DarkWind: 2nd Book, WindDemon Trilogy (16 page)

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Authors: Charlotte Boyett-Compo

BOOK: DarkWind: 2nd Book, WindDemon Trilogy
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“I’m sure you did,” she said, easing her hand from under his. She wiped her mouth on her napkin then stood and gathered the dishes.

“You’re angry with me,” he said, his apologetic tone turning defensive.

“I’m irritated, yes,” she replied as she stacked his plate atop hers. “No woman likes to spend her day off cooking for a man who neither appreciates it nor wants it.”

“I was hungry when I was at the car show.”

“And you couldn’t wait until you got home to eat.” She turned and headed toward the kitchen with the dirty dishes.

He winced as she kicked open the swinging door and went into the kitchen. The sound of dishes clattering and pots being thrown into the sink gave evidence of how upset his wife truly was.

Cree drew in a long breath, released it slowly, then let his head drop to his chest as though he had the weight of the world on his broad shoulders. Once more, he thought, he had given in to selfish behavior that he should have known would annoy his wife. But he was so new to this sharing life; so unaccustomed to having to take another’s feelings into consideration before a decision. He loved Bridget with all his heart-black as it was-but he could not seem to make her happy.

With another long, much-put-upon sigh, he got up from the table and followed his wife into the kitchen.

“The garbage can needs emptying,” Bridget informed him as he entered.

A pained look came over the Reaper’s face, but he went to the plastic can and opened the lid to withdraw the garbage bag inside. His nose crinkled with distaste as he spun the bag around, crimping the top to close it. He frowned, looking around for the little twist tie Bridget always placed on the counter for him.

“What are you looking for?” she asked as she began running water in the sink.

“The thing.”

“The thing.” Bridget dropped the words like rocks. When he just stood there, looking at her, the garbage bag dangling from his strong hand, she stomped to the drawer beside which he was standing, jerked it open and took out the sheet of twist ties. “Here,” she said, tearing one off and handing it to him.

“Thank you,” he said in a little boy voice.

“It is your kitchen, too. You’d think by now you’d know where the ‘things’ are kept!”

“Not part of my job.”

“You don’t have a job.” She was immediately sorry for the jibe; the hurt look that passed over Cree’s face cut right to her heart. She watched him shrug then open the garage door to carry out the trash bag.

Bridget stood at the sink with her hands on the counter, staring blindly out the window. When he came back inside, she turned to him. “I’m sorry.”

He shrugged again as though the matter was of no concern.

“It’s been a rough day,” she said.

“Don’t worry about it.” He walked into the dining room.

Bridget looked at the garbage can and could have screamed. Her teeth clenched, she went to the drawer, pulled out the box of garbage bags and tore off one. She snapped it open and stuffed it into the plastic can with considerable force. As her hand went through the bottom of the bag, making a wide rip in the plastic material, she yanked the bag out of the can and began shredding it with a vengeance, growling with fury.

“I forgot to ask-” Cree poked his head around the door. When he saw what was happening, he pushed the door all the way open. “What are you doing?”

Bridget’s lips peeled back from her teeth. “Taking...my...anger... out...on...this...gods-be-damned...bag,  Reaper!” she snarled.

He blinked then watched as she dropped the pieces of torn plastic on the floor and stomped on them. He crossed his arms over his chest and leaned against the doorjamb. “Pretending that’s me, are you?” he inquired with a trace of humor.

“Aye, Reaper, I am!” She kicked the plastic.

His gaze followed the flying plastic shreds as they sailed about the floor then smiled at his wife’s fury as she jerked another bag out of the box and started stretching it. With a snort, he uncrossed his arms, went to her and took the bag away from her.

“No,” he denied as she tried to snatch it back. “You’ve killed enough garbage bags for one evening, Bridget.” He held the bag behind him, grunting as she tried to reach around him to retrieve it.

“Gimme the bag!”

“No,” he said on a long breath. “But I’ll give you something else.”

She stilled, looked up into his hot eyes and watched the desire forming there. Her own eyes widened. “Oh, no, you won’t!” Before Bridget could move, he had her against him, his arms enfolding her. She squirmed, trying to break free, but his hold tightened.

“Be still,” he whispered, his lips against her ear.

“Bastard,” she said, but her heart wasn’t in the insult for the hardness of him was pressed intimately against her belly.

“Bitch,” he whispered in return and ran his tongue inside her ear.

Bridget shivered, melting against him. “Is this all you know how to do?”

“No,” he replied. “I know how to do this, too.” He moved one hand between her legs.

“Oh hell..” Bridget sighed. The heat of his palm was at the juncture of her thighs and pressing against her own heat.

“How about tearing into something other than a garbage bag, Dr. Dunne?”

“Like?” she asked as she slowly lifted her gaze to his.

He grinned and lifted her onto the counter. He pushed her skirt up her thighs then wedged between her legs. “Oh, I don’t know,” he muttered. He hooked his fingers in her panties and ripped them away. “Like a bag of cotton candy maybe?”

She shrieked with exasperation then wrapped her long legs around his waist to anchor him to her. “You are a hateful man, Captain Cree!”

“I am a horny man, Doctor Dunne.”

“A condition you seem to perpetuate of late.”

He shrugged. “Perhaps I can have Troi engineer a fembot to-”

“The hell you will!” She reached out to take his face in her hands. She pulled his head toward her then slanted her mouth hungrily across his. As she drove her tongue between his teeth, she heard his answering growl of passion and felt him fumbling with the zipper of his jeans.

“Wicked woman,” he said against her mouth as he freed himself.

“Your wicked woman.”

“Aye,” he agreed as he drove into her. “Cree’s very wicked woman.”

 

The sun was
setting when they woke. After the mindless sex on the kitchen counter, he had taken her again when he’d carried her to their bed. Their lovemaking had been slow and sure and infinitely sweet the second time. With his lady firmly placed against his sweaty side, he had fallen asleep, listening to her gentle breaths.

Their son’s angry wails as he woke from his afternoon nap had driven them from sleep.

“He’s hungry,” Bridget said, swinging her legs from the bed.

“Give him cotton candy.” Cree chuckled.

She tossed him a look he had come to think of as one of her ‘you’re pushing it’ looks.

He heard her talking quietly, cooing to Jaelin and recognized the very moment she picked the baby up for there was a grunt in her voice. As she carried the child to the bed, he moved over so she could sit down.

“He needs changing,” Bridget told him.

“I’ll bet he does,” Cree acknowledged, but made no move to help.

A small portion of the happiness that had put a glow in her cheeks faded from Bridget’s face. She pursed her lips and reached for a disposable diaper from the box she’d brought in with her.

“You know,” she said, “it wouldn’t hurt you to take care of him once and awhile.”

“Don’t,” he asked and when she looked up at him, he was frowning.

The rest of her happiness evaporated and Bridget changed their son in silence.

“I like watching you with our son,” Cree said quietly. His heart felt huge in his chest and a lump that always formed when he watched his lady and his son together made his voice husky.

“Why don’t you make yourself useful and go fix his bath,” Bridget snapped. She was smoothing the thick dark curls on her son’s head and did not see the pain that flashed through the Reaper’s golden eyes as she spoke.

Cree closed his eyes for a moment then swung his long legs from the bed. He stepped into his jeans, leaving them unzipped, and padded barefoot from the room without speaking.

Bridget heard the water go on in the bathtub. She lowered her head and kissed her son’s forehead. He looked so much like his father...the same coloring, the same thick dark hair...but his eyes were a very vivid shade of green, deeper than her own color. For a reason he would not explain, her lover had told her he was particularly pleased that his son’s eyes were green.

Looking down into the verdant gaze looking up at her, Bridget smiled.

“He’ll come around, Jaelin,” she told her son. “Your daddy will come around.”

But a part of Bridget Dunne did not believe her own words.

Especially when she heard the front door open and close behind Cree.

 

“Did I tell
you about the conversation I had with the Rysalian?” Lares asked his wife as she prepared his breakfast the next morning.

“Which conversation was that?”

The darkman and his lady had been discussing Cree and Bridget. Folding his newspaper, the Necroman laid it beside Beryla’s plate.  “He is concerned he will harm the child.”

Beryla turned from the pancake she had flipped and gave her husband a surprised look. “He told you that?” At her husband’s nod, she asked, “When was this?”

“On the ship,” Lares replied. “Soon after the bantling was birthed.”

A frown drew across Beryla’s face. “And you’re just now getting around to telling me?”

“He asked me to say nothing and on my honor I have not. But in light of the problems the Reaper and his woman are having, I thought now would be a good time to reveal what I know,” Lares defended.

Beryla turned off the stove and moved the griddle with the half-cooked pancake to a back burner.  “What did he tell you?”

Lares looked at the stack of pancakes that he knew would grow cold before his wife had finished interrogating him and shrugged.  “He believes the Dearg Duls within him will harm the child. That is the reason no Reaper was ever allowed to see his offspring.” The darkman looked longing at the pancakes. “He aches to hold the child but dares not for fear the bloodbeast within him will strive to kill its rival.”

“Aurora thought that might be the reason he won’t hold Jaelin,” Beryla said. Taking pity on her husband, she brought the stack of pancakes to him.

“You called her?” Lares asked, rubbing his hands together before delving into the ten pancakes.

“I had to call to see if she’d take Dorrie off Bridie’s hands” She frowned. “She doesn’t want her, either, so I’m afraid Burkhart will be down in Albany awhile longer. At least until I find someplace else to send her.”

“How is Ro-Ro?”

“Fine, but she did voice a few concerns that I must admit are troubling me, as well.”

“Such as?” Lares asked as he slathered butter atop each pancake.

“She believes the suggestionaries we gave Bridget are beginning to wear off.”

“Good,” Lares proclaimed. “A woman should love her man because she wishes to, not because a scientist has made it so.”

“It proposes a problem for us, though.”

“How so?”

“Bridie loves Cree,” Beryla answered. “There’s no denying that. Given time and no interference from the Resistance, I believe she would have fallen in love with him despite the assistance of the drugs and subliminal messages in the Celtic music CDs we gave her. The two of them were destined to be together.”

Lares poured syrup over his cooling pancakes. “What problem does the lessening of the suggestionaries cause then?”

“As much as she loves Cree, she loves her son even more. A mother’s love is stronger than any other. If it comes down to choosing between the two of them, she’ll chose her child.”

“As it should be,” Lares agreed.

“Aye, but where does that leave our Reaper? If the suggestionaries were strongly in place still, there wouldn’t be a problem. From listening to Bridie’s complaints about her husband, I can tell the hold is slipping. She’s liable to do or say something she wouldn’t if the subliminals were still working.” Beryla asked. “We both know anger is always the Reaper’s first reaction to every new situation that adversely affects what he wants.”

The darkman considered his wife’s comment. His broad forehead puckered with concern.  “That would not be good,” he said quietly.

“No, it would not.”

“I believe you should tell her why Cree will not interact with the boy,” Lares told her.

“I have no choice but to do so,” Beryla agreed. “I’ll call her later today.”

   

 

 

 

   

Chapter Fifteen

 

The theater was
draining of its inhabitants as Cree sat there reading the roll of credits. He was focused on the screen, counting the names. When the screen went dark and the house lights bled the shadows from the room, he glanced down at the wristwatch Bridget had given him when they first arrived on Terra and saw it was close to the time his lady was to leave work. She would expect him to be there when she opened the door and would be angry to find he was not. In his mind’s eye, he could see her storming to the neighbor’s to retrieve their child, her face set and hard.

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