Lure of the Wicked (8 page)

Read Lure of the Wicked Online

Authors: Karina Cooper

Tags: #Romance Speculative Fiction

BOOK: Lure of the Wicked
6.1Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

She filled his hand perfectly. Her nipple peaked hard into his palm, and he groaned. Her breath hissed out from between her teeth.

Phin found his hands full of ice and fire, of silk and steel. All the conundrums he didn’t know how to tame, not right now.

Maybe not ever.

She curved into his body like he was the last thing she’d ever need, and the heady combination of hazy violet eyes and the beckoning pulse of her body against him was too much.

Too damn fast.

He dragged her hips upward, pushed her higher against the bag. The slick material of her athletic shorts glided like water over him. The juncture of her legs slid over the hard length of his pulsing, desperately hard cock, and she rode him, legs wrapped hard around his waist. Rode him as if their clothes didn’t exist, as if she could drag herself over him and feed on the shudders of sensation between them both.

It was torture. It was hell.

It was pure heaven.

Naomi gasped, her cheeks flushed, back arching. Her fingers knotted in the mesh netting that kept the athletic bag supported, kept her supported against it. Gone with lust, with the crazy intoxication of her scent, her sounds, Jesus, her own sexual madness, Phin angled her body, dragged her over him again.

And again.

Her body trembled. Tightened under his hands. She threw her head back, eyes clenched shut. Pink swept across her chest, across her shoulders, her throat. He felt her desperate release build in the tension surging beneath her skin.

Curling one hand around the back of her neck, his fingers brushing against the hot metal beads she hid so well, Phin jerked her away from the bag. He pressed her face to his shoulder and gritted his teeth as her wild, muffled cry washed over him, as she went rigid against him. Around him, locked hip to hip.

He was, he reflected as he braced himself against the rough bag behind her, a complete masochist.

For a long moment there was only the sound of her breathing. Of his muted heartbeat thundering against his ribs. It matched hers, beat for beat. Slam for slam.

She stirred.

Naomi’s legs uncurled from around his waist. Pliant, fluid, she eased her taped feet back to the floor and pushed her damp hair from her face. She smiled languidly, as satisfied as a cat surrounded by defenseless canaries.

“Well,” she said, casual as the wind. “That was nice.”

“Oh, no.” Phin caught her arm when she shifted, held it when he could read her intent to escape as easily as if she’d announced it.

She glanced at his hand, measuring it. Her gaze turned curious, amused, as it flicked back to his. “What?”

“It’s not going to end here.”

Amusement faded. Her lashes narrowed, a thick line of edged black. “Oh?”

“Yeah.” Phin let her go, slowly, and stepped back from the maddening feel of her body before he pushed it one limit too far and made a mess of himself.

Naomi stretched languorously, those sleek muscles moving like silk under her skin. Her arms locked over her head, her back arched in sinuous challenge. “What makes you think I’m interested in anything else?”

With need, the temptation of her battering at his unfulfilled body, Phin wasn’t going to play her game. Not now.

Later. After he’d taken care of the erection practically begging for attention under his shorts. He flashed a smile he knew would annoy her. Easy, knowing.

The kind of smile that said,
I’ve seen you come and loved every second of it
.

Her smile faltered. Her lips parted on a small, almost imperceptible breath.

One point for him.

Laughter split through the gym, the isolated contest of wills, and shredded the small pocket of silence around them. Naomi stiffened, her gaze jerking suddenly over his shoulder. Phin glanced behind him to watch a handful of day-trippers enter the far entrance. Each carried towels and complimentary water bottles.

They chattered and teased one another. None of them spared more than a glance toward Naomi and Phin. Phin grinned at the sudden wary tension that ratcheted her body.

He leaned forward, handed her the water bottle she’d dropped around the same time she’d kissed him stupid. “Guess we’ll have to be more careful next time,” he murmured in her ear.

Naomi drove an elbow into his chest. “Next time, my ass,” she hissed.

She sidestepped him, shoulders rigid as he laughed softly at her back. “You can run, Naomi.”

She didn’t acknowledge the threat.

Phin didn’t pretend it was anything else but.

Chapter Seven

T
en minutes of ice-cold water was more punishment than any man should suffer for a woman. Shivering, Phin turned off the shower and thought it wasn’t
nearly
as terrible as what he was doing to himself.

Lusting after a guest? Check.

Lusting after a guest he suspected had more baggage than she let on? Check.

Acting on it anyway? That was the kicker.

But there was something about Naomi that pulled on every nerve, every sense he possessed. He wanted to like her. He wanted to help her.

And, he admitted in silent aggravation, he wanted to peel her out of that facade of cool, calculated amusement that she wore like a goddamn mask.

He wanted her eyes dark and clouded with passion, not wariness. Her mouth gasping his name.

“Whoa,” Phin muttered, and ground a fist into his eyes until he couldn’t count the pulse in his crotch anymore. A cold shower wasn’t going to help if he just kept at it.

Deliberately he slid the shower stall open and reached for a towel as he thought about the day’s notes. He’d made it as far as the repairs scheduled for the sauna tomorrow when the comm unit he’d tossed carelessly to the counter vibrated itself onto the floor with a clatter.

Hurriedly, wrapping the towel around his dripping waist, he scrambled to collect it before the caller hung up.

“Wait a minute.” He fumbled with the earpiece, swore, and gave up when it slipped through his slick fingers. He pressed the speaker to his wet ear instead. “Phin Clarke. How can I help you?”

“Firstly”—Gemma’s voice all but vibrated the line with amusement—“you’re nowhere to be found mid-afternoon. Now, either you’ve managed to entangle yourself with someone quite pretty for the moment—”

He winced. “No.”

“—or you’re hiding,” she finished on a chuckle. “As the lovely Jordana has just now entered the dining floor, I’m going to lean toward the latter.”

Phin shifted the comm to his other ear, snagging a hand towel from its neat rack to blot at his dripping hair. “Jordana would eat me alive, Mother, and you know it.” He sighed, knowing it for the long-suffering sound it was. “Neither. I was tired from being up all night with the technicians, so I took a quick shower to wake up.”

“You poor dear,” Gemma crooned, suddenly nothing but contrite. “Are you doing all right now?”

Feeling only a little twinge of guilt, he said simply, “Foggy around the edges, but fine, Mother, don’t worry about me. Is there a
secondly
in there somewhere?”

“What? Oh! Yes, there is.”

A beat. Phin grinned, quickly raking a comb through his hair. “And it would be?”

“Family meeting.”

The comb slid through his fingers and clattered to the counter. Phin grabbed at it, missed, and sent it spiraling into the sink. Biting back a sound of irritation, he focused on the comm instead. “When? Where?”

“Soon as you can make it to your mother’s office, dear.”

Phin grimaced. “I’ll be there in ten minutes.”

Gemma hummed a farewell, disconnecting the call before Phin could shake the water off the small screen.

He dressed quickly, left his suite tidy and dry behind him. Within the ten minutes he’d promised, he made it to the floors tucked underneath the public levels and entered Lillian’s office.

Two sets of speculative eyes greeted his arrival.

Lillian perched one hip on the rich rosewood desk, her suit tailored to chic simplicity. The muted plum color brought out a diamond shine in her golden hair, made her eyes look luminous gold and green. Beside her, Gemma sat in the matching chair, one hand threaded loosely with Lillian’s, palm to palm.

Lillian’s eyebrow arched in regal Hollywood flair. “Exactly on time.”

Phin shut the door behind him, ruefully spread his hands. “What did I do now?”

“Nothing.” Gemma grinned, revealing the dimples she’d passed on to him. “I think.”

“Gemma.”

The woman smothered her amusement at Lillian’s murmured warning, clearing her throat. “Right, well, let’s get right to it.”

“Have a seat, my love,” Lillian added, inclining her perfectly coiffed head toward one of the two chairs arrayed before the desk.

Feeling a little like a boy called before the dean, Phin sat. “All right.” He sighed. “But this had better have everything to do with the accident, and not the ongoing discussion of my love life.”

“Or lack—” Gemma clamped her mouth under Lillian’s warning squeeze. He didn’t miss the flex of his mother’s fingers, the shift of her beautiful eyes. “It does,” she said instead.

“I filled your mother in,” Lillian explained, her tone crisp. Professional.

Down to business, after all. Phin straightened. “The sauna accident looks targeted, but it makes no sense.” He rubbed at his jaw idly. “It’s no accident, that’s clear. The good news here is that the technicians can get it fixed within three days, if the parts are available.”

The women exchanged a glance, worry and relief tangled.

“What?” He frowned. “What’s going on?”

“Maybe nothing,” Gemma said, only to smile wanly as Lillian stated, “Your mother has a concern.”

“Oh, no.” Phin pinched the bridge of his nose between two fingers. “No, no, I don’t want to hear that.”

“Maybe it’s nothing,” Gemma repeated, rising. Her bow-shaped mouth intent, she put her hands on her hips and frowned fiercely at them both, lines drawn between her dark eyebrows. “It seems so random, so out of the blue. I can’t believe it was just about poor Alexandra.”

Lillian adjusted the sleeve of her jacket. Sharp, tight movements. Frustration. He knew the signs, knew each woman as well as he knew himself.

Both were worried, antsy.

Phin rubbed at the edge of his nose, but it didn’t soothe the ache forming behind his forehead. What did they all have to go on? Nothing. One nearly fatal accident.

Damn it.

“What about Naomi Ishikawa?”

Phin jerked his head toward Lillian. His eyes narrowed. “What about her?”

“Who is she, really?” She tapped her long, unpainted nails on the desk in a sharp staccato. “What do we know about her?”

“Lily, you don’t think—”

Phin cut them both off, rising to his feet with a surge of sudden, angry energy. “Naomi has nothing to do with any of this.”

Lillian frowned, a deep furrow of her carefully penciled-in eyebrows. “No,” she said, shaking her head. “I don’t know what your involvement with that woman is—”

“I’m not—”

“—but you can’t afford to look at this with anything else but impartiality,” she finished in neat, clipped tones, overriding him as easily as if he’d never spoken.

He bit back an angry retort. Mouth tight with the effort, he turned and studied the gilt-patterned wallpaper that lent the office a warm, old-fashioned touch. He knew he looked sulky, like a kid caught with candy in his pocket before dinner, but if he unfolded his arms now, they’d know he knew it.

And he wasn’t ready to explain why he thought Naomi was in the clear.

Why he
wanted
her to be.

A warm, gentle hand slid over his shoulder. Down his back. “Phin,” Gemma said softly. “Baby. We mean well.”

“For you,” Lillian said firmly, “and for Timeless. We have too much at stake here, Phin, you know that.”

“I know.” He took another deep breath, a solid inhale. Let it out slowly. He turned, wrapped both arms around Gemma’s shoulders, and rested his chin on top of her curls. He met Lillian’s gaze across the room.

It killed him to see her eyes soften so much. Warmed him to see them brim with the love he’d spent his life immersed in.

Despite his worry, he smiled. “I know, Mother, and I’m sorry. Naomi Ishikawa,” he continued quickly before she could say anything, “is a woman desperately in need of some relaxation time, but I don’t think she’s wired enough to pull something like the sauna stunt.”

“Actually, I agree.” Gemma laced her fingers around his forearms, her hair tickling his chin as she shook her head. “She isn’t the patient sort, and whatever that was, it needed patience. I suspect that Miss Ishikawa is much more inclined toward something face-to-face. Her nose,” she added dryly, “makes that clear.”

“Not to mention,” Phin pointed out, “she came from her suite before all of it happened, and she hadn’t checked in early enough to do any wiring herself.”

Mouth pursing in thought, Lillian stared past them for a long, silent moment.

“Lily?”

“I can’t shake the feeling that something is very off about her,” Lillian said flatly. She braced her weight on one hand, fingers flattened on the desk. It was as close to a slump as he’d ever seen her get. “I don’t trust her, not completely.”

“I don’t, either,” Phin said in quiet agreement. It bothered him to say it, to acknowledge it. “But it wasn’t her.”

“I like her.” Gemma tipped her head up just enough to smile up at Phin, squeezing his arms affectionately. “She’s hurt, and I don’t think she’s entirely whole, but I like her.”

Suddenly feeling like a particularly interesting butterfly pinned to a wall, Phin grimaced. “Can we get back to the part where this isn’t about me?”

“Oh, stop.” Gemma laughed, swatting at his cheek.

“But he’s right,” Lillian added. She smoothed long fingers over her chignon, tucking in tendrils that didn’t need tucking. Nerves.

Phin sobered. “Mother, what can we do?”

“I’ve had the staff informed to keep watch for anything out of the ordinary,” she replied. Her elegant mouth twisted. “At my request, security has begun a thorough study of the in-house feeds.”

“What about the secret halls?” Phin straightened, frowning. “Joel knows about them, as does the extraction team, but we’ve been careful.”

“Nobody else knows about the secret halls,” Gemma assured him. “The blueprints were destroyed shortly after the building was finished.”

“As far as we know,” Lillian murmured. But the tension slowly eased out of her. Inch by inch. “Mr. Barker is thorough and has proved to be more than discreet.”

Phin nodded. “Does he have help?”

“Yes, however, none of the temporary staff is involved.” Lillian smiled halfheartedly. “I know you mean well by these people you’re rescuing, Phin, but this is too delicate a situation to allow them to meddle in.”

He winced. “They wouldn’t meddle,” he began, and subsided when Gemma’s fingers tightened at his wrists. He dropped his chin to her hair again. Rubbed it gently back and forth.

She smelled like the lavender she used to scent the soaps for the spa. It calmed him enough to say mildly, “Okay, that’s fine. No temporary help. We’ve already cut down to a bare crew of them anyway, and we can’t rush the refugees any faster than we have to. Any undue suspicion now will alert the gate guards and bring the Church on our heads worse than it may be already.”

“All right.” Lillian rubbed the back of her neck with stiff fingers. “I am so proud of what you do, Phin, we both are. I want you to know that.”

Warmth bloomed in his chest. Adoration, gratitude. Love.

And suspicion. The set of her expression warned him there was more. “But,” he prompted.

“No buts,” Gemma interjected. She stepped out from his embrace, shaking her head. “Just that. We’re proud of you. There are entire families who wouldn’t be where they are without your help. You’ve given them hope, found them homes out where everyone was so sure there’d be none.”

“People are industrious,” Phin replied simply. “The accused we help are willing to work hard. They’ll make it.”

“And they do,” Gemma said earnestly. “I just know they’re out there happy and well.”

Jaw working, Lillian fell silent.

Phin crossed the room, ignored her perfect polish to wrap his arms around her shoulders. “I love you, too.”

“Oh, Phin.” Lillian’s hands splayed over his back, rubbed gently. “Just be careful,” she said into his chest. “Gemma isn’t the only mother with a concern.”

Gemma threw her arms around them both, and Phin shifted to let her into the circle. Holding the most important women in the world, he breathed in their mingled scents and perfume, wrapped himself in the warmth of their love, and wished to hell he was the only one up at night.

Worrying was what this family did best.

Pressing a kiss to each warm cheek, Phin promised, “I’ll be careful, and I’ll keep an ear to the ground.” He looked down at them both, met hazel eyes and sweet brown. “Promise me that neither of you will do anything rash.”

“Of course,” Lillian said, amusement like a spark of gold in her suddenly crinkled gaze. “Have I ever done anything rash?”

“Never.” Phin gave them both a final squeeze, stepped away. “I’ll get to work on the underground now. If you need me, I’m in comm reach.”

Gemma smiled ruefully. “You always are. In the meantime, keep a close eye on Naomi, all right?”

Lillian’s smile went crooked. “Is that for our safety or his interests?”

“Mother,” Phin groaned, and waved both hands in surrender. “Fine, I’ll stay close by her.”

“Like it’d kill him.” Gemma chuckled as he turned away.

Phin left them, good-natured aggravation melting into too many logistics, too many problems, and a rapidly sinking sensation that time was slipping away. He had a cargo of people to move out too soon after the last, and he’d have to do it without raising eyebrows.

Behind him, the women watched the door click shut. For a long moment, neither spoke.

Then Gemma shifted back into Lillian’s embrace. “Nothing rash,” she said, lacing her fingers loosely at her wife’s hip. “Besides defying your glitterati family and eloping with a mid-city whor—”

Lillian seized Gemma’s mouth in her fingers, pinching her lips closed with a frown as unbending as steel. “Don’t you dare, Gemma Clarke,” she said fiercely. “Those were their words, never mine. Never, ever yours.”

Gemma’s lips moved. Curved upward as she pressed a kiss to Lillian’s fingertips. “I love you,” she murmured. “I wouldn’t change anything for the world.”

“Neither would I, Gem.” Lillian allowed herself to sink against Gemma’s supporting embrace, into the soft curves of the body she was so fortunate to hold every night. To admire every morning. “Two aging women. What will the world do with us?”

Other books

The Spider Thief by Laurence MacNaughton
Dread Locks by Neal Shusterman
Starfire by Charles Sheffield
Love Beyond Expectations by Rebecca Royce
Islands in the Net by Bruce Sterling
Living Separate Lives by Harper, Paulette
The Meaning of Night by Michael Cox
Innocent Darkness by Suzanne Lazear