“It would if he were my master. But he’s not.”
“Huh? Say what?”
“It’s in the
Djinnoire
, Merlin. Now hush. I want to hear what they’re talking about.” She turned back around and pressed her ear against the door again.
All she could hear was a soft masculine murmur and Lynda’s oh-don’t-be-silly giggle that really meant “I want you to think that I think you’re the funniest, smartest, brightest, hottest man in town so you’ll let me take you home tonight and have my way with you.” Mortals hadn’t changed all that much in the hundred years she’d been out of commission.
“Okay, so I get that you never earned the gold bracelets that mark you as being in The Service, but if he’s not your master, what are you doing hanging around?”
She sighed, then opened her eyes and looked at Merlin. “You’re not going to let go of this, are you?”
“I don’t get it, Van. If you’re free, out in the world with no master, able to go anywhere you want, do whatever you want, why are you hanging around this dump, sneaking around like a shadow? And look at you.” His wings fluttered over her body. “You
are
a shadow.”
Vana looked down. Oh, right, she was invisible.
She kissed the air and her body melted back into view. “I can’t let Zane sell the house. It was Peter’s greatest wish to keep it in the family and I failed him at so many others. I have to do this for him. And the children.”
Merlin tapped his head with his wing. “You’re staying here for a
dead
guy? What part of ‘dead’ don’t you get, Van? Peter will never know. And the kids stack up nicely, in case you hadn’t noticed. Some bubble wrap, packing tape, and you’re free to go.”
“I can’t do that to any of them, Merlin. This is their home.”
The doorknob turned.
Holy smokes! Vana shooed Merlin away, kissed herself back into nothingness, and plastered herself into the tiny space between Eirik and the doorway just as Zane backed through the door.
“Yes, Lyn, it was great seeing you again. I’m glad you stopped by.”
“Are you sure I can’t tempt you out to dinner? I really do make a good steak.”
Vana rolled her eyes. Seriously, how hard was it to grill a hunk of meat? The woman was doing it right now with her gaze as she looked at Zane.
Vana curled her fingers into fists to keep from scratching those eyes out.
“Thanks, Lyn, but I have to pass. Too much to do.”
“Why don’t you just have your assistant take care of it? Isn’t that what assistants are for?”
“My what?”
“I heard you were bringing someone to the dinner on Saturday. I assumed she was your assistant.” A peekaboo toe shoe worked its way into the doorway. “If she’s not here yet, I’d be willing to help with whatever you need.”
Vana just bet she would.
“If you don’t want my home cooking, we could order pizza while we do whatever it is that needs to be done around here. Paint the porch, air out the bedrooms… whatever.” Her blonde head was next in the door.
Zane didn’t budge.
Vana, standing inches beside him, didn’t either. His
assistant
? Couldn’t the woman come up with anything else? Talk about no subtlety…
Vana had a good mind to give the woman a
piece
of her mind. Except she was invisible, and suddenly materializing where she was would only create problems. Materializing from the kitchen, on the other hand…
Vana kissed herself into the kitchen, brought her body back to the visible plane, whipped up an apron and an apple pie out of thin air (literally), and headed back toward the foyer.
“Whoa, whoa, whoa!” Merlin showed up in a shower of silver sparkles and matching feathers, and plastered his wingspan across the opening. “What do you think you’re doing?”
“She thinks I’m his assistant.”
“So you want her to think you’re the housekeeper? Why not just give the tart a leather teddy and concede defeat?” Merlin looked her over.
“Oh.” Vana set the pie on the table. “I see what you mean.”
“Come on, Van. You want him, you gotta fight for him.”
She yanked the apron off her head. “I don’t want him, Merlin.”
“Yeah, and Arthur pulled the sword out all by himself.” Merlin rolled his eyes. “Look, Van, it is what it is. And you got first dibs. So whip yourself up something femme fatale and show that man-killer out there that you’re anything but Zane’s assistant.”
21
Lynda wasn’t the only one who could wear red, and Vana intended to let her to know it.
And rue it.
“Zane, what do you think of this dress for our dinner date?” Vana walked down the front stairs in a killer red evening gown. “Too revealing?”
She reached the bottom stair and twirled around, giving both Zane and
Lynda
the full show. A spaghetti-strap bodice with a full scarf sleeve over one arm, the fabric swirling with splashes of gold and orange that wrapped around and gathered at her waist, the flowing jumble of chiffon allowing one leg to peek through, ankle to thigh.
Zane’s mouth fell open.
Lynda’s became a thin, tight line that smeared lipstick just above her lip.
“Oh, hello.” Vana stuck out her hand oh-so-innocently. “And you are?”
Furiously
angry
, but Vana wouldn’t expect the woman to admit it.
“Lynda Hus—er, Wattrell.” Lynda played the game well. If Vana hadn’t been privy to their earlier conversation, she would have thought the tight voice Lynda used was her natural one. Or maybe it was and the baby-doll breathlessness was fake. “Zane and I, uh, well, we go back a ways.”
Oh, the woman had innuendo down, too, but, again, Vana knew how old Zane had been when he’d left here. Twelve-year-olds’ crushes—if he’d even had one on the girl this woman had once been—were nothing compared to what
she
and Zane had shared.
Too bad he didn’t remember it.
Vana kept the smile plastered to her face and took the
teeniest
step closer to Zane. “Isn’t that nice, Zane? All of your
old
”—that word stressed, of course—“school chums are stopping by. I guess they couldn’t wait until we went to the dinner to see you. You and your husband will be there, won’t you, Lynda?”
She put just the right amount of inflection on the “we” and just the right amount of sincerity in her smile. After being around mortals for eight hundred years, out-innuendoing Lynda was a piece of cake. Preferably of the Marie Antoinette kind because she’d like to lop off this chick’s head.
Especially when Lynda turned a slyly calculating gaze toward Zane. “I’m assuming he’ll be there, but Gary and I are divorced.”
Ah, touché. Letting Zane—and Vana—know she was available. Good play. Too bad Vana had the ultimate hand—
if
she told him about last night. Which, of course, she couldn’t.
Vana’s smile faltered. What was she doing? She wasn’t here to make nice with Peter’s grandson. (Though it had been
very
nice.) She was here to make Peter’s wish come true by turning the children back, and if Lynda could make Zane happy and keep him in town and living in this house, then maybe Vana had no business trying to outdo the woman. Instead, she should embrace Lynda’s feelings for Zane and step aside to let Nature take its course.
Except she’d never been too good with that. Patience was not one of her virtues, which was how she’d ended up in her bottle to begin with.
Vana took a step closer, practically plastering herself against him. Gods, he smelled so good. The tiniest tang of perspiration mixed with his natural scent, along with the same soap Peter had used.
And it probably
was
the same soap; she’d conjured up enough to last until Doomsday. Unfortunately, Peter had said “until Tuesday.”
She shook her head. Why was she thinking about Peter with Zane mere inches away? Peter had been an old man when she’d become his genie and had held no physical attraction whatsoever for her. Zane, on the other hand, was anything
but
old. Hot, sexy, fun, nice, funny, good with his hands…
Lynda was checking out those hands. And the rest of him, too.
Vana wanted to blast a wart onto the woman’s nose. A big hair on her chin. Bags under her eyes. But she’d never had good luck with that magical specialty, and with her luck, she’d…
On second thought, screwy magic could come in handy.
She took a little breath. One wart coming up. She puckered her lips and—
Zane planted a kiss on them. A quick peck, but enough to surprise the magic out of her. And wipe the smile off Lynda’s face.
“The dress is beautiful, Vana. I think it’ll be fine.” He left a stunned Vana standing there as he worked his own magic, spinning Lynda around and guiding her back to the door. “It’s been great catching up, Lynda. We’ll see you at the dinner. Thanks for stopping by.”
Just like that, Lynda found herself on the other side of the door.
And when Zane turned around, Vana found herself in hot water.
“What was that?”
“What?” she squeaked.
“That.” Zane pointed to the door. “I thought we were going to need a referee in here.”
Vana smiled weakly, still trying to get her hormones under control from that one little kiss. The man pecked, er, packed a mighty wallop. “I don’t know what you’re talking about. And I thought you didn’t want to kiss me anymore.”
“Don’t try to distract me from the issue here, Vana. That kiss was the only way I could prevent you from doing whatever you were going to do to her. You might be hundreds of years older than me, but I wasn’t born yesterday. Care to tell me what’s with the attitude toward Lynda?”
“Her?” Vana swished the dress around her legs. She’d worn her own version of peekaboo-toed red shoes, with ribbon ties around her ankles that made Lynda’s look like something one would wear to the supermarket. “Could you not tell that she had one thing on her mind?”
“And what the hell’s wrong with that?”
Okay, wrong answer…
Vana flung the skirt behind her. How dare he! After all they’d done—
Oh, right.
She took a deep breath. “Oh please, Zane. You show up out of the blue, a rich, successful athlete with this inheritance, in this little town that looks as if it’s still stuck in the 1800s, and she comes over dressed to kill at three in the afternoon, and you’re wondering what
I’m
up to?”
“What business is it of yours? Or are genies supposed to monitor their masters’ love lives, too?”
It was on the tip of her tongue to tell him that love was not what Lynda had in mind, but then she’d have to address the master thing and her innate sense of self-preservation wouldn’t allow her to go down that route.
“Look, Vana, do me a favor. Stay as far away from my love life as possible, okay?”
“Uh… sure.”
Unfortunately, it was a little late for that.
***
Zane strode into the kitchen. Good God. Vana talking about his love life. She’d walked down those stairs, her bare legs playing hide-and-seek with the silky fabric, and his dick had gone straight to attention. Thank
God
she’d engaged Lynda in that little pissing match. It’d given him time to get himself under some semblance of control, but holy fuck, a guy could only take so much. Now she wanted to
talk
about it?
He’d known what Lynda was up to the moment he’d heard that singsong way she’d called his name. He’d been around the block with sports-team groupies for years. Had partaken a few times, but there’d never been even the slightest chance that those encounters would lead to anything.
Same deal now. Especially with Lynda being Gary’s ex. That alone would put her on the Do Not Touch list, regardless of the fact that the crush he’d had on her had fizzled out the day Mom drove them out of town.
But Vana, on the other hand…
He glanced at the cuckoo clock and opened the fridge. Too bad it was still two hours until five. Although that didn’t matter anyway since he hadn’t brought beer for this trip—which was turning out to have been a really bad decision. But then, he hadn’t exactly counted on meeting
her
.
Swiping the orange-juice carton over his forehead, Zane willed the chill to cool his heated blood. He didn’t understand it; he knew what Vana was, and he still couldn’t get over this attraction he felt toward her. He’d think the fact that she wasn’t a mortal would wipe it away, but apparently hormones only responded to sexy.
And, God, was she sexy. She’d sashayed down those stairs, her hips swaying, her breasts bouncing, her fingers trailing lightly along the banister, and all Zane could imagine was them trailing over him. Her breasts sliding against his chest, her long, toned legs wrapped around his waist… his shoulders…