Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton
Dante’s Salvation By Anna Leigh Keaton
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton
Dante’s Salvation By Anna Leigh Keaton
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental. Dante’s Salvation Copyright© 2008 Anna Leigh Keaton ISBN: 978‐1‐60088‐234‐0 Cover Artist: Sable Grey Editor: Melissa Darnell All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced electronically or in print without written permission, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in reviews. Cobblestone Press, LLC www.cobblestone‐press.com
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton
Chapter One Dante Rainaldi skimmed his hand over the piece of wood, its cool, smooth surface soothing against his palm. This would work. It had to. He touched the pad of his index finger to the pointed tip. Not quite good enough. It had to be lethal. Sharp enough to pierce through skin, muscle, cartilage and finally, the heart. Using the X‐acto knife he picked up from the coffee table, he shaved a few more swipes, carefully designing a point as sharp as possible. The sharper the point, the easier it would be to accomplish his goal. Killing a vampire was a tricky feat. He had to be precise and get it right the first time or... Or the consequences would be unbearable. He had one shot at this. A mistake could not be made. Pressing his finger against the tip once more, he jerked back when the wood pierced his flesh. “Shit.” He sucked the tiny drop of blood from his fingertip and frowned. That hurt. Well, death wasn’t meant to be completely painless, now was it? It was time. He sucked in a deep breath, laid his stake on the coffee table, pulled off his T‐shirt, and set it on the couch next to him. Looking between the stake and the steel mallet on the coffee table,
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton he frowned. How the hell was he going to do this? The stake had to enter hard enough and fast enough to go all the way through. He shook his head and picked up the mallet. The stake was almost three feet long. There was no way to reach... As a thought occurred to him, he grinned and stood up. Lifting the stake, he set the flat end against the coffee table and leaned over it, testing the height. Just right. Excitement surged through him. Adrenaline pumped hard in his veins. This was it. He was finally going to do it. He’d waited three hundred years for this day. He gripped the stake in both hands, holding it steady against the tabletop. A smile curved his lips as peace settled over him. Finally, he’d be free. Leaning over until the tip touched his left breast, right over his heart, he felt around until he knew the point settled between two ribs. Having it deflect off a bone would be bad. He wanted death, not pain. God, he hated pain. Closing his eyes, he rose up and sucked in a deep breath. It was so close he could taste it. He let out the breath, slowing his heart rate and then— “Oh, bloody hell, Dante!” His eyes popped open as the stake was rudely jerked from his grasp. “What the hell do ya think yer about, you idgit? You think I wanna clean up yer mess?” Dante grabbed for the stake, but his roommate, Digger O’Toole, laughed and held it behind his back. “What a moron ya are. If’n yer gonna do yerself in, don’t do it in the livin’ room on the rug.” “Give it to me.” Dante bound over the coffee table and grabbed at the little Irishman, but Digger vanished, only to reappear across the room. “When will ya learn?” He winked. “Yer just hungry. Get dressed. We’ll go find some tasty young morsels to feed on.”
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton “I’m not hungry. I want to end this now.” “Yer hungry. Ya always get suicidal when ya haven’t eaten in a while. When did ya last feed?” Dante went back to the couch and slumped onto it. “I had a sirloin last night.” Digger threw back his head and laughed, but then stopped abruptly as he examined the stake. “Bloody hell, mate. Ya...” He glanced into the dining room. “Ya cut off the table leg?” * * * * * “Come on, Wendy. Put this on. You look cute in it.” Wendy Schumacher curled her lip in disgust as she looked at the baby doll top her best friend, Candice, held in her hand. “You look cute in it. I look like I’m pregnant.” Candice rolled her big blue eyes and sighed. “It’s your birthday, honey. Lighten up and have a little fun. You’ll like this place.” She grinned and tossed the gauzy top at her, and she caught it. “It’s not a nightclub or anything. I swear.” “You don’t need to remind me that I’m thirty‐seven today.” She held the top up and examined it. See‐through arms, high waisted. “Ugh. I can’t wear this.” “You can, and you will.” Candice bounded off the bed and went to the closet. “And those cute jeans we got for you a couple months ago...a‐ ha. Here they are.” She pulled out a pair of jeans that fit Wendy like a second skin. She shook her head. “No. I won’t go out in these things. I’ll just throw on a sweatshirt and—” “No. You won’t. We’re going to find you a man tonight, and you’re getting laid.” Wendy’s lips parted in shock. “I most certainly am not.” Candice nodded. “Uh huh, you are. How long’s it been anyway?”
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton “None of your business.” She pulled the towel from her head and let her damp hair fall over her shoulders. “None of my business, or it’s been so long you can’t remember?” “I remember just fine. April third.” Candice raised an eyebrow. “Of what year?” Then her eyes widened. “April? As in the April three years ago when you broke up with John the Jackass?” Wendy scowled. “He wasn’t a jackass. We just had different...goals in life.” Candice snorted. “Yeah. As in he had none.” She came up to Wendy and tugged the towel wrapped around her body. Wendy gripped it in her fist and squealed. “Stop it! Okay, okay. I’ll get dressed.” Her friend grinned. “You got ten minutes, and then I’m coming back in to do your hair and makeup.” Wendy sighed. No use fighting. When Candice got a bug up her butt, there was no stopping her. She’d put on the skanky clothes and go out and try to enjoy herself. It was her birthday after all. Maybe a few drinks wouldn’t hurt. But she was not going to look for a man. No way. She didn’t need a man. Things were much better on her own with no one to answer to. Candice flounced out of the bedroom, leaving the door open. Wendy slammed it shut and stuck out her tongue. Great. Thirty‐seven years old, and Candice could make her act like a five‐year‐old. After retrieving a bra and panties from the bureau, she dropped the towel and pulled them on. Out of the corner of her eye, she caught sight of herself in the mirror on the back of the door. She cringed and swallowed hard. “Birthday resolution number one,” she murmured as she pulled the shirt over her head. “Join gym Monday morning.” As a medical assistant, she didn’t expend much energy during the day. The most exercise she got was walking to and from work. The donuts and lattes were adding up...all on her thighs, butt, and waist. She
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton struggled into the jeans and flopped down on the bed to get them zipped—something she hadn’t done since high school. She laid there and panted, wondering if she’d be able to even sit up in the damn things. This was so not for her. She’d rather stay in, order a pizza, have a couple of beers—gain ten more pounds. “Ready?” Candice asked from the doorway. “That was not ten minutes.” She struggled up to a sitting position, the jeans digging into her belly. “Ohh, you look hot. Come on in the bathroom and let me do your hair. I’m thinking something up and flirty.” Wendy made a face. “Flirty? I don’t do flirty.” Candice winked. “You will tonight. You’ll have no choice.” Forty‐five minutes later, after walking six blocks through a warm, summer, Seattle evening, Candice pulled open the door to a brightly lit office with Dinner and a Date stenciled on the door. “What is this?” Wendy asked as she followed Candice inside. Candice grinned. “This, dear heart, is where you’re going to find the perfect man. Come on.” Wendy gripped the strap of her purse in her fist. She followed Candice to a desk where a matronly woman sat behind a low table. The scent of raw onions and peppers permeated the air. She tried to peer into the adjoining room, but too many men stood in the way. All men. Where were the rest of the women? “What is this place?” she whispered to Candice as her palms began to sweat. She didn’t like surprises. She thought Candice would take her to the new little jazz club that had opened down the street. Candice grinned. “Food and men. Your favorite.” Men were Candice’s favorite, not hers. Food, on the other hand... Her mouth watered, and her stomach grumbled. She could handle some food. They stepped up to the counter when the woman in front of them moved out of the way, and Candice withdrew two tickets from the pocket
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton of her skin‐tight jeans. Wendy’s own pants had stretched enough to let her breathe—as long as she stood up. Sitting might still be a problem. “Right through the door,” the woman behind the counter said, pointing in the direction of the other room blocked by men. “Pick a table. You have a choice of chicken, fish or beef. Dinner preparations will begin in about ten minutes.” “Thanks.” Candice grabbed Wendy’s hand and dragged her toward the throng of men. She thought she might be sick. Her friend pulled her through the group with a few “excuse me’s” and a flirty look or two toward a couple of guys. Wendy ducked her head and followed. They entered into a room set up with tables. Two chairs per table. On each one stood a griddle, and bowls of meat and mixed vegetables sat in tubs of ice. There were also bottles of a variety of oils and sauces. Most tables were already taken up with women, but they found two side‐by‐side toward the back. “I want the chicken,” Candice said as she plopped down into a chair. Wendy glanced around the room, at the backs of the fifteen or so other women sitting at tables, each one at their own table with an empty chair next to them. She sat down at the vacant table next to Candice’s. She got the beef. Her stomach curled in unease as she stared at the faces of the men hovering in the doorway. The ages ranged from twenties to fifties. Handsome to not‐so‐handsome. The women in front of her—she hadn’t really looked at their faces—but based on what she could see, the ages ranged just as widely as the men. “Okay, gentlemen. Pick your flavor.” Wendy jumped in surprise at the voice coming over speakers hanging from the ceiling behind her head. Then she saw the woman up in front of everyone, behind her own table but facing the group. She had a small microphone clipped to the strap of her apron.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton The men surged into the room like spawning salmon. A handsome guy in his early thirties sat down next to Candice, and her friend sent her a wide, pleased grin and wink. And then... Wendy swallowed hard. All the men were seated, and she was the only woman alone. Even the white‐haired granny lady in the front row had a man next to her. Humiliation heated her cheeks, and she ducked her head. It was sixth grade dodge ball all over again. The last kid picked for a team. Candice’s laugh rang through the room, and Wendy scrunched down in her seat. Too late to make a run for it. If she got up and left, it would only draw more attention to her. That was the last thing she wanted. Thank God she was in the back row. “Okay, ladies and gentlemen,” the blonde with the microphone said. “Ten minutes to introduce yourselves, and then we’ll start cooking.” Why, oh why, did the floor not open and swallow her when she needed it most? She was going to kill Candice when they got out of here. * * * * * “Yer dressed to go to a funeral, not a club.” Dante shoved his hands in the pockets of his Armani slacks as he and Digger walked down 4th Avenue toward The Starlight, the club they frequented to find willing candidates from which to feed. “There is nothing wrong with dressing nicely. At least I don’t look as if I came from a Hell’s Angels rally.” “The boys like the leather. Hey, ya know what? I know a good vampire shrink. I think ya should see ’im.” “I don’t want to see a shrink.” “Ya were gonna stake yerself, my friend. And what about trying to fry yerself last month?” Dante snorted. What a bumble fuck that had been.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton “Ya knew ya were too old to try that. Only young vamps turn to dust in the sun.” He shrugged. “I thought if I stayed out there long enough...” Digger shook his head. Dante had suffered third‐degree burns over every bit of skin he’d exposed to the sun. Oozing blisters. If Digger hadn’t brought home a woman and fed him, who knew how long he would have suffered? Suffered. Not died. He shook his head. “It was much easier to get killed when the humans believed we existed and hunted us. I should have let VanBueren kill me when he had the chance two hundred years ago instead of ripping his heart out.” “Ya did what ya did because ya had to for all of us. If he hadn’t been stopped, he would’ve systematically hunted us down and done away with the entire race.” “And what a shame that would have been,” Dante mumbled. Digger heaved a sigh of annoyance. “We’ve got to get ya outta this slump, man. Find a woman ya can really sink yer teeth—and yer cock— into.” The thought turned his stomach. He hated feeding, and it certainly didn’t turn him on. The whole drinking blood thing... He only did it when absolutely necessary, which was about every two weeks. If he went longer, he got weak. He was on the edge of the hunger fatigue now and had been for a couple of days. He’d find a woman, mesmerize her, and feed tonight. Then he could go about his life for a while and not think about it again. Until next time. He swallowed hard and suppressed a shiver of disgust. Three hundred years as a blood‐sucking vampire, and he’d never acquired a taste for it. A door opened, and out barreled a short redhead onto the sidewalk, running smack into Dante. He caught her by the arms to keep her from falling, and a scent assailed his senses that made his stomach growl. Onions, beef, green peppers...and lilacs. She looked up at him with
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton startled, brilliant green eyes. “Oh...I’m...sorry.” She jerked out of his grasp, and her purse slipped from her shoulder to the sidewalk. In her other hand she held a plate covered in tin foil. “Shit,” she murmured and bent to retrieve the fallen purse, giving him a splendid view of her ample backside in skin‐ tight denim, and a flash of pale flesh at her lower back as her blouse slipped up a bit. His mouth watered. When she stood, the sloppy knot holding up her hair slipped to the side of her head, giving her a rumpled, sexy look—as though she’d just been thoroughly kissed while a man ran his hands through her hair. She was the most stunning woman he’d seen in years. She ducked her head and took off down the street. He turned to go after her, but Digger grabbed his arm, stopping him with a chuckle. “Guess her date didn’t go so well.” Dante watched the pretty little woman scurry away until she disappeared around the corner at the end of the block, and then he turned a frown on his friend. “What do you mean, her date?” Digger pointed his thumb at the door the woman had exited in such a hurry. Dinner and a Date it said. “What is this place?” Digger headed off toward The Starlight again, and Dante followed, but what he wanted to do was go after the woman. To find out why she seemed so flustered and in such a hurry. “A couple women at work were talkin’ ‘bout it,” Digger said. “Apparently, the women buy a ticket, and men get in free. It’s kind of a cooking class fer singles. Ya pair up in there. The men pick the women they wanna share dinner with, and then they make it together.” Dante shook his head. “Sounds stupid.” Digger chuckled. “I’d say the chunky redhead thought so, too.” “Hey. She wasn’t chunky. She was...” Beautiful. Gorgeous. Soft. And she smelled like heaven.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton They approached The Starlight and bypassed the line of humans waiting to get in. They were regulars and were never forced to wait. The bouncer—one of Digger’s favorite lovers—nodded at them and unhooked the velvet rope to let them pass. Digger waggled his eyebrows at the African American with bulging muscles. “Good on ya, Jesse.” The bouncer winked. “Nice seein’ you, too, Dig.” “Think you’ll be up to joining me later?” Dante brushed by his roommate to let him flirt in private, and pushed open the heavy metal door to the club. He would swear the only reason Digger kept him around was because he was straight and didn’t compete for the Irishman’s male lovers. Not that Dante had any lovers in recent memory. Hell, it’d been over a decade since he’d bedded a woman. He’d once longed for love but could only find one‐night stands—so he’d given up even looking. As he walked down the hall to the inner bowels of the club, the heavy beat of the music resounded through his body. The scent of alcohol, perfume, cologne and sweat permeated the air. His stomach soured. God, he hated this. If he had a woman who loved him, one who accepted who he was, he’d never be forced into these places. He could feed at home when he needed and not have to worry about... He knew from experience that would never happen. He swallowed hard and pushed open the door. Another bouncer, this one a testosterone‐laden white guy named Willy, nodded at him as he passed. The music was so loud it hurt his sensitive ears. The smell of hot, sweaty bodies nearly gagged him. Find a woman, and get it over with. He scanned the room of writhing men and women. He still couldn’t believe what people called dancing these days. Give him a waltz anytime over this...clothed orgy. A nice restaurant with low lighting, soft music, and a voluptuous redhead in his arms as they moved to the graceful strains of a full
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton orchestra. Ahh. Moonlight Sonata, his favorite. He yearned for years long gone, when women were soft and subtle, and men didn’t have a feminine side. Digger swaggered up next to him. “Do me a favor tonight, mate. Give me a few hours before ya come home. Jesse gets off in an hour, and then we’re both goin’ to get off.” He winked, his mannerisms suggestive and obvious. Dante forced himself not to make a face of disgust. Feeding to Digger was playtime. During the week, Digger worked as a pastry chef at an all‐night bakery. Friday and Saturday nights, though, he found a man, brought him back to the apartment, and had noisy sex all night. He fed well, and he fed often. Digger enjoyed it. A small part of him wished he could enjoy it. Sex and feeding had gone hand‐in‐hand with vampire life since the first one was turned two millennia ago. He hadn’t minded it so much when he was human and his vampire lover fed from him. It had been erotic. The sensation of having an orgasm while Kayla sank her razor‐sharp fangs into his neck or inner thigh... Digger elbowed him in the side. “Yer daydreamin’ again, Dant.” With a sigh, he headed toward the bar. He’d need something strong for when he was done. As he made his way through the throng of dancers, he searched for a woman who looked clean. “Tequila,” he shouted to the bartender, then turned and scanned the single women sitting at the bar. Three stools down, a platinum blonde turned toward him and gave a come‐hither smile. He swallowed hard. She was the one. She looked hygienic. Just a little makeup, nothing overdone. Taking the drink from the bartender and handing over a bill, he moved down the bar. She smelled sanitary. That was a plus. She hadn’t been sweating all night as most of the women on the dance floor had. Turning on her stool, she looked up at him and smiled. “I’m Debbie.” Her voice was high and a little annoying. Hopefully she didn’t want to talk.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton “Let us dance,” he said, turning on his vampire charm. The faster he got her under the spell and this done, the better for him. Digger grabbed the drink from his hand. “Slow song in two.” Dante nodded his thanks. Digger always had his back. For a six‐ hundred‐year‐old vamp, he was a really great guy. “What’s your name?” Debbie asked. “Dante.” He put his body through the grinding motions of the song until, as Digger had promised, the music slowed. Debbie went easily into his arms and purred like a cat as she rubbed her scrawny, bony body against his. The woman was in heat, and he doubted it had anything to do with his half‐hearted attempt to mesmerize her. He needed to bring her under the spell, though, if he was going to get his fangs into her without her realizing it. He tilted her head up with the edge of his finger so she met his eyes, and then he let it go. The magic. The pheromones. The gift every vampire was given upon being turned. Human blood was essential to their existence, and he’d honed his skill over the past centuries. He could mesmerize and get the blood he needed in a matter of minutes. It was all he needed, and his host would never remember a thing. Her eyelids drooped halfway, and a sleepy smile spread over her lips. He grabbed her left arm from his shoulder and lowered it. Gripping her wrist, he raised it to his mouth, but he got a whiff of something on her that was not so pleasant. His stomach turned in an uneasy roll. He reached into his pocket with the other hand, never breaking eye contact, and withdrew an alcohol swab. He ripped the small package open with his teeth, swiped it over her wrist, then brought her arm to his mouth. The tang of the antiseptic was preferable to unwashed flesh. Come on, come on. His teeth ached, but they weren’t extending. Like arousal without a hard‐on. Impotent. A vision of the sensuous redhead on the sidewalk flashed in his
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton mind, and his fangs extended. He sank them into the blonde’s flesh. She moaned in pleasure and leaned against him. He wrapped his free arm around her back to steady her, making sure to never lose eye contact with her. On the dark, strobe‐lit dance floor, his actions would seem a seduction rather than what it was. Hot blood spurted into his mouth. He fought his gag reflex as the metallic taste flooded his senses. One, two, three... Just two more swallows and he’d be fine for another two weeks. His throat tried to close on him. Four. One more. His stomach heaved. Fuck! Five. He jerked his head back and pressed his thumb over her beating pulse to seal the wound. It would only take a moment or two for the punctures to heal to small red marks she probably wouldn’t even notice in the morning. “Here.” Digger was at his side, holding up his glass of tequila and a handkerchief. Dante handed off the woman to his friend and took the drink. He sloshed the alcohol in his mouth to get rid of the taste of the blood then wiped his lips with the cloth. He shuddered in disgust. Digger led the mesmerized woman to a table in the far corner, and Dante followed. “I’ve got to get out of here,” he told Digger after his friend had settled the woman into the corner of the booth. Digger nodded. “I’ll make sure she’s okay.” “Thanks.” He set his glass on the table and made his getaway, practically pushing his way through the throng of gyrating bodies to get outside. He burst through the door, leaped over the velvet rope past Jesse, and headed down the street. Sucking in gulps of the clean, warm, damp air, his pulse slowed, and his roiling stomach settled. He had to find a better way to feed. Or be successful in killing himself next time. Hell. He didn’t really want to die. He just needed to find something that made him want to live. Really live. He turned the corner down Virginia Street, heading for the wharf, driven by the need for the bay’s salty clean air to clear his head. Lights reflected off the calm water, the
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton sight beautiful and serene. Then a scent hit him, and he stopped. The redhead. Beef, peppers, onions and lilacs. He raised his head and breathed deep. It was her. He’d never smelled anything so enticing before tonight. Slowly he followed the scent, tracking her. On 2nd Avenue, he stopped in front of a dimly lit coffee house. There weren’t many people in there, so she was easy to spot through the window. Alone with a latte mug, cinnamon roll, and the foil‐ covered plate on the table in front of her, she sat with her head bowed, her chin propped on her hand, and shoulders slumped. She’d let her hair down, and ringlets of auburn trailed to the center of her back. She looked...sad. Lonely. He laid a hand over his heart. A woman as beautiful as her should not be alone on a Friday night. She should never be sad. Surely anyone as stunning as she must have a lover. He moved the few paces to the front door and slowly drew it open. Ahh. Coffee and pastries. This was a smell he could stomach. One that satisfied his still‐human soul.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton
Chapter Two Wendy stared at her untouched cinnamon roll and silently cursed Candice. They’d been friends since grade school, though sometimes she wondered why. This wasn’t the first time Candice had ditched her when she found a man, but it was the first birthday she’d spent alone. She should have stayed in and ordered that pizza. The foil‐covered paper plate sat on the table, mocking her. Beef fajitas. She hadn’t had the stomach to even taste them. With no one to share them with, she’d felt stupid sitting there through over an hour of how‐to instructions while couples around her laughed and joked and in general had a great time. As they finished up, Candice leaned over and asked in her oh‐so‐ polite way if she’d mind too terribly walking home alone. Her date, the stud at least five years younger than Candice, wanted to go get a drink afterward. Chances were, Candice was the one getting laid tonight, and Wendy had struck out all the way around. Bitch. She covered her face with her hands and sighed. It wasn’t Candice’s fault if she was the fun one. The beautiful one. Men gravitated toward her as if she were a testosterone magnet. She knew how to smile and flirt like a pro—had been doing it for as long as Wendy could
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton remember. Even in junior high, Candice had been surrounded by boys. Then again, Candice had been married and divorced twice in the last ten years. At least Wendy had been smart enough to dump the jerks she wound up with before she made that particular mistake. Though, having a man to curl up and watch a movie with once in a while might be nice. No. Stop it. She sucked in a breath and sat up straight. She didn’t need a man. Not at all. She was successful in her career, she loved her little apartment from which she could see the bay, and if she got a little lonely once in a while, that was by her own choice. How many times did she have to get burned to remind herself that her relationships never went anywhere? John had been a jackass. He’d moved in with her after they dated a mere three weeks, then quit his job and let her take care of him for a year. Ha. What a laugh. He’d been looking for a mother—someone to do his laundry and cook his meals—not a girlfriend. Besides, the sex had been horrible. That’s what she really needed. Maybe Candice had a point. She needed to get laid. Some good old fashioned fucking, with a real live man and a hot, hard cock. Her battery powered toys could only do so much. Damn, she missed the feel of a man’s body wrapped around her, thrusting into her. And this time, damn it, she’d find a guy who knew how to use the stuff between his legs. Next Friday she’d go out. Maybe to that club up on 4th. The Starlight. She heard it was a good place to meet single men—at least that was what Candice had told her. She reached for her latte and sipped the tepid liquid. The problem there was that a nightclub was more Candice’s speed than hers. Dinner and a Date was more her style, but she saw how well that had worked out, hadn’t she? She frowned at her coffee. So where the hell did a woman like her go to meet men? A class at the community college? Pottery lessons? What about one of those classes at Home Depot? Surely there were single
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton men there. And her apartment did need some updating. Maybe she could learn how to lay hardwood flooring while she met a guy. A small smile slipped out, and she ducked her head to hide it should anyone be looking her way and think her a wacko. Maybe if she met a guy in a class on laying hardwood flooring, she could invite him over to help her with hers. “Is this seat taken?” Her head snapped up at the low, cultured voice with just a hint of foreign accent. The man standing next to her was...the same man with the amazing black eyes, black hair, and incredibly sexy goatee she’d run into outside Dinner and a Date. She got another whiff of his expensive cologne, and her eyelids drooped in appreciation. Now this was a man she’d love to get into her bed. He dressed in an expensive, tailored, double‐breasted suit. He was tall, lean, gorgeous, and carried himself with an air of sophistication that made her melt. Yeah. Keep dreaming, Wend. She waved her hand toward the chair. “It’s free. Help yourself.” She expected him to take the other chair to another table, but instead he pulled it out and sat down. Her lips parted in surprise, and her coffee sloshed onto the table and the back of her hand as she set her mug down with a thud. The man reached for the napkin dispenser, withdrew a couple, and dabbed at her hand. “Slippery, aren’t they?” He finished wiping up the spilled latte then neatly folded the napkins into quarters before setting them at the edge of the table. She licked her lips, but her brain seemed to have disconnected itself from her tongue. What the hell was wrong with this guy? He was young—couldn’t be over thirty—dashing, debonair, and had just sat down at her table? Was this a joke? Was she on Candid Camera? Trick the middle‐aged frump? Was she being Punked? She glanced around the almost empty coffee shop. A couple of college students took up two tables, happily clicking away at their laptop
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton keys. Another table held an older couple who talked in subdued tones. Only one guy worked the counter, and a waitress stood off to the side with a bored expression on her face. “Can I...um...help you with something?” she finally asked after ungluing her tongue from the roof of her mouth. The hunk’s smile was just as sexy as the rest of him, and he held out his hand. He had beautifully straight, white teeth. “Dante Rainaldi. I was passing by on my way down to the wharf and saw you in here. Since we met earlier and hadn’t been properly introduced, I thought it only fitting.” Yeahhh... She placed her hand in his. Warmth and—oh, dear Lord—lust shot through her. She squeezed her thighs together and bit her bottom lip. He’s so out of your league! Don’t even think about it. She cleared her throat. “Wendy Schumacher. And I’m sorry about earlier.” He kept the smile on his lips as he tilted his head slightly. “You seemed to be in a hurry. I was surprised to find you here.” The waitress saved her from having to answer the unspoken question as to why she’d been in such a hurry. Dante ordered a mocha then turned back to her as the waitress left, seemingly unmoved by the woman’s obvious eyelash batting and flirting techniques. “So,” he said, his voice low and so sexy tingles raced down her spine. “What’s a pretty lady such as yourself doing all alone on a Friday night?” He could have done much better than that lame line. Then again, with the slight European accent, even trite come‐ons sounded awful sexy. She grinned, because if she didn’t she’d probably make a fool of herself by bursting into tears. “Celebrating my birthday.” Shit, it still sounded pathetic. His smile faded, and his brow drew together. “Alone?” She broke eye contact and looked down at her cinnamon roll. She didn’t want this stranger to know how badly she hurt inside. Candice had
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton really crossed the never‐do line tonight. Ditching her on her birthday...that was just plain mean. Especially when Candice could get any guy any night of the week. She didn’t have to choose this night. A warm, gentle finger touched her chin, and she jerked in surprise to meet the stranger’s gaze. “I am sorry, Wendy. Forgive me if I’ve made you uncomfortable. That was not my intent.” He looked so earnest. As if he really...cared. She closed her eyes and let out a slow breath. She would not read anything into his kindness. Maybe he’d been ditched, too. Hadn’t he been with a short, stocky fellow when she ran into him? “My friend dragged me to this stupid...” She wasn’t going to lay her problems on this poor guy’s doorstep. She licked her lips and tried again. “She thought it would be fun to try out that Dinner and a Date place. Only she got the date, and I didn’t.” She shrugged, hoping it came off as nonchalance. “I just decided to stop in here before going home. How about you? Why are you all alone tonight?” Good. Get him talking about himself. Guys loved that. “Your friend left you alone on your birthday because of a man?” She almost rolled her eyes but caught herself. “Yeah. That’s just the way Candice is. I’ve learned to roll with it.” Dante’s eyebrows drew closer together, and his lips turned down in a disapproving frown. “It’s okay, really. I’m used to her being a little flaky.” The waitress returned and set the coffee in front of him. He nodded his thanks, picked it up, and sipped. With a sigh, he seemed to relax, which made her realize how tense he’d been. “I do adore a good cup of coffee,” he said with a small tilt to his sexy lips. “Seattle’s the place for it.” She was horrible at small talk and didn’t know what to say next. The mundane usually worked. “Where are you from? Originally, I mean.”
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton His smile returned. “I am originally from a small village on the Italian coast near Naples.” He waived his hand in dismissal. “But that seems several lifetimes ago. I am a U.S. citizen and claim Seattle as my home now. You?” Why did he keep turning it around to her? She’d rather sit and listen to him speak. “Born and raised right here in Seattle.” He sipped his drink and settled more fully into his chair, watching her over the rim of his mug, which made her want to fiddle with something. His gaze was so intense, as if he were looking into her soul. But she couldn’t seem to bring herself to look away, either. “You have beautiful hair,” he said in that wonderfully rich voice. “You are much more suited to wearing it down than piled on top of your head.” She chuckled. “Tell that to Candice. She’s the one who did that...thing with it.” Shaking her head, she turned her cinnamon roll plate with her fingertips. “I’m much more casual than this normally.” He arched one perfect eyebrow. “And what do you call casual?” She shrugged. How did she tell a man who wore a suit that cost more than her mortgage payment that she normally wore whatever was most comfortable? She loved her sweatshirts and loose, comfortable jeans. This guy was so far out of her league they might as well not be on the same planet. Which again begged the question, what the hell was he doing sitting here with her? “My friend told me about that place you went tonight. Did you enjoy it?” She scrunched her nose and shook her head. “If I were to take a real cooking class, it wouldn’t be with some woman who only knew how to stir fry vegetables.” He chuckled. Goose bumps raised on her arms. “Did you meet anyone...interesting?” Her humor fled. He was the most interesting person she’d met in
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton ages. With a shake of her head, she lifted her latte. “No. I didn’t.” She sipped, but the drink was now cold, and it took supreme effort not to wince. She took another swallow “You are single, then?” She choked. More coffee sloshed from the mug and out of her mouth. Dante was right there with more napkins, first blotting her chin, then her hand. Please let me die right now! Right now, God. If you care about me at all! Her cheeks heated with embarrassment as he once again cleaned up the table. “Your coffee is cold. Let me get you another.” Before she could respond, he had her mug and was walking up to the counter. She had the urge to make a run for it while his back was turned. She could get out the door and down a block before he ever knew she was gone. He’d never find her. Leaning against the counter with a sophisticated nonchalance she could only dream of possessing, he turned and winked at her. Good Lord, the man was lethal. When he stuck his hand in his slacks, his jacket lifted just enough for her to get a great view of his ass. His perfect, round, tight buns. She licked her lips, hoping she didn’t salivate. Think, Wendy! Okay, he’d said her hair was beautiful, he was buying her a cup of coffee, and he was flirting. Maybe he was lonely and just wanted someone to spend the night with. She probably came off as an easy candidate, since she was by herself on her birthday, sitting in here sulking. Would it hurt to get laid? Hadn’t she been thinking about a quickie when he came in? She chewed the inside of her cheek and stared at that gorgeous backside. The suit covered him well, but there was no mistaking wide shoulders and a slim waist. If his butt looked that good, what would his chest be like? Rippled abs? Damn, she didn’t think she’d actually ever
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton slept with a guy with rippling abs. He was young, though. Really young. And she was old and flabby. If he saw her naked, he might become ill. Besides the thirty extra pounds she carried on her short frame, she had batwing arms and cottage cheese thighs. Nu uh. No way could she do him. He was way too good looking. A one‐night stand she chose needed to be in her league, not a million miles ahead of her. Damned if she didn’t want to, though. He picked up a steaming mug the barista had set down and smiled as he came toward her. “Here you are, my lady. Would you like me to have your roll heated for you?” He set the drink in front of her. She shook her head. “No, thanks.” No way was she going to sit there eating a gooey cinnamon bun while he watched. “After I ordered it, I realized I wasn’t very hungry.” Actually, she was starving, since she hadn’t had supper. What she really wanted was that pizza. Lots of cheese and sausage...the kind that always gave her heartburn. That sounded good tonight. And an ice cold beer...or two. “If you don’t mind me asking,” he said after he’d taken his seat and sipped his own coffee, “what do you do for a living?” She’d just met the man, and after tonight she’d never see him again. Part of her had the urge to lie and come up with something exciting, like telling him she was a cop or an international news reporter or something. Instead, she carefully lifted her coffee and sipped. “I’m a medical assistant for a clinic.” A small smile flitted over his lips, and he nodded. “I pictured you in the healing arts.” She frowned. He sure didn’t speak like any thirty‐year‐olds she knew. Hell, John had been nearing forty and all he talked about was video games and the latest reality television shows, not healing arts. “You have a gentle aura about you,” he continued, as if explaining himself. “A soft beauty that shows through. It is very attractive.” A soft beauty? She didn’t know if she should roll her eyes at yet
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton another lame pickup line, or swoon at his feet. “And you? What is it you do for a living?” Professional bullshit artist? He set his mug aside, reached inside his jacket, and withdrew a business card. “This is my company. I deal in antiquities.” She took the gold embossed card and read it. Echidna’s Cave. If you’ve ever dreamed it, we will find it. “Echidna?” she asked. The name had a familiar ring to it, though she had no idea why. “Ahh. You remember your Greek mythology?” She shook her head and laid the card on the table. “It’s been a while. Who was she?” Dante’s grin was teasing. His eyes fairly sparkled. “More of a what, really. A creature that was half nymph and half serpent. She lived in a cave and came out to eat those who passed by.” He winked again, and her heart fluttered. She chuckled to cover her unease at her body’s unwarranted reaction to him. “And is that how you get customers? By snatching them off the street as they walk by?” He laughed, his perfect teeth against his dark goatee almost startling. “Alas, no. I run a reputable business. You should stop by sometime.” She glanced at the business card but didn’t pick it up. It would be much better for her to never lay eyes on this man after tonight. Besides, she didn’t do antiques. The only thing she had older than herself was the crucifix she wore tucked inside her shirt, handed down to her from her great‐grandmother. Dante watched Wendy’s pulse flutter in her neck. His fangs ached to be set free, which made no sense since he’d just finished feeding. Even more remarkable, his cock stirred. With every smile and sultry chuckle from her, he grew ever increasingly uncomfortable. She was a stunning beauty, and he wished to taste her skin. She was pure and healthy, she smelled of not only the food he wished he could taste, which sat under the
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton tin foil on the table, but of the soft aroma of lilacs. Beneath all the other scents, she smelled of clean human flesh and arousal. Warm and enticing. Not since Mary, nearly a century and a half ago, had a woman’s body called to his this way. He wanted to kiss her, taste her skin, bathe her with his tongue, drink her excitement. He smelled no other male on her, so he doubted she’d been with one in quite some time. Male pheromones tended to cling to their sexual partners weeks, sometimes months, after a relationship ended. Though he’d asked to be certain, he’d known before the question left his lips that she was single. She was neither coy nor obvious in her want of him, which intrigued him. Women who found him attractive usually had no qualms about throwing themselves at him. It disgusted him. Wendy was shy and unsure of herself. If he were to guess, he’d say she didn’t find herself worthy of his attentiveness. How wrong she was. She was the first woman in over a century he wanted to possess. She was pure of heart, mind, and body. Her friend stood her up on her birthday, yet she defended the woman. Loyalty such as that was hard to find. In fact, he knew no women in this day who stood up for their friends the way she had. He lifted his coffee and sipped. Wendy slowly spun the plate holding the cinnamon bun with her fingertips. Her nervousness he found endearing. He wondered if she’d come by his store. If he wanted to, he could implant the urge in her mind with a simple hypnosis technique, but he needed her to come of her own free will. She must want to see him again. He would not employ vampire trickery on this sweet woman. No. She was special. She suddenly leaned over and picked up her leather purse from the floor. “I really should get going.” His heart sank, but he nodded in response. He shouldn’t have stared so long. Conversation was the key, and he’d blown it. It had been too long since he tried to entice a woman with his human charm. She reached into her purse and pulled out a couple of crumpled
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton bills. “Wait.” He laid a hand over hers, and her wide‐eyed gaze jerked up to meet his. “Let me pay. It is the least I can do.” He smiled. “You allowed me your company and turned a very unpleasant evening into something I will remember for years to come.” Her brow puckered, and then she chuckled. “Okay. Thank you. That’s very kind of you.” He stood, withdrew his wallet, and threw a couple of bills on the table. Then he held out his hand for her. “Allow me to hail you a cab.” She glanced at his hand then back up to his face. Shaking her head, she motioned toward the door. “I just live a few blocks away. I can walk.” “Then let me be a gentleman and show the lady to her door.” She stared at his still extended hand. “Come. I am harmless, I promise you.” “Said the spider to the fly,” she murmured. “I believe the spider asked the fly to step into her parlor.” She chuckled and looked up at him. “You weren’t supposed to hear that.” Just as he wasn’t supposed to hear her blood rushing through her veins or her heart pounding with excitement and trepidation. But he did. “I will not ask to enter your parlor. I am a gentleman. I will walk you to your door and bid you a fond goodnight.” No matter how badly he wanted to get his hands on her. She slipped her small hand into his and stood up. “You run a hard bargain, Mr. Rainaldi. I’d be a fool to pass up an escort home.” “Please,” he said, dropping his voice to little more than a whisper and leaning down slightly, “call me Dante.” A shiver passed over her, and he smiled to himself as he breathed in her glorious scent. Aroused woman with the hint of sweet lilac. She’d taste like ambrosia, he was sure. “Come then,” he said, pulling himself back. Just as he laid a hand on the small of her warm back, she grabbed his business card, cinnamon
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton roll, and tin foil‐covered plate off the table. The card she stuffed into her purse. Ah, perhaps he still had the charm after all. He guided her out the door onto the street. A gentle breeze had come up off the bay, and her hair whipped around her and against his jacket. He wished he were naked in order to feel her cool curls against his flesh. She wrapped her arms around herself and huddled against the chill. “Allow me,” he said as he slipped the buttons of his jacket and shrugged out of it. When he laid it around her shoulders, she smiled at him—a genuine smile. Soft and sweet. Not the forced ones of earlier, or those she’d used to cover her unease. “Thank you. You are a gentleman.” He kept a loose arm around her as they walked up the steep hill toward 3rd. She was small, yet she wasn’t frail. Her curves covered a sturdy build he found quite arousing. She was soft and warm, and he knew his jacket would hold her scent for days. He looked forward to it. His fangs ached, and he drew in a breath to calm his own lust. Sex and feeding...he didn’t understand why it would meld now at this particular moment. He wanted her body, not her blood. He wanted to taste her flesh, her arousal, not sink his fangs into her. Besides, he’d just fed. He didn’t need human blood again for at least two weeks. “So...is this what you do with your Friday nights? Rescue lonely women from having to walk home alone?” He cocked his head and looked down at her, but her own head was bowed. “Are you lonely, Wendy?” He heard her swallow, and she didn’t answer. “I am sorry. I do not mean to make you uncomfortable. It is just that most women of your age are usually searching for...something.” Her shoulders slumped slightly beneath his arm, and she ducked her head even farther. Hell, he was going to mess up his well‐laid seduction if he didn’t keep his mouth shut. “You mean like a man?” she finally asked. “I don’t need a man. I’m
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton perfectly happy without one.” Though her words held conviction, her body language said otherwise. She was lonely, and it hurt him to see her so. He’d bet his store and all that was in it that some man, or perhaps more than one, had hurt her. “You are a very well‐adjusted woman. Self assurance is highly underrated.” She lifted her head, and a small smile curled her sensual, pink lips. “I can take care of myself.” He nodded in agreement. There was a difference between loneliness and needing a man to lean on. She didn’t need one, but she’d like one. It was written all over her face for the world to see. “And you have taken care of yourself for a very long time, haven’t you?” “Yes.” The word came out on a soft sigh. He wanted—no, needed—to be the man she could lean on. “This is my place,” she said as she slipped from beneath his arm and turned to face him. She slid his jacket off her shoulders and held it out to him. “Thank you for walking me home.” Her building was a mid‐class apartment complex. “I assure you, the pleasure was mine alone.” Standing under the streetlamp as they were, her deep auburn hair seemed spun with strands of gold. Her eyes were the most startling, intriguing spring‐like green. Her smile was shy and sweet. She reached into her purse and withdrew a small ring of keys, and then she looked up at him again, and he saw the question in her eyes. Even if she asked, he’d have to decline the invitation. Not tonight. It was too soon and had been much too long since he held a woman in his arms. When he did have her body, he needed to be in control of his lust, lest he frighten her. “Well. I guess I should go in.” He nodded but wasn’t about to let her go without a taste. “It is late.”
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton She didn’t move away, which he took as a small invitation. It was enough. Gripping his jacket in one hand, he raised the other and tucked a thick lock of downy soft hair behind her ear. Her heartbeat sped, thundering in his ears as if it were his own. The seductive scent of her arousal assailed him, and his fangs tried to extend. He forced his need into submission and leaned down until his cheek softly brushed hers. “This last hour with you has been the best I’ve experienced in many years.” He turned his head slightly and grazed his lips over her rose petal soft skin. Her flavor was more than he’d expected, and his cock throbbed to fullness. “I look forward to seeing you again.” For just the briefest moment, he buried his nose in her hair and breathed her in, imprinting her on his soul. “Goodnight, sweet Wendy.” He pulled back and turned away. If he didn’t, he couldn’t be held responsible for what he might do to her. “Goodnight,” she whispered, her voice carrying to him on the evening breeze, too soft for human ears to have heard.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton
Chapter Three Dante walked the streets of downtown Seattle until the half moon rose high over the bay and reflected off the rippling water. A lightness he hadn’t experienced in more years than he cared to remember put a spring in his step. The lingering scent of Wendy on his skin, which softly wafted up from his jacket collar to his nose, made him sigh every so often. Wendy. Even her name was innocence personified. He wondered what birthday she was celebrating tonight. He’d place her somewhere around forty, maybe a bit younger. To find such a woman of her age was a rare treasure. And he knew rare beauty. He made his livelihood collecting it for his shop. Finally, he headed up into Queen Anne where he and Digger shared a stately seventy‐year‐old home. Digger’s bedroom light was still on, which meant he was still entertaining. Instead of going inside, Dante jumped the six‐foot privacy fence in a single leap into the backyard. The only positive aspect of feeding was regaining his full strength. He sat down in one of the cushioned loungers near the sunken whirlpool on the deck. With a sigh, he closed his eyes, relaxing his body, hoping his semi arousal would soon fade. Then Wendy’s scent carried up from his jacket and teased him. His mouth watered, and his cock jumped inside his slacks. Was she thinking of him? Wanting him as much as he wanted her?
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton Did she have difficulty getting to sleep because she craved him? Did a woman of such pure heart even think about acting on her arousal with a man she’d just met? Her body had fairly vibrated with lust. Her pulse had sped, and her scent... His cock twitched and grew harder. He sucked in a lungful of air. The rose bushes along the back fence put off a sensual aroma that mixed with Wendy’s lingering scent. His penis tented his slacks, and he groaned. There was one way to find out. He hadn’t attempted to astral project in years, but he needed to know. He slipped out of his suit jacket and tossed it on the nearby chair, then unbuttoned and rolled back his shirtsleeves. Settling fully into the lounger, he systematically relaxed his muscles. When his heartbeat slowed to only a few beats per minute and his breathing grew shallow, he cast his soul from his body and soared above Queen Anne, over the bay, and then into downtown to Wendy’s apartment building. He reached for her essence. Her elemental being. Floating around the building, he locked into her on the tenth floor. Ahh, sweet Wendy. You are a naughty, naughty girl. * * * * * Wendy’s breath hitched as she flicked her fingertips over her right nipple. Tingles raced through her body and made her throb. Dante. Dante. So beautifully handsome and sophisticated. His scent seemed to linger on her skin from where he’d touched her, where his jacket had rested around her. She should have invited him in. If she had, and he’d accepted, he could be here with her now, touching her as she touched herself. Running her hand down over her belly, she tangled her fingers in her damp curls and moaned. His long, tapered fingers. She wanted his touch. He was every woman’s dream, and she’d let him get away.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton She glided her fingertip between her spread legs, gathering her slick juices, then skimmed it up over her clit. Her hips jerked, and she sighed with anticipation of the coming orgasm. Dante. Dante. Why did I let you get away? She envisioned what his body would look like beneath his tailored suit. Sleek and toned, his olive skin glistening in the darkness as he hovered over her, his mouth suckling, his gorgeous teeth nipping. He’d know how to make a woman writhe in ecstasy. He’d taunt and torment her body until she couldn’t stand it one second longer. Ah, beautiful Wendy. She could still hear his voice in her mind. That cultured, European accent. His low, smooth voice. He’d whisper to her as he made love to her, as he touched, caressed and teased her into a sexual frenzy the likes of which she’d never known. She pinched her nipple and delved her fingers deep into her core, crying out as his image hovered behind her closed eyelids. “Dante,” she said on a gasp as the orgasm grew closer, unfurling from deep inside her, spreading outward, taking over her body. Come for me, my sweet. “Yes. Yes.” The storm of the orgasm gripped her. She bucked against her own hand, but it wasn’t hers any longer. Dante was there, holding her, pumping his thick, hard cock into her as she cried out against his shoulder. His scent and heat enveloped her. She panted and lay limp against her pillows, a sheen of perspiration quickly cooling her skin. Alone. Her breathing hitched again, only this time it wasn’t in pleasure. Hot tears stung her eyes, and she rolled over, curling herself around a pillow, burying her face in it. No. No, no, no. She wasn’t going to do this. She didn’t need a man. But she wanted one. She wanted Dante with his smooth voice and
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton sexy body. His dark eyes and a body to make her tingle and yearn. She shouldn’t have let him leave tonight. If she was any kind of woman, she would have asked him in. But she was a chickenshit. So what did she do? She came in, ate her giant cinnamon roll, then ordered pizza and ate most of that, too. “Fucking birthday,” she whispered and swiped her eyes with the back of her hand. Things will be different next year. And Candice better stay the hell away from me for a very long time. * * * * * Dante gasped as his soul reentered his body. He jerked open the fly of his slacks and delved into his briefs to grab his throbbing cock. He stroked himself hard and fast, the vision of his gorgeous Wendy writhing and whimpering as she touched herself forever planted in his mind. He came with a soft groan, imagining her slick heat clamping around his cock instead of his own hand. Panting, he dropped his head back against the cushions and waited for his heart rate to fall back to normal. His dick twitched beneath his palm as if still straining for a touch from her. Exhaustion weighed him down. Astral projection always wore him out. Having entered Wendy’s mind while doing so had taken everything out of him except his need for her. When she’d called out his name as she came, and he’d heard her thoughts, her craving for him, he’d cursed himself for having left her alone. With a sigh, his heartbeat still thudding against his ribs, he closed his eyes and forced his body to relax once more. He’d give her five days. If she hadn’t shown up at his shop in that time, he’d go after her and make her his. With the sounds of the breeze rustling the leaves of the weeping willow next to the house, and the soft chirp of crickets in the distance, he
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton closed his eyes and breathed deep the scent of roses, Wendy, and sex. “Put that wanker away and get yer ass in here.” Dante jerked awake at Digger’s words. He squinted against the morning light. Though he sat on the covered deck, the sun had risen over the backyard and nearly blinded him. “Mrs. Muldoon is peeking out ’er window at ya. Gettin’ an eyeful.” He sat up and realized his pants were still open and sure enough, he was hanging out. Glancing up at the second‐story window of their neighbor’s house, he saw their octogenarian neighbor peering out her window at him. He waved at her and sent her a mischievous grin. She turned away from the window after giving him a fierce scowl, and he tucked himself into his slacks. “Git yer arse in here. Ya need to see this.” With a sigh of annoyance, Dante shoved up from the low lounger and ambled through the open French doors into the living room. Digger shoved a cup of steaming coffee into his hand then motioned to the widescreen television. “There’s some bad shit afoot, my friend.” Dante took a sip of the acrid brew Digger called coffee and went to the leather sofa. The morning news was on, and the female reporter stood on the street in front of The Starlight. “Two male victims who have yet to be identified were found in the alley behind this popular nightclub in the early hours of the morning. The police have not yet released many details, but a source tells us the men had been decapitated.” A cold chill went down Dante’s spine. “I just got off the phone with Jesse,” Digger said from behind him. “He got a call from Terrence, the club owner, this morning about four to get back down there. Terrence found the bodies. The victims are Justin Brighton and Bartholomew Hastings.” Vampires both. How did one kill a vampire? Decapitation or a stake through the
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton heart. And neither were easy feats for a human. Vampires had strength ten times that of a human. Whoever did this... “Unless it was another vampire—” “They weren’t working alone,” Digger finished. He and Digger knew Justin and Bart. They were good, honest, hardworking guys. Justin worked on the loading docks at a warehouse, and Bart ran an art gallery downtown. As far as he knew, they didn’t have any enemies in the wide‐ranging vampire population of Seattle. “What do you make of this?” he asked Digger. His friend sat down on the loveseat and set his mug on the coffee table, leaned forward and clasped his hands together. “I think we’ve got some vampire slayers among us.” * * * * * The ringing phone pulled Wendy from a sensual dream of Dante’s hot bod making hers zing with arousal. Breathing heavily, she rolled over and grabbed the cordless from the nightstand. “Hello?” Her voice cracked, and she wiped the sleep from her eyes. “You’re still sleeping? Jeesh, it’s almost ten. I’m downstairs. Let’s go get some breakfast.” Wendy plopped back against the pillows. “No.” Last thing she wanted was to see Candice right now. “Come on. I figure since dinner went so badly for you, I owe you a birthday meal.” Thoughts of the mostly eaten pizza from the night before made her cringe. “I’m not hungry.” “You’re mad at me.” Well, duh. She rolled over and hugged her pillow. She wanted to go back to sleep and dream of Dante some more. “Does it help if I tell you Eric turned out to be a dud? He still lives with his parents.”
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton Wendy sighed. “You know what, Candice? I don’t give a damn.” She never spoke to her friend this way, and part of her felt like a petulant child, but it needed to be said. She couldn’t let Candice walk all over her anymore. “It was my birthday, and I spent it alone because you made me go to that damn place and then abandoned me for some guy you just met. You hurt me.” Friends before lovers. Wasn’t that what a true friend believed? How many times over the years had she canceled a date because Candice had been in a funk and needed a friend? “I’m...sorry. But you didn’t seem to mind when I asked if it was okay.” She’d told Candice to do whatever she wanted. Shouldn’t a person she’d known since childhood be able to read between the lines? “Call me back when you really are sorry and it’s not followed by a ‘but’.” She punched the disconnect button on the phone, hanging up on Candice. “Welcome to thirty‐seven,” she muttered as she tossed the handset onto the nightstand. “No man, and now no friend. Good going.” She swiped her hand over her face and sighed. This year was going to be different. She had to grow a backbone before she hit forty, or where would she be? She’d let Candice run the show for...ugh...longer than she wanted to think about. Candice overshadowed her in every way, and it was time she stopped walking in her shadow, getting tugged along to nightclubs she didn’t fit into, stupid schemes like last night to find a man. Look at the wonderful man she’d met last night while sitting in a café. She didn’t need to go in search of a guy. If the right one were ever to enter her life—and she certainly wasn’t going to hold her breath until it happened—she’d meet him on her turf, doing things she liked to do. Maybe a class or two at the community college would be good. The phone rang again, and she stared at it, wondering if she should bother. Candice was too self‐centered to get it on the first try, she was sure. With a sigh, she reached for the phone. “Hello?” “I didn’t mean to make you mad.” Candice sniffled. “You said it
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton was okay if I went with him.” She rolled her eyes. “What, exactly, would you think if the tables were turned? If it was your birthday and you were forced into the humiliation of sitting in a place with twenty other couples—alone—and then I abandon you in the hopes of getting laid?” Candice probably couldn’t even picture it because she’d never been alone unless she wanted to be. On the other hand, if she hadn’t been rushing out of Dinner and a Date, she wouldn’t have bumped into Dante, and then he wouldn’t have sought her out later. The suckiest part of the entire night was that Dante was the best thing to happen to her in longer than she could remember, and it was only because he’d made her feel like a beautiful woman. He was all charm. He was too young for her, too wealthy, too cultured. But he’d made her feel, for just an hour or so, as if she really could attract a man like him. Candice cut into her thoughts with a soft, “I’m sorry.” Wendy could hear the sincerity in her friend’s voice, but she wasn’t ready to let her off the hook yet. “Don’t do that to me ever again, whether it’s my birthday or not.” “I won’t. I promise.” Candice sucked in a shuddery breath. “Can I please take you out to breakfast?” She’d need to eat salads for the next week to make up for the pizza. “Come on up. I need to grab a shower.” “Thanks.” Candice sounded subdued. Wendy hoped she’d never have to speak to her friend that way again. She hated confrontation. * * * * * Dante hadn’t seen a gathering of vampires this large in a hundred years. Not since the last vampire killings around the turn of the twentieth century.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton Old friends that hadn’t seen each other in decades clasped hands and gave each other back‐slapping hugs. There were new faces among the crowd. Young vampires, recently turned. For their sake, the meeting had been postponed until midnight Sunday, for they couldn’t yet be out in the daylight. Most of the young vampires stayed close to their masters and mistresses—the older, experienced vampires who had turned them. Thoughts of Wendy floated through his mind as he took a seat in the auditorium. With the threat of a vampire slayer—or slayers—on the loose, he couldn’t in good conscience seek her out as he’d planned. Perhaps if she knew who and what he was it would be different, but he wouldn’t put such an innocent life at risk, no matter how much he craved her. Digger sat down next to him as Gaston Pierre stepped up onto the stage. Gaston’s age neared one thousand. He was by far the oldest of the Seattle sect, and everyone had looked to him as leader for as long as Dante had been on the west coast. He was a handsome man who’d been turned in his prime. Though vampires didn’t age as humans did, he now held the appearance of a fifty year old. The last time Dante had been to his home, more than twenty years ago, he’d had a small harem of young, svelte, female vampires and humans at his beck and call. Dante couldn’t imagine living so long. He also couldn’t imagine at that age wanting a half‐dozen different women. Wendy. He forced her image from his mind and concentrated on their leader. “Welcome,” Gaston said, his voice strong and carrying over the crowd, which quickly grew silent. “I wish this gathering were under better circumstances. It has been far too long since we gathered as brothers and sisters.” A murmured agreement moved through the crowd. “As you well know, two of our brethren were slaughtered Friday night. Justin and Bartholomew were good men, and it is sad their lives
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton were taken while they were both so young.” “So what are we going to do about it?” A male called from the center of the auditorium. “Any ideas who committed the murders?” “That is why this gathering has been called,” Gaston continued. “For nearly a century, we’ve walked among the humans, living our lives in peace and without fear. There are many who refused to attend this meeting because of the terror spreading throughout our sect. “No. We have no idea who committed this heinous act.” Dante had desperately hoped someone would have stepped forward with some information. Someone had to know who killed Justin and Bart. The worst possibility was that it could be one of their own. Possibly someone right here in this auditorium tonight. “Then what are we supposed to do?” a female from the back called out. Gaston’s crystal blue gaze traveled over the group. “We must band together as we once did ages ago. I know many of you have taken human lovers, and their lives may be in as much danger as our own. “For now, we know nothing of the murderer. He or she may be a vampire, or it may be a group of humans who have discovered us. I spoke with the county coroner, and he told me the murder weapon was not found, but it is suspected to be a sword.” Gaston was heavy into local politics. Being his age, he walked freely in daylight. He sat on the city council and had friends in very high places. Another murmur rose from the gathering. It solidified the fear that the killer or killers knew exactly how to kill a vampire. One clean cut of a sword to effectively decapitate their victim. This also spoke of the fact that their killer was most likely a vampire, because it took a hell of a lot of strength to accomplish such a feat. Dante’s stomach tightened in dread. It was the 1910 massacre all over again, and this would be only the beginning. Or it could have been a one‐time shot. The murder could have been carried out by some
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton disgruntled vampire who had a beef to pick with either or both Justin and Bart. That was the terrifying part. The not knowing. “We will gather here again in one week’s time to discuss any further developments. Until then, I ask for anyone who may have any information to please contact me. My door is always open to you.” “So we just sit around and wait for more of us to be slaughtered?” another man shouted. “You’ve developed no plan to put a stop to this?” Arrogant bastard. Obviously this guy knew nothing. What could they do at this juncture? He probably hadn’t been a vampire long enough to remember what it was like before. They couldn’t expose themselves to the humans. “Our brothers and sisters on the Seattle Police force are doing all they can to find clues,” Gaston said, his voice calm. “I will remain in contact with the coroner and the chief of police. Until we know more, there is little we can do except watch our backs and those of our sect.” “This is bullshit.” Dante turned in his seat to see the man stand up. He was young, probably turned less than a half century. “There’s assholes out there hunting us, killing us, and we sit here and wait for another attack?” “Pete, please,” the woman next to him said as she tugged on his arm, trying to get him to sit down. Dante recognized her as one of the older generation, at least as old as he. She’d obviously turned Pete, yet she had no control over him. “I understand your concern,” Gaston said, “but we cannot act in haste. Keeping ourselves a secret is paramount. Think of what would happen if the humans found out that nearly five hundred vampires walk among them everyday. And there is nothing that can be done if we do not know who the killer or killers are.” Pete slumped back into his seat, and Dante turned forward once again.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton Digger leaned in close. “The real question is, how did the killer know Justin and Bart were vampires? I have a sick feelin’ about this, Dant. I think it’s one of us.” Dante nodded. He felt plenty sick himself. Vampires didn’t reveal themselves to the humans unless a strong, nearly unbreakable relationship had formed. Even then, most human lovers had no idea of the sheer number of vampires that populated the city. One of the first lessons taught to newly‐turned vamps was how to feed from humans without the human finding out or remembering. Dante found it difficult to believe any one of them had been so foolish as to reveal themselves to a human who would want them dead. Which led again to it being one of their own. “I’m sorry I cannot offer more information at this time. Please take care of yourselves and each other. I will see you in one week’s time.” Gaston turned to exit the stage by way of the stairs. The crowd grew loud as talking resumed and, over everyone, he heard Pete spouting off about finding the asshole responsible and ripping out his heart. “If it were that simple,” Dante muttered. He turned his attention on Digger. “You are at The Starlight more than I am. Has there been any sign of unrest among the vamps who hang out there?” Digger shook his head. “Not that I’ve noticed. And the only humans in the joint who know who we are and what we do there are Terrance, Jesse, and Willie. But all three of ’em offer themselves to us on a regular basis for feeding and sex.” His brow furrowed in a worried frown. “Jesse was with me, and Terrance found the bodies. Willie was at his post by the door all night until the club emptied.” Terrance was the owner of The Starlight and had been a friend to the vampires for years. Jesse was Digger’s favorite flavor, and the human spent as much time at their house as Digger did, it seemed. He was a good man. Willie preferred the female vamps. He had an eye for the older ones, too.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton “Shit.” Digger nodded in agreement. “That’s exactly what this is, mate. A giant heap of shite.” “May I have a word with you two?” He and Digger looked up to see Gaston standing at the end of the aisle. They both nodded. Out of sheer courtesy, when Gaston summoned, no vampire denied him. “My house, tomorrow after dark. Can you both meet me there?” They nodded. “Yes, sir. We’ll be there,” Dante replied. “Thank you.” Gaston moved on. “What do ya think that’s about?” Dante shook his head. “I guess we’ll find out tomorrow.” They stood up to leave. Dante had a sneaking suspicion that Gaston wanted the two of them on the hunt should the killer be identified. Not many vampires had marked kills to their names, but both he and Digger did. Dante had taken out VanBueren three centuries earlier, and Digger had been with the group who located and dispatched the humans in 1910 who had slaughtered thirty of their sect. He didn’t mind being assigned as a hunter, but now there was no way he could get involved with Wendy. At least not until this situation was closed and the killers were taken care of.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton
Chapter Four Wendy sat at her desk, Dictaphone headphones on her head, doing her transcriptions Monday morning. The gold embossed business card Dante had given her kept drawing her attention though. She’d come across it when she put her keys away after she left home to walk to work, and now it sat there on her desk, mocking her. Echidna’s Cave. The name was as exotic as the man who owned the store. She typed away, mindlessly transcribing Dr. Thompson’s notes, but her mind kept wandering back to Dante. Tall, gorgeous Dante Rainaldi. His smile, the feel of his arm around her as he’d walked her home. The soft kiss he’d placed on her cheek before he turned and walked away, leaving her to quiver with arousal and want of more of his touch. Wendy jumped when someone touched her shoulder, and she jerked her head around, ripping the headphones from her head. “Hey, Wend,” Cathy, one of the nurses said with a grin. “Didn’t mean to startle you. It’s lunchtime. Wanna run next door and grab a bite?” “Umm...” She glanced at the embossed business card. “Thanks, but not today. I have an errand to run.” Cathy shrugged. “Okay. I’ll see if Jane wants to go.” Wendy’s heart thudded as Cathy walked away. She hit the foot pedal on the Dictaphone to stop the tape and laid the headphones on her desk. She would do it. She was going to go see Dante.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton His shop was just a few blocks away. She could drop in and have a look at what he...had to offer. Her hands began to sweat. Maybe he gave his card to everyone. Advertising or something. She bent and pulled her purse from the bottom drawer. What could it hurt? She’d just go in there and be all nonchalant, act as though she were just there to see what he sold. Since she was positive he couldn’t be truly interested in her, she wouldn’t look as if she was there for him. Curiosity about the store, that was all. She signed out on the white board in the nurses’ station and headed out of the clinic. In the hour she had for her lunch break, she’d stop in, see Dante—no, see his store—and grab a sandwich on the way back to eat at her desk as she got back to work. She headed down 4th Avenue with a smile on her face and her heart thudding against her ribs so hard she felt a little dizzy. Her blood pressure skyrocketed the nearer she got to the address on the card. She couldn’t do this. He’d know she was there to see him. He’d invited her, though. He was just being nice to a lonely old woman sitting alone on her birthday. She stopped walking in the middle of the sidewalk a half block from his shop. Someone bumped into her from behind. She mumbled an apology and moved up against the building. Why was she doing this to herself? Asking for rejection was really what she needed right this second, wasn’t it? Chewing her lip, she examined the business card gripped in her hand. The sun broke through the clouds and glinted off the gold embossing. It was stylish and classy, just like Dante. She glanced down at herself. Frumpy, chunky, and wearing dark blue hospital scrubs. This year was supposed to be different. She’d promised herself. She was worthy of a man like Dante. Maybe not Dante himself because he was
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton too young for her, but... She closed her eyes and leaned against the rough brick wall. The sun warmed her face, and she forced her breathing to slow. What was the worse possible scenario if she went to his store? He wouldn’t recognize or remember her. He’d give her a blank look and ask if he could help her. That wouldn’t be so bad. She could play it off. No, worse than that would be him looking at her as if she were nuts for actually having shown up. If he was just a slick bullshit artist, he’d never expect her to be there. The sun dipped behind a cloud, and a breeze flung her hair into her face. She pushed away from the wall and headed down the sidewalk. This year was supposed to be different. If she played it safe her entire life, she wouldn’t get anywhere. Going to his shop would be the first step of her asserting her newfound...what? She hadn’t found anything. She could still back out. Her life wasn’t so bad as it was. She didn’t need a man’s approval. Friday night had simply been a diversion. He’d made her feel...nice. And then she was standing in front of Echidna’s Cave, staring through the window at a gorgeous, Asian dragon carved out of black marble, its head reared back, forked tongue slithering out. It was perfectly carved, just like Dante. Grow some balls, Wend. She nodded and sucked in a calming breath. He’d invited her. It didn’t mean anything except to get another customer into his store. So she’d...browse. Taking the five steps past the display window, she read the name printed in gold script on the door and reached for the handle. The bell over the door tinkled. “I will be with you momentarily,” Dante called from the back office of Echidna’s Cave. But then he glanced up from the customs forms he’d been filling out for an overseas shipment. What he saw on the closed circuit television hanging in the corner of the room made his heart skip a beat. Wendy. She’d come. His spirits soared. Then they crashed to his
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton stomach with a hard twist. Fuck. She wasn’t supposed to be here. She couldn’t be. He couldn’t have her around right now. Not until the situation with the slayer had been dealt with. He stared at the monitor as she clutched her purse in both hands and examined a Persian rug he’d picked up over a century earlier. He’d invited her to come, but he never thought she would. He’d pegged her for shy and insecure. She’d been so unsure of herself the other night, he’d been positive he was the one who would need to do the pursuing. She moved on to the jewelry display and leaned over the counter, the camera at a perfect angle to see her lovely, rounded ass. His cock jumped, and visions of her writhing in ecstasy on her bed flashed through his mind. He licked his lips, his gums tingling with the urge to release his fangs. Settle down, man. You can’t have her right now. He stood up and rounded the desk to the doorway. She stood up straight, and her brilliant green gaze snagged his heart. Dear God, she was gorgeous. Even better than the other night. Her face was clean of makeup, and her hair flowed in soft waves around her shoulders. The medical scrubs hugged each of her luscious curves, their dark color making her skin look like porcelain. “Well, hello there, Wendy.” He smiled as he stepped up to the counter opposite her. As much as she shouldn’t be there, he couldn’t deny the pleasure coursing through him because she’d sought him out. He held out his hand to her and, when she slipped her small palm against his, he raised her fingers to his lips and kissed them. This time her scent was a little antiseptic, but he still savored a hint of lilac. Her lips parted on a soft sigh, the sound like a stroke over his nerve endings. His cock pressed against his briefs, and he longed to suck her fingers into his mouth and taste her. “Welcome to Echidna’s Cave.”
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton Her big, brilliant eyes were wide with surprise, but a slow smile curved her sensual lips. “Thanks.” She didn’t pull away from his touch, which pleased him. “You came from work?” She nodded. “Lunch break.” Her pulse thudded at the base of her throat so hard he could hear it, almost feel it as if it were his own. His nostrils flared slightly as he got a whiff of her sudden arousal. He stroked his thumb over the backs of her fingers, and she shivered. When her tongue peeked out and stroked along her lower lip, his knees almost buckled from the lust coursing through him. “I’m glad you came,” he said, his voice a little rougher than normal. “Why?” Her question startled him speechless. Why? She pulled her hand from his and clutched her purse again. She glanced down at the display case between them. “I mean...” She shrugged. “Do you hand your cards out to everyone you meet?” Oh. His heart twisted. How could someone so sweet, gentle and beautiful be so self‐doubting? How could he turn her away now? If he pushed her away, postponed his courting of her until things were settled, she’d never trust him again. He reached across the counter and touched the edge of his finger under her chin until she looked up at him. “I gave you the card because I wanted to see you again.” She sucked her bottom lip between her teeth for an instant. “Why?” He smiled. “Because it has been many years since I met someone as extraordinary as you.” Her brow puckered into a frown. “What’s that mean?” So mistrusting. Someone had hurt her. It would take tender care to bring her around to believing in him. He wished he were a simple man, and that his secrets weren’t such that could destroy the blossoming attraction she held for him. “Sweet Wendy,” he murmured as he coasted the back of his finger along her silken jaw line.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton She jerked back, and her brow puckered in what looked like confusion. “Be straight with me.” She shook her head, her hair brushing against her shoulders. “Why did you give me your card?” “Because I had hoped you would come by so I might see you again. And you did.” He smiled slightly and leaned over, propping his elbows on the glass display case, bringing himself down so he was face to face with her. “You do not know how pleased you have made me.” Her hand shook slightly as she raised it to tuck her hair behind her ear. “Okay. You saw me. I should get back to work.” But she didn’t turn away from him or move toward the door. “Why did you come, Wendy?” She licked her lips again, and his cock twitched with each beat of his heart. “Did you enjoy our conversation the other night?” She nodded slowly, her eyes showing her wariness. Like a skittish little bunny. He ached to take, to possess, making him feel as if he were the Big Bad Wolf. He kept his voice soft when he said, “Perhaps you are a little attracted to me?” Her nostrils flared slightly. Her gaze never wavered, but she didn’t answer. None was needed. He could smell it on her. She wanted him, craved him nearly as much as he did her. “I find you very attractive.” His eyelids drooped slightly as he remembered her touching herself and calling out his name as she came. “I would like to have you over for supper.” She swallowed so hard it was audible in the silent store. Then she shook her head. “That doesn’t make any sense. You’re years younger than me and...” She glanced around the shop before her gaze zeroed back in on him. “You’re rich and sophisticated and...and young.” “I am older than I look. Is age and financial status so important to you?” Her lips parted, but she didn’t respond.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton He grinned. “I thought not. What is important to you, Wendy? A man who will treat you as if you were a princess? A man who will worship your body with his own if you allow him?” He raised an eyebrow as her pulse sped and a fine sheen of perspiration shone on her top lip. He longed to taste her excitement. To lick her skin and revel in her flavor. He dropped his voice to a whisper. “A man who craves you so much he hasn’t been able to erase your image from his mind since he left your side two nights ago?” Her body fairly quivered with excitement. His briefs constricted against his rock‐hard erection. He wanted nothing more than to leap over the counter separating them, pull her against him, and sink deep into her slick heat. And she would be slick. Hot. Shuddering with her longing for his touch. Oh, yes, she was ripe for the plucking. “How... How old are you?” Still fighting it. What a wonderfully innocent woman. “Older than you’d think.” He was tempted to enter her mind and discover the reasons behind her insecurities—he didn’t believe the fact she thought him years younger than herself was the only problem—but he fought the urge. He had ways of persuading her, if he chose to employ them, but he wanted her as a man wanted a woman, not as a vampire looking for a quick meal. She stood out of his reach beyond the counter, looking so unsure of herself, gripping her purse as if it were a lifeline. He broke eye contact and reached for a business card from the holder near the cash register. He scribbled out his address and phone number on the back then held it out to her. “Six‐thirty tomorrow night. I will cook you dinner.” She glanced at the card, then back at him. “I...don’t think that’s a good idea.” He heard the longing in her voice, saw it in her eyes. “Are you afraid of me, Wendy?” She shook her head, the denial too quick to be believed. He smiled. “What if we had a chaperone?”
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton Her brow wrinkled slightly in an adorably confused frown. “My roommate. What if he were to join us? Would that make you feel better?” “You have a roommate?” He nodded. “Digger O’Toole. He works nights in a bakery. You may leave before he goes to work, if that would make you more comfortable.” She glanced around the shop again, and he supposed she was wondering why a wealthy antiquities dealer would need a roommate. He didn’t, of course, need one, but he and Digger had been together for centuries. Without Digger looking out for him, he was sure he’d have succeeded in killing himself before now. What a shame it would have been to die before he met this glorious woman. She looked back at the business card. “I’m still not sure.” He lowered his hand and then slowly rounded the end of the counter. “Have I not proven myself to be a gentleman? Have I done anything to cause you to fear me?” “No...” The word came out on a soft sigh. “Then have dinner with me. Please.” He stepped up to her, so close he could feel her warmth and breathe in her sweet scent. Lilacs and warm, aroused woman. “Maybe lunch would be better?” Her words rushed out. “Do you have someone to watch your store? There’s a deli next door.” He glanced out the front window. The sun was bright today. He couldn’t. If it were a dark, rainy day, he’d gladly close the shop for an hour, but he wouldn’t put himself in the sunshine. Never again unless absolutely necessary. “Alas, I cannot.” She once again sucked her bottom lip between her teeth. Her breathing had sped with his nearness, as did her heartbeat. “Is this something you do often? Invite unsuspecting women to your house to seduce them with dinner and your silver tongue?”
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton A chuckle slipped out of him before he could stop it. “You are precious.” He raised his hand and laid it gently against her cheek. “No, my sweet. It has been a very long time since I...” Craved, he almost said, which was the truth. “Since I dated.” He shouldn’t have pushed for her to come to his house, but being in public with a human female right now, with the possibility of a slayer on the loose... He couldn’t take the chance with her safety. She would be safe in his home with both he and Digger there to protect her and themselves. The house was a virtual fortress against the outside world when needed. She leaned slightly into his touch, and the simple action was so innocent it nearly took his breath. Yet, she still didn’t take the card from his fingers, nor did she give any response to his confession. Ten years he’d been without a woman’s touch. Ten years since he allowed himself the pleasure of a woman’s body. And then it had been a one‐night stand. He wanted more from Wendy. He needed her heart. Her soul. Her...love. He closed his eyes and leaned into her slightly, dipping his head to touch his cheek against hers. He breathed her in. “Please,” he whispered in her ear. She trembled, and her blood rushed through her veins with a roar. For the first time in over a century, he wanted to turn his head and sink his fangs into a woman’s giving flesh. He knew she would taste sweeter than anything he’d ever experienced. “Okay,” she said on a shuddery sigh, her warm breath tickling his skin. He skimmed his beard lightly against her cheek, pulling a breathy laugh from her, before he turned to place a soft kiss against her fragrant skin. “Thank you.” When he pulled away, he lifted the business card between them. “What would you like me to make for supper?” She took the card, and that’s when he saw the other one she still held in her fist. He smiled to himself. If nothing else, he’d made an impact on her Friday night. “I’m not picky.”
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton “Anything I should avoid making?” “Shellfish. They give me hives.” Her smile was more relaxed now, as if making a decision had calmed her nervousness. “Very well.” He glided his fingers over her cheek and along the line of her jaw. He fought the urge to kiss her full on the mouth. He would save that for later, after she became more relaxed around him. “Dante?” He lifted his eyebrows in question, unable to take his gaze from her. Her skin was milky white, as smooth as silk. Warm. He skimmed his thumb down her neck, feeling her heavy heartbeat. “When you touch me, I can’t think.” “Perhaps thinking is overrated. Sometimes it is better to simply...feel.” Her bottom lip quivered as she exhaled. Her lips parted, as if she were about to speak, but then her eyelids drifted shut. She tipped her head slightly, giving his fingers free roam of her lovely neck. His fangs started to descent, but he gritted his teeth to hold them back. Not now. Not yet. Maybe never with this woman, no matter how badly he needed to taste her. He refused to frighten her. She fed his soul— he could find blood anywhere. So instead of kissing her neck for fear he wouldn’t be able to control himself, he leaned down and placed his lips against her forehead. “You are beautiful.” He skimmed his lips down the line of her nose and kissed the tip. She tasted of sweetness mixed with the tang of salt. Perfection. When he dropped his mouth to kiss her cheek once again, she startled him by turning her head and skimming her lips against his. Their breaths mingled as he held still, waiting for her to take more. When she didn’t move, he pressed his mouth against hers. His fangs descended all the way. Fuck! He needed to get himself under control. “Until tomorrow,” he said, pulling back, making sure he didn’t let her see his teeth.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton Her eyelids fluttered open, and a soft, sensual smile curved her lips. She nodded but didn’t move away. He smiled, carefully keeping his lips together, and then put his arm around her shoulders and led her to the entry. “Six‐thirty,” he said as he pulled the door open for her. She nodded, her eyes languid with lust. “Okay.” She stepped out into the sunlight and walked away. Dante closed the door and locked it. He went to his office and collapsed into his chair, dropping his head back against the padded leather. His breathing came heavy, and his hard‐on strained against his slacks. Running his tongue over the needle sharp points of his fangs, he willed his body into submission. He had to have better control tomorrow night. He needed Wendy to fall for him before he revealed the monster within. And then he’d pray she could look past it to the man she loved. * * * * * Wendy made it a block and a half before her knees turned to jelly, and she slouched down on a chair by a table of an outdoor café. If she thought she’d been in bad shape Friday night after he said goodbye... Her breasts ached, her nipples were as hard as marble, and between her legs she was hot, slick, and throbbing. She couldn’t believe she’d found the guts to turn into the kiss, to make the move that brought their lips together. But she had, and she was proud of herself. A giggle slipped out of her, and she clamped her hand over her mouth, hoping no one heard. She’d made the first move! Oh, God... Tomorrow night. She lifted her hand and read the card. It was the same type of card he’d given her the other night, but when she turned it over, she saw his address and phone number. Oh, wow. He lived in Queen Anne. Those houses up there cost a fortune. He really was rich. His handwriting was a beautiful flourish. She’d only seen
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton handwriting like that in books—the type of script that was once taught in schools more than a hundred years ago. “What can I get ya?” A bubblegum‐chewing waitress in her early twenties asked. “Uhm...” Where the hell was she? She glanced at the window of the shop. It was a deli and coffee house. “Turkey on whole wheat, no mayo, lots of Dijon. And a grand latte in a to‐go cup.” The waitress nodded, snapped her gum, and walked off. Good Lord. She was going to have supper with Dante tomorrow night. Adrenaline spiked through her veins as her excitement soared. Would he kiss her for real then? Would he do more than kiss her? Stop it. Still none of this made sense. That man could have any woman—absolutely any woman in the world—he wanted. Why the hell was he interested in her? And just how old was he? He looked so young. No gray in his hair, only the tiniest of laugh lines around his eyes. He’d never answered her question, instead turning it on her and asking if money and age meant anything to her. And then he’d told her he wanted to worship her body with his. Spikes of heat shot through her, and she squeezed her thighs together as her clit throbbed and she grew damp. Maybe she was old enough to have herself a boy‐toy fling. Lord knew, if he was even a fraction as good in bed as he was out, she’d never had better. She grinned and stared out at the cars on the avenue. Yeah. Maybe it was time to gain that newfound courage. After his roommate left for work tomorrow night... “Here’s your coffee.” The waitress blew a bubble with her pink gum. “Sandwich’ll be out in a few.” She nodded and lifted the insulated cup to her lips. Hot sex with a young stud. She’d have to stop off at the drugstore on the way home tonight and pick up some condoms. She wasn’t about to show up unprepared for whatever might happen.
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Chapter Five Digger weaved in and out of traffic as they crossed Lake Washington, heading to Bellevue where Gaston lived. “I need you at the house tomorrow evening,” Dante said, gripping the door handle in a white‐knuckled fist. Digger’s driving scared the hell out of him. “Sure thing.” He glanced at Digger, afraid to take his eyes off traffic for too long. “You’re not going to ask why?” Digger shrugged. “If ya need me, ya know I’m there.” This was why they’d lived together so long. They were brothers. Dante smiled then squeezed his eyes closed, waiting for the impact, as Digger braked hard and swerved to miss a pickup truck. Digger chuckled as he hit the accelerator. “Breathe, mate.” They rode in silence until Digger pulled up to the gate outside Gaston’s estate. “Yer not gonna tell me?” Dante grinned. He knew his friend would want a reason eventually. “I need a chaperone.” The gate swung open, and they drove up the curved, oak‐lined driveway. “A chaperone, eh? What are ya plannin’?” “I have a date, and she’s skittish. I promised her my roommate
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton would be there so she would feel less intimidated to come to the house.” Digger stopped behind a short line of cars and killed the engine of his Corvette. He was silent for a few moments, staring out the windshield, tapping his finger on the steering wheel. When he turned to Dante, his brow was furrowed. “Ya shouldna be datin’ right now, mate. Not with this bullshit goin’ on.” He knew that. But... “I know it’s been a long time for ya, and if ya found a willin’ woman, I’m all for it. But are ya puttin’ someone in danger?” He’d tried pushing the guilt aside all afternoon. He couldn’t take the chance of losing her, of her changing her mind about seeing him. On the other hand, he did worry about asking a woman into his world if the sect was in danger. “She will be safe with us at our house.” “Who is she? I didna know you were seein’ anyone.” “We just met the other night. Do you remember the woman who ran into me on the sidewalk near The Starlight?” Digger frowned. “The chunky little redhead?” “She is not chunky,” he gritted out between his teeth. His friend’s eyebrows rose in surprise. “She is chunky, mate, but if that’s what gets ya goin’...” He blew out a breath. “After I left the club, I came across her in a café. We had a nice conversation, and I gave her my business card. She came into the shop today. I asked her over for dinner tomorrow night.” Digger shook his head and sighed. “Well, mate, ya know I’m there for ya, even if I donna think it’s a good idea.” “Two murders don’t prove anything. It’s not as if half of the rest of the Seattle sect doesn’t have human lovers. You do, and I can’t imagine you keeping away from Jesse until this is settled. We might all be overreacting about this entire situation, anyway.” “Ah, she knows what ya are, then. That’s good.” The little Irishman was goading him, but he wasn’t going to fall for it. He pushed his door open.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton “So, she doesn’t? Hmm. Interestin’.” “Look, Dig.” He stopped halfway up the wide steps to the front door of the mansion and faced his friend. “She’s special. Very special. Understand?” The teasing left Digger’s face, and he nodded. “Understood.” Dante headed up the stairs. “Be careful with her. Ya remember what happened with Mary.” A white‐haired human in a black suit opened the door to them before they rang the bell. “No one needs to remind me. But aren’t we allowed love, too?” “Right this way, please,” the butler said and held out his hand, pointing toward Gaston’s library. “If ya found a woman who can love ya as ya are. Don’t try to be what ya aren’t for her, though. You know that willna work.” Dante would give anything to be exactly what Wendy needed him to be. His only hope was that she could accept him as he was. Eventually. After he convinced her she could love him. They walked through the open door of Gaston’s spacious library. Several other vampires were there, all men he knew except one—a light‐ haired man with the strong, Nordic features of a Norwegian. “Welcome, brothers,” Gaston said. His expression was grave as he stood in front of a wide, cherry wood desk. He and Digger shook his hand then made the rounds of greeting the other four men they knew. Zebulon Brooks, Thomas Jones, Carlson Everson, and Xavier Worthington. The oldest of the sect, their ages ranged between three and five hundred years old. All strong supporters of Gaston. “And this is Evan Fredrick,” Gaston said, introducing the tall, lean stranger among them. “He moved here two years ago from the Tacoma sect and is under my employ as a guard for...” A sly little smile curved his lips. “...the ladies.” Gaston’s harem. Dante wondered what the number was up to now.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton “Please, have a seat, gentlemen. Let us get on with this meeting.” They settled into the leather furniture in front of Gaston’s desk. Evan sat off to the side, facing the rest of the group. He seemed to be examining each of them, and Dante thought he was probably very good at his job. Gaston’s harem, at least the last time he’d seen them, consisted of both human and vampire females—a few to feed from, a few purely for entertainment. Gaston leaned back against the desk and crossed his ankles. “I’ve called you here because you are the oldest of the sect. Most of you have lived through, and fought against, those who have sought our extermination in the past.” Each of them nodded. “Something I did not bring up at the meeting last night is that Justin and Bartholomew came to see me last week. They’d heard rumors of unrest among the younger of our sect. Unhappiness in the fact that we are not as organized as our brothers to the south. There was word of a vampire clan meeting being organized, though they had no solid details. “I do not find it a coincidence that the two who came to me with the warning wound up dead less than a week later. I fear anyone else opposed to the reunification of the sects may wind up with their heads detached, also. “If the clan is brought together, organized as we were hundreds of years ago, kept track of on paper...” His gaze landed on Dante, and Dante nodded. It was the organization that led to each and every clan member’s name being logged. When it fell into VanBueren’s hands, the slayer tried to systematically wipe out the entire clan. “Times have changed, though,” Gaston continued, “since the last slayer made himself known. We can no long form a posse and go in search for this murderer. And I worry, from those I heard at the meeting last night, that we will have a few vigilantes trying to find this person or persons.” That obnoxious young man who’d sat behind him.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton “Our brothers and sisters on the police force are keeping me informed of developments in the case, but so far they’ve come up empty. We still don’t know how many may have been involved in the murders, or if it is a vampire or not. “What we do know is that if the killer is one of us, we will be the ones who need to step up to dispatch him. Putting a vampire in prison, provided it could be captured...” He shook his head, and his bushy white brows pulled together. “I fear our discovery. I fear for the humans. “We’ve lived in peace for a hundred years. We must fight to keep our way of life secret, and we must do anything and everything in our ability to keep this monster from killing any more of us. We must keep the humans safe.” “So we sit back and wait for the killer to strike again?” Thomas asked. “And what of a clan gathering? We can’t let that happen.” “I pray our friends on the police force will find clues to lead us to the slayer before then. And we will keep close watch on the younger of the sect to see what they might be planning. Most of them are too young to remember what life was like when we were the ones under a constant watch—the downfall for being such a new sect.” Dante raised an eyebrow. “Him?” Until now it was ‘the killer’. Gaston sighed. “My gut tells me it is one of us, and most likely a male. I hope I am wrong, but every one of us is so careful about the humans who know of our existence, and I do not believe there are any women among us strong enough to decapitate not one but two of our older vampires at the same time.” It did make sense, he supposed. But a female vampire over the age of two hundred had nearly as much strength as a male of the same age. Dante shifted slightly, and Evan’s black gaze cut to him. “I need to know if all of you are willing to band together, once we know who the killer is, to take care of the situation. Zebulon, you have not been involved in such situations, but you are the oldest besides myself and Digger.”
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton “I donna think ya should put yer own life on the line, Gaston,” Digger said. “The sect needs ya in your political capacity.” Gaston pressed his lips into a thin line for a moment. “Digger’s right,” Carlson said. “You keep us informed, and we’ll be where you need us, when you need us, but you can’t risk your own life. There is no one else the entire sect looks up to the way we do you. And it would take years if not decades for someone to move up to your political and social standing. We need you on the inside.” “Your support humbles me,” Gaston said, his voice softer than before. “I have dealt with my share of vampire slayers over the millennia I have been alive, but I will defer to you. Unless my skill is needed to rid Seattle of this monster.” Dante nodded in agreement with his brothers. “We can take care of it,” Thomas said. “Aye,” Zebulon added. “Don’t worry ’bout me. I’m there with ye.” “Very well,” Gaston said as he stood up straight. “Until then, please get the word out that none of us should be out alone, and to keep a sharp eye and ear to the ground for any unrest among the sect. And arm yourselves. As soon as I get word, I’ll be calling you.” As a group, they stood and then shook Gaston’s hand one at a time. The mood was somber and quiet as they exited the mansion and headed to their respective vehicles. “Any thoughts?” Digger asked as he started the Corvette. Dante shook his head, feeling a little ill. A slayer was one thing. The young idiot vampires trying to reunite and reorganize the clan was quite another. He would succeed in killing himself before he let his name be put back on a roster. A rogue slayer was bad enough. One with an entire list of names, one who might be organizing other slayers to do away with their entire race... “Hell no,” he muttered. “I’m with ya, mate. I’m right with ya.”
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton * * * * * “Shit, that hurts!” Wendy ripped the last wax strip from her calf and cringed. She still had a half hour before she needed to call the taxi to take her to Dante. Tonight had to be perfect. Smooth legs, hair in place, and now to find the perfect outfit. She exited the bathroom and jerked open the closet door in her bedroom. Where was something sexy when she needed it? She didn’t own sexy. Those damn tight jeans she’d worn last Friday were about as sexy as she had, but she couldn’t go to eat dinner in them. Five bites of food and she’d have to open the top button just to breathe. Oh, Lord. She couldn’t eat in front of Dante. She hadn’t used proper table manners in years. He was so sophisticated, he probably used all ten forks and eight spoons for a formal table setting. Sex. Going there for sex. Hot, steamy, take‐me‐hard sex. If table etiquette put him off, then he wasn’t the right guy to get down and dirty with. A flash of heat zipped through her body, making her shiver with excitement. She sooo wanted to get down and dirty. It had been three years since she’d gotten laid, and she just knew Dante would know how to use that mouth—those incredibly long fingers. His low voice and soft accent were enough to send her over the edge. She sucked in a deep breath, shut her eyes, and reached into the closet. Eeny, meeny, miny, moe... Nodding in approval of the emerald green skirt and sleeveless blouse, she thought it just might do. Then she went to her bureau and rifled through looking for some nylons...and came up empty. Damn, damn, damn. Okay. That was okay. Who wanted to fight with pantyhose during hot, nasty sex? Certainly not her. They might suck her gut in and make her legs look better, but they weren’t the sexiest piece of clothing ever invented when they were being removed.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton Panties. She needed sexy panties. Digging to the very back of the drawer, she found her one and only lace pair. Black. Thong. A gift from Candice, which she’d rolled her eyes at. Thank you, Candi! She found her only black bra in the back of the drawer, also, and hurried to put them on. Then she was back in the bathroom, wiping away the hair remover from her top lip. Lookin’ good, girl. She grinned at herself then leaned closer to the mirror to check her teeth. The door buzzer rang. Who the hell...? She hadn’t told Candice about her date. She grabbed her blouse and put it on as she went to the speaker near the door and pushed the button. “Hello?” “Wend. It’s Babs.” Not now. “What is it? I’m in a hurry.” “So am I. Let me in.” Her sister was the last person she wanted to see right now. “I’m on my way out.” “This is important, Wendy. Let me in.” She did sound somewhat harassed, so Wendy hit the button that would buzz her in, then opened the front door a crack so Barbara could get in. She dashed back into her bedroom for her skirt. While she was there, she reached into the bottom of the closet and grabbed her one‐and‐ only pair of black heels. Hopefully they’d do good things for her calves, since she didn’t have support hose to do it for her. The front door crashed open against the wall. “Thank God you’re home,” her sister said. Carrying the shoes into the living room, she greeted Barbara with a hug. “What’s up?” Then she saw her shy, little, ten‐year‐old niece, Francine, lurking in the doorway. “Hi, honey.” “Hi, Aunt Wendy.” She stared at her tennis shoes, her hands shoved in the pockets of her baggy jeans. “I got called in for a last‐minute dinner meeting with a client, and I need you to watch Frannie for me.”
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton Wendy shook her head. “I can’t. Not tonight.” “Rick’s out of town. You’re the only one I can get on short notice.” “Not tonight, you can’t. I have a date.” Her flamboyant sister, dressed in an elegant navy‐blue business suit, tipped back her blonde head and laughed. “Right. How about an excuse I can believe?” Pain cut through Wendy’s heart at the cruelty. Her sister, five years older than her and definitely the pretty one of the family, had treated her like the redheaded stepchild her entire life. The fact she was the red‐ headed stepsister didn’t make it any easier. Then she glanced at her dear niece and sighed. She didn’t get to see her very often as it was. “I’ll be back by midnight,” Barbara said. “She hasn’t had dinner yet, either.” Wendy swallowed her disappointment. Dante and the sex she’d been anticipating since last night could wait. Barbara brushed the kid off so much, Wendy wasn’t about to do it, too. “Fine.” “Thanks, sis.” Barbara sent her one of those I‐knew‐you’d‐cave grins then walked out the still open door without so much as a goodbye to her daughter. “Come on inside, Frannie,” Wendy said. “I’ve got to make a phone call, and then we’ll order a pizza or something. Does that sound good?” The little girl shuffled into the living room and sat down on the couch without a word. Wendy shut the door, her heart twisting. She knew all too well what it was like to be pushed to the side. Barbara and Rick had a kid because it had been the fashionable thing to do, and now neither of them had time for her. Barb was an attorney for a big real estate firm, and Rick worked for a national bank and was out of town on business more than he was home. “Be right back,” Wendy said, grabbing the cordless phone off the charger in the kitchen. Then she picked up her purse and headed into the bedroom to call Dante and cancel their date.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton After pulling his business card from her wallet, she sat down on the edge of the bed and dialed the number he’d written out for her. On the third ring, the phone was answered. “’Ello?” She frowned. That wasn’t Dante. In the background, loud, big band music played. Her stepfather used to listen to the stuff. Glenn Miller, if she guessed correctly. “’Ello? Anyone there?” “Umm... This is Wendy. Is Dante there?” “Ah, yer the woman he’s been cookin’ for all day.” The man’s thick Irish brogue would have made her smile if his words didn’t make her feel like crap. He must be the roommate. “May I speak with him, please?” “Just a minute, lass.” The music grew softer in the background, though she could still hear it plainly, and then a shiver ran down her spine as Dante’s rich voice came on the line. “Wendy?” She closed her eyes and drew in a deep breath to calm her nerves. “Hi, Dante.” “Hello, my sweet.” Ugh. Could he make this any more difficult? “Something’s come up—” “What the hell do you think you’re doing?” She almost dropped the phone at Dante’s bark, but when she heard the change in the music in the background, she realized he wasn’t talking to her but the roommate. Loud, thumping, grunge metal had replaced the upbeat rhythm of “In the Mood”. “Hold on a minute, sweets,” he said, his voice lower. Then she heard, “Turn that shit off.” “She’s a modern woman, mate. She ain’t gonna wanna hear no orchestra.” Wendy grinned. She much preferred Glenn Miller over grunge. Then her smile slipped, and her shoulders slumped. It wouldn’t matter.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton “Find something soft, then,” Dante said. “Do you like Sting?” It took a moment for her to realize he was speaking to her again. “Yeah. But, Dante. Something’s come up, and I’m not going to be able to make it tonight.” He was silent, and in the background Sting’s soft voice crooned. “I’m sorry,” she said. “I know this is last minute, but my sister needed a babysitter, and I couldn’t say no.” She’d never been able to say no to Barbara. She would have tonight, though, if it had been for anything other than taking care of Frannie. “I see.” He sounded...hurt. So was she. It had been a very long time since she looked forward to anything as much as she had this date. “My sister has a business meeting and didn’t have anyone else to watch her daughter.” “How old is the child?” “Ten.” “Please hold a moment,” he said, then the sound of music muffled. Wendy rubbed her forehead and tried not to let the disappointment overwhelm her. She had to think of Frannie. She’d order a pizza and dig out the few Disney movies she owned. Maybe they could walk down to the—no, the ice cream shop closed at six on weekdays. She had some microwave popcorn. “You’re welcome to bring your niece,” Dante said, his voice low. “I have been anticipating your arrival all day. The chicken is already in the oven, and there is enough for another person.” Oh, how she wanted to! “I don’t know... She’s very shy.” She could hear the smile in his voice when he said, “Not unlike her aunt, then?” Wendy chuckled. “Worse.” “You wanted a chaperone. Now we will have two.” She didn’t want a chaperone. He was the one who’d suggested it. She wanted to be alone with him. But perhaps a date that didn’t lead to sex wouldn’t be horrible. Part of her had no idea why they would do it,
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton because it wasn’t as if Dante wanted... What did he want? Shaking her head, she sighed. There was no explanation as to why he’d asked her over in the first place. If all he wanted was sex—and from the way he touched her and tried to seduce her she assumed he did want sex—he could have it with any woman in all of Seattle. She’d bet even a lot of happily married ones could be swayed into cheating by him. “Say yes,” he whispered, and her body shuddered with suppressed need. “Yes.” “Thank you.” She shook her head. How could he sound so genuinely happy? If it wasn’t sex—since he supplied the chaperone... “We will see you in approximately twenty minutes, then?” She glanced at the clock on the nightstand. Twenty minutes would be exactly six thirty, when she was supposed to be there. She grinned. “I’ll call the cab now. We’ll be there as soon as we can.” “I await your arrival with anticipation, my sweet.” She heard the click of him disconnecting the call. Good Lord, the man had a vocabulary that would make an English professor swoon. He was awaiting their arrival with anticipation. Blowing out a deep breath, she dialed the cab company she always used. When she finished the call, she went back into the living room to find Frannie still seated on the couch, staring into space. “Change of plans, honey. We’re going to my friends’ place for dinner. Sound good? Taxi’s on the way.” Frannie gave a one‐shoulder shrug but didn’t speak. Talk about a strange turn of events. From expecting hot, torrid sex to sharing dinner with a roommate who liked grunge rock, and a little girl who couldn’t even look her aunt in the face.
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Chapter Six “Yer a fool, mate.” Dante tried to ignore Digger as he lit the candles on the mantle. “She was backin’ out. Ya shoulda let ’er go. You know that would be best right now.” He laid the lighter on the mantle and turned around to face his friend. “And if I let her go now, there might not be a second chance. She’s skittish enough as it is.” Digger rolled his eyes and shoved his hands in his jeans pockets. “Yer a good lookin’ guy. If she wants ya now, she’ll want ya when things have settled.” Dante headed back to the kitchen and went to work quartering cherry tomatoes for the salad. Digger would never understand. Hell, he didn’t even know why his attraction to a woman he barely knew was so strong. What he did know, though, was that when she was near him he felt...alive. He wanted to live. Needed to find out if the attraction between them was as real and as pure as it seemed. He could still feel the precious kiss she’d given him. “Are ya in love with the woman?” “Perhaps,” he muttered as he slid the sliced tomatoes off the cutting board into the glass salad bowl. “But ya just met ’er.”
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton He set down the board and knife and propped his hands on the counter. “I cannot explain it. There is something about her that calls to me as no other woman ever has.” He raised his eyes and met Digger’s steely gaze. “More so than Mary. Maybe even more so than Kayla.” Digger’s eyebrows rose. Dante nodded slowly, his lips turned down in a frown. “Now do you see why I am doing this?” “Yeah. I see. Do ya think she can handle what ya are?” He shrugged. “I do not know. She’s so...” He sighed. “...innocent.” The doorbell rang, and Digger followed him to the front entryway. He glanced up at the ceiling, pulling himself back together. It hurt to admit how much he craved Wendy. Not just her body, but her soul. He’d never loved another woman the way he had Kayla. Wendy had the ability to finally make him forget how sweet life had been when he was human, and Kayla had loved him with all her heart. Loved him enough to turn him into a vampire in order to save his life. The bell rang again, and he plastered a smile on his lips before pulling open the door. Dear God, she was gorgeous. The green dress set off the flecks of gold in her sparkling eyes. Her hair was softly curled and floating around her shoulders. She was free of makeup except for a soft pink on her lips that made them shine. His smile no longer needed to be forced. “Good evening, Wendy.” He looked down to the petite blonde child at her side. “And who do we have here?” The girl sidled into her aunt and ducked her head. Wendy laid a hand on the girl’s shoulder and hugged her close. “This is my niece, Frannie. Can you say hello to Mr. Dante and...” Her gaze traveled to his side. “This is my roommate, Digger O’Toole.” Digger stepped forward and extended his hand. “Nice to meet ya properly, ma’am.” The humor in his voice was enough to make Dante want to slug him.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton They shook hands. Dante stepped to the side and held the door. “Please, come in.” “Mmm. Smells good,” Wendy said as she ushered Frannie into the foyer. “Garlic chicken parmesan.” He closed the door then laid a gentle hand on Wendy’s back because he couldn’t go a moment longer without touching her. “Come into the kitchen while I finish the preparations?” She nodded. “I’ll set the...uh...coffee table,” Digger said with a snicker in his tone. Dante narrowed his eyes at him. “Coffee table?” Wendy asked as they walked into the kitchen. As Digger pulled plates from the cupboard, he chuckled. “Dante had a little accident with the dining table and hasn’t bothered to fix it yet.” “Ignore him. May I get you two something to drink?” He went to the fridge and drew out a bottle of wine. “Beer for me, mate,” Digger said as he walked out of the room. “Frannie?” he said softly. “Would you care for a Coke?” He wasn’t sure he’d ever seen anyone so shy. Her big blue eyes turned to Wendy, and Wendy nodded. “Yes, thank you.” He pulled out a can of Digger’s cola and put ice in a glass from the refrigerator dispenser. “Why don’t you have a seat here,” he said to Frannie as he set her drink on the breakfast bar in front of a high stool, “and I’m going to have Aunt Wendy help me get the dessert started.” The tiniest of smiles curled Frannie’s lips as she climbed up on the stool. Wendy sent him a brilliant smile, which made him feel warm. Too warm. “Come here, sweetheart,” he said softly as he took a bowl of strawberries from the other counter and set them in front of her. “As soon as the chicken comes out, I will drop the cake in the oven...” He motioned to a bunt pan sitting on top of the stove. “...and we will have fresh strawberry shortcake.”
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton She licked her lips as she set her purse on another of the stools. “How did you know that was my favorite?” He wanted to kiss her, but when he glanced at Frannie, the girl was watching them. “I am lucky, I suppose.” He winked and handed Wendy a paring knife. “If you can take off the tops and slice them? I will finish with the salad.” Wendy smiled, but her gaze remained locked on his mouth. He grinned, took her by the shoulders, and gently nudged her around to face the counter. “Behave, sweets,” he whispered in her ear and breathed in her warm, lilac scent. “Your chaperone is too attentive.” She giggled and set to work on the strawberries. He was loathe to let go of her. She was so soft, and her bare arms were warm and silky. He slid his hands down to her elbows. She shivered, and goose bumps popped out beneath his fingers. Damn chaperones. He slowly pulled away and moved next to her, back to the cutting board, and sliced the red onions. He stood so close, he could still feel the heat from her body against his arm. “So, Frannie,” he said as he glanced at the girl. “Where do you go to school?” The child glanced at Wendy then down at her untouched glass of cola. “In Lynwood.” “She goes to the Brighton School. She’s a very gifted little girl.” There was no mistaking Wendy’s pride in her niece, and he smiled. “I’ve heard that is an exceptional school.” It was a very expensive private school. Children who went there in elementary more often than not went on to Ivy League universities. Frannie shrugged. Well, if he’d feared having a child in the house would be disruptive... “What do you enjoy doing when you are not studying?” Again, the girl shrugged. “Come on, Frannie. It’s okay to talk to Dante,” Wendy said softly. “Why don’t you tell him about the camp you went to last month?”
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton Her lips curved a little, and she finally looked up. “We studied marine life of the Pacific Rim.” “My goodness, that sounds interesting.” He sent her a sincere smile and held a sliver of almond out to her on the palm of his hand. Tentatively, she took it from him and ate it. He sprinkled the rest of them on the salad. “What was your favorite part? I’ve always been fond of orca. I find them beautifully fascinating.” “Jellyfish,” Frannie said, then giggled and ducked her head. He chuckled. “How about starfish?” “I got to hold a purple one with white spots. It was really pretty.” Dante nodded. “I’m not so fond of jellyfish myself. I was once night diving off the coast of Hawaii and was stung by a man ‘o war.” Frannie made a face. “Did you have vinegar to pour on it?” He chuckled. It had been years ago, when the belief that urinating on the sting would help. Digger had enjoyed pissing on his leg. “Naw,” Digger said as he came back into the kitchen and slid onto the stool next to Frannie. “He’s tough. Besides, I took care of it by—” Dante cleared his throat, cutting him off. Wendy laughed and bumped his arm with hers. Then she let out a little gasp. The tangy scent of blood caught his senses, and he turned to her. She lifted her thumb to her mouth. His gut tightened with need. “Come here,” he said, taking her to the sink. When he pulled her hand from her mouth, a bright red drop oozed from a small cut on the tip of her thumb. Without thinking, he raised her hand, slipped her thumb into his mouth, and lightly sucked the drop away. His fangs descended as heat blossomed through him. His cock throbbed to fullness. She was as sweet and pure as he knew she would be. He hadn’t tasted blood so uncontaminated in years—decades. Stifling a moan of pleasure, he slowly licked the pad of her thumb, careful not to catch it on the razor sharpness
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton of his fangs. His saliva would close the wound. What he wanted was to suckle more from her. “Dante?” He glanced into her eyes but quickly looked away. It would be too easy to mesmerize her. He licked the last of the glorious blood from her finger then held up her hand to show her. “Just a tiny scratch.” Her eyes widened as she examined her digit. She gave a nervous laugh, and he could smell her arousal. What he wouldn’t give to be alone with her right now. To whisk her away to his bedroom and make love to her. To sink his cock deep within her heated depths and his fangs into her neck where her pulse beat hard and fast. “Is dinner done yet?” Digger asked, obviously trying to break the spell. “I’m starvin’. How ’bout it, Frannie? Hungry?” Dante let go of Wendy and stepped back. He needed to get himself under control. Get his teeth back where they should be. “Would you pour some wine for Wendy, please?” he asked Digger. “I’ll be back in a moment or two.” Leaving Wendy standing by the sink looking a little shell shocked, he made a beeline for the restroom. Holy Mother of God. He leaned against the closed door and willed his body into submission. If he didn’t get her alone soon, he wasn’t sure he’d survive. * * * * * Wendy stared at the red mark on her thumb. She’d seen the blood. The cut had been deep. She’d jerked when she laughed, and the point of the little knife had sliced into her. All that remained was a tiny, red mark. Was she hallucinating? No, she knew she’d bled. So where had the cut gone? “Here ya are, luv,” Dante said, holding out a glass of white wine to her.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton She accepted it with a smile and put her wound out of her mind. “Thank you.” “Why don’t we head into the living room? I’m sure Dante will be out in a minute.” She motioned to Frannie to follow. “Grab yer drink, luv,” Digger said to Frannie. When her niece hesitated, he chuckled. “We’re not so formal ’round here. Dante can clean a rug like no one’s business if ya should spill.” Frannie smiled. A big, full‐on grin, and Wendy’s heart tilted on its side. Maybe tonight was a good thing for the girl. Lord only knew how often she was left alone with sitters or the nanny while her parents were out. No wonder she was so shy. She had no experience with other adults. They settled on the plush, leather sofa, and Digger sat down across from them in an easy chair. “So, li’l Frannie, do ya like magic?” Frannie nodded. “Yes, sir.” Digger flicked his wrist, and a quarter appeared between his fingers. Frannie’s eyes went wide. Wendy smiled and sipped the light, sweet wine. Digger rolled the coin over his knuckles, and then it was gone. “Oops,” he said with a grin and a wink. “Where did it go?” He made as if he were searching under the coffee table, then stood up and lifted the cushion of the chair...and there it was. Frannie giggled. “You put it there.” “Did I now? How about this?” Digger vanished. Wendy gasped along with her niece. “Now do ya think I put it there?” he asked from the doorway to the kitchen. “Stand up and look where ya were sittin’.” Frannie stood up, and there was the quarter. Or a quarter. Digger was an illusionist, and very good at it, too. She had no idea how he did it,
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton but she was impressed. “Wow,” Frannie said. “That was awesome.” She picked up the coin and handed it to him when he came back to the table. “Can you do it again?” “Maybe after supper,” Dante said, carrying the glass bowl of salad to the coffee table. He cast a look at Digger that plainly said he wasn’t pleased. Digger shrugged, sat back down, and lifted his bottle of beer from the table. “After supper then.” He winked at Frannie, and the girl giggled again. Dante dished salad into bowls for the four of them then sat down on the other easy chair at the end of the table. Wendy would have liked for him to sit next to her, but she supposed the less touching—accidental as it might be—the better right now. She’d just about melted into a puddle on the floor when he’d stood behind her, his body so close, his scent so provocative, those beautiful hands on her bare arms. “I’m sorry we cannot sit at the dining table,” Dante said. “I will have it replaced before your next visit. I promise.” Next visit. Wendy licked her lips in anticipation. She prayed next time they’d be alone. Just the two of them. And if that were the case, she didn’t give a damn about the table. Frannie held her bowl on her lap and tried to pick out the almond slivers with her fork. “Eat the whole salad, honey,” Wendy whispered. Frannie glanced up at her then nodded and speared a tomato. She didn’t put it in her mouth, though. “Is something wrong?” Dante asked, leaning forward and peering at Frannie. The girl shook her head, but it was obvious something was wrong. Wendy smiled at Dante’s show of concern. “She’s ten,” she offered as an excuse. “Onions, tomatoes, lettuce and vinegar dressing aren’t favorites.”
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton Digger set his salad on the table. “Come with me, luv. We’ll find ya somethin’ good.” He held out his hand, and when Wendy took the bowl from Frannie and the girl stood up with Digger, she heard Digger say, “I don’t like salad either. I was just bein’ nice.” They disappeared around the corner into the kitchen. “I’m sorry,” she said to Dante. “I like it.” Instead of saying anything, he set his own bowl down and moved to the sofa next to her, his arm going around her shoulders. “I do not care about the salad, but if I don’t kiss you—” He didn’t finish the sentence. His warm, moist lips touched hers, stealing her breath and making her whimper as lightning bolts of lust shot through her. His goatee tickled her chin, and his hand closed over her bare shoulder. She sighed into his mouth, and his tongue swept in, gliding against hers in a smooth, seductive action that brought her to a fevered pitch, quivering with need, in the span of a heartbeat. She leaned into him and raised her hand to his neck. He was so warm, and his spicy, masculine scent wound around her, blanketing her in a cocoon of lust. Her nipples beaded against the snug bra, and she squeezed her thighs together to prolong the tempting, naughty pulse of heat and dampness gathering in her center. Dante broke the kiss and touched his forehead to hers, his breaths coming in heavy pants, fanning against her cheek. “I have been dreaming of your soft lips since yesterday.” She sighed out a shuddery breath. “Me, too.” He brushed his mouth against hers again but didn’t linger. “You are dangerous, sweet Wendy. I have never had a need for a woman as I do you.” So straightforward. She didn’t know how to take his words. Was it just a line, or did he mean it? And if he did...why? “Chicken’s ready,” Digger said. Dante slowly pulled away from her, his dark, dark gaze snaring hers. He touched her cheek with the back of one knuckle. “I am glad you
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton came tonight.” She felt the honesty of those words and smiled even as her cheeks heated with a blush. “Me, too.” “I will return shortly.” He stood then and went toward the kitchen. Frannie sat back down next to her, her eyes wide. “He kissed you?” she whispered. Wendy grinned and nodded. “Wow.” She held a small plate with cheese, crackers, apple slices, and store‐ bought chocolate chip cookies. Wendy gave her a look and shook her head. “Some dinner you have there, kiddo.” Frannie grinned. “All Digger’s favorites.” Digger sat back down in his chair, crunching a slice of apple. “If a grown man shouldna be made to eat that,” he said, nodding toward the salad, “a sweet little girl shouldna.” Barbara would have a coronary if she saw her daughter eating cookies for supper. “Don’t tell your mother.” Frannie’s eyes widened, and she glanced at the glass of cola. “Donna worry, luv,” Digger said with a teasing smile. “What happens in this house, stays in this house. Right, Wendy?” She nodded in agreement. No one, not even Candice, would ever know about Dante. He was all hers for as long as he wanted to...whatever. She wasn’t about to take the chance of Candice getting her sexy claws into him. No way. She’d lost three boyfriends over the years to her friend. She’d kill Candice if she ever so much as looked at Dante. Thirty years of friendship be damned. Dante sat next to her as they ate spicy chicken parmesan and garlic‐ roasted baby red potatoes. She couldn’t remember a man going so far out of his way to cook for her before. Digger and Frannie shared the plate of snacks then went and got some more. This time when they were alone, Dante simply watched her. Seemed to watch every single move she made.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton “This is very good food,” she said. “Thank you.” Dante reached up and touched his thumb to the corner of her mouth. “I enjoy cooking but do not do it often.” He licked a bit of sauce from his thumb he’d removed from her lip. “Perhaps next time you will stay for breakfast.” Her heart thudded so hard she thought it might jump right out of her chest. He did want to sleep with her. Oh, Lord, she wished Frannie weren’t with her. She wanted that breakfast to be tomorrow morning. Play hard to get. Play hard to get. “I think that would be...” Screw hard to get. Just get him. “Really nice.” That slow, seductive smile spread over his lips. He took the empty plate from her lap and set it on the coffee table then, when she thought for sure he’d kiss her again, he lifted her wine glass from the table and handed it to her. Settling back into the sofa, he sipped his drink and stretched his arm along the back. When she settled against the cushions, he wrapped his arm around her shoulders then kissed the top of her head as he tucked her up against his side. She sighed and closed her eyes. It had been years since she’d just...cuddled. “Hey, mate,” Digger called from the kitchen. “Ya want me and li’l Frannie to finish with the strawberries?” “That would be nice, thank you,” Dante said. “Do not eat them all in the process, though.” Wendy chuckled. “Digger loves fruit. We cannot seem to keep enough in the house for him.” She tipped her head to the side and looked up into his gorgeous face. “And what’s your favorite?” He licked his lips, and his eyelids lowered a bit. He took a deep breath, his nostrils flaring the slightest bit. And then he leaned in close, his whiskers just barely touching her cheek, and whispered in her ear, “Lately, I’ve been fantasizing about lilacs and sweet cream.”
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton Every nerve ending in her body quivered with excitement. She used lilac‐scented shampoo. She clutched her fingers around the stem of the wine glass and tried to breathe normally. That feat became impossible when his tongue traced the rim of her ear and tingling spirals curled through her body aimed straight at her heated, pulsing center. “Don’t,” she whispered. She couldn’t take it. All this teasing was going to make her insane. “I can’t help myself, sweets,” he murmured in her ear. “You taste of heaven, and I have lived in hell so long.” She definitely understood what a man with a silver tongue meant now. He could probably talk her into an orgasm without much difficulty. His short fingernails lightly scored her bare shoulder, and she jerked in surprise at the electrical currents shooting through her. Her wine splashed on the front of her blouse, and she pulled away with a muttered curse. “Goodness,” he said, his tone anything but contrite. “I do think we need to take care of that before the stain sets.” He set his glass on the coffee table then took hers and did the same with it. She made a face at him. “It’s white wine on dark green. It’s not going to stain.” He stood and held out his hand. “We would not wish to take any chances, would we?” When she glanced up into his eyes, she realized he didn’t give a damn about her blouse. She licked her lips and glanced toward the kitchen. Dante raised an eyebrow. “Do you wish to let me dry your shirt, or shall we call the chaperones back into the room?” Wendy slipped her hand into his and let him pull her to her feet. She hadn’t counted on their first time being a quickie while they hid from the chaperones but, at this point, if she didn’t relieve some of the pressure building inside her, she wasn’t sure she’d survive.
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Chapter Seven Dante sighed with relief when Wendy took his hand. His cock ached to be in her. His body’s needs had never been so urgent. He would have called Digger back into the room and accepted her wishes if she’d said no, but he thanked God she hadn’t. “Wendy spilled wine on herself,” he said as he tugged her along through the kitchen. “We’re going to find her something else to wear.” Wendy smiled at Frannie, who was carefully slicing strawberries on the cutting board. “Take yer time,” Digger said, humor lacing his words. He led her to the hall then up the stairs. Her hand in his was slightly damp, and he sensed her nervousness. He wouldn’t do anything she didn’t want, but from the way she’d kissed him, the way she responded to his every touch, she was ready for him. She followed him into his darkened bedroom, and she was the one to shut the door. He turned to her, pressed her against the hardwood door, and cupped her cheeks in his palms. Her sweet wine‐scented breath sighed out with a little bit of a hitch and brushed against his cheek. “You are nervous,” he said, his voice low, slightly rough. “It’s been a while.” Her admission made him grin. He’d known, but he enjoyed
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton hearing it. Running his fingers into her hair, he pushed it away from her cheeks. The cool, silky strands made him sigh as her elemental scent rose from her. Sweet honey. Lilacs. A woman ready for a man to pleasure her. She tipped her head back, and a soft, sexy moan slipped from her lips. “You make me feel like the only woman on earth when you touch me.” “You are the only woman on earth for me, Wendy. Don’t ever doubt that.” He leaned in then, before she could say anything else, before her insecurities made her ask questions—question his sincerity—and captured her mouth in a hard, deep, wet kiss. He swallowed her soft cry of surprise as he pressed his hard‐on against her belly and wound his arms around her, holding her tight to his chest. Her breasts were full and soft, her nipples hard nubs scraping against his pecs. “Ohh,” she sighed when he moved from her full, warm lips to her jaw, to her ear. Her blood roared loud, her heart beating a frantic tattoo against his chest, and his fangs started to descend. Not now. Not now. He needed her body, not her blood. Only her body. She raised her hands to his chest and, for an instant, he worried she’d push him away, but instead she curled her fingers into his shirt and bumped her hips forward, grinding his cock between their clothed bodies. He rocked against her, reveling in the sensation of her softness. Skimming his palms beneath her blouse, he brought the silky material up, and she raised her arms over her head, letting him pull it off. A black, lacy bra covered breasts nearly spilling from the cups. He groaned and dipped his head, kissing each beautiful, satiny mound. A thin gold chain ended at her luscious cleavage in an intricate gold crucifix inlaid with tiny seed pearls. Wendy’s fingers tangled in his hair, holding him to her. His fangs descended fully—he couldn’t control his reaction to the heavy beat of her blood—but he fought the urge to graze a razor‐sharp tooth over the lovely
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton swells. She moaned again and thrust her chest forward, begging for more. He nuzzled her, licked her flesh, as he found the zipper of her skirt. It opened, and he shoved it to the floor. When he cupped her bottom, it was bare. For a moment, he thought she’d gone without, but then he felt the lacy straps of her thong. “Wendy,” he chided softly as he raised his head enough to see into her sparkling eyes. “You are a bad girl, aren’t you?” She laughed but drew in a sharp breath when he traced his finger along her cleft. Her panties were slightly damp. The sweet aroma of her arousal caught him so hard he dropped to his knees in front of her and buried his face against her mound, breathing her in. She whispered his name on a sigh as her fingers weaved through his hair, curling and petting him as if he were a cat. Her touch was so light, so gentle, yet so arousing he almost couldn’t stand it. So long he’d been without the loving touch of a woman. He’d forgotten what it was like. What it could do to his body. He slipped her panties down her legs then leaned forward once again, this time his lips meeting warm, soft, damp flesh and crinkly curls. He swiped his tongue out, and Wendy gripped his hair in fists. She was as sweet as he knew she’d be. Warm cream, a woman in full lust. He spread her legs a bit and delved his tongue deep. She thrust forward and whimpered, riding his face with inexperienced grace. Her entire body shook with the building force of her orgasm. He gripped the back of her thighs to hold her steady as he ate and suckled at her heated core, unable to get enough. He’d never have enough of her. He felt her orgasm approaching as if it were his own. Her blood pounded, her body heated, her gasps grew loud. At the last second, he pressed two fingers deep into her cunt, flicked her clit with his thumb, and turned his head. Finding her ephemeral artery, he punctured it with the tip of one fang.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton She screamed in ecstasy as her hot, sweet blood flowed over his tongue. While her orgasm rocked through her, he sipped, reveling in her taste, in the pleasure of her vibrancy. But he quickly sealed the wound with his tongue. Guilt shook him nearly as much as her release shook her. He hadn’t meant to feed—he hadn’t taken enough to be called a feeding—but she tasted of heaven—of his redemption. “Dante. Dante...” She tugged at his shoulders. When he stood, she reached for his belt. He stood still and let her open his pants, unbutton his shirt, and then reach into his slacks and draw out his rock‐solid cock. When her sweet mouth closed around one flat nipple, he groaned and dropped his head back, planting a hand on the door by her shoulder to keep steady. She stroked his shaft in a rough, greedy motion as she suckled his nipple. She moved to the other. And then she bit his pec, and fire shot through his body. He grunted and grabbed her ass, lifting her. She wound her legs around his waist, her gaze locked with his, and he slammed deep into her. She cried out and gripped his shoulders as he set a pounding pace. She stared into his eyes and for the first time in...three hundred years...he looked at a woman as a man would. He fought his own release, waiting for hers to build. He would not use her again for his own selfish needs. This was a woman he could love, and he would never taste her blood again without her knowledge, without her permission. “Feel me,” he whispered. “Know me.” Love me. A single, sparkling tear fell from her right eye, as if she’d read his thoughts. Then she threw her arms around his neck and clung to him, her face buried against his shoulder, as he thrust into her again and again. Her breaths grew shallow, her arms around him tightened, her velvet heat gripped his cock. He held her tight, buried his face against her hair, and breathed her in. His Wendy. His woman. She screamed against his shoulder, his flesh muffling the sound,
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton and he pressed into her one last time, letting himself find oblivion. Wendy clung to Dante, her entire body vibrating with the force of the orgasm which had stolen her soul. Never had sex been so...profound. So earth shattering. So...beautiful. Tears ran unchecked down her cheeks as she nuzzled against his neck and reveled in his hot, musky scent. She couldn’t help it; she’d never had a man... What? What was so different about him? He was tender but rough. Demanding, yet sensitive enough to see to her needs before his. His chest heaved against hers as he, too, tried to catch his breath. Knowing he’d enjoyed it as much as she had made her smile in wonder. How could any man so beautiful and worldly be interested in her? Treat her as he’d said he would—worshiping her body with his own. “Wendy,” he whispered in her ear. “I would carry you to bed, my sweet, but I fear my pants around my ankles would trip me.” A laugh burst out of her, and she hugged him hard before unlocking her ankles from behind his butt. He carefully lowered her until her feet met the floor. “I think my weight alone would trip you.” He bent and pulled up his pants, zipped them but didn’t button them. Then, without warning, he scooped her up into his arms. “You weigh no more than a feather.” She clung to his neck, but she realized he had no difficulty carrying her. Never had a man carried her. She wasn’t exactly a lightweight. When he deposited her on the huge bed as if she were a precious jewel, she ran her hands over his muscled shoulders and down his chest. “You’re stronger than you look,” she murmured. He was lean but built like the Statue of David. No bulging muscles, but... She sighed. Very, very nice. He stretched out next to her and pulled her against him. He kissed her forehead then brushed her hair back from her shoulder. “You are the most exquisite woman I have ever met, my sweet.” She sighed and smiled as she laid her head against his chest. “And
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton you are a silver‐tongued devil.” He was silent for a moment then said, “I am not the devil.” Frowning, she levered herself up on her elbow and studied his eyes in the ambient light filtering through the window. “It’s a figure of speech. You always seem to know just the right things to say to me to...” She chuckled at her train of thought. His expression remained serious. “I have never told you an untruth. I find you remarkable. You are so pure and sweet you make me want...” Her heart stalled. “Want what?” He touched her in that sweet way he always did, skimming the back of one finger from cheekbone to chin. He sighed. “It has been so long since I met a woman for which I felt such a strong attraction. When I look into your eyes, I see so much insecurity I fear if I say more you will become frightened.” Insecurity. He nailed her there. She still had no idea what he saw in her that made him take her up against the door and bring her to sexual heights she’d only read about. She wasn’t one to elicit lust from a man such as him. Perhaps honesty was best. “You tell me I’m beautiful, but I know I’m very ordinary. I’ve had a few long‐term relationships in the past, but none of them ever did to me—never made me feel the way you do.” “Tell me, sweets. What do I make you feel?” He brushed his fingers through her hair then trailed his palm down her neck, then lower, over her breast still covered by the lacy black bra. She sighed and closed her eyes. “As if you cherish me. Like...” She couldn’t open her soul so much so soon. She barely knew the man. He made her believe he was the one who would fulfill all her fantasies, sweep her off her feet, grow old with her. “I do cherish you. I cherish your smile, your laughter, your kind, gentle heart.” He leaned forward and grazed his lips against her cheek. “Never doubt what I feel for you.” “That’s just it,” she said as she pulled away. “How can you feel
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton anything? We just met. I never sleep with a guy—oh, shit! Dante, we didn’t use protection.” Her chest tightened, and she thought she might have a panic attack. She never slept with a guy on the first date, and she sure as hell never slept with one without a condom. Ever. “Shh, sweets.” He pulled her back down against his chest and tucked her head beneath his chin. “Do not worry. I am sterile. You will not become pregnant. And I promise you, I am disease free.” She jerked back to look into his face once again. He was too calm. “Sterile? But you’re so young. How can you be sterile? And how do you know you don’t have something? Good Lord, the way you make love, you’ve got a ton of experience and have probably been with hundreds of women.” He chuckled. “I have been sterile most of my lifetime. It is something I have come to accept. I told you before I am not as young as I seem. And as for diseases—” He shrugged. “I am clean. I know that for a fact.” “You’ve been tested? When was your last STD test?” She’d have to get Dr. Thompson to draw her blood tomorrow. How could she have been so stupid? “Do you doubt my word?” Dante asked softly, making her focus on him again. No, she really didn’t doubt his word. But still, it was stupid to have unprotected sex under any circumstances. She worked in a doctor’s office for goodness sake. She’d seen everything from syphilis to crabs. She shivered. To AIDS. “I would never do anything to harm you, Wendy. You must believe me.” The scariest part of it was that she did believe him. And she trusted him. She just didn’t know why. “What happens now?” She squeezed her eyes shut as soon as the words were out. Insecure and needy. Great girlfriend material. She waited for him to run.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton Instead, he kissed her forehead, and she could feel his smile against her skin. “Now, we must head back downstairs before your niece comes looking for you and finds you in my bed mostly naked.” She groaned. “I can’t believe I had sex with her right downstairs.” Dante laughed. “Digger kept her occupied, I am sure. He loves kids. Come with me.” He sat up and took her hand. When she stood next to him, he wrapped his arm around her shoulders and led her through the room. “Watch your eyes. I’m turning on the light.” She squinted as the bright bulbs in an attached bathroom came on. Then she watched Dante as he pulled a fluffy washcloth from the cabinet over the toilet and ran it under warm water in the sink. He was so absolutely gorgeous. His slacks hung low on his hips, and his shirt was open, revealing washboard abs and pecs she wanted to get her teeth into again. Without a word, he turned to her and slowly, gently, smoothed the cloth over her chest, shoulders, the swells of her breasts, and then down her belly. When he rinsed it and returned to lightly swipe it between her thighs, her pussy was still so sensitive that the lightest touch made her moan and grab him for support. Her breath caught. “I do not believe I have ever met a woman quite as responsive as you. I wish we had all night so that I might explore every inch of your body.” “Stop it,” she said on a sigh as he rinsed the cloth again. He leaned over the sink and washed his face then reached for his toothbrush, which sat in a cup on the edge. Not only gorgeous, but hygienic as well. She almost laughed at her thoughts. When he was finished, he wiped his face with a dry cloth he pulled from the towel rack behind her, and then he gathered her in his arms and kissed her deep. His minty tongue glided over hers, and she melted into him. So easily he rekindled the tinder of her need for him. He lifted his head and smiled. “I have seen a hundred expressions
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton on your face since I met you, but this one is my favorite.” Trying to gather her wits, she raised an eyebrow. “Oh?” He slowly nodded. “It is primal. Lust and longing.” He brushed his lips against hers. “Do you work on Saturdays?” The change of subject caught her off guard, and she laughed. She hoped he was asking so that Friday night they could do more of this. “No. Monday through Friday.” “Do you have plans for Friday night?” She grinned. “No. I’m free.” “Not anymore. Come over for supper.” He kissed her again. “Dessert.” His tongue traced the edge of her bottom lip, making her shiver. “And breakfast.” She sighed. “What about Digger?” He lifted his head, and his dark eyes glittered with humor. “You wish for a threesome?” She laughed and pulled away, lightly smacking his arm. “And if I did?” He shrugged and grinned, those beautiful teeth flashing against his tanned skin. “If that is what the lady wishes. Though I do believe Digger would be a bad choice.” She wrinkled her brow even as she grinned. “Because you live with him?” He shook his head and took her hand, leading her back into the darker bedroom. “No. Because he’d be more interested in getting into my pants than yours.” “Oh.” She laughed. “I see. I guess it’s a good thing I don’t want a threesome then.” “Sit,” he said, aiming her for the bed. She did. He picked up her clothes and laid them out next to her. And then, to her utter shock, he knelt in front of her and slipped her panties up her legs. This was all too much. He couldn’t be real. No one was this wonderfully perfect.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton “Stand.” She did, and he pulled her panties up. He reached for her skirt and had her step into it. Before he raised it, though, he leaned forward, nuzzled his lips against her mound, and inhaled deeply. Her cheeks heated with embarrassment even as a thrill tickled through her. He zipped her into her skirt and slipped her shoes on her feet as if she were Cinderella. Then he stood and slipped off his own shirt, which was still open. “Take this,” he whispered as he held it out for her to put on. “Sleep in it tonight. Keep my scent and warmth close. Dream of me.” She swallowed hard as he slowly did up each button. She had no doubt she’d dream of him, and she couldn’t wait for Friday to arrive.
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Chapter Eight “Delivery for you. I put it on your desk.” Wendy glanced back at Cathy from the open‐face file cabinet where she was putting away patient forms. “A delivery? I didn’t order anything.” Cathy winked. “I think someone might have ordered them for you.” She hurried through the last three files then headed for her desk. She smelled them before she rounded the corner. Her heart tripped a beat, and tears prickled the backs of her eyes. A bouquet of white, pink and lavender lilacs sat in the center of her desk. Where had he found fresh lilacs in August? She pulled the little card from the holder in the middle and glanced around to make sure no one looked over her shoulder before she opened the envelope. Taking her seat, her fingers shaking slightly, she pulled the card out. I can’t stop thinking about last night. Love, Dante Ohh. He was the sweetest, most amazing man ever. When she
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton looked back at the vase, she noticed a small jewelry box tied with a satin ribbon around the neck. She carefully untied it, not wanting to ruin the ribbon. The vase... Oh, goodness. She’d seen that vase in his shop. It was hand painted in pastels of... She looked around again. Did anyone else notice? They were flowers, but they were the epitome of sexual art. Who could mistake what each of those blooms resembled? Her face heated in a flush of remembered pleasure and embarrassment. She finished untying the ribbon and turned the very old jewelry box over in her hands. It was a faded pastel blue with a little button latch on the front. She licked her lips, wondering what it could be. What kind of jewelry did a man give a woman he’d just met and only spent one night with? “So, what is it?” She jumped and glanced up to see Candice standing on the other side of her desk. “And who’s it from?” Shit. Dante was her secret. She didn’t want to tell Candice anything. “What are you doing here?” “Came to take you to lunch, but this is much more interesting.” Candice lifted the vase and turned it in her hands. “Damn. Can we get any more obvious? You didn’t tell me you were seeing anyone.” She set the vase back down with a thud, and Wendy wanted to beat her. No one had any business touching her gift. “What’s in the box?” She shrugged with a nonchalance she was far from feeling. “I’ll open it later.” She bent and retrieved her purse from the bottom drawer. “You said something about lunch? Let me go sign out.” “Yeah...but...” She left Candice sputtering and headed to the back and the nurses’ station. As soon as she rounded the corner, she pushed the little button on the jewelry box, and the lid popped up on spring hinges. Her feet stopped moving. She leaned against the wall for support.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton The earrings... She lifted her crucifix from inside her shirt and held it up next to the earrings. They were a perfect match. Identical. Down to the scrollwork on each point of the cross and the tiny pearls. How...? With reverence, she shut the box and held it against her breast. Love, Dante, he’d signed the note. Did he...could he...love her? So soon? She closed her eyes, and visions of last night danced in her mind. The dinner he’d cooked, the kisses, the sex. He’d dressed her afterward, and then the four of them had played a checkers tournament and ate fresh strawberry shortcake until almost midnight. Saying goodnight so she could get Frannie back to the apartment before Barbara showed up had almost killed her. The sex had shaken her more than anything ever had, but she would have gladly stayed and played checkers all night. She simply wished to be in the same room as him. “You okay, Wend?” Cathy asked as she laid a hand on Wendy’s arm. She grinned and looked at the nurse. “I think I might be better than I’ve been in a really long time.” “Because you got flowers?” Wendy nodded. “Yeah. Because he sent me flowers.” “Good for you, girl.” Cathy nudged her with her elbow. “Go have lunch. I’ll sign you out.” “Thanks.” Wendy tucked the earrings into her purse and made her way to the front of the clinic where Candice waited for her by the glass doors. As they stepped out into the warm late‐morning sun, Candice asked, “So, are you going to tell me about him?” She shook her head. “No. I don’t think so.” “Well, why not? Is he a secret?” “Yeah. For now.” She nodded and grinned. They stopped at their favorite café just a block away and found a
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton table on the patio. “At least tell me where you met him.” Candice dropped her purse on the ground at her feet. “At Addictions the other night after you ditched me.” Her friend’s face looked as if it had turned to stone. “I told you I was sorry.” Wendy nodded. “I know, but it was still wrong.” “So now you’re punishing me by not telling me about some guy who’s sending you sexy vases and jewelry?” The waitress brought ice water with lemon wedges and set two menus on the table. “Thanks,” Wendy muttered to the waitress. To Candice she said, “No, I’m not punishing you. I just don’t want to...jinx it. It’s too new.” He was too wonderful. And maybe she was still a little peeved at her friend. Candice’s blonde eyebrows rose. “You’re not superstitious. Is he hideously ugly or something? Has to send you gifts to bribe you into bed?” Wendy shrugged. Let Candice believe what she would. She wasn’t about to share any details. None. Not the fact he was the most incredibly handsome man in the world, looked ten years younger than her, or that he had Casanova beat in the bedroom by a long shot. Well, she assumed he did. She grinned. She hadn’t been with a whole lot of men in her life, but Dante was a million times better than anyone else she’d ever been with. Candice sighed. “Oookay. At least you’re smiling. That’s a change.” Wendy frowned at her friend. “What’s that mean?” “It means for months now you’ve been mopey and depressed. It’s good to see you smiling. Even if he is butt ugly.” “He’s not ugly,” she blurted out then laughed. “Good to hear.” Candice picked up her menu. “So, what’s Dante look like?” A prickle went down her spine as dread spread through her at the
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton rate of a raging river. “How do you know his name?” Candice lowered the menu and rolled her eyes. “I read the card.” Wendy sighed in relief. She shouldn’t be so paranoid about her best friend, but history did have a way of proving Candice couldn’t be trusted around men. “Anywhoo... A couple girls from work are going to The Starlight on Friday night, and I wondered if you wanted to come along. I think I’ll get the chicken salad. What are you having?” “Same. And no, I can’t Friday. But thanks for the offer.” As if she’d want to go out with Candice again—and to a nightclub no less—and a bunch of her perfectly manicured spa friends. “Date?” Wendy nodded. “Where are you going?” None of your business. “Come on, Wend. Tell me something. What’s he do for a living? Where’s he live? Why is he signing a card Love, Dante if you just met him last Friday?” “He’s cooking me dinner at his house in Queen Anne. And he’s an antique dealer.” That was as much as she was going to share. End of discussion. “Queen Anne? Holy shit. You go, girl!” Wendy chuckled and turned her attention to the waitress when she returned. Love, Dante. She ordered her chicken salad sandwich and leaned back in the plastic deck chair with a smile. She could see herself falling in love with him. Hell, after the wonderful night they’d had, she was probably already halfway there. * * * * * Thursday mornings Dante spent in the storage room filing new stock, deciding what to move to the showroom and what to remove.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton When the phone rang, he stopped in the middle of lifting a box of very rare, very expensive hand‐blown fifteenth‐century vases. He hadn’t opened the shop yet, so he hadn’t taken the phone off the answering service. Whoever was calling had his private line. He set the box down and went across the room to the phone on the wall. “Dante here.” “We have another slaying.” Dante’s heart sank at Digger’s voice coming over the line. “Who is it?” “I just got a call from Gaston. Zebulon’s wife called him. She found his body in the car in the garage. Zebulon still sat in the driver’s seat, his head was on the passenger’s.” “Fuck.” Dante sank down onto a wooden crate as his knees went weak. “The cops are crawlin’ all over Zebulon’s now. I just turned on the news, and it’s on every local channel. They’re claiming there’s a serial killer on the loose.” “That’s not far off the mark.” He swiped his fingers through his hair then pinched the bridge of his nose. “Do we know when it happened?” “Zebulon’s wife said he called last night around eight to say he’d be home late. He had a last‐minute meeting, but she doesn’t know who with. She said it’s not out of the ordinary for ’im to be out until midnight with clients. She went to bed ’round eleven and tried gettin’ a hold of him on his cell this mornin’. She had some errands to run and went to the garage, and there was his car with his body in it. Gaston figures the slayer snuck in before the garage door shut. There wasna sign of forced entry— at least that’s what Gaston’s contacts at the PD are sayin’.” Nausea rolled through Dante’s gut, combined with a twinge of fear. So far, all the killings had happened at night, so they could be dealing with a youngster, but the strength it took to decapitate a vampire... Digger’s voice cut into his thoughts. “Gaston wants you, me and
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton Evan down at The Starlight tomorrow night, tryin’ to gather information. He’s convinced this has to do with the Southerners.” He sighed. “Systematically take out all the older, experienced vampires in Seattle and move in the younger upstarts to do things their way. I just donna know. It’s too...neat.” “What do you mean?” “Why wasna Gaston the first target? Wouldn’t they be wiser to start at the top? Get rid of the oldest first, if that’s the goal? If I was doin’ it, I’d take out Gaston and work my way down the chain until everyone else fell into line, not the other way around.” Dante didn’t know. Extermination of their race had been sought by slayers for a millennia or longer, probably since the first vampire had been turned around the time of Christ. Slayers were normally humans with a grudge, or a newly turned vampire who was pissed off at their situation. “I’m one of the youngest of the older generation,” Dante said. “Yeah, but ya’ve fought slayers before. Look at who he’s taken out so far. The three of us older generation who’ve never fought. Hell, mate, Zebulon wasna even trained in warfare.” “All of us left are, though. We’ve all killed before. So what does that mean? He’s scared?” “Could be.” Dante shook his head. This guy wasn’t scared of anything. He’d taken out two vampires right outside The Starlight. “I don’t buy it. There’s got to be some system he’s following, so if it’s the weakest first, who is next?” The silence answered his question. They both figured he was the next target. “Son of a bitch,” he said on a sigh. “Be home before dark, mate. I’ll call and take a few days off work. We need to stick together.” He nodded in agreement. “Yes. I will be home before dark.” “Watch yer back.”
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton The line went dead, and he reached to hang up the phone. He stared at the stacks of boxes and shelves of nearly priceless antiquities. He’d spent his life gathering the rare and beautiful, and in a few days who would care? He could be killed and there would be no one to carry on his legacy. Only Digger was there to mourn his passing—provided Digger survived. He swiped his hand down his face and stood up. How did he defend himself when he didn’t know from where the threat came? At least with VanBueren, he knew the killer. The slayer who had haunted the Seattle sect at the turn of the last century had not made himself a secret— his only goal had been to wipe out as many vampires as possible before he was killed. Just when things had begun looking up for him... Fuck. Wendy. Their date for Friday night. He headed to his office and grabbed the phonebook to look up the number for the doctor’s office where she worked. “Thomas and Merovia Health and Wellness. This is Wendy, how may I direct your call?” His heart tightened at the sweet sound of her voice. “Hello, Wendy.” Her quick intake of breath sent a shiver down his spine. “Hi, Dante.” He smiled despite himself, but it was short lived. “I have some bad news, my sweet. I must cancel our date for tomorrow night. I have some business I must attend.” “Oh...” The disappointment was clear in her voice, and it echoed what was in his heart. But now more than ever he had to keep her away from himself. If he was next on the slayer’s list, he could not put her in jeopardy. “Please do not be upset,” he said softly. “I...” He sighed, wishing he could tell her everything, explain why he couldn’t be with her right now. “I must leave town for a few days.” The lie made him flinch. How could
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton he have a relationship with her when it started this way? “When...” Wendy sighed, and when she spoke again her tone was too filled with cheer. “Have a great trip, then. Hope everything goes well.” “Wendy—” “I’ve got to get back to work. Thanks for the call.” “Sweet—” The line went dead. She’d hung up on him, and deep down he knew she thought he was blowing her off. He’d seen too much insecurity in her eyes when she looked at him, heard it in her voice the other night when she’d ask him what happens now. She didn’t trust easily, and here he was lying to her. But her safety depended on her knowing nothing. Above all, he could not put her life in danger. If something happened to her, he’d never forgive himself. He’d rather never see her again than to let this evil touch her. * * * * * “Watch the front for me?” Wendy said to Cathy as she hung up the phone. “I gotta go—” She motioned toward the back as her throat closed up. When Cathy nodded and opened her mouth to say something, Wendy rushed toward the staff bathroom. She locked herself in and leaned against the door, sucking in deep breaths, trying to keep from bursting into tears. She’d known it was all too good to be true. Dante had time to come to his senses and didn’t want to see her again. Damn it, she knew she shouldn’t have let herself feel anything toward him. She’d tried. Really, really tried. But he’d been so sweet, so... Love, Dante. He’d signed the note, Love, Dante. She touched her ears and the earrings he’d sent her. Moving to the mirror over the sink, she looked at herself. Little lines fanned out from the
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton corners of her eyes—crows’ feet. Her hair... Under the bright fluorescent lights there was no missing the shiny gray hairs mixed in with her auburn. She bit her bottom lip, the lip gloss she’d applied earlier now gone. Shaking her head, she sighed. Maybe he was telling the truth and he had to go out of town for business. Maybe he finally saw what she saw whenever she looked in the mirror. Either way, it didn’t matter in the greater scheme of her life. She’d known going in it was just a passing affair. But it would have been nice if she could have had that one night with him. The memory of their hurried sexual encounter was never far from her mind. At odd times her body would tingle, and her nipples would tighten when a vision of his handsome face, buried against her pussy, floated through her mind. Or the way he’d touched her, held her, as if he cherished her. How his long, thick cock had filled her as no other ever had, and how he’d seemed to find as much pleasure within her body as she’d taken from him. A knock at the door made her jump. “Wendy? You okay in there?” Cathy called. She cleared her throat. “Yeah. Fine. Be out in a sec.” A week, she decided as she ran cool water from the tap over her palms then patted her face. She’d give him a week to call her again. If she hadn’t heard from him by next Friday, she’d know he hadn’t been as interested as he’d pretended. After drying her hands and blotting her cheeks with a paper towel, she opened the door. Cathy stood across the hall, arms folded and brow pulled into a concerned frown. “What’s up?” “Nothing. Just had to go.” Cathy shook her head. “Liar. What’s wrong?” Wendy shrugged, trying to be nonchalant about it. “That guy that sent me the flowers the other day...he just canceled our date for tomorrow night.”
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton “Oh, honey...” “No. I’m fine.” She forced a smile, but it was difficult. “He’s got some business meeting or something he’s got to go out of town for.” Cathy’s look told her she didn’t believe that story, either. Wendy shrugged again and headed back up front. The waiting room was empty, and she sat down at her computer to work on dictation. As she reached for her headphones, she stopped and stared at the phone. There was absolutely no reason she had to sit at home on a Friday night feeling sorry for herself. If she did, she’d just order another large pizza and eat the whole thing, along with the rest of the half gallon of rocky road in her freezer, and gain five pounds by Monday. She grabbed the phone and dialed Candice’s office. “Hey,” she said when her friend answered. “Is your invitation still open for tomorrow night?” “Uh...yeah...of course. But I thought you had a date.” “Something came up, and now I’m free. What time should I meet you there?” “Ten. And I’m glad you’re coming.” Wendy smiled at the honest pleasure she heard in Candice’s voice. “Yeah. Me, too. See ya then.” She could do this. A new year and a new Wendy. She’d stop at the drugstore on the way home and pick up a bottle of hair dye. Hell, she might as well pick up a new outfit, too. Something sexy that told the men she was looking. Maybe she wouldn’t find Mr. Right at The Starlight, but she sure as hell could find Mr. Right Now. Why couldn’t she be a modern woman and have a few flings before she got too old? Everyone else did. Surely there was someone out there with whom she could have a few hot nights tearing up the sheets. She slumped in her chair and stared at the flying windows on her screen saver. Who was she kidding? She wanted Dante, not some manslut. She’d rather have one more night with him than a hundred nights with strangers. What the hell. She could still do her hair and maybe pick up a new
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton outfit. She hadn’t gone shopping in ages. Makeup. She’d go have her makeup done at the department store. She didn’t have to be hunting for a man in order to make herself feel better and look a little better. Glancing down at her dark blue scrubs, she sighed. She had to do something to get out of this slump.
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Chapter Nine The stench of sweaty bodies, sexual arousal, and desperation stung Dante’s nose as he entered The Starlight with Digger. Every time he came here, he hated it more. The throb of techno music beat in opposition to his own heart, making him stagger a bit. “Ya need to feed, mate,” Digger said, pulling him down to speak into his ear over the music. He wanted to deny it, but he couldn’t. He needed to keep up his strength in order to fight their unseen foe. He carried weapons, but if he was too weak to use them, they wouldn’t do much good. “Where’s Evan?” Dante asked, scanning the full house. Just before ten on a Friday night, and the place was packed to capacity. Digger shrugged. “He said he’d meet us here.” Dante started toward the bar to get himself a drink, pushing his way through the grinding, bumping bodies. He might as well feed before Evan arrived. As he ordered his shot of tequila, he scanned the single women hanging around the bar. Three were together, and he always tried to avoid pulling one away from a group. One was a vampire he recognized. She winked at him and grinned, showing her fangs. He chuckled and shook his head. She was obviously on the hunt, too. As he dropped the bill on the counter for his drink, he was jostled from behind. He turned to find an attractive blonde woman.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton “Hey, sorry,” she shouted over the music and waved her hand toward the crowd of dancers. “Apple martini,” she told the bartender before she looked up at him and batted her fake eyelashes. She didn’t smell too bad. There were several men’s pheromones on her, but nothing fresh. “Let me buy that for you,” he offered as he reached into his pocket for another bill. She grinned. “Thanks.” He waited until she’d taken a sip of her drink, then gave her his patented I desire you grin. Her eyes widened slightly, and then a slow come‐hither grin spread over her full, scarlet‐painted lips. “Slow song in one,” Digger informed him from behind. Dante tried to psych himself up to feed. He leaned down to the woman’s ear and murmured, “Dance with me, beautiful.” Without giving her time to deny him, he slipped her drink from her hand, passed it off to Digger, then took her hand to lead her onto the dance floor. He pulled her into his arms just as the hard techno beat dropped into a slow pop song. “Oh,” she said in surprise when he lifted her hand to his shoulder. “I like a man who knows what he wants,” she murmured and swayed her pelvis against his. He raised an eyebrow and pretended interest in her as he began the mesmerizing process, looking deep into her eyes, hypnotizing her. The woman’s eyes glassed over, and she stumbled. He pulled her tight against him with one arm, at the same time raising her left wrist to his mouth. A scent hit him that made him pause. Lilacs and purity. He looked up, breaking eye contact with the woman in his arms, to see Wendy a few feet away. A look of pain etched her gorgeous face, while anger flared in her bright green eyes. Agony and fury pierced Wendy so hard she didn’t know if she should cry or beat them both over the head. This sure wasn’t the first time her friend had moved in on a guy she’d claimed as her own, but it was the
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton first time it hurt so bad. And Dante was supposed to be out of town on business. Instead, he was hanging out in a nightclub, staring into her best friend’s eyes as if she were the only woman on earth—the same look he’d given her and she’d believed in. Candice’s eyes widened when she turned to see her. “Wendy! You made it!” She pulled out of Dante’s arms and came toward her. No way was she ready to speak to Candice. If she said anything to the woman right now, she could promise it would be the last words ever uttered between them. Right this moment, she hated the woman deeper than she thought physically possible. Wendy turned and started through the crowd, shoving her way between the throng of dancers. She had to get out. Get away. She needed time to process before she dealt with Candice. And Dante? He could just go stick it where the sun didn’t shine! When she looked up, she realized she’d taken a wrong turn. Instead of the passageway leading outside, she wound up in the short hall to the bathrooms. She turned to go the other direction, but Candice was right there. “Wendy. What’s wrong? Where are you going?” “How could you? How did you find him? I never told you anything!” She bit her tongue. She hadn’t meant to have an outburst in public, but the tears stung her eyes, and her throat tightened. It didn’t help when Dante came up behind Candice. “Wendy. Sweetheart. Let me explain.” Explain? Her hands shook where she fisted them at her sides. Her whole body shook. Her heart had been ripped out, and Candice acted as naïve as always, and Dante wanted to explain. Tears blurred her vision, but she didn’t let them fall. “Don’t you call me sweetheart, you asshole. You’re supposed to be out of town on business!” She tried to shove past him, but he blocked the narrow hallway and held out his hands to stop her. “Wait. Wendy. Please.”
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton “This is the dude that sent you flowers?” Candice asked. “He just picked me up at the bar. I’ve never seen him before tonight.” Wendy shoved him then, hard, her palms flat against his solid chest. She wasn’t a violent person, but right now she wanted to hurt, to inflict the kind of pain sucking the soul out of her body. Dante wound his arms around her and held her against his chest. She fought with all of her strength, but it didn’t seem to faze him. She kicked at his shins, scratched his neck, and called him every bad name she could come up with. He held her in a tight yet pain‐free embrace that hurt her even more than if he’d slapped her. She’d found such happiness in his arms. The tears came then, and she fought all the harder. “Shh, Wendy. Please. Let me explain. Let me explain.” “Hey! Let go of her you two‐timing jackass!” Candice went after him with her little purse, whacking him on the head. He turned his back on her and let her pummel his shoulder instead. A sob tore from Wendy’s throat, and she stopped fighting. His voice was so low, so gentle in her ear. His big, gentle hands held her against his body. She knew what she’d seen, but shouldn’t she hear him out? Give him a chance to explain? No. No. She wasn’t going to let someone treat her this badly ever again. She was worth more than this. “It’s not what you think,” he murmured in her ear, cupping the back of her head in that loving way that had melted her before. “I hate you,” she said in a tightly restrained voice. “Put me down.” “Not until you let me explain.” “You were making out with my friend. What’s to explain? I saw it. I saw you.” She shoved at his shoulders, and he lowered her to the floor but kept a tight hold around her waist. “I wasn’t making out with her—” The purse Candice wielded landed hard against his ear, and he turned on her. “Knock it off. Give me a minute to talk to Wendy.” Wendy turned and ran, as fast as she could with so many people
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton everywhere. She headed straight for the exit door, but someone grabbed her arm, spinning her around. She landed hard against Digger’s chest. “Hey, lassie. Where ya headed to so fast?” She shoved away from him, only to see Dante closing in. She swiped the tears from her cheeks. She obviously wasn’t getting away. “Wendy. Let me explain,” Dante said when he caught up. Digger still had a hold of her upper arm. She turned and looked up at him, her eyes narrowed. “You told me you were out of town on business,” she said, her voice low, her teeth gritted. “Just let me go. It’s over.” She jerked her arm from Digger’s grasp, and thankfully he let her go. “I’ve dated a lot of assholes in my thirty‐ seven years, but I don’t put up with liars.” “He’s ’ere on business, lass,” Digger said. “He didna leave town, but we’re not here for pleasure.” She made a scoffing sound. “Looked like he was getting a hell of a lot of pleasure with Candice.” She turned her glare on her friend. “I swear to God, you better not have known who he was.” Candice shook her head, her eyes wide. “Never saw him before tonight. I swear.” Dante closed his eyes for a moment and let out a slow breath. When he opened them, he looked into her eyes but didn’t say anything. If she were the type of person to try to read another’s mind, she’d say he was hurting as much as she was. But that just couldn’t be the case. She knew what she’d seen. “Take her home, Dant,” Digger said. Dante looked at his friend, and Digger nodded. “We’ll drive her to our place, and then I’ll come back here and meet up with Evan.” Wendy pressed her lips tight. Who did these men think they were? “Maybe someone should ask what I want to do?” she blurted out as she crossed her arms over her chest. “I’m not going anywhere with this lying assh—” The hard, loud techno music resumed, drowning out her last word,
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton but she was pretty sure they knew exactly what she’d said. Without warning, Dante stepped up to her, cupped her cheeks in his palms, leaned down, and kissed her. Softly. Just a brush of his lips against hers. She raised her hands and fisted the lapels of his jacket, wanting to push him away, but she couldn’t. He smelled too good. Tasted too good. God help her, she loved the bastard. He skimmed his lips along her jaw and up to her ear. “Please hear me out, my sweet. I have so much to explain.” She shivered, and a soft whimper passed her lips. She had to remember why she was mad. “You lied to me.” “I know. It was necessary, though.” She leaned back and looked into his eyes. Could there be any truth in what he and Digger said? But then why was Candice in his arms? “Come to my house so we can talk.” She started to shake her head, but he cut off her refusal. “If you don’t like what I have to say, you can leave. I will call you a cab myself.” She hesitated only a moment before nodding. She was so weak. But he’d better have a good excuse. A damn good one. Right now, she couldn’t fathom what it might be, but she wanted so badly for there to be one. He glanced at Digger and tipped his head toward the door. “Hey!” Candice cried as they started to walk off. “I’m coming with you.” Wendy stopped and turned toward her friend with a shake of her head. The poor woman looked upset, but Wendy didn’t back down. Candice had hurt her too many times to count. If this was in any way her fault, she feared their lifelong friendship was over. Candice shook her head and turned away, disappearing into the crowd. Wendy let Dante take her hand and lead her down the long corridor to the front of the building, and then they stepped out into the cool night air. The big African American bouncer came up to them—the same
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton man who’d just let her into the club less than fifteen minutes before. “Leaving so soon?” He aimed the question at Digger. Dante tried to wrap his arm around her shoulder, but she sidled away. If she were to keep a clear head and not fall for his seduction, she couldn’t let him touch her. “Aye,” Digger said. “I’ll be back in a bit.” He handed the slip to the valet. “Dante needs to work some stuff out with his girlfriend.” Dante scowled at Digger, but his friend didn’t seem to notice. Wendy crossed her arms over her chest. “He’s not my boyfriend. He’s just a guy I slept with who lied to me.” “Wendy, I’m—” “Save it. I’m going home. This was all a mistake.” She took off down the street, heading in the direction of her apartment. She knew she needed to cool off before she dealt with him. Her emotions were too all over the place for her to think straight. Dante grabbed her arm and hauled her back under the bright lights of the front of the club. A line of patrons stood against the wall, the front few watching the byplay. Wendy growled and tried to pry his fingers off her arm, but he held tight. “Stop it,” he said. “You’re making a spectacle of yourself.” “And you weren’t out on the dance floor? Staring into her eyes. And you were going to—Grrr. Let go of me before I call the cops.” She tried to twist out of his grasp but couldn’t. “You’re only going to hurt yourself,” he said, keeping his voice low. “Help me,” she said to the bouncer, who stood looking on with amusement. When he was of no help, she turned her pleading gaze on Digger. “Give the boy a chance, lass,” he said. “He didna do this to hurt ya. He cares for ya.” She stopped struggling because there was something in Digger’s tone that got to her. He sounded—and looked—sincere. But then, he might just be sticking up for his friend.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton The valet pulled up with a two‐seater Corvette and held the door open. Dante kept hold of her arm, slipped into the passenger seat, and pulled her down on his lap. She did everything she could to keep from leaning back into him, melting against his sheer size and heat. By the time the short ride into Queen Anne to Dante’s house ended, her back hurt from remaining so stiff. Digger pulled the car right into the garage and shut the door behind them, killing the car’s deep rumble with a flick of the ignition. “I’m assumin’ you donna need a chaperone for this?” She shoved the door open and climbed out, desperate to get away from Dante’s clean scent, his beautiful body that seemed to surround her. That was when he obviously noticed her skirt—her very short, tight skirt—and he raised his eyebrows as his gaze traveled up her body. The blouse was low‐cut and the same green as her eyes, the skirt black and clinging. “What did you do to yourself?” Her mouth dropped open, and her hands fisted at her sides. Wasn’t this where a guy trying to get back into her good graces would compliment her? He climbed out of the car and shut the door. Through the open window he said to Digger, “Call me if something comes up.” Digger nodded and hit the button to raise the garage door, then started the engine. “Lock up and keep tight.” Dante nodded and stepped back so Digger could leave. When the garage door was firmly shut once again, and they were alone, he turned back to her. “You do not need to wear makeup. You’re much too beautiful to cover yourself in that goop.” An indignant huff was her only reply, but something soft and tender shifted in her heart. She firmed her resolve and gritted her teeth. “Start talking, Dante. You’ve got five minutes to convince me you’re not a lying, cheating asshole.”
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton He pulled open the door to the utility room and punched in the code for the alarm system. At the same time he tisked his tongue. “Such language.” Then he held out his hand for her to join him. Instead of placing her palm against his, because that would be beyond stupid at that point, she brushed past him and went into the kitchen, stopping at the counter. “Talk. Time’s ticking.” “Give me one extra minute,” he said and disappeared down the hall. She heard a door opening, and she assumed he was hanging up his jacket. Pressing her fingers against her forehead, she told herself, again, that she needed to be strong. Be firm. And if he didn’t have one hell of a good reason, she was leaving. End of discussion. End of relationship. End. End. End. Dante wasn’t any better than any other man she’d been stupid enough to give her lonely heart to. When he came back into the kitchen, she said, “I’m waiting,” and crossed her arms over her chest. When his gaze narrowed at her chest, she looked down to see her breasts pressed up, nearly overflowing the low‐ cut blouse. She dropped her arms to her side even as a flush of embarrassment and...oh, hell. Just the way he looked at her made her tingle all over. He cleared his throat and opened his mouth, but then snapped it shut. She raised an eyebrow. “What happened to Mr. Debonair? Mr. Smooth‐talker? Mr. Seduce‐me‐into‐sex‐on‐the‐first‐date? Hmm? Cat got your tongue? Can’t come up with some slick line I might believe?” Her tone was nasty and filled with venom. It was all self‐preservation, because all she wanted was for him to give her a good excuse she could believe, or at least pretend to believe. He stepped toward her, but she backed away and raised her hands to warn him off. “No way. Don’t touch me. You’ve obviously got no excuse.” Tears blurred her vision, and she gave her head a furious shake. “You made me
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton believe—” Her words cut off when her throat tightened, and a single tear slid down her cheek. Turning on her heel, she all but sprinted for the front door. She had to get away before she totally lost it. That would be the ultimate humiliation—to let him see how much he’d hurt her. “Wendy. Wait.” He grabbed her arm as she gripped the doorknob. “I love you.” Her face scrunched and another tear fell as she jerked from his grasp. “You fucking lied to me!” She shoved against his chest with both hands, knocking him back a step. “And you can’t even tell me why. Would you please just tell me the truth? Why did you break our date? Why were you with Candice? Why did you make me believe in you?” And now he said he loved her. Words she would have swooned to hear just a few hours earlier. “I was there on business. I was not with Candice, I was only dancing with her. And I need you to believe in me.” She backed toward the door. Letting him talk her into believing him would be stupid. The most stupid thing she’d ever done. “Don’t touch me. What business can take place at a loud nightclub? You were dancing with a woman you claim to have never met. What—” She swallowed hard. “I don’t want to see you again. Ever. You hurt me, and I’m not going to let you or anyone else walk all over me and make me think they care about me when all they care about is themselves. Never again.” She turned and jerked open the door. The sight that met her made her blood run ice cold through her veins. And then she screamed in terror as she stared into the open, sightless eyes of a corpse. At the piercing, hair‐raising scream, Dante lunged for Wendy, pulling her to safety. After he’d shoved her against the wall out of the open doorway, shielding her with his own body, something flopped with a dull thud onto the floor. He turned to see Xavier’s body slouched over the threshold, a wooden stake protruding from his chest.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton Wendy cried hysterically against his chest, clinging to his shirt as she violently shook and uttered incoherent words. He let go of her, and she screamed again, pulling him back and burying her face against his neck. He pried her fingers out of his shirt and turned away long enough to drag the body into the house, shut the door, and turn the deadbolt, praying no one had seen the body or heard Wendy’s terror‐filled cries. Then he turned back to her, grabbed her face in his hands, and stared into her eyes. “Forget, Wendy,” he murmured even though she whimpered with each breath she took. “Forget what you saw. Remember only my love. Remember my love.” She shook in his grasp and curled her fingers around his wrists. “Forget what you saw. Remember my love. I love you. Forget all the bad. Forget it all.” Slowly her eyes glazed, and her eyelids drooped. Guilt shot through him, but what choice did he have? When this was over and he could explain everything, she could make a logical decision. Until then... “Forget the bad. Forget the fear.” When she sagged, he caught her and lifted her into his arms, and that was when he realized how weak he’d grown. He hadn’t fed since they’d had sex, and then it hadn’t been enough to satisfy. He carried her up to his bedroom, laid her on the bed, slipped off her shoes, and pulled up the covers. He’d put her into a deep, hypnotic sleep, so she’d sleep for a few hours if not all night. When he made it back downstairs, he bypassed Xavier’s body in the foyer and grabbed the portable phone from the end table in the living room. He dialed Digger’s cell. On the third ring, Digger answered, the sound of the club loud in the background. “Aye, mate?” “Our slayer left his calling card on our doorstep.” “What?” “Xavier.”
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton “Fuck me!” He nodded, agreeing with the sentiment. “Evan was here when I got back, so we’ll be there in a few minutes. Call Gaston and find out what he wants us to do.” Digger disconnected the call, and Dante punched in Gaston’s private number. This was going to be one long‐ass night.
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Chapter Ten Wendy awoke with warmth at her back, a heavy arm over her waist, and a sense of floating on a cloud in perfect harmony with the world. She inhaled deep, and there was no doubting Dante’s sensual scent surrounding her. She smiled sleepily and stretched, arching her back and pressing her butt against his groin. His arm flexed and pulled her harder against his chest, but his deep, steady breathing never changed. He loved her. The knowledge infused her with energy and a need she’d never before experienced. Need for his touch, for him to possess her, as if she wouldn’t be whole until he buried himself deep inside her. Rolling over, she looked into his face. So beautiful. So perfect. And all hers. His bare chest was so very warm where she rested her palm against the flesh over his heart. The heavy beat vibrated against her hand, and she leaned forward to kiss the tender hollow just beneath his Adam’s apple. He made an, “mmm,” sound and ran his hand up her back under her blouse. She glanced down with a frown, wondering how she’d possibly fallen asleep fully dressed when Dante was stripped down to his black briefs. Had she had too much to drink? Oh, the poor man, she thought with a naughty grin. The poor, sweet man who took her to bed only to have her fall asleep before they
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton made love. And after he’d told her he loved her, too. Reaching between their bodies, she laid her palm against his semi‐ aroused penis. His hips jerked slightly, pressing himself against her, and his cock grew in length and width as it hardened. She hummed in pleasure as she stroked him and leaned forward, burying her face in the crook of his neck and breathing in his clean, masculine scent. He must have showered before bed. Though the scent of his exotic cologne clung to the bedding beneath her, his skin was clean and fresh. She licked him then sucked a bit of his flesh between her lips. “Wendy,” he groaned as his other arm moved under her, wrapping around her, and he pulled her flush against his chest, her hand trapped between them against his now solid cock. “’Mornin’, handsome,” she murmured as she nipped at his neck then moved down to his chest so she could flick her tongue over his flat nipple. He sighed and pressed his arousal into her palm as his nipple puckered and hardened. “’Morning, my love,” he said in that glorious accent as he speared his fingers through her hair and held her head still while she tortured his chest with tiny nips and flicks of her tongue. Dipping her hand into his briefs, she wrapped her fingers around him and exalted in the surge of power coursing through her. She made him this hard. Only her. Because he loved her. Her heart swelled to bursting. He loved her. She inched her way down his body, licking, nipping his taut skin, kissing and tasting. When her face came even with his pelvis, she shoved his underwear out of the way and took his hot, silky cock into her mouth as deep as she could. “Ahhrgh.” His fingers tightened in her hair. She groaned with the thrill that his lust sent through her. He tasted of sin and temptation. Of everything she’d always fantasized but never thought could happen to her. Her skin tingled, and her pussy pulsed with heat and moisture. She cupped his balls, gently rolling them in her palm,
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton and sucked hard while she flicked her tongue along the sensitive underside. “Wendy. Wendy.” His hips rose off the bed, and she took him to the back of her throat. He groaned, and she tasted a bit of tangy pre‐cum. She wanted more. Wanted it all. She hummed around his shaft, and his cock grew even harder. When she grazed her teeth the length of him, he shouted and jerked away. With a triumphant laugh, she went after him again, but so fast it made her head spin, she was facedown on the bed, her wrists clasped in his hands, and he slammed into her pussy with a force so hard she almost hit the headboard. She screamed with pleasure at the onslaught of his hard, pounding pace, his cock hitting and rubbing every hotspot in her pussy. She squirmed, but his body held her in place. His warm breath puffed against her ear with each thrust, his guttural, animalistic grunts of passion spurring her on, making her hotter, needier. “Dante.” She arched her back to raise her ass in the air and spread her legs wider so he could go deeper. Deeper! she silently begged him. Please! Dante’s mouth watered, his fangs at full length. Her neck was right there for his taking. She was so aroused he knew if he drank she’d never feel it. Never know. He could drink his fill of her ambrosia‐like blood while he fucked her cunt and loved her with all his heart. No. He couldn’t. He’d promised himself he wouldn’t feed from her without her permission, her compliance. She had to want to give him her blood. He thrust into her again and again. She writhed beneath him and cried out with every punishing thrust. She called his name and begged for release, but still he tortured the both of them, not allowing her to adjust that final bit that would take her over the edge. If he couldn’t feed, he needed the energy their lovemaking would give him. It wasn’t enough, but it had to last him a little while. Just until he could talk to her.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton “Dante! Please!” He licked her neck. The sweet‐salty flavor of her skin made his balls draw up tight and the cum press at the base of his dick. He was so close. He wanted to drink while he came. Needed to taste her blood once again. “No!” he shouted as he pressed his forehead to her shoulder and laced his fingers through hers, gripping her hands tight, fighting the hunger. “Please,” she begged on harsh pants. “Please.” Her cunt squeezed his cock in a vise‐like grip as her muscles contracted. She screamed, and he knew it was the hardest orgasm she’d probably experienced in her life. Still he stroked and stroked. She sobbed, and her hands gripped his fingers so hard he lost feeling there. He held his breath, trying to hold off his release. When she arched under him, and her ass lifted him right off the bed, he pulled one hand away and speared it under her to pinch her clit. She yowled like a cat in heat, and the sound, along with the hot, slick release of her juices over his engorged cock, sent him over the edge with a shout. Every muscle in his body tensed, tightened, coiled. And for the first time in three hundred years, he wished his semen held life. For he’d give anything to gift the woman he loved with a child. His child. The child of his heart. “No. Don’t move,” Dante whispered when Wendy tried pulling her hand from his. “Give me two more minutes to recover.” And to get his fangs to disappear. The musky scent of her sweaty skin, combined with the aroma of their spent lust, kept his hunger too near the surface. “You’re squashing me,” she muttered and rolled to her side. He chuckled and tucked her against his front, wrapping his arms tight around her, not letting her turn to look at him. He needed a few more minutes. “That was...” She sighed. “Indescribable.” He buried his face in the curly mass of her bed‐mussed hair and
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton smiled. But then he remembered how they’d wound up in this bed. She’d been so angry with him before he mesmerized her, she told him she hated him and never wanted to see him again. He’d coerced her into bed with him, and if he hadn’t made her forget everything that happened last night, she wouldn’t have just made love to him. She’d hate him when he told her the truth. “What else can you do that I don’t know about?” Leap tall buildings in a single bound and stop a speeding bullet with my chest and survive. But only after I drink your blood and make you fear me. He shook his head and sighed. “My love, I have some things to tell you.” She turned in his arms, pressing her still‐clothed body against his, and looked up at him with trust and love in her greener than springtime eyes. Luckily, his fangs had subsided into his gums. But it was time to lay himself bare. Time for her to know the truth. He couldn’t keep his secrets to himself because he needed her to know—and accept—him for who he truly was. “You sound awfully serious,” she said, a small wrinkle forming between her brows. “What’s wrong?” He lifted his hand to touch her cheek. “I love you with all my heart and soul. You must remember that above all. No matter what happens, or what I tell you, you have to believe that I love you as I’ve never loved another woman.” “Dante... You’re scaring me. Oh, God, don’t tell me you’re a criminal or something. I can’t be involved with a criminal. Have you been in jail? Prison? Are you an axe murderer?” “Shh. No, I have never been in prison or jail.” But he’d killed before. With his bare hands. Ripped VanBueren’s throat out with the same hands he’d just used to pleasure her. Jesus Christ, how could he tell her the truth? He kissed her. Coaxing her mouth open with a soft swipe of his tongue, he delved inside her heat and held her tight against him, knowing it may very well be the last kiss he would be allowed to share with her.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton Wendy moaned and shifted against him, rocking her pelvis against his. Her arm went around his waist, her small, warm hand pressed against his back. Her tongue slid against his in an erotic dance that brought his arousal back to life. If he had the next millennium with her, it would never be enough to satisfy his craving for her. She moved her hand downward until she palmed his butt cheek, flexing her fingers into his muscle. He moaned and rolled over on top of her even as he battled his need to feed. If she did accept who and what he was, it didn’t mean she’d ever let him feed from her. He needed to prepare himself for that likelihood. If she said no, he would never take her blood. She tore her mouth from his and arched her neck as she pressed her head into the pillow and moaned. Raising her hips, she aligned their bodies so the tip of his cock teased her curls. But all he saw was the smooth, silky column of her throat and how badly he wanted to bite. To suck. He jerked from her grasp and rolled to the side of the bed where he sat up. “Wendy. We have to talk first. I cannot make love with you again until we talk.” He dropped his head into his hands. “Until I tell you my secrets.” Her heavy breathing filled the silent room, as did the scent of her arousal. “Why are you talking...weird?” She moved behind him on the bed, and then she leaned around and looked into his face. “You’ve never had a lisp before. What’s wrong?” All it would take would be for him to open his mouth and show her his fangs. Even if she didn’t believe in the fable of vampire lore, she’d know something was different about him. Bang, bang, bang. “Dante, mate, get yer arse outta bed. We’ve got a problem.” Dante surged off the edge of the bed and jerked open the door. Digger gave him a once over and raised his brow.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton Dante narrowed his eyes. “What?” Digger’s look of humor fled, and he leaned in close, obviously so Wendy couldn’t hear. “Thomas and Carlson. They’re dead. Gaston wants us at his place right now.” “Fuck.” Dante dropped his head back and stared at the ceiling. He and Digger were the last two left on the list—provided they were correct about said list. “Evan and Jesse are downstairs. Evan will drive Wendy home, and Jesse’s coming with us. He’s the only human we have who might be up to fighting with us. And by God, we can’t be separated at all right now.” Dante nodded. “I agree. Give me ten minutes.” Without waiting for Digger’s response, he shut the bedroom door and turned toward Wendy who still sat in the middle of the bed. “Sweetheart, something has come up. I have to leave. A friend of mine will drive you home, though, all right?” “Why? What’s going on? Where do you have to go?” He headed for the chest of drawers and pulled out a lightweight pair of sweatpants and a T‐shirt. “Put these on. I don’t want you going out looking like that.” “Excuse me?” She came off the bed and planted her hands on her hips. “What’s wrong with this? I just bought it yesterday.” Then she looked down at herself, and her cheeks turned pink as she tried to push her skirt down her thighs. She was covered in wrinkles, and she’d lost the top button on the blouse, so the opening showed much too much of her luscious cleavage. “As I was saying,” he said, trying to keep his brain focused on what needed to be done. “I have to get to a very important meeting.” He pulled jeans, socks, and another T‐shirt from the drawers. Thank God he hadn’t told her everything yet. With Thomas and Carlson dead, there was no telling what would happen to him in the next few days. All three had been murdered in less than twenty‐four hours, which told him the slayer was getting antsy to finish the job.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton When he turned back to Wendy after pulling the shirt over his head, she was trying to adjust the drawstring on the sweatpants. “Let me,” he said as he sat down on the bed and pulled her between his knees. “I’m sorry about this. I swear, when—soon—we’ll sit down and I’ll tell you everything.” She frowned at him. “Just tell me now. Don’t make me wait and wonder and make stuff up in my head.” “I cannot.” He pulled the drawstring tight and tied it in a bow. Then he reached for her blouse buttons. “Just know that it has nothing to do with you.” He looked up into her eyes. “I want nothing and no one more than I want you. Do you understand that?” As he slipped the blouse down her arms, she shook her head. “Something feels a little off. How exactly did we get here last night?” Fuck. He’d said too much. If she remembered what happened last night before they had a chance to talk, it would be all for naught, and she’d hate him again. “I brought you here,” he said, slipping the T‐shirt over her head. “But—” He clamped his mouth over hers and speared his tongue into her mouth. She gripped his shoulders for support as she leaned into him. When he brought his hands up to cup her soft breasts, she moaned into his mouth. “I love you, Wendy,” he whispered when he broke the kiss and laid his cheek against hers. “Always remember that.” Before she could ask any more questions, he stood, took her hand, and led her downstairs. At the bottom of the steps, he stopped and grasped the handrail as dizziness assailed him. If he didn’t feed soon, he was liable to collapse. Too much energy exertion and no nutrients. He had no idea sex could take so much out of him. “Dante?” Wendy said as she touched his forehead. “You don’t look so good. Are you okay?” He wrapped his fingers around her wrist and pulled her hand
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton away. She was far too tempting, and as strong as the hunger beat at him, it would be too easy to lean down and take a sip from her. Her willingness be damned. “I’m fine,” he said, his voice low. She frowned at him and pursed her lips. “Are you sick? Is that what you had to tell me? Do you have cancer or something?” With a sigh, he shook his head. “No, love. I am not dying. I am a little hungry is all. I didn’t have supper last night.” Evan, Digger and Jesse were all in the kitchen. Jesse was eating a bagel, and Digger handed both he and Wendy a mug of coffee when they entered. “Thank you,” Wendy muttered. She cast him a sidelong glance, but there was nothing he could do right now. He read the questions in her eyes, but now was definitely not the time. “Wendy,” he said. “This is Evan Fredrick. He’ll be driving you home.” “Nice to meet you,” she said and held out her hand. Evan shook her hand and gave a polite nod. “The pleasure’s mine, ma’am.” “And this is Jesse Johnstone,” Digger said as he wrapped his arm around the big black man. “You probably remember him from the club.” Her mouth opened slightly as she stared at Jesse, and Dante knew it wasn’t because Digger had just made it clear that he and Jesse were a couple. She didn’t remember the events that transpired at the club. Damn it, he should have told Digger last night what he’d done, but they’d been so busy with disposing of Xavier’s body, there hadn’t been much time to talk. By the time they got back to the house, it had been near dawn, and they’d both been exhausted. Dante cleared his throat and laid his hand on Wendy’s back. “I think she had a bit too much to drink last night. She doesn’t exactly remember how she got here.” He sent Digger a look that begged him to keep his mouth shut.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton Digger gave the slightest of nods. “Do ya need an aspirin or two, then, lassie?” Wendy shook her head. “I’m fine. But Dante needs to eat.” Then she went to the counter, pulled a bagel out of the bag there, and smeared it with the cream cheese sitting next to it. “Eat this,” she said to Dante, “before you pass out.” Evan raised an eyebrow at him, but he ignored the look of amusement. Wendy’s words and actions made it clear she didn’t know yet, and any vampire knew it was up to the lover to tell the human the truth, no one else. It was an unwritten, sacred rule. He took the bagel. “Thank you.” “We should go,” Evan said. “Gaston’s waiting for you. I’ll be there as soon as I drop her at home.” “Make sure she gets to her door, please,” Dante said. “Of course.” Evan held out his arm for her. “Shall we?” After she took another sip of her coffee, she set the mug on the counter. “Dante? Can I...um...” She cocked her head to the side, indicating she wanted to talk to him in the relative privacy of the hallway. He set down his coffee and half‐eaten bagel on the counter and followed her to the hall. “What is it, love?” She turned toward him, wrapped her arms around his neck, and pulled him down for a kiss that curled his toes and made his gums ache. “I love you, too, Dante,” she whispered in his ear. “I didn’t get to tell you that. And whatever you have to tell me, I’ll be there for you, no matter how bad it is.” Dante’s heart swelled with the love he harbored for her. He wrapped his arms around her and lifted her slightly in a crushing hug as he buried his face in her hair. “Thank you, Wendy. Your words...” Would get him through the next few days and whatever horrors they might bring. “Thank you,” he whispered. She kissed his cheek and laughed. “Please take care of yourself. You feel as though you’re shaking.”
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton He was shaking. He was starving. “You’d better go so Digger and I can get to our meeting. I’ll call you...in a few days, okay?” “A few...” “Please. Trust me. I need a couple days.” “I do trust you.” She smiled a sweet grin filled with love. But then it faltered and her brow furrowed again as if she was remembering something, or trying to remember. “Come on. Let’s go. Evan’s waiting.” She let him escort her to the front door where he met Evan. He gave the other vampire Wendy’s address and again asked him to see her to her door. “I’ll guard her with my life,” Evan said, and Wendy made a face. “Jeesh, it’s just a ride home. I could call a cab.” “No,” both Dante and Digger said in unison. “Evan will drive you,” Dante said. “Be careful,” Digger added as they walked down the steps to Evan’s dark blue sedan. Evan gave a wave as he held the door for her. “Stop worrying. She’s safe with me.” “Let’s get going. I’ve got to feed soon.” Dante turned to put on his shoes. “Maybe Gaston’ll let ya use one of his women. You’re lookin’ a bit pasty.” Digger led him to the coat closet in the hallway where they armed up and put on jackets to cover the shoulder holsters that held their weapons. They met Jesse in the kitchen, and Digger handed his lover a wooden dagger in a sheath for him to wear on his belt. “It’s all I got for ya, babe,” he said to Jesse. “Dante and I are carryin’ the guns.” Jesse nodded as he loosened his belt and slid the sheath into place. “It’s okay. I’m hoping I don’t have to get close enough to use it.” He smiled at Digger and laid a hand on his lover’s shoulder as he leaned in and kissed him. “I’ll meet you at Gaston’s. Be careful.” Digger nodded and headed for the door to the garage. “I thought
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton ya were gonna tell ’er the truth, mate.” Jesse followed them into the garage, gave Digger one last kiss while Dante punched in the alarm code, then stood behind Digger’s Vette so he could get out when Digger opened the garage door. Dante sighed as he settled into the passenger seat. “I was going to. Almost did it, until you knocked on the door. What good is telling her now, though, if I wind up dead in the next day or two? What good will that do?” “Yer not gonna die,” Digger said, his voice firm. “We’re gonna wait ’til this bastard comes after us, and then we’re gonna take ’im out.” They both waved to Jesse as they pulled out of the garage, and then they waited until he got into his SUV before taking off down the street. Dante wished he had as much confidence as his friend. Maybe he’d feel more positive after he fed. The one thing he did have on his side now was Wendy’s love. If he could make it through this, he’d at least get a chance to explain his life to her. It was the first time in ages he truly wanted to live.
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Chapter Eleven Thank God for the rain in Seattle. The noon sky hung low and pewter gray. Even so, Dante’s eyes hurt from the light as they drove across Lake Washington toward Bellevue. He groaned and gripped his stomach as the hunger curled his guts in a painful knot. “Hell, mate,” Digger said, laying his hand on Dante’s shoulder as he weaved through traffic. “You’re in bad shape.” Dante could do nothing but nod. He couldn’t remember the last time he’d been so hungry. Then he realized—he hadn’t supplemented. Usually, when he avoided feeding, he ate raw beef. It wasn’t optimum, but it gave him some of the nutrients needed for his survival. This past week he hadn’t eaten anything. His worries had been on other things. The slayer, his emotional conflict over Wendy. He couldn’t remember if he’d eaten anything at all since Wendy had come for supper. That night he’d cooked chicken, which did nothing for him except give him the pleasure of flavor and a sense of his humanity. He groaned again when the pain gripped him. “Almost there,” Digger said as he whipped down the side streets leading to Gaston’s estate. “Gaston’ll find ya some blood.” “I thought...sex...was supposed to help...” he gasped out. “Transfer...of energy.” “Not the way yer goin’ about it. Yer in too much turmoil. Yer
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton worryin’ about tellin’ her, yer fightin’ the hunger, and yer expending too much energy of yer own for some slap and tickle to help. Ya need to tell the lass or be done with ’er.” He knew that. He would have let her leave last night if she hadn’t discovered Xavier’s body on the porch. If he survived the coming battle, he’d tell her. Explain everything. Let her choose the next step in their relationship, whether it was walking away from his monstrosity or letting him prove to her he’d be anything and everything she needed. If she left... The car screeched to a halt in front of the steps leading up to the wide front doors of Gaston’s mansion. Digger jumped out and came around his side just as he pushed the door open. When he tried to get out, his knees buckled. Digger caught him, keeping him from falling. “Fuck me, mate.” He groaned. “Rather not, friend.” Digger chuckled as they started up the steps. Jesse pulled his SUV to a stop right behind Digger’s Corvette then leaped out and came to his other side, slipping his arm around his waist to help support him. Digger laughed, and Dante even found a slight smile. Digger had more strength in one arm then both he and Jesse had in their entire bodies. “Here,” Jesse said, holding his wrist out to Dante to feed from. He shook his head. “No offence, Jesse, but female blood is bad enough.” As they approached the doors, they opened but, instead of the old butler, there were two well‐armed guards—one human, one vampire. “Mr. Pierre is waiting for you in the library,” the vampire said. Dante didn’t recognize him, but he was older, at least part of Dante’s generation. Gaston must have brought him in from out of town. Outside the library stood another two guards. Again one was human, one vampire. They wore the long swords typical of vampire warriors, along with wooden daggers on their belts similar to the one Digger had given Jesse. Dante assumed they also wore the specially
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton designed vampire pistols under their suit jackets as did he and Digger. “What has happened?” Gaston asked, rising from his desk when the three of them entered the library. “He needs to feed,” Digger said. “Would you have a woman, probably two at this point, you’d be willing to share?” “Of course.” Gaston picked up the phone and pressed a button. “Valerie, would you and Jessica please join me in the library?” Digger and Jesse lowered him to the leather sofa. “How did he get this way? Was there a fight?” Dante shook his head, but the pain was almost unbearable, and he couldn’t find words. “It’s a long, complicated story,” Digger said. “Boilin’ it down to the simplest terms...our boy ’ere is an idgit.” Gaston laughed. “A woman, then?” “A human he’s afraid of tellin’ the truth to.” “Ahh, Dante,” Gaston said on a sigh. “You should be old enough to know better.” He was old enough to know better. He knew that if he handled Wendy the wrong way, she’d run screaming from him and he’d never see her again. The doors opened, and Dante got a whiff of perfume— overbearingly sweet and cloying. He swallowed hard. “Ah, my beauties,” Gaston said. “My friend here must feed. Are you willing?” “Yes, Gaston,” they answered in unison. Dante finally looked up to see two women. One was dressed in jeans and a peasant blouse. The other wore yoga pants and a fluffy angora sweater. Both were barefoot. Neither could be over twenty‐five years old. Gaston’s tastes never ceased to amaze him. The one in jeans sat down next to him, flicked her hair over her shoulder, and exposed her neck. He did his best not to shudder as he reached for her hand. “Thank you,” he said, “but I prefer the wrist.” He
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton couldn’t imagine closing his mouth over any woman’s neck but Wendy’s. The thought repulsed him. Everything about this repulsed him, but he had no choice—he wasn’t about to suck Jesse’s wrist. He brought the woman’s arm up and sank his fangs into her. As the warm, tangy blood spurt into his mouth, he gagged, spraying droplets of the precious fluid in the poor girl’s face. She yelped and jerked from his grasp, bounding off the couch and into Gaston’s arms. Humiliation complete, Dante dropped his head forward as he swiped the back of his hand over his mouth. “My apologies,” he said as his mouth watered. As bad as it was, his body craved it. “Gaston, do you mind if I get him a drink? Tequila is preferable. If he can wash down the—” Dante shut his eyes. He was so tired, he wasn’t sure if he could lift his head again. “I have something better,” he heard Gaston say, and then the sounds surrounding him faded out as he slumped against the cool smoothness of the couch. “Come on, mate,” Digger said, his voice little more than a whisper. “A few more sips.” Dante came around with a straw stuck between his lips. He sucked, and the astringent taste of vodka filled his mouth. Underlying the flavor was the coppery tingle of pure, fresh blood. But it went down without causing his throat to close and his gag reflexes to convulse. He opened his eyes to see Jesse sitting next to him, holding him up, and Digger knelt on the floor in front of him, holding the tall glass of dark red liquid. “Welcome back,” Jesse said, humor lacing his deep voice. “You gave Dig quite a scare.” Digger shook his head and pursed his lips in disgust as he cast Jesse a glare. Then his attention focused back on Dante. “I wanna beat the shite out of ya, is what I wanna do.”
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton Dante reached for the glass and sat up straight, pulling away from Jesse. He glanced around the room as he downed the last of the alcohol‐ tainted blood, wondering who stood witness to his shame, but the room was empty. “Aye, they left to give us some privacy after Gaston made up this concoction. He said yer not the first pussy vamp he’s come across.” Dante chuckled and wiped his mouth. He sucked in a deep breath, relieved the pain was gone. The surge of strength wouldn’t come for about twenty minutes—until the nutrients entered his blood stream—but already the terrible weakness had subsided. “I am sure Gaston called me a pussy.” Jesse chuckled and stood up. “Naw, that’s just Dig showing his love for you.” Digger pushed to his feet and stood over Dante, arms crossed, shaking his head. “Yer lucky Gaston keeps a supply of fresh blood on hand. Ya scared that girl, and the other one looked ready ta puke when ya spit blood all o’er her friend. It’s been three hundred years, mate. It’s time ta get over yer hang‐ups.” “I don’t need a lecture.” He set the glass on the end table and stretched, making sure all the aches had left his muscles. They had. “You think I enjoyed making a fool of myself just now?” Digger raised an eyebrow. “Just now? Ya passed out over a half hour ago. That’s the third glass of that crap we’ve shoved down yer gullet. We weren’t sure ya were comin’ back this time. Ya’ve done a lot o’ stupid shite in the years I’ve known ya, but—” “Let him be,” Jesse said softly, laying his hand on Digger’s shoulder. “This time it was an accident.” Digger shook his head and turned away, walked over to a bookshelf, and leaned against it. “Was it?” Dante stood up in a surge of anger. “You know it was. What the hell kind of question is that?” His best friend shrugged. “It’s not like it’s the first time ya tried
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton killin’ yerself. Just last week ya sawed off the leg of the table to stake yerself. Why would starvation be any different? And why would ya do it now, when ya know ya need yer strength to fight off the goddamn slayer who’s wipin’ out all our friends?” Dante’s fury drained away as fast as it had come. Digger wasn’t so much angry at him as the situation that surrounded them. “It was a week and a half ago,” he said softly. “And things have changed in my life since then. You know I wouldn’t abandon you until this slayer is found and dealt with. I’m not that selfish.” As he watched, Digger’s shoulders relaxed and he sighed. “Sorry, mate.” He glanced at Jesse, looking a little sheepish. “Me, too,” Dante replied. “This is getting to all of us,” Jesse said. “You think I like the idea of the man I love going against this unknown evil?” He went up to Digger and pulled the smaller man into his arms. “I love you, and this is eating me alive. I can only imagine what it’s doing to you guys.” Dante turned his back on the intimate embrace and stared out the window at the low clouds and steady rain. He wished he could share his worries with his lover, as well. He could use her support. Then again, he wouldn’t want to worry her. The possibility of his death was too real. If she knew... He swiped his hand through his hair. What were the chances this was the last slayer they’d ever face? It had been a hundred years since the last one, but that meant nothing. Whoever this was could have others waiting in the wings to take his place if he failed. A knock sounded on the door before it opened. Dante turned to see Gaston enter, followed by Evan. “You are looking better,” Gaston said to him with a grin. “Thank you, Gaston, for the blood. I feel a bit foolish for going so long between feedings.” “Say no more. Please, have a seat.” Evan took up his post beside Gaston’s desk, Jesse and Digger sat
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton down next to each other on the sofa, and Dante moved to one of the wingback chairs. Gaston leaned back against his desk and shoved his hands into the pockets of his suit pants. “Evan,” Gaston said. “Why don’t you tell them what you know?” Evan crossed one ankle over the other knee and slouched slightly in his seat. “Last night when I returned to the club after I left your house, I overheard a group of young vampires talking about an overthrow. There were no specifics, but they said with the elimination of the elders, soon they’d be able to move up in ranks and take over.” He shook his head and sighed. “These kids were nobodies, and I’m pretty sure they were just mouthing off about things they’d overheard, but it brings to light that our summation was correct as to why this is happening.” Digger rubbed his forehead with his fingertips. “What happened with Thomas and Carlson? How were they killed?” “I tried calling them last night after you called me about Xavier, and I couldn’t get a hold of them. I sent Evan to find them when he checked in after what he’d overheard at the club. Carlson was killed in his bed. He never saw it coming. Thomas had fought, and fought hard. He was hacked up from battle, but the killing blow had decapitated him.” “Christ Almighty.” Dante’s stomach turned, and it had nothing to do with the blood he’d consumed. “We’re all that’s left,” Gaston said. “The four of us are the oldest vampires left in all of Seattle. Evan is a skilled fighter, as both of you are. I’ve surrounded and filled my house with the best fighters I know, both human and vampire, but these vampires have never before faced a determined slayer. I’d like for the both of you to remain here.” Both Digger and Dante shook their heads. “If we’re hidin’ away here, how the fuck do we draw him out? We don’t know who the hell he is. We have to see ’im to defeat ’im.” “If we’re all here, he’s only got one place to come after us,” Gaston tried to reason.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton “Whoever this is isn’t stupid or he’d already have been identified,” Dante said. “He’s a fighter, obviously, if what you say about Thomas is true, so it’s going to come down to hand‐to‐hand combat to kill him.” He glanced at Evan. “Gaston needs to be protected at all costs, and bringing the slayer here before Digger and I have a chance at him is not the right thing to do.” “I agree,” Digger said. “Ya need to stay safe, which means ya need to stay locked away ’ere with all yer guards while Dante and I find this fucker.” Gaston shook his head. “We don’t know who he is. And there’s a possibility it is more than one. If this has to do with an overthrow of leadership within the sect, then it’s very likely there is an assassination team at work. How else do you explain the sheer number taken out in so little time?” It wasn’t a thought that he hadn’t had, but Dante shook his head. “It does not matter, Gaston. If you fall, then they’ve won. There is no one who can take your place. At least if they come after Digger and me, we’ll be together and have more of a chance of one of us surviving to get back to you. Then you’ll know who they are so the rest of your guard can go after them en masse.” “Jesse’ll never be put in danger, if it can be helped,” Digger said. “He’ll be the one to bring word should somethin’ happen to us.” Jesse reached over and laid his hand on Digger’s thigh. “I’ll do anything I can to help,” he said. “I know I don’t have vampire strength, but I’m a hell of a scrapper.” Digger’s smile was a little sad as he laid his hand over his lover’s. Dante hated seeing his teasing friend so distraught. This was worse than a hundred years ago. This was getting too personal. “I would like to argue with you,” Gaston said, “but what you say has merit. I’ll let the guards know that Jesse is free to come and go from the estate without question.” Dante stood. Jesse and Digger followed suit. “Thanks again,” Dante
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton said, shaking Gaston’s hand. “Please tell your...um...tell her I’m sorry.” Gaston chuckled. “She’s fine.” He turned, lifted a business card from his desktop, and handed it to Dante. “The next time you need some blood, contact this person. She’s a friend of mine. Tell her I sent you.” Dante read the card. It was for a Sue Mathis at the Seattle General Blood Bank. “Again, thank you,” he said, slipping the card into his pocket. He stepped aside while Digger and Jesse said their farewells to Gaston. “Wendy got home safely?” he asked Evan. The man nodded. “Yes. Walked her to her door. She was fine when I left her.” “Thank you.” He headed for the door. “I want hourly check‐ins,” Gaston said. “If I don’t hear from you, I’m sending Evan and a team to your house.” “I’m sure it willna be long once nightfall comes,” Digger said. “We’ll be in touch.” The three of them headed to the driveway. Jesse gave Digger a hug and kiss before he got into his SUV and pulled off. Digger stared after the vehicle for a long moment. “He’s goin’ to work. He says he wants to keep his ears open to anythin’ there. He’s even workin’ inside tonight, which he hates doin’. He’ll call if he hears anythin’.” Digger started the car. “I wish he’d stay away from us.” “He’s not stupid. He knows what he can and cannot do.” Digger turned to him. “Sorry ’bout earlier. I’m—” “Enough said.” Dante shrugged. “It’s been a bitch of a week.” “Aye. That it has.” As they pulled out onto the street, Dante slouched into the seat and prepared for a hair‐raising trip home. Digger surprised him by driving within the speed limit. A sure sign of Digger’s distress. * * * * * Wendy lay on the couch, staring at the textured ceiling, making
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton little pictures out of the bumps and dips. She sighed and smiled, imbued with a sense of peace and calm she couldn’t remember ever feeling. Relaxed, yet energized. Languid, yet she never thought she’d been quite so awake. She could run a marathon, but lying here seemed like a good thing to do, too. She was in love. She was loved. Her body ached from the hard loving of just a few hours ago, but it was a wonderful twinge. One she wanted to experience again and again and again. The door buzzer rang, and she sighed. She glanced at the door and the speaker, but didn’t want to move. It buzzed again, and she rolled to her feet, going a little lightheaded at the sudden move. She giggled and stumbled toward the door. Her blood zinged as if she’d had too much alcohol. Must have been the aftereffects of drinking too much the night before. “Yo?” she said, punching the speaker button. “Uh...Wendy?” came Candice’s voice. “That you?” “Hey, Candi. Come on up.” She buzzed her friend in, cracked the door open, then flopped back onto the couch and propped her hands behind her head. Candice pushed the door open and peered around it. “Hey. You’re speaking to me?” Wendy laughed. “Why? Did you do something you shouldn’t have? Do I smell coffee?” Candice came the rest of the way in, a cardboard tray with two grand lattes and a paper sack in her hand. “Well, you were pretty pissed when you left the club last night. I figured I was on your Shit list again.” She set the drinks on the coffee table and dropped her purse to the floor. “I guess everything went well with Dante?” Wendy stared at Candice in confusion. She had no recollection of her friend being at The Starlight. In fact... She licked her lips and sat up, pulling her legs out of the way so Candice could sit down. “What?” Candice asked as she sat down and pulled a paper cup
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton from the holder. “Why are you looking at me like that? You are pissed, aren’t you?” She slowly shook her head. “How much did I have to drink? And...and why was Dante...he was at the club? But he was supposed to be out of town. When did he show up?” Candice handed her the coffee. “Whoa, girl. You don’t remember what happened? Me dancing with him? You getting pissed? Him hauling you outta there as if you were his property?” Wendy sipped the piping hot coffee, desperately trying to grasp some memory. “Again. How much did I drink?” Candice shook her head as she pulled a croissant from the paper sack. “I don’t think you drank anything. You showed up, and I was dancing with him, and it went from there. I wanted to go with you, but you gave me that look.” “What look?” “That one that says you want to murder me.” “You were dancing with Dante when I got to the club?” “If Dante is a six‐foot, dark‐haired devil with an accent that made me cream my panties, that’s the one.” Wendy dropped her head forward and rubbed her temple with her fingertips. “What’s going on? You don’t remember anything? Nothing at all? Did that son of a bitch slip you something?” Dante wouldn’t drug her, of that she was sure. She shook her head. “I remember arriving at the club, and Jesse, the big black guy who works the front door, he let me in when I said I was meeting friends that were already inside.” “You know the bouncer?” She shook her head. “No, but he’s Digger’s lover.” “Who the hell is Digger?” Wendy looked up. Candice had croissant crumbs on her chin. “Digger is Dante’s roommate. I met him the other night. He’s this short
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton Irishman.” “Oh, yeah. He was at the club, too.” “This morning, Jesse—the bouncer—was at their house.” She wrinkled her forehead. “It’s obvious that he and Digger are a couple. But...but after I got to the club, and Jesse let me in—I didn’t know his name was Jesse at the time—I went in the door, and down that long hallway...and...and then I woke up in bed with Dante this morning after the sun was up.” Candice raised her eyebrows. “He fucked you and you don’t remember it? Eww. You should press charges for that.” Wendy shook her head. “No. I was still dressed. Only my shoes were off—and they’re still on his floor.” She made a face and laid her hand against her forehead. “How the hell can I not remember anything? I don’t even remember having anything to drink, but Dante told Jesse when we were introduced this morning that I’d had too much. So, I’m assuming I got drunk at his house.” “I was surprised you didn’t make it home last night because, girl, you were furious with both of us. I was sure you were going to tell him where to stick it.” She didn’t remember being mad. All she remembered, all she felt, was this sense of...peaceful fulfillment. She did have one memory of the night before. Of standing by the door in his house as he cupped her cheeks in his big, gentle hands, as he told her he loved her. “‘Forget all the rest,’ he said to me. ‘Remember only that I love you.’” “The rest of what?” Candice asked as she reached into the paper sack for more food. “That’s a little creepy, isn’t it, since you did forget everything?” Wendy sipped her coffee and pulled her knees to her chest. Creepy? She wasn’t sure if she’d go that far, but she needed to talk to him. He was the only one who could tell her exactly what happened last night. “You gonna eat this?” Candice asked, pulling the last croissant from the bag.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton “No. Go ahead.” She didn’t feel hungry, and she didn’t know if she could wait those few days for Dante to call her. “Did he say what he was doing at the club?” Candice shrugged. “He said he was there on business—or I guess that little Irish dude said that—but as far as I could tell, he was there picking up women. He picked me up at the bar.” Pain pierced through Wendy. “What do you mean?” Her friend laid the pastry on the coffee table. “Honey, don’t be upset, but I’d just stepped up to the bar to get a drink and accidentally bumped into this guy standing there when I got shoved by some dancers. He turned around, smiled at me, bought my drink, then hauled me out on the dance floor. That’s when you walked in.” “He was supposed to be out of town on business. That’s what he said when he canceled our date. That’s why I decided to go to The Starlight with you instead of sitting at home feeling sorry for myself.” Candice laid her hand over Wendy’s. “I swear I didn’t know who he was. And if it means anything, he looked truly upset that you were pissed off at him.” “I just don’t get it,” Wendy muttered. Why would he lie about work and then take her home and tell her he loved her? What about what happened between them this morning? It was earth shattering. Mind blowing. She’d never be the same again after that. He said he had something to tell her before he’d make love to her again. She groaned and buried her face in her hand. “Oh, shit.” “What? What?” Candice pulled Wendy’s hand from her face. “What are you thinking?” “I knew he was too good to be true.” Tears stung her eyes, but she blinked them back. “I think he’s a criminal. He owns an antique store, and he’s conducting business in a nightclub. I asked him this morning, and he denied it, but... Oh, God, he said he’d never been to prison, but he didn’t deny being a bad guy. He told me we couldn’t make love again until he
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton told me his secrets. What if he’s in the mob or something?”
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Chapter Twelve Dante paced the width of the living room and then back again. He swiped one hand through his hair and shoved the other in his jeans pocket. The waiting had become unbearable about fifteen hours earlier; now he was going crazy with it. “Sit yer arse down, Dant. You’re makin’ me nervous.” Dante spun to look at Digger who reclined in the easy chair, legs crossed, reading a copy of Time. “How can you be so fucking relaxed? Why hasn’t he made his move? Come after us? Something.” “A watched pot doesna boil.” Dante made a face and plopped down on the sofa. “What the hell does that mean?” “It means, mate, that pacin’ and grousin’ ain’t gonna bring the bad guy any faster. All it’s gonna do is wear ya out ’til yer too uptight to fight when he gets here.” He reached to the end table, picked up the TV remote, and tossed it to Dante. “Watch the tube. Read a book. Do somethin’, cuz yer makin’ me want to pummel ya.” Dante flopped back into the leather cushions and heaved an annoyed sigh. Tossing the remote on the coffee table, he folded his arms and stared out the window. The sun had set an hour ago. Forty‐five hours had passed since their meeting with Gaston. It was almost time for another hourly check in, and still they had nothing to report. Nothing at
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton all. The phone rang, jarring him, and he fumbled for the cordless on the end table. “Rainaldi,” he said into the phone. “Dante, it’s Evan. We’ve got a lead. Two actually. I need you to meet me and a few of Gaston’s guards at the Billings Paper warehouse. Gaston wants Digger to head down to The Starlight and meet with a vampire named James Clovers. He’s got some information about the Southern sect trying to move in.” “James Clovers. I’ll let him know. When do you need me at Billings?” Billings was a company owned by Gaston. Nearly all his employees were vampires, and Dante assumed someone had some information. “An hour, if you can make it.” “I’ll be there as soon as I drop Digger off at the club.” Evan disconnected the call, and Dante surged to his feet. Digger watched him with bright eyes. His friend was as ready to fight as he was, even if he pretended calm. Dante reiterated everything Evan had said as he went to the coat closet and began arming himself. God, he hoped this was the one. This was it. They could put it all to rest tonight. Digger, who’d already been wearing the shoulder holster with the specialized pistol, strapped on a long sword and reached for his leather trench coat. Dante checked his own revolver, made sure the safety was on, then grabbed the scabbard holding the sword specially made for him three hundred years earlier. “Ready, mate?” Digger asked. Dante nodded as he slid his arms into his own trench coat. His grin was feral, and he let his fangs show. “Never been more so.” “Let’s go.” In the garage, Dante opened the driver’s door to Digger’s Corvette and climbed in, nearly strangling himself on the steering wheel. He popped the release and scooted the seat all the way back. “Damn short men,” he muttered as Digger slid in beside him.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton Digger chuckled and patted the dashboard. “Ya better not hurt me baby, or a slayer’s the last thing ta fear.” He hit the button to raise the garage door and tore out with a squeal of tires. * * * * * As Wendy washed her face, preparing for bed, her door buzzer rang. She made a face at herself in the mirror before grabbing the hand towel from the rack and blotting her cheeks. The buzzer went again, and she rolled her eyes as she headed for the speaker by the front door. Candice needed to start keeping normal hours. How the woman got up and went to work every day was beyond her. “Hey, Candi, don’t you know it’s after ten?” A man cleared his throat. “This is Evan Fredrick, Dante’s friend.” She frowned. “Oh, sorry. What can I do for you?” “Something’s happened to Dante, and he’s asked me to pick you up and bring you to the hospital.” “Ohmygod. Is he okay? What happened?” “He’s all right now, but he’d like to see you.” “Right. Okay. I have to get dressed. Umm. Come on up.” She pressed the button to unlock the door downstairs, cracked her door open, and then dashed into her bedroom for clothes. In record time, she stripped off her nightshirt, pulled on jeans and a sweatshirt, and slipped her feet into a pair of loafers. Evan was just coming in the front door when she hurried into the living room. “What happened? How bad is it?” She grabbed her purse and turned to Evan, who still stood in the doorway. “Calm down,” he said in a gentle voice. “Really, he’s fine. He just had a little accident with a sharp object.” He grinned. “What kind of sharp object?” She ushered him out the door then turned to lock it. “Which hospital is he at? Is Digger with him?”
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton Evan was right behind her as she rushed down the stairs. When they reached the sidewalk, he placed his hand on her lower back and steered her toward the same black Lexus he’d driven her home in the day before. “I didn’t mean to upset you,” he said. He held the door for her, and she slid in and buckled up. When he got into the driver’s seat, he smiled at her again, but something wasn’t right. His eyes looked... His mouth... A warning screamed loud in her head, and she reached for the seatbelt to unlatch it. “I wouldn’t do that if I were you,” he said, his pleasant voice changed to something cold, hard, and very, very scary. Fear and dread slithered down her spine. “Where’s Dante?” “He’ll be along shortly.” He clicked the electric door locks. The sound was as loud as a gunshot in the silent car. Then he grinned, and she realized what was wrong. His eye teeth were pointed. Really pointed. And much too long. Leaning back against the door to put as much space between them as possible, she shook her head. “What—what’s going on?” “Nothing much,” he said as he turned the key and the car rumbled to life. “I just figured you’d be a tasty little morsel once I’m done decapitating your lover.” A squeak came out of her, and she clamped her hand over her mouth. His laughter sent a chill over her skin, and she tried to ease her hand toward the seatbelt latch. So fast she didn’t even see the motion, his hand gripped her wrist, and he squeezed. She cried out at the pain radiating up her arm. “No. Please.” Panic set in, and she struggled to pull away from his grasp, but he only held her tighter. She screamed and reached for the door release, but it was locked. She couldn’t find the lock switch in the dark. “Don’t fight, Wendy,” he said in a too‐calm, too‐calculating voice. “It’ll only hurt you more, and I do hate my dinner bruised.” She nearly gagged at the images his words produced. He was going to rape her. “Oh, God, no,” she cried as she tried clawing his fingers away
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton from her arm. His hold on her was unbreakable, and no matter how much she scratched him, he didn’t budge, didn’t even seem to notice what she was doing. He guided the car down the streets with one hand and seemed not to have a care in the world. When she saw they were headed for the viaduct, she turned her attention to the cars driving alongside them. She pounded against the window and screamed, “Help me. Help me!” Another of those hair‐raising, goose bump‐producing laughs came out of him. “The windows are tinted, my silly little girl. And this car is known for how soundproof it is.” She screamed louder, trying to drown him out. “Please!” She banged on the window, trying to catch someone’s eye in the other vehicles on the road, but they never looked her way. “The more you scream, the harder I get. You’re going to be so sweet when I fuck you and drain your blood.” His words froze her mid swing at the window. Drain my blood? What kind of whacked out sicko was he? Oh, God, oh, God, oh, God. He was going to torture her, too. Some sadistic satanic ritual. Tears blurred her vision, and she started struggling against his one‐ handed hold again. They zoomed along the viaduct and headed toward West Seattle. She sobbed as she struggled against his hold, but he was so strong, and her arm hurt so badly. “Please, tell me what you want. I’ll give you anything. I have money. I...I...” “All I want is Dante’s head and your pussy, darling. Nothing too much.” He breathed in deep, and his eyelids drooped a bit. “The smell of your fear is so sweet it’s making my mouth water and my dick hard.” Out of preservation, Wendy stopped struggling and clamped her mouth shut, stopping her screams. Tears streamed down her cheeks, and she shook in violent spasms of terror—something she had no control over.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton This handsome man who she’d thought was a really nice guy to drive her home the day before was a psychopath. And now he had her, and he was going to rape her, kill her, and kill Dante. A sob lodged in her throat, and she clamped her hand over her mouth to keep it there. Begging with him obviously wouldn’t work. He was so strong, fighting him would be a moronic gesture. Her purse had fallen to the floorboard during her struggle. She had her cell in there, but with him holding her arm, there was no way to go after it without him knowing. “You won’t escape,” he stated in a mater‐of‐fact tone as he took an exit from the highway into the industrial area. “I’m stronger, faster, and smarter than you. Obviously, I’m smarter than your idiot boyfriend.” He shook his head and cast a glance in her direction. “Falling in love with a human. How stupid can he be?” This guy didn’t think he was human? Didn’t think Dante was human? Oh, Lord, she had to figure out how to get away from him. He was crazier than she’d thought. “And Digger.” He laughed that evil chuckle. “You do know he’s a fag, right? I’m sure he’s doing your boyfriend when you’re not around.” No, he wasn’t, Wendy thought. Digger was in love with or at the very least very attached to Jesse. “As soon as I’m done with you and Dante, it’ll be Digger’s turn.” He flashed the horrifying grin again, his sharp teeth and menacing eyes glittering in the light from the dashboard. “He’ll be my biggest challenge yet, but I’m up for it. I’ve been planning this for years, and it’s all falling into place just like I wanted it to. With the exception of you.” He winked. “You’re a tasty little bonus. I can’t wait to see Dante’s face when he sees you at my mercy. And your blood will give me just the boost I need to take on Digger. By morning, Seattle will be mine.” Wendy stifled the whimper clawing to be free. He was insane. He thought killing Dante and Digger would make Seattle his? Evan braked hard in front of a warehouse in the industrial area.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton God, she thought, it was like a bad movie. Only it was a paper company, not a meat packing plant. Just the same, he was going to kill her and probably throw her body in the bay because there was a dock just yards away. She’d be found in three weeks, half eaten, bloated and blue. Who knew how long it would take authorities to identify her. Candice and her sister were the only ones to miss her. What would they think when she turned up missing? He let go of her to turn off the ignition. He was so fast, though, he grabbed her the second she released her seatbelt. “Ah, ah, ah. You’re going to be a good little girl and listen to Uncle Evan.” She shivered in disgust as her stomach curled into a tight ball of fear. He threw open his door and dragged her across the driver’s seat. She stumbled out onto the pavement, going down hard on her knees, but he lifted her by her arm as if she weighed nothing. She screamed and went back to fighting. This time she kicked at his shins and leaned down to bite the hand holding her wrist. Without seeming to notice, he turned toward the building and dragged her along by her arm held in his vice‐like grip. Her wrist was bruised, her bones possibly broken because she could barely move her fingers. “Let me go! Please!” She bit the back of his hand, trying to tear away his flesh. Something to produce enough pain so he’d release her and give her a chance to run. “Tsk, tsk, tsk. Naughty girls get punished.” Without warning, he slapped her across the face so hard she saw stars. She would have fallen, but he kept dragging her. Stumbling along behind him, she had no choice but to follow. A warm trickle ran from the corner of her mouth, and she swiped it with the back of her hand. Blood. Evan stopped in front of the man door next to the giant garage bay doors of the warehouse. As he slipped a key into the lock, he stopped
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton moving, sniffed the air, then turned toward her. His eyes seemed to glow with an evil, terrifying light reflecting from the halogen lamp over the door. When he leaned in, she tried pulling back, but he jerked her arm, and she fell against him. His hot, wet tongue swiped out and licked her chin where the blood still dribbled. “No,” she whimpered, and she thought she might throw up. “Too bad you reek of Dante. If it weren’t for that, you’d be the sweetest I’ve ever had.” She gagged as the panic and fear turned to outright horror. The grip on her arm was so hard her fingers went numb. She had to escape. She had to. No way could she let this sick asshole do to her... She gagged again. He sniffed again, this time burying his nose against her neck. “Ah, yes.” His tongue touched her pulse point, those sharp teeth scraping her skin, and she screamed in terror and jerked back, hitting her head against the wall of the building. Again she saw stars. Evan turned back to the door, pushed it open, then dragged her inside. Only a few security lights burned way up in the rafters. Giant mountains of stuff stood stacked on pallet boards. He pulled her along, weaving her through the piles, until he came to an open area in the center of the warehouse. It looked as if the pallets had been pushed back to form a kind of room. With only one way in. He dragged her across the wide, open space to a single, metal folding chair. “Sit.” He didn’t give her time to comply, simply shoved her into the seat. He reached for a pile of nylon rope next to the chair, releasing her arm, and she bolted toward the opening. Before she reached the gap between piles, he was there in front of her. She screamed and tripped, landing at his feet in a heap. Before she could scramble away, he grabbed her hair and pulled her up. “This is your last warning, little girl.” Tears streamed from her eyes as pain throbbed through her skull
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton from his tight fist in her hair. Last warning? He’d already said he was going to rape her and drain her blood. What else could be worse? She grabbed his hand in her hair and tried to pull away, uncaring if all her hair ripped out. What did a bald head matter if she lived? He threw her back into the chair and grabbed the rope. She screamed in fury and kicked at him as he wound the heavy, nylon cord around her, anchoring her in place. “I do love a feisty woman,” he murmured in her ear. “Keep fighting, little girl. Get all hot and sweaty for me.” He licked her neck, and she cried out, jerking to the side, nearly toppling the chair. “Let me go you fucking psycho!” He laughed the evil chuckle right in her ear. “Not until your lover gets here. Then he’ll watch this psycho fuck your brains out right before I kill him.” * * * * * Dante pulled the Vette up next to Evan’s car in front of the Billings warehouse and killed the rumbling engine. When he opened his door, the sounds of the docks greeted him. Water lapped at the cargo ship’s hull, seagulls cried, and the buoy bells clanked. He headed for the door. The offices were on the second floor inside the warehouse. He’d been there once years ago to visit a friend. A scent hit him as he reached for the doorknob. Wendy. The scent of lilacs and her unique musk. His gut clenched, and he eased the pistol from its holster at his side. He turned the doorknob carefully, avoiding all sound, and slowly eased the door open. The illumination from overhead was dim, but plenty for him to navigate. “Let me go you fucking psycho!” Dante’s blood ran cold, and he stilled at Wendy’s shouted words. “Not until your lover gets here. Then he’ll watch this psycho fuck
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton your brains out right before I kill him.” Evan. Fuck. Dante’s heart sped. He hadn’t seen this coming. How had Evan slipped past everyone’s radar? He flexed his fingers around the handle of his handgun. He didn’t know enough about Evan to walk into battle alone. How old was he? How experienced? He’d killed six men who were well trained. What chance did Dante have alone against him? He turned to move back out into the night so he could call Digger. “I smell you, Dante. I know you’re here. Come see what I have.” Evan’s voice was taunting, echoing through the warehouse as if it came from every direction. “He’s going to kill you! Get out,” Wendy cried. The panic in her tone tore at his soul. If he didn’t kill Evan, the vampire would kill her. “It’s okay, my love,” he said, keeping his voice even. “I’m here now, and everything will be fine.” In one leap, he gained the top of the nearest stack of paper products. The plastic sheeting crinkled under his weight, and he silently cursed. Evan laughed. “Everything will be fine. Come out and face me. Let’s get on with this. You’re not the only vampire I plan to kill tonight.” Dante made his way toward Evan’s voice, hopping from one pallet to the next until he could see down into the opening in the middle of the warehouse where his Wendy was tied to a chair with Evan standing behind her. Evan looked up and grinned, his fangs showing. “Welcome, Dante. Won’t you join me?” Dante lifted the handgun and fired. Wendy screamed. Evan barely staggered at the impact, and then he let out a maniacal laugh and ripped open his shirt to display a flack jacket. “Wooden bullets don’t penetrate Kevlar, moron.” Fuck. He glanced at Wendy to see tears streaming down her face. Her
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton flesh was pale, and terror radiated off her. He could smell it. Hell, he could feel it. Evan crouched for an instant, and when he stood, he held a sword similar to the one strapped at Dante’s side. He could shoot Evan in the face, but unless he was close enough to take off the vampire’s head within seconds, he’d do nothing but waste a bullet. Evan was obviously well fed and in fine form. His healing powers would be up to par. Unless the wooden bullet penetrated the vampire’s heart, it wouldn’t do much harm. Evan sauntered into the center of the open area and held out his arms, the sword dangling from the fingers of his right hand. “Come on down here, vampire, and fight me. I’ve heard such tales of your ability, I’ve been beside myself with excitement at the thought of one‐on‐one, hand‐to‐hand combat with you.” Dante had no choice. The gun was useless, and he had no way to call for backup. It was kill or be killed, and Wendy’s life was on the line. He stepped off the pallet and landed softly on the concrete floor. Wendy gasped, but he couldn’t spare her a glance. “Arm yourself,” Evan said as he slowly circled Dante. Dante holstered his weapon then shrugged out of his coat. “Dante,” she said, her voice so soft she wouldn’t have been heard by a human ear. “Dante, Dante,” Evan mimicked then laughed. “She’s a tasty piece of ass, I’ll grant you that. But is she worth it? I was so tempted to show her what we are when we were alone yesterday, but then I thought of this.” His grin was feral, that of an insane person. “She’ll be a tasty dessert to the feast of your killing.” Dante shrugged out of his holster and tossed both it and the trench coat to the edge of the open space. Then he pulled his sword from its scabbard. The satisfying ring sent his heart into a heavy beat. He hadn’t battled in years. He and Digger only sparred once in a while in the backyard.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton “Dante...don’t.” He ignored Wendy’s plea. He stared into Evan’s fevered eyes as the two of them circled each other. Evan was a bit smaller than him, but that meant nothing when dealing with vampires. Evan raised his left hand and waggled his fingers in a come‐hither motion, taunting him. “Don’t be a pussy like Xavier. He cried like a baby when I ran that stake through his chest. Come get me.” The taunts did nothing to him. He kept moving, ready for Evan’s first move, watching his every action. The way he held his sword, the way his feet moved, how he held his shoulders in a rigid pose. Evan launched himself at Dante with a bloodcurdling battle cry. Dante raised his sword and blocked the blow, halting the bone‐ jarring strike just inches from his neck. Wendy screamed.
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Chapter Thirteen The ring of metal was deafening. Wendy stared in shock as the man she loved and the man who planned to kill her fought with swords like some present‐day knights. Dark against light. Only this time, the darkness was not evil. Dante blocked swing after swing as Evan went at him like a madman, swiping his shiny sword through the air with a speed that made the blade blur. Muscles bunched under Dante’s black T‐shirt with each movement. The most terrifying part was that Evan gained ground, backing Dante across the space until he had less than a foot of space between him and a hulking stack of something covered in opaque plastic. She twisted her arms, trying to pull them free, but the ropes were too tight. Her hands had lost all feeling, and the nylon cut into her stomach with each wiggle of her body. She whimpered and swiped her face on her shoulder, wiping away tears that blurred her vision. If Dante didn’t win, she was dead. If Dante didn’t win, he was dead. A roar came out of Dante, making her jerk her head up. “No!” she screamed and struggled against her bonds all the harder. His shirt had been sliced near his ribs. Blood poured out onto the concrete floor. He kept blocking blows, though. Sweat bloomed on his forehead. He swung and swung and swung. Another swing sliced Dante’s right bicep. His lips curled back in a
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton snarl as he slashed his sword at Evan. To Wendy’s horror, he had teeth just like Evan’s. Long, pointy eye teeth. “No...” The word came out as a strangled whisper. Vampire. Evan had said the word several times. But vampires didn’t exist. They weren’t real. They were in the movies and books, not in real life. Not in her simple, quiet, dull life. Evan dropped to one knee and shoved the sword upward, impaling Dante through the stomach. A gunshot rang out. Blood exploded from the back of Evan’s head. Digger appeared out of thin air and swung another sword. Evan’s head flew into the air and landed with a sickening thud on the concrete. The scream lodged in her throat. She couldn’t breathe. Couldn’t move. Dante dropped to his knees, wrapped his hands around the hilt of the sword sticking from his stomach, and jerked it out with a groan before toppling to his side. Jesse came running into the opening from the narrow pathway Evan had dragged her down. He carried a gun in his hand that looked like the one Dante had earlier. Digger and Jesse went to their knees at Dante’s side. “Talk to me, mate,” Digger said as he rolled Dante onto his back. Dante groaned and held his hands pressed against his bleeding stomach. “Get the girl,” he said, and Jesse got to his feet and rushed toward her. The breath whooshed out of her when he pulled a folding knife from his pocket and cut the ropes. “Don’t hurt me,” she whimpered when he grabbed her arm. “Please.” She glanced at Evan’s body. The blood pooled where his head should be. Her stomach clenched, and she heaved.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton “Dante needs you now,” Jesse said, his tone gentle as he pulled her along. She shook her head and tried to jerk free, but she hurt. And her legs wouldn’t work right. Her entire body shook, and her vision seemed to narrow to points. “He ain’t gonna hurt ya, Wendy,” Digger said as he got to his feet. “Dante will die, though, if ya donna give him some of yer blood.” She slapped her hand over her mouth as her stomach heaved again. She looked back and forth between Jesse and Digger, then down at Dante where he lay on the cold, gray floor surrounded by his own blood. “Don’t make me force ya, luv,” Digger said, his tone soft but his gaze hard. She tried to back away, but Digger caught her arm. With the return of blood flow to her limbs, it was as if someone shoved hot pokers under her fingernails, and she cried out. “Stop it,” Dante said, his voice raspy. “Let her go.” Digger knelt next to Dante, still holding her so she had no choice but to go down, too. Dante’s skin was pale, his forehead and upper lip beaded with perspiration. Digger shifted his grip to her wrist, and she whimpered at the excruciating pain. The same arm Evan had held and harmed. Digger glanced down at her hand, and she followed his gaze to see dark purple bruises in the shape of fingers. Digger let go. “Sorry, luv,” he murmured. “I know this is hard for ya to grasp, but Dante and I are vampires. If he doesna get human blood right now, he’s gonna die.” She turned and looked at Jesse. He shook his head and lifted his upper lip to show her normal teeth. “I’m human.” Her stomach churned, and tears blurred her vision. Digger took her other hand in his and hauled it up to Dante’s mouth.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton “No,” she screamed and jerked away. She fell back on her butt, slipping in the pool of blood from Evan’s body. She screamed again as all the horrors of the night swam in her head. Dante was a monster. A creature. She sobbed and scrambled backward, her hands slick with blood from the floor. She screamed again when Digger came at her with a look of murder in his eyes. Dante fought to stay conscious. Wendy’s terror‐filled screams ripped his heart and soul into shreds. “Let her go,” he forced out. “Dear God, let her go.” “You have ta feed.” Dante rolled his head back and forth. Licked his parched lips. Digger and Wendy appeared next to him again. When he looked up into her face, her eyes were glazed. Digger had mesmerized her. “No. I won’t take her blood,” he rasped out. “I swore...” He swallowed. “I swore I’d never take it without her...consent.” “Now isna the time to be noble,” Digger barked. He raised Wendy’s wrist to his mouth, and he knew Digger was going to puncture her vein to feed him. “I’d rather die than betray her,” Dante said, forcing his voice to be stronger. “Don’t bite her.” Jesse thrust his arm out. “Take mine.” Digger sliced into Jesse’s wrist with his fang, and then Jesse held it to Dante’s mouth. The hot tang closed his throat, but he forced himself to swallow. He didn’t want to die. He had to survive to make this up to Wendy. As the warm flow of coppery fluid slid down his throat, he felt his wounds begin to knit. He swallowed and swallowed, his stomach rebelling with each drop, until Jesse’s arm moved away. “Enough,” Digger said. He opened his eyes to see Digger and Jesse looking down at him. Wendy stared with the blank eyes of a trance. His stomach curled with nausea from Jesse’s blood. He prayed he wouldn’t vomit.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton “How do ya feel?” “Better.” He groaned as he tried to sit up. He still hurt like a bitch. He needed another feeding. “Why’d you decide to come here?” Digger wrapped his arm around Dante’s waist and helped him to his feet. “Gaston called ’bout five minutes after ya dropped me. He said he dinna give Evan those instructions. I knew somethin’ was up.” “Thanks for saving my ass.” “Jesse’s a damn fine shot.” Digger winked at his lover who held Wendy up. “Did you erase her memories?” Dante asked. Digger shook his head. “Just the worst of it. What do ya wanna do with her?” He wanted to bundle her up and haul her home with them. But her screams of terror still echoed in his mind. If she came out of the trance in their home, with him and Digger there, he’d have to erase her memory. He desperately didn’t want to delete himself from her mind—her heart. Less than two days ago, she’d told him she loved him. He looked to Jesse. “Would you mind driving her to her house and seeing that she’s safe and sound?” “I think her arm’s broken,” Digger said. Dante stepped over to her and reached up to cup her cheeks, but then he saw all the blood on himself. And on her. Her glazed stare looked through him, and it killed him. “I’ll take care of her,” Jesse said. “If you can do whatever you need to do with her brain, I’ll see that she gets medical attention and gets home.” “Take her to the Sheridan clinic,” Digger said. “I’ll call Bryce and have him meet you there. He can patch her up.” Bryce was a human doctor married to an older female vampire. Dante swallowed hard, still a bit nauseous. “Remember the love, Wendy,” he whispered, staring into her blank eyes. “Forget the fear, but remember who and what I am.” He sucked in a deep breath. “You’re
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton going to be all right. Don’t ever be afraid. The bad is gone. You’re safe.” He leaned down and brushed his lips against hers. “I love you.” She collapsed against Jesse’s supporting arms, her eyes shut. “Be gentle with her,” he said to Jesse as his heart broke open. He knew this would more than likely be the last time he saw her. She wouldn’t fear him or his kind, but she wouldn’t change her opinion of him. “I swear on my life,” Jesse said solemnly. A wave of dizziness caught Dante unaware, and he stumbled. Digger grabbed him. “Whoa there, mate. I gotcha.” “I need to feed more,” he said as he leaned on his friend. “We’ve got the stuff from the blood bank at home.” Jesse lifted Wendy into his arms and carried her away. “We need to call Gaston to clean up this mess.” “Donna worry yerself. I’ll take care of it.” They followed Jesse through the maze of stacked pallets. “I thought ya were a goner.” “He wanted to disable me. He wanted me to watch him rape Wendy. He wasn’t trying to kill me...yet.” “Fuck me.” Digger opened the passenger door of the Vette. “Sonofabitch, yer gonna get blood all o’er my car.” The smallest of smiles tugged at his lips. “I’ll pay to have it detailed.” His humor died as he watched Jesse load a limp Wendy into the passenger seat of his little SUV. He silently said goodbye as Jesse pulled the vehicle out of the parking lot. “If she’s the one, she’ll be back,” Digger said. Dante laid his head back against the seat. “They never come back.” * * * * * Wendy slid into consciousness in a haze of muscle aches and the awareness that she wasn’t in her own bed. Her eyes popped open, and she stared at the pale blue wall across from her. Hospital. Hard bed, heavy
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton blankets that suffocated, the smell of latex and disinfectant. When she tried sitting up, her ribs ached, but not unbearably so. What grabbed her attention most was the throb in her jaw and the fat tensor bandage around her left wrist. A flash of... A man’s hand around her wrist, squeezing, pulling, dragging her... She narrowed her eyes and tried to grasp at the memory, but it slipped away before it fully developed. What the hell had happened to her? Why was she here? She saw her purse sitting on the windowsill across the room. So she hadn’t been mugged. Unless it was empty. Shoving herself up, she pushed the covers off her legs and swung them over the edge of the bed. She wore a hospital gown. Cool air caressed her back where the thing gaped open, and she shivered. She slid off the bed and moved across to the window, glad that the only thing that really hurt was her arm and face. She didn’t think her ribs were broken. The window was on the second floor of a building, and it wasn’t any of the local hospitals. She overlooked 4th Avenue. A downtown clinic? She opened her purse and looked in. Her wallet, cell phone, keys were all there. “Oh, good, you’re finally awake.” She swung around, grabbing the back of the gown with her right hand to make sure her butt was covered. A tall, lanky blond man in a doctor’s lab coat entered the room with a pleasant smile on his face. “What happened to me?” she asked without preamble. He raised his eyebrows. “You don’t remember?” She licked her lips and shook her head. “No. Not really.” An image of Dante flashed in her mind. He wore all black and wielded a sword like a knight. She frowned at the doctor. “Have a seat, Wendy,” he said, his voice gentle. She moved back to the bed and sat down, pulling the stifling covers over her bare legs.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton “Do you know Jesse Johnstone?” “Yes,” she said slowly. “He brought you here last night. Do you remember why?” She licked her dry lips again. Dante fighting with someone. Someone who wanted to hurt her. A sword fight. Vampire. A soft smile tilted the doctor’s lips. “It’s coming back, isn’t it?” “Are you...one of them?” “Ah, no.” He smiled in earnest and shoved his hands into the pockets of his lab coat. “I’m married to one of them.” She wondered if they were talking about the same thing. Vampires didn’t get married. Did they? Hell, they weren’t even supposed to exist. As if a dam opened, memories poured into her mind. Evan coming to her apartment and telling her Dante was injured. Going with him. Evan’s maniacal laugh. How he’d gripped her arm with a strength that was inhuman. Dante fighting with Evan. Evan dying. Dante needed her blood. “Dante,” she whispered, remember how pale he’d been as he lay there on the concrete floor. “He’s fine,” the doctor reassured. She glanced at the name on his pocket, which said Dr. B. Sheridan. Shaking her head, she glanced down at her bandaged arm then back at the doctor. “You’re sure?” He nodded. “He called here about twenty minutes ago to check on you. He’s at home, resting, but should be back to his old self in a day or two.” He grinned, and his pale blue eyes seemed to sparkle. “They heal a heck of a lot faster than we do.” She licked her lips again, and he asked, “Would you care for something to drink? Water? Tea? Soda?” “Um. Soda, please.” She could use the bit of caffeine boost, and she did feel parched. Her throat was a little raw, too, and she wasn’t sure why. “Be back in a minute.” On his way to the door, he pulled open a
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton cabinet door, which she saw was a small closet, and pulled out a pair of jeans and sweatshirt. He came back and laid them on the foot of the bed. “Jesse brought these in. You can go ahead and get dressed. You’re good to go whenever you feel up to it.” “Thanks.” Folded inside the pants were a pair of sweat socks and underwear. While Dr. Sheridan was gone, she pulled on her clean clothes, leaving the rough hospital gown on the end of the bed. A knock sounded on the door, and she called, “Come in.” The doctor came in with a can of cola and a small cup filled with ice. He set them on the bedside table. “How’s your head? Any blurred vision or anything?” “No.” She poured some of the fizzy drink over the ice then sipped with relief. “Just my ribs a bit, and this...” She lifted her left arm. “Is it broken?” “Just badly bruised. I did x‐rays.” After a few more sips, she asked, “Was I hit over the head? What happened to me?” “You were put in a trance.” She frowned at him over the rim of the plastic cup. “Hypnotized. Jesse said you were pretty hysterical, and it was the only way to calm you down.” “To hypnotize me,” she murmured. She had an odd feeling, as if there were things she couldn’t remember. “Is there a way they can make a human forget something?” Like an entire night when she was pissed off at Dante and Candice for dancing together? “Yes. But Dante assured me he didn’t do that last night. He said Digger hypnotized you so that you weren’t hysterical, and all they took out was the worst part of the... Well...” He shrugged. “I guess it got pretty gory.” She could remember seeing Evan swinging the sword at Dante, and then Digger and Jesse were there, but it was as though little segments of
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton time were missing. “Is there any way to get back whatever they took out of my head?” “Only if they hypnotize you and put it back.” Now she really wondered what exactly happened the other night. Candice said she’d been furious when she found them dancing at The Starlight. So he’d zapped her memory to take away her anger? To seduce her into bed? She narrowed her eyes at the doctor. “Whoa, now, Wendy. Don’t jump to any conclusions. I’ve known Digger and Dante for a lot of years, and they’re not unethical. If they erased anything, there’s a reason. They were worried about your mental state. As a medical doctor, I wish I had the ability to remove traumatic memories from my patients.” How could she argue with that? But that didn’t change the fact that the other night she’d left the club with him—according to Candice—mad enough to castrate him. When she woke up the next morning, she’d fucked him like a... She squeezed her eyes shut. He’d felt so good. Been so...absolutely...amazing. “Wendy.” She looked up at the doctor. “When I talked to Dante this morning, he said he didn’t wipe out your memory of him because he wants you to know who and what he is. They don’t go around revealing themselves to humans on a regular basis. It takes someone very special to them to open their community to us outsiders.” Wendy stood up and went to the window to get her purse. “Who do I see about payment?” She needed to think, and she couldn’t do it here. She needed some coffee, and she needed to be alone. “It’s all been taken care of. Keep the arm wrapped up for a few days. Take some ibuprofen or acetaminophen for the pain.” She smiled, which pulled at her sore jaw. “I’m a medical tech. I
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton know the routine.” He smiled at her. “Good, then.” “Uh. How bad do I look?” she asked, glancing around the room for a mirror. “Follow me,” the doctor said and held the door for her. He led her down a short hall to a restroom and turned on the light for her. “Would you like me to call you a cab?” She shook her head. She needed the fresh air to clear her mind, and she didn’t live far. “Take care of yourself,” he said before he walked off down the hallway. Wendy stepped into the bathroom, shut and locked the door, then went to the sink and stared at herself in the mirror. “Ugh.” She had a golf ball‐sized bruise on her jaw, her bottom lip was split in the corner, and her hair was a wild, curly bird’s nest. She pulled her brush from her purse then realized it was Monday. She hadn’t shown up for work. “Shit,” she murmured as she pulled out her cell phone. Cathy answered. “Hi, Cathy, it’s Wendy.” “Wendy! Where are you? We were getting worried. Are you okay?” She licked her lips as she formulated the lie. “I, um, was mugged last night. I’m a little banged up. Could you please tell Doctor Thompson I need a couple days off?” “Of course. Do you need anything?” She swallowed the lump in her throat. She needed to figure everything out. Too much stuff swam around in her head, and she didn’t even know which end was up. “No. I’m fine. Just a little bruised. Thanks.” “You call me if you need something, okay? We were so worried when we couldn’t get a hold of you this morning.” “Thanks,” she said again. “I’ll be in Wednesday.” “Take your time. I’m sure Dr. Thompson agrees with that.” She was, too. Thompson was a wonderful employer. “Okay. I’ll talk
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton to you later.” She disconnected the call and glanced at her reflection again. Her strongest urge was to go to Dante’s to see for herself if he was really okay. On the other hand, she didn’t know if she should ever go near him again. He was... They were... Vampires. She shivered but had no idea how she felt about that fact.
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Chapter Fourteen Dante sat on the sofa, staring at the ring he’d happened across at an estate sale the day before. He’d bought it on a whim because the scrollwork and antique gold matched the crucifix pendant Wendy always wore. The one for which he’d given her matching earrings. A half carat diamond was set within the white gold of the ring. It would make a beautiful engagement ring. But not for him to give. He’d called Wendy once a day for the last week and a half. She never answered her phone or called him back. Today he’d sent her a single red rose and a card begging her to talk to him. The only thing left to do was track her down in person and run the risk of being arrested for stalking. He’d sworn he wouldn’t push her, but inside he was dying. Slowly. Painfully. His heart shriveling to the size of a raisin. The front door opened, and Digger and Jesse came into the house, laughing and holding hands. His gut twisted, and he snapped the lid shut on the jewelry box. The two lovebirds didn’t even acknowledge him as they headed straight for the stairs. Dante pressed the heel of his hand against his forehead. The last thing he needed was to sit here and listen to them go at it all night. He stood up, shoved the little jewelry box into his pocket, and headed out the
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton door. A long walk would do him good. Maybe. Something had to drag him out of this. He had to accept the fact that Wendy wanted nothing to do with him. It was over. The night was warm with a full moon hanging low over the bay, glittering off the water. He headed down the hill toward downtown, planning to make his way to the pier. Maybe grab a drink at Fisherman’s Warf. Hands in his pockets, he wandered the streets. The smell of the sea was strong, mingling with the aroma of coffee from the many cafés. And then a scent hit him that made him pause. Onions, peppers and grilled beef. The scent that had clung to Wendy that first night. He turned the corner and saw the door to Dinner and a Date. The lights were bright inside, so he walked in. “I’m sorry, sir,” said a woman who sat behind a low counter. “We’re full for the night.” He nodded. “Thanks, anyway.” He turned back around and walked out. He wasn’t sure why he’d gone in there anyway. He didn’t want any date but Wendy. He headed toward the wharf when another scent carried to him on the breeze. This time it was unmistakable. Lilacs and Wendy. He paused and realized he was just a few doors down from the coffee shop in which he’d first met her. Slowly, he made his way to the front window of Addictions, and there she sat, alone at the same table where she’d been that night only a couple of weeks ago. It felt as if it had been a lifetime since he’d held her, touched her, kissed her full lips, heard her declare her love for him. She sat at the table, looking so much like the first time he’d seen her. Head propped on hand as she stared at her mug of coffee, a big cinnamon roll at her elbow, untouched. Dante moved to the door and pulled it open. He weaved his way through the tables to reach hers, and just like the first time, he asked, “Is this seat taken?”
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton Her head snapped up, her eyes widened, and then she looked back at the table and shook her head. She didn’t tell him to get lost, so perhaps there was some hope. He pulled out the chair and sat down. “Hi, Wendy.” “Hi.” She picked up her spoon and stirred her coffee. A million things went through his mind. Why won’t you take my calls? I’ve missed you. I love you. Give me another chance. But all those things seemed too pushy. She’d avoided him for days. He needed to take it slow if he was to gain any ground with her. So he simply said, “I’m sorry.” “Can I get ya somethin’?” Dante shook his head at the waitress’ question but couldn’t tear his gaze from Wendy. He couldn’t stomach anything right now. This meeting was the final test. Either he passed and got another chance, or she sent him packing. Wendy still stared into her coffee, but she let go of the spoon and lowered her hands below the table. He sensed her inner turmoil. She fairly vibrated with it. At least there was no fear, and for that he was thankful. It might kill him if she feared him. “What are you sorry for?” she asked in little more than a whisper after the waitress left. He leaned forward and kept his voice low. “For deceiving you. For not telling you who I was sooner. For putting your life in danger.” “What about erasing my memories?” she said, her voice shaking. “Are you sorry for that?” “I... No. I’m not.” She glanced up at him. In that split second, he saw the hurt he’d caused. “Wendy, my love, I had no choice.” “You don’t love me,” she hissed. “You wouldn’t have made me forget an argument if you loved me. Fights are part of a relationship.” “I do love you, and it wasn’t my intention to erase the fight. You were hysterical, and I had to deal with...” He glanced around to make sure
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton no one was listening. Dropping his voice even more, he leaned in closer. “Evan had left a dead body on the doorstep. When you went to leave—to storm out from the argument we were having—you found it. You were screaming. I had no choice but to mesmerize you. In my haste, I wasn’t specific enough with the hypnotic suggestion, and it erased the entire evening. For that I’m sorry.” Her jaw flexed as she gritted her teeth, and she stared at her coffee. “Why won’t you look at me?” he asked. “Because if I look at you, you might erase my brain again.” She might as well have kicked him in the gut. The air whooshed out of him, and he sat back in the chair. He’d killed all trust she could ever have in him. She wouldn’t even look at him. It really was over between them. He couldn’t blame her. If the tables were turned... He stood up to leave, but he couldn’t until he touched her one last time. He leaned down, cupped her neck, and laid his cheek against hers. Her skin was warm and soft and smelled of lilacs. He kissed her cheek, and then her forehead. “I will always love you,” he whispered, his throat so tight he thought he was being strangled. Wendy looked up as he pulled back, just in time to catch the quickest glimpse of pain in Dante’s eyes before he turned away. Gone was the debonair man she’d met right here in this coffee shop. As he walked away, his shoulders were slumped, his hands buried deep in his pockets. He looked as horrible as she felt. He pushed the door open with his shoulder and walked into the night. In a rush, she grabbed her purse, jumped out of the seat, and took off after him. “Hey!” she shouted as she shoved through the door and caught sight of him at the end of the block. Dante stopped and turned toward her. “If you love me, why the hell aren’t you fighting a little harder?” She wanted to be indignant, but tears burned her eyes as she hurried toward him. “You’re just going to walk away? That’s it? You didn’t even
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton try to defend yourself when I said you were going to erase my brain.” Her voice hitched, and she sucked in a breath. “If you love me, why are you leaving? Why don’t you defend yourself?” She’d spent the last week and a half trying to convince herself that she couldn’t deal with everything he was. But the overriding emotion, which was nearly enough to suffocate her, was that she loved him with all her heart. That single, perfect bloom he’d sent her today had tipped the scales in his favor, along with the simple, yet elegant card that asked her to please talk to him. But as she’d walked out her door to go to his house, the doubt had returned, and she’d needed a little more time to think. That’s how she’d wound up in the café. “What good is fighting for something that will never be?” he asked. His voice was soft and deep and sent a shiver through her. “If you fear me, what do I say to change that? If you do not trust me...” He shook his head and turned away for a moment, then back. “I have been through this before, Wendy. It is why I have avoided letting my emotions tangle with a woman for the last hundred and fifty years.” The pain was so evident in his voice, it caused a physical pain in her heart. “What do you mean? You haven’t had a lover in that long?” He shook his head. “I haven’t had a lover in ten years. I have not loved in well over a century.” His mouth turned down into a frown. “I am over three hundred years old, and I have loved three women. The woman who turned me into this monster you cannot stand to look at. She loved me so much, she couldn’t watch me die, so she gave me eternal life. She was killed by a man not unlike Evan. When my heart finally healed from losing her, I tried again. The next one told me she accepted what I was...” He made a face of disgust. “It wasn’t long until I repulsed her.” Wendy realized she was the third one. He was...frightened. Her heart turned over, and the tears spilled from her eyes. He’d been alone for over a century? She thought three years had been rough. She reached out toward him, but he stepped back and his face hardened.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton “I didn’t tell you to gain your pity.” “I—” “Do not say it. Please. I’ve been through this. Mary tried to live with it, tried to convince herself that I wasn’t a bloodsucking monster, but it doesn’t work. Even if I never feed from you, you’ll know that I need human blood to live. No matter what you try to tell me or yourself, that makes you sick. “Did you know I drank your blood? Did you know that? That I couldn’t help myself when we had sex that first time? You tasted so damn good I couldn’t stop myself. That’s the kind of evil monster I am.” He swiped his hand through his hair. “Goodbye, Wendy. Try to remember the good things that happened between us. Forget the rest. It’ll be best for you—for both of us.” He turned and started down the sidewalk. Wendy stood in stunned silence. When her thoughts stilled, she realized one thing. She wasn’t repulsed. Though the thought was rather odd, she knew it to be true. If he needed blood to survive, she’d rather he took hers than some other woman’s. “If you don’t give me a chance,” she shouted at his back, “how will you know if I can live with it or not?” He stopped but didn’t turn back. She saw movement out of the corner of her eye and realized they had an audience on the opposite side of the street. She might have found a stronger part of herself these last few weeks, but she wasn’t about to air all her dirty laundry right there on the street. Putting her purse strap over her shoulder, she hurried down the sidewalk at a fast jog. He turned just before she reached him. She grabbed his hand and pulled him up the street, heading for her apartment. “Wendy—” “Just shut up and walk me home. Be the gentleman you were that night I met you.” He fell into step next to her and laced his fingers with hers. She smiled to herself, but this wasn’t the leisurely stroll they’d taken that first
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton night. This time she had a purpose. She needed to get him inside her apartment and ask all the questions that had plagued her since she woke up in that clinic. When they reached her building, she let go of his hand in order to pull her keys from her purse. “Wend—” “Don’t talk yet. You’re coming in, and then we’ll talk.” “I don’t think—” She whirled on him and planted her hands on her hips. “You’ve been calling me for over a week, and today you sent me the most beautiful rose I’ve ever seen. Are you backing out? If so, why all the phone calls?” He stared at her with sad eyes, but he pressed his lips together. She stepped forward, wound her arms around his waist, and laid her head against his shoulder. She figured she understood without him having to lay it out for her. He was afraid if he didn’t leave now, it would hurt worse later. The same way she’d felt when she first met him. Only she’d overcome her fears. Could he? “You said you loved me,” she reminded him. “Did you mean it?” “With all my heart,” he whispered and wrapped his arms around her. His big hand coasted over her hair in that gentle gesture she’d grown to adore. He was so big, so strong, yet so gentle. “There’s a lot I can’t remember of that night with Evan, but I know one thing. You were willing to die to save me.” “I never wanted you involved. It nearly killed me when I realized that monster had you.” His fingers skimmed her jaw then threaded through her hair. “That morning, before Digger interrupted, were you going to tell me?” “Yes,” he whispered. She slowly pulled back and looked into his gorgeous face. “Why did you decide to open your heart after a hundred‐fifty years?” He cupped her cheek in his big, warm palm. Skimmed his thumb
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton over her bottom lip, which made her tingle all the way to her toes. “I had no choice. I’ve always heard that when a vampire meets their human mate, they just know...” A sad smile tilted his lips. “All I knew was that I needed you. If you hadn’t come to the shop, I would have come after you. I would have pursued you to the ends of the earth.” “Then how could you walk away now?” she asked, her throat tight and achy. “You don’t trust me. What is a relationship without trust? And you’re right. I should have been honest from the beginning. I shouldn’t have—” She pulled his head down and pressed her lips against his to stop him. His mouth was gentle, undemanding. It was a sweet kiss that stole her breath and made her quiver. He breathed in deep then skimmed his tongue along her lips. When she opened, he slipped inside, teasing her tongue with his. With a groan, she clung to him, afraid her knees would give way. When she felt the hard press of his cock against her belly, she shivered. “Dante,” she whispered when he rested his forehead against hers and panted. “I’m sorry, love. I’m sorry for everything.” “I know. Come upstairs.” He nodded. “So we can talk.” She grinned and pulled back so she could unlock the door. Her hand shook, and it took three tries to get the key into the lock. She giggled and shoved the door open, grabbed his hand, and hauled him to the elevator. They’d talk, all right, but not until after... She went up on tiptoe and kissed him again as the elevator doors shut. He was fast to respond this time, wrapping her in a tight embrace, gripping her bottom and holding her snug against his cock. The elevator came to a stop, and the doors opened. She backed out of the car, still holding on to him so he couldn’t pull away, and stopped in
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton front of her apartment across the hall. “Sweetheart,” he muttered as he kissed her chin, her jaw, her ear. “We have to stop.” She grinned at the panting sounds he made and looked up into his eyes. “I don’t want to stop. I want you to make love to me.” He stared into her eyes for a long moment, and a tiny part of her feared another brain erasure, but in her heart she knew he wouldn’t do that to her. He’d done it for real, logical reasons before. Not on a whim. “Don’t run away,” she said, hoping he read the sincerity in her eyes, from her heart. A soft chuckle came out of him, and he turned his head to kiss her palm. She reached behind her and slipped her key in the door. “Come on.” She hooked her finger in the collar of his shirt and pulled him inside. She didn’t stop until she’d tugged him into the bedroom. “Wendy, we do need to talk.” She nodded and started unbuttoning her blouse. “Yes, we do.” He tipped his head to the side in the most endearing way when she dropped her shirt and reached for the button on her jeans. “You don’t want to talk right now, do you?” he asked, his eyes sparkling with humor. She shook her head, then laughed as she shoved her pants down her legs and kicked off her shoes. “Depends on how good your concentration is, I guess.” He chuckled and pulled his shirt over his head. His stomach muscles rippled. His biceps bulged slightly. She stopped in the middle of reaching behind her to unhook her bra. Goodness, he was gorgeous. Raising an eyebrow at her, he reached for the fly of his jeans. “You’re staring.” She nodded. “Yeah. It feels like it’s been forever since I saw you.” He reached for her then, pulled her into his arms, and buried his face against her hair. “It’s been the worst week and a half of my life.” She clung to him, breathing in his spicy scent, reveling in the touch
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton of their skin. “Mine, too. I thought I could forget you. I thought I was better off without you.” She pulled back and looked into his face. “Swear to me that what I feel is real and not some hypnotic implant you stuck there.” He reached up and held her face between his palms. “I swear to you, Wendy, I would never, ever do anything like that. I admit the first time I told you I loved you, you were mesmerized, but I would never try to trick you into feeling something you didn’t.” A smile tugged at her lips. “That’s why I woke up that morning knowing you loved me when you’d never said it.” He nodded. “It was true then. It’s true now. I love you.” She believed him. She trusted him. Lifting her hand from where she’d held his side, she held her wrist up. “I want you to...” She swallowed hard, just a little afraid it might hurt. “...drink my blood.” He glanced at her arm then back into her eyes. “No.”
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Chapter Fifteen Dante watched Wendy’s eyes widen, and he sensed her withdrawal, if not physically then emotionally. “No?” she asked, confusion clear in her eyes. He pulled her against him when she would have backed away. “No, I won’t drink your blood from your wrist. That’s how I take blood from women at the club. I mesmerize them and then take what I need.” He shook his head and tucked a lock of hair behind her ear. “I don’t need to take blood from women any longer. I...” He chuckled. “I have a connection at a blood bank now.” Her brow furrowed. “You don’t want my blood anymore?” “Oh, love, I want badly. But I won’t take it if you’re frightened of it.” She licked her lips. “I’m not afraid. Besides, you said you took it before, and I didn’t even know. Where did you take it from anyway? I didn’t see any marks on my neck.” He slid his hands down her back, over her butt, then brought one around and slipped it up the inside of her right thigh. “Here. While I was on my knees in front you.” She shivered, and her eyelids drooped. “And I don’t leave marks.” He skimmed his fingers over the crotch of her silky panties. She whimpered and gripped his shoulders. “I don’t
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton need your blood, love. I will never again take what you don’t offer.” He slipped his middle finger under the edge of her underwear and through her damp curls. “Why...ah...why didn’t I know last time?” He wound his arm around her back to keep her from collapsing and brought his lips against her ear. “Because, when I bit, you were crying out in ecstasy. My teeth are so sharp when I feed, you can’t feel it. But there’s a rush of pleasure when my saliva mixes with your blood, going through your veins. It makes your orgasm even stronger.” Wendy arched her back and pressed against his hand when he slid one finger into her cunt and flicked her clit with his thumb. “I... I’d never come from...ahh...oral sex before.” Her juices slicked his palm. In a bit of awe, he asked, “Talking about this is turning you on, isn’t it?” She nodded. “You turn me on. I want you to...to...” “Feed from you? Claim you as my mate?” Her breathing hitched. “Your mate.” She looked up at him through hooded eyes. “Like...forever?” He stopped stroking her pussy and withdrew his hand as he looked deep into her eyes, praying he read her right. “I want forever with you, Wendy. I’ve searched several lifetimes for a woman with your heart, your soul. Can you see past what I am to the man inside of me?” “Oh, Dante,” she whispered. “I’m sorry I doubted you. I’ve never made good choices where men were concerned. And then this young, gorgeous, worldly man sweeps me off my feet, and he’s got more problems than any...human...I’ve ever dated.” He chuckled. “I do have a few.” She was silent as she looked at him. “Does stuff like what happened with Evan happen often?” He shook his head. “Only about once every hundred years or so.” “You’ll never grow old?” “It’s a very slow progression. I was twenty‐four when I was turned.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton I’ve aged a bit in the last three hundred years.” She swallowed so hard it was audible. “What happens when I get old and wrinkled, gain forty pounds and get gray hair?” He touched his lips to hers. “I’ll never betray you, love. I’ll never leave you.” He swept his tongue into her mouth just once, tasting her warmth. When he pulled back, he said, “There’s also the... If you wanted...” He closed his eyes. He didn’t want her trapped in the same world he was, yet he wanted to spend the next dozen centuries with her and no one else. “I could turn you.” “Umm.” He shook his head. “That is not a discussion for tonight.” He touched her cheek, her chin, the shell of her ear. “Dante,” she said softly. “Hmm?” He couldn’t tear his gaze from her silky skin. “Make me your mate.” A grin spread over his face as peace settled in his heart. Then he scooped her into his arms and dropped her on the bed. She giggled as he shucked off his jeans and underwear and came down on top of her, taking her mouth in a hard, deep, wet kiss. Wendy moaned and bucked against him, her damp heat and silky panties sliding along the length of his cock. “More,” she gasped when he moved to her jaw, kissing his way down her neck. He reached under her, popped the clasp on her bra, and peeled it away. When he cupped her breasts and flicked his thumbs over her already hardened nipples, she shivered and grinned. “You have magic hands. Since that first time you touched me when you blotted spilled coffee from my hand...” She sighed. “I love you, Dante.” Taking his gaze from her beautiful, lush breasts, he looked into her eyes. “I love you, too, Wendy.” She threaded her fingers through his hair, pulled his mouth down to hers, and speared her tongue into his mouth. His cock throbbed, and
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton his gums ached. He let his fangs distend. The time for secrets was over. She squirmed against his erection, rubbing her damp heat against him. Without breaking their kiss, stroking his tongue against hers, he shoved her panties down her thighs. She spread her legs wide and lifted herself to him, meeting him more than halfway, and he plunged into her fast and deep. She cried out and jerked her mouth from his, arching her beautiful neck as she pressed her head into the pillow. “Look at me,” he said, buried deep within her, her cunt pulsing around his cock, trying to draw out an orgasm. Her eyes opened, and she giggled. “You’re lisping.” He grinned, showing her his fangs. She shivered beneath him, but her pussy clenched tight around him. He didn’t repulse her. She wasn’t afraid. He could smell her excitement. “I’m going to bite your neck as you come. I’m going to drink your blood and make you mine.” She thrust her hips up, urging him to move. “I’m already yours. I’ve been yours since the night you walked me home and didn’t try to seduce me.” He chuckled, leaned down, and licked her neck, right over the heavy beat of her pulse. “I did seduce you, love. I saw you touch yourself that night. Heard you cry out my name as you came around your own fingers.” She gasped, and her excitement grew. Her cunt squeezed his cock, her juices hot and slick. “How...?” He drew back then thrust again, hard. “Let me have a couple secrets.” Her grip tightened in his hair. “Did you...like it?” He thrust again, and she whimpered. “Yes. I masturbated afterwards. I could still smell you on my clothing.” “Please,” she panted. “I need...”
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton He reached down, wrapped one arm beneath her knee, and pulled it up high on his side, opening her wide. “I’m going to bite you now.” She nodded and bucked against him when he plunged deep into her. “I want it.” “I love you,” he ground out as he started a hard, fast rhythm of press and draw, delving deeper into her body than he’d ever been. “Love...you...” she said around moans. As her cunt began to pulse around him, and her breaths grew short and whimpery, he leaned down and licked her pulse point. She tipped her head to the side, giving him better access. With her acceptance, he pierced her flesh. She cried out and bowed her back, nearly throwing him off. The hot, sweet rush of her blood on his tongue brought him to his own orgasm. As he drank, he pumped into her, riding out the sweetest torment he’d ever experienced. Wendy screamed and clung to him, her fingernails digging into his shoulders, her inner muscles clenching again and again and again, forcing him into a second orgasm—something that had never before happened to him. He released her neck, tipped his head back, and shouted as every muscle in his body clenched in pure, beautiful ecstasy. It could have been minutes or hours. Wendy wasn’t sure how long had passed until she awoke in the warm shelter of Dante’s arms. The scent of sex, his cologne, and the cool breeze streaming in through the window mingled into a sweet fragrance she never wanted to leave. “Hey,” he whispered as he shifted up on an elbow and looked down at her. “You okay?” She grinned. “Uh huh.” He kissed the tip of her nose. “You passed out.” He chuckled. “That has never happened without me mesmerizing before.” “That was...” She sighed and snuggled against his chest. “Amazing.” She shivered as another tingle shot through her, clenching her
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton pussy and tightening her nipples. “Do we still need to talk?” he asked, his tone changing from playful to apprehensive. She nodded and traced the gorgeous muscles of his chest. “I just have a couple questions.” “Okay.” “Will you ever quit your job and expect me to support you?” “What?” She leaned back to look him in the face. “That’s what my last boyfriend did. I don’t want to be with a bum.” Dante sighed. “No, love. I would never expect you to support me. I’m stinking rich, if you hadn’t noticed. We could travel the world for the rest of—” “The rest of my life?” she finished. He nodded and cupped her cheek. “We can do whatever you wish to do. All I want is to make you happy. I’ll do anything to make you happy.” Her heart melted. “I like my job, but I wouldn’t mind traveling a little.” He smiled but didn’t say anything more. “Okay,” she said, blowing out a breath. “What’s with you cooking with garlic? Aren’t vampires repulsed by it?” He chuckled and softly kissed her. “No. That is just a fable.” He touched the crucifix between her breasts. “And these don’t hurt me, either.” “Sunlight?” “Ahh,” he said, raising his eyebrows. “That is true to an extent. My eyes are sensitive to it, and I sunburn very easily. If I were exposed long enough, it would kill me.” Then he winked. “Why do you think I live in the rainiest, cloudiest state in the country?” “So you can go out in the daylight, just not the sun?” He nodded.
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton “Basically, then, you’re normal except for the blood drinking thing.” He nodded again. It wasn’t as bad as she thought it would be, and her heart lightened. She could do this. “You won’t turn into a jerk in a year?” He grinned. “If I do, for some reason, turn into a jerk, you have my permission to throttle me.” She chuckled and buried her face against his neck and breathed him in. “What’s next, then?” He rubbed her back and didn’t speak for a long time. So long she got worried and scooted back to see his face. His brow was furrowed. “Dante? What do we do next? You and me? Date? Move in together? What do vampires do with their human...” “Lovers,” he finished. “We do the same as human couples. We move in together, get married... But I cannot have children.” “It’s okay. I don’t really have that biological clock urge a lot of women my age have. Do you really want to marry me?” His frown smoothed out, and a grin took its place. Then he pulled away and rolled to the side of the bed. She admired his bare ass as he leaned over the edge, reaching for something. Unable to stop herself, she bent and nipped his butt cheek. “Hey,” he barked around a laugh. When he rolled back next to her, he held a black, velvet jewelry box in his hand. He kissed her hard then looked into her eyes. “Yes, I want to marry you. I want the world to know you are mine, and I am yours.” He lifted the box and flicked it open with his thumb. “I bought this yesterday because it matches your earrings and necklace. I wanted it to be an engagement ring, but I didn’t believe it would ever happen.” Wendy’s heart stalled as she stared at the gorgeous ring, the sparkling diamond. Then she looked up into his eyes, and the image of him blurred as tears swam in her eyes. “Fuck, Wendy. Don’t cry.” He wrapped his arms around her and
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton cradled her against his chest. “Don’t cry.” She sniffled. “Did you just propose to me?” “Yes, love. But if it’s too soon—” “Yes! Yes. The answer’s yes.” She kissed his neck, his chin, and finally, his lips. “Yes.” He rolled her onto her back and straddled her thighs. “Yes?” he asked when he pulled away from her mouth. She nodded. “I want to spend forever with you, Dante. And I want it to start right now.” He lowered his head to her, pressed his lips to hers in that sweet, tender way that made her ache for more yet cherish the simple, elegant touch. “Yes,” he whispered. And she knew that one word was his promise of forever. The End
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Dante’s Salvation by Anna Leigh Keaton
Author Bio Anna Leigh has been reading and penning romance for as long as she can remember. After she met and married her very own real‐life hero, romance took on a whole new meaning. She now knows married life can sizzle and romance can be erotic—even in her own home. Now her writing has taken on a spicier flavor and, while hubby’s off at work, she lets her imagination soar…. Anna loves to hear from her readers. You can visit her website at www.annaleighkeaton.com for all her upcoming and previously published works, and meet her alter ego at www.leannekarella.com.
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