Read Alpha Pack 4 - Hunters Heart Online
Authors: J.D. Tyler
look. “I’m so glad you approve.”
He ignored her sarcasm. “But when was the last time
you actually
talked
to any of them?”
“What the hell do you mean? I just told you I talk all
day!”
“When’s the last time you asked one of them anything
personal?”
“Personal?” She was at a complete loss. “Like what?”
“Jesus.” He pinched the bridge of his nose, then
dropped his hand and regarded her in part amusement, part
exasperation. “You know Brandon the waiter?”
“Brandon Gates. Of course I do.”
“Right. But did you know his pet iguana died
yesterday?”
Obviously one of them had been dropped on their head.
And it wasn’t
her
.
“So? As long as Ethan didn’t serve it in the soup, what
does that have to do with me?”
The bastard actually laughed. An honest-to-God laugh
that made his eyes crinkle and her toes curl. Made her
insides warm in the most pleasant way.
“Christ, you’re so uptight, you squeak when you walk.”
“What?” She gaped at him. “Listen, Mr. James—”
“I saved your life, as you pointed out,” he murmured,
moving closer. Reaching out, he gently touched her face
with the rough pads of his fingers. “I believe we’ve
moved on to first names, Anna.”
Her breath caught in her chest, her nerves dancing at his
touch. The hunger in his eyes, his nearness torched all of
her arguments to dust. At five-eight she wasn’t a short
woman, but the top of her head barely reached his chin.
That was a secret thrill of hers—a big, tall man
surrounding her. Pressing her down, covering her lips with
his.
He was so close, their mouths almost met. Then he
stepped back, and it took her a moment to adjust. To
realize he wasn’t going to kiss her after all. Flushing, she
attempted to cover her embarrassment by fishing in her
purse for the keys to her apartment. Finding them, she gave
him a smile she didn’t feel.
“Well, Gray, I should get home.”
She turned and started down the hallway and he kept
pace beside her, apparently not ready to relinquish his
role as her protector. Suddenly her ordered world had
been unbalanced, not just by the attack but by Gray’s
nearness, and she wondered if that’s what he intended.
At her door, she unlocked it and faced him. “Thank you
for saving me. I can’t imagine what might’ve happened if
you hadn’t been walking home right behind me.”
The idea made her feel sick again.
“I’m glad I was there.” A shadow passed over his face
and was gone. “Let me come in? You’ve had a shock and I
want to see you settled before I leave.”
Settled. That would be the very last thing she would
feel if she allowed him inside; of that, there was no doubt.
Some force that obliterated reason and good sense had her
opening the door anyway, stepping aside to welcome him
to her home.
“Nice place,” he commented.
“I imagine it’s the same as yours.”
“Just the floor plan.” Looking around, he appeared
impressed. “I definitely don’t have your sense of style.”
“I can’t claim much credit, except for the colors. I
picked those and then hired a decorator.”
“I like the browns with the deep red accents. It fits
you.”
Curious, she studied him as she set her purse on the bar.
“How so?”
“The browns are subtle, understated, and strong. Alone,
they might be boring to the eye, and then bam! The red is
exciting. Just like those flashes of your true personality
when you let them out, as you did in the hallway a few
minutes ago.”
“Seriously?” A laugh escaped before she could help it.
“You are so full of shit.”
“And like now,” he said, looking smug. “
Miss Claire
would never have said that, but
Anna
sure did. I obviously
know what I’m talking about.”
“I don’t know whether to be flattered or frightened by
the armchair psychoanalysis.”
“Flattered. What else?” Gesturing toward the couch, he
ordered, “Sit down. What do you want to drink? Wine?
Something stronger?”
Bemused, she did as he said—for the moment. “Isn’t
that my line? This
is
my apartment.”
“You can offer one to me some other time.” He
disappeared into the kitchen and began to rummage around
as his voice drifted to her. “You know, sometime when
you haven’t been attacked by a mugger.”
The image caused her to shiver, and she unwillingly
began to relive the encounter. “I’ll just have some water.
Get whatever you want for yourself.”
In moments he was back, the sofa dipping as he sat
beside her and twisted the tops off two bottles, handing
her one. “I don’t often drink this late at night. Gives me
insomnia.”
“Hmm.” There was something odd about that man in the
alley.
“Are you sure you’re all right?” he asked in concern.
“He talked too much.”
“What?”
“The mugger.” Anna lifted her gaze to see Gray studying
her, brows furrowed. “He was all talk. He never did much
except push me around and scare me. Isn’t that weird?”
Gray leaned forward. “What else?”
“He smelled nice, like he had on his best cologne.
And . . .”
“And?”
She gasped. “The man wasn’t armed! He didn’t have
anything in his hands.”
“Are you sure? Could be that it happened so fast, you
missed a small knife or something in his grasp.”
“No, I’m positive. The mugger wasn’t armed, he spoke
articulately, and he smelled nice. Something is off about
the whole thing.”
“That is strange,” he said thoughtfully. “You should be
more careful from now on. In fact, I’ll be walking you
home for a while. Just in case.”
In case the man returned. Fear overrode the inner
whispering that it was smart to keep a distance from this
sexy man, no matter how much she wanted him. “All
right.”
Their eyes met and a strange flutter of butterfly wings
took off in her stomach. Gray was looking at her as though
she was the answer to every question he had, and it was
wonderful. Confusing. Arousing.
“You’re so beautiful,” he said with reverence, touching
her face with the pads of his fingers.
“I don’t remember the last time anyone told me that.”
“You deserve to hear that every single day, because it’s
true.”
“Thank you.” Drawn to him, she reached up and traced
his lips with one finger. “You’re a very handsome man
yourself.”
“I wasn’t fishing.”
“I didn’t think you were.” She paused. “Why me?”
His face registered surprise. “Why am I interested in
you?”
“Yes.”
“Besides your beauty, you’re smart, successful. Kind. I
think you need to unwind a lot, and I want to help you do
that.”
God, he smelled good. Woodsy and manly, and it made
her body ache to be touched. Completed. “Then help me,
Gray.”
For a few moments he didn’t speak. His hand covered
hers and he waited, giving her time to voice an objection.
When it didn’t come, he leaned over and closed the
distance between them. Brought their lips together, parted
hers with his tongue.
His kiss was liquid fire. Slowly, he licked her mouth,
his sensual exploration sparking an electrical storm
throughout her body. All thoughts of why it was a bad idea
to see an employee blew to dust. Pushing into him, she
sought more. Needed more from this man. It had been far
too long since she’d come alive this way.
All too soon, the kiss was over and Gray moved back.
Confused, she tried to pull herself together.
“Will you be okay tonight?”
Only if you stay.
But of course she wouldn’t say the
words.
“Yes, I’ll be fine.” She forced a smile. “Go on, get
some rest. You’re on the late shift again tomorrow.”
Rising, he looked down at her. He didn’t seem eager to
go—more like resigned that it was for the best. And it
was.
“Give me your cell phone.”
“Why?”
“So I can program my number in for you.”
“Oh. Okay.” Fishing around in her purse, she found the
device and handed it over.
He punched a long series of buttons; then he handed it
back. “Here you go. Call me if you need anything at all,
Anna.”
Her name on his lips, the intensity of his gaze made her
feel like a wounded antelope in the sights of a lion. The
thing was, she didn’t want to escape.
“I will.”
With that promise extracted, he gave her a wicked half
smile and walked out the door, shutting it softly behind
him. Following him, she looked up and then stood gazing
at the colors in her living room, trying to see them—and
herself—through his eyes.
Brown for steadiness and strength, red for excitement.
Being alive.
Somehow, it seemed he’d taken all of the red with him
when he left.
• • •
Grayson closed the door behind him and stood in the
middle of his sparsely furnished apartment, frustration and
guilt riding him hard.
As he’d started getting to know Anna Claire over the
past few weeks, he’d slowly come to realize she was
nothing like he’d first assumed. He’d thought she was too
straitlaced and wondered why she hadn’t snapped like a
brittle twig. Maybe a little stuck-up, too. But she wasn’t.
She was driven, determined, smart, and sexy. Kind to
her employees and patrons, yet aloof to the former,
perhaps because she was their boss. The woman was
complicated, and yet he felt he was coming to understand
what made her tick. She needed to have some fun, enjoy
life a little.
He intended to help her along in that area.
A knock at the door interrupted his musings. “You took
a hell of a risk,” he growled as he opened the door. “Don’t
you ever use your brain?”
Simon King strolled inside and faced him, wearing a
grin. “I changed clothes, and nobody saw me come here.
It’s not like she got a good look at me anyhow.”
Gray rolled his eyes. “She knows something is off, you
idiot. Once she calmed down and had time to pull herself
together, she said you were too articulate and you smelled
good. And it didn’t escape her notice that you weren’t
armed.”
The cocky grin slid off his face. Good.
“Shit. I didn’t expect her to be so aware of those kinds
of details. Most women wouldn’t be when they’re so
scared.”
“Anna’s not most women, Simon.” Gray sighed.
“Yeah? Well, at least we accomplished our goal,” his
partner pointed out. “You got invited into the lioness’s
den. The question is, did you get a free pass to go back?”
“Most likely. She’s a tough one, but I think this was the
edge I needed.”
Simon considered that. Thankfully, he didn’t mention
just how far Gray might still have to go to capture their
prey. “Did you get the trace put on her cell phone?” he
asked instead.
“Yeah. I’ll get the rest in place next time I go over
there.”
“Which will be when?”
“Hopefully tomorrow.”
“It would be quicker if you just broke in and did the
job.”
“And more risky, too, in a building like this with all the
apartment doors facing the hallway and no access from the
outside. No, being invited in is a much better scenario.”
“All right. It’s your call.” Simon paused. “Who do you
like for this, partner? Honestly?”
Gray rubbed the back of his neck. “That’s the million-
dollar question.”
And that’s why he and his partner were on this case,
and why Gray had infiltrated the staff of Floor Fifty-Five.
Several of Anna’s employees were running drugs, using
the restaurant as a cover and base of operations. His job
was to learn the names of everyone involved, how and
where they were hiding the drugs—and whether Anna was
in on the scheme.
Lowering himself into an easy chair, he answered, “I’m
the low man there, so working my way into confidences is
proving harder than I expected.”
“Whoever’s behind this is mob-connected, my friend.
They’re going to be suspicious of anyone new and it will
take too long to earn their trust, so forget making buddies.
Just find the evidence and get out.”
“I have to tell you, my gut says Anna’s not involved.”
“You sure that’s not your dick doing the talking?”
Despite the seriousness of the situation, Gray laughed.
“Not at all.”
“That’s what I figured.” His partner shook his head.
“Be careful, okay?”
“I wouldn’t be anything less.”
But after Simon left, he couldn’t help but think
careful
wasn’t going to be a word that applied at all where Anna
was concerned.