Read Beauty Dates the Beast Online

Authors: Jessica Sims

Beauty Dates the Beast (26 page)

“Not wolves,” he said dismissively. “Whatever is behind this attacked the wolves.”

“It was a figure of speech,” I snapped, starting to get worried at how close he was to the truth. “We have to rescue Giselle. I won’t be able to live with myself if we don’t. Remember that finger on your property? Whoever is behind this is eating people. And they have her.”

“I realize that,” he said patiently. “But your safety is first and foremost in my mind. Someone is out there hunting blondes. That’s in addition to the wolf pack, which is looking for your sister and has my cousin. We have enough problems without trying to play white knight to a woman who was trying to pimp you out to the highest bidder!
Bath,” he said, moving to my side and rubbing my arms to soothe me. “With everything that’s going on, why don’t you just lay low for the next few days and let me take care of things.”

The offer was sweet, and thoughtful … and meant me sitting on my ass waiting for him to make magic happen.

That wasn’t how I worked.

Beau’s phone vibrated and he glanced down at the screen, then back at me. “Ramsey’s got an update on Savannah. Can you wait in here?”

I nodded. “Sure.”

As soon as he was out the door, I plucked the keys from the nightstand and climbed out the window—luckily, we were on the bottom floor—and then I shut it again. Then I dashed across the parking lot to the rental car. Even if I was running into a trap, I’d do it. Sara needed me.

As I pulled out of the parking lot, my cell phone buzzed. The message that popped up was a text with an address.

I memorized it without really comprehending the words and pulled onto the high-way.

Beau would be panicking, wondering where I’d gone. He’d asked me to trust him, and I hadn’t. As soon as he’d turned his back, I’d run. Again. If I ever saw him again, I hoped he would understand.

Chapter Twenty
 

T
wenty minutes later, I pulled off the high-way and onto the service road, following the GPS to the address I’d been given.

 

I had no plan. My mind was racing at a million different angles, and the best I could come up with was
Free Giselle and Sara; escape by any means necessary
. In other words, I was doomed.

I pulled up to a familiar driveway, my eyes widening at the sight of the iron gates with JTC emblazoned across it. No fucking way. What was Arabella doing at Jason’s house? I remembered the maid’s fright and the way he’d sniffed the bloody handkerchief, and I swallowed hard.

I pulled up to the speaker box, pressing my finger on the call button.

“Who is it?” Arabella’s sweet voice came through the speaker.

Who the hell did she think it would be? “It’s me. I’m here, and I’m alone.”

A buzz sounded and the gate began to swing open. “If you’re
not
alone, I’m going to disembowel Sara,” she warned.

My finger stabbed at the button, my mouth watering as if I was going to throw up. “Don’t hurt her,” I yelled in. “I’m
alone.
I swear.”

No response. I drove up the long, winding driveway.

No one came to the door to greet me. I hesitated before ringing the doorbell, and headed to the side of the massive house, trying to look into the windows and see what I was up against.

Most of the windows were closed, the heavy curtains drawn over the panes. There was a window at the back of the house, though, and it revealed an empty, white-tiled kitchen bigger than my first apartment. A sunny, cheerful yellow split door nearby led into the kitchen. I placed my hand on the doorknob. What if there was an alarm? Well, Arabella was expecting me anyway. I turned the knob.

No alarm. Good.

My heart hammering, I tiptoed into the house. Around me was a blanket of silence, uncomfortable and oppressing. My shoes sounded heavily on the floor. I crossed the kitchen quickly, spotted a
knife in a butcher block, and grabbed it. No sense charging in without a weapon. Clutching it tight in my hand, I turned down the hall.

Somewhere in this maze of a house, Arabella was waiting for me. To kick my ass or eat me, I had no idea which. I slid forward along the wall, and I suddenly understood why they did that in movies. If you had your back to something, you felt less vulnerable. If I could have pressed both my front and my back to the wall, I would have done it.

The stairwell loomed up ahead, and I walked toward it. Quietly.

A whiff of Arabella’s heavy perfume, powdery with a rancid undertone, caught my nose. At the smell a few things clicked in my brain. Whenever we’d been at a scene where the Wendigo had been present, the smell of rot and decay had been present. Inside my house, the putrid stench had been chokingly strong.

That
was why Arabella had been able to hide her true nature for so long—she’d nearly choked us with her perfume, disguising the awful smell of death that accompanied her stolen powers. Jason wore an equal amount of cologne. And now I realized why Arabella was hiding at Jason’s house.

They were working together.

My eyes watered and I crouched low, eyeing
my surroundings. No sign of her. Maybe the smell was everywhere inside.

The house felt eerily deserted. I glanced at a nearby clock—I still had a few minutes before my deadline. With a final glance around me, I proceeded silently up the stairs. If I had been a vicious Wendigo looking to get revenge on my ex-boyfriend, I’d have hidden my prisoners on the highest floor, in the most inaccessible room.

The second floor was more open than the first, which made me nervous. I stuck close to one side of the hallway, pausing only to quickly pass a red and white bathroom.

Then I paused again. And turned back.

The bathroom wasn’t decorated in red.

Blood covered the floor, splattered across the ceramic bowl of the toilet, across the edge of the columned sink. The edge of the fabric shower curtain was soaked in it.

A hand dangled out of the bathtub, long red nails perfectly manicured.

I knew whose hand that was.

Giselle’s.

Where was Sara? Was she still alive?

Jason’s voice rang out from down the hall. “ ’Sheba, I see you’ve arrived.”

Gripping the knife tighter, I followed the sound of his voice.

I found him two rooms down, reclining on a pool table. His hair was a mess and his neat, expensive clothes were ripped at the shoulders and seams. He grinned at the sight of me. “You’re here. Welcome!”

I froze, fear pounding through my blood. “Where’s Sara?”

“I haven’t seen her,” he said, his grin widening. I could smell his thick cologne from where I stood several feet away.

A very, very bad feeling crept over me and I turned back to the door.

Arabella stood there, reeking of floral, powdery perfume and rot. A bit of red tinged her mouth, and as I watched, she delicately wiped at the corners. “Oh, is Sara not here?” she said in a dulcet voice. “Shit. I guess we lied. That makes me a bad, bad girl, doesn’t it?’ ”

I took a step backward, reaching for the wall.
Back against the wall. Back against the wall.
My palms began to sweat, and I adjusted my grip on the knife, “Sara’s not here?”

Arabella grinned at Jason. “What a moron.”

Sara wasn’t here? Relief flooded through me. My sister was safe, then.

Arabella went over to the table and caressed Jason’s jaw. “JT’s plan was brilliant.”

My gaze grew horrified as a few more things
clicked into place. Beau’s story about his childhood friend, then enemy. The absolute terror of his servants. The big honking JTC on the main gate.

I
was
a moron. “Jason … you’re JT?”

His smile seemed entirely too toothy. “I was wondering how long it would take for you to catch on. I really had you going.”

“You sure did,” I agreed, moving along the wall until I bumped into the corner, and huddled there. The smell of both of them was overpowering, and coupled with my frantic mind, I thought it might make me faint.

With a possessive look on her face, Arabella watched JT slide off the table.

“So,” JT said as he sidled toward me.

Cornered, I brandished the knife and glared at him. “I suppose this is the part where I’m supposed to ask you what you plan to do with me.”

He took another step forward and I swung, but he was unnaturally strong and fast. He knocked the knife out of my arm so hard that I thought my wrist would snap from the impact, then he shoved me against the wall. The plaster gave a little behind me, and the wind was knocked out of me from the force of his blow.

I struggled for breath, trying to gasp it in. When it finally returned, I sucked in huge, noxious lungfuls of Jason’s scent and gagged.

He planted his mouth on mine, forcing his tongue into my mouth. I gagged at the taste of carrion and tried to shove him away, but it was like shoving against brick itself. I pounded on his shoulders, waiting for him to be done with me.

Arabella cleared her throat, sounding annoyed. “Jason.”

He pulled away from me and chucked me on the chin, looking amused. “You, my dear, even taste immune.”

“Immune?” I stared up at him.

He grinned. “Yes. My Arabella isn’t fond of the physical changes of being a Wendigo. Legend says that to transform back, you have to drink the blood of an immune. And I wondered where would we ever find such a creature?”

I swallowed hard.

“Then … I started stalking a little female who’d gone out with my enemy. She was sweet and pretty, but human. And because Beau wanted her, she was going to have to die,” he said, gazing at me in a possessive fashion. “At least eventually, after I’d had my fun. Humans are so easy. Easy to stalk. Easy to frighten. Easy to follow and scare.”

All the times I’d been sure that something had been wrong in my house. I couldn’t put my finger on it. The dead blondes who looked like me. The occasions when Jason had shown up out of nowhere
to woo me. How long had he been playing with me like a cat with its prey?

“Then I found out from Giselle that my little human had a werewolf for a sister. And I thought that was odd, because her older sister didn’t smell like a wolf at all. Isn’t that fascinating?”

I looked over at Arabella, whose eyes were glittering as she focused on me.

“Arabella said your blood smelled pure to her, so I checked for myself. And sure enough,” he said, digging one claw under my chin until blood welled. His nostrils flared and a leer flitted over his face. “You smell nice and clean.”

I jerked my knee up, trying to catch him in the groin.

His hand grabbed my knee before I could make contact, his movements whipcord-fast. “Nice try.”

“So you brought me here because you want to eat me? Is that it?” I said bravely.

“Actually,” Jason said, “we brought you here because you’re Beau’s mate. First we’re going to lure him here and kill him. That’s for me.
Then
my darling Arabella gets to eat you. Something for both of us.”

Chapter Twenty-one
 

T
rue to their plan, they didn’t eat me right away.

 

They tied me to a chair. At first they’d tied me spread-eagle on the pool table, but when Jason had eyed me with a little too much interest as he’d fixed my bonds, Arabella had insisted on a chair instead.

And so we sat, and waited.

It seemed that Arabella was a different sort of Wendigo from Jason—less powerful and more drawn to the blood, though his reek was as strong as hers. Every so often, Arabella would shudder and convulse, and disappear for another round of eating Giselle. I guessed that she needed the flesh more often.

No wonder she wanted to change back.

During one of these interludes, I decided to work on Jason. I twisted my hands behind the chair, trying to loosen my bonds. They weren’t
that tight, and I didn’t suppose it really mattered—they’d be on me within seconds and I’d be unable to escape. Still, it made me feel better to work them.

“Why are you doing all this?” I asked.

Jason looked up from his BlackBerry in surprise. “That’s a rather asinine question.”

“I’m an asinine human,” I shot back. “Humor me. I thought Wendigos were supposed to be strong and invincible.”

He pocketed his phone and moved across the room toward me. “There is no greater power in the world than that of a Wendigo. I have the strength of those that I have devoured.”

“So why eat me and change back?”

“My mate is not happy with her transformation. This is for her.”

I squirmed a little. “Okay, I get that. But why drag Beau into this? What has he done to you?”

He squatted near my chair. “Why am I after Beau?” Jason seemed to be amused by my concern. “Are you truly that worried about him?”

I shrugged. “Just curious. He was only using me for his heat.”

“I’m not so sure about that.” Jason reached forward and began to pull my T-shirt out of the waistband of my jeans. “At any rate, I’m sure we’ll find out shortly.”

I jerked as he tugged at my clothing. “What are you doing?”

He sliced my T-shirt open with his claws, jerking it apart and dragging it across my shoulders so it exposed my pale torso and my bra. “Making sure our kitty cat takes the bait, my sweet.” He picked up a roll of masking tape from a table and pulled off a piece. Then he crammed a sock into my mouth and slapped the tape over it, muffling me and making me gag. My heart hammered in my throat, my eyes went wide. What was he planning on doing?

Jason slid around the chair and wrapped his arm around the back of it, curling it around to rest on my breast. I yelled against the sock, shoving my tongue against it to try and loosen the gag.

He held up his phone and snuggled up to me, grinning at its camera. “Smile for your boyfriend,” he said and pinched my nipple.

I snarled as I heard the click of the camera.

To my relief, he got up and wandered across the room. His thumbs flew across the keypad as he typed in a text message, whistling to himself. Jason clicked one final button, then glanced over at me, the toothy smile revealing itself again. “All done. We’ll see if that brings your boyfriend out to play.”

Other books

Rod by Nella Tyler
Framingham Legends & Lore by James L. Parr
In the Teeth of the Wind by Charlotte Boyett-Compo
The Flood by William Corey Dietz
Her Ladyship's Man by Joan Overfield
Corazón by Edmondo De Amicis
A Clearing in the Wild by Jane Kirkpatrick
The League of Seven by Alan Gratz