Bound by Legend: A Bound Novel (35 page)

Read Bound by Legend: A Bound Novel Online

Authors: A.D. Trosper

Tags: #Young Adult, #Coming of Age, #adventure, #YA, #Horror, #fallen, #beautiful creatures, #Paranormal, #demons, #Angels, #lauren kate, #supernatural, #twilight, #stephanie meyer, #kami garcia, #action

Morgan shook her head and turned her attention on the dark angel. “Any luck finding a cougar claw?”

“Not yet. With the hounds in full hunt again, we don’t have much time.” He paused and smiled. “Damien tells me there is a great burger place here. I have calls out for the claw, there’s nothing we can do other than wait and see if anyone calls back. I haven’t heard the hounds since we left Denver. Why don’t we take a moment and forget about it. At least spend an hour enjoying good food and the company of friends?”

“What about Lucy?” As nice as it sounded, Morgan didn’t really want to leave the dog in the hotel room.

Lucian slid one arm around her waist and pulled her close, scorching her lips with a kiss that made her forget about food or anything other than the fact that they were alone in a room with a bed. Her heart leapt and her breath came faster as she returned the kiss, pressing herself closer to him.

He ended the kiss with a low chuckle. “We’ll take her with us.”

It took a moment for her brain to engage and remember what they had been talking about. “Oh, um, okay. Are you sure?”

“Don’t you think she deserves a cheeseburger?”

Morgan laughed and stepped away from his embrace. “Nobody is going to be eating anything if you don’t stop holding me like that.”

Lucian prowled closer, a mischievous glint in his smoldering gaze. “Why is that?”

“Because,” Morgan said, backing away even as her body flushed with heat. “Either we are going to be too occupied to eat or I’ll suffer spontaneous combustion.”

“Mmmm, we can’t have you combusting now can we?” Lucian moved impossibly fast, his arms encircling her waist before she could blink.

Squealing and laughing, Morgan tried to push away even as his hot kisses down her neck made her knees buckle. She sank into him with a groan. His large hands found their way under her shirt, caressing her skin and igniting a fire deep within her. And then he claimed her mouth, his tongue sweeping in to tease her further.

Morgan’s hands moved up under his shirt of their own accord, exploring the hard muscles of his stomach and chest. All of the tension of the past few days, all of the sorrow, all of the fear, screamed for the release offered by his body.

Sometime later, an hour? Maybe two? Morgan wasn’t sure, someone knocked on their door. She wished they would go away. Drifting in a blissful emotional state of peaceful nothingness, while her sated body lay twisted in the sheets with Lucian’s, she didn’t want to move. Maybe not ever again.

Damien’s muffled voice came through the door from the hall beyond. “Are you guys ready to eat? We uh, waited for you as long as we could, but we’re getting pretty hungry.”

Morgan felt heat flush over her face and neck. Lucian cocked a grin at her. “Are you blushing?”

“No. I don’t blush.” And she didn’t, at least not normally. Right then she wanted to crawl under the covers and hide. Had the others known why she and Lucian hadn’t come out of the hotel room? Probably.

Lucian chuckled and climbed from the bed. “Yeah, just give us a minute and we’ll be ready.”

Groaning, Morgan slid out of the bed. She really hadn’t wanted to move. After gathering her clothes from the floor and putting them on, she dug through one of her bags until she unearthed her brush then set to work combing through the rats nest her hair had become since arriving.

It didn’t take long and by the time Morgan laid the brush down, Lucian was fully dressed and looking as good as he had when they got there. Damn dark angel speed. She shoved her feet into her boots and called for the dog. They all piled into her SUV, Morgan relinquishing the driver’s seat to Damien since he knew where the restaurant was. Behind them to the west, mountains shadowed the horizon. In front, to the east, the land spread out in a plain that was surprisingly flat.

Damien navigated the traffic with ease and soon pulled into the driveway of a strip mall and then into the smaller parking lot belonging to a white building with blue, yellow, and red awnings and a sign proclaiming it “Good Times.” Morgan hoped it would be. They could use some good times.

As the truck eased into a parking spot, Morgan saw several small, umbrella-topped tables outside. This place was already good in her book since Lucy would be able to sit with them. Or at least with her. Morgan didn’t care if the others wanted to sit inside; she wasn’t leaving the dog in the car. For one, with the temperature hovering in the low nineties, it was too hot.

When she started toward the tables Lucian stopped her. “What do you want me to order?”

Morgan shrugged. “Whatever you think looks good. I told you, I’m the world’s least picky eater.”

She settled at one of the umbrella adorned tables, thankful for the shade it provided. Lucy laid down a few feet away in the shade of the restaurant itself. Isobel, Jameth, and Sarah took seats at the other small tables. The three tables were clustered close enough together that they would be able to talk freely without bumping elbows. A line of trees and bushes separated their seating choice from the busy road several yards away, helping to keep the noise of passing cars down.

Morgan glanced at Lucy laying in the shade and asked, “Are you sure Sorsha will be okay?”

“My neighbor always looks after her when I have to be away. Sorsha will be fine. With a cat door and someone to fill her food and water, she’ll be content.” Isobel paused then snorted. “In fact, now that Lucy is out of the house, Sorsha is probably quite happy.”

Chuckling, Morgan stretched and stifled a yawn.

Isobel smiled. “Didn’t sleep well?”

Morgan shook her head and leaned her elbows on the table. “You?”

“I think I fell asleep about an hour before I needed to get up,” Isobel said around a yawn of her own.

“I don’t think any of us slept easy last night,” Sarah said. “Hard to relax when you can hear those cursed hounds howling.”

“Tell me about it.” Morgan gathered her hair and pulled it over one shoulder to allow the breeze to reach the back of her neck. “It’s even harder when you know they’re after you.”

Isobel gave her a sympathetic look. “It’s never easy when something is after you specifically.” Her eyes took on a faraway look. “Much easier when it’s just random demons you need to banish.”

“Did you have a demon after you?” Morgan leaned forward and rested her elbows on the table.

“A demon from the highest level. He spent several weeks terrorizing me, making me think I was seeing things. Unlike you, I had no idea I was a channel, no idea what was going on.” Isobel eyes focused again. “Thankfully, he is back where he belongs, along with every demon he brought against us.”

“Talking about the time you nearly got yourself killed?” Damien said.

They all turned to look at the two men carrying several sacks each. Lucian raised an eyebrow at Damien. “Which time?”

Isobel rolled her eyes. “I did what needed to be done each time.”

Someday, Morgan was going to have to ask her friend to tell her more about what happened in this life before they met. Lucian set a couple of the sacks on the table in front of her and then began parceling out the food in them. He unwrapped two plain cheeseburgers and tossed them to Lucy, then pulled out a small cardboard cup with a plastic dome on it. The cup read Paw Bender on it. Morgan gave him a puzzled look. “Ice cream, in this heat?”

“It’s for Lucy.” He flashed her a grin. “They make it especially for dogs. It’s vanilla custard drizzled with peanut butter and topped with dog biscuits.”

He popped the lid off and held it so she could see the contents. A smile spread across Morgan’s face as he carried over to where the dog ate her cheeseburgers and set it down. Lucy stopped to sniff at it then began to lick the cold treat. After Lucian settled at the table, he handed her a very large cheeseburger piled with lettuce, onion, tomato and condiments. It smelled divine. Then he set a couple of different packages of fries on the table. One filled with seasoned fries, another with green chili on them, and finally onion rings.

Morgan took a huge bite of the cheeseburger, relishing the wonderful flavor of it while Lucian unwrapped two giant double cheeseburgers with bacon. Conversation flowed between the three tables as everyone ate and Morgan tried to decide which style of fry she liked better. The seasoned fries had a small cup of deliciousness next to them filled with something Lucian said was Wild Dippin’ Sauce. It tasted like a cross between smoky barbeque sauce and steak sauce and she couldn’t get enough of dipping the fries in it and even opened her cheeseburger and used a fry to spread some on that, too.

While she wasn’t a picky eater, Morgan still knew good food when she had it and Good Times did appear to have wonderful food. She glanced at Lucy. The dog had finished her cold treat and first burger and was now working on the second. As they enjoyed their meal, some of the tension eased out of her shoulders. Sitting there in the middle of the day, surrounded by friends and food, with the cool breeze carrying no hint of the hounds, Morgan found herself relaxing in spite of everything.

The only thing that marred the time was when her thoughts strayed to Jake. He had loved warm days like this, and he would have loved this food. She was glad she’d spent that last night in the park with him, if only…

Morgan blinked several times to keep the tears from coming. It didn’t stop the ache. She missed him.

On the way back to the hotel, Morgan rode with Isobel and Sarah in the back bench where they could talk easier while Jameth sat up front, Lucian drove, and Damien shared the middle bench with Lucy.

When they got back to the hotel, Isobel joined Morgan in her room after shooing the dark angels away. Morgan sat down on the edge of the bed as Isobel shut the door and said, “I thought we could use a little girl time without them hovering around.”

It really hadn’t been that long since they’d had girl time. Nope, it was best not to think of the evening that had been interrupted by the phone call. Thankfully, Isobel didn’t bring it up either. “Where’s Sarah? Didn’t she want any girl time?”

After turning on the TV to some series about vampires, Isobel sprawled on the bed near the window next to Lucy. “I’m thinking we are younger than her usual companions for this type of thing. Plus she and Jameth are off searching for a cougar claw and the rest of the items.”

“I hope they find it all soon,” Morgan said as she pulled her feet up on the bed.

“I hope so, too. They have to be careful, though. If Jameth or Sarah cross the hounds’ path, the hounds will follow them to see if the path leads to you.”

Unease sent a ripple through Morgan’s stomach. “How likely is that to happen?”

Isobel frowned. “I don’t know. Jameth contacted several taxidermies that aren’t too far, but they were out of cougar claws and teeth. The farther they find it, the more difficult it will be to retrieve it. Only the fact that we’re well out of your normal area is keeping the hounds from hunting in this direction. Even if they can’t smell you, they can smell the dark angels and will investigate to see if you are who they protect.”

“So either we find one close or we’re screwed?”

“Pretty much.”

Morgan flopped back on the bed. “Well, that’s just freaking great.”

For a while, neither of them said anything while the fictional characters on the show struggled with made up problems. Finally, Isobel changed the subject and they passed several hours mindlessly watching whatever shows came on and chatting as Isobel told her about the summer in this life that brought her and Damien together. How Xapar had made her think everyone was dead.

Morgan wished what happened to Jake had only been a hallucination. It wasn’t, though. Jax had ripped out Jake’s heart making Morgan feel as if he’d done the same to her.

Pain radiated from her chest and Morgan quickly shut those thoughts down before the sting in her eyes turned into a flow of tears. Not now. One day, but not now.

As the night wore on, their talk lapsed into silence and Morgan’s eyes grew heavy. Just as sleep pulled her under, a faint howl drifted through the open window on the cool night breeze.

 

Other books

Vivienne's Guilt by Heather M. Orgeron
Two-Minute Drill by Mike Lupica
The Red Umbrella by Christina Gonzalez
Mirrorshades: Una antología cyberpunk by Bruce Sterling & Greg Bear & James Patrick Kelly & John Shirley & Lewis Shiner & Marc Laidlaw & Pat Cadigan & Paul di Filippo & Rudy Rucker & Tom Maddox & William Gibson & Mirrors
The Paris Directive by Gerald Jay
The Gardens of the Dead by William Brodrick
Convicted by Jan Burke
Spin the Sky by Katy Stauber