Read Kissing the Werewolf - An Izzy Cooper Novel Online
Authors: Kendra Ashe
A second later, Muriel popped up in front of me. “Where are you going?”
“To my office. Where else would I be going … seeing how I’m headed out back?” I grumbled.
“Why?” I asked, stopping suddenly.
Now I was getting annoyed. Not only did Muriel know what Tim’s name was, though she insisted on calling him nerd, I was getting the feeling she knew more than she was telling me.
“Well what did you hear them talking about before they left?” I decided it was time to get a little pushy.
“Nothing.”
It was time to go right to the source and ask Ayden myself, which is exactly what I would have done, if I’d remembered to grab my phone before I left the house.
What was wrong with me today?
Another plus was that there was a landline in the office. In light of this, I continued in that direction.
Muriel floated along side me. “I think you need to concentrate on Captain Marsh.”
“I don’t have time right now, but I’ll look into it,” I promised.
The door to the office was locked, so it was a good thing Ayden had been generous enough to give me a key.
There was no note waiting for me on the whiteboard, just a display of gruesome crime scene photos.
Snatching up the phone from my desk, I punched in Agent Fontaine’s number. It rang several times and then went to his voicemail.
There was nothing to do but try again later.
“You can come along if you want!” I called out to an invisible Muriel.
But since I’m so over that crap, I changed my mind and decided I hadn’t kicked Jasper’s head, but just a rock.
I was just thinking that I should find another rock to kick when I heard the angry - snarling growl. It wasn’t just a regular growl, but a ferocious, I’m going to eat you, growl.
When the wolf emerged from the thicket of trees, I couldn’t hold back the half gasp, half scream that escaped my lips. It was easily the biggest wolf I’d ever seen. Not that I’d seen that many wolves, other than in at the zoo.
It was time to face facts. This wolf had to be Elias. The heartthrob of my teen dreams was indeed, a werewolf.
What if it were just a wolf, or even worse, another werewolf?
Suddenly I felt like a great big hen that had just wandered out of the chicken coop to come face to face with the big bad wolf.
“Elias!” I half choked on his name.
The wolf began moving toward me, slowly - gracefully.
There was no stopping it. My eyes made their way from his beautiful face, to his wide shoulders, and then to the bulging muscles of his chest.
I couldn’t stop there. My eyes had a mind of their own, so on account of this, they continued to his narrow waist, and right on down to his extra thick and long, dangling boy part.
If it were possible for a body to overheat and melt, mine would have done just that.
Thinking of what it was I’d missed out on in high school, was enough to make me want to do a little time traveling.
All traces of the wolf were gone, but his eyes were still on me, and they were still hungry.
“Elias,” I breathed.
I cleared my throat. Not so much because I really needed to clear my throat, but because it gave me time to come up with a response that wouldn’t sound totally stupid. The extra time didn’t work.
“That’s okay. I don’t mind.”
“Yeah well, if you’ll give me a minute, I’ll throw some clothes on.”
Putting clothes over that body was so totally not needed, but I kept my mouth shut. I didn’t think there would be enough room to fit my other foot in there.
A few minutes later, he was at his front door, motioning for me to come in.
I hesitated. After all, he was a suspect in a homicide investigation.
Oh the hell with it!
I followed him through the front door.
How could he still do that to me after all these years?
“Umm … both … I think,” I stammered.
There went the other foot, right into my mouth.
“Good,” he said. “I’m going to need some caffeine if you’re going to be interrogating me.”
“Me too.”
Why couldn’t I just be cool, like Annabelle?
The kitchen was rustic, kind of an Old West - log cabin style rustic, but with all the conveniences of modern living. It had the two most important items needed in a kitchen, a microwave and a coffee pot.
Did they have breakfast bars in the Old West?
Since I didn’t have my phone, I also didn’t have my recorder. That meant doing things the old fashion way.
To keep my mind off the fact that I’d again made myself out to look like a total klutz in front of the sexiest guy on earth, I cleared my throat and slipped into my FBI skin.
“Do you mind telling me what you were doing at the lighthouse today … with my uncle?”
One dark brow shot up. “I didn’t realize there was a law against visiting a radio station.”
“There’s not … but when I questioned Aaron, he said that you were there looking for something. What was it that you were looking for?”
When Elias smiled, my heart fluttered in my chest like a trapped butterfly.
Was it just my imagination, or was he smiling like that on purpose, perhaps with the intent of giving me a heart attack?
What a perfect way to kill a federal agent. The coroner would classify it as death by natural causes, and no one would be the wiser.
But I was onto him. No way was he going to win me over with his devious smiles.
“Sorry. I just can’t get over the fact that after all these years, I’m sitting here next to you, but you’re only here to question me about looking through a spyglass.”
Since he put it like that, it did seem a little crazy. There was a time when I’d come up with just about any excuse to hang around his house, the outside of it anyway. Actually,
when I thought about it, questioning him about what he was looking at through a spyglass was probably one of my more logical reasons for coming to his house.
“So what were you looking for this morning?” I asked again.
“When I was out early yesterday morning, I saw this gigantic guy walking down Eerie Lane.”
“What time yesterday morning?”
His answer caused my eyebrows to do that scrunching thing. “What were you doing out at that time of the morning?”
“Running.”
He shook his head. “I wasn’t jogging … I was running.”
“Running?” I echoed. “Oh yeah, running!”
So now I could add foolish to feeling stupid, or maybe it was pretty much the same thing.
A thought occurred to me. “You wouldn’t have happened to have been hunting, while you were running?”
“Sure,” he nodded. “Rabbits and such.”
Well there was no law against hunting rabbits, unless one didn’t have a hunting license. Problem was, I wasn’t sure that a werewolf needed a hunting license, or even how that would work.
Oh well, it was probably best to change the subject and stay totally away from the, werewolf hunting rabbits illegally, thing.
Granny was always telling us that a smart woman chooses her battles wisely. That’s what I would do in this situation.
“What did this guy look like?”
Giving me a lopsided grin, he turned away. “You won’t believe me.”
“Try me,” I urged, returning his smile.
“He looked like the Frankenstein monster from those old classic movies.”
I couldn’t stop my jaw from hitting the floor.
It took a minute to recover, and during that time, he was staring at me - waiting for a response.
“I hate to ask you this,” I said, clearing my throat, “but do you self medicate … drink, anything like that?”
The thought of a drunken werewolf running amok on Mystique Island was really ugly.
Elias shook his head. “I told you that you wouldn’t believe me.”
“No,” he wagged his head again. “That’s what I thought at first too, but I saw him again, after changing back”.
“After changing, I followed the guy to the Smuggler’s Bay Lodge. It was weird because he just stood outside, as if he were waiting for someone. Dale must have been out running too, because he was only half changed into human form when he went through that window.
The guy got a hold of him before he’d even made it back to his human form.”
Again, my mouth was hanging open. “You witnessed the murder, and didn’t tell Ayden about it when he questioned you?”
“You know he wouldn’t have believed me. He’d just run me in for more questioning.”
“You’d be surprised. Agent Fontaine is a lot more open minded than what you might think.”
“Maybe so, but he’s not an islander, and I know he’s one of those, by the book, kind of cops. He might know about some things, but how is he going to believe something that I’m having a hard time believing myself?”
“So are you going to keep this between us for now?” he asked, adding sugar to his words by way of his devilishly sexy smile.
“Oh what the hell?” I shrugged. “But only for a day or two.”
“That’s okay,” he said, reaching out to caress my arm.
As soon as our skin made contact, I felt my blood turn to liquid fire.
My first reaction was to jerk away.
But why, especially considering the fact that I loved the way it felt when he touched me?
If Jasper could tear me up with what he’d done, I could only imagine what Elias could do. My feelings for Elias had been around longer, and I suspected they ran much deeper than anything I’d ever felt for Jasper.
“No more keeping things like this to yourself, or I’ll have to tell my boss everything,” I warned.
Elias nodded.
Sighing, I got to my feet and put my little notepad back in my pants pocket. I wasn’t even sure why I’d taken it out. It wasn’t as if I’d actually written anything in it, but I had managed a cool picture of Frankenstein while I’d been doodling.
“I have a question though,” he said, drawing my attention back to him.
I paused, waiting for him to ask his question.