Read Kissing the Werewolf - An Izzy Cooper Novel Online
Authors: Kendra Ashe
At first he didn’t say anything. He just stared at me with hungry eyes, which for some reason made me feel like dinner, or a sex goddess. At the moment, I wasn’t sure which.
“Why did you do it?” he finally asked.
Okay then. I had no idea what he was talking about.
“Do what?”
“Did it really mean so little to you that you don’t even remember?” Pain and anger twisted at his handsome features.
“Really Elias … I have no idea what you’re talking about.”
“That summer we spent together. Don’t you remember any of it?”
I was pretty sure what we’d had together, if anything, was all one sided, as in my side.
Turning away from me, he studied the teapot clock that hung on the kitchen wall. He wasn’t saying anything, which I found really disturbing.
On account of the uncomfortable silence, I decided maybe I should say something more. “Seriously Elias … that’s how I remember it.”
When he turned away from the clock, I could actually feel his dark - turbulent gaze settle on me.
“So you don’t remember me asking you to marry me … to share your life with me? You don’t remember that you just stopped writing? You never gave me a reason … the letters just stopped.”
There have been very few times in my life that I was speechless, and this was one of them.
Had I somehow been sucked into an alternate reality, and now all my dreams were coming true. It may be a little belated, but all things considered, late was better than never.
How could two people’s recollection of the same thing, be so vastly different?
Elias was convinced his version of that summer was the correct version.
But that was impossible. If I’d had some hot and heavy romance with Mister Elias Moreland, I damn sure would remember it.
Wouldn’t I?
The next thing to do would be to make a quick pit stop at home to pick up my phone. It was exactly where I’d left it, charging on the nightstand in my bedroom. There were several missed calls from both, Ayden and Tim.
“Where are you?” he demanded.
“Umm … well when I went into the office today, everyone was gone and there were no instructions left for me … so I kind of just did some poking around on my own,” I explained, hoping I sounded convincing enough that I wouldn’t have to elaborate.
To my surprise and pleasure, he didn’t ask any further questions concerning my
whereabouts. Instead, he made more demands.
“Well you need to get to the Sandbar, ASAP!”
“Okay … what’s up?” I asked, already on my way out the door.
“I’ll fill you in when you get here.” The line went dead.
Well how rude was that
?
I just might start hanging up on him, and then we’d see how Mister Smarty Pants Fontaine liked it.
* * *
All this murder and chaos had to be killing business.
“Thanks,” I said, adding a smile.
He returned my smile, but it was forced. This was my first clue that something was very wrong. Not just regular, another homicide wrong, but something very very wrong.
Jeb was there, sitting on Annabelle’s metal desk with one butt cheek. Tim was sitting next to Nick Watson, the guy who cooked for the Sandbar, and doubled as a dishwasher. He looked shaken and white as a ghost, which wasn’t a major change for Nick.
Nick had been one of Annabelle’s best friends while they were in school. After graduation, Nick ran off to the big city, like most of the younger generation tended to do. And like most, he ended up right back on Mystique Island, broken and disillusioned. The outside world didn’t mesh well with the secrets most of us had.
And Nick had secrets, I was sure of it.
“What’s going on?” I asked.
Ayden turned to Nick. “That will be all. We’ll be in touch.”
Nodding, Nick got up and practically ran out the door, which was totally out of character for him. Sure, we hadn’t been as close as he and Annabelle, but we were still friends. Usually he had a hello for me, and sometimes even some kind of crazy story. Mostly his stories were trumped up tales of the time he’d spent on a commercial fishing vessel, but they were interesting.
“What’s all this about?” I asked again. “Where’s my sister?”
When Ayden and Tim shared one of their looks, which usually meant they were keeping something from me, I knew I’d better sit down.
This I did, even before the boss man could command me to do so.
“Annabelle’s missing,” Ayden told me, and quickly added. “But this time there’s a witness. I’m not sure the witness is all that reliable, but he did see
something
.”
“Who … Nick?” Not being a complete idiot, I’d managed to put two and two together fairly quickly.
Ayden nodded.
Well maybe not so much, but how was I going to get my sister back if they wouldn’t even let me in on what was going on?
“Well did you get a description of the suspect?” I asked, half expecting him to tell me that the suspect had an uncanny resemblance to Frankenstein.
Okay then. That was completely random, and there was even a slight possibility that it topped Elias’s Frankenstein sighting.
Had everyone on the island lost their freaking minds?
“That’s what he says?” Ayden sighed.
“You don’t actually believe any of this, do you?
No one responded, which was not a good sign.
It was official. I was the only sane person left on the island.
The Kennedys being some kind of drug cartel was as good a theory as I’d heard so far, in my opinion anyway.
“Maybe we should send a sample to the university on the mainland,” I suggested.
Ayden had a thoughtful - brooding look on his face, which meant he was actually considering my suggestion.
“They know.” Ayden nodded. “By the time we informed them, you’d already left. I didn’t want to panic your family, so we didn’t say anything until we knew what was going on.”
Unable to sit still any longer, I jumped to my feet. “I don’t know how much good that will do. Some of these incidents took place before the sun went down.”
“She’s right,” Ayden put in.
All I received for my effort were a lot of blank stares.
“Remember the old Indian curse, and the rumors about this island being some kind of sacred ground, or portal?”
“Are you losing it?” Ayden frowned.
“Well I don’t see where that’s any crazier than a mummy, or the Frankenstein monster,” I shot back, realizing my mistake too late.
“Frankenstein? What are you talking about?” Tim asked.
“Nothing.” I shook my head. “Just adding some color to the theory.”
I hated lying, but a promise was a promise. On the bright side, now I could encourage Elias to come forward with what he knew, and then maybe Ayden could clear him from the suspect list.
Of course it was still a possibility that Ayden would arrest Elias for the murder of Dale Simmons, unless we could find another person of interest.
“Well there’s no shortage of them type on this island, that’s for sure.” Jeb said in a dry - cynical voice.
It was obvious that Jeb wasn’t too fond of witches since Granny put a spell on his prom date.
“It makes sense, in a crazy sort of way. Granny said there could be someone channeling the island’s power.”
Ayden was scowling at me, which meant he didn’t like something I’d said. “Have you been discussing this case with your grandmother?”
“Well kind of … umm pretty much,” I admitted.
With it being three in the morning, it was no wonder I barely had the strength to fall into bed, let alone push myself into the shower, but I forced the issue. I wouldn’t get a wink of sleep without a shower. It was one of those things you got conditioned to as a child that never left you. It wouldn’t matter if we were in the middle of an apocalypse, and I was half dead, I had to have a shower and brush my teeth.
It was an island for hell’s sake. How many places were there to hide a kidnap victim?
We were missing something significant, I was sure of it. Things just weren’t adding up.
If I kept thinking about Annabelle, I wouldn’t get any sleep at all, and I needed sleep to function.
I couldn’t help but wonder how those TV cops could stay up for hours, drink a dozen pots of coffee, and still manage to shoot straight enough to bring down the bad guy?
I wasn’t too worried about Annabelle just yet. My sister and I had always had some kind of connection between us. Since we were old enough to walk and talk, there had been this emotional connection. We could sense the other’s emotions.
But if so … who would do something like that, and why?
* * *
Why I’d thought it was cute enough to put as a ringtone, I had no idea.
Resisting the urge to hurl the phone across the room, with the hope that by doing so, the song would somehow change to just an annoying buzz, I groped for the offensive piece of technology and put it to my ear.
“Hello,” I croaked.
“Did you want some breakfast this morning?” Tim asked.
“Hmm … no, but some coffee and aspirin would be appreciated.”
“No … and I’m offended that you would even suggest I’d do such a thing, with my sister gone, and monsters overrunning our town?”
“Sorry,” he apologized. “You just sound a little hung over.”
I felt hung over.
“Maybe I sound like that because you keep waking me up at insane hours of the morning,” I accused, though it might be a mite unfair of me, especially since Tim had been holding my hand a lot of the time. It was his way of helping me keep my job.
“That’s okay. If you’ll come and open your door, I can help you out with a cup of ambition.
Not bothering to put a robe over my pink bunny pajamas, I slipped into my trusty turtle slippers and stumbled to the front door.
As soon as I swung open the door, I was ready to tackle him for the Styrofoam cup he was holding, but I thought better of it. Instead, I gave him a quick peck on the cheek before snatching the coffee out of his hand. I hoped the kiss would make up for my lack of manners.
The subject of angels made me think of Julius. I hadn’t heard from my guardian demon in a couple of days, which wasn’t really that unusual. But still, when there was something going on, he tended to make an appearance.
“Are you okay?” Tim asked.
“Did you get any sleep last night?” I asked.
“Yeah,” he nodded. “Slept in the lobby of the Social Science building. “I take it there was no luck with the search last night?”
“Are you okay,” Tim asked again.
“Yes, just coming back from the land of the dead. Sorry.”
“So I haven’t talked to Fontaine yet. What happened last night?”
“We got a search party together and search most of the island, but we didn’t find a thing,” I explained, my mouth dipping into a frown.
“Maybe she was taken off the island,” he suggested.
“And no sign of monsters?” he asked, a cockeyed grin lighting up his boyish features..
“Nope … no monsters.”
“Well I have some news,” he informed me.
That’s when I realized I hadn’t offered him a seat. It wasn’t that I was being forgetful, or rude on purpose. I was just accustomed to Julius, who would sit whether he was invited to or not.
“Have a seat.” I motioned to a kitchen chair.
My knowledge of ancient Egypt was about as extensive as my knowledge of physics, which meant I knew next to nothing.
“Sooo … what does all that mean?”
I couldn’t help but wonder how likely it was that a killer would go through so much trouble, just to make it appear as if he were some kind of old mummy. Probably not too likely,
but yet it all seemed real enough. This led me back to Granny’s, witchcraft combo curse, theory.
“I do have an idea,” Tim interrupted my thought process, which for some reason reminded me that I had a headache.
“What’s that?” I asked, as I was searching the cupboard for a bottle of aspirin.
“We could hire a paranormal investigator … you know, maybe as a consultant.”
Tim was brilliant. Why hadn’t I thought of that one?
Although I couldn’t quite understand what an island full of witches and other odd folks would need a paranormal investigator for, I was up for it.
This not only wasn’t good, it was just plain odd.
A paranormal investigator sounded good.