That sort of subtle fishing for information might have worked on someone else but not on Jess.
“Friend of the family.” Jess didn’t give an inch. Her one good eye studied the two Hanovers. I could see her assessing the pair and finding them wanting in most areas.
It wasn’t personal. Jess plain didn’t like humans.
Bernadette frowned. “An aunt, maybe? Her parents—” She cut off her words when her husband tugged on her arm.
“Really, dear. There’s a time and a place for this sort of discussion and this isn’t it.” The elder Hanover gave Jess a gentle smile. “You’ll have to forgive her. She’s rather rabid about taking care of our son and wanting to know everything about the company he keeps.”
A shadow passed over Jess’s face. For a second she looked older than her years, the crow’s feet around her eyes growing deeper and dragging the energy out of her. “I understand. All parents want to protect their young.”
Michael pulled again at his wife’s arm. “We’ll see you for dinner, Brandon.” He gave Jess a respectful nod as they slid past her.
Jess walked past me into the house, head held high as Bran’s parents escaped the front yard with a clattering of heels and low mutterings. I noticed their expensive sedan sitting on the street and sent up a quiet prayer of thanks it hadn’t been scratched up or worse, jacked and headed for the local chop shop.
Not that I’d know about such things.
“You go see what’s up with her.” Bran jerked a thumb at his retreating family. “I’ll see them off.” He shuffled off toward the car, sweat beading on his forehead. It was a case of the lesser of two evils—and I knew there’d be a reckoning on all fronts at some point for this.
I spun on my heel and headed inside, eager and terrified to find out why Jess had come here.
She didn’t do social visits. The last two times she’d contacted me had been job offers from the family.
I didn’t need any more distractions at the moment.
Jess was in the kitchen putting the kettle on for tea. Jazz, lying on the counter, looked at Jess and rolled onto her back, offering her pink tummy. I watched with a detached curiosity as Jess went through the motions of making tea, something she’d only do for an equal or a superior.
Which I definitely was not, being outcast from the Pride. Recent events had me bordering on legitimacy within the Felis family. Barely.
Not that I gave a damn. I hadn’t cared for over two decades and that feeling wasn’t going to change anytime soon. But this was something new, something different, and I knew there was trouble in the air.
The Felis had managed to stay hidden within human society for centuries, keeping our feline shape-shifting abilities hidden from those who would want to study us or destroy us. We worked in human society, played in human society and even married humans—but maintaining our secret was paramount, without exception.
Even I was sworn to stay hidden, outcast and crippled by my inability to Change on demand.
“Brandon’s parents.” Jess rubbed the white cat’s belly.
“Yep.” I watched Jazz slip into bliss, the tip of her tail fluttering.
“I thought they were dead.” She looked at me sideways. “Didn’t he tell you they were dead?”
“Not so much.” I waggled my hand in the air. “Seems his family is loaded.” I drew out the last word to eight syllables. “Natural reaction is to deny any connection.”
“Good survival technique.” Jess dug under Jazz’s jaw with her nails, encouraging even louder purring. “Looking at those two I can’t blame him. I’d wish they were dead too.”
“Jess.” I shot her as much of a warning look as I dared. “I’m pissed off but I can understand why he did it.” I repeated Bran’s words. “We’ve got our own family secrets.”
She pressed her lips together into a tight, straight line before responding. “I’m not sure if I’m willing to concede the high ground to him on this one.”
“Well, you’re not the one sleeping with him.” It came out a bit sharper than I intended.
Jess’s right eyebrow arched. “Down, girl. Wasn’t trying to add fuel to the fire. You’ve got enough on your plate as it is.” She grunted. “No wonder he can keep secrets.”
I didn’t pursue that opening. Bran was one of the few humans who knew about the Felis and possibly the only one with actual status in the family. Beating down Carson in Pennsylvania had earned him respect from that Pride and it would have definitely made news on the Felis rumor mill.
“So now you’re meeting the possible in-laws.” Jess smirked. “Sort of terrifying, hmm?”
I didn’t answer. I didn’t have to—she’d raised two daughters and knew darned well what emotions were running wild. I pitied the poor men who’d tried wooing her girls—you’d have to have balls of steel to suggest a date, much less marriage. The two women had moved south to other Prides, away from their powerful mother.
“I’m not too worried about that.” I waited, knowing what Jess was building up to.
“They have a file on you?”
I flinched at the unspoken reprimand. “I’ll take care of it.” I couldn’t blame her for being upset. She’d worked hard to keep our existence secret.
She glared at me, the return of the iron lioness complete. “Do what you can, but realize if it gets out of control we’ll have to take measures to stop this intrusion.”
I didn’t ask her to elaborate what would happen if I didn’t put the Hanovers off that particular track.
I knew.
Bran came back into the kitchen at a run, rubbing his hands together. “Okay, parents are off and all’s well. What’s up?”
Jess’s good eye twitched. “They have a file on Reb. They had her investigated.”
I could hear her teeth grinding with each word.
“Standard procedure for every woman I date.” A sheepish look replaced the panic. “My dad’s worth, at last count, about five billion dollars. A lot of gold diggers out there figuring I’m worth a pretty penny.”
Jess snorted. “You better be worth it.”
Bran blew her a kiss. “Every penny.” He struck a pose. “I got some mad moves from those boys down at the Cat’s Meow.” He swiveled his hips at Jess.
I felt my cheeks burn at the reference to the strip club down in Penscotta.
Jess looked like she was caught between laughing out loud and scowling at Bran’s impudence. She compromised by shaking her head and letting out a deep sigh.
“What did you come here for?” I deflected the conversation away from the topic at hand. “The Council need another favor? Another trip to clean up someone’s dirty laundry.”
Jess turned her full attention back on me. The scathing look sent me back a step, closer to Bran. “I was coming by to give you an update. Let you know the Penscotta Pride’s being broken up into smaller pieces, based on current events. More of their children spreading out to other groups.”
I nodded. It wasn’t a surprise. When we’d left the Pennsylvania Pride the Felis had taken over the local town council. Good for business but bad for keeping the Felis secret—the more contact we had with humans the more likely someone would let something slip and our secret would be out.
Bran and I had discussed this many times, usually in bed. He couldn’t see why we kept ourselves part of, but apart from human society. We were judges, lawyers, car lot owners and hot dog cart vendors—but we always kept to ourselves. We married other Felis from other Prides, rarely, if ever, taking human lovers, never mind human mates. A human husband or wife had to be kept out of the loop, never knowing their significant other kept deep secrets. For the Felis who married humans there’d always be the sense of loss, of separation from the family.
There weren’t too many Felis who married humans.