The effort is not lost on Frey. His frown deepens. “Well?”
“I need to do some research. I figured your library would be the place to start.”
“Research about what?”
“Your cousins.”
“Cousins?”
“The were side of the family.”
The brows draw together. “Shape-shifters are in no way related to weres. They are pack animals, dangerous in and out of their animal bodies.” He looks at me and for the first time, something besides aggravation touches his expression. “Anna, you want nothing to do with weres. Hasn’t Williams ever told you that?”
“No. He had his chance, too. I saw him last night. Anyway, I’ve got no choice in this. I need to know what magic they possess. What spells they can cast. I need the information before tonight.”
He glares at me, a dark intensity shadowing his eyes. “What happens tonight?”
“I have to meet with a were. It’s business.”
“What business could you possibly have with a were?”
Frey and I used to be able to read each other’s thoughts, the way I can with vamps. That changed when I stupidly bit him once, and fed from him, which broke that connection. I see in his expression that he wishes he could crawl into my head right now and pry the information out of me. I also see deep concern and a dawning realization that he may be able to do something to stop me.
“Frey,” I say with a warning shake of my head. “You can’t stop this. Don’t try. No tricks. I know you think you would be protecting me, but believe me when I say if you do anything to try and prevent this, I’ll be angry. More than angry. I’ll be downright pissed. We both know that wouldn’t be good.”
He continues to stare at me, the internal debate obviously still raging. He, too, has the ability to cast spells. I have firsthand knowledge. He cast one on me a while back. Judging from that experience, though, I know he has to be present to invoke it and to keep the object of the spell under its control. Unless he plans to stay with me all day and night, I don’t think he can really do anything to prevent my meeting with Sandra.
Still.
“If you want to help, let me use your books. Find out how to protect myself. Doesn’t that make sense?”
The debate comes to an end. His expression is still anxious but he does swing open the door.
His sartorial taste isn’t the only thing that’s changed.
The last time I was in Frey’s home, the decor was minimalist to say the least—the walls, the carpet, the furniture, all the same color—gray. There were no pictures on the walls, no knickknacks on the tables, not a single book on the smooth, marble block that serves as a coffee table.
That was then.
Today the walls are alive with colorful works of art—bold landscapes done in great slashing strokes of green and yellow and red. The furniture has been rearranged, not symmetrically, but clustered in front of the fireplace. Throw pillows tumble over each other and spill onto the floor. A stack of books and a fan of magazines battle for space with a huge bouquet of violet lilies on that same marble coffee table.
It takes me a minute to absorb it all.
“Wow,” I say, turning to Frey, “when you redecorate, you don’t fool around, do you?”
“But he does fool around with the decorator.”
The voice comes from behind me, startling me into whirling around. I never heard her approach, never sensed the presence. She must have come from outside, the balcony. “What are you, a cat?”
She smiles. “Sorry. I should have made more noise.”
Frey moves around me to stand beside the woman. She’s tall, only an inch or two shorter than his six feet, and willowy thin. She has light brown hair drawn back from her face. Her eyes, blue, cool, are carefully hooded as she looks at me. She’s pretty in an edgy way, velvet over steel.
She’s dressed in a pair of pajamas that match Frey’s—only hers are pink with little black cats—and, oh, a couple of other major differences: her top is low-cut, revealing a curve of breast, and her pants ride low on her hips, exposing a tanned stretch of trim abdomen. No robe for this one. She’s immodesty personified.
Makes me see Frey in a new light. He and I had sex. Once. It was pretty damned good, too, but if this is Frey’s girlfriend, he must have talents he hid from me.
She’s watching me, a half smile playing on those full lips. It hits me then. She’s reading my thoughts. Shit. She’s a shape-shifter, too. She now knows everything that’s gone through my head in the last few minutes. Too late now to close the conduit.
You might have let me know.
She laughs. Why? This was so much more fun.
Are you a panther, too?
No. She links her arm through Frey’s. A tiger.
Figures. I knew she had to be some kind of cat.
Frey is looking from one of us to the other. “This isn’t fair,” he says. “I can only hear one side of the conversation.”
She tilts her head up and gives Frey a kiss on the cheek. “Go tend to Anna’s needs,” she says. “I’m going to shower.”
Color floods Frey’s face as he watches her walk toward the bedroom. She must have thrown him a parting remark that I wasn’t privy to.
“Care to share?” I ask.
“No.” He straightens his shoulders and gestures toward the hall. “Let’s go to the library.”
I follow in his wake. “Does the sex kitten have a name?” “She didn’t tell you?”
“No. Would I be asking if she did?”
“Layla. Her name’s Layla.”
“Any last name?”
We’re at the door to the library and he swings it open. He doesn’t answer. He’s never been secretive with me before and it’s creeping me out.
“She said she’s a decorator? Where does she work?”
No answer. Again. If he doesn’t give me something to work with, how am I going to check this kitty out?
He’s at the shelves, trailing a finger over a row of books. Frey’s library is extensive, three walls of floor-to-ceiling bookcases. Each book has the name of a literary classic embossed on its spine.
The room smells of old paper and aged leather, like an antiquarian bookstore. Except that these books are not literary classics. They’re books on magic. Cleverly disguised and protected by a spell.
Frey makes his decision with a grunt and a snap of his fingers. He pulls down a volume and turns to me, clutching the book against his chest.
“I’m still not sure I should do this,” he says.
I hold out a hand for the book. “Look at it this way, if you don’t and I walk into a were trap, will you ever forgive yourself?”
Again the grunt but this time, he puts the book in my hand. “Read the first three chapters. And chapter seventeen. They contain the relevant information.”
The book lies heavy on my palm. The title says Great Expectations, and if I were human, what I’d see when I opened the book would be the Dickens text. What I see now upon opening the book is Old English calligraphy.
English?
I look up at Frey. “The last time I looked at one of these books, the text was some kind of hieroglyphic. Are they all different?”
He gives me a tight-lipped smile. “I wasn’t sure about you then.”
“You have the ability to change the text?”
“Oh, Anna, I have all sorts of abilities. You’d be amazed.”
I stare at him. Having met Layla, he’s probably right. As for the books, I knew they were spell protected. It appears Frey is the spellbinder. Impressive.
He takes my arm and steers me toward the door. “Promise me you’ll be careful, Anna. And call me if you have any questions. In fact, call me after your meeting.”
“You’re that concerned about my meeting with the were?”