“In the supply cupboard.”
From anyone else, she’d have suspected sarcasm.
“I could wait here and help Ms. Moore carry her bags upstairs. She looked tired.”
Ms. Moore could carry you upstairs; one-handed. But that wasn’t Claire’s secret to reveal. “You know, the longer you leave that floor unattended the greater the odds are that Austin will take a walk and track dark oak stain all over the hotel.”
“He’d notice the floor was wet.”
“Of course he’d notice. He wouldn’t do it by accident.”
“But…”
“He’s a cat.” She waited until Dean started back toward the dining room then, jaw set for confrontation, headed upstairs.
“So she’s h…cute, is she?” Yanking out a set of single sheets, she piled them on top of the towels. “I don’t care if he’s been providing breakfast, dinner, and midnight snacks, it’s dangerous and it’s going to stop. I won’t have my staff snacked on.”
“Who is snacking on your staff?” Jacques floated down from the floor above and settled about an arm’s reach away. “And does that mean what it sounds like it means, or is it some prissy Anglais way to talk of what is more interesting?”
“It means what it sounds like it means.” Two small bars of soap were dropped on the pile. “Did I put one of your anchors in here?”
“Oui.”
“I wonder why I did that.”
“So we could have more time alone together?” He lifted a lecherous brow but at her protest pressed it back down onto his forehead. “Because you felt sorry for me?” His whole body got involved in looking mournful, shoulders slumped, gaze focused on the loose interlacing of his fingers.
Claire rolled her eyes at the dramatics but couldn’t help smiling.
Peering up through his hair, Jacques caught sight of the smile and flashed her an answering grin. “Ah. That is better, no? You should be in a happy mood. I am saved from the pit, and you…” He waved a hand at the gathered supplies. “…you have someone to stay at your hotel.”
“You seem to have recovered from this morning’s experience.” Claire struggled toward the door, decided she was being ridiculous, wrapped the whole unwieldy pile in power and floated it out into the hall. “I expected the trauma to have lasted a little longer.”
Jacques shrugged. “A man does not allow himself to be held captured by his fears. Besides, as Austin reminds me, I am dead. The dead exist in the now; this morning is as years away. Tomorrow may never happen. When I am with you, only then do I think of a future.”
Which said something, something unpleasant, about the lingering effect of Aunt Sara. Not to mention country music lyrics.
Inside room four. Claire brought the bedding and towels and sundries to rest on the bureau and picked a small shaving mirror and stand up off the floor.
“What are you doing?”
“You can’t have access to rooms that guests are in.”
“Why not?”
“Because they might not like it.”
“How can they not like me?”
“You’re dead.” She set the mirror out in the hall and carried the towels into the bathroom.
“Hey, who’s the dead guy?”
The sound of the hall door closing brought Claire back out into the dressing room. “He’s none of your concern.”
“Count on it” She grinned and shrugged out of her jacket. “I don’t ask for much from my dates, but they do have to be alive. Now that piece of prime rib in your basement…”
“Stay away from him.”
“Why?” She polished nails much the same length and color as Claire’s against her black sleeveless turtleneck. “You think I’m too hard an act to follow?”
“I have no intention of following you or anyone else. I don’t know and I don’t care…” Claire ignored a raised ebony brow, obviously intended to provoke. “…about what happened when Augustus Smythe ran the site, but while I’m responsible, Dean Mclssac is under my protection.”
“Really? He seemed like a big…” A reflective moment later, she resumed. “…very big boy. And you’re not his guardian, Keeper, so chill. But, as it happens, I never feed in the crib unless things get desperate and, if that’s the case, your mother hen act will be the least of my problems. Besides, it’d be easier to throw myself on your mercy. After all, Keepers respond to need.” A startlingly pale tongue flicked over burgundy lips. “You’re what, O negative?”
“What does that have to do with anything?”
“It doesn’t. It’s just nice to know you’re one of my favorite flavors. Just in case.”
Busying herself with the bed, Claire pointedly did not respond.
Behind her, Sasha laughed, neither insulted nor discouraged. “From the way you spoke of him, I assume the little man isn’t dead. What did he do? Bugger off and leave you holding the stick?”
“That’s not how it works.”
Sasha laughed again. “Not generally, no, but Keepers don’t take over sites from Cousins who took over from Keepers, so clearly it ain’t working the way it should.”
“How do you know all that?”
“I’ve been around a while.”
Claire remembered the years of signatures in the registration book—not one of them, unfortunately, occurring in the few short months Sara held the site. “Do you know about…?” A jerk of the head to room six finished the question.
“Well, duh. It’s not like it’s possible to hide something like that from me. I mean, after four or five visits it got kind of hard to ignore this unchanging life just hanging around upstairs.” The musician shrugged into an oversized red sweater. “Gus said it was a woman the Keepers had done a Sleeping Beauty on and that was all I needed to know.”
“You called him Gus?”
“Sure. And I’d love to know how he stuck you with this place, but if you don’t want to spill, hey, that’s cool.” She ran her fingers through her hair and quickly changed her lipstick to match the sweater. “He never filled me in on his summoning either—the obnoxious little prick. But man, at your age, it must be driving you nuts hanging around here when you could be out saving the world.”
Before Claire could answer, Dean’s voice, calling her name, drifted up the stairwell.
Sasha tilted her head toward the sound. “And right on cue we have a reminder of the fringe benefits.”
“He’s not a benefit,” Claire protested.
Cool fingers cupped her chin for a heartbeat “Foolish girl, why not?” Then, with a jangle of silver bracelets and a careless, “Don’t wait up—” she was gone.
Her touch lingered.
Later that night, as Claire climbed into bed, Austin uncurled enough to mutter, “I understand you’re renting a room to a bloodsucking, undead, soulless creature.”
“Does that bother you,” Claire asked.
“Not in the least.” He yawned. “Anyone who can operate a can opener is okay by me.”
“She came back into her room just before dawn. I think that she saw somebody in town last night.” Jacques’ hands traced euphemistic signals in the air. “If you know what I mean. She had a cat who has eaten canary look.”
Sprawled on top of the computer monitor, Austin snorted. “She looked like she was about to hawk up a mouthful of damp feathers?”
“That is not what I mean.”
“You shouldn’t spy on the guests,” Dean told him, tightening his grip on a handful of steel wool. “It’s rude.”
“I was not spying,” Jacques protested indignantly. “I was concerned.”