“I’m not amused,” Wilder retorted. “I’m about to kick this turd’s ass.” Satira ground her teeth together until her voice came out as clenched as her jaw. “Why?” Archer laughed. “Bloodhounds are territorial, sweet thing.” He tossed his hat onto the table. “Best remember that if you plan to run with one.”
Wilder turned a chair around and sat. “What the hell are you doing here anyway, Arch?”
“Undercover.” Archer sprawled in the opposite chair and lifted both booted feet to the table, heedless of the damage they’d probably do to the precious tablecloth. “Been deep in the Deadlands for six months now.”
“Doing what?”
“Inciting the bloodsucking bastards into killing each other off. Most of them are in a blood feud with at least a half dozen of the other ones. Keeping them stirred up isn’t so hard.” Wilder chuckled. “Sounds like fun.”
It sounded useful. Satira stepped forward and planted herself firmly between the two men, intent on capturing Archer’s undivided attention. “Have you heard anything about a Guild inventor who’s been taken captive?”
The man’s humor faded, and a muscle in his jaw ticked. “I’ve heard rumors. Been waiting for confirmation.”
Too many nights in Wilder’s bed had dulled her sense of self-preservation. She’d already taken a step forward before she remembered that the man sprawled so casually in front of her wasn’t a man at all. The urge to curl her fingers in a bloodhound’s vest and shake him until answers tumbled out was damn close to suicidal.
Her hands shook with the effort control cost her. “What rumors?” He watched her sharply. “That one of the younger bloodsuckers is planning a coup, but he needed a weapon. He needed a Guild inventor.”
“Which one?”
Archer huffed out a laugh, and Wilder spoke. “We plan to head out, Arch, so you may as well tell us.” He shook his head. “You’re heading for a fight with a lady in tow? You’re a bigger fool than I thought.”
“The lady can take care of herself.”
That warmed her a little. Enough to let her take a step back. Toward Wilder. “Please tell us.” Archer didn’t relax, though his expression cleared. “His name is Thaddeus Lowe. Ever heard of him?” Wilder tensed again. “Some.”
“Some?” Satira demanded, panic rising. Wilder’s reaction was enough to scare half of the life out of her. “Is it worse than you expected?”
It was Archer who answered. “Lowe is a shrewd son of a bitch. Mean. It won’t be easy getting close, but I might be able to get it done.”
“I’ll do anything,” she whispered. “Anything.”
“Satira.” Wilder rose and stepped in front of her. “I’d be much obliged, Arch. We have to get Nate out of there.”
The other bloodhound nodded and dropped his hat back on his head as he stood. “I’ll be in touch. This time tomorrow at the latest.”
Archer left, leaving Satira staring at Wilder’s rigid back as the door clicked shut again. “Wilder?” He turned slowly, releasing a shaky breath. “Didn’t like having him so close, that’s all.” It took her a moment to understand, and even when she did, she didn’t quite believe it. “So close to me?”
He didn’t meet her gaze. “Sorry. I’m usually much more reasonable.” Perhaps it wasn’t proper to feel a kindling warmth in her belly. She reached out a hand to touch his shoulder. “I have never had a man be unreasonable about me before.” Wilder laughed a little. “You sound pleased.”
“It’s…” Thrilling. Exciting. Soothing, to think someone had strong enough emotions regarding her to behave irrationally. Soothing to matter to someone. “It’s pleasing. In moderation.” His hands framed her hips, pulled her close. “I’ll bear that in mind.” Satira turned her head and rested her cheek against his shoulder with a soft sigh. “Then tomorrow, we’ll know how to find Nate.”
He sobered. “Tomorrow. You should get some rest tonight.”
It wasn’t the loss of his promised wickedness that hurt, but the warmth and comfort of having his strong body curled around hers. “Alone?”
“You can sleep with me,” he told her, “but I do mean sleep.” She tried to hide her smile against his shoulder. “As long as you keep my feet warm.”
“That’s the only thing hounds are good for, sweetheart.”
It sounded like a warning. Perhaps he didn’t care for the way she held him, the way she’d snuggled up against him. Too intimate, too expectant. Satira stepped back and reminded herself that having a man’s lust could be a long way from having his regard. Her words must be lighthearted. Teasing. “You’re skilled at keeping all of me warm.”
His eyes were dark, and he closed his hands around her arms. “Don’t figure you’d agree to stay here tomorrow.”
If he’d bedded her for the last few nights in hopes of making her more agreeable to being left behind, he’d be sorely disappointed. “Don’t figure I would.”
He sighed. “Thought so.”
She had one point on which she had every intention of digging her heels in. “And I’ll be wearing something reasonable. So if you’d like to spend a moment admiring my tits, you’d best do it now.” Finally, he unbent enough to smile. “Tonight, perhaps, before we sleep.” So there’d be one more night of furtive touches and desperate pleasure. “Take me to bed, Wilder Harding. I yearn for your admiration.”
He kissed her, a glancing brush of his lips on hers. “Now?”
“I’m only hungry for one thing.”
Wilder lifted her suddenly and set her on the nearest table, his hands hard on her hips, his breath hot on her ear. “Here?”
Her heart skipped. The hunger in his voice, in his grip… It was everything she’d craved without knowing it. Not a bloodhound interested in a conquest. A man who wanted her.
Oh, she was a fool. A terrible fool, because she couldn’t summon the will to build a wall around her heart. Instead she slid her fingers up his arms and curled them around his neck, drawing him down for another kiss.
Chapter Seven
The sun was low, too low, and Wilder cursed under his breath. According to Archer’s message, this was the right rendezvous point, only he was nowhere to be found.
And darkness was fast approaching.
“Wilder?” Satira sat her horse more easily today, with the reins firm in her gloved hands. She seemed more relaxed in trousers and a rough jacket, though tension threaded her voice now.
Hiding his emotions and thoughts from her was growing harder with each passing day. “Archer’s late.”
“I take it that’s not like him?”
“No.” Not like any bloodhound to leave a comrade stranded in the desert borderlands with dusk fast approaching.
Wilder’s stomach twisted with a sick sense of foreboding.
Satira stripped off her gloves and tucked them behind her belt, then reached for the gun at her hip.
“Do you think something happened to him?”
“Could be.” If he’d tried to set things up for them, he could have gotten—
Really, Harding? You didn’t see it in his eyes? Ignore it when he tried to call you off?
He tightened one hand around his rifle and turned his horse. “Ride, Satira. Back toward town, now.” For one endless moment she stared at him, eyes conflicted. Then she gripped her reins. “You’d best be behind me, Wilder, or I will turn around.”
He started to speak, but the crack of a gunshot stilled his tongue. Wilder dragged Satira closer, heedless of the way her mount whinnied in protest.
Her heart hammered so loud he could hear it clearly, but her fingers found her gun. “Tell me what to do, and I’ll do it.”