Dreaming of the Wolf (Heart of the Wolf #8)

Chapter 6


Alicia entered her hotel room, and her heart skipped a beat when she saw an envelope on the blue-gray carpet where it must have been shoved underneath the door. Before she picked up the note, she considered that it might be from her informant. What if Mario and Danny were again on the move?


Her breathing suspended, she tore the envelope open and pulled out the folded note. Alicia Greiston, Room 101 was repeated on the piece of paper, but in another man’s hard-bitten scrawl. She swallowed hard and opened the piece of paper and read: You want me, come and get me. But if lover boy is with you, consider him dead.


Her heart felt as though its motion had been suspended in mid-beat.


Jake would die.


No matter how much she wanted to be with him, to live again, to enjoy life to the fullest, she’d known her meeting him had been too good to be true. He’d leave her anyway. She reminded herself of the way he’d reacted after they’d made love in the woods—that this was a mistake.


It was. A grave mistake. If Jake died, it would be as though she had pulled the trigger herself. All she’d been thinking of was herself, damn it.


No more. She had a job to do. And Jake had to stay out of the picture.


As fast as she could, she changed into jeans and a T-shirt, tossed the rest of her clothes and cosmetics into her bags, and hurried to the lobby. There, with her heart racing, worried Jake would discover her leaving before she could disappear and guessing he wouldn’t allow it, she stood at the checkout counter, trying not to tap her fingers on the polished surface as she waited for the clerk to get off the phone.


As soon as he did and she got her bill, he said, “Miss Alicia Greiston, you had a message.” He passed an envelope to her, eerily like the first, with her name and room number written on top. But she thought she recognized her informant’s handwriting, although she couldn’t be certain because the scrawl was often disguised. With a quick thanks, she stalked toward the back door where her car was parked outside. As soon as she stowed her bags in the trunk, she drove away from Breckenridge and opened the envelope.


I want to take Mario down, too. But if you get to him first, I’m all for it. He’ll be in Denver at a condo in Cherry Creek North, listed under John Smith.


It was the same type of encouraging, cryptic note that she’d received before, telling her that Mario and Danny were now in Breckenridge. Whoever her informant was, he had been right. She was still concerned that he might be one of Mario’s men, but gut instinct told her she could trust him as far as his not working for Mario. She also assumed he was not one of the strictly good guys or he’d identify himself. More than likely he was someone who had a vendetta of his own.


Turning the car around, she drove in the direction of Denver, two hours away, and hoped Jake wouldn’t hate her too much as a damnable tear slid down her cheek. She had to draw on her anger if she was going to take Mario and Danny down. Remorse and regret would get her killed before she could accomplish her mission otherwise, and she definitely would get Jake killed if she had anything more to do with him.


***


Impatiently, Jake signed the paperwork at the art gallery, agreed on the pricing of the photographs, and after leaving all his contact information, headed back to Alicia’s inn. He was thinking he should be noble and take her to lunch first, although he already wanted to make love to her again. He’d never felt that way about a woman—that being separated from her for even an hour would make him crave her all the more. He was thinking of a hike on a trail, although probably not the one where he’d found her earlier today, facing off against two more thugs. Maybe he could take her to a movie at the local theater later tonight. Or even better, find something on pay TV and order room service. Ice up a bottle of champagne. Anything she wanted to do was fine with him.


Before he’d even reached the lot where her car was parked in the back of the inn, though, he began to have a bad feeling. He wasn’t sure why he was feeling so uneasy until he realized that Alicia’s red car was gone.


He parked, and with his heart beating furiously, he headed for her room. He didn’t have a key card and just pounded on the door. When there was no answer, he wasn’t surprised. She had to have run into town for something. Even though he knew she had to be all right and was just running an errand, he couldn’t help the foreboding that said something more was wrong. If he’d thought about it and not been in such a rush to get to the gallery, he would have given her his cell number. He considered using the lock picks that he carried like most lupus garous, but because of the gnawing worry that something more had happened, he went to the front desk instead. There, he broke in on a conversation the clerk was having on the phone.


“Excuse me, did Alicia Greiston leave a message for me, Jake Silver?” he asked the scrawny suited man with slightly balding temples.


The clerk shot an annoyed look at him, shook his head, and then continued to talk to the person on the phone.


“Are you certain?” Jake persisted, leaning against the counter, ready to climb over it and force the clerk to answer him immediately.


The clerk said to the person on the phone, “Excuse me for a second.” With his hand over the mouthpiece of the phone and a peeved look on his face, he turned his full attention to Jake. “She had a couple of messages, one delivered to her room and the other here at the counter.”


“Who delivered them?”


“I wouldn’t know.”


Jake ground his teeth. “She could be in danger.”


The man raised his brows as if he thought Jake was giving him a line.


“She’s a bounty hunter tracking some real criminals. They’ve threatened her once already, and I had to intervene to protect her earlier in the day. I have to make sure she’s not heading into danger.”


The clerk looked unmoved by the comment and said nothing.


“Can I see her room? Make sure it doesn’t show signs that she was coerced into leaving?”


“I’m sorry, sir. Our policy is—”


“Have someone go with me. If there’s been any sign of force, you’ll have to call the police. If foul play has occurred and you don’t do your part to see that she was safe in a timely manner, your job could very well be on the line.”


The man’s steely gaze narrowed even more. But he took an annoyed breath and said to the person on the phone, “Let me have your number, and we’ll get back to you.” Then he scribbled the number down, said good-bye, and spoke to another clerk in an office. “I’m checking out a guest’s room. I’ll be right back.”


“All right,” a woman said.


Then the clerk escorted Jake to Alicia’s room. “I waited on her when she was checking out, and she seemed in a rush. She was looking over her shoulder, but it didn’t seem that anyone was with her.”


“She looked anxious, though?”


“Yes. She was in a real hurry. I was on the phone at the time, but I could see she was really apprehensive. She kept looking over her shoulder as if someone might arrive at any moment and stop her.” He glanced at Jake, implying he might have been the one she was trying to avoid.


The clerk opened the door to her room and led the way. Nothing was amiss. The bed was still unmade, but her bags were gone. Jake glanced around the room, looking for anything else that might give him a clue as to why she left so abruptly. While the clerk checked out the bathroom, Jake noticed a note on the dresser, saw her name and room number on it, and opened it. Someone had warned Alicia not to stay with Jake or Jake would die, damn the perpetrator’s soul who had written the note.


“Was that something important?” the clerk asked, pointing to the paper in Jake’s hand as he rejoined him.


“Yeah, the perp threatened that if she took me with her, I’d be dead. I told you this was serious.”


The man’s eyes widened. “Shouldn’t we call the police?”


“Yeah. That’s what you need to do. Tell them she’s a bounty hunter trying to catch Mario Constantino and Danny Massaro, who are bail bond jumpers. And they’ve made a death threat against me.” He handed the clerk the slip of paper. “I’m going to look for her and see if I can catch sight of her car anywhere. It’s a red Neon. Not sure of the license plate number, but you probably already have it when she signed in.”


The clerk pulled at his tie as if it was suddenly strangling him. “We would. Shouldn’t you wait here until the police arrive?”


“Not if I’m going to try to locate her before she comes to harm. Here’s my cell phone number. The name is Jake Silver,” he reminded the clerk. “I can’t wait until it’s too late.”


His heart beating a million miles a minute, Jake left the clerk standing in the middle of the hotel room and stalked back out of the building into the parking lot. Within seconds, Jake was driving his truck back into town. As much as he hated that Alicia had left without word to him, he figured she’d been misguided into thinking she could keep him safe. He couldn’t help but admire her for worrying about him, if that was the case. But the thought of her tangling with these men on her own nearly gave him heart palpitations.


For an hour, he scoped out Breckenridge. Not finding any sign of Alicia’s vehicle, he went back to the street where he was supposed to eat lunch with her. Three restaurants offered steak platters on Main Street, but none of the places was specifically called a steak restaurant, and he cursed himself for not learning the actual name. Lunchtime came and went, and after repeatedly checking all three restaurants while looking for her, Jake finally stood in the middle of the sidewalk, hoping she’d still make their engagement but knowing in his gut she wouldn’t.


After another hour of waiting and fuming with himself for not having kept her with him when he went to the gallery, he couldn’t quit worrying that she had followed the men she was tailing and was going to get herself killed if she hadn’t already.


He drove all over Breckenridge, looking for her car into the night, searching through lodges, rental-condo parking lots, and B and Bs. Anywhere that she might have stayed so she could continue to trail Mario.


He remained vigilant, searching all the next morning, returning to the inn and then the restaurant where he’d met her, and continuing to look for her until late that afternoon. Not finding any sign of her, he left word at the art gallery to call him if she dropped by looking to reconnect. Then hating to leave Breckenridge, dejected and miserable, fearing for her safety but not knowing what else to do, he headed for home.


He kept thinking about the trouble she might have gotten into with the men on whom she’d been conducting surveillance.


And how he could have protected her—and hadn’t.


***


Earlier that evening, Alicia had checked into a hotel in Denver and then searched for Mario’s trail, finally finding it but not where her informant had said he was. The bloodred moon dominated the black night like the harbinger of death as Alicia stalked her prey—Mario Constantino headed for the front steps of a redbrick townhouse. Just as she’d suspected, he hadn’t bothered to show up for his court date.


She’d lost track of Danny Massaro, so Mario was the first one she planned to arrest. And she was ready with the arrest warrant and firepower—pepper spray, a stun gun, and her pistol. She hadn’t told Jake that she had earned a black belt in jujitsu, but he probably would have dismissed that training as not enough, either. And leaving the scene promptly was better than tangling with an armed assailant. But she was confident she could do this.


Every minute she’d been driving to Denver from Breckenridge, she’d thought about Jake Silver and felt bad about giving him, her hero, the slip. About him worrying about her. She should have left word that she had to leave, to let him know she was all right.


But having no boyfriend meant having no dead boyfriend. And no matter how much she wanted to see more of him, no matter how much she had wanted what she was sure he would have continued to offer her, she couldn’t with a clear conscious allow him to get involved. Not after what had happened to her mother. These men meant business. They were ruthless.


She kept waffling about sending Jake word she was all right, but she knew that would involve lying to him, telling him she didn’t want to see him further. She thought he might not believe her, considering it was a lie, and might want to protect her and stop her from doing this. But she had to finish this. It was the right thing to do—not only for her mother’s memory, but for those Mario and his gang might hurt in the future.


She took a deep breath of the cool night air, trying to fortify her ragged nerves as she walked silently toward the townhouse.


On the other hand, she consoled herself with the notion that Jake was probably glad to be rid of her. Or even might have someone else in his life back home. The thought was a sour reminder that they had no future.


For now, this was her life. And as a loner, she was fine with it. She had no intention of risking anyone else’s life, but she owed it to her mom to keep her promise and put Mario and Danny behind bars for good.


Leaves crunched softly underfoot as she kept her distance, certain Mario didn’t hear her following him as far away as she was, hidden in the shadows and guided by the mellow brass street lamps lighting the way. But she should have known it was too easy tracking down the bastard, who had a rap sheet as long as she was tall. Why the judge had set bail for him, she still couldn’t fathom. Unless he had bribed the judge.


Maybe this was a wake-up call. She was used to getting her man, or woman, with the least amount of collateral damage—mainly because they usually weren’t all that intelligent and often were way too predictable. The job often depended on wit over brawn to subdue a perp. A little psychology could go a long way.


But this time it felt wrong. This was just too easy—as if she had been led into a trap.


The hair at the nape of her neck and on her arms stood on end as she watched Mario knock on the door of a brick townhouse. It silently opened to him. She couldn’t see anyone inside, as if it was one of those nightmarish haunted houses with automatically opening ghostly doors that drew the unwilling victim inside. He entered, then the door shut with a clunk.


Damn, he was supposed to have been alone.


The lamplight nearest her sputtered ominously and then flickered out, plunging her into darkness. Immediately, the setting seemed perfect for a blood-seeking vampire moving silently through the night beneath the hunter’s moon. Again, her thoughts shifted to her mother and how she’d introduced Alicia to her love of vampires when Alicia had been a teen and they’d watched handsome and sexy Count Dracula sweep the heroine off her feet in a college stage play. Alicia had wished she was the heroine the count intended to seduce.


Snapping herself out of her memories, she saw something move in her peripheral vision. A shadow glided quickly toward her from a drive-through alley between that townhouse and the next. A vampire, her brain registered; only of course it wasn’t. He was a man and a genuine threat.


Pepper spray already in hand, she whirled to spray him in the face, but footfalls raced directly behind her before she realized two of them were coming at her from different locations. Before she could whip around and protect herself, a sharp pain to the back of her head registered.


She felt herself falling, the can of spray slipping from nerveless fingers, heard the can clunk as it struck the stone walk, felt her body hit the unforgiving walk, and saw the red, red moon watching her as if saying it had warned her about the night. And she should have taken heed. The last thought she had was maybe it was time to bury her pain and find a new occupation.


Then the red moon faded to black.


***


“Alicia Greiston,” a husky male voice said, penetrating the darkness, but the pain in her head splintered every thought she tried to conjure up.


A hand roughly shook her shoulder. She wanted to open her eyes and see where she was, instantly remembering her mission—take Mario Constantino into custody—and her failure to do so. She’d been attacked from behind.


Was this man one of his henchmen? This really wasn’t good.


“I know you’re awake.” His voice hinted at dark amusement. The smell of cigarette smoke wafted in the air, and a sickly sweet cologne penetrated her airspace.


Then he drew closer, and she realized she was lying on a soft mattress, and he was pressing his body against her side as he leaned over her. His fingers worked clumsily on the buttons on her jacket. Oh God, what did he plan to do to her? Rape her? Torture her? Kill her? Maybe all three. But her head hurt so badly she couldn’t gather the wits to respond in any way.


He jerked the sleeves down her arms, then removed her gun holster, the gun still in it. Her head was pounding so hard that she only had a tenuous grip on remaining conscious. Her mind was slipping away into grayness until his fingers began working on her blouse buttons, which instantly gave her more clarity.


Intent on fighting him despite the way her head was splintering with pain, she opened her eyes and saw only blackness. How could he tell what he was doing in the dark? She couldn’t even see his face.


She grabbed his wrists—big, rawboned, powerful. He laughed, the sound husky and eerie.


“I knew you were awake.” He easily shook free of her hold, seized her wrists, and held them above her head. “We can do this easily or we can do this the hard way. Either suits me.”


All the moisture in her mouth evaporated. She had to fight him, but not yet. When she could, she would knee him in the groin, find her gun, and—


“I admire you, Alicia. Not just anyone could have tracked Mario down like you did with the scant clues I was able to give you. He would have killed you if you’d approached him, though. You have me to thank for saving your life.” The man’s tone was disquieting, as if she owed him and he meant for her to pay big time.


“Who are you? What do you want?”


“I like that. To the point. No p-ssyfooting around. I’m Ferdinand Massaro, your knight in shining armor. The one who’s been giving you clues as to where Mario is staying. They were only roundabout clues since I never could get a real handle on where he was at any one time, but you did it. Used your investigative skills to find him. Now I’ll show you what I want. Just be patient. But don’t fight me on this. I’d just as soon knock you out and take you that way. Your decision. A word of warning, though. If my brother, Danny, gets hold of you—or me, we’re both dead.”


Trying to get her rapid heartbeat under control, she attempted to stall him, realizing that the man who had pulled the trigger and killed her mother was this man’s brother. “Are you a friend of Mario’s?”


“A friend?” Ferdinand laughed bitterly. “No. His friends don’t live long. We’re cousins, if you didn’t know. He sent one of his men to kill me. Only I got the upper hand and killed Mario’s henchman first. But the assassin gave me a present before I ended his miserable life.” Ferdinand let go of her hands and went to work on her belt, but she couldn’t let him rape her or whatever he planned on doing.


With a superhuman effort, she tried to sit up, intending to hit him or kick him or something, but the pain streaked across her skull with a vengeance, and she collapsed back against the bed in a near faint.


“Hell, I figured you wouldn’t go easy. Just know this. You’re mine. The bastard who turned me is dead, but I’m not about to live alone like this. And since Mario killed Candy, you’re it, dollface. Mine.” He slammed his iron fist into the side of her head, creating an eruption of pain so profound that she cried out, and the darkness swiftly closed in on her again.


***


The sound of gruff angry male voices brought Alicia to semiconsciousness as she lay naked on a soft mattress, presumably in Ferdinand’s bedroom. Her head pounded, her arm throbbed and stung, and she couldn’t figure out why it hurt when only her head should have. The room was black as night, but a thin strip of light appeared beneath a closed door.


“You been following Mario,” a brusque man said in another room. “And Jimmy’s been following him, too. Only Jimmy’s paid for his… mistake. He said it was your idea to trail Mario. So what the hell for?”


“You’re wrong,” Ferdinand said, his voice just as dark. “My cousin’s damned paranoid.”


“You know Mario’s already pissed off at you.”


“Because his thug didn’t kill me last time.” Ferdinand sounded defiant, as though he still had the upper hand. “He shouldn’t have murdered Candy.”


“Candy shouldn’t have stolen from Mario’s casino. Not only that, but Mario said you got in his way with Missy Greiston.”


Her mother? Alicia swallowed hard.


“She was dating a loser. How did I know Mario wanted a piece of the action?”


“You wanted her because Tony was working for Mario and knew his business. You wanted to muscle in on Mario’s territory. And you figured you’d get the goods on Mario through Missy. The straw that broke the camel’s back? Candy’s gambling scheme that made Mario lose some big bucks. He doesn’t like to lose. Not to a woman. And not when you’d been porking her on top of it. He figured you had something to do with Candy’s going after his money. Admit it.”


Something hit something with a dull thud and a crunching noise, and a loud grunt of pain sounded. Cursing followed, mixed with moans, and then the words spoken were suddenly silenced. No one said anything further for what seemed like an eternity. The sound of Alicia’s blood pounding in her ears was the only thing she heard as she strained to hear what else was happening in the other room.


“He doesn’t know anything,” another man said, his voice quieter, much more sinister.


The silence that followed was more frightening than the harsh words. Because with the silence, she couldn’t tell whether the men were still a long way off or coming for her.


“Was Ferdinand alone?” the sinister-sounding man finally asked, his words spoken in the direction of the bedroom as if he was suddenly looking that way, suddenly aware Ferdinand might not have been alone.


“When I grabbed him in the living room getting a whiskey at the bar, he was the only one who made a sound. If anyone else was in the place, she would have checked to see what was happening.”


“Hell, he was naked. I thought you would have already checked to see if he had a woman stashed back there before I arrived. Jimmy said Ferdinand had grabbed a woman and taken her away with him. Maybe’s he’s got her tied up and gagged in the bedroom.”


The nightmare was only going to get worse. Alicia knew they’d look for anyone else in the place, and she figured she didn’t stand a chance if they found her.


She swung her legs over the bed, felt dizzy and sick at the same time, and forced her vision to clear. Then she swept her hands over the mattress, snagging articles of clothing: bra, panties, slacks, stockings, shirt, jacket. Everything but her shoes. She meant to stand, but as soon as her bare feet hit the carpeted floor, she crumpled. She couldn’t walk. Couldn’t do much but slide under the bed. With pain shrieking through her head and her arm throbbing as if it had been cut badly, she managed to slip underneath the bed, knocking her shoes under there with her.


Dust floated upward underneath the bed, and she stifled a sneeze, holding her nose and gritting her teeth.


The door opened; a light flipped on. Footfalls walked around the room, black leather dress shoes squeaking. Heels toward her, the shoes paused at the edge of the bed. She froze. She smelled a man’s pungent cologne and the thick odor of smoke. The leather shoes walked away, and the footfalls headed back down the hallway. “No one else here. Kill the bastard.”


Ferdinand didn’t object. Why didn’t he say anything? Had they knocked him out? Taped his mouth shut?


She shivered with fear. If they found her, they’d kill her, too.


No one said anything further. She heard no other sounds until a door in another room opened and closed.


Then eerie silence prevailed. Too frightened to leave her safe spot underneath the bed, she lay there waiting, her head and arm hurting so much that she didn’t think anything could get any worse.


She was wrong.


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