âEven your bloomers?â
Irena broke out with a loud laugh, startling the humans around them. Charlie groaned, and Jake tossed a five-dollar bill on the table in front of Drifter.
A human couldnât have tracked the speed at which Alice reached over, pinched the money, and sat again. Jakeâs body tightened, but he forced his mind out of her skirts. Tried to.
When she moved quickly, everything rigid became supple, her body long and fluid.
âThey arenât made of spider silk, novice. I weaved them from the legs of those widows who have passed,â Alice said, her back straight now. âFor when one is a Guardian, loyalty is the utmost virtue. And so I keep my friends closeâeven if they itch.â
âYouâve got itching down below?â Jake leaned in and lowered his voice. âTheyâve got powders for that now.â
Alice smiled. Her teeth, he saw, were sharp again.
âOh, Lord.â As if sensing disaster, Charlie spoke up, asking Aliceâs opinion on the materials the decorators planned to use at the theater.
Jake sat back, studying Alice.
Spider legs and loyalty. Sheâd used the same tone thatâd gotten his back up before, but heâd have bet his left nut that her moralizing platitudes were a joke.
Half the time, anyway. Or only around people she was tight withânot the fucking new guy.
But when she unbent a little, the Black Widow wasnât half-bad.
And where had he gotten the impression that she was dried up, spinsterish? As angular as her features were, they werenât pinched or heavy. Her dark brows, her straight nose, and her direct gaze gave her a no-nonsense look, sureâbut there was also something dainty about her mouth, her pointed chin.
When he looked past the severe braid and rigid posture, she appeared about the same age Jake did. Early twenties, maybe. Not more than twenty-five.
It was the dress, he thought. And he didnât usually notice the thickness of a womanâs lashes when the disapproval in her eyes was driving icy spikes into his brain.
Those lashes flickered in response to Irenaâs voice. Alerted by that unease, Jake realized Irena was addressing him, caught the tail end of her question.
ââhave begun your specializations?â
âIâm on swords. With Alejandro.â He checked his watch. âIâm meeting him at midnight.â
Every day the same: four hours with Alejandro, six hours in San Francisco, ten with Drifter, and the rest in personal study. Now that heâd come across Aliceâs collection, most of those personal hours would probably be spent in the Archives.
âAlejandro? That is good.â Irena nodded abruptly, and Jake wasnât about to ask why her tone suggested otherwise. âHe was born to wield a blade.â
Charlie looked at Drifter. âYouâre good with a sword, though. Iâve seen you.â
âDamn good,â Drifter said. âBut Iâm more of a fists-and-pistols man.â
âHugh taught both of us the basics of the discipline, Charlie,â Alice said. âBut when we specialized with Alejandro, I daresay we learned more in one year than the previous sixty.â
âThat we did.â
âJake will, as well.â Aliceâs gaze rested on him. âI have already seen Alejandroâs influence in the way he holds his blade.â
Charlie flashed a grin at Drifter. âAlejandro used to freak me out, you knowâthe first couple of times he came in here to visit you. Thereâs that devil goatee thing heâs got going on, and then heâs all dark and quiet and staring. Like it hurts him to smile.â
âHeâs a good man,â Irena said softly.
âYeah.â Jake glanced at Alice, and got his money ready. âItâs other people who creep me out.â
And if he told himself that enough, maybe he wouldnât think about stroking her mouth open with his tongue.
Alice Brown
Alexis D. Craig
Kels Barnholdt
Marilyn French
Jinni James
Guy Vanderhaeghe
Steven F. Havill
William McIlvanney
Carole Mortimer
Tamara Thorne