pulling it closed behind her. Graham was striding through her small yard, which sheâd filled with desert and tropical flowers she carefully cultivated. He was stomping around, hands clasped on his head, the sun beating down on him. He was about to ruin the clump of autumn sage sheâd nursed back from frost kill last winterâsheâd finally got the plant bushy again, the bright red blossoms cheerful against the green.
Misty marched to Graham and grabbed him by the arm. He swung around, the look in his eyes so wild and empty that Misty had to take a faltering step back.
CHAPTER EIGHT
H e couldnât do this. Graham couldnât be around this woman, who smelled like honey and spice, who curled her tongue around the light and dark ice cream as though it were the sweetest aphrodisiac.
He had a hard-on that wouldnât stop. Xav Escobar knew it, the asshole. Graham had recognized the smirk. Of course, Xav probably had one too. And for that, Graham would kill him.
âI canât do this,â he said.
âCanât do what?â Misty stood in front of him, hands on her hips. âBreak my door? Smash my dishes? Trample my plants? Youâre like walking mass destruction.â
She wanted him to apologize, Graham realized. But Graham never apologized. You said sorry, and people felt smug and justified, and started to take advantage.
Hard to look into those sweet brown eyes and say nothing, though. âIâll fix your front door.â
âYou bet your ass you will,â Misty said. âNow, are we going to talk about it?â
There she went again. Talking. Always talking. âI thought you were done with me,â Graham said.
âI am, but that doesnât mean Iâm not still mad at you. Or not talking to you.â
âThen weâre not done.â Not by a long way.
âYes, we are.â
Graham turned from her, not liking how fast his heart was beating. Or how thirsty he was. He fought it, having learned to work through hunger and thirst a long time ago, but he knew he couldnât banish it entirely. The Fae magic had gotten to him, but he couldnât give in to it. If he did that, he was dead.
To keep himself from thinking about the thirst, he focused on Mistyâs yard. It was like herâcompact, neat, beautiful. She hadnât simply stuck clumps of plants everywhere. The yard had been landscaped, sculpted almost, with low mounds of grass and gravel hosting small flowering bushes and plants that bloomed fiercely under the hot sun. A false wash of river rock cut through the yard, crossed by a small wooden bridge.
Stepping stones led to the bridge and across the yard on the other side. Between the stones were gravel and scatterings of plants, blossoms moving in the summer breeze. The ugly cement block walls, so common in Southwestern cities, were softened by stands of hot pink and white oleanders on two walls, with a line of rose bushes, sheltered from the direct sun, on the third.
A pretty garden, with chairs and tables set out so Misty and friends could sit and enjoy iced tea or whatever women drank on summer afternoons. Graham was out of place here, a hulking creature in the diminutive space.
Misty seemed to be waiting for something. Graham did not understand herâanything female, in fact. She declared she was finished with him, then she ran after him. She said she wanted to talk to him, then she expected him to do the talking, when Graham wasnât any good at it.
âWhat do you want me to say?â he ended up almost shouting. Yellingâ
that
he was good at.
Misty glared. Did she know how edible she looked in her body-hugging tank top, the shorts that stopped mid-thigh? Sheâd put on sandals, which showed her bare legs all the way to her toes. Misty wasnât a stick, thank the Goddess. Some human women starved themselves down to skin and bones and thought it looked good. Insanity.
Misty had round breasts, arms that
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