The look in his eyes brought home the fact that the reason he was doing this was to protect her. And that little insight led her to another one. “If I recuse myself from the contest, someone else will win.”
“Yes,” Shawn said as if confused.
“So by me walking out, it would likely save me, but put someone else’s life in danger.”
Shawn frowned. “And if you don’t, it’s your life that could be in danger. And it would be my fault. If someone else wins, it’s not my fault.”
“No, then it would be mine. Because if something happened to someone else, then … I would know it would have been me if I hadn’t pulled out.” She shook her head. “I can’t do that. I can’t just say I don’t want to be killed and let it be someone else.”
“Better than you being dead,” Della said and Kylie seemed to agree.
Shawn’s frown came on strong. “Exactly—”
“No!” Miranda set a hand on her hip and glared at her best friends. “I know you two. Neither one of you would step aside to save yourself. You’re too brave.”
Neither of them could deny it.
“The hell with being brave,” Shawn snapped. “Two girls have already died.”
“Then you three just have to make sure that doesn’t happen to me,” Miranda snapped back. “Face it, whoever would take my place wouldn’t have you guys to protect her.”
* * *
Burnett texted Della and Kylie and asked them to help take the names of everyone in the crowd since some of them were dead set on leaving. That left Miranda and Shawn alone. She didn’t know what to say, so she said nothing. She dropped into a chair. Shawn pulled another one over.
She considered grabbing her phone and going back to killing shape-shifters, but the desire to do that had waned. Still, she pulled her phone out of her pocket and feigned interest in the screen. Tension filled the small space and made even breathing uncomfortable. And loud. She could hear him take in air and tried not to make any sound herself when she drew in oxygen.
When her cell rang, thankful for the interruption, she answered it before even checking to see the identity of the caller.
“Hello,” she said.
“Hi, angel.”
His voice, that’s all it took and she could feel his arms around her, smell his familiar cologne. “Hi, Daddy.”
“I heard you’ve been playing with fire again,” he said. “Is that why my buttocks were itching?”
“I didn’t do it,” she said, feeling her chest grow heavy even when she heard the tease in his voice.
“I’m joking. Your mom told me you saved the day. I just wanted to call and make sure my little girl’s okay.”
“I am,” she said and wondered what her mom had told her dad. Especially since her dad had never been in favor of the competitions.
“I won, Dad,” she said, wanting him to be proud of her, even if she wasn’t completely sure she deserved the win.
“You’ve always been a winner to me,” he said, his tone making it clear that he still didn’t approve of the contests. “But I’m proud of you. Gotta go now.”
She hung up, and realized Shawn was studying her. “My dad,” she said.
He nodded and then went back to staring at his own phone. And breathing.
The silence felt awkward. And after about twenty minutes, she couldn’t stand it.
“Why did you do it?” she asked. “Why did you help me?”
He didn’t glance up. “I told you. You were panicked.”
“I’m sure a few of the other girls were nervous as well.”
“I don’t know the other girls.” He continued to stare at his feet.
“You don’t know me all that well either.”
He looked up, his blue eyes intense. “Yes, I do.”
She shook her head. “Not really. I was your sister’s friend for a few years.”
“You were my sister’s friend who had a crush on me.”
She frowned. “How do you know that?”
He smiled, and damn if that smile wasn’t a heart stopper. “A guy knows.”
She rolled her eyes. “Fine, but that still doesn’t mean you know me. You never gave me the time of day.”
He arched one brow and half smiled. “I knew exactly what you looked like in that lime-green bikini you used to wear when you came to swim with Ellen in our pool. I knew when you laughed, your hazel eyes brightened to a light green. I knew you ate ketchup on your scrambled eggs. I knew you had PE fifth period when I was a senior. I would sometimes walk through the gym just to get a glimpse of you in shorts and a tank top. And then there was our kiss?”
Miranda stared, his words slowly filling her brain. “You … Wait. What…? We never kissed.”
He grinned. “So you really didn’t know it was me?”
“I don’t know who you kissed, but we never—”
“So you’ve never kissed anyone when you didn’t know who they were? Like on a balcony one night during a full moon?”
“What…?” Holy shit! There had been the New Year’s Eve masquerade party she’d gone to when she was fifteen. A guy dressed like Zorro had found her on the balcony seconds before midnight, and when the bell rang, he’d … he’d pulled her into his arms and kissed her like … she’d ever been kissed before.
“You were Zorro?”
“Ah, so you do remember.” A confident smile lit up his face. “That said, if your memory is blurry, I could remind you.” His gaze dropped to her lips.
She shook her head. “But … I mean why … why didn’t you tell me who you were? What kind of guy kisses a girl like that and runs?”
He shrugged. “The kind who’d been caught by his dad admiring you sunbathing and got the back of his head slapped because I was sixteen and you were fourteen.” He glanced down for a second and then looked up. “You didn’t look fourteen in that bikini.”
“I was fifteen when you kissed me.”
“Yeah, but I was seventeen and about to go away to college. And that didn’t feel so right either.”
Angry for reasons she wasn’t even sure of, she snagged her phone and started scanning Twitter.
He let the silence linger for only a few minutes. “Why did you call a couple weeks ago to see if I was okay and then not call back when I asked you to?”
“Because I’m confused.” She spoke the truth without realizing that it might require an explanation.
“About what?”
She hesitated and stared down at her phone. It just didn’t feel right talking to him about this.
“About Perry?” he asked.
She looked up, shocked that he … “How do you know about him?”
He leaned his chair back on two legs. “I met him a while back when Burnett had used him as a lookout for a case. He seemed like a nice guy.”
“He is,” Miranda said.
He dropped the chair back down on all fours. “I admit I liked him less when I found out that you and he were … an item. But I heard he left, and that he sort of broke it off.”
She glanced back at her phone as if she’d stumbled across something interesting, but in truth it was an avoidance tactic.
“We’re just taking a break,” she said, hoping that didn’t sound as lame to Shawn as it had to her when Perry had said it.
“I see,” he said.
She looked at him again. Did that mean he understood? Because if he did, would he please explain it to her?
Their gazes met and held.
Or they did until voices started booming on the other side of the door.
Chapter Seven
“I said no, Ms. Kane. She’ll not be interviewed or photographed until I’ve checked out the media!” Burnett’s baritone voice penetrated the door.
Miranda’s heart went out to him. Sure, he was accustomed to dealing with rogues and serial killers, but he’d never dealt with her mom. And she was a whole other animal.
“Why?” her mom asked. “Someone pulled a prank with that fireball. G
ranted, it was dangerous, but why so much precaution?”
“Because I care about your daughter,” Burnett answered.
“Can I at least see her?” Her mom’s high-pitched voice rose.
“I would never keep a mother from her child,” Burnett seethed and slung open the door. It banged against the wall, causing Miranda to jump.
Her mom stormed in, and on her heels was a bright-eyed Burnett, looking ready to kill. Thank goodness Miranda knew his moral ethics prevented him from murder. Then again, this was her mom, who could skew moral ethics with her headstrong personality.
“This man is ruining your victory!” her mom spouted out. “You deserve your five minutes of fame!”
“It’s okay,” Miranda said. She didn’t need fame—she wasn’t even sure she wanted fame, period—but this was what her mom lived for. “I won, that’s what matters.” She hugged her mom, hoping to calm her and prevent Burnett from wringing her neck. Arms still wrapped around her mom, she spotted Kylie and Della standing in the doorway.
Kylie smiled with concern. Della looked half pissed. The vamp didn’t like Miranda’s mom. Not that Della’s parents were all that much better.
The clearing of a throat had Miranda dropping her arms from around her mother. “Sorry, Ms. Kane,” Shawn said as he stood from his chair. “I’m about to really upset you.”
Oh, great! Now Shawn wasn’t afraid of her mother. Miranda eyed Shawn with warning. What was he up to?
He met her eyes briefly and then turned to her mother. “You see, your daughter needs to recuse herself from this competition.”
Miranda’s jaw dropped open. “We already talked about this.”
“Are you insane?” her mom snapped.
Miranda ignored her mom and stared daggers at the blond warlock.
He wiped his face with a palm then took a step back from her mom. Fear flashed in his eyes. And rightfully so.
Shawn glanced back at Miranda. “Yeah, we talked, and I disagreed with you.”
Miranda dropped a hand on her hip. “You didn’t say you disagreed with me.”
“I didn’t say I agreed with you either.”
She felt a bit speechless. “As if that matters. I don’t need you to agree with me.” Miranda shook her head and then glanced back at Burnett. “I’m not recusing myself from the competition. It will just put someone else in danger.”
“That’s a hell no! My daughter will not recuse herself,” her mom added and came to stand by Miranda as if to create a solid front. Then she turned and looked at Miranda. “Wait. Why would it put someone else in danger?”
Before Miranda could address her mom’s question, Shawn countered with, “Then I’ll have to confess to the council.”
“Confess what?” Burnett asked.
“You will not!” Miranda said, and her hot tone now sounded a bit like her mom.
“Confess what?” Her mom repeated Burnett’s inquiry.
“Your daughter got some outside help with the competition.”
“My daughter does not cheat!” Her mom started moving toward Shawn.
Miranda caught her arm and held on for dear life. Her mom did Pilates and aerobics three times a week, so it wasn’t easy.
Burnett shot between Shawn and her mom as if fearing for his junior agent’s life. About time Burnett realized what he was dealing with.
“What are you saying?” Burnett asked Shawn, holding out a hand in case her mom got free.
“I sent her a surge of calm.”
“You? You sent it?” her mom seethed and yanked out of Miranda’s hold.
“Yes,” Shawn said.
Her mom cut her eyes back to Miranda. “Did you ask him to send that to you?”
“No,” she and Shawn said at the same time.
“Good!” Her mom stretched out her hand and pointed her pinky.
“No.” Burnett moved closer to her mother and ever so gently lowered her arm. “Can we please calm down and let me figure out what’s going on?”
“Winning this competition puts your daughter’s life at risk.” Shawn moved around Burnett.
“Why would it put her life at risk?” she asked, and when Shawn didn’t answer, she turned her head and glared at Burnett. Miranda knew that look. It was the same one her mom shot her dad before she turned him into a baboon.
“You,” she said, her voice tight with anger. “You had better start talking before I render you mute.”
Damn it! This was just going to get worse.
* * *
Burnett told her the whole story about the two girls who’d been murdered. Miranda’s mom, her face lacking color, dropped down into a chair. Miranda went and stood beside her.
Her mom looked up at her and then reached over and took Miranda’s hand.
“Do you know who … who is doing this?”
“Not yet,” Burnett said. “The problem is that it doesn’t necessarily have to be the finalists here in the U.S. I’m told there will be twenty finalists from all over the world. I’ll be contacting them or their families to confirm nothing has happened to them.”
“The thing is, Miranda has a reason to recuse herself,” Shawn spoke up. “Right now it appears the killer is taking out contestants. Right?” He focused on Burnett.
“It appears—”
Shawn didn’t let him finish before starting up again. “So if she drops out now, the chances are she won’t be in danger. She won’t have to go to Paris,” he continued, driving home his point.
A point she didn’t appreciate. “No,” Miranda snapped. “I’m going to Paris.”
Her mom looked up. “Not if your life is in danger, you aren’t.”
Miranda heard the words, but couldn’t believe them. Winning, or rather, Miranda making high priestess, meant everything to her mom. Miranda’s chest squeezed and she felt a knot rise in her throat. For the first time in years, Miranda felt loved. And for some crazy reason, the emotion tightening her throat and making her chest ache made the thought of disappointing her mom almost unbearable.
“I’ll be okay.” She pushed the words out. “Burnett will protect me.”
“But, baby, if something happened to you, I … I wouldn’t know what to do.”
“Nothing is going to happen. He won’t let it,” Miranda insisted and waved a hand toward Burnett.
Everyone turned and looked at Burnett as if for confirmation.
He sighed. “If I thought by dropping out you would be out of danger, I would have already gotten your name off the list. You see, we just found out that one of the girls who was murdered had dropped out of the competition three days ago. And since I’m going to be going to France, I would rather you be near me than here.”
“I’m pretty sure I’m going, too,” Kylie spoke up, looking directly at Miranda’s mom. “I won’t let anything happen to her.” Kylie’s blue gaze shifted from her mother to Miranda. Warmth filled Miranda’s lungs. Nothing like best friends.
“She’s a protector,” Miranda spoke up. “More powerful than anyone when someone she loves is in danger. So you see, it’s going to be fine.” She glanced at Della. “You’re going, too, right? Mom’s paying for it.” Miranda looked at her mom for confirmation. Her mom nodded, then Miranda refocused on Della.
“I…” Della’s frown gave Miranda her answer and she didn’t like it.
“I just really want—”
“Yes, she will be going.” Burnett took a step forward.
Della turned her confused gaze on the big bad vampire and shook her head. “With what’s going on here with my dad, I don’t think…”
“You need to—”
Della shook her head and spoke again. “I’m sure between you and Kylie, you can—”
“Hear me out,” Burnett said with a growl. “A lead in the case you’re working just popped up in DeVille, France. You’re going to want to go.”
“What lead?” Della snapped. Her eyes widened with interest. “Chase?”
Miranda knew the case that Della was wor
king was about her father’s murder conviction—the eighteen-year-old murder of his own sister. And the person who might have info on it was Chase, another super vampire, who had saved Della’s life by blending his blood with hers when she went through the second turn. Supposedly, the blending of blood had bonded the two together. But then Della found out he’d been lying to her and had connections to her father’s brother who was a possible rogue vamp, who the FRU, and Della, believed to be the real murderer.
“Is it Chase?” Della insisted when Burnett didn’t answer immediately.
He nodded. “I got word about an hour ago. He was traveling with a guy of Asian descent.”
“Wait,” Kylie spoke up. “You don’t think these two cases are connected, do you?”
“Not that we can see right now,” Burnett said. “But I agree, it’s almost too much of a coincidence.”
Della’s chest expanded and her eyes brightened with emotion, though what emotion, Miranda couldn’t say.
Della glanced back at Miranda. “Looks like I’ll be going.”
* * *
Two days later, the cool afternoon wind whipped Miranda’s hair around her face. She stood on a small patch of grass and stared up at the Eiffel Tower. Kylie and Della stood beside her. Her two best friends in the world, but even their presence wasn’t offering the comfort she longed for.
And hanging back about a hundred feet was the blond warlock. Miranda could feel his gaze on her. She hadn’t spoken to him since the competition. It still pissed her off that he’d gone against her wishes and threatened to get her thrown out.
They had arrived in Paris that morning. Her mom wasn’t supposed to arrive for two more days. Miranda was jetlagged and emotionally exhausted. Out of precaution, Burnett had taken them to an apartment, not the designated hotel where all the contestants were to stay. As silly as it sounded, Miranda has been relieved that the apartment building didn’t have gargoyles. She hated gargoyles and just walking over here, she’d shuddered at the sight of several glaring down at her from the neighboring buildings’ eaves.
They had crashed for about six hours. But upon waking up, Miranda had begged Burnett to let them go out.