Chapter 15 #2

Her mouth opened against his. Her hand at his collar tightened, fingers closing on the fabric and pulling him closer with a force that matched what he had brought to her.

Her weight shifted forward, and her other hand found his waist and gripped the shirt above his hip. The three feet collapsed into nothing.

His free hand went to her waist. He pulled her into him, and she came without resistance, her body fitting against his with an immediacy that eliminated the possibility of pretending this was accidental or impulsive or anything less than what both of them had been building toward since the first time he heard her laugh in a café on Decatur Street.

Her mouth tasted of the coffee she had drunk hours ago and a warmth beneath it that belonged only to her.

He kissed her harder, and she answered with pressure that sent heat through his chest and down his spine.

Her fingers released his collar and moved to his face—her palm against his cheek, her thumb at the corner of his jaw, holding him there.

His hands did not want to stop at her waist. His mouth did not want to stay at hers.

Every point of contact demanded more of the same, and the discipline he had maintained for months—while his body strained toward this woman through every late-night conversation and every accidental touch—had been a cage, and Delphine’s mouth on his had opened it.

Her fingers slid into his hair. His hand at her waist tightened, pulling her hips flush against his. The counter pressed against her back. Her spine arched to meet him. The corkboard full of crime scene photographs occupied the far wall, and Bastien did not look at it.

Her breathing changed against his mouth, each exhale carrying heat that mixed with his own. The trumpet had stopped. The street had gone quiet. The city had retreated to leave them in a silence occupied only by the shift of fabric and the press of his palm against her back.

She tilted her head and gave him access to the line of her neck where her pulse raced beneath the surface. His mouth tracked the beat. Her pulse told him what her words had not—that the patience she had maintained across months of proximity had cost her as much as his control had cost him.

His teeth grazed the tendon at the side of her neck, and her hand in his hair tightened. A sound left her—low, involuntary, pressed against his temple where her mouth had found the skin above his ear.

He returned to her mouth. Kissed her with the hunger that discipline, once broken, leaves behind. Her hands held his face, and his held her body, and the kiss extended past the point where breath should have forced them apart.

Then it did.

They separated by inches, the distance a body creates when the lungs override the will.

Bastien’s forehead rested against hers. His breathing came ragged, matching the rhythm of hers. His hand remained at her waist. Her fingers stayed against his jaw.

Her eyes opened, dark and dilated, fixed on his from the width of a breath away. He could see himself reflected in them—his own expression unguarded in a way he had not allowed another person to witness in longer than Delphine had been alive.

She did not speak. Did not name what had happened. Did not offer an exit or an apology.

Her thumb traced the line of his jaw, back and forth, a motion so small it covered no more than an inch of skin.

The darkened skin burned steady beneath his sleeve, pushing its position into the New Orleans night.

Details of the investigation sat on the corkboard. The killer’s pattern tightened around him with every body and every symbol.

“This changes things,” he said. His voice came out wrecked.

“Yes,” she said. “It does.”

She did not elaborate. She stated the fact and let it stand in the charged air between their mouths.

The jasmine drifted through the window. A dog barked once on the block and stopped.

His hands had not left her body. His fingers pressed against the small of her back, and every nerve in them pulled toward closing the inches between his mouth and hers again.

He held still. The moment carried a gravity that another kiss would not honor.

A fracture had opened between them—not broken apart but broken through—and the result required stillness before it required anything else.

Delphine’s hand left his jaw. Her fingers trailed down the side of his neck and came to rest on his chest, over his heart.

The same placement she had found in the basement when the curse had nearly taken him to the floor.

Her palm pressed flat, and his heartbeat answered her touch the way it had answered in the dark beneath the cotton press.

“I should go,” she said.

She did not sound convinced. Her hand stayed on his chest, and the contradiction between her words and her body told him she already knew that staying tonight would outrun what either of them could navigate in the dark.

“I know,” he said.

Her hand stayed where it was for three more seconds. He counted them.

Then Delphine stepped back. The air that filled the space between them carried her warmth for a moment before the ceiling fan took it.

She picked up her bag from the counter and shouldered it.

Her hands moved through the familiar motions, and he watched her fingers close the clasp and adjust the strap with the quiet certainty that he would remember the exact choreography of those gestures for the rest of a life that had already lasted longer than any mortal span.

“Tomorrow,” she said.

“Tomorrow.”

She walked to the door, opened it, and paused in the frame—her body angled toward the stairwell, her face turned back toward him. The apartment light caught the line of her cheekbone and the place where her mouth still carried the evidence of his.

“For the record,” she said. “I’m not going to let you pull away from this.”

She descended the stairs. He listened to her footsteps—measured, unhurried. The front door opened and closed. He moved to the window and watched her cross the street to her car.

She opened the driver’s door and paused. She looked up, found his window, found him standing in it, and held his gaze across the September night for five full seconds before she got in the car.

The Honda pulled away from the curb. Taillights tracked south on Chartres, past the closed galleries and the sleeping courtyards.

She turned on Ursulines, and the street took her in increments, one pool of lamplight to the next, until the corner claimed her and the block held only the space where she had been.

The darkened skin burned steady. The broadcast continued. The corkboard behind him displayed five dead vampires and a pattern that pointed toward a purpose he had not yet identified.

He pressed his fingers to his mouth. Her taste remained.

This changes things.

Standing in this apartment with her breath still on his skin, he understood the change had not begun with the kiss.

It had begun the first time she smiled at him across a table at Café du Monde, and every moment since had been the slow collapse of a structure that was never going to hold.

Really, it happened the moment she’d been born.

He turned from the window. The photographs waited. The maps. The evidence of a killer’s design that tightened around him with each passing day.

He would sit at the desk and study the patterns and hunt the architect who had made him a target. The work had not changed. The danger had not lessened. The truth he owed Delphine remained unspoken, and the speaking of it would test everything the kiss had built.

But the kiss had built. And for the first time since the mark appeared in his flesh, what grew between him and Delphine held stronger than what the curse kept trying to take.

He sat at his desk. Opened the case file. Read the first line three times without absorbing a word.

The investigation would have to wait until morning.

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