Dream of You (Wait For You)
Chapter 1
You’d be really hot if
you’d just lose some weight.
My fingers curled around my car keys as I stormed out of the
bar and into the thick, muggy air of July. The jagged edges dug into my palm as
I resisted the urge to walk back and shove the keys into one of the jackass’s
over-inflated muscles.
From the moment Rick asked me out, I knew the date was going
to be a bad idea.
The second I’d stepped foot on the elliptical at the gym
that was a part of the Lima Academy, I’d seen Rick buzzing from one chick to
the next, wearing his nylon sweats and babyGap shirt, so tight I always
expected it to burst at any given moment. I hadn’t even realized he worked for
Lima Academy until tonight, employed in their sales and marketing department,
and I felt like I knew everything about him because that was all Rick
did.
He talked about himself.
God, why did I even agree to go out with him? Was I that
lonely and sad? The clicking of my heels across the sidewalk was my only
answer. Parking in the city on a Friday night was ridiculous. It was going to
take a year to get to my car.
You’d be really hot if you’d
just lose some weight.
My lips thinned. I couldn’t believe he actually
said that to me, like it was a compliment. What in the actual hell? It
wasn’t like I didn’t know I could stand to lose a few pounds or thirty, but in
my twenty-eight years of life, I had long accepted that I would never, in the
history of ever, have a thigh gap, my butt would always have strange dimples in
it, and no amount of sit-ups were going to counterbalance my love of cupcakes.
Deep down, I knew why I agreed to go out with him. I hadn’t
been on a successful date in two years, and my last serious relationship had
evoked the “to death do us part” clause.
I was twenty-eight.
A widow.
A twenty-eight-year-old widow who needed to lose weight.
Sighing, I turned the corner as I reached up, tucking my
hair back from my face. A fine sheen of sweat dotted my brow. I stuck close to
the edge of the sidewalk, walking under the street lamps
and staying away from the dark shadows that bled out from the numerous alleys.
I could see my car up ahead, at the end of the silent block. It was early for a
Friday night, but I was going to go home, crack open that can of BBQ Pringles
that had been calling my name all evening, and forget about Rick while diving
into the latest Lara Adrian romance.
Why couldn’t alpha vampires with a heart of gold be real?
A sudden pained grunt snagged my attention as I was halfway
to my car. Instinct flared alive, a burning fire in my gut urging me to keep
walking, but I looked to my right. I couldn’t help it. My head turned on its
own accord, a reflex, and I stumbled.
Horror seized me, freezing my muscles and shooting darts of
ice through my blood. Terror slowed time, throwing the scene into stark detail.
Dull yellow light formed a halo over the three men in the
alley. One stood further back from the other two. His hair bleached blond and
greasy, sticking up all over his head. He had a scar. A thin slice across his
cheek, paler than his skin. Another man was leaning against the brick wall of
the building, crowding the alley. I couldn’t make out his features, because his
head was hanging from his shoulders, and he appeared barely able to stand,
obviously injured. The other man, his head completely shaven, stood directly in
front of the injured man, and even though I only saw his profile, it was a face
I’d never forget.
Hatred bled into every line of the man’s face, from the dark slash of brows and squinty eyes, to the hooked
nose and distorted, curled upper lip. He was a big guy. Tall. Broad in the
shoulders. He wore a white tank top, and as my gaze tracked down his arm, I
could tell his skin was shadowed with markings. A tattoo. But I wasn’t thinking
about the tattoo when I saw what he held in his hand.
The bald man was pointing a gun at the injured man!
Instinct was screaming like a five-alarm fire. Run. Get
away. There’s a gun! Go. But I couldn’t move, torn between shocked
disbelief and some inherent, possibly suicidal urge to do the right thing, to
intervene and to—
A small light burst and thunder cracked overhead. The
injured man crumbled as if some grand puppeteer had cut his strings. He hit the
ground with a fleshy smack, and for a moment, all I could hear was my heart
beating fiercely, pushing blood through my veins.
That popping snap wasn’t thunder. The burst of light was a
spark.
Reality slammed into me as I stared at the fallen man in the
alley. A dark puddle formed, spreading from where he lay face first on the
dirty pavement. My heart seized in my chest as I opened my mouth, dragging in
air.
No. No way.
The man with the scar was talking to the one with the gun,
his voice an excited, high-pitched squeal, but I was beyond hearing the exact
words. My hand spasmed, and the keys slipped from my grasp. They clattered off
the sidewalk, as loud as me trying to run on a treadmill.
Bald man’s head swung sharply in my direction, and if I had
felt like time had slowed before, it stopped right then. Our gazes locked, and
in an instant, a horrifying connection was formed. He saw me. I saw him.
I saw him shoot someone in the face.
And this man, this killer, knew that.
His arm started to lift. All my muscles reacted and unlocked
at the same moment. Pulse pounding, I spun around and started running back
toward the bar, my lungs burning as a scream tore out from me, a sound I was
sure even in my darkest moments, I’d never made before.
Brick exploded to my left, showering wickedly sharp chunks
into the air. Flashes of pain erupted along my cheek, and I stumbled. The heel
on my shoe snapped and slipped off, but I kept running, leaving the shoe
behind.
I needed to find someone. I needed to call for help. I
needed—
Rounding the block, I slammed into someone. A startled
scream was cut off as I bounced back. There was a grunt, and I felt a hand
grasping for my arm, but it was too late. I went down, landing hard on my side.
A flash of pain jarred my bones, knocking the air out of my lungs.
“Holy shit,” a male voice boomed above me. “Are you okay?”
I gulped and wheezed air as I flopped onto my front as I
heard a woman say, “Of course she’s not okay, Jon. She kamikazed into you!”
Lifting my head, I peered through the hair that had fallen
into my face. I saw them—the one with the scar and the bald man, the
cold-blooded murderer, running away, down the sidewalk, beyond where my car was
parked. I watched them until they disappeared.
“Miss?” the man asked. “Miss, are you okay?”
Hands shaking, I pushed up onto my knees. The whole world
took on a startling clarity. Cars driving by sounded like airplanes. Nearby
doors closing sounded as if they were being repeatedly slammed, and my own
heart was beating like a steel drum.
“Yes. No.” I rasped out. Pressing my fingers to my burning
cheek, I jerked my hand back when I felt the wet warmth. Darkness smeared the
tips of my fingers. My gaze shot back to where I’d run from. “We need to call
the police. Someone has been shot.”