
Call Me Wicked
Harlequin Blaze
June 2007
Miniseries: Extreme
Blaze
ISBN: 9-780373-79332-7
Lauren Parish's hottest fling
was with Carson McCullena mortal and a huge no-no in her
witching world. His reappearance in her life has her imagining
many new steamy encounters. Too bad his timing sucks.
She's busy
avoiding the witch-hunters who want her dead, and her only option
is to go underground. And when the hunters spot Carson, he has
to join her. Still, there are worse ways to pass the days than
in seclusion with such a scrumptious man.
Before
long their bedroom maneuvers make their previous affair seem
G-rated. All too soon, however, they have to return to the real
world
and the threat facing Lauren. Logically, she knows
she should let Carson go. But how long can she go without this
hot sex?
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Excerpt
Lauren Parish
did not intend to die today.
Death was
nowhere on her todo list, and yet here she was, crouched
on the fire escape outside her bedroom window, cold wind snaking
up her nightgown and her heart pounding wildly in her ears.
Four stories up, with two men in black tearing through her apartment
and muttering Czech words she could not identify, death didn't
seem such an unlikely scenario all of a sudden.
Five minutes
ago, she'd been sitting in bed flipping through research notes
for a presentation due next week, when an image had flashed
in her mind. She saw two men standing at her door, using some
kind of tool to pick the lock. When her hearing, more acute
than that of mortals, caught the slightest sound of metal against
metal at her front door, she'd turned off her bedside lamp,
dropped the notes, and scrambled to the window, her only escape.
She was easing the window shut again when she heard the men
enter the apartment.
It hadn't
been the first time one of her visions had proven useful, but
it had definitely been the most opportune.
She barely
had enough room to keep herself out of sight of the window on
the small landing, and she had to either go up or down. Her
breath was coming out in quick shallow gasps, and her legs quaked
beneath her. She wanted to cry, but she wouldn't. She had to
summon whatever strength she possessed to stay calm, to escape.
She knew
without thinking twice who the men were, and she knew their
intent without a doubt was to kill her, or take her to be interrogated
and then kill her.
Neither
choice was remotely appealing.
So this
is what it felt like to stare death in the face. It was a fear
she hadn't been struck by since childhood, a fear her ancestors
had held close and nurtured, a fear she'd foolishly let slip
away in her comfortable lifein her disdain for what had
always seemed to her generation as the elders' cowardice.
The men
only had to feel the stillwarm bed where she'd been sitting
to know that she'd been there, that she was hiding somewhere
close by. She glanced up and saw that her crazy upstairs neighbor
was home, but the woman would call the police before she'd let
Lauren climb in her window.
She looked
down and could see no light coming from the window directly
below. The apartment was occupied by a young couple who had
a cat they let go in and out the window, and if she was lucky,
the window would be open now.
Ever so
slowly, she peered into her bedroom again and caught sight of
one of the men standing beside her bed, doing exactly what she
feared he'd do. Her heart flipflopped. When he ran his
hand along the sheet where she'd been sitting, she held her
breath and eased herself slowly toward the ladder.
The old
metal fire escape was creaky, and even a cat scaling it had
a tendency to sound like a herd of buffalo. Lauren didn't have
a chance. Why couldn't she have been born with some really cool
power like the ability to shapeshift? Now would have been
a great time to transform into a mouse.
She moved
as quickly as she could, eased herself down the ladder with
a minimum of noise, and stopped at the neighbor's landing. The
window, as she suspected, was ajar six inches. But when she
tried to push it up farther, she saw that a piece of wood had
been nailed into place to prevent the window from opening any
wider.
Lauren
muttered a curse and glanced up. From above, she could hear
her own window opening. She sucked icy air into her lungs and
shivered, then pushed up hard on the window. It wouldn't budge.
She noticed the wood window frame was rotting, and she had to
decide whether to keep trying to get into this window or take
the risk of going another floor down.
Above,
if they were looking down at her now, they'd see her. She felt
a burst of adrenaline, and she stood up, kicked the window frame
with all the strength she could summon, and felt the satisfying
give of the wood against her heel. Broken glass pierced the
top of her foot, but she didn't feel pain, just the warmth of
blood.
The men
upstairs had to have heard. She broke away a few large shards
of remaining glass and eased herself quickly through the opening,
where she thankfully found an empty bedroom. She ran to the
front door, flung it open, and kept running.
Downstairs,
out the door, into the street, through the alley, toward the
apartment three blocks over where she could only pray her best
friend was home.
Her nightgown
didn't protect her from the cold October air, and the cut on
her foot was beginning to throb with pain, but she ran, faster
than she'd ever run before, her bare feet slapping cold pavement--across
streets and around cars and past buildings and up stairs until
she was pounding on Macy's door.
When the
door opened a moment later, she saw her friend's worried face,
and she collapsed into her, into the apartment, then she spun
and slammed the door shut. Locked all the locks. Caught her
breath.
No one
had followed her closely enough to see where she'd gone, she
was pretty sure of it. But only now did she feel the weight
of guilt that she had possibly led those murderers right to
Macy's door.
"Lauren!
What happened? What's wrong? Are you okay?" Macy was holding
her at arm's length now, taking in her halfnaked appearance,
her bare feet, the bloody gash.
Lauren
heaved a few deep breaths, but said nothing. Macy didn't know
Lauren's true identity. No mortal knew.
"Oh
my God, your foot! Let me get something," Macy said, hurrying
to the bathroom. "Should I call 911?"
she called over her shoulder.
"No!"
Lauren eased onto the floor, leaned against the door, fearful
now of not being near enough to an exit should she need one.
This was
not the first time Lauren had been forced to hide from assholes
who had a thing against witches. Once when she was a kid visiting
her extended family in Brittany on the coast of France, the
house had been raided by the witch hunters, and she'd been forced
to hide in the forest for days with her cousins.
She'd grown
up in hiding, and she'd been lectured a thousand times about
the dangers of being a witch in a world of mortals. But all
things drift toward complacency, and even the gravest dangers
cannot loom large in one's mind for long when at a distance.
There had not been many raids in California during her lifetimecertainly
not enough for her to worry about. The Parish familythey'd
changed their names from Beauville to Parish when her grandparents
had moved from Louisiana to the Napa Valley in the thirtieshad
been very good at hiding.
So what
had changed? Why her? Why now? She didn't have to consider the
questions for more than a second. The CNN interview had done
it. It had aired for the first time early this morning. The
witch hunters apparently worked fast.
Her mother
had been furious, had called her on her cell phone that afternoon
to tell her she was a fool and a traitor, had told her she'd
put the entire family in danger for the sake of her own ego.
But Lauren
hadn't believed her. She'd grown so complacent and secure, smug
even. She hadn't seen any harm in doing the interview to talk
about the study she'd headed up, the results of which were making
news all over the world now. She'd believed the witch hunters
weren't really a threat anymore, that most of the zealots among
them had died out and that any remaining ones weren't really
interested in a battle that was centuries old.
Lauren
had been wrong. Her inconsistent and troublesome ability to
foretell the future had not warned her far enough in advance.
Instead, it had waited until danger was at her door.
Macy returned
carrying a towel and a first aid kit. She knelt on the oak plank
floor beside Lauren's foot and began tending to the wound. "Is
this glass?" she said, gently picking it out as Lauren
winced in pain.
"Yeah,"
she said, looking at her friend instead of the cut. "I
had a little accident. I can't really tell you what happened,
okay? Can you just trust me and promise not to say a word to
anyone about this?"
Macy peered
at her with concerned brown eyes. She looked so safe, so surreal
here in her warm, familiar apartment, her long blond hair still
wet from a shower. "You're scaring me, Lauren. What the
hell's going on?"
"I
have to disappear for a while, okay? And you can't tell anyone
you saw me tonight. You can't act like you know anything at
all."
"About
what? What are you talking about? Is someone trying to hurt
you?"
"I
just need you to loan me some clothes, and maybe your car if
you can spare it. And some money, just enough to get me away
from here."
Lauren's
mind raced now, forming a plan. She'd always known what she
had to do if she was ever found out. But the logistics of getting
to her cousin Sebastian in L.A.how to get clothes and
money when she was chased out of her apartment wearing nothing
but a nightgownwere never discussed by the elders.
"God,
Lauren, this is crazy. You know you can tell me anything, right?
You can trust me."
Macy was
wrapping her foot in a bandage now, securing it with tape.
"It's
not that simple. And I swear I would tell you if I could. Just
trust me on this. As soon as I can, I'll give you the whole
story, and this will all make perfect sense, and you'll understand
why I'm protecting you by not saying anything."
Macy regarded
her seriously. "What about Griffin? Should I not tell him
you've been here either?" Griffin was Macy's fiancé.
Lauren
shook her head. "Don't tell anyone." "I think
you need stitches in your foot. Can I at least give you a ride
to the emergency room?"
She looked
down at the bandage. "No. I'll have to have it looked at
somewhere else, not here in the city."
Her friend
sighed heavily. "Okay, I'll give you whatever you need.
You can have my car. I'll just tell Griffin I had to put it
in the shop for repair."
"Thank
you so much, Macy. You're saving my life right now. And whatever
you do, don't go to my apartment. In fact, don't even let on
that you know me if anyone asks."
"This
is just too weird," Macy said as Lauren followed her into
the bedroom. "You're acting like a criminal or something."
It's way
worse than that, Lauren wanted to say, but didn't. "Don't
worry, I'm not, I swear. When I'm able to explain, you'll understand."
Macy wouldn't
have believed the truth anyway. What mortal could without some
kind of solid proof? They needed to see milk being curdled on
the spot or corpses raised from the dead to believe a witch
was in their midst. Not that real witches did any of that stuff,
but stereotypes died hard.
Lauren's
foot throbbed now, yet she could walk on it with little trouble.
Wearing shoes might be a different story, though.
But she
had to get out of San Francisco, and she had to do it fast.
She wasn't sure if she'd ever be able to come back. At that
thought, tears stung her eyes, and when Macy glanced back and
caught the stricken look on her face, she halted in her tracks
in the doorway to the bedroom.
"Lauren,"
she said, and took her friend into her arms.
Lauren
awkwardly allowed Macy to hug her. She'd never been much for
the whole cheek kissing and hugging friends thing. But slowly
the gesture comforted her enough to relax into the embrace.
She wasn't
the one who broke into tears about anything, ever. She was the
scientist, the medical researcher who viewed everything through
the cool, impartial lens of science. She was the icy intellectual,
the one people relied upon for the harsh, unvarnished truth.
While her gift of prescience may have been unpredictable, she'd
always relied on her intelligence to solve any problem. She
didn't do this.
Not cowering.
Not weakness. Not falling apart. She didn't realize right away
that she was crying hard, that sobs racked her chest, until
she heard Macy murmuring soothing sounds.
And then
Lauren stopped. She calmed down, silenced herself, pulled away,
wiped her face.
Macy stared
at her with concern. "Are you sure you'll be okay to drive?
Do you need me to give you a ride somewhere? I'll take you wherever
you need to go. I'll drive you all the way to Mexico if"
Lauren
was shaking her head before Macy even stopped speaking. "No,
it's not safe for you. I have to go alone."
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