Home > Glimmer (Nina Decker #1)(2)

Glimmer (Nina Decker #1)(2)
Author: Vivi Anna

Iron had a sickening effect on the fae. Although I wasn’t full blooded, I still felt the ions of the metal seeping into my skin through my pores and destabilizing my immune system. I wasn’t absolutely positive why this happened. Something to do with the Bronze Age and the Iron Age. During the Bronze Age, the fae lived out in the open, free to live their lives as they’d been doing for centuries. But when the Iron Age came, so did prejudice and persecution. Many fae died by tortuous hands. Since then iron had become like a disease and the once mental aversion became a physical one hereditarily passed down through the generations.

Despite the story being true or not, the effects were the same. Iron didn’t sit well with anyone with fae blood. Although I wasn’t full-blooded, I still belonged to that small group of unfortunates. Lucky me.

But a girl had to get around, so I rode a motorcycle, a really cool one at that—candy apple red and white painted tank and fenders, the rest in shiny chrome. I wore a matching helmet and with my white leather jacket, I was vain enough to think I looked pretty cool. To me, there was nothing like having the wind in my face and hair. I likened it to flying. Not that I truly knew what that felt like. Enough to know that if I could do it, I knew I’d never want to do anything else.

After taking out the elastic from my hair, I settled my helmet over my head. Before mounting the bike, I thought about the poor woman that had been savaged by something. I wasn’t yet prepared to say it had been a werewolf attack, but I definitely was leaning that way.

I didn’t want werewolves to be the big bad creatures depicted in bad horror films. Because if they turned out to be monsters, then I was sure I wasn’t that far behind them.

My thoughts strayed to Officer Stettler’s claim that I had the hots for one of them. Severin Saint Morgan in particular.

Emigrated from Australia years ago, Severin appeared to be a mild-mannered associate professor at the University of British Columbia. He was the poster boy so to speak for the werewolf community. He’d been on TV several times talking about how werewolf packs operated, trying I was sure to calm the public. I had to admit they chose him well. How could anyone think werewolves were monsters when one of their own was packaged so well?

Swinging my leg over the bike, I nestled into the leather seat, and kicked the bike over. But I didn’t pull away from the curb. The hair on the back of my neck prickled. I felt uneasy, almost like I was being watched.

I was pretty much alone on the street except for a couple of homeless people, both of whom I knew by name. I glanced across the street to see if someone lurked in the doorways or first floor windows of the pawn shop. As far as I could see, there was no one there.

I wasn’t usually paranoid but the feeling would not vanish. I shivered inside my jacket but not from the cool night air.

Resigned to just move on, I turned back around, but that was when something on the rooftop of the building opposite me caught my eye. Startled, I stared up at the top of the brick building. There were dark shadows, but some of them seemed to be moving. Then a black shape sprang from one rooftop to the next.

I shook my head, thinking my eyes were playing tricks. No way could a person could jump that far. But maybe it wasn’t exactly a person up there lurking in the night. Maybe it was something else. Something not quite human.

Shivering again, I kicked up the stand and decided to get the hell out of there. Quickly. I pulled away from the curb, intending to race away from the ominous feeling that had taken hold.

Because of the late hour, I decided to take a short cut home. The roads I chose weren’t in the best areas of town but I didn’t have any fear. It took a lot more than a few homeless people and young gang members shooting off their mouths to frighten me. When I was on my bike, especially at night, I felt completely untouchable.

I raced through the Eastside. As I made the next turn, I might have been over the speed limit. That could’ve been why I had trouble stopping as I came upon a giant brown wolf standing in the middle of the street.

***

Chapter 2

After sliding with the bike for about twelve feet, I came to a complete stop. The wolf seemed to watch me struggle underneath the weight of the bike then bounded off into the shadows. Thankfully, I wasn’t injured. My knee-high riding boots protected my lower leg from road-rash.

Once I righted the bike and kicked the stand, I tore off my helmet, hung it on the handlebar, and walked down the street, searching the shadows for the wolf. As I was sure it had been one. Which meant a werewolf was nearby.

As I stood there, out in the open and vulnerable, I thought maybe this wasn’t the smartest thing to do. I should get back on my bike and get the hell out of there.

Sure, I had training in defensive techniques—I studied S.I.N.G. like everyone else (solar plexus, instep, nose, groin)—and some martial arts, but not enough to take on a huge wolf that could rip out my throat with one swipe of its lethal claws.

I started to back up towards my bike. Maybe I could get on it and start it before something big and hairy and hungry leapt out at me from the shadows. If I ran, I wondered if it would chase me.

“Are you injured?”

The sexy accented voice came from a line of shadows near one of the old buildings. Turning, I searched the night for him. I could see a form moving in the shadows. Then he stepped out into the glow of the street lamps and I nearly lost all reason.

Unabashedly na**d, he strode into the street toward me. His skin shone with sweat and I admit fully to ogling him from head to toe. Possibly pausing much too long on the middle part to be considered polite. But by the enticing grin on his face, he didn’t seem to mind in the least.

“No,” I finally managed to say.

As he neared, I realized he was maybe only an inch taller than my five foot ten inches. But he was wide, like a linebacker on a football team. Powerful shoulders, muscular arms, flat stomach, and ripped athletic legs, he was incredible to look at. I tried not to stare too long at his other attributes, but it was impossible not to.

Severin Saint Morgan was a big man.

Clearing my throat, I finally found my voice, although it was a bit shaky. “What were you doing in the middle of the road?”

“Prowling.” His wet hair fell forward. He ran his hands through the lustrous brown waves, pulling them back off his face. His light blue eyes seemed to dance in his angular face. They were striking, intense. And they hadn’t left my face since he stepped out of the shadows.

“Well next time, maybe you should stick to the sidewalks.” I was wringing my hands together when I noticed that my skin was unnaturally white. They almost seemed to glow a little. I quickly hid them behind my back.

He grinned at that.

I felt something warm begin to flow inside. Heat swirled in my stomach and threatened to venture lower if I didn’t put a cork in my carnal thoughts. This was extremely difficult with an incredibly alluring na**d man standing in front of me smiling.

“You have a beautiful smile.”

My heart picked up a few extra beats. “Thank you.” God, I was scared out of my mind, but at the same time desire flared over me. A strange combination.

He nodded. “You’re a nurse.”

His words weren’t a question.

“Yes,” I said, my voice cracking. “How do you know that?” And my thoughts flitted back to the moving shadows on the rooftop by the hospital.

He gestured with his hand. “Your scrubs.”

I glanced down at myself. I had on my light blue hospital scrubs still. They were pretty distinctive. “Oh, right. Yes, I work at St. Paul’s.”

“It suits you. You give off this healing vibe.” He continued to stare into my eyes.

I should’ve felt unnerved but I didn’t. I liked his intensity. Which was strange because I usually didn’t like people looking at me for so long. Hiding was harder when someone’s trying to stare right through you.

I stared back at him, letting my gaze drift slowly down his body. That was when I noticed the long red gouges on his chest.

“You’re hurt.” I had the sudden urge to reach out and touch him, to soothe the angry looking cuts. I wondered where he’d gotten them. During his prowling about town?

“Just a scratch. It’ll be gone in a couple of days.” He touched the swelling marks, pushing on them as if to prove his point. “We have remarkable healing capabilities.”

“Yes, I know. I saw you on Breakfast Television talking about some of your…ah, differences.”

He just continued to eye me, as if in consideration of something, making me nervous and fluttery in odd places. By the flash in his eyes, he knew what he was doing to me.

“What were you doing in this neighborhood? Not a likely place a university professor would hang out,” I asked, still curious about his injury.

“I had business nearby.”

I eyed him, not quite sure what to make of him. I wasn’t one hundred percent positive that he wasn’t a danger to me in some way. Because he was dangerous. No doubt about it.

“You weren’t over at St. Paul’s earlier, were you?”

A few seconds passed before he answered. “Why would you ask?”

“Because a woman came in with a gut wound and marks just like those.” I gestured to his chest. “She died on the table before we could stitch her back together.”

“That’s unfortunate. I’m sorry to hear that she died.”

“You followed me, didn’t you? From St. Paul’s? I saw you on the rooftops.”

He nodded. “I heard about the attack and I had to follow up on it. My job is to keep the werewolf community in check.”

I shivered again from his intensity. This man had a lot of power, it radiated from him. I sensed that if he knew who’d been responsible for the attack on that woman, he’d take care of it. With his own type of justice I suspected. It made me curious how werewolves punished their own.

“How did you know that I was even involved? We get tons of trauma patients in every night.”

He tapped his nose. “I could smell the attack on you.”

   
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