Richelle Mead

Succubus Blues


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much to my disappointment. Seth gathered up his haul of books, gave me another scattered smile as he voiced his thanks, and disappeared into the house. I was almost back to Queen Anne when I realized I’d forgotten to ask him for my copy of The Glasgow Pact.

      Annoyed, I entered my building and immediately heard the front desk attendant solicit me. “Miss Kincaid?”

      I walked over to him, and he handed me a vase of flowers teeming with shades of purple and dark pink. “These came for you today.”

      I accepted the vase with delight, inhaling the mingled scents of roses, irises, and stargazer lilies. They had no card. Typical. “Who brought them?”

      He gestured beyond me. “That man over there.”

      Chapter 7

      I turned and saw Roman sitting over in a corner of the small lobby. He looked striking in a deep green turtleneck, his dark hair brushed away from his face. He smiled at me when I caught his eye, and I walked over to sit near him.

      “Jesus, you really are a stalker.”

      “Well, well. Aren’t you presumptuous. I only came for my coat.”

      “Ah.” I blushed, feeling foolish. “How long have you been waiting?”

      “Not too long. I actually tried the bookstore first, thinking that might be a little less stalker-ish.”

      “It’s my day off.” I looked down at the riotously colored blossoms in my arms. “Thanks for the flowers. You didn’t need to bring them to get your coat back.”

      Roman shrugged, those blue-green eyes wreaking havoc with me. “True, but I figured they might induce you to go out for a drink tonight.”

      So he did have another motive. “Not this again—”

      “Hey, if you’d wanted to avoid ‘this,’ you shouldn’t have lured me in last night. Now it’s too late. You might as well avoid the long, drawn-out pain and get it over with quickly. Sort of like taking off a Band-Aid. Or cutting off a limb.”

      “Wow. Who says there’s no romance left in the world?” In spite of my sarcasm, I found Roman’s easy repartee a refreshing change from the halting atmosphere with Seth.

      “So, what? Does that mean you finally concede, general? Truly, you’ve fought a worthy battle in eluding me thus far.”

      “I don’t know. You showed up at my home. I apparently didn’t do that much eluding.” When he only waited expectantly, my smile faded. I sighed, studying him and trying to figure out his motivations. “Roman, you seem like a nice guy and everything—”

      He groaned. “No. Don’t start that with me. It’s never a good sign when a woman says ‘you’re a nice guy.’ It means she’s getting ready to let you down easy.”

      I shook my head. “I’m just not interested in getting serious with anyone right now, that’s all.”

      “Whoa, ‘get serious’? Slow down there, sister. I’m not asking you to marry me or anything. I just want to go out with you sometime, maybe catch a movie, have dinner and drinks, that’s it. Kiss at the end of the night if I’m lucky. Hell, if that still freaks you out, we’ll just shake hands.”

      I leaned my head back against the wall, and we stayed like that a moment, each of us sizing up the other. I knew it was perfectly possible for men and women to go out on dates without automatic sex, but my dates generally didn’t work that way. My instincts drove me to seek sex out, and looking at him, I realized that urge might be strong independent of any sort of succubus need to feed. I liked the way he looked, the way he dressed, and the way he smelled. I especially liked his goofy attempt at courtship. Unfortunately, I couldn’t turn off the destructive succubus absorption, even if I wanted to. It would happen of its own volition, probably strongly with him. Even the kiss he joked about would still steal some of his life away.

      “I don’t know anything about you,” I said finally, realizing I’d been quiet too long.

      He smiled lazily. “What do you want to know?”

      “Well…I don’t know. What do you like to do? Do you even have a job? You must have lax hours to be able to hang around me all the time.”

      “All the time, huh? You’re being presumptuous again, but yes, I do work. I teach a couple of community college linguistics classes. Short of when I’m there, I get to make my own hours with grading and stuff.”

      “Okay. What’s your last name?”

      “Smith.”

      “No way.”

      “Way.”

      “That hardly goes with Duke Roman.” I tried to think of another appropriate screening item. “How long have you lived in Seattle?”

      “A few years.”

      “Hobbies?”

      “I’ve got some.” He paused and cocked his head toward me when no more questions came. “Anything else you want to know? Should I dig out my college transcripts perhaps? A full curriculum vitae and background check?”

      I waved a hand of dismissal. “I have no use for inconsequential information like that. I only need to know the really important stuff.”

      “Like?”

      “Like…what’s your favorite song?”

      The question obviously caught him by surprise, but he recovered immediately, just as he had last night. I loved that. “The last half of the Beatles’ Abbey Road.”

      “The last half of Abbey Road?”

      “Yeah, there are a bunch of songs, but they sort of blend into one song—”

      I cut him off with a quick gesture. “Yeah, yeah, I know the album.”

      “So?”

      “So, that’s a pretty good answer.” I tugged at my ponytail, wondering how best to navigate this. He nearly had me. “I—no. I’m sorry. I can’t. It’s just too complicated. Even the one date. It’ll turn into a second date, then another, then—”

      “You really do jump ahead. What if I gave the super-secret Boy Scout promise to never bother you again after one date?”

      “You’d agree to that?” I asked skeptically.

      “Sure, if that’s what you want. But I don’t think you will once you’ve spent an evening with me.”

      A suggestive tone in his voice did something to my stomach I hadn’t felt in a very long time. Before I could fully process this, my cell phone rang.

      “Sorry,” I apologized, digging it out of my purse. Glancing at the Caller ID display, I recognized Cody’s number. “Yeah?”

      “Hey, Georgina. Something weird happened tonight…”

      Lord. That could mean anything from another death to Peter shaving his head. “Hang on a second.”

      I stood up and looked at Roman, juggling the vase of flowers as I did. He rose with me, looking concerned. “Is everything okay?”

      “Yeah, I mean, no. I mean, I don’t know. Look Roman, I need to go upstairs and take this call. I appreciate the flowers, but I just can’t get involved right now. I’m sorry. It’s not you, it’s me. Honestly.”

      He took a few steps toward me as I started to walk away. “Wait.” He dug in his pockets, pulled out a pen and piece of paper. Hastily he scrawled something and handed it to me. I looked down and saw a phone number.

      “For when you change your mind.”

      “I won’t.”

      He simply smiled, inclined his head slightly, and left the lobby. I watched him only a moment before heading upstairs,