Excerpt--Beneath a Darkening Moon
Savannah Grant climbed out of the truck and breathed deeply of the crisp
air. Though it had snowed last night, the sky this morning was rich and
blue, and the sun contained a surprising amount of heat.
The aspen trees surrounding the small clearing glowed a rich, vibrant gold
that contrasted sharply against the blue of the sky and the white of the
snow-covered peaks looming high above. Leaves littered the ground beneath
her feet, but the snow that had covered them earlier was now little more
than droplets of water through which the sunlight gleamed, making them
glow like mini rainbows.
It was a tranquil setting that hid a darker heart.
She slammed the door shut and turned around as a second truck came to a
halt in the clearing. Three men climbed out-two deputy rangers, and a
brown-haired teenager who looked positively green around the gills.
His gaze skirted the clearing, resting momentarily on the barely visible
trail that disappeared through the aspens. Then he gulped and looked at
Savannah. His blue eyes were wide and frightened-a sure sign that for once
in his short life, Matt wasn't crying wolf. "I don't have to go back up
there, do I?"
"No." She tried to give the kid a reassuring smile, but it probably looked
as fake as it felt. But then, it wasn't every day two human tourists were
murdered within a week of each other within the confines of the Ripple
Creek werewolf reservation.
And it certainly wasn't every day those murders were an exact replica of a
past event-an event that still haunted the worst of her nights.
A shiver ran down her spine. Not from the cold, though here in the
mountains it was certainly that, despite the sun's heat. Clairvoyance
wasn't something she'd ever laid claim to, but she'd had premonitions in
the past that had certainly come true, and that was what she was feeling
now. The murders would not stop with the current two-and the past she'd
tried so hard to forget was about to slap her across the face.
She rubbed her arms and stepped away from the truck. "Ike, you want to
stay here with Matt?"
"But-"
"Ike," she warned, in no mood to take any of the young deputy's crap
today. "You do as I say, or you head back down the mountain."
"How the hell am I going to learn anything-"
"You could always sit at a desk and do paperwork," she cut in. "Your
choice."
Sullen didn't even begin to describe his expression as he nodded. Guilt
slithered through her, but she shoved it away and glanced across at Ronan.
"Ready?"
The russet-haired deputy nodded and hitched the small backpack onto his
shoulder. She spun, and walked across the clearing. Sunlight and golden
glowing leaves dappled the slight path, but it quickly gave way to deeper
shadows as they moved into the pines.
"You were a bit hard on the kid, weren't you?" Ronan said, his deep voice
seeming to resonate through the silence. "I know he can be annoying, but
he is truly eager to learn."
She blew out a breath. "I know. It's just-"
"You're dreaming again, aren't you?"
She looked over her shoulder. Ronan's gray eyes gleamed almost silver in
the shadows, and they were full of concern. But then, they'd known each
other a very long time. Ronan was not only one of her few close friends,
but he'd been her very first lover. Even though it went against her policy
of not mixing business and pleasure, they still shared a moon dance when
one or the other was feeling the bite of loneliness.
"What makes you think that?"
His smile echoed through his eyes. "The only time you're so short-tempered
is when you're feeling the heat of the moon or have been dreaming.
Considering we shared a few rather energetic nights last weekend, I
figured it was the latter."
She grinned. "Have you made the bed yet?"
"Yeah. Otherwise Conor would be asking who I was with."
She nodded. The cabin they used for their retreats had been in Ronan's
family for years, but these days it was only occupied in spring, when the
fishing was good. It was the perfect sanctuary the rest of the year,
except that Conor, Ronan's younger brother, was one of those wolves who
had a nose for intrigue and always seemed to be three steps behind them.
While he didn't appear to know about their some-time affair, neither of
them wanted him to find out, if only because the kid was a blabber-mouth.
Besides, their illicit meetings not only went against her own rules, but
the council rules, as well.
Though the council, she thought grimly, definitely needed to pull their
heads out of their asses and look around. Not so much because of the no
fraternizing with co-workers rule, but for all the other rules they were
trying to institute. Like a ten o'clock curfew on anyone under eighteen.
This was the twenty-first century, for God's sake, not the Middle Ages. It
was dumb-ass rules like that that had driven her out of both home and
Ripple Creek when she was barely seventeen.
Of course, her views on the matter, though often aired, weren't taken into
consideration, despite the fact her dad was the head of the council. He
also happened to be the main man behind all the
saving-yourself-for-marriage flag waving currently going on, despite the
hassle and heartache such beliefs had caused Neva, Savannah's twin, just
over a year ago.
"What are the dreams about this time?" Ronan asked.
She brushed aside a tree branch, waiting until he'd safely passed before
letting it go. "Same old, same old. Death, destruction and mayhem."
Only this time, it wasn't in the past, but the present. And that scared
her, because the man behind those murders so long ago was supposedly dead.
So how could they be happening again, here in Ripple Creek, the exact same
way? The press had never released all the details, so it couldn't be a
copycat. Yet the murder-or at least, the first murder-was exactly the
same. Right down to the mutilation of the genitals.
A shiver ran down her spine. Fear, she acknowledged. Fear of what was
coming. Who was coming.
She frowned at the thought, but at that moment, death touched the air. She
stopped, sniffing the faint breeze and tasting the scents entwined within
it.
"A new death," Ronan said, stopping close enough that she could feel his
body heat. "The blood is still fresh."
She nodded. "The hint of sage and musk suggests the victim is male."
"Same as the first one."
She glanced over her shoulder and met his gaze. The grim certainty
reflected in his eyes echoed through her. They had themselves a serial
killer, and with autumn giving way to winter and drawing in the
cross-country skiing crowd, soon there would be far too many potential
victims in Ripple Creek.
"Let's get up there before the scavengers do."
She followed the ever-thickening scent of death through the trees. The
path became steeper, rockier, as the tree line began to recede. The clumps
of snow become drifts that ran on and on, and the chill in the air was
more noticeable. Yet, despite that, sweat trickled down her spine. But not
from exertion. The past she'd run from was merging with the present, and
all she could see in the near future was disaster.
She swiped at the moisture dribbling down her forehead and tried to get a
grip on her overactive imagination. It was just a murderer-just a crazy
person. The past wasn't coming back to haunt her. It was a weird
coincidence, nothing more.
Maybe, that deep-down voice said. And maybe not.
"There's the egg-shaped boulders Matt mentioned." Ronan pointed to the
rocks off on the left hand side of the trail.
She nodded and made her way toward them. Beyond the stones, death waited.
Like the first victim, this man had his arms and legs stretched wide, his
penis and scrotum sliced away, and his heart removed. For a moment, she
closed her eyes, fighting not only the sickness that churned in the pit of
her stomach, but the memories that came crowding back.
Even without those memories, it was doubtful that scenes like this would
ever become easy, she thought, as her gaze swept around the stone circle
that surrounded the mutilated body. She might have spent the last nine
years as a ranger, but death was not something she'd visited often. Which
was why finding someone so brutally and methodically killed still had the
power to shock her.
"We have ourselves a nutter," Ronan said, as he came to a halt beside her.
"That we have." The question was, did this nutter echo past events by
chance or by design? "You want to secure the area and take some prelim
photos? I'll call headquarters, and get them to call in the coroner."
"The doc's not going to be happy," Ronan commented, as he swung the pack
off his shoulder and took out the crime scene tape. "It's barely eight,
and Wednesday is his day off."
"Obviously, no one told our murderer," she snapped, then met his sharp
glance with a wave of her hand. "I know, I know. I'm going to have to stop
being so bitchy."
"Or go see someone about those damn dreams."
She nodded and got her cell phone from her pocket. Then she stepped out of
his way and made her call. Kelly, who was both their administrative
assistant and communications officer, answered on the second ring.
"Ripple Creek Ranger's office."
"Kel, can you ask Doc Carson to head on over to Pike's clearing at the top
of Red Mountain Road? Ike will be waiting for him."
"Will do. You've a visitor, by the way."
"Who?"
"A Mr. Jones from the Interspecies Investigation Squad."
Savannah swore under her breath. The IIS were an offshoot of the FBI, and
by law they had to be notified whenever a human was killed on werewolf
land. But she hadn't expected them to come running so quickly, nor did she
really want them here. The men and women of the IIS had the reputation of
riding roughshod over local law enforcement and had, in the past, caused a
lot of bad feelings between the community and its police officers. She
certainly didn't want that happening here in Ripple Creek.
"Tell him I'm coming in." At least that would give Ronan, Ike and the Doc
time to do a prelim examination of the scene and the body before the IIS
charged in and took over. She glanced at her watch. "I'll be there in
twenty."
"I'll tell him. I'll even offer him decent coffee."
Which, in Kel speak, meant the man in question was not only single, but
gorgeous. She smiled slightly, half wondering if, just this once, they
should use Kel as a distraction. Hell, there were few men of any species
that didn't take a second, third and fourth look when Kel walked by, so it
might just give them a chance to do their job without IIS inference. But
the way their luck had been running of late, Mr. Jones would probably end
up preferring dark haired men rather than voluptuous blondes-and none of
her deputies were inclined that way.
She hung up and met Ronan's expectant gaze. "The IIS are here."
He swore, long and loud.
"Yeah," she said. "Exactly. I'm heading down there. I'll get Ike to meet
Carson, and he'll have to assist you here."
Ronan nodded. "He's damn good with the cameras, so he can take over that
job."
"Just keep an eye on him-with the IIS here, we can't afford any of his
exuberant mistakes."
Ronan nodded and began taking photos of the body and the ceremonial ring
of small stones surrounding it. She cast one more look at the victim, her
gaze resting momentarily on the severed genital area, noting once again
the lack of blood in the dirt beneath the body. She shivered and turned
around, making her way back down the hill.
If history was repeating itself, she just had to hope that everything
about that time of her life wasn't about to make an appearance. Because
there were some sections she had no desire to revisit in any way, shape,
or form.
"Ike," she called, once she'd reached the clearing. "I want you to go down
to the main road and wait for Doc Carson. Bring him up here and take him
to Ronan. You're to help Ronan after that."
The young deputy's eyes lit up. "Really?"
"Really." God, was she ever that enthusiastic? Probably not. By the time
she'd applied for the deputy position, she'd truly seen the darker side of
human and wolf nature. She'd known all too well the full extent of damage
some people could do to others-be it physical or emotional.
"Matt, you want to ride back to town with me?"
The teenager nodded and climbed into her truck. She glanced back to Ike.
"Do what Ronan tells you to-nothing more, nothing less."
Ike grinned and gave her a thumbs up, his carrot-bright hair glowing like
a beacon in the morning sun. Savannah shook her head, climbed into her
truck and headed back to town. By the time she'd dropped Matt off and
talked briefly to his parents, thirty-five minutes had come and gone.
Kel looked up as Savannah opened the front door of their little section of
city hall, her expression a mix of amusement and annoyance. "Our dear IIS
officer is not impressed with tardiness. Or so he's said, every five
minutes for the last fifteen minutes."
"One of those, huh?"
"Yeah. All looks and no charm." Kel placed a mug on the counter, and the
rich aroma of cinnamon coffee teased Savannah's nostrils. "Here, take
this. You're going to need it."
Savannah grimaced and picked up the steaming mug. "What excuse did you
give him?"
"I didn't. He's not my boss, and he certainly wasn't polite, so he didn't
deserve an update."
She couldn't help a grin. "So did he get that coffee?"
"Machine blend, not the good stuff."
Meaning he'd really pissed her off. "Could you take all my calls while I
deal with this fellow?"
"Will do."
"Thanks, Kel."
Savannah sipped the sweet, aromatic liquid, fortifying herself as she
walked around the counter and trundled down the long hall to her office.
The door was shut, and the blinds shuttered, affording her no glimpse of
the grump who'd manage to annoy their usually jovial administration
assistant.
She grasped the handle with her free hand, and pushed the door open.
"Sorry to keep you wait-"
The rest of her words died as the man inside turned around.
Shock and something else, something she couldn't quite define, rippled
through her. The man standing so calmly in the middle of her office was
the one man she'd hoped never to see again.
For too many minutes, all she could do was stare. This man had haunted her
dreams for nigh on ten years, yet except for the crow's-feet near his
eyes, his too-handsome features showed no real sign of aging. He was a big
man, just over six feet tall, his build lean but powerful, like that of a
sprinter. His hair was dark brown, but the mahogany highlights she'd so
adored now contrasted against flecks of silver that gleamed in the
sunlight streaming in through the window behind him. Once upon a time his
hair had been long, and tied back carelessly in a ponytail-a ponytail she
always used to undo, just so she could run her fingers through those
gloriously silky lengths. Now, though, it was short, barely even brushing
the shoulders of his starched blue shirt.
Her gaze finally, inevitably, locked with his. For several heartbeats, she
couldn't think, was barely able to breathe, as the navy blue of his eyes
all but consumed her.
Heat prickled across her skin and ignited a familiar ache deep inside. She
knew she had to move, had to do something other than simply stand here and
let him consume her like this. Yet, she couldn't tear herself away from
the power of that gaze. From the memories she saw deep within it.
A slight smile touched the lips that were still as sensual as she
remembered. Then his gaze rolled languidly down her body, a touch that
wasn't a touch, and yet one that sent energy singing across every fiber of
her being. Her nipples hardened, pressing almost painfully against the
restrictions of her shirt, and the deep down ache got stronger.
His navy gaze completed its erotic journey and rose to meet hers again,
lingering a little on the scar that marred the left side of her face. But
it wasn't the heat in his look that made her tremble, it was the sudden
flash of anger.
As if he had anything to be angry about.
"Well, well," he said. "Fancy finding you here, of all places."