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He’d never felt such an immediate attraction before. A potent mix of desire and passion had slammed into him like a charging bull, leaving him dazed and breathless. Proof positive that he’d gone too long without a woman. For a few glorious seconds he thought he’d found the perfect woman.
But one sniff had crushed his hopes. Reality had crashed down on him so hard, he’d hardly felt the ball smacking him upside the head. She wasn’t a shifter. She wasn’t the one for him. The sooner he found his true mate, the better.
He studied the monitors. No one in the parking lot or the foyer. The hallways were empty. Everyone seemed to be in the cafeteria partying. He should be there with his adopted children. But he’d needed to talk to Angus about the new expedition.
And he needed to avoid her.
His chest tightened when he spotted her on a monitor. She was approaching the edge of the garden where it melded into the woods. Her bright yellow sweater and blond hair made her look like sunshine in the midst of darkness. What was she doing here? If she’d come for Tino’s party, why was she missing it?
“Who is she?” He pointed to the monitor, attempting to keep his manner nonchalant.
Howard glanced up. “That’s Caitlyn Whelan, Shanna’s sister.”
Carlos’s hand curled into a fist. Merda. Sean Whelan was her father? The man was a bigoted fool. Still, he was not someone the Vamps wanted to anger. They needed their alliance with him in order to defeat the Malcontents and keep themselves safe.
That meant Carlos needed to stay away from his daughter. A dalliance would upset Sean and the Vamps.
But to be honest, Carlos had already known she was forbidden. She was a disaster disguised as paradise, the kind of woman a man could never forget and never leave. He couldn’t allow himself anywhere near her. His fate was written in stone. To ensure the survival of his species, he had to find a mate just like him.
Angus sauntered toward the wall of monitors. “She looks a lot like her sister.”
Not at all, Carlos thought. Her eyes were more turquoise in color. Her face was more oval-shaped. Her nose was sprinkled with a few freckles. Her hair was longer and a more golden shade than Shanna’s strawberry blond hair. He shook his head ruefully. Was there nothing he hadn’t noticed about her and already committed to memory?
Howard leaned back in his chair behind the desk. “Did you know Sean didn’t tell her that Shanna was married or had children?”
“Och, what an arse,” Angus muttered.
When it came to Sean Whelan, Carlos was tempted to use more colorful language. “She’s missing the party.”
“She’s probably in shock.” Howard propped his feet up on the desk. “Shanna was going to tell her about vampires.”
Angus nodded. “That was Emma’s idea. She thought it would be better for Caitlyn to hear the news from her sister.” He glanced at her on the monitor. “She seems to be taking it well.”
Howard snorted. “Because she’s not running for her car, screaming her head off?”
Carlos gave Angus a curious look. “Why did Emma want her to know the truth?”
“We’re hoping to hire her.”
“What?” Carlos stepped back.
“We’d rather have her working for us than for her father and his bloody Stake-Out team.”
Carlos gulped. He couldn’t work alongside her. If they stationed her here at Romatech, he’d have to put in for a transfer. Better yet, he’d just depart immediately for Bangkok. “I need to leave on my trip right away.”
“What trip?” Howard asked.
Carlos quickly explained. “I’ll take the first available flight.”
Angus’s brow creased with a frown. “Why the big hurry?”
“Why not?” Carlos countered. “Things are slow right now, with Casimir and the Malcontents in hiding. You don’t really need me here. And you know I have to find a mate. I’ve been looking for five years. I’m not getting any younger.”
“I understand, lad.” Angus rested a hand on his shoulder. “I’m just concerned about yer children. I hear they’re having some trouble adjusting to the new school and new country. I’m no’ sure ye should be leaving them right now.”
Carlos groaned inwardly. He knew the orphans were having a rough time. All the more reason for him to find a mate. Coco was only six years old. Raquel was nine, and Teresa twelve. They needed a mother. They needed a woman who could guide them through the shape shifting process when they reached puberty. The change could happen any time now for Teresa. Carlos could feel the clock ticking.
Angus’s cell phone rang, and he retrieved it from his pocket. “Aye, I’ll be there soon.”
The big Scotsman’s normally gruff voice had softened, a sure sign he was talking to his wife, Emma. His eyes widened. “They’re missing? Doona worry, sweetheart. We’ll find them.” He hung up.
“Who’s missing?” Carlos asked.
“Coco and Raquel.” Angus studied the monitors. “Emma was fetching cake and ice cream for the children, and when she came back to the table, the two lassies were gone.”
Howard dropped his feet to the floor with a thud and stood. “They couldn’t have gone far.”
Carlos felt the usual heaviness in his chest whenever a problem arose with the children. They were suffering, and he didn’t have a clue how to make it better. His pretense that everything was fine wasn’t working. He knew how to save people physically, but emotionally? Whenever the children looked at him with all that pain glimmering in their teary eyes, he cringed inside.
He spotted movement on a monitor that showed the garden. Someone was hiding behind a big rhododendron. His heart twinged. The poor girls didn’t want to be found.
He motioned to the quivering bush. “They’re hiding there. I’ll get them.” He could return them to the party, but God help him, he didn’t know what to tell them. For the last few years, he’d entertained them with jokes, amateur magic tricks, and trips to the ice cream parlor to make the tears go away. It wasn’t enough, but how could he open his heart when all he had to offer was pain and despair?
He left the security office and trudged down the hallway to the side exit. The heaviness in his chest bore down on him, making it hard to breathe. The orphans thought he was their hero, the bravest man in the world, the one who had rescued them from a horrible death.
He couldn’t let them know the truth. He was brave enough to face the physical pain of death, but when it came to emotional pain, he was a clueless pretender. Worse than that, he thought with a snort. He was a damned coward.
Caitlyn was deep in thought as she sat on the bench beneath the oak tree. If vampires were real, what other strange creatures could exist? Elves? The tooth fairy? Big Foot?
A sound close by made her jump. She turned and spotted someone behind the oak tree. Definitely not Big Foot. Not big at all.
She rose to her feet. “Hello?”
The little girl peered around the tree. Tears glistened in her big brown eyes and her bottom lip trembled.
“Coco, no,” another girl whispered from behind a nearby bush. Her voice carried a slight accent and sounded tense with pain. “Leave the lady alone.”
“It’s all right,” Caitlyn assured them. Were these hybrid children like Constantine? Whatever they were, they were certainly upset.
Coco rounded the tree and approached Caitlyn quietly. She had a lost, frightened look in her eyes that Caitlyn had seen many times in her life, every time a stray kitten or puppy came to her for help.
She sat on the bench and patted the space beside her. “Tell me what’s wrong, Coco.”
The little girl climbed onto the bench and wiggled up close.
The second girl, who appeared a few years older, ventured closer. “I forgot your name.”
“I’m Caitlyn. And you are?”
“Raquel. Raquel Gatina.” She lifted her chin proudly. “We’re from Brazil.”
Coco’s thin shoulders shook as she burst into tears. “I want to go home. I…I’m so t
ired of this English. It’s hard.”
“Sweetie.” Caitlyn patted her on the back. “You speak whatever you like. I’ll understand.” Her comprehension would be immediate, but it would take a while before she could start responding in the girls’ native language.
Raquel stepped closer. “Are you serious?”
“Try me.”
Coco gazed up at her. “I feel bad,” she said in Portuguese.
“Why do you feel bad?” Caitlyn asked in English.
The girls exchanged surprised looks.
“Coco’s mad at Constantine,” Raquel explained in Portuguese. “She says she hates him.”
“I don’t want to hate him,” Coco wailed. “I like Tino. But it’s not fair!”
Raquel sniffed. “Tino has family and friends. We don’t.”
Caitlyn’s heart squeezed. “You have each other. And from what I could tell, every woman at the party loves you and wants to be your aunt.”
Raquel frowned and kicked at the ground. “They just feel sorry for us because we’re orphans.”
“Tino has a mommy and daddy and a sister,” Coco whispered. “My mommy and daddy and sister are dead.”
Caitlyn gulped. “How did that—I’m sorry. I’m sure you don’t want to talk about it.”
Raquel perched on the bench next to Coco. “Some bad men came to our village and killed our families. They hate us because we’re different.”
Caitlyn sucked in a deep breath. Good God. Were the girls’ families killed because they were vampires? That was unconscionable. It reminded her of racial purging. It could not be allowed to continue.
She was struck suddenly with a moment of crystal clarity. If she took the job offered by Emma MacKay, she could work to protect innocent children like Coco and Raquel. And her niece and nephew.
Coco tugged on the sleeve of her cardigan sweater. “Am I bad ’cause I’m mad at Tino?”
“No, sweetie. It’s normal to be envious when someone else has what you want for yourself.”
“I really do like him.” Coco sniffled. “I want to be happy for him, but it’s not fair.”
“I know.” Caitlyn stroked the girl’s long black hair. “But in a strange way, you can be happy that the world isn’t fair.”
Raquel stiffened. “But it should be fair.”
“Think about it,” Caitlyn said softly. “In a world that was totally fair, everything that happened to you would be because somehow you absolutely deserved it.”
Raquel’s mouth dropped open. “We—We didn’t deserve it.”
Coco sat up, her eyes wide with horror. “The bad men came because I’m bad?”
“No!” Caitlyn grabbed the girl by the shoulders. “You are good. You are a sweet, innocent child, and there is no way you could ever deserve what happened.”
Raquel jumped to her feet. “Then why did it happen?”
Tears filled Caitlyn’s eyes. “Oh, honey, I don’t know why there’s evil in the world. I think it has something to do with free will, so people can decide to be good or bad.”
“I want to be good,” Coco whispered.
Caitlyn blinked back her tears. “Sweetie, you are good.”
“If we’re good, why did that bad thing happen to us?” Raquel cried.
Caitlyn winced. She was in seriously over her head. “I don’t know. It shouldn’t have happened to you. I’m so sorry that it did.”
Coco burst into tears and threw her arms around Caitlyn’s neck. Raquel sidled closer, looking hesitant to ask for comfort.
“Come here.” Caitlyn pulled the older girl onto her right knee. Her own tears spilled over as she listened to the girls’ soft cries and felt their small bodies tremble.
Great job, she chided herself. Instead of making them happy, she’d brought them to tears.
She thought back to when she’d been stationed in Thailand and she’d visited the Tiger Temple. She’d asked a Buddhist monk the same question Raquel had asked her. He’d simply smiled and said it was better to consider all that was good in the world that brought love and joy. She pointed out that he’d avoided giving her a real answer.
“Sometimes there are no words to answer. Only love,” he replied. “And love is always the best answer.”
So she sat silently, hugging the girls and hoping it was enough to give them some comfort.
Slowly, a sense of purpose and completion seeped into her. She’d been fired from the State Department because she’d interfered with local customs in order to help an innocent woman. She didn’t regret her actions. She’d do it again in a second.
Maybe that was her true mission in life. Protect the innocent. She was here at this moment because these girls needed her. Her whole life had been a maze of turns and decisions, all leading to this.
“I’m going to be here for you,” she whispered to the girls in Portuguese. She wouldn’t let anyone harm them because they were different.
“You know our language?” a deep masculine voice asked in Portuguese.
With a gasp, she turned her head. Good God, it was him. The gorgeous mystery man. The vampire.
Carlos.
Chapter Four
C aitlyn dragged in a shaky breath. What was it about this man that made her feel so raw and ragged? It was as if every nerve cell was exposed and vulnerable. And instead of frightening her, it excited her.
He stepped out of the shadows, moving so stealthily and quietly she wondered how long he’d been there. How much of their conversation did he hear? Since he obviously spoke Portuguese, he would have understood the girls.
“Uncle!” Coco scrambled off the bench, ran to him and flung her arms around his waist.
Uncle? Caitlyn watched as he patted the girl on her back. Was the uncle an honorary title? Coco had said her family members were dead.
Raquel approached him slowly, as if afraid her need for affection would be rejected.
Caitlyn exhaled with relief when he drew the girl closer. Somehow, he didn’t display the same gracefulness he had while playing basketball. His movements seemed hesitant and awkward.
“Are you all right?” he asked quietly in English.
“Yes.” Raquel motioned toward Caitlyn. “We made a new friend.”
His gaze shifted to Caitlyn and his eyes narrowed. “Yes, I know.”
She had a strange suspicion that he was annoyed with her, but that didn’t make any sense. “How do you do? I’m Caitlyn Whelan.”
“Yes, I know.”
She waited for him to introduce himself, but he simply watched her, his amber eyes gleaming and intense, as if he were sizing up his prey. Maybe to a vampire, she was prey. She suppressed a shiver. “You’re Coco’s uncle?”
His mouth thinned. “I’m her guardian. We need to get back to the party. Thank you for your assistance.”
He was annoyed. Why would he object to her helping the girls? Caitlyn looked at Coco and Raquel. “If you ever need to talk again, I’ll be happy to listen.”
Coco grinned and ran to her. Raquel followed, and Caitlyn wrapped her arms around them, pulling them close. When she noticed Carlos scowling at her, she couldn’t resist needling him.
She smiled a sweet invitation. “Group hug?”
His gaze drifted down to her feet, then inched slowly back up. “I don’t do groups.”
Her skin tingled with sensual awareness, but she refused to let him know how much he unnerved her. “I don’t do strangers.”
His wide mouth curled up on one side. “I don’t consider you a stranger. I know your name.”
“You didn’t tell me yours.”
His eyes glimmered with heat. “Yes, I know.”
She suspected he was playing cat and mouse with her. She lifted her chin. She was not the sort to accept the role of mouse.
Coco tugged on her sweater. “Will you come to the party with us?”
“You go on with your…uncle,” Caitlyn replied. “I’ll see you in a little while.”
“’Bye!” The girls ran back to Carlos.r />
He inclined his head at Caitlyn. “Good evening.” He turned to escort the girls back to the cafeteria.
“So long.” Caitlyn couldn’t resist one last jab. “Carlos.”
He stopped and looked back at her. A flash of heat flared in his amber eyes, and her skin prickled with excitement.
“Catalina,” he whispered. Then he turned and walked away.
Catalina. The name sizzled through her. Maybe he was just translating her name into Portuguese, but she could have sworn he’d made it sound like an endearment.
With shaky knees she sat on the bench. She fumbled through her silk handbag for a tissue, then wiped her damp cheeks. The two girls had touched her heart. And Carlos—what was he doing to her? If he came back and asked for a pint, she’d actually be tempted to bare her neck. Did all vampires exude that sexy seductive charm?
But she’d seen other vampires on the basketball court. It was only Carlos who was affecting her like this. She looked in his direction, but he and the girls had moved out of view, blocked by a huge rhododendron bush.
“Carlos!” a female voice yelled. “We need to talk.”
Caitlyn eased to the other side of the oak tree. There in the shadow she had a good view. A young man and woman approached Carlos and the girls.
In a low voice Carlos urged the girls to go on to the cafeteria. “I’ll be there soon.” He walked a few steps with them, then watched them continue past the gazebo.
“Is it true?” the young woman asked. “You’re leaving on another trip?”
Carlos turned to face the young man and woman. “Yes. Angus approved it.”
“Howard mentioned it at the party,” the young woman continued impatiently. “And he said you wanted to leave right away?”
“That’s true.” Carlos’s gaze shifted toward the oak tree and his eyes narrowed.
Could he see her? Caitlyn moved farther back into the shadows and slipped her white tissue back into her handbag. Maybe vampires had superior night vision.
“How long do you intend to be gone?” the young woman demanded.
Carlos sighed. “However long it takes. A month, maybe more.”