Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter Colletion_ Books 11-15 - Laurell K. Hamilton [601]
I sat down on the couch sort of suddenly. I don’t think I’d realized how worried I was until it was all right. I didn’t even like Tammy much, but Larry was my friend and it would have broken his heart.
Micah was standing in front of me. I looked up. “Tammy and the baby are going to be fine. He must have called while we were in the air.”
Micah smiled and touched my face. “You’re pale. You were really worried about it, weren’t you?”
I nodded.
“Were you hiding it from me or didn’t you know either?”
I gave him a smile that was a bit too wry to be happy. “Stop knowing me so well, dammit.”
“Better than you know yourself, sometimes,” he said softly. And that was a little too close to the truth.
CHAPTER
6
Room service came with a knock and a polite voice. Micah got to the door before I did, but he didn’t just open it. Some people in my life I’ve had to teach caution to, but Micah had come with it as part of the standard boyfriend package.
He checked the peephole, then looked at me. “Room service.” But he didn’t open the door. I watched him take a very deep breath, scenting the air. “Smells like room service.”
My hand eased back from the gun under my arm. I hadn’t even realized my hand was on it until that moment. His scenting at the door had made me think, just for a second, that something was wrong, not that he was simply scenting the air because it smelled good.
He put his sunglasses on before he opened the door. I made sure my jacket was covering the gun. Didn’t want to weird anyone out, and definitely didn’t want to give the staff a reason to talk. Hiding how far outside normal we were was standard practice. People tend to get nervous around guns and shapeshifters. Go figure.
The guy smiled and asked where we’d like the tray set up. We let him put a cloth on the table by the window.
It seemed to take a long time for him to get everything ready. He placed water glasses, real napkins, even a rose in a vase in the center of the table. I’d never seen anything this elaborate from room service.
Finally, he was done. Micah signed for the food, and the guy left with a Have a nice day that actually sounded sincere.
Micah shut the door behind him, putting all the locks in place. I approved. Locks don’t help you if you don’t use them.
I was trying to decide whether to frown. “I like the caution—you know I do.”
“But,” he said, setting the sunglasses on the coffee table.
“But I thought I should compliment you before I complain about something else.”
His smile slipped a little. “What now?”
“There’s a salad here with grilled chicken on it and a butterflied chicken breast grilled with veggies. The salad better not be mine.”
He grinned then, and it was that sudden grin that gave me a glimpse of what he might have looked like at fifteen.
“You get the chicken breast.”
I frowned. “I would have preferred steak.”
He nodded. “Yes, but if you eat that heavy then sometimes the food doesn’t sit well if the sex is too, um, vigorous.”
I tried not to smile and failed. “And is the sex going to be, um, vigorous?”
“I hope so,” he said.
“And you got the salad, because . . .”
“I’ll be doing most of the work,” he said.
“Now, that’s just not true,” I said.
He wrapped his arms around me, and his being the same height made the eye contact very serious, very intimate.
“Who does the most work depends on who is doing what.” His voice was low and deep. His face leaned closer as he said, “I know exactly what I want to do to you and with you, and it means that I will be doing”—and his mouth was just above mine—“most of the work.”
I thought he’d kiss me, but he didn’t. He drew back and left me breathless and a little shaky. When I could