backside wagged with excitement. Della recalled Chase telling her that the only âsomeoneâ he hadnât lost in the plane accident had been his dog. Was this the same dog? She suspected it was.
âHe wonât bite,â Chase said when she still stood a step back. âWill you, Baxter?â he asked the dog.
Baxter seemed to take that as an invitation and moved closer. While his gray snout put him in his older years, his toned body and movements didnât show signs of age. She held out her hand for him to sniff then she slowly turned her hand over and ran her palm over the top of his head.
The canine accepted her touch, but stared up at her with caution. Della pulled her hand back.
âNot a dog person?â Chase asked.
âNo, I like dogs. My dad wasnât too big on them though, so we never had one. But my neighbor had several through the years, and I sort of got attached to a couple of them. My neighbor was a divorced man who was always late with the dogâs supper; some nights he wouldnât even come home. I had my mom buy dog food, and Iâd feed him when I saw he wasnât home after dark.â
A slow smile appeared in Chaseâs eyes. âSo Della Tsang actually has a soft spot?â
âItâs not a very big spot.â She shot him a frown. The truth was that soft spot was larger than sheâd like.
She shifted and a bird swooped right past the porch. She glanced at the feathered creature as it landed on one of the feeders. It piped out part of a song, almost saying thank you, dug its beak into the wire mesh to snag a piece of food, and then flew off.
âI knew I heard aâ¦â Chase said.
She looked back at him. He had the binoculars plastered to his eyes, and when he lowered them, his expression looked victorious. âThat birdâs not supposed to be here now,â he said.
She almost grinned at his enthusiasm. âNot a birder, huh?â
He didnât really appear embarrassed, just caught. âMaybe a little. But it was forced on me. My mom was an avid birder. She dragged me to bird-watching events four or five times a year.â
Della heard devotion in his voice when he talked about the woman whoâd raised him the first fourteen years of his life, and it made her realize how little she knew about this guy. Not exactly her fault. Heâd been secretive from the beginning.
And still was. Her gut said he knew more about who had sent him to check on her and Chan. And that someone could be the one person Della was searching for: her uncle. Sheâd recently learned her dadâs brother was a vampire whoâd faked his own death years ago, and she wondered if heâd made contact with Chase.
She wasnât going to forget that she didnât completely trust Chase. Hopefully, if they collaborated with the Vampire Council, she might get answers there. Hell, her uncle could even be one of the council members. That thought sent a wave of urgency to get this case startedâto find Natasha and to find her own answers.
Â
Chapter Twelve
Another bird swooped past, and awkwardness slipped into the moment. Della and Chase stood there on the huge front porch, gazes locked, each lost in their own thoughts.
She focused back on the trees and asked another question. âDid this place belong to your parents?â When he didnât answer right away, she looked at him.
âNo,â he said, watching the bird feeders. âThough my mom would have loved it.â
And, just like that, in spite of just telling herself she didnât trust him, she felt herself wanting to know more. More about his past life, his present. That desire suddenly felt wrong and dangerous. Forbidden. An image of Steve flashed in her head as guilt sat on the edge of her heart.
She swallowed the uncomfortable feeling down her throat and remembered why she was here. âWe should look at those files.â
His right brow arched ever
Jules Verne
Claudie Arseneault
Missy Martine
Betty Ren Wright
Patricia H. Rushford
Tom Godwin, edited by Eric Flint
Hannah Ford
Andi Van
Nikki Duncan
Tantoo Cardinal