Chasing Midnight. Susan Krinard
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Griffin slowed to a walk, keeping on eye on the muggers as he edged toward the garbage cans. “Are you all right?” he called.
“Yes,” came the muffled female voice.
Joe’s friend glared at Griffin, passing his knife from hand to hand. “What we got here, Joe? Some cakeeater who’s lost his way to the Cotton Club?”
“Sure looks thatway, Fritz,” Joe said. He rubbed his thumb along the ugly scar that ran from the corner of his eye to his chin. “Listen, chump, and take some friendly advice. Get outta here and mind your own business.”
“That’s right,” Joe said with a grin, “or me ‘n’ Fritz’ll carve you up real nice.”
“It seems we’re at an impasse,” Griffin said. “But I’ll give you one chance to avoid possible serious injury. Leave now.”
Joe and Fritz exchanged incredulous glances. Fritz dropped his shoulders and hung his head as if in defeat. Joe lowered his knife. They held their submissive poses for all of five seconds before Fritz attacked.
Griffin closed his eyes. It would have been so easy then to become the wolf, and take these hoodlums down with teeth and claws and sheer lupine strength. So easy to lapse into the killer’s mind that had so often consumed him during the War, when he had taken revenge on those who’d slain his men in battle.
But he wouldn’t give in. Not this time. Not while he had the safety of the civilized world around him.
Griffin caught Fritz’s arm on its downward swing, applied a little pressure and neatly snapped the hoodlum’s wrist. Fritz’s shriek filled the alley like a siren. Griffin kicked his knife away and gently sidestepped Joe’s charge. He slipped up behind Joe before the mugger could catch his balance, seized his waistband and collar and tossed him into a thick heap of refuse piled in the corner.
“I’ll kill her!”
Griffin looked up. Fritz was standing with one arm hanging limp at his side and the other wrapped around the young woman’s throat, the edge of a switchblade pressed against her delicate skin.
The victimwas none other than Miss Louise Moreau.
She met Griffin’s gaze, her eyes brave and calm in spite of her precarious situation. Griffin nodded slightly and returned his attention to Fritz.
“Let her go,” he said softly, “and I may let you live.”
Fritz tried to laugh and only managed a squeak. “Make one move,” he growled, “and I’ll slit her throat.”
“You’ll do nothing of the kind,” Griffin said. “You see, you’re much too slow to stop me, Fritz. I’ll reach you before you can so much as twitch your little finger.”
“You’re crazy.” Fritz licked his lips. “I’ve got—”
He never finished his sentence. Griffin crossed the space between them in one leap, wrenched the switchblade from Fritz’s hand and flung him against the brick wall. Fritz slumped to the ground. Griffin grabbed Miss Moreau just as she began to fall and guided her to one of the empty crates.
“Sit down, Miss Moreau,” he said. “I’ll make sure these men are incapable of any further mischief.”
Miss Moreau took a deep breath. “Thank you so much, Mr. Durant.”
He squeezed her arm and walked back into the shadows, his legs shaking with reaction from the fight and the memories it had evoked. Joe still lay unconscious in the refuse heap; Griffin found a bit of rope and tied his hands behind his back. A moaning Fritz lay where he’d fallen, nursing his wrist. He wouldn’t be molesting anyone soon.
Just as he finished tying Fritz’s ankles together, Griffin sensed a sudden, unexpected motion behind him. He jumped to his feet and found himself staring into the concealed face of awoman, her head and body swathed in dark veils and a black velvet coat that fell to her ankles. Her tantalizing scent seeped into Griffin’s skin and raced through his blood like a dangerous drug.
“Lou,” the woman said, crouching to take Miss Moreau’s hands, “are you all right?”
Miss Moreau passed a shaking hand over her hair. “I’m fine, Allie. Thanks to this gentleman.”
The woman—Allie—scrutinized Miss Moreau’s face and touched the narrow line of blood at the base of her neck. “They hurt you.”
“It’s nothing. I’d just like to go home.”
“Of course. Just give me a minute.” Allie rose, glanced toward the hobbled men and then fixed her attention on Griffin. “I owe you one, mister,” she said in a voice half silk and half steel, “but I can handle it from here.”
Griffin shook himself—hard. “I beg your pardon, Miss—”
“You don’t have to beg anything. Just leave the rest to me.”
His equilibrium somewhat restored, Griffin turned back to Miss Moreau. “Is this the employer of whom you spoke?”
“Yes.” She began to rise. “Mr. Durant, may I present Miss Allegra Chase. Allegra—”
“Sit down, Lou, before you fall down,” Miss Allegra Chase said sharply. She faced Griffin again. “What’s your name?”
He tipped his hat, not without a touch of irony. “Griffin Durant.”
“Oh, yes…the morally upright multimillionaire.” Her mockery belied her terse thanks. “Well, Mr. Durant, if you’d like to keep playing the gentleman, you could do me a favor and escort Lou out to the street until I’ve finished here.”
Griffin’s bemusement turned to foreboding. “Finished with what, Miss Chase?”
“Merely what you started. Making sure these hoodlums don’t try this kind of thing again.”
Griffin stood very still, studying Miss Chase with astonishment. Such a casual reference to confronting a pair of street toughs would ordinarily have seemed absurd coming from a female swathed in a trailing black coat and tottering on high-heeled pumps. She was petite, her head hardly reaching his shoulder, yet the swiftness of her appearance and the way she’d taken him by surprise spoke volumes; he’d been caught off guard thatway only a few times in his life, and never by an ordinary woman.
Nevertheless…
“I would prefer not to leave you alone, Miss Chase,” he said firmly.
The blue-green eyes behind her veil glinted red. “Are your kind always so protective of people they’ve never met?”
Your kind. So she knew, as she must realize that he recognized her inhuman nature.
“I don’t regard a situation like this as a matter of species,” he said. “I wouldn’t leave any woman with men such as these…not even one of your kind.”