abrupt departure. But then I flushed. He thought he had set her off. Crap on toast, he thought he had set her offâmeaning . . .
Stop it, Rachel. âUm, sheâs fine,â I said, not wanting to say no and have him guess that I had set her off, not him. âYou donât mind driving, do you? My car is in impound.â His eyes went wide in question, and I added, âLong story. Not my fault. Iâll tell you in the car.â He almost laughed, and I could have smacked him. âSo where are we going, anyway?â
âI told you. Bowling.â
âFine. Donât tell me.â He was still smiling and I lagged behind as we passed through the sanctuary, the light from the TV a dim glow as Jenksâs youngest watched a wildlife documentary. Bowling. Was he serious? What kind of contacts could he make bowling ?
Trentâs pace was graceful and smooth, his fingers trailing along the smooth finish of the pool table. It was all I had left to remind me of Kisten, and I watched Trentâs fingers until they slipped off the end. âSo what did Al say?â he asked.
To leave you alone, I thought, and seeing my frown, Trent added, âIt was tampered with, wasnât it?â
âOh!â I forced a smile. âNo,â I said as we entered the unlit foyer, pulse quickening when the scent of wine and cinnamon seemed to grow stronger in the dark. âIt was fine,â I murmured. âAl says the charm was overstimulated, not misfired. Iâm guessing it is the same thing that caused the rest of the misfires today. Howâs your employee?â
âHeâll be okay with minimal hospitalization. The safety measures in place saved his sight, but if it had happened anywhere else it might have . . . taken out a room.â His words trailed off in thought as he reached before me to open the door. âOverstimulated? That makes more sense than misfires. I had a couple more incidents come in this afternoon. Little things, but I sent Quen all the data I could find. He says the misfires are localized into a narrow band that seems to be stemming from, ah . . . Loveland?â
His voice was hesitant, expression doubly so in the faint light from the sign over the door, and I nodded, glad heâd figured it out and I wouldnât have to bring it up. Not many people knew that the ley line just outside the old castle was less than a year old and made by meâby accident. âI asked Al while I was there. We went out to look, and thereâs nothing wrong with my line.â
âOh!â His smile was oddly relieved as he pointed his fob at the car at the curb, and it started up. It was one of his sportier two-doors, and he liked his gadgets almost as much as he liked driving fast. âYouâre already ahead of me on this. Good. That frees up our conversation tonight. Iâd like to wedge something to eat into the schedule too.â He hesitated, one step down. âThat is, if you donât have other plans.â
I eyed him, not sure why the hint of pleasure in his voice. âI could eat, sure.â He still hadnât told me where we were really going, and I closed the door behind me. We could lock it only from the inside, but who would steal from a Tamwood vampire and Cincinnatiâs only day-walking demon? Scuffing down the shallow steps, I headed for Trentâs car, only to jerk to a halt when he unexpectedly reached before me to open the door with a grand flourish.
Weâre going bowling, I thought sarcastically as I got in. Right. Trent shut the door, and the solid thump of German engineering echoed down our quiet street. I watched Trent through the side mirror as he came around the back of the car, his pace fast and eager. I fidgeted as he got in, the small car putting us closer than usual. I leaned to put my bag in the tiny space behind the seat, and Trent was holding himself with a closed stiffness when I