he could have her. He had tasted her desire ful y. But once he was finished with her, she would have no memory of him.
No memory of his touch. His kiss.
His name…
Her body would only soothe his for a few minutes.
It would do nothing to ease the loneliness in his heart that yearned for someone to remember him.
“Good-bye, my sweet,” he whispered, touching her lightly on the cheek before he turned around.
He would remember their kiss forever.
She wouldn’t recal him at al …
Cassandra couldn’t move as the Dark-Hunter walked away from her.
By the time he had vanished into the night, she had completely forgotten he’d ever existed.
“How did I get out here?” she asked as she wrapped her arms around her to banish the biting cold.
Her teeth chattering, she ran back into the bar.
Chapter 2
Wulf was stil thinking of the unknown woman when he pul ed his dark green Expedition into his five-car garage. He frowned at the sight of the red Hummer parked against the far wal , and turned his car off.
What the hel was Chris doing home? He was supposed to be spending the night at his girlfriend’s house.
Wulf went inside to find out.
He found Chris in the living room, putting together a huge… something. It had metal ic arms and things that reminded him of a poorly designed robot.
Chris’s wavy black hair was sticking out in front as if he’d been tugging at it in frustration. There were parts and papers strewn al over the room, along with various tools.
Wulf watched in wry amusement as Chris battled the long, metal ic post he was trying to fit into the base.
As Chris worked, one of the arms fel and smacked him on the head.
Cursing, he dropped the post.
Wulf laughed. “Been watching QVC again?”
Chris rubbed the back of his head as he kicked at the base. “Don’t start with me, Wulf.”
“Boy,” Wulf said sternly, “you better check that tone.”
“Yeah, yeah, ya scare me,” Chris said irritably. “I’m even wetting my pants while in your terrifying, gut-wrenching presence. See me shiver and quiver? Ooo, ahhh, ooo.” Wulf shook his head at his Squire. The boy had no sense whatsoever to taunt him. “I knew I should have taken you out in the woods as an infant and left you there to die.” Chris snorted. “Ooo, nasty Viking humor. I’m actual y surprised my father didn’t have to present me to you for inspection at birth. Good thing you couldn’t afford the barnautbur[?]dr , huh?” Wulf glared at him—not that he thought for one second it would do any good. It was only force of habit.
“Just because you’re the last of my bloodline doesn’t mean I have to put up with you.”
“Yeah, I love you, too, Big Guy.” Chris went back to his project.
Wulf shrugged his coat off, then draped it over the back of his couch. “I swear, I’m going to cancel our cable subscription if you keep this up. Last week it was the weight bench and rowing machine. Yesterday that facial thing, and now this. Have you seen the crap in the attic? It looks like a rummage sale.”
“This is different.”
Wulf rol ed his eyes. He’d heard that one before. “What the hel is it, anyway?” Chris didn’t pause as he set the arm back up. “It’s a sun lamp. I thought you might be tired of your pasty-pale complexion.”
He looked at him drol y. Thanks to his mother’s dark Gaulish genes, Wulf wasn’t real y pale, especial y given the fact that he hadn’t been in daylight in over a thousand years. “Christopher, I happen to be a Viking in the middle of winter in Minnesota. Lack of a deep tan goes with the whole Nordic territory. Why do you think we raided Europe anyway?”
“Because it was there?”
“No, we wanted to thaw out.”
Chris flipped him off. “Just wait, you’l thank me for this once I get it hooked up.” Wulf stepped over the pieces. “Why are you here, screwing with this? I thought you had a date tonight.”
“I did, but twenty minutes after I got to her place, Pam broke up
Janwillem van de Wetering