“Yes, Kane.”
He released her and stood up, and then turned around and fixed Raven with his baleful eye. He folded his arms and waited, the tips of two fangs showing.
All the burning glee she’d felt as she’d watched Sue-Eye get her chewing-out froze over in an instant. Raven couldn’t meet his steady gaze for long. “I’m sorry,” she mumbled. “I did start it. I hit her first.” She tried to brace herself for the blow she knew she’d earned.
She saw one of his hands curl into a fist, but then it relaxed and gripped his bicep again. “You’re sick,” he grunted. “I forgive you. But you’re scratching me, Raven. Watch yourself.”
He started moving. Raven and Sue-Eye followed, side by side, filling the heavy summer air with silent hate.
*
It was a dead party. So maybe it beat staying at home, but it was still a dead party. Too hot, for one thing, and the boys kept going on about how great it would be to get a bonfire going. A bonfire, for Christ’s sake. Kati could just see that spitting out of control and eating up the whole damn forest, and even if it didn’t, she kept having to point out that they’d have a ranger out here faster than Domino’s could deliver a pizza, and who was planning on paying the fine? All this common sense made the boys pissy, which in turn made Kati pissy, and which was why she was here, sitting on the fallen tree christened the ‘party log’ and guarding the heap of deadfall the boys had gathered while practically everyone else was down at the river having fun.
Fun. Splashing around in that pathetic trickle and tripping all over the cracked, log-strewn bank that used to be the river’s borders. Just like a bunch of kids. Hell, most of them really were kids, still in high school. Buncha babies. Not like Kati, who’d already put one year of community college under her belt and could put another one there easy if she wanted to. Maybe when summer was over. If she didn’t have anything else to do.
The pounding headache that Riffer called music finally, thankfully came to an end, and Kati helped herself to another bottle of beer to celebrate the silence. She was on her third sip when Riffer came up from the water to put on a fresh disc. Joy. Another one of his amateur DJ mix CDs, all alternative shit with heavy drums and sitars and strange-ass shit with lyrics no one could understand. In Riffer’s mind, anything that actually played on the radio was for sell-outs. He didn’t seem to realize that everyone around him hated this crap and was only too polite to say so because he brought, along with his bullshit CDs, many bags of reefer. It was good reefer, too, but the music gave Kati a headache.
Still…
She gave Riffer a wave, hoping to coax him over and keep her company for a while. He was just a kid—not even a college kid, but just out of high school, for fuck’s sake!—but he was a good-looking kid, and Tabby said he was pretty well hung for a guy with no pubes.
No luck. Riffer waved back and then galloped off over the edge to splash down in the dried-up river. Dumb kid. Who needed him?
Dead party.
She couldn’t even say it would get better later, because they were practically all here now, all except for the ones who were off at summer classes or riding around in RVs with their families. There were even a couple people here who didn’t belong. Ray had showed up just a little bit ago with his kid brother Danny and both their girlfriends, leading a second car full of cousins, none of whom had even looked at her because Tabby had chosen that exact moment to strip off her shirt and run down to the river. And she couldn’t really just say ‘fuck you’ and leave, either, because she’d tagged along with Owen and Corky, and they’d gotten their Bake on and gone into the woods hours ago.
Mmm. Bake sounded pretty good, actually. It was the only thing Kati’d ever tried that never ever took you on a bad trip. No, it was all pretty pictures and great fake sex, although god knew, the fuck-buddies Bake could dream up were often exceedingly strange.
Kati got up and went to the goodie-stash in the red cooler, and fished through Slim Jims, Twinkies, Riffer’s reefer (Mr. Smiley stickers wrapping each and every rolled joint), Doritos, and finally found a baggie of Baked Alaska down at the bottom. She helped herself to a gumdrop of mouthwash-colored delight, popped it in her pipe and sat back down on the party log to get groovy.
The flames burned green, and Kati watched them distractedly, now tapping her feet along with Riffer’s impossible and obnoxious music without realizing it. Finally, the transformation she’d been waiting for: The Bake went instantly from jelly to syrup and then to vapor, and she sucked in a hot/cold breath of bliss.
Peace was a velvet glove with a horseshoe in it, clopping upside of her head and then sticking there, melting slowly down into her skin and through her blood. Good shit. She felt horny already.
Kati tucked her pipe away and retrieved her beer. She was in no real hurry. Probably as soon as one of the guys wandered up for a beer and saw her all dopey and grinning, he’d come over and get it on. There was nothing more arousing to the male mind than a girl blitzed out of her senses. And hell, she’d probably think she was getting banged by a talking tree by that point. Baked Alaska…fucking great!
Movement at the corner of her eye attracted her attention. She swiveled around and watched as three people she didn’t know came out of the woods. Two girls, one of them definitely too old for this scene, and a guy. Big guy, also no kid, not even a college kid, but no ranger, either. Gym-baby by the looks of him, in his best Matrix costume, all long coat and shiny pants and no shirt on, but he was sure built for it, so Kati wasn’t complaining.
Kati got up and headed over, still in the lazy stages of early high, to check him out close up. He was a big boy, tall and broad and muscles all over. He had a hard, plastic-looking suitcase or something on a strap slung over one shoulder, and he kept one hand resting on it. His chest was hairless, glassy with sweat, and Kati bit the tip of her finger coyly, resisting the urge to walk her hand up and down that interesting road.
“What’s up, stranger?” she said, flipping her hair back with practiced indifference.
The guy looked her over, giving one of his girls—the young one with purple hair—a nudge towards the shade. Purple wandered off and sat down on the ugly old couch Ray had dragged out here at the start of summer. She wrapped her arms around her stomach and curled up, looking flushed and pale and miserable. Neither the guy nor his blonde companion looked too concerned. Bad shit, was Kati’s guess. That happened.
“Haven’t seen you around,” Kati continued, her eyes traveling the intriguingly mountainous terrain of the front of his shiny pants. “Passing through?”
“Hunting,” the guy said. His voice was low and relaxed. Friendly.
Kati made it up to his face at last. Not bad. Weird beard, but he made up for it with good looks and a clear complexion. His eyes were black. Really black. To Kati’s pleasantly-baked brain, they almost looked like horse’s eyes, so black they had no white around them at all. He wasn’t looking at her, either. His gaze skipped around where the music blared out into the empty clearing.
“It’s the wrong season for hunting,” Kati told him. “You bad boy.”
Now he looked at her, his brows rising.
“Maybe you like getting into trouble,” she said, and winked.
His expression didn’t change, but he blew out a short, soundless laugh. There was interest in his gaze, but it wasn’t the kind Kati was used to seeing in a guy. It was more like the interest of a boy for a new kind of bug.
“What’s your name?” she asked, sipping at her beer and licking lightly at the opening of the bottle.