Forbidden Territory & Forbidden Temptation: Forbidden Territory / Forbidden Temptation. Paula Graves

Forbidden Territory & Forbidden Temptation: Forbidden Territory / Forbidden Temptation - Paula  Graves


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muscles bunched as a burst of adrenaline flushed through his system. “You saw her this morning at school?”

      “No, not at the school.” Her voice faded.

      “Then where? Away from school?” Had Ms. Herrera been wrong? Had Lily slipped away from the meeting, after all?

      The silence on Lily Browning’s end of the line dragged on for several seconds. McBride stifled the urge to throw the phone across the room. “Ms. Browning, where did you see Abby Walters?”

      He heard a deep, quivery breath. “In my mind,” she said.

      McBride slumped in his chair, caught flat-footed by her answer. It wasn’t at all what he’d expected.

      A witness, sure. A suspect—even better. But a psychic?

      Bloody hell.

      CHAPTER TWO

      HEAVY SILENCE GREETED Lily’s answer.

      “Are you there?” She clutched the phone, her stomach cramping.

      “I’m here.” His tight voice rumbled over the phone. “And you should know we don’t pay psychics for information.”

      “Pay?”

      “That’s why you’re calling, isn’t it?” His words were clipped and diamond hard. “What’s your usual fee, a hundred an hour? Two hundred?”

      “I don’t have a fee,” she responded, horrified.

      “So you’re in it for the publicity.”

      “No!” She slammed down the phone, pain blooming like a poisonous flower behind her eyes.

      The couch cushion shifted beside her and a furry head bumped against her elbow. Lily dropped one hand to stroke the cat’s brown head. “Oh, Delilah, that was a mistake.”

      The Siamese cat made a soft prrrupp sound and butted her head against Lily’s chin. Jezebel joined them on the sofa, poking her nose into Lily’s ribs. Groaning, she nudged the cats off her lap and staggered to her feet. Half-blinded by the migraine, she made her way down the hall to her bedroom.

      The headaches had never been as bad back home in Willow Grove, with her sister Iris always around to brew up a cup of buckbean tea and work her healing magic. But Willow Grove was one hour and a million light-years away.

      The phone rang. Lily started to let the answering machine get it when she saw Iris’s face float across the blackness of her mind. She fumbled for the phone. “Iris?”

      Her sister’s warm voice trembled with laughter. “I’m minding my own business, drying some lavender, and suddenly I get an urge to call you. So, Spooky, what do you need?”

      The warm affection in her voice brought tears to Lily’s eyes. “Buckbean tea and a little TLC.”

      “Did you have a vision?” Iris’s voice held no laughter now.

      “A bad one.” Lily told her sister about Abby Walters. “The detective on the case thinks I’m a lunatic.” She didn’t want to examine why that fact bothered her. She was used to being considered crazy. Why should McBride’s opinion matter?

      “What can I do to help?” Iris asked.

      “Does your magic work over the phone?”

      Iris laughed. “It’s not magic, you know. It’s just—”

      “A gift. I know.” That’s what their mother had always called it. Iris’s gift. Or Rose’s or Lily’s.

      Lily called hers a curse. Seeing terrified little girls crying for their daddies. Broken bodies at the bottom of a ditch, rain swirling away the last vestiges of their lifeblood. Her own father’s life snuffed out in a saw-mill across town—

      “Stop it, Lily.” Her sister’s voice was low and strangled. “It’s too much all at once.”

      Lily tried to close off her memories, knowing that her sister’s empathic gift came with its own pain. “I’m sorry.”

      Iris took a deep breath. “Do you want me to come there?”

      “No, I’m feeling better.” Not a complete lie, Lily thought. Her headache had eased a little. Just a little. “Sorry I called you away from your lavender.”

      Iris laughed. “Sometimes I listen to us talk and understand why people think the Browning sisters are crazy.”

      Lily laughed through the pain. “I’ll visit soon, okay? Meanwhile, don’t you or Rose get yourselves run out of town.”

      Iris’s wry laughter buzzed across the line. “Or burned at the stake.” She said goodbye and hung up.

      Lily lay back against the pillow, her head pounding. Jezebel rubbed her face against Lily’s, whiskers tickling her nose. “Oh, Jezzy, today went so wrong.” She closed her eyes against the light trickling in through the narrow gap between her bedroom curtains, trying to empty her mind. Sleep would be the best cure for her headache. But sleep meant dreams.

      And after a vision, Lily’s dreams were always nightmares.

      * * *

      BY FIVE O’CLOCK, the sun sat low in the western sky, casting a rosy glow over the small gray-and-white house across the street from McBride’s parked car. He peered through the car window, wishing he were anywhere but here.

      When Lily Browning had hung up the phone, his first sensation had been relief. One more wacko off his back. Then he’d remembered Andrew Walters’s demand and his own grudging agreement. Call it following every lead, he thought with a grim smile. He exited the vehicle and headed across the street.

      Lily Browning’s house was graveyard quiet as he walked up the stone pathway. A cool October night was falling, sending a chill up his spine as he peered through the narrow gap in the curtains hanging in the front window.

      No movement. No sounds.

      He pressed the doorbell and heard a muted buzz from inside.

       What are you going to say to her—stay the hell away from Andrew Walters or I’ll throw you in jail?

      Wouldn’t it be nice if he could?

      He cocked his ear, listening for her approach. Nothing but silence. As he lifted his hand to the buzzer again, he heard the dead bolt turn. The door opened about six inches to reveal a shadowy interior and Lily Browning’s tawny eyes.

      “Detective McBride.” She slurred the words a bit.

      “May I come in? I have some questions.”

      Her face turned to stone. “I have nothing to tell you.”

      McBride nudged his way forward. “Humor me.”

      She moved aside to let him in, late afternoon sun pouring through the open doorway, painting her with soft light. Her eyes narrowed to slits, and she skittered back into the darkened living room, leaving him to close the door.

      Inside, murky shadows draped the cozy living room with darkness. When McBride’s eyes finally adjusted to the low light, he saw Lily standing a few feet in front of him, as if to block him from advancing any farther.

      “I told you everything I know on the phone,” she said.

      He shook his head. “Not quite.”

      Her chest rose and fell in a deep sigh. Finally, she gestured toward the sofa against the wall. “Have a seat.”

      McBride sat where she indicated. As his eyes adjusted further to the darkened interior, he saw that Lily Browning looked even paler than she had at school earlier that day. She’d scrubbed off what little makeup she’d worn, and pulled her dark hair into a thick ponytail. Despite the cool October afternoon, she wore a sleeveless white T-shirt


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