Page 8
Story: Hell’s Gator (Legacy #4)
Hellen rolled over and stretched her body this way and that before she even fully woke.
Her nose began to twitch and she managed to pry one eye open as her brain and her stomach enticed her to consciousness.
She lay in her bed, trying to figure out why someone was cooking in her house, and couldn’t make the least bit of sense out of it.
Very, very quietly she slipped out of bed, pausing beside her closed bedroom door to take hold of a baseball bat she’d been jokingly gifted by Havoc.
Inscribed on the bat was the name ‘Hell’s Hell Tamer’.
She grasped the bat and crept stealthily up the hallway toward her kitchen, bat held at the ready just over her right shoulder.
The sight that greeted her almost took her breath away.
Long, luxurious black hair caressing his muscular, tanned back, jeans riding so low on his hips that she all but could see the dimples just above his ass cheeks.
She almost lost her breath, but not quite.
Her irritation at finding him still in her kitchen, cooking her food, and acting like he had every right to be there, kind of pissed her off again.
“You gonna use that, cher, or you just gonna carry it around just in case the feeling strikes you?”
“Why are you still here cooking my food and acting like you belong here? I thought we decided last night there was no reason for you to be here.”
“I decided no such thing. And I’m crushed. Here I was thinking we’d formed a truce of sorts,” Lucien said, turning around to smile that devil’s wicked smile at her.
Her eyes swept up and down his body, unable to help noticing that even his feet were sexy.
The scars his body bore did nothing to detract from his beauty — they just made him look more dangerous.
She closed her eyes for a moment to get her suddenly jumbled thoughts organized again, then opened her eyes only to find him smirking at her as he patiently waited.
“You alright?”
“I’m fine. Where did you find jeans? You were wearing a rain jacket last night.”
“I went to return your cousin’s rain jacket and met a very nice lady named Tempest. And yes, she’s the pregnant one.
She,” he lifted his hand, still holding the spatula in his grip and twirled it in the air to indicate the magic Tempest was perfectly capable of, “whipped me up some clothes. She said I shouldn’t be walking around naked.
She didn’t say so, but I’m thinking she’s afraid her boyo will be a little unsettled at all this manliness walking around his land,” he said, snickering.
“Boyo? His name is Brandt, and he’s our Alpha. Not to mention, he’s family. We all are, for the most part. And she is his mate.”
“I don’t know, she was enjoying getting a little peek at what is now safely tucked away beneath my jeans. If you know what I’m saying,” he teased.
“Know what you’re saying? Yeah, I know what you’re saying. You’re saying that you’re going to get your ass whipped and left for dead and if nobody’s as stupid as I was when I found you, you’ll really end up dead. Because I’m not doing it again.”
“Oh, cher, you don’t want to save me? I’d save you,” he said, deep blue eye focusing on her with such intensity that it made parts she’d not stopped thinking of since he’d sauntered into her bathroom the previous night remind her yet again that they’d really like some attention.
“You messed around with the wrong male’s female, didn’t you? That’s why they messed you up so badly? Can’t believe I felt sorry for you.”
He grew somber suddenly, turning his back to her to flip the potatoes, onions, and peppers he was sauteing. “That’s what you think of me?” he asked, all traces of mirth gone from his voice.
“I don’t know what to think of you, Lucien.
All I know is I did all I could to save you.
All you did was hiss and growl at me the entire time.
Even hissed at me when I told you I’d be back, and to wait for me.
When I got back you were gone, and you’ve been in the wind for two months — trust me, I know, I checked for signs of you often.
Then you show up here acting like we’re long lost friends.
You’re wickedly sexy and you know it, and you’re using it to underscore every flirtatious thing you say.
The things in my life that mean a lot to me, my family, my Alpha, my home, you totally disregard and make light of.
So, I’m not sure what to think of you. Or if I even should be thinking of you at all.
I’m leaning more and more toward it’s probably for the best if you just go away. ”
Lucien reached for the bowl of half a dozen eggs he’d already cracked and scrambled, and poured them over the onions, peppers and potatoes.
He scrambled the entire skillet of food until it was fully cooked, then plated it along with a full pound of Andouille sausage that had been split and seared.
He tossed a dozen flour tortillas into the skillet one after the other and quickly warmed them before putting them on their own plate and moved it all to the table.
He moved slowly, the soreness in his muscles evident, though he pretended he was fine.
He returned to the kitchen and took a large bowl filled with sliced bananas, sliced strawberries, sectioned grapefruit wedges and put it on the table with the food he’d already put out, then returned for the orange juice and coffee.
Once all was on the table he stood behind her chair and pulled it out for her, watching her, patiently waiting for her to accept his invitation to sit at her own table.
Hellen noticed the quivering of the muscles over his ribs and realized he was fighting the urge to stretch his body, and give in to the desire to do whatever his body told him to do to alleviate the pain.
She pursed her lips together as she started toward him, shaking her head.
She sat down and allowed him to scoot her chair closer to the table, watching as he took his own seat.
He picked up his fork, took an uneasy breath, and sat there for a second before he raised his gaze to look her in the eye.
“I suppose I should apologize for my demeanor when you were the only one that even considered coming to my aid. I am indebted to you. But I find it hard to do. Simple truth is that I’m as dumbfounded at what to do with you as you are at what to do with me.
You’re something else, Hell. Something I never imagined existed, much less would come across in my lifetime.
” He continued looking into her eyes, his gaze so intense she actually wanted to look away, but as a matter of pride, she didn’t.
“I never wanted a mate. Never looked for one after I turned a certain age, and most certainly never expected one to drag my mostly dead body out of the swamp and try to bury me alive,” he smiled at her as he threw in a slight tease.
“I don’t know what to do with you. My intentions were to come here, find you, see for myself that you’re not what I thought you’d be, and get you out of my system once and for all.
But now that I’m here, I find I can’t quite make myself leave.
So now I don’t know what to do with me either.
” He shook his head as he reached for the bowl of fruit and used the large serving spoon balanced in it to fill the small bowl near her plate he’d put out while she was still sleeping.
“For now I’m just going by my instincts to feed you, protect you, make sure you have what you need, while at the same time ignoring my other instincts that tell me to get my ass to the swamp and get as far away from you as I possibly can. ”
“Why don’t you?” she asked quietly.
“I don’t know, cher. Seems I’m at odds with myself, and for the first time in a long, long time, my conscience is telling me that I should care about somebody other than myself.”
“And that’s a problem,” she said.
He huffed a laugh. “It is when you didn’t know you even had a conscience.”
Hellen picked up an Andouille link and held it delicately between her thumb and forefinger as she took one small bite at a time, chewing thoughtfully as she ate and watched him do his best not to watch her.
“Maybe it’s best if you just go, then.”
“If you make me go, I’ll just camp out in your yard.”
“If that happens, my clan will just make you leave.”
“And if they try that, there will be trouble.”
She raised her eyebrows in question.
“Look, I don’t want no trouble with your people.
I don’t, for real. What I want is,” he stopped and shook his head, “no, that’s wrong.
What I need, is to be near you. I don’t mean your people any harm.
I don’t mean you any harm, quite the contrary actually, I’ll kill somebody over you.
But I don’t know what I think I see coming from all this either.
I just know I need to be here.” He shrugged. “I can’t go.”
He sat there, watching her, waiting for her to make a decision about what would happen with them because he certainly wasn’t capable of it at this particular point in time.
Hellen sat there, munching on her sausage link, maintaining eye contact with him as she kept her thoughts to herself.
Finally, she popped the last bite into her mouth and brushed her hands off on the paper towel he’d placed her silverware on.
She took a deep breath letting it out slowly before she looked up at him again.
“Well, what I do know is that I don’t like my family in my business.
They are over-protective, though, so if I kick you out that’s just an unspoken invitation for them to be all up in my business.
That I don’t need.” She sighed deeply, exaggeratedly.
“And since you’ve made it clear you’re not going away soon, I guess it’s in everybody’s best interests if you just hang around inside for a while. ”
He nodded slowly. “Makes sense to me.”
Table of Contents
- Page 1
- Page 2
- Page 3
- Page 4
- Page 5
- Page 6
- Page 7
- Page 8 (Reading here)
- Page 9
- Page 10
- Page 11
- Page 12
- Page 13
- Page 14
- Page 15
- Page 16
- Page 17
- Page 18
- Page 19
- Page 20
- Page 21
- Page 22
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- Page 24
- Page 25
- Page 26
- Page 27
- Page 28
- Page 29
- Page 30
- Page 31
- Page 32
- Page 33
- Page 34
- Page 35
- Page 36
- Page 37
- Page 38
- Page 39
- Page 40
- Page 41