Page 8 of The First Sin


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“The day I won’t keep a pretty girl like you company is the day they seal me in my tomb. Need anything outta there?” He jerks a thumb at Lucille, and I reach in to grabmy duffle and hoodie, my lips repeating his words silently and then aloud.

“Seal you in your tomb? What, are you a vampire or something?”

His lips kick up at the corners and he takes the duffle from me.

“I can carry that?—”

“Not when I’m around. And no, not a vampire, although I wouldn’t say no to sucking on your neck.”

I’m horrified to feel myself blushing. I haven’t blushed since I was ten years old, for Chrissake. “So what’s this business about a tomb, Mr. Non-Vampire?”

He opens the back door of his truck on the passenger side and tosses the bag in, then opens the front door to the cab and gestures. “Up you go.”

I haven’t had a dude open a door for me since…ever…but I decide to let it go, and climb into the truck, settling myself in the plush interior and strapping in as he walks around and then climbs in, himself.

What a day. What a year.

What a fucking life, only to end up here.

“Down here near the Gulf, our water table is so high that in-ground graves are not a good idea. Results in flooding and messed-up remains,you see.”

Ah.

“Got it. Thank you.”

With a quick over-the-shoulder check of traffic, Shiloh pulls out onto the highway and places a hands-free call.

“’Lo, you got Murray.”

“Murray, it’s Shiloh. Got a pick up for you, out on Highway…”

Listening with half an ear, I peer out the window as the scenery flashes by in a blur of green that seems so out of place given the winter gray of Chicago. It’s a different world down here, one populated by an eternal summer and people who speak with nothing but vowels.

I glance over at Shiloh, who’s disconnecting his call.

I’d like to buy a vowel, Alex.

“Thanks,” I say softly.

“Sure.”

“Not that I couldn’t have made a call myself.”

“Hey, Yank.”

I just look at him.

“It was my pleasure. Now, what do you like to eat?” Shiloh continues. “They have this café that serves good sandwiches and burgers and stuff, and…”

I wait.

He side-eyes me.

“And?”

“And they have this café that serves great sandwiches and burgers and stuff.”

“Ha. You’re a funny one, Shiloh. The café sounds good.”