Read Alix (The Coven's Grove Chronicles #1) Online

Authors: Virginia Hunter

Tags: #Warlock, #fantasy, #Urban Fantasy, #Demon, #Wizard, #sorcery, #Paranormal Romance, #shifter, #mage, #Magic, #shapeshifter, #Top 10 Paranormal Romance, #Witch, #Thriller, #Steamy, #Sex

Alix (The Coven's Grove Chronicles #1) (2 page)

A
lix hadn’t always been gifted. In fact, she hadn’t been or done much of anything until after she’d turned sixteen—that’s when things had really gone to shit. Nine years had passed since that fateful day, but her situation only seemed to worsen year after year. Until a couple years ago that is.

She set the outline for one of the shop’s standard tats on her desk, and then poured cherry-red ink into the well of her tattoo machine. Two clients, twitterpated fools that they were, had come into the shop wanting to commemorate their never-ending love by having matching hearts forever embedded into their skin. At least she had convinced them to not use their names.

“You want it here?” Alix pointed to the back of the girl’s left shoulder.

The smooth-skinned, spunky blond, managed to pull her eyes away from her Prince Charming long enough to smile, and nod.

“Okay, here we go,” Alix said, as she set the bottle of ink next to her ceramic Buddha. She’d picked him up somewhere along her travels on the East Coast. He was a cute, little fat guy she hadn’t been able to part with. The chubby god had been the first thing she’d stolen after her mother died. Her dad had been gone for years, but her mother... Well, she had stayed to fight the good fight, raising a child on her own in a sea of single mothers trying to do the same. Alix knew she had done the best she could. The two of them never had much in the way of money or nice things, but they’d had each other. For a time, at least.

“Ouch!” The blonde squealed, as Alix pressed the iron to her shoulder.

Charming shot a glare at Alix.

“Sorry.” She pointed to the tip of the machine, “The needles, ya know.”

Her answer seemed to calm Loverboy’s spiked testosterone. He leaned back against the wall, and returned to gazing into Beauty’s eyes without a word.

Most of those nine years since that fateful day Alix had spent alone—a desperate vagabond. Her mother had died a few days before her birthday, leaving Alix a cardboard box full of heirlooms as a present. After that, it was skid city. Alix learned a lot about herself, and survival during the first few years of her scavenging. The most crucial lesson being: Take care of yourself because no one else will. She had lived by that mantra wholeheartedly until Hank, the parlor’s owner, had pulled her off the streets just over two years back. He was a loveable old biker, with a potbelly, no hair on his head, and a handlebar moustache. He’d seen her talent on the walls in the back alleys of Brooklyn’s business district, and decided that if she could wield a paint can so artistically, she could learn to handle the iron.

He hadn’t been wrong.

Alix took to the art like a veteran of twenty years. She became the “Go-to-girl” within six months of laying tats on anyone willing to pay. Now, all the standard designs that littered the yellowed walls of the parlor, could be executed with nothing more than a flick of her wrist. She had actually done one blindfolded on a dare recently. A mistake in hindsight. Hank had walked in while she was midway through the process; he hadn’t made a sound, but she had known he was there. Regardless, she continued her work, and the tat came out perfectly. Not a single flaw. To a bunch of drunken fools looking to make their friend commit to a potentially horrible mistake, her feat meant next to nothing. To Hank however… Well, he hadn’t looked at her the same way since.

The blonde squealed in pain again, and bucked, as if she were a branded calf.

Alix jerked the iron away, before it made a godawful mess. “You sure you wanna do this?”

Beauty’s tear-streaked face turned from Alix to Charming. “I...I’m not sure.”

Charming frowned. “Baby you promised,” he whined. Then his frustrated gaze darted to Alix. “Can you make it so it’s not so painful?”

Alix blinked. She could have afforded her own shop by now if she had gotten a dollar every time somebody asked that ridiculous question. “Uh, not really.”

In actuality though, she
could
make it less painful. Painless, in fact. It was part of her “gift.” Ever since she turned sixteen, Alix had been able to transfer images from her mind onto objects. Paper, concrete, cars, and even people, became a canvas with a mere thought. No drawing with a pencil, or painting with a brush. The image would just appear where she wanted it. How she wanted it. There were other facets to her gift, but she rarely performed those on people other than herself.

“But you’re supposed to be the best,” he scoffed. “What the hell?”

Alix sighed, set her machine down, and stood so that she was facing Charming. “This isn’t for everyone, Bud. And she obviously isn’t up for the ride.”

His frown deepened.

“Here.” Alix dug the cash he had paid out of the tray on her work table, and offered it to him. “Take it and buy her some jewelry. That’ll go over a lot better, I promise.”

“That sounds good to me,” Beauty piped in, rubbing her shoulder.

Charming’s jaw worked as if he were gnawing on a piece of rawhide. After looking from Alix to Beauty a few times, he finally snatched the money from Alix’s hand and grumbled, “Whatever.” He stomped his way out the door, dragging Beauty behind him.

Alix shook her head.
When the feeling’s real, you shouldn’t need a tattoo to prove it,
she thought bitterly. It’s not that she hated the idea of lovers coming into the shop looking to create permanent mementoes of their relationships. She just hated when both parties weren’t kosher with the deal, and the fact that she herself hadn’t found the guy to do it with.

It’d been over a year since her last relationship, and that had been rocky at best—she always seemed to attract the broken ones.

Alix plopped down on her stool, and began clearing the ink out of the machine.
I need a vacation
. That trip down south she’d been rolling over in her mind the past few months was overdue. Hank wouldn’t be happy, but he’d been kind of a dick recently, so he would just have to deal. She wished his reaction to her “blindfolded feat” had been different. She’d hoped he would’ve been proud, but instead he’d been freaked out. To be fair, his response hadn’t been all that surprising or unjustified. What she had done was pretty much impossible, unless you were gifted of course. It just stung that he’d reacted that way.

Alix slumped in her seat. Despite the fact that Hank was acting squirrely toward her, he and the people of this tattoo parlor were like family, and she couldn’t leave them in a lurch. She resolved to ask about taking some time off, but not to cram it down his throat.

The bell to the front door chimed as someone came in. It was getting pretty late, and only the real wack-jobs came in when it was late. She decided to let Sam get this one.

After a minute a deep voice asked, “Anybody here?”

Dammit Sam, where the hell are you, girl?
she thought, as she finished cleaning the machine. Usually Mike was here too, but he had made arrangements last week to be at a rock concert this evening. That left the two girls by themselves for a few hours, until Hank made it in. “Yeah, just a minute,” she called, and got up to go to the front.

Alix hesitated, changing her mind about stepping to the counter, and moved instead to the royal purple curtains Hank used as a partition for each of the artist’s work space. There was no sense in waltzing up front without checking to see if the guy was holding a shotgun or something. Armed robbery wasn’t a common thing in this area, but it’s not like it hadn’t happened before. She peeked through the velvety fabric, and when her gaze fell on the guy, she froze in place.

His deep-blue eyes accented the shadow of the light ginger beard that covered his heavy chin. A thick neck swiveled, as he looked at the wall, from one design to the next. The thin black shirt he wore hugged his broad shoulders, and stretched tightly over a thick chest. It continued down his trim waist, to tuck into a pair of worn blue jeans. Well-rounded muscles encased his legs and butt, and his left ass-cheek twitched a bit as one of his black boots tapped softly on the floor.

Oh shit,
Alix thought, stepping away from the curtain. She darted to the mirror attached to her workstation. She wasn’t one to primp, but she’d be damned if she was going out there looking like she’d pulled a twelve-hour shift.

Her hair was still decent. The purple fringe shone brightly against the jet of her long, straight hair, and her pale green eyes. She reapplied some pink lipstick, and shifted her bra around to give the girls a little perk. She stepped back to look herself over, turning so that she could see her butt.
Good God, rhinos have smaller asses.

The side door opened suddenly. Sam stepped in from the alley, her hands overflowing with soft drinks and fast food. Alix had completely forgotten that her friend had gone to pick up dinner. Her dark brown eyes caught Alix’s. Sam’s brows came together curiously, picking up on the fact that something was up. She looked toward the front through one of the parted curtains.

Alix didn’t wait for Sam’s reaction, and sprinted for the counter.

“Oh, you bitch!” Sam managed with a laugh, before Alix burst through the heavy curtains.

Slowing to a fast walk, Alix smiled, as she approached the man who seemed to become more attractive as she got closer.
Sam’s loss, my gain,
she thought before asking, “Lookin’ for something in particular?”

His well-muscled body moved smooth as a jaguar when he turned toward her. He ran a hand through his hair, and smiled at her. “Yeah. I’m looking for protection.”

“You”—Alix eyed him up and down—“need protection?”

He chuckled. The sound was warm and inviting. “A symbol of protection, I mean.”

“Oh, I get ya,” Alix replied. She walked up to the counter and caught his scent. It was fresh and filled with virility. She paused, pushing the thought of tearing his shirt off right there on the spot back into the recesses of her mind. I know it’s been awhile, but get a grip woman. She placed her hands on the counter to settle her nerves as he came closer. “I think we can find something for you,” she managed.

“Sounds good,” he said, coming to a stop at the front desk.

Alix wasn’t an especially tall girl. Coming in at about five-foot-five, she always had to look up at the guys. Mr. Handsome was no exception. He wasn’t overly tall, just under six foot, which was a perfect fit for her.

His gaze moved over her body, and lingered on her nether region.

She started to feel a bit awkward, as he continued to stare and narrowed his eyes at her crotch. She fought the urge to pull the tiny black half-shirt she wore down over her pierced navel. Not that she could, there was hardly enough fabric to cover her breasts, let alone her midriff. Now, under such scrutiny, she regretted her choice of attire.

“Nice belt buckle,” he said, finally.

A wave of relief washed over her. The creepy suspicion that Mr. Handsome was a closet weirdy evaporated. Alix looked down at the belt buckle she had pulled out of the cardboard box her mother had left to her nine years earlier. The golden skull that glared back at her was the gaudiest piece of costume jewelry she’d ever seen. She loved it. Crystal rhinestones covered the top part of its head almost completely. Red, blue, and more clear stones, decorated the golden crossed bones that sat behind the skull. She had added her own bit of embellishment to put a splash of purple, her favorite color, into the garish affair: an eye patch with similar accent stones, and a strip of deep fuchsia ribbon. “It was my grandmother’s. She was kinda strange.”

He shrugged. “Looks cool to me.”

Heat came to Alix’s cheeks.
God, I’m acting like a twelve-year-old
.

“I like your tattoos too. Did you do them yourself?”

She glanced down at her stomach. Thankfully it was pretty firm; sit-ups, with a short jog every day, could work wonders. That wasn’t what he’d commented on though. The purple flower that she’d placed around her bellybutton was his focus, along with the matching set of vines that weaved down her arms. “Yeah, I did.”

“They look awesome.” He smiled. “Looks like I’ve come to the right place.

“Thanks.” She gestured to the curtains that concealed her workstation, trying not to blush even more. “Let’s get you settled.”

Alix pulled back the fabric barrier to her work area, only to find Sam sitting on her stool. She was a petite thing with sandy-blond hair. Piercings adorned her ears, nose, lower lip, and a few other choice areas, or so she had said.

“Hey,” Sam purred. “Need any help?”

Alix gave her a flat look. “I’ll be fine. Thanks.”

Mr. Handsome stepped in behind Alix, and looked around her workstation that was now too cramped thanks to Sam. “Where do you want me?”

A devilish grin made its way across Sam’s face.

“Just over there,” Alix said, before Sam could respond. She pointed to the padded table that could convert into a really uncomfortable chair. Alix moved so she was facing her oh-so-aggravating co-worker, and stood to where Mr. Handsome couldn’t see their exchange. She mimed the words “GET OUT” and jabbed her thumb toward the exit.

Sam continued to smile wickedly, but got up and moseyed to the partition. Her narrow hips swayed with an intentional allure as she walked—no doubt for Mr. Handsome’s benefit.

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