The penthouse suite of the casino consumed most of the top floor. Tastefully decorated in muted shades of brown and tan, it had a large sitting room filled with long sofas and overstuffed chairs arranged around a wet bar and hot tub. On each side were matching bedrooms with their own private bathrooms that were as large as most spas.
Such hushed elegance was a welcomed respite from the crowded gaming rooms, but it was the stunning view from the glass walls that attracted most guests.
Caine included, although it wasn’t for the usual reasons, Cassie wryly conceded.
The overprotective Were didn’t care that the view at night offered a dazzling display of lights from the nearby casinos, or that during the day there was a breathtaking panorama of the surrounding desert and line of craggy hills.
His only interest was having the best possible view to make sure that nothing could sneak up on them. And of course, being high enough off the ground to keep anything without wings from sneaking through the window.
Cassie appreciated his concern. She truly did. It was just...
Pacing from one end of the sitting room to the other, Cassie struggled to pinpoint the source of her dissatisfaction. Not an easy task. Cassie rarely remembered that beyond her visions she was a normal female who should possess normal female emotions. And she most certainly never took them out to examine them.
Not until Caine.
So now she was stuck trying to process the bizarre contradictions that were plaguing her.
The breathtaking tingles of excitement that raced through her whenever Caine happened to touch her, followed by the achy sense of disappointment when he pulled away. The restless inability to concentrate when he was in the same room and the ridiculous fear the moment he left the hotel suite without her.
A growingly common occurrence, she acknowledged, halting to stare out the glass wall, barely noticing the streets baking beneath the fierce summer sun or the wilting tourists jamming their way into the buses that briefly halted before moving on to the next casino.
Over the past four days Caine had spent an inordinate amount of time searching for enemies that he seemed convinced were lurking just outside the door. She sensed it was more than the driving need to protect her that was sending him out the door, but she didn’t have interpersonal experience to know what she was doing wrong.
Or more importantly, how to halt him.
She turned, her gaze instinctively searching out the clock set above the entertainment center. It had been three hours since Caine left.
Far longer than he was usually gone.
Her strange sense of abandonment ratcheted up another notch. Had he gone for good this time?
It would be perfectly understandable. Playing babysitter to a female who spent most of her life besieged by glimpses of the future wasn’t a role any man would willingly take on. If Caine had grown tired and decided to cut his losses, she wouldn’t blame him for a minute.
The brave, noble thought had barely crossed her mind when she ruined it all by breathing a tiny sob of relief as she caught the familiar scent of Caine’s approach.
He hadn’t abandoned her . . .
Wrapping her arms around her waist, she forced herself not to leap forward and knock the poor man down as he stepped into the hotel suite and closed the door. Unfortunately, she couldn’t prevent her shaky sigh of relief or the compulsive words that tumbled from her lips before she could halt them. “You’re back.”
He appeared weary, with a hint of golden stubble on his jaw and his exquisite sapphire eyes shadowed. His white-blond hair was rumpled, as if he’d been running his fingers through it, and his muscles tightly coiled beneath the tight white T-shirt and faded jeans.
Still, he was on instant alert as he caught sight of her pale face. Moving with liquid speed, he was across the room, grasping her shoulders in a tight grip.
“What is it?” His gaze ran down her slender body, assuring himself that she was unharmed. “Did something happen?”
“No, you were just gone a long time. I thought . . .” She bit her lip, unwilling to burden him with her ridiculous fears.
Of course, he easily read her mind. It was one of his tricks that she didn’t particularly appreciate.
“I’m sorry.” Stepping back, he scrubbed his face with his hands. “I didn’t mean to worry you.”
“Where did you go?”
He shrugged. “I made a sweep of the hotel.”
She frowned. It didn’t take three hours to make a sweep of the hotel. Not unless he was searching room by room.
“Do you sense trouble?” she asked.