“It is. Everyone calls me that.”
“I doubt it.”
“Why? What’s so unbelievable about my name?”
“You’re at the NSO and have the name of a feline?”
It sank in. “It’s spelled with a K.”
“I don’t care. Why not use a more human name like Mary?”
“That’s not what my parents stuck me with. I’m actually named after my grandmother. She died while my mom was pregnant with me.” That was also true. “It’s just a weird coincidence.”
He didn’t look convinced.
“It’s too obvious if you think about it. I’d have to be dumb to pick that name and I didn’t even make the connection to cats until you brought it up. I’m not an idiot. I would have done a fantastic job at building a false identity for myself.”
“That, I believe.”
“Good.”
“Who do you work for?”
“Bakersfield Police Department, crime lab.”
“What color is your bra?”
“Black.” He was testing her, trying to gauge facial expressions or her tone of voice to determine if he could spot a sign that she lied. She’d done the same thing to suspects.
“My hair is brown. So are my eyes. I’m five-foot-five. Don’t bother asking my weight. I’m not telling. Everyone lies on their license about that.”
“You’re about a hundred forty pounds. No need. I lifted you out of that chair.”
He was good. She was actually a hundred thirty-eight pounds.
“You appear to be lighter, about one twenty-five, but you have good muscle tone. That tells me you work out or train often.” He studied her breasts. “No plastic surgery.” He lifted away and stood, his gaze raking over her stomach and thighs. “No children.”
“How do you know that?”
“You have scars on you. Your upper arm, one near your calf. They are noticeable. It is telling. Pregnancy would have marred you as well and left signs. Your lower belly and upper thighs are flawless. No signs of stretch marks.”
“Not all women get them.” She admired his skills of observation. It was kind of hot.
“Not all but most have at least a few.”
“I don’t have kids,” she confirmed.
His focus returned to her face. “You don’t wear makeup. It also explains your plain undergarments. No lace on them and your bra isn’t a padded one to give your breasts a larger appearance. You don’t want to draw attention to yourself from men. Why is that?”
“Maybe I just didn’t have time to do my face this morning. As for my bra, pushups are uncomfortable as hell.”
He regarded her, expressionless, and she would have loved to know what he was thinking.
Darkness hoped fear provided the last push he needed to get the female to break. Everything he’d told her was true. He did admire her. An image flashed of what would happen if he struck her or broke bones. She’d scream. He’d feel like the monster the humans had tried to create. He couldn’t hit her.
She had beautiful, expressive eyes. He hoped he could read her correctly and that the males who’d attacked the gates weren’t with her. It would anger him if she were evil. He’d already fallen for one female who had betrayed him. He could use that anger on Kat but one glance at her frail build stopped him cold. There was no honor in harming Kat. She was helpless and, damn it, he really liked her.
Frustration came next. It was his job to get answers and find out who she really was. He just couldn’t do it effectively. He considered his options. Someone else would have to take his place. He didn’t even want to be in the building, knowing what would go down in that interrogation room. A wave of compassion and protectiveness washed over him. Queasiness pitted in his stomach, thinking about another male inflicting pain on her to make her talk.
He stared into her eyes again, torn between duty and the unexpected desire to just escort her to the gate. That would put an end to it all but that wasn’t possible. He decided to try one more shot at intimidation and fear.
Chapter Three
“Look at me.” He removed his tank top.
“I am.” Kat studied Darkness.
“All of me.” He backed away from the table a few feet. “Tell me what you see.”
“You’re tall.” She took in his naked chest. “Very fit.” The tight, well-defined muscles displayed across his abs were perfection all the way down to the waistband of his sweats. She jerked her attention to his face.
“Never entice a predator into playing a game you can’t win,” he rasped. “The NSO isn’t to be fooled with. I don’t want to hurt you because I have an issue with hitting females but others won’t have that same problem. Tell me everything, the whole truth, or this is going to get extreme.”