St. Martin's Paperbacks edition / January 2005
St. Martin's Paperbacks are
published by St. Martin's Press, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10010.
For my fans and friends who have
kept me going through thick and thin, and especially the RBL ladies and those
of you who take the time to visit the Dark-Hunter.com bbs. Your support means
more to me than any of you will ever know.
To Kim and Nancy for all the hard
work you do on my behalf, thank you. I can honestly never say that enough.
To my husband and sons who put up
with all my wild imaginings and most importantly to my mother who indulged me
when I was young. I miss you, Mom, and I always will. Love and hugs to all of
you.
SEIZE THE NIGHT
Prologue
"Happy birthday,
Agrippina," Valerius said as he laid a single red rose at the feet of the
marble statue that held a sacred place in his home.
It was nothing compared to the
sacred place that the woman herself had held within his heart while she had
lived. A place she still occupied—even after two thousand years.
Closing his eyes, he felt crippled
by the pain of her loss. Crippled by the guilt that the last sounds he had
heard as a mortal man had been her wrenching sobs as she called out for his
help.
Unable to breathe, he reached up and
touched her marble hand. The stone was hard. Cold. Unyielding. Things Agrippina
had never been. In a life that was measured by brutal formality and harshness,
she had been his only refuge.
And he loved her still for the quiet
kindness she had given him.
He clasped her delicate hand in both
of his, then laid his cheek against the cold stone palm.
If he could have one wish, it would
be to remember the exact sound of her voice.
To feel the warmth of her fingers on
his lips.
But time had robbed him of
everything except the agony he had caused her. He would die ten thousand more
deaths if only he could have saved her the pain of that one night.
Unfortunately, there was no way to
turn back time. No way to force the Fates to undo their actions and give her
the happiness she should have known.
Just as there was nothing that could
fill the aching void inside him left by Agrippina's death.
Grinding his teeth, Valerius pulled
away and noted the eternal flame that burned by her side was sputtering.
"Don't worry," he said to
her image. "I won't leave you in the dark. I promise."
It was a promise he had made to her
during her lifetime, and even in death, he had never broken it. For more than
two thousand years he had kept her in the light even while he was forced to
live in the darkness that had terrified her.
Valerius crossed the sunroom to
reach the large Roman-style buffet table that held the oil for her flame. He
removed the oil from the center of the buffet and took it to her statue; then
he stepped up onto the stone pedestal to pour the last of it into the lamp.
In this position, his head was even
with hers. The sculptor he had commissioned centuries ago had captured every
delicate curve and dimple of her precious face. Only Valerius's memory supplied
the honey color of her hair. The vivid green of her eyes. Agrippina had been
flawless in her beauty.
Sighing, Valerius touched her cheek
before he stepped down. There was no use in dwelling on the past. What was done
was done.
He was sworn now to protect the
innocent. To keep watch over humanity and make sure that no other man had to
lose so valuable a light in his soul as Valerius had lost.
Assured the flame would last until
tomorrow night, Valerius inclined his head respectfully to her statue.
"Amo," he said to her, whispering Latin for "I love you."
It was something he wished to the
gods that he'd had the courage to say aloud to her while she had lived.
Chapter 1
"I don't give a damn if they
throw me down into the deepest, slimiest pit for eternity. I belong here and no
one is going to make me leave. No one!"
Tabitha Devereaux took a deep breath
and struggled not to argue as she tried to pick the lock on the handcuffs that
her sister Selena had used to fasten herself to the wrought-iron gate that
surrounded the famed Jackson Square. Selena had hidden the key in her bra and
Tabitha had no desire to search there for it.
No doubt that would get them both
arrested, even in New Orleans.
Luckily there wasn't a big crowd on
the street in the middle of October, right at dusk, but what people were there
all stared at them as they passed by. Not that Tabitha cared. She was more than
used to people looking at her and thinking her strange. Even insane.
She prided herself on both. She also
prided herself on being available to her friends and family in a crisis. And
right now, her big sister was in an emotional turmoil second only to the time
when Selena's husband Bill had been in a car wreck that had almost killed him.
Tabitha fumbled with the lock. The
last thing she wanted was to have her sister arrested.
Again.
Selena tried to push her away, but
Tabitha refused to budge, so Selena bit her.
Tabitha jumped back with a yelp as
she shook her hand in an effort to relieve the pain. Completely unremorseful
about it, Selena sprawled on the cobbled steps that led into the Square in a
pair of ripped jeans and a large navy sweater that obviously belonged to Bill.
Her long, curly brown hair was braided and oddly sedate. No one would recognize
Madame Selene, as she was known to the tourists, except for the big sign she
was holding that said, "Psychics have rights, too."
Ever since they had passed that
stupid, asinine law that psychics couldn't read cards in the Square for
tourists anymore, Selena had been fighting it. Earlier, the police had forced
her out of the federal building for protesting- so Selena had headed over here
to chain herself to the gate not far from where she had once set up her card
table for reading other people's futures.
Too bad she couldn't see her own
fate as clearly as Tabitha could. If Selena didn't unhook herself from this
blessed fence, she was going to be spending the night in jail.
Overwrought and angry, Selena kept
waving her sign. There was no reasoning with her. But then, Tabitha was used to
that, too. High emotions, obstinacy, and insanity ran deep in their
Cajun-Romanian family.
"C'mon, Selena," she said,
trying yet again to soothe her. "It's already dark. You don't want to be
Daimon bait out here, do you?"
"I don't care!" Selena
sniffed and pouted. "The Daimons won't eat my soul anyway since I have no
friggin' will to live. I just want my home back. This is my spot and I'm not
leaving." She punctuated each of the last words with a pounding of her
sign against the stones.
"Fine." Sighing in
disgust, Tabitha sat down near her, but not so close that Selena could bite her
again. She wasn't about to leave her older sister out here alone. Especially
since Selena was so upset.
If the Daimons didn't get her, a
mugger would.
And so here the two of them sat like
two immovable bumps on a log: Tabitha dressed all in black with her dark auburn
hair pulled back into a silver barrette and Selena waving her sign at anyone
who came near them on the pedestrian mall, urging them to sign her petition to
change the law. "Hey, Tabby. What's up?"
It was a rhetorical question.
Tabitha waved at Bradley Gambieri, one of the docents who led vampire tours
around the Quarter, as he headed toward the tourist center to drop off more
brochures. He didn't even pause as he passed by. But he did frown at Selena,
who called him an imaginative name because he didn't sign her petition.
Good thing he knew them or he really
might be offended.
Tabitha and her sister knew most of
the locals who frequented the Quarter. They had grown up here and had haunted
the area around the Square since they had been young teenagers.
Of course, things had changed over
the years. A few of the shops had come and gone. The Quarter was a good deal
safer these days than it had been in the late nineteen eighties and early
nineties. However, some things were the same. The bakery, Cafй Pontalba, Cafй Du Monde, and Corner Cafй were in the same place. The tourists still gathered
in the Square to ogle the cathedral and the colorful natives who passed by… and
the vampires and muggers still stalked the streets looking for easy victims.
The hair on the back of her neck
rose.
Tabitha moved her hand instinctively
to the hidden sheath in her boot that concealed a three-inch stiletto as she
scanned the thinning October crowd around her.
For the last thirteen years, Tabitha
had been a self-styled vampire slayer. She was also one of the few humans in
New Orleans who actually knew what went on in this town after dark. She was
scarred inside and out from her battles with the damned. And she had sworn her
life to making sure that none of them ever hurt anyone else on her watch.
It was an oath she took seriously;
she would kill anyone or anything she had to.
But as her gaze found the tall,
exotically erotic man sporting a black backpack coming around the corner of the
Presbytere building, she relaxed.
It'd been a couple of months since
he'd last been in town. In truth, she'd missed him a lot more than she should
have.
Against her will and common sense,
she'd let Acheron Parthenopaeus worm his way into her guarded heart. But then,
Ash was a hard man not to adore.
His long, sensuous gait was
impossible to ignore and every female in the Square, except for the distraught
Selena, was held transfixed by his presence. They all paused to watch him walk
by as if compelled by some unseen force. He was sexy in a way very few men
were.
He held an aura that was dangerous
and wild; and by his slow, languorous moves, it was obvious that he would be
incredible in bed. It was something you just knew intrinsically when you saw
him and it rippled through your body like hot, seductive chocolate.
At six feet eight, Ash always stood
out in a crowd. Like her, he was dressed all in black.
His Godsmack T-shirt was untucked
and a bit large, but even so it didn't detract from that fact that Ash was
seriously ripped. And his custom-made leather pants cupped a butt so prime, it
begged for a groping.
Not that she ever would. An
undefinable air about him warned people to keep their hands to themselves if
they wanted to keep breathing.
She smiled as she noted his boots.
Ash had a thing for German Goth clothing. Tonight he had on a pair of black
biker boots that had nine vampire-bat buckles going up the length of them.
He wore his long black hair loose
and flowing around his shoulders. It was a perfect drape for a face that was
eerily pretty and yet wholly masculine. Flawless. There was something about Ash
that made every hormone in her body stand up and pant for more.
Yet for all his sexual
attractiveness, there was also an aura so dark and deadly that it kept her from
ever thinking of him as anything more than a friend.
And he'd been a friend ever since
she had met him at her twin sister Amanda's wedding three years ago. Since
then, they had crossed paths repeatedly as he visited New Orleans and helped
her keep watch against the city's predators.
Now he was a regular part of her
family, especially since he often stayed at her twin's house and was, in fact,
the godfather for Amanda's daughter.
He stopped beside her and cocked his
head. With his dark sunglasses on, Tabitha couldn't tell if he was looking at
her or Selena. But it was obvious he was bemused by the two of them.
"Hey, gorgeous babe,"
Tabitha said. She smiled as she realized his T-shirt paid tribute to the
Godsmack song "Vampires." How strangely apropos since Ash was an
immortal who came equipped with his own set of fangs. "Nice shirt."
Ignoring her compliment, he pulled
the black backpack off his shoulder and flipped his sunglasses up to show
eerie, swirling silver eyes that seemed to flash in the darkness. "How
long has Selena been handcuffed to the fence?"
"About half an hour. I figured
I'd hang out with her and keep her from becoming a Daimon-kabob."
"I wish," Selena muttered.
She raised her voice and slung her arms wide. "Here I am, vampires, come
and end my misery!"
Tabitha and Ash exchanged a
half-amused, half-irritated look at her dramatics.
Ash moved to sit down beside Selena.
"Hi, Lanie," he said quietly as he kept the backpack at his feet.
"Go away, Ash. I'm not leaving
here until they repeal their law. I belong in this Square. I was raised
here."
Ash nodded in understanding.
"Where's Bill?"
"He's a traitor!" Selena
snarled.
Tabitha answered the question.
"He's probably at the courthouse holding ice to a private area after
Selena racked him and accused him of being 'the man who is holding her
down.'"
Ash's face softened as if the
thought amused him.
"He deserved it," Selena
said defensively. "He told me that the law is the law and that I had to
obey it. Screw that. I'm not going anywhere until they change it."
"Guess I'll be here for
awhile," Tabitha said wistfully.
"You can make them repeal the
law," Selena said, turning toward Ash. "Can't you?"
Ash leaned back against the fence
without commenting.
"Don't get too close to her,
Ash," Tabitha warned. "She's been known to bite."
"That makes two of us," he
said with a hint of humor in his voice as his fangs flashed. "But I
somehow think my bite might hurt a little more."
"You're not funny," Selena
said sullenly.
Ash draped an arm over Selena's
shoulder. "C'mon, Lane. You know it's not going to change anything for you
to stay here. Sooner or later a cop will come by—"
"And I'll assault him."
Ash tightened his hold on her.
"You can't assault them for doing their job."
"Yes, I can!"
Still he managed to remain calm
while dealing with the Queen of Hysteria. "Is that really what you want to
do?"
"No. I want my stand
back," Selena said, her voice breaking from her grief and pain.
Tabitha's own chest was tight in
sympathetic agony for her.
"I wasn't hurting anyone by
having a table here. This is my space. I've had my stand right here in this
spot since 1986! It's so not fair for them to make me leave because those
stupid artists are jealous. Who wants one of their crappy paintings of the
Quarter, anyway? They're stupid. What's New Orleans without her psychics? Just
another boring, run-down tourist town, that's what!"
Ash held her sympathetically.
"Times change, Selena. Believe me, I know, and sometimes there's nothing
you can do about it except to let it go. No matter how much you want to stop
time, it has to go forward and move on to something else."
Tabitha heard the sadness in his
voice as he spoke comfortingly to her sister. Ash had been alive for more than
eleven thousand years. He remembered New Orleans back in the days when it had
barely qualified as a town. For that matter, he probably remembered New Orleans
before any kind of civilization had claimed it.
If anyone knew about change, it was
Acheron Parthenopaeus.
Ash wiped the tears from Selena's
face and angled her chin so that she was staring at the building across the
street from them. "You know, that building is up for sale. 'Madame
Selene's Tarot Reading and Mystical Boutique.' Can you imagine it?"
Selena snorted at that. "Yeah,
right. Like I can afford it. Have you any idea what the real estate here goes
for?"
Ash shrugged. "Money's not a
problem for me. Say the word and it's yours."
Selena blinked at him as if she
couldn't believe what he was offering her. "Really?"
He nodded. "You could put a
sign up right here that points people to your brand-new store where you can
read cards to your heart's content."
Finally seeing a solution to her
sister's temporary dementia and grateful to Ash for it, Tabitha sat forward so
that she could look at Selena. "You've always said you'd like to be
someplace where it can't rain you out."
Selena cleared her throat as she
considered it. "It would be nice to look out from a building instead of
into it."
"Yeah," Tabitha said.
"You'd no longer freeze in the winter or blister in the summer. Climate
control all year long. No more wheeling your cart up here and setting up the
table and chairs. You could even have a La-Z-Boy in the back room and carry all
sorts of tarot card decks. Tia would be jealous as all get-out since she's been
wanting a shop closer to the Square. Think about it."
"You want it?" Ash asked.
Selena nodded enthusiastically.
Ash pulled out his cell phone and
dialed a number. "Hey, Bob," he said after a brief pause. "This
is Ash Parthenopaeus. There's a building for sale on St. Anne's in Jackson
Square… yeah, that one. I want it." He offered a close-lipped smile to
Selena. "No, I don't need to see it. Just have the keys out here in the
morning." He pulled the phone aside. "What time can you meet him
here, Selena?"
"Ten?"
He repeated it into the phone.
"Yeah, and make the deed out to Selena Laurens. I'll swing by tomorrow
afternoon and handle the payment. All right. Have a good one." Ash hung up
the phone and returned it to his pocket.
Selena smiled up at him. "Thank
you."
"No problem." The instant
he stood up, the handcuff fell free of the gate and Selena's arm.
Jeez, that man had some fearsome
powers. Tabitha just wasn't sure which was more impressive. The one that broke
the handcuff off Selena without a scratch or the one that allowed him to drop a
couple of million dollars without blinking.
He held his hand out to Selena and
helped her to her feet. "Just make sure you carry a lot of bright, shiny
things for Simi to buy whenever we're here."
Tabitha laughed at the mention of
Ash's demon… something… Tabitha still didn't know if Simi was Ash's girlfriend
or what. The two of them had a very odd relationship.
Simi demanded and Ash gave without
hesitation.
Unless it involved Simi killing and
eating someone. Those were the only times she'd ever seen Ash put his foot down
with the demon he kept secret from most of his Dark-Hunters. The only reason
Tabitha even knew about Simi was that the demon often joined them for movies.
For some reason, Ash really loved
the cinema and Tabitha had been going to see movies with him for the last two
years. His favorites were horror and action flicks. Meanwhile the Simi was a
most unusual and discriminating being who made him sit through "girl"
movies that often left Ash groaning.
"Where is the Simster
tonight?" Tabitha asked.
Ash brushed his hand over the dragon
tattoo on his forearm. "She's hanging around. But it's too early for her.
She doesn't like to be out and about until at least nine." He slung the
backpack over his shoulder.
Selena stood on her tiptoes and
pulled Ash down so that she could hug him. "I'll carry an entire line of
Kirk's Folly just for Simi."
Smiling, he patted her on the back.
"No more handcuffs, right?"
Selena pulled away. "Well, Bill
did say that I could protest with him later in the bedroom and I do owe him for
that kick I gave him, so…"
Ash laughed as Selena scooped up the
cuffs from the street.
"And you wonder why I'm
nuts," Tabitha said as Selena tucked them into her back pocket.
Ash pulled his glasses back down to
cover his eerie, swirling silver eyes. "At least she's entertaining."
"And you're way too
charitable." But that was what Tabitha loved most about Ash. He always saw
the good in everyone. "So what are you up to tonight?" she asked Ash
while Selena folded up her handmade sign.
Before he could answer, a large
black Harley came roaring down St. Anne. When it reached the turn that would
have taken the rider down Royal Street, the bike, stopped and was shut off.
Tabitha watched as the tall, lithe
rider, who was decked out all in black biker leathers, held the bike upright
between his thighs with ease and pulled the helmet off.
To her surprise, it was an
African-American woman, and not a man, who set the helmet down before her on
the bike's gas tank and unzipped her jacket. Extremely gorgeous, she was
slender but muscular, with medium brown skin and a flawless complexion. She
wore her jet-black hair in braids that were pulled back into a ponytail.
"Acheron," she said in a
singsong Caribbean accent. "Where should I park me ride?"
Ash indicated Decatur Street behind
him. "There's a public lot on the other side of the Brewery. I'll wait here
until you get back."
The woman's gaze went to Tabitha,
then Selena.
"They're friends," Ash
said. "Tabitha Devereaux and Selena Laurens."
"Sisters-in-law to
Kyrian?"
Ash nodded.
"I am Janice Smith," she
said to them. "Nice to meet friends of the Hunters."
Tabitha was sure that was a play on
words that stemmed not so much from Kyrian's last name as from his former
occupation of being a Dark-Hunter-one of the immortal warriors like Janice and
Ash who guarded the night against vampires, demons, and rogue gods.
Janice started her motorcycle and
roared off.
"New Dark-Hunter?" Selena
asked before Tabitha had a chance.
He nodded. "Artemis transferred
her here from the Florida Keys to help Valerius and Jean-Luc. Tonight's her
first night so I thought I'd give her a tour of the city."
"Need any help?" Tabitha
asked.
"Nah. I got it. Just try not to
stake Jean-Luc again if you meet up with him."
Tabitha laughed at his reference to
the night she had inadvertently met the pirate Dark-Hunter. It had been dark
and Jean-Luc had grabbed her from behind in an alley while she was stalking
after a group of Daimons. All she had seen were fangs and tallness, so she had
struck.
Jean-Luc had yet to forgive her.
"I can't help it. All you
fanged people look alike in the dark."
Ash grinned. "Yeah. I know what
you mean. All you soul-full people look alike to us, too."
Tabitha shook her head at him as she
continued laughing. She wrapped her arm around Selena and started toward
Decatur, where Selena had left her Jeep across the street.
It didn't take long to get her
sister home and situated with a very hesitant Bill, who wasn't sure if Selena
would rack him again or not. Once Tabitha was satisfied that Selena would be
okay… and Bill, too… she headed back to the Quarter to patrol for Daimons.
It was a relatively quiet night out.
She followed her usual habit of stopping in at the Cafe Pontalba and getting
four plates of red beans and rice with Cokes to go, then taking the meals down
to an alley off of Royal Street where many of the homeless were known to
congregate. Since the city had decided to crack down on vagrants and the
homeless, they weren't nearly as prevalent as before. Now they, like the
vampires she sought, kept to the shadows where they were forgotten.
But Tabitha knew they were there and
she never let herself forget about them.
Tabitha left the food on an old
rusted barrel and turned to leave.
As soon as she reached the edge of
the sidewalk, she heard people scurrying for the food.
"Hey, if you want a job—"
But they were gone before she could
get anything more than that out.
Sighing, Tabitha headed down Royal.
She couldn't save the world, she knew that. But at least she could see to it
that some of the hungry were fed.
With no real destination in mind, she
wandered down the lonely streets and browsed in the jewelry shop windows.
"Hey, Tabby, killed any
vampires lately?"
She looked up to see Richard
Crenshaw coming toward her. A waiter at Mike Anderson's Seafood, which was just
a couple of doors down from her own store, had a bad habit of coming in
whenever he got off work and hitting on the strippers who ordered custom-made
costumes from her.
As usual, he was laughing at her.
That was fine. Most people did. In fact, most people thought she was insane.
Even her own family had laughed at her for years… until her twin had ended up
married to a Dark-Hunter and had faced a vampire who had almost killed her.
Suddenly her family realized that
her preternatural stories over the years weren't total hallucinations or
fabrications.
"Yeah," she said to
Richard, "I dusted one last night."
He rolled his eyes and laughed at
her as he walked on past.
"You're welcome, Dick,"
she said under her breath as he kept going. The Daimon she'd killed had been
hovering around the back door of Mike Anderson's, where Richard was known to
take out the trash right before he got off work. If Tabitha hadn't killed the
Daimon, Richard would most likely be dead now.
Whatever. She didn't really want
thanks for what she did and she certainly didn't expect it.
She kept walking down the street,
feeling extremely lonely tonight. How she wished she could live her life
blindly, never knowing what was out here.
But she wasn't blind. She knew, and
with that knowledge came the choice of either helping people or walking away.
Never in her life had Tabitha been the kind of person who turned her back on
someone in need. Her powers as an empath were too much for her sometimes. She
felt the pain of others even more deeply than she felt her own.
It was what had drawn Ash to her in
the beginning. Over the last three years, he had taught her several tricks to
dampen down others' emotions and to focus on her own. He'd been a godsend to
her and had done more for her sanity than anyone else. Still, his tricks didn't
silence them totally.
At times it was all completely
overwhelming. She was so bombarded by intense emotions that it set off hers and
sometimes caused her to lash out verbally just from the stress of it.
So here she was, by herself,
spending another lonely night walking the streets as she risked her life for
people who mocked her.
Patrolling was certainly much more
fun when she'd done it with a group of friends.
Tabitha forced herself not to
remember Trish and Alex, who'd both died in the line of duty. But it was
useless. Tears filled her eyes as she touched the jagged scar on her face that
the Daimon Desiderius had given her. The worst sort of psycho, Desiderius had
been out to kill her twin sister and brother-in-law. Luckily, Amanda and Kyrian
had survived. Tabitha just wished she'd been killed that night instead of her friends.
It wasn't right for them to pay such a high price when Tabitha had been the one
to talk them into helping her in the first place.
God, why couldn't she have kept her
mouth shut and just left them alone to live out their lives in ignorance and peace?
It was why she fought alone now. She
would never again ask anyone to risk their life to do what she did.
They had a choice about this.
She didn't.
Tabitha slowed down as she got the
familiar tickle down the center of her spine.
Daimons…
They were behind her.
Turning around, she knelt down and
pretended to tie the laces on her boot. Meanwhile she was well aware of the six
shadows that were closing in on her…
Valerius pulled at the edge of his
right leather Coach glove to straighten it as he walked down the virtually
abandoned street. As always, he was impeccably dressed in a long black cashmere
coat, a black turtleneck, and black slacks. Unlike most Dark-Hunters, he wasn't
a leather-wearing barbarian. He was the epitome of sophistication. Breeding.
Nobility. His family had been descended from one of the oldest and most
respected noble families of Rome. As a former Roman general whose father had
been a well-respected senator, Valerius would have gladly followed in the man's
footsteps had the Parcae, or Fates, not intervened.
But that was the past and Valerius
refused to remember it. Agrippina was the only exception to that rule. She was
the only thing he ever remembered from his human life.
She was the only thing worth
remembering from his human life.
Valerius winced and focused his
thoughts on other, much less painful things. There was a crispness in the air
that announced winter would be here soon. Not that New Orleans had a winter,
compared to what he'd been used to in D.C.
Still, the longer he was here the
more his blood was thinning, and the cool night air was a bit chilly to him.
Valerius paused as his Dark-Hunter
senses detected the presence of a Daimon. Tilting his head, he listened with
his heightened hearing.
He heard a group of men laughing at
their victim. And then he heard the strangest thing of all…
"Laugh it up, asshole. But she
who laughs last, laughs longest and I intend to belly roll tonight."
A fight broke out.
Valerius whirled on his heel and
headed back the direction he'd come from.
He drifted through the darkness
until he found an ajar gate that led to a courtyard.
There in the back were six Daimons
fighting a tall human woman.
Valerius was mesmerized by the
macabre beauty of the battle. One Daimon came at the woman's back. She flipped
him over her shoulder and in one graceful motion stabbed him in the chest with
a long, black dagger. The Daimon burst into a golden dust.
She twirled as she rose up to face
another one. She tossed the dagger from one hand to the other and held it like
a woman well used to defending herself from the undead.
Two Daimons rushed her. She actually
did a cartwheel away from them, but the other Daimon had anticipated her
action. He grabbed her.
Without panicking, the woman
surrendered her weight by picking both of her legs up to her chest. It brought
the Daimon to his knees. The woman sprang to her feet and whirled to stab the
Daimon in his back.
He evaporated.
Normally the remaining Daimons would
flee. The last four didn't. Instead they spoke to each other in a language he
hadn't heard in a long time: ancient Greek.
"Little chickie la la, isn't
dumb enough to fall for that, guys," the woman answered back in flawless
Greek.
Valerius was so stunned he couldn't
move. In over two thousand years, he'd never seen or heard of anything like
this. Not even the Amazons had ever produced a better fighter than the woman
who now confronted the Daimons.
Suddenly a light appeared behind the
woman. It flashed bright and swirling. A chill, cold wind swept through the
courtyard before six more Daimons stepped out.
Valerius went rigid at something
even rarer than the warrior-woman fighting the Daimons.
Tabitha turned slowly to see the
group of new Daimons. Holy shit. She'd only seen this one other time.
The new batch of Daimons looked at
her and laughed. "Pitiful human."
"Pitiful this," she said
as tossed her dagger at his chest.
He moved his hand and deflected the
dagger before it reached him. Then he slung his arm toward her. Something
invisible and painful slashed through her chest as she went flying head over
heels.
Dazed and scared, Tabitha lay on the
ground.
Horrible memories ripped through her
of the night when her friends had died. The way the warrior Spathi Daimons had
torn through them…
No, no, no.
They were dead. Kyrian had killed
them all.
Her panic tripled as she struggled
to right herself.
She was dizzy, her vision blurry as
she pushed herself to her feet.
Valerius was across the alley in
microseconds as he saw the woman fall.
The tallest Daimon, who stood even
in height to Valerius, laughed. "How nice of Acheron to send us a
playmate."
Valerius pulled his two retractable
swords from his coat and extended the blades. "Play is for children and
dogs. Now that you have identified which category you fall into, I'll show you
what Romans do to rabid dogs."
One of the Daimons smiled.
"Romans? My father always told me that all Romans die squealing like
pigs."
The Daimon attacked.
Valerius sidestepped and brought his
sword down. The Daimon pulled a sword out of nothing and parried his attack
with a skill that bespoke a man with years of training.
The other Daimons struck at once.
Valerius dropped his swords and
swung out with his arms, releasing the grappling hooks and cords that were
attached to his wrists. The hooks went straight into the chest of the tallest
Daimon and the one he was fighting.
Unlike most Daimons, they didn't
disintegrate instantly. They stared at him with hollow eyes before they burst
apart.
But while he was distracted by them,
another Daimon retrieved his sword and cut him across his back. Valerius hissed
in pain before he turned and elbowed the Daimon in the face.
The woman was back on her feet. She
killed two more
Valerius wasn't sure what had
happened to the others; in truth, he was having a bit of trouble moving because
of the vicious pain of his back.
"Die, Daimon snot!" the
woman snarled at him an instant before she, too, stabbed him straight in the
chest.
She pulled the dagger out instantly.
Valerius hissed and staggered back
as pain ripped through his heart. He clutched at his chest, unable to think
past the agony of it.
Tabitha bit her lip in terror as she
saw the man recoil and not explode into dust.
"Oh, shit," she breathed,
rushing to his side. "Please tell me you're some screwed-up Dark-Hunter
and that I didn't just kill an accountant or lawyer."
The man hit the street hard.
Tabitha rolled him over onto his
back and checked his breathing. His eyes were partially opened, but he wasn't
speaking. He held his jaw clamped firmly shut as he groaned deep in his throat.
Terrified, she still wasn't sure who
she had mistakenly stabbed. Her heart hammering, she pulled up his turtle-neck
to see the nasty-looking stab wound in the center of his chest.
And then she saw what she had hoped
for…
He had a bow and arrow brand above
his right hipbone.
"Oh, thank God," she
breathed as relief poured through her. He was in fact a Dark-Hunter and not
some unfortunate human.
She grabbed her phone and called
Acheron to let him know one of his men had been hurt, but he didn't answer.
So she started dialing her sister
Amanda until her common sense returned. There were only four Dark-Hunters in
this city. Ash who led them. Janice whom she had met earlier. The former pirate
captain, Jean-Luc. And…
Valerius Magnus.
He was the only Dark-Hunter in New
Orleans she didn't know personally. And he was the mortal enemy of her
brother-in-law.
She hit the cancel button on her
phone. Kyrian would kill this man in a heartbeat and bring the wrath of Artemis
down fully upon his head. In return, the goddess would kill Kyrian for it and
that was the last thing Tabitha wanted. Her sister would die if anything
happened to her husband.
Come to think of it, if half of what
Kyrian said about this man and his family was true, she should just leave him
here and let him die.
But then Ash would never forgive her
if she did that to one of his men. Besides she couldn't leave him here, not
even she was that heartless. Like it or not, he had saved her life and she was
honor-bound to return the favor.
Wincing, she realized she was going
to have to get him to safety. And he was just a little too large for her to
handle on her own. She dialed her phone again and waited for an answer that
came in a slick, Cajun drawl.
"Hey, Nick, it's Tabitha
Devereaux. I'm in the old courtyard off Royal Street with a man down and I need
help. Any chance you want to be my knight in shining armor tonight and lend a
hand to a damsel in distress?"
Nick Gautier's smooth laugh rippled
in her ear. "Why, cher, you know I live for such moments. I'll be right
there."
"Thanks," she said before
she gave him precise directions and hung up.
A New Orleans native like herself,
Nick had been an acquaintance of hers for years since the two of them
frequented many of the same restaurants and clubs. Not to mention, Nick had
brought a few of his girlfriends in to browse some of the racier outfits that
Tabitha sold in her adult boutique, Pandora's Box.
A charming rogue, Nick was about as
handsome as any man she'd ever seen. He had dark brown hair that tended to stay
in a pair of eyes that were so blue and seductive they really should be
illegal.
And when it came to his smile…
Not even she was entirely immune to
it.
She'd been stunned to learn at her
sister's wedding three years ago that Nick actually worked for the undead.
Rumors on the street had always abounded on what Nick did for a living. Every
native who haunted the Quarter knew the man had a ton of cash and no real job
that anyone could discern. When he'd shown up as best man for Kyrian, she'd
been completely shocked.
But since that night, she and Nick
had forged an odd alliance as drinking buddies and partners-in-crime who lived
to rankle the Dark-Hunters. It was really nice to have someone she could talk
to who knew that the vampires were real and who understood the dangers she
faced every night.
Tabitha sat down on the cobblestoned
walk to wait on Nick. Valerius still wasn't moving. She cocked her head to
study Kyrian's great Satan. According to her brother-in-law, Valerius and his
Roman family had been the worst sort of bastards.
They had killed and raped any- and
everything that came into their paths as they led bloody campaigns across the
ancient world. She would have taken Kyrian's aspersions with more grains of
salt if it wasn't for the fact that other Dark-Hunters concurred.
To her knowledge, no one liked
Valerius.
No one.
But as she watched him breathing
lightly, he didn't look so ominous.
Probably because he's practically
dead.
Actually, he was all dead. But still
breathing. The moonlight cast shadows over the handsome planes of his face and
showed the tears in his clothing where he was bleeding. If he could bleed to
death, she'd hold a compress to his chest wound, but since he couldn't she
stayed put.
"How did you die?" she
whispered. Kyrian didn't know, and in all her readings about ancient Rome and
Greece, Valerius's name had seldom been mentioned. For all the brutality that
Kyrian accused him of, Valerius Magnus wasn't much more than a footnote in
history.
"Hey, Tab, you in here?"
She breathed a sigh of relief at the
sound of Nick's deep Cajun drawl. Thank goodness he only lived three blocks
away and knew how to hustle in a jam. "I'm over here."
Dressed in a pair of faded jeans and
a short-sleeved blue shirt, Nick quickly joined her, then cursed the instant he
saw who was lying on the ground.
"You've got to be kidding
me," he snarled after she asked him to help her get Valerius up. "I
wouldn't throw piss on that man if he were on fire."
"Nick!" Tabitha said,
shocked at his rancor. Normally Nick was the most laid-back of men. "That
was uncalled-for."
"Oh, yeah, right. I notice you
didn't call Kyrian for this. Why is that, Tabitha? 'Cause he'd kill you
both?"
She stamped down her own temper,
which would only set his off more if she started telling him how juvenile he
was behaving. "C'mon, Nick. Don't be like that. I don't want to help him,
either, but Ash won't answer the phone and no one else seems to like him."
"Damn straight. Everyone, but
you, has a brain. Let him rot on the street."
She stood up and faced him with her
hands on her hips. "Fine. You explain to Ash why one of his Hunters was
killed, then. You deal with his anger. I'm out of it."
Nick narrowed his eyes on her.
"You really suck, Tabby. Why didn't you call Eric for this?"
"Because it's awkward to ask
your ex—who is happily married to someone else—for favors, okay? I somehow
thought my friend Nick wouldn't hassle me over this, but I can see now that I
was wrong."
He gave an exaggerated wince at
that. "I really hate this man, Tabitha. I've known Kyrian too long and owe
him too much to render aid to the man whose grandfather crucified him."
"And we are not responsible for
the actions of our family members, are we, Nick?"
His jaw ticced at that.
Nick's father had been a convicted
murderer who had died in a prison riot. It was well known by everyone that the
man was a repeat felon who had spent the whole of Nick's youth in and out of
jail for all sorts of unsavory crimes. Nick himself had been well on his way to
repeating his father's fate when Kyrian had stepped in and saved him.
"That's low, Tab, real
low."
"But it's true. Now, please,
forget that he's a dickhead and help me get him home, okay?"
Nick growled at her before he came
near them. "Do you know where he lives?"
"No, do you?"
"Somewhere over in the Garden
District." Nick pulled out his phone and dialed a number. After a minute,
he cursed. "Otto, answer the phone." He cursed again, then hung up
and glared at her. "You know it's bad when the guy's own Squire won't
answer to save him."
"Maybe Otto's busy."
"Maybe Otto's psychic."
"Nick…"
Nick put his phone in his pocket,
then bent over, tossed Valerius over his shoulder, and headed out of the
courtyard to where his Jaguar was parked on the street. He dumped Valerius
unceremoniously into the passenger seat.
"Watch his head, Nick!"
she snapped as Nick banged it against the car.
"Not like I could kill him or
anything. What happened to him, anyway?"
"I stabbed him."
Nick blinked, then burst out
laughing. "I knew I liked you for a reason. Oh man, I can't wait to tell
Kyrian. He'll laugh his ass off."
"Yeah, well, in the meantime,
take Valerius back to my place and give me Otto's number so that I can keep
trying to call him."
"And you want to tell me how
I'm going to get him to your place since Bourbon Street is closed off to
traffic after dark?"
She gave him a droll stare.
He growled at her. "Fine, but
you owe me big-time."
"Yeah, yeah. Get cracking,
Squire."
He mumbled something under his
breath that she was sure was less than complimentary before he walked to the
other side of his car and got in.
Since his car was a two-seater,
Tabitha headed out on foot to rendezvous with him at her store. As she walked
into the crowd on Bourbon Street, she felt something evil brush up against her
psychically.
Spinning around, she scanned the
crowd, but didn't see anything.
Still, she felt it deep inside.
"Something wicked this way
comes…" She breathed the title of her favorite Ray Bradbury book.
And something inside told her it was
far more evil than anything she had faced before.
Chapter 2
Valerius came awake slowly to the
sound of someone humming nearby.
Humming?
He blinked open his eyes expecting
to find himself in his own bed in his own house. Instead, he was on a
queen-size antique tester bed with an ornate wooden canopy that was padded in
burgundy velvet.
The voice he heard was coming from a
rocking chair on his left. He turned his head and was floored by what he found.
It was…
Well, at first glance it looked like
a very large woman. She had long blond hair and was wearing a short-sleeved,
pink furry sweater and a pair of khaki pants. Only the "woman" had
shoulders every bit as broad as Valerius did and a pronounced Adam's apple.
She sat in the chair, flipping
through the fall issue of Vogue with glossy, blood-red fingernails that could
double for claws. She looked up and paused in her humming.
"Oh! You're awake!" she
said excitedly, getting up immediately and fluttering around his bed. She
awkwardly grabbed what appeared to be a walkie-talkie from the nightstand and
pressed the button while making sure she didn't break a nail. "Tabby, Mr.
Sexy is awake."
"Okay, Marla, thanks."
Valerius had a faint memory of that
voice, but it wasn't clear as he tried to remember what had happened to him.
"Where am I?" he asked.
"Hell" seemed the most
apropos answer. But the pain in his body and the dimmed room that was a
peculiar mixture of modern and antique said that not even hell would be this
bad or tacky.
"Don't move, sweetie," the
unknown woman said as she continued to gesture and hover around the bed.
"Tabby will be right here. She said that I wasn't to let you go anywhere
at all. So don't."
Before he could ask who Tabby was,
another woman burst into the room.
She too was tall. But unlike the
first one, she was slender, almost waif-like, except that her body was well defined,
as if she lifted weights. Her long auburn hair was pulled back into a ponytail
and she had a vicious scar over her left cheekbone.
Valerius froze at the sight of the
warrior he'd seen the night before. Memories flooded him. Including the one where
she had stabbed him straight in the chest-which was helped by the fact that she
still held a large butcher knife in her right hand.
"You!" he accused, pushing
himself to the furthest edge of the bed.
The woman visibly cringed before she
turned to the first one and urged her toward the door. "Thanks, Marla, I
appreciate your watching over him."
"Oh, anytime, hon. You just
ring-a-ding if you need anything."
"I will." She pushed the
larger woman out the door and slammed it shut. "Hi," she said to
Valerius.
He stared at the knife in her hand,
then looked down at the healing wound on his chest. "What? Are you back to
finish me off?"
She frowned at him.
"Wha…?" Then her gaze went to the knife in her hand. "Oh, this.
No, last night was a complete accident."
Tabitha placed the knife on the
dresser, then turned to face him. She had to admit that Valerius looked
extremely handsome in her bed. His long black hair was down, and draped around
his face. His features were perfectly chiseled as if by some master artist. And
that body of his…
Really, no man should look that
yummy.
It was why she'd spent the night in
her downstairs office and why she'd sent Marla up to watch after him first
thing this morning.
Asleep he'd been more of a
temptation than she wanted. He'd looked relaxed and gentle.
Inviting.
Awake he looked dangerous.
And still inviting.
She would give the goddess credit,
Artemis had exquisite taste in men; and to Tabitha's knowledge, and according
to Amanda's words, there was no such thing as an ugly Dark-Hunter.
She couldn't really fault the
goddess for that. If you had to pick men for your own personal army, what woman
wouldn't pick the tallest and best-looking of the bunch?
It also explained why Acheron was
their leader.
Yes, it was good to be a goddess.
Tabitha couldn't imagine how great it would be to command all that delectable
testosterone.
And Valerius was prime DH material
as he sat with one divinely carved arm braced on her mattress while the rest of
him was all but bare to her sight. He looked like some coiled, wild beast ready
to strike.
But he was confused. She felt his
emotions reaching out to her. He was also angry but she wasn't sure why.
"You're safe here," she
said, stepping near the bed. "I know what you are and I made sure all the
windows are covered."
"Who are you?" he asked in
a suspicious tone.
"Tabitha Devereaux," she
said.
"Are you a Squire?"
"No."
"Then how do you know—"
"I'm a friend of
Acheron's."
His anger snapped at that.
"You're lying." He stood up suddenly, then hissed as he realized he
was completely naked.
Tabitha bit her lip to keep from
moaning at the sight of all that luscious skin bared. She had to give the
Dark-Hunters credit, they were all incredibly well built.
Valerius grabbed the sheet from her
bed and covered himself. "Where are my clothes?" he asked in the most
disdainful voice she'd ever heard.
No wonder Nick and the others had a
hard time with him. Arrogance and supreme superiority bled from every molecule
of that masculine body. It was obvious Valerius was a man used to giving
orders, which made sense since she knew he had once been a Roman general.
Unfortunately, Tabitha wasn't used
to following anyone's orders, especially not a man's.
"Keep your shirt on," she
said with a laugh at her bad joke. "Your clothes are at the laundry.
They'll deliver them as soon as they're ready."
"And in the meantime?"
"Looks like you're naked."
His jaw worked as if he couldn't
believe what he was hearing. "I beg your pardon?"
"Beg all you want, you're still
going to be naked." Tabitha paused at the wicked image in her mind.
"Come to think of it, a gorgeous, begging, naked man… that's the stuff of
fantasies. Begging won't get you your clothes, but it could get you something
else." She wiggled her eyebrows at him.
His fist tightened on the sheet he
held around his waist. She could sense that he was both offended and yet oddly
amused by her.
She cocked her head at him.
"You know, you are Roman. You could just make a toga out of the
bedsheet."
Valerius stood there feeling a strange
urge to sputter. Had he been lowborn, he might actually have done that.
This had to be the strangest woman
ever born.
"How do you know I'm
Roman?"
"I told you, I know Ash and all
the rest of you night dwellers." She gave him a playful look. "C'mon,
make a toga for me. I tried to make one in college and ended up with it falling
off in the middle of the party. Thank God my roommate was still sober enough to
scoop it up and wrap it around me before the frat boys pounced."
Behind him, he heard a cuckoo clock
chime. Valerius turned to see the time, then scowled as he realized the
"bird" had a red mohawk.
It also had an eyepatch.
"Ain't it a hoot?" Tabitha
asked. "I picked it up in Switzerland when I spent a year there
studying."
"Fascinating," he said
coldly. "Now if you'll leave me, I shall—"
"Whoa, wait a sec, bud. I ain't
your servant and you don't take that tone with me. Capisce?"
"Saeva scaeva," Valerius
muttered under his breath.
"Saeve puer," she shot
back.
Valerius actually gaped at her.
"Did you just insult me in Latin?"
"You insulted me first. Not
that I'm particularly insulted by being called a rampant she-devil. It's kind
of flattering, but still, I'm not the kind of person to take an insult in
silence."
In spite of himself, he was
impressed. It had been a long time indeed since he'd met a female who knew his
native tongue. Of course, he didn't like being called an oafish boy, but there
was something to be said for a woman who possessed such intelligence.
And it had been an eternity since he
was around someone who didn't openly disdain him. She wasn't biting in her
retorts. Rather she was sparring with him like a champion debater who took none
of this to heart.
How unusual…
How frighteningly refreshing.
Suddenly, the theme song to The
Twilight Zone chimed through the house.
"What is that?" he asked
trepidatiously. Maybe he had actually walked into Rod Serling's domain.
"Doorbell. It's probably your
clothes being delivered."
"Tabby!" Marla shouted
from somewhere outside the bedroom. "It's Ben with your stuff."
Valerius stiffened at the crass
behavior. "Does he always scream like that?"
"Hey, now," Tabitha said
sternly. "Marla is one of my dearest friends on this earth and if you
insult her or keep calling her a he, I'll stake your butt somewhere where it'll
hurt a lot more than your chest." She dropped her gaze meaningfully to his
groin.
Valerius widened his eyes at her
threat. What kind of woman said such a thing to a man?
Before he could speak, she left the
room.
Stunned, he wasn't sure what to do.
What to think. He went to the dresser where she'd left her knife. Next to it
was his wallet, keys, and phone.
He grabbed the phone and called
Acheron, who immediately answered.
"I need help," Valerius
said to him for the first time in two thousand years.
Acheron groaned slightly. "Help
with what?" he asked. His heavily accented voice was groggy, as if
Valerius had awakened him from a deep sleep.
"I'm in the home of a madwoman
who claims she knows you. You have to get me out of here right now, Acheron. I
don't care what it takes."
"It's noon, Valerius. We both
should be asleep." Acheron paused. "Where are you anyway?"
Valerius was looking around the
room. There were Mardi Gras beads draped all over the three-sided antique
dresser mirror. Instead of a Persian rug, it was… a giant toy-car road map.
There were parts of the room that showed impeccable taste and breeding and
parts that were just plain scary.
He hesitated in front of what
appeared to be a voodoo altar.
"I don't know," Valerius
said. "I hear some godawful kind of music from outside, horns blaring, and
I'm in a house with a mohawk cuckoo bird, a transvestite, and a knife-wielding
lunatic."
"Why are you at
Tabitha's?" Acheron asked.
Valerius was floored by the
question. Acheron really did know her?
Granted, Acheron was a bit
eccentric, but up until now, Valerius had assumed the Atlantean had more sense
than to associate with such low-class humans. "Excuse me?"
"Relax," Acheron said with
a yawn. "You're in good hands. Tabby won't hurt you."
"She stabbed me!"
"Damn," Ash said. "I
told her not to stab any more Hunters. I hate it when she does that."
"You hate it? I'm the one with
the festering wound."
"Really?" Acheron asked.
"I've never known a Dark-Hunter to have a festering wound before. At least
not externally."
Valerius clenched his teeth at the
Atlantean's misplaced humor. "I do not find you amusing, Acheron."
"Yeah, I know. But look on the
bright side: You're the third Dark-Hunter she's nailed so far. She kind of gets
a little carried away sometimes."
"A little carried away? The
woman is a menace."
"Nah, she's a good egg. Unless
you're a Daimon—then she can give Xanthippe a run for her money."
Valerius doubted that. Even the
infamous ancient Greek shrew had to be more composed than Tabitha.
The door opened to show Tabitha
entering the room with his clothes wrapped in plastic.
"Who are you talking to?"
she asked.
"Tell her I said hi,"
Acheron said a second later.
This time, Valerius did sputter. He
just couldn't believe what was happening here. That these two knew each other
so well.
He stared at Tabitha as she hung his
clothes on the closet doorknob. "Acheron says hi."
She moved to stand in front of him,
leaned forward, and raised her voice so that Acheron could hear her over the
phone. "Hey, gorgeous babe. Shouldn't you be asleep?"
"Yes, I should," Acheron
said to Valerius.
"You don't call Acheron
'babe,'" Valerius said sternly to Tabitha.
She actually snorted at him. Like a
horse. "You don't call Acheron 'babe' because… well, that's just sick. But
I call him 'babe' all the time."
Valerius was shocked.
Was she…
"No, she's not my
girlfriend," Acheron said from the other end as if he could hear
Valerius's thoughts. "I'm leaving that for some other poor sap."
"You have to help me,
Acheron," Valerius said, tightening his grip on the sheet as he moved away
from Tabitha, who continued to pursue him across the room.
"Okay, listen. Here's some
help. You know your prized cashmere coat?"
Valerius couldn't imagine how that
might help him, but at this point he was willing to try anything.
"Yes?"
"Guard it well. Marla is about
your size and she'll definitely try to steal it if she sees it. She has this
strange coat and jacket fetish, especially if they've been worn by men. Last
time I was in town, she ended up with my favorite motorcycle jacket."
Valerius gaped. "And how is it
that you associate with drag queens, Acheron?"
"I have many interesting
friends, Valerius, and some of them are even complete and utter assholes."
He stiffened. "Was that
directed at me?"
"No. I just think you're way
too uptight for your own good. Now if you're through wigging out on me, I'd
like to go back to sleep."
Ash actually hung up the phone.
Valerius stood there, holding the
cell phone. He felt like someone had just cut the line on his life preserver,
and was leaving him to drift out into shark-infested waters.
Jaws herself was there, waiting to
devour him.
Jupiter help him.
Tabitha picked the pillow up off the
floor and returned it to the bed. She paused as she caught sight of Valerius's
backside. Damn, he had the nicest posterior she'd ever seen on any man. Someone
should stamp Grade A Prime on it. It was all she could do not to walk over to
him and cop a feel, but his rigid, frigid stance kept her well at bay.
That and the multitude of scars that
marred his back. It looked as if someone had beaten him repeatedly.
But who would have dared do such a
thing?
"You okay?" she asked as
he walked to the dresser and set his phone down.
He raked his hand through his long
hair and sighed. "How many hours to sundown?"
"A little over five." She
sensed he was still angry and confused. "You want to go back to bed and
sleep?"
He gave her a harsh, menacing glare.
"I want to go home."
"Yeah, well, I would have taken
you home had Otto answered his phone last night."
"I gave Guido time off for bad
behavior," Valerius said under his breath. Then his face went suddenly
pale.
Tabitha sensed dread, followed
sharply by a pain so deep that it actually made her wince.
"What's wrong?" she asked.
"I need to go home
immediately."
"Well, unless you have some
special relationship to Apollo that I need to know about, that's about as
likely as me winning the lottery, which would be highly likely if Ash would
ever share those damn numbers with me. Vicious cur that he is. He won't share
squat."
She felt a wave of hopeless despair
consume Valerius. Instinctively, she walked over to him and gently touched his
arm. "It's okay, really. I'll take you back as soon as the sun goes
down."
Valerius looked down at her hand on
his biceps. No woman had laid a bare hand to him like that in centuries. It
wasn't sexual. It was soothing. The hand of someone who offered him comfort.
He lifted his gaze to hers. She had
searingly blue eyes.
They were sharp and intelligent.
Most of all, they were kind, and kindness wasn't something Valerius was used
to.
Most people took one look at him and
instantly had a strong disliking for him. As a human, he'd attributed it to his
regal status and his family's well-earned reputation for brutality.
As a Dark-Hunter, it had stemmed
from the fact that he was a Roman and since Rome and Greece had spent centuries
warring against each other until Rome had finally brought Greece to her knees,
it was only to be expected that the Greeks would hate him. Unfortunately, the
Greeks and Amazons were a vocal group who had quickly turned all the other
Dark-Hunters and Squires against their Roman-born brethren.
Over the centuries, Valerius had
convinced himself that he didn't need any brothers-in-arms and had even started
getting a morbid kind of enjoyment from reminding them of his regal Roman
status.
From the first year of his rebirth,
he'd learned to strike out at them before they struck him.
He'd finally embraced the rigid
formality and sense of propriety that his father had beaten into him as a
child.
But that formality fled before the
kindness of this woman's soothing touch.
Tabitha swallowed as something
passed between them. His dark, intense stare went through her and for the first
time it wasn't condemning or judgmental. It was almost tender, and tenderness
was not something she expected from a man of Valerius's reputation.
He laid his fingers against the scar
on her cheek. She didn't see the sneer on his face that most men got when they
saw it. Instead, he gently traced its line. "What happened?" he
asked.
"Car wreck" almost came
out. She'd told that lie for so long that it was practically automatic now.
Honestly, it was a lot easier to say the lie than it was to live the truth.
She knew just how hideous her face
was. Her family had no idea how many times she had overheard them make comments
about her scar. How many times Kyrian had told Amanda that he would gladly pay
for her to have plastic surgery.
But Tabitha had been terrified of
hospitals ever since her aunt had died of a simple tonsillectomy gone bad. She
would never elect to have something done just because she wasn't pretty
anymore. If the rest of the world couldn't deal with her, it was their problem,
not hers.
"A Daimon," she said
quietly. "He said he wanted to give me a special memento so that I would
always remember him."
A tic started in his jaw at her words
and she sensed his anger on her behalf.
"I'll give him credit,"
she said past the lump in her throat. "He was right. I think of him every
time I look in the mirror."
Valerius dropped his hand down to
the scar on her neck where one of the Daimons had actually gotten a bite on
her. If not for Kyrian coming to her rescue, she would most likely have died
that night.
"I'm sorry," he whispered.
Those were words she was certain
never crossed this man's lips. "It's okay. We all have scars. I'm just
lucky that most of mine are on the outside."
Valerius was stunned by her wisdom.
He'd never expected such depth of thought from a woman like her. She gave a
light squeeze to his hand before she removed it from her neck and stepped back.
"Are you hungry?"
"Famished," he answered
honestly. Like most Dark-Hunters he usually ate three meals a night. One not
long after he awoke at sunset, another around ten or eleven at night, and the
third one around three or four in the morning. Since he'd been wounded fairly
early, he'd only eaten one meal last night.
"Okay, I have a well-stocked
kitchen. What would you like?"
"Something Italian."
She nodded. "Sounds good. Go
ahead and get dressed and I'll meet you downstairs. The kitchen is the door on
the left. Don't open the one on the right that has a Bio-hazard sticker on it.
That one leads to my shop and it's nothing but daylight in there."
She started to pull the door closed
behind her, then stopped. "By the way, you might want to put your coat in
my closet until you leave. Marla—"
"Acheron already warned
me."
"Ah, good. See you in a
few."
Valerius waited until she was gone
before he went to dress. As he hung his coat in her closet, he was struck by
the fact that she owned as much black as he did. The only color in her closet
was a bright pink satin dress that stood out harshly amidst the sea of
darkness. That and a red plaid miniskirt.
It was the miniskirt that held his
attention as an unwanted image of Tabitha in it went through him and he
wondered if she had nice legs.
He'd always appreciated a pair of
shapely, soft feminine legs. Especially when they were wrapped around him.
His body hardened instantly with
that thought. Valerius grimaced as he felt suddenly like a pervert standing in
her closet, daydreaming about her.
He shut the closet door instantly
and left the room. The hallway was painted a bright yellow shade that was a bit
harsh on his sensitive Dark-Hunter eyes. There was a room across the hall that
had the door opened to display a well-kept, tastefully decorated bedroom. He
saw a silver sequined dress lying across the antique bed and an ornate brunette
wig resting on a foam head beside it.
"Oh, hi, cutie," Marla
said as she left what must have been a bathroom. She was wearing a turban on
her apparently bald head and a pink bathrobe. "Tabby's downstairs."
"Thank you," he said,
inclining his head to her.
"Ooo, manners. What a nice change
for Tabby. Most of the men she drags home are all crude ruffians. Except for
that Ash Parthenopaeus who is remarkably well-mannered. But he's odd, too. Have
you ever met him?"
"I am acquainted with him,
yes."
She visibly shivered. "Ooo, I
like the way you say 'acquainted,' shug. That's some accent you have there. Now
you better go on before I take up any more of your time. God knows, I'll talk
your ears off if you let me."
Smiling at her flamboyant gestures
as she shooed him away, Valerius bid her adieu, then closed her door. There was
something oddly charming about Marla.
He made his way down the beautiful
cherry staircase that led to a small landing. He frowned at the Biohazard
sticker that was right where Tabitha had said. He turned to the left where two
French doors that could use a bit of repair led to a small dining room. Inside
were an old brown-and-white farmer's table and ladder-back chairs that had seen
better days.
The walls were painted a harsh white
and held framed black-and-white posters of European landmarks such as the
Eiffel Tower, Stonehenge, and the Coliseum. Black plantation shutters had been
pulled closed over the windows to block out the daylight for him. And a black
buffet was set against the far wall. The top of it was littered with pictures
and collectible plates, including ones of Elvis and Elvira. Two large, antique
silver candelabrums stood at each end of it.
But what amazed him was an 8 x 10
picture in the center of the buffet of what appeared to be Tabitha in a wedding
dress standing beside a man whose face was covered by a small cut-out picture
of Russell Crowe's head.
He reached out to remove the
picture.
"There you are," Tabitha
said from behind him.
Valerius straightened instantly.
"You're married?" he asked.
She frowned until she saw the
picture. "Oh, good grief, no. That's my sister Amanda at her wedding. The
baby girl in the picture next to it is her daughter, Marissa."
Valerius studied the wedding
picture. There was really no difference between the women except for the scar.
"You have a twin sister?"
"Yes."
"And why is your sister married
to Russell Crowe?"
Tabitha laughed. "Ah, it's a
goof on my brother-in-law, the self-righteous, proselytizing schlemiel."
He gave her an arch look. "I
take it you don't care for the man."
"Actually, I love him to death.
He's really good to my sister and niece, and is a real sweetheart in his own
way. But, much like you, he takes himself entirely too seriously. You guys need
to lighten up and enjoy yourselves more. Life's too short… well, maybe not for
you, but for the rest of us mortals it is."
Valerius was fascinated by this
woman who should repulse him. She was tacky and uncouth and yet she was amusing
and charming in a most unexpected way.
She plunked a small red can on the
table that had a plastic spoon sticking out of what appeared to be some sort of
elbow macaroni and marinara.
Valerius frowned. "What is
that?"
"Ravioli."
He arched a brow at that. "That
is not ravioli."
She looked down at it. "Well,
okay. It's Beefaroni. My niece calls anything that comes in these small
microwavable cans ravioli." She pulled a chair out for him. "Eat
up."
Valerius was aghast at what she was
offering him. "I beg your pardon? You don't actually expect me to eat
that, do you?"
"Well, yeah. You said you
wanted Italian. It's Italian." She picked the can up and indicated the
label. "See. Chef Boyardee. He makes only the best stuff."
Valerius had never been more appalled
in his life. Surely she was joking. "I don't eat out of paper cups with
plastic cutlery."
"Well, la-di-da, Mr. Fancy
Pants. Sorry if I offended you, but here on Planet Earth the rest of us
plebeians tend to eat whatever's handy, and when something is given to us, we
don't question it."
Tabitha crossed her arms over her
chest as he went ramrod stiff. If looks could kill, her poor cup of Beefaroni
would be splintered.
"I shall withdraw until
nightfall." He gave her an imperious nod of his head before he headed back
toward the stairs.
Tabitha gaped as he left her. He
really was offended and deep inside, hurt. The latter made no sense whatsoever
to her. She was the one who should be insulted. Picking up the Beefaroni, she
sighed, took a bite, and headed back into the kitchen with it.
Valerius carefully closed the door
to her room when what he really wanted to do was slam it. But then, nobility
didn't slam through the house. That was for commoners. Nobility held their
emotions under careful restraint.
Nor were they wounded by the opinion
of crass women with no couth who insulted them.
He'd been foolish to think for even
a moment that she…
"I don't need anyone to like
me," he muttered under his breath. He'd lived all his life without anyone
giving a damn about him. Why should it change now?
And yet he couldn't squelch that
tiny part of him that yearned for someone to pass along a note of kindness to
him. A simple, "Tell Valerius I said hi." Just once in his life…
"You're being foolish," he growled at himself. Better to be feared
than liked. His father's words rang in his ears. People will always betray
someone they like, but never someone they truly fear.
It was true. Fear kept people in
line. He more than anyone knew that.
Had his brothers feared him…
Valerius winced at the memory and
moved to sit in the director's chair in the corner of the room.
It was set next to a bookcase that
held a wide assortment of novels. He frowned as he scanned the titles, which
went from The Last Days of Pompeii and The Life and Times of Alexander the
Great to Jim Butcher's Dresden novels.
What a peculiar woman Tabitha was.
As Valerius reached for a book about ancient Rome, his gaze fell to the trash
can beside the chair. It was large like the kind that most people kept in the
kitchen, but what caught his attention was the piece of black sleeve that
peeped out from the closed top. Opening it, he found his shirt and coat.
His frown deepened as he pulled them
out. They were still covered in blood and torn. He fingered the slash in the
back of them from where the Daimon had cut him with a sword.
But he was wearing his…
Valerius stood up and pulled his
silk turtleneck off. It was Ralph Lauren, identical to the one he'd worn last
night. There was only one explanation.
Tabitha had bought him new clothes.
He went to the closet and examined
the coat. It wasn't until then that he realized the buttons were a slightly
different color of brass. Other than that, it was an exact copy.
He couldn't believe it. His coat
alone had cost fifteen hundred dollars. Why would she do such a thing?
Wanting an answer, he headed back
downstairs where he found her alone in the kitchen, cooking.
Valerius hesitated in the doorway.
She stood sideways from him, a perfectly serene profile. She was truly a
beautiful woman.
Her faded black jeans hugged long
legs and an extremely attractive rear. She wore a short-sleeved, buttoned-up
black sweater that rode high, leaving a large amount of tanned flesh exposed
between the low-riding jeans and her navel, which, if he wasn't mistaken, was
pierced.
Her long auburn hair was pulled back
and she looked strangely tranquil standing over the stove in her bare feet; a
silver toe ring twinkled on her right foot. The radio was turned on, low,
playing Martin Briley's "Salt in My Tears." Tabitha's hips moved in
time to the music in an erotic rhythm that was far more alluring than he wanted
to admit.
Indeed, it was all he could do to
not move toward her so that he could dip his head down and sample some of the
succulent skin that beckoned him.
She was a spitfire who would surely
ride him well. He took a step forward and she jumped, then kicked her foot out.
Valerius cursed as said foot made contact with his groin and he doubled over
with the pain of it.
"Oh my God!" Tabitha
gasped as she realized she'd just racked her houseguest. "I'm so sorry!
Are you okay?"
He gave her a menacing glare.
"No," he growled, limping away from her.
Tabitha helped him toward the step
stool chair that she kept in the small kitchen. "I'm really, really
sorry," she repeated as he sat down and held the heel of his hand against
himself. "I should have warned you not to sneak up behind me."
"I wasn't sneaking," he
said from between clenched teeth. "I was walking."
"Here, let me get you some
ice."
"I don't need ice. I just need
a minute to breathe and not talk."
She held her hands up in surrender.
"Take your time."
After he turned several interesting
shades, he finally recovered himself. "Thank Jupiter you didn't have
another knife in your hands," he muttered, then said louder, "Do you
kick every man who comes into the house like this?"
"Oh, Lord, not another
one!" Marla said as she entered the room. "Tabby, I swear it's a
wonder you have a personal life at all the way you treat men."
"Oh, hush, Marla. I didn't do
it on purpose… this time."
Marla rolled her eyes as she grabbed
two Diet Cokes from the fridge. She handed one to Valerius. "Hold that to
your wound, sweetie. It'll help. Just be grateful you're not Phil. I heard they
had to perform a testicle retrieval operation after Tabby caught him two-timing
on her." Then she popped the top on her drink and went back upstairs.
"He deserved it," Tabitha
called after Marla. "He's lucky I didn't cut it off."
Valerius really didn't want to
pursue that conversation. He stood up and set the Coke on the countertop.
"Why are you cooking?"
Tabitha shrugged. "You said you
didn't want something out of a can so I'm making you pasta."
"But you said—"
"I say a lot of things I don't
mean."
He watched her as she turned the
stove off, then took the pot of boiling pasta toward the sink. A bell sounded.
"Wanna get that for me?"
"Get what?" he asked.
"The microwave."
Valerius looked around the kitchen.
In all his life, he'd seldom seen a kitchen and knew very little about the
appliances that one cooked with. He had servants for such things.
The bell chimed again.
Assuming that was the microwave, he
went to it and pulled the handle. Inside was a bowl of marinara. He took the
fish-shaped potholder that was lying in front of the microwave and pulled the
bowl out. "Where should I put this?"
"The stove, please."
He did as she said.
She brought a small bowl over to
where he stood, then covered the pasta with sauce.
"Better?" she asked,
handing it to him.
Valerius nodded, until his gaze
dropped to the noodles. He blinked in disbelief as the shape of the pasta hit
him.
No. Surely he was seeing things.
Was that a…?
His jaw went slack as he realized
that it was what it appeared. Little tiny pasta penises were swimming in the
red marinara.
"Oh, come on," Tabitha
said in an irritable voice. "Don't tell me a Roman general is having
trouble with penironi."
"You don't honestly expect me
to eat this?" he asked, aghast.
She huffed at him. "Don't you
dare cop that superior attitude with me, buddy. I happen to know exactly how
you Romans lived. How you decorated your houses. You come from the land of the
phallus, so don't act so shocked that I gave you a bowl of them to eat. It's
not like I have the flying phallus wind chime hanging in my house to ward off
evil or something, but I'll bet you did when you were human."
It was true, but it had been
centuries since… come to think of it, he'd never seen anything like this.
She handed him a fork. "It's
not silver, but it is stainless steel. I'm sure you can make do."
He was still mesmerized by the
pasta. "Where did you get this?"
"I sell it and boobaroni in my
shop."
"Boobaroni?"
"I think you can figure that
one out."
Valerius didn't know what to say to
that. He'd never eaten obscene food before—and just what kind of shop did she
own that she sold such commodities inside it?
"House of Vetti," Tabitha
said, arms akimbo. "Need I say more?"
Valerius was well-versed about the
Roman house she spoke of, as well as its risque murals. True, his people had
been rather overt with their sexuality, but he most certainly hadn't expected
to come face to face with it in this modern age.
"Non sana est puella,"
Valerius said under his breath, which was Latin for This girl is insane.
"Quin tu istanc orationem hinc
veterem antque antiquam amoves, vervex?" Tabitha shot back. Would you stop
using that obsolete language, you sheep-head?
Never before had Valerius been both
insulted and amused at the same time. "How is it you speak Latin so
perfectly?"
She pulled a piece of toast from her
oven. "I have a master's degree in Ancient Civ. My sister, Selena, has her
Ph.D. in it. We thought it was a goof in college to insult each other in
Latin."
"Selena Laurens? The lunatic
with a tarot-card table in the Square?"
She gave him a fierce glare.
"That loon happens to be my beloved big sister and if you insult her
again, you'll be limping… more."
Valerius bit his tongue as he made
his way to her table in the dining room. He'd met Selena several times over the
last three years, and none of those encounters had gone well. When Acheron had first mentioned
her, Valerius had been delighted at the prospect of having
someone to talk to who knew his culture and language.
But as soon as Acheron had
introduced them, Selena had tossed her drink into Valerius's face. She had
called him every insult known to mankind and had even made up quite a few new
ones.
He didn't know why Selena hated him
so much. All she would say is that it was a shame he hadn't died under a
barbarian stampede, ripped to pieces.
And that was one of her kinder
wishes for his death.
It would most likely please her a
great deal to know his real death had been far more humiliating and painful
than any of her rants.
Every time he ventured into the
Square to patrol for Daimons, she hurled curses at him, as well as anything
else she had handy to throw in his direction.
No doubt she would be thrilled to
find out her sister had stabbed him. Her only regret would be that he was still
living and not lying dead in some gutter.
Tabitha paused in the doorway and
watched as Valerius actually ate his pasta in silence. He held himself rigidly
upright and his manners were impeccable. He appeared calm and composed.
But then he also looked so
incredibly uncomfortable in her house. Not to mention out of place.
"Here," she said, moving
forward to hand him the bread.
"Thank you," he said as he
took it. He frowned as if looking for a bread plate. Finally, he set the bread
down on the table and returned to his offbeat pasta.
There was an awkward silence between
them. She didn't know what to say to him. It was weird to have this man in her
presence when she'd heard so much about him.
None of which was good.
Her brother-in-law and his best
friend Julian spent hours at family parties, ranting about Valerius and his
family and the fact that Artemis had transferred Valerius to New Orleans for
pure spite because she hadn't wanted to let Kyrian go. Maybe that was true. Or
maybe the goddess had only wanted Kyrian to face his past and put it firmly to
rest.
Either way, the person who seemed to
be punished most by Artemis's decision was Valerius, who was constantly
reminded of Kyrian and Julian's hatred.
Funny how he didn't seem so bad to
her.
True, he was arrogant and formal,
but…
There was something more to him. She
could feel it.
She went to the kitchen to get him
something to drink. Her first thought was to give him water, but then, she'd
already been vicious in giving him the penironi. It had been a childish impulse
that she now felt extremely guilty over. So she decided to break open her wine
cabinet and get him something he would no doubt appreciate.
Valerius looked up as Tabitha handed
him a glass of red wine. He half-expected it to be a harsh, cheap Ripple and
was pleasantly surprised at the rich, full-bodied taste of it.
"Thank you," he said.
"You're welcome."
As she started away, he captured her
hand and pulled her to a stop. "Why did you buy me new clothes?"
"How did you—"
"I found mine in the
garbage."
She cringed as if it bothered her
that he had learned what she'd done. "I should have emptied the can.
Damn."
"Why didn't you want me to
know?"
"I thought you might not take
them. It was the least I could do since I was part of the reason they were
ruined."
He offered her a smile that warmed
her heart. "Thank you, Tabitha."
It was the first time he'd said her
name. His rich, deep accent sent a shiver over her.
Before she could stop herself, she
placed her hand against his cheek. She half-expected him to pull away.
He didn't. He merely stared up at
her with those curious black eyes.
She was struck by his handsomeness.
By his inner pain, which made her own heart ache for him. And before she could
think better of it, she dipped her head down so that she could capture his lips
with her own.
Valerius was completely unprepared
for her action. Never had a woman initiated a kiss with him. Never. Tabitha was
bold with her exploration, demanding, and it sizzled through his body like
lava.
Cupping her face in his hands, he
kissed her back.
Tabitha moaned at the decadent taste
of her general. Her tongue brushed against his fangs, giving her a chill. He
was lethal and deadly.
Forbidden.
And for a woman who prided herself
on following no one's rules but her own, it made him even more appealing.
She straddled him in the chair and
sat down in his lap.
He didn't protest. Instead, he
dropped his hands from her face and trailed them over her back while she pulled
the tie from his hair and loosened the thick, black strands that slid like silk
against her fingers.
She could feel his erection as it
pressed against the center of her body, igniting her desire even more.
It'd been so long since she'd been
with a man. So long since she had felt a desire this potent to wrap herself
around one. But she wanted Valerius badly, even though he should be completely
off her menu.
Valerius's head swam as Tabitha
trailed her lips along the length of his jaw, then under his chin, to his neck.
Her hot breath blistered him. It had been centuries since he'd taken a woman
who knew what he was.
A woman he didn't have to kiss
carefully for fear of her discovering his fangs.
Not once had he ever been with a
woman this exciting. One who met him so openly. So wildly. There was no fear
whatsoever in this woman. No holding back.
She was fierce and passionate and
completely feminine.
Tabitha knew she shouldn't be doing
this. Dark-Hunters weren't allowed to get involved with women. They weren't
allowed any emotional attachments at all except for maybe a Squire.
She could sleep with Valerius just
once and then she would have to let him go.
But more than that, her entire
family hated this man and she should, too. She should be repulsed by him. Only
she wasn't. There was something about him that was irresistible.
Against all sanity and reason, she
wanted him.
You're just horny, Tabby, let him
go.
Maybe it was just that simple. It'd
been almost three years since she'd broken up with Eric and in that time she
hadn't been with anyone else. No one had even appealed to her as anything more
than a passing curiosity.
Well, except for Ash, but she knew
better than to make a move on him.
And even he didn't make her sizzle
like this. But then, he didn't have the pain inside him that Valerius carried—or if he did, he was better at hiding it around her.
She felt as if Valerius needed her
somehow.
Just as she reached for the zipper
of his pants, the phone rang.
Tabitha ignored it until Marla used
her walkie-talkie to say, "It's Amanda, Tabby. She says for you to pick up
the phone. Now."
She groaned in frustration. She gave
Valerius a hot, quick kiss before she got up. "Please don't say a word
while I'm on the phone," she warned him.
Since Amanda had married Kyrian, she
had become incredibly psychic, and if she heard Valerius's voice, she would
know instantly who he was. Tabitha was sure of it. It was the last thing she
wanted to deal with.
She picked up the wall phone in the
kitchen. "Hey, Mandy, whatcha need?"
Tabitha turned to watch Valerius as
he put himself back together. He pulled his hair back and replaced the small
black tie she had removed.
He returned to being regal and rigid
as he picked up his fork and began eating again.
Her sister was babbling on about a
bad dream, but it wasn't until the term "Spathi Daimon" came up that
Tabitha pulled her attention away from Valerius.
"I'm sorry, what?" she
asked Amanda.
"I said that I had a bad dream
about you, Tabby, that you were seriously hurt in a fight. I just wanted to
make sure that you were okay."
"Yeah, I'm fine."
"Are you sure? You sound kind
of strange to me."
"You interrupted me from
work."
"Oh," Amanda said,
accepting the lie, which made Tabitha feel a little guilty. Tabitha wasn't used
to keeping anything from her twin. "Okay. In that case, I won't keep you.
But you be careful for me. I have a really bad feeling that won't go
away."
Tabitha felt it, too. It was
something undefinable and at the same time persistent. "Don't worry. Ash
is in town and there's an extra Dark-Hunter he moved in. Everything's fine."
"Okay. I'm trusting you to
watch your back... But, Tabby?"
"Yeah?"
"Stop lying to me. I don't
like it."
Chapter 3
Tabitha hung up the phone, feeling a
little odd about her conversation. And she felt even odder about Amanda's
prediction for her health. It concerned her a lot, especially when combined
with her own uneasy feeling.
She'd almost died twice three years ago
when Desiderius had been out to kill Amanda and Kyrian. Since then, no Daimon
had gotten near her. Mostly because she had honed her skills and become much
more observant.
But the ones last night…
They'd been tough kills and a group
of them had gotten away. Surely they wouldn't be back. Most Daimons vacated the
area very quickly after they ran into her or one of the Dark-Hunters. Courage
wasn't exactly something they were known for: Since they were young and the
idea was to stay alive, very few Daimons wanted to run head-to-head with
Artemis's army, which was comprised of warriors with hundreds, if not
thousands, of years of combat experience on them.
Only Desiderius—who had been a
half-god—had possessed the strength and stupidity to fight the Dark-Hunters.
No, the Daimons from last night were
gone and she would be fine. Amanda must have had bad chicken or something.
She returned to Valerius, who was
finishing up his food. "What are your powers?" she asked.
He looked a bit taken aback by the
question. "Excuse me?"
"Your Dark-Hunter powers. Do
they include premonitions or precog?"
"No," he said before
taking a drink of wine. "Like most Roman Dark-Hunters, I got rather, and
please excuse the crassness of this, 'shafted' in that department."
Tabitha frowned. "How do you
mean?"
He took a deep breath before he
answered. "Artemis didn't care for the fact that in Rome, she wasn't a
major deity. Rather, she was mostly revered by our lower classes, slaves and
women. So she carried her grudge over to us when we were created. I'm stronger
than a human and faster, but I don't have the elevated psychic powers that the
rest of the Dark-Hunters do."
"Then how do you manage to
fight the Daimons?"
He shrugged. "The same way you do.
I battle more skillfully than they."
Yeah, maybe, but she often found
herself bloody from her battles. She wondered how often he did, too. It was
hard to fight a Daimon as a human.
"That's not right,"
Tabitha said, angry on his behalf that Artemis would create such a disparity
among her Dark-Hunters. How could the goddess turn them loose, knowing what
they were up against?
Man, Simi was right. Artemis was a
bitch-goddess.
Valerius frowned at the anger he
heard in Tabitha's voice. He wasn't used to anyone taking his side in any
matter. Neither as a man nor as a Dark-Hunter. It had always seemed his ill
fate to end up on the losing end of any matter regardless of whether he was
right or wrong. "Few things ever are fair."
He drained the last of his wine and
rose to his feet, then inclined his head to her. "I thank you for the
food."
"Any time, Val."
He stiffened at her use of a
nickname he despised. The only people to ever use it had been his brother
Markus and his father, and then only to mock or belittle him. "My name is
Valerius."
She looked at him dryly. "I
can't call you Valerius. Jeez. It sounds like some broken-down Italian car. And
every time I hear that name I feel the deep need to break out into Vo-lar-ray,
Oh, oh, oh—and then I start thinking of the movie The Hollywood Knights and
believe me you don't want me to go there. So to save my sanity from that crappy
song echoing in my head and images of a lunatic running around a high school
gym doing unspeakable things, you can be known as Val or Babycakes."
His gaze darkened. "My name is
Valerius and I will not answer to Val."
She shrugged. "Fine then,
Babycakes, have it your way."
He opened his mouth to protest, but
already he knew better than to argue. Tabitha had a way of doing just as she
pleased, all arguments be damned. "Very well," he said grudgingly,
"I shall endure Val. But only from you."
She smiled. "See how painless that
is? Why would you hate the name, anyway?"
"It's coarse."
She rolled her eyes at him.
"You must really be fun in bed," she said sarcastically.
Valerius was stunned by her words.
"Excuse me?"
"I'm just wondering what it
would be like to make love to a man who is so concerned about being rigid—then
again… Nah. I can't imagine someone so regal getting down and dirty with
it."
"I assure you, I've never had
any complaints in that regard."
"Really? Then you must be
sleeping with women who are so cold you could freeze ice cubes on them."
He turned to leave the room.
"We are not having this discussion."
But she gave him no reprieve as she
followed him toward the stairs. "Were you like this in Rome? I mean, from
everything I've read, you guys were raw with sexuality."
"I can just imagine the lies
they tell."
"So were you always this
uptight?"
"What do you care?"
Her response stunned him as she
pulled him to a stop. "Because I'm trying to figure out what made you like
you are now. You are so closed off, you're barely human."
"I am not human, Ms. Devereaux.
In case you haven't noticed, I'm one of the damned."
"Baby, open your eyes and look
around. We're all damned in one way or another. But damned is a far cry from
dead. And you live like you're dead."
"I'm that, too."
She ran a hot look over his
scrumptious body. "For a dead man you look remarkably fit."
His face hardened. "You don't
even know me."
"No, I don't. But the question
is, do you know you?"
"I'm the only one who
does."
And that simple sentence told her
everything she needed to know about him.
He was alone.
Tabitha wanted to reach out to him,
but could sense that she needed to give him some space. He wasn't used to
interacting with people like her… then again, few were.
As Grandma Flora, the gypsy seer of
their family, always said, Tabitha tended to come on to people like a freight
train and mow them down where they stood.
Tabitha sighed as he took another
step away from her. "How old are you, anyway?"
"Two thousand, one
hundred—"
"No," she interrupted.
"Not Dark-Hunter years. How old were you when you died?"
She felt a profound wave of pain go
through him at the thought. "Thirty."
"Thirty? Jeez, you act like an
old, wrinkled-up prune. Did no one laugh where you came from?"
"No," he said simply.
"Laughter was not tolerated or indulged."
Tabitha couldn't breathe as his
words sank in and she remembered the sight of the scars on his back.
"Never?"
He didn't respond. Instead, he
continued up her stairs. "I should retire now."
"Wait," she said, rushing
up the stairs to sneak around him so that she could keep him still. She turned
to face him.
She could feel turmoil inside him.
Pain. Confusion. She knew just how hated this man was. Maybe he deserved it,
but deep inside she wasn't so sure.
People didn't close themselves off
from the world without reason. No one was happily this stoic.
And in that moment, she realized
something. It was his defense mechanism. She got brash and wild whenever she
was out of sorts or uncomfortable.
He turned cold. Formal.
That was his facade.
"I'm sorry if I said anything
that offended you. My sisters often tell me that I've made offending people an
art form."
A smile tugged at the edges of his
lips and, if she didn't miss her guess, his eyes softened ever so slightly.
"I wasn't offended."
"Good."
Valerius was tempted to stay here
and talk to her, but he felt uncomfortable with the thought of it. He'd never
been the kind of person other people chatted with. Even as a man, his
conversations had revolved around battle tactics, philosophy, and politics.
Never chit-chat.
His conversations with women had
been even fewer than his conversations with men. Not even Agrippina had ever
truly spoken to him. They had passed comments, but she had never shared her
opinions with him. Merely agreed with him and did as he asked.
He had a feeling Tabitha would never
agree with anyone, even if she knew they were right. It seemed a matter of
principle that she had to disagree with everything.
"Are you always so
outspoken?" he asked.
She smiled widely. "I know no
other way."
Suddenly Lynyrd Skynyrd's
"Gimme Three Steps" started playing on the radio.
Tabitha let out a small squeak of
happiness and dashed down the stairs. Valerius barely had time to blink before
she cranked the volume up, then ran back toward him.
"I love this song," she
said as she danced to it. Valerius found it hard to focus on much of anything
except the sway of her hips as she danced and sang to the song.
"C'mon, dance with me!"
she said at the first guitar solo. She ran up the stairs to take his hand.
"This isn't really dancing
music."
"Sure it is," she said
before she broke into the chorus. In spite of himself, he was greatly amused by
her. In all his lifetime, he'd never known anyone who enjoyed life so much, who
took such pleasure from something so simple.
"C'mon," she tried again
when the singing paused. "It's a great song. You have to admire anyone who
can rhyme 'feller' with 'the head color yeller.'" She winked at him.
Valerius laughed.
Tabitha paused. "Oh, my God, he
does know how to laugh."
"I know how to laugh," he
said lightly.
She pulled him from the stairs and
two-stepped around him before she used him as a maypole and continued dancing.
She let go, snapped her fingers and
twisted down, then rose back up. "One day, I think you're going to bust
out of those hand-polished loafers and actually cut loose."
Valerius cleared his throat and
tried to imagine such a thing. It wasn't possible. There had been a time once,
back when he'd been human, when he might have attempted it.
But those days were long gone.
Anytime he'd ever tried to be
anything other than what he was, someone else had paid a terrible price for it.
So he'd learned to stay as he was and to leave everyone else alone.
It was for the best.
Tabitha watched as his face turned
to stone once again. She sighed. What would it take to reach this guy? For
someone who was immortal, he certainly didn't seem to enjoy life very much.
In spite of all of Kyrian's faults,
she had to give him credit. The former Greek general did enjoy every breath he
took. He lived his life to its fullest.
Meanwhile, Valerius just seemed to
exist
"What do you do for fun?"
she asked.
"I read."
"Literature?"
"Science fiction."
"Really?" she asked,
surprised. "Heinlein?"
"Yes. Harry Harrison is one of
my favorites, as are Jim Butcher, Gordon Dickson, and C. J. Cherryh."
"Wow," she said, amazed.
"I'm impressed. Go, Dorsai."
"Actually, I rather like
Dickson's The Right to Arm Bears and Wolfling novels better."
Now that she found surprising.
"I don't know, Soldier, Ask Not seems more your style to me."
"It is a classic, but the other
two spoke to me more."
Hmmm… Wolfling was about a man alone
in an alien world with no friends or allies. That further confirmed her
suspicions about his life. "Have you ever read Hammer's Slammers?"
"David Drake. Another
favorite."
"Yeah, you have to love the
military stuff. Burt Cole wrote a book years ago called The Quick."
"Shaman. He was quite the
complex hero."
"Yeah, strangely amoral and yet
moral at the same time. Never sure what side of the fence he's on. Kind of
reminds me of a few friends I've had over the years."
Valerius couldn't keep from smiling.
It was so nice to have someone who was familiar with his guilty secret. The
only other person he knew who read science fiction was Acheron, but the two of
them seldom ever talked about it.
"You're a remarkable woman,
Tabitha."
She smiled up at him. "Thanks.
Now, I'll let you go on to bed," she said gently. "I'm sure you could
use the rest."
She ached to give him a tender,
friendly kiss on the cheek, but thought better of it. Instead, she watched as
he headed out of the room, up the stairs.
Valerius made his way silently back
to Tabitha's room. She had such a powerful presence that he literally felt
drained just from having been around her.
He removed his clothes and hung them
back up so that he wouldn't wrinkle them, then returned to bed to sleep.
But sleep was something that didn't
come to him. For the first time, he smelled the perfume on her sheets.
It was Tabitha's scent. Warm,
vivacious. Seductive.
And it made him instantly hard for
her. He covered his eyes with his hand and ground his teeth. What was he doing?
The last thing he could do as a Dark-Hunter was have a relationship with a
woman. Even if he could, Tabitha Devereaux was the last woman on the planet he
could have.
As a friend to Acheron, she was so
far off limits to him that he should call Acheron again and demand he find some
way for Valerius to leave.
But Acheron had left them together.
Rolling over, he did his best not to
breathe in deeply or to imagine what Tabitha might look like in this bed. Her bare
limbs entwined…
He cursed, then pulled a second
pillow over toward him. As he did so, he saw a small black silk gown. An image
of Tabitha in it seared him.
He couldn't breathe. Before he could
think better of it, he pulled it close and let the cool silk caress his skin.
He held it to his nose and inhaled her scent. She is not for you.
It was true. He'd already killed one
woman because he'd been foolish. He had no desire to retread that path.
He tucked the gown back beneath his
pillow and forced himself to close his eyes.
But even then, he was haunted by
images of a woman who should, by all reason, repel him and yet completely
captivated and beguiled him.
Tabitha spent the rest of the day
between her store and walking to the foot of the stairs where she forced
herself to reverse direction and go back to business.
But she felt a horrible pull toward
the Dark-Hunter who slept in her bed. It was stupid. He was an ancient warrior
who didn't seem to even like her.
Yet his kiss had said something
else. There for a few minutes, he had been as eager for her as she had been for
him. He wasn't completely repulsed by her.
She waited until four, then went to
wake him.
Opening the door slowly, she paused
as she caught sight of him asleep. He lay with his back to her, but what made
her stop was the fierce scars that crisscrossed his flesh. Those weren't battle
scars. They were the kind of marks you would find on someone who had been
beaten with a whip. Many times.
She couldn't take her eyes off it.
Without thinking, she crossed the room and placed her hand on his arm.
He rolled over with a hiss and
seized her.
Before she even realized what he was
going to do, he had her on the bed beneath him, with his hand at her throat.
"Let go of me, Valerius, or I'm
going to hurt you bad."
He blinked as if he were coming out
of a dream. His grip loosened immediately. "Forgive me," he said as
he lightly stroked her neck. "I should have warned you not to wake me by
touch."
"You always assault people when
you wake up?"
Valerius couldn't speak as he felt
the softness of her skin beneath his fingertips. In truth, he'd been dreaming
of her. Only she had been in his world. Dressed in nothing but a pearl necklace
and covered by rose petals.
She was incredibly beautiful. Her
eyes were so blue. Her nose pert and her lips… they were the stuff of legends.
Full and lush, they begged for his attention.
Before he could stop himself, he
lowered his mouth to hers.
Tabitha moaned at the taste of Roman
warrior. His kiss was tender and soft, a total antithesis to the steely feel of
his body. It melted her as she wrapped her arms around his bare back and traced
the scars she found there.
And she was all too aware of the
fact that he was completely naked.
Valerius growled at the feel of her
tongue lightly stroking his. Of her scent and soft curves wrapped around him.
The denim of her jeans scraped against his flesh as she opened her legs and
cradled him with those long, lush legs. She raked one hand through his hair,
brushing it back from his face before she sank her hand deep and held him to
her.
He lifted the hem of her sweater so
that he could gently cup her breast through the satin of her bra. She moaned deep
in her throat, a husky raw sound that sizzled through him.
As Tabitha had pointed out earlier
to him, he'd spent far too many nights with women who had never reacted so
openly to his touch. She ran her hands over his shoulders, then down to the
small of his back.
All he could think of was taking
her. Of sliding himself deep inside until they were both sated and weak.
As he fingered the front catch of
her bra, a tiny shred of sanity reared its ugly head. She was not for him.
He pulled his hand away.
Tabitha cupped his head in her hands
and pulled back. "I know what you are, Val. It's okay."
She took his hand into hers and led
it back to her breast. She pushed the satin aside until he felt her hard,
swollen nipple teasing his palm. He couldn't breathe as he cupped her soft
breast. She was so warm, so welcoming that he found it hard to believe he was
anything special to her.
"Do you sleep with all the
Dark-Hunters?"
She stiffened. "What?"
"I was just wondering if you'd
been with Acheron… Talon."
She bucked him off of her at that.
"What kind of question is that?"
"I just met you and twice now
you've offered yourself to me."
"Oh, you arrogant jerk!"
She grabbed her pillow off the bed and assaulted him with it.
Valerius held his hand up to shield
himself, but she didn't stop.
"You are so stupid! I can't
believe you'd ask me such a thing. I swear, I will never again be in the same
room with you!"
Finally the pillow bashing stopped.
He lowered his arm.
She nailed him with a final blow
upside his head, then released the pillow. "For your information, buddy, I
am not the town bike. I don't sleep with every guy I get near. I thought you
were… Oh never mind. To hell with you!"
She turned and stormed out of the
room. She slammed the door so hard that it actually rattled the windows and
shook the beads on her mirror and altar.
Valerius lay on the bed completely
stunned by what had just happened. She had beaten him with a pillow?
He knew from his encounter with her
last night that she could have assaulted him with something much more painful,
yet she had refrained.
In all honesty, he was relieved by
her untoward reaction. Her indignation had been too great to be feigned.
And that brought a strange warmth to
his chest. Could it be that she might actually like him?
No. It wasn't possible. No one liked
him. They never had.
"You are worthless. I weep for
the day Mother bore you into this world. I'm only glad that she died before she
could see what an embarrassment you are to the family." He flinched at the
harsh words that his brother Markus had repeatedly hurled at him.
His own father had despised him.
"You are weak. Pathetic. I should have seen you dead rather than waste the
water and food it has taken to rear you."
Their words were kind compared to
what his Dark-Hunter brethren had uttered.
No, there was no way Tabitha
"liked" him. She didn't even know him.
He didn't know why she was so
receptive to his touch.
Maybe she was merely a woman of
strong passion. He was a handsome man. Not that he was vain about it. It was a
simple statement of fact. Countless women had offered themselves to him over
the centuries.
But for some reason that didn't bear
thinking on, he wanted something more than a one-night stand with Tabitha.
He wanted…
Valerius forced his thoughts away
from that. He didn't need anyone, not even a friend. His life was best spent
alone, far away from other people.
Getting up, he dressed and left her
room to go downstairs.
He met Marla in the dining room.
"Ooo, shug, I don't know what
you did to Tabby, but you have her panties in a tight wad. She said to tell you
to eat before she poisoned your food or did something worse to it."
Valerius was surprised to see veal
marsala and an Italian salad with garlic bread waiting for him. "Where did
that come from?" he asked Marla.
"Tony's from down the street.
Tabitha sent me over there to get it. She and Tony aren't on speaking terms at
the moment. God love her, she tends to make everyone irritated with her. But
he'll get over it. He always does."
Valerius took a seat and then bit
into heaven. He'd never tasted anything better. Why would Tabitha have gone to
such trouble for him?
He was halfway through the meal
before Tabitha came out of the door that led to her shop.
"I hope you choke on it,"
she snarled as she headed toward the kitchen.
Valerius swallowed his bite of food,
wiped his mouth, then slid out of his chair to go after her.
"Tabitha?" He pulled her
to a stop. "I'm sorry for what I said. It's just…"
"Just what?"
"People are never nice for no
reason." And they were never nice to him.
Tabitha paused at that. Was he
serious? "Was dinner okay?"
"It was delicious. Thank
you."
"No problem." She pulled
her hand away. "You probably know that it's already dark. I can get you
home whenever you're ready."
"I just need to stop and pick
up some lamp oil."
"Lamp oil? Don't you have
electricity?"
"I do, but it's imperative that
I get some tonight and get home."
"Okay. The chariot awaits four
blocks over at my sister Tia's. We can grab the oil at her shop."
"She has lamp oil?"
"Yeah. She's a voodoo
priestess. You probably saw the altar upstairs that she made for me. She's a
bit offbeat, but we love her anyway."
Valerius inclined his head
respectfully to her, then returned upstairs for his coat.
Tabitha was about to pick up his
dishes when Marla shooed her away.
"I'll take care of that for
you."
"Thanks, sweetie."
Marla wrinkled her nose.
"Anytime. You two go and have a wild time for me. I want all the
details."
Tabitha laughed as she tried to
imagine what a "wild" time with Valerius might entail. It would
probably be nothing more miraculous than getting him to wear a pair of tennis
shoes and drink out of a paper cup.
Valerius rejoined her. She quickly
ushered him out the shop door before Marla saw his coat and confiscated it.
He stopped so short inside her store
that she actually ran into him. His jaw slack, he scanned the shop with a look
of complete horror on his face. "Where are we?"
"My store," Tabitha said.
"Pandora's Box on Bourbon. I cater to the strippers and drag queens."
"This is… it's a…"
"Adult store, yes, I know. I
inherited it from my aunt when she retired. Now close your mouth and stop
gulping. I make a lot of money and friends in this place."
Valerius couldn't believe what he
was seeing. Tabitha owned a den of iniquity? Why was he even surprised?
"And this is exactly what has
caused the Western world to decline," he said as she led him past a glass
case of pasties and thongs.
"Oh, yeah, right," Tabitha
said. "Like you wouldn't give your right arm to have a woman dressed in my
stuff strip for you. Good night, Franny," she called to the woman behind
the register. "Make sure you give Marla the receipts and deposit when you
close up tonight, okay?"
"You got it, boss. Have a good
night."
Tabitha led the way to the street.
The city was already placing the barricades at the intersections that would
turn Bourbon into an after-hours pedestrian mall. She hung a left onto
Bienville Street toward her sister's house; all the while, she scanned for any
suspicious activity.
Valerius remained remarkably silent.
As they neared the next
intersection, she heard Valerius curse.
Two seconds later a lightning bolt
struck him.
Chapter 4
Tabitha gasped as Valerius was
thrown against a building from the lightning strike. Before she could take a
step toward him, it literally started pounding rain on him and no one else. In
fact, the only place it was raining was where Valerius lay on the ground.
"What on earth?" she
asked.
Valerius took a deep breath as he
slowly pushed himself to his feet. His lip was split, and he had a cut on his
cheek from where he'd hit the building. Without a word, he wiped the blood off
with the back of his hand, then felt the wound on his cheek.
He was soaking wet while the rain
continued to fall on him in a pounding staccato beat. "It'll stop in a
minute."
And it did.
Valerius wiped the water from his
face and then wrung out his ponytail.
Tabitha was aghast. "What just
happened?"
"My brother, Zarek," he
said wearily as he shook his arms and sent water flying. "He was made a
god a couple of years ago and has since turned me into his full-time
occupation. It's why I no longer drive anywhere. I grew rather tired of my
engine just falling out of my car for no apparent reason whenever I stopped for
a light. The only safe mode of transportation I have is my feet and as you have
just witnessed, not even it is completely safe." There was no missing the
anger in his tone.
"Is my car safe?"
He nodded. "He only comes after
me."
She started to approach him.
"Don't," he said, his
breath suddenly forming a small cloud as he spoke. "It's freezing
here."
Tabitha reached out her hand and
felt the arctic air that surrounded Valerius. It was colder than a freezer
where he stood. "Why does he do this to you?"
"He hates me."
"Why?" She felt a wave of
shame come over him. "What did you do to him?"
He didn't answer. Instead, he
breathed into his hands and headed down the street again.
"Valerius," she said,
stopping him even though she wasn't sure she didn't get frostbite to her hand
for the effort. "Talk to me."
"And say what, Tabitha?"
he asked quietly. "I felt sorry for Zarek when we were children and every
time I tried to help him, I only ended up hurting him more. He's right to hate
me and everyone else in our family. I should have just left him alone and
ignored him. It would have been better for all of us if I had."
"It's not wrong to help
someone."
He gave her a dry stare. "My
father always said, 'Nullus factum bonus incedo sinepoena'—No good deed goes
unpunished. In Zarek's case, he made a point of proving it."
She was dismayed at what he was
telling her. "I thought my family was odd. You guys sound like you really
were the dysfunctional crew."
"You've no idea." He
started back down the street.
Tabitha followed, but to be honest,
she felt really sorry for him. She couldn't imagine having one of her siblings
hate her. It was true they didn't all get along all the time. With eight
sisters and a wide assortment of fruits and nuts in the family, there was
always someone who wasn't talking to someone over something, but in the end,
family was family and anyone who threatened them quickly got a dose of Devereaux
solidarity.
Even if they weren't technically
speaking to each other, they could always count on the family in a pinch. Even
as kids. In high school, Tabitha had sworn she would never talk to her older
sister Trina again because Trina had gone out with a guy she knew Tabitha had a
crush on.
When the jerk had broken Trina's
heart by two-timing her with a cheerleader, Tabitha had let loose Aunt Cora's
prized boa constrictor in the guy's car. He'd been so scared, he'd wet his
jeans before Tabitha had pulled the snake out.
It'd still taken two more days
before she and her sister had reconciled. But they had reconciled. No one
carried a grudge in their family for more than a few weeks. And no matter how
angry they were, they would never, ever really hurt one another.
Goodness, what kind of family did
Valerius have that two thousand years later his brother was still hurling
lightning bolts at him?
By the time they reached her
sister's shop, Val's eyebrows and lashes were frozen white. His skin had a
terrible grayish tint to it.
"Are you okay?"
"It won't kill me," he
said quietly. "Don't worry. He'll get bored in a few minutes and leave me
alone for awhile."
"How long?"
"Usually a few months,
sometimes longer. I never really know when he's going to strike. He likes to
surprise me."
Tabitha was aghast at what she was
witnessing. "Does Ash know he does this to you?"
"Zarek is a god now. What can
Acheron do to stop it? Much like you with your brother-in-law, Zarek thinks it's
fun to 'goof on me."
"I'm never deliberately cruel
to him. Well, maybe just the one time I sent him a box of Rogaine on his
birthday, but that was just a gag gift until he opened the real one." She
touched his ice-cold hands and realized he was shivering unmercifully.
Her heart ached for him. She blew
into her hands and rubbed them together before she placed them to his face,
which was so cold that it instantly took the heat from her skin.
He gave her a grateful look before
he pulled back.
Suddenly a cloud of sulphuric
something engulfed them.
Tabitha coughed at the rank smell
before she held her nose and turned to see her sister Tia mumbling something
she couldn't understand.
"What are you doing?" she
asked.
"He got the evil funk of death
on him. You weren't really going to bring him into my store like that, were
you?"
"Yeah." She snatched the
small wooden bowl out of Tia's hand. "Would you please lay off the nasty
voodoo crap? It's stinks."
Tia reached for it. "Give me
that."
"Quit grabbing or I'll dump it
in the street."
Tia stood back instantly.
Tabitha looked at the reddish-gold
powder and curled her lip at the rancid smell of it. "You know I really
could have done without the Shower to Shower in poop. And here I was telling
Val that my family wasn't so bad." She handed it back to Tia.
"You need protection," Tia
said defensively. "There's something here. I can feel it."
"That might be your sanity. You
might actually want to invite it in."
Tia gave her a peeved glare.
Tabitha smiled. "I'm just
kidding. I know what you mean. I can feel it, too."
Tia looked up at Valerius, who was
still shivering. "Why is he frozen and wet?"
"Long story," Tabitha
said. She had a feeling Valerius wouldn't appreciate her telling her sister
about his psycho brother. "This is my sister Tiyana. Tia for short."
"Hi," Tia said before she
grabbed Valerius's arm and pulled him toward the entrance to her store.
He gave Tabitha a panicked look.
"It's okay. She's mostly nuts,
but doesn't have a mean bone in her body."
"I don't want to hear about my
insanity from the loon who stalks vampires in her spare time. You should see
her," Tia said to Valerius as she hauled him through the narrow shop that
was lined with shelves of all manner of gris-gris, charms, voodoo dolls,
candles, and tourist items. "She thinks any guy in black is a vampire.
Have you any idea how many men in New Orleans wear black? She's frightening.
Really."
Tia turned toward her clerk.
"Chelle, watch the store for a minute," she said to her employee, who
was stickering a new batch of alligator-tooth key rings.
Tia led them through the back door
to the storeroom. She sat Valerius down on a barstool and then pulled out a
large box of Mexican ponchos, before she grabbed several of them and wrapped
Valerius in them.
She went to the bathroom and came
out with a towel. "Dry his hair while I make him something warm to
drink."
"Thanks, sis," Tabitha
said as she took the towel from her.
Valerius was taken aback by the
untoward kindness. No one had ever treated him this way… like he mattered. Like
they cared. "I can dry my own hair."
"Stay under the ponchos and get
warmed up," Tabitha said as she pulled the tie from his ponytail. Her
tenderness amazed him as she carefully towel-dried his hair, then combed it
with her fingers.
Tia came back with a large, steaming
skeleton mug that had a warm, odd smell to it. "Don't worry. It's not a
potion. Just a homemade cinnamon-chocolate blend that I sell at Christmas
that's supposed to ward off melancholy." She handed it to him.
"Does it work?" he asked.
"On most people. The chocolate
stimulates endorphins to perk you up and the cinnamon makes most people think
of home and mother's love." Tia smiled. "You'd be amazed how much
science there is in magic."
Valerius took a hesitant drink. It
was surprisingly good and did in fact warm him. "Thank you," he said.
Tia nodded. "You guys here for
your car?" she asked Tabitha.
"Yeah. I didn't mean for us to
disturb you."
"It's okay. I was waiting for
Amanda to show up. I called her earlier and told her I made a talisman for her
and Marissa."
Tabitha went cold. It wouldn't do
for Amanda to find Valerius here. She was sure her sister wouldn't understand
how she could be helping him. Not that Tabitha was ashamed for what she was
doing, but it was still a complication she wanted to avoid for all their sakes.
"Cool, but we need to get going. We have some things to do. Give Mandy a
kiss for me."
"Will do."
Tabitha motioned for Valerius to
follow her out the back door that led to the courtyard where Tia's Mitsubishi
was parked beside her Mini Cooper.
She unlocked the car for him.
"Get in, I'll be right back."
Valerius did as she asked and was
surprised that the car had more leg room inside than what it appeared to have
from the outside. Even so, he felt a bit cramped in it.
She ran back into the store and came
out a few minutes later with a plastic sack. She got into the car and handed it
to him.
"Your lamp oil," she said.
He was stunned that she had
remembered it, especially since it had slipped his own mind. "Thank
you."
She didn't say anything as she
started the car and backed them out of the driveway. As soon as they were on
the street, she popped the gear into drive and squealed off.
He sat quietly while she weaved them
in and out of traffic at a rate that would have left him terrified had he not
been immortal.
The interior of the car was so tiny
compared to what he was used to that it was hard not to notice her. She drove
like she lived: fast and on the edge.
"Why are you so intense?"
he asked as she took a corner he swore left the car with only two wheels on the
ground.
"My mother says I was born that
way. She thinks Amanda must have gotten both shares of restraint while I took
all the courage."
She turned serious as she shifted
gears and whipped around a slow-moving car. "Actually, that's not true.
The fact is that I'm what some call a magnet. My psychic powers don't lie in
special abilities like my sister Amanda's do. Mine are more quiet. Intuition,
psychometry. Things that are virtually useless to a human, but are highly
prized by the Daimons."
She paused at a light on Canal
Street and looked at him. "I was only thirteen when the first group of
Daimons attacked me. I would be dead now if Talon hadn't saved me."
Valerius frowned at her words. She
was right. Magnets gave off a powerful lure to Daimons. With her fierce nature
and zest for living, she would be all the more alluring to them.
"Unlike most humans, I wasn't
allowed to live in ignorance of your world. It was either learn to defend
myself or end up dead. No offense, dead doesn't appeal to me."
"No offense taken. Having been
dead for more than two thousand years, I can't exactly recommend it
myself."
She laughed at that. "I don't
know. Dead and in Armani. I think most people would be hurling themselves off
buildings if they could come back loaded like you."
"I had just as much money as a
mortal man and a lot more…" He let his voice trail off as he realized he'd
almost said friends. That wasn't really true, but at least back then people who
openly disdained him, with the exception of his family, generally kept it to
themselves.
It wasn't something he liked to
think or talk about.
"Lot more what?" she asked
when he didn't finish his sentence.
"Nothing."
Valerius directed her to his house
on Third Street down in the Garden District.
Tabitha let out a low whistle as
they neared it. She pulled into the drive, which was shielded by a variety of
greenery and stopped before the large, wrought-iron gate. She lowered her
window and pressed the button on the security box.
"Yes?"
He leaned forward and spoke loudly.
"It's Valerius, Gilbert. Open the gate."
The gates opened a few seconds
later.
"Nice," Tabitha said as
she drove down his circular drive and parked before the front door, right
behind what appeared to be a run-down primer and red Chevy IROC that must
belong to one of Valerius's employees. She couldn't imagine Val being caught
dead in it and since he was dead…
"I take it that isn't yours, or
did your brother just get really pissed off one day and nail it?"
Valerius didn't comment.
Tabitha paused to stare at the
fountain in the bend of the drive that had blue lights at night. It was a
tribute to the goddess Minerva and had been one of the reasons Valerius had
chosen this as his home.
"Does Artemis know about that
statue?"
"Since I'm still breathing, I
rather doubt it," he said quietly.
He led her up the old stone steps.
As soon as they reached the door, Gilbert opened it.
"Good evening, my lord."
His butler didn't comment on the fact that Valerius was coming home wet.
There was something about the rigid,
older Englishman that reminded Tabitha of Alfred from Batman.
"Evening, Gilbert." He
stood aside to let the older man see Tabitha. "This is Ms.
Devereaux."
"Very good, sir." Gilbert
inclined his head stiffly to Tabitha. "Charmed, madam." Then he
looked back at Valerius. "Would your lordship and madame care for
something to drink or eat?"
Valerius looked at her.
"I'm fine."
"No, thank you, Gilbert."
The butler inclined his head to
them, then headed toward the back of the house.
Valerius led her toward the left.
"If you would, please wait in the library and I'll be back in a few
minutes."
"Where are you going?" she
asked, wondering at his suddenly somber mood.
"I need to change into
something dry."
She nodded. "Okay."
He headed up the stairs.
Tabitha wandered through the arched
doorway into a dark room that was covered from floor to ceiling with books. She
was in a corner skimming titles when she felt someone come into the room behind
her.
She turned to find a handsome man
around her own age staring at her.
"Amanda? What the hell brought
you here?"
"I'm not Amanda," she
said, crossing the room so that he could see her scarred face. "I'm her
sister Tabitha. And you are?"
"Otto Carvalletti."
"Ah," she said in
understanding. "Val's Squire."
"Yeah, don't remind me."
She didn't need her empathy to feel
his rancor. "Why do you serve someone you hate?"
"Like I have a choice. The
council sent me here, so here I am, locked in hell."
"Bud, I don't know where you
hail from, but I take exception to people who hate my town."
He scoffed at that. "I got no
problem with New Orleans. I love this town. It's Count Penicula that I take
issue with. Have you met him?"
"Count who?"
"The dick who lives here.
Valerius. You know, old 'Don't breathe in my presence, you prole.'"
This had to be the strangest man
Tabitha had ever met—and given the odd crew of friends she had, that said a
lot. "Prole as in proletariat?"
He looked relieved that she got it.
"Oh, thank God you have a brain."
She wasn't sure if she should feel
complimented or not. "I'm still confused. Why did the Squire's Council
send you here? Don't they know how you feel about him?"
"Since my father happens to be
one of the board members, yes, they know. Unfortunately, no one else will take
this post. And since Lord Valerius demanded someone who could speak Italian and
Latin there weren't that many of us to choose from. Pompous windbag."
"What's so pompous about
wanting someone who speaks your native tongue? I noticed Talon has taught
Sunshine Gaelic; and every time Julian and Kyrian get around Selena, they
immediately break into ancient Greek."
"Yeah, but they don't demand
that their Squires know it. Notice Nick ain't real swift in Greek."
Tabitha snorted. "Nick's not
real swift in English most of the time."
"Hey now, don't insult my
friend."
"Nick happens to be one of my
friends too and I love him like a brother, but that doesn't make it open season
on Valerius."
"Yeah, right. Hon, you should
invest in a textbook and read up on what Valerius Magnus did in his
lifetime."
She folded her arms over her chest
and cocked her head. "Excuse me, Mr. Carvalletti, I'll have you know I
hold a master's in Ancient Civ. Do you?"
"No, I hold a doctorate from
Princeton."
She was impressed in spite of
herself. Princeton didn't let in stupid people. "In Ancient Civ?"
"No. Film Studies," he
said in a low tone.
"Pardon?" she asked, her
eyes wide. "Did you say film?" She was aghast at that. "You
majored in movies? Oh, and I was almost impressed."
"Hey," he said
defensively, "I'll have you know I worked my ass off for that degree,
thank you very much."
"Oh, yeah, right. I was a
Fulbright Scholar. Did you ever attend a school where Daddy didn't put up a
building?"
"My father didn't put up a
building there…" He paused before adding, "My great-grandfather did."
Tabitha snorted. "I'm sorry,
but I had to learn four languages to get my degree. What about you?"
"None. I grew up speaking
twelve."
"Well aren't you Mr. Fancy
Pants? Ooo, and you have the nerve to crack on Val? At least he doesn't walk
around flaunting his superior intellect."
"No, he just flaunts his
superior breeding. Bow down before me, all you plebeian scum."
"Maybe he wouldn't act that way
if all of you weren't damned nasty to him all the time."
"I'm nasty to him! Lady, you
don't even know me."
Tabitha backed off, especially since
she felt his hurt. "You're right, Otto, I don't know you and I'm probably
doing the same thing to you that you did to Val when you met him. I took one
look at you, listened to three seconds of your conversation, and made some
really harsh judgments that could be wrong just as easily as they could be
right."
She approached him with her hands
clasped behind her back. "Case in point. Your hair, while attractive, is shaggy,
but it's that kind of shabby-chic that only comes from a really expensive
beautician. You haven't shaved in what? Two days?"
"Three."
She ignored him. "You're
wearing a loud, obnoxiously bright red Hawaiian shirt that I know belongs to
Nick because he only wears it whenever he wants to jerk Kyrian's chain. He had
to special-order it online for the mere tackiness of it alone. You're barefoot
and I saw the beater IROC outside, which, I assume now, is yours."
He stiffened noticeably, which confirmed
her suspicion.
She continued her summation.
"At first glance, you look like one of those out-of-work party guys who
come into my shop browsing the video closet that we keep in back because no
self-respecting woman will go out with you. The kind of guy who buys all the
naked boob and fornicating Mardi Gras beads to hang around his neck and then
spends the entire week drunk and puking, screaming at women to show him their
cans."
He folded his arms and gave her a
sullen glare.
"Now let's contrast that with a
few other facts I've noticed. You're a Squire and from your own admission
you're a Blue Blood, which means you come from entire generations of Squires.
Your family has had more money than God for a long time. You actually went to
Princeton, and even with a laughable major, you went through the trouble of
getting a doctorate. That tells me that status does mean something to you. Let
me guess: That really cool, metallic black Jag that literally glistens in
darkness that Nick has parked at his house and yet never drives is actually
yours."
She paused beside him and looked him
up and down. "Not to mention you carry yourself like a man used to being
respected, even while trying to pretend to be a tasteless slob. Anyone with
even an ounce of perception isn't fooled by the tough way you stand."
She lifted his hand, where a
spiderweb was tattooed. "Nice watch," she said dryly. "Patek
Philippe Grand Complications Chronographs. Let me guess: it's the 5004P which
sells for one hundred fifty thousand dollars."
"How do you know that?"
"I come from a long line of
store owners and my Aunt Zelda has a jewelry store." She held her arm up
to him. "Look, see my coffin watch? It retails for thirty-two dollars at
Hot Topic and it has the same time yours does. It takes a Daimon licking and
keeps on ticking."
He rolled his eyes at her.
Tabitha continued her rant.
"And you're not just a regular Squire." She tapped the spiderweb
tattoo on the back of his hand that all Squires of his ilk were marked with.
"You're a Blood Rite. Why, Dr. Carvalletti, I do believe that in real
life, you're not too far away from being just like Val yourself. Tough,
arrogant, and willing to do whatever is necessary to get your job done."
She tilted her head. "I think
what bothers you most is that if you were a Dark-Hunter, you'd be just like
him. I think it kills you to know exactly how similar the two of you are. Where
is your black Armani suit hanging? Nick's house?"
"What are you? Friggin'
Sherlock Holmes?"
She smiled. "Pretty much,
except it usually doesn't take me as long to get to the truth."
He looked at her stonily. "I
don't need you to teach me a moral lesson, babe. I know how the world
works."
"I've no doubt about that. But
you have a lot to learn about people. What they say and what they feel are
seldom the same. I know right now that you hate my guts. You would like nothing
better than to toss my ass out of here and slam the door shut. But notice you
haven't done either one of those to me."
"So what's your point?"
"My point is this. Blood Rite
Squires are the ones charged with keeping the dictates of the Council and
keeping the lid on the Dark-Hunter world. That means they are willing to take
whatever steps are necessary, including murder, to protect their secrets. I am
sure somewhere in your past, you have had to do something distasteful to you in
order to uphold your Squire's oath and perform your duties. When you were
reading that textbook about Valerius did you ever wonder how much of it he
enjoyed? Or did he simply do what he did because it was his job?"
Otto cocked his head at her.
"Anyone ever tell you you should be an attorney?"
"Only Bill when we argue.
Besides, I like killing bloodsuckers too much to ever be one of them." She
held her hand out to him. "Tabitha Devereaux. Pleased to meet you."
His confusion engulfed her. He
hesitated before he shook her proffered hand.
"Don't worry, Otto," she
said with a smile. "I'm an acquired taste. Most of my best friends had to
know me for years before they could even stand my presence. I'm like mold, I
usually grow on you very slowly."
"You said it, not me."
She patted his arm. "Do me a
favor, be nice to Penicula. I think there's a lot more to him than what we see."
"You're the only person I know
who feels that way."
"Yeah, well, I guess I feel
like all of us misfits need to hang together. At least that way we don't swing
alone."
He gave her a confused scowl, but
before he could comment, his cell phone rang.
Tabitha stepped away from him to
give him privacy with his call. She wandered toward the foyer to ogle the
really impressive tile work on the floor.
It wasn't until she stood in the
doorway that she saw Valerius standing on the bottom stair. At first glance, he
might pass for one of the statues that flanked the stairs, but unlike them he
was flesh and blood.
Valerius stared at Tabitha as her
words rang in his head. To his knowledge, no one had ever defended him.
Not once in all of his two thousand
years of life and death.
Even if they had, he doubted they
would have done so so eloquently. She was in the shadow of his doorway, her
long auburn hair framing a face that was open and honest.
The face of a woman who wasn't
afraid to stand up to anyone or anything. He'd never known anyone more
courageous.
"Thank you," he said
quietly.
"You heard?"
He gave a subtle nod.
"How much did you hear?"
"A lot."
She appeared uncomfortable with
that. "You could have let us know you were here. It's not nice to
eavesdrop."
"I know."
She moved to stand before him.
Valerius descended his step. He
wanted to pull her into his arms and kiss her so badly, but he couldn't.
She was human while he wasn't. The
last time he had deigned to feel compassion for a woman who wasn't meant for
him, he had caused her the pain no woman should ever have to bear and himself
death.
It still didn't stop his body from
craving Tabitha. His heart from feeling a strange pang over the fact that she
had stood up for him.
Before he could stop himself, he
reached out and cupped her scarred cheek with his hand.
He'd been alone for so long.
Isolated. Hated.
And this woman…
She filled some inner emptiness that
he had forgotten was even there.
Tabitha's heart pounded at the
warmth of his hand on her face. The gentleness she saw in his dark eyes and the
gratitude she sensed inside him. No, he wasn't what Otto thought.
He wasn't cold and unfeeling. Brutal
or vicious. If he were, she'd know it. She'd feel it.
None of that was there. She sensed
only loneliness and pain from him.
She covered his hand with hers and
offered him a smile.
To her surprise, he returned it with
one of his own. It was the first time she'd seen a real smile from him. The
gesture softened his features and tugged at her heart.
He dipped his head toward hers.
Tabitha opened her lips, wanting to
taste him.
"Hey, Valerius?"
He jerked upright as she fought back
a curse at Otto's timing.
Valerius stepped away from her two
seconds before Otto came into the foyer. "Yes?"
"I'm heading out for the night.
I'm going to meet up with Tad and Kyr from the Dark-Hunter Web site. I'll have
my phone on if you need anything." Otto's gaze slid to hers and she felt
his disdain.
Tabitha smiled at him. "Night,
Otto. Don't let Tad get you into trouble."
"You know Tad, too?"
"Babe, I know almost everyone
in this town."
"Great," Otto muttered
under his breath as he headed for the door.
As soon as the door closed behind
him, Valerius started past Tabitha.
For some reason she couldn't fathom,
she reached out and caught his head in her hand.
Startled, he opened his mouth.
Unable to resist the temptation, she
stood on her tiptoes and kissed him.
Chapter 5
Tabitha was completely unprepared
for his reaction to her kiss. In one swift, tender motion, he pulled her to
him, lifted her off her feet, spun about, and then laid her down on the
polished stairs. It wasn't the most comfortable of positions, but it was
strangely erotic.
Still, it was no match for his hot,
demanding kiss that left her weak and breathless. His long, masculine body lay
between her legs as he kept all of his weight on one knee. She could feel his
erection pressing against the center of her body as her own body burned to feel
him like this naked.
The rich, delicious scent of him
tore through her, exciting her even more.
There was nothing civilized or
proper about the way he kissed her. Nothing civilized about the way he held
her. It was raw and earthy. Promising.
Tabitha wrapped her legs around his
lean waist as she returned his kiss full force.
Valerius couldn't think as he tasted
her. Felt her. She cocooned him with her warmth and passion.
And it was all he could do not to
take her on the stairs like some barbarian warlord.
"You have to stop kissing me,
Tabitha," he breathed raggedly.
"Why?"
He hissed as she gently nipped his
chin. "Because if you don't, I'm going to make love to you and that is the
last thing either one of us needs."
Tabitha traced the outline of his
lips with her tongue as he spoke. All she wanted was to strip off his clothes
and explore every inch of his lush, male body with her mouth. To lick and tease
him until he begged her for mercy.
But he was right. It was the last
thing either of them needed. He was a Dark-Hunter forbidden to have a
girlfriend and even worse, he wasn't the kind of guy she could ever introduce
to her family.
They would all turn on her for
befriending her brother-in-law's most hated enemy. Kyrian had been more than
accepted into her large family. Everyone loved him.
Even Tabitha did. How could she hurt
him this way?
No, it wasn't fair to any of them.
"All right," she said
quietly. "But you'll have to get off me first."
That was the hardest thing Valerius
had ever done. All his heart wanted was to stay right where he was. But he
couldn't and he knew it.
Taking a deep breath, he forced
himself to get up and help her to her feet.
His body was still hard, his
breathing a struggle. He couldn't stand to be close to her without touching
her. But then, he was used to restraint.
He had been bred to it.
What he had never expected was the
almost animal-like need he had to take her. It was primitive and demanding.
Fierce. And the only thing it craved was a taste of Tabitha.
"I suppose this is where we
part company," he said, his voice catching.
Tabitha nodded. He passed so close
to her that she could smell his raw, innately masculine scent. It made her
heart pound and fueled her desire even more.
It was all she could do not to reach
out for him. Aching, she watched him open the front door to his house.
"Thank you, Tabitha," he
said quietly.
She felt his sadness and it made her
hurt all the more. "Stay out of trouble, Val. Try not to get stabbed
again."
He nodded and kept himself rigid and
formal. But he refused to look at her.
Sighing wistfully over something
that couldn't be helped, Tabitha forced herself to leave.
It was over.
Impulsively, she looked back as the
door closed. There was no sign of Valerius. None.
Except for a sixth sense that told
her he was still watching her.
Valerius couldn't take his eyes off
Tabitha as she got into her car. He had no comprehension of why he felt the
compulsion to run out of the door and stop her.
She wasn't like Agrippina. Tabitha
wasn't soothing or comforting, and yet…
His heart ached as she whipped her
car out of his driveway and herself out of his life.
He was alone again.
But then, he'd always been alone.
Even when Agrippina had lived within his household, he had kept to himself.
He'd watched her from afar. Lusted for her every night and yet he'd never
touched her.
It wasn't his place. He'd been a
nobleman and she nothing more than a low-born slave who served in his
household. Had he been one of his brothers, he would have taken her without
question. But it hadn't been in him to take advantage of her. To force her to
his bed.
She wouldn't have dared deny him.
Slaves had no control whatsoever over their lives, especially not when it
involved their masters.
Every time he had seen her, it had
been on the tip of his tongue to ask her to sleep with him.
And every time he had opened his
mouth, he had quickly clamped it shut and refused to ask her something she had
no say about. So, he had brought her into his household to save her from what
the other members of his family would have done to her.
Valerius winced as he remembered the
night his brothers had come for him. The night they had found her statue and
realized who it was.
Cursing, he turned away from the
window and forced all those thoughts out of his mind.
It had never been his destiny to
help anyone.
He had been born to be alone. To
know no friends or confidants. To never laugh or play.
There was no fighting destiny. No
hope for anything more. He was born to this life just as he had been born to
his previous one.
Tabitha was gone.
And it was for the best.
His chest tight, he made his way up
the mahogany stairs toward his room. He would shower, re-dress, and then do the
job he had sworn himself to.
Tabitha drove her car back to Tia's,
where she saw Amanda's Toyota on the street. She pulled in and was getting out
as Amanda and Tia came out the back door.
"Hey, Mandy," Tabitha
said, closing the distance so she could hug her twin.
"So who was the gorgeous man
you were with? Tia said you didn't tell her his name."
Tabitha forced herself not to send
any unconscious thought or emotion out to her twin sister. "He's just a
friend."
Amanda shook her head.
"Tabby," she chided. "You need to stop hanging out with your gay
friends and find a boyfriend."
"He didn't seem gay to
me," Tia said. "But he was well dressed."
"So where's baby M?"
Tabitha asked, trying to get both of them off the topic.
"At the house. You know how Ash
is. He refuses to let her leave the premises once the sun goes down."
Tabitha nodded. "Yeah, I agree
with him. She's a very special little girl in need of protection."
"I agree too, but I hate
leaving my baby behind. I feel like I'm missing a vital organ." Amanda
held up her silver talisman. "Tia made me promise to hang it in Marissa's
room."
"Good advice."
Amanda frowned at her. "Are you
sure you're okay? There's something very odd about you tonight."
"There's always something odd
about me."
Amanda and Tia laughed.
"True," Amanda agreed. "All right, I'll quit worrying
then."
"Please. One mother is quite
enough."
Amanda kissed her on the cheek.
"I'll see you guys later."
Neither Tabitha nor Tia spoke until
after Amanda had gotten into her car and left. Tabitha put her hands in her
pockets and turned to face her sister's scowl.
"What?"
"Who was he, really?"
"What is it with you guys? He
was nobody for you to worry about."
"Was he a Dark-Hunter?"
"Stop it, Gladys," Tabitha
said, referring to the nosy neighbor from Bewitched, the show that had given
Tabitha her name. "There's no bonus round here for Twenty Questions and
I've got stuff I need to do. See ya."
"Tabitha!" Tia followed
her toward the street. "It's not like you to be secretive about anything.
It makes me nervous."
Tabitha took a deep breath and faced
her older sister. "Look, he was just someone who needed some help and I
gave it. Now he's back to his life and I'm back to mine. We don't need a family
powwow over it."
Tia made a noise of disapproval at
her. "You are so aggravating. Why can't you just answer my one
question?"
"Good night, Tia. Love
you." Tabitha kept walking and was grateful her sister stopped and went
back toward her shop.
Relieved, she headed for Bourbon
Street with no real destination. She'd pick up some food for the homeless and
then do her rounds.
"Oh, it's Tabitha!"
She turned at the distinctive
singsongy voice she knew extremely well. Rushing up behind her was Ash's demon,
Simi, who externally appeared to be a nineteen- or twenty-year-old woman.
Tonight Simi had on a black miniskirt, purple leggings, and a risque corset
top. She wore a pair of black thigh-high stiletto boots and carried a PVC
coffin purse. Her long black hair was loose about her shoulders.
"Hey, Simi," Tabitha said,
scanning the street behind the demon. "Where's Ash?"
She rolled her eyes and let out a
disgusted noise. "He got waylaid by that old heifer-goddess who said she
had to speak to him and so I said I was hungry and that I wanted to eat
something. So he said, 'Simi, don't eat no people. Go to Sanctuary and wait for
me while I talk to Artemis.' So here the Simi is going to Sanctuary all alone
to wait for akri to come and get her. You going to Sanctuary, Tabitha?"
It always amused Tabitha that the
demon referred to herself in the third person. "Not really. But if you
want me to walk with you that way, I can."
A man whistled as he walked past
them while he eye-balled Simi.
The demon gave him a sultry glance
and a small smile.
He headed back toward them.
"Hey, baby," he said. "You looking for company?"
Simi huffed. "Are you blind,
human?" she asked. She gestured dramatically toward Tabitha. "Can't
you see the Simi has company?" She shook her head.
He laughed at that. "You got a
number I can call and talk to you sometime?"
"Well, I do have a number, but
if you call it, akri will answer and he will get all angry at you and then your
head gonna explode into fire." She tapped her chin. "Hmmm, come to
think of it, barbecue… It's 555-"
"Simi…" Tabitha said in a
warning tone.
"Oh, poo," Simi said as
she let out another disgusted breath. "You are right, Tabitha. Akri just
get all mad at me if the Simi makes him make this man barbecue. He can be so
particular sometimes. I swear."
"Akri?" the man asked.
"Is he your boyfriend?"
"Oh no, that's just sick. Akri
my daddy and he get all upset whenever a man looks at the Simi."
"Well, what Daddy doesn't know
won't hurt him."
"Yeah," Tabitha said,
stepping between them. "Trust me, her 'Daddy' isn't someone you want to
mess with." She took Simi's arm and led her away.
The man followed. "C'mon, I
just want her number."
"It's 1-800-get-a-clue,"
Tabitha called over her shoulder.
"Fine, bitch, have it your
way."
Before Tabitha could blink, Simi
broke her hold and lunged at the man. She grabbed him by his neck and threw him
up against the side of a building where she held him effortlessly while his
feet were about a foot off the ground. "You don't talk to the Simi's
friends like that. You hear me?"
He couldn't respond. His face was
already turning purple, his eyes bulging.
"Simi," Tabitha said,
trying to pull the demon's hand away from the man's throat. "You'll kill
him. Let go."
The demon's brown eyes flashed red a
second before Simi released him. Bending double, he coughed and wheezed as he
struggled to breathe again.
"You better never insult
another lady, you stupid human," she said. "The Simi means that,
too."
Without another word or thought
about the matter, Simi swung her purse over her shoulder and sashayed down the
street as if she hadn't almost killed someone.
Tabitha's heart was still pounding.
What would have happened had she not been there to stop Simi?
"So, Tabitha, do you have any
more of them yummy mints that you gave to the Simi when we went to the
movies?"
"Sorry, Simi," she said,
trying to regain some composure as she watched the poor guy stumble down the
street. No doubt it would be quite awhile before he tried to pick up another
woman he didn't know. "I didn't bring them with me."
"Oh poo, I really liked them. I
especially liked that green tin. It was very nice. The Simi needs to make akri
buy her some."
Yeah, and Tabitha needed to make
sure Ash didn't let his demon loose unattended anymore. Simi wasn't evil, she
just didn't understand right or wrong. In the demon's world, there wasn't such a
concept.
Simi only understood Ash's orders
and she carried them out to the letter.
But at least they were headed
somewhere where most of the people knew and understood Simi. Sanctuary was a
biker bar at 688 Ursulines Avenue that was owned by a family of Were-Hunters.
Unlike the Dark-Hunters, the Were-Hunters were cousins of the cursed Apollites
and Daimons with one profound difference: They were also half-animal.
Aeons ago, the Were-Hunters had
originally been half-Apollite, half-human. In an effort to save his sons from
dying at twenty-seven as the Apollites did, their creator had magically spliced
animal essence with his sons' bodies.
The result had created two sons who
possessed human hearts and two who held animal hearts. Those who were human
were called Arcadians and those who were animals were called Katagaria. The
Arcadians spent most of their lives as humans who could take animal form,
whereas the Katagaria were animals who could take human form.
Even though they were related, the
two groups warred against each other because the Arcadians thought their animal
cousins were lesser beings and the animals fought because that was their
nature.
It was a Katagaria bear pack who
owned the bar. Inside the walls of Sanctuary, anyone was welcomed. Human,
Apollite, Daimon, god, Arcadian, or Katagaria. There was only one rule: You
don't bite me and I won't bite you. Sanctuary was one of the few sacred areas
on this planet where no paranormal being could attack another. And the bears
would gladly keep Simi occupied until Ash was able to rejoin her.
Simi chattered endlessly until they
reached the saloon-style doors of the bar.
"Are you coming inside?"
she asked Tabitha.
Before she could answer, Tabitha saw
Nick Gautier I headed toward them. Since Nick's mother worked at the bar, he
was an almost constant visitor there.
"Ladies," he said with a
charming smile as he joined them.
"Nick," Tabitha said in
greeting. Simi smiled warmly. "Hi, Nick," she said, twisting a strand
of hair around her finger. "You going into Sanctuary, too?"
"I was planning on it. What
about you two?"
Tabitha's phone rang. "Hang on," she said to
Nick and Simi before she answered it. It was Marla in hysterics.
"What?" Tabitha asked, trying
to understand Marla's words that came out in staccato between her sobs.
She glanced at Nick, who was
watching her with a frown, "How about Nick Gautier—"
The question was cut off by Marla's
scream of terror. "Okay, okay," Tabitha said, realizing immediately
why Marla was upset. Nick was wearing one of his heinous Hawaiian shirts along
with ragged blue jeans and a pair of tennis shoes that looked as if they'd been
fed to a garbage disposal. "Stop crying and get dressed. I'll get someone,
I promise."
Marla sniffed. "You
swear?"
"Cross my heart."
"Thank you, Tabby. You're a
goddess!"
Tabitha had serious doubts about
that as she hung up. "Nick, can you entertain Simi for a little while? I
have to go prevent a disaster."
Nick grinned. "Sure, chиr. I'll
be more than happy to keep Simi company if she doesn't mind."
Simi shook her head. "You know,
I really like them blue-eyed people," she said to Tabitha. "They's
all quality."
"You two have a good
time," Tabitha said as she left them and rushed for Chartres Street.
Valerius was blow-drying his hair
when he heard a commotion in his bedroom. It sounded like Gilbert and…
Turning off the dryer, he left the
bathroom to find Gilbert trying to pull Tabitha out of his bedroom.
"Forgive me, my lord,"
Gilbert said as he released Tabitha. "I was coming to let you know you had
a visitor when she followed me into your rooms."
Valerius couldn't breathe as he saw
the impossible. Tabitha back in his home.
An unexpected happiness consumed
him, but he refused to even smile.
"It's all right, Gilbert,"
he said, amazed at how even his tone was when all he really wanted to do was
grin like an imbecile at her. "You may leave us."
Gilbert inclined his head before he
obeyed.
Tabitha swallowed at the amazing
sight of Valerius wearing nothing but a damp burgundy towel wrapped around his
lean hips. It seemed completely incongruous to find him like that. With his
imperious air, she would have thought him to have a collection of silk
bathrobes or something.
His dark hair was damp and loose,
framing a face that was chiseled to perfection.
Wow, he looked good like that. He'd
probably look even better naked like he'd been when he jumped out of her bed…
She squelched that thought before it
got her into trouble.
"To what do I owe this
honor?" he asked.
She smiled. Oh yeah, he was perfect
for what she needed… and she didn't even want to contemplate that double entendre.
"I need you dressed."
Tabitha paused at the thought. Yeah, right, there was something seriously wrong
with a woman who said that to a man this finely made.
"Excuse me?"
"Hurry and dress, then meet me
downstairs." She shooed him toward the bed where he had a suit laid out.
"Fretta! Fretta!"
Valerius wasn't sure what stunned
him more, her wanting him dressed or her speaking Italian.
"Tabitha—"
"Dress!" Without another
word, she left his room.
Before he could move, she opened the
door and stuck her head back in. "You know, you could have dropped that
towel, slowpoke… oh, never mind that thought. Keep your hair down and make sure
you wear something really elegant and expensive. Preferably Versace if you have
it, but Armani will do, too. And make sure you wear a tie and bring your
coat."
Completely baffled and yet oddly
curious about her request, he exchanged the suit on his bed for a black Versace
silk and wool blend with a black silk shirt and matching silk tie, then opened
the door.
Tabitha turned as the door swung
open and she felt her mouth go dry. Her jaw dropped.
It wasn't as if she hadn't known he
was gorgeous, but…
Oh… my!
It was all she could do to breathe.
She'd never seen a man wear a totally black suit before but it was haute
couture of the first right. He looked debonair and regal.
Marla was going to die!
That is, if Tabitha didn't die first
of hormonal overload poisoning.
"You know, I've always heard
people say it should be illegal to look that good, but in your case, it really
is true."
He frowned at her.
Tabitha grabbed his hand and pulled
him toward the stairs. "C'mon, there's no time to waste."
"Where are you taking me?"
"I need a favor from you."
Valerius was oddly flattered by her
request. It was extremely rare that anyone ever asked him for a favor. Those
were things most people reserved for people they considered friends.
"What do you need?"
"Marla needs an escort for the
Ms. Red Light pageant."
Valerius stopped immediately.
"She what?"
Tabitha turned to face him. "Oh
come on, please don't be a prude here. You're Roman, for heaven's sake."
"Yes, but that doesn't mean I
have some innate qualification to be an escort for a transvestite. Tabitha,
please."
She looked so disappointed that it
actually made him feel guilty.
"Marla has been practicing for
this for months now and her guy cancelled on her tonight. Her number-one competitor
bribed him to escort her instead. If Marla loses, this will kill her."
"I have no desire to be paraded
around a group of gay men."
"It's not a parade… exactly.
All you need to do is walk her out in the very beginning when they introduce her.
It'll only take a few minutes and that's it. C'mon, Val. She spent a year's
salary on this gorgeous Versace gown."
Tabitha looked up at him with the
most pathetically heartfelt gaze he'd ever seen. It absolutely melted him.
"There's no one else to call on
such a short notice. She needs a really elegant man. Someone who's first class
and I don't know anyone else who fits the bill. Please? For me? I swear I'll
make it up to you."
Personally, he'd rather be beaten
and killed… again. And yet he couldn't find it within himself to disappoint
her.
"What if one of them gropes
me—"
"They won't. I promise, I'll
protect all your…" She arched a brow as she looked at his derriere.
"Assets."
"And if anyone ever learns of
this—"
"They won't. I'll take it to my
grave."
Valerius let out a long breath.
"You know, Tabitha, anytime in my life I have ever sought to help anyone,
I've only made it worse for them. I have a bad feeling about this. Something
will go wrong. Watch and see. Marla will fall off the stage and break her neck,
or worse, her big wig will catch on fire."
She waved her hand dismissively.
"You're being paranoid."
No, he wasn't. And as she led him
toward the front door, every horrible memory of his life played through his
mind… The time when he'd felt sorry for Zarek and had tried to soothe him after
a beating. His father had then forced him to beat Zarek more. He'd pulled back
the strokes, hoping they wouldn't be as painful as the ones his father had
given Zarek. Instead, he'd ended up blinding the poor slave.
Then when he'd tried to keep Zarek
from being caught outside the confines of their villa, he'd caused his father
to pay a slaver to take Zarek away from everything the boy had known.
As a first-time general, he'd had a
young soldier under his command who was the last surviving son of his family.
Hoping to keep the youth away from the battlefield, he had sent him as a
messenger to another Roman camp.
The boy had died two days out from
an attack by rogue Celts who had stumbled across him.
And Agrippina…
"I can't do this,
Tabitha."
Tabitha paused on the front steps to
look at him. There was a catch in his voice that told her this wasn't him being
ridiculous.
She actually felt a wave of fear go
through him.
"It'll be okay. Five minutes.
That's it."
"And if I cause Marla to be
hurt?"
"I'll be right there. Nothing
bad is going to happen. Trust me."
He nodded, but she felt his
reluctance as she tugged him toward the taxi she'd left waiting for them.
Getting in, she gave directions to the driver to the Cha Cha Club on Canal
Street.
It barely took them fifteen minutes
to get there. Tabitha paid for the cab while Valerius stood on the sidewalk
looking like he was ready to bolt, especially since some of the club's
clientele had already taken notice of him.
"Don't worry," Tabitha
said as she joined him. "They really won't bother you."
Valerius couldn't believe he was
doing this. He must have lost his mind.
Tabitha took his hand and led him
through the bright pink double doors.
"Hey, Tabby," a bouncer at
the door called. He was large and muscular, wearing a sleeveless T-shirt. His
dark brown hair was cut short and he had a Celtic band tattooed around his
exposed biceps. At first glance he appeared intimidating, but his open, honest
smile stole the ferocity from him.
Tabitha pulled out her wallet to pay
their cover charge. "Hi, Sam. We're here to help out Marla. Is she in the
back?"
"Put that away," Sam said,
pushing her wallet back toward her. "You know your money's no good here.
Yes, Marla's in back and please go help her. My boyfriend's about to lose his
mind because she won't stop crying."
Tabitha winked at him. "Don't
worry. The cavalry's here."
Valerius took a deep breath as he
followed Tabitha into what had to be the scariest place he'd ever been.
Personally, he'd rather walk straight into a nest of Daimons who were armed
with chainsaws and guillotines.
But by the time they reached the
bright yellow door beside the stage, he felt a little better. Though many of
the men in the club stopped to gawk at him, none of them made a move toward
him.
"Don't worry," Tabitha
said as he walked past her. "I've got your flank covered."
Valerius jumped as she pinched his
butt playfully. "Please don't give them ideas."
She laughed at that.
They walked through a crowd of
people who were in the process of applying makeup, wigs, and elaborate dresses.
Marla sat in a back corner, wailing while another man flitted around her,
complaining. Her bald head was covered by a pink net turban and her makeup was
completely wrecked.
"You're ruining all my hard
work, honey. You have to stop crying or I'll never get it fixed in time."
"What does it matter? I'm going
to lose. Damn you, Anthony! All men are pigs. Pigs! I can't believe he'd sell
me out."
Valerius felt bad for Marla. It was
obvious this pageant meant a lot to her.
"Hey, babe," Tabitha said.
"Buck up. We got something a lot better than old Tone. In fact, both he
and Mink will die when you step out with this by your side." She pushed
Valerius forward.
"Hi, Marla," he said
simply, feeling like a complete and utter jackass.
Marla's jaw dropped. "You're going
to do this for me?"
He glanced over his shoulder to see
Tabitha watching him closely. There was actually fear in her eyes that he might
back out.
God knows, he truly wanted to.
He really, really didn't want to go
through with this. But Valerius Magnus was tougher than this. He had never run
in his life and he would do this favor for Tabitha no matter how distasteful it
might be to him.
Straightening himself, he turned
back to Marla. "I would be honored to be your escort."
Marla let out an ear-piercing scream
as she jumped up and grabbed him in a hug so hard that he feared his ribs might
crack. She screamed even louder as she left him and grabbed Tabitha up into a
hug that brought Tabitha's feet off the floor.
"Oh, girlfriend, you are the
best friend anyone ever had! Imagine Marla Divine going out there on the arm of
the only straight man in the house. Girl, they will die of envy." She let
go of Tabitha. "Carey, get over here and redo my makeup, pronto. I need to
be fabulous! Fabulous!"
Carey was smiling at Marla's
dramatics. "Sit down, darling, and you will be."
While Carey worked on Marla,
Valerius and Tabitha stood off to the side, out of the way.
"Thank you," Tabitha said.
"Really."
"It's okay."
Tabitha watched Valerius. Before she
could stop herself, she wrapped her arms around him and smiled up at him and
laid her head against his chest.
Valerius couldn't breathe at the
sensation of her hold. His heart thudded at the sight of her head lying against
him, at the warmth of her body pressed against his. An unexpected tenderness
swelled inside him.
He reached up and lightly stroked
her hair while he hoped nothing went wrong with Marla because he was helping
her.
The last time he had tried to help
someone had been over a year ago when Acheron had asked him to help fight
Daimons off a Katagaria wolf pack. He'd gone willingly but during the fight,
Vane and Fang, the two wolves they'd been helping, had lost their sister to an
ill-placed Daimon strike. She'd died in her brothers' arms.
The sight haunted him to this day.
Valerius had told Vane that anytime
he needed him, he'd gladly lend his sword arm to the wolf. Luckily, Vane had
never needed him. You're being ridiculous.
Perhaps, but it wouldn't bother him
so much if he was the one who bore the brunt of it. The disaster always seemed
to fall onto the ones he tried to help.
He put that thought away and focused
on the woman with him. A woman unlike any other he'd ever met before.
She was truly special. Unique.
Time seemed to hold still as he
stood there, just letting the warmth of Tabitha seep into him.
He was actually startled when Marla
stood up and gestured for him to follow her.
"Dum-da-dum-dum… dum…"
Tabitha hummed the theme song to Dragnet as if to portend his doom as they
followed Marla back through the dressing room into a hallway that was crowded
with drag queens.
Tabitha kissed Valerius's cheek,
then left him so that she could make room for others.
She headed out into the club and
found Marla's best friend, Yves, sitting at a table in front of the runway with
a group of his pals.
"Hey, vampire slayer,"
Yves said as she pulled a chair up to the table. "Are you here to cheer
Marla on?"
"Of course. Where else would I
be?"
A cheer went up from the table while
they bantered around and laid bets on who would win until the show finally
started.
Tabitha was a nervous wreck until
Marla and Valerius appeared. The crowd went wild the minute they saw Valerius,
who walked as if he was completely comfortable in his role as escort. Only
Tabitha could sense his discomfort and she had a feeling it stemmed more from
his fear of causing Marla to be hurt than anything else.
When they reached the stairs that
would lead them off the runway to where the rest of the earlier contestants
were gathered, Valerius descended first and, like a true gentleman, reached up
to help Marla down.
Tabitha wanted to weep at what a
kind thing he was doing for someone he didn't even know.
She couldn't think of any other
straight man who would do something this ridiculous to help out a woman he'd
just met. A woman who had stabbed him no less.
As soon as the escorts were
dismissed, she pushed through the crowd to find him. The instant she reached
him, she threw herself into his arms and held him close.
Valerius was completely stunned by
Tabitha's exuberant reaction. She felt so good in his arms that it was all he
could do not to crush her to him and kiss her until they both made a spectacle
of themselves.
She squeezed him tight, then laid a
gentle kiss on his lips. "You are the best!"
Shocked, he didn't know what to say
to that.
"If you want, we can leave
now."
Valerius looked about.
"No," he said honestly. "I've come this far and I didn't kill
Marla, so I think we should stay and see how she does."
The look on her face made his entire
body burn. "Does Ash have any idea just what a sweetheart you are?"
"I shudder at the mere
prospect."
She laughed, then took his hand and
led him to a table near the stage.
A large group of men greeted them.
"You were great!" the one
closest to them said.
Valerius inclined his head as
Tabitha introduced all of them. They sat there for a little over an hour while
the contestants held a talent and bathing suit competition. The latter of which
made Valerius even more uncomfortable than being on stage.
"You okay?" Tabitha asked,
leaning toward him. "You look a little green."
"I'm fine," he said, even
though he was cringing at the thought of how a man could restrict himself so
much in a bathing suit as to leave no trace of his gender.
Some things just didn't bear thinking
on.
After an hour, the judges had
finally narrowed it down to three contestants.
Tabitha sat forward. She wrapped her
arm around Valerius and perched her chin on his shoulder as she held her breath
and prayed for Marla.
Valerius didn't move, but the
sensation of his hand on hers made her warm considerably. No matter the
outcome, she was so grateful to him for bailing her out.
Neither Kyrian nor Ash would be
caught dead here.
Tabitha caught Marla's nervous gaze
as they came down to the winner's name.
She couldn't breathe. Not until they
announced…
"Marla Divine!"
Marla screamed and grabbed the
contestant closest to her. They jumped up and down and cried as more
contestants moved in for hugs and congrats.
Tabitha shot to her feet, screaming
and whistling her support. "Go, Marla, go!"
She looked down to see Valerius
staring at her in horror.
Huffing at him, she pulled him to
his feet. "Let's hear it, General," she said. "Shout out."
"I only shout when calling orders
to troops and that was a long time ago."
Well, there was only so much
loosening up a person could do in one night.
She blew him a raspberry, then
continued yelling for her roommate.
The emcee placed the crown on Marla,
and the sash, then handed her a dozen roses and directed her toward the runway.
Marla walked down it, crying and
laughing as she blew kisses to the audience.
When it was all over, Tabitha and
Valerius fought the crowd to her side. Marla hugged Tabitha first, then grabbed
Valerius. "Thank you!"
Valerius nodded. "My pleasure.
Congratulations on winning, Marla."
Marla smiled. "I owe the two of
you. Don't think I'm going to forget, now. Y'all go on and I'll catch up to you
later."
"All right," Tabitha said.
"I'll see you at home."
They made their way out of the club,
to the busy Canal Street that bordered the French Quarter.
Tabitha checked her watch. It was
almost ten. "I don't know about you, but I'm famished. Want to go grab a
bite?"
Valerius gave her an amused stare.
"You have to be the only woman alive who would ask a man with fangs that
question."
She laughed. "You're probably
right. So would you like to join me?"
"We don't have reservations
anywhere."
She rolled her eyes at him.
"Hon, where I'm going we don't need no stinking reservations."
"Where are we going?"
She headed down Royal Street, which
connected Canal to Iberville. "The Antoine's of seafood. Acme Oyster House."
"Acme? I've never eaten
there."
And as soon as Tabitha reached the
door of the place, Valerius knew why. It actually had plastic black-and-white
checked tablecloths.
He hesitated in the doorway as he
scanned the small restaurant. The place was tiny and the crowd thinning. It had
a bar to his right that stretched along the wall, and tables set up to his
left. The walls were a tawdry mixture of mirrors, pictures, and neon signs. It
was loud and obnoxious.
Not to mention, Valerius had to quickly
catch himself and mentally force his image into the mirrors before someone
realized he didn't cast a reflection.
Tabitha turned to look at him. She
put her hands on her hips. "Would you stop looking like someone just
scuffed your brand-new shoes? They have the best oysters on earth here."
"It's so… neon."
"So put on your
sunglasses."
"It doesn't look
sanitary," he said in a low tone.
"Oh please, you're about to eat
something that is the vacuum cleaner of the ocean. You do know how pearls are
formed, right? All an oyster does is ingest trash. Besides, you're immortal,
what do you care?"
"Valerius?"
He looked past Tabitha to see Vane
and Bride Kattalakis seated at the oyster bar, where two men behind the counter
were shucking oysters for the handful of people who sat there. Valerius let out
a relieved breath. Finally, someone he could relate to. A little, anyway since
Vane was an Arcadian wolf and Bride his human mate.
Dressed in jeans and a long-sleeved
T-shirt, Vane was Valerius's height and had long dark brown hair that he wore
loose around his shoulders. Bride was a plump, beautiful woman whose long
auburn hair was worn up in a messy bun. She had on a tan sweater over a brown
dress with little white flowers.
Valerius crossed the floor to shake
Vane's hand. "Wolf," he said in greeting… it was always polite to
refer to the Arcadians and Katagaria by their animal selves. "Nice seeing
you again." He looked to Bride. "And you, my lady, always an honor."
Bride smiled at him, then looked at
Tabitha. "What are the two of you doing here? Together?"
"Val was doing a favor for
me," Tabitha said as she came up behind him. She turned to one of the men
behind the counter, who was wiping his hands after shucking a plate of oysters.
"Hey, Luther, two beers and a fork."
The tall African-American laughed at
her. "Tabby, this is what, the fourth time this week you've been here?
Don't you have a home?"
"Yeah, but we don't have
oysters in it. At least not good ones. And I have to come here just to harass
you. Imagine a whole day without Tabitha in it… What would you do?"
Luther laughed.
Valerius didn't miss the strange
look that passed between Vane and Bride before Luther handed Bride the plate of
shucked oysters and went to get Tabitha the beers.
"Is there something I should
know?" Valerius asked them.
The instant Vane opened his mouth to
speak, Tabitha kicked his shin. Hard.
Vane yelped, then frowned at her.
"What was that?" Valerius
asked. "Why did you kick him?"
"No reason," Tabitha said,
reaching over the bar to pluck an oyster from the pile.
She looked angelic, which meant
something truly evil was going on.
Valerius looked back at Vane.
"What were you going to say?"
"Absolutely nothing," Vane
said before he took a drink from his longneck.
Valerius had a bad feeling about
this.
Luther returned with two bottles of
beer and handed them to Tabitha, who in turn held one out for Valerius.
He stared at it blankly.
"Aren't you thirsty?"
Tabitha asked.
"Don't we get glasses?"
"It's beer, Val, not champagne.
Take it. Really, it doesn't bite."
"Tabby, be nice," Bride
chided. "Valerius probably isn't used to beer."
"I do drink it," Valerius
said, taking the bottle reluctantly, "just not like this."
"You want oysters?"
Tabitha asked him.
"I'm not sure after your rather
blunt reminder of what they are."
Tabitha laughed at him. "Set us
up, Luther, and keep them coming until I pop."
Luther grinned at her. "I don't
think you have a limit, Tabby. It's a wonder we have any left to serve after
you leave."
Tabitha sat on the stool beside
Bride and indicated for Valerius to assume the one on the opposite side of her.
Valerius set his beer on the counter before he complied.
"You look so uncomfortable
here, Valerius," Bride said sweetly. "How on earth did Tabitha talk
you into this?"
"I'm still not quite
sure."
"You two been dating
long?" Vane asked.
"We're not dating, Vane,"
Tabitha answered quickly. "I told you, Val is only doing me a favor."
"Whatever you say, Tab. I just
hope your sis—"
His words were cut short by Bride
clearing her throat. "Tabitha knows what she's doing, Vane. Don't you, Tabby?"
"Usually not, but this is okay.
Really."
Valerius would sell his soul again
for a chance to read Vane's mind. "Vane, may I have a word with you
privately?"
Bride poured Tabasco sauce over an
oyster. "You leave that barstool, Mr. Kattalakis, and you really will be
'in the doghouse' literally for the rest of the week. In fact, I'll sic your
brother Fury on you and change the locks."
Vane actually cringed. "As much
as I would like to help you out, Valerius, you have to remember that her father
neuters dogs for a living, and he trained his daughter well. I think I'll have
to pass."
Valerius looked at Tabitha, who was
busy taking an oyster from Luther. She refused to meet his gaze.
What did Vane know that he didn't?
They sat at the bar, with Tabitha
and Bride chatting about clothes, old friends, and nothing important while both
men were ill at ease. The restaurant closed at ten, but Luther served them
oysters for another fifteen minutes.
"Thank you, Luther,"
Tabitha said. "I really appreciate you not running me off."
"It's always a pleasure, Tabby.
I like the way you appreciate my service and food, and I have to say this one
is easier to feed than your friend Simi. That little girl eats like a
demon."
"Oh, you have no idea."
Valerius went to pay while Vane
stayed with the women. Once the bill was settled, Vane and Bride headed off
toward Royal while he and Tabitha headed toward Bourbon.
"Ready to patrol?" Tabitha
asked.
"I'll drop you at your—"
"I'm not going home," she
said, interrupting him.
"Where are you going?"
"Stalking Daimons. Just like
you."
"That's not safe."
She stopped and glared at him.
"I know what I'm doing."
"I know," he said quietly.
"You have the spirit and strength of an Amazon. But I would really rather
you not kill yourself for something best left to those of us who have already
died. Unlike you, we have no one to mourn us if we perish."
Tabitha was taken aback at his
unexpected words. More than that, she was taken aback by the concern she felt
from him. The pain. "Who mourned for you when you died?" she asked,
not sure why she wanted to know.
He paused, then looked away.
"No one."
"No one? Didn't you have any
family?"
He laughed bitterly at that. "My
family was a Shakespearean tragedy. Trust me when I say they were gleefully rid
of me."
"How can you say that? I'm sure
they cared. Surely—"
"My brothers are the ones who
killed me."
Tabitha felt the vengeful agony that
surged through him as he growled those heartfelt words at her. Her chest ached
for him. Was he telling her the truth?
"Your brothers?"
Valerius couldn't breathe as the
past tore through him. But in truth, he felt a wave of relief at finally, after
two thousand years, telling someone the truth about what had made him a
Dark-Hunter.
He nodded as he forced the twisted
images of that night out of his mind. When he spoke, his voice was surprisingly
level. "I was an embarrassment to my family so they executed me."
"Executed you how?"
His eyes were blank. "You're an
ancient scholar. I'm sure you know what Rome did to her enemies."
Tabitha covered her mouth as a wave
of nausea consumed her. Before she could stop herself, she took his arm and
pulled back his sleeve so that she could see the scar on his wrist. There was
all the proof she needed.
Like Kyrian, he had been crucified.
"I'm so sorry."
Stiff and formal, he withdrew his
arm and straightened out his sleeve. "Don't be. I find it oddly fitting
given my family history. He who lives by the sword…"
"How many people did you
crucify?"
She felt his shame before he turned
and headed away from her. Unwilling to let him go, she rushed after him and
pulled him to a stop. "Tell me, Valerius. I want to know."
The agony on his face tore through
her. His jaw ticced. "None," he said after a long pause. "I
refused to ever kill a man like that."
Tears pricked her eyes as she stared
up at him.
He wasn't what Kyrian and the others
thought. He wasn't.
The man they described wouldn't have
hesitated to humiliate or kill someone. And yet Valerius had.
He cleared his throat and looked as
if the words pained him. "When I was a young boy, I saw a man executed. He
was one of the greatest generals of his time."
Tabitha's heart paused its beating
as she realized he was talking about Kyrian.
"My grandfather tricked him and
then spent weeks interrogating him." His breathing was labored, his entire
body tense. "My father and grandfather insisted my brothers and I be
brought in to witness it. They wanted us to learn how to break a man. How to
strip the dignity from him until there's nothing left. And all I saw was blood
and horror. No one should suffer like that. I looked into that man's eyes and I
saw his soul. His strength. His pain. I tried to run and they beat for me for
it, then brought me back in and forced me to watch."
He gave her a fierce, tormented
stare. "I hated them for that. Two thousand years later and I can still
hear his screams as they raised his broken body up and carried the once-proud
prince out to the square to die like a common criminal."
Tabitha covered her own ears as she
imagined what it must have been like for Kyrian to die that way. She knew from
her sister that his death still haunted him, too. Though Kyrian's nightmares
were much fewer now than they had been when he and Amanda had first married, he
still had them. He still woke up in the middle of the night to make sure his
wife and child were safe.
Some nights, he didn't sleep at all
for fear that someone would come and take it all away from him again.
And he hated Valerius with an
unreasoning vengeance.
Valerius took a deep breath as he
saw the way Tabitha cringed. He cringed too, just not openly.
His heart had carried the guilt and
horrors of his childhood throughout time. If he could go back in time, he never
would have sold his soul to Artemis. Better to die and silence the resonance of
his father's cruelty than to live interminably with all of their voices echoing
in his mind.
He was sure Tabitha hated him now,
just like the others. She had every right to. What his family had done was
inexcusable. It was why he made a point to avoid Kyrian and Julian.
There was no need in reminding
either one of them of their past lives in ancient Greece. It would be even
crueler now that both of them had happiness in the modern world.
He'd never understood why Artemis
had moved him into New Orleans. It was something his father would have done to
ensure that the two Greeks had no peace whatsoever.
But that was something he would
never speak of. And should he ever cross paths with Kyrian and Julian, he knew
better than to apologize. He'd tried that once centuries past with Zoe, who had
been killed by his brother Marius. The Amazon had run him through, trying her
best to kill him.
Valerius had been forced to
overpower her.
She had spat on him. "Roman
filth! I'll never understand why Artemis allows you to live when you should be
gutted like a squealing pig."
Over the centuries, he'd learned to
just hold his head high and carry on regardless of what the other Dark-Hunters thought.
He couldn't give them peace from their pasts any more than he could have peace
from his own.
Some ghosts refused to be exorcized.
Now Tabitha knew the truth and she
would hate him as well. So be it.
Valerius turned to leave.
"Val?"
He paused.
Tabitha wasn't sure what to say to
him. So she didn't speak with words. She reached up and pulled his head down to
hers, then kissed him soundly.
Valerius was stunned by her actions.
He crushed her to him as he tasted the warmth of her mouth. The warmth of her
embrace.
He pulled back. "You know what
I am, Tabitha… why are you still here?"
She looked up at him, her blue eyes
searing with tenderness. "Because I know what you are, Valerius Magnus.
Believe me, I know. And I want to take you home with me, right now, and make
love to you."
Chapter 6
Valerius would never understand this
woman or her strangeness. In the back of his mind was an image of Tabitha in
the slinky black negligee he'd found under her pillow.
The image haunted him.
"I would love to go home with
you, Tabitha," he said. "But I can't right now. I have to do my
job."
She smiled, then kissed him again so
passionately that it made his entire body sizzle.
Pulling back, she breathed in his
ear. "And that makes me want you even more." He shivered as she
delivered one long, sensuous lick to his lobe. "When the dawn comes, I'm
going to make you scream in pleasure."
His groin jerked in eager
anticipation.
"Promise?" The word was
out before he could stop it.
She took a step back and let her
hand fall from his face to his chest where she traced a path to his belt. He
burned in the wake of her touch.
"Oh yeah, baby," she said
teasingly. "I intend to squeeze you until you pop."
That thought alone was enough to
turn his blood into lava. He couldn't suppress the fantasy of Tabitha's long
legs wrapped around his hips, her body warm and wet as she welcomed him in.
He pulled her close to him so that
he could kiss her even though they stood in the middle of the street. He'd
never done anything so lowborn. Nor had he ever enjoyed anything more than the
taste of her lips.
Her spicy-sweet scent invaded his
senses and made his entire body burn for her.
This was going to be the longest night
of his life.
Taking a deep breath, he reluctantly
stepped away from her. "So where should we start patrolling?"
"You're not going to try and
force me home?"
"Could I?"
"Not bloody likely."
"Then where should we start
patrolling?"
Tabitha laughed. "Aren't you a
little overdressed for stalking the undead?"
"Not really. It's rather
fitting, don't you think, that I should look like I'm going to a funeral?"
She laughed at his morbid sense of
humor. "I suppose. Do you always wear a suit?"
"I'm most comfortable in one.
I'm not really a jeans and T-shirt sort of man."
"Yeah, I imagine you look like
I do whenever I have to wear a suit. Itchy." Tabitha indicated the street
with a tilt of her head. "Shall we?"
"Do we have to do Bourbon?
Can't we go down Chartres or Royal?"
"Bourbon's where the crowd
is."
"But the Daimons like to kill
over by the Cathedral." He was suddenly very uncomfortable.
"What's wrong with Bourbon
Street?"
"There are lots of unsavory
people there."
Now that offended her. "Excuse
me, I live on Bourbon. So you're calling me unsavory?"
"No. Not exactly. But you do
own a sex shop."
That set off her hackles even more.
"Oh! That's it. Nothing for you tonight, Count Penicula. You can go roast
your own—"
"Tabitha, please. I don't like
Bourbon Street."
"Fine," she said sharply
as she stalked away from him. "You go that way. I'm headed this way."
Valerius clenched his teeth as she
left him standing there. He truly hated to step one foot into this area. It was
bright, loud, and filled with people who hated his guts.
Just go. Forget her.
He should. He really should, but he
couldn't.
Before he could stop himself, he
headed off after Tabitha. By the time he caught up to her, she was already on
Bourbon Street.
"What are you doing here?"
she asked as he came up beside her. "I would hate to sully you."
"Tabitha, please stay with me.
I didn't mean to offend you."
She turned on him with a curled lip.
The instant Tabitha opened her mouth
to let him have it, someone tossed a bucket of foul-smelling water from over a
balcony and doused Valerius.
He went ramrod stiff while she
frowned, then looked up to see Charlie, one of the doormen for the Belle Queen
strip club, laughing. He set the bucket up and high-fived another man standing
beside him.
"Charlie Laroux, what the hell
are you doing?" Tabitha yelled up at them.
"Me?" he asked
indignantly. "Since when are you hanging out with enemies? Nick done told
us all about that ass-wipe and I promised Nick that if I ever caught Dick on
our street again, I'd make him regret it."
Tabitha couldn't have been more
stunned had Charlie slapped her. She looked at Valerius, who'd taken a
handkerchief out of his pocket to wipe his face while that angry tic worked in
his jaw.
"I swear, Charlie, if you were
down here, I'd wring your neck."
"Why? You know our code, Tabby.
Why you violating it?"
"Because there's nothing wrong
with Val other than the fact that Nick needs to get a life. Just you wait,
Charlie. I'm going to have a nice long talk with Brandy and when I finish with
her, you'll be lucky if she lets you park your car in her driveway to sleep in
it."
Brandy was Charlie's girlfriend, a
regular customer in Tabitha's shop.
Charlie went pale while she reached
to take Valerius's arm. She pulled him across the street, toward her store.
"I can't believe them!" she
snarled.
"It's why I hate this
street," he said in an emotionless voice. "Every time I come here, I
end up walking the gauntlet through Nick's friends."
"That asshole!"
Tabitha had never been more furious
in her life. She led him into her store and didn't even stop to chitchat with
her employee. She took him upstairs to her bathroom and grabbed a towel and
washcloth from the closet.
"Go ahead and take a bath. I'll
borrow some clothes from my roomie."
He went pale. "No offense, but
silver sequins and pastels are not my style."
She smiled in spite of herself.
"I won't borrow from Marla, I'll borrow from Marlon."
"Marlon?"
"Her alter ego. He doesn't
visit here much, but she keeps a few of his things for whenever he feels the need
to come out."
"I don't think I quite
understand."
"Go bathe," she said,
urging him into the room.
Valerius didn't argue. The fetid
stench of the water was truly unbearable. He was just grateful that Tabitha was
willing to tolerate him long enough to allow him to clean up.
He'd barely stripped his clothes off
and entered the shower before the door opened.
Valerius froze.
"It's just me," Tabitha
said from the other side of the shower curtain. "I found a pair of black
slacks and sedate black shirt for you. The pants are probably a little too big
in the waist, but they should be long enough. I'm not sure about the shirt. You
might end up wearing one of my tees."
"Thank you," he said.
Before he realized what she was
doing, the curtain opened to show her standing outside with a hungry look on
her face. "You're welcome."
Valerius didn't move as he stood
facing her with the hot water sliding down his spine. Her bold, intense stare
made his body harden against his will.
She didn't seem to mind at all.
Indeed, a small smile spread across her face.
"Do you always spy on your
guests?" he asked quietly.
"Never, but I couldn't resist
getting a peek at what I intend to savor later."
"Are you always this
brazen?"
"Honestly?"
He nodded.
"No, I'm not normally quite
this obnoxious and you're the last man on the planet I should be considering.
But I can't seem to help myself."
Valerius reached out to touch her.
She really was too good to be true. "I've never known anyone like
you."
She covered his hand with hers, then
turned her face to kiss his palm. "Hurry and shower. We have work to
do."
She pulled away and he felt her
absence immediately. What was it about her?
Unwilling to think about it, he
quickly bathed, then dressed. He found Tabitha in her bedroom, sitting in the
chair and flipping through one of her books.
Tabitha looked up as she felt
Valerius's presence. He stood silently in the doorway. He appeared to be
completely in his element, except for the clothes that didn't quite fit.
Getting up, she offered him a kind
smile. Once she reached him, she unbuttoned the cuffs of the sleeves that were
a little too short for his arms and rolled them back on his forearms.
Then she untucked his shirt.
"I know it's not your style,
but it looks much better this way."
"Are you certain?"
He looked delectable. "Oh
yeah."
He held a long, retractable sword in
his hand. "The only problem is if I don't have long sleeves, I can't wear
this."
Tabitha sucked her breath in at the
quality of his weapon. "Very nice piece of work. Is it Kell's?" she
asked. Kell was a Dark-Hunter stationed out in Dallas who made a lot of the
heavy weapons the Dark-Hunters used.
"No," he said with a deep
breath. "Kell doesn't deal with anyone from Rome."
"Excuse me?"
He took the weapon from her.
"He's from Dacia and his people waged war against mine. He and his
brothers were captured and taken to Rome to be gladiators. Two thousand years
later, he's still rather upset at all of us."
"Okay, I've had it with this.
Why doesn't Ash stop them from treating all of you like dirt?"
"How can he stop it?"
"Beat some sense into
them?"
"It wouldn't work. My brethren
and I have learned to just leave the rest of them alone. We're few in number
and there's no need in even arguing."
Tabitha growled. "Fine, let
them all rot then."
Valerius placed his sword on her
dresser and left it there before the two of them went back outside.
Tabitha quickly led him away from
the sidewalks so that no one else could toss a bucket at them and kept her arm
wrapped around his. "You know, I don't see how you can do your duties with
Zarek taking potshots at you from Olympus and the rest of the losers on the
street gunning for you."
"I learned quickly to avoid
Bourbon Street and leave it for Talon or now Jean-Luc to patrol while I take
the areas where no one knows Nick."
"And Zarek?"
He didn't comment.
They turned down Dumaine Street.
Neither spoke. They hadn't gone far when Tabitha felt a weird sensation whip
through her. "Daimons," she whispered, unaware she had spoken until
Valerius let go of her.
He pulled a dagger from his pocket
as he turned around in the street as if trying to catch a scent.
There was nothing.
Tabitha could feel the evil
presence, but she couldn't pinpoint it either.
Something whistled before an
unexpected wind danced down the street. It carried the sound of faint, maniacal
laughter.
"Tabitha…"
Her blood ran cold at the sound of
her name whispered out of darkness.
"We're coming for you, little
girl." The laughter echoed loudly, then faded into nothing.
Terrified, Tabitha couldn't breathe.
"Where are you?" Valerius
called.
No one answered.
Valerius wrapped Tabitha in his arms
as he reached out with every sense he possessed, but could find no trace of who
or what had spoken.
"Tabitha?"
Valerius turned sharply at the sound
of a voice directly behind him.
It wasn't human. Nor was it Daimon.
It was a spirit. A ghost.
It opened its mouth as if to scream,
then evaporated into an eerie mist that ran over and through her, leaving her
body completely cold.
It was as if something had actually
brushed her soul.
Valerius could feel Tabitha shaking,
but to her credit, she didn't scream or lose control of herself.
"Is it gone?" she asked.
"I think so." At least he
no longer felt it.
"What was that thing?" she
asked with a tiny trace of hysteria in her voice.
"I'm not sure. Did you
recognize it or the voice?"
She shook her head.
A human scream rang out.
Valerius let go of her so that he
could run toward the sound. He knew Tabitha was right behind him and he made
sure he kept her there. The last thing he wanted was to leave her behind for
that thing to attack.
It didn't take long to reach the
small, dark alcove where the scream had originated.
Unfortunately, they were too late. A
body lay on the street in a heap.
"Stay back," he told
Tabitha as he inched closer to it.
Tabitha started to argue, but didn't
really want to see what was obvious. To be honest, she'd seen more than her
share of dead bodies.
Valerius knelt down and felt for a
pulse. "He's dead," he said.
Tabitha crossed herself, then
glanced away. As her gaze touched on the building, she frowned. There on the
old faded brick was bloody Greek writing. Tabitha could speak the language, but
couldn't read the Greek words. "Do you know what that says?"
Valerius looked up. His face turned
to stone. "It says, 'Death to those who meddle.'"
As soon as he read it, the words
vanished. She swallowed as a new wave of panic swept through her. "What is
going on here, Val?"
"I don't know," he said
before he pulled out his phone and called Tate, the parish coroner who was a
long-time friend of the Dark-Hunters.
"I'm surprised Tate will talk
to you," she said after Valerius hung up.
"He doesn't like me, but after
Ash had a talk with him, he's learned to tolerate me." Valerius rejoined
her. "We better go before Tate arrives with the police."
"Yeah," she said, feeling
sick to her stomach. "Do you think we should call Ash and tell him what
happened?"
"We don't really know what
happened. There wasn't enough time for a Daimon to kill him and steal his
soul."
"So what does that mean?"
"Have you or your sister
conjured up anything?"
"No!" she said
indignantly. "We know better."
"Well, something seems to have
your number, Tabitha, and until we find out what it is, I don't think I should
let you out of my sight."
Tabitha couldn't agree more. In all
honesty, she didn't want to be out of his sight. Not if that… thing was going
to come back.
"Tell me something, Val. Are
Dark-Hunters any good against ghosts?"
"Honestly?"
She nodded.
"Not a damn bit. In fact, if
we're not careful, we can become possessed by them."
She went cold at his words.
"Are you telling me that if that spook comes back, he could take you
over?"
Valerius nodded. "And God help
you and the rest of this city if it does."
Chapter 7
Tabitha felt uneasy for the rest of
the night. She couldn't shake the notion that even the air around her was evil.
Tainted. Something was out there and it was gunning for her.
She only wished she knew who or
what.
Why?
Valerius didn't speak much as they
patrolled and yet found no sign of any Daimon. It was less than an hour before
dawn when they returned to her place on Bourbon Street.
Valerius stood back while she
unlocked her door. Tabitha paused as she noticed that he didn't make any move
to enter.
"You had a bad fright
tonight," he said quietly as he kept his hands in his pockets. "You
should get a good sleep and you'll feel better."
Tabitha watched the way the
moonlight cut across his handsome features. The sincerity she saw in those
tormented black eyes haunted her. "Honestly, I don't want to be alone. I
would really like for you to come in."
"Tabitha—"
She placed her fingers over his warm
lips to stifle his protest. "It's okay, Val. If you're not interested in
sex with me, I won't take it personally. But—"
He broke her words off with a hot
kiss. Tabitha moaned at the taste of Roman as he placed one hand on the back of
her head and buried his fingers in her hair.
Wrapping her arms around him, she
pulled him inside and pinned him to the wall so that she could kiss him wildly.
She pulled at his clothes, practically ripping his shirt off before she
realized she hadn't even closed the door.
She slammed it shut, locked it, then
returned to Valerius.
"Marla," he said huskily
as she reached to undo his pants.
Tabitha cursed. Valerius was right.
If Marla heard them, she'd come and investigate.
"Follow me," she
whispered, taking him by the hand to lead him up the stairs to her room.
Luckily Marla's door was closed.
Tabitha took him into her bedroom, then shut and locked her own door.
She should be nervous about this and
yet she wasn't. It was like some part of her needed this intimacy with a man
who was a total anathema to her entire family.
It didn't make sense.
Yet here she was, breaking every
taboo she knew. Amanda would kill her for this. Kyrian would never forgive her.
But her heart wouldn't hear reason.
Against all sanity, it wanted her Roman general.
Tabitha kissed him fiercely, needing
him to drive away her fear.
Valerius growled at how good she
tasted. He wasn't used to a woman taking the lead in sex and he found her lack
of modesty refreshing. She broke from his lips long enough to pull her own
shirt off before she seized him again.
He couldn't think as she pressed her
body against his. Her lace-covered breasts were small and inviting as they
brushed against his chest. She unzipped his pants, then slid her hand down to
gently caress his cock..
He hissed in pleasure as she moved
her hands around his hips to his butt. Slowly, seductively, she slid his pants
down, baring him to her. He'd never experienced anything more erotic.
Kneeling down before him, she
removed his shoes, and socks, then pulled his pants free.
He didn't understand this woman. He
found it impossible to believe that she was here with him like this. It'd been
so long since he'd been with a woman. As Tabitha had pointed out, most of the
ones he'd met had been frigid and formal in bed.
Never passionate. Not like this.
Not like her.
She was priceless and special, a
rare treat he wanted to savor. It was that fire in her that warmed him. That
fire that drew him in even against his will.
Tabitha paused as she felt an odd
sensation from him. "What's wrong, Valerius?" she whispered, rising
to stand before him.
"I'm just trying to understand
why you're with me."
"Because I like you."
"Why?"
She bit her lip seductively before
she shrugged. "You're strangely amusing and you're kind."
He shook his head. "I'm not
kind. I only know how to be cold."
She buried her hands in his unbound
hair and let the silken strands caress her fingers. "You don't feel cold
to me, General."
Tabitha ran her tongue along the
edge of his bottom lip before she kissed him.
Valerius's head spun at her actions
and her words. Starving for her, he reached behind her back and unhooked her
bra. Without breaking her kiss, she lowered her arms to let it fall to the
floor.
He pulled her up against him so that
her bare breasts were flush to the heat of his chest. Her silver moon-shaped
belly button ring brushed against his hip, bringing a foreign thrill to him.
His groin burned in need of her.
As did his heart.
He'd never made love to a woman who
really liked him. As a man, his lovers had been political alliances. Women who
only sought to claim him as a well-connected, wealthy husband or lover.
As a Dark-Hunter, his liaisons had
been with women who didn't even know him.
But Tabitha…
Growling low in his throat, he
finished undressing her as quickly as possible. The glow from streetlights
drifted in from her shades, cutting across her bare body. She was beautiful.
Lean, muscled. He'd never wanted anyone more.
Valerius lifted her from the floor
and pinned her against her door.
Tabitha laughed at the strength of
him. At his raw, earthy passion. No, her general wasn't frigid. He was hot and
exciting. Delectable.
Holding her with nothing more than
the strength of his arms, he slid himself deep inside her.
Tabitha moaned deep in her throat as
he filled her to capacity. "That's it, baby," she groaned. "Give
me all you've got."
Valerius buried his head against her
neck and inhaled her warm sweetness as he thrust against her. She had one leg
wrapped around his waist. He'd never made love to a woman like this. It was
animalistic and fierce.
And he loved it.
She arched her back, drawing him in
even deeper as she met him stroke for stroke. She had one leg on the floor that
she used for leverage against him as she raised and lowered her body on his,
heightening the depth of his penetration. It was all he could do to wait on her
as she took from him the same pleasure he felt with her.
Valerius cupped her breast in his
hand while he savored the sleek wetness of her body welcoming his.
He watched her bite her lip as she
wrapped her other leg around his waist and squeezed him tight between her
thighs. She was incredible.
She licked and teased his neck as he
continued to thrust for both of them.
Tabitha couldn't think past the
sensation of his hard thickness inside her. Her body burned and ached for him.
She could feel herself clutching him, needing him.
And when she came, she had to stifle
her cry.
Valerius growled as she scoured his
back with her nails and moaned in his ear. Yet it wasn't painful.
He smiled at the sight she made
coming in his arms. She actually laughed and purred, then cupped his face in
her hands before she kissed him blind.
That kiss drove him over the edge.
He could swear he saw stars as his body released itself inside hers.
He held her tight until the last
tremor shook him. His head spinning, he leaned his forehead against the door
while she slid her legs slowly down his body.
"You are the wild one, aren't
you?" she asked playfully, nipping at his bare shoulder.
Valerius grinned at that, taking an
odd sense of satisfaction from it.
Tabitha slid out from between him
and the door to head for the stereo she kept under a pile of clothes in the far
corner.
"What are you doing?" he
asked.
Suddenly Elvis filled the air with
"Can't Help Falling in Love." She turned the volume low before she
came back to him and pulled him into her arms.
"Tabitha?"
"Dance with me, Val. Everyone
should have at least one night of naked dancing in their lives."
"I don't dance."
"Everyone dances to
Elvis."
Before he could protest further, she
wrapped her arms around his neck and leaned her head against his chest, then
started slow dancing with him.
Valerius had never been more
uncertain. Yet as she led him through the song, he felt the most surreal
calmness of his life. It was magical. Special.
His heart light, he brushed his hand
through her hair while he silently held her and they swayed to the music.
Tabitha's soft, melodic voice sang
quietly along with Elvis.
"You have a beautiful
voice," he whispered.
She kissed the center of his chest.
"Thank you. I was the lead singer in an all-girl heavy metal band in
college."
He smiled at the thought as her
breath tickled across his chest. He could just see her on stage, singing to a
wild crowd. "Really?"
"Mmmm." She looked up at
him with the sweetest expression he'd ever seen on a woman's face. "We
thought we'd be the next Vixen. We weren't. Shelly got pregnant and Jessie
decided she wanted to go out to Las Vegas and be a hotel manager."
"And you became a vampire
slayer."
She twirled out of his arms, then
came back flush with his chest. "Yes, and I'm damned good at it."
He looked down at the tiny scar on
his chest where she'd stabbed him. "I would concur."
The song stopped, but was followed
by Aerosmith's "Sweet Emotion."
Tabitha let go of him to sway
seductively to the music. Valerius couldn't breathe as he watched her,
especially when the beat picked up and she kicked one leg over her head.
And when she used the poster of her
bed like a stripper's pole, he came dangerously close to moaning.
There was nothing on the planet more
erotic than watching this woman dance. She came closer, then turned her back to
him and lifted her hair up to let it trail all over her as she gently ground
her hips against his groin.
Valerius couldn't take any more of
it. Dipping his head, he teased her shoulder with his lips as he wrapped his
arms around her. He trailed his hands over her breasts, then down her stomach,
over her belly ring, until he could touch the triangle of auburn curls between
her legs. She was still wet from their lovemaking.
The instant he touched her, she
hissed, then rubbed herself against his hand. To his amazement, she trailed her
hand down his forearm and covered his hand with hers as she urged him on.
She was completely shameless in
letting him know exactly what she needed and he loved every minute of it. There
was no guessing if she liked his touch. She reacted to every stroke and when he
sank two fingers inside her she cried out.
She turned in his arms and seized
him. Before he realized what she was doing, she literally flipped him onto the
bed and was on top of him, straddling his hips.
Valerius laughed. "You know, a
lesser man might actually be afraid of you."
Laughing, she slung her hair over
her shoulders to trail down her back. "Are you afraid of me, Val?"
"No," he said honestly.
"I like that you know what you want and aren't afraid to take it."
The smile she gave him melted his
heart.
She trailed one finger over the
bridge of his nose, letting the nail lightly scrape his skin as she traced a
path over his lips and down his throat.
Tabitha dipped her head down and
suckled him. She growled at the taste of his hard nipple under her tongue. He
tasted even better than she had thought he would. There was nothing better than
the feel of all his lush, tawny skin underneath her.
What she liked most of all was that
he didn't feel threatened by her. He had no problem with her voracious appetite
for his succulent body.
It was a nice change of pace.
She trailed her lips from his chest,
down that lean, hard abdomen, to his hipbone. She felt the chills spread over
his body. Laughing, she raked her fingers through the crisp hairs at the center
of his body. He was already hard again.
Pulling back, she examined him in
the dim light of the room. He was gorgeous. She teased the tip of his cock with
her fingers, letting his moisture coat her.
He watched her without comment while
she explored the length of him, down to his soft sac. He arched his back.
Delighting in her power over him,
Tabitha bent her head down and took the tip of him into her mouth. His entire
body jerked in response, urging her on to please him more.
She took great pride in his deep
moans.
Valerius lay there, cradling her
head in his hands as she gently tongued him from tip to hilt. In all eternity,
he'd never known this feeling that was deep down inside him. What was it about
Tabitha that she was able to see past his facade? I figure all of us misfits should
hang together, that way we don't swing alone. Her words to Otto drifted through
his mind.
But she wasn't a misfit. She was
vivacious and wonderful.
Tabitha inhaled the rich, masculine
scent of him as she took her time tasting his body. She looked up to find him
watching her, his eyes glazed by desire.
Smiling, she slowly licked her way
up his body until she could claim that decadent mouth that begged for her
kisses. He growled and held her tight as she ran her hand over his shoulders.
Tabitha broke away so that she could nip his chin. His whiskers prickled her
tongue and lips, his breath caressed her cheek.
She pulled back, then slowly slid
herself onto him, inch by long, luscious inch.
Valerius cupped her face as she rode
him with a gentle, easy rhythm that left him even more breathless than their
earlier rowdy session.
She was like a whisper as she made
love to him. And it was making love. It was soft, tender. She covered his hand
with hers and opened her lips to taste his fingers.
Valerius hissed as her tongue worked
its magic on the pads of his fingertips. Smiling even more, she nipped his
fingers playfully.
He pulled her down to capture her
lips as he lifted his hips, driving himself even deeper into her.
This time when they came, it was
together.
She collapsed on his chest as they
both lay sweaty and panting.
Valerius cradled her gently. He
never wanted to let her go. If he could, he would spend the rest of his
immortality lost in this one perfect moment of them nestled together, his body
spent and sated.
Closing his eyes, he felt himself
drifting off to the first undisturbed sleep he'd had in over two thousand
years.
After making sure no daylight would
threaten Valerius, Tabitha lay quietly in Valerius's arms as she listened to
him sleeping.
She still felt uneasy about the
ghost they had seen. About the feeling inside her that wouldn't relent. Part of
her wanted to call Acheron, but she didn't want to disturb him with something
stupid. He needed to rest.
Whenever they awoke in the
afternoon, she'd ask him about it.
For now, she had Valerius and he
brought her a strange sense of peace.
She shouldn't feel this way, not for
a man her twin would never accept into her house. Part of her felt like she was
a traitor to Amanda and Kyrian and the other part of her couldn't resist the
tormented gleam in Valerius's eyes.
He was a calm anchor to her chaotic
life and truthfully, she liked his dry sense of humor. His ability to take
things in stride without blowing a gasket. It was rare in her world to meet
such a man. He's not a man.
No, he wasn't. She knew that, just
as she knew there was no hope of any kind of future for a relationship.
Dark-Hunters didn't have significant others of any sort. They could never be
together. Never.
Once she and Valerius left this bed,
they'd have to part company. He would just be another passing friend.
And yet she didn't want to let go of
him.
"Stop," she whispered to
herself. She needed her rest.
Closing her eyes, she forced herself
to sleep. But her dreams were far from comforting. All morning long, they
haunted her with vivid, horrific images of her sister and Kyrian. Of baby
Marissa crying for someone to help her.
Most of all, they haunted her with
the faces of her friends who had died and with scenes of Valerius being
tortured. She could see him stretched out and hear mocking laughter as he
struggled not to die.
She could feel his pain, his
betrayal.
Hear his scream of vengeance as it
echoed throughout time.
Tabitha came awake just after noon
with her entire body shaking from her dreams. She'd only been sleeping a few
hours, but she was so upset that she couldn't go back to sleep.
"Tabitha?"
She looked at Valerius, who squinted
at her.
"Are you all right?" he
asked hoarsely.
She kissed his bare shoulder and
offered him a smile. "I can't sleep. You go ahead and rest."
"But—"
She placed her finger on his lips.
"Sleep, baby. I'm fine. Really."
He nibbled her finger before he
rolled over, gave her a tight hug, then returned to sleep.
Tabitha lay in the shelter of his
arms with her thoughts racing. She honestly didn't want to get up. But after a
few minutes, when she heard Marla and Debbie chatting somewhere downstairs
about inventory, she finally decided to rise.
She quickly showered and dressed,
taking care not to wake the delicious guy in her bed. As soon as she went
downstairs, she called Otto and asked him to bring clothes over for Valerius.
"Why didn't he come home last
night?" Otto asked.
"It was too close to
dawn."
"Uh-huh," Otto said as if
he didn't buy it. "I'll be over in about an hour with something for
him."
"Otto," she said with a
warning note in her voice. "It better be something he wants to wear and
not some Nick-I-want-to-piss-off-Kyrian knockoff."
"You take all the fun out of
this."
Tabitha shook her head as she hung
up the phone. With nothing better to do, she headed into her store, where
Debbie was ringing up a customer.
Otto came about an hour later and
dropped off the clothes without so much as a grimace. But Tabitha noted that he
was wearing a stylish black sweater and a pair of nice jeans instead of his
regular wear. He probably looked like this whenever Valerius wasn't around.
After Otto left, she took the
clothes upstairs and laid them out for Valerius to see when he awoke, then
crept back to her shop, where she cleaned and reworked a pasties display.
She'd just finished matching the
pasties to thongs when Nick Gautier came into the store with a bright smile on
his face as he whipped his sunglasses off. "Afternoon, chиr," he said,
walking up to her.
He kissed her lightly on the cheek.
Tabitha frowned. It'd been a long
time since Nick had done something like that. "What has you in such a good
mood?" she asked.
He flashed that devilish, charming
grin at her. "What do you think? Man, I owe you dinner out,
big-time."
She was even more confused than
before. "For what?"
"That friend of yours… Simi.
She was something else."
Tabitha went cold at the sound of
reverence in his voice.
"I can't wait to see her
again," Nick continued, increasing her sense of dread. "You wouldn't
happen to have her number handy, would you? I was supposed to meet her at six
tonight, but I'm going to run a little late and didn't want to leave her
waiting for me."
Tabitha struggled to breathe as
panic and fear consumed her. This couldn't be happening. Nick didn't do what
she thought he'd done-had he?
Surely not even Nick Gautier was
that stupid.
"Simi? You want Simi's
number?"
"Yeah. She cut out so fast last
night that I didn't have a chance to get it."
"Why did she cut out
fast?"
"She said she was supposed to
meet someone." He frowned at her. "What's up? Is there something I
need to know? She's not married, is she?"
Tabitha felt the color drain from
her face. "Tell me you didn't do anything with Simi last night, did you?
You just took her into Sanctuary and—"
"I took her out for barbecue.
She said it was her favorite and those bears don't know shit about
mesquite."
Tabitha rubbed her head to help
alleviate some of the bitter ache that was starting right between her eyes.
This was so bad… "And after you two ate, you what?"
His grin turned wicked. "You
know a gentleman never kisses and tells."
Tabitha covered her mouth as she
felt an urge to be really sick.
Nick sobered instantly.
"What?"
"You didn't happen to ask her
who she was going to meet, did you?"
"No, I assumed it was a
friend."
"Oh, Nick," she said,
wanting to cry for him and his ignorance, "it was more than a friend. Let
me put it to you this way: Her phone number is 555-562-1919."
He scowled. "That's Ash's
number."
"Yes, it is."
His pallor now matched her own as
the true horror of his situation dawned on him. "Not our Ash as in
Parthenopaeus Ash?"
She nodded glumly.
He turned a multitude of colors as
that registered. "Oh, God, Tabitha, why didn't you tell me?"
"I thought you knew her. She
knows you."
"No, I never met her before
last night." Nick raked a hand over his face as he set off cursing.
Tabitha shook her head. "Ash is
going to kill you."
"Don't you dare tell him!"
Nick snarled.
"I'm not about to. But what if
Simi—"
"I'll call him and tell him I
need to talk to him. I'll confess…"
"Nick, he will kill you. He
loves Simi and I mean loves Simi. He'll never forgive you for this. You'll be
lucky to come away with all parts attached."
Nick couldn't believe what he was
hearing. There had been several times over the last few years that Ash had
intimated that he had a girlfriend and Nick had taken to goofing on him for it.
The last thing he'd ever expected
was to meet Ash's girlfriend in the Quarter without him.
Oh God, this couldn't be happening.
How could he have slept with his best friend's girl? Why hadn't Simi told him?
If, as Tabitha said, Simi knew who he was, why would she do such a thing?
"Is she fighting with
Ash?" he asked, hoping, praying it was a possibility.
"No, Nick. You're not that
lucky."
He cursed again. "I have to
tell him," he said to Tabitha. "I'm not going to be a coward. I owe
him that much."
"Then you better make sure you
go over to the St. Louis Cathedral and confess before you do."
Nick crossed himself, unable to
believe what he'd just gotten himself into. He should have known Simi was too
good to be real. She'd been a lot of fun, and in truth, he'd been looking
forward to seeing her again.
Tabitha was right. He was a dead
man.
"Hey, Tabby," Marla said
as she stuck her head into the shop. "Valerius is up and showering in the
bathroom."
Nick gaped, then glared.
"Valerius?"
"Sh," Tabitha snapped at
Nick.
He didn't take the hint.
"Valerius as in Valerius, dick-head Valerius? What the hell is he still
doing here, Tabitha?"
"It's none of your
business."
His anger snapped at that. "Oh,
yeah, right. Excuse me, but between the two of us…" He paused as he
thought over what he was about to say, then reconsidered it. "Okay, I'm
still more screwed than you are, but you are seriously screwed blue. Amanda
will tear your heart out if she finds out."
Tabitha turned on him with her eyes
flashing anger. "So help me, Nick, you breathe a word of this and I'll press
the speed dial on my phone straight for Ash."
He held his hands up in surrender.
"Deal. But you better get that Roman prick out of here."
She pointed toward the door.
"Good-bye, Mr. Gautier."
He put his sunglasses back on.
"Later, Ms. Devereaux."
Tabitha rubbed her hands over her
face as she contemplated what a horror this day was and that it wasn't even
close to over yet.
Aggravated, she headed toward the
door that led to her apartment. Upstairs, she heard Valerius in the shower.
Tabitha went ahead and called to
have a pizza delivered in case he was hungry.
By the time he was finished and
dressed, the pizza arrived. Tabitha paid for it and set it on the table as she
waited for Valerius to come down.
She still had the sickest feeling
her stomach. "There really needs to be a do-over button for days that suck
this much," she muttered as she set out two paper plates.
Valerius was buttoning the last
button on his shirt as he came down the stairs, looking for Tabitha. She was
standing with her back to him.
He paused on the stairs to admire
her there. She was leaning over the table to give him one nice view of her
derriere. A small smile played at the edges of his lips as he remembered what
that rear had looked like last night naked against him as she danced in her
room.
He hardened instantly.
Getting a little hold on his
treacherous body, he walked into the room and frowned as he saw a large white
box on Tabitha's kitchen table. It smelled good, but…
"What is that?" he asked.
"Pizza," she said, turning
to face him.
He scowled in revulsion.
"Oh, c'mon," she said
irritably. "It's Italian."
"It's pizza."
"Have you ever had pizza?"
"No."
"Then sit down and hush while I
get us some wine. You'll like it, I promise. It was handmade by an Italian
named Bubba."
Valerius arched a doubtful brow at
her words. "There are no Italians named Bubba."
"Sure there are," she said
saucily. "It's more Italian than Valerius is. At least Bubba's name
actually ends with a vowel."
Valerius opened his mouth to
contradict her, then stopped. There was no reasoning with Tabitha when she was
in this saucy mood. "Are you testy because you didn't get enough sleep or
do you wish for me to leave?"
"I didn't get enough sleep and
if you know what's good for you, you'll sit down and eat." She headed to
the kitchen.
Valerius didn't listen. He went into
the kitchen, picked her up, and tossed her over his shoulder.
"What are you doing?" she
asked, her tone angry.
He sat her down in a chair and
braced his hands on its arms so that she was pinned there. "Good evening,
Tabitha. I'm fine tonight. How are you?"
"Irritated at you."
"I'm sorry to hear that,"
he said, lifting one hand up to caress her cheek. "I woke up to the smell
of you on my skin and I have to say that it put me in a rather good mood that I
don't want you to destroy."
Tabitha melted at those words and
the tender look on his face. Not to mention that the fresh, clean scent of his
skin could undo even the worst mood imaginable. His lips were so close to hers
that she could already taste them.
And those dark eyes…
They were beguiling.
"You really know how to be
aggravating, don't you?" she asked him. She forced her ire aside and
offered him a smile. "Okay, I'll play nice." She pulled his head to
hers so that she could kiss him.
She was just getting into that kiss
when her phone rang. Cursing at the ill timing, she got up to answer it.
It was Amanda. Again.
Tabitha wasn't really paying
attention to her as her sister rambled on about Marissa and Kyrian and another
dream she'd had.
At least not until she mentioned
Desiderius and her.
"What?" she said, forcing
herself not to watch Valerius who was poking at the pizza as if it were a UFO.
"I said I'm scared, Tabby.
Really scared. I dreamed during my nap that Kyrian and I were killed by
Desiderius."
Chapter 8
Tabitha hung up the phone,
terrified. She'd never heard so much fear in Amanda's voice. Worse, she knew
her sister's powers—if Amanda had foreseen her own death...
Without hesitation, Tabitha called
Acheron.
"Hey, Ash," she said,
noting the way Valerius's attention turned from his pizza to her. "I have
a problem. Amanda just called and said that she had dreamed her own death and
last night I ran across something really spooky. It—"
Ash appeared before her.
"What?" he asked.
Tabitha froze for a second as she
realized what Ash had just done. He really was scary at times.
She hung up the phone again and
repeated everything, including details about the ghost they'd seen the night
before.
Ash got a faraway look in his eyes,
tilting his head as if listening to someone.
"Can you see her death?"
she asked him.
Ash stood there, his heart thumping
wildly as he tried to clear the mist that surrounded Amanda and Kyrian's
future.
He saw nothing.
He heard nothing.
Dammit. It was why he did his best
never to let anyone too close to him. Anytime he allowed himself to care about
someone or they were a part of his own future, he was blind to their destinies.
There was nothing but blackness
where Kyrian and Amanda were concerned and he hated that most of all.
"Talk to me, Ash."
He looked back at Tabitha and heard
and felt the fear and panic in her mind. Her thoughts that rambled as she
sought a comfort he couldn't give.
Even her future was forbidden to him
now.
"Her destiny was to be
happy," he said quietly. But the key word to that statement was was. Free
will could, and often did, alter fate.
What had changed?
Something must have and Amanda had
glimpsed it in her sleep.
He held enough belief in Amanda's
powers not to doubt her in the least If she foresaw their deaths, then it was a
likely outcome unless he could find the cause and change it before it was too
late.
Ash closed his eyes as he let
himself feel the minds of the humans. He searched for what could possibly
change Amanda's fate, but he found nothing.
Nothing.
Dammit!
Valerius was behind him now. Ash
stepped aside so that his back wasn't exposed to the Roman.
"Tell me exactly what happened
last night," Ash said to Tabitha.
Tabitha related the whole scene with
the ghost while Valerius filled in a few details.
"Urian!" Ash called,
summoning his Spathi contact.
Tabitha frowned. Ash was acting very
strange and she could sense his worry. "Who's Urian?"
Before she finished the question
another tall, insanely handsome man appeared in her kitchen. Dressed in black
leather pants and a black shirt, he had white-blond hair and blue eyes.
He looked less than pleased as he
narrowed those baby blues on Ash. "Don't take that tone of voice with me,
Ash. I don't care who you are, I don't like it."
"Like it or not, I need to know
what the Spathis are up to. More precisely, I need to know if Desiderius is
back on the playing field."
Horror filled her.
Urian curled his lip. "Why are
you worried about him? Des is a punk."
"Desiderius is dead,"
Tabitha said emphatically. "Kyrian killed him."
Urian scoffed. "Yeah, and I'm
the Easter Bunny—see my fluffy tail? You don't just kill a Spathi, little girl.
All you do is take him out of commission for awhile."
"Bullshit!" Tabitha
snarled.
"No, Tabitha," Ash said,
gentling his voice. "Desiderius's essence was released. But if one of his
brethren or children wanted to bring him back, they could. It's not easy to do,
but it is possible."
She was aghast that Ash had kept
something this important from them. "Why didn't you ever tell us
this?"
"Because I was hoping it
wouldn't happen."
"Hoping?" Tabitha
shrieked. "Please tell me you weren't pinning my sister's life and
Kyrian's on a hope."
Ash didn't answer.
Meanwhile the true significance of
the last few days settled fully on her shoulders. "So those really were
Spathis I fought the night I met Valerius."
Urian snorted. "Trust me,
little girl, you must have faced the neophytes. Had those been true Spathis,
you'd both be dead now."
His arrogance was seriously starting
to piss her off. Just who was this jerk anyway? "How do you know so much
about them, Dr. Intellect?"
"I used to be one."
Her fury breaking, Tabitha rushed
him.
Ash caught her and pulled her back.
He lifted her up off the floor. Tabitha kicked and cursed as she struggled to
reach Urian, who watched her with a smirk.
"Stop it, Tabby," Ash
breathed in her ear. "Urian is on our side now. Believe me, he has paid
for his allegiance to the other side more than you will ever know."
Yeah, right.
"How could you bring a Daimon
into my house after what they did to me? To my family?" she demanded.
"Oh, I'm not a Daimon anymore,
little girl," Urian said, his eyes flashing dangerously. "If I
were—"
"You'd be dead," Valerius
said, cutting him off with a sinister tone. "By my hand."
Urian laughed. "Yeah,
right." He looked at Ash. "The arrogance of your Hunters truly knows
no bounds. You should spend more time educating them about us, Ash."
Ash released Tabitha, then spoke to
Urian. "I need you to go in and find out what's going on. Are there any
left who might still be loyal to you?"
The Daimon shrugged. "I can
probably dredge up a flunky or two. But…" Urian's gaze went to Tabitha.
"If Des really is back, he'll want to finish what he started. May the gods
help you all if he has been reincarnated. It's going to get bloody in New
Orleans."
"Who would want to bring that
monster back?" Tabitha asked.
"His children," Urian and
Ash said simultaneously.
Tabitha still couldn't believe what
she was hearing. But as she seethed, Urian's face finally looked compassionate. Haunted.
When he spoke, the arrogance was
gone from his voice. "Trust me, it's hard to let go of the loyalty you
feel to a father who saved you from dying a horrible death at
twenty-seven." Something in his tone said he spoke from experience.
"Is your loyalty to your
father?" she asked.
Urian's face turned to stone.
"I would have done anything for my father until the day he killed me and
took from me the only thing that meant more to me more than my life. Any bonds I
felt for that man were shattered instantly." He looked at Ash. "I'll
see what I can find out."
A bright orange engulfed Urian an
instant before he flashed out of her kitchen. Even so, his malevolence still
clung to the air around them.
"Damn," Ash muttered.
"Urian and his dramatics. I have got to remind him to lay off the
pyrotechnics when he comes and goes."
"That is one angry man,"
Tabitha said.
"You've no idea, Tab," Ash
said. "And he has every right to his hatred." He shook his head as if
to clear it, then spoke to them quietly. "While Urian is busy, I need for
the two of you to stay together and watch each other's backs. Desiderius is the
son of Dionysus, and Dionysus is still upset at me over what happened at Mardi
Gras three years ago. I don't think he's stupid enough to help Desiderius, but
I wouldn't put anything past either one of them."
He looked meaningfully at Tabitha.
"Even if Daddy doesn't help him, Desiderius still has a lot of god powers
that can be deadly, as you no doubt remember."
"Yeah," she said
sarcastically as she recalled the way he and his Daimons had cut through her
and her friends as if they were straw. "I remember."
He looked at Valerius.
"Desiderius can manipulate people. Possess them, if you will. Tabitha is
stubborn enough that the only thing that can possess her is the spirit of
chocolate. We're lucky there. But Marla could be swayed. Otto should be safe.
But the rest of your staff… you might want to think about giving them some time
off."
By the look on Valerius's face,
Tabitha could tell he'd rather be dead. "I can handle them."
"You have to sleep sometime.
One of the servants could easily break into your bedroom and kill you. I don't
think any of them love you so much that they will hesitate over Desiderius's
orders the way Kyrian's cook did."
Valerius's nostrils flared.
Ash ignored the pain that Tabitha
felt from Valerius. "I need you two together on this. I have to go warn
Janice and Jean-Luc about what's up." He turned to face her.
"Tabitha, pack a bag and move in with Valerius for awhile."
"What about my store?"
"Have Marla watch over it for a
couple of weeks."
"Yeah, but—"
Ash's features hardened. "Don't
argue with me, Tabitha. Desiderius is a major power with one hell of a grudge
against you, your sister, and Kyrian. He's not going to be playing with the
three of you this time. He's going to kill you."
Normally, she would argue with him
just for spite. But she knew that tone of voice. No one argued with Ash for
long. "Fine."
"You have your orders,
General," Ash said sternly to Valerius.
Valerius gave him a rather sarcastic
Roman salute.
Rolling his eyes, Ash flashed out of
the room.
Now that they were alone, Valerius
stared at her without speaking. Fury was burning so raw inside him that it
actually hurt her.
"What?" she asked.
Without a word, he went to the
picture on her buffet of Amanda's wedding and pulled the Russell Crowe picture
off Kyrian's face.
He cursed. "I should have known
when you told me her name was Amanda."
The look of repugnance on his face
set her off. "Yeah, and my name is Tabitha, not Amanda. What has that got
to do with anything?"
But he didn't hear her. She knew it.
He stalked quietly from the room and
went back upstairs. She jumped at the sound of her bedroom door slamming.
"Fine," she said out loud.
"Be a baby. I don't care."
Valerius sat motionless on the edge
of the bed as his mind ranted over who Tabitha really was.
The twin of Kyrian's wife had saved
him. This was priceless, truly priceless. Here he'd spent the last two thousand
years avoiding the Greek so as not to hurt him by reminding him what Valerius's
family had done to him, and now this…
He clenched his teeth as he felt for
Kyrian's betrayal. Valerius's grandfather, an exact look-alike for Valerius,
had seduced Kyrian's beloved wife Theone centuries ago and used her to betray
her husband. Kyrian hadn't been captured on the battlefield as befitted a man
of his stature. He'd been drugged by the hand of his wife in his own home as he
tried to save her, and then handed over to his mortal enemy.
Valerius's stomach churned as he
remembered the weeks where his father and grandfather had tortured the Greek
general for information and for fun. Remembered Kyrian's screams.
The sight of the man lying bloody
and defeated haunted him to this day. Kyrian had lain there with his eyes
pain-filled and empty. Only once during those weeks had their gazes met and the
look in Kyrian's eyes was still seared into Valerius's soul.
Worse, Valerius remembered his
grandfather laughing at dinner the night Kyrian had been crucified after
Kyrian's father had tried to save him.
"You should have seen his face
as his wife came in my arms right in front of him. I had his whore moaning and
begging for my cock as he watched me fuck her. Too bad he died before he could
see her face when I threw her out."
Valerius had never understood that
cruelty. It was enough to defeat an enemy, but to use his woman in front of
him…
And now he was sleeping with the
identical twin of Kyrian's wife.
History did, in fact, repeat itself.
And Acheron had known and not told
him. Why would the Atlantean insist on the two of them being together when he
had to know what this would do to Kyrian? It didn't make sense. Any more than
Tabitha saving him when she herself knew Kyrian hated him.
Jupiter knew the man had every right
to wish him dead. No wonder Selena had hated him so passionately. As Kyrian's
sister-in-law, it was a wonder she hadn't been even more violent toward him.
The door opened.
Valerius tensed as he saw Tabitha
come inside. She didn't speak to him as she set about packing a small suitcase…
of weapons.
"What are you doing?" he
asked.
"What Ash said to do. I'm going
to move in with you."
"Why not go and stay with Kyrian
and Amanda?"
"Because I trust Ash. If he
says I should be with you, then I'm going."
"Will you be spitting on me as
well?" The question was out before he could stop it.
Tabitha paused at his untoward
question. "Pardon?"
A tic started in Valerius's jaw.
"It's what your sister Selena does every time she sees me. I was wondering
if I should make sure to keep a good lougie distance from you, too."
Tabitha would have laughed had he
not been deadly serious. "Lougie. Interesting word for you. I wouldn't
have thought you knew that one."
"Yes, well, your sister and my
latest Squire have tutored me well on the mighty lougie." He stood up and
moved toward the door. "I shall wait outside until you're through."
Tabitha kicked the door closed
before he reached it. He turned with a supreme look of arrogance.
"What has crawled up your butt
and died?"
"Excuse me?" he asked, his
voice every bit as icy as his look.
"Look, there are a few things
you need to know about me. One, I don't take crap from anyone. Two, I don't
hold anything back. Whatever I feel about something or someone, I let it be
known."
"I noticed."
She ignored his interruption.
"And three, I am an empath. You can stand there and act all nonchalant as
you want to, but at the end of the day, I feel what you do. So don't act all
secretive and cold when I know better. It just pisses me off."
His jaw slackened ever so slightly.
"You're an empath?"
"Yes. I know that Ash's
presence in the kitchen hurt you, but I don't know why, and I felt your fury
flare the minute you uncovered Kyrian's face." She reached up and placed
her hand to his cheek. "My mother always said that still waters run deep.
The only time your actions have matched your emotions was last night when we
were making love and when you came up here and slammed the bedroom door."
He tried to move away, but she
refused to let him. "Deal with me, Val, don't walk away."
"I don't understand you,"
he said, his heart pounding. "I'm not used to anyone liking me, especially
not people who have every right to hate me."
"Why should I hate you?"
"My family ruined your
brother-in-law."
"And my Uncle Sally was a loan
shark who died when one of his shakedowns shot him dead in the street. Every
family tree has an asshole in it. That's not your fault. You're not the one who
killed Kyrian, are you?"
"No, I was just a child when he
died."
"Then what's your
problem?"
For an unreasonable person, she had
moments of strange lucidity. "Every person I have met in this town who
knows Kyrian has hated me from the moment they saw me. I assumed you would be
like them."
"Well, you know what they say
about assume… it makes an ass out of u and me. Jeez. I love Kyrian, but the man
really needs to learn how to let go of the past."
He couldn't believe her. That she
would be so accepting of him was…
She pulled him into a tight, oddly
invigorating hug. "I know I can't keep you, Valerius. Believe me, I
understand fully the life you have and the calling. But we are friends and we
are allies."
He held her close as those words
resonated deep inside him.
She let go and stepped back.
"And we have things to do tonight. Right?"
"Right."
"Very good then, let's
rocket."
He frowned. "Rocket?"
She gave him a silly grin. "My
nephew Ian is addicted to the Power Rangers. I think I've been watching the
videos way too long with him."
"Ah," he said, reaching
for her suitcase. "Let's get you settled at my place and then we can head
out tonight and see what Daimons we find."
Fearful of running into Tia and
risking more questions, Tabitha called a cab to take them over to Valerius's
house. Otto was already gone by the time they reached his mansion.
As expected, Gilbert met them at the
door. He seemed stodgy as ever as he greeted them formally.
"Nice seeing you again,
Gil," Tabitha said as Valerius handed him her suitcase. "Nice rigid
stance."
Gilbert frowned before he looked
down, then gave her a quizzical stare.
Valerius almost smiled. "Ms.
Devereaux will be staying with us for awhile, Gilbert. Would you please have
Margaret ready a room for the lady?"
"Yes, my lord."
Valerius started for the stairs,
then paused. "After Margaret is finished, I would like for the entire
staff to take a few weeks off."
Gilbert looked shocked. "My
lord?"
"Don't worry. It's with full
pay. Consider it an early Christmas present. Just leave a number on my desk
where I can contact everyone to have them return."
"As you wish, my lord."
Tabitha felt Valerius's sadness. In
spite of what Acheron said, Valerius did like Gilbert and seemed to hate the
thought of the man leaving.
"Where are you off to?"
Tabitha asked as Valerius took another step up the regal mahogany staircase.
"I was going to get new
weapons. Would you care to join me?"
"Ooo," she said
suggestively. "I've always been a sucker for a man with lots of weapons.
Show me what you got, baby."
She wasn't quite sure if he was
amused or not as he waited for her to join him. Tabitha followed him up the
stairs, then turned down the long hallway on the right. He led her halfway down
before he paused in front of a door and opened it.
Tabitha whistled low as she caught
sight of his training room. It was huge, and held a variety of punching bags,
mats, and dummies. One in particular looked like it had been seriously abused.
It also wore a bright Hawaiian
shirt.
"Is this supposed to be someone
we know?" she asked as she noted the stab wounds to the dummy's head.
"I plead the Fifth."
"I take it Otto doesn't
participate in your training sessions."
He glanced at the dummy. "I
guess you could say that in a way he does."
She shook her head as Valerius
headed over to the closet. Inside was an arsenal she was sure the ATF would
have some issues with.
"Grenade launcher?"
"EBay," Valerius said.
"You can find anything on there."
"Apparently so. Who needs Kell
when you have all this?"
He gave her a wicked grin as he
strapped a long, lethal blade to his forearm. "What's my lady's
choice?"
Tabitha pulled a small crossbow off
a hanger on the door. "I've watched one too many Buffy reruns. I'm a
crossbow girl all the way."
Valerius stood back while Tabitha
picked her weapons. He had to admit that he enjoyed seeing a woman who knew how
to take care of herself. She weighed and examined each one carefully with the
precision of a pro.
He would never have believed such a
thing could be a turn-on and yet his body was already hard for her. It was all
he could do not to take her right now in the closet.
Tabitha looked over her shoulder as
she caught the sizzling wave from Valerius. His black eyes blazed at her.
He was close to breaking, she could
sense it. The fire of his desire reached out to her, igniting her own until she
struggled to breathe.
"Here," she said, handing
him one of the polished steel stakes.
He stepped back and slid it into his
pocket. Before he could comment, the door from the hallway opened to admit
Gilbert. "Ms. Devereaux?"
She turned to find the butler
nearing her. "Yes?"
"Your room is prepared."
Valerius cleared his throat.
"Please make sure it's to your liking before the servants leave."
"Okay," she said, knowing
he needed some breathing room. In truth, she did, too. If she didn't get out of
this room for a few minutes, they were both going to be naked and sprawling.
Tabitha left the closet to follow
Gilbert back down the hall to the other wing. He led her to a room at the end
of the hallway, then opened the door.
Tabitha gaped at the palatial room.
It was, after all, the very best. She wouldn't expect anything less from
Valerius and still the room was awe-inspiring.
It was decorated in dark navy blue
and gold. The lush navy duvet was already turned down for her.
Gilbert headed for an intercom, then
stopped himself. "I don't suppose there will be anyone here to answer if
you call," he said under his breath.
"You don't want to leave?"
He looked a bit startled by that.
"I've been with Lord Valerius a long time."
By the note in his voice, she could
tell "long" had a meaning all itself.
"Are you another Squire?"
He shook his head. "They don't
even know I exist. It's why Lord Valerius changes Squires out so often. He took
me in when I was fifteen and he was stationed in London. No one else would have
me."
She frowned at his words. "Why
didn't they make you a Squire?"
"The Squire's Council refused
to grant Lord Valerius that request."
"Why?" she asked, not
understanding it. The Council had let Nick Gautier in when Kyrian had asked and
heaven knew that boy had an extremely shady past.
"They don't think much of the
general or his requests, I'm afraid."
Tabitha growled low in her throat.
She'd never been the kind of person who could stand those who sat in judgment
of others. As her Aunt Zelda so often said, but for the grace of God, there go
I.
"Don't worry, Gilbert. I'll make
damn sure no one messes with Valerius while you're gone. Deal?"
He smiled at her. "Deal."
He bowed to her, then took his leave.
Tabitha crossed the room only to
discover that her clothes had already beea unpacked and everything placed
neatly in drawers, the armoire and in the bathroom.
Wow. A woman could get used to this
kind of treatment.
She sorted through her weapons,
which had been placed in a drawer by themselves. Her favorites were the
retractable knives that fastened to her wrists with Velcro. A high-pressure
release shot them from her arm into her hands, but you had to be careful or
they would cut a nasty wound into the palm.
She lifted her pants leg and slid
another stiletto into her boot and tucked a butterfly knife in her back pocket.
Most of her weapons were illegal, but she had enough friends in the police
department that they didn't harass her for them.
She was pulling on a long-sleeved
sweater to cover up her arms when someone knocked on her bedroom door.
Opening the door, she found Valerius
on the other side. He had to be the most handsome man she'd ever seen. His hair
was still damp, pulled back into his almost requisite ponytail, though to be
honest, she preferred it loose and wild.
His chiseled features betrayed
nothing, but she could sense delight in him.
"I'm on my way out to
patrol."
"I'm ready."
The amusement she sensed doubled.
The lines in his face also softened and it was all she could do not to pull him
back into her arms.
Really, no one should be so
tempting.
He widened the opening for the door.
"Come, my Lady Dangerous, your Daimons await."
Tabitha led the way down the stairs
where Otto was waiting for them.
He must have come back while they'd
been upstairs.
"There's an alert going out to
New Orleans," he said to them. "All the Squires except the Blood
Rites are being evacuated. Ash is also bringing in a couple more Hunters from
upstate and Mississippi. Did you know about this?"
"No," Valerius said.
"I didn't realize an alert had been issued."
"Are the Addamses
leaving?" Tabitha asked.
Otto nodded. "Even Tad. They're
transferring the control of the Dark-Hunter site up to Milwaukee until the
alert breaks."
Amanda's words of warning went
through Tabitha's head. She pulled her phone out of her back pocket and called
to check in on them as Valerius and Otto spoke to each other.
She was relieved the minute she
heard Amanda's voice. "Hey, sis," she said, trying to sound normal.
"What are you guys up to?"
"Not much. And yes I know about
the alert. Ash has already moved in here along with some Dark-Hunter named
Kassim."
"Why aren't you being
evacuated?"
"It'll just follow us, Ash
said. He thought it better that we fight on our own ground than to be someplace
unfamiliar. Don't worry, Tab. I really do feel better with Kassim and Ash
here."
"Yeah. I know Ash would never
let anything happen to any of you. You guys take care and I'll talk to you
later. Love you."
"You, too. 'Bye."
Tabitha sighed as Amanda hung up and
her stomach contracted even more with unfounded fear.
Why was she so nervous?
"I'll make sure all the help is
out of here by tonight," Otto said before taking his leave.
Valerius gave an imperious nod.
As soon as they were alone, Tabitha
struggled to get rid of her somber mood. "Do you know a Dark-Hunter named
Kassim?"
"I know of him."
"What do you know?"
Valerius adjusted his coat sleeve
around his wrist. "He was an African prince in the Middle Ages. He was
stationed in Jackson, Mississippi, until Ash moved him to Alexandria a few
years ago. Why?"
"He was moved into Amanda's
house, so I was just curious about him." She indicated the front door with
her thumb. "Shall we?"
He took her hand as she started away
from him. "Whatever this is after all of you, we'll get them, Tabitha.
Don't worry."
The sincerity of his voice cut
through her. "You would protect your mortal enemy?"
He glanced away. When his gaze came
back to hers, it seared her. "I will protect your loved ones. Yes."
There was no reason for him to do
such a thing. None. She had no doubt that in his place, Kyrian would go back
upstairs, lock his door, and do nothing.
But Valerius…
Before she could stop herself, she
pulled his lips down to hers and kissed him fiercely. The taste of him
permeated her head. How she wished she had nothing more to do tonight than to
pull him upstairs and make love to him.
If only she could…
Sighing regretfully, she nipped his
lips and pulled back. She felt his reluctance as he released her. Forcing
herself to let go of him, she stepped away, opened the door, and walked
outside.
Otto was heading up the driveway
from where his car was parked on the street as they left and it dawned on her
that he still wore his black jeans and sweater from that afternoon… he hadn't
morphed into tacky Otto tonight. He actually looked like a grown-up.
"I forgot something," he
said. He handed Valerius a device that looked like a small transmitter.
"Just in case. The Council wants everyone tagged so that if something
happens we can pull you out."
To her amazement, he handed her one
as well.
"Thanks, Otto."
He inclined his head to her.
"You two be careful. Talon will be out around the Square tonight along
with Kyrian and Julian. They'll also be scoping on Ursulines around Sanctuary
and Chartres, and the French Market. You guys might want to patrol somewhere
else."
"We'll hang around the
northwest side of the Quarter. Bourbon, Toulouse, St. Louis, Bienville, and
Dauphine."
Valerius cringed as soon as Bourbon
came out, but didn't say anything.
"Ash is taking the
cemeteries," Otto continued, "Janice will be down along Canal,
Harrod's, and the Warehouse District while Jean-Luc takes the Garden District.
Ulric is in the Business District and Zoe is at Tulane. Which leaves Kassim,
who has been told by Ash that if he, Amanda, or Marissa leave Kyrian's house
before dawn, he'll be toast."
"Who's Ulric?" Tabitha
asked.
Otto gave her a droll stare.
"He's the Dark-Hunter from Biloxi who arrived about half an hour ago. He's
blond, so try not to stab this one should you meet him in an alley."
Tabitha was offended. "What?
It's not my fault I stab all the fanged people. They shouldn't look like
Daimons."
"I didn't look like a Daimon,
but you stabbed me."
Otto laughed.
"Yeah, well, you looked like a
lawyer so I had to kill you. It was a moral imperative."
Valerius shook his head at her.
Sobering, she looked back at Otto. "How many Squires are left in
town?"
"Just me, Kyr, and Nick. The
last ones out were Tad and your ex Eric and his wife, who hopped a chartered
flight about an hour ago. Everyone else from Liza on down is out of here until
Ash gives the thumbs-up to return."
"What about the Weres?"
Valerius asked.
"They're all hanging close to
Sanctuary to protect their young and women. Even Vane and Bride are bunking
over there for the time being."
"Will the Weres help us at
all?" Tabitha asked.
Otto shook his head. "They view
this as a human problem and don't want to get involved."
Tabitha huffed at that. "I
can't believe them."
"You don't know much about
animals, then," Otto said. "It's why Talon wants to keep an eye on
the club. The Apollites and Daimons know that once they're inside Sanctuary, no
one, not even Ash, can touch them."
Tabitha laughed at that. "Ash
doesn't have to touch them to kill them."
"Excuse me?" Valerius and
Otto asked simultaneously.
"What?" she asked them.
"You didn't know that? Ash is seriously impressive in a fight. He'll take
your ass outpermanently before you even know he's there. He moves so fast you
can't see him half the time."
"Sounds like Corbin," Otto
said. "She's a teleporter. She'll poof in, stab a Daimon, and poof out
before it disintegrates."
"Corbin?" Tabitha asked.
"A former Greek queen turned
Dark-Huntress," Valerius said.
Tabitha rolled her eyes. "Let
me guess, not friendly to you?"
"Do I really need to answer
that?"
No, he didn't.
"Yeah," Otto said,
"but she's a walk in the park compared to Zoe and Samia. You say 'Roman'
around them and you better cup yourself fast." He looked at Tabitha.
"Well, not you, but those of us with things to protect down there have
to."
"Okay," Tabitha said,
stepping away from him. "And on that most interesting note, I think it's
time we headed off." She gestured toward the beat-up red IROC that was
parked on the other side of Valerius's gate. "Mind if we borrow your car,
Otto?"
Valerius looked horrified.
Otto laughed evilly as he pulled out
the keys. "Be my guest."
Valerius spoke up instantly. "I
have my—"
"This'll work," Tabitha
said as she winked at Otto and took the keys.
Valerius was rigid. "Really,
Tabitha, I think—"
"Get in the car, Val. I promise
you it won't bite."
He looked less than convinced.
Laughing, she started down the
driveway toward the IROC.
To her surprise, Otto called out
after them, "You guys be careful. I may not appreciate either one of you,
but I don't want the bad guys to win."
"Don't worry," Tabitha
said as she kept walking. "This time, I know what to expect."
"Don't be cocky," Valerius
said, giving her a gimlet stare. "It was a far better man than I who said,
'Pride cometh before the fall.'"
She took his words to heart.
"Good advice." She looked over his shoulder. "Night, Otto."
"Night, Tabitha. Take care of
my car."
Valerius actually cringed.
She stifled her laughter at his
reaction. "Mmm," she said, taking a deep breath of air that was all
New Orleans as she opened the small gate next to the drive to let them outside
the grounds. "Smell the beauty."
Valerius frowned at her. "All I
smell is the stench of decay."
She gave him a menacing glare as he
joined her on the sidewalk next to Otto's car. "Close your eyes."
"I'd rather not. I might step
in something and then I might bring it home and smell it all night."
She gave him a disgusted look that
he took in stride.
"You're the only woman I know
who can smell this rancid air and think it pleasant."
She shut the gate. "Close your
eyes, Valerius, or your nose might be the only part of you that is in working
order tomorrow."
Valerius wasn't sure if he should
obey her or not, but he found himself reluctantly doing so as he drew up short.
"Now take a deep breath,"
she said, her sultry voice in his ear. It sent a shiver over him as he did it.
"Do you smell the dampness of
the river with a hint of Cajun gumbo scenting it? Not to mention the Spanish
moss?"
He opened his eyes. "All I
smell is urine, rotten seafood, and river slime."
She gaped at him. "How can you
say that?"
"Because it's what I
smell."
She growled at him as she got into
the car. "You're a tough sell, you know that?"
"I've been called worse."
Her gaze turned serious and sad.
"I know you have. But new times are upon you. I'm taking that stick up
your butt out and tonight we're going to cut loose, kick Daimon ass, and—"
"I beg your pardon?" he
asked in an offended tone. "The what up my where?"
"You heard me," she said
with a wicked smile. "You know, half the problem people have with you is
that you don't laugh much and you take yourself and everything else way too
seriously."
"Life is serious."
"No," she said, her
passion glowing in her blue gaze. "Life is an adventure. It's thrilling
and scary. Sometimes it's even a bit boring, but it should never be
serious."
Tabitha saw the hesitancy in his
eyes. He was so unused to trusting people and for some reason, she wanted him
to trust her. "Come with me, General Valerius, and let me show you just
what life can really be and why it's so damned important that we save the
world."
She watched as he opened the door
handle like a man who was touching a baby's dirty diaper. She'd never seen
anyone sneer more. It was quite impressive.
But he didn't say anything more as
he got into the car and she dropped it into gear and squealed away from the
curb.
Valerius wasn't expecting much to
come of this night; but he had to admit that he did like the vibrancy of this
woman. The zeal with which she lived. She was fascinating to watch. No wonder
Ash had befriended her.
When one was an immortal, the
freshness of life had a way of dying even more quickly than one's body had. As
the centuries blended together, it was easy to forget the human side of
oneself. To remember why humanity needed saving.
It was hard to remember how to
laugh. Then again, laughter and Valerius were virtual strangers. Until Tabitha,
he'd never really shared a laugh with anyone.
Tabitha had the enthusiasm of a
child. Somehow she had managed to hold on to her youthful ideals even in the
face of a world that didn't entirely accept her. She truly didn't care what he,
or anyone else, thought of her. She went through her life doing what she needed
to do and handling everything on her own terms.
How he envied her that.
She was a powerful force to be
reckoned with.
Valerius laughed in spite of
himself.
"What?" she asked as she
whipped the car around a corner so fast that she practically threw him into her
seat.
He righted himself. "I was just
thinking someone should name you Hurricane Tabitha."
She snorted. "You're too late.
My mother already did. Actually, she named me that the first time she visited
my dorm room and saw the chaos of me without my sister Amanda around to pick up
after me. You should be grateful that after twelve years of living on my own, I
finally learned to pick up for myself."
He shuddered at the thought.
"Truly, I am grateful."
She cut the car sharply into the
Jackson Brewery parking lot and whipped it into a parking space that wasn't
really supposed to be a parking space.
"The police will tow the
car."
"Nah," she said as she
shut it off and placed a small silver medallion on the dashboard that had her
name engraved on it. "This is Ed's route and he knows better. I'll get my
sister to hex him and his brother if he tries."
"Ed?"
"One of the cops assigned here.
He keeps an eye out for me. We used to go to high school together and he dated
my older sister, Karma, for years."
"You have a sister named
Karma?" Valerius asked.
"Yes and it's very apt. She has
a nasty tendency to come back and hurt anyone who does her wrong whenever they
least expect it. She's like the big, black spider, lying in wait." The
words weren't nearly as amusing as the gesture Tabitha made where she held her
hands up and nibbled like a rabid mouse. "Just when you think you're safe
from her wrath… bam!" She slapped her hands together. "She knocks
your feet out from under you and leaves you lying on the floor, bleeding
profusely."
"I do hope you're joking."
"Not at all. She's a scary
woman, but I love her."
Valerius got out of the car, then
paused as a thought occurred to him. Every time he turned around, she pulled
out another relative. "Just how many sisters do you have?"
"Eight."
"Eight?" he asked, stunned
at the number. No wonder he couldn't keep them all straight. He wondered how
she did.
Tabitha nodded. "Tiyana who
goes by Tia. Selena and Amanda you know. Then there's Esmerelda, or Essie, as
we call her. Yasmina or Mina. Petra, Ekaterina who goes by Trina mostly, and
Karma who refuses to have a nickname."
Valerius gave a low whistle at her
roll call.
"What?" Tabitha asked.
"I'm just pitying whatever poor
males lived in that house with all of you. It must have been truly frightening
at least one week out of every month."
She gaped, then laughed out loud.
"Was that a joke from you?"
"Merely a frightening statement
of fact."
"Yeah, right. Well, truth be
told, my father did spend a lot of time at work during that time of the month
and he did make sure that all our pets were males so that he wouldn't feel too
terribly outnumbered. What about you? Did you have any sisters?"
He shook his head as she joined him
over on the passenger side of the car and they headed toward Decatur Street.
"I only had brothers."
"Whoa, just imagine if your
father had married my mother, we'd have had the Brady Bunch."
He scoffed at her. "Hardly.
Believe me, my family made the Borgias look like Ozzie and Harriet."
She cocked her head at him.
"For a man who prides himself on being prim and proper, you certainly know
a lot of pop icons."
He didn't comment.
"So how many brothers did you
have?" she asked, surprising him with her quick return to their previous
topic.
He started not to answer and yet it
came out before he could stop himself. "Until a couple of years ago, I
thought I only had four."
"What happened then?"
"I found out that Zarek was one
of them, too."
Tabitha frowned at his disclosure.
"You didn't know while you were alive?"
Guilt and anger tore through
Valerius at her innocent question. He really should have known. Had he ever
bothered to look at Zarek when they were human…
But then, he was his father's son.
"No," he said sadly,
"I didn't."
"Yet you knew him?"
"He was a slave in our
house."
She looked aghast. "But he was
your brother?"
He nodded.
Tabitha was as confused as he'd been
the night he learned the truth. "How could you not know?"
"You don't understand the world
I lived in. You didn't question certain things. When my father spoke, it was
truth. You didn't look at servants, and Zarek… he wasn't recognizable in those
days."
Tabitha felt a wave of grief so profound
that it made her ache with him. She wrapped her arm around his and gave a light
squeeze.
"What are you doing?" he
asked.
"I'm standing beside you so
that Zarek won't whack you again with another lightning bolt. You said he
wouldn't hurt innocent people, right?"
"Yes."
She smiled at him. "Call me
Shield."
Valerius smiled in spite of himself
as he placed a hand on her forearm. "You're such a strange woman."
"Yeah, but I'm growing on you,
aren't I?"
"Yes, you are."
Her smile widened. "Fungus are
us. Next thing you know, you'll actually like me."
The problem was, he already did like
her. A lot more than he should.
"Where are we going?" he
asked as she scooted him down Decatur toward Iberville and away from where they
might run into one of the crew who begrudged him every breath he took.
"Well, it's early still, so I
figured an early perimeter check followed by an intense search of the Abyss,
which is a club I am sure you have never stepped foot into. A lot of Apollites
like to hang there and I've dusted quite a few Daimons in and about the
area."
"Isn't that one of the clubs
Acheron frequents?"
"Yes, but since he's in the
cemeteries, I have a feeling the Daimons will be congregating where they think
it's safe."
He couldn't argue that.
Tabitha led him over to the Magnolia
Cafe.
"Are you hungry again?" he
asked in disbelief as she entered the restaurant.
"No."
"Then why are we in here?"
"Don't worry about it."
She went to the counter and ordered five meals to go.
Valerius was completely baffled as
he glanced around what most people would call a "homey" place. It had
red-and-white checked plastic tablecloths and small tables and chairs that
someone might find in a normal home.
It most definitely wasn't the kind
of place Valerius ate at, but it did look like Tabitha's cup of tea.
When the orders were ready, Tabitha
grabbed them up and led the way back to the street.
Valerius followed behind her,
curious about what she was going to do with them.
His curiosity ended in a dark alley.
She left the bags of food, then pulled him out by the arm. He heard people
scurrying in the darkness.
"You're feeding the
homeless," he said quietly. She nodded. "Do you do this a lot?"
"Every night about this
time."
He pulled her to a stop and stared
at her. "Why?"
"Someone has to." When he
opened his mouth to speak, she placed her hand over his lips. "I know all
the arguments, Val. Why should they work when people like me are willing to
feed them for free? You can't save the world. Let someone else take care of
them, etc. But I can't do it. Every night when I come out here, I know they're
there and I know they're in pain. One of the men, Martin, was at one time a
prominent business owner who got sued and lost everything. His wife divorced
him and took the kids. And since he had dropped out of high school and was
fifty-six when he had to go bankrupt, no one would hire him. He worked for me
in my store, but it wasn't enough to support him and he didn't want to take
charity, so he slept in alleys. I wanted to give him a raise so badly, but if I
did that, I'd have to give one to everyone and I can't afford to pay every
part-time employee in my store thirty thousand dollars a year."
"I wasn't going to say anything
about that, Tabitha," he said quietly. "I only wanted to tell you
that your compassion for other people overwhelms me."
"Oh." She offered him a
tenuous smile. "I'm just used to people condemning everything I do."
He lifted her hand to his lips and
kissed her knuckles. "I don't condemn you, my lady. I only admire
you."
Her smile turned full fledged and
floored him. She squeezed his hand with hers, then did the most unexpected
thing of all. She put her arm around his waist and started walking down the
street with him.
Valerius felt so strange. He'd seen
lovers do this for centuries, but had never had anyone do it with him.
Hesitantly, he draped his arm over her shoulders and just let the warmth of her
body and touch seep into him.
There were no words for what he felt
right now. It was a very common thing they were doing. People shouldn't touch
so intimately in public. And yet he'd never known a better feeling than to have
this odd woman by his side.
The breeze brushed strands of her
hair over his hand. It was soft and light and brought images to his mind that
he shouldn't have of her wild in his bed. Untamed.
And it played havoc with his body.
They didn't speak much as they
walked through the dark city where the humans went about their business
oblivious to the danger that was hanging over them. It was eerily peaceful.
It was a little after midnight when
they made their way over to Toulouse Street. The Abyss wasn't the typical New
Orleans club scene. It was dark and far from inviting like most of the more
touristy places that beckoned the mainstream inside.
Tabitha led him down a long alleyway
that was narrow and a bit spooky in feel.
"Hey, Tabby," a tall,
African-American man greeted her as he was checking the IDs of the couple in
front of them. He was bald with tattoos marking every inch of exposed flesh…
even his hands.
"Hi, Ty," Tabitha said.
"How's it going tonight?"
"Not bad," he said with a
wink as he waved the couple in. "Who's your friend?" he asked, raking
Valerius with a frown.
"Val. He's a friend of Ash and
Simi's, too."
"No shit?" Ty said before
he extended his hand to Valerius. "Ty Gagne. Nice to meet you."
Valerius shook his hand. "You,
too."
"You two have fun, and Tabby,
no weapons tonight, deal?"
"Yeah, yeah, Ty. No bloodshed.
Gotcha."
Once inside the club, Valerius was
taken aback by the sea of black-garbed humans. It looked like a Dark-Hunter
convention. It was extremely easy to pick out the tourists who had stumbled
inadvertently into the club or maybe had been dared into it. There were more
body piercings and tattoos than he'd ever seen in one room in his entire two
thousand years of living.
Many of the regulars knew Tabitha on
sight.
"Hi, Vlad," Tabitha said
to one emaciated, tall man with skin so pale it was translucent. He wore a
white ruffled shirt, blood-red velvet tuxedo jacket, and black slacks. His
long, black hair hung around his gaunt face, and his eyes were covered by a
pair of round, black sunglasses.
"Good evening, Tabitha,"
the man said, before he smiled to show Valerius a set of fangs. He saluted them
with a brandy snifter that looked like it held blood. Valerius's Dark-Hunter
sense could tell it was red vodka. Vlad's long, skinny fingers were covered
with silver claws.
Valerius felt an urge to laugh and show
the man his own set of real fangs, but refrained.
"Vlad is a fifteenth-century
vampire," she told Valerius.
"Son to Vlad Tepes and named
for my esteemed father," Vlad explained in a faked Transylvanian accent.
"Really?" Valerius said.
"I find that fascinating since Vlad's only son, Radu, was slain by the
Turks when he was eighteen. Vlad's only surviving child was a daughter,
Esperetta, who now lives in Miami."
"Vlad" rolled his eyes.
"Really, Tabitha, where do you find these people?"
Valerius did laugh as the fake
vampire drifted off.
Tabitha joined him.
"Seriously," she said, sobering. "Is there any truth to that
bull you just spieled?"
He nodded. "Ask Ash. Retta's
husband was made into a Dark-Hunter around 1480, I believe, and she followed him
over. Her husband is one of the few Dark-Hunters who will actually speak to me
in a civil tone."
"Kewl!" Tabitha stepped
back as another Goth princess walked between them.
She indicated a stairway with the
tilt of her head. "There are three bars here and an area called the
Library. Daimons are usually found lurking in the Library or the Sound bar. The
other two are the Main bar and the Aphrodite bar. Oh, and I should probably
warn you that Eros and Psyche tend to haunt the Aphrodite bar as well, so you
might want to leave that to me in case they show up."
"Hey, Tabby!" a plump
blonde said as she grabbed Tabitha in an overbearing hug. "You seen any
vampires tonight?"
"Hi, Carly," she said,
casting an amused look at Valerius. "Not tonight. Why?"
"Well, if you find one, send
him my way. I'm ready to be bitten and made immortal."
Tabitha rolled her eyes. "I
told you they can't do that. It's a Hollywood myth."
"Yeah, well, I wanna be
mythitized. So if you find one, tell him I'm in the Library, waiting."
"Okay," she said with a
nod. "I'll do it."
"Thanks, doll."
Valerius rubbed his eyebrow as the
blonde woman left them. "You know a lot of interesting people."
She laughed at him. "This from
someone who takes orders from a man who's been walking around for almost twelve
thousand years, not to mention that you actually do know the daughter of Count
Dracula. I don't want to hear it from you, buddy."
She had a point with that.
"Could you relax?" She tugged
his coat collar up before she untied and then started mussing his hair.
"What are you doing?"
"Trying to make you blend in.
It would certainly help if you didn't look like you were constipated right
now."
"I beg your pardon?"
"C'mon," she said,
brushing her hand against his lips as she tried to smooth them. "Stop
curling your lip and looking like you're afraid you're going to catch
something. It's not like you can die or anything."
"You're the one who should be
worried."
She made a rude noise at him.
"This from a man whose culture actually invented bulimia. Tell me, how
many times did you visit the old vomitorium anyway?"
"We didn't all do that, thank
you."
"Yeah, right." She drifted
off.
Valerius hastened his steps to catch
up to her. The last thing he wanted was to be left alone with the strangeness
of the people gathered in this place. Granted, they couldn't hurt him, but they
were disturbing nonetheless. He couldn't imagine why Acheron preferred to "hang"
at a place such as this. It was so loud that he couldn't hear himself think.
The lights played havoc with his eyesight, and the skeleton and bat decor…
It just wasn't where he would spend
his spare time if he had any choice in the matter.
But Tabitha blended in with an eerie
kind of conformity. This was her environment. Her people and culture.
There was nothing stodgy about
anyone here.
She led him toward the dance floor,
where she was hailed by a woman with an extremely tall, electric blue mohawk.
Valerius watched in horror as
Tabitha dashed across the floor to dance with the woman and what appeared to be
a man dressed in shiny plastic that was held to his body by large silver
buckles. The man's eyes and lips were painted black and his hair looked as
though it had never been brushed.
Tabitha didn't seem to notice as she
swayed to the loud, thrashing music. She was lovely.
She didn't care who watched her.
There was no such thing as decorum or rules that held her back.
She merely was.
And he loved her for that.
Laughing at something the man said,
she swooped low to the floor, then came up with a limber rhythm that ignited
more fantasies than he would have thought possible. Every masculine part of him
was aware of her. Aware of the softness of her face, the way the lights made
her skin luminescent.
The way her body moved like liquid
to the pounding beat.
She looked at him then. The minute
her blue eyes met his, his groin jerked with needful anticipation.
Smiling, she crooked a finger for
him to join her.
Valerius actually took a step
forward before he caught himself. Dancing wasn't something he did in public. As
a Roman, his father had thought it crass and lowly, and had forbidden all of
them to partake of it. As a Dark-Hunter, he'd never thought to learn.
Unwilling to embarrass her before
her friends, he stepped back.
Tabitha paused, then said something
to the man and woman. She kissed the man on his cheek and hugged the woman,
then joined him.
"Let me guess, Romans have no
rhythm?"
"Not any that I wish to
share."
She smiled even wider. "I would
put that to the test, but having seen you dance, I…" Her voice trailed off
as her gaze went past his shoulder.
Valerius turned his head to see what
had her transfixed. He spied the Daimons instantly.
There were five of them.
And they were headed toward the exit
with a small group of women.
Chapter 9
Tabitha headed for the Daimons
without thought until Valerius pulled her to a stop. "What are you
doing?" she asked him indignantly.
"It's a trap."
She frowned up at him.
"What?"
There was a strange look on his face
as he tightened his grip on her arm. "Can't you feel it? Even without
powers I sense this one."
"No and if we don't go out
there, they're going to kill those people." She tried to twist her arm out
of his grasp, but he held tight.
"Tabitha, listen to me. This
isn't right. Daimons are never that bold and they had to know I was in
here."
He was right. It was too obvious. In
this crowd Valerius stood out like sunshine in darkness. "What do you
suggest we do, then? Just let the innocent die?"
"No. You stay here and I'll go."
"Bull—"
"Tabitha," he snapped at
her, his black eyes burning into her. "I'm immortal. You're not. Unless
one of them is wielding an ax, they can't hurt me much. Whatever they do to me,
I will survive. You might not."
She wanted to argue with him, but
she knew he was right. Not to mention she could feel inside that he was
sincere. This wasn't some macho move to prove himself superior to her.
He was concerned for her safety, and
if he was worried about her, he wouldn't be able to fight clear headedly.
"Okay," she said.
"You go and I'll try not to follow."
A tic worked in his jaw. "For
my sake, please do more than try. Succeed." He released her and before she
could blink, he was out of sight.
Valerius hurried through the crowd, after
the Daimons. He paused at the entrance long enough to ask Ty to keep Tabitha in
the bar for her own safety. He wasn't sure if the man would help him with that
or not, but if Ty could slow her down some, maybe it would give him enough time
to kill the Daimons before she got there and endangered herself.
Leaving the bar, he hesitated on the
street. The loud music still rang in his ears. But even so, he could sense the
Daimons…
At the end of the block, he turned
down Royal and headed in the direction that he was certain they had vanished.
The Daimons were moving fast, drawing him into the darkness.
Unless he was mistaken, which was
unlikely, there was a large group of them.
He slowed a bit as he approached St.
Louis Street and turned onto it. He hadn't gone far before he came upon a gate
slightly ajar.
They were inside. Quiet and still.
Waiting.
Had they killed the humans already?
Pulling out a dagger and holding it
so that the blade was in line with his forearm while the hilt rested lethally
in his palm, he pushed the gate wider, taking care not to make a sound as he
slipped inside the pitch-black courtyard.
It was a moonless night, and unlike
most of New Orleans, there were no lights back here. He moved around the side of
the building, knowing exactly what to expect.
The Daimons were lying in wait for
him.
He could hear someone clucking his
tongue.
"It's been a long time since I
faced a truly intelligent Dark-Hunter. This one already knows we're here."
Valerius came around the shrubbery
to find a group of nine Daimons waiting in the courtyard. The women he had
thought were human weren't.
They were fanged.
Damn.
Valerius drew himself up to his
entire, imperious height and arched a brow at the group. "Well, when one
puts out a cosmic calling card, I assume one wants it answered."
A slow smile spread over the
Daimon's lips who'd spoken as he moved slowly through the group so that he
could stand before Valerius. An inch shorter, the Daimon had a lean build and,
like all of his kind, was perfect in his male form.
"The call wasn't for you."
The Daimon sighed wearily. Obviously disgusted, he looked at the group behind
him. "I thought I told you to draw the woman out, not the
Dark-Hunter."
"We tried, Desiderius,"
one of the women said. "She stayed behind."
Valerius saw red at the name of the
Daimon who had scarred Tabitha's face. He wanted to tear the Daimon to shreds,
but knew better than to betray himself or Tabitha by acting as if she were
special to him.
Had he maintained his composure the
night his brothers had killed him, they would have left Agrippina alone. He
wasn't about to sacrifice Tabitha needlessly.
Desiderius frowned. "Tabitha
Devereaux stayed behind?"
"The Dark-Hunter told her
to," another Daimon supplied. "I heard them."
"Interesting." Desiderius
turned to face him. "I find it hard to imagine Tabitha would listen to
anyone. You must be special indeed."
"She didn't think of you as a
threat," Valerius said nonchalantly. "You weren't worth her
time." He yawned at them. "No more than you're worth mine."
The Daimon moved to blast him.
Valerius caught his arm, whirled,
and elbowed him in the throat. Desiderius staggered back, cursing.
"I know all about Greeks and
their tricks," he snarled as he seized Desiderius's neck in his fist and
flipped the Daimon onto the street. "Most of all, I know to kill
them."
Before he could move his dagger and
kill Desiderius, the others swarmed him. One grabbed him from behind while one
of the females moved in to stab him with a long, vicious-looking dagger.
Valerius kicked her back, then
twisted to confront the ones behind him. One of the Daimons slugged him across
the face. He ground his teeth as pain exploded along his cheek to his nose, and
he tasted blood.
But then, pain was nothing new to
him. As a mortal, he'd been well acquainted with beatings and pain.
Valerius returned the blow with one
of his own that sent the Daimon to his knees.
Out of nowhere, a god-bolt struck
him hard in the center of his chest. It knocked him off his feet and sent him
slamming into the brick wall behind him. Valerius couldn't breathe. He tried to
stay standing, but the sheer agony of it overrode his desire and he crumpled to
the ground.
"Hurts, doesn't it?"
Desiderius said. "It was a gift inherited from my father." Desiderius
bent down and seized Valerius's right hand and studied his Roman seal ring.
"Now there's something I find interesting, too. A Roman in New Orleans.
Kyrian of Thrace must truly love you."
Valerius glared at him as he forced
himself to roll.
He'd barely moved before Desiderius
hit him with another shocking bolt.
"What are we going to do with
him?" one of the women asked.
Desiderius laughed once again, then
seized him.
But it was Valerius who laughed
hardest as he kicked the Daimon back and shrugged off his pain.
He caught Desiderius and slung him
against the wall where he rebounded with a thud. "The question isn't what
are you going to do with me. It's what I'm going to do to you."
Tabitha couldn't stand waiting any
longer. But she wasn't completely stupid, either. Pulling out her cell phone,
she called Acheron, who answered on the first ring.
"Hey, Tabby," he said with
a laugh, "Valerius's cell is 204-555-6239."
"I really hate it when you do
that, Ash."
"You know what you're going to
hate even more?"
"I can't imagine."
"Turn around."
She did and found him standing on
the other side of the bar. At six feet eight and wearing a pair of tall Goth
boots that added a good three inches to his height, he was impossible to miss.
In spite of what he said, she felt a
wave of relief at seeing him there. Hanging up her phone, she crossed the room
to meet him. "What are you doing here?"
"I knew you were going to head
off after Valerius and I'm here to go with you."
"Then you think he's in
trouble, too."
"I know he is. Let's go."
Tabitha didn't ask him to elaborate.
She knew him better than that. Acheron Parthenopaeus seldom ever answered
anything. He lived life on his own terms and was eerily secretive about
everything.
Ash led the way out of the club and
into the street. Tabitha didn't know where they were headed, but he seemed to
know instinctively.
"I have a really bad
feeling," she said to Ash as they practically ran down the street.
"So do I," he said,
ducking into an open gate. Tabitha followed him inside, then skidded to a halt
as she caught sight of the most incredible thing she'd ever seen in her life.
Valerius fighting. He held a sword
in each hand as he fought off four Daimons who lunged and parried with consummate
skill of their own. It was fluid, violent, and morbidly beautiful.
Spinning about, Valerius caught one
of the blond Daimons with an uppercut that tore through his chest, piercing the
dark spot over their hearts where the human souls gathered. It caused the
Daimon to explode into a golden powder.
Ash joined the fight by catching two
of the Daimons with a staff. He drove them away from Valerius, allowing the
Roman to concentrate on the other Daimon.
Tabitha took a step forward only to
feel something cold and evil brush up against her.
"Predictable," came that
sinister, haunting voice again.
A flash of something sizzled past
her, heading toward Acheron.
One moment Ash was piercing a Daimon
with his staff and in the next, he was on his knees as Valerius killed his own
Daimon.
The second Daimon Ash had been
fighting moved to stab Ash, only to have his blow intercepted by Valerius, who
kicked the Daimon back, then killed him.
Tabitha ran to Ash, who was on the
ground, hissing as he held his arm as if it were broken.
"Simi," he panted.
"Human form. Now!"
The large dragon tattoo on Ash's
forearm peeled itself off his skin into a dark red shadow that quickly
transformed into the demon Tabitha knew so well.
"Akri?" Simi asked as she
caught Ash's head. "Akri, what hurts?"
Tabitha knelt down beside them and
tried to see Ash's arm. It was literally turning into stone, only it wasn't
growing hard. His skin was turning a grayish-white color and it was spreading
up his arm, toward his shoulder.
His face battered from his fight,
Valerius fell to his knees on the other side of Ash. "What is that?"
Ash writhed as if he were on fire.
"Simi… Akra… Thea Kalosis. Biazomai, biazomai."
Tabitha saw the terrified look on
Simi's face before the demon vanished.
"Ash?" she asked,
panicking. "What's going on?"
"Nothing," he gasped. He
grabbed Valerius's shirt. "Get Tabitha home. Now!"
"We can't leave you," they
said in unison.
"Go!" Ash snapped an
instant before the grayish stone-like skin crawled over more of his body.
They didn't.
Ash fought and screamed as the
grayish color spread all over his body. Tabitha laid him out flat on the
ground. Ash panted as if trying to fight off whatever had him.
It was a losing battle.
His swirling silver eyes bulged
before they too turned gray and he was as still as a corpse. Ash wasn't
breathing. He wasn't moving. It was as if something held him completely
paralyzed.
"What do we do?" she asked
Valerius.
"You die."
Tabitha spun at the malevolent voice
behind her to face the ghost again. It was surrounded by more Daimons.
"Good Lord, who spread the
Daimon fertilizer around? They're cropping up like a bad horror flick,"
Tabitha said.
Valerius rose to his feet.
Before she could move, Valerius
engaged them.
Tabitha rushed to join the fight.
"Don't kill the woman!"
the ghost snarled to the Daimons. "I need her alive."
Another blond Daimon laughed.
"Yeah, but feel free to rough her up all you want."
Tabitha turned to find yet another
Daimon behind her. She struck out with her arm only to have him dodge her blow,
then straighten up to deliver a staggering strike to her ribs.
The pain drove her straight to her
knees.
Valerius cursed and started for her.
Two Daimons cut him off.
With nothing more than sheer
strength of will, Tabitha regained her feet.
The Daimon looked impressed.
Tabitha went to hit him, only to
have him move away, lightning fast. This time when he tried to strike her, he
was slammed into the building beside her.
"Leave her alone,"
Valerius snarled. He put himself between her and the rest of the Daimons.
Tabitha pulled her sleeve back and
shot a crossbow bolt into the nearest Daimon. He disintegrated.
Suddenly, something ricocheted
through the Daimons, killing two instantly before it vanished.
Tabitha looked past the Daimon horde
to see a cavalry. Julian, Talon, and Kyrian were coming in, weapons drawn. She'd
never been happier to see any of them. Alone each one of the blond men was
dangerous. Together, they were invincible.
Side by side with Valerius, she
fought the Daimons while Kyrian, Julian, and Talon joined the fight. With the
five of them, it didn't take any time at all to finish the Daimons off. In
truth, it was a colorful display as one by one the Daimons disintegrated.
Except for the one who had struck
her. The ghost wrapped itself around that particular Daimon and the two of them
appeared to evaporate into nothing. Tabitha frowned at the peculiar sight.
Until she heard Kyrian's resonant curse. One moment Valerius was beside her,
the next he was being slammed face-first into the wall.
"You bastard!" Kyrian
snarled as he pummeled him. Valerius ducked the blows and whirled to the side.
He slammed Kyrian into the wall and would have pinned him had Julian not
grabbed him from behind.
The next thing she knew, Julian was
hitting Valerius, too. Without thinking, Tabitha rushed Julian, knocking him
back. She put herself between the Roman and the two Greeks.
"Get out of my way,
Tabitha," Kyrian said as he glared his hatred at Valerius. "I don't
want Amanda pissed at me because I hurt you for being stupid."
"And I don't want Amanda pissed
at me because I permanently maimed you for being an idiot."
"This isn't a game,
Tabitha," Julian said sternly. In his human life, Julian had been the
Greek general who had commanded Kyrian. Unfortunately, he'd run afoul of the
gods, who had cursed him into a book to be a sex slave to whatever woman
summoned him out.
Selena's best friend Grace Alexander
had set the half-god free.
Since then, Julian had often joined
ranks with the Dark-Hunters to fight the Daimons, and now he was joining ranks
with Kyrian to kill Valerius.
It was something she would never
allow.
She held her arms out to keep them
back. "No, it isn't."
"It's all right, Tabitha,"
Valerius said from behind her. "This is a confrontation that's been a long
time coming."
"Talon," Tabitha said,
glancing over to the tall blond Celt who was standing behind his Greek friends.
As always, Talon was dressed like a biker in a black motorcycle jacket,
T-shirt, and leather pants. His hair was cut short except for two thin braids
that hung from his left temple. "Are you going to help me?"
Talon grimaced. "Unfortunately,
yes." He moved to stand with her.
"Celt—" Kyrian snarled.
His face determined, Talon crossed
his arms over his chest.
"Look," Tabitha said
between clenched teeth. "We have bigger problems right now than you two
hating Valerius and his family."
"Like what?" Kyrian asked.
Tabitha pointed to the ground where
Ash still lay.
Kyrian's face went pale as his gaze
focused on Ash's body. "What happened?"
"I don't know," Tabitha
said. "One of the Daimons did that to him and we need to get him to
safety."
Kyrian passed a grudging, angry look
at Valerius. "We're not through."
Valerius said nothing as he moved
toward Ash.
When he started to lift Ash up,
Kyrian shoved him back. "Get your filthy hands off him, Roman. We don't
need your help. We take care of our own."
"Valerius happens to be the
only Dark-Hunter here," Tabitha snapped at her brother-in-law. "He
has more right to help Ash—"
"Greeks don't want or need
Roman help," Julian said as he brushed roughly past Valerius.
Tabitha felt Valerius's anger, his
pain, but most of all, she felt shame from him. Why?
"Val?"
As soon as it was out of her mouth,
Tabitha realized she'd just made a strategic mistake. Kyrian let out a vulgar
curse. "Oh, don't tell me you've taken up with him. Shit, Tabitha, I
thought even you had more sense than that."
That was it! Tabitha went to stand
in front of him. "Get off the cross, Kyrian. Literally." She gestured
behind her to Valerius. "He didn't hurt you."
Kyrian curled his lip at her.
"How do you know? Were you there?"
"Ooo, childish much? No, I
wasn't there. But I can do math and I know how old he was when you were killed.
What? You let a five-year-old nail you down?"
Someone grabbed her from behind.
Tabitha started to attack until she realized it was Valerius pulling her back.
"Don't, Tabitha. Just let it go."
"Why should I? I'm tired of the
way they treat you. Aren't you?"
Valerius's face was completely
stoic, but his heart wasn't. She felt his pain. "I honestly don't care
what they think of me. I really don't. And you don't need to alienate your
entire family. Just leave this alone."
"Why?"
Valerius looked past her to Kyrian,
then he stared at her. Hard. "This will wait. Right now, Acheron and you
need to be safe. Go with Kyrian."
Tabitha wanted to argue, but he was
right and she wasn't so stubborn as to not recognize that basic fact. The
longer they stood out here arguing, the more danger Ash was in, especially
since Simi wasn't here to protect him.
Their first priority was to get Ash
to safety. "You be careful."
Valerius gave her a strangely tender
Roman salute, then spun on his heel and left them.
"You're unbelievable,"
Kyrian snarled as he and Julian lifted Acheron's body up from the ground.
"I can't believe you screamed at Amanda about me and you'd cuddle up to
that bastard."
"Shut up, Kyrian," Tabitha
said. "Unlike Amanda, I don't mind staking you straight through the
heart."
"Where are we taking
T-Rex?" Talon asked as he grabbed Ash's feet and helped to carry him.
"Back to my house," Kyrian
answered. "After the attack of that demon on Bride Kattalakis when she was
visiting us, Ash put some kind of mojo on it to make it safe. I figure whatever
did this to him can't come back and hurt him if he's there."
Talon nodded. "What exactly did
this to him?"
Tabitha shrugged. "I don't
know. He was hit with something and poof, down he went. It happened so fast, I
didn't even see what they hit him with."
Talon let out a slow breath.
"Man, I wouldn't have thought anything could bring down Ash. Not like
this."
"Yeah," Tabitha agreed,
"but at least he's still alive. Kind of… in a freaky sort of way."
She didn't want to admit to them
just how frightened she was of the fact that the Daimons had brought the
powerful Atlantean down without breaking a sweat. If they could do this, then
there was no telling what they could do to the rest of them.
Which begged the question of why the
Daimons had left them alone when they could have killed them, too.
It didn't make sense.
They wended their way down the
darker, less traveled alleys, watching for Daimons and innocent passersby who
might call the cops if they saw them carrying what appeared to be a dead body
as they headed for Julian's Land Rover.
Tabitha got in the backseat with Ash
while Talon stayed behind to continue patrolling for Daimons. Getting into the
front passenger's seat, Kyrian remained sullenly silent while Julian drove them
over to the Garden District where Kyrian's mansion stood less than two blocks
away from Valerius's.
She wondered if either man realized
just how close they lived to each other. They were practically neighbors and
yet they were divided by infinite hatred.
Putting that out of her mind, she
ran her hand over Ash's hair. It had an odd, spongy texture. His eyes were
half-open and for once the silvery color didn't swirl. It was terrifying to
think something could do this to him and none of them knew what it was or if
they could restore him.
God, what would happen if they
couldn't?
What would happen to the
Dark-Hunters if they didn't have Ash to lead them anymore? It was a terrifying
thought. He always knew what to do and to say. How to make things better for
everyone.
Biting her lip, Tabitha fought her
panic down. Simi would get help for Ash. There was no way she wouldn't.
The men got out and pulled Ash from
the seat, then carried him into the house with Tabitha one step behind them.
Amanda came off the sofa the instant
she saw Ash being carried into her foyer. "Oh my God, what happened?"
"We don't know," Kyrian
said as he and Julian carried Ash toward the mahogany stairs.
"Tabby?" Amanda asked.
She shrugged as she followed after
the men. Amanda joined the procession up the stairs. As they reached the top
landing, a tall African-American man came out of one of the guest rooms.
"Acheron?" he said, his
voice thickly accented.
"We don't know what
happened," Kyrian said in answer to his unasked question as they brushed
past him.
"Hi, I'm Tabitha," she said,
extending her hand to the new Dark-Hunter who was guarding her family.
"Kassim," he said, shaking
her hand before they both followed the men into Ash's room.
Once they had Ash safely tucked into
the bed, Kyrian curled his lip at Tabitha. "Why don't you ask your sister
about her new friend, Amanda?"
"Kyrian," Tabitha said in
warning. "Lay off or you will limp."
"What friend?" Amanda
asked.
"Valerius Magnus," Julian
said. "They were rather friendly tonight when we found them."
"Yes, we were," Tabitha
said. "And it's none of your business."
Amanda gave her a harsh stare.
"Tabitha—"
"Shut up!" Tabitha
snapped. "Look, I will gladly submit to the 'jump all over sister Tabitha'
session after we help Ash. Right now, I'm going to start calling some people
and see if anyone knows how to fix this. You guys can stand here with your
thumbs up your butts and roast me all you want, but I'm not listening."
Pulling her phone off her belt,
Tabitha headed for the stairs, then down to the living room and called Tia, who
was completely useless for this.
"C'mon, T," Tabitha begged
her sister. "There has to be an undo spell."
"Not if you don't know what
caused it. Ash isn't exactly human, Tab. One wrong move and we could really do
some damage to him."
Tabitha growled into the phone, then
hung up. Amanda had just joined her in the living room when they heard
something hit the front door so hard, it rattled the hinges.
Handing the phone to Amanda, Tabitha
pulled her stiletto from her boot.
"Akri!" Simi's maniacal
wail echoed through the house like vicious thunder. "Let the Simi in,
akri!"
"What is that?" Amanda
asked, her face ashen.
"It's Ash's demon."
"Simi is making that godawful
sound?" Kyrian asked as he and Julian ran down the stairs.
"Looks like," Tabitha said
as she headed toward the door.
Kyrian beat her to it.
"No!" he snarled. "It could be a trick."
"Trick my ass," she
muttered. "Simi? Is it you outside?"
"Tabitha, let me in. I can't
help akri if I can't see him. I gots to help my akri. Lemme in or the Simi will
barbecue this door, so help me."
"You can't, Simi. The shield
would hurt you if you tried to. They have to invite you in."
Tabitha froze as she heard the
unfamiliar, gentle feminine voice on the other side of the door. It held just a
faint hint of a foreign accent. "Who's with you, Sim?"
"One of the bitch-goddess's
koris, they them people who serve her in her temple on Olympus. Katra good
quality people who gonna help my akri. Now let the Simi in!"
"It's
okay," Tabitha said to Kyrian. "I know Simi well enough to vouch that
it's really her out there."
Kyrian gave her a menacing stare.
"Yeah, and you know Valerius, too. That gives me so much faith in your
judgment-not."
Tabitha went rigid. "Amanda, if
your husband's balls have any meaning to you, I suggest you move him out of my
way or he's going to be singing in soprano."
"Let her open the door, Kyrian."
"Like hell," he snarled. "My daughter is asleep
upstairs."
"Her niece is asleep upstairs," Amanda reminded
him. "Tabitha would never endanger Marissa. Now move."
Kyrian made a gesture as if he'd
like to choke both of them, then stepped aside.
Tabitha swung open the door to see
Simi outside with an extremely tall, robed woman.
Neither woman asked where Ash was,
they seemed to know instinctively.
"Don't worry, Tabby," Simi
said as the unbelievably tall woman headed toward the stairs. "Katra will
never hurt my akri. She loves him like us."
Katra didn't listen to Simi as she
made her way up the stairs of the unfamiliar house. Then again, there was no
such thing as an unfamiliar house to her. She'd inherited great powers from
both her father and mother, including the ability to feel the essence and
layout of buildings.
This house echoed warmth, respect,
and love. No wonder Acheron liked to stay here whenever he visited New Orleans.
This was a wonderful home and Marissa was a lucky child to live here. How she
wished she'd known such a place as a little girl.
She opened the last door on the
hallway to find Acheron lying prone on a large, four-poster bed.
Kat paused at the sight of Acheron
there. Never in all these centuries had she been so close to him. As a young
woman, she'd often tried to catch glimpses of him as he came and went on
Olympus to see Artemis. Like all of the goddess' servants, Kat was banished
from the temple whenever he visited.
She more than any other was
forbidden to ever be near him. And now…
She'd waited all her life for this
one, single moment. For one chance to touch him. Know him.
To feel his arms around her, just
once.
Her heart pounding, she crossed the
room to stand beside the bed that didn't really accommodate his tall, lean
frame. The pallor and odd color of his skin did nothing to detract from the
fact that he was without a doubt the most handsome man who had ever been born.
But he was so much more than
external beauty.
Even in stasis, he was commanding
and frightening. She could feel his powers reaching out to her. Calling to her.
He was power incarnate.
More than that, he was invaluable to
the order of the universe. If Acheron should ever die…
It didn't bear thinking on.
Using her own powers, which were
second only to his, Kat shut and locked the bedroom door with her thoughts
before she lowered her cowl and sat beside him. She wanted a few minutes alone
with him where no one could observe them.
"You are so handsome," she
breathed as she traced the line of his eyebrows.
Since the moment she had first
glimpsed him when she was a young child, she'd yearned to touch his hand.
Yearned to have him call her by name.
Or better yet, yearned just to have
him know she existed at all.
But it wasn't meant to be.
Artemis would always stand between
them. She had ordained centuries ago that no one, especially not Kat, could
ever touch the sacred Acheron.
Yet here she sat, alone with him,
far away from the goddess's watchful stare.
Deep-seated emotions engulfed her.
Unable to stand the tide of them, Kat lay against him and hugged him close,
wishing he were awake to know her. To feel her.
But he wasn't.
He would never know she'd been here.
That she had been the one to help him. Simi was forbidden to tell him and as
soon as she vanished, the others below would forget they had ever seen her,
too.
"I love you," she
whispered against his ear. "I always will." She placed a chaste kiss
on his cheek before she pulled back and took his large hand into hers.
Tears streaked her face as she
brushed his fingers against her cheek. "One day," she breathed,
"we will' know each other. I promise."
Kat unlocked the door with her
powers, then pulled a small satchel out of her pocket. It held three leaves
from the Tree of Life that only bloomed in the garden of the Destroyer, deep in
the halls of her temple in Kalosis. It alone could break the ypnsi, the sacred
sleep that Orasia had once dispensed from the sacred halls of Katoteros back in
the days when the ancient Atlantean gods had ruled the earth.
This alone could restore Acheron to
his full strength.
Kat wrung the leaves until they were
moist. Holding them over Acheron's lips, she twisted, more until they were able
to drip nine drops into his mouth.
She watched as the color spread from
his lips, slowly, over the rest of his body.
He took a deep breath, then opened
his eyes.
She vanished instantly.
Ash felt the air stir around him. He
sat up quickly, then wished he hadn't as pain swept through his body.
Wiping his lips, he grimaced at the
bitter, nasty taste in his mouth.
"Akri?"
His heart stopped beating as he
heard Simi's hesitant voice an instant before she burst into the room and leapt
onto the bed beside him.
Suddenly, everything came back to
him. The Daimons.
The blow…
What the hell had hit him?
"Simi, what am I doing
here?"
She tackled him with a hug that left
him flat on his back with her wrapped around his upper torso. "You scared
the Simi, akri. She didn't know what was wrong with you. You turned all gray
and nasty like one of them statues or something. You not supposed to do that!
You said so."
"I'm okay, Sim," he said,
cradling her. "I think. Why am I in Kyrian's house… with you in human
form?"
"We brought you here."
Ash tensed at the sound of Kyrian's
voice. He sat up slowly with Simi still hugging him.
With his arms folded over his chest,
Kyrian stood in the doorway with Julian and Amanda.
"You okay?" Kyrian asked.
Ash nodded. "I think so. Still
a little fuzzy, but breathing." Or at least trying to given the fact Simi
was latched onto him like a protective mother bear.
"Do you know what happened to
you?" Tabitha asked from somewhere out in the hallway.
Unfortunately yes, but it wasn't
something they needed to know about since Simi had gone for the antidote and
restored him. Thank the gods she'd understood his order.
If the others ever learned who and
what he was…
But that begged the question: Who
among the Daimons knew the truth of him? How did they know to strike him with
the one compound that could actually neutralize him?
Not that it would work again. As
long as he knew to expect it, he knew to guard against it.
Pain to the next one dumb enough to
attempt hurting him.
"Okay, Simi," Ash said,
patting the demon on her back. "You can let go."
"No, I can't," she said as
she tightened her hold. "You got all grisly, akri. Like one of them things
at home. Ew! The Simi don't like that. You gots to stay nice and pink like
you're supposed to. Or blue. I don't mind it when you're blue. In skin, that
is. When you blue in spirit, it makes the Simi sad, too."
"Okay, Simi," Ash said,
cutting her off before she told something she wasn't supposed to.
"Your skin turns blue?"
Kyrian asked.
"Everyone's skin turns blue
when they're cold," he answered evasively.
Ash slid off the bed in spite of
Simi's hold, which had yet to lessen. He needed to get out of this room to
distract them from the fact that he'd come about as close to dying as his kind
could.
Simi moved to stand behind him and
kept her arms locked tightly around his waist.
"I think someone's attached to
you, T-Rex," Talon said with a laugh.
"Yeah, just a little." Ash
made his way from the room.
"Can we have some ice
cream?" Simi asked as she finally let go. She started for the stairs, then
veered off to Marissa's nursery to peek inside the closed door. "Sh!"
Simi said loudly as she straightened up. "The baby's sleeping."
"Yeah, and Tabitha's sneaking
away," Kyrian said. "Are you running off to meet up with
Valerius?"
Tabitha went rigid at his question.
"Tell me something, Ash," she said in a low tone as she neared him on
the stairs. "Would Artemis care if I killed an ex-Dark-Hunter?"
"No, but I think your sister
would."
Tabitha looked over her shoulder to
see Amanda. "Then she better up her insurance on him. 'Cause he's one step
away from a nasty tumble down these stairs."
"Don't threaten me,
Tabby," Kyrian said. "You were so foul to me when you found out I was
with Amanda. You actually tried to kill me. Now you're hooking up with the
worst sort of lowlife. Tell her, Ash. His kind killed without compassion."
Tabitha whirled at the top of the
stairs to face him. "His kind? What, an ancient general? Seems like I know
two other people who were his kind." She looked meaningfully from Kyrian
to Julian.
"Tabitha," Amanda said.
"Enough. You knew how Kyrian felt about Valerius. How could you do this to
us?"
Ash rubbed his head as if he had a
headache. "People, leave Tabitha alone. I'm the one who put her with
Valerius."
"Why?" Kyrian, Julian, and
Amanda asked in unison.
Ash paused on the top step to give Tabitha
a dry stare. "Tabby, what's your ideal man like?"
"Honestly?"
Ash nodded.
"You," she said without
hesitation. "Someone tall, gorgeous, hip, and Goth."
"And what do you think of
Valerius?"
She glanced hesitantly at her
sister. "He's a stick in the mud, but I really like him."
Kyrian and Julian cursed.
"Tabitha…" Amanda said in
a warning tone.
"Don't 'Tabitha' me. Jeez, I'm
tired of all of you jumping on me." Tabitha descended the stairs and
headed for the door to leave.
As soon as she opened it, she met
Nick on the steps, who grinned at her before he entered the foyer. He brushed
by her before she thought to warn him Ash was in the house…
With Simi.
Gawking, Tabitha turned.
"Hey, Nicky!" Simi said,
her face beaming as she danced away from Ash finally to wave at Nick.
Tabitha went cold with dread.
And she knew the instant Ash
realized Simi "knew" Nick. His face mottled red with fury.
Nick froze, then gaped.
Simi appeared oblivious to the
mayhem she caused. "Nicky," she said, putting her hands on her hips
as she pouted at him. "Why didn't you meet me tonight like you said you
would?"
Nick's mouth opened and closed as
Ash let out a bellow of rage. He grabbed Nick by the throat and slung him
against the wall. Nick hit it so hard, he actually went through the plaster.
Tabitha cringed in sympathetic pain
as Nick struggled to rise through the powder of the plaster. "I didn't know
she was your girlfriend, Ash," Nick panted. "I swear it."
Ash's silver eyes turned a glowing
shade of red. "She's not my girlfriend, you asshole. She's my
daughter."
Tabitha wouldn't have thought it
possible, but Nick turned even paler. "But she's so… so young… you're so
young…" Nick swallowed audibly. "I'm so screwed."
Ash's eyes appeared to boil red and
yellow as he hit Nick so hard, Nick was knocked back twenty feet into Kyrian.
Marissa started crying from
upstairs.
"Amanda, tend your baby,"
Ash snarled in a voice that wasn't human. It was deep and rumbling.
Frightening.
While he was distracted, Tabitha ran
at Ash, but he held his hand out and she stopped dead in her tracks and was
held there by some invisible force.
"Akri!" Simi shrieked.
"No!"
Ash moved toward Nick, but before he
could take more than two steps Simi was between them.
Tabitha cringed as Ash let out an
agonized cry.
"You were never to have carnal
knowledge!" he said to his demon.
While the rest of them feared for
their lives, Simi was completely unperturbed by his anger.
"Why not?" Simi asked.
"Everyone else has it."
Ash raked his hands through his
black hair. "Because, dammit, Simi, now you'll be like everyone else. I'll
never have any peace from you."
Simi screwed her face up as if that
was the most disgusting thing she'd ever heard. "Pah-lease, akri. You got
a big opinion of yourself. That just sick. You been hanging out with that
heifer too long. Bleh! I mean, you a good-looking person and all, but you ain't
no Travis Fimmel. Now, he's fine. But honestly, the Simi didn't like all that
heaving and sweating very much. It seems like an awful lot of work for such a
short amount of pleasure. Personally, I'd rather go shopping. It much more fun
and you don't have to shower afterward. Well, not unless you go someplace
dirty, but most malls are really clean nowadays."
Nick opened his mouth as if to
refute her words, but was cut off by Talon, who shook his head.
"Boy," Talon said sharply.
"Be damned glad you suck in bed and take the out she's offering you before
you lose your life."
"Yeah, Nick," Kyrian
added. "Keep your damned mouth shut."
Ignoring the two of them, Ash pulled
Simi to him and held her close as if afraid of letting her go.
Whatever invisible force held
Tabitha released her. She took a deep breath as the very air around them seemed
to settle down.
But when Ash looked back at Nick,
his eyes were still blazing red. "You're dead to me, Gautier. If I were
you I'd kill myself to save me from the trouble of doing it later."
"Hey!" Tabitha snapped as
Ash headed for the door.
"That was harsh."
"Back off, Tabitha," Ash
snarled in warning. "Simi, return to me."
The demon turned into a fine, black
mist before she laid herself over Ash's arm and became a dragon-shaped tattoo.
Ash immediately slammed out of
Kyrian's house. Without hesitation, Tabitha ran after him. "Ash!" she
snapped, pulling him to a stop in the driveway. "What are you doing?"
"I'm leaving before I kill
Nick."
"You can't blame this solely on him."
"Like hell I
can't. He slept with my Simi."
"Well, if you want to hate someone,
then hate me. I was the one who left them alone together."
His eyes snapped fire at her.
Literally. "Leave me, Tabitha. Now."
"No," she said earnestly.
"If you want to hurt someone for this, then hurt the one who is really
responsible. You and Nick are best friends. Don't think I don't know it. He
loves you like a brother and you just crushed him."
"He slept—"
"I heard you the first time.
And I also know how ill Nick was when he found out Simi belonged to you. Tell
me something, Ash. Why didn't Nick know about her?"
His jaw worked furiously. "I
didn't want any man to know about her. I knew the day would come when she
would…" He winced as if the thought cut through him. "You don't
understand."
"You're right, I don't. I don't
know what happened to you tonight. I don't know what's after me. I don't
understand what the hell you turned into a few minutes ago or why your eyes are
doing the freaky fire dance now. What are you? 'Cause right now, I'm wondering
if you were ever human."
His eyes flashed red to silver.
"I was human, once," he breathed.
"And now?"
"Now it's time for you both to
die."
The eerie, threatening words barely
registered before something hot pierced Tabitha's stomach.
Chapter 10
Tabitha gasped as pain engulfed her.
She'd never felt anything like this. It was as if something had invaded her
body.
Ash cursed as he threw his hand out
and blasted her.
Tabitha screamed from the agony of
his blast. It was as if something was trying to rip her apart.
Unable to stand against it, she
started to fall, only to realize someone was holding her against a strong
chest.
"I've got you," Valerius
said as he picked her up in his arms and held her close.
Tabitha's heart soared at his
nearness. She didn't know how he'd gotten there to catch her, she was only
grateful that he had.
"Careful," she said
between the teeth she had clenched to keep from moaning out at the pain that
overwhelmed her.
Her eyes blurred by tears, she
feared the ghost was now trying to move into Ash or Valerius.
"Forget it," Ash said.
The spirit laughed, then vanished.
Ash was beside her in an instant.
"Breathe easy," he whispered.
Tabitha couldn't speak anymore as
she laid her head against Valerius's neck and inhaled the warm scent of his
skin. She would have never thought to feel this way about anyone.
She felt strangely protected even
though she couldn't fight for herself.
"We need to get her to
safety," Valerius said sharply.
Ash nodded.
One second they were in the driveway
outside of Kyrian's house and in the next they were in Valerius's room in his
home.
Valerius looked relieved as he laid
her gently down on his mattress. "Are you all right?"
"I think so," she
whispered. The pain was starting to abate a bit.
He offered her a warm smile before
his face hardened and he turned to look at Ash. "What are we facing?"
Ash took a deep breath and appeared
to debate what to say for several minutes. "That ghost outside of Kyrian's
house was Desiderius. The good news is he isn't corporeal… yet."
"But I fought him in corporeal
form," Valerius said. "He attacked me earlier."
"When?" Tabitha asked as
her terror returned tenfold. "I didn't see him."
"He was the one the ghost
protected at the end of the fighting. Remember?"
Tabitha shook her head. "That
wasn't Desiderius. Believe me, I remember that bastard's face." She
touched the scar on her cheek.
"No," Ash said. "It
was his eldest son. According to Urian, they share the same name."
Tabitha rolled her eyes. "What
is it with you ancient people that you only had, what? Three names in the whole
family lineage and everybody recycled them?"
"It was tradition,"
Valerius said. "One I'm glad to have seen broken. Believe me, I take no
joy from a name that reminds you of a cheesy song and a man doing unspeakable
things in a high school gym. But I suppose, all things considered, 'Valerius'
is infinitely better than 'Newbomb Turk.'"
Tabitha laughed at his unexpected
comment, amazed that he'd actually understood her earlier reference to the
movie The Hollywood Knights.
"Knowing Tabitha, I'm not even
going to ask about that one," Ash said, rubbing a hand over his eyebrow.
Ash went suddenly rigid. Tabitha
could sense his dread.
"Ash?"
"What happened?" Ash
whispered without acknowledging her. It was as if he were talking to someone
else.
"Ash?"
"You two stay here and do not
leave this house again tonight." He vanished instantly.
She looked at Valerius, whose frown
made a mockery of her own. "What was that about?" she asked.
"I don't know, but I have a
feeling it's not good."
Ash entered his home in Katoteros
with a whirlwind maelstrom flowing behind him. The fifteen-foot-tall, solid oak
doors echoed menacingly as they slammed shut of their own accord in his wake.
The minute he crossed the elegant threshold, his clothes changed from his
modern-day Goth to ancient Atlantean. The seams of his jeans turned into
tightly woven, crisscrossed laces that held the tight black leather pants
perfectly sculpted to his lower body. His shirt and jacket dissolved away into
a heavy black silk foremasta, a long duster-like robe that was left to flow
regally around his lithe, muscular body. On the back of the foremasta was
embroidered the emblem of a golden sun pierced by three silver bolts of
lightning.
It was his personal symbol of power
and it marked everything he owned.
Without stopping, he walked directly
across the large black marbled foyer that held the same design in the center of
the floor.
There was no furniture in the circular
foyer, but the golden domed ceiling above him was supported by sixteen columns
that had been carved into statues of the most prominent of the Atlantean gods.
Gods who had once made this realm
their home. In those days, they had gathered affectionately here in this hall
to share time with each other as they watched over the human world and
protected it.
But those days were long gone.
The ancient gods themselves were
long gone.
Ash headed for the throne room that
faced the main doors. The doorway to it was flanked by the likenesses of
Apollymi the Destroyer and her husband Archon Kosmetas, a surname that meant
Order. At one time, the two of them had presided over the nether realms of
Katoteros and Kalosis and in one fit of anger, Appolymi had laid waste to all
who dwelled here.
All of them.
Not a single Atlantean god had
remained standing after she had swept through this temple in her violent fury.
Ash had never understood what could possess her to do such a thing.
But as he entered the throne room of
the ancient gods, he was beginning to have enlightenment.
"Urian!" he growled,
summoning his servant to him.
Urian popped into the Atlantean
throne room ready to take on the devil himself. He drew up short as he caught sight
of Ash's true form while the Dark-Hunter stood before the gilded dais that
contained two gold thrones that were carved into the shape of dragons.
Urian was still having trouble
dealing with Ash when the man looked like this. The blood-red, flaming eyes
were enough to make even a demigod like Urian cringe, and Ash's iridescent
blue-streaked, marbled skin tone…
Errr…
But the most disturbing thing was
the deep, vicious scar that ran from Ash's navel to his throat where someone's
handprint had been branded. It looked as if someone had once held the man down
by his throat as they sliced him open.
Urian had learned from Alexion on
the day he had arrived at Katoteros that while the hand scar came and went, the
vertical scar was only visible in this realm and that he should never react to
it.
Not if he valued his life, anyway.
Ash's unbalanced temper was present
in the lightning bolts and thunder that crackled and sparked outside the leaded
windows of the temple.
There were very few things in life
that frightened Urian. The extremely powerful man before him was one of them.
Not even Ash's pet pterygsauri would
come out to be with their master in this mood. Unlike Urian, the small winged
dragon-like creatures had stayed wisely hidden.
"What have you to report?"
Acheron asked him, his voice thick with his Atlantean accent.
"Basically that all hell is
breaking loose in hell."
Acheron looked less than pleased by
the news. More lightning shot across the sky outside the floor-to-ceiling
windows behind the thrones. It gave an eerie glow to Acheron's body. Thunder
clapped ominously as it shook the temple floor where Urian stood.
"What is happening?"
Urian bit back his sarcasm as he
started to point out that the weather in Kalosis mirrored the weather here in
Katoteros. That would most likely be suicidal.
"I don't know. Desiderius came
back to the hall with his son in tow a little while ago. I was told that he
said something to Stryker that caused him to reward Desiderius by giving him
the ability to reincarnate. Apollymi the Destroyer is locked inside her temple
and no one is allowed to see her. Apparently someone did something wrong and
she has since sent her Charonte demons off on a blood hunt throughout Kalosis
to find the perpetrator. There are Spathis dropping like flies all over the
place and everyone is pretty much wetting their pants in fear of her
wrath."
"And your father?"
Urian tensed at the reminder that
Stryker, the leader of the Spathi Daimons who were controlled by the Destroyer,
had fathered him. "I don't know. The minute Desiderius left, he flipped
out in the main hall and has been tearing the place apart ever since." His
face hardened. "He keeps screaming out my name and I don't know why. Maybe
he learned that I'm alive."
Acheron looked away from him.
"What's up with all this, Ash?
I know you know."
"No, I don't. The Destroyer is
silent to me. I hear nothing from her and that's what concerns me most. She's
never silent in our battles."
Urian cursed at what that signified.
"What could have set them both off at once?"
The muscle in Acheron's jaw beat an
impressive staccato rhythm. "My guess is Stryker sent Desiderius out with
a test for me. Once Desi saw that it was effective, he reported it back to
Stryker, who had all the confirmation he needed."
"Confirmation of what?"
Acheron's gaze cut through him.
"What he really is to Apollymi."
Urian gave a low whistle.
"Yeah, that would freak him out. Maybe we'll get lucky and he and the
Destroyer will kill each other."
Acheron shot him a look that made
him take a step back.
"Sorry," he said quickly.
Acheron started pacing. With his
robe flowing eerily out behind him and his silver-soled boots clicking against
the black marble floor, he was a spooky sight.
"Why would Desiderius try to
take over Tabitha's body?"
"What do you mean?" Urian
asked.
"He tried to take over her
while I was there. After I blasted him out of her, he came for me."
That didn't make sense. How stupid
could… well, it was Desiderius, after all. "Why would he attempt that if
he knew what you were?"
Ash gave a low, ominous laugh.
"I don't think Stryker shared that information with Desiderius. He
wouldn't dare. It would undercut his own authority in Kalosis if he did
so."
Good point. "So I guess the
real question is who will be the body donor."
Acheron cocked his head as if he
just realized something. "He's after Kyrian and Amanda. Since he couldn't
get either Tabitha's body or mine, he'll probably go after someone else they
know and trust. And that's the next bit I need you to find out. Stryker has me
blocked so that I sense nothing in regard to Desiderius."
"For the record, I'm beginning
to feel like cannon fodder here. There are a lot of people in Kalosis who
rejoiced the day Stryker cut my throat. If one of them finds out that I'm there
spying on them, they'll send me back to you in pieces."
Acheron gave him a wry, wicked grin.
"It's okay. I'll just put you back together again."
"Thanks, boss. And I find that
thought even more disturbing. Humpty Dumpty here doesn't want to fall off the
wall, okay?"
Acheron's face hardened once more.
"Go, Urian."
Inclining his head, Urian stepped
back and willed himself to Kalosis.
Acheron stood silently in his throne
room, listening. Still, he heard nothing from the other side. More lightning
clashed outside as the winds whistled against the glass panes.
"Talk to me, Apollymi. What are
you doing?"
But for the first time in eleven
thousand years, she was utterly silent.
The only sound he heard in the
deafening silence of his mind was his sister's faint voice. "Be careful
what you wish for, little brother. You will get it."
Tabitha hung up the phone from
talking to Amanda. Kyrian and Julian had been in the process of taping up
Nick's ribs while she'd warned her sister about Desiderius's attack just
outside of their house.
"I'm scared, Val," she
said as she put her phone down. "Really scared. I keep hearing Amanda's
voice telling me about her dream where she and Kyrian die. I know you hate the
man, but—"
"I don't hate Kyrian, Tabitha.
He hates me."
She nodded as Valerius pulled her
into a tight hug that she really needed. He held her carefully against his
chest while one hand played in her hair.
She inhaled his rich, welcoming
scent, which soothed her even more than his touch.
"Acheron won't let her
die," he said comfortingly. "You know that."
"I hope so, but her
vision…"
"Those can be altered. Acheron
is always saying that fate is helpless against free will. What she saw was one
possible outcome."
Tabitha choked on her tears as she
thought about what life would be like without Amanda. It was more than she
could stand. "I can't lose my sister, Valerius. I can't. We've always had
each other."
"Shh," he breathed before
placing a gentle kiss on the top of her head. "I'm sure she feels the same
way about you, and I swear on my life that neither one of you will ever have to
fear losing the other. Not on my watch."
Tabitha was amazed by his tenderness
when it was obvious he'd never been shown any himself.
She pulled back to look up at him.
"How could your brothers have ever killed you?"
He released her instantly and took
three steps back. By the look on his face, she could tell her question had hurt
him deeply.
"I'm sorry, Val. That was
insensitive of me."
"It's all right. Things were
different in those days."
That seemed to be his answer for
everything, and it seemed too easy for her to accept.
"I shall call Otto and have him
bring us dinner. I don't know about you, but I'm hungry."
Tabitha nodded and gave him the
reprieve she sensed he needed. Without looking back, he left her alone in his
library.
"Whatever do you see in that
bastard?"
She turned quickly at the sudden
voice behind her to find a man of Val's height, staring angrily at her. Dressed
in black jeans and a black T-shirt, he was incredibly handsome with a neatly
trimmed goatee, short, jet-black hair, and electric blue eyes. "Who the
hell are you?"
"Zarek."
The unexpected name caught her off
guard. So this was the infamous whipping boy who had lived in Valerius's Roman
home. Offhand, there wasn't much other than the dark hair and height that
marked them as brothers.
Tabitha folded her arms over her
chest as she faced him. "So you're the dirtbag with the lightning
bolt."
He laughed evilly at her insult.
"I'd be careful if I were you. There's no law that says I can't fry your
ass, too."
She scoffed at that and refused to
give in to his intimidation. "Sure there is. Ash would kill you if you
hurt me."
"He might try, but I doubt he'd
succeed."
She sucked her breath in between her
teeth at his daring tone. "You are arrogant, aren't you?"
He shrugged nonchalantly.
"So, why are you here?"
she asked him.
"I've been watching the two of
you."
She was disgusted at his confession,
and the thought of being his personal viewing choice. It made her shiver in
revulsion. "You unbelievable perv!"
His gaze narrowed dangerously.
"Hardly. I've made sure to look away when you two start the lovey-dovey
shit. I've already been blind once in my life. I have no wish to go back to
it."
"Then why were you watching
us?"
"Curiosity mostly."
"And you're here now, why?"
"Because I'm curious as to why
the sister-in-law of Kyrian would fuck someone like Valerius."
She sneered at him. "That's
none of your damned bus…" Tabitha trailed off as the room spun around her.
Suddenly, Valerius's library was
gone and she found herself in what appeared to be a mirrored hallway. She saw
herself reflected in the mirrors with Zarek by her side.
"Where are we?"
"Olympus. I have something I
wanted to show you."
The mirror before her shimmered and
changed. It no longer reflected them.
Instead it showed her the past.
She saw an ancient canvas tent with
a bloodied man tied to a wooden frame inside it, being tortured. His screams
rang out as he begged for mercy in Latin while another man beat him with a
barbed whip.
Cringing, Tabitha covered her ears
until the beating stopped and another man dressed in Roman armor stepped
forward.
It was a young Valerius. His dark
face was in need of a shave and his armor was spotted with bloodstains. He
looked tired and ill-kempt, as if he hadn't slept in days, but still he held
that regal air of superiority.
He threw water into the man's face.
"Tell me where they're marching to."
"No."
The Latin words echoed in her head
along with the sight of Valerius ordering a soldier to beat the man more.
"It was your lover who blinded
me," Zarek snarled in her ear as the mirror clouded, then cleared to show
her the image of two small boys.
One lay on the ground, curled into a
ball while the other beat him with a whip. One of the lashes cut deep into the
one boy's eye, causing him to scream as he covered it with one grimy hand.
"I'm the one on the
ground," Zarek snarled in her ear. "Valerius is the one beating me
mercilessly and you fucked him."
Unable to watch the cruelty, Tabitha
turned and ran into someone else.
She started to fight until she
glanced up to see Ash looking less than pleased.
"What are you doing, Z?"
"I'm showing her the
truth."
Ash shook his head at the former
Dark-Hunter. "I can't believe you married a justice nymph and have yet to
learn anything from her. There are always three sides to every memory, Z.
Yours, theirs, and the truth, which lies somewhere in between the two. You're
only showing her a single sound bite to prove your point. Why don't you give
her the whole clip?"
Ash turned her back toward the
mirror. "I'm not going to lie to you, Tabby, or try and sway your opinion.
This isn't Zarek's memory or Valerius's. It's just the untarnished, objective
truth of what happened to them."
She saw the child Valerius again as
a man in a toga who looked remarkably similar to Zarek stepped forward. He had
to be their father.
Laughing, he patted Valerius on the
shoulder. "That's it, my son. Always strike where they're the most
vulnerable. You'll make a fine general one day."
The child Zarek glared at both of
them as if he could kill them where they stood. Their father jerked the whip
from Valerius's hand and commenced to beating him again.
His face horrified, Valerius ran
from the room, sobbing. He looked as if he were going to be ill as he stumbled
across an old Roman courtyard until he fell down by a huge fountain in the
center of the atrium. He braced his folded arms on the edge of the fountain and
lay his head down.
"I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm
sorry," he repeated over and over again as he cried.
His father came running out of the
house, toward him.
"Valerius!" he snarled as
he came up to the child. "What are you doing?"
Valerius didn't answer. His father
pulled him up from the ground by his hair.
The horror on the boy's face seared
her.
"You pathetic little
worm," his father sneered. "I should have named you Valeria. You're
more woman than man."
His father backhanded him so hard
the sound echoed and sent several birds into flight. Unbalanced by the blow,
Valerius fell back to the ground.
His nose and cheek bleeding,
Valerius tried to push himself up, but before he could regain his feet, his
father brought the whip down across his back. The boy dropped instantly.
Still, his father beat him.
Valerius covered his head as the
blows rained down on his little body.
"Get up," his father
snarled after he'd delivered twenty lashes.
Valerius was crying so hard he
couldn't speak.
His father kicked him in the ribs.
"Up, damn you, or I'll give you twenty more."
Tabitha had no idea how he managed
it, but somehow Valerius pushed himself to his feet, where he shook and
trembled. His clothes were tattered, his face covered in dirt and blood.
His father seized him by the throat
and shoved him back against a rough wall so that his ravaged back was scraped
by it.
She cringed in sympathetic pain,
trying to imagine how a child so young could stand there and not collapse.
"You will stand here until
nightfall and if you so much as bend your knees to rest them, I will see you
beaten every day until you learn to stomach your pain. Do you understand
me?"
The boy Valerius nodded.
"Markus?" his father
shouted.
Another boy who closely resembled
Valerius came running out of the house. It was obvious he was a few years
older. "Yes, Father?"
"Watch your brother; if he sits
down or moves, you come for me."
Markus smiled as if his father had
just given him a present. "I will, sir."
Their father turned and left them.
And as soon as he was out of sight, Markus turned to laugh at Valerius.
"Poor little Val," he said tauntingly. "I wonder what Father
will do to you if you fall down." Markus struck him in the stomach.
Valerius groaned at the pain, but
didn't move from the wall.
That only made Markus angrier.
Growling at Valerius, he began striking him. Valerius fought back, but it was
no use. In no time, Markus had him on the ground again.
"Father!" Markus cried,
running for the door where their father had vanished. "He fell down!"
Tabitha turned away, afraid of what
additional punishment Valerius's father had heaped on him. She'd already seen
his back firsthand. Had run her hands over those scars that he bore with grace
and dignity.
He must truly hate his father, and
yet he never spoke a word against any of them. Valerius merely went on with his
life, quietly suffering and keeping all the painful memories to himself.
He was remarkable to her.
The screen went black.
"It changes nothing,"
Zarek said, curling his lip. "So he was beaten, too. I notice you didn't
correct the fact that he was torturing—"
"A Greek soldier whose army had
marched on a Roman village," Ash said, interrupting him. "Every woman
and child there had been locked inside Minerva's temple before they burned it
to the ground. Valerius was after the army to stop them before they killed any
more innocents."
Zarek scoffed. "They weren't
all innocent."
"No," Tabitha said, her
throat tight. "But he was a general during a time when things were
violent."
"Yes," Ash said quietly.
"And he did what he had to do."
Zarek snorted. "Yeah, right.
Valerius spent his entire human lifetime trying to please his father, trying to
make that animal proud."
Ash refuted that as well. "And
when you were children, he was so afraid of your father that he stuttered every
time he was in his presence."
"He never hesitated to commit
an act of cruelty to please his family."
"Never?"
Tabitha watched the mirror as it
again showed her Valerius as a child. He was around the age of eight, lying in
bed asleep. Her heart pounded at the peaceful, sweet sight he posed.
Until his bedroom door was slung
open.
Valerius jerked upright as lamplight
cut across him.
His father seized him from the bed
and literally threw him to the ground. Valerius looked at his father and then
to the one who held the lamp.
It was Markus.
"What is this?" his father
asked as he threw a blanket at Valerius.
Valerius turned pale.
"What is that blanket,
Zarek?" Ash asked.
Zarek's blue eyes turned cold.
"It's the piece of shit old horse blanket that the little bastard gave to
me one winter night and I was beaten for it."
"Valerius!" his father
shouted as he slapped the boy. "Answer me."
"B-b-blanket."
"I saw him give it to the
slave, Father," Markus said. "So did Marius. He didn't want the slave
to be cold."
"Is this true?"
Valerius looked horrified.
"Is it true!"
Valerius swallowed. "He was
c-c-c-cold."
"Was he now?" his father
sneered, "Well, better a slave to suffer than you, is it not? Perhaps it's
time you learn that lesson, boy."
Before Valerius could move, his
father tore his clothes from him, then wrenched him up by his thin arm and
hauled him from the room. Completely naked, Valerius was taken outside, where
his father tied him to a hitching post. It was so cold that their breaths
formed icy clouds around them.
"P-p-pl—"
Valerius's plea was cut short by
another vicious backhand. "We're Roman, boy. We don't beg for mercy from
anyone. For that you'll be beaten even more come morning. If you live through
the night."
Shaking from the cold, Valerius bit
his lip to keep his teeth from chattering.
Markus laughed at him. "I think
you're being too kind, Father."
"Don't question me, Markus,
unless you wish to join him."
Markus's laughter died instantly.
Without another word or looking back, the two of them turned back toward the
house and left Valerius outside alone.
The small boy sank to his knees
while he tried to loosen his hands. It was no use. "I swear I'll be a good
Roman," he whispered quietly. "I will."
The scene faded.
"You're not convincing me,
Acheron," Zarek said coldly. "I still think he's a ruthless bastard
who deserves nothing."
"Then how about this?"
This time when the mirror lightened,
she saw what appeared to be a seriously disfigured version of Zarek chasing an
older version of his father through the ancient Roman house she now knew was
theirs.
The middle-aged man was bleeding,
his face ravaged as if he'd been knocked around.
The man spilled into what appeared
to be a dining hall where Valerius sat at a desk wearing his armor, writing a
letter. Frowning, he rose to his feet as he saw his father's frantic run.
His father fell against him and
grabbed the metal straps of Valerius's cuirass. "For Jupiter's sake, help
me, boy. Save me!"
Zarek drew up short as he saw
Valerius in full military regalia. Candlelight shone off the golden armor that
was contrasted by his blood-red cape.
Valerius made a fearsome sight as he
pushed his father aside and pulled his sword out slowly from its burgundy
leather scabbard as if to engage Zarek.
"That's it, boy," his
father said with an evil laugh. "Show the worthless slave what I taught
you."
"Go ahead, you bastard,"
Zarek snarled defiantly. "I'm here for my vengeance and you can't kill
someone who's already dead."
"I wasn't planning on it,"
he said simply.
"Valerius," his father
snarled. "What are you doing, boy? You have to help me."
His face completely stoic, Valerius
looked at his father as if the man were a complete stranger. "We're Roman,
Father, and I've long since ceased being a boy. I am the general you made me
and you taught me well that we don't beg for mercy from anyone."
He handed his sword hilt-first to
Zarek.
With those words spoken, Valerius saluted
his brother, walked out of the room, and closed the door.
His father's screams echoed as he
walked slowly down the corridor.
Tabitha couldn't breathe as she
witnessed the tragedy that was both their lives. Part of her couldn't believe
Valerius had left his father to die like that and another part of her
understood it completely.
Poor Valerius. Poor Zarek. They both
were victims of the same man. One son spat upon because he was a slave and
another because he wasn't cold-blooded and unfeeling. At least not until that
one moment.
She looked at Zarek, whose eyes
still bore the hatred and pain of his past. "If you hate Valerius so much,
why didn't you kill him, too, Zarek?"
"Pardon the bad pun, but the
blind man was shortsighted at the time."
"No," she whispered.
"You knew, didn't you? You knew who deserved your hatred and who
didn't."
Zarek's sneer turned even colder as
he shot a menacing glare from her to Acheron. "This changes nothing. Valerius
still doesn't deserve peace. He doesn't deserve anything except contempt. He is
his father's son."
"And what are you?" Tabitha
asked. "It seems to me that you're the one carrying around the acidic
hatred that won't let you live in peace. Valerius doesn't strike out at other
people. Ever. To me that makes him twice the man you are."
Zarek's look pierced her. "Oh,
you think you're so special. That he's worth defending. Tell you what, sweetie,
if you want to know who Valerius really loves, go to the solarium in his house.
Imagine how much Agrippina must have meant to him that he's been lugging her
stone statue around for more than two thousand years."
"Zarek…" Ash growled in
warning.
"What? It's true and you know
it."
Zarek took a step back and then
looked as if he were trying to disappear. "What the…?"
Ash gave him a droll stare.
"Just for the record, Zarek. If you ever do hurt Tabitha, I will kill you.
Gods and goddesses be damned."
Zarek opened his mouth as if to
argue, but vanished before any words could escape.
The next thing Tabitha knew, she was
back in Valerius's library right where she'd been standing.
"Tabitha?" Valerius asked
as he walked back into the room. "Did you not hear my question?"
Tabitha reached out to touch the
shelf nearest her to confirm that she was here. Yeah, she was back. But she
felt rather strange all of a sudden.
"No," she said to
Valerius. "I missed your question, sorry."
"Otto wanted to know if you
like mushrooms."
"I'm totally ambivalent to
them."
Valerius cast an amused look at her
before he relayed the information to Otto. After he finished ordering their
dinner, he put the phone back in his pocket. "Are you all right?"
No, she wasn't. The images and words
of Zarek and Ash tumbled through her mind.
And she wanted to know who to
believe.
"Where's your solarium?"
There was no missing the wave of
apprehension that went through Valerius. "My what?"
"Your solarium. You do have one
here, right?"
"I… uh, yes, I have one."
At least he didn't lie about it.
"Can I see it?"
He went rigid. "Why?"
"I like solariums. They're nice
rooms." Tabitha headed out of the library toward the other side of the
house. "Would it be this way?"
"No," Valerius said as he
followed her. "I still don't see why you'd want—"
"Humor me. Just for a sec,
okay?"
Valerius debated. Something wasn't
right with Tabitha, he could sense it. And yet he couldn't hide from the past;
and for some reason he didn't understand, he didn't want to hide anything from
her.
Inclining his head to her regally,
he took a backward step toward the stairs. "If you'll follow me."
He led her up the stairs to the room
beside his bedroom where the door was sealed with a keypad.
Tabitha watched him key in the code.
The lock clicked. Valerius took a deep breath before he swung it wide.
Tabitha's heart shrank as she saw
the statue in the middle of the solarium of a beautiful young woman. There was
an eternal flame burning beside it
She looked up at Valerius, who
refused to meet her eyes while he stared at the floor.
"So this is why you were
freaking out about the lamp oil. You must really have loved her."
Chapter 11
Valerius looked up at the statue as
Tabitha's words rang in his ears. As always Agrippina's face stared out into
nothingness. Blank. Cold.
Unfeeling.
His chest ached from the harsh
reality of the past and his own particular stupidity of trying to hang on to
something good from his human life.
"Honestly, I didn't even know
her," he said quietly. "I most likely never spoke more than a handful
of words to her during her lifetime and yet if I could have had a woman to love
me, I would have been grateful for it to have been her."
Tabitha was stunned by his
confession. "I don't understand. Why do you take care of a statue of a
woman you didn't know?"
"I'm pathetic." He gave a
bitter laugh. "No, actually I'm too pathetic for even the average
pathetic. I take care of her statue because I wasn't able to take care of
her." His anger and pain reached out to her and seized her heart.
"What are you talking
about?"
His entire body rigid, he stared off
to the side of the room. "Do you want the truth of me, Tabitha?
Really?"
"Yes, I do."
Folding his arms over his chest, he
moved away from her so that he could stare out the dark windows of the room,
into the elegant courtyard in back. "I was a genetic screw-up of titanic
proportions and I've never understood why. I've spent my entire life trying to
understand why I give a single shit about anyone when no one ever gave a damn
about me."
His profanity shocked her. It wasn't
like him to speak that way and that alone told her how volatile his mood was.
"There's nothing wrong about caring for other people."
"Yes, there is. Why should I
care? If I died right now, no one would miss me. Most of the people who know me
would openly rejoice."
Her throat tightened at the truth of
his statement and yet the thought of him dying…
It hurt to an unfathomable level.
"I would care, Valerius."
He shook his head at her. "How
could you? You barely know me. I'm not stupid. I've seen the people who are
your friends. None of them look like me. None of them act or speak like me. All
of you mock anyone you see who looks or acts like I do. Your kind hates us. You
dismiss us. I'm rich and cultured, I come from a noble Roman family, therefore
I must think myself above everyone else, so it's okay to be vicious and cold
whenever I'm around. We have no feelings to hurt. How could a Roman nobleman
give a single rat's ass for a slave? And yet two thousand years later, there
she stands and here I am, a noble watchdog for a humble slave because she was
afraid of the dark as a child, and I once made a promise to her that she
wouldn't have to sleep in darkness."
His words touched her so deeply that
it tightened her chest and almost succeeded in bringing tears to her eyes.
The mere fact that he'd kept his vow
to a simple slave…
"Why was she afraid of the
dark?"
A muscle worked in his jaw.
"She'd been the daughter of a wealthy merchant in a town my father had
destroyed. He'd brought her back to Rome intending to sell her at market when
my grandmother saw her and thought she'd make a good companion. My father made her
a gift to my grandmother, and Agrippina lived in terror all her life that
someone else would come for her in the dark of night and destroy her world
again."
His gaze turned haunted. "She
found out the hard way that the light can never keep the real monsters away.
They could care less who sees them."
Tabitha frowned. "I don't
understand."
He turned to face her with a
menacing glare. "Do you know what asterosum is?"
"No."
"It's an ancient drug that
completely paralyzes your body, but leaves you completely able to see, hear,
and feel. Roman physicians used it whenever they needed to amputate."
He winced as if something painful
went through him. She felt the agony of it in her own chest.
Valerius wrapped his arms around himself as if that could protect him somehow
from the horror of his past. "It was the drug my brothers gave me the night they
came to my villa. I had just taken over the Celtic city of Angaracia. Instead of razing it to the
ground and killing everyone as any other male in my family would have done, I
negotiated a surrender with the Celts. I thought it would be better if their
children didn't grow up to hate Rome and strive to avenge their people as so
many had done before them." He laughed bitterly. "It was my fatal
flaw."
"How could mercy be a
flaw?" she asked, aghast.
And even as the words came out, she
remembered the sight of his father. In Valerius's world, it would have been a
crime.
Valerius cleared his throat.
"Most of my assignments were in the outer provinces, fighting the Celts. I
was the only Roman of my time who had ever been truly successful against them,
mostly because I understood them. My brothers hated me for that. To them, the
only way to conquer a people was to destroy them."
"So they thought to kill
you?"
He nodded. "They came into my
house and drugged me. I lay on the floor completely helpless as they destroyed
everything around me. After they had ransacked my hall, they took me out into
the back courtyard to kill me. It was there they discovered Agrippina's
statue."
Tabitha looked up at the white
marble face from his past. "Why did you have her statue there?"
"Like my grandmother, I thought
she deserved to be saved. To be preserved. So, I commissioned the piece for my
private garden not long after she came to live with me."
A vicious stab of unwarranted
jealousy went through her. He might not have loved the woman, but he obviously
felt deeply for her. Especially since he'd spent thousands of years keeping a
promise to her.
"How did she end up with
you?" she asked quietly.
He drew a deep, ragged breath.
"My grandmother had summoned me home from the battlefield because she knew
she was dying and she was afraid for Agrippina. She knew the temperament of her
sons and grandsons, and Agrippina was a very beautiful and delicate woman who
had grown to mean a lot to her. I was the only one who had ever come to call on
her that she didn't have to keep from Agrippina's bed. So she asked me to take
Agrippina into my house and to keep her safe from the others."
Tabitha's throat tightened at his
kindness. "You fell in love with her?"
"I loved the idea of her, she
was beauty incarnate. Soft and kind. Things that had never existed in my world
before. Whenever I was home, I spent hours watching her from afar as she went
about her duties. And I often wondered if someone so beautiful could ever love
something as vile as me. Then I would castigate myself for wanting the love of
a slave. I was a noble Roman general. What did I need with a slave's
regard?"
Yet he had craved it. She knew that.
She could feel it.
Valerius grew silent. If she didn't
know better, she'd swear she saw tears in his eyes.
"They raped her in front of me
and I couldn't help her."
"Oh, Val," she breathed.
He moved away from her as she sought
to touch him. "I couldn't even close my eyes or turn my head. I lay there
completely helpless as they took pleasure violating her. The more she screamed,
the more they laughed, right up until the end when Markus ran her through with
my sword." The words were torn from his throat as tears welled in his
eyes.
"What good was I?" he
asked between clenched teeth, his nostrils flared by impotent rage. "What
good did I do her in the end? Had I never taken her into my home, they would
have at least allowed her to live."
Tabitha choked on her own tears as
he finally allowed her to pull him into her arms. She tried to blot out what
must have happened after they killed Agrippina.
She'd seen the scars on his wrist
and knew from him that they had crucified him. The horror that must have been
that night! No wonder he didn't want to remember the past.
And she would never again ask him
anything about it.
He was rigid for several seconds
before he relaxed. Then he wrapped his arms tightly around her and held her
close.
"What kind of man am I that
every act of kindness I ever attempt ends up hurting the very people I seek to
help?"
"You didn't hurt me or Marla or
Gilbert."
"Yet," he breathed.
"Agrippina lived in my home almost ten years before the Parcae hurt
her."
"No one's going to hurt me,
Valerius, trust me."
He brushed his hand lovingly over
her scarred cheek. "You have so much fire inside you. It warms me every
time you near me."
"Warms you? Most people are
consumed by it. My ex used to say that I was completely exhausting to be
around. He'd tell me that I wore him out and that he needed at least two to
three days to recoup for every hour he spent with me."
He offered her a small smile.
"I don't find you exhausting."
"And I don't find you
pathetic."
That succeeded in bringing out a
laugh from him. "What is it about you, Tabitha? I've only known you a few
days and I feel as if I could tell you anything."
"I don't know, but I feel the
same way about you." She reached up and pulled his head down so that she
could kiss him.
Valerius moaned at the taste of her.
At the feel of her. In her arms, he didn't feel pathetic or rigid. She allowed
him to laugh and to feel joy again.
No, she allowed him to feel joy for
the first time in his life. No one but Tabitha had ever reached out and
embraced him.
She knew he was stodgy and she
accepted it. Instead of turning him away, she poked gentle fun at him and then
worked around it.
She didn't write him off.
In all of history, she alone had
befriended him. And that made her the most precious woman on earth.
Tabitha pulled back. "How much
time do we have before Otto gets here with food?"
He checked his watch. "Probably
twenty to thirty minutes. Why?"
She smiled. 'That'll do."
Before he could ask her more, she
pulled her shirt off and wrapped it around his neck, then crooked her finger
for him to follow her.
"Come with me, General. I'm
going to rock your world."
Little did she know, she'd done that
the minute he'd first seen her fighting the Daimons, and she'd been doing it
steadily ever since.
Stryker had finally managed to calm
himself. At least on the outside.
Inside he was still seething.
Damn the Destroyer and her lies and
damn Acheron Parthenopaeus for his honesty.
If it was the last thing he did, he
would rid the world of both of them. But he had to move carefully.
Strategically.
If the Destroyer ever learned that
he'd been the one to give Aima to Desiderius so that the Spathi could wound
Acheron, his life would be meaningless. No, he'd have to move with great skill
to defeat them both, and he would.
Eventually.
The air around him sizzled with a
request from Desiderius for a bolt hole so that the Spathi could return from
New Orleans to the realm of Kalosis, the Atlantean hell realm.
Here there was no light. It was
perpetually dark and dismal. Up until the night he had slain his own son, that
hadn't bothered him.
Now it did.
Stryker held his hand out and opened
the portal.
Desiderius returned, still a
bodiless mist.
Stryker curled his lip at the
incompetent Daimon. There had been a time once when he'd held the Daimon in
regard, but Desiderius's failure against a simple Dark-Hunter and his human
paramour had left Stryker completely disgusted with the being.
If it wasn't for the fact that he
didn't want to bring himself under the fire of the Destroyer, he wouldn't have
even allowed Desiderius this one chance to return to corporeal form. But in
exchange for Desiderius wounding Acheron, Stryker was willing to reincarnate
the Daimon.
"I thought you were going
to—"
"What am I up against?" Desiderius
asked as his faceless, formless essence flickered in the dimly lit chamber.
"You know what you're up
against."
"No," Desiderius said.
"What was that substance you gave me that took down the Dark-Hunter
leader?"
"It's of no concern to you.
Your only concern is to bring me the child."
"I don't understand why."
Stryker laughed. "And you never
will. Bring me the child or I will blast you into oblivion."
If he didn't know better, he'd swear
the ghost actually sneered at him.
"I was blasted out of the
bitch's body by Acheron. They are now guarded. I need another body."
Stryker paused as he heard Daimons
shrieking from outside his hall. No doubt Apollymi's Charontes were still
seeking the one who had stolen the Aima from her.
None of them would look to him for
it. They wouldn't dare.
In truth, he was in no mood to play
any longer. His mother, the Destroyer, had said to wait.
He was through waiting.
The day he had spilled his own son's
blood to appease the Destroyer was the day he had started to notice some
things.
And when his mother had bade him to
bring her the little child of a former Dark-Hunter and a human sorceress, he
had realized something. That child, known as Marissa Hunter, held in her hands
the very balance of the universe.
Whoever possessed her, possessed the
key to control the most primal, ancient power of all time.
She was the fate of the entire
world.
The Destroyer sought to have the
child for her own so that she would be in control.
Stryker bit back his bitter
laughter. She would have Marissa over his own dead body. In the end, it would
be he who controlled the Final Fate. Not Apollymi.
"Arod, Tiber, Sirus,
Allegra!" he called.
The four Spathi commanders appeared
before him. Three men and one woman. Stryker took a minute to scan their
perfect, beautiful bodies. All four Daimons appeared physically to be no older
than twenty-seven… just like him. And just like him, they had been around since
time immemorial. Allegra was the youngest of their group, but even she was a
staggering nine thousand years old.
Trained to kill and to take and
possess human souls to live, his army had no equal.
It was time mankind met them.
"You called us, akri?" Tiber
asked.
Stryker nodded. "Desiderius is
in need of a body to do my bidding."
The four Daimons looked at each
other nervously.
"Relax," Stryker said.
"I'm not asking any of you to volunteer yourselves. Oh, no. Far from it. The
four of you are to be his bodyguards."
"But, akri," Allegra said
quietly, "he has no body to guard."
Stryker laughed maniacally.
"Yes, he does." He splayed his hand out and an image appeared in the
center of the room. Dressed all in black, the Dark-Hunter was walking alone on
the streets of New Orleans.
"There's your body,
Desiderius," he said. "And there's your ticket into the Hunter
household. Now you bring me that baby or all of you will die…
permanently."
As they started to shimmer out of
the room, Stryker stopped them with one last order. "Acheron took from me
the only thing I have ever loved. In memory of my son he stole from me, I
command you to make the humans Acheron loves pay. I want to see blood flowing
in the streets of New Orleans. Do you understand?"
Desiderius smiled wickedly.
"Understood, akri. Definitely understood."
Valerius growled at how good Tabitha
felt against him. Completely naked in his arms, she kissed him fiercely as her
hand gently stroked his hard cock from tip to hilt.
His black shirt hung open. Unlike
her, he was still mostly dressed.
"Otto is on his way," he
said raggedly as she dipped her head down to suckle his hard nipple.
It was difficult to think straight
while her hand massaged him so expertly.
"Then we better get down to
business," she said with a laugh as she climbed up on his bed.
Valerius couldn't breathe at the
sight of her naked on his black duvet.
He watched as she spread her legs
open in invitation.
She hooked her ankles around his
hips and pulled him forward.
He hissed as she reached between
their bodies and lowered his pants enough so that she could slide herself onto
him.
Arching her back, she drew him in
deep as she moaned and writhed against him. Valerius leaned forward onto one
arm as he stared down at her naked body moving underneath him. With both feet
still on the floor, he thrust deep inside her warm, wet body.
"That's it, baby," she
panted as she met him equally.
Valerius thrust harder as he let her
touch soothe him. He cupped her breast with his hand, delighting in the soft,
supple texture of it. His mouth watered for a taste of her.
Tabitha groaned as Valerius dipped
his head down and took her breast into his mouth while he continued to thrust
against her hips. She loved the way this man felt when he was inside her. The
way he looked, primal and savage.
There was something seriously erotic
about a man this controlled losing it all whenever he touched her. She liked
the fact that he could drop his guard when they were alone.
That he didn't judge her.
Closing her eyes, she clutched his
head to her as he moved even faster against her. There was nothing better than
him pounding himself into her over and over again. Than his tongue working its
magic on her breast.
Unable to stand it, she pulled his
lips away from her breast so that she could kiss him. His eyes were dark with
his passion, his face a bit flushed from their exertion.
She ground herself against him as
she sank her hands into his long hair and nipped his lips with her teeth.
Valerius growled in his throat as
Tabitha licked her way to his ear where her tongue swirled around his lobe and
made chills spread all over his body.
It drove him past his control. He
wanted to be even deeper inside her.
Pulling out of her, he rolled her
over, onto her stomach and positioned her so that she was bent over the bed
with her buttocks exposed.
"Val?"
He brushed the hair away from her
neck as he drove himself back into her body. She cried out in pleasure as he
buried himself all the way to the hilt.
Some inner, wild part of him roared
to life. He cupped her breasts in his hands while the scent of their passion
filled his head.
Tabitha couldn't breathe as Valerius
took control. He left one hand cupping her breast while the other trailed down
her body, past her belly ring to bury it between her legs.
"Oh, Val," she sobbed,
aching from the pleasure of his touch. His fingers delved deep in her cleft as
he stroked her in time to his thrusts.
Her head spun.
She'd never felt so strangely
desirable. So needed.
"I love the way you smell,
Tabitha," Valerius breathed in her ear.
She felt him brush his fangs against
her throat. "Are you going to bite me, Val?"
She felt him hesitate as one fang
hovered dangerously close to her jugular.
"I've never wanted to bite
anyone before," he said raggedly.
"And now?"
He moved even faster against her.
"I want to devour you."
Tabitha cried out as she came
instantly.
Valerius clenched his teeth as he
felt her shuddering. The foreign part of him still begged to taste her. It
begged to possess her.
It was wild and frightening.
He nipped her throat, but forced
himself not to break her skin. But it was hard.
It was damn near impossible.
And when he climaxed a minute later,
he heard that alien part of himself roar in triumph.
He held her close until the last
tremor shook him. Completely drained, he turned her around and then sank to his
knees in front of her.
Tabitha was awed by the sight of the
proud Roman warrior kneeling before her. He wrapped his arms around her waist
and laid his head carefully against her stomach.
Gently, she ran her hands through
his hair.
He pulled back to look up at her
with a searching gaze that seared her. "I don't know why you're here,
Tabitha, but I'm glad that you are."
She smiled down at him.
His gaze locked on hers, he nibbled
the sensitive flesh of her stomach, just below her belly ring. Biting her
lip, she moaned as he tongued the moon that dangled from her hoop, Then he
licked in and around her navel, making her body burn even more.
And when he sank two fingers inside
her, she thought she might actually collapse.
"You are so
beautiful, Tabitha," he said, spreading her open so that he could stare at
the most intimate part of her body.
She couldn't breathe as he took her
into his mouth and used that incredible tongue to taste her intimately. She
spread her legs even wider, to give him more access as he slid his tongue
through the tender folds.
Tabitha stared down at him. He
seemed to enjoy tasting her as much as she enjoyed being tasted.
And he took his time exploring her.
"Hey, Valerius?"
He jerked away at the sound of Otto
in the hallway. Still he left one finger inside her that continued to pleasure
and probe her.
Rising slowly to his feet, he slid
another finger into her body. "What have you done to me, Tabitha?" he
breamed raggedly in her ear. "Otto's in the hallway and all I can think of
is being inside you again. Of licking you until I can taste your climax."
His unexpected comment made her moan
deep in her throat at the thought of what he described. "Get rid of Otto
and I'm yours for the night."
He kissed her passionately, then
squeezed her butt in his hands. "Stay naked. I want to eat my dinner off
you."
Tabitha bit her lip as a shudder
went through her. "You got it."
Valerius pulled away and quickly
buttoned his shirt and fastened his pants. He cast one hot, promising look at
her before he slipped out of the bedroom and left her alone.
Tabitha pulled down his bedcovers and slid herself between the dark silk sheets that held his spicy mascuhne
scent.
Wrapping her arms around his pillow,
she inhaled deeply.
"What am I doing?" she
asked herself. She was literally sleeping with the enemy and she was enjoying
it way too much.
Worse, she didn't want to leave.
Ever.
"My gift in life," she
said under her breath. She seemed to be forever drawn to the men she could
never have.
She should leave here and go bunk
with Amanda and Kyrian, but she couldn't bring herself to leave Valerius. What
would he do without her?
More importantly, what would she do
without him?
Chapter 12
Ash drew up short as he saw Kyrian
in his upstairs office through the slightly ajar door. It was well after four
a.m. and though Kyrian occasionally stayed up late with Amanda, it was unusual
to find the former Dark-Hunter up alone.
Cocking his head, he watched through
the crack as Kyrian bent over a stack of papers, pulling at his hair. Ash could
sense the frustration.
He knocked lightly on the door so as
not to startle him.
Kyrian looked up, then pulled the
glasses off his face. "Oh, hey," he said in a low tone as Ash pushed
the door open a bit. "I thought you might be Amanda, begging me to come to
bed."
"Not for all the money in the
universe," Ash said as he walked in. He moved to stand in front of the
black, kidney-shaped, Chippendale desk where official papers and handwritten
notes were scattered. "What are you doing up so late?"
"I couldn't sleep. I…"
Kyrian ground his teeth.
"What?" Ash asked, worried
about his long-time friend.
Kyrian let out one long, tired
breath. "You have no idea what this is like, Ash. How hard every day is.
Do you even remember being human?"
Ash set his backpack down on the
floor as he heard Kyrian's thoughts. They were disoriented and panicky.
Normally, Ash wouldn't answer any
questions about his past, but his friend needed comfort; in all honesty, given
the crap that had gone on tonight between Nick, Simi, Zarek, Tabitha, the
Destroyer, and Daimons, so did he. "Yeah, I remember being human, but I do
my damnedest not to dwell there."
"Yeah, but no offense, you were
young when you died. You have no idea of the responsibility I carry."
Ash had to bite back a bitter laugh
at that. If Kyrian only knew…
He'd trade fates and
responsibilities with the former Greek general in a heartbeat.
"Look at this," Kyrian
said, pushing a sheet of paper at him. "Forget the damned Daimons, the
scariest thing on this planet are lawyers and insurance brokers. My God, do you
know the statistics for traffic accidents? I'm terrified to put my kid or wife
in the car at all. My medicine cabinet that used to hold nothing but toothpaste
and bandages now has Advil, Sudafed, Bengay, Lipitor, and Benicar. I have high
blood pressure, high cholesterol—"
"Well, you did abuse your body
for the last forty years with junk food."
"I was immortal!" Kyrian
snapped, then his face went ashen. "I'm going to die again, Ash. Only this
time, I doubt Artemis will be there to offer me a trade." He raked a hand
through his hair. "My wife is going to die one day, and Marissa…"
"Don't think about it."
Kyrian's eyes snapped at him.
"Don't think about it? That's easy for you to say. You're not going to
die. And death is all I can think about, especially since Amanda keeps having
her nightmares. I'm human now. I can't protect them like I could before."
"That's why Kassim and I are
here."
Kyrian shook his head, then reached
for his glasses. "And I hate these damned things that I have to wear so I
can read all the fine print that's designed to steal my soul even more
effectively than the goddess did. What happened to me, Acheron? Yesterday, I
was the baddest thing stalking the night. The Daimons trembled in fear of me.
Now what am I? I'm so pathetic that I have to bribe Nick to slip beignets into
the house and hide in a closet to eat one so Amanda doesn't find out and ream
me a new one. I have sinus problems. My back aches at night if I sleep wrong.
My knees are shot to hell and yesterday when I bent over to pick up Marissa, I
almost fell. Growing old really sucks."
Ash gave him an arch stare.
"Are you telling me you want to go back?"
Kyrian looked away sheepishly.
"At times I do, and then I look at my wife and I think what a selfish
bastard I am. I love her so much that it hurts deep down in places I never knew
existed. Whenever I think of her being hurt or Marissa… I can't breathe. I
can't live. I hate feeling helpless. I hate knowing that I'm going to grow old
and die on them."
"You're not going to die,
Kyrian."
"How do you know?" he
snapped.
"I won't let you."
Kyrian scoffed at him. "As if
you could stop it. We both know I have no choice except to die as an old man…
if I'm lucky and make it that long and don't drop dead of a heart attack, car
accident, food poisoning, or a million other catastrophes." He hung his
head in his hands.
Ash truly felt for his friend. It
was hard to be human. Hell, it was hard to live at all.
Life was definitely not for the
meek. Every time something seemed to go right, at least three or four things
had to go wrong. It was just the law of nature.
"Amanda's pregnant again,"
Kyrian breathed after a small pause.
In spite of the dire tone, Ash
sensed his happiness. And his terror. "Congratulations."
"Thanks." Kyrian looked at
the stack of papers on his desk. "I'm trying to get my will in order, just
in case."
Ash stifled an urge to laugh at his
fatalistic friend. "You're not going to die, Kyrian," he reiterated.
He knew Kyrian wasn't listening to
him. He was too busy fixating on all the things that could go wrong with not
just Amanda and the baby, but himself.
"Will you be the baby's
godfather again?" Kyrian asked quietly.
"Of course."
"Thank you. Now, if you don't
mind, I have to have this in with the attorney and insurance company
tomorrow."
"All right. Good night,
General."
"Night, Acheron."
Ash pulled his backpack up from the
floor and shut the door as he left. He paused in the hallway to find Amanda
standing in her bedroom door, wrapped in a cream bathrobe. There were tears in
her eyes.
Ash closed the distance between
them. "You okay?"
She shrugged. "Is it like this
for all of those who regain their souls?"
Sighing, he nodded. "It's hard
to readjust. You spend hundreds to thousands of years thinking you literally
have all the time in the world where nothing can touch you and your body never
hurts for more than a few hours, only to become mortal and realize that you
only have thirty or forty years left if you're lucky. You're now susceptible to
death and disease just like everyone else. It's not an easy mindset. The first
real paper cut damn near kills them."
A single tear went down her cheek.
She wiped it away and sniffed daintily. "I wish I had left him as he was.
I wish you had told me this would happen."
"Told you what, Amanda?"
he asked. "That the two of you would spend the rest of your lives loving
each other? Raising your kids? Neither one of you have any idea how miraculous
your life is. How many people would gladly sell their souls for what you have.
Forget Artemis and immortality. What you have is infinitely more precious and
rare."
His heart clenched as his anger at
both of them swelled over the fact that they were doubting their love and
whether they had made the right decision. "Even I would trade all my
immortality for one single day of what you two have."
He took her scarred hand into his
and held it up so that she could see the place where Kyrian's soul had burned
her hand when she returned it to his body. "I asked you once if he was
worth it. Do you remember what you said to me?"
"I would walk through the fires
of hell to die for him."
Ash nodded. "And I would walk
through the fires of hell to keep you both safe."
"I know."
He tightened his grip on her hand.
"Do you really wish you had left him to his Dark-Hunter life?"
She shook her head. "I would
die without him."
"And he would die without
you."
She wiped her eyes and smiled at
him. "Oh, I'm just tired and pregnant. I hate this emotional hormonal
state. I'm sorry to dump all over you when I'm sure it's the last thing you need."
Standing on her tiptoes, she pulled him down so that she could hug him.
Ash clenched his hand into a fist
against her back as he savored the kindness of her touch. It was rare for
anyone to touch him as a friend and it meant everything to him.
"I love you, Ash," she
breathed before she kissed his cheek. "You're the best friend anyone could
ever ask for." Except for Nick…
Ash winced as he recalled his
earlier anger. He shouldn't have done what he did. It wasn't often he gave rein
to his rage. Simi was one of the few triggers that was still left inside him.
Up until Nick had sullied her, she had been the only pristine thing left in his
life.
Part of him hated Nick for what he'd
done.
But the sane, rational part of him
understood. Even so, he couldn't forgive what they had done. He was afraid of
how it would change Simi. Of what she might become…
"Is Nick okay?"
Amanda looked extremely
uncomfortable. "He was busted up pretty badly. I tried to get him to go to
the hospital, but he refused. He said he'd had enough broken ribs in his life
to know how to tend them. So Kyrian and Talon taped him up and sent him
home."
Ash nodded. "Keep an eye on
him."
"What about you? Aren't you
going to check on him?"
"I can't. At least not for
awhile. I need time to get past this and I can't guarantee that I won't hurt
him again. God knows, Nick has a true gift for saying the wrong thing in any
given situation."
He saw the agreement on her face.
"You know he loves you, right?"
"Yeah, but emotions don't have
brains."
"No, I don't guess they
do."
Ash gently pushed her toward her
bedroom. "Go get some sleep."
Amanda took a step away, then paused
and turned back to face him. "Ash?"
"Yeah?"
"Why did you put Tabitha with
Valerius?"
"For the same reason I handed
you Kyrian's soul on the day we first met."
"You have to know that there
will never be peace between the two of them. Ever. Tabitha can't bring Valerius
into our family. It's just not fair to Kyrian."
"Maybe, but the real question
is this: Had you met Valerius before Kyrian, would you still feel the same way
toward the Roman? And if Tabitha had married Valerius and then you found
Kyrian, how would you feel if she told you that you had to let him go?"
Amanda looked away.
"Exactly, Amanda. In order to
have a future, Kyrian needs to let go of the past."
Tabitha sucked her breath in sharply
between her teeth as Valerius licked the salted garlic butter off her breast.
He laughed playfully with her nipple between his teeth as he looked up at her.
He pulled back long enough to dip
another piece of shrimp in butter before holding it up for her to bite into.
Tabitha licked his fingers sensuously as she ate from his hand.
"I think we set a record for
longest meal in history."
Valerius smiled at that as he placed
another shrimp on her right nipple. The butter ran down the side of her breast.
He licked it off her skin before he went after the shrimp and devoured it.
Tabitha smoothed his hair back from
his face. "See, I knew you Romans were raw with this kind of stuff. I was
right, wasn't I?"
"You were right," he said
as he squeezed a lemon over her stomach.
Her toes actually curled as he
lapped the juice off her.
His whiskers gently brushed her
stomach, sending chills all over her. "You are so wonderful," she
said quietly.
Valerius froze at her words. No one
had ever said such a thing to him before.
No one.
And in that moment, he had a
terrifying thought. He was going to have to let her go.
Some unknown force slammed into his
chest at the thought. It stole the breath completely away from him.
Life without Tabitha.
How could such a thought slice
through him when he'd only just met her? And yet as he tried to imagine going
back to his cold, sterile world where people ignored, mocked, and disregarded
him, he wanted to shout at the injustice.
He wanted to keep her.
The desire to bind her to him was
feral and unreasoning. It was also selfish and wrong.
Tabitha had a family who loved her.
Her family had always been a major part of her life. He'd seen it himself. The
love. The care.
His family had been a nightmare of
jealousy and cruelty. But hers…
He couldn't take her away from them.
It wouldn't be right.
"Valerius? Is something
wrong?"
He offered her a half-smile.
"No."
"I don't believe you."
Valerius lay on top of her and just
listened to her breathe. She cradled him with her body and he reveled at the
feel of her skin against his. Of her arms and legs wrapped around his bare
body.
But it wasn't just his skin that was
naked. His spirit was stripped bare as well.
He would give anything to have this
woman and she was the one person he could never keep.
It wasn't fair.
Tabitha stroked Valerius's back as
she felt his emotions. He was filled with angry despair and she didn't know
why.
"Baby," she whispered.
"Talk to me."
"Why do you call me baby?"
His breath tickled against her breast.
"Does it bother you?"
"No. I've just never had anyone
else use an endearment when they talked to me. It's odd to hear it from
you."
She ran her hand over the scars of
his back as her heart clenched for him. "Were you ever in love?" she
asked.
He shook his head. "I only had
Agrippina."
"But you never touched
her?"
"No. I slept with others who
had a choice about being with me."
She frowned at that. "But you
didn't love any of them?"
"No." He angled his head
so that he could look up at her. "What about you? Have you ever been in
love?"
She sighed as she remembered her
past and the one person she had wanted to share the rest of her Me with.
"I loved Eric. I wanted to marry him so badly that when he broke up with
me, I thought I would die from the pain of it."
She felt jealousy cut through
Valerius. "Why did he break up with you?"
She traced the fine line of his left
eyebrow, then buried her hand in his hair to toy with it while she explained
herself. "He said I burned him out."
Tears filled her eyes as she
remembered that summer day when Eric had come over and ended the only decent
relationship she'd ever had. "He said that as hard as it was to keep up with
me while he was in his mid-twenties, he was terrified of trying to keep up with
me at forty. He told me that if I could give up the vampire hunting and my
store that we might stand a chance. But how could I ever give up the things
that mean so much to me? I live to hunt. I owe it to those who can't fight for
themselves."
Valerius lifted himself up and
gently kissed away her tears. "Eric was a fool."
She smiled at that as his lean,
muscled body slid sensuously against hers. Oh, he was delectable. All that
strength and power…
And she wondered who he'd gone after
once he became a Dark-Hunter.
"Who did you take revenge
on?" she asked quietly.
He went rigid as he pulled away.
"Why do you want to know?"
"I was just curious. I slashed
Eric's car tires when he broke up with me."
His face was aghast. "No, you
didn't."
She nodded. "I would have done
more, but decided that that was enough to get my anger out. He had really nice
Pirelli tires," she confessed.
He shook his head at her and
laughed. "It's a good thing I don't drive, then."
"And you're avoiding my
question," she said, tapping the end of his nose with her finger.
"Tell me, Valerius. I won't think any less of you, I swear."
Valerius lay down beside her as his
buried memories surfaced. He normally did his best not to recall those last
hours of his human life. To remember the first night of his immortality.
He propped himself up on his elbow
as he traced circles around Tabitha's breast. He adored the fact that she
wasn't body conscious. Their nudity didn't bother her in the least.
"Val?" she prompted.
She wasn't going to let him escape.
Taking a deep breath, he paused his hand over her belly ring. "I killed my
brothers."
Tabitha traced the line of his jaw
as she felt his pain and guilt.
"They were drinking and
wenching with their slaves when I arrived. I will never forget the look of
terror on their faces when they saw me and realized what I was there for. I
should have let them go, but I couldn't." He moved away from her with eyes
that were filled with torment and pain. "What kind of man kills his own
brothers?"
Tabitha sat up and caught his arm as
he left the bed. "They killed you first."
"And as the old saying goes,
two wrongs don't make a right. We were family and I cut them down like they
were enemy strangers." He raked his hand through his hair. "I even
killed my own father."
"No," she said earnestly,
tightening the grip on his arm. "Zarek killed your father, not you."
He frowned at her. "How do you
know that?"
"Ash told me."
His face turned to stone as he
glared at her. "And did he tell you how Zarek killed him? He ran my father
through with my sword. A sword I handed to him after my father begged for me to
save him."
She felt his ache and wanted to give
him peace. "No offense, but your father was a bastard who deserved to be
butchered."
"No," he said, shaking his
head. "No one deserves what happened to him. He was my father and I betrayed
him. What I did was wrong. So wrong. It was just like the night when…"
Tabitha couldn't breathe as a
terrible wave of guilt sliced through her. She sat up on the bed. "What,
baby? What night?"
Valerius clenched his fists as he
tried to block out the memories of his childhood. It was impossible.
Over and over he saw the violence,
heard the screams that echoed across the centuries even now.
He had never been able to block it
out.
Before he realized what he was
doing, he told her what he had never told another single soul. "I was five
when Kyrian died and I was there the night he came for his vengeance against my
grandfather. That was how I knew what Zarek was the night he came for my
father. How I knew to call out Artemis when I died. I…"
He shook his head to clear it. But
it was hard. The images of the past were still crystal clear and haunting.
"My grandfather had kept me up late that night to tell me how glorious it
was to triumph over a worthy adversary even if it's by treachery. I was in the
hall with him when we heard the horses outside reacting to something. You could
feel that something evil was there. It clung to the air. Then we heard the
guards shouting and dying. My grandfather pushed me into a cabinet to hide
while he grabbed his sword."
Valerius winced. "There was a
crack in the wood and I could see straight into the hall. I saw Kyrian come in.
He was completely wild as he and my grandfather fought. My grandfather was no
match for his fury. But Kyrian wasn't content to just kill him. He butchered
him. Piece by piece. Inch by inch, until there was nothing left that resembled
a human being at all. I kept my ears covered and choked on my sobs. I wanted to
be sick, but I was terrified that Kyrian would hear me and butcher me, too.
"So I sat there like a coward
in the darkness until there was complete silence in the hall. I looked and saw
nothing but the red-stained floor and walls."
He raked his hand over his eyes as
if to blot out the images that still tormented him. "I crept from the
cabinet and remember staring at the way my grandfather's blood coated my
sandals. And then I screamed until I lost my voice from the terror of it. For years,
I kept thinking that if I had run for help maybe I could have saved him. That
if I'd left the cabinet, I could have done something."
"You were just a child."
He refused her comfort. He knew
better. "I wasn't a child when I walked away and left my father to
die."
Valerius cupped her cheek in his
hand. She was so beautiful. Courageous.
Unlike him, she had morals and
kindness.
He had no right to touch something
so precious, so priceless. "I am not a decent man, Tabitha. I have destroyed
everyone I've ever touched and you… you are goodness. You have to leave while
you can. Please. You can't stay with me. I'll destroy you, too. I know I
will."
"Valerius," she said,
taking his hand into hers. She felt his aching need to touch her. Felt his
desire to keep her safe and protect her.
Pulling him into her arms, she held
him quietly in the darkness. "You are a good man, Valerius Magnus. You are
honor and decency, and I'll hurt anyone who says otherwise… even you."
Valerius closed his eyes as he held
her. He cupped her head in his hand and savored her warmth and kindness.
And in that moment, he realized
something that terrified him more than anything else.
He was falling in love with Tabitha
Devereaux. Brazen temptress, vampire slayer, complete uncouth lunatic woman
that she was, he loved her.
And there was no way he could have
her. None.
What was he going to do?
How could he give up the only thing
he'd ever had that was worth anything? Yet it was because he loved her that he
understood why he had to do this.
She belonged with her family and he
belonged to Artemis.
He'd sworn himself to the goddess's
service centuries ago. The only way for a Dark-Hunter to be free of that oath
was for someone to love them enough to survive Artemis's test.
Amanda had loved Kyrian enough.
Sunshine had loved Talon, and Astrid had loved Zarek.
Tabitha was certainly strong enough
to survive the test. But could a woman like her ever love someone like him
enough to free him?
Even as the thought went through his
head, he realized just how stupid he was.
Artemis wasn't about to let another
Dark-Hunter go free, and even if she was, Tabitha would never be his. He
refused to ever come between her and her family.
He might need her, but in the end,
she needed them a lot more. He was used to surviving alone. She wasn't.
He wasn't cruel enough to ask her to
choose the impossible when the impossible would cost her everything she held
dear.
Chapter 13
The next two weeks were truly hell
on earth after dark. It seemed as if the Daimons lived only to play with and
torment them.
No one was safe. The city had even
tried to implement a curfew at Acheron's behest, but since New Orleans was a
twenty-four-hour party town, they hadn't been able to enforce it.
The body count was unlike anything
Tabitha had ever heard of outside of a Hollywood Movie, and the Squire's
Council and Acheron were having a hard time hiding all the deaths from the
police and news agencies. But what scared her most was the fact that what few
Daimons they caught were damn near impossible to kill.
Every night she came back to
Valerius's house in pain from the abuse to her body. She knew he didn't want
her to go out with him to patrol and yet he never said anything.
Valerius merely spent an hour or two
after they returned home massaging Icy Hot into her pains and bandaging up her
wounds.
It was unfair that he never had
aches and pains, and what few scuffs his body suffered were always gone after a
few hours.
Tabitha now lay naked in the shelter
of his arms. He was asleep and yet he held her firmly tucked in beside him as
if he were afraid of losing her.
That warmed her more than anything
else ever had. She should have gotten up hours ago. It was already after four
in the afternoon, but since she'd moved in with Valerius she'd become a
certified night owl.
Her head lay against his biceps and
his right arm was thrown over her waist. She ran her hand over his forearm as
she studied that tawny masculine skin.
Valerius had beautiful hands. Long
and tapered, they were strong and well-shaped. These last few weeks they had
given her so much comfort and pleasure that she could barely breathe from the
happiness that consumed her whenever she thought of him.
Her phone rang.
Tabitha scooted out from under him
to answer it.
It was Amanda.
"Hey, sis," she said a
little hesitantly. Over the last two weeks, there had been a major strain on
their relationship.
"Hi, Tabby, I was wondering if
I could come over for a little while and talk to you."
Tabitha rolled her eyes at the idea.
"I don't need another lecture, Mandy."
"I swear it's not a lecture.
It's one sister to another. Please."
"Okay," she said quietly
after a brief internal debate, then gave Val's address.
"I'll see you in a few
minutes."
Tabitha hung up the phone, then
crept toward the bed. Valerius lay on his side with his hair fanned out around
him. Stubble shadowed his face and yet he looked almost boyish as he lay there.
Even asleep the muscles of his body
were evident and defined. Dark hairs lightly dusted every perfect dip and
curve, making the terrain of his skin all the more masculine and alluring.
But it wasn't just his handsomeness
that appealed to her. It was his heart. The way he could take care of her
without taking over her. She knew he didn't like it when she fought beside him
and yet he never said one word against it. He merely stood by and let her fight
her own battles. The only time he interfered was whenever she was in over her
head.
Then he would charge in and save her
without making her feel incompetent or weak.
Tabitha smiled at the sleeping image
of him.
How could someone come to mean so
much to her in such a short period of time?
Shaking her head, she reached to
dress and thought about the first time Valerius had seen the tattoo on the
small of her back, a small Celtic triangle.
"Why would you mark yourself
intentionally?" he'd asked as if aghast at the very idea.
"It's sexy."
He'd curled his lip at that and yet
now he took a great deal of pleasure kissing and massaging the tattoo in the
mornings when they returned from their patrols.
Impulsively, she picked up his black
silk shirt from the floor and put it on. She loved the way his spicy male scent
clung to the fabric. The way it clung to her skin.
She pulled on her pants, then went
downstairs to wait for Amanda.
"Hey, Tab."
She turned to the left at the bottom
of the stairs to spy Otto using the computer in Valerius's study. It was the
only piece of technology she'd been able to find in Val's entire house except
for the massive DVD collection that he kept hidden in a vault in his office,
which explained his knowledge of pop culture.
"Hey, Otto, whatcha working
on?"
"Trying to track the Daimon
menace as always. I'm using Brax's program to see if there's a pattern we can
follow to predict where they might be tonight."
She nodded. Otto had slowly warmed
up to her, and since the Daimon attacks had started, he'd reverted to his basic
black wardrobe.
Today he had on a black turtleneck,
charcoal sweater, and black slacks. She had to admit he was a good-looking man
when he wasn't trying to be a tasteless slob.
He'd even given up the IROC and now
drove his Jag, claiming that it was no longer fun to antagonize Valerius since
the Roman was so distracted by Tabitha that he never reacted to Otto's ribbings
anymore. Nor was Gilbert there to react to him either.
She moved into the study to look
over his shoulder. "Have you found anything?"
"No. There isn't a pattern,
yet. I just don't understand what has caused this. If they want Kyrian, why
haven't they moved on him?"
She sighed irritably. "They're
playing with us. You weren't here for Round One with Desiderius. He gets off on
making us afraid of him and on toying with our heads."
"Yeah, but I'm getting sick of
the escalating body count. Ten people died last night and the Council is having
a hard time hiding all this from the authorities. The public is freaking and
they've only heard about a percentage of the actual total."
Tabitha cringed. "How many
Daimons were killed last night?"
"Only a dozen. The four you and
Val took out, Ash killed five, and then Janice, Jean-Luc, and Zoe killed one
each. The rest of the bastards got away."
"Damn."
"Yeah, I don't like being on
the losing side of anything. This really sucks."
Tabitha scowled as his list ran
through her head. "You know, it's pretty sad when I'm human and I can take
out more Daimons than a Dark-Hunter."
Otto gave her a droll stare.
"You're not out there on your own."
She blew him a raspberry. "For
the record, Valerius helps me, not the other way around."
"Riiiight."
Tabitha laughed at his playful
scoffing until another thought occurred to her. "What about Ulric?"
"What about him?"
"How many did he kill?"
"None, why?"
None? That wasn't right. "He
didn't kill any the night before, either, did he?"
"No."
A bad feeling went through her. No,
surely she was wrong.
It wouldn't be possible, would it?
"Where did most of the kills
occur last night?" she asked.
Otto punched a key and changed the
monitor screen to a map of the French Quarter. She saw the areas highlighted in
red wherever someone had died. There was a heavy concentration of red marks in
the northeast quadrant.
"Who was assigned that
area?"
Otto checked another screen.
"Ulric."
She went cold. "And yet he
didn't kill any Daimons?" she asked in disbelief.
Otto's gaze narrowed. "What are
you saying?"
"Desiderius needs a body…
Valerius said back when all this started that if a Daimon ever took over a
Dark-Hunter—"
"That's bullshit, Tabitha. I
saw Ulric last night myself and he was fine."
"But what if I'm right? What if
Desiderius has taken him over?"
"You're wrong. Desiderius
wouldn't be able to lay a hand on him. He was a medieval warlord. If there's
one thing Ulric knows how to do, it's protect himself." Maybe.
The buzzer sounded for the gate.
"It should be my sister."
Otto swung his chair around to the
small video console that showed an image of the car's driver. It was Amanda.
He buzzed her in.
Tabitha went to meet her at the
door, even though she couldn't shake the feeling that something wasn't right
with Ulric. In spite of what Otto said, she wanted proof that she was wrong.
Tonight, she'd meet the Dark-Hunter
herself and decide if her fear held any validity and if it did, he would be
Daimon dust.
Swinging open the door, she saw
Amanda getting out of her Toyota in the driveway. She was dressed in a pair of
nice black slacks, a dark green silk top, and black sweater. It was really good
to see her again.
Silently, Tabitha stood in the open
doorway as she waited for Amanda to draw near.
Amanda gave her a tight hug as soon
as she reached her. "I've missed you."
"I'm only a couple of blocks
away."
"I know, but we haven't talked
much lately."
Tabitha squeezed her back, then let
her go. "I know. It's kind of hard to talk right now."
Amanda brushed the hair back from
Tabitha's face in a very motherly fashion and smiled. "You look happy
underneath that suspiciousness; are you?"
Tabitha frowned. "You are
seriously scaring me." She looked past Amanda and scanned the street.
"Has someone replaced my twin with a pod person?"
Amanda laughed. "No, goofball.
It's me. I've just been worried about you."
"Well, as you can see, I'm
fine. You're fine. Everything's fine. So what brings you here?"
"I want to meet Valerius."
Tabitha couldn't have been more
stunned had her sister hit her. "Excuse me?"
"Ash said some things to me a
couple of weeks ago that got me thinking. And with every day that passed
without you racking this guy and moving in with me until this is over, I did
more thinking. You've been with him night and day, haven't you?"
Tabitha shrugged with a nonchalance
she didn't feel. "Yeah, so?"
"And yet I haven't had a single
call from my homicidal twin telling me she's going to cut his head off and put
it in a bowling bag if he says or does such-and-such one more time. Why, Tabby,
I do believe that's a record for you."
Tabitha fidgeted guiltily. It was
true. Not once in all their lives had she been with anyone that she wasn't
threatening to kill the guy every other hour for some annoying habit.
But with Valerius…
Even when he annoyed her, it wasn't
so bad. And the truth was, he very seldom annoyed her. They talked about all
kinds of things and even when they didn't agree, he respected her opinions.
"You love him, don't you?"
Tabitha looked away.
"Oh God, Tabitha," Amanda
breathed. "You've never done anything the easy way, have you?"
"Don't start on me,
Amanda."
Amanda cupped her face and turned
her head until their eyes met. "I love you, Tabby. I do. Of all the
men—"
"I know!" she snapped
angrily. "It's not like I woke up and said, Hmmm, who is the one man on
the planet guaranteed to alienate me from my entire family for all eternity?
Oh, I must go and find him immediately and fall hopelessly in love with
him."
She took a deep breath before her
anger overwhelmed her. "God knows, I didn't want to love someone like
Valerius. I keep thinking that you are his perfect woman. You're elegant,
sophisticated. Hell, you actually know which fork to eat with when you go out.
I'm the idiot in college who went out with you and Dad and drank out of the
finger bowl because I thought it was some kind of fucked-up clear soup."
Tabitha scoffed at her own words.
"For that matter, listen to my language. I have to be horrifying to him
and yet when he looks at me, I shiver."
Over and over, the arguments of why
she didn't belong with Valerius ran through her mind. They should be completely
incompatible and yet they weren't. It didn't make sense. It wasn't right.
Tabitha sighed. "The other
night he took me to Commander's Palace and we sat down where they had this
really elegant display sitting in the middle of the table. It was made up of
all these exotic veggies and fruit and looked really tasty. So, stupid me, I
grabbed my butter knife and started hacking at it to eat some of it. It wasn't
until I looked up and saw the gape on the waiter's face that I realized I'd
done something completely stupid. I asked him what his problem was and he said
that he had just never seen anyone actually eat the centerpiece before. I was
so embarrassed I wanted to die."
"Oh, Lord, Tabby."
"I know. Valerius, God bless
him, didn't miss a beat. He reached over and started eating it too, then he
gave one of those haughty, regal stares at the waiter, who quickly ran off.
After he was gone, Val said for me not to worry about it. That he spent enough
money in that place that I could eat the tablecloth next if I wanted to and if
that didn't make me happy, then he'd buy the restaurant just so I could fire
the waiter."
Amanda burst out laughing.
Tabitha had laughed too when he said
it and the memory of his kindness still warmed her.
She gave her sister a sincere stare.
"Don't you think I know that I don't belong with this man? I really,
really don't. To me fine dining is slurping down oysters and drinking beer out
of a bottle. To him it's a fifteen-course meal where people actually put the
napkin in your lap for you and reset the silverware between every course."
"And yet you're still
here."
"And I don't understand
why."
Amanda smiled gently. "All I
ever wanted was a nice, normal life with a nice, normal man. Instead, I end up
with a husband who used to be immortal who has friends that are gods, demons,
and animals that can take human form. And I don't even know how to begin to
classify Nick. Let's face it, I'm married to a man who gave me a daughter who
is able to talk to animals like Doctor Dolittle and who can use her thoughts to
move just about anything in the house. And you know what?"
"What?"
"I wouldn't trade it for all
the normality in the world. Love isn't easy. Anyone who says differently is
lying to you. But it is worth fighting for. Believe me, I know, and that's why
I'm here. I want to meet this man and see if there's any way I can soothe over
Kyrian enough to where he can at least say Valerius's name without rupturing a
vein."
Tears blurred her vision as Tabitha
pulled her sister into another hug. "I love you, Amanda, I really
do."
"I know. I'm the perfect
twin."
Tabitha laughed at that. "And
I'm the psychotic one." Stepping back, she took Amanda's hand and led her
into the house.
Amanda gave a low whistle as she
came inside and looked around the elegant interior. "Very nice
place."
Otto stepped into the foyer to shake
his head at them. "Kyrian will stroke if he ever finds out you were here."
"And you'll be limping if you
enlighten him," Tabitha said.
"Don't worry. He won't hear it
from me. I'm not that stupid." Otto headed for the door. "I'm off to
meet up with Kyr and Nick. We're going to get together tonight and do some
patrolling of our own and see if we can run some of these bastards to
ground."
Tabitha nodded. "You guys be
careful."
"You, too." He inclined
his head to them, then left.
"Why don't you wait in the
library?" Tabitha said. "I'll go see if he's up yet."
Amanda nodded.
Tabitha sprinted up the stairs and
headed to Valerius's room to find him still asleep in his bed.
She lifted the silk sheet up so that
she could nip his hip with her teeth.
He made a sound of pleasure before
he rolled over onto his back.
Tabitha's breath caught in her
throat at the sight of his nude body. She could stare at this man all day or
night long.
She particularly loved the area of
his body where short crisp hairs ran from his navel to his groin. Unable to
stand the temptation, she bent over him and nibbled the little hairs there.
His cock hardened. He placed his
hand gently on her head. "You certainly know how to wake a man up happily,
don't you?"
She laughed at that before she
lightly nipped his skin, then pulled away. "I need for you to get
up."
"I am up," he said, glancing
down to the part of his body that was standing at full attention.
"Not that," she said,
rolling her eyes. "My sister is downstairs and she wants to meet
you."
"Which sister?"
She gave him a meaningful look.
His face went ashen. "I can't
meet her?
Tabitha refused to listen to his
argument. "Get dressed and meet her. It'll only take a minute and then
she'll leave."
"But—"
"No buts, General. I'll be
waiting at the stairs and if you're not there in five minutes, I'm going to bring
her up here."
Amanda sat in a burgundy chair near
a heavily draped window. She looked around the formal, elegant mansion. Unlike
her home, there was nothing inviting about it. It spoke of a man who was stern
and formidable, pretentious and condescending. Cold. Even a little evil and
scary.
Everything she'd been told to expect
from Valerius Magnus.
How had Tabitha ever hooked up with
such a man? Her sister was none of those things.
Well, Tabitha could be evil, but in
her twin's case that was an almost endearing quality.
It seemed to take forever before she
heard Tabitha coming down the stairs.
"Tabitha!" The hushed tone
was stern and commanding.
When Tabitha didn't lash back with a
caustic retort, Amanda got up to investigate. She stayed in the shadows so that
she could see Valerius with Tabitha on the stairs.
He was dressed in black pants and a
black button-down shirt. From what she'd heard of him, she'd assumed his hair
would have been cropped very short. To her surprise, it brushed down to his
shoulders. His face was elegantly sculpted. Perfect.
Power and control bled from every
part of him. This was definitely not the kind of man who attracted Tabitha. Ever.
He glared at her sister as if he
wanted to choke her. "You can't have her here. She has to leave
immediately."
"Why?"
"Because Kyrian would die if he
ever found out his wife was in my home. He'd lose his mind."
"Val—"
"Tabitha, I'm not kidding. This
is cruel to him. You have to get her out of here before he finds out."
Amanda was shocked by his words. Why
would he care how this affected Kyrian when Kyrian would gladly see him dead?
"Amanda wants to meet you,
Valerius. Please? Just for a minute and then I'm sure she'll head home."
She scowled at Tabitha's calm,
rational tone. Normally when her sister didn't get her way, she turned rather
violent. Or at the very least, shouted.
His face softened instantly as he
reached out and cupped Tabitha's scarred cheek in his hand. "I hate when
you give me that look." He brushed his fingers over her eyebrow and smiled
gently at her. "Okay." He dropped his hand to hers, then pulled it up
and kissed the back of her hand.
Tabitha kissed his cheek before she
stepped away and headed toward the library.
Her heart thumping at what she'd
just seen, Amanda stepped back into the room so that they wouldn't know she'd
been spying on them. But as she waited, images of their encounter played
through her mind…
Valerius couldn't believe he was
about to meet his enemy's wife.
Tabitha's twin sister.
He'd never been more nervous or
unsure of himself.
But he refused to let that show.
Stiffening his spine, he walked into the library, where Tabitha greeted her
sister.
It was extremely odd to listen to
them speak to each other. The only way he could tell their voices apart was
their vocabulary. Tabitha had a unique way of speaking, whereas her twin sister
was more eloquent and proper.
Amanda's eyes widened a bit as she
scanned him from head to toe. Whatever she thought of him, she gave no clue.
"You must be Valerius,"
she said, stepping forward to offer him her hand.
"It's an honor," he said
formally before he shook her hand very briefly, released it, and stepped back
six paces.
She looked at Tabitha. "You two
are the odd couple, aren't you?"
Tabitha shrugged before she tucked
her hands in her pockets. "Thank God he's cuter than Tony Randall and I
don't have Jack Klugman's nose."
Valerius became even more rigid.
Tabitha ran her hand affectionately
down his arm. "Relax, hon. She doesn't bite. Only I do that." She
winked at him.
The problem was, he didn't know how
to relax. Especially not while her twin was staring at him as if he were
something sinister.
Amanda watched her sister with the
Roman general she had assumed she would hate on first meeting. To her surprise,
she didn't.
He wasn't friendly, that was
certainly true. He stood there with a crisp, arrogant look that seemed to defy
her to insult him. But as she looked closer, she realized it was nothing more
than a facade. He actually expected her to say something vicious to him and was
just bracing himself to take it.
In fact, her psychic sense didn't
pick up cruelty of any sort. Though he looked completely ill at ease, his gaze
softened ever so subtly every time he glanced at Tabitha.
And there was no way to miss the way
Tabitha reacted to him.
Oh, good grief, they really did love
each other. What a nightmare!
"Well," Amanda said
slowly, "I can stand here making everyone uncomfortable or I can go home.
I should probably head back before it gets dark anyway. So—"
"My apologies, Mrs.
Hunter," he said quickly. "I didn't mean to make you uneasy. If you
wish to stay and talk to Tabitha, I'll be more than happy to withdraw."
She smiled at his kindness.
"No, it's okay. I just wanted to meet you for myself. I've never been the
kind of person to let someone else make up my mind for me and I wanted to know
if you really were a three-toed, horned demon. But strangely enough, you look
like an accountant."
"From her, that's a
compliment," Tabitha said with a laugh.
He looked even more uncomfortable.
"It's okay," Amanda said.
"Really. I just felt this insane need to know who was holding my sister
hostage. It's not like her to not call me three dozen times a day."
"I'm not holding her
hostage," he said quickly as if the accusation offended him. "She can
leave anytime she chooses."
Amanda smiled. "I know."
She looked at Tabitha and shook her head. "It's going to be hell at
Thanksgiving, huh? Never mind the terror of Christmas. And we thought Granny
Flora was bad with Uncle Robert."
Tabitha's heart pounded at what her
sister was saying. "You don't mind?"
"Oh, I mind, all right. I would
sooner kill myself than ever hurt Kyrian, but I can't hurt you either and I'm
not willing to lose you over something that happened two thousand years ago.
Maybe we'll get lucky and one of the Daimons'll get Valerius before this is
over."
"Amanda!" Tabitha snapped.
"I was joking, Tabby.
Really." She took Valerius's hand and held it against Tabitha's. "One
of these is not like the other, one of these does not belong," she sang
under her breath.
Then she sobered. "Are you
going to ask Ash for Valerius's soul back?"
Tabitha felt a bit awkward with that
question. "We haven't gotten that far."
"I see."
Tabitha stiffened at the
"Mom" tone Amanda used. "What's that supposed to mean?"
Amanda looked at her as if she had
no clue. "It means nothing."
"Yeah, right," Tabitha
said, her anger mounting. "I know that tone. You don't think I'm serious
about him, do you?"
Amanda sputtered. "I didn't say
that."
"You didn't have to say that,
Amanda. You know, I'm really tired of being the brunt of the family jokes. I've
never understood why I'm the weird, crazy one when Tia dances naked out in the
bayous in voodoo ceremonies; Selena chains herself to fences; Karma is a bull
inseminator; Aunt Jasmine is trying to splice a Venus flytrap with kudzu to
make a man-killing plant to devour her ex—"
"She what?" Valerius
asked.
Tabitha ignored him. "And you,
precious Amanda, who is everyone's darling. First you unknowingly date a
half-Apollite whose adopted father is out to kill you for your powers and then
you end up married to a vampire that I have to tolerate even though I
personally think he's a pompous, overbearing, humorless boor. Why am I the
crazy one in all this?"
"Tabitha—"
"Don't Tabitha me when you know
it seriously pisses me off!"
Amanda's eyes flared. "Fine,
you want to know why you're the crazy one? Because you flit from one extreme to
the other. Good grief, you had, what? Nine majors in college?"
"Thirteen."
"See? You are a
flibbertigibbet. If not for us taking care of you, you'd be one of those
homeless people you feed every night and you know it. It's why you feed
them."
"I can take care of
myself."
"Yeah, right. How many jobs did
you have until Irena left you the store? She didn't want to retire, by the way.
Dad paid her to because it was the only job you ever held on to for more than a
few days."
"You bitch!" Tabitha
lunged for her sister, only to have Valerius intercept her.
"Tabitha, calm down," he
said, holding her back.
"No! I'm tired of being treated
like the village idiot by those who claim they love me."
"We wouldn't treat you that way
if you didn't act it. My God, Tabitha look at yourself. Look at why Eric left
you. I love you, I really do, but you have done nothing but cause strife all
your life."
"Don't you dare speak to her
that way," Valerius snarled as he moved away from Tabitha to confront
Amanda. "I don't give a damn who you are, I'll throw you out. No one talks
to her like that. No one. There is nothing wrong with Tabitha. She's nothing
but kindness to anyone. If you can't see all her good qualities, then there's
something seriously wrong with you."
A smile instantly broke across
Amanda's face. "And that really was what I needed to know."
"You were playing with
me?" Tabitha snapped.
"No," Amanda said sternly.
"This is no playing matter. But before I go make my husband absolutely
miserable, I have to know that you two are serious and that Valerius isn't just
another one of your 'let me make my family crazy' fixations."
Tabitha glared at her as her
volatile emotions swirled. "There are times, Mandy, when I think I hate
you."
"I know. Bring him by the house
tonight and we'll try this again."
"I can't believe you're doing
this for us," Valerius said.
Amanda took a deep breath. "No
offense, I'm not. I'm doing this for Kyrian. Ash told me something and I'm here
to make sure it happens."
And with that, she turned and headed
for the door.
"Mandy?" Tabitha called,
stopping her before she left. "Do we have a truce?"
"No. We have a volatile,
homicidal family. But at least it won't be boring. I'll see you tonight."
Tabitha watched as her sister left.
Deep in the pit of her stomach, a strong sense of foreboding settled. It was
bleak and harsh. Frightening and cold.
It was almost as if she knew
instinctively that tonight one of them would die…
Chapter 14
Dressed all in black lace, Apollymi
sat looking to the uninitiated like a beautiful, ethereal blonde angel on her
settee. She stared out of the open grand French doors onto her garden, where
only black flowers grew in memory of her one true son who had been brutally
taken from her.
Even after all these centuries, her
mother's heart ached with the loss of him. With the feral, unending need she
had to hold her child to her. To feel his warm touch.
What good was it to be a god when
she couldn't have the only wish that had ever burned inside her?
This day was the most painful of all
days. For this was the very day when she had given birth to her beautiful,
perfect son.
And this had been the day they had
taken him from her forever.
Tears glittered in her eyes as she
lifted the small black pillow from her lap to her face and inhaled the spicy
scent of it. Her son's scent. Closing her eyes, she summoned an image of his
precious, most beloved face in her mind. Heard the sound of his commanding
voice.
"I need you back,
Apostolos." But her whisper went unheard and she knew it.
"He is here, Benevolent
One."
Apollymi paused as she heard
Sabine's voice from behind her. Sabine was her most trusted Charonte servant,
since Xedrix had vanished on the night the Greek god Dionysus and the Celtic
god Camulus had sought to free her from her prison in Kalosis.
Apollymi returned the pillow to her
lap as she dismissed the orange-fleshed, winged demon.
"You summoned me, Mother?"
Stryker asked as he came toward her.
She forced herself not to betray the
fact that she knew he had turned on her. He thought himself clever.
It was enough to make her laugh.
No one could ever defeat the
Destroyer. It was why she was imprisoned. She could be contained, but never
annihilated. It was a lesson Stryker would learn one day all too soon.
But not today. Today, she still
needed him.
"It is time, m'gios." The
Atlantean term for "my son" was bitter as always on her tongue. He
was a very poor substitute for the male child she had birthed. "Tonight
will be the perfect time to strike. It is a full moon in New Orleans and the
Dark-Hunters will be distracted."
And she wanted that human child! It
was time to put an end to her captivity once and for all.
Marissa Hunter was a mild sacrifice
she needed to return her son to his real, living state. And by all the power of
Atlantis, she would restore her son.
No other life, not even her own, was
worth one tiny part of his.
Stryker inclined his head.
"Indeed, Mother. I've already set loose my Daimons to wreak carnage.
Desiderius will return with the child at midnight and when they leave tonight,
there won't be a single Dark-Hunter left breathing."
"Good. I don't care how many
Spathi die or anyone else. I must have that child!"
She felt Stryker starting to leave.
"Strykerius?" she called.
"Yes, Mother?"
"Serve me well and you will be
rewarded beyond measure. Betray me and there is nothing that can save you from
my wrath."
Stryker narrowed his eyes on the
goddess, who refused to even look at him. "I would never dream of
betraying you, Mother," he said, masking the rancor of his tone.
No, he wasn't going to betray her
tonight.
He was going to kill her.
After leaving her temple, Stryker
summoned his Illuminati together before he opened the bolt-hole that would
take his men to New Orleans. There they would do his will while he stayed
safely tucked away from the Destroyer's notice. It was time he stopped the age-old
conflict between human and Apollite.
A new era was dawning, and mankind…
It was time they learned their
inferior place.
As for Acheron, now that he knew
what the man really was, he knew how to neutralize him.
After all, not even the great
Acheron could be in two places at once, nor could he stand against the assault
that was about to begin.
Desiderius paused outside of a small
voodoo shop. It was quaint and charming, and to most tourists, it looked like
all the others.
The only thing that separated this
store from all the rest that occupied designated areas of the French Quarter
was the fact that here he sensed real power.
Closing his eyes, he inhaled the
rich, musty scent of it. As a Daimon, he'd need her soul to live, but since he
was in the body of a Dark-Hunter…
Killing humans was done for simple
pleasure now, not for sustenance.
He smiled to himself as he stepped
inside to find his target. It only took a second to locate her behind the
counter, where she was waiting on a tourist who was buying a love potion.
"Hi, Ulric!" his victim
said excitedly as the customer walked out of the store and left them alone.
Ah, good, she knew the Dark-Hunter.
It would make killing her all the easier.
"Hi," he said, stepping up
to the counter. "How are you tonight?"
"I was just about to close. I'm
really glad you came by. After everything that's been happening around here,
well… it's good to see a friendly face."
Desiderius's gaze went past her
shoulder to a small snapshot hanging on a calendar that advertised scented
candles. It was of nine women, two of whom he knew instantly.
His gaze darkened.
"How are Tabitha and
Amanda?" he asked.
"They're doing okay. All things
considered. Mandy's afraid to leave the house and Tabby… you've probably met
her on the street."
Yes, Amanda was afraid to leave her
house, which made their getting into it almost impossible.
But there was one way he knew to
draw the sorceress out of her home.
He gave the woman behind the counter
a tight-lipped smile. "Would you like for me to walk you home?"
"What a sweetie. Thanks,
that'll be great. Just give me a sec to grab the money envelope and I'll do the
paperwork at home."
Desiderius licked his lips. He could
already taste her blood…
The night was eerily quiet as Ash
walked alone through the St. Louis Cemetery No. 1 searching for Daimons who
often came to claim the souls of the dead who had refused to move on.
The New Orleans natives called these
impressive stone cemeteries the Cities of the Dead, a title that was wholly
apropos. Because the town was below sea level, no one could bury the dead
without the bodies making a most unwelcomed reappearance.
The full moon above cast distorted
shadows of the statuary along the brick, stone, and marble crypts-some of which
were taller than even he was. Although in places rather haphazard, most of the
tombs were arranged into blocks that did in fact strangely mirror the layout
and design of a city.
Each crypt was elegantly crafted as
a monument to those whose remains it contained. There were three
classifications for the tombs: wall vaults; family vaults; and society vaults
that were reserved for specific groups, like the round Italian Society tomb, which
was the largest crypt there, and one that dominated the cemetery.
Most of the tombs showed signs of
their age by having broken pieces of masonry either missing or askew, along
with collapsed roofs, and blackened mold that grew all over them. Many held
scrolled wrought-iron gates and fences.
It was beautiful here. Peaceful.
Although the strategically placed holes in the exterior walls that allowed
muggers to come and go at will were a constant reminder of how some of the
occupants had come to reside here.
Ash reached out and touched the
grave of Marie Laveaux, the famous voodoo maven of the city. Her grave was
marked with Xs from those who would pay tribute to her.
She'd been a remarkable woman and in
his long life, she had been the only human to know him for what he really was.
Sirens sounded off in the distance
as police headed for a new crime scene.
As he turned away, Ash felt a ripple
go through him like a debilitating blow. He hissed in pain as he felt a
fragile, forbidden doorway opening and felt the evil pouring out of it.
The Illuminati were leaving Kalosis…
Suddenly, his vision became cloudy.
Ash no longer saw anything around
him, overwhelmed with sounds and images of souls screaming in agony as they
died. It was a sound unheard by mortals, but one that cut through him like
shattering glass.
The order of the universe was being
altered.
"Atropos!" he called,
summoning the Greek goddess of fate who was responsible for cutting the life
strands of mortals.
Tall and blonde with furious eyes,
she appeared beside him instantly. "What?" she snapped.
The two of them had never gotten
along; in truth, none of the Moirae could stand him. Not that he cared. He had
far more reasons to hate them than they had to hate him.
Ash leaned back against one of the
old crypts as he tried to staunch some of his pain.
"What are you doing?" he
gasped.
"It's not me," she said
indignantly. "It's something from your side, not ours. We have no control
over it. If you want it to stop, stop it."
She vanished.
Wrapping his arms around his
stomach, Ash slid to the ground. The pain… it was biting into him even more. He
couldn't breathe. Couldn't think.
The screams rang throughout his head
until it brought tears to his eyes.
Without his bidding, Simi came off
his arm. "Akri?" she said, kneeling beside him. "What hurts you,
akri?"
"Sim," he panted through
the vicious stabs. "I c-can't…" His words trailed off into a groan.
She doubled in size and transformed
from a young woman into her demon form. Her skin and horns were red, and her
hair and lips were black, while her eyes glowed a dull yellow in the darkness.
She pulled him away from the crypt
long enough to slide herself between him and the stone, then she wrapped her
body around his. Her midnight wings folded around both of them as a protective
cloak.
Ash's lips chattered from the agony
as tears flowed from his eyes. He felt as if something were rupturing inside
him. He had to block the screams or he would be useless.
Simi placed her cheek against his
and hummed an ancient lullaby as she rocked him soothingly.
"The Simi has you, akri, and
she'll make all the voices go away."
Ash leaned back in her arms and
prayed she was right. Because if she didn't restore him soon, there would be no
one to repair what was being torn apart.
Tabitha was filled with such a
sudden sense of pain that it stopped her dead in her tracks.
Gasping, she reached out for
Valerius, who was walking beside her.
"Tabitha? Is something
wrong?"
"Tia," she gasped, her
heart aching in a pain so profound that she wasn't sure how she maintained her
stance. "Something's happened to her. I know it."
"Tab—"
"I know it!" she shrieked,
clutching his shirt. "Oh God, no!" She grabbed her phone and started
dialing Tia's number as she ran toward her sister's store. They were only six
blocks away.
No one answered.
She dialed Amanda, her heart
thumping in her chest as she ran. This couldn't be happening. She had to be
wrong.
She had to be!
"Tabitha?" She heard the
tears in Amanda's voice.
"It's true, isn't it? You feel
it, too?"
"Kyrian won't let me leave the
house. He says it's too dangerous."
"Don't worry, I'm on the street
and I'll call you as soon as I know something."
Tabitha clutched the phone in her
hand as they neared the dark store.
Everything looked normal…
Valerius slowed down as he sensed
death. There was an evil pall that hung over the store. He'd been a Dark-Hunter
long enough to know even that much without any psychic abilities.
Tabitha tried the front door, which
was locked.
"Tia!" she shouted,
knocking on it. "You still here?"
No one answered.
She led him around back, into a
small courtyard. The back door to the shop had been left ajar.
Valerius held his breath at the
confirmation of his fears. Tabitha slowed down to a careful walk.
"Tia?" she called again.
Valerius pulled her away from the
back door. "Stay behind me."
"She's my sister!"
"And I'm immortal. Stay behind
me."
Luckily, she nodded.
Valerius opened the door carefully
as he looked for anyone to move on them.
No one did.
The back room appeared completely
normal. Nothing was out of place. It looked just as it had a few weeks ago when
Tia had tended him here.
His hand on the dagger at his waist,
he carefully approached the door to the shop, which was also slightly ajar. He
pushed it open, then froze when he saw the pair of shoes sticking out from
behind the counter.
His heart stopped.
"Stay here, Tabitha."
"But—"
"Dammit, Tabitha, stay!"
"I am not your bitch, General,
and you don't talk to me that way!"
He knew it was her fear that made
her so angry. She never knew how to cope with strong emotions. "Please,
Tabitha. Stay here while I look."
She nodded.
Valerius pulled away and walked
cautiously across the floor to where he saw the shoes. As he drew nearer, he
saw the rest of the body.
Shit.
His chest tight and aching, he
turned Tia over to see her glazed eyes staring out at nothing. Her neck was torn
open as if a Daimon had attacked her, but her soul was still here. He could
feel it.
Why would a Daimon not take her
soul?
As he reached to close her eyes, he
realized something else. Tabitha wasn't with him.
Panic threatened to consume him. It
wasn't like her to really listen. Rising quickly, he dashed back to the
storeroom, where he found her sitting before a video surveillance console that
showed the flickering black-and-white images of Tia's death.
Tabitha sat there with tears pouring
out of her eyes as she held her hands crossed over her lips. Her sobs were
silent, yet they shook her entire body.
"I'm so sorry, Tabitha,"
he whispered before he shut off the monitor and pulled her into his arms.
"She can't be dead!" she
wailed as she clutched him to her. "This isn't true. Not my sister. She's
not dead. She's not!"
He didn't speak as he rocked her
gently in his arms.
She screamed out in pain before she
shoved him away from her and ran for the storefront.
"Tabitha, no!" he snapped,
pulling her back before she saw Tia's body. "You don't need to see her
like that."
She turned on him with a shriek and
shoved him back. "Damn you! Damn all of you for this. Why didn't you just
kill me? Why kill my sister? Why…?"
Her eyes widened in horror.
"Oh, God, they're going for my family." She pulled her phone out, no
doubt to call Amanda again.
While she called her family, he
pulled his Nextel out to notify the others what had happened. "Code Red to
everyone," he said, his voice tight. "Tia Devereaux has been slain
inside her store. Everyone needs to pull back and secure their families."
One by one, the Dark-Hunters and
Squires checked in: Otto, Nick, Kyr, Rogue, Zoe, Jean-Luc, Ulric, Janice,
Kassim-even Talon, Kyrian, and Julian. But there was no sign of Acheron.
Valerius tried to buzz him, then
call him.
There was no answer.
His blood ran cold. Had the Daimons
gotten to Acheron already and hurt him again?
"I love you, Mandy,"
Tabitha said as her lips quivered from her grief. "You be careful, okay?
I'm going to find this bastard and I'm going to kill him tonight."
Valerius glanced to the now blank
monitor screen. "Do you know who killed her?" he asked.
Tabitha nodded. "It was Ulric
and now I'm going to kill him."
Nick was walking down Ursulines,
headed for the house on Bourbon Street that he shared with his mother. After
hearing Valerius's call about Tia, he'd gone immediately to check on his
mother, who was working late at Sanctuary.
Since he'd planned on hanging around
the outside of the bar to watch out for her until it was time for her to leave,
he'd practically been there already when the call went out.
As soon as he'd reached the
saloon-style doors that were monitored by Dev Peltier, one of the bears who
owned Sanctuary, he'd been told that his mother had left work early because she
wasn't feeling well. Nick had been absolutely furious with the bear until Dev
had told him that Ulric had agreed to escort her home.
Given Nick's busted ribs, his mom
was a lot safer with a Dark-Hunter than she would have been with him anyway.
Still, he had a need inside him to check on her to make sure she was all right.
It'd been just the two of them his
whole life. Impregnated by a career felon when she was only fifteen, his mother
had been cast out the door to fend for herself. He wouldn't have blamed her had
she given him up, but she hadn't.
"You're the only thing in my
life I ever did right, Nicky, and I thank God every night for giving me
you."
It was why he loved her so much.
Nick had never met his grandparents
on either side. Hell, he'd only met his father a handful of times and only once
that he really remembered. It'd been when Nick was ten and his father had
needed a place to crash for the longest stretch of freedom the man had known as
an adult-three whole months.
In a bad clichй, his father moved
in, drank beer constantly, and knocked the two of them around before one of his
felon friends had convinced him to take a stab at bank robbery, where his
father had shot four people dead just for the hell of it. His father had been
quickly convicted, then died a year later when some inmate had cut his throat
during a prison riot.
Cherise Gautier left much to be
desired when it came to her taste in men, but as a mother…
She was perfect.
And Nick would do anything in the
world for her.
He heard static from his Nextel,
which he expected to be Otto screwing with him again.
It wasn't.
Valerius's accented voice broke the
stillness. "Nick, are you there?"
Just what he needed tonight.
Grimacing, he jerked the phone off his belt. "What?" he snapped.
"I wanted to let you know that
Ulric is Desiderius. He's already killed Tia. I don't know who's next, but I
think you might want to check on your mother." Suddenly, Valerius's voice
changed to one that made his blood run cold.
"Oh, wait…" Desiderius
said tauntingly, "she's dead now." He made a sound of smacking his
lips. "Hmmm, type O negative. My favorite. Of course, you'll be glad to
know her last thoughts were of you."
Nick stopped moving for an instant
before he dropped the phone and started running as fast as he could toward his
house.
Over and over, he saw images of his
mother in his mind. Of her gently teasing him while he grew up. The pride on
her face the day he'd told her he was going to college.
His battered ribs ached and
throbbed, but he didn't care if he ruptured both lungs.
He had to get to her.
By the time he reached the gate to
his driveway, he was shaking so badly that he could barely punch in the code.
"Goddammit, open!" he
snarled as the first code was rejected.
He reentered it.
The gates swung open slowly.
Ominously.
Panting from fear and exertion, he
raced up the drive to the back door.
It was unlocked. Nick entered, ready
to do battle. He stopped in the kitchen to pull his Glock.31 out of the drawer
by the stove. He checked the mag clip to make sure it was fully loaded with all
seventeen rounds.
"Mom?" he called as he
slid the mag in. "Mom, it's Nick, are you home?"
Only silence answered him.
His heart hammering, Nick crept
through the house, room by room, expecting to be attacked.
He found absolutely nothing, until
he reached the upstairs sitting room. At first, it looked like his mother was
sitting in her chair like she'd done a million times before when he'd come home
to catch her waiting for him.
He'd bought this house just for this
room alone. His mother loved to read romance novels. All her life, she'd
dreamed of owning a home where she could have a perfect, five-sided room to
read her books in peace. The sitting room was lined with custom-made bookshelves.
Every inch of every shelf in here
held a paperback that she had lovingly chosen and cherished.
"Mom?" he said, his voice
breaking off into a sob. His hand shook as he held the gun out and stared
through misty eyes at the blond hair he could see over the top of the leather
recliner. "Please talk to me, Mom, please." She didn't move.
He fought back his tears as he moved
slowly forward until he could touch her. Still, she was silent.
Nick cried out in grief as he buried
his hand in her soft hair and saw the paleness of her face. The vicious
bite-wound on her neck.
"No, Mommy, no!" he sobbed
as he knelt beside her. "Dammit, Mom, don't be dead!"
Only this time mere was no comfort
to be found in her touch. No soft, loving voice to tell him that men didn't
cry. They didn't show pain.
But how could any man withstand this
kind of brutal agony?
This was his fault. All his fault.
He'd been the idiot who had befriended the Dark-Hunters. Had he ever told her
the truth… She hadn't stood a chance.
"Mommy," he breathed
against her cold face as he rocked her in his arms. "I'm so sorry. I'm so
sorry. I didn't mean to hurt you. I didn't. Please wake up, please. Oh, please,
Mom, don't leave me."
Then his rage took hold. It steamed
through his veins and screamed out in shattering waves that tore him apart.
"Artemis!" he shouted. "I summon you to human form. Now!"
She appeared almost instantly with
her hands on her hips and in a pique.
At least until she saw his mother's
body.
"What is this?" she asked,
curling her lip as if the sight of death disgusted her. "You're Acheron's
friend Nick, aren't you?"
Nick laid his mother back in her
chair, brushed the tears from his eyes with the back of his hand, and rose
slowly to his feet. "I demand vengeance on the Daimon who did this and I
demand it now."
She made a rude noise of dismissal.
"You can demand all you want to, human, you're not going to get it."
"Why not? You give it to every
other asshole who demands it. Make me a Dark-Hunter. You owe it to me."
She cocked her head and arched a
brow at him. "I owe you nothing, human. And in case you haven't noticed,
you imbecile, you have to be dead before you can become a Dark-Hunter."
She let out a disgusted sigh. "Didn't you learn anything from
Acheron?"
Artemis took a step back, intending
to return home to Olympus, but before she could, the human knelt to the ground
and picked up a gun.
"Make me a Dark-Hunter,"
he snarled an instant before he pulled the trigger.
Artemis froze at the loud, echoing
sound of the gunshot. She couldn't breathe as she took in the sight of the man
lying dead at her feet.
"Oh, no," she said
breathlessly as her heart pounded. Acheron's human friend had just killed
himself… right in front of her!
What was she going to do?
Her panicked thoughts raced.
"He'll blame me for this." He'd never forgive her. Never. Even though
it wasn't her fault, Acheron would find some way to blame it all on her, to say
that she should have known and should have stopped him.
She stared in horror at the gore
that spattered the front of her white dress. She'd never seen such before.
"Oh, think, Artemis,
think…" But she couldn't think straight. All she could hear was the sound
of Acheron in her head as he told her why Nick and his mother meant so much to
him.
"You'll never understand,
Artie. They had nothing but each other and instead of blaming each other for
ruining their lives, which many people would do, they bonded. Cherise's life
has sucked and yet she's still kind and giving to everyone she meets. One day,
Nick's going to marry and give her a houseful of grandchildren to love. Zeus
knows, they both deserve it."
Only now Nick lay dead at her feet.
Dead by his own hand, and he was
Catholic.
She could smell the sulphur already.
"Acheron!" she called,
allowing her voice to travel through all dimensions. She had to tell him before
it was too late. Only he could fix this.
He didn't answer.
"Acheron!" she tried
again.
Again, he was silent.
"What do I do?" She was
forbidden to make a Dark-Hunter from a suicide. But if she left Nick dead, his
soul would be claimed by Lucifer and he would spend eternity in hell being
tormented.
Either way, she would lose. Acheron
would blame her for letting his friend suffer. He would think she'd done this
on purpose just to hurt him.
And if she saved Nick…
The consequences didn't bear
thinking on.
But as she stood there in
indecision, one image came and stayed in her mind. The look on Acheron's face
the day she had turned her back on his pain.
It was the only thing in her life
that she truly regretted. The one thing she would change if she could.
There was no real choice here. She
couldn't hurt Acheron like that again. Ever.
Kneeling down, she pulled Nick's
body to her and restored him to what he'd been before the gunshot. She brushed
his hair back from his face and spoke the forbidden words of a long-dead
civilization.
The stone appeared in her hand. She
felt its heat as his soul entered it
Two seconds later, Nick's eyes
opened. No longer blue, they were jet-black. He hissed as pain from the light
pierced his now-sensitive eyes.
"Why didn't you call for
Acheron instead of me?" she asked him quietly.
"He was mad at me," he
said, lisping from the fangs that he had yet to grow accustomed to. "He
told me I should kill myself and save him the trouble of it."
Artemis winced as she heard those
words. Her poor Acheron. He would never forgive himself for this.
Nor would he forgive her.
Nick pushed himself up. "I want
my vengeance."
"I'm sorry, Nick," she
whispered. "I can't give it to you. You didn't adhere to the course of the
bargain."
"What?"
Before he could say anything more,
she raised her hand and sent him to a special room in her temple.
"Where are you, Acheron?"
she whispered. The world was falling apart and he was nowhere to be heard.
It wasn't like him to be so
careless.
Afraid something bad had befallen
him, she closed her eyes and searched for him.
Desiderius walked down the street as
if he owned it. And why not?
He did.
He held his arms out and leaned his
head back as he heard the screams of the innocent in his head.
"You should be here,
Stryker," he said with a laugh. Only Stryker could truly appreciate the
beauty that was this night.
But time was running out.
He had to return with the Hunter
child by midnight or the Destroyer would revoke his body.
"Father?"
He turned at the sound of his son's
voice. "Yes?"
"Acheron is still missing, just
as Stryker promised, and we've found our way in."
Desiderius laughed. At long last he
would have his revenge on Amanda and Kyrian.
And as soon as he delivered up the
child, he would finish off the main course with Tabitha for dessert.
Chapter 15
Valerius was torn between his
loyalties and his duties. The Dark-Hunter in him wanted to find Acheron, but
the man inside refused to leave Tabitha, who was keeping vigil in her sister's
store until the coroner, Tate, arrived.
One by one, she'd contacted her
family and assured herself that they were safe.
She hesitated on the last number to
be called. "I can't call my mama and tell her," she said, her tears
welling. "I can't."
The phone rang.
By the look on her face as she saw
the caller ID, he had a good idea of who it was.
Valerius pried the cell phone from
her hand and flipped it open. "Tabitha Devereaux," he said quietly.
"Who is this?" the woman
sounded a bit frantic.
"I'm…" He hesitated at
giving her his full name since she would no doubt register it as the name of an
enemy and panic even more. "Val," he said firmly. "I'm a friend
of Tabitha's."
"This is her mother. I need to
know she's okay."
"Tabitha," he said,
gentling his voice as he offered her the phone. "Your mother wants to know
if you're okay."
She cleared her throat, but didn't
take the phone from his hand. "I'm fine, Mama. Don't worry."
Valerius put the phone back up to
his ear. "Mrs. Devereaux-"
"Don't say it," she said,
her voice breaking. "I already know and I need my baby girl home with me.
I don't want her to be alone. Could you please bring Tabitha here?"
"Yes."
She hung up.
Valerius ended the call, then
returned the phone to Tabitha, who slipped it into her pocket.
He felt completely helpless against
her grief, and he hated that most of all. It seemed like there should be
something that he could say at such a moment and yet he knew from personal
experience that there wasn't.
All he could do was hold her.
"Hey, everyone?" Otto's
voice called out over the Nextel intercom. "I'm at Nick's house. The
front gate was open and something really bad went down here. I need a head
count immediately."
Kyr came back right away, as did
Talon and Janice. Julian answered in next, followed by Zoe and then Valerius.
They all waited for the next one to
check in.
No one did.
"Nick?" Otto called.
"You out there, Cajun? Come on, buddy, answer me with something
smart-ass."
No answer.
Valerius went cold.
"Jean-Luc?" Otto asked.
Again, nothing.
"Acheron?"
A feeling of severe dread ran
through Valerius as Tabitha gave him a panicked look.
They knew the next name before Otto
spoke it. "Kyrian? Kassim?" Only static filled the line.
Valerius pulled the Nextel off his
belt and pushed for Otto alone. "What happened at Nick's?"
"Cherise is dead and there's no
sign of him. I found his gun lying in a pool of blood by his mother's body with
one round missing, but it's not what killed Cherise."
Valerius ground his teeth as he
understood Otto's meaning. "Daimon attack?"
"Yeah."
Tabitha cursed, then bolted off her
stool. "I have to get to Amanda."
"Otto, meet us at
Kyrian's." He opened the line back out to the group. "Janice? Talon?
Zoe? Can you start searching for Jean-Luc?"
"Who left you in charge,
Roman?" Zoe sneered. Valerius wasn't in the mood for this bullshit as he
went after Tabitha. "Stow it, Amazon. This isn't about my heritage. This
is about your brothers-in-arms and their lives."
Julian came back at him.
"I'll meet you at Kyrian's."
"No, please. Stay with your wife
and children. Make sure they're safe."
"All right. Let me know what
you find out." Tabitha was already in the driver's seat of her Mini
Cooper. Valerius got inside and slammed the door shut.
She threw it in reverse and didn't
bother to open the wooden gate. She crashed through it as she squealed off into
the street.
Valerius braced himself against the
dashboard while she careened them through traffic at a deadly pace, toward her
sister's house.
Once they reached it, she didn't
stop at Amanda's tall iron gate, either. Valerius held his arm up to shield his
face as she drove straight through it and tore the iron posts off their stone
facings.
Tabitha skidded to a stop just in
front of the door and launched herself from the car without even turning it
off.
Valerius didn't hesitate to follow.
From the outside of the house,
everything looked normal. The lights were on, and as Tabitha kicked open the
front door, they could hear a television somewhere upstairs.
"Mandy?" Tabitha screamed
out in a shrill tone.
Her sister didn't answer her.
"Hey, Dad?" someone called
from upstairs. "Your dessert's here."
Artemis paused outside the cemetery
where she sensed Acheron's presence. She shivered in revulsion. She'd always
hated such places, while he seemed to prefer them.
"Acheron?" she called as
she walked through the stone wall.
The dark ground was uneven, making
it hard for her to walk. So she floated through the area.
"Acheron?"
A flash of fire shot near her head.
Artemis ducked and moved to return
the blast until she caught sight of Acheron's pet. She curled her lip at the
demon until she saw Acheron lying in its arms. He looked terrible as he writhed
there as if in the throes of torture.
"What have you done to
him?" Artemis demanded of the creature.
The demon hissed at her. "The
Simi did nothing, you heifer-goddess. You the one who hurts my akri. Not
me."
Any other time, Artemis might argue
with it, but Acheron lay there as if he were in excruciating pain.
"What happened to him?"
"It's the souls them Daimons
are eating. They scream when they die and there are too many of them tonight.
The Simi can't make it go away."
"Acheron?" Artemis tried
again as she knelt beside him. "Can you hear me?"
He recoiled from her.
She tried to reach for him only to
have the demon lunge at her.
"Don't you touch my akri!"
Damn the Charontes! The only one who
could control them was…
No, there were two people alive who
could control them.
"Apollymi?" she spoke to
the mist around her. "Can you hear me?"
Evil laughter echoed on the breeze.
The Atlantean goddess couldn't come out of her prison in form, but her powers
were so great that she could extend her will and voice even through her
limitations. "So, you speak to me, bitch. Why should I listen?"
Artemis clamped her temper down
before she answered insult with insult and drove the older goddess away.
"I can't help Acheron. His demon won't let me. I need your help."
"And why should I care?"
"Because I…" Artemis
ground her teeth together before she spoke the most difficult word of all for
her. "Please. Please, help me."
"What will you give me for this
service? Will you return my baby to me?"
Artemis curled her lip at the
thought. There was no way she'd ever release him. "I can't do that and you
know it."
She felt Apollymi pulling away.
"No!" she said hurriedly.
"Do me this favor and I'll release Katra from my service. She'll be yours
alone to command and will no longer have torn loyalties between me and
you."
Once more she heard the ancient
Atlantean goddess laughing at her.
The laughter ended on a short note.
"I would have helped him anyway, you gullible chit. But I thank you for
the gift."
A red, eerie haze fell over the area
as the Destroyer withdrew her voice. It formed the shape of a hand that then
cradled Acheron's body. Acheron cried out as if the pain were more than he
could bear. His whole body turned rigid and strained.
"Akri?" the demon wailed,
its face terrified.
Then suddenly, Acheron went
completely limp as the mist evaporated.
Artemis let her breath out slowly as
she watched him in fear that Apollymi might have actually worsened his
condition just for spite. The demon cuddled him to its bosom while it stroked
his long black hair away from his face.
His chest rose and fell normally.
"Sim?" he breathed as he
looked up at the demon with a tender expression that made Artemis hate him.
"Sh, akri, you needs to rest
for the Simi."
He raked his hand through his hair
until he noticed Artemis standing in front of him. All the tenderness fled his
expression. "What are you doing…"
His voice trailed off as if he
suddenly became aware of something.
He vanished instantly, leaving her
and the demon alone in the graveyard.
Folding her arms over her chest,
Artemis huffed at his rudeness. "A thank-you would have been nice,
Acheron!"
But she knew he didn't hear her. He
had a remarkable ability to tune her out.
Her only consolation was the demon
looked every bit as baffled until its eyes widened and it flashed to the form
of a human female with horns.
"They gots baby Marissa!"
the demon breathed before it too vanished.
Tabitha lunged at the Daimon, who
laughed as he stepped to the side and brought his fist down across her back.
Pain exploded down her spine.
Valerius roared with rage before he
shot a bolt at the Daimon.
It missed.
The Daimon laughed again.
"Let's see if the Roman general dies crying for his human love the same
way the Greek did."
Tabitha couldn't breathe as she
heard those words. Kyrian wasn't dead. He wasn't.
"You liar!" she snarled.
She turned to watch Valerius fight
the Daimon as more of them came running from the stairs. They swarmed into the
room like angry ants.
Two of them grabbed her. Tabitha
slugged them, but her blows seemed to glance off them without fazing them at
all.
Valerius broke free from his
opponent to hand her one of his swords.
She took it from him before she
turned to face three Daimons. She stabbed the one nearest her, but he didn't
explode.
He smiled at her instead. "You
don't kill the servants of the goddess, human. The Illuminati aren't typical
Daimons."
She swallowed her panic before it
defeated her. "Valerius? What goddess are they talking about?"
"There's only one goddess, you
pathetic fool. And it's not Artemis," the Illuminati said an instant
before sinking his teeth into her neck.
Tabitha cried out from pain.
Suddenly, she was thrown away from
them. She looked to see Valerius engaging the Daimons.
"Don't you touch her."
The Daimon tsked at him. "Don't
worry, Dark-Hunter, before she dies, we'll all sample her blood. Just as we did her sister."
Tabitha screamed as pain racked her.
"Damn you!"
Another Daimon seized her from
behind. "Of course we're damned. The Spathi wouldn't have it any other
way." He backhanded her, knocking her off her feet.
Tabitha tasted the blood on her
lips, but she wasn't daunted. She wasn't about to let them get away with this.
As she stumbled away from the Daimon
toward her sword that had skidded to the foot of the stairs, she glanced
upstairs and froze. Horror consumed her.
Kyrian lay at the top of staircase,
his body on the landing while his head rested on a step, his right arm fully
extended. A bloodied Greek sword had fallen halfway down the stairs. His
sightless eyes were open and a small trail of blood ran from his lips. But it
was the gaping wound in his chest that held her transfixed.
They had killed him.
A few feet away from his body, two
bare, feminine legs peeked out from under the hem of a pink nightgown in the
doorway of the nursery.
And then she saw Ulric stepping over
Amanda's body with a crying Marissa in his arms as he started for the stairs.
"Daddy!" the toddler
wailed as she fought against the tight hold the Daimon had on her to reach her
father. Pictures flew from the wall into Ulric, who paid them no heed.
"Daddy, Mama, get up."
Marissa pulled the Daimon's hair and bit at him. "Get up!"
"Amanda! Amanda! Amanda!"
Tabitha didn't know who at first was calling her sister's name as terror filled
her. It wasn't until she couldn't scream anymore that she realized the
hysterical shrieks were hers.
Grabbing her sword, she ran up the
stairs for the Daimon. He knocked her back. She slipped on Kyrian's blood and
went tumbling back down.
Valerius caught her from behind
before she fell the whole way.
"Run, Tabitha," he
breathed in her ear.
"I can't. That's my niece and
I'll be damned if he's going to get her without a fight."
She pushed herself away from
Valerius as a phantom wind whipped through the room. It tore through the house
with a vengeance, hurtling lamps, plants, and anything small around.
And as it touched the Daimons, they
fell one by one with nothing more than a gasp.
Clutching Marissa to him,
Desiderius, who was still in Ulric's body, ran past her and Valerius into the
living room.
Tabitha followed, intending to
reclaim her niece.
"Desi!" he cried as his
son fell and then vanished into nothingness. "Desi!"
"It hurts, doesn't it?"
Tabitha turned to face the voice she
knew so well.
It was Acheron.
He walked slowly through the
shattered doorway as if nothing odd had happened.
Marissa stopped crying the instant
she saw him. "Akri, akri!" she called, reaching out for him.
"What the hell are you?"
Desiderius asked.
Ash held his hand out and Marissa
was torn free from Desiderius's arms. She floated across the room to Ash, who
cuddled her close to his chest.
"I'm her godfather, with a
heavy emphasis on the god part." Ash placed a kiss on Marissa's head.
"Rissa want her mommy and
daddy, akri," Marissa said as she locked her tiny arms around Ash's neck
and squeezed him tight. "Make them get up."
"Don't worry, ma komatia"
Ash said soothingly. "Everything's fine now."
Shrieking, Desiderius lunged at them
and rebounded off what appeared to be an invisible wall.
Valerius stood beside Tabitha as
Acheron approached them.
Ash held his hand out and Kyrian's
sword flew into his grip. He handed it to Tabitha. "Have at it, Tabby.
Desiderius is all yours."
"Stryker!" Desiderius
called as he pulled out what appeared to be an ancient amulet. "Open the
portal."
"There is no portal," Ash
said with a sneer. "Not for you, asshole."
For the first time since the whole
horrendous night had started, Tabitha smiled. "Eat steel, you sorry
bastard!"
She ran at him.
Valerius went to help her. In her
current mood, she wasn't thinking straight and he wasn't about to see her hurt.
She'd been hurt enough.
While Tabitha attacked the Daimon,
Acheron paused on the stairs beside Kyrian's body.
"Close your eyes, Marissa, and
make a wish for your daddy to hold you."
She clenched her eyes shut.
"Daddy, hold me."
Valerius paused as Kyrian took a
deep breath and blinked his eyes. The Greek looked as dazed as Valerius felt
while he helped Tabitha fight the Daimon.
Ash handed Kyrian his daughter, who
squealed in happiness that her father was alive. Then the Atlantean continued
up the stairs.
Valerius didn't have time to
contemplate the total bizarreness of that as Desiderius lunged for Tabitha.
He pulled the Daimon back.
"Forget it," he snarled.
Desiderius fought his hold.
Yelling in triumph, Tabitha plunged
her sword through Desiderius's heart. Valerius jumped back an instant before
the blade went through the body and would have stabbed him as well.
Tabitha pulled it out and smiled
until the wound on Desiderius healed.
He laughed. "I'm a Dark-Hunter,
bitch. You can't—"
His words were silenced as Valerius
delivered the one blow that would kill a Dark-Hunter.
He severed the Daimon's head from
his shoulders.
"No one calls her a bitch and
lives," Valerius snarled as Desiderius collapsed.
Tabitha was frozen completely by the
grisly sight. She should have felt avenged.
She didn't.
Nothing could ease the pain this
night had wrought.
Valerius pulled her into his arms
and turned her away from the body as Otto came crashing through the door's
remains.
He stood there, surveying the damage
that had once been her sister's prized home.
"Do I want to know?" Otto
whispered.
She shook her head.
"Amanda," she breathed in
an agonized tone as her tears started again.
How could her twin be dead?
"Tabby?"
Tabitha's breath caught in her
throat as she heard her sister's voice from the stairs. She turned her head
slowly, almost afraid it would be another specter.
It wasn't.
Amanda stood there, her face pale,
her hair disheveled, her gown coated in blood.
But she was alive!
Shrieking, Tabitha ran for her and
pulled her into her arms, holding her tight as her tears flowed yet again, only
this time in happiness.
Amanda was alive! The words echoed
in her mind.
"I love you, I love you, I love
you!" she breathed against her sister's neck. "And if you ever die on
me again, I'll kill you so dead!"
The two of them stood there locked
in an embrace.
Valerius smiled at the sight of
them, grateful for Tabitha's sake that Amanda was whole.
His smile died when his gaze met
Kyrian's as the Greek came down the stairs with Acheron behind him. There was
nothing but open hatred in the Greek's eyes.
"Where's Kassim?" Otto
asked.
"He's dead," Ash said
wearily. "He's upstairs in the nursery."
Both Valerius and Otto winced.
Tabitha let go of Amanda as she
caught sight of Kyrian.
"You were dead," she
breathed. "I saw you."
"They both were dead," Ash
said as he stepped past the twins and headed into the living room. He held his
hand up and clenched it into a fist.
Desiderius's body vanished
instantly.
"You're a god?" Valerius
asked him as Ash's earlier declaration finally seeped into his mind.
Ash didn't respond. He didn't have
to.
"Why didn't you ever tell
us?" Kyrian asked.
Ash shrugged. "Why should I? By
tomorrow none of you will even remember that you ever learned this about
me."
Tabitha frowned. "I don't
understand."
Ash took a deep breath. "The
universe is an extremely complicated thing. All any of you need to know is that
Amanda and Kyrian are now immortal. No one will ever be able to kill them
again."
"What?" Amanda asked,
stepping away from Tabitha.
Ash looked to Kyrian. "I
promised I wouldn't let you die and I am bound by my oath."
"Wait!" Tabitha said.
"You're a god. You can bring back Tia!"
Ash's face turned pale. "Tia is
dead?"
"Didn't you know?"
"No," Ash said quietly. He
got that faraway look as if he were listening for something very faint.
"She wasn't supposed to die tonight."
"Then save her!"
He looked as sick as Tabitha felt.
"I can't help Tia. Her soul has passed on. I can't force it back into her
body against her will. Amanda and Kyrian's souls refused to leave their
daughter and I got here in time to restore them."
"What about my unborn
baby?" Amanda asked. "Was it hurt by this?"
Ash shook his head. "He's fine
and would appreciate it greatly if you'd drink more apple juice." Ash
lifted his hands and everything in the house went back to what it had been
before the Daimons had come.
Nothing was out of place.
"Ash," Tabitha said,
moving to stand beside him. "Please bring Tia back for me."
He cupped her face in his palm.
"I wish I could, Tabby. I really do. But know that she's watching out for
you and that she loves you."
She saw red at his words.
"That's not good enough for me, Ash. I want her back."
"I know, but right now I have
other people to check on."
"But my sister…"
Ash took Tabitha's hand and placed
it into Valerius's. "I have to go, Tabitha." He turned to Otto.
"Jean-Luc is alive, but seriously hurt. I need you and Nick to get him
back to his boat."
"We don't know where Nick
is," Otto said quietly. "I found his mother dead."
Ash vanished immediately.
"I really hate it when he does
that," Kyrian said as he shifted a now-sleeping Marissa in his arms.
Tabitha didn't move while her sister
sat down on the floor and started crying.
Tabitha sat beside her and pulled
her close.
"What a day," Amanda
sobbed. "I saw my husband killed. Kassim… Tia and now Cherise."
"I know," Tabitha said.
"I'm not so sure we're the ones who won this time around."
"No," Kyrian said as he
joined them on the floor. "We're still here and they're not. To me, that's
winning." He pulled his wife against his chest and kissed her on the head.
Tabitha turned to see Valerius
heading for the door with Otto.
By the time she caught up, he and
Otto were outside the house.
"What are you doing?" she
asked him.
"We didn't want to intrude on a
family moment," he said quietly. "Your sister needs you."
"And I need you."
Valerius was stunned as she walked
into his arms.
She wrapped her arms around him and
held him close while Otto turned off her car.
"I'll leave the keys in it and
see you guys later." He got into his Jag and drove off.
"Thank you," Tabitha
whispered as she tucked her head in below his chin. "I wouldn't have made
it through tonight without you."
"I'm sorry I wasn't of more
help and I'm so sorry about Tia."
He felt her tears scalding his chest
through his shirt.
"Your mother said she wanted
you home."
Tabitha nodded. "Yeah, I need
to go see her. She draws her strength from us." She pulled away as Amanda
came out onto the front porch. "I'm going to see Mom."
Amanda nodded. "Tell her I'll
be there tomorrow morning. I don't want her to see me like this."
Tabitha looked at Amanda's bloodied
gown.
"Yeah, that's the last thing
she needs."
Then Amanda did the most amazing
thing of all: She reached out and pulled Valerius close for a hug. "Thank
you for coming, Valerius, and for keeping Tabitha safe. I really appreciate
it." She kissed his cheek before she pulled away.
Valerius had never been more stunned
in his life. In that moment, he felt a strange sense of almost belonging
somewhere. It was such a foreign, odd sensation that he wasn't sure how to cope
with it.
"My pleasure, Amanda."
She patted his arm, then went back
into her house.
Valerius helped Tabitha into her
battered car and for once he took the driver's seat. He didn't say a word as
she gave him directions to her mother's house in Metairie.
Neither of them spoke the entire
way. His heart ached for her. Taking her hand, he held it quietly in the
darkness while she stared out the passenger side window.
When they reached her mother's
house, he got out and opened the door for her.
Tabitha drew a ragged breath as she
contemplated facing her mother. For once her courage was gone.
Valerius handed her the keys.
She frowned at him as he stepped
away from her. "What are you doing?"
"I was going to head
back."
"Don't leave me, Val.
Please."
He brushed a tender hand down her
cold cheek and nodded. He kept his hands on her shoulders and in truth she
needed to feel his touch as she knocked on the door.
Her father answered it, his face
grim. His dour look lightened and tears filled his eyes as he saw her and
pulled her up into a rib-crushing embrace. "Thank God at least you're all
right. Your mother has been out of her mind with fear for you."
She hugged him back. "I'm okay,
Daddy, so's Amanda and Kyrian."
Her father released her, then
narrowed his eyes on Valerius. "Who are you?"
"He's my boyfriend, Daddy,
please be nice to him."
Kindness was the last thing Valerius
expected, so when her father held a hand out to him, he was stunned.
Valerius shook it and then was led
into a house that was packed full of the Devereaux clan.
And as he stepped into the living
room, Valerius felt something he'd never felt in all his life.
He felt like he'd come home.
Chapter 16
Ash entered Artemis's temple on
Olympus without any preamble. In the middle of the large main room, which was
surrounded by columns, she reclined on a white throne that looked more like a
chaise longue.
Her koris, who had been singing and
playing lutes, immediately rushed from the room and as one rather tall blond
kori ran past him, he paused and turned to look after her.
"What are you doing here?"
Artemis asked, and for once her tone was hesitant.
He turned back toward her and
shifted the backpack on his shoulder. "I wanted to thank you for what you
did tonight, but as I considered that, it dawned on me that you have never once
in eleven thousand years done anything for me for free. The sheer fear factor
of that realization alone has made me come seeking you. So what gives?"
Artemis wrapped her arms around
herself as she sat on her white throne. "I was worried about you."
He laughed bitterly at that.
"You never worry about me."
"I do, too. I called and you
didn't answer me."
"I almost never answer
you."
She looked away, reminding him of a
cringing child who had been caught doing something wrong.
"Spill it, Artemis. I have a
lot of crap to clean up tonight and don't want you on top of it."
She took a deep breath. "Very
well, it's not like I can keep it from you."
"Keep what from me?"
"A new Dark-Hunter was born tonight."
His blood ran cold at that.
Literally. "Damn you, Artemis! How could you do this?"
She came off her throne ready to
battle. "I had no choice."
"Yeah, right."
"No, Acheron. I had no
choice."
As she spoke, his mind connected
with hers and the images of her and Nick went through him.
"Nick?" he breathed, his
heart shattering.
What had he done?
"You cursed him," Artemis
said quietly. "I'm so sorry."
Ash ground his teeth as guilt
consumed him. He knew better than to speak in anger.
His will, even when not thought out,
made reality. One wrong word… He had damned his best friend.
"Where is he?"
"The bower room."
Ash started to leave, but Artemis
stopped him. "I didn't know what else to do, Acheron. I didn't."
She held her hand out and a dark
green amulet appeared. She handed it to him.
"How many lashes?" he
asked bitterly, thinking it was Valerius's soul she offered him.
A single tear fled down her cheek.
"None. It's Nick's soul, and I have no right to it." She pressed it
into his hand.
Ash was so stunned he didn't know
what to say.
He placed it into his backpack.
Artemis swallowed as she watched him
tuck it carefully away. "Now you're going to learn."
"Learn what?"
"Just how heavy a burden a soul
is."
He gave her a dry stare. "That
I learned a long time ago, Artie."
And with that, he stepped back and
willed himself to Nick's prison. He opened the door slowly to find his friend
in a fetal position on the floor.
"Nick?"
Nick looked up, his black eyes
rimmed in red. The anger and pain Ash saw and felt from Nick tore through him.
"They killed my mother, Ash."
A new wave of guilt slammed through
him. In one fit of anger and with nothing more than a single sentence, he had
altered their fates and had stolen from Nick and Tabitha the two people that
neither of them should have lost. It was all his fault.
"I know, Nick, and I'm
sorry." He was sorrier than Nick would ever know. "Cherise was one of
the few decent people in this world. I loved her, too."
He loved the New Orleans crew a lot
more than he should. Love was a worthless emotion that had never served him
anything but misery.
Even Simi…
Ash ran his hand over her tattoo as
he fought back his emotions.
He made himself numb, then reached
out to Nick. "C'mon."
"Where are we going?"
"I'm taking you home. You have
a lot to learn."
"About what?"
"How to be a Dark-Hunter.
Everything you think you know about fighting, surviving, it's nothing. I have
to show you how to use your new powers and to see correctly with those
eyes."
"And if I don't want to
learn?"
"Then you'll die and there
won't be any coming back from it this time."
Nick took his hand and allowed him
to pull him to his feet.
Ash closed his eyes and took Nick
home.
He'd never looked forward to
training a new Dark-Hunter, but this one…
This one hurt most of all.
Valerius slipped out of the
Devereaux house an hour before dawn. Tabitha had finally fallen asleep, and he
had carried her upstairs to the room that she had shared with Amanda when they
were children.
After placing her on the bed, he'd
spent longer than he should have looking over the old photos on the wall of the
two of them together.
Of them with their sisters.
His poor Tabitha. He didn't know if
she'd ever heal.
He called a taxi and had it drop him
at his house. The place was completely dark. There was no one there now, and he
realized just how reliant he'd become on Tabitha.
These last couple of weeks…
They had been miraculous.
She was miraculous.
Now their time together was over.
Valerius opened the door to his house
and listened to the silence. He shut and locked the door, then walked up the
stairs to the solarium where Agrippina's statue waited.
He refilled the oil in her lamp
before he realized just how stupid he'd been, both as a man and as a
Dark-Hunter.
He hadn't been able to protect
Agrippina or Tabitha from the pain that was life.
Just as he couldn't protect himself.
But then, maybe life wasn't about
protecting. Maybe it was about something else.
Something even more valuable.
It was about sharing.
He didn't need someone to protect
him from the past. He needed the touch of a woman whose warmth chased away
those demons. A woman whose very presence had made the unbearable bearable.
And in all these centuries he still
hadn't learned the most valuable thing of all.
How to say "I love you" to
someone.
But at least now he understood what
feeling it meant.
His heart shattering, he touched
Agrippina's cold cheek. It was time to let go of the past.
"Good night, Agrippina,"
he whispered.
Stepping down, he blew out her flame
and walked out of the room that had been hers alone and into the one he had
learned to share with Tabitha.
Tabitha came awake to find herself
alone in her old bed. She closed her eyes and wished herself back to childhood.
Back to the days when all of her sisters had shared this house with her. Back
to the time when their worst fear was not having a date for the prom.
But time was ever fleeting.
And there was no way back.
Sighing, she rolled over and
realized that Valerius wasn't with her. She felt the absence of him
immediately.
She got up and pulled on a bathrobe
her mother must have left in the room for her. As she walked past the dresser,
she paused, then stepped back to see a ring on top of it.
Her heart pounded as she recognized
Valerius's signet ring on top of a folded-up note.
Picking it up, she read the handful
of words.
Thank you, my lady Tabitha. For
everything. Val
Tabitha frowned. Was it a kiss-off?
Oh, yeah, that was just what she needed right now.
Why not?
She was almost angry until she read
it again and realized that he hadn't signed it "Valerius."
He'd used her nickname for him.
A nickname he hated.
Her throat tight, she tucked the
note into her pocket and kissed the ring he'd left her. She slid it onto her
thumb and went to bathe.
Valerius was dreaming of Tabitha.
She was laughing in his ear as she lay beneath him.
It seemed so real, he could almost
swear he felt her hand on his back…
No, now it was buried in his hair.
And then she moved it away and ran
it over his hip, down his thigh until she cupped him in her palm.
Growling in pleasure, Valerius
opened his eyes to realize it wasn't a dream.
Tabitha lay on her side next to him.
"Hi, baby," she whispered.
"What are you doing here?"
he asked, unable to believe she was real.
She held her hand up to show him his
ring. "How could I be anywhere else given the curtness of your note?"
"My note wasn't curt."
She scoffed at him. "I almost
thought you were telling me to hit the road."
"Why would you think that? I
left you my ring."
"Consolation gift?"
He rolled his eyes at her
misbegotten reasoning. "No, that ring means that the wearer is worth his
or her weight in gold. See?" He held it up so that she could see the regal
crest.
A slow smile spread across her face.
"I'm worth my weight in gold?"
Valerius moved her hand to his lips
so that he could kiss it. "You're worth a lot more than that to me."
Her eyes misted as she looked up at
him. "I love you, Valerius."
He'd never heard anything more
precious to him. "I love you, too, Tabitha," he said, his voice
thick.
Her smile widened as she pulled him
into her arms and kissed him senseless.
She literally tore her shirt off
before she wiggled herself up under him.
Valerius laughed at her eagerness
before he kissed her gently on the lips.
She wasn't in the mood for that.
They made love furiously, as if they wouldn't have another chance again.
Afterward, they lay in each other's
arms. Valerius toyed with her hair as he contemplated their future. "So
what do we do now, Tabitha?"
"What do you mean?"
"How do we make this
relationship work? Kyrian still hates me and I'm still a Dark-Hunter."
"Well," she said raggedly.
"Rome wasn't built in one day. We take it one step at a time."
Little did she know that those steps
were going to be horrific.
The first one came the night of her
sister's wake. Valerius had driven her to her parents' only to pull up short as
they realized Kyrian, Amanda, and Julian and his wife Grace were there.
The animosity was tangible.
Tabitha had meant to stay with
Valerius the entire time, but her Aunt Zelda pulled her away.
"I'll be right back."
Valerius nodded as he went to get
something else to drink.
Julian and Kyrian cornered him in
the kitchen.
He sighed wearily as he waited for
them to start in on him. He set his cup down.
Kyrian grabbed his arm.
Valerius was about to lay him out
cold when he realized that Kyrian wasn't hurting him. He pulled back Valerius's
sleeve so that the scars of his execution were visible.
"Amanda told me how you
died," Kyrian said quietly. "I didn't believe her."
Valerius jerked his arm away.
Without a word, he started away from the two Greeks.
But Kyrian's voice stopped him.
"Look, Valerius, I have to tell you that it literally kills me every time
I see you. Can you imagine what it would be like if I had the face of the man
who nailed you to the wood?"
Valerius gave a bitter laugh at the
irony. "Actually, I know exactly how you feel, General. Every time I use a
mirror, I too see the face of my executioner."
He may not have been twins with his
brothers, but they looked enough alike that it was hard to see himself in a
mirror without seeing them. It was why he was so damned grateful Dark-Hunters
didn't cast reflections unless they wanted to.
Kyrian nodded. "Yeah, I guess
you would. I don't suppose I could bribe or bully you away from Tabitha, can
I?"
"No."
"Then we're going to have to be
grown-ups here because I love my wife too much to hurt her. She's lost one
sister, it would kill her to lose another one. She needs Tabitha." Kyrian
grimaced as if in pain, then held his hand out to Valerius. "Truce?"
Valerius took his hand into his.
"Truce."
Kyrian released him, then Julian
offered his hand.
"For the record," Kyrian
said before he left. "This only makes us friendly enemies."
Tabitha came into the kitchen as
they left. "You okay?"
He nodded. "Kyrian decided to grow
up."
She looked impressed. "I guess
immortality agrees with him."
"Apparently so."
The two of them stayed at the wake
until just after midnight when they decided to head home in Tabitha's beat-up
Mini Cooper.
As they entered the foyer, they
found Ash waiting for them.
"What are you doing here?"
Valerius asked.
Ash came forward and handed a small
box to Tabitha. "You know what to do. Just remember: Don't drop it."
Tabitha was aghast as she held the
box that contained Valerius's soul in her hand. "We had decided that we
weren't going to do this. I don't want to take Valerius's immortality from
him."
Ash let out a long, tired breath.
"Until you return his soul to him, Artemis owns him. Is that what you
want?"
"No."
"Well, there you go." Ash
headed for the door, then paused to look back at them. "By the way, Tabby,
you're immortal now, too."
"What?"
He shrugged. "It wouldn't be
fair to Amanda to lose you to old age."
"But how? How can I be
immortal?"
Ash gave her a wry grin. "It's
the will of the gods. Don't question it."
He slipped out the door and left
them alone.
"Wow," Tabitha breathed as
she opened up the box to see a royal blue medallion inside. It was vibrant with
swirling colors that made it seem as if it were living.
She closed the box. "Well, what
do you think?"
"I think you'd best not drop
it."
She agreed.
Later that night when it came time
to stake him so that she could return his soul to him, she learned something
horrible.
She couldn't do it.
"C'mon, Tabitha," Valerius
said as he sat up on the bed, shirtless. "You stabbed me the night we met
without even blinking."
"Yeah, but you were a dirtbag
then."
"I think I'm offended."
Weeks went by as Tabitha attempted
to stab Valerius, only to meet with failure.
She even tried to pretend he was a
Daimon.
It didn't work. Not to mention the
small fact that they had yet to discover what would drain his Dark-Hunter
powers and make him human long enough to die.
So they settled into a strange kind
of peace. Tabitha moved out of her apartment over her store and left that for
Marla to keep while she lived with Valerius.
They stayed together in the daytime
and hunted together at night.
Still she couldn't stake him, but at
least one afternoon, she'd learned his weakness: hurting her. It'd been an
accident. He'd been reaching for his sword when he'd accidentally elbowed her.
For two hours, his eyes had been blue.
Even so, she hadn't been able to
stab him.
It was hopeless.
Until that summer. While Tabitha and
Valerius were in the middle of training in the upstairs gym, the unthinkable
happened.
One minute, she had been playing
with Valerius; the next, Kyrian burst through the door, causing Valerius to
strike her by accident. His eyes turned instantly blue. Before she realized
what he was doing, Kyrian grabbed Valerius, threw him to the ground, and drove
a stake through his heart and left it there.
"What are you doing?"
Tabitha shrieked, rushing toward him.
Amanda caught her. "It's okay,
Tabby," she said, forcing the box that held Valerius's soul into her hand.
"Since you keep telling me that you can't do this, Kyrian
volunteered."
"Yeah, and with any luck, you
might actually drop it," Kyrian said evilly.
Tabitha scowled at him.
Grabbing the box from her sister,
she knelt beside Val.
Valerius lay on the floor panting.
His face was covered in sweat while he bled from his wound.
"Don't worry, baby. I won't
drop it."
He offered her a trembling smile.
"I trust you."
Tabitha's heart stopped as he died.
Grabbing the medallion, she cried out as it burned her palm. Tabitha bit her
lip and placed the medallion to the bow-and-arrow brand on Valerius's hip.
"Sh," Amanda said
soothingly. "It'll stop burning in a second. Just think about
Valerius."
She did, even though every sane part
of her wanted to let go of the burning hunk of lava that seared her hand.
Finally, it started to cool.
Valerius didn't move.
Tabitha began to panic.
"It's okay," Amanda said.
"It just takes a minute."
And after a few more, Valerius
opened his eyes, which were now a permanent and vibrant shade of blue. His
fangs were completely gone.
Tabitha smiled at the sight of him,
grateful beyond measure that he was alive. "You don't look right."
Valerius cupped her face. "I
think you look beautiful."
"I think I should stake him
again just for good measure," Kyrian said.
"I think we need to be
going," Amanda said as she got up from the floor, grabbed her husband, and
made a quick exit.
"Oh, c'mon," Kyrian whined
from the hallway. "Can't I please stake him one more time?"
"Hi, human," Tabitha said
before she kissed him.
Then she pulled back with a cry as
she realized something.
She was immortal. Now that Valerius
was no longer a Dark-Hunter, he wasn't.
"Oh, my God," she
breathed. "What have we done?"
But the answer was simple. They had
just damned her to live out eternity without him.
Chapter 17
Four months later Mount Olympus
"Your brother's getting married
today, Zarek."
Zarek rolled over in bed to find his
wife Astrid staring at him with that unnerving gimlet look that she seemed to
reserve solely for him whenever he irritated her. "And I should care,
why?"
"He's all the family you have
left, and I would like for my baby to know both sides of his family."
Zarek turned back to his side as he
pretended to ignore her. But that was impossible. For one thing, he loved her
too much to ever discount her, and for another, she wouldn't be ignored.
He felt her hand in his hair as she
toyed with it. "Zarek?"
He didn't answer. After Ash had
returned to earth with Tabitha, he'd spent a lot of time in the Peradomatio, or
Hall of the Past.
Astrid was wearing off on him after
all. Being married to her had taught him much about justice.
No, that wasn't exactly true. Being
with her was making the past somehow bearable, and now that she was pregnant…
He didn't want his son born into a
world where forgiveness was an alien concept.
"It's not easy to let go of the
past, Astrid," he said finally.
She kissed his shoulder, sending
chills all over him. "I know, Prince Charming." She rolled him over,
onto his back, and leaned over him.
Zarek placed his hand against her
distended stomach, where he felt his baby moving rambunctiously against his
palm. His son was due in only two weeks.
"So, do I need to get dressed
for a wedding?" Astrid asked quietly.
Zarek brushed her long, blonde hair
back from her face so that he could cup her cheek. "I prefer you naked, in
my bed."
"Is that your final
answer?"
"What's wrong, Tabitha?"
Tabitha turned around to see
Valerius behind her. He looked completely elegant in his black tie attire, but
then he always looked that way. Unlike her, he never had a single hair out of
place.
Her body wanned instantly at his
approach. She wore a strapless wedding dress and was barefoot at the moment,
having kicked off her high heels the minute they left the cathedral.
"Nothing's wrong," she
lied, not wanting him to know just how sorry she was for all the strife she'd
caused him.
And how she really would be the
death of him one day.
Her heart ached.
"Are you ready to trade me in
yet?" she asked playfully, even though her throat was really tight.
"Never, but there's a large
crowd of people out in the backyard who are wondering where the bride is."
She wrinkled her nose at that.
"Okay, I'm coming," she said, taking him by the arm.
He led her back outside into the
thick of madness that was her family.
She'd opted at the church not to
divide up the guests in the pews lest it become painfully obvious that there
wasn't anyone on the groom's side.
Even four of the seven groomsmen had
to be borrowed from her side. Only Ash, Gilbert, and Otto had been there for
Valerius.
She was still angered that no other
Dark-Hunter had come or sent good wishes.
Kyrian, Julian, Talon, and Tad had
graciously volunteered to finish out the number of groomsmen so that her
sisters wouldn't be without escorts. For that, she would love them always.
Her Aunt Sophie grabbed her and
pulled her away from Valerius.
Tabitha promised her return before
the women surrounded her.
Valerius smiled at the sight, then
turned to go get them both a glass of champagne. Laughter echoed in the
backyard, amidst the strains of the orchestra they'd hired. Tabitha had wanted
a Goth band to play, but her mother had put her foot down and insisted Tabitha
not make the ears of their guests bleed.
He looked around the crowd where
people were laughing together and talking. Ash, Otto, and even Gilbert were
standing off to the side with the other groomsmen. He longed to go over and
join them, but knew from experience that though Kyrian and Julian tolerated his
presence, they didn't like it.
How odd that he felt alienated even
at his own wedding.
Taking a drink of champagne, he
scanned the crowd until he found his wife with her sisters.
He smiled at the sight Tabitha was
absolutely lovely with her auburn hair down around her shoulders. Someone had
placed little sprigs of flowers all through her hair and sprayed glitter in it.
She looked like some ethereal fey out to seduce him.
The wedding director came up to
inform him that dinner was ready to be served.
Inclining his head to her, Valerius
went to tell Tabitha that they needed everyone to be seated.
He claimed his bride and led her to
the bridal table.
Tabitha laughed under her breath as
she sat in the chair and they actually got her scooted up without incident. She
was finally learning how to do this properly. The first time Valerius had held
a chair out for her had been a complete fiasco.
He took a seat on her right as
Gilbert sat to her left.
The waiters started bringing out
plates and filling the wineglasses.
Valerius took her hand into his,
then kissed her knuckles. The sensation of his lips on her hand set fire to
her. She'd never known a human being could be so happy and yet terrified at the
same time.
Once everyone was served, Gilbert
stood up to toast them.
The band stopped playing.
Gilbert opened his mouth, but before
he could speak, a deep, accented voice interrupted him.
"I know that it's typical for
the best man to toast the couple, but I think Gilbert might forgive me for
usurping his place for a minute."
Tabitha had to force herself not to
gape as Zarek approached their table from out in the crowd.
Valerius's grip tightened on her
hand.
Zarek paused directly in front of
them and stared meaningfully at his brother. "Weddings have always been a
fascinating thing to me," he said, his voice ringing out. "A time
when two people look into each other's eyes and promise each other that they
will never allow anyone or anything to divide them.
"Out of two families, they come
together to form a separate branch that links back to their roots. It's a time
when two families are joined together because of the hearts of two people. A
time when ill will and bad feelings should be put to rest along with the
past."
Zarek's gaze went down the table,
stopping at each of the current and former Dark-Hunters. "Weddings signify
a new beginning. After all, no human alive has ever been able to choose his
family… God knows, I would never have chosen mine." He quirked a smile at
Valerius. "But as the Roman playwright Terence once wrote, 'From many a
bad beginning great friendships have formed.'"
Zarek lifted a glass to them.
"Here's to my brother, Valerius, and his wife Tabitha. May you both come
to enjoy the happiness I have known with my own wife. And may you give one
another all the love you both deserve."
Tabitha wasn't sure which of them
was the most stunned by Zarek's words. Her family, unaware of what an
unexpected moment this was, cheered Zarek's toast.
Shocked beyond comprehension,
neither of them took a drink.
Zarek walked over and gave them a
wry, almost mocking grin. "You're supposed to take a drink now."
They did, but Valerius choked on
his. He sniffed the glass suspiciously.
"Did you poison me?" he
asked Zarek in a low tone.
Zarek rubbed his eyebrow with his
middle finger. "No, Valerius. Even I'm not that cruel."
"It's nectar," a woman's
voice said.
Tabitha turned to see a beautiful
blonde pregnant woman behind her.
The woman placed a gentle hand on
her shoulder, then kissed her on the cheek. "I'm Zarek's wife,
Astrid," she said in a low tone that only the two of them could hear. She
turned to Valerius and gave him a kiss as well. "We couldn't decide what
to give the two of you for a wedding gift, so Zarek thought the best gift would
be eternity together."
"Yeah," Zarek said in a
surly tone. "That's the polite version of what I said."
Astrid gave him a playfully mean
look before she looked back at them. "Congratulations to you both."
She handed Valerius a small bowl of
something that reminded Tabitha of Jell-O. "It's ambrosia," she said
to Valerius. "Eat it and you'll be able to hurl lightning bolts back at
Zarek whenever he gets playful with you."
"Hey!" Zarek snapped.
"I never agreed to that."
Astrid gave him an innocent stare.
"This way, I figure you'll play nicer in the future with your
brother."
Tabitha laughed. "You know, I
think I like my new sister-in-law."
Astrid left them to join Zarek, who
looked less than pleased. "Don't worry, hon, I'll make sure you have
plenty of other things to occupy your time with than harassing Valerius."
Zarek's gaze softened the instant
she touched him.
Valerius rose to his feet and walked
around the table until he stood before Astrid and Zarek. "Thank you,"
he said.
He held his hand out to Zarek, who
looked at it suspiciously. Tabitha half-expected him to turn away.
He didn't.
Taking Valerius's hand, he clapped
him on the back, then released him. "Your woman loves you more than you
know. She's a hell of a fire-cat. I probably should have given you something in
Kevlar."
Valerius laughed at that. "I
hope you two will stay for the reception."
"We'd love to," Astrid
said before Zarek could answer.
The two of them took a seat at the
table with Selena and Bill while Valerius came back to her.
"Bon appetit," Tabitha
said as she held the ambrosia out to him.
He ate it, then kissed her.
"Mmm," Tabitha breathed,
inhaling the scent of her husband. "Pedicabo ego vos et irrumabo." I intend to have my way with you
upstairs and down.
Valerius smiled. "And I intend
to let you." His face turned serious as he stared at her and his love for
her consumed him. "Amo, Tabitha. Amo."
Epilogue
One year later
"Look at the poor
bastard," Kyrian said as he sat inside the Cafй Pontalba with Amanda,
Grace, Julian, Bill, and Selena having dinner. "I should have been kind
and killed him when I had the chance."
Through the doorway on their right,
they could see Tabitha and Valerius walking toward the St. Louis Cathedral.
The women frowned as they watched
them.
"What?" Amanda asked.
"He's so screwed," Bill
said before taking a drink of his beer. "I wonder what he did wrong this
time."
"What are you two talking
about?" Selena asked.
"I know that Devereaux
walk," Kyrian said, shaking his head. "It's the 'You're not going to
get any tonight, pal, so don't even ask' walk."
"Oh, hell yeah," Bill
agreed. "Be glad you married the only one of the sisters who won't rack
you in a fit of anger, Kyrian. You seriously lucked out."
"I beg your pardon?"
Selena glared at her husband.
Kyrian laughed.
"I wouldn't laugh if I were
you," Amanda said, her voice tense as they saw Tabitha tell Valerius to
"talk to the hand."
Then she continued to walk in front
of him as Valerius followed and made placating gestures.
"I really hate that walk,"
Bill muttered.
"I think you're both going to
see that walk up close and personal tonight," Julian said before he pulled
out his Nextel phone. He scrolled through the names before he clicked the talk
button. "Hey, Otto? Where are you?"
"Cafй Du Monde. Why?"
"Can you see Valerius and
Tabitha? They look like they're heading down the Pedestrian Mall toward
you."
Otto made a sound of disgust.
"Yeah, the two of them need to go get a room."
"Pardon?" Julian asked.
"They're lip-locked like two
horny teenagers."
Amanda and Selena gave their
husbands indignant glares.
"No way." Kyrian got up
and dashed out the doorway with Bill one step behind him.
He walked the block over to see
Tabitha and Valerius stopped in front of Selena's store.
Sure enough, the two of them were
necking.
"Excuse me?" Bill said.
"You know, there are public decency laws here?"
Tabitha scoffed at Bill. "Do
you remember what happened to you the last time you tried to tell a Devereaux
what the city laws were?"
Bill went pale.
Tabitha laughed, then returned to
what she'd been doing before Bill so rudely interrupted her.
Read on for an excerpt from Sherrilyn Kenyon's next book
Sins of the Night
Coming soon from St. Martin's Paperbacks
Sighing, Danger pulled into her
driveway and did her best to clear her thoughts. She saw Keller's SUV. Damn.
She really wasn't in the mood for his five thousand questions tonight. Not
while she was trying to sort through all this.
After getting out of the car, she
made her way into her house. It was eerily quiet. How unlike Keller not to have
a radio blasting or be in the middle of a boisterous phone conversation with a
friend.
"Keller?" she called,
heading for the living room.
She paused in the doorway to find
her Squire sitting on the couch across from an unknown man.
"Hey, Danger," Keller said
in a nervous greeting. "We have a guest. He's um… he's Ash's Squire."
The man stood up and Danger's gaze
quickly fell to the white garment draped on the arm of her chair.
It was a coat.
And it belonged to Ash's Squire—who
was blond…
Danger's reaction to her
"guest" was swift and automatic, and it happened without any
premeditation on her part. She pulled out her dagger and threw it straight into
the man's heart. He burst apart into a golden dust just like any good Daimon
would.
"Mere d'un dieu," she
breathed. Kyros had been right. The man was…
Entering the room from the doorway
on her right!
Her jaw dropped as he sauntered into
the room with an arrogant swagger and a less-than-amused smirk. He pinned her
with a droll stare as he moved to stand in front of her. Her dagger shot from
the floor where it had fallen after he'd exploded into dust, and into his hand.
He held it out to her. "Could you please refrain from the theatrics? I
really hate doing that. It seriously pisses me off and it ruins a perfectly
good shirt."
Danger continued to gape as she
stared at the hole in his black turtleneck where the dagger had gone in. There
was no blood. No wound. Nothing. Not even a red mark.
"What are you?" she
breathed.
"Well, had you listened before
you stabbed me, you would have heard the 'I'm Acheron's Squire' part.
Apparently that somehow escaped your hearing and you mistook me for a pin
cushion."
He was certainly a snotty bastard.
"He has some really sweet
talents, Danger," Keller said from the couch. "He made all the
Daimons explode without touching them, but he won't tell me how he did
it."
Danger took her dagger from
Alexion's hand, then, without thought, touched the ragged tear in his shirt. He
felt solid underneath. Real. There was warm skin beneath the silk and wool
fabric and it was hard and masculine. Yet human beings didn't shatter like
Daimons and no Daimon reappeared after death…
In that moment, she was terrified of
him, and terror wasn't something Danger St. Richard felt.
Alexion ground his teeth at the
sensation of her soft touch. He felt his body roared to life as he
watched her examine him like a scientist with a lab experiment that had gone
tragically wrong. She was very short for a Dark-Hunter which meant Artemis must
have taken an unusual liking to the woman. The goddess preferred to create
Dark-Hunters who were equal in height to the Daimons they fought.
No more than five two or three,
Dangereuse was petite and athletic. He'd seen her many times lately in the
sfora as he kept watch on what the Mississippi Dark-Hunters were up to.
There had been something about her
that had caught his interest. An innocence that still seemed to be inside her.
Most Dark-Hunters were jaded by their human lives and by their duties. But this
one… She appeared to have avoided the cynicism that eternal life often brought.
Her dark, chestnut-colored hair was
worn in a long braid down her back, but pieces of it had escaped to curl
becomingly around her face. Her features were angelic and delicate. If not for
her carriage and self-assuredness, she would have appeared fragile.
And yet there was nothing fragile
about her. Dangereuse could more than take care of herself and he knew that
well. As one of the newer Dark-Hunters, she was only a couple hundred years old
and had died while trying to save the noble half of her family from the
guillotine in France during their revolution. It had been a monumental task she
had set for herself and she would have succeeded, if she hadn't been betrayed.
Not to mention the woman had the
most kissable mouth he'd ever seen. Full and lush, her lips were the kind that
a man dreamed of tasting at night. That mouth beckoned to him with temptation
and the promise of pure unadulterated heaven.
She also smelled of sweet magnolias
and woman. It had been over two hundred years since he'd last tasted a woman.
And it was all he could do not to bend his head down and bury his face against
her soft, tender neck and inhale the scent of her. Feel the softness of her skin
against his hungry lips as he tasted the supple flesh there.
But then, given her first reaction
to his presence, he didn't think she'd react much better to being mauled by
him.
Pity.
Danger swallowed in sudden
trepidation as she looked at the man before her. He was just as Stryker had
foretold… right down to the white cashmere coat.
It's all true. All of it.
He was Acheron's personal destroyer
who had come to kill them for questioning Acheron's authority. She felt the
sudden need to cross herself, but caught herself just in time. The last thing
she needed to do was to let him know she feared him.
Her extremely superstitious and
Catholic mother had always told her that the devil wore the face of an angel.
In this case, it was most certainly true. The man before her was without a
doubt one of the choicest examples of his gender. His dark blond hair held
golden highlights and brushed the top of his collar. He wore it in a casual
style that swept back from a perfectly masculine face. His well-sculpted cheeks
were covered with two days' growth of whiskers that added a savage, fierce look
to him.
Like hers, his eyes were the
midnight black of a Dark-Hunter and yet she sensed that he wasn't one of them.
For one thing, he didn't drain her Dark-Hunter abilities.
There was an aura of extreme power
and lethal danger from him. It rippled and sizzled in the air around them and
made the hair on the back of her neck rise.
"What are you doing here?"
she asked, forcing herself not to betray anything other than nonchalance.
Although the earlier dagger throw had most likely tipped him she wasn't exactly
ambivalent to his presence.
His smile was wicked and disturbing.
"You invited me."
Was that a play on her new suspicion
that Ash might be a Daimon? No Daimon could enter someone's home without an
invitation. Or was he just making an idle comment?
"I invited Ash here. Not you. I
don't even know who you are."
"Alexion." His voice was
deep and well-cultured. There was only the faintest trace of some foreign
accent in it, but she didn't know what nationality it was from.
"Alexion…?" she prompted,
wondering what his surname was.
"Just Alexion."
Keller joined them. "Ash sent
him here for a couple of weeks to check into what you were saying about a Rogue
Dark-Hunter."
She arched a brow at Keller.
"Is that what Alexion told you?"
"Well, yeah, but then I called
Ash and he corroborated it."
Good boy that he didn't accept the
man's word. "Did Ash say anything else?"
"Just to trust Alexion."
Yeah, right.
Danger sheathed her dagger before
she addressed Alexion again. "Well, it appears I spoke too soon. I was
checking into the Rogue thing myself tonight and everything's fine so you can
feel free to return to Ash now."
Alexion narrowed his dark eyes on
her. "Why are you lying to me?"
"I'm not lying."
He dipped his head down so that he
could speak in a low tone just for her hearing. His nearness was disturbing and
intense. It actually raised chills over her body as his hot breath fell against
her skin. "For the record, Dangereuse, I can smell a lie from nine miles
off."
She looked up to see the deep
curiosity in those… She frowned. No longer black, his eyes had turned to a
peculiar hazel green that practically glowed.
Just what the hell was he?
Alexion pinned her with a fierce
stare he no doubt hoped would intimidate her. It wasn't working. Danger refused
to be intimidated by anyone or anything. When he spoke, his voice was scarcely
more than a primal growl. "My only real question is why would you protect
your Rogue?"
She moved away without answering.
"Keller? Can I have a word with you in private?"
Alexion gave a short laugh at that.
"I will leave the two of you alone." He headed for the hallway that
would take him to a guest room.
Danger ground her teeth. Don't tell
me Keller already set him up in my house!
She waited until she was sure
Alexion had left them and lowered her voice. "What the hell happened
tonight? You look like someone beat you."
"They did. I ran into a group
of Daimons and when I told them to back off, they said they were untouchable
now. They said that they were working with the Dark-Hunters."
Anger whipped through her that they
would dare to beat her Squire. "They attacked you?"
"No, I beat my own self up.
What do you think?"
She ignored his sarcasm as she
realized why the plasma TV hadn't been blaring when she came in. It was
shattered. "What happened to the TV?"
Keller looked at it and shrugged.
"I don't know. I was flipping channels after we got back and I paused on
QVC to see this cool camcorder they were advertising and the next thing I knew,
it blew up. I'm not sure if it was the TV or if Alexion has a thing against
QVC."
Thank the Lord and his saints that
her Squire hadn't blown up as well.
"And where did Alexion just
head off to?"
"I put him in the guest suite
that Ash uses whenever he visits."
She clenched her fist to keep from
choking him. "I see."
"I didn't do anything wrong,
did I?"
Yes, but she didn't want to get into
it with him. If he stayed ignorant of all this, maybe Alexion would spare him.
Either way, she refused to put Keller in any danger.
"You're fine, sweetie. Why
don't you head on home before it gets any later?"
Luckily her Squire didn't argue and
he was too dense to recognize the slight tremor of fear for him in her voice.
Just in case Alexion intended to fight, she wanted Keller out of here and
tucked safely at home.
"Okay, Danger. I'll see you
tomorrow night."
"Ahh," Danger hedged at
that "Why don't you take a few days off? Go see your sister in
Montana."
He frowned at her. "Why?"
She offered him a smile she didn't
feel. "I have Acheron's Squire here. I'm sure he can—"
"I don't know," he said,
wrinkling his nose. "He seems all right, but I think I'll hang close to
home, just in case."
"Keller…"
"Don't mess with me, Danger. My
number-one mandate is to protect you. I may be human, but I'm your Squire and
that includes all die inherent risks that come with the position. Okay? I was
raised in this world and I know all the freaky shit it sometimes entails."
She couldn't argue with that.
"All right. Go home and I'll keep in touch."
He nodded, then gathered up his coat
and left
Danger took a deep breath as she
headed for Alexion's room. She really didn't want him here, but what else could
she do? Keep your friends close and your enemies closer.
So long as he was in her house, she
could monitor his activities and see what he was doing. Not to mention she
still wasn't thoroughly convinced about Kyros and his agenda. She'd heard a lot
of weird things lately, including that some of the local Dark-Hunters were
drinking human blood. For all she knew, Kyros was setting her up.
Until she had more information, she
would play this coolly and see for herself what was going on.
At the end of the hallway, she
pushed open the door to find Alexion studying one of the Faberge eggs that she
collected. He stood before the small baroque-style dressing table, holding it
carefully in his large hand as if he understood how much she loved her
collectibles. She was struck by the gentleness of his touch as he closed it and
returned it to its stand.
He was incredibly handsome standing
there and her body reacted to him with an intensity that stunned her.
Alexion felt her presence like a
sizzling caress. It was as if she made contact with his soul every time she
drew near him. Something that was completely impossible since he hadn't owned a
soul in more than nine thousand years.
He didn't know what it was about
her, but his body reacted wildly to her. Turning, he found her in the doorway,
watching him with a wary expression. Danger was afraid of him. Terrified
actually. But she was trying hard to disguise it. Why? He had done nothing to scare
her… not yet anyway.
"I mean you no harm,
Dangereuse."
"The name's Danger," she
corrected. "I haven't gone by Dangereuse in a long time."
"Forgive me."
She took a hesitant step into the
room. "So what's your story? You say you're Ash's Squire. Are you a Blue
Blood, Blood Rites, or what?"
Blue Bloods were Squires who came
from long generations of Squires. Blood Rites were the Squires who were charged
with maintaining that the rules of their world were followed. They protected
the Dark-Hunters and were a police force for other Squires. Of course, Alexion
had been serving Acheron since before the Squires' Council had existed. He
wasn't a true Squire. He was Acheron's Alexion, an Atlantean term that had no
real translation into English. Basically, he would do whatever was necessary to
protect Acheron and Simi. And he truly meant whatever.
But he couldn't tell her the truth
of his status. "I'm a barnacle chip," he answered in Squire slang,
meaning that Acheron had recruited him to be his Squire. In a weird way, it was
even true.
"How long have you served
him?"
He gave a short laugh at that.
"It seems like forever most days."
Her dark eyes flashed suspicion and
intelligence at him. "And how is it that you did that little trick with
the dagger?"
He quirked up one side of his mouth
at her vague questions. "Ask me what's on your mind, Danger. I don't like
to play games. We both know I'm not human so let's not do the polite song and
dance while you tiptoe around me trying to figure me out."
Danger seemed to appreciate his
frankness. "Are you here to spy for Acheron?"
He laughed at that. "No. Trust
me, he doesn't need anyone to spy for him. If he wants to know something, he
does."
"What do you mean?" she
asked nervously.
"I meant what I said. Acheron
is able to find things out on his own."
"Then why were you sent
here?"
Alexion glanced away. Perhaps he
should tell her the truth for once. Most likely, she wouldn't believe him, but
what could it really hurt? "In short, I am here to protect you as much as
I can."
Danger couldn't have been more
surprised had he come right out and admitted to being Acheron's destroyer.
"Protect me from what?"
"Those who would see you dead.
You are in a precarious place, Danger. The one who has gone Rogue will kill you
instantly if he learns you have betrayed him."
Funny, Kyros had been remarkably
understanding about that. "What do you know of it?"
"More than I can share."
Then they were at an impasse.
"In that case, you'll understand if I ask you to stay in a hotel room
while you're here?"
He actually laughed again at that.
"You've met with him and confronted him, haven't you?"
"I don't know what you're
talking about."
He closed the distance between them.
His presence was mammoth in the room. Overpowering and yet strangely
comforting. It was as if his aura were putting off soothing vibes. He was also
extremely compelling in a very sexual way. Acheron was the only other person
she knew who had that strange "do me" factor that enticed everyone who
came near him to strip his clothes off and throw him down for a wicked night of
play. What is wrong with me?
"You know," Alexion said
in a deep tone, "for an actress you certainly can't lie worth a
damn."
She stiffened at his words. "I
beg your pardon?"
"You heard me. So what lie did
Kyros tell you? I hope he was at least more creative than the 'old Acheron is a
Daimon' standby."
She didn't know what surprised her
more. The fact that he knew what they'd said about Acheron or the fact that he
spoke of Kyros as if he knew the man personally. "How do you know about
Kyros?"
"Believe me, I know everything
about him."
Danger was even more confused now.
Was he telling her the truth? Or was he using the truth to distract her?
"So tell me, is Acheron a Daimon?"
Those eerie green hazel eyes
narrowed on her. "What do you think?"
"I don't know." And that
was the honest truth. "It makes sense. He is from Atlantis and we all know
that the Daimons are from there as well."
Alexion scoffed at her.
"Acheron was born in Greece and grew up in Atlantis. That hardly makes him
a Daimon."
"He never eats food."
"Are you sure? Just because he
doesn't eat in front of you, doesn't mean he doesn't eat at all."
He did have a point with that.
"Then what about you? If Kyros is so wrong, how did he know that you were
going to come here in your white coat, huh?"
Alexion froze at her question.
"Pardon?"
"You have no answer for that
one, do you?"
No, he didn't. "How could he
know about me? No one knows I exist."
"Then he's right. You are lying
to me about your purpose. You're here to kill us all."
Alexion couldn't breathe as her
words went through him. How could anyone know about him? It wasn't possible.
Acheron had taken great care to make sure no one knew he existed. "No, I'm
not. I'm here to save as many of you as I can."
"And I'm supposed to believe
you, why?"
"Because I'm telling you the
truth."
"Then prove it."
That was easier said than done.
"Prove it how? The only way to prove to you that I'm not out to kill you
is to not kill you and last I checked you were the one throwing the dagger, not
me."
Danger gave him a hostile glare.
"What was I supposed to think? I come into my house to see my normally
ebullient Squire cowed on my couch, looking beat-up, and my TV blown to kingdom
come. Then this blond man, and I use that term loosely, whom I was told would
come to kill me, stands up wearing the exact white coat that I was told he'd
have on. What would you have done?"
"I would have said, 'Hello, can
I help you?'"
She rolled her eyes at him.
"Sure, you would."
Actually, he would, but then he had
one distinct advantage over her. He couldn't die. At least, not from something
born of this earth.
"Look, Danger, I know you have
absolutely no reason to trust me. Before tonight you never even heard of me.
But you know Acheron. Have you ever seen him hurt anyone? Think about it. If
Ash really were a Daimon, why would he be helping the Dark-Hunters?"
"Because he uses us to fight
his own kind so that his mother doesn't kill him."
Alexion went cold at that. Acheron
would lose his mind if he heard those words. More to the point, there would be
no salvation for any Dark-Hunter here. Acheron would destroy them all without
blinking. When it came to the existence of his mother, Acheron didn't play or
take chances.
"What do you know of his
mother?"
"That she cast him out of the
Daimon realm and now he uses us to get back at her and his people."
"Trust me, that is a complete
lie."
She snorted at him. "The
problem is, I don't trust you. At all."
"But do you trust Kyros?"
He saw her answer in her dark eyes.
No, she didn't. But it spoke a lot for her that she hadn't turned on her
Dark-Hunter brother. She was still protecting Kyros. He could admire her for
that.
"Look, Danger. Open your heart
and listen with your feelings. What does your gut tell you to do?"
"Run for the hills with my
Squire and let you guys duke it out."
St. Martin's Paperbacks edition / January 2005
St. Martin's Paperbacks are
published by St. Martin's Press, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10010.
For my fans and friends who have
kept me going through thick and thin, and especially the RBL ladies and those
of you who take the time to visit the Dark-Hunter.com bbs. Your support means
more to me than any of you will ever know.
To Kim and Nancy for all the hard
work you do on my behalf, thank you. I can honestly never say that enough.
To my husband and sons who put up
with all my wild imaginings and most importantly to my mother who indulged me
when I was young. I miss you, Mom, and I always will. Love and hugs to all of
you.
SEIZE THE NIGHT
Prologue
"Happy birthday,
Agrippina," Valerius said as he laid a single red rose at the feet of the
marble statue that held a sacred place in his home.
It was nothing compared to the
sacred place that the woman herself had held within his heart while she had
lived. A place she still occupied—even after two thousand years.
Closing his eyes, he felt crippled
by the pain of her loss. Crippled by the guilt that the last sounds he had
heard as a mortal man had been her wrenching sobs as she called out for his
help.
Unable to breathe, he reached up and
touched her marble hand. The stone was hard. Cold. Unyielding. Things Agrippina
had never been. In a life that was measured by brutal formality and harshness,
she had been his only refuge.
And he loved her still for the quiet
kindness she had given him.
He clasped her delicate hand in both
of his, then laid his cheek against the cold stone palm.
If he could have one wish, it would
be to remember the exact sound of her voice.
To feel the warmth of her fingers on
his lips.
But time had robbed him of
everything except the agony he had caused her. He would die ten thousand more
deaths if only he could have saved her the pain of that one night.
Unfortunately, there was no way to
turn back time. No way to force the Fates to undo their actions and give her
the happiness she should have known.
Just as there was nothing that could
fill the aching void inside him left by Agrippina's death.
Grinding his teeth, Valerius pulled
away and noted the eternal flame that burned by her side was sputtering.
"Don't worry," he said to
her image. "I won't leave you in the dark. I promise."
It was a promise he had made to her
during her lifetime, and even in death, he had never broken it. For more than
two thousand years he had kept her in the light even while he was forced to
live in the darkness that had terrified her.
Valerius crossed the sunroom to
reach the large Roman-style buffet table that held the oil for her flame. He
removed the oil from the center of the buffet and took it to her statue; then
he stepped up onto the stone pedestal to pour the last of it into the lamp.
In this position, his head was even
with hers. The sculptor he had commissioned centuries ago had captured every
delicate curve and dimple of her precious face. Only Valerius's memory supplied
the honey color of her hair. The vivid green of her eyes. Agrippina had been
flawless in her beauty.
Sighing, Valerius touched her cheek
before he stepped down. There was no use in dwelling on the past. What was done
was done.
He was sworn now to protect the
innocent. To keep watch over humanity and make sure that no other man had to
lose so valuable a light in his soul as Valerius had lost.
Assured the flame would last until
tomorrow night, Valerius inclined his head respectfully to her statue.
"Amo," he said to her, whispering Latin for "I love you."
It was something he wished to the
gods that he'd had the courage to say aloud to her while she had lived.
Chapter 1
"I don't give a damn if they
throw me down into the deepest, slimiest pit for eternity. I belong here and no
one is going to make me leave. No one!"
Tabitha Devereaux took a deep breath
and struggled not to argue as she tried to pick the lock on the handcuffs that
her sister Selena had used to fasten herself to the wrought-iron gate that
surrounded the famed Jackson Square. Selena had hidden the key in her bra and
Tabitha had no desire to search there for it.
No doubt that would get them both
arrested, even in New Orleans.
Luckily there wasn't a big crowd on
the street in the middle of October, right at dusk, but what people were there
all stared at them as they passed by. Not that Tabitha cared. She was more than
used to people looking at her and thinking her strange. Even insane.
She prided herself on both. She also
prided herself on being available to her friends and family in a crisis. And
right now, her big sister was in an emotional turmoil second only to the time
when Selena's husband Bill had been in a car wreck that had almost killed him.
Tabitha fumbled with the lock. The
last thing she wanted was to have her sister arrested.
Again.
Selena tried to push her away, but
Tabitha refused to budge, so Selena bit her.
Tabitha jumped back with a yelp as
she shook her hand in an effort to relieve the pain. Completely unremorseful
about it, Selena sprawled on the cobbled steps that led into the Square in a
pair of ripped jeans and a large navy sweater that obviously belonged to Bill.
Her long, curly brown hair was braided and oddly sedate. No one would recognize
Madame Selene, as she was known to the tourists, except for the big sign she
was holding that said, "Psychics have rights, too."
Ever since they had passed that
stupid, asinine law that psychics couldn't read cards in the Square for
tourists anymore, Selena had been fighting it. Earlier, the police had forced
her out of the federal building for protesting- so Selena had headed over here
to chain herself to the gate not far from where she had once set up her card
table for reading other people's futures.
Too bad she couldn't see her own
fate as clearly as Tabitha could. If Selena didn't unhook herself from this
blessed fence, she was going to be spending the night in jail.
Overwrought and angry, Selena kept
waving her sign. There was no reasoning with her. But then, Tabitha was used to
that, too. High emotions, obstinacy, and insanity ran deep in their
Cajun-Romanian family.
"C'mon, Selena," she said,
trying yet again to soothe her. "It's already dark. You don't want to be
Daimon bait out here, do you?"
"I don't care!" Selena
sniffed and pouted. "The Daimons won't eat my soul anyway since I have no
friggin' will to live. I just want my home back. This is my spot and I'm not
leaving." She punctuated each of the last words with a pounding of her
sign against the stones.
"Fine." Sighing in
disgust, Tabitha sat down near her, but not so close that Selena could bite her
again. She wasn't about to leave her older sister out here alone. Especially
since Selena was so upset.
If the Daimons didn't get her, a
mugger would.
And so here the two of them sat like
two immovable bumps on a log: Tabitha dressed all in black with her dark auburn
hair pulled back into a silver barrette and Selena waving her sign at anyone
who came near them on the pedestrian mall, urging them to sign her petition to
change the law. "Hey, Tabby. What's up?"
It was a rhetorical question.
Tabitha waved at Bradley Gambieri, one of the docents who led vampire tours
around the Quarter, as he headed toward the tourist center to drop off more
brochures. He didn't even pause as he passed by. But he did frown at Selena,
who called him an imaginative name because he didn't sign her petition.
Good thing he knew them or he really
might be offended.
Tabitha and her sister knew most of
the locals who frequented the Quarter. They had grown up here and had haunted
the area around the Square since they had been young teenagers.
Of course, things had changed over
the years. A few of the shops had come and gone. The Quarter was a good deal
safer these days than it had been in the late nineteen eighties and early
nineties. However, some things were the same. The bakery, Cafй Pontalba, Cafй Du Monde, and Corner Cafй were in the same place. The tourists still gathered
in the Square to ogle the cathedral and the colorful natives who passed by… and
the vampires and muggers still stalked the streets looking for easy victims.
The hair on the back of her neck
rose.
Tabitha moved her hand instinctively
to the hidden sheath in her boot that concealed a three-inch stiletto as she
scanned the thinning October crowd around her.
For the last thirteen years, Tabitha
had been a self-styled vampire slayer. She was also one of the few humans in
New Orleans who actually knew what went on in this town after dark. She was
scarred inside and out from her battles with the damned. And she had sworn her
life to making sure that none of them ever hurt anyone else on her watch.
It was an oath she took seriously;
she would kill anyone or anything she had to.
But as her gaze found the tall,
exotically erotic man sporting a black backpack coming around the corner of the
Presbytere building, she relaxed.
It'd been a couple of months since
he'd last been in town. In truth, she'd missed him a lot more than she should
have.
Against her will and common sense,
she'd let Acheron Parthenopaeus worm his way into her guarded heart. But then,
Ash was a hard man not to adore.
His long, sensuous gait was
impossible to ignore and every female in the Square, except for the distraught
Selena, was held transfixed by his presence. They all paused to watch him walk
by as if compelled by some unseen force. He was sexy in a way very few men
were.
He held an aura that was dangerous
and wild; and by his slow, languorous moves, it was obvious that he would be
incredible in bed. It was something you just knew intrinsically when you saw
him and it rippled through your body like hot, seductive chocolate.
At six feet eight, Ash always stood
out in a crowd. Like her, he was dressed all in black.
His Godsmack T-shirt was untucked
and a bit large, but even so it didn't detract from that fact that Ash was
seriously ripped. And his custom-made leather pants cupped a butt so prime, it
begged for a groping.
Not that she ever would. An
undefinable air about him warned people to keep their hands to themselves if
they wanted to keep breathing.
She smiled as she noted his boots.
Ash had a thing for German Goth clothing. Tonight he had on a pair of black
biker boots that had nine vampire-bat buckles going up the length of them.
He wore his long black hair loose
and flowing around his shoulders. It was a perfect drape for a face that was
eerily pretty and yet wholly masculine. Flawless. There was something about Ash
that made every hormone in her body stand up and pant for more.
Yet for all his sexual
attractiveness, there was also an aura so dark and deadly that it kept her from
ever thinking of him as anything more than a friend.
And he'd been a friend ever since
she had met him at her twin sister Amanda's wedding three years ago. Since
then, they had crossed paths repeatedly as he visited New Orleans and helped
her keep watch against the city's predators.
Now he was a regular part of her
family, especially since he often stayed at her twin's house and was, in fact,
the godfather for Amanda's daughter.
He stopped beside her and cocked his
head. With his dark sunglasses on, Tabitha couldn't tell if he was looking at
her or Selena. But it was obvious he was bemused by the two of them.
"Hey, gorgeous babe,"
Tabitha said. She smiled as she realized his T-shirt paid tribute to the
Godsmack song "Vampires." How strangely apropos since Ash was an
immortal who came equipped with his own set of fangs. "Nice shirt."
Ignoring her compliment, he pulled
the black backpack off his shoulder and flipped his sunglasses up to show
eerie, swirling silver eyes that seemed to flash in the darkness. "How
long has Selena been handcuffed to the fence?"
"About half an hour. I figured
I'd hang out with her and keep her from becoming a Daimon-kabob."
"I wish," Selena muttered.
She raised her voice and slung her arms wide. "Here I am, vampires, come
and end my misery!"
Tabitha and Ash exchanged a
half-amused, half-irritated look at her dramatics.
Ash moved to sit down beside Selena.
"Hi, Lanie," he said quietly as he kept the backpack at his feet.
"Go away, Ash. I'm not leaving
here until they repeal their law. I belong in this Square. I was raised
here."
Ash nodded in understanding.
"Where's Bill?"
"He's a traitor!" Selena
snarled.
Tabitha answered the question.
"He's probably at the courthouse holding ice to a private area after
Selena racked him and accused him of being 'the man who is holding her
down.'"
Ash's face softened as if the
thought amused him.
"He deserved it," Selena
said defensively. "He told me that the law is the law and that I had to
obey it. Screw that. I'm not going anywhere until they change it."
"Guess I'll be here for
awhile," Tabitha said wistfully.
"You can make them repeal the
law," Selena said, turning toward Ash. "Can't you?"
Ash leaned back against the fence
without commenting.
"Don't get too close to her,
Ash," Tabitha warned. "She's been known to bite."
"That makes two of us," he
said with a hint of humor in his voice as his fangs flashed. "But I
somehow think my bite might hurt a little more."
"You're not funny," Selena
said sullenly.
Ash draped an arm over Selena's
shoulder. "C'mon, Lane. You know it's not going to change anything for you
to stay here. Sooner or later a cop will come by—"
"And I'll assault him."
Ash tightened his hold on her.
"You can't assault them for doing their job."
"Yes, I can!"
Still he managed to remain calm
while dealing with the Queen of Hysteria. "Is that really what you want to
do?"
"No. I want my stand
back," Selena said, her voice breaking from her grief and pain.
Tabitha's own chest was tight in
sympathetic agony for her.
"I wasn't hurting anyone by
having a table here. This is my space. I've had my stand right here in this
spot since 1986! It's so not fair for them to make me leave because those
stupid artists are jealous. Who wants one of their crappy paintings of the
Quarter, anyway? They're stupid. What's New Orleans without her psychics? Just
another boring, run-down tourist town, that's what!"
Ash held her sympathetically.
"Times change, Selena. Believe me, I know, and sometimes there's nothing
you can do about it except to let it go. No matter how much you want to stop
time, it has to go forward and move on to something else."
Tabitha heard the sadness in his
voice as he spoke comfortingly to her sister. Ash had been alive for more than
eleven thousand years. He remembered New Orleans back in the days when it had
barely qualified as a town. For that matter, he probably remembered New Orleans
before any kind of civilization had claimed it.
If anyone knew about change, it was
Acheron Parthenopaeus.
Ash wiped the tears from Selena's
face and angled her chin so that she was staring at the building across the
street from them. "You know, that building is up for sale. 'Madame
Selene's Tarot Reading and Mystical Boutique.' Can you imagine it?"
Selena snorted at that. "Yeah,
right. Like I can afford it. Have you any idea what the real estate here goes
for?"
Ash shrugged. "Money's not a
problem for me. Say the word and it's yours."
Selena blinked at him as if she
couldn't believe what he was offering her. "Really?"
He nodded. "You could put a
sign up right here that points people to your brand-new store where you can
read cards to your heart's content."
Finally seeing a solution to her
sister's temporary dementia and grateful to Ash for it, Tabitha sat forward so
that she could look at Selena. "You've always said you'd like to be
someplace where it can't rain you out."
Selena cleared her throat as she
considered it. "It would be nice to look out from a building instead of
into it."
"Yeah," Tabitha said.
"You'd no longer freeze in the winter or blister in the summer. Climate
control all year long. No more wheeling your cart up here and setting up the
table and chairs. You could even have a La-Z-Boy in the back room and carry all
sorts of tarot card decks. Tia would be jealous as all get-out since she's been
wanting a shop closer to the Square. Think about it."
"You want it?" Ash asked.
Selena nodded enthusiastically.
Ash pulled out his cell phone and
dialed a number. "Hey, Bob," he said after a brief pause. "This
is Ash Parthenopaeus. There's a building for sale on St. Anne's in Jackson
Square… yeah, that one. I want it." He offered a close-lipped smile to
Selena. "No, I don't need to see it. Just have the keys out here in the
morning." He pulled the phone aside. "What time can you meet him
here, Selena?"
"Ten?"
He repeated it into the phone.
"Yeah, and make the deed out to Selena Laurens. I'll swing by tomorrow
afternoon and handle the payment. All right. Have a good one." Ash hung up
the phone and returned it to his pocket.
Selena smiled up at him. "Thank
you."
"No problem." The instant
he stood up, the handcuff fell free of the gate and Selena's arm.
Jeez, that man had some fearsome
powers. Tabitha just wasn't sure which was more impressive. The one that broke
the handcuff off Selena without a scratch or the one that allowed him to drop a
couple of million dollars without blinking.
He held his hand out to Selena and
helped her to her feet. "Just make sure you carry a lot of bright, shiny
things for Simi to buy whenever we're here."
Tabitha laughed at the mention of
Ash's demon… something… Tabitha still didn't know if Simi was Ash's girlfriend
or what. The two of them had a very odd relationship.
Simi demanded and Ash gave without
hesitation.
Unless it involved Simi killing and
eating someone. Those were the only times she'd ever seen Ash put his foot down
with the demon he kept secret from most of his Dark-Hunters. The only reason
Tabitha even knew about Simi was that the demon often joined them for movies.
For some reason, Ash really loved
the cinema and Tabitha had been going to see movies with him for the last two
years. His favorites were horror and action flicks. Meanwhile the Simi was a
most unusual and discriminating being who made him sit through "girl"
movies that often left Ash groaning.
"Where is the Simster
tonight?" Tabitha asked.
Ash brushed his hand over the dragon
tattoo on his forearm. "She's hanging around. But it's too early for her.
She doesn't like to be out and about until at least nine." He slung the
backpack over his shoulder.
Selena stood on her tiptoes and
pulled Ash down so that she could hug him. "I'll carry an entire line of
Kirk's Folly just for Simi."
Smiling, he patted her on the back.
"No more handcuffs, right?"
Selena pulled away. "Well, Bill
did say that I could protest with him later in the bedroom and I do owe him for
that kick I gave him, so…"
Ash laughed as Selena scooped up the
cuffs from the street.
"And you wonder why I'm
nuts," Tabitha said as Selena tucked them into her back pocket.
Ash pulled his glasses back down to
cover his eerie, swirling silver eyes. "At least she's entertaining."
"And you're way too
charitable." But that was what Tabitha loved most about Ash. He always saw
the good in everyone. "So what are you up to tonight?" she asked Ash
while Selena folded up her handmade sign.
Before he could answer, a large
black Harley came roaring down St. Anne. When it reached the turn that would
have taken the rider down Royal Street, the bike, stopped and was shut off.
Tabitha watched as the tall, lithe
rider, who was decked out all in black biker leathers, held the bike upright
between his thighs with ease and pulled the helmet off.
To her surprise, it was an
African-American woman, and not a man, who set the helmet down before her on
the bike's gas tank and unzipped her jacket. Extremely gorgeous, she was
slender but muscular, with medium brown skin and a flawless complexion. She
wore her jet-black hair in braids that were pulled back into a ponytail.
"Acheron," she said in a
singsong Caribbean accent. "Where should I park me ride?"
Ash indicated Decatur Street behind
him. "There's a public lot on the other side of the Brewery. I'll wait here
until you get back."
The woman's gaze went to Tabitha,
then Selena.
"They're friends," Ash
said. "Tabitha Devereaux and Selena Laurens."
"Sisters-in-law to
Kyrian?"
Ash nodded.
"I am Janice Smith," she
said to them. "Nice to meet friends of the Hunters."
Tabitha was sure that was a play on
words that stemmed not so much from Kyrian's last name as from his former
occupation of being a Dark-Hunter-one of the immortal warriors like Janice and
Ash who guarded the night against vampires, demons, and rogue gods.
Janice started her motorcycle and
roared off.
"New Dark-Hunter?" Selena
asked before Tabitha had a chance.
He nodded. "Artemis transferred
her here from the Florida Keys to help Valerius and Jean-Luc. Tonight's her
first night so I thought I'd give her a tour of the city."
"Need any help?" Tabitha
asked.
"Nah. I got it. Just try not to
stake Jean-Luc again if you meet up with him."
Tabitha laughed at his reference to
the night she had inadvertently met the pirate Dark-Hunter. It had been dark
and Jean-Luc had grabbed her from behind in an alley while she was stalking
after a group of Daimons. All she had seen were fangs and tallness, so she had
struck.
Jean-Luc had yet to forgive her.
"I can't help it. All you
fanged people look alike in the dark."
Ash grinned. "Yeah. I know what
you mean. All you soul-full people look alike to us, too."
Tabitha shook her head at him as she
continued laughing. She wrapped her arm around Selena and started toward
Decatur, where Selena had left her Jeep across the street.
It didn't take long to get her
sister home and situated with a very hesitant Bill, who wasn't sure if Selena
would rack him again or not. Once Tabitha was satisfied that Selena would be
okay… and Bill, too… she headed back to the Quarter to patrol for Daimons.
It was a relatively quiet night out.
She followed her usual habit of stopping in at the Cafe Pontalba and getting
four plates of red beans and rice with Cokes to go, then taking the meals down
to an alley off of Royal Street where many of the homeless were known to
congregate. Since the city had decided to crack down on vagrants and the
homeless, they weren't nearly as prevalent as before. Now they, like the
vampires she sought, kept to the shadows where they were forgotten.
But Tabitha knew they were there and
she never let herself forget about them.
Tabitha left the food on an old
rusted barrel and turned to leave.
As soon as she reached the edge of
the sidewalk, she heard people scurrying for the food.
"Hey, if you want a job—"
But they were gone before she could
get anything more than that out.
Sighing, Tabitha headed down Royal.
She couldn't save the world, she knew that. But at least she could see to it
that some of the hungry were fed.
With no real destination in mind, she
wandered down the lonely streets and browsed in the jewelry shop windows.
"Hey, Tabby, killed any
vampires lately?"
She looked up to see Richard
Crenshaw coming toward her. A waiter at Mike Anderson's Seafood, which was just
a couple of doors down from her own store, had a bad habit of coming in
whenever he got off work and hitting on the strippers who ordered custom-made
costumes from her.
As usual, he was laughing at her.
That was fine. Most people did. In fact, most people thought she was insane.
Even her own family had laughed at her for years… until her twin had ended up
married to a Dark-Hunter and had faced a vampire who had almost killed her.
Suddenly her family realized that
her preternatural stories over the years weren't total hallucinations or
fabrications.
"Yeah," she said to
Richard, "I dusted one last night."
He rolled his eyes and laughed at
her as he walked on past.
"You're welcome, Dick,"
she said under her breath as he kept going. The Daimon she'd killed had been
hovering around the back door of Mike Anderson's, where Richard was known to
take out the trash right before he got off work. If Tabitha hadn't killed the
Daimon, Richard would most likely be dead now.
Whatever. She didn't really want
thanks for what she did and she certainly didn't expect it.
She kept walking down the street,
feeling extremely lonely tonight. How she wished she could live her life
blindly, never knowing what was out here.
But she wasn't blind. She knew, and
with that knowledge came the choice of either helping people or walking away.
Never in her life had Tabitha been the kind of person who turned her back on
someone in need. Her powers as an empath were too much for her sometimes. She
felt the pain of others even more deeply than she felt her own.
It was what had drawn Ash to her in
the beginning. Over the last three years, he had taught her several tricks to
dampen down others' emotions and to focus on her own. He'd been a godsend to
her and had done more for her sanity than anyone else. Still, his tricks didn't
silence them totally.
At times it was all completely
overwhelming. She was so bombarded by intense emotions that it set off hers and
sometimes caused her to lash out verbally just from the stress of it.
So here she was, by herself,
spending another lonely night walking the streets as she risked her life for
people who mocked her.
Patrolling was certainly much more
fun when she'd done it with a group of friends.
Tabitha forced herself not to
remember Trish and Alex, who'd both died in the line of duty. But it was
useless. Tears filled her eyes as she touched the jagged scar on her face that
the Daimon Desiderius had given her. The worst sort of psycho, Desiderius had
been out to kill her twin sister and brother-in-law. Luckily, Amanda and Kyrian
had survived. Tabitha just wished she'd been killed that night instead of her friends.
It wasn't right for them to pay such a high price when Tabitha had been the one
to talk them into helping her in the first place.
God, why couldn't she have kept her
mouth shut and just left them alone to live out their lives in ignorance and peace?
It was why she fought alone now. She
would never again ask anyone to risk their life to do what she did.
They had a choice about this.
She didn't.
Tabitha slowed down as she got the
familiar tickle down the center of her spine.
Daimons…
They were behind her.
Turning around, she knelt down and
pretended to tie the laces on her boot. Meanwhile she was well aware of the six
shadows that were closing in on her…
Valerius pulled at the edge of his
right leather Coach glove to straighten it as he walked down the virtually
abandoned street. As always, he was impeccably dressed in a long black cashmere
coat, a black turtleneck, and black slacks. Unlike most Dark-Hunters, he wasn't
a leather-wearing barbarian. He was the epitome of sophistication. Breeding.
Nobility. His family had been descended from one of the oldest and most
respected noble families of Rome. As a former Roman general whose father had
been a well-respected senator, Valerius would have gladly followed in the man's
footsteps had the Parcae, or Fates, not intervened.
But that was the past and Valerius
refused to remember it. Agrippina was the only exception to that rule. She was
the only thing he ever remembered from his human life.
She was the only thing worth
remembering from his human life.
Valerius winced and focused his
thoughts on other, much less painful things. There was a crispness in the air
that announced winter would be here soon. Not that New Orleans had a winter,
compared to what he'd been used to in D.C.
Still, the longer he was here the
more his blood was thinning, and the cool night air was a bit chilly to him.
Valerius paused as his Dark-Hunter
senses detected the presence of a Daimon. Tilting his head, he listened with
his heightened hearing.
He heard a group of men laughing at
their victim. And then he heard the strangest thing of all…
"Laugh it up, asshole. But she
who laughs last, laughs longest and I intend to belly roll tonight."
A fight broke out.
Valerius whirled on his heel and
headed back the direction he'd come from.
He drifted through the darkness
until he found an ajar gate that led to a courtyard.
There in the back were six Daimons
fighting a tall human woman.
Valerius was mesmerized by the
macabre beauty of the battle. One Daimon came at the woman's back. She flipped
him over her shoulder and in one graceful motion stabbed him in the chest with
a long, black dagger. The Daimon burst into a golden dust.
She twirled as she rose up to face
another one. She tossed the dagger from one hand to the other and held it like
a woman well used to defending herself from the undead.
Two Daimons rushed her. She actually
did a cartwheel away from them, but the other Daimon had anticipated her
action. He grabbed her.
Without panicking, the woman
surrendered her weight by picking both of her legs up to her chest. It brought
the Daimon to his knees. The woman sprang to her feet and whirled to stab the
Daimon in his back.
He evaporated.
Normally the remaining Daimons would
flee. The last four didn't. Instead they spoke to each other in a language he
hadn't heard in a long time: ancient Greek.
"Little chickie la la, isn't
dumb enough to fall for that, guys," the woman answered back in flawless
Greek.
Valerius was so stunned he couldn't
move. In over two thousand years, he'd never seen or heard of anything like
this. Not even the Amazons had ever produced a better fighter than the woman
who now confronted the Daimons.
Suddenly a light appeared behind the
woman. It flashed bright and swirling. A chill, cold wind swept through the
courtyard before six more Daimons stepped out.
Valerius went rigid at something
even rarer than the warrior-woman fighting the Daimons.
Tabitha turned slowly to see the
group of new Daimons. Holy shit. She'd only seen this one other time.
The new batch of Daimons looked at
her and laughed. "Pitiful human."
"Pitiful this," she said
as tossed her dagger at his chest.
He moved his hand and deflected the
dagger before it reached him. Then he slung his arm toward her. Something
invisible and painful slashed through her chest as she went flying head over
heels.
Dazed and scared, Tabitha lay on the
ground.
Horrible memories ripped through her
of the night when her friends had died. The way the warrior Spathi Daimons had
torn through them…
No, no, no.
They were dead. Kyrian had killed
them all.
Her panic tripled as she struggled
to right herself.
She was dizzy, her vision blurry as
she pushed herself to her feet.
Valerius was across the alley in
microseconds as he saw the woman fall.
The tallest Daimon, who stood even
in height to Valerius, laughed. "How nice of Acheron to send us a
playmate."
Valerius pulled his two retractable
swords from his coat and extended the blades. "Play is for children and
dogs. Now that you have identified which category you fall into, I'll show you
what Romans do to rabid dogs."
One of the Daimons smiled.
"Romans? My father always told me that all Romans die squealing like
pigs."
The Daimon attacked.
Valerius sidestepped and brought his
sword down. The Daimon pulled a sword out of nothing and parried his attack
with a skill that bespoke a man with years of training.
The other Daimons struck at once.
Valerius dropped his swords and
swung out with his arms, releasing the grappling hooks and cords that were
attached to his wrists. The hooks went straight into the chest of the tallest
Daimon and the one he was fighting.
Unlike most Daimons, they didn't
disintegrate instantly. They stared at him with hollow eyes before they burst
apart.
But while he was distracted by them,
another Daimon retrieved his sword and cut him across his back. Valerius hissed
in pain before he turned and elbowed the Daimon in the face.
The woman was back on her feet. She
killed two more
Valerius wasn't sure what had
happened to the others; in truth, he was having a bit of trouble moving because
of the vicious pain of his back.
"Die, Daimon snot!" the
woman snarled at him an instant before she, too, stabbed him straight in the
chest.
She pulled the dagger out instantly.
Valerius hissed and staggered back
as pain ripped through his heart. He clutched at his chest, unable to think
past the agony of it.
Tabitha bit her lip in terror as she
saw the man recoil and not explode into dust.
"Oh, shit," she breathed,
rushing to his side. "Please tell me you're some screwed-up Dark-Hunter
and that I didn't just kill an accountant or lawyer."
The man hit the street hard.
Tabitha rolled him over onto his
back and checked his breathing. His eyes were partially opened, but he wasn't
speaking. He held his jaw clamped firmly shut as he groaned deep in his throat.
Terrified, she still wasn't sure who
she had mistakenly stabbed. Her heart hammering, she pulled up his turtle-neck
to see the nasty-looking stab wound in the center of his chest.
And then she saw what she had hoped
for…
He had a bow and arrow brand above
his right hipbone.
"Oh, thank God," she
breathed as relief poured through her. He was in fact a Dark-Hunter and not
some unfortunate human.
She grabbed her phone and called
Acheron to let him know one of his men had been hurt, but he didn't answer.
So she started dialing her sister
Amanda until her common sense returned. There were only four Dark-Hunters in
this city. Ash who led them. Janice whom she had met earlier. The former pirate
captain, Jean-Luc. And…
Valerius Magnus.
He was the only Dark-Hunter in New
Orleans she didn't know personally. And he was the mortal enemy of her
brother-in-law.
She hit the cancel button on her
phone. Kyrian would kill this man in a heartbeat and bring the wrath of Artemis
down fully upon his head. In return, the goddess would kill Kyrian for it and
that was the last thing Tabitha wanted. Her sister would die if anything
happened to her husband.
Come to think of it, if half of what
Kyrian said about this man and his family was true, she should just leave him
here and let him die.
But then Ash would never forgive her
if she did that to one of his men. Besides she couldn't leave him here, not
even she was that heartless. Like it or not, he had saved her life and she was
honor-bound to return the favor.
Wincing, she realized she was going
to have to get him to safety. And he was just a little too large for her to
handle on her own. She dialed her phone again and waited for an answer that
came in a slick, Cajun drawl.
"Hey, Nick, it's Tabitha
Devereaux. I'm in the old courtyard off Royal Street with a man down and I need
help. Any chance you want to be my knight in shining armor tonight and lend a
hand to a damsel in distress?"
Nick Gautier's smooth laugh rippled
in her ear. "Why, cher, you know I live for such moments. I'll be right
there."
"Thanks," she said before
she gave him precise directions and hung up.
A New Orleans native like herself,
Nick had been an acquaintance of hers for years since the two of them
frequented many of the same restaurants and clubs. Not to mention, Nick had
brought a few of his girlfriends in to browse some of the racier outfits that
Tabitha sold in her adult boutique, Pandora's Box.
A charming rogue, Nick was about as
handsome as any man she'd ever seen. He had dark brown hair that tended to stay
in a pair of eyes that were so blue and seductive they really should be
illegal.
And when it came to his smile…
Not even she was entirely immune to
it.
She'd been stunned to learn at her
sister's wedding three years ago that Nick actually worked for the undead.
Rumors on the street had always abounded on what Nick did for a living. Every
native who haunted the Quarter knew the man had a ton of cash and no real job
that anyone could discern. When he'd shown up as best man for Kyrian, she'd
been completely shocked.
But since that night, she and Nick
had forged an odd alliance as drinking buddies and partners-in-crime who lived
to rankle the Dark-Hunters. It was really nice to have someone she could talk
to who knew that the vampires were real and who understood the dangers she
faced every night.
Tabitha sat down on the cobblestoned
walk to wait on Nick. Valerius still wasn't moving. She cocked her head to
study Kyrian's great Satan. According to her brother-in-law, Valerius and his
Roman family had been the worst sort of bastards.
They had killed and raped any- and
everything that came into their paths as they led bloody campaigns across the
ancient world. She would have taken Kyrian's aspersions with more grains of
salt if it wasn't for the fact that other Dark-Hunters concurred.
To her knowledge, no one liked
Valerius.
No one.
But as she watched him breathing
lightly, he didn't look so ominous.
Probably because he's practically
dead.
Actually, he was all dead. But still
breathing. The moonlight cast shadows over the handsome planes of his face and
showed the tears in his clothing where he was bleeding. If he could bleed to
death, she'd hold a compress to his chest wound, but since he couldn't she
stayed put.
"How did you die?" she
whispered. Kyrian didn't know, and in all her readings about ancient Rome and
Greece, Valerius's name had seldom been mentioned. For all the brutality that
Kyrian accused him of, Valerius Magnus wasn't much more than a footnote in
history.
"Hey, Tab, you in here?"
She breathed a sigh of relief at the
sound of Nick's deep Cajun drawl. Thank goodness he only lived three blocks
away and knew how to hustle in a jam. "I'm over here."
Dressed in a pair of faded jeans and
a short-sleeved blue shirt, Nick quickly joined her, then cursed the instant he
saw who was lying on the ground.
"You've got to be kidding
me," he snarled after she asked him to help her get Valerius up. "I
wouldn't throw piss on that man if he were on fire."
"Nick!" Tabitha said,
shocked at his rancor. Normally Nick was the most laid-back of men. "That
was uncalled-for."
"Oh, yeah, right. I notice you
didn't call Kyrian for this. Why is that, Tabitha? 'Cause he'd kill you
both?"
She stamped down her own temper,
which would only set his off more if she started telling him how juvenile he
was behaving. "C'mon, Nick. Don't be like that. I don't want to help him,
either, but Ash won't answer the phone and no one else seems to like him."
"Damn straight. Everyone, but
you, has a brain. Let him rot on the street."
She stood up and faced him with her
hands on her hips. "Fine. You explain to Ash why one of his Hunters was
killed, then. You deal with his anger. I'm out of it."
Nick narrowed his eyes on her.
"You really suck, Tabby. Why didn't you call Eric for this?"
"Because it's awkward to ask
your ex—who is happily married to someone else—for favors, okay? I somehow
thought my friend Nick wouldn't hassle me over this, but I can see now that I
was wrong."
He gave an exaggerated wince at
that. "I really hate this man, Tabitha. I've known Kyrian too long and owe
him too much to render aid to the man whose grandfather crucified him."
"And we are not responsible for
the actions of our family members, are we, Nick?"
His jaw ticced at that.
Nick's father had been a convicted
murderer who had died in a prison riot. It was well known by everyone that the
man was a repeat felon who had spent the whole of Nick's youth in and out of
jail for all sorts of unsavory crimes. Nick himself had been well on his way to
repeating his father's fate when Kyrian had stepped in and saved him.
"That's low, Tab, real
low."
"But it's true. Now, please,
forget that he's a dickhead and help me get him home, okay?"
Nick growled at her before he came
near them. "Do you know where he lives?"
"No, do you?"
"Somewhere over in the Garden
District." Nick pulled out his phone and dialed a number. After a minute,
he cursed. "Otto, answer the phone." He cursed again, then hung up
and glared at her. "You know it's bad when the guy's own Squire won't
answer to save him."
"Maybe Otto's busy."
"Maybe Otto's psychic."
"Nick…"
Nick put his phone in his pocket,
then bent over, tossed Valerius over his shoulder, and headed out of the
courtyard to where his Jaguar was parked on the street. He dumped Valerius
unceremoniously into the passenger seat.
"Watch his head, Nick!"
she snapped as Nick banged it against the car.
"Not like I could kill him or
anything. What happened to him, anyway?"
"I stabbed him."
Nick blinked, then burst out
laughing. "I knew I liked you for a reason. Oh man, I can't wait to tell
Kyrian. He'll laugh his ass off."
"Yeah, well, in the meantime,
take Valerius back to my place and give me Otto's number so that I can keep
trying to call him."
"And you want to tell me how
I'm going to get him to your place since Bourbon Street is closed off to
traffic after dark?"
She gave him a droll stare.
He growled at her. "Fine, but
you owe me big-time."
"Yeah, yeah. Get cracking,
Squire."
He mumbled something under his
breath that she was sure was less than complimentary before he walked to the
other side of his car and got in.
Since his car was a two-seater,
Tabitha headed out on foot to rendezvous with him at her store. As she walked
into the crowd on Bourbon Street, she felt something evil brush up against her
psychically.
Spinning around, she scanned the
crowd, but didn't see anything.
Still, she felt it deep inside.
"Something wicked this way
comes…" She breathed the title of her favorite Ray Bradbury book.
And something inside told her it was
far more evil than anything she had faced before.
Chapter 2
Valerius came awake slowly to the
sound of someone humming nearby.
Humming?
He blinked open his eyes expecting
to find himself in his own bed in his own house. Instead, he was on a
queen-size antique tester bed with an ornate wooden canopy that was padded in
burgundy velvet.
The voice he heard was coming from a
rocking chair on his left. He turned his head and was floored by what he found.
It was…
Well, at first glance it looked like
a very large woman. She had long blond hair and was wearing a short-sleeved,
pink furry sweater and a pair of khaki pants. Only the "woman" had
shoulders every bit as broad as Valerius did and a pronounced Adam's apple.
She sat in the chair, flipping
through the fall issue of Vogue with glossy, blood-red fingernails that could
double for claws. She looked up and paused in her humming.
"Oh! You're awake!" she
said excitedly, getting up immediately and fluttering around his bed. She
awkwardly grabbed what appeared to be a walkie-talkie from the nightstand and
pressed the button while making sure she didn't break a nail. "Tabby, Mr.
Sexy is awake."
"Okay, Marla, thanks."
Valerius had a faint memory of that
voice, but it wasn't clear as he tried to remember what had happened to him.
"Where am I?" he asked.
"Hell" seemed the most
apropos answer. But the pain in his body and the dimmed room that was a
peculiar mixture of modern and antique said that not even hell would be this
bad or tacky.
"Don't move, sweetie," the
unknown woman said as she continued to gesture and hover around the bed.
"Tabby will be right here. She said that I wasn't to let you go anywhere
at all. So don't."
Before he could ask who Tabby was,
another woman burst into the room.
She too was tall. But unlike the
first one, she was slender, almost waif-like, except that her body was well defined,
as if she lifted weights. Her long auburn hair was pulled back into a ponytail
and she had a vicious scar over her left cheekbone.
Valerius froze at the sight of the
warrior he'd seen the night before. Memories flooded him. Including the one where
she had stabbed him straight in the chest-which was helped by the fact that she
still held a large butcher knife in her right hand.
"You!" he accused, pushing
himself to the furthest edge of the bed.
The woman visibly cringed before she
turned to the first one and urged her toward the door. "Thanks, Marla, I
appreciate your watching over him."
"Oh, anytime, hon. You just
ring-a-ding if you need anything."
"I will." She pushed the
larger woman out the door and slammed it shut. "Hi," she said to
Valerius.
He stared at the knife in her hand,
then looked down at the healing wound on his chest. "What? Are you back to
finish me off?"
She frowned at him.
"Wha…?" Then her gaze went to the knife in her hand. "Oh, this.
No, last night was a complete accident."
Tabitha placed the knife on the
dresser, then turned to face him. She had to admit that Valerius looked
extremely handsome in her bed. His long black hair was down, and draped around
his face. His features were perfectly chiseled as if by some master artist. And
that body of his…
Really, no man should look that
yummy.
It was why she'd spent the night in
her downstairs office and why she'd sent Marla up to watch after him first
thing this morning.
Asleep he'd been more of a
temptation than she wanted. He'd looked relaxed and gentle.
Inviting.
Awake he looked dangerous.
And still inviting.
She would give the goddess credit,
Artemis had exquisite taste in men; and to Tabitha's knowledge, and according
to Amanda's words, there was no such thing as an ugly Dark-Hunter.
She couldn't really fault the
goddess for that. If you had to pick men for your own personal army, what woman
wouldn't pick the tallest and best-looking of the bunch?
It also explained why Acheron was
their leader.
Yes, it was good to be a goddess.
Tabitha couldn't imagine how great it would be to command all that delectable
testosterone.
And Valerius was prime DH material
as he sat with one divinely carved arm braced on her mattress while the rest of
him was all but bare to her sight. He looked like some coiled, wild beast ready
to strike.
But he was confused. She felt his
emotions reaching out to her. He was also angry but she wasn't sure why.
"You're safe here," she
said, stepping near the bed. "I know what you are and I made sure all the
windows are covered."
"Who are you?" he asked in
a suspicious tone.
"Tabitha Devereaux," she
said.
"Are you a Squire?"
"No."
"Then how do you know—"
"I'm a friend of
Acheron's."
His anger snapped at that.
"You're lying." He stood up suddenly, then hissed as he realized he
was completely naked.
Tabitha bit her lip to keep from
moaning at the sight of all that luscious skin bared. She had to give the
Dark-Hunters credit, they were all incredibly well built.
Valerius grabbed the sheet from her
bed and covered himself. "Where are my clothes?" he asked in the most
disdainful voice she'd ever heard.
No wonder Nick and the others had a
hard time with him. Arrogance and supreme superiority bled from every molecule
of that masculine body. It was obvious Valerius was a man used to giving
orders, which made sense since she knew he had once been a Roman general.
Unfortunately, Tabitha wasn't used
to following anyone's orders, especially not a man's.
"Keep your shirt on," she
said with a laugh at her bad joke. "Your clothes are at the laundry.
They'll deliver them as soon as they're ready."
"And in the meantime?"
"Looks like you're naked."
His jaw worked as if he couldn't
believe what he was hearing. "I beg your pardon?"
"Beg all you want, you're still
going to be naked." Tabitha paused at the wicked image in her mind.
"Come to think of it, a gorgeous, begging, naked man… that's the stuff of
fantasies. Begging won't get you your clothes, but it could get you something
else." She wiggled her eyebrows at him.
His fist tightened on the sheet he
held around his waist. She could sense that he was both offended and yet oddly
amused by her.
She cocked her head at him.
"You know, you are Roman. You could just make a toga out of the
bedsheet."
Valerius stood there feeling a strange
urge to sputter. Had he been lowborn, he might actually have done that.
This had to be the strangest woman
ever born.
"How do you know I'm
Roman?"
"I told you, I know Ash and all
the rest of you night dwellers." She gave him a playful look. "C'mon,
make a toga for me. I tried to make one in college and ended up with it falling
off in the middle of the party. Thank God my roommate was still sober enough to
scoop it up and wrap it around me before the frat boys pounced."
Behind him, he heard a cuckoo clock
chime. Valerius turned to see the time, then scowled as he realized the
"bird" had a red mohawk.
It also had an eyepatch.
"Ain't it a hoot?" Tabitha
asked. "I picked it up in Switzerland when I spent a year there
studying."
"Fascinating," he said
coldly. "Now if you'll leave me, I shall—"
"Whoa, wait a sec, bud. I ain't
your servant and you don't take that tone with me. Capisce?"
"Saeva scaeva," Valerius
muttered under his breath.
"Saeve puer," she shot
back.
Valerius actually gaped at her.
"Did you just insult me in Latin?"
"You insulted me first. Not
that I'm particularly insulted by being called a rampant she-devil. It's kind
of flattering, but still, I'm not the kind of person to take an insult in
silence."
In spite of himself, he was
impressed. It had been a long time indeed since he'd met a female who knew his
native tongue. Of course, he didn't like being called an oafish boy, but there
was something to be said for a woman who possessed such intelligence.
And it had been an eternity since he
was around someone who didn't openly disdain him. She wasn't biting in her
retorts. Rather she was sparring with him like a champion debater who took none
of this to heart.
How unusual…
How frighteningly refreshing.
Suddenly, the theme song to The
Twilight Zone chimed through the house.
"What is that?" he asked
trepidatiously. Maybe he had actually walked into Rod Serling's domain.
"Doorbell. It's probably your
clothes being delivered."
"Tabby!" Marla shouted
from somewhere outside the bedroom. "It's Ben with your stuff."
Valerius stiffened at the crass
behavior. "Does he always scream like that?"
"Hey, now," Tabitha said
sternly. "Marla is one of my dearest friends on this earth and if you
insult her or keep calling her a he, I'll stake your butt somewhere where it'll
hurt a lot more than your chest." She dropped her gaze meaningfully to his
groin.
Valerius widened his eyes at her
threat. What kind of woman said such a thing to a man?
Before he could speak, she left the
room.
Stunned, he wasn't sure what to do.
What to think. He went to the dresser where she'd left her knife. Next to it
was his wallet, keys, and phone.
He grabbed the phone and called
Acheron, who immediately answered.
"I need help," Valerius
said to him for the first time in two thousand years.
Acheron groaned slightly. "Help
with what?" he asked. His heavily accented voice was groggy, as if
Valerius had awakened him from a deep sleep.
"I'm in the home of a madwoman
who claims she knows you. You have to get me out of here right now, Acheron. I
don't care what it takes."
"It's noon, Valerius. We both
should be asleep." Acheron paused. "Where are you anyway?"
Valerius was looking around the
room. There were Mardi Gras beads draped all over the three-sided antique
dresser mirror. Instead of a Persian rug, it was… a giant toy-car road map.
There were parts of the room that showed impeccable taste and breeding and
parts that were just plain scary.
He hesitated in front of what
appeared to be a voodoo altar.
"I don't know," Valerius
said. "I hear some godawful kind of music from outside, horns blaring, and
I'm in a house with a mohawk cuckoo bird, a transvestite, and a knife-wielding
lunatic."
"Why are you at
Tabitha's?" Acheron asked.
Valerius was floored by the
question. Acheron really did know her?
Granted, Acheron was a bit
eccentric, but up until now, Valerius had assumed the Atlantean had more sense
than to associate with such low-class humans. "Excuse me?"
"Relax," Acheron said with
a yawn. "You're in good hands. Tabby won't hurt you."
"She stabbed me!"
"Damn," Ash said. "I
told her not to stab any more Hunters. I hate it when she does that."
"You hate it? I'm the one with
the festering wound."
"Really?" Acheron asked.
"I've never known a Dark-Hunter to have a festering wound before. At least
not externally."
Valerius clenched his teeth at the
Atlantean's misplaced humor. "I do not find you amusing, Acheron."
"Yeah, I know. But look on the
bright side: You're the third Dark-Hunter she's nailed so far. She kind of gets
a little carried away sometimes."
"A little carried away? The
woman is a menace."
"Nah, she's a good egg. Unless
you're a Daimon—then she can give Xanthippe a run for her money."
Valerius doubted that. Even the
infamous ancient Greek shrew had to be more composed than Tabitha.
The door opened to show Tabitha
entering the room with his clothes wrapped in plastic.
"Who are you talking to?"
she asked.
"Tell her I said hi,"
Acheron said a second later.
This time, Valerius did sputter. He
just couldn't believe what was happening here. That these two knew each other
so well.
He stared at Tabitha as she hung his
clothes on the closet doorknob. "Acheron says hi."
She moved to stand in front of him,
leaned forward, and raised her voice so that Acheron could hear her over the
phone. "Hey, gorgeous babe. Shouldn't you be asleep?"
"Yes, I should," Acheron
said to Valerius.
"You don't call Acheron
'babe,'" Valerius said sternly to Tabitha.
She actually snorted at him. Like a
horse. "You don't call Acheron 'babe' because… well, that's just sick. But
I call him 'babe' all the time."
Valerius was shocked.
Was she…
"No, she's not my
girlfriend," Acheron said from the other end as if he could hear
Valerius's thoughts. "I'm leaving that for some other poor sap."
"You have to help me,
Acheron," Valerius said, tightening his grip on the sheet as he moved away
from Tabitha, who continued to pursue him across the room.
"Okay, listen. Here's some
help. You know your prized cashmere coat?"
Valerius couldn't imagine how that
might help him, but at this point he was willing to try anything.
"Yes?"
"Guard it well. Marla is about
your size and she'll definitely try to steal it if she sees it. She has this
strange coat and jacket fetish, especially if they've been worn by men. Last
time I was in town, she ended up with my favorite motorcycle jacket."
Valerius gaped. "And how is it
that you associate with drag queens, Acheron?"
"I have many interesting
friends, Valerius, and some of them are even complete and utter assholes."
He stiffened. "Was that
directed at me?"
"No. I just think you're way
too uptight for your own good. Now if you're through wigging out on me, I'd
like to go back to sleep."
Ash actually hung up the phone.
Valerius stood there, holding the
cell phone. He felt like someone had just cut the line on his life preserver,
and was leaving him to drift out into shark-infested waters.
Jaws herself was there, waiting to
devour him.
Jupiter help him.
Tabitha picked the pillow up off the
floor and returned it to the bed. She paused as she caught sight of Valerius's
backside. Damn, he had the nicest posterior she'd ever seen on any man. Someone
should stamp Grade A Prime on it. It was all she could do not to walk over to
him and cop a feel, but his rigid, frigid stance kept her well at bay.
That and the multitude of scars that
marred his back. It looked as if someone had beaten him repeatedly.
But who would have dared do such a
thing?
"You okay?" she asked as
he walked to the dresser and set his phone down.
He raked his hand through his long
hair and sighed. "How many hours to sundown?"
"A little over five." She
sensed he was still angry and confused. "You want to go back to bed and
sleep?"
He gave her a harsh, menacing glare.
"I want to go home."
"Yeah, well, I would have taken
you home had Otto answered his phone last night."
"I gave Guido time off for bad
behavior," Valerius said under his breath. Then his face went suddenly
pale.
Tabitha sensed dread, followed
sharply by a pain so deep that it actually made her wince.
"What's wrong?" she asked.
"I need to go home
immediately."
"Well, unless you have some
special relationship to Apollo that I need to know about, that's about as
likely as me winning the lottery, which would be highly likely if Ash would
ever share those damn numbers with me. Vicious cur that he is. He won't share
squat."
She felt a wave of hopeless despair
consume Valerius. Instinctively, she walked over to him and gently touched his
arm. "It's okay, really. I'll take you back as soon as the sun goes
down."
Valerius looked down at her hand on
his biceps. No woman had laid a bare hand to him like that in centuries. It
wasn't sexual. It was soothing. The hand of someone who offered him comfort.
He lifted his gaze to hers. She had
searingly blue eyes.
They were sharp and intelligent.
Most of all, they were kind, and kindness wasn't something Valerius was used
to.
Most people took one look at him and
instantly had a strong disliking for him. As a human, he'd attributed it to his
regal status and his family's well-earned reputation for brutality.
As a Dark-Hunter, it had stemmed
from the fact that he was a Roman and since Rome and Greece had spent centuries
warring against each other until Rome had finally brought Greece to her knees,
it was only to be expected that the Greeks would hate him. Unfortunately, the
Greeks and Amazons were a vocal group who had quickly turned all the other
Dark-Hunters and Squires against their Roman-born brethren.
Over the centuries, Valerius had
convinced himself that he didn't need any brothers-in-arms and had even started
getting a morbid kind of enjoyment from reminding them of his regal Roman
status.
From the first year of his rebirth,
he'd learned to strike out at them before they struck him.
He'd finally embraced the rigid
formality and sense of propriety that his father had beaten into him as a
child.
But that formality fled before the
kindness of this woman's soothing touch.
Tabitha swallowed as something
passed between them. His dark, intense stare went through her and for the first
time it wasn't condemning or judgmental. It was almost tender, and tenderness
was not something she expected from a man of Valerius's reputation.
He laid his fingers against the scar
on her cheek. She didn't see the sneer on his face that most men got when they
saw it. Instead, he gently traced its line. "What happened?" he
asked.
"Car wreck" almost came
out. She'd told that lie for so long that it was practically automatic now.
Honestly, it was a lot easier to say the lie than it was to live the truth.
She knew just how hideous her face
was. Her family had no idea how many times she had overheard them make comments
about her scar. How many times Kyrian had told Amanda that he would gladly pay
for her to have plastic surgery.
But Tabitha had been terrified of
hospitals ever since her aunt had died of a simple tonsillectomy gone bad. She
would never elect to have something done just because she wasn't pretty
anymore. If the rest of the world couldn't deal with her, it was their problem,
not hers.
"A Daimon," she said
quietly. "He said he wanted to give me a special memento so that I would
always remember him."
A tic started in his jaw at her words
and she sensed his anger on her behalf.
"I'll give him credit,"
she said past the lump in her throat. "He was right. I think of him every
time I look in the mirror."
Valerius dropped his hand down to
the scar on her neck where one of the Daimons had actually gotten a bite on
her. If not for Kyrian coming to her rescue, she would most likely have died
that night.
"I'm sorry," he whispered.
Those were words she was certain
never crossed this man's lips. "It's okay. We all have scars. I'm just
lucky that most of mine are on the outside."
Valerius was stunned by her wisdom.
He'd never expected such depth of thought from a woman like her. She gave a
light squeeze to his hand before she removed it from her neck and stepped back.
"Are you hungry?"
"Famished," he answered
honestly. Like most Dark-Hunters he usually ate three meals a night. One not
long after he awoke at sunset, another around ten or eleven at night, and the
third one around three or four in the morning. Since he'd been wounded fairly
early, he'd only eaten one meal last night.
"Okay, I have a well-stocked
kitchen. What would you like?"
"Something Italian."
She nodded. "Sounds good. Go
ahead and get dressed and I'll meet you downstairs. The kitchen is the door on
the left. Don't open the one on the right that has a Bio-hazard sticker on it.
That one leads to my shop and it's nothing but daylight in there."
She started to pull the door closed
behind her, then stopped. "By the way, you might want to put your coat in
my closet until you leave. Marla—"
"Acheron already warned
me."
"Ah, good. See you in a
few."
Valerius waited until she was gone
before he went to dress. As he hung his coat in her closet, he was struck by
the fact that she owned as much black as he did. The only color in her closet
was a bright pink satin dress that stood out harshly amidst the sea of
darkness. That and a red plaid miniskirt.
It was the miniskirt that held his
attention as an unwanted image of Tabitha in it went through him and he
wondered if she had nice legs.
He'd always appreciated a pair of
shapely, soft feminine legs. Especially when they were wrapped around him.
His body hardened instantly with
that thought. Valerius grimaced as he felt suddenly like a pervert standing in
her closet, daydreaming about her.
He shut the closet door instantly
and left the room. The hallway was painted a bright yellow shade that was a bit
harsh on his sensitive Dark-Hunter eyes. There was a room across the hall that
had the door opened to display a well-kept, tastefully decorated bedroom. He
saw a silver sequined dress lying across the antique bed and an ornate brunette
wig resting on a foam head beside it.
"Oh, hi, cutie," Marla
said as she left what must have been a bathroom. She was wearing a turban on
her apparently bald head and a pink bathrobe. "Tabby's downstairs."
"Thank you," he said,
inclining his head to her.
"Ooo, manners. What a nice change
for Tabby. Most of the men she drags home are all crude ruffians. Except for
that Ash Parthenopaeus who is remarkably well-mannered. But he's odd, too. Have
you ever met him?"
"I am acquainted with him,
yes."
She visibly shivered. "Ooo, I
like the way you say 'acquainted,' shug. That's some accent you have there. Now
you better go on before I take up any more of your time. God knows, I'll talk
your ears off if you let me."
Smiling at her flamboyant gestures
as she shooed him away, Valerius bid her adieu, then closed her door. There was
something oddly charming about Marla.
He made his way down the beautiful
cherry staircase that led to a small landing. He frowned at the Biohazard
sticker that was right where Tabitha had said. He turned to the left where two
French doors that could use a bit of repair led to a small dining room. Inside
were an old brown-and-white farmer's table and ladder-back chairs that had seen
better days.
The walls were painted a harsh white
and held framed black-and-white posters of European landmarks such as the
Eiffel Tower, Stonehenge, and the Coliseum. Black plantation shutters had been
pulled closed over the windows to block out the daylight for him. And a black
buffet was set against the far wall. The top of it was littered with pictures
and collectible plates, including ones of Elvis and Elvira. Two large, antique
silver candelabrums stood at each end of it.
But what amazed him was an 8 x 10
picture in the center of the buffet of what appeared to be Tabitha in a wedding
dress standing beside a man whose face was covered by a small cut-out picture
of Russell Crowe's head.
He reached out to remove the
picture.
"There you are," Tabitha
said from behind him.
Valerius straightened instantly.
"You're married?" he asked.
She frowned until she saw the
picture. "Oh, good grief, no. That's my sister Amanda at her wedding. The
baby girl in the picture next to it is her daughter, Marissa."
Valerius studied the wedding
picture. There was really no difference between the women except for the scar.
"You have a twin sister?"
"Yes."
"And why is your sister married
to Russell Crowe?"
Tabitha laughed. "Ah, it's a
goof on my brother-in-law, the self-righteous, proselytizing schlemiel."
He gave her an arch look. "I
take it you don't care for the man."
"Actually, I love him to death.
He's really good to my sister and niece, and is a real sweetheart in his own
way. But, much like you, he takes himself entirely too seriously. You guys need
to lighten up and enjoy yourselves more. Life's too short… well, maybe not for
you, but for the rest of us mortals it is."
Valerius was fascinated by this
woman who should repulse him. She was tacky and uncouth and yet she was amusing
and charming in a most unexpected way.
She plunked a small red can on the
table that had a plastic spoon sticking out of what appeared to be some sort of
elbow macaroni and marinara.
Valerius frowned. "What is
that?"
"Ravioli."
He arched a brow at that. "That
is not ravioli."
She looked down at it. "Well,
okay. It's Beefaroni. My niece calls anything that comes in these small
microwavable cans ravioli." She pulled a chair out for him. "Eat
up."
Valerius was aghast at what she was
offering him. "I beg your pardon? You don't actually expect me to eat
that, do you?"
"Well, yeah. You said you
wanted Italian. It's Italian." She picked the can up and indicated the
label. "See. Chef Boyardee. He makes only the best stuff."
Valerius had never been more appalled
in his life. Surely she was joking. "I don't eat out of paper cups with
plastic cutlery."
"Well, la-di-da, Mr. Fancy
Pants. Sorry if I offended you, but here on Planet Earth the rest of us
plebeians tend to eat whatever's handy, and when something is given to us, we
don't question it."
Tabitha crossed her arms over her
chest as he went ramrod stiff. If looks could kill, her poor cup of Beefaroni
would be splintered.
"I shall withdraw until
nightfall." He gave her an imperious nod of his head before he headed back
toward the stairs.
Tabitha gaped as he left her. He
really was offended and deep inside, hurt. The latter made no sense whatsoever
to her. She was the one who should be insulted. Picking up the Beefaroni, she
sighed, took a bite, and headed back into the kitchen with it.
Valerius carefully closed the door
to her room when what he really wanted to do was slam it. But then, nobility
didn't slam through the house. That was for commoners. Nobility held their
emotions under careful restraint.
Nor were they wounded by the opinion
of crass women with no couth who insulted them.
He'd been foolish to think for even
a moment that she…
"I don't need anyone to like
me," he muttered under his breath. He'd lived all his life without anyone
giving a damn about him. Why should it change now?
And yet he couldn't squelch that
tiny part of him that yearned for someone to pass along a note of kindness to
him. A simple, "Tell Valerius I said hi." Just once in his life…
"You're being foolish," he growled at himself. Better to be feared
than liked. His father's words rang in his ears. People will always betray
someone they like, but never someone they truly fear.
It was true. Fear kept people in
line. He more than anyone knew that.
Had his brothers feared him…
Valerius winced at the memory and
moved to sit in the director's chair in the corner of the room.
It was set next to a bookcase that
held a wide assortment of novels. He frowned as he scanned the titles, which
went from The Last Days of Pompeii and The Life and Times of Alexander the
Great to Jim Butcher's Dresden novels.
What a peculiar woman Tabitha was.
As Valerius reached for a book about ancient Rome, his gaze fell to the trash
can beside the chair. It was large like the kind that most people kept in the
kitchen, but what caught his attention was the piece of black sleeve that
peeped out from the closed top. Opening it, he found his shirt and coat.
His frown deepened as he pulled them
out. They were still covered in blood and torn. He fingered the slash in the
back of them from where the Daimon had cut him with a sword.
But he was wearing his…
Valerius stood up and pulled his
silk turtleneck off. It was Ralph Lauren, identical to the one he'd worn last
night. There was only one explanation.
Tabitha had bought him new clothes.
He went to the closet and examined
the coat. It wasn't until then that he realized the buttons were a slightly
different color of brass. Other than that, it was an exact copy.
He couldn't believe it. His coat
alone had cost fifteen hundred dollars. Why would she do such a thing?
Wanting an answer, he headed back
downstairs where he found her alone in the kitchen, cooking.
Valerius hesitated in the doorway.
She stood sideways from him, a perfectly serene profile. She was truly a
beautiful woman.
Her faded black jeans hugged long
legs and an extremely attractive rear. She wore a short-sleeved, buttoned-up
black sweater that rode high, leaving a large amount of tanned flesh exposed
between the low-riding jeans and her navel, which, if he wasn't mistaken, was
pierced.
Her long auburn hair was pulled back
and she looked strangely tranquil standing over the stove in her bare feet; a
silver toe ring twinkled on her right foot. The radio was turned on, low,
playing Martin Briley's "Salt in My Tears." Tabitha's hips moved in
time to the music in an erotic rhythm that was far more alluring than he wanted
to admit.
Indeed, it was all he could do to
not move toward her so that he could dip his head down and sample some of the
succulent skin that beckoned him.
She was a spitfire who would surely
ride him well. He took a step forward and she jumped, then kicked her foot out.
Valerius cursed as said foot made contact with his groin and he doubled over
with the pain of it.
"Oh my God!" Tabitha
gasped as she realized she'd just racked her houseguest. "I'm so sorry!
Are you okay?"
He gave her a menacing glare.
"No," he growled, limping away from her.
Tabitha helped him toward the step
stool chair that she kept in the small kitchen. "I'm really, really
sorry," she repeated as he sat down and held the heel of his hand against
himself. "I should have warned you not to sneak up behind me."
"I wasn't sneaking," he
said from between clenched teeth. "I was walking."
"Here, let me get you some
ice."
"I don't need ice. I just need
a minute to breathe and not talk."
She held her hands up in surrender.
"Take your time."
After he turned several interesting
shades, he finally recovered himself. "Thank Jupiter you didn't have
another knife in your hands," he muttered, then said louder, "Do you
kick every man who comes into the house like this?"
"Oh, Lord, not another
one!" Marla said as she entered the room. "Tabby, I swear it's a
wonder you have a personal life at all the way you treat men."
"Oh, hush, Marla. I didn't do
it on purpose… this time."
Marla rolled her eyes as she grabbed
two Diet Cokes from the fridge. She handed one to Valerius. "Hold that to
your wound, sweetie. It'll help. Just be grateful you're not Phil. I heard they
had to perform a testicle retrieval operation after Tabby caught him two-timing
on her." Then she popped the top on her drink and went back upstairs.
"He deserved it," Tabitha
called after Marla. "He's lucky I didn't cut it off."
Valerius really didn't want to
pursue that conversation. He stood up and set the Coke on the countertop.
"Why are you cooking?"
Tabitha shrugged. "You said you
didn't want something out of a can so I'm making you pasta."
"But you said—"
"I say a lot of things I don't
mean."
He watched her as she turned the
stove off, then took the pot of boiling pasta toward the sink. A bell sounded.
"Wanna get that for me?"
"Get what?" he asked.
"The microwave."
Valerius looked around the kitchen.
In all his life, he'd seldom seen a kitchen and knew very little about the
appliances that one cooked with. He had servants for such things.
The bell chimed again.
Assuming that was the microwave, he
went to it and pulled the handle. Inside was a bowl of marinara. He took the
fish-shaped potholder that was lying in front of the microwave and pulled the
bowl out. "Where should I put this?"
"The stove, please."
He did as she said.
She brought a small bowl over to
where he stood, then covered the pasta with sauce.
"Better?" she asked,
handing it to him.
Valerius nodded, until his gaze
dropped to the noodles. He blinked in disbelief as the shape of the pasta hit
him.
No. Surely he was seeing things.
Was that a…?
His jaw went slack as he realized
that it was what it appeared. Little tiny pasta penises were swimming in the
red marinara.
"Oh, come on," Tabitha
said in an irritable voice. "Don't tell me a Roman general is having
trouble with penironi."
"You don't honestly expect me
to eat this?" he asked, aghast.
She huffed at him. "Don't you
dare cop that superior attitude with me, buddy. I happen to know exactly how
you Romans lived. How you decorated your houses. You come from the land of the
phallus, so don't act so shocked that I gave you a bowl of them to eat. It's
not like I have the flying phallus wind chime hanging in my house to ward off
evil or something, but I'll bet you did when you were human."
It was true, but it had been
centuries since… come to think of it, he'd never seen anything like this.
She handed him a fork. "It's
not silver, but it is stainless steel. I'm sure you can make do."
He was still mesmerized by the
pasta. "Where did you get this?"
"I sell it and boobaroni in my
shop."
"Boobaroni?"
"I think you can figure that
one out."
Valerius didn't know what to say to
that. He'd never eaten obscene food before—and just what kind of shop did she
own that she sold such commodities inside it?
"House of Vetti," Tabitha
said, arms akimbo. "Need I say more?"
Valerius was well-versed about the
Roman house she spoke of, as well as its risque murals. True, his people had
been rather overt with their sexuality, but he most certainly hadn't expected
to come face to face with it in this modern age.
"Non sana est puella,"
Valerius said under his breath, which was Latin for This girl is insane.
"Quin tu istanc orationem hinc
veterem antque antiquam amoves, vervex?" Tabitha shot back. Would you stop
using that obsolete language, you sheep-head?
Never before had Valerius been both
insulted and amused at the same time. "How is it you speak Latin so
perfectly?"
She pulled a piece of toast from her
oven. "I have a master's degree in Ancient Civ. My sister, Selena, has her
Ph.D. in it. We thought it was a goof in college to insult each other in
Latin."
"Selena Laurens? The lunatic
with a tarot-card table in the Square?"
She gave him a fierce glare.
"That loon happens to be my beloved big sister and if you insult her
again, you'll be limping… more."
Valerius bit his tongue as he made
his way to her table in the dining room. He'd met Selena several times over the
last three years, and none of those encounters had gone well. When Acheron had first mentioned
her, Valerius had been delighted at the prospect of having
someone to talk to who knew his culture and language.
But as soon as Acheron had
introduced them, Selena had tossed her drink into Valerius's face. She had
called him every insult known to mankind and had even made up quite a few new
ones.
He didn't know why Selena hated him
so much. All she would say is that it was a shame he hadn't died under a
barbarian stampede, ripped to pieces.
And that was one of her kinder
wishes for his death.
It would most likely please her a
great deal to know his real death had been far more humiliating and painful
than any of her rants.
Every time he ventured into the
Square to patrol for Daimons, she hurled curses at him, as well as anything
else she had handy to throw in his direction.
No doubt she would be thrilled to
find out her sister had stabbed him. Her only regret would be that he was still
living and not lying dead in some gutter.
Tabitha paused in the doorway and
watched as Valerius actually ate his pasta in silence. He held himself rigidly
upright and his manners were impeccable. He appeared calm and composed.
But then he also looked so
incredibly uncomfortable in her house. Not to mention out of place.
"Here," she said, moving
forward to hand him the bread.
"Thank you," he said as he
took it. He frowned as if looking for a bread plate. Finally, he set the bread
down on the table and returned to his offbeat pasta.
There was an awkward silence between
them. She didn't know what to say to him. It was weird to have this man in her
presence when she'd heard so much about him.
None of which was good.
Her brother-in-law and his best
friend Julian spent hours at family parties, ranting about Valerius and his
family and the fact that Artemis had transferred Valerius to New Orleans for
pure spite because she hadn't wanted to let Kyrian go. Maybe that was true. Or
maybe the goddess had only wanted Kyrian to face his past and put it firmly to
rest.
Either way, the person who seemed to
be punished most by Artemis's decision was Valerius, who was constantly
reminded of Kyrian and Julian's hatred.
Funny how he didn't seem so bad to
her.
True, he was arrogant and formal,
but…
There was something more to him. She
could feel it.
She went to the kitchen to get him
something to drink. Her first thought was to give him water, but then, she'd
already been vicious in giving him the penironi. It had been a childish impulse
that she now felt extremely guilty over. So she decided to break open her wine
cabinet and get him something he would no doubt appreciate.
Valerius looked up as Tabitha handed
him a glass of red wine. He half-expected it to be a harsh, cheap Ripple and
was pleasantly surprised at the rich, full-bodied taste of it.
"Thank you," he said.
"You're welcome."
As she started away, he captured her
hand and pulled her to a stop. "Why did you buy me new clothes?"
"How did you—"
"I found mine in the
garbage."
She cringed as if it bothered her
that he had learned what she'd done. "I should have emptied the can.
Damn."
"Why didn't you want me to
know?"
"I thought you might not take
them. It was the least I could do since I was part of the reason they were
ruined."
He offered her a smile that warmed
her heart. "Thank you, Tabitha."
It was the first time he'd said her
name. His rich, deep accent sent a shiver over her.
Before she could stop herself, she
placed her hand against his cheek. She half-expected him to pull away.
He didn't. He merely stared up at
her with those curious black eyes.
She was struck by his handsomeness.
By his inner pain, which made her own heart ache for him. And before she could
think better of it, she dipped her head down so that she could capture his lips
with her own.
Valerius was completely unprepared
for her action. Never had a woman initiated a kiss with him. Never. Tabitha was
bold with her exploration, demanding, and it sizzled through his body like
lava.
Cupping her face in his hands, he
kissed her back.
Tabitha moaned at the decadent taste
of her general. Her tongue brushed against his fangs, giving her a chill. He
was lethal and deadly.
Forbidden.
And for a woman who prided herself
on following no one's rules but her own, it made him even more appealing.
She straddled him in the chair and
sat down in his lap.
He didn't protest. Instead, he
dropped his hands from her face and trailed them over her back while she pulled
the tie from his hair and loosened the thick, black strands that slid like silk
against her fingers.
She could feel his erection as it
pressed against the center of her body, igniting her desire even more.
It'd been so long since she'd been
with a man. So long since she had felt a desire this potent to wrap herself
around one. But she wanted Valerius badly, even though he should be completely
off her menu.
Valerius's head swam as Tabitha
trailed her lips along the length of his jaw, then under his chin, to his neck.
Her hot breath blistered him. It had been centuries since he'd taken a woman
who knew what he was.
A woman he didn't have to kiss
carefully for fear of her discovering his fangs.
Not once had he ever been with a
woman this exciting. One who met him so openly. So wildly. There was no fear
whatsoever in this woman. No holding back.
She was fierce and passionate and
completely feminine.
Tabitha knew she shouldn't be doing
this. Dark-Hunters weren't allowed to get involved with women. They weren't
allowed any emotional attachments at all except for maybe a Squire.
She could sleep with Valerius just
once and then she would have to let him go.
But more than that, her entire
family hated this man and she should, too. She should be repulsed by him. Only
she wasn't. There was something about him that was irresistible.
Against all sanity and reason, she
wanted him.
You're just horny, Tabby, let him
go.
Maybe it was just that simple. It'd
been almost three years since she'd broken up with Eric and in that time she
hadn't been with anyone else. No one had even appealed to her as anything more
than a passing curiosity.
Well, except for Ash, but she knew
better than to make a move on him.
And even he didn't make her sizzle
like this. But then, he didn't have the pain inside him that Valerius carried—or if he did, he was better at hiding it around her.
She felt as if Valerius needed her
somehow.
Just as she reached for the zipper
of his pants, the phone rang.
Tabitha ignored it until Marla used
her walkie-talkie to say, "It's Amanda, Tabby. She says for you to pick up
the phone. Now."
She groaned in frustration. She gave
Valerius a hot, quick kiss before she got up. "Please don't say a word
while I'm on the phone," she warned him.
Since Amanda had married Kyrian, she
had become incredibly psychic, and if she heard Valerius's voice, she would
know instantly who he was. Tabitha was sure of it. It was the last thing she
wanted to deal with.
She picked up the wall phone in the
kitchen. "Hey, Mandy, whatcha need?"
Tabitha turned to watch Valerius as
he put himself back together. He pulled his hair back and replaced the small
black tie she had removed.
He returned to being regal and rigid
as he picked up his fork and began eating again.
Her sister was babbling on about a
bad dream, but it wasn't until the term "Spathi Daimon" came up that
Tabitha pulled her attention away from Valerius.
"I'm sorry, what?" she
asked Amanda.
"I said that I had a bad dream
about you, Tabby, that you were seriously hurt in a fight. I just wanted to
make sure that you were okay."
"Yeah, I'm fine."
"Are you sure? You sound kind
of strange to me."
"You interrupted me from
work."
"Oh," Amanda said,
accepting the lie, which made Tabitha feel a little guilty. Tabitha wasn't used
to keeping anything from her twin. "Okay. In that case, I won't keep you.
But you be careful for me. I have a really bad feeling that won't go
away."
Tabitha felt it, too. It was
something undefinable and at the same time persistent. "Don't worry. Ash
is in town and there's an extra Dark-Hunter he moved in. Everything's fine."
"Okay. I'm trusting you to
watch your back... But, Tabby?"
"Yeah?"
"Stop lying to me. I don't
like it."
Chapter 3
Tabitha hung up the phone, feeling a
little odd about her conversation. And she felt even odder about Amanda's
prediction for her health. It concerned her a lot, especially when combined
with her own uneasy feeling.
She'd almost died twice three years ago
when Desiderius had been out to kill Amanda and Kyrian. Since then, no Daimon
had gotten near her. Mostly because she had honed her skills and become much
more observant.
But the ones last night…
They'd been tough kills and a group
of them had gotten away. Surely they wouldn't be back. Most Daimons vacated the
area very quickly after they ran into her or one of the Dark-Hunters. Courage
wasn't exactly something they were known for: Since they were young and the
idea was to stay alive, very few Daimons wanted to run head-to-head with
Artemis's army, which was comprised of warriors with hundreds, if not
thousands, of years of combat experience on them.
Only Desiderius—who had been a
half-god—had possessed the strength and stupidity to fight the Dark-Hunters.
No, the Daimons from last night were
gone and she would be fine. Amanda must have had bad chicken or something.
She returned to Valerius, who was
finishing up his food. "What are your powers?" she asked.
He looked a bit taken aback by the
question. "Excuse me?"
"Your Dark-Hunter powers. Do
they include premonitions or precog?"
"No," he said before
taking a drink of wine. "Like most Roman Dark-Hunters, I got rather, and
please excuse the crassness of this, 'shafted' in that department."
Tabitha frowned. "How do you
mean?"
He took a deep breath before he
answered. "Artemis didn't care for the fact that in Rome, she wasn't a
major deity. Rather, she was mostly revered by our lower classes, slaves and
women. So she carried her grudge over to us when we were created. I'm stronger
than a human and faster, but I don't have the elevated psychic powers that the
rest of the Dark-Hunters do."
"Then how do you manage to
fight the Daimons?"
He shrugged. "The same way you do.
I battle more skillfully than they."
Yeah, maybe, but she often found
herself bloody from her battles. She wondered how often he did, too. It was
hard to fight a Daimon as a human.
"That's not right,"
Tabitha said, angry on his behalf that Artemis would create such a disparity
among her Dark-Hunters. How could the goddess turn them loose, knowing what
they were up against?
Man, Simi was right. Artemis was a
bitch-goddess.
Valerius frowned at the anger he
heard in Tabitha's voice. He wasn't used to anyone taking his side in any
matter. Neither as a man nor as a Dark-Hunter. It had always seemed his ill
fate to end up on the losing end of any matter regardless of whether he was
right or wrong. "Few things ever are fair."
He drained the last of his wine and
rose to his feet, then inclined his head to her. "I thank you for the
food."
"Any time, Val."
He stiffened at her use of a
nickname he despised. The only people to ever use it had been his brother
Markus and his father, and then only to mock or belittle him. "My name is
Valerius."
She looked at him dryly. "I
can't call you Valerius. Jeez. It sounds like some broken-down Italian car. And
every time I hear that name I feel the deep need to break out into Vo-lar-ray,
Oh, oh, oh—and then I start thinking of the movie The Hollywood Knights and
believe me you don't want me to go there. So to save my sanity from that crappy
song echoing in my head and images of a lunatic running around a high school
gym doing unspeakable things, you can be known as Val or Babycakes."
His gaze darkened. "My name is
Valerius and I will not answer to Val."
She shrugged. "Fine then,
Babycakes, have it your way."
He opened his mouth to protest, but
already he knew better than to argue. Tabitha had a way of doing just as she
pleased, all arguments be damned. "Very well," he said grudgingly,
"I shall endure Val. But only from you."
She smiled. "See how painless that
is? Why would you hate the name, anyway?"
"It's coarse."
She rolled her eyes at him.
"You must really be fun in bed," she said sarcastically.
Valerius was stunned by her words.
"Excuse me?"
"I'm just wondering what it
would be like to make love to a man who is so concerned about being rigid—then
again… Nah. I can't imagine someone so regal getting down and dirty with
it."
"I assure you, I've never had
any complaints in that regard."
"Really? Then you must be
sleeping with women who are so cold you could freeze ice cubes on them."
He turned to leave the room.
"We are not having this discussion."
But she gave him no reprieve as she
followed him toward the stairs. "Were you like this in Rome? I mean, from
everything I've read, you guys were raw with sexuality."
"I can just imagine the lies
they tell."
"So were you always this
uptight?"
"What do you care?"
Her response stunned him as she
pulled him to a stop. "Because I'm trying to figure out what made you like
you are now. You are so closed off, you're barely human."
"I am not human, Ms. Devereaux.
In case you haven't noticed, I'm one of the damned."
"Baby, open your eyes and look
around. We're all damned in one way or another. But damned is a far cry from
dead. And you live like you're dead."
"I'm that, too."
She ran a hot look over his
scrumptious body. "For a dead man you look remarkably fit."
His face hardened. "You don't
even know me."
"No, I don't. But the question
is, do you know you?"
"I'm the only one who
does."
And that simple sentence told her
everything she needed to know about him.
He was alone.
Tabitha wanted to reach out to him,
but could sense that she needed to give him some space. He wasn't used to
interacting with people like her… then again, few were.
As Grandma Flora, the gypsy seer of
their family, always said, Tabitha tended to come on to people like a freight
train and mow them down where they stood.
Tabitha sighed as he took another
step away from her. "How old are you, anyway?"
"Two thousand, one
hundred—"
"No," she interrupted.
"Not Dark-Hunter years. How old were you when you died?"
She felt a profound wave of pain go
through him at the thought. "Thirty."
"Thirty? Jeez, you act like an
old, wrinkled-up prune. Did no one laugh where you came from?"
"No," he said simply.
"Laughter was not tolerated or indulged."
Tabitha couldn't breathe as his
words sank in and she remembered the sight of the scars on his back.
"Never?"
He didn't respond. Instead, he
continued up her stairs. "I should retire now."
"Wait," she said, rushing
up the stairs to sneak around him so that she could keep him still. She turned
to face him.
She could feel turmoil inside him.
Pain. Confusion. She knew just how hated this man was. Maybe he deserved it,
but deep inside she wasn't so sure.
People didn't close themselves off
from the world without reason. No one was happily this stoic.
And in that moment, she realized
something. It was his defense mechanism. She got brash and wild whenever she
was out of sorts or uncomfortable.
He turned cold. Formal.
That was his facade.
"I'm sorry if I said anything
that offended you. My sisters often tell me that I've made offending people an
art form."
A smile tugged at the edges of his
lips and, if she didn't miss her guess, his eyes softened ever so slightly.
"I wasn't offended."
"Good."
Valerius was tempted to stay here
and talk to her, but he felt uncomfortable with the thought of it. He'd never
been the kind of person other people chatted with. Even as a man, his
conversations had revolved around battle tactics, philosophy, and politics.
Never chit-chat.
His conversations with women had
been even fewer than his conversations with men. Not even Agrippina had ever
truly spoken to him. They had passed comments, but she had never shared her
opinions with him. Merely agreed with him and did as he asked.
He had a feeling Tabitha would never
agree with anyone, even if she knew they were right. It seemed a matter of
principle that she had to disagree with everything.
"Are you always so
outspoken?" he asked.
She smiled widely. "I know no
other way."
Suddenly Lynyrd Skynyrd's
"Gimme Three Steps" started playing on the radio.
Tabitha let out a small squeak of
happiness and dashed down the stairs. Valerius barely had time to blink before
she cranked the volume up, then ran back toward him.
"I love this song," she
said as she danced to it. Valerius found it hard to focus on much of anything
except the sway of her hips as she danced and sang to the song.
"C'mon, dance with me!"
she said at the first guitar solo. She ran up the stairs to take his hand.
"This isn't really dancing
music."
"Sure it is," she said
before she broke into the chorus. In spite of himself, he was greatly amused by
her. In all his lifetime, he'd never known anyone who enjoyed life so much, who
took such pleasure from something so simple.
"C'mon," she tried again
when the singing paused. "It's a great song. You have to admire anyone who
can rhyme 'feller' with 'the head color yeller.'" She winked at him.
Valerius laughed.
Tabitha paused. "Oh, my God, he
does know how to laugh."
"I know how to laugh," he
said lightly.
She pulled him from the stairs and
two-stepped around him before she used him as a maypole and continued dancing.
She let go, snapped her fingers and
twisted down, then rose back up. "One day, I think you're going to bust
out of those hand-polished loafers and actually cut loose."
Valerius cleared his throat and
tried to imagine such a thing. It wasn't possible. There had been a time once,
back when he'd been human, when he might have attempted it.
But those days were long gone.
Anytime he'd ever tried to be
anything other than what he was, someone else had paid a terrible price for it.
So he'd learned to stay as he was and to leave everyone else alone.
It was for the best.
Tabitha watched as his face turned
to stone once again. She sighed. What would it take to reach this guy? For
someone who was immortal, he certainly didn't seem to enjoy life very much.
In spite of all of Kyrian's faults,
she had to give him credit. The former Greek general did enjoy every breath he
took. He lived his life to its fullest.
Meanwhile, Valerius just seemed to
exist
"What do you do for fun?"
she asked.
"I read."
"Literature?"
"Science fiction."
"Really?" she asked,
surprised. "Heinlein?"
"Yes. Harry Harrison is one of
my favorites, as are Jim Butcher, Gordon Dickson, and C. J. Cherryh."
"Wow," she said, amazed.
"I'm impressed. Go, Dorsai."
"Actually, I rather like
Dickson's The Right to Arm Bears and Wolfling novels better."
Now that she found surprising.
"I don't know, Soldier, Ask Not seems more your style to me."
"It is a classic, but the other
two spoke to me more."
Hmmm… Wolfling was about a man alone
in an alien world with no friends or allies. That further confirmed her
suspicions about his life. "Have you ever read Hammer's Slammers?"
"David Drake. Another
favorite."
"Yeah, you have to love the
military stuff. Burt Cole wrote a book years ago called The Quick."
"Shaman. He was quite the
complex hero."
"Yeah, strangely amoral and yet
moral at the same time. Never sure what side of the fence he's on. Kind of
reminds me of a few friends I've had over the years."
Valerius couldn't keep from smiling.
It was so nice to have someone who was familiar with his guilty secret. The
only other person he knew who read science fiction was Acheron, but the two of
them seldom ever talked about it.
"You're a remarkable woman,
Tabitha."
She smiled up at him. "Thanks.
Now, I'll let you go on to bed," she said gently. "I'm sure you could
use the rest."
She ached to give him a tender,
friendly kiss on the cheek, but thought better of it. Instead, she watched as
he headed out of the room, up the stairs.
Valerius made his way silently back
to Tabitha's room. She had such a powerful presence that he literally felt
drained just from having been around her.
He removed his clothes and hung them
back up so that he wouldn't wrinkle them, then returned to bed to sleep.
But sleep was something that didn't
come to him. For the first time, he smelled the perfume on her sheets.
It was Tabitha's scent. Warm,
vivacious. Seductive.
And it made him instantly hard for
her. He covered his eyes with his hand and ground his teeth. What was he doing?
The last thing he could do as a Dark-Hunter was have a relationship with a
woman. Even if he could, Tabitha Devereaux was the last woman on the planet he
could have.
As a friend to Acheron, she was so
far off limits to him that he should call Acheron again and demand he find some
way for Valerius to leave.
But Acheron had left them together.
Rolling over, he did his best not to
breathe in deeply or to imagine what Tabitha might look like in this bed. Her bare
limbs entwined…
He cursed, then pulled a second
pillow over toward him. As he did so, he saw a small black silk gown. An image
of Tabitha in it seared him.
He couldn't breathe. Before he could
think better of it, he pulled it close and let the cool silk caress his skin.
He held it to his nose and inhaled her scent. She is not for you.
It was true. He'd already killed one
woman because he'd been foolish. He had no desire to retread that path.
He tucked the gown back beneath his
pillow and forced himself to close his eyes.
But even then, he was haunted by
images of a woman who should, by all reason, repel him and yet completely
captivated and beguiled him.
Tabitha spent the rest of the day
between her store and walking to the foot of the stairs where she forced
herself to reverse direction and go back to business.
But she felt a horrible pull toward
the Dark-Hunter who slept in her bed. It was stupid. He was an ancient warrior
who didn't seem to even like her.
Yet his kiss had said something
else. There for a few minutes, he had been as eager for her as she had been for
him. He wasn't completely repulsed by her.
She waited until four, then went to
wake him.
Opening the door slowly, she paused
as she caught sight of him asleep. He lay with his back to her, but what made
her stop was the fierce scars that crisscrossed his flesh. Those weren't battle
scars. They were the kind of marks you would find on someone who had been
beaten with a whip. Many times.
She couldn't take her eyes off it.
Without thinking, she crossed the room and placed her hand on his arm.
He rolled over with a hiss and
seized her.
Before she even realized what he was
going to do, he had her on the bed beneath him, with his hand at her throat.
"Let go of me, Valerius, or I'm
going to hurt you bad."
He blinked as if he were coming out
of a dream. His grip loosened immediately. "Forgive me," he said as
he lightly stroked her neck. "I should have warned you not to wake me by
touch."
"You always assault people when
you wake up?"
Valerius couldn't speak as he felt
the softness of her skin beneath his fingertips. In truth, he'd been dreaming
of her. Only she had been in his world. Dressed in nothing but a pearl necklace
and covered by rose petals.
She was incredibly beautiful. Her
eyes were so blue. Her nose pert and her lips… they were the stuff of legends.
Full and lush, they begged for his attention.
Before he could stop himself, he
lowered his mouth to hers.
Tabitha moaned at the taste of Roman
warrior. His kiss was tender and soft, a total antithesis to the steely feel of
his body. It melted her as she wrapped her arms around his bare back and traced
the scars she found there.
And she was all too aware of the
fact that he was completely naked.
Valerius growled at the feel of her
tongue lightly stroking his. Of her scent and soft curves wrapped around him.
The denim of her jeans scraped against his flesh as she opened her legs and
cradled him with those long, lush legs. She raked one hand through his hair,
brushing it back from his face before she sank her hand deep and held him to
her.
He lifted the hem of her sweater so
that he could gently cup her breast through the satin of her bra. She moaned deep
in her throat, a husky raw sound that sizzled through him.
As Tabitha had pointed out earlier
to him, he'd spent far too many nights with women who had never reacted so
openly to his touch. She ran her hands over his shoulders, then down to the
small of his back.
All he could think of was taking
her. Of sliding himself deep inside until they were both sated and weak.
As he fingered the front catch of
her bra, a tiny shred of sanity reared its ugly head. She was not for him.
He pulled his hand away.
Tabitha cupped his head in her hands
and pulled back. "I know what you are, Val. It's okay."
She took his hand into hers and led
it back to her breast. She pushed the satin aside until he felt her hard,
swollen nipple teasing his palm. He couldn't breathe as he cupped her soft
breast. She was so warm, so welcoming that he found it hard to believe he was
anything special to her.
"Do you sleep with all the
Dark-Hunters?"
She stiffened. "What?"
"I was just wondering if you'd
been with Acheron… Talon."
She bucked him off of her at that.
"What kind of question is that?"
"I just met you and twice now
you've offered yourself to me."
"Oh, you arrogant jerk!"
She grabbed her pillow off the bed and assaulted him with it.
Valerius held his hand up to shield
himself, but she didn't stop.
"You are so stupid! I can't
believe you'd ask me such a thing. I swear, I will never again be in the same
room with you!"
Finally the pillow bashing stopped.
He lowered his arm.
She nailed him with a final blow
upside his head, then released the pillow. "For your information, buddy, I
am not the town bike. I don't sleep with every guy I get near. I thought you
were… Oh never mind. To hell with you!"
She turned and stormed out of the
room. She slammed the door so hard that it actually rattled the windows and
shook the beads on her mirror and altar.
Valerius lay on the bed completely
stunned by what had just happened. She had beaten him with a pillow?
He knew from his encounter with her
last night that she could have assaulted him with something much more painful,
yet she had refrained.
In all honesty, he was relieved by
her untoward reaction. Her indignation had been too great to be feigned.
And that brought a strange warmth to
his chest. Could it be that she might actually like him?
No. It wasn't possible. No one liked
him. They never had.
"You are worthless. I weep for
the day Mother bore you into this world. I'm only glad that she died before she
could see what an embarrassment you are to the family." He flinched at the
harsh words that his brother Markus had repeatedly hurled at him.
His own father had despised him.
"You are weak. Pathetic. I should have seen you dead rather than waste the
water and food it has taken to rear you."
Their words were kind compared to
what his Dark-Hunter brethren had uttered.
No, there was no way Tabitha
"liked" him. She didn't even know him.
He didn't know why she was so
receptive to his touch.
Maybe she was merely a woman of
strong passion. He was a handsome man. Not that he was vain about it. It was a
simple statement of fact. Countless women had offered themselves to him over
the centuries.
But for some reason that didn't bear
thinking on, he wanted something more than a one-night stand with Tabitha.
He wanted…
Valerius forced his thoughts away
from that. He didn't need anyone, not even a friend. His life was best spent
alone, far away from other people.
Getting up, he dressed and left her
room to go downstairs.
He met Marla in the dining room.
"Ooo, shug, I don't know what
you did to Tabby, but you have her panties in a tight wad. She said to tell you
to eat before she poisoned your food or did something worse to it."
Valerius was surprised to see veal
marsala and an Italian salad with garlic bread waiting for him. "Where did
that come from?" he asked Marla.
"Tony's from down the street.
Tabitha sent me over there to get it. She and Tony aren't on speaking terms at
the moment. God love her, she tends to make everyone irritated with her. But
he'll get over it. He always does."
Valerius took a seat and then bit
into heaven. He'd never tasted anything better. Why would Tabitha have gone to
such trouble for him?
He was halfway through the meal
before Tabitha came out of the door that led to her shop.
"I hope you choke on it,"
she snarled as she headed toward the kitchen.
Valerius swallowed his bite of food,
wiped his mouth, then slid out of his chair to go after her.
"Tabitha?" He pulled her
to a stop. "I'm sorry for what I said. It's just…"
"Just what?"
"People are never nice for no
reason." And they were never nice to him.
Tabitha paused at that. Was he
serious? "Was dinner okay?"
"It was delicious. Thank
you."
"No problem." She pulled
her hand away. "You probably know that it's already dark. I can get you
home whenever you're ready."
"I just need to stop and pick
up some lamp oil."
"Lamp oil? Don't you have
electricity?"
"I do, but it's imperative that
I get some tonight and get home."
"Okay. The chariot awaits four
blocks over at my sister Tia's. We can grab the oil at her shop."
"She has lamp oil?"
"Yeah. She's a voodoo
priestess. You probably saw the altar upstairs that she made for me. She's a
bit offbeat, but we love her anyway."
Valerius inclined his head
respectfully to her, then returned upstairs for his coat.
Tabitha was about to pick up his
dishes when Marla shooed her away.
"I'll take care of that for
you."
"Thanks, sweetie."
Marla wrinkled her nose.
"Anytime. You two go and have a wild time for me. I want all the
details."
Tabitha laughed as she tried to
imagine what a "wild" time with Valerius might entail. It would
probably be nothing more miraculous than getting him to wear a pair of tennis
shoes and drink out of a paper cup.
Valerius rejoined her. She quickly
ushered him out the shop door before Marla saw his coat and confiscated it.
He stopped so short inside her store
that she actually ran into him. His jaw slack, he scanned the shop with a look
of complete horror on his face. "Where are we?"
"My store," Tabitha said.
"Pandora's Box on Bourbon. I cater to the strippers and drag queens."
"This is… it's a…"
"Adult store, yes, I know. I
inherited it from my aunt when she retired. Now close your mouth and stop
gulping. I make a lot of money and friends in this place."
Valerius couldn't believe what he
was seeing. Tabitha owned a den of iniquity? Why was he even surprised?
"And this is exactly what has
caused the Western world to decline," he said as she led him past a glass
case of pasties and thongs.
"Oh, yeah, right," Tabitha
said. "Like you wouldn't give your right arm to have a woman dressed in my
stuff strip for you. Good night, Franny," she called to the woman behind
the register. "Make sure you give Marla the receipts and deposit when you
close up tonight, okay?"
"You got it, boss. Have a good
night."
Tabitha led the way to the street.
The city was already placing the barricades at the intersections that would
turn Bourbon into an after-hours pedestrian mall. She hung a left onto
Bienville Street toward her sister's house; all the while, she scanned for any
suspicious activity.
Valerius remained remarkably silent.
As they neared the next
intersection, she heard Valerius curse.
Two seconds later a lightning bolt
struck him.
Chapter 4
Tabitha gasped as Valerius was
thrown against a building from the lightning strike. Before she could take a
step toward him, it literally started pounding rain on him and no one else. In
fact, the only place it was raining was where Valerius lay on the ground.
"What on earth?" she
asked.
Valerius took a deep breath as he
slowly pushed himself to his feet. His lip was split, and he had a cut on his
cheek from where he'd hit the building. Without a word, he wiped the blood off
with the back of his hand, then felt the wound on his cheek.
He was soaking wet while the rain
continued to fall on him in a pounding staccato beat. "It'll stop in a
minute."
And it did.
Valerius wiped the water from his
face and then wrung out his ponytail.
Tabitha was aghast. "What just
happened?"
"My brother, Zarek," he
said wearily as he shook his arms and sent water flying. "He was made a
god a couple of years ago and has since turned me into his full-time
occupation. It's why I no longer drive anywhere. I grew rather tired of my
engine just falling out of my car for no apparent reason whenever I stopped for
a light. The only safe mode of transportation I have is my feet and as you have
just witnessed, not even it is completely safe." There was no missing the
anger in his tone.
"Is my car safe?"
He nodded. "He only comes after
me."
She started to approach him.
"Don't," he said, his
breath suddenly forming a small cloud as he spoke. "It's freezing
here."
Tabitha reached out her hand and
felt the arctic air that surrounded Valerius. It was colder than a freezer
where he stood. "Why does he do this to you?"
"He hates me."
"Why?" She felt a wave of
shame come over him. "What did you do to him?"
He didn't answer. Instead, he
breathed into his hands and headed down the street again.
"Valerius," she said,
stopping him even though she wasn't sure she didn't get frostbite to her hand
for the effort. "Talk to me."
"And say what, Tabitha?"
he asked quietly. "I felt sorry for Zarek when we were children and every
time I tried to help him, I only ended up hurting him more. He's right to hate
me and everyone else in our family. I should have just left him alone and
ignored him. It would have been better for all of us if I had."
"It's not wrong to help
someone."
He gave her a dry stare. "My
father always said, 'Nullus factum bonus incedo sinepoena'—No good deed goes
unpunished. In Zarek's case, he made a point of proving it."
She was dismayed at what he was
telling her. "I thought my family was odd. You guys sound like you really
were the dysfunctional crew."
"You've no idea." He
started back down the street.
Tabitha followed, but to be honest,
she felt really sorry for him. She couldn't imagine having one of her siblings
hate her. It was true they didn't all get along all the time. With eight
sisters and a wide assortment of fruits and nuts in the family, there was
always someone who wasn't talking to someone over something, but in the end,
family was family and anyone who threatened them quickly got a dose of Devereaux
solidarity.
Even if they weren't technically
speaking to each other, they could always count on the family in a pinch. Even
as kids. In high school, Tabitha had sworn she would never talk to her older
sister Trina again because Trina had gone out with a guy she knew Tabitha had a
crush on.
When the jerk had broken Trina's
heart by two-timing her with a cheerleader, Tabitha had let loose Aunt Cora's
prized boa constrictor in the guy's car. He'd been so scared, he'd wet his
jeans before Tabitha had pulled the snake out.
It'd still taken two more days
before she and her sister had reconciled. But they had reconciled. No one
carried a grudge in their family for more than a few weeks. And no matter how
angry they were, they would never, ever really hurt one another.
Goodness, what kind of family did
Valerius have that two thousand years later his brother was still hurling
lightning bolts at him?
By the time they reached her
sister's shop, Val's eyebrows and lashes were frozen white. His skin had a
terrible grayish tint to it.
"Are you okay?"
"It won't kill me," he
said quietly. "Don't worry. He'll get bored in a few minutes and leave me
alone for awhile."
"How long?"
"Usually a few months,
sometimes longer. I never really know when he's going to strike. He likes to
surprise me."
Tabitha was aghast at what she was
witnessing. "Does Ash know he does this to you?"
"Zarek is a god now. What can
Acheron do to stop it? Much like you with your brother-in-law, Zarek thinks it's
fun to 'goof on me."
"I'm never deliberately cruel
to him. Well, maybe just the one time I sent him a box of Rogaine on his
birthday, but that was just a gag gift until he opened the real one." She
touched his ice-cold hands and realized he was shivering unmercifully.
Her heart ached for him. She blew
into her hands and rubbed them together before she placed them to his face,
which was so cold that it instantly took the heat from her skin.
He gave her a grateful look before
he pulled back.
Suddenly a cloud of sulphuric
something engulfed them.
Tabitha coughed at the rank smell
before she held her nose and turned to see her sister Tia mumbling something
she couldn't understand.
"What are you doing?" she
asked.
"He got the evil funk of death
on him. You weren't really going to bring him into my store like that, were
you?"
"Yeah." She snatched the
small wooden bowl out of Tia's hand. "Would you please lay off the nasty
voodoo crap? It's stinks."
Tia reached for it. "Give me
that."
"Quit grabbing or I'll dump it
in the street."
Tia stood back instantly.
Tabitha looked at the reddish-gold
powder and curled her lip at the rancid smell of it. "You know I really
could have done without the Shower to Shower in poop. And here I was telling
Val that my family wasn't so bad." She handed it back to Tia.
"You need protection," Tia
said defensively. "There's something here. I can feel it."
"That might be your sanity. You
might actually want to invite it in."
Tia gave her a peeved glare.
Tabitha smiled. "I'm just
kidding. I know what you mean. I can feel it, too."
Tia looked up at Valerius, who was
still shivering. "Why is he frozen and wet?"
"Long story," Tabitha
said. She had a feeling Valerius wouldn't appreciate her telling her sister
about his psycho brother. "This is my sister Tiyana. Tia for short."
"Hi," Tia said before she
grabbed Valerius's arm and pulled him toward the entrance to her store.
He gave Tabitha a panicked look.
"It's okay. She's mostly nuts,
but doesn't have a mean bone in her body."
"I don't want to hear about my
insanity from the loon who stalks vampires in her spare time. You should see
her," Tia said to Valerius as she hauled him through the narrow shop that
was lined with shelves of all manner of gris-gris, charms, voodoo dolls,
candles, and tourist items. "She thinks any guy in black is a vampire.
Have you any idea how many men in New Orleans wear black? She's frightening.
Really."
Tia turned toward her clerk.
"Chelle, watch the store for a minute," she said to her employee, who
was stickering a new batch of alligator-tooth key rings.
Tia led them through the back door
to the storeroom. She sat Valerius down on a barstool and then pulled out a
large box of Mexican ponchos, before she grabbed several of them and wrapped
Valerius in them.
She went to the bathroom and came
out with a towel. "Dry his hair while I make him something warm to
drink."
"Thanks, sis," Tabitha
said as she took the towel from her.
Valerius was taken aback by the
untoward kindness. No one had ever treated him this way… like he mattered. Like
they cared. "I can dry my own hair."
"Stay under the ponchos and get
warmed up," Tabitha said as she pulled the tie from his ponytail. Her
tenderness amazed him as she carefully towel-dried his hair, then combed it
with her fingers.
Tia came back with a large, steaming
skeleton mug that had a warm, odd smell to it. "Don't worry. It's not a
potion. Just a homemade cinnamon-chocolate blend that I sell at Christmas
that's supposed to ward off melancholy." She handed it to him.
"Does it work?" he asked.
"On most people. The chocolate
stimulates endorphins to perk you up and the cinnamon makes most people think
of home and mother's love." Tia smiled. "You'd be amazed how much
science there is in magic."
Valerius took a hesitant drink. It
was surprisingly good and did in fact warm him. "Thank you," he said.
Tia nodded. "You guys here for
your car?" she asked Tabitha.
"Yeah. I didn't mean for us to
disturb you."
"It's okay. I was waiting for
Amanda to show up. I called her earlier and told her I made a talisman for her
and Marissa."
Tabitha went cold. It wouldn't do
for Amanda to find Valerius here. She was sure her sister wouldn't understand
how she could be helping him. Not that Tabitha was ashamed for what she was
doing, but it was still a complication she wanted to avoid for all their sakes.
"Cool, but we need to get going. We have some things to do. Give Mandy a
kiss for me."
"Will do."
Tabitha motioned for Valerius to
follow her out the back door that led to the courtyard where Tia's Mitsubishi
was parked beside her Mini Cooper.
She unlocked the car for him.
"Get in, I'll be right back."
Valerius did as she asked and was
surprised that the car had more leg room inside than what it appeared to have
from the outside. Even so, he felt a bit cramped in it.
She ran back into the store and came
out a few minutes later with a plastic sack. She got into the car and handed it
to him.
"Your lamp oil," she said.
He was stunned that she had
remembered it, especially since it had slipped his own mind. "Thank
you."
She didn't say anything as she
started the car and backed them out of the driveway. As soon as they were on
the street, she popped the gear into drive and squealed off.
He sat quietly while she weaved them
in and out of traffic at a rate that would have left him terrified had he not
been immortal.
The interior of the car was so tiny
compared to what he was used to that it was hard not to notice her. She drove
like she lived: fast and on the edge.
"Why are you so intense?"
he asked as she took a corner he swore left the car with only two wheels on the
ground.
"My mother says I was born that
way. She thinks Amanda must have gotten both shares of restraint while I took
all the courage."
She turned serious as she shifted
gears and whipped around a slow-moving car. "Actually, that's not true.
The fact is that I'm what some call a magnet. My psychic powers don't lie in
special abilities like my sister Amanda's do. Mine are more quiet. Intuition,
psychometry. Things that are virtually useless to a human, but are highly
prized by the Daimons."
She paused at a light on Canal
Street and looked at him. "I was only thirteen when the first group of
Daimons attacked me. I would be dead now if Talon hadn't saved me."
Valerius frowned at her words. She
was right. Magnets gave off a powerful lure to Daimons. With her fierce nature
and zest for living, she would be all the more alluring to them.
"Unlike most humans, I wasn't
allowed to live in ignorance of your world. It was either learn to defend
myself or end up dead. No offense, dead doesn't appeal to me."
"No offense taken. Having been
dead for more than two thousand years, I can't exactly recommend it
myself."
She laughed at that. "I don't
know. Dead and in Armani. I think most people would be hurling themselves off
buildings if they could come back loaded like you."
"I had just as much money as a
mortal man and a lot more…" He let his voice trail off as he realized he'd
almost said friends. That wasn't really true, but at least back then people who
openly disdained him, with the exception of his family, generally kept it to
themselves.
It wasn't something he liked to
think or talk about.
"Lot more what?" she asked
when he didn't finish his sentence.
"Nothing."
Valerius directed her to his house
on Third Street down in the Garden District.
Tabitha let out a low whistle as
they neared it. She pulled into the drive, which was shielded by a variety of
greenery and stopped before the large, wrought-iron gate. She lowered her
window and pressed the button on the security box.
"Yes?"
He leaned forward and spoke loudly.
"It's Valerius, Gilbert. Open the gate."
The gates opened a few seconds
later.
"Nice," Tabitha said as
she drove down his circular drive and parked before the front door, right
behind what appeared to be a run-down primer and red Chevy IROC that must
belong to one of Valerius's employees. She couldn't imagine Val being caught
dead in it and since he was dead…
"I take it that isn't yours, or
did your brother just get really pissed off one day and nail it?"
Valerius didn't comment.
Tabitha paused to stare at the
fountain in the bend of the drive that had blue lights at night. It was a
tribute to the goddess Minerva and had been one of the reasons Valerius had
chosen this as his home.
"Does Artemis know about that
statue?"
"Since I'm still breathing, I
rather doubt it," he said quietly.
He led her up the old stone steps.
As soon as they reached the door, Gilbert opened it.
"Good evening, my lord."
His butler didn't comment on the fact that Valerius was coming home wet.
There was something about the rigid,
older Englishman that reminded Tabitha of Alfred from Batman.
"Evening, Gilbert." He
stood aside to let the older man see Tabitha. "This is Ms.
Devereaux."
"Very good, sir." Gilbert
inclined his head stiffly to Tabitha. "Charmed, madam." Then he
looked back at Valerius. "Would your lordship and madame care for
something to drink or eat?"
Valerius looked at her.
"I'm fine."
"No, thank you, Gilbert."
The butler inclined his head to
them, then headed toward the back of the house.
Valerius led her toward the left.
"If you would, please wait in the library and I'll be back in a few
minutes."
"Where are you going?" she
asked, wondering at his suddenly somber mood.
"I need to change into
something dry."
She nodded. "Okay."
He headed up the stairs.
Tabitha wandered through the arched
doorway into a dark room that was covered from floor to ceiling with books. She
was in a corner skimming titles when she felt someone come into the room behind
her.
She turned to find a handsome man
around her own age staring at her.
"Amanda? What the hell brought
you here?"
"I'm not Amanda," she
said, crossing the room so that he could see her scarred face. "I'm her
sister Tabitha. And you are?"
"Otto Carvalletti."
"Ah," she said in
understanding. "Val's Squire."
"Yeah, don't remind me."
She didn't need her empathy to feel
his rancor. "Why do you serve someone you hate?"
"Like I have a choice. The
council sent me here, so here I am, locked in hell."
"Bud, I don't know where you
hail from, but I take exception to people who hate my town."
He scoffed at that. "I got no
problem with New Orleans. I love this town. It's Count Penicula that I take
issue with. Have you met him?"
"Count who?"
"The dick who lives here.
Valerius. You know, old 'Don't breathe in my presence, you prole.'"
This had to be the strangest man
Tabitha had ever met—and given the odd crew of friends she had, that said a
lot. "Prole as in proletariat?"
He looked relieved that she got it.
"Oh, thank God you have a brain."
She wasn't sure if she should feel
complimented or not. "I'm still confused. Why did the Squire's Council
send you here? Don't they know how you feel about him?"
"Since my father happens to be
one of the board members, yes, they know. Unfortunately, no one else will take
this post. And since Lord Valerius demanded someone who could speak Italian and
Latin there weren't that many of us to choose from. Pompous windbag."
"What's so pompous about
wanting someone who speaks your native tongue? I noticed Talon has taught
Sunshine Gaelic; and every time Julian and Kyrian get around Selena, they
immediately break into ancient Greek."
"Yeah, but they don't demand
that their Squires know it. Notice Nick ain't real swift in Greek."
Tabitha snorted. "Nick's not
real swift in English most of the time."
"Hey now, don't insult my
friend."
"Nick happens to be one of my
friends too and I love him like a brother, but that doesn't make it open season
on Valerius."
"Yeah, right. Hon, you should
invest in a textbook and read up on what Valerius Magnus did in his
lifetime."
She folded her arms over her chest
and cocked her head. "Excuse me, Mr. Carvalletti, I'll have you know I
hold a master's in Ancient Civ. Do you?"
"No, I hold a doctorate from
Princeton."
She was impressed in spite of
herself. Princeton didn't let in stupid people. "In Ancient Civ?"
"No. Film Studies," he
said in a low tone.
"Pardon?" she asked, her
eyes wide. "Did you say film?" She was aghast at that. "You
majored in movies? Oh, and I was almost impressed."
"Hey," he said
defensively, "I'll have you know I worked my ass off for that degree,
thank you very much."
"Oh, yeah, right. I was a
Fulbright Scholar. Did you ever attend a school where Daddy didn't put up a
building?"
"My father didn't put up a
building there…" He paused before adding, "My great-grandfather did."
Tabitha snorted. "I'm sorry,
but I had to learn four languages to get my degree. What about you?"
"None. I grew up speaking
twelve."
"Well aren't you Mr. Fancy
Pants? Ooo, and you have the nerve to crack on Val? At least he doesn't walk
around flaunting his superior intellect."
"No, he just flaunts his
superior breeding. Bow down before me, all you plebeian scum."
"Maybe he wouldn't act that way
if all of you weren't damned nasty to him all the time."
"I'm nasty to him! Lady, you
don't even know me."
Tabitha backed off, especially since
she felt his hurt. "You're right, Otto, I don't know you and I'm probably
doing the same thing to you that you did to Val when you met him. I took one
look at you, listened to three seconds of your conversation, and made some
really harsh judgments that could be wrong just as easily as they could be
right."
She approached him with her hands
clasped behind her back. "Case in point. Your hair, while attractive, is shaggy,
but it's that kind of shabby-chic that only comes from a really expensive
beautician. You haven't shaved in what? Two days?"
"Three."
She ignored him. "You're
wearing a loud, obnoxiously bright red Hawaiian shirt that I know belongs to
Nick because he only wears it whenever he wants to jerk Kyrian's chain. He had
to special-order it online for the mere tackiness of it alone. You're barefoot
and I saw the beater IROC outside, which, I assume now, is yours."
He stiffened noticeably, which confirmed
her suspicion.
She continued her summation.
"At first glance, you look like one of those out-of-work party guys who
come into my shop browsing the video closet that we keep in back because no
self-respecting woman will go out with you. The kind of guy who buys all the
naked boob and fornicating Mardi Gras beads to hang around his neck and then
spends the entire week drunk and puking, screaming at women to show him their
cans."
He folded his arms and gave her a
sullen glare.
"Now let's contrast that with a
few other facts I've noticed. You're a Squire and from your own admission
you're a Blue Blood, which means you come from entire generations of Squires.
Your family has had more money than God for a long time. You actually went to
Princeton, and even with a laughable major, you went through the trouble of
getting a doctorate. That tells me that status does mean something to you. Let
me guess: That really cool, metallic black Jag that literally glistens in
darkness that Nick has parked at his house and yet never drives is actually
yours."
She paused beside him and looked him
up and down. "Not to mention you carry yourself like a man used to being
respected, even while trying to pretend to be a tasteless slob. Anyone with
even an ounce of perception isn't fooled by the tough way you stand."
She lifted his hand, where a
spiderweb was tattooed. "Nice watch," she said dryly. "Patek
Philippe Grand Complications Chronographs. Let me guess: it's the 5004P which
sells for one hundred fifty thousand dollars."
"How do you know that?"
"I come from a long line of
store owners and my Aunt Zelda has a jewelry store." She held her arm up
to him. "Look, see my coffin watch? It retails for thirty-two dollars at
Hot Topic and it has the same time yours does. It takes a Daimon licking and
keeps on ticking."
He rolled his eyes at her.
Tabitha continued her rant.
"And you're not just a regular Squire." She tapped the spiderweb
tattoo on the back of his hand that all Squires of his ilk were marked with.
"You're a Blood Rite. Why, Dr. Carvalletti, I do believe that in real
life, you're not too far away from being just like Val yourself. Tough,
arrogant, and willing to do whatever is necessary to get your job done."
She tilted her head. "I think
what bothers you most is that if you were a Dark-Hunter, you'd be just like
him. I think it kills you to know exactly how similar the two of you are. Where
is your black Armani suit hanging? Nick's house?"
"What are you? Friggin'
Sherlock Holmes?"
She smiled. "Pretty much,
except it usually doesn't take me as long to get to the truth."
He looked at her stonily. "I
don't need you to teach me a moral lesson, babe. I know how the world
works."
"I've no doubt about that. But
you have a lot to learn about people. What they say and what they feel are
seldom the same. I know right now that you hate my guts. You would like nothing
better than to toss my ass out of here and slam the door shut. But notice you
haven't done either one of those to me."
"So what's your point?"
"My point is this. Blood Rite
Squires are the ones charged with keeping the dictates of the Council and
keeping the lid on the Dark-Hunter world. That means they are willing to take
whatever steps are necessary, including murder, to protect their secrets. I am
sure somewhere in your past, you have had to do something distasteful to you in
order to uphold your Squire's oath and perform your duties. When you were
reading that textbook about Valerius did you ever wonder how much of it he
enjoyed? Or did he simply do what he did because it was his job?"
Otto cocked his head at her.
"Anyone ever tell you you should be an attorney?"
"Only Bill when we argue.
Besides, I like killing bloodsuckers too much to ever be one of them." She
held her hand out to him. "Tabitha Devereaux. Pleased to meet you."
His confusion engulfed her. He
hesitated before he shook her proffered hand.
"Don't worry, Otto," she
said with a smile. "I'm an acquired taste. Most of my best friends had to
know me for years before they could even stand my presence. I'm like mold, I
usually grow on you very slowly."
"You said it, not me."
She patted his arm. "Do me a
favor, be nice to Penicula. I think there's a lot more to him than what we see."
"You're the only person I know
who feels that way."
"Yeah, well, I guess I feel
like all of us misfits need to hang together. At least that way we don't swing
alone."
He gave her a confused scowl, but
before he could comment, his cell phone rang.
Tabitha stepped away from him to
give him privacy with his call. She wandered toward the foyer to ogle the
really impressive tile work on the floor.
It wasn't until she stood in the
doorway that she saw Valerius standing on the bottom stair. At first glance, he
might pass for one of the statues that flanked the stairs, but unlike them he
was flesh and blood.
Valerius stared at Tabitha as her
words rang in his head. To his knowledge, no one had ever defended him.
Not once in all of his two thousand
years of life and death.
Even if they had, he doubted they
would have done so so eloquently. She was in the shadow of his doorway, her
long auburn hair framing a face that was open and honest.
The face of a woman who wasn't
afraid to stand up to anyone or anything. He'd never known anyone more
courageous.
"Thank you," he said
quietly.
"You heard?"
He gave a subtle nod.
"How much did you hear?"
"A lot."
She appeared uncomfortable with
that. "You could have let us know you were here. It's not nice to
eavesdrop."
"I know."
She moved to stand before him.
Valerius descended his step. He
wanted to pull her into his arms and kiss her so badly, but he couldn't.
She was human while he wasn't. The
last time he had deigned to feel compassion for a woman who wasn't meant for
him, he had caused her the pain no woman should ever have to bear and himself
death.
It still didn't stop his body from
craving Tabitha. His heart from feeling a strange pang over the fact that she
had stood up for him.
Before he could stop himself, he
reached out and cupped her scarred cheek with his hand.
He'd been alone for so long.
Isolated. Hated.
And this woman…
She filled some inner emptiness that
he had forgotten was even there.
Tabitha's heart pounded at the
warmth of his hand on her face. The gentleness she saw in his dark eyes and the
gratitude she sensed inside him. No, he wasn't what Otto thought.
He wasn't cold and unfeeling. Brutal
or vicious. If he were, she'd know it. She'd feel it.
None of that was there. She sensed
only loneliness and pain from him.
She covered his hand with hers and
offered him a smile.
To her surprise, he returned it with
one of his own. It was the first time she'd seen a real smile from him. The
gesture softened his features and tugged at her heart.
He dipped his head toward hers.
Tabitha opened her lips, wanting to
taste him.
"Hey, Valerius?"
He jerked upright as she fought back
a curse at Otto's timing.
Valerius stepped away from her two
seconds before Otto came into the foyer. "Yes?"
"I'm heading out for the night.
I'm going to meet up with Tad and Kyr from the Dark-Hunter Web site. I'll have
my phone on if you need anything." Otto's gaze slid to hers and she felt
his disdain.
Tabitha smiled at him. "Night,
Otto. Don't let Tad get you into trouble."
"You know Tad, too?"
"Babe, I know almost everyone
in this town."
"Great," Otto muttered
under his breath as he headed for the door.
As soon as the door closed behind
him, Valerius started past Tabitha.
For some reason she couldn't fathom,
she reached out and caught his head in her hand.
Startled, he opened his mouth.
Unable to resist the temptation, she
stood on her tiptoes and kissed him.
Chapter 5
Tabitha was completely unprepared
for his reaction to her kiss. In one swift, tender motion, he pulled her to
him, lifted her off her feet, spun about, and then laid her down on the
polished stairs. It wasn't the most comfortable of positions, but it was
strangely erotic.
Still, it was no match for his hot,
demanding kiss that left her weak and breathless. His long, masculine body lay
between her legs as he kept all of his weight on one knee. She could feel his
erection pressing against the center of her body as her own body burned to feel
him like this naked.
The rich, delicious scent of him
tore through her, exciting her even more.
There was nothing civilized or
proper about the way he kissed her. Nothing civilized about the way he held
her. It was raw and earthy. Promising.
Tabitha wrapped her legs around his
lean waist as she returned his kiss full force.
Valerius couldn't think as he tasted
her. Felt her. She cocooned him with her warmth and passion.
And it was all he could do not to
take her on the stairs like some barbarian warlord.
"You have to stop kissing me,
Tabitha," he breathed raggedly.
"Why?"
He hissed as she gently nipped his
chin. "Because if you don't, I'm going to make love to you and that is the
last thing either one of us needs."
Tabitha traced the outline of his
lips with her tongue as he spoke. All she wanted was to strip off his clothes
and explore every inch of his lush, male body with her mouth. To lick and tease
him until he begged her for mercy.
But he was right. It was the last
thing either of them needed. He was a Dark-Hunter forbidden to have a
girlfriend and even worse, he wasn't the kind of guy she could ever introduce
to her family.
They would all turn on her for
befriending her brother-in-law's most hated enemy. Kyrian had been more than
accepted into her large family. Everyone loved him.
Even Tabitha did. How could she hurt
him this way?
No, it wasn't fair to any of them.
"All right," she said
quietly. "But you'll have to get off me first."
That was the hardest thing Valerius
had ever done. All his heart wanted was to stay right where he was. But he
couldn't and he knew it.
Taking a deep breath, he forced
himself to get up and help her to her feet.
His body was still hard, his
breathing a struggle. He couldn't stand to be close to her without touching
her. But then, he was used to restraint.
He had been bred to it.
What he had never expected was the
almost animal-like need he had to take her. It was primitive and demanding.
Fierce. And the only thing it craved was a taste of Tabitha.
"I suppose this is where we
part company," he said, his voice catching.
Tabitha nodded. He passed so close
to her that she could smell his raw, innately masculine scent. It made her
heart pound and fueled her desire even more.
It was all she could do not to reach
out for him. Aching, she watched him open the front door to his house.
"Thank you, Tabitha," he
said quietly.
She felt his sadness and it made her
hurt all the more. "Stay out of trouble, Val. Try not to get stabbed
again."
He nodded and kept himself rigid and
formal. But he refused to look at her.
Sighing wistfully over something
that couldn't be helped, Tabitha forced herself to leave.
It was over.
Impulsively, she looked back as the
door closed. There was no sign of Valerius. None.
Except for a sixth sense that told
her he was still watching her.
Valerius couldn't take his eyes off
Tabitha as she got into her car. He had no comprehension of why he felt the
compulsion to run out of the door and stop her.
She wasn't like Agrippina. Tabitha
wasn't soothing or comforting, and yet…
His heart ached as she whipped her
car out of his driveway and herself out of his life.
He was alone again.
But then, he'd always been alone.
Even when Agrippina had lived within his household, he had kept to himself.
He'd watched her from afar. Lusted for her every night and yet he'd never
touched her.
It wasn't his place. He'd been a
nobleman and she nothing more than a low-born slave who served in his
household. Had he been one of his brothers, he would have taken her without
question. But it hadn't been in him to take advantage of her. To force her to
his bed.
She wouldn't have dared deny him.
Slaves had no control whatsoever over their lives, especially not when it
involved their masters.
Every time he had seen her, it had
been on the tip of his tongue to ask her to sleep with him.
And every time he had opened his
mouth, he had quickly clamped it shut and refused to ask her something she had
no say about. So, he had brought her into his household to save her from what
the other members of his family would have done to her.
Valerius winced as he remembered the
night his brothers had come for him. The night they had found her statue and
realized who it was.
Cursing, he turned away from the
window and forced all those thoughts out of his mind.
It had never been his destiny to
help anyone.
He had been born to be alone. To
know no friends or confidants. To never laugh or play.
There was no fighting destiny. No
hope for anything more. He was born to this life just as he had been born to
his previous one.
Tabitha was gone.
And it was for the best.
His chest tight, he made his way up
the mahogany stairs toward his room. He would shower, re-dress, and then do the
job he had sworn himself to.
Tabitha drove her car back to Tia's,
where she saw Amanda's Toyota on the street. She pulled in and was getting out
as Amanda and Tia came out the back door.
"Hey, Mandy," Tabitha
said, closing the distance so she could hug her twin.
"So who was the gorgeous man
you were with? Tia said you didn't tell her his name."
Tabitha forced herself not to send
any unconscious thought or emotion out to her twin sister. "He's just a
friend."
Amanda shook her head.
"Tabby," she chided. "You need to stop hanging out with your gay
friends and find a boyfriend."
"He didn't seem gay to
me," Tia said. "But he was well dressed."
"So where's baby M?"
Tabitha asked, trying to get both of them off the topic.
"At the house. You know how Ash
is. He refuses to let her leave the premises once the sun goes down."
Tabitha nodded. "Yeah, I agree
with him. She's a very special little girl in need of protection."
"I agree too, but I hate
leaving my baby behind. I feel like I'm missing a vital organ." Amanda
held up her silver talisman. "Tia made me promise to hang it in Marissa's
room."
"Good advice."
Amanda frowned at her. "Are you
sure you're okay? There's something very odd about you tonight."
"There's always something odd
about me."
Amanda and Tia laughed.
"True," Amanda agreed. "All right, I'll quit worrying
then."
"Please. One mother is quite
enough."
Amanda kissed her on the cheek.
"I'll see you guys later."
Neither Tabitha nor Tia spoke until
after Amanda had gotten into her car and left. Tabitha put her hands in her
pockets and turned to face her sister's scowl.
"What?"
"Who was he, really?"
"What is it with you guys? He
was nobody for you to worry about."
"Was he a Dark-Hunter?"
"Stop it, Gladys," Tabitha
said, referring to the nosy neighbor from Bewitched, the show that had given
Tabitha her name. "There's no bonus round here for Twenty Questions and
I've got stuff I need to do. See ya."
"Tabitha!" Tia followed
her toward the street. "It's not like you to be secretive about anything.
It makes me nervous."
Tabitha took a deep breath and faced
her older sister. "Look, he was just someone who needed some help and I
gave it. Now he's back to his life and I'm back to mine. We don't need a family
powwow over it."
Tia made a noise of disapproval at
her. "You are so aggravating. Why can't you just answer my one
question?"
"Good night, Tia. Love
you." Tabitha kept walking and was grateful her sister stopped and went
back toward her shop.
Relieved, she headed for Bourbon
Street with no real destination. She'd pick up some food for the homeless and
then do her rounds.
"Oh, it's Tabitha!"
She turned at the distinctive
singsongy voice she knew extremely well. Rushing up behind her was Ash's demon,
Simi, who externally appeared to be a nineteen- or twenty-year-old woman.
Tonight Simi had on a black miniskirt, purple leggings, and a risque corset
top. She wore a pair of black thigh-high stiletto boots and carried a PVC
coffin purse. Her long black hair was loose about her shoulders.
"Hey, Simi," Tabitha said,
scanning the street behind the demon. "Where's Ash?"
She rolled her eyes and let out a
disgusted noise. "He got waylaid by that old heifer-goddess who said she
had to speak to him and so I said I was hungry and that I wanted to eat
something. So he said, 'Simi, don't eat no people. Go to Sanctuary and wait for
me while I talk to Artemis.' So here the Simi is going to Sanctuary all alone
to wait for akri to come and get her. You going to Sanctuary, Tabitha?"
It always amused Tabitha that the
demon referred to herself in the third person. "Not really. But if you
want me to walk with you that way, I can."
A man whistled as he walked past
them while he eye-balled Simi.
The demon gave him a sultry glance
and a small smile.
He headed back toward them.
"Hey, baby," he said. "You looking for company?"
Simi huffed. "Are you blind,
human?" she asked. She gestured dramatically toward Tabitha. "Can't
you see the Simi has company?" She shook her head.
He laughed at that. "You got a
number I can call and talk to you sometime?"
"Well, I do have a number, but
if you call it, akri will answer and he will get all angry at you and then your
head gonna explode into fire." She tapped her chin. "Hmmm, come to
think of it, barbecue… It's 555-"
"Simi…" Tabitha said in a
warning tone.
"Oh, poo," Simi said as
she let out another disgusted breath. "You are right, Tabitha. Akri just
get all mad at me if the Simi makes him make this man barbecue. He can be so
particular sometimes. I swear."
"Akri?" the man asked.
"Is he your boyfriend?"
"Oh no, that's just sick. Akri
my daddy and he get all upset whenever a man looks at the Simi."
"Well, what Daddy doesn't know
won't hurt him."
"Yeah," Tabitha said,
stepping between them. "Trust me, her 'Daddy' isn't someone you want to
mess with." She took Simi's arm and led her away.
The man followed. "C'mon, I
just want her number."
"It's 1-800-get-a-clue,"
Tabitha called over her shoulder.
"Fine, bitch, have it your
way."
Before Tabitha could blink, Simi
broke her hold and lunged at the man. She grabbed him by his neck and threw him
up against the side of a building where she held him effortlessly while his
feet were about a foot off the ground. "You don't talk to the Simi's
friends like that. You hear me?"
He couldn't respond. His face was
already turning purple, his eyes bulging.
"Simi," Tabitha said,
trying to pull the demon's hand away from the man's throat. "You'll kill
him. Let go."
The demon's brown eyes flashed red a
second before Simi released him. Bending double, he coughed and wheezed as he
struggled to breathe again.
"You better never insult
another lady, you stupid human," she said. "The Simi means that,
too."
Without another word or thought
about the matter, Simi swung her purse over her shoulder and sashayed down the
street as if she hadn't almost killed someone.
Tabitha's heart was still pounding.
What would have happened had she not been there to stop Simi?
"So, Tabitha, do you have any
more of them yummy mints that you gave to the Simi when we went to the
movies?"
"Sorry, Simi," she said,
trying to regain some composure as she watched the poor guy stumble down the
street. No doubt it would be quite awhile before he tried to pick up another
woman he didn't know. "I didn't bring them with me."
"Oh poo, I really liked them. I
especially liked that green tin. It was very nice. The Simi needs to make akri
buy her some."
Yeah, and Tabitha needed to make
sure Ash didn't let his demon loose unattended anymore. Simi wasn't evil, she
just didn't understand right or wrong. In the demon's world, there wasn't such a
concept.
Simi only understood Ash's orders
and she carried them out to the letter.
But at least they were headed
somewhere where most of the people knew and understood Simi. Sanctuary was a
biker bar at 688 Ursulines Avenue that was owned by a family of Were-Hunters.
Unlike the Dark-Hunters, the Were-Hunters were cousins of the cursed Apollites
and Daimons with one profound difference: They were also half-animal.
Aeons ago, the Were-Hunters had
originally been half-Apollite, half-human. In an effort to save his sons from
dying at twenty-seven as the Apollites did, their creator had magically spliced
animal essence with his sons' bodies.
The result had created two sons who
possessed human hearts and two who held animal hearts. Those who were human
were called Arcadians and those who were animals were called Katagaria. The
Arcadians spent most of their lives as humans who could take animal form,
whereas the Katagaria were animals who could take human form.
Even though they were related, the
two groups warred against each other because the Arcadians thought their animal
cousins were lesser beings and the animals fought because that was their
nature.
It was a Katagaria bear pack who
owned the bar. Inside the walls of Sanctuary, anyone was welcomed. Human,
Apollite, Daimon, god, Arcadian, or Katagaria. There was only one rule: You
don't bite me and I won't bite you. Sanctuary was one of the few sacred areas
on this planet where no paranormal being could attack another. And the bears
would gladly keep Simi occupied until Ash was able to rejoin her.
Simi chattered endlessly until they
reached the saloon-style doors of the bar.
"Are you coming inside?"
she asked Tabitha.
Before she could answer, Tabitha saw
Nick Gautier I headed toward them. Since Nick's mother worked at the bar, he
was an almost constant visitor there.
"Ladies," he said with a
charming smile as he joined them.
"Nick," Tabitha said in
greeting. Simi smiled warmly. "Hi, Nick," she said, twisting a strand
of hair around her finger. "You going into Sanctuary, too?"
"I was planning on it. What
about you two?"
Tabitha's phone rang. "Hang on," she said to
Nick and Simi before she answered it. It was Marla in hysterics.
"What?" Tabitha asked, trying
to understand Marla's words that came out in staccato between her sobs.
She glanced at Nick, who was
watching her with a frown, "How about Nick Gautier—"
The question was cut off by Marla's
scream of terror. "Okay, okay," Tabitha said, realizing immediately
why Marla was upset. Nick was wearing one of his heinous Hawaiian shirts along
with ragged blue jeans and a pair of tennis shoes that looked as if they'd been
fed to a garbage disposal. "Stop crying and get dressed. I'll get someone,
I promise."
Marla sniffed. "You
swear?"
"Cross my heart."
"Thank you, Tabby. You're a
goddess!"
Tabitha had serious doubts about
that as she hung up. "Nick, can you entertain Simi for a little while? I
have to go prevent a disaster."
Nick grinned. "Sure, chиr. I'll
be more than happy to keep Simi company if she doesn't mind."
Simi shook her head. "You know,
I really like them blue-eyed people," she said to Tabitha. "They's
all quality."
"You two have a good
time," Tabitha said as she left them and rushed for Chartres Street.
Valerius was blow-drying his hair
when he heard a commotion in his bedroom. It sounded like Gilbert and…
Turning off the dryer, he left the
bathroom to find Gilbert trying to pull Tabitha out of his bedroom.
"Forgive me, my lord,"
Gilbert said as he released Tabitha. "I was coming to let you know you had
a visitor when she followed me into your rooms."
Valerius couldn't breathe as he saw
the impossible. Tabitha back in his home.
An unexpected happiness consumed
him, but he refused to even smile.
"It's all right, Gilbert,"
he said, amazed at how even his tone was when all he really wanted to do was
grin like an imbecile at her. "You may leave us."
Gilbert inclined his head before he
obeyed.
Tabitha swallowed at the amazing
sight of Valerius wearing nothing but a damp burgundy towel wrapped around his
lean hips. It seemed completely incongruous to find him like that. With his
imperious air, she would have thought him to have a collection of silk
bathrobes or something.
His dark hair was damp and loose,
framing a face that was chiseled to perfection.
Wow, he looked good like that. He'd
probably look even better naked like he'd been when he jumped out of her bed…
She squelched that thought before it
got her into trouble.
"To what do I owe this
honor?" he asked.
She smiled. Oh yeah, he was perfect
for what she needed… and she didn't even want to contemplate that double entendre.
"I need you dressed."
Tabitha paused at the thought. Yeah, right, there was something seriously wrong
with a woman who said that to a man this finely made.
"Excuse me?"
"Hurry and dress, then meet me
downstairs." She shooed him toward the bed where he had a suit laid out.
"Fretta! Fretta!"
Valerius wasn't sure what stunned
him more, her wanting him dressed or her speaking Italian.
"Tabitha—"
"Dress!" Without another
word, she left his room.
Before he could move, she opened the
door and stuck her head back in. "You know, you could have dropped that
towel, slowpoke… oh, never mind that thought. Keep your hair down and make sure
you wear something really elegant and expensive. Preferably Versace if you have
it, but Armani will do, too. And make sure you wear a tie and bring your
coat."
Completely baffled and yet oddly
curious about her request, he exchanged the suit on his bed for a black Versace
silk and wool blend with a black silk shirt and matching silk tie, then opened
the door.
Tabitha turned as the door swung
open and she felt her mouth go dry. Her jaw dropped.
It wasn't as if she hadn't known he
was gorgeous, but…
Oh… my!
It was all she could do to breathe.
She'd never seen a man wear a totally black suit before but it was haute
couture of the first right. He looked debonair and regal.
Marla was going to die!
That is, if Tabitha didn't die first
of hormonal overload poisoning.
"You know, I've always heard
people say it should be illegal to look that good, but in your case, it really
is true."
He frowned at her.
Tabitha grabbed his hand and pulled
him toward the stairs. "C'mon, there's no time to waste."
"Where are you taking me?"
"I need a favor from you."
Valerius was oddly flattered by her
request. It was extremely rare that anyone ever asked him for a favor. Those
were things most people reserved for people they considered friends.
"What do you need?"
"Marla needs an escort for the
Ms. Red Light pageant."
Valerius stopped immediately.
"She what?"
Tabitha turned to face him. "Oh
come on, please don't be a prude here. You're Roman, for heaven's sake."
"Yes, but that doesn't mean I
have some innate qualification to be an escort for a transvestite. Tabitha,
please."
She looked so disappointed that it
actually made him feel guilty.
"Marla has been practicing for
this for months now and her guy cancelled on her tonight. Her number-one competitor
bribed him to escort her instead. If Marla loses, this will kill her."
"I have no desire to be paraded
around a group of gay men."
"It's not a parade… exactly.
All you need to do is walk her out in the very beginning when they introduce her.
It'll only take a few minutes and that's it. C'mon, Val. She spent a year's
salary on this gorgeous Versace gown."
Tabitha looked up at him with the
most pathetically heartfelt gaze he'd ever seen. It absolutely melted him.
"There's no one else to call on
such a short notice. She needs a really elegant man. Someone who's first class
and I don't know anyone else who fits the bill. Please? For me? I swear I'll
make it up to you."
Personally, he'd rather be beaten
and killed… again. And yet he couldn't find it within himself to disappoint
her.
"What if one of them gropes
me—"
"They won't. I promise, I'll
protect all your…" She arched a brow as she looked at his derriere.
"Assets."
"And if anyone ever learns of
this—"
"They won't. I'll take it to my
grave."
Valerius let out a long breath.
"You know, Tabitha, anytime in my life I have ever sought to help anyone,
I've only made it worse for them. I have a bad feeling about this. Something
will go wrong. Watch and see. Marla will fall off the stage and break her neck,
or worse, her big wig will catch on fire."
She waved her hand dismissively.
"You're being paranoid."
No, he wasn't. And as she led him
toward the front door, every horrible memory of his life played through his
mind… The time when he'd felt sorry for Zarek and had tried to soothe him after
a beating. His father had then forced him to beat Zarek more. He'd pulled back
the strokes, hoping they wouldn't be as painful as the ones his father had
given Zarek. Instead, he'd ended up blinding the poor slave.
Then when he'd tried to keep Zarek
from being caught outside the confines of their villa, he'd caused his father
to pay a slaver to take Zarek away from everything the boy had known.
As a first-time general, he'd had a
young soldier under his command who was the last surviving son of his family.
Hoping to keep the youth away from the battlefield, he had sent him as a
messenger to another Roman camp.
The boy had died two days out from
an attack by rogue Celts who had stumbled across him.
And Agrippina…
"I can't do this,
Tabitha."
Tabitha paused on the front steps to
look at him. There was a catch in his voice that told her this wasn't him being
ridiculous.
She actually felt a wave of fear go
through him.
"It'll be okay. Five minutes.
That's it."
"And if I cause Marla to be
hurt?"
"I'll be right there. Nothing
bad is going to happen. Trust me."
He nodded, but she felt his
reluctance as she tugged him toward the taxi she'd left waiting for them.
Getting in, she gave directions to the driver to the Cha Cha Club on Canal
Street.
It barely took them fifteen minutes
to get there. Tabitha paid for the cab while Valerius stood on the sidewalk
looking like he was ready to bolt, especially since some of the club's
clientele had already taken notice of him.
"Don't worry," Tabitha
said as she joined him. "They really won't bother you."
Valerius couldn't believe he was
doing this. He must have lost his mind.
Tabitha took his hand and led him
through the bright pink double doors.
"Hey, Tabby," a bouncer at
the door called. He was large and muscular, wearing a sleeveless T-shirt. His
dark brown hair was cut short and he had a Celtic band tattooed around his
exposed biceps. At first glance he appeared intimidating, but his open, honest
smile stole the ferocity from him.
Tabitha pulled out her wallet to pay
their cover charge. "Hi, Sam. We're here to help out Marla. Is she in the
back?"
"Put that away," Sam said,
pushing her wallet back toward her. "You know your money's no good here.
Yes, Marla's in back and please go help her. My boyfriend's about to lose his
mind because she won't stop crying."
Tabitha winked at him. "Don't
worry. The cavalry's here."
Valerius took a deep breath as he
followed Tabitha into what had to be the scariest place he'd ever been.
Personally, he'd rather walk straight into a nest of Daimons who were armed
with chainsaws and guillotines.
But by the time they reached the
bright yellow door beside the stage, he felt a little better. Though many of
the men in the club stopped to gawk at him, none of them made a move toward
him.
"Don't worry," Tabitha
said as he walked past her. "I've got your flank covered."
Valerius jumped as she pinched his
butt playfully. "Please don't give them ideas."
She laughed at that.
They walked through a crowd of
people who were in the process of applying makeup, wigs, and elaborate dresses.
Marla sat in a back corner, wailing while another man flitted around her,
complaining. Her bald head was covered by a pink net turban and her makeup was
completely wrecked.
"You're ruining all my hard
work, honey. You have to stop crying or I'll never get it fixed in time."
"What does it matter? I'm going
to lose. Damn you, Anthony! All men are pigs. Pigs! I can't believe he'd sell
me out."
Valerius felt bad for Marla. It was
obvious this pageant meant a lot to her.
"Hey, babe," Tabitha said.
"Buck up. We got something a lot better than old Tone. In fact, both he
and Mink will die when you step out with this by your side." She pushed
Valerius forward.
"Hi, Marla," he said
simply, feeling like a complete and utter jackass.
Marla's jaw dropped. "You're going
to do this for me?"
He glanced over his shoulder to see
Tabitha watching him closely. There was actually fear in her eyes that he might
back out.
God knows, he truly wanted to.
He really, really didn't want to go
through with this. But Valerius Magnus was tougher than this. He had never run
in his life and he would do this favor for Tabitha no matter how distasteful it
might be to him.
Straightening himself, he turned
back to Marla. "I would be honored to be your escort."
Marla let out an ear-piercing scream
as she jumped up and grabbed him in a hug so hard that he feared his ribs might
crack. She screamed even louder as she left him and grabbed Tabitha up into a
hug that brought Tabitha's feet off the floor.
"Oh, girlfriend, you are the
best friend anyone ever had! Imagine Marla Divine going out there on the arm of
the only straight man in the house. Girl, they will die of envy." She let
go of Tabitha. "Carey, get over here and redo my makeup, pronto. I need to
be fabulous! Fabulous!"
Carey was smiling at Marla's
dramatics. "Sit down, darling, and you will be."
While Carey worked on Marla,
Valerius and Tabitha stood off to the side, out of the way.
"Thank you," Tabitha said.
"Really."
"It's okay."
Tabitha watched Valerius. Before she
could stop herself, she wrapped her arms around him and smiled up at him and
laid her head against his chest.
Valerius couldn't breathe at the
sensation of her hold. His heart thudded at the sight of her head lying against
him, at the warmth of her body pressed against his. An unexpected tenderness
swelled inside him.
He reached up and lightly stroked
her hair while he hoped nothing went wrong with Marla because he was helping
her.
The last time he had tried to help
someone had been over a year ago when Acheron had asked him to help fight
Daimons off a Katagaria wolf pack. He'd gone willingly but during the fight,
Vane and Fang, the two wolves they'd been helping, had lost their sister to an
ill-placed Daimon strike. She'd died in her brothers' arms.
The sight haunted him to this day.
Valerius had told Vane that anytime
he needed him, he'd gladly lend his sword arm to the wolf. Luckily, Vane had
never needed him. You're being ridiculous.
Perhaps, but it wouldn't bother him
so much if he was the one who bore the brunt of it. The disaster always seemed
to fall onto the ones he tried to help.
He put that thought away and focused
on the woman with him. A woman unlike any other he'd ever met before.
She was truly special. Unique.
Time seemed to hold still as he
stood there, just letting the warmth of Tabitha seep into him.
He was actually startled when Marla
stood up and gestured for him to follow her.
"Dum-da-dum-dum… dum…"
Tabitha hummed the theme song to Dragnet as if to portend his doom as they
followed Marla back through the dressing room into a hallway that was crowded
with drag queens.
Tabitha kissed Valerius's cheek,
then left him so that she could make room for others.
She headed out into the club and
found Marla's best friend, Yves, sitting at a table in front of the runway with
a group of his pals.
"Hey, vampire slayer,"
Yves said as she pulled a chair up to the table. "Are you here to cheer
Marla on?"
"Of course. Where else would I
be?"
A cheer went up from the table while
they bantered around and laid bets on who would win until the show finally
started.
Tabitha was a nervous wreck until
Marla and Valerius appeared. The crowd went wild the minute they saw Valerius,
who walked as if he was completely comfortable in his role as escort. Only
Tabitha could sense his discomfort and she had a feeling it stemmed more from
his fear of causing Marla to be hurt than anything else.
When they reached the stairs that
would lead them off the runway to where the rest of the earlier contestants
were gathered, Valerius descended first and, like a true gentleman, reached up
to help Marla down.
Tabitha wanted to weep at what a
kind thing he was doing for someone he didn't even know.
She couldn't think of any other
straight man who would do something this ridiculous to help out a woman he'd
just met. A woman who had stabbed him no less.
As soon as the escorts were
dismissed, she pushed through the crowd to find him. The instant she reached
him, she threw herself into his arms and held him close.
Valerius was completely stunned by
Tabitha's exuberant reaction. She felt so good in his arms that it was all he
could do not to crush her to him and kiss her until they both made a spectacle
of themselves.
She squeezed him tight, then laid a
gentle kiss on his lips. "You are the best!"
Shocked, he didn't know what to say
to that.
"If you want, we can leave
now."
Valerius looked about.
"No," he said honestly. "I've come this far and I didn't kill
Marla, so I think we should stay and see how she does."
The look on her face made his entire
body burn. "Does Ash have any idea just what a sweetheart you are?"
"I shudder at the mere
prospect."
She laughed, then took his hand and
led him to a table near the stage.
A large group of men greeted them.
"You were great!" the one
closest to them said.
Valerius inclined his head as
Tabitha introduced all of them. They sat there for a little over an hour while
the contestants held a talent and bathing suit competition. The latter of which
made Valerius even more uncomfortable than being on stage.
"You okay?" Tabitha asked,
leaning toward him. "You look a little green."
"I'm fine," he said, even
though he was cringing at the thought of how a man could restrict himself so
much in a bathing suit as to leave no trace of his gender.
Some things just didn't bear thinking
on.
After an hour, the judges had
finally narrowed it down to three contestants.
Tabitha sat forward. She wrapped her
arm around Valerius and perched her chin on his shoulder as she held her breath
and prayed for Marla.
Valerius didn't move, but the
sensation of his hand on hers made her warm considerably. No matter the
outcome, she was so grateful to him for bailing her out.
Neither Kyrian nor Ash would be
caught dead here.
Tabitha caught Marla's nervous gaze
as they came down to the winner's name.
She couldn't breathe. Not until they
announced…
"Marla Divine!"
Marla screamed and grabbed the
contestant closest to her. They jumped up and down and cried as more
contestants moved in for hugs and congrats.
Tabitha shot to her feet, screaming
and whistling her support. "Go, Marla, go!"
She looked down to see Valerius
staring at her in horror.
Huffing at him, she pulled him to
his feet. "Let's hear it, General," she said. "Shout out."
"I only shout when calling orders
to troops and that was a long time ago."
Well, there was only so much
loosening up a person could do in one night.
She blew him a raspberry, then
continued yelling for her roommate.
The emcee placed the crown on Marla,
and the sash, then handed her a dozen roses and directed her toward the runway.
Marla walked down it, crying and
laughing as she blew kisses to the audience.
When it was all over, Tabitha and
Valerius fought the crowd to her side. Marla hugged Tabitha first, then grabbed
Valerius. "Thank you!"
Valerius nodded. "My pleasure.
Congratulations on winning, Marla."
Marla smiled. "I owe the two of
you. Don't think I'm going to forget, now. Y'all go on and I'll catch up to you
later."
"All right," Tabitha said.
"I'll see you at home."
They made their way out of the club,
to the busy Canal Street that bordered the French Quarter.
Tabitha checked her watch. It was
almost ten. "I don't know about you, but I'm famished. Want to go grab a
bite?"
Valerius gave her an amused stare.
"You have to be the only woman alive who would ask a man with fangs that
question."
She laughed. "You're probably
right. So would you like to join me?"
"We don't have reservations
anywhere."
She rolled her eyes at him.
"Hon, where I'm going we don't need no stinking reservations."
"Where are we going?"
She headed down Royal Street, which
connected Canal to Iberville. "The Antoine's of seafood. Acme Oyster House."
"Acme? I've never eaten
there."
And as soon as Tabitha reached the
door of the place, Valerius knew why. It actually had plastic black-and-white
checked tablecloths.
He hesitated in the doorway as he
scanned the small restaurant. The place was tiny and the crowd thinning. It had
a bar to his right that stretched along the wall, and tables set up to his
left. The walls were a tawdry mixture of mirrors, pictures, and neon signs. It
was loud and obnoxious.
Not to mention, Valerius had to quickly
catch himself and mentally force his image into the mirrors before someone
realized he didn't cast a reflection.
Tabitha turned to look at him. She
put her hands on her hips. "Would you stop looking like someone just
scuffed your brand-new shoes? They have the best oysters on earth here."
"It's so… neon."
"So put on your
sunglasses."
"It doesn't look
sanitary," he said in a low tone.
"Oh please, you're about to eat
something that is the vacuum cleaner of the ocean. You do know how pearls are
formed, right? All an oyster does is ingest trash. Besides, you're immortal,
what do you care?"
"Valerius?"
He looked past Tabitha to see Vane
and Bride Kattalakis seated at the oyster bar, where two men behind the counter
were shucking oysters for the handful of people who sat there. Valerius let out
a relieved breath. Finally, someone he could relate to. A little, anyway since
Vane was an Arcadian wolf and Bride his human mate.
Dressed in jeans and a long-sleeved
T-shirt, Vane was Valerius's height and had long dark brown hair that he wore
loose around his shoulders. Bride was a plump, beautiful woman whose long
auburn hair was worn up in a messy bun. She had on a tan sweater over a brown
dress with little white flowers.
Valerius crossed the floor to shake
Vane's hand. "Wolf," he said in greeting… it was always polite to
refer to the Arcadians and Katagaria by their animal selves. "Nice seeing
you again." He looked to Bride. "And you, my lady, always an honor."
Bride smiled at him, then looked at
Tabitha. "What are the two of you doing here? Together?"
"Val was doing a favor for
me," Tabitha said as she came up behind him. She turned to one of the men
behind the counter, who was wiping his hands after shucking a plate of oysters.
"Hey, Luther, two beers and a fork."
The tall African-American laughed at
her. "Tabby, this is what, the fourth time this week you've been here?
Don't you have a home?"
"Yeah, but we don't have
oysters in it. At least not good ones. And I have to come here just to harass
you. Imagine a whole day without Tabitha in it… What would you do?"
Luther laughed.
Valerius didn't miss the strange
look that passed between Vane and Bride before Luther handed Bride the plate of
shucked oysters and went to get Tabitha the beers.
"Is there something I should
know?" Valerius asked them.
The instant Vane opened his mouth to
speak, Tabitha kicked his shin. Hard.
Vane yelped, then frowned at her.
"What was that?" Valerius
asked. "Why did you kick him?"
"No reason," Tabitha said,
reaching over the bar to pluck an oyster from the pile.
She looked angelic, which meant
something truly evil was going on.
Valerius looked back at Vane.
"What were you going to say?"
"Absolutely nothing," Vane
said before he took a drink from his longneck.
Valerius had a bad feeling about
this.
Luther returned with two bottles of
beer and handed them to Tabitha, who in turn held one out for Valerius.
He stared at it blankly.
"Aren't you thirsty?"
Tabitha asked.
"Don't we get glasses?"
"It's beer, Val, not champagne.
Take it. Really, it doesn't bite."
"Tabby, be nice," Bride
chided. "Valerius probably isn't used to beer."
"I do drink it," Valerius
said, taking the bottle reluctantly, "just not like this."
"You want oysters?"
Tabitha asked him.
"I'm not sure after your rather
blunt reminder of what they are."
Tabitha laughed at him. "Set us
up, Luther, and keep them coming until I pop."
Luther grinned at her. "I don't
think you have a limit, Tabby. It's a wonder we have any left to serve after
you leave."
Tabitha sat on the stool beside
Bride and indicated for Valerius to assume the one on the opposite side of her.
Valerius set his beer on the counter before he complied.
"You look so uncomfortable
here, Valerius," Bride said sweetly. "How on earth did Tabitha talk
you into this?"
"I'm still not quite
sure."
"You two been dating
long?" Vane asked.
"We're not dating, Vane,"
Tabitha answered quickly. "I told you, Val is only doing me a favor."
"Whatever you say, Tab. I just
hope your sis—"
His words were cut short by Bride
clearing her throat. "Tabitha knows what she's doing, Vane. Don't you, Tabby?"
"Usually not, but this is okay.
Really."
Valerius would sell his soul again
for a chance to read Vane's mind. "Vane, may I have a word with you
privately?"
Bride poured Tabasco sauce over an
oyster. "You leave that barstool, Mr. Kattalakis, and you really will be
'in the doghouse' literally for the rest of the week. In fact, I'll sic your
brother Fury on you and change the locks."
Vane actually cringed. "As much
as I would like to help you out, Valerius, you have to remember that her father
neuters dogs for a living, and he trained his daughter well. I think I'll have
to pass."
Valerius looked at Tabitha, who was
busy taking an oyster from Luther. She refused to meet his gaze.
What did Vane know that he didn't?
They sat at the bar, with Tabitha
and Bride chatting about clothes, old friends, and nothing important while both
men were ill at ease. The restaurant closed at ten, but Luther served them
oysters for another fifteen minutes.
"Thank you, Luther,"
Tabitha said. "I really appreciate you not running me off."
"It's always a pleasure, Tabby.
I like the way you appreciate my service and food, and I have to say this one
is easier to feed than your friend Simi. That little girl eats like a
demon."
"Oh, you have no idea."
Valerius went to pay while Vane
stayed with the women. Once the bill was settled, Vane and Bride headed off
toward Royal while he and Tabitha headed toward Bourbon.
"Ready to patrol?" Tabitha
asked.
"I'll drop you at your—"
"I'm not going home," she
said, interrupting him.
"Where are you going?"
"Stalking Daimons. Just like
you."
"That's not safe."
She stopped and glared at him.
"I know what I'm doing."
"I know," he said quietly.
"You have the spirit and strength of an Amazon. But I would really rather
you not kill yourself for something best left to those of us who have already
died. Unlike you, we have no one to mourn us if we perish."
Tabitha was taken aback at his
unexpected words. More than that, she was taken aback by the concern she felt
from him. The pain. "Who mourned for you when you died?" she asked,
not sure why she wanted to know.
He paused, then looked away.
"No one."
"No one? Didn't you have any
family?"
He laughed bitterly at that. "My
family was a Shakespearean tragedy. Trust me when I say they were gleefully rid
of me."
"How can you say that? I'm sure
they cared. Surely—"
"My brothers are the ones who
killed me."
Tabitha felt the vengeful agony that
surged through him as he growled those heartfelt words at her. Her chest ached
for him. Was he telling her the truth?
"Your brothers?"
Valerius couldn't breathe as the
past tore through him. But in truth, he felt a wave of relief at finally, after
two thousand years, telling someone the truth about what had made him a
Dark-Hunter.
He nodded as he forced the twisted
images of that night out of his mind. When he spoke, his voice was surprisingly
level. "I was an embarrassment to my family so they executed me."
"Executed you how?"
His eyes were blank. "You're an
ancient scholar. I'm sure you know what Rome did to her enemies."
Tabitha covered her mouth as a wave
of nausea consumed her. Before she could stop herself, she took his arm and
pulled back his sleeve so that she could see the scar on his wrist. There was
all the proof she needed.
Like Kyrian, he had been crucified.
"I'm so sorry."
Stiff and formal, he withdrew his
arm and straightened out his sleeve. "Don't be. I find it oddly fitting
given my family history. He who lives by the sword…"
"How many people did you
crucify?"
She felt his shame before he turned
and headed away from her. Unwilling to let him go, she rushed after him and
pulled him to a stop. "Tell me, Valerius. I want to know."
The agony on his face tore through
her. His jaw ticced. "None," he said after a long pause. "I
refused to ever kill a man like that."
Tears pricked her eyes as she stared
up at him.
He wasn't what Kyrian and the others
thought. He wasn't.
The man they described wouldn't have
hesitated to humiliate or kill someone. And yet Valerius had.
He cleared his throat and looked as
if the words pained him. "When I was a young boy, I saw a man executed. He
was one of the greatest generals of his time."
Tabitha's heart paused its beating
as she realized he was talking about Kyrian.
"My grandfather tricked him and
then spent weeks interrogating him." His breathing was labored, his entire
body tense. "My father and grandfather insisted my brothers and I be
brought in to witness it. They wanted us to learn how to break a man. How to
strip the dignity from him until there's nothing left. And all I saw was blood
and horror. No one should suffer like that. I looked into that man's eyes and I
saw his soul. His strength. His pain. I tried to run and they beat for me for
it, then brought me back in and forced me to watch."
He gave her a fierce, tormented
stare. "I hated them for that. Two thousand years later and I can still
hear his screams as they raised his broken body up and carried the once-proud
prince out to the square to die like a common criminal."
Tabitha covered her own ears as she
imagined what it must have been like for Kyrian to die that way. She knew from
her sister that his death still haunted him, too. Though Kyrian's nightmares
were much fewer now than they had been when he and Amanda had first married, he
still had them. He still woke up in the middle of the night to make sure his
wife and child were safe.
Some nights, he didn't sleep at all
for fear that someone would come and take it all away from him again.
And he hated Valerius with an
unreasoning vengeance.
Valerius took a deep breath as he
saw the way Tabitha cringed. He cringed too, just not openly.
His heart had carried the guilt and
horrors of his childhood throughout time. If he could go back in time, he never
would have sold his soul to Artemis. Better to die and silence the resonance of
his father's cruelty than to live interminably with all of their voices echoing
in his mind.
He was sure Tabitha hated him now,
just like the others. She had every right to. What his family had done was
inexcusable. It was why he made a point to avoid Kyrian and Julian.
There was no need in reminding
either one of them of their past lives in ancient Greece. It would be even
crueler now that both of them had happiness in the modern world.
He'd never understood why Artemis
had moved him into New Orleans. It was something his father would have done to
ensure that the two Greeks had no peace whatsoever.
But that was something he would
never speak of. And should he ever cross paths with Kyrian and Julian, he knew
better than to apologize. He'd tried that once centuries past with Zoe, who had
been killed by his brother Marius. The Amazon had run him through, trying her
best to kill him.
Valerius had been forced to
overpower her.
She had spat on him. "Roman
filth! I'll never understand why Artemis allows you to live when you should be
gutted like a squealing pig."
Over the centuries, he'd learned to
just hold his head high and carry on regardless of what the other Dark-Hunters thought.
He couldn't give them peace from their pasts any more than he could have peace
from his own.
Some ghosts refused to be exorcized.
Now Tabitha knew the truth and she
would hate him as well. So be it.
Valerius turned to leave.
"Val?"
He paused.
Tabitha wasn't sure what to say to
him. So she didn't speak with words. She reached up and pulled his head down to
hers, then kissed him soundly.
Valerius was stunned by her actions.
He crushed her to him as he tasted the warmth of her mouth. The warmth of her
embrace.
He pulled back. "You know what
I am, Tabitha… why are you still here?"
She looked up at him, her blue eyes
searing with tenderness. "Because I know what you are, Valerius Magnus.
Believe me, I know. And I want to take you home with me, right now, and make
love to you."
Chapter 6
Valerius would never understand this
woman or her strangeness. In the back of his mind was an image of Tabitha in
the slinky black negligee he'd found under her pillow.
The image haunted him.
"I would love to go home with
you, Tabitha," he said. "But I can't right now. I have to do my
job."
She smiled, then kissed him again so
passionately that it made his entire body sizzle.
Pulling back, she breathed in his
ear. "And that makes me want you even more." He shivered as she
delivered one long, sensuous lick to his lobe. "When the dawn comes, I'm
going to make you scream in pleasure."
His groin jerked in eager
anticipation.
"Promise?" The word was
out before he could stop it.
She took a step back and let her
hand fall from his face to his chest where she traced a path to his belt. He
burned in the wake of her touch.
"Oh yeah, baby," she said
teasingly. "I intend to squeeze you until you pop."
That thought alone was enough to
turn his blood into lava. He couldn't suppress the fantasy of Tabitha's long
legs wrapped around his hips, her body warm and wet as she welcomed him in.
He pulled her close to him so that
he could kiss her even though they stood in the middle of the street. He'd
never done anything so lowborn. Nor had he ever enjoyed anything more than the
taste of her lips.
Her spicy-sweet scent invaded his
senses and made his entire body burn for her.
This was going to be the longest night
of his life.
Taking a deep breath, he reluctantly
stepped away from her. "So where should we start patrolling?"
"You're not going to try and
force me home?"
"Could I?"
"Not bloody likely."
"Then where should we start
patrolling?"
Tabitha laughed. "Aren't you a
little overdressed for stalking the undead?"
"Not really. It's rather
fitting, don't you think, that I should look like I'm going to a funeral?"
She laughed at his morbid sense of
humor. "I suppose. Do you always wear a suit?"
"I'm most comfortable in one.
I'm not really a jeans and T-shirt sort of man."
"Yeah, I imagine you look like
I do whenever I have to wear a suit. Itchy." Tabitha indicated the street
with a tilt of her head. "Shall we?"
"Do we have to do Bourbon?
Can't we go down Chartres or Royal?"
"Bourbon's where the crowd
is."
"But the Daimons like to kill
over by the Cathedral." He was suddenly very uncomfortable.
"What's wrong with Bourbon
Street?"
"There are lots of unsavory
people there."
Now that offended her. "Excuse
me, I live on Bourbon. So you're calling me unsavory?"
"No. Not exactly. But you do
own a sex shop."
That set off her hackles even more.
"Oh! That's it. Nothing for you tonight, Count Penicula. You can go roast
your own—"
"Tabitha, please. I don't like
Bourbon Street."
"Fine," she said sharply
as she stalked away from him. "You go that way. I'm headed this way."
Valerius clenched his teeth as she
left him standing there. He truly hated to step one foot into this area. It was
bright, loud, and filled with people who hated his guts.
Just go. Forget her.
He should. He really should, but he
couldn't.
Before he could stop himself, he
headed off after Tabitha. By the time he caught up to her, she was already on
Bourbon Street.
"What are you doing here?"
she asked as he came up beside her. "I would hate to sully you."
"Tabitha, please stay with me.
I didn't mean to offend you."
She turned on him with a curled lip.
The instant Tabitha opened her mouth
to let him have it, someone tossed a bucket of foul-smelling water from over a
balcony and doused Valerius.
He went ramrod stiff while she
frowned, then looked up to see Charlie, one of the doormen for the Belle Queen
strip club, laughing. He set the bucket up and high-fived another man standing
beside him.
"Charlie Laroux, what the hell
are you doing?" Tabitha yelled up at them.
"Me?" he asked
indignantly. "Since when are you hanging out with enemies? Nick done told
us all about that ass-wipe and I promised Nick that if I ever caught Dick on
our street again, I'd make him regret it."
Tabitha couldn't have been more
stunned had Charlie slapped her. She looked at Valerius, who'd taken a
handkerchief out of his pocket to wipe his face while that angry tic worked in
his jaw.
"I swear, Charlie, if you were
down here, I'd wring your neck."
"Why? You know our code, Tabby.
Why you violating it?"
"Because there's nothing wrong
with Val other than the fact that Nick needs to get a life. Just you wait,
Charlie. I'm going to have a nice long talk with Brandy and when I finish with
her, you'll be lucky if she lets you park your car in her driveway to sleep in
it."
Brandy was Charlie's girlfriend, a
regular customer in Tabitha's shop.
Charlie went pale while she reached
to take Valerius's arm. She pulled him across the street, toward her store.
"I can't believe them!" she
snarled.
"It's why I hate this
street," he said in an emotionless voice. "Every time I come here, I
end up walking the gauntlet through Nick's friends."
"That asshole!"
Tabitha had never been more furious
in her life. She led him into her store and didn't even stop to chitchat with
her employee. She took him upstairs to her bathroom and grabbed a towel and
washcloth from the closet.
"Go ahead and take a bath. I'll
borrow some clothes from my roomie."
He went pale. "No offense, but
silver sequins and pastels are not my style."
She smiled in spite of herself.
"I won't borrow from Marla, I'll borrow from Marlon."
"Marlon?"
"Her alter ego. He doesn't
visit here much, but she keeps a few of his things for whenever he feels the need
to come out."
"I don't think I quite
understand."
"Go bathe," she said,
urging him into the room.
Valerius didn't argue. The fetid
stench of the water was truly unbearable. He was just grateful that Tabitha was
willing to tolerate him long enough to allow him to clean up.
He'd barely stripped his clothes off
and entered the shower before the door opened.
Valerius froze.
"It's just me," Tabitha
said from the other side of the shower curtain. "I found a pair of black
slacks and sedate black shirt for you. The pants are probably a little too big
in the waist, but they should be long enough. I'm not sure about the shirt. You
might end up wearing one of my tees."
"Thank you," he said.
Before he realized what she was
doing, the curtain opened to show her standing outside with a hungry look on
her face. "You're welcome."
Valerius didn't move as he stood
facing her with the hot water sliding down his spine. Her bold, intense stare
made his body harden against his will.
She didn't seem to mind at all.
Indeed, a small smile spread across her face.
"Do you always spy on your
guests?" he asked quietly.
"Never, but I couldn't resist
getting a peek at what I intend to savor later."
"Are you always this
brazen?"
"Honestly?"
He nodded.
"No, I'm not normally quite
this obnoxious and you're the last man on the planet I should be considering.
But I can't seem to help myself."
Valerius reached out to touch her.
She really was too good to be true. "I've never known anyone like
you."
She covered his hand with hers, then
turned her face to kiss his palm. "Hurry and shower. We have work to
do."
She pulled away and he felt her
absence immediately. What was it about her?
Unwilling to think about it, he
quickly bathed, then dressed. He found Tabitha in her bedroom, sitting in the
chair and flipping through one of her books.
Tabitha looked up as she felt
Valerius's presence. He stood silently in the doorway. He appeared to be
completely in his element, except for the clothes that didn't quite fit.
Getting up, she offered him a kind
smile. Once she reached him, she unbuttoned the cuffs of the sleeves that were
a little too short for his arms and rolled them back on his forearms.
Then she untucked his shirt.
"I know it's not your style,
but it looks much better this way."
"Are you certain?"
He looked delectable. "Oh
yeah."
He held a long, retractable sword in
his hand. "The only problem is if I don't have long sleeves, I can't wear
this."
Tabitha sucked her breath in at the
quality of his weapon. "Very nice piece of work. Is it Kell's?" she
asked. Kell was a Dark-Hunter stationed out in Dallas who made a lot of the
heavy weapons the Dark-Hunters used.
"No," he said with a deep
breath. "Kell doesn't deal with anyone from Rome."
"Excuse me?"
He took the weapon from her.
"He's from Dacia and his people waged war against mine. He and his
brothers were captured and taken to Rome to be gladiators. Two thousand years
later, he's still rather upset at all of us."
"Okay, I've had it with this.
Why doesn't Ash stop them from treating all of you like dirt?"
"How can he stop it?"
"Beat some sense into
them?"
"It wouldn't work. My brethren
and I have learned to just leave the rest of them alone. We're few in number
and there's no need in even arguing."
Tabitha growled. "Fine, let
them all rot then."
Valerius placed his sword on her
dresser and left it there before the two of them went back outside.
Tabitha quickly led him away from
the sidewalks so that no one else could toss a bucket at them and kept her arm
wrapped around his. "You know, I don't see how you can do your duties with
Zarek taking potshots at you from Olympus and the rest of the losers on the
street gunning for you."
"I learned quickly to avoid
Bourbon Street and leave it for Talon or now Jean-Luc to patrol while I take
the areas where no one knows Nick."
"And Zarek?"
He didn't comment.
They turned down Dumaine Street.
Neither spoke. They hadn't gone far when Tabitha felt a weird sensation whip
through her. "Daimons," she whispered, unaware she had spoken until
Valerius let go of her.
He pulled a dagger from his pocket
as he turned around in the street as if trying to catch a scent.
There was nothing.
Tabitha could feel the evil
presence, but she couldn't pinpoint it either.
Something whistled before an
unexpected wind danced down the street. It carried the sound of faint, maniacal
laughter.
"Tabitha…"
Her blood ran cold at the sound of
her name whispered out of darkness.
"We're coming for you, little
girl." The laughter echoed loudly, then faded into nothing.
Terrified, Tabitha couldn't breathe.
"Where are you?" Valerius
called.
No one answered.
Valerius wrapped Tabitha in his arms
as he reached out with every sense he possessed, but could find no trace of who
or what had spoken.
"Tabitha?"
Valerius turned sharply at the sound
of a voice directly behind him.
It wasn't human. Nor was it Daimon.
It was a spirit. A ghost.
It opened its mouth as if to scream,
then evaporated into an eerie mist that ran over and through her, leaving her
body completely cold.
It was as if something had actually
brushed her soul.
Valerius could feel Tabitha shaking,
but to her credit, she didn't scream or lose control of herself.
"Is it gone?" she asked.
"I think so." At least he
no longer felt it.
"What was that thing?" she
asked with a tiny trace of hysteria in her voice.
"I'm not sure. Did you
recognize it or the voice?"
She shook her head.
A human scream rang out.
Valerius let go of her so that he
could run toward the sound. He knew Tabitha was right behind him and he made
sure he kept her there. The last thing he wanted was to leave her behind for
that thing to attack.
It didn't take long to reach the
small, dark alcove where the scream had originated.
Unfortunately, they were too late. A
body lay on the street in a heap.
"Stay back," he told
Tabitha as he inched closer to it.
Tabitha started to argue, but didn't
really want to see what was obvious. To be honest, she'd seen more than her
share of dead bodies.
Valerius knelt down and felt for a
pulse. "He's dead," he said.
Tabitha crossed herself, then
glanced away. As her gaze touched on the building, she frowned. There on the
old faded brick was bloody Greek writing. Tabitha could speak the language, but
couldn't read the Greek words. "Do you know what that says?"
Valerius looked up. His face turned
to stone. "It says, 'Death to those who meddle.'"
As soon as he read it, the words
vanished. She swallowed as a new wave of panic swept through her. "What is
going on here, Val?"
"I don't know," he said
before he pulled out his phone and called Tate, the parish coroner who was a
long-time friend of the Dark-Hunters.
"I'm surprised Tate will talk
to you," she said after Valerius hung up.
"He doesn't like me, but after
Ash had a talk with him, he's learned to tolerate me." Valerius rejoined
her. "We better go before Tate arrives with the police."
"Yeah," she said, feeling
sick to her stomach. "Do you think we should call Ash and tell him what
happened?"
"We don't really know what
happened. There wasn't enough time for a Daimon to kill him and steal his
soul."
"So what does that mean?"
"Have you or your sister
conjured up anything?"
"No!" she said
indignantly. "We know better."
"Well, something seems to have
your number, Tabitha, and until we find out what it is, I don't think I should
let you out of my sight."
Tabitha couldn't agree more. In all
honesty, she didn't want to be out of his sight. Not if that… thing was going
to come back.
"Tell me something, Val. Are
Dark-Hunters any good against ghosts?"
"Honestly?"
She nodded.
"Not a damn bit. In fact, if
we're not careful, we can become possessed by them."
She went cold at his words.
"Are you telling me that if that spook comes back, he could take you
over?"
Valerius nodded. "And God help
you and the rest of this city if it does."
Chapter 7
Tabitha felt uneasy for the rest of
the night. She couldn't shake the notion that even the air around her was evil.
Tainted. Something was out there and it was gunning for her.
She only wished she knew who or
what.
Why?
Valerius didn't speak much as they
patrolled and yet found no sign of any Daimon. It was less than an hour before
dawn when they returned to her place on Bourbon Street.
Valerius stood back while she
unlocked her door. Tabitha paused as she noticed that he didn't make any move
to enter.
"You had a bad fright
tonight," he said quietly as he kept his hands in his pockets. "You
should get a good sleep and you'll feel better."
Tabitha watched the way the
moonlight cut across his handsome features. The sincerity she saw in those
tormented black eyes haunted her. "Honestly, I don't want to be alone. I
would really like for you to come in."
"Tabitha—"
She placed her fingers over his warm
lips to stifle his protest. "It's okay, Val. If you're not interested in
sex with me, I won't take it personally. But—"
He broke her words off with a hot
kiss. Tabitha moaned at the taste of Roman as he placed one hand on the back of
her head and buried his fingers in her hair.
Wrapping her arms around him, she
pulled him inside and pinned him to the wall so that she could kiss him wildly.
She pulled at his clothes, practically ripping his shirt off before she
realized she hadn't even closed the door.
She slammed it shut, locked it, then
returned to Valerius.
"Marla," he said huskily
as she reached to undo his pants.
Tabitha cursed. Valerius was right.
If Marla heard them, she'd come and investigate.
"Follow me," she
whispered, taking him by the hand to lead him up the stairs to her room.
Luckily Marla's door was closed.
Tabitha took him into her bedroom, then shut and locked her own door.
She should be nervous about this and
yet she wasn't. It was like some part of her needed this intimacy with a man
who was a total anathema to her entire family.
It didn't make sense.
Yet here she was, breaking every
taboo she knew. Amanda would kill her for this. Kyrian would never forgive her.
But her heart wouldn't hear reason.
Against all sanity, it wanted her Roman general.
Tabitha kissed him fiercely, needing
him to drive away her fear.
Valerius growled at how good she
tasted. He wasn't used to a woman taking the lead in sex and he found her lack
of modesty refreshing. She broke from his lips long enough to pull her own
shirt off before she seized him again.
He couldn't think as she pressed her
body against his. Her lace-covered breasts were small and inviting as they
brushed against his chest. She unzipped his pants, then slid her hand down to
gently caress his cock..
He hissed in pleasure as she moved
her hands around his hips to his butt. Slowly, seductively, she slid his pants
down, baring him to her. He'd never experienced anything more erotic.
Kneeling down before him, she
removed his shoes, and socks, then pulled his pants free.
He didn't understand this woman. He
found it impossible to believe that she was here with him like this. It'd been
so long since he'd been with a woman. As Tabitha had pointed out, most of the
ones he'd met had been frigid and formal in bed.
Never passionate. Not like this.
Not like her.
She was priceless and special, a
rare treat he wanted to savor. It was that fire in her that warmed him. That
fire that drew him in even against his will.
Tabitha paused as she felt an odd
sensation from him. "What's wrong, Valerius?" she whispered, rising
to stand before him.
"I'm just trying to understand
why you're with me."
"Because I like you."
"Why?"
She bit her lip seductively before
she shrugged. "You're strangely amusing and you're kind."
He shook his head. "I'm not
kind. I only know how to be cold."
She buried her hands in his unbound
hair and let the silken strands caress her fingers. "You don't feel cold
to me, General."
Tabitha ran her tongue along the
edge of his bottom lip before she kissed him.
Valerius's head spun at her actions
and her words. Starving for her, he reached behind her back and unhooked her
bra. Without breaking her kiss, she lowered her arms to let it fall to the
floor.
He pulled her up against him so that
her bare breasts were flush to the heat of his chest. Her silver moon-shaped
belly button ring brushed against his hip, bringing a foreign thrill to him.
His groin burned in need of her.
As did his heart.
He'd never made love to a woman who
really liked him. As a man, his lovers had been political alliances. Women who
only sought to claim him as a well-connected, wealthy husband or lover.
As a Dark-Hunter, his liaisons had
been with women who didn't even know him.
But Tabitha…
Growling low in his throat, he
finished undressing her as quickly as possible. The glow from streetlights
drifted in from her shades, cutting across her bare body. She was beautiful.
Lean, muscled. He'd never wanted anyone more.
Valerius lifted her from the floor
and pinned her against her door.
Tabitha laughed at the strength of
him. At his raw, earthy passion. No, her general wasn't frigid. He was hot and
exciting. Delectable.
Holding her with nothing more than
the strength of his arms, he slid himself deep inside her.
Tabitha moaned deep in her throat as
he filled her to capacity. "That's it, baby," she groaned. "Give
me all you've got."
Valerius buried his head against her
neck and inhaled her warm sweetness as he thrust against her. She had one leg
wrapped around his waist. He'd never made love to a woman like this. It was
animalistic and fierce.
And he loved it.
She arched her back, drawing him in
even deeper as she met him stroke for stroke. She had one leg on the floor that
she used for leverage against him as she raised and lowered her body on his,
heightening the depth of his penetration. It was all he could do to wait on her
as she took from him the same pleasure he felt with her.
Valerius cupped her breast in his
hand while he savored the sleek wetness of her body welcoming his.
He watched her bite her lip as she
wrapped her other leg around his waist and squeezed him tight between her
thighs. She was incredible.
She licked and teased his neck as he
continued to thrust for both of them.
Tabitha couldn't think past the
sensation of his hard thickness inside her. Her body burned and ached for him.
She could feel herself clutching him, needing him.
And when she came, she had to stifle
her cry.
Valerius growled as she scoured his
back with her nails and moaned in his ear. Yet it wasn't painful.
He smiled at the sight she made
coming in his arms. She actually laughed and purred, then cupped his face in
her hands before she kissed him blind.
That kiss drove him over the edge.
He could swear he saw stars as his body released itself inside hers.
He held her tight until the last
tremor shook him. His head spinning, he leaned his forehead against the door
while she slid her legs slowly down his body.
"You are the wild one, aren't
you?" she asked playfully, nipping at his bare shoulder.
Valerius grinned at that, taking an
odd sense of satisfaction from it.
Tabitha slid out from between him
and the door to head for the stereo she kept under a pile of clothes in the far
corner.
"What are you doing?" he
asked.
Suddenly Elvis filled the air with
"Can't Help Falling in Love." She turned the volume low before she
came back to him and pulled him into her arms.
"Tabitha?"
"Dance with me, Val. Everyone
should have at least one night of naked dancing in their lives."
"I don't dance."
"Everyone dances to
Elvis."
Before he could protest further, she
wrapped her arms around his neck and leaned her head against his chest, then
started slow dancing with him.
Valerius had never been more
uncertain. Yet as she led him through the song, he felt the most surreal
calmness of his life. It was magical. Special.
His heart light, he brushed his hand
through her hair while he silently held her and they swayed to the music.
Tabitha's soft, melodic voice sang
quietly along with Elvis.
"You have a beautiful
voice," he whispered.
She kissed the center of his chest.
"Thank you. I was the lead singer in an all-girl heavy metal band in
college."
He smiled at the thought as her
breath tickled across his chest. He could just see her on stage, singing to a
wild crowd. "Really?"
"Mmmm." She looked up at
him with the sweetest expression he'd ever seen on a woman's face. "We
thought we'd be the next Vixen. We weren't. Shelly got pregnant and Jessie
decided she wanted to go out to Las Vegas and be a hotel manager."
"And you became a vampire
slayer."
She twirled out of his arms, then
came back flush with his chest. "Yes, and I'm damned good at it."
He looked down at the tiny scar on
his chest where she'd stabbed him. "I would concur."
The song stopped, but was followed
by Aerosmith's "Sweet Emotion."
Tabitha let go of him to sway
seductively to the music. Valerius couldn't breathe as he watched her,
especially when the beat picked up and she kicked one leg over her head.
And when she used the poster of her
bed like a stripper's pole, he came dangerously close to moaning.
There was nothing on the planet more
erotic than watching this woman dance. She came closer, then turned her back to
him and lifted her hair up to let it trail all over her as she gently ground
her hips against his groin.
Valerius couldn't take any more of
it. Dipping his head, he teased her shoulder with his lips as he wrapped his
arms around her. He trailed his hands over her breasts, then down her stomach,
over her belly ring, until he could touch the triangle of auburn curls between
her legs. She was still wet from their lovemaking.
The instant he touched her, she
hissed, then rubbed herself against his hand. To his amazement, she trailed her
hand down his forearm and covered his hand with hers as she urged him on.
She was completely shameless in
letting him know exactly what she needed and he loved every minute of it. There
was no guessing if she liked his touch. She reacted to every stroke and when he
sank two fingers inside her she cried out.
She turned in his arms and seized
him. Before he realized what she was doing, she literally flipped him onto the
bed and was on top of him, straddling his hips.
Valerius laughed. "You know, a
lesser man might actually be afraid of you."
Laughing, she slung her hair over
her shoulders to trail down her back. "Are you afraid of me, Val?"
"No," he said honestly.
"I like that you know what you want and aren't afraid to take it."
The smile she gave him melted his
heart.
She trailed one finger over the
bridge of his nose, letting the nail lightly scrape his skin as she traced a
path over his lips and down his throat.
Tabitha dipped her head down and
suckled him. She growled at the taste of his hard nipple under her tongue. He
tasted even better than she had thought he would. There was nothing better than
the feel of all his lush, tawny skin underneath her.
What she liked most of all was that
he didn't feel threatened by her. He had no problem with her voracious appetite
for his succulent body.
It was a nice change of pace.
She trailed her lips from his chest,
down that lean, hard abdomen, to his hipbone. She felt the chills spread over
his body. Laughing, she raked her fingers through the crisp hairs at the center
of his body. He was already hard again.
Pulling back, she examined him in
the dim light of the room. He was gorgeous. She teased the tip of his cock with
her fingers, letting his moisture coat her.
He watched her without comment while
she explored the length of him, down to his soft sac. He arched his back.
Delighting in her power over him,
Tabitha bent her head down and took the tip of him into her mouth. His entire
body jerked in response, urging her on to please him more.
She took great pride in his deep
moans.
Valerius lay there, cradling her
head in his hands as she gently tongued him from tip to hilt. In all eternity,
he'd never known this feeling that was deep down inside him. What was it about
Tabitha that she was able to see past his facade? I figure all of us misfits should
hang together, that way we don't swing alone. Her words to Otto drifted through
his mind.
But she wasn't a misfit. She was
vivacious and wonderful.
Tabitha inhaled the rich, masculine
scent of him as she took her time tasting his body. She looked up to find him
watching her, his eyes glazed by desire.
Smiling, she slowly licked her way
up his body until she could claim that decadent mouth that begged for her
kisses. He growled and held her tight as she ran her hand over his shoulders.
Tabitha broke away so that she could nip his chin. His whiskers prickled her
tongue and lips, his breath caressed her cheek.
She pulled back, then slowly slid
herself onto him, inch by long, luscious inch.
Valerius cupped her face as she rode
him with a gentle, easy rhythm that left him even more breathless than their
earlier rowdy session.
She was like a whisper as she made
love to him. And it was making love. It was soft, tender. She covered his hand
with hers and opened her lips to taste his fingers.
Valerius hissed as her tongue worked
its magic on the pads of his fingertips. Smiling even more, she nipped his
fingers playfully.
He pulled her down to capture her
lips as he lifted his hips, driving himself even deeper into her.
This time when they came, it was
together.
She collapsed on his chest as they
both lay sweaty and panting.
Valerius cradled her gently. He
never wanted to let her go. If he could, he would spend the rest of his
immortality lost in this one perfect moment of them nestled together, his body
spent and sated.
Closing his eyes, he felt himself
drifting off to the first undisturbed sleep he'd had in over two thousand
years.
After making sure no daylight would
threaten Valerius, Tabitha lay quietly in Valerius's arms as she listened to
him sleeping.
She still felt uneasy about the
ghost they had seen. About the feeling inside her that wouldn't relent. Part of
her wanted to call Acheron, but she didn't want to disturb him with something
stupid. He needed to rest.
Whenever they awoke in the
afternoon, she'd ask him about it.
For now, she had Valerius and he
brought her a strange sense of peace.
She shouldn't feel this way, not for
a man her twin would never accept into her house. Part of her felt like she was
a traitor to Amanda and Kyrian and the other part of her couldn't resist the
tormented gleam in Valerius's eyes.
He was a calm anchor to her chaotic
life and truthfully, she liked his dry sense of humor. His ability to take
things in stride without blowing a gasket. It was rare in her world to meet
such a man. He's not a man.
No, he wasn't. She knew that, just
as she knew there was no hope of any kind of future for a relationship.
Dark-Hunters didn't have significant others of any sort. They could never be
together. Never.
Once she and Valerius left this bed,
they'd have to part company. He would just be another passing friend.
And yet she didn't want to let go of
him.
"Stop," she whispered to
herself. She needed her rest.
Closing her eyes, she forced herself
to sleep. But her dreams were far from comforting. All morning long, they
haunted her with vivid, horrific images of her sister and Kyrian. Of baby
Marissa crying for someone to help her.
Most of all, they haunted her with
the faces of her friends who had died and with scenes of Valerius being
tortured. She could see him stretched out and hear mocking laughter as he
struggled not to die.
She could feel his pain, his
betrayal.
Hear his scream of vengeance as it
echoed throughout time.
Tabitha came awake just after noon
with her entire body shaking from her dreams. She'd only been sleeping a few
hours, but she was so upset that she couldn't go back to sleep.
"Tabitha?"
She looked at Valerius, who squinted
at her.
"Are you all right?" he
asked hoarsely.
She kissed his bare shoulder and
offered him a smile. "I can't sleep. You go ahead and rest."
"But—"
She placed her finger on his lips.
"Sleep, baby. I'm fine. Really."
He nibbled her finger before he
rolled over, gave her a tight hug, then returned to sleep.
Tabitha lay in the shelter of his
arms with her thoughts racing. She honestly didn't want to get up. But after a
few minutes, when she heard Marla and Debbie chatting somewhere downstairs
about inventory, she finally decided to rise.
She quickly showered and dressed,
taking care not to wake the delicious guy in her bed. As soon as she went
downstairs, she called Otto and asked him to bring clothes over for Valerius.
"Why didn't he come home last
night?" Otto asked.
"It was too close to
dawn."
"Uh-huh," Otto said as if
he didn't buy it. "I'll be over in about an hour with something for
him."
"Otto," she said with a
warning note in her voice. "It better be something he wants to wear and
not some Nick-I-want-to-piss-off-Kyrian knockoff."
"You take all the fun out of
this."
Tabitha shook her head as she hung
up the phone. With nothing better to do, she headed into her store, where
Debbie was ringing up a customer.
Otto came about an hour later and
dropped off the clothes without so much as a grimace. But Tabitha noted that he
was wearing a stylish black sweater and a pair of nice jeans instead of his
regular wear. He probably looked like this whenever Valerius wasn't around.
After Otto left, she took the
clothes upstairs and laid them out for Valerius to see when he awoke, then
crept back to her shop, where she cleaned and reworked a pasties display.
She'd just finished matching the
pasties to thongs when Nick Gautier came into the store with a bright smile on
his face as he whipped his sunglasses off. "Afternoon, chиr," he said,
walking up to her.
He kissed her lightly on the cheek.
Tabitha frowned. It'd been a long
time since Nick had done something like that. "What has you in such a good
mood?" she asked.
He flashed that devilish, charming
grin at her. "What do you think? Man, I owe you dinner out,
big-time."
She was even more confused than
before. "For what?"
"That friend of yours… Simi.
She was something else."
Tabitha went cold at the sound of
reverence in his voice.
"I can't wait to see her
again," Nick continued, increasing her sense of dread. "You wouldn't
happen to have her number handy, would you? I was supposed to meet her at six
tonight, but I'm going to run a little late and didn't want to leave her
waiting for me."
Tabitha struggled to breathe as
panic and fear consumed her. This couldn't be happening. Nick didn't do what
she thought he'd done-had he?
Surely not even Nick Gautier was
that stupid.
"Simi? You want Simi's
number?"
"Yeah. She cut out so fast last
night that I didn't have a chance to get it."
"Why did she cut out
fast?"
"She said she was supposed to
meet someone." He frowned at her. "What's up? Is there something I
need to know? She's not married, is she?"
Tabitha felt the color drain from
her face. "Tell me you didn't do anything with Simi last night, did you?
You just took her into Sanctuary and—"
"I took her out for barbecue.
She said it was her favorite and those bears don't know shit about
mesquite."
Tabitha rubbed her head to help
alleviate some of the bitter ache that was starting right between her eyes.
This was so bad… "And after you two ate, you what?"
His grin turned wicked. "You
know a gentleman never kisses and tells."
Tabitha covered her mouth as she
felt an urge to be really sick.
Nick sobered instantly.
"What?"
"You didn't happen to ask her
who she was going to meet, did you?"
"No, I assumed it was a
friend."
"Oh, Nick," she said,
wanting to cry for him and his ignorance, "it was more than a friend. Let
me put it to you this way: Her phone number is 555-562-1919."
He scowled. "That's Ash's
number."
"Yes, it is."
His pallor now matched her own as
the true horror of his situation dawned on him. "Not our Ash as in
Parthenopaeus Ash?"
She nodded glumly.
He turned a multitude of colors as
that registered. "Oh, God, Tabitha, why didn't you tell me?"
"I thought you knew her. She
knows you."
"No, I never met her before
last night." Nick raked a hand over his face as he set off cursing.
Tabitha shook her head. "Ash is
going to kill you."
"Don't you dare tell him!"
Nick snarled.
"I'm not about to. But what if
Simi—"
"I'll call him and tell him I
need to talk to him. I'll confess…"
"Nick, he will kill you. He
loves Simi and I mean loves Simi. He'll never forgive you for this. You'll be
lucky to come away with all parts attached."
Nick couldn't believe what he was
hearing. There had been several times over the last few years that Ash had
intimated that he had a girlfriend and Nick had taken to goofing on him for it.
The last thing he'd ever expected
was to meet Ash's girlfriend in the Quarter without him.
Oh God, this couldn't be happening.
How could he have slept with his best friend's girl? Why hadn't Simi told him?
If, as Tabitha said, Simi knew who he was, why would she do such a thing?
"Is she fighting with
Ash?" he asked, hoping, praying it was a possibility.
"No, Nick. You're not that
lucky."
He cursed again. "I have to
tell him," he said to Tabitha. "I'm not going to be a coward. I owe
him that much."
"Then you better make sure you
go over to the St. Louis Cathedral and confess before you do."
Nick crossed himself, unable to
believe what he'd just gotten himself into. He should have known Simi was too
good to be real. She'd been a lot of fun, and in truth, he'd been looking
forward to seeing her again.
Tabitha was right. He was a dead
man.
"Hey, Tabby," Marla said
as she stuck her head into the shop. "Valerius is up and showering in the
bathroom."
Nick gaped, then glared.
"Valerius?"
"Sh," Tabitha snapped at
Nick.
He didn't take the hint.
"Valerius as in Valerius, dick-head Valerius? What the hell is he still
doing here, Tabitha?"
"It's none of your
business."
His anger snapped at that. "Oh,
yeah, right. Excuse me, but between the two of us…" He paused as he
thought over what he was about to say, then reconsidered it. "Okay, I'm
still more screwed than you are, but you are seriously screwed blue. Amanda
will tear your heart out if she finds out."
Tabitha turned on him with her eyes
flashing anger. "So help me, Nick, you breathe a word of this and I'll press
the speed dial on my phone straight for Ash."
He held his hands up in surrender.
"Deal. But you better get that Roman prick out of here."
She pointed toward the door.
"Good-bye, Mr. Gautier."
He put his sunglasses back on.
"Later, Ms. Devereaux."
Tabitha rubbed her hands over her
face as she contemplated what a horror this day was and that it wasn't even
close to over yet.
Aggravated, she headed toward the
door that led to her apartment. Upstairs, she heard Valerius in the shower.
Tabitha went ahead and called to
have a pizza delivered in case he was hungry.
By the time he was finished and
dressed, the pizza arrived. Tabitha paid for it and set it on the table as she
waited for Valerius to come down.
She still had the sickest feeling
her stomach. "There really needs to be a do-over button for days that suck
this much," she muttered as she set out two paper plates.
Valerius was buttoning the last
button on his shirt as he came down the stairs, looking for Tabitha. She was
standing with her back to him.
He paused on the stairs to admire
her there. She was leaning over the table to give him one nice view of her
derriere. A small smile played at the edges of his lips as he remembered what
that rear had looked like last night naked against him as she danced in her
room.
He hardened instantly.
Getting a little hold on his
treacherous body, he walked into the room and frowned as he saw a large white
box on Tabitha's kitchen table. It smelled good, but…
"What is that?" he asked.
"Pizza," she said, turning
to face him.
He scowled in revulsion.
"Oh, c'mon," she said
irritably. "It's Italian."
"It's pizza."
"Have you ever had pizza?"
"No."
"Then sit down and hush while I
get us some wine. You'll like it, I promise. It was handmade by an Italian
named Bubba."
Valerius arched a doubtful brow at
her words. "There are no Italians named Bubba."
"Sure there are," she said
saucily. "It's more Italian than Valerius is. At least Bubba's name
actually ends with a vowel."
Valerius opened his mouth to
contradict her, then stopped. There was no reasoning with Tabitha when she was
in this saucy mood. "Are you testy because you didn't get enough sleep or
do you wish for me to leave?"
"I didn't get enough sleep and
if you know what's good for you, you'll sit down and eat." She headed to
the kitchen.
Valerius didn't listen. He went into
the kitchen, picked her up, and tossed her over his shoulder.
"What are you doing?" she
asked, her tone angry.
He sat her down in a chair and
braced his hands on its arms so that she was pinned there. "Good evening,
Tabitha. I'm fine tonight. How are you?"
"Irritated at you."
"I'm sorry to hear that,"
he said, lifting one hand up to caress her cheek. "I woke up to the smell
of you on my skin and I have to say that it put me in a rather good mood that I
don't want you to destroy."
Tabitha melted at those words and
the tender look on his face. Not to mention that the fresh, clean scent of his
skin could undo even the worst mood imaginable. His lips were so close to hers
that she could already taste them.
And those dark eyes…
They were beguiling.
"You really know how to be
aggravating, don't you?" she asked him. She forced her ire aside and
offered him a smile. "Okay, I'll play nice." She pulled his head to
hers so that she could kiss him.
She was just getting into that kiss
when her phone rang. Cursing at the ill timing, she got up to answer it.
It was Amanda. Again.
Tabitha wasn't really paying
attention to her as her sister rambled on about Marissa and Kyrian and another
dream she'd had.
At least not until she mentioned
Desiderius and her.
"What?" she said, forcing
herself not to watch Valerius who was poking at the pizza as if it were a UFO.
"I said I'm scared, Tabby.
Really scared. I dreamed during my nap that Kyrian and I were killed by
Desiderius."
Chapter 8
Tabitha hung up the phone,
terrified. She'd never heard so much fear in Amanda's voice. Worse, she knew
her sister's powers—if Amanda had foreseen her own death...
Without hesitation, Tabitha called
Acheron.
"Hey, Ash," she said,
noting the way Valerius's attention turned from his pizza to her. "I have
a problem. Amanda just called and said that she had dreamed her own death and
last night I ran across something really spooky. It—"
Ash appeared before her.
"What?" he asked.
Tabitha froze for a second as she
realized what Ash had just done. He really was scary at times.
She hung up the phone again and
repeated everything, including details about the ghost they'd seen the night
before.
Ash got a faraway look in his eyes,
tilting his head as if listening to someone.
"Can you see her death?"
she asked him.
Ash stood there, his heart thumping
wildly as he tried to clear the mist that surrounded Amanda and Kyrian's
future.
He saw nothing.
He heard nothing.
Dammit. It was why he did his best
never to let anyone too close to him. Anytime he allowed himself to care about
someone or they were a part of his own future, he was blind to their destinies.
There was nothing but blackness
where Kyrian and Amanda were concerned and he hated that most of all.
"Talk to me, Ash."
He looked back at Tabitha and heard
and felt the fear and panic in her mind. Her thoughts that rambled as she
sought a comfort he couldn't give.
Even her future was forbidden to him
now.
"Her destiny was to be
happy," he said quietly. But the key word to that statement was was. Free
will could, and often did, alter fate.
What had changed?
Something must have and Amanda had
glimpsed it in her sleep.
He held enough belief in Amanda's
powers not to doubt her in the least If she foresaw their deaths, then it was a
likely outcome unless he could find the cause and change it before it was too
late.
Ash closed his eyes as he let
himself feel the minds of the humans. He searched for what could possibly
change Amanda's fate, but he found nothing.
Nothing.
Dammit!
Valerius was behind him now. Ash
stepped aside so that his back wasn't exposed to the Roman.
"Tell me exactly what happened
last night," Ash said to Tabitha.
Tabitha related the whole scene with
the ghost while Valerius filled in a few details.
"Urian!" Ash called,
summoning his Spathi contact.
Tabitha frowned. Ash was acting very
strange and she could sense his worry. "Who's Urian?"
Before she finished the question
another tall, insanely handsome man appeared in her kitchen. Dressed in black
leather pants and a black shirt, he had white-blond hair and blue eyes.
He looked less than pleased as he
narrowed those baby blues on Ash. "Don't take that tone of voice with me,
Ash. I don't care who you are, I don't like it."
"Like it or not, I need to know
what the Spathis are up to. More precisely, I need to know if Desiderius is
back on the playing field."
Horror filled her.
Urian curled his lip. "Why are
you worried about him? Des is a punk."
"Desiderius is dead,"
Tabitha said emphatically. "Kyrian killed him."
Urian scoffed. "Yeah, and I'm
the Easter Bunny—see my fluffy tail? You don't just kill a Spathi, little girl.
All you do is take him out of commission for awhile."
"Bullshit!" Tabitha
snarled.
"No, Tabitha," Ash said,
gentling his voice. "Desiderius's essence was released. But if one of his
brethren or children wanted to bring him back, they could. It's not easy to do,
but it is possible."
She was aghast that Ash had kept
something this important from them. "Why didn't you ever tell us
this?"
"Because I was hoping it
wouldn't happen."
"Hoping?" Tabitha
shrieked. "Please tell me you weren't pinning my sister's life and
Kyrian's on a hope."
Ash didn't answer.
Meanwhile the true significance of
the last few days settled fully on her shoulders. "So those really were
Spathis I fought the night I met Valerius."
Urian snorted. "Trust me,
little girl, you must have faced the neophytes. Had those been true Spathis,
you'd both be dead now."
His arrogance was seriously starting
to piss her off. Just who was this jerk anyway? "How do you know so much
about them, Dr. Intellect?"
"I used to be one."
Her fury breaking, Tabitha rushed
him.
Ash caught her and pulled her back.
He lifted her up off the floor. Tabitha kicked and cursed as she struggled to
reach Urian, who watched her with a smirk.
"Stop it, Tabby," Ash
breathed in her ear. "Urian is on our side now. Believe me, he has paid
for his allegiance to the other side more than you will ever know."
Yeah, right.
"How could you bring a Daimon
into my house after what they did to me? To my family?" she demanded.
"Oh, I'm not a Daimon anymore,
little girl," Urian said, his eyes flashing dangerously. "If I
were—"
"You'd be dead," Valerius
said, cutting him off with a sinister tone. "By my hand."
Urian laughed. "Yeah,
right." He looked at Ash. "The arrogance of your Hunters truly knows
no bounds. You should spend more time educating them about us, Ash."
Ash released Tabitha, then spoke to
Urian. "I need you to go in and find out what's going on. Are there any
left who might still be loyal to you?"
The Daimon shrugged. "I can
probably dredge up a flunky or two. But…" Urian's gaze went to Tabitha.
"If Des really is back, he'll want to finish what he started. May the gods
help you all if he has been reincarnated. It's going to get bloody in New
Orleans."
"Who would want to bring that
monster back?" Tabitha asked.
"His children," Urian and
Ash said simultaneously.
Tabitha still couldn't believe what
she was hearing. But as she seethed, Urian's face finally looked compassionate. Haunted.
When he spoke, the arrogance was
gone from his voice. "Trust me, it's hard to let go of the loyalty you
feel to a father who saved you from dying a horrible death at
twenty-seven." Something in his tone said he spoke from experience.
"Is your loyalty to your
father?" she asked.
Urian's face turned to stone.
"I would have done anything for my father until the day he killed me and
took from me the only thing that meant more to me more than my life. Any bonds I
felt for that man were shattered instantly." He looked at Ash. "I'll
see what I can find out."
A bright orange engulfed Urian an
instant before he flashed out of her kitchen. Even so, his malevolence still
clung to the air around them.
"Damn," Ash muttered.
"Urian and his dramatics. I have got to remind him to lay off the
pyrotechnics when he comes and goes."
"That is one angry man,"
Tabitha said.
"You've no idea, Tab," Ash
said. "And he has every right to his hatred." He shook his head as if
to clear it, then spoke to them quietly. "While Urian is busy, I need for
the two of you to stay together and watch each other's backs. Desiderius is the
son of Dionysus, and Dionysus is still upset at me over what happened at Mardi
Gras three years ago. I don't think he's stupid enough to help Desiderius, but
I wouldn't put anything past either one of them."
He looked meaningfully at Tabitha.
"Even if Daddy doesn't help him, Desiderius still has a lot of god powers
that can be deadly, as you no doubt remember."
"Yeah," she said
sarcastically as she recalled the way he and his Daimons had cut through her
and her friends as if they were straw. "I remember."
He looked at Valerius.
"Desiderius can manipulate people. Possess them, if you will. Tabitha is
stubborn enough that the only thing that can possess her is the spirit of
chocolate. We're lucky there. But Marla could be swayed. Otto should be safe.
But the rest of your staff… you might want to think about giving them some time
off."
By the look on Valerius's face,
Tabitha could tell he'd rather be dead. "I can handle them."
"You have to sleep sometime.
One of the servants could easily break into your bedroom and kill you. I don't
think any of them love you so much that they will hesitate over Desiderius's
orders the way Kyrian's cook did."
Valerius's nostrils flared.
Ash ignored the pain that Tabitha
felt from Valerius. "I need you two together on this. I have to go warn
Janice and Jean-Luc about what's up." He turned to face her.
"Tabitha, pack a bag and move in with Valerius for awhile."
"What about my store?"
"Have Marla watch over it for a
couple of weeks."
"Yeah, but—"
Ash's features hardened. "Don't
argue with me, Tabitha. Desiderius is a major power with one hell of a grudge
against you, your sister, and Kyrian. He's not going to be playing with the
three of you this time. He's going to kill you."
Normally, she would argue with him
just for spite. But she knew that tone of voice. No one argued with Ash for
long. "Fine."
"You have your orders,
General," Ash said sternly to Valerius.
Valerius gave him a rather sarcastic
Roman salute.
Rolling his eyes, Ash flashed out of
the room.
Now that they were alone, Valerius
stared at her without speaking. Fury was burning so raw inside him that it
actually hurt her.
"What?" she asked.
Without a word, he went to the
picture on her buffet of Amanda's wedding and pulled the Russell Crowe picture
off Kyrian's face.
He cursed. "I should have known
when you told me her name was Amanda."
The look of repugnance on his face
set her off. "Yeah, and my name is Tabitha, not Amanda. What has that got
to do with anything?"
But he didn't hear her. She knew it.
He stalked quietly from the room and
went back upstairs. She jumped at the sound of her bedroom door slamming.
"Fine," she said out loud.
"Be a baby. I don't care."
Valerius sat motionless on the edge
of the bed as his mind ranted over who Tabitha really was.
The twin of Kyrian's wife had saved
him. This was priceless, truly priceless. Here he'd spent the last two thousand
years avoiding the Greek so as not to hurt him by reminding him what Valerius's
family had done to him, and now this…
He clenched his teeth as he felt for
Kyrian's betrayal. Valerius's grandfather, an exact look-alike for Valerius,
had seduced Kyrian's beloved wife Theone centuries ago and used her to betray
her husband. Kyrian hadn't been captured on the battlefield as befitted a man
of his stature. He'd been drugged by the hand of his wife in his own home as he
tried to save her, and then handed over to his mortal enemy.
Valerius's stomach churned as he
remembered the weeks where his father and grandfather had tortured the Greek
general for information and for fun. Remembered Kyrian's screams.
The sight of the man lying bloody
and defeated haunted him to this day. Kyrian had lain there with his eyes
pain-filled and empty. Only once during those weeks had their gazes met and the
look in Kyrian's eyes was still seared into Valerius's soul.
Worse, Valerius remembered his
grandfather laughing at dinner the night Kyrian had been crucified after
Kyrian's father had tried to save him.
"You should have seen his face
as his wife came in my arms right in front of him. I had his whore moaning and
begging for my cock as he watched me fuck her. Too bad he died before he could
see her face when I threw her out."
Valerius had never understood that
cruelty. It was enough to defeat an enemy, but to use his woman in front of
him…
And now he was sleeping with the
identical twin of Kyrian's wife.
History did, in fact, repeat itself.
And Acheron had known and not told
him. Why would the Atlantean insist on the two of them being together when he
had to know what this would do to Kyrian? It didn't make sense. Any more than
Tabitha saving him when she herself knew Kyrian hated him.
Jupiter knew the man had every right
to wish him dead. No wonder Selena had hated him so passionately. As Kyrian's
sister-in-law, it was a wonder she hadn't been even more violent toward him.
The door opened.
Valerius tensed as he saw Tabitha
come inside. She didn't speak to him as she set about packing a small suitcase…
of weapons.
"What are you doing?" he
asked.
"What Ash said to do. I'm going
to move in with you."
"Why not go and stay with Kyrian
and Amanda?"
"Because I trust Ash. If he
says I should be with you, then I'm going."
"Will you be spitting on me as
well?" The question was out before he could stop it.
Tabitha paused at his untoward
question. "Pardon?"
A tic started in Valerius's jaw.
"It's what your sister Selena does every time she sees me. I was wondering
if I should make sure to keep a good lougie distance from you, too."
Tabitha would have laughed had he
not been deadly serious. "Lougie. Interesting word for you. I wouldn't
have thought you knew that one."
"Yes, well, your sister and my
latest Squire have tutored me well on the mighty lougie." He stood up and
moved toward the door. "I shall wait outside until you're through."
Tabitha kicked the door closed
before he reached it. He turned with a supreme look of arrogance.
"What has crawled up your butt
and died?"
"Excuse me?" he asked, his
voice every bit as icy as his look.
"Look, there are a few things
you need to know about me. One, I don't take crap from anyone. Two, I don't
hold anything back. Whatever I feel about something or someone, I let it be
known."
"I noticed."
She ignored his interruption.
"And three, I am an empath. You can stand there and act all nonchalant as
you want to, but at the end of the day, I feel what you do. So don't act all
secretive and cold when I know better. It just pisses me off."
His jaw slackened ever so slightly.
"You're an empath?"
"Yes. I know that Ash's
presence in the kitchen hurt you, but I don't know why, and I felt your fury
flare the minute you uncovered Kyrian's face." She reached up and placed
her hand to his cheek. "My mother always said that still waters run deep.
The only time your actions have matched your emotions was last night when we
were making love and when you came up here and slammed the bedroom door."
He tried to move away, but she
refused to let him. "Deal with me, Val, don't walk away."
"I don't understand you,"
he said, his heart pounding. "I'm not used to anyone liking me, especially
not people who have every right to hate me."
"Why should I hate you?"
"My family ruined your
brother-in-law."
"And my Uncle Sally was a loan
shark who died when one of his shakedowns shot him dead in the street. Every
family tree has an asshole in it. That's not your fault. You're not the one who
killed Kyrian, are you?"
"No, I was just a child when he
died."
"Then what's your
problem?"
For an unreasonable person, she had
moments of strange lucidity. "Every person I have met in this town who
knows Kyrian has hated me from the moment they saw me. I assumed you would be
like them."
"Well, you know what they say
about assume… it makes an ass out of u and me. Jeez. I love Kyrian, but the man
really needs to learn how to let go of the past."
He couldn't believe her. That she
would be so accepting of him was…
She pulled him into a tight, oddly
invigorating hug. "I know I can't keep you, Valerius. Believe me, I
understand fully the life you have and the calling. But we are friends and we
are allies."
He held her close as those words
resonated deep inside him.
She let go and stepped back.
"And we have things to do tonight. Right?"
"Right."
"Very good then, let's
rocket."
He frowned. "Rocket?"
She gave him a silly grin. "My
nephew Ian is addicted to the Power Rangers. I think I've been watching the
videos way too long with him."
"Ah," he said, reaching
for her suitcase. "Let's get you settled at my place and then we can head
out tonight and see what Daimons we find."
Fearful of running into Tia and
risking more questions, Tabitha called a cab to take them over to Valerius's
house. Otto was already gone by the time they reached his mansion.
As expected, Gilbert met them at the
door. He seemed stodgy as ever as he greeted them formally.
"Nice seeing you again,
Gil," Tabitha said as Valerius handed him her suitcase. "Nice rigid
stance."
Gilbert frowned before he looked
down, then gave her a quizzical stare.
Valerius almost smiled. "Ms.
Devereaux will be staying with us for awhile, Gilbert. Would you please have
Margaret ready a room for the lady?"
"Yes, my lord."
Valerius started for the stairs,
then paused. "After Margaret is finished, I would like for the entire
staff to take a few weeks off."
Gilbert looked shocked. "My
lord?"
"Don't worry. It's with full
pay. Consider it an early Christmas present. Just leave a number on my desk
where I can contact everyone to have them return."
"As you wish, my lord."
Tabitha felt Valerius's sadness. In
spite of what Acheron said, Valerius did like Gilbert and seemed to hate the
thought of the man leaving.
"Where are you off to?"
Tabitha asked as Valerius took another step up the regal mahogany staircase.
"I was going to get new
weapons. Would you care to join me?"
"Ooo," she said
suggestively. "I've always been a sucker for a man with lots of weapons.
Show me what you got, baby."
She wasn't quite sure if he was
amused or not as he waited for her to join him. Tabitha followed him up the
stairs, then turned down the long hallway on the right. He led her halfway down
before he paused in front of a door and opened it.
Tabitha whistled low as she caught
sight of his training room. It was huge, and held a variety of punching bags,
mats, and dummies. One in particular looked like it had been seriously abused.
It also wore a bright Hawaiian
shirt.
"Is this supposed to be someone
we know?" she asked as she noted the stab wounds to the dummy's head.
"I plead the Fifth."
"I take it Otto doesn't
participate in your training sessions."
He glanced at the dummy. "I
guess you could say that in a way he does."
She shook her head as Valerius
headed over to the closet. Inside was an arsenal she was sure the ATF would
have some issues with.
"Grenade launcher?"
"EBay," Valerius said.
"You can find anything on there."
"Apparently so. Who needs Kell
when you have all this?"
He gave her a wicked grin as he
strapped a long, lethal blade to his forearm. "What's my lady's
choice?"
Tabitha pulled a small crossbow off
a hanger on the door. "I've watched one too many Buffy reruns. I'm a
crossbow girl all the way."
Valerius stood back while Tabitha
picked her weapons. He had to admit that he enjoyed seeing a woman who knew how
to take care of herself. She weighed and examined each one carefully with the
precision of a pro.
He would never have believed such a
thing could be a turn-on and yet his body was already hard for her. It was all
he could do not to take her right now in the closet.
Tabitha looked over her shoulder as
she caught the sizzling wave from Valerius. His black eyes blazed at her.
He was close to breaking, she could
sense it. The fire of his desire reached out to her, igniting her own until she
struggled to breathe.
"Here," she said, handing
him one of the polished steel stakes.
He stepped back and slid it into his
pocket. Before he could comment, the door from the hallway opened to admit
Gilbert. "Ms. Devereaux?"
She turned to find the butler
nearing her. "Yes?"
"Your room is prepared."
Valerius cleared his throat.
"Please make sure it's to your liking before the servants leave."
"Okay," she said, knowing
he needed some breathing room. In truth, she did, too. If she didn't get out of
this room for a few minutes, they were both going to be naked and sprawling.
Tabitha left the closet to follow
Gilbert back down the hall to the other wing. He led her to a room at the end
of the hallway, then opened the door.
Tabitha gaped at the palatial room.
It was, after all, the very best. She wouldn't expect anything less from
Valerius and still the room was awe-inspiring.
It was decorated in dark navy blue
and gold. The lush navy duvet was already turned down for her.
Gilbert headed for an intercom, then
stopped himself. "I don't suppose there will be anyone here to answer if
you call," he said under his breath.
"You don't want to leave?"
He looked a bit startled by that.
"I've been with Lord Valerius a long time."
By the note in his voice, she could
tell "long" had a meaning all itself.
"Are you another Squire?"
He shook his head. "They don't
even know I exist. It's why Lord Valerius changes Squires out so often. He took
me in when I was fifteen and he was stationed in London. No one else would have
me."
She frowned at his words. "Why
didn't they make you a Squire?"
"The Squire's Council refused
to grant Lord Valerius that request."
"Why?" she asked, not
understanding it. The Council had let Nick Gautier in when Kyrian had asked and
heaven knew that boy had an extremely shady past.
"They don't think much of the
general or his requests, I'm afraid."
Tabitha growled low in her throat.
She'd never been the kind of person who could stand those who sat in judgment
of others. As her Aunt Zelda so often said, but for the grace of God, there go
I.
"Don't worry, Gilbert. I'll make
damn sure no one messes with Valerius while you're gone. Deal?"
He smiled at her. "Deal."
He bowed to her, then took his leave.
Tabitha crossed the room only to
discover that her clothes had already beea unpacked and everything placed
neatly in drawers, the armoire and in the bathroom.
Wow. A woman could get used to this
kind of treatment.
She sorted through her weapons,
which had been placed in a drawer by themselves. Her favorites were the
retractable knives that fastened to her wrists with Velcro. A high-pressure
release shot them from her arm into her hands, but you had to be careful or
they would cut a nasty wound into the palm.
She lifted her pants leg and slid
another stiletto into her boot and tucked a butterfly knife in her back pocket.
Most of her weapons were illegal, but she had enough friends in the police
department that they didn't harass her for them.
She was pulling on a long-sleeved
sweater to cover up her arms when someone knocked on her bedroom door.
Opening the door, she found Valerius
on the other side. He had to be the most handsome man she'd ever seen. His hair
was still damp, pulled back into his almost requisite ponytail, though to be
honest, she preferred it loose and wild.
His chiseled features betrayed
nothing, but she could sense delight in him.
"I'm on my way out to
patrol."
"I'm ready."
The amusement she sensed doubled.
The lines in his face also softened and it was all she could do not to pull him
back into her arms.
Really, no one should be so
tempting.
He widened the opening for the door.
"Come, my Lady Dangerous, your Daimons await."
Tabitha led the way down the stairs
where Otto was waiting for them.
He must have come back while they'd
been upstairs.
"There's an alert going out to
New Orleans," he said to them. "All the Squires except the Blood
Rites are being evacuated. Ash is also bringing in a couple more Hunters from
upstate and Mississippi. Did you know about this?"
"No," Valerius said.
"I didn't realize an alert had been issued."
"Are the Addamses
leaving?" Tabitha asked.
Otto nodded. "Even Tad. They're
transferring the control of the Dark-Hunter site up to Milwaukee until the
alert breaks."
Amanda's words of warning went
through Tabitha's head. She pulled her phone out of her back pocket and called
to check in on them as Valerius and Otto spoke to each other.
She was relieved the minute she
heard Amanda's voice. "Hey, sis," she said, trying to sound normal.
"What are you guys up to?"
"Not much. And yes I know about
the alert. Ash has already moved in here along with some Dark-Hunter named
Kassim."
"Why aren't you being
evacuated?"
"It'll just follow us, Ash
said. He thought it better that we fight on our own ground than to be someplace
unfamiliar. Don't worry, Tab. I really do feel better with Kassim and Ash
here."
"Yeah. I know Ash would never
let anything happen to any of you. You guys take care and I'll talk to you
later. Love you."
"You, too. 'Bye."
Tabitha sighed as Amanda hung up and
her stomach contracted even more with unfounded fear.
Why was she so nervous?
"I'll make sure all the help is
out of here by tonight," Otto said before taking his leave.
Valerius gave an imperious nod.
As soon as they were alone, Tabitha
struggled to get rid of her somber mood. "Do you know a Dark-Hunter named
Kassim?"
"I know of him."
"What do you know?"
Valerius adjusted his coat sleeve
around his wrist. "He was an African prince in the Middle Ages. He was
stationed in Jackson, Mississippi, until Ash moved him to Alexandria a few
years ago. Why?"
"He was moved into Amanda's
house, so I was just curious about him." She indicated the front door with
her thumb. "Shall we?"
He took her hand as she started away
from him. "Whatever this is after all of you, we'll get them, Tabitha.
Don't worry."
The sincerity of his voice cut
through her. "You would protect your mortal enemy?"
He glanced away. When his gaze came
back to hers, it seared her. "I will protect your loved ones. Yes."
There was no reason for him to do
such a thing. None. She had no doubt that in his place, Kyrian would go back
upstairs, lock his door, and do nothing.
But Valerius…
Before she could stop herself, she
pulled his lips down to hers and kissed him fiercely. The taste of him
permeated her head. How she wished she had nothing more to do tonight than to
pull him upstairs and make love to him.
If only she could…
Sighing regretfully, she nipped his
lips and pulled back. She felt his reluctance as he released her. Forcing
herself to let go of him, she stepped away, opened the door, and walked
outside.
Otto was heading up the driveway
from where his car was parked on the street as they left and it dawned on her
that he still wore his black jeans and sweater from that afternoon… he hadn't
morphed into tacky Otto tonight. He actually looked like a grown-up.
"I forgot something," he
said. He handed Valerius a device that looked like a small transmitter.
"Just in case. The Council wants everyone tagged so that if something
happens we can pull you out."
To her amazement, he handed her one
as well.
"Thanks, Otto."
He inclined his head to her.
"You two be careful. Talon will be out around the Square tonight along
with Kyrian and Julian. They'll also be scoping on Ursulines around Sanctuary
and Chartres, and the French Market. You guys might want to patrol somewhere
else."
"We'll hang around the
northwest side of the Quarter. Bourbon, Toulouse, St. Louis, Bienville, and
Dauphine."
Valerius cringed as soon as Bourbon
came out, but didn't say anything.
"Ash is taking the
cemeteries," Otto continued, "Janice will be down along Canal,
Harrod's, and the Warehouse District while Jean-Luc takes the Garden District.
Ulric is in the Business District and Zoe is at Tulane. Which leaves Kassim,
who has been told by Ash that if he, Amanda, or Marissa leave Kyrian's house
before dawn, he'll be toast."
"Who's Ulric?" Tabitha
asked.
Otto gave her a droll stare.
"He's the Dark-Hunter from Biloxi who arrived about half an hour ago. He's
blond, so try not to stab this one should you meet him in an alley."
Tabitha was offended. "What?
It's not my fault I stab all the fanged people. They shouldn't look like
Daimons."
"I didn't look like a Daimon,
but you stabbed me."
Otto laughed.
"Yeah, well, you looked like a
lawyer so I had to kill you. It was a moral imperative."
Valerius shook his head at her.
Sobering, she looked back at Otto. "How many Squires are left in
town?"
"Just me, Kyr, and Nick. The
last ones out were Tad and your ex Eric and his wife, who hopped a chartered
flight about an hour ago. Everyone else from Liza on down is out of here until
Ash gives the thumbs-up to return."
"What about the Weres?"
Valerius asked.
"They're all hanging close to
Sanctuary to protect their young and women. Even Vane and Bride are bunking
over there for the time being."
"Will the Weres help us at
all?" Tabitha asked.
Otto shook his head. "They view
this as a human problem and don't want to get involved."
Tabitha huffed at that. "I
can't believe them."
"You don't know much about
animals, then," Otto said. "It's why Talon wants to keep an eye on
the club. The Apollites and Daimons know that once they're inside Sanctuary, no
one, not even Ash, can touch them."
Tabitha laughed at that. "Ash
doesn't have to touch them to kill them."
"Excuse me?" Valerius and
Otto asked simultaneously.
"What?" she asked them.
"You didn't know that? Ash is seriously impressive in a fight. He'll take
your ass outpermanently before you even know he's there. He moves so fast you
can't see him half the time."
"Sounds like Corbin," Otto
said. "She's a teleporter. She'll poof in, stab a Daimon, and poof out
before it disintegrates."
"Corbin?" Tabitha asked.
"A former Greek queen turned
Dark-Huntress," Valerius said.
Tabitha rolled her eyes. "Let
me guess, not friendly to you?"
"Do I really need to answer
that?"
No, he didn't.
"Yeah," Otto said,
"but she's a walk in the park compared to Zoe and Samia. You say 'Roman'
around them and you better cup yourself fast." He looked at Tabitha.
"Well, not you, but those of us with things to protect down there have
to."
"Okay," Tabitha said,
stepping away from him. "And on that most interesting note, I think it's
time we headed off." She gestured toward the beat-up red IROC that was
parked on the other side of Valerius's gate. "Mind if we borrow your car,
Otto?"
Valerius looked horrified.
Otto laughed evilly as he pulled out
the keys. "Be my guest."
Valerius spoke up instantly. "I
have my—"
"This'll work," Tabitha
said as she winked at Otto and took the keys.
Valerius was rigid. "Really,
Tabitha, I think—"
"Get in the car, Val. I promise
you it won't bite."
He looked less than convinced.
Laughing, she started down the
driveway toward the IROC.
To her surprise, Otto called out
after them, "You guys be careful. I may not appreciate either one of you,
but I don't want the bad guys to win."
"Don't worry," Tabitha
said as she kept walking. "This time, I know what to expect."
"Don't be cocky," Valerius
said, giving her a gimlet stare. "It was a far better man than I who said,
'Pride cometh before the fall.'"
She took his words to heart.
"Good advice." She looked over his shoulder. "Night, Otto."
"Night, Tabitha. Take care of
my car."
Valerius actually cringed.
She stifled her laughter at his
reaction. "Mmm," she said, taking a deep breath of air that was all
New Orleans as she opened the small gate next to the drive to let them outside
the grounds. "Smell the beauty."
Valerius frowned at her. "All I
smell is the stench of decay."
She gave him a menacing glare as he
joined her on the sidewalk next to Otto's car. "Close your eyes."
"I'd rather not. I might step
in something and then I might bring it home and smell it all night."
She gave him a disgusted look that
he took in stride.
"You're the only woman I know
who can smell this rancid air and think it pleasant."
She shut the gate. "Close your
eyes, Valerius, or your nose might be the only part of you that is in working
order tomorrow."
Valerius wasn't sure if he should
obey her or not, but he found himself reluctantly doing so as he drew up short.
"Now take a deep breath,"
she said, her sultry voice in his ear. It sent a shiver over him as he did it.
"Do you smell the dampness of
the river with a hint of Cajun gumbo scenting it? Not to mention the Spanish
moss?"
He opened his eyes. "All I
smell is urine, rotten seafood, and river slime."
She gaped at him. "How can you
say that?"
"Because it's what I
smell."
She growled at him as she got into
the car. "You're a tough sell, you know that?"
"I've been called worse."
Her gaze turned serious and sad.
"I know you have. But new times are upon you. I'm taking that stick up
your butt out and tonight we're going to cut loose, kick Daimon ass, and—"
"I beg your pardon?" he
asked in an offended tone. "The what up my where?"
"You heard me," she said
with a wicked smile. "You know, half the problem people have with you is
that you don't laugh much and you take yourself and everything else way too
seriously."
"Life is serious."
"No," she said, her
passion glowing in her blue gaze. "Life is an adventure. It's thrilling
and scary. Sometimes it's even a bit boring, but it should never be
serious."
Tabitha saw the hesitancy in his
eyes. He was so unused to trusting people and for some reason, she wanted him
to trust her. "Come with me, General Valerius, and let me show you just
what life can really be and why it's so damned important that we save the
world."
She watched as he opened the door
handle like a man who was touching a baby's dirty diaper. She'd never seen
anyone sneer more. It was quite impressive.
But he didn't say anything more as
he got into the car and she dropped it into gear and squealed away from the
curb.
Valerius wasn't expecting much to
come of this night; but he had to admit that he did like the vibrancy of this
woman. The zeal with which she lived. She was fascinating to watch. No wonder
Ash had befriended her.
When one was an immortal, the
freshness of life had a way of dying even more quickly than one's body had. As
the centuries blended together, it was easy to forget the human side of
oneself. To remember why humanity needed saving.
It was hard to remember how to
laugh. Then again, laughter and Valerius were virtual strangers. Until Tabitha,
he'd never really shared a laugh with anyone.
Tabitha had the enthusiasm of a
child. Somehow she had managed to hold on to her youthful ideals even in the
face of a world that didn't entirely accept her. She truly didn't care what he,
or anyone else, thought of her. She went through her life doing what she needed
to do and handling everything on her own terms.
How he envied her that.
She was a powerful force to be
reckoned with.
Valerius laughed in spite of
himself.
"What?" she asked as she
whipped the car around a corner so fast that she practically threw him into her
seat.
He righted himself. "I was just
thinking someone should name you Hurricane Tabitha."
She snorted. "You're too late.
My mother already did. Actually, she named me that the first time she visited
my dorm room and saw the chaos of me without my sister Amanda around to pick up
after me. You should be grateful that after twelve years of living on my own, I
finally learned to pick up for myself."
He shuddered at the thought.
"Truly, I am grateful."
She cut the car sharply into the
Jackson Brewery parking lot and whipped it into a parking space that wasn't
really supposed to be a parking space.
"The police will tow the
car."
"Nah," she said as she
shut it off and placed a small silver medallion on the dashboard that had her
name engraved on it. "This is Ed's route and he knows better. I'll get my
sister to hex him and his brother if he tries."
"Ed?"
"One of the cops assigned here.
He keeps an eye out for me. We used to go to high school together and he dated
my older sister, Karma, for years."
"You have a sister named
Karma?" Valerius asked.
"Yes and it's very apt. She has
a nasty tendency to come back and hurt anyone who does her wrong whenever they
least expect it. She's like the big, black spider, lying in wait." The
words weren't nearly as amusing as the gesture Tabitha made where she held her
hands up and nibbled like a rabid mouse. "Just when you think you're safe
from her wrath… bam!" She slapped her hands together. "She knocks
your feet out from under you and leaves you lying on the floor, bleeding
profusely."
"I do hope you're joking."
"Not at all. She's a scary
woman, but I love her."
Valerius got out of the car, then
paused as a thought occurred to him. Every time he turned around, she pulled
out another relative. "Just how many sisters do you have?"
"Eight."
"Eight?" he asked, stunned
at the number. No wonder he couldn't keep them all straight. He wondered how
she did.
Tabitha nodded. "Tiyana who
goes by Tia. Selena and Amanda you know. Then there's Esmerelda, or Essie, as
we call her. Yasmina or Mina. Petra, Ekaterina who goes by Trina mostly, and
Karma who refuses to have a nickname."
Valerius gave a low whistle at her
roll call.
"What?" Tabitha asked.
"I'm just pitying whatever poor
males lived in that house with all of you. It must have been truly frightening
at least one week out of every month."
She gaped, then laughed out loud.
"Was that a joke from you?"
"Merely a frightening statement
of fact."
"Yeah, right. Well, truth be
told, my father did spend a lot of time at work during that time of the month
and he did make sure that all our pets were males so that he wouldn't feel too
terribly outnumbered. What about you? Did you have any sisters?"
He shook his head as she joined him
over on the passenger side of the car and they headed toward Decatur Street.
"I only had brothers."
"Whoa, just imagine if your
father had married my mother, we'd have had the Brady Bunch."
He scoffed at her. "Hardly.
Believe me, my family made the Borgias look like Ozzie and Harriet."
She cocked her head at him.
"For a man who prides himself on being prim and proper, you certainly know
a lot of pop icons."
He didn't comment.
"So how many brothers did you
have?" she asked, surprising him with her quick return to their previous
topic.
He started not to answer and yet it
came out before he could stop himself. "Until a couple of years ago, I
thought I only had four."
"What happened then?"
"I found out that Zarek was one
of them, too."
Tabitha frowned at his disclosure.
"You didn't know while you were alive?"
Guilt and anger tore through
Valerius at her innocent question. He really should have known. Had he ever
bothered to look at Zarek when they were human…
But then, he was his father's son.
"No," he said sadly,
"I didn't."
"Yet you knew him?"
"He was a slave in our
house."
She looked aghast. "But he was
your brother?"
He nodded.
Tabitha was as confused as he'd been
the night he learned the truth. "How could you not know?"
"You don't understand the world
I lived in. You didn't question certain things. When my father spoke, it was
truth. You didn't look at servants, and Zarek… he wasn't recognizable in those
days."
Tabitha felt a wave of grief so profound
that it made her ache with him. She wrapped her arm around his and gave a light
squeeze.
"What are you doing?" he
asked.
"I'm standing beside you so
that Zarek won't whack you again with another lightning bolt. You said he
wouldn't hurt innocent people, right?"
"Yes."
She smiled at him. "Call me
Shield."
Valerius smiled in spite of himself
as he placed a hand on her forearm. "You're such a strange woman."
"Yeah, but I'm growing on you,
aren't I?"
"Yes, you are."
Her smile widened. "Fungus are
us. Next thing you know, you'll actually like me."
The problem was, he already did like
her. A lot more than he should.
"Where are we going?" he
asked as she scooted him down Decatur toward Iberville and away from where they
might run into one of the crew who begrudged him every breath he took.
"Well, it's early still, so I
figured an early perimeter check followed by an intense search of the Abyss,
which is a club I am sure you have never stepped foot into. A lot of Apollites
like to hang there and I've dusted quite a few Daimons in and about the
area."
"Isn't that one of the clubs
Acheron frequents?"
"Yes, but since he's in the
cemeteries, I have a feeling the Daimons will be congregating where they think
it's safe."
He couldn't argue that.
Tabitha led him over to the Magnolia
Cafe.
"Are you hungry again?" he
asked in disbelief as she entered the restaurant.
"No."
"Then why are we in here?"
"Don't worry about it."
She went to the counter and ordered five meals to go.
Valerius was completely baffled as
he glanced around what most people would call a "homey" place. It had
red-and-white checked plastic tablecloths and small tables and chairs that
someone might find in a normal home.
It most definitely wasn't the kind
of place Valerius ate at, but it did look like Tabitha's cup of tea.
When the orders were ready, Tabitha
grabbed them up and led the way back to the street.
Valerius followed behind her,
curious about what she was going to do with them.
His curiosity ended in a dark alley.
She left the bags of food, then pulled him out by the arm. He heard people
scurrying in the darkness.
"You're feeding the
homeless," he said quietly. She nodded. "Do you do this a lot?"
"Every night about this
time."
He pulled her to a stop and stared
at her. "Why?"
"Someone has to." When he
opened his mouth to speak, she placed her hand over his lips. "I know all
the arguments, Val. Why should they work when people like me are willing to
feed them for free? You can't save the world. Let someone else take care of
them, etc. But I can't do it. Every night when I come out here, I know they're
there and I know they're in pain. One of the men, Martin, was at one time a
prominent business owner who got sued and lost everything. His wife divorced
him and took the kids. And since he had dropped out of high school and was
fifty-six when he had to go bankrupt, no one would hire him. He worked for me
in my store, but it wasn't enough to support him and he didn't want to take
charity, so he slept in alleys. I wanted to give him a raise so badly, but if I
did that, I'd have to give one to everyone and I can't afford to pay every
part-time employee in my store thirty thousand dollars a year."
"I wasn't going to say anything
about that, Tabitha," he said quietly. "I only wanted to tell you
that your compassion for other people overwhelms me."
"Oh." She offered him a
tenuous smile. "I'm just used to people condemning everything I do."
He lifted her hand to his lips and
kissed her knuckles. "I don't condemn you, my lady. I only admire
you."
Her smile turned full fledged and
floored him. She squeezed his hand with hers, then did the most unexpected
thing of all. She put her arm around his waist and started walking down the
street with him.
Valerius felt so strange. He'd seen
lovers do this for centuries, but had never had anyone do it with him.
Hesitantly, he draped his arm over her shoulders and just let the warmth of her
body and touch seep into him.
There were no words for what he felt
right now. It was a very common thing they were doing. People shouldn't touch
so intimately in public. And yet he'd never known a better feeling than to have
this odd woman by his side.
The breeze brushed strands of her
hair over his hand. It was soft and light and brought images to his mind that
he shouldn't have of her wild in his bed. Untamed.
And it played havoc with his body.
They didn't speak much as they
walked through the dark city where the humans went about their business
oblivious to the danger that was hanging over them. It was eerily peaceful.
It was a little after midnight when
they made their way over to Toulouse Street. The Abyss wasn't the typical New
Orleans club scene. It was dark and far from inviting like most of the more
touristy places that beckoned the mainstream inside.
Tabitha led him down a long alleyway
that was narrow and a bit spooky in feel.
"Hey, Tabby," a tall,
African-American man greeted her as he was checking the IDs of the couple in
front of them. He was bald with tattoos marking every inch of exposed flesh…
even his hands.
"Hi, Ty," Tabitha said.
"How's it going tonight?"
"Not bad," he said with a
wink as he waved the couple in. "Who's your friend?" he asked, raking
Valerius with a frown.
"Val. He's a friend of Ash and
Simi's, too."
"No shit?" Ty said before
he extended his hand to Valerius. "Ty Gagne. Nice to meet you."
Valerius shook his hand. "You,
too."
"You two have fun, and Tabby,
no weapons tonight, deal?"
"Yeah, yeah, Ty. No bloodshed.
Gotcha."
Once inside the club, Valerius was
taken aback by the sea of black-garbed humans. It looked like a Dark-Hunter
convention. It was extremely easy to pick out the tourists who had stumbled
inadvertently into the club or maybe had been dared into it. There were more
body piercings and tattoos than he'd ever seen in one room in his entire two
thousand years of living.
Many of the regulars knew Tabitha on
sight.
"Hi, Vlad," Tabitha said
to one emaciated, tall man with skin so pale it was translucent. He wore a
white ruffled shirt, blood-red velvet tuxedo jacket, and black slacks. His
long, black hair hung around his gaunt face, and his eyes were covered by a
pair of round, black sunglasses.
"Good evening, Tabitha,"
the man said, before he smiled to show Valerius a set of fangs. He saluted them
with a brandy snifter that looked like it held blood. Valerius's Dark-Hunter
sense could tell it was red vodka. Vlad's long, skinny fingers were covered
with silver claws.
Valerius felt an urge to laugh and show
the man his own set of real fangs, but refrained.
"Vlad is a fifteenth-century
vampire," she told Valerius.
"Son to Vlad Tepes and named
for my esteemed father," Vlad explained in a faked Transylvanian accent.
"Really?" Valerius said.
"I find that fascinating since Vlad's only son, Radu, was slain by the
Turks when he was eighteen. Vlad's only surviving child was a daughter,
Esperetta, who now lives in Miami."
"Vlad" rolled his eyes.
"Really, Tabitha, where do you find these people?"
Valerius did laugh as the fake
vampire drifted off.
Tabitha joined him.
"Seriously," she said, sobering. "Is there any truth to that
bull you just spieled?"
He nodded. "Ask Ash. Retta's
husband was made into a Dark-Hunter around 1480, I believe, and she followed him
over. Her husband is one of the few Dark-Hunters who will actually speak to me
in a civil tone."
"Kewl!" Tabitha stepped
back as another Goth princess walked between them.
She indicated a stairway with the
tilt of her head. "There are three bars here and an area called the
Library. Daimons are usually found lurking in the Library or the Sound bar. The
other two are the Main bar and the Aphrodite bar. Oh, and I should probably
warn you that Eros and Psyche tend to haunt the Aphrodite bar as well, so you
might want to leave that to me in case they show up."
"Hey, Tabby!" a plump
blonde said as she grabbed Tabitha in an overbearing hug. "You seen any
vampires tonight?"
"Hi, Carly," she said,
casting an amused look at Valerius. "Not tonight. Why?"
"Well, if you find one, send
him my way. I'm ready to be bitten and made immortal."
Tabitha rolled her eyes. "I
told you they can't do that. It's a Hollywood myth."
"Yeah, well, I wanna be
mythitized. So if you find one, tell him I'm in the Library, waiting."
"Okay," she said with a
nod. "I'll do it."
"Thanks, doll."
Valerius rubbed his eyebrow as the
blonde woman left them. "You know a lot of interesting people."
She laughed at him. "This from
someone who takes orders from a man who's been walking around for almost twelve
thousand years, not to mention that you actually do know the daughter of Count
Dracula. I don't want to hear it from you, buddy."
She had a point with that.
"Could you relax?" She tugged
his coat collar up before she untied and then started mussing his hair.
"What are you doing?"
"Trying to make you blend in.
It would certainly help if you didn't look like you were constipated right
now."
"I beg your pardon?"
"C'mon," she said,
brushing her hand against his lips as she tried to smooth them. "Stop
curling your lip and looking like you're afraid you're going to catch
something. It's not like you can die or anything."
"You're the one who should be
worried."
She made a rude noise at him.
"This from a man whose culture actually invented bulimia. Tell me, how
many times did you visit the old vomitorium anyway?"
"We didn't all do that, thank
you."
"Yeah, right." She drifted
off.
Valerius hastened his steps to catch
up to her. The last thing he wanted was to be left alone with the strangeness
of the people gathered in this place. Granted, they couldn't hurt him, but they
were disturbing nonetheless. He couldn't imagine why Acheron preferred to "hang"
at a place such as this. It was so loud that he couldn't hear himself think.
The lights played havoc with his eyesight, and the skeleton and bat decor…
It just wasn't where he would spend
his spare time if he had any choice in the matter.
But Tabitha blended in with an eerie
kind of conformity. This was her environment. Her people and culture.
There was nothing stodgy about
anyone here.
She led him toward the dance floor,
where she was hailed by a woman with an extremely tall, electric blue mohawk.
Valerius watched in horror as
Tabitha dashed across the floor to dance with the woman and what appeared to be
a man dressed in shiny plastic that was held to his body by large silver
buckles. The man's eyes and lips were painted black and his hair looked as
though it had never been brushed.
Tabitha didn't seem to notice as she
swayed to the loud, thrashing music. She was lovely.
She didn't care who watched her.
There was no such thing as decorum or rules that held her back.
She merely was.
And he loved her for that.
Laughing at something the man said,
she swooped low to the floor, then came up with a limber rhythm that ignited
more fantasies than he would have thought possible. Every masculine part of him
was aware of her. Aware of the softness of her face, the way the lights made
her skin luminescent.
The way her body moved like liquid
to the pounding beat.
She looked at him then. The minute
her blue eyes met his, his groin jerked with needful anticipation.
Smiling, she crooked a finger for
him to join her.
Valerius actually took a step
forward before he caught himself. Dancing wasn't something he did in public. As
a Roman, his father had thought it crass and lowly, and had forbidden all of
them to partake of it. As a Dark-Hunter, he'd never thought to learn.
Unwilling to embarrass her before
her friends, he stepped back.
Tabitha paused, then said something
to the man and woman. She kissed the man on his cheek and hugged the woman,
then joined him.
"Let me guess, Romans have no
rhythm?"
"Not any that I wish to
share."
She smiled even wider. "I would
put that to the test, but having seen you dance, I…" Her voice trailed off
as her gaze went past his shoulder.
Valerius turned his head to see what
had her transfixed. He spied the Daimons instantly.
There were five of them.
And they were headed toward the exit
with a small group of women.
Chapter 9
Tabitha headed for the Daimons
without thought until Valerius pulled her to a stop. "What are you
doing?" she asked him indignantly.
"It's a trap."
She frowned up at him.
"What?"
There was a strange look on his face
as he tightened his grip on her arm. "Can't you feel it? Even without
powers I sense this one."
"No and if we don't go out
there, they're going to kill those people." She tried to twist her arm out
of his grasp, but he held tight.
"Tabitha, listen to me. This
isn't right. Daimons are never that bold and they had to know I was in
here."
He was right. It was too obvious. In
this crowd Valerius stood out like sunshine in darkness. "What do you
suggest we do, then? Just let the innocent die?"
"No. You stay here and I'll go."
"Bull—"
"Tabitha," he snapped at
her, his black eyes burning into her. "I'm immortal. You're not. Unless
one of them is wielding an ax, they can't hurt me much. Whatever they do to me,
I will survive. You might not."
She wanted to argue with him, but
she knew he was right. Not to mention she could feel inside that he was
sincere. This wasn't some macho move to prove himself superior to her.
He was concerned for her safety, and
if he was worried about her, he wouldn't be able to fight clear headedly.
"Okay," she said.
"You go and I'll try not to follow."
A tic worked in his jaw. "For
my sake, please do more than try. Succeed." He released her and before she
could blink, he was out of sight.
Valerius hurried through the crowd, after
the Daimons. He paused at the entrance long enough to ask Ty to keep Tabitha in
the bar for her own safety. He wasn't sure if the man would help him with that
or not, but if Ty could slow her down some, maybe it would give him enough time
to kill the Daimons before she got there and endangered herself.
Leaving the bar, he hesitated on the
street. The loud music still rang in his ears. But even so, he could sense the
Daimons…
At the end of the block, he turned
down Royal and headed in the direction that he was certain they had vanished.
The Daimons were moving fast, drawing him into the darkness.
Unless he was mistaken, which was
unlikely, there was a large group of them.
He slowed a bit as he approached St.
Louis Street and turned onto it. He hadn't gone far before he came upon a gate
slightly ajar.
They were inside. Quiet and still.
Waiting.
Had they killed the humans already?
Pulling out a dagger and holding it
so that the blade was in line with his forearm while the hilt rested lethally
in his palm, he pushed the gate wider, taking care not to make a sound as he
slipped inside the pitch-black courtyard.
It was a moonless night, and unlike
most of New Orleans, there were no lights back here. He moved around the side of
the building, knowing exactly what to expect.
The Daimons were lying in wait for
him.
He could hear someone clucking his
tongue.
"It's been a long time since I
faced a truly intelligent Dark-Hunter. This one already knows we're here."
Valerius came around the shrubbery
to find a group of nine Daimons waiting in the courtyard. The women he had
thought were human weren't.
They were fanged.
Damn.
Valerius drew himself up to his
entire, imperious height and arched a brow at the group. "Well, when one
puts out a cosmic calling card, I assume one wants it answered."
A slow smile spread over the
Daimon's lips who'd spoken as he moved slowly through the group so that he
could stand before Valerius. An inch shorter, the Daimon had a lean build and,
like all of his kind, was perfect in his male form.
"The call wasn't for you."
The Daimon sighed wearily. Obviously disgusted, he looked at the group behind
him. "I thought I told you to draw the woman out, not the
Dark-Hunter."
"We tried, Desiderius,"
one of the women said. "She stayed behind."
Valerius saw red at the name of the
Daimon who had scarred Tabitha's face. He wanted to tear the Daimon to shreds,
but knew better than to betray himself or Tabitha by acting as if she were
special to him.
Had he maintained his composure the
night his brothers had killed him, they would have left Agrippina alone. He
wasn't about to sacrifice Tabitha needlessly.
Desiderius frowned. "Tabitha
Devereaux stayed behind?"
"The Dark-Hunter told her
to," another Daimon supplied. "I heard them."
"Interesting." Desiderius
turned to face him. "I find it hard to imagine Tabitha would listen to
anyone. You must be special indeed."
"She didn't think of you as a
threat," Valerius said nonchalantly. "You weren't worth her
time." He yawned at them. "No more than you're worth mine."
The Daimon moved to blast him.
Valerius caught his arm, whirled,
and elbowed him in the throat. Desiderius staggered back, cursing.
"I know all about Greeks and
their tricks," he snarled as he seized Desiderius's neck in his fist and
flipped the Daimon onto the street. "Most of all, I know to kill
them."
Before he could move his dagger and
kill Desiderius, the others swarmed him. One grabbed him from behind while one
of the females moved in to stab him with a long, vicious-looking dagger.
Valerius kicked her back, then
twisted to confront the ones behind him. One of the Daimons slugged him across
the face. He ground his teeth as pain exploded along his cheek to his nose, and
he tasted blood.
But then, pain was nothing new to
him. As a mortal, he'd been well acquainted with beatings and pain.
Valerius returned the blow with one
of his own that sent the Daimon to his knees.
Out of nowhere, a god-bolt struck
him hard in the center of his chest. It knocked him off his feet and sent him
slamming into the brick wall behind him. Valerius couldn't breathe. He tried to
stay standing, but the sheer agony of it overrode his desire and he crumpled to
the ground.
"Hurts, doesn't it?"
Desiderius said. "It was a gift inherited from my father." Desiderius
bent down and seized Valerius's right hand and studied his Roman seal ring.
"Now there's something I find interesting, too. A Roman in New Orleans.
Kyrian of Thrace must truly love you."
Valerius glared at him as he forced
himself to roll.
He'd barely moved before Desiderius
hit him with another shocking bolt.
"What are we going to do with
him?" one of the women asked.
Desiderius laughed once again, then
seized him.
But it was Valerius who laughed
hardest as he kicked the Daimon back and shrugged off his pain.
He caught Desiderius and slung him
against the wall where he rebounded with a thud. "The question isn't what
are you going to do with me. It's what I'm going to do to you."
Tabitha couldn't stand waiting any
longer. But she wasn't completely stupid, either. Pulling out her cell phone,
she called Acheron, who answered on the first ring.
"Hey, Tabby," he said with
a laugh, "Valerius's cell is 204-555-6239."
"I really hate it when you do
that, Ash."
"You know what you're going to
hate even more?"
"I can't imagine."
"Turn around."
She did and found him standing on
the other side of the bar. At six feet eight and wearing a pair of tall Goth
boots that added a good three inches to his height, he was impossible to miss.
In spite of what he said, she felt a
wave of relief at seeing him there. Hanging up her phone, she crossed the room
to meet him. "What are you doing here?"
"I knew you were going to head
off after Valerius and I'm here to go with you."
"Then you think he's in
trouble, too."
"I know he is. Let's go."
Tabitha didn't ask him to elaborate.
She knew him better than that. Acheron Parthenopaeus seldom ever answered
anything. He lived life on his own terms and was eerily secretive about
everything.
Ash led the way out of the club and
into the street. Tabitha didn't know where they were headed, but he seemed to
know instinctively.
"I have a really bad
feeling," she said to Ash as they practically ran down the street.
"So do I," he said,
ducking into an open gate. Tabitha followed him inside, then skidded to a halt
as she caught sight of the most incredible thing she'd ever seen in her life.
Valerius fighting. He held a sword
in each hand as he fought off four Daimons who lunged and parried with consummate
skill of their own. It was fluid, violent, and morbidly beautiful.
Spinning about, Valerius caught one
of the blond Daimons with an uppercut that tore through his chest, piercing the
dark spot over their hearts where the human souls gathered. It caused the
Daimon to explode into a golden powder.
Ash joined the fight by catching two
of the Daimons with a staff. He drove them away from Valerius, allowing the
Roman to concentrate on the other Daimon.
Tabitha took a step forward only to
feel something cold and evil brush up against her.
"Predictable," came that
sinister, haunting voice again.
A flash of something sizzled past
her, heading toward Acheron.
One moment Ash was piercing a Daimon
with his staff and in the next, he was on his knees as Valerius killed his own
Daimon.
The second Daimon Ash had been
fighting moved to stab Ash, only to have his blow intercepted by Valerius, who
kicked the Daimon back, then killed him.
Tabitha ran to Ash, who was on the
ground, hissing as he held his arm as if it were broken.
"Simi," he panted.
"Human form. Now!"
The large dragon tattoo on Ash's
forearm peeled itself off his skin into a dark red shadow that quickly
transformed into the demon Tabitha knew so well.
"Akri?" Simi asked as she
caught Ash's head. "Akri, what hurts?"
Tabitha knelt down beside them and
tried to see Ash's arm. It was literally turning into stone, only it wasn't
growing hard. His skin was turning a grayish-white color and it was spreading
up his arm, toward his shoulder.
His face battered from his fight,
Valerius fell to his knees on the other side of Ash. "What is that?"
Ash writhed as if he were on fire.
"Simi… Akra… Thea Kalosis. Biazomai, biazomai."
Tabitha saw the terrified look on
Simi's face before the demon vanished.
"Ash?" she asked,
panicking. "What's going on?"
"Nothing," he gasped. He
grabbed Valerius's shirt. "Get Tabitha home. Now!"
"We can't leave you," they
said in unison.
"Go!" Ash snapped an
instant before the grayish stone-like skin crawled over more of his body.
They didn't.
Ash fought and screamed as the
grayish color spread all over his body. Tabitha laid him out flat on the
ground. Ash panted as if trying to fight off whatever had him.
It was a losing battle.
His swirling silver eyes bulged
before they too turned gray and he was as still as a corpse. Ash wasn't
breathing. He wasn't moving. It was as if something held him completely
paralyzed.
"What do we do?" she asked
Valerius.
"You die."
Tabitha spun at the malevolent voice
behind her to face the ghost again. It was surrounded by more Daimons.
"Good Lord, who spread the
Daimon fertilizer around? They're cropping up like a bad horror flick,"
Tabitha said.
Valerius rose to his feet.
Before she could move, Valerius
engaged them.
Tabitha rushed to join the fight.
"Don't kill the woman!"
the ghost snarled to the Daimons. "I need her alive."
Another blond Daimon laughed.
"Yeah, but feel free to rough her up all you want."
Tabitha turned to find yet another
Daimon behind her. She struck out with her arm only to have him dodge her blow,
then straighten up to deliver a staggering strike to her ribs.
The pain drove her straight to her
knees.
Valerius cursed and started for her.
Two Daimons cut him off.
With nothing more than sheer
strength of will, Tabitha regained her feet.
The Daimon looked impressed.
Tabitha went to hit him, only to
have him move away, lightning fast. This time when he tried to strike her, he
was slammed into the building beside her.
"Leave her alone,"
Valerius snarled. He put himself between her and the rest of the Daimons.
Tabitha pulled her sleeve back and
shot a crossbow bolt into the nearest Daimon. He disintegrated.
Suddenly, something ricocheted
through the Daimons, killing two instantly before it vanished.
Tabitha looked past the Daimon horde
to see a cavalry. Julian, Talon, and Kyrian were coming in, weapons drawn. She'd
never been happier to see any of them. Alone each one of the blond men was
dangerous. Together, they were invincible.
Side by side with Valerius, she
fought the Daimons while Kyrian, Julian, and Talon joined the fight. With the
five of them, it didn't take any time at all to finish the Daimons off. In
truth, it was a colorful display as one by one the Daimons disintegrated.
Except for the one who had struck
her. The ghost wrapped itself around that particular Daimon and the two of them
appeared to evaporate into nothing. Tabitha frowned at the peculiar sight.
Until she heard Kyrian's resonant curse. One moment Valerius was beside her,
the next he was being slammed face-first into the wall.
"You bastard!" Kyrian
snarled as he pummeled him. Valerius ducked the blows and whirled to the side.
He slammed Kyrian into the wall and would have pinned him had Julian not
grabbed him from behind.
The next thing she knew, Julian was
hitting Valerius, too. Without thinking, Tabitha rushed Julian, knocking him
back. She put herself between the Roman and the two Greeks.
"Get out of my way,
Tabitha," Kyrian said as he glared his hatred at Valerius. "I don't
want Amanda pissed at me because I hurt you for being stupid."
"And I don't want Amanda pissed
at me because I permanently maimed you for being an idiot."
"This isn't a game,
Tabitha," Julian said sternly. In his human life, Julian had been the
Greek general who had commanded Kyrian. Unfortunately, he'd run afoul of the
gods, who had cursed him into a book to be a sex slave to whatever woman
summoned him out.
Selena's best friend Grace Alexander
had set the half-god free.
Since then, Julian had often joined
ranks with the Dark-Hunters to fight the Daimons, and now he was joining ranks
with Kyrian to kill Valerius.
It was something she would never
allow.
She held her arms out to keep them
back. "No, it isn't."
"It's all right, Tabitha,"
Valerius said from behind her. "This is a confrontation that's been a long
time coming."
"Talon," Tabitha said,
glancing over to the tall blond Celt who was standing behind his Greek friends.
As always, Talon was dressed like a biker in a black motorcycle jacket,
T-shirt, and leather pants. His hair was cut short except for two thin braids
that hung from his left temple. "Are you going to help me?"
Talon grimaced. "Unfortunately,
yes." He moved to stand with her.
"Celt—" Kyrian snarled.
His face determined, Talon crossed
his arms over his chest.
"Look," Tabitha said
between clenched teeth. "We have bigger problems right now than you two
hating Valerius and his family."
"Like what?" Kyrian asked.
Tabitha pointed to the ground where
Ash still lay.
Kyrian's face went pale as his gaze
focused on Ash's body. "What happened?"
"I don't know," Tabitha
said. "One of the Daimons did that to him and we need to get him to
safety."
Kyrian passed a grudging, angry look
at Valerius. "We're not through."
Valerius said nothing as he moved
toward Ash.
When he started to lift Ash up,
Kyrian shoved him back. "Get your filthy hands off him, Roman. We don't
need your help. We take care of our own."
"Valerius happens to be the
only Dark-Hunter here," Tabitha snapped at her brother-in-law. "He
has more right to help Ash—"
"Greeks don't want or need
Roman help," Julian said as he brushed roughly past Valerius.
Tabitha felt Valerius's anger, his
pain, but most of all, she felt shame from him. Why?
"Val?"
As soon as it was out of her mouth,
Tabitha realized she'd just made a strategic mistake. Kyrian let out a vulgar
curse. "Oh, don't tell me you've taken up with him. Shit, Tabitha, I
thought even you had more sense than that."
That was it! Tabitha went to stand
in front of him. "Get off the cross, Kyrian. Literally." She gestured
behind her to Valerius. "He didn't hurt you."
Kyrian curled his lip at her.
"How do you know? Were you there?"
"Ooo, childish much? No, I
wasn't there. But I can do math and I know how old he was when you were killed.
What? You let a five-year-old nail you down?"
Someone grabbed her from behind.
Tabitha started to attack until she realized it was Valerius pulling her back.
"Don't, Tabitha. Just let it go."
"Why should I? I'm tired of the
way they treat you. Aren't you?"
Valerius's face was completely
stoic, but his heart wasn't. She felt his pain. "I honestly don't care
what they think of me. I really don't. And you don't need to alienate your
entire family. Just leave this alone."
"Why?"
Valerius looked past her to Kyrian,
then he stared at her. Hard. "This will wait. Right now, Acheron and you
need to be safe. Go with Kyrian."
Tabitha wanted to argue, but he was
right and she wasn't so stubborn as to not recognize that basic fact. The
longer they stood out here arguing, the more danger Ash was in, especially
since Simi wasn't here to protect him.
Their first priority was to get Ash
to safety. "You be careful."
Valerius gave her a strangely tender
Roman salute, then spun on his heel and left them.
"You're unbelievable,"
Kyrian snarled as he and Julian lifted Acheron's body up from the ground.
"I can't believe you screamed at Amanda about me and you'd cuddle up to
that bastard."
"Shut up, Kyrian," Tabitha
said. "Unlike Amanda, I don't mind staking you straight through the
heart."
"Where are we taking
T-Rex?" Talon asked as he grabbed Ash's feet and helped to carry him.
"Back to my house," Kyrian
answered. "After the attack of that demon on Bride Kattalakis when she was
visiting us, Ash put some kind of mojo on it to make it safe. I figure whatever
did this to him can't come back and hurt him if he's there."
Talon nodded. "What exactly did
this to him?"
Tabitha shrugged. "I don't
know. He was hit with something and poof, down he went. It happened so fast, I
didn't even see what they hit him with."
Talon let out a slow breath.
"Man, I wouldn't have thought anything could bring down Ash. Not like
this."
"Yeah," Tabitha agreed,
"but at least he's still alive. Kind of… in a freaky sort of way."
She didn't want to admit to them
just how frightened she was of the fact that the Daimons had brought the
powerful Atlantean down without breaking a sweat. If they could do this, then
there was no telling what they could do to the rest of them.
Which begged the question of why the
Daimons had left them alone when they could have killed them, too.
It didn't make sense.
They wended their way down the
darker, less traveled alleys, watching for Daimons and innocent passersby who
might call the cops if they saw them carrying what appeared to be a dead body
as they headed for Julian's Land Rover.
Tabitha got in the backseat with Ash
while Talon stayed behind to continue patrolling for Daimons. Getting into the
front passenger's seat, Kyrian remained sullenly silent while Julian drove them
over to the Garden District where Kyrian's mansion stood less than two blocks
away from Valerius's.
She wondered if either man realized
just how close they lived to each other. They were practically neighbors and
yet they were divided by infinite hatred.
Putting that out of her mind, she
ran her hand over Ash's hair. It had an odd, spongy texture. His eyes were
half-open and for once the silvery color didn't swirl. It was terrifying to
think something could do this to him and none of them knew what it was or if
they could restore him.
God, what would happen if they
couldn't?
What would happen to the
Dark-Hunters if they didn't have Ash to lead them anymore? It was a terrifying
thought. He always knew what to do and to say. How to make things better for
everyone.
Biting her lip, Tabitha fought her
panic down. Simi would get help for Ash. There was no way she wouldn't.
The men got out and pulled Ash from
the seat, then carried him into the house with Tabitha one step behind them.
Amanda came off the sofa the instant
she saw Ash being carried into her foyer. "Oh my God, what happened?"
"We don't know," Kyrian
said as he and Julian carried Ash toward the mahogany stairs.
"Tabby?" Amanda asked.
She shrugged as she followed after
the men. Amanda joined the procession up the stairs. As they reached the top
landing, a tall African-American man came out of one of the guest rooms.
"Acheron?" he said, his
voice thickly accented.
"We don't know what
happened," Kyrian said in answer to his unasked question as they brushed
past him.
"Hi, I'm Tabitha," she said,
extending her hand to the new Dark-Hunter who was guarding her family.
"Kassim," he said, shaking
her hand before they both followed the men into Ash's room.
Once they had Ash safely tucked into
the bed, Kyrian curled his lip at Tabitha. "Why don't you ask your sister
about her new friend, Amanda?"
"Kyrian," Tabitha said in
warning. "Lay off or you will limp."
"What friend?" Amanda
asked.
"Valerius Magnus," Julian
said. "They were rather friendly tonight when we found them."
"Yes, we were," Tabitha
said. "And it's none of your business."
Amanda gave her a harsh stare.
"Tabitha—"
"Shut up!" Tabitha
snapped. "Look, I will gladly submit to the 'jump all over sister Tabitha'
session after we help Ash. Right now, I'm going to start calling some people
and see if anyone knows how to fix this. You guys can stand here with your
thumbs up your butts and roast me all you want, but I'm not listening."
Pulling her phone off her belt,
Tabitha headed for the stairs, then down to the living room and called Tia, who
was completely useless for this.
"C'mon, T," Tabitha begged
her sister. "There has to be an undo spell."
"Not if you don't know what
caused it. Ash isn't exactly human, Tab. One wrong move and we could really do
some damage to him."
Tabitha growled into the phone, then
hung up. Amanda had just joined her in the living room when they heard
something hit the front door so hard, it rattled the hinges.
Handing the phone to Amanda, Tabitha
pulled her stiletto from her boot.
"Akri!" Simi's maniacal
wail echoed through the house like vicious thunder. "Let the Simi in,
akri!"
"What is that?" Amanda
asked, her face ashen.
"It's Ash's demon."
"Simi is making that godawful
sound?" Kyrian asked as he and Julian ran down the stairs.
"Looks like," Tabitha said
as she headed toward the door.
Kyrian beat her to it.
"No!" he snarled. "It could be a trick."
"Trick my ass," she
muttered. "Simi? Is it you outside?"
"Tabitha, let me in. I can't
help akri if I can't see him. I gots to help my akri. Lemme in or the Simi will
barbecue this door, so help me."
"You can't, Simi. The shield
would hurt you if you tried to. They have to invite you in."
Tabitha froze as she heard the
unfamiliar, gentle feminine voice on the other side of the door. It held just a
faint hint of a foreign accent. "Who's with you, Sim?"
"One of the bitch-goddess's
koris, they them people who serve her in her temple on Olympus. Katra good
quality people who gonna help my akri. Now let the Simi in!"
"It's
okay," Tabitha said to Kyrian. "I know Simi well enough to vouch that
it's really her out there."
Kyrian gave her a menacing stare.
"Yeah, and you know Valerius, too. That gives me so much faith in your
judgment-not."
Tabitha went rigid. "Amanda, if
your husband's balls have any meaning to you, I suggest you move him out of my
way or he's going to be singing in soprano."
"Let her open the door, Kyrian."
"Like hell," he snarled. "My daughter is asleep
upstairs."
"Her niece is asleep upstairs," Amanda reminded
him. "Tabitha would never endanger Marissa. Now move."
Kyrian made a gesture as if he'd
like to choke both of them, then stepped aside.
Tabitha swung open the door to see
Simi outside with an extremely tall, robed woman.
Neither woman asked where Ash was,
they seemed to know instinctively.
"Don't worry, Tabby," Simi
said as the unbelievably tall woman headed toward the stairs. "Katra will
never hurt my akri. She loves him like us."
Katra didn't listen to Simi as she
made her way up the stairs of the unfamiliar house. Then again, there was no
such thing as an unfamiliar house to her. She'd inherited great powers from
both her father and mother, including the ability to feel the essence and
layout of buildings.
This house echoed warmth, respect,
and love. No wonder Acheron liked to stay here whenever he visited New Orleans.
This was a wonderful home and Marissa was a lucky child to live here. How she
wished she'd known such a place as a little girl.
She opened the last door on the
hallway to find Acheron lying prone on a large, four-poster bed.
Kat paused at the sight of Acheron
there. Never in all these centuries had she been so close to him. As a young
woman, she'd often tried to catch glimpses of him as he came and went on
Olympus to see Artemis. Like all of the goddess' servants, Kat was banished
from the temple whenever he visited.
She more than any other was
forbidden to ever be near him. And now…
She'd waited all her life for this
one, single moment. For one chance to touch him. Know him.
To feel his arms around her, just
once.
Her heart pounding, she crossed the
room to stand beside the bed that didn't really accommodate his tall, lean
frame. The pallor and odd color of his skin did nothing to detract from the
fact that he was without a doubt the most handsome man who had ever been born.
But he was so much more than
external beauty.
Even in stasis, he was commanding
and frightening. She could feel his powers reaching out to her. Calling to her.
He was power incarnate.
More than that, he was invaluable to
the order of the universe. If Acheron should ever die…
It didn't bear thinking on.
Using her own powers, which were
second only to his, Kat shut and locked the bedroom door with her thoughts
before she lowered her cowl and sat beside him. She wanted a few minutes alone
with him where no one could observe them.
"You are so handsome," she
breathed as she traced the line of his eyebrows.
Since the moment she had first
glimpsed him when she was a young child, she'd yearned to touch his hand.
Yearned to have him call her by name.
Or better yet, yearned just to have
him know she existed at all.
But it wasn't meant to be.
Artemis would always stand between
them. She had ordained centuries ago that no one, especially not Kat, could
ever touch the sacred Acheron.
Yet here she sat, alone with him,
far away from the goddess's watchful stare.
Deep-seated emotions engulfed her.
Unable to stand the tide of them, Kat lay against him and hugged him close,
wishing he were awake to know her. To feel her.
But he wasn't.
He would never know she'd been here.
That she had been the one to help him. Simi was forbidden to tell him and as
soon as she vanished, the others below would forget they had ever seen her,
too.
"I love you," she
whispered against his ear. "I always will." She placed a chaste kiss
on his cheek before she pulled back and took his large hand into hers.
Tears streaked her face as she
brushed his fingers against her cheek. "One day," she breathed,
"we will' know each other. I promise."
Kat unlocked the door with her
powers, then pulled a small satchel out of her pocket. It held three leaves
from the Tree of Life that only bloomed in the garden of the Destroyer, deep in
the halls of her temple in Kalosis. It alone could break the ypnsi, the sacred
sleep that Orasia had once dispensed from the sacred halls of Katoteros back in
the days when the ancient Atlantean gods had ruled the earth.
This alone could restore Acheron to
his full strength.
Kat wrung the leaves until they were
moist. Holding them over Acheron's lips, she twisted, more until they were able
to drip nine drops into his mouth.
She watched as the color spread from
his lips, slowly, over the rest of his body.
He took a deep breath, then opened
his eyes.
She vanished instantly.
Ash felt the air stir around him. He
sat up quickly, then wished he hadn't as pain swept through his body.
Wiping his lips, he grimaced at the
bitter, nasty taste in his mouth.
"Akri?"
His heart stopped beating as he
heard Simi's hesitant voice an instant before she burst into the room and leapt
onto the bed beside him.
Suddenly, everything came back to
him. The Daimons.
The blow…
What the hell had hit him?
"Simi, what am I doing
here?"
She tackled him with a hug that left
him flat on his back with her wrapped around his upper torso. "You scared
the Simi, akri. She didn't know what was wrong with you. You turned all gray
and nasty like one of them statues or something. You not supposed to do that!
You said so."
"I'm okay, Sim," he said,
cradling her. "I think. Why am I in Kyrian's house… with you in human
form?"
"We brought you here."
Ash tensed at the sound of Kyrian's
voice. He sat up slowly with Simi still hugging him.
With his arms folded over his chest,
Kyrian stood in the doorway with Julian and Amanda.
"You okay?" Kyrian asked.
Ash nodded. "I think so. Still
a little fuzzy, but breathing." Or at least trying to given the fact Simi
was latched onto him like a protective mother bear.
"Do you know what happened to
you?" Tabitha asked from somewhere out in the hallway.
Unfortunately yes, but it wasn't
something they needed to know about since Simi had gone for the antidote and
restored him. Thank the gods she'd understood his order.
If the others ever learned who and
what he was…
But that begged the question: Who
among the Daimons knew the truth of him? How did they know to strike him with
the one compound that could actually neutralize him?
Not that it would work again. As
long as he knew to expect it, he knew to guard against it.
Pain to the next one dumb enough to
attempt hurting him.
"Okay, Simi," Ash said,
patting the demon on her back. "You can let go."
"No, I can't," she said as
she tightened her hold. "You got all grisly, akri. Like one of them things
at home. Ew! The Simi don't like that. You gots to stay nice and pink like
you're supposed to. Or blue. I don't mind it when you're blue. In skin, that
is. When you blue in spirit, it makes the Simi sad, too."
"Okay, Simi," Ash said,
cutting her off before she told something she wasn't supposed to.
"Your skin turns blue?"
Kyrian asked.
"Everyone's skin turns blue
when they're cold," he answered evasively.
Ash slid off the bed in spite of
Simi's hold, which had yet to lessen. He needed to get out of this room to
distract them from the fact that he'd come about as close to dying as his kind
could.
Simi moved to stand behind him and
kept her arms locked tightly around his waist.
"I think someone's attached to
you, T-Rex," Talon said with a laugh.
"Yeah, just a little." Ash
made his way from the room.
"Can we have some ice
cream?" Simi asked as she finally let go. She started for the stairs, then
veered off to Marissa's nursery to peek inside the closed door. "Sh!"
Simi said loudly as she straightened up. "The baby's sleeping."
"Yeah, and Tabitha's sneaking
away," Kyrian said. "Are you running off to meet up with
Valerius?"
Tabitha went rigid at his question.
"Tell me something, Ash," she said in a low tone as she neared him on
the stairs. "Would Artemis care if I killed an ex-Dark-Hunter?"
"No, but I think your sister
would."
Tabitha looked over her shoulder to
see Amanda. "Then she better up her insurance on him. 'Cause he's one step
away from a nasty tumble down these stairs."
"Don't threaten me,
Tabby," Kyrian said. "You were so foul to me when you found out I was
with Amanda. You actually tried to kill me. Now you're hooking up with the
worst sort of lowlife. Tell her, Ash. His kind killed without compassion."
Tabitha whirled at the top of the
stairs to face him. "His kind? What, an ancient general? Seems like I know
two other people who were his kind." She looked meaningfully from Kyrian
to Julian.
"Tabitha," Amanda said.
"Enough. You knew how Kyrian felt about Valerius. How could you do this to
us?"
Ash rubbed his head as if he had a
headache. "People, leave Tabitha alone. I'm the one who put her with
Valerius."
"Why?" Kyrian, Julian, and
Amanda asked in unison.
Ash paused on the top step to give Tabitha
a dry stare. "Tabby, what's your ideal man like?"
"Honestly?"
Ash nodded.
"You," she said without
hesitation. "Someone tall, gorgeous, hip, and Goth."
"And what do you think of
Valerius?"
She glanced hesitantly at her
sister. "He's a stick in the mud, but I really like him."
Kyrian and Julian cursed.
"Tabitha…" Amanda said in
a warning tone.
"Don't 'Tabitha' me. Jeez, I'm
tired of all of you jumping on me." Tabitha descended the stairs and
headed for the door to leave.
As soon as she opened it, she met
Nick on the steps, who grinned at her before he entered the foyer. He brushed
by her before she thought to warn him Ash was in the house…
With Simi.
Gawking, Tabitha turned.
"Hey, Nicky!" Simi said,
her face beaming as she danced away from Ash finally to wave at Nick.
Tabitha went cold with dread.
And she knew the instant Ash
realized Simi "knew" Nick. His face mottled red with fury.
Nick froze, then gaped.
Simi appeared oblivious to the
mayhem she caused. "Nicky," she said, putting her hands on her hips
as she pouted at him. "Why didn't you meet me tonight like you said you
would?"
Nick's mouth opened and closed as
Ash let out a bellow of rage. He grabbed Nick by the throat and slung him
against the wall. Nick hit it so hard, he actually went through the plaster.
Tabitha cringed in sympathetic pain
as Nick struggled to rise through the powder of the plaster. "I didn't know
she was your girlfriend, Ash," Nick panted. "I swear it."
Ash's silver eyes turned a glowing
shade of red. "She's not my girlfriend, you asshole. She's my
daughter."
Tabitha wouldn't have thought it
possible, but Nick turned even paler. "But she's so… so young… you're so
young…" Nick swallowed audibly. "I'm so screwed."
Ash's eyes appeared to boil red and
yellow as he hit Nick so hard, Nick was knocked back twenty feet into Kyrian.
Marissa started crying from
upstairs.
"Amanda, tend your baby,"
Ash snarled in a voice that wasn't human. It was deep and rumbling.
Frightening.
While he was distracted, Tabitha ran
at Ash, but he held his hand out and she stopped dead in her tracks and was
held there by some invisible force.
"Akri!" Simi shrieked.
"No!"
Ash moved toward Nick, but before he
could take more than two steps Simi was between them.
Tabitha cringed as Ash let out an
agonized cry.
"You were never to have carnal
knowledge!" he said to his demon.
While the rest of them feared for
their lives, Simi was completely unperturbed by his anger.
"Why not?" Simi asked.
"Everyone else has it."
Ash raked his hands through his
black hair. "Because, dammit, Simi, now you'll be like everyone else. I'll
never have any peace from you."
Simi screwed her face up as if that
was the most disgusting thing she'd ever heard. "Pah-lease, akri. You got
a big opinion of yourself. That just sick. You been hanging out with that
heifer too long. Bleh! I mean, you a good-looking person and all, but you ain't
no Travis Fimmel. Now, he's fine. But honestly, the Simi didn't like all that
heaving and sweating very much. It seems like an awful lot of work for such a
short amount of pleasure. Personally, I'd rather go shopping. It much more fun
and you don't have to shower afterward. Well, not unless you go someplace
dirty, but most malls are really clean nowadays."
Nick opened his mouth as if to
refute her words, but was cut off by Talon, who shook his head.
"Boy," Talon said sharply.
"Be damned glad you suck in bed and take the out she's offering you before
you lose your life."
"Yeah, Nick," Kyrian
added. "Keep your damned mouth shut."
Ignoring the two of them, Ash pulled
Simi to him and held her close as if afraid of letting her go.
Whatever invisible force held
Tabitha released her. She took a deep breath as the very air around them seemed
to settle down.
But when Ash looked back at Nick,
his eyes were still blazing red. "You're dead to me, Gautier. If I were
you I'd kill myself to save me from the trouble of doing it later."
"Hey!" Tabitha snapped as
Ash headed for the door.
"That was harsh."
"Back off, Tabitha," Ash
snarled in warning. "Simi, return to me."
The demon turned into a fine, black
mist before she laid herself over Ash's arm and became a dragon-shaped tattoo.
Ash immediately slammed out of
Kyrian's house. Without hesitation, Tabitha ran after him. "Ash!" she
snapped, pulling him to a stop in the driveway. "What are you doing?"
"I'm leaving before I kill
Nick."
"You can't blame this solely on him."
"Like hell I
can't. He slept with my Simi."
"Well, if you want to hate someone,
then hate me. I was the one who left them alone together."
His eyes snapped fire at her.
Literally. "Leave me, Tabitha. Now."
"No," she said earnestly.
"If you want to hurt someone for this, then hurt the one who is really
responsible. You and Nick are best friends. Don't think I don't know it. He
loves you like a brother and you just crushed him."
"He slept—"
"I heard you the first time.
And I also know how ill Nick was when he found out Simi belonged to you. Tell
me something, Ash. Why didn't Nick know about her?"
His jaw worked furiously. "I
didn't want any man to know about her. I knew the day would come when she
would…" He winced as if the thought cut through him. "You don't
understand."
"You're right, I don't. I don't
know what happened to you tonight. I don't know what's after me. I don't
understand what the hell you turned into a few minutes ago or why your eyes are
doing the freaky fire dance now. What are you? 'Cause right now, I'm wondering
if you were ever human."
His eyes flashed red to silver.
"I was human, once," he breathed.
"And now?"
"Now it's time for you both to
die."
The eerie, threatening words barely
registered before something hot pierced Tabitha's stomach.
Chapter 10
Tabitha gasped as pain engulfed her.
She'd never felt anything like this. It was as if something had invaded her
body.
Ash cursed as he threw his hand out
and blasted her.
Tabitha screamed from the agony of
his blast. It was as if something was trying to rip her apart.
Unable to stand against it, she
started to fall, only to realize someone was holding her against a strong
chest.
"I've got you," Valerius
said as he picked her up in his arms and held her close.
Tabitha's heart soared at his
nearness. She didn't know how he'd gotten there to catch her, she was only
grateful that he had.
"Careful," she said
between the teeth she had clenched to keep from moaning out at the pain that
overwhelmed her.
Her eyes blurred by tears, she
feared the ghost was now trying to move into Ash or Valerius.
"Forget it," Ash said.
The spirit laughed, then vanished.
Ash was beside her in an instant.
"Breathe easy," he whispered.
Tabitha couldn't speak anymore as
she laid her head against Valerius's neck and inhaled the warm scent of his
skin. She would have never thought to feel this way about anyone.
She felt strangely protected even
though she couldn't fight for herself.
"We need to get her to
safety," Valerius said sharply.
Ash nodded.
One second they were in the driveway
outside of Kyrian's house and in the next they were in Valerius's room in his
home.
Valerius looked relieved as he laid
her gently down on his mattress. "Are you all right?"
"I think so," she
whispered. The pain was starting to abate a bit.
He offered her a warm smile before
his face hardened and he turned to look at Ash. "What are we facing?"
Ash took a deep breath and appeared
to debate what to say for several minutes. "That ghost outside of Kyrian's
house was Desiderius. The good news is he isn't corporeal… yet."
"But I fought him in corporeal
form," Valerius said. "He attacked me earlier."
"When?" Tabitha asked as
her terror returned tenfold. "I didn't see him."
"He was the one the ghost
protected at the end of the fighting. Remember?"
Tabitha shook her head. "That
wasn't Desiderius. Believe me, I remember that bastard's face." She
touched the scar on her cheek.
"No," Ash said. "It
was his eldest son. According to Urian, they share the same name."
Tabitha rolled her eyes. "What
is it with you ancient people that you only had, what? Three names in the whole
family lineage and everybody recycled them?"
"It was tradition,"
Valerius said. "One I'm glad to have seen broken. Believe me, I take no
joy from a name that reminds you of a cheesy song and a man doing unspeakable
things in a high school gym. But I suppose, all things considered, 'Valerius'
is infinitely better than 'Newbomb Turk.'"
Tabitha laughed at his unexpected
comment, amazed that he'd actually understood her earlier reference to the
movie The Hollywood Knights.
"Knowing Tabitha, I'm not even
going to ask about that one," Ash said, rubbing a hand over his eyebrow.
Ash went suddenly rigid. Tabitha
could sense his dread.
"Ash?"
"What happened?" Ash
whispered without acknowledging her. It was as if he were talking to someone
else.
"Ash?"
"You two stay here and do not
leave this house again tonight." He vanished instantly.
She looked at Valerius, whose frown
made a mockery of her own. "What was that about?" she asked.
"I don't know, but I have a
feeling it's not good."
Ash entered his home in Katoteros
with a whirlwind maelstrom flowing behind him. The fifteen-foot-tall, solid oak
doors echoed menacingly as they slammed shut of their own accord in his wake.
The minute he crossed the elegant threshold, his clothes changed from his
modern-day Goth to ancient Atlantean. The seams of his jeans turned into
tightly woven, crisscrossed laces that held the tight black leather pants
perfectly sculpted to his lower body. His shirt and jacket dissolved away into
a heavy black silk foremasta, a long duster-like robe that was left to flow
regally around his lithe, muscular body. On the back of the foremasta was
embroidered the emblem of a golden sun pierced by three silver bolts of
lightning.
It was his personal symbol of power
and it marked everything he owned.
Without stopping, he walked directly
across the large black marbled foyer that held the same design in the center of
the floor.
There was no furniture in the circular
foyer, but the golden domed ceiling above him was supported by sixteen columns
that had been carved into statues of the most prominent of the Atlantean gods.
Gods who had once made this realm
their home. In those days, they had gathered affectionately here in this hall
to share time with each other as they watched over the human world and
protected it.
But those days were long gone.
The ancient gods themselves were
long gone.
Ash headed for the throne room that
faced the main doors. The doorway to it was flanked by the likenesses of
Apollymi the Destroyer and her husband Archon Kosmetas, a surname that meant
Order. At one time, the two of them had presided over the nether realms of
Katoteros and Kalosis and in one fit of anger, Appolymi had laid waste to all
who dwelled here.
All of them.
Not a single Atlantean god had
remained standing after she had swept through this temple in her violent fury.
Ash had never understood what could possess her to do such a thing.
But as he entered the throne room of
the ancient gods, he was beginning to have enlightenment.
"Urian!" he growled,
summoning his servant to him.
Urian popped into the Atlantean
throne room ready to take on the devil himself. He drew up short as he caught sight
of Ash's true form while the Dark-Hunter stood before the gilded dais that
contained two gold thrones that were carved into the shape of dragons.
Urian was still having trouble
dealing with Ash when the man looked like this. The blood-red, flaming eyes
were enough to make even a demigod like Urian cringe, and Ash's iridescent
blue-streaked, marbled skin tone…
Errr…
But the most disturbing thing was
the deep, vicious scar that ran from Ash's navel to his throat where someone's
handprint had been branded. It looked as if someone had once held the man down
by his throat as they sliced him open.
Urian had learned from Alexion on
the day he had arrived at Katoteros that while the hand scar came and went, the
vertical scar was only visible in this realm and that he should never react to
it.
Not if he valued his life, anyway.
Ash's unbalanced temper was present
in the lightning bolts and thunder that crackled and sparked outside the leaded
windows of the temple.
There were very few things in life
that frightened Urian. The extremely powerful man before him was one of them.
Not even Ash's pet pterygsauri would
come out to be with their master in this mood. Unlike Urian, the small winged
dragon-like creatures had stayed wisely hidden.
"What have you to report?"
Acheron asked him, his voice thick with his Atlantean accent.
"Basically that all hell is
breaking loose in hell."
Acheron looked less than pleased by
the news. More lightning shot across the sky outside the floor-to-ceiling
windows behind the thrones. It gave an eerie glow to Acheron's body. Thunder
clapped ominously as it shook the temple floor where Urian stood.
"What is happening?"
Urian bit back his sarcasm as he
started to point out that the weather in Kalosis mirrored the weather here in
Katoteros. That would most likely be suicidal.
"I don't know. Desiderius came
back to the hall with his son in tow a little while ago. I was told that he
said something to Stryker that caused him to reward Desiderius by giving him
the ability to reincarnate. Apollymi the Destroyer is locked inside her temple
and no one is allowed to see her. Apparently someone did something wrong and
she has since sent her Charonte demons off on a blood hunt throughout Kalosis
to find the perpetrator. There are Spathis dropping like flies all over the
place and everyone is pretty much wetting their pants in fear of her
wrath."
"And your father?"
Urian tensed at the reminder that
Stryker, the leader of the Spathi Daimons who were controlled by the Destroyer,
had fathered him. "I don't know. The minute Desiderius left, he flipped
out in the main hall and has been tearing the place apart ever since." His
face hardened. "He keeps screaming out my name and I don't know why. Maybe
he learned that I'm alive."
Acheron looked away from him.
"What's up with all this, Ash?
I know you know."
"No, I don't. The Destroyer is
silent to me. I hear nothing from her and that's what concerns me most. She's
never silent in our battles."
Urian cursed at what that signified.
"What could have set them both off at once?"
The muscle in Acheron's jaw beat an
impressive staccato rhythm. "My guess is Stryker sent Desiderius out with
a test for me. Once Desi saw that it was effective, he reported it back to
Stryker, who had all the confirmation he needed."
"Confirmation of what?"
Acheron's gaze cut through him.
"What he really is to Apollymi."
Urian gave a low whistle.
"Yeah, that would freak him out. Maybe we'll get lucky and he and the
Destroyer will kill each other."
Acheron shot him a look that made
him take a step back.
"Sorry," he said quickly.
Acheron started pacing. With his
robe flowing eerily out behind him and his silver-soled boots clicking against
the black marble floor, he was a spooky sight.
"Why would Desiderius try to
take over Tabitha's body?"
"What do you mean?" Urian
asked.
"He tried to take over her
while I was there. After I blasted him out of her, he came for me."
That didn't make sense. How stupid
could… well, it was Desiderius, after all. "Why would he attempt that if
he knew what you were?"
Ash gave a low, ominous laugh.
"I don't think Stryker shared that information with Desiderius. He
wouldn't dare. It would undercut his own authority in Kalosis if he did
so."
Good point. "So I guess the
real question is who will be the body donor."
Acheron cocked his head as if he
just realized something. "He's after Kyrian and Amanda. Since he couldn't
get either Tabitha's body or mine, he'll probably go after someone else they
know and trust. And that's the next bit I need you to find out. Stryker has me
blocked so that I sense nothing in regard to Desiderius."
"For the record, I'm beginning
to feel like cannon fodder here. There are a lot of people in Kalosis who
rejoiced the day Stryker cut my throat. If one of them finds out that I'm there
spying on them, they'll send me back to you in pieces."
Acheron gave him a wry, wicked grin.
"It's okay. I'll just put you back together again."
"Thanks, boss. And I find that
thought even more disturbing. Humpty Dumpty here doesn't want to fall off the
wall, okay?"
Acheron's face hardened once more.
"Go, Urian."
Inclining his head, Urian stepped
back and willed himself to Kalosis.
Acheron stood silently in his throne
room, listening. Still, he heard nothing from the other side. More lightning
clashed outside as the winds whistled against the glass panes.
"Talk to me, Apollymi. What are
you doing?"
But for the first time in eleven
thousand years, she was utterly silent.
The only sound he heard in the
deafening silence of his mind was his sister's faint voice. "Be careful
what you wish for, little brother. You will get it."
Tabitha hung up the phone from
talking to Amanda. Kyrian and Julian had been in the process of taping up
Nick's ribs while she'd warned her sister about Desiderius's attack just
outside of their house.
"I'm scared, Val," she
said as she put her phone down. "Really scared. I keep hearing Amanda's
voice telling me about her dream where she and Kyrian die. I know you hate the
man, but—"
"I don't hate Kyrian, Tabitha.
He hates me."
She nodded as Valerius pulled her
into a tight hug that she really needed. He held her carefully against his
chest while one hand played in her hair.
She inhaled his rich, welcoming
scent, which soothed her even more than his touch.
"Acheron won't let her
die," he said comfortingly. "You know that."
"I hope so, but her
vision…"
"Those can be altered. Acheron
is always saying that fate is helpless against free will. What she saw was one
possible outcome."
Tabitha choked on her tears as she
thought about what life would be like without Amanda. It was more than she
could stand. "I can't lose my sister, Valerius. I can't. We've always had
each other."
"Shh," he breathed before
placing a gentle kiss on the top of her head. "I'm sure she feels the same
way about you, and I swear on my life that neither one of you will ever have to
fear losing the other. Not on my watch."
Tabitha was amazed by his tenderness
when it was obvious he'd never been shown any himself.
She pulled back to look up at him.
"How could your brothers have ever killed you?"
He released her instantly and took
three steps back. By the look on his face, she could tell her question had hurt
him deeply.
"I'm sorry, Val. That was
insensitive of me."
"It's all right. Things were
different in those days."
That seemed to be his answer for
everything, and it seemed too easy for her to accept.
"I shall call Otto and have him
bring us dinner. I don't know about you, but I'm hungry."
Tabitha nodded and gave him the
reprieve she sensed he needed. Without looking back, he left her alone in his
library.
"Whatever do you see in that
bastard?"
She turned quickly at the sudden
voice behind her to find a man of Val's height, staring angrily at her. Dressed
in black jeans and a black T-shirt, he was incredibly handsome with a neatly
trimmed goatee, short, jet-black hair, and electric blue eyes. "Who the
hell are you?"
"Zarek."
The unexpected name caught her off
guard. So this was the infamous whipping boy who had lived in Valerius's Roman
home. Offhand, there wasn't much other than the dark hair and height that
marked them as brothers.
Tabitha folded her arms over her
chest as she faced him. "So you're the dirtbag with the lightning
bolt."
He laughed evilly at her insult.
"I'd be careful if I were you. There's no law that says I can't fry your
ass, too."
She scoffed at that and refused to
give in to his intimidation. "Sure there is. Ash would kill you if you
hurt me."
"He might try, but I doubt he'd
succeed."
She sucked her breath in between her
teeth at his daring tone. "You are arrogant, aren't you?"
He shrugged nonchalantly.
"So, why are you here?"
she asked him.
"I've been watching the two of
you."
She was disgusted at his confession,
and the thought of being his personal viewing choice. It made her shiver in
revulsion. "You unbelievable perv!"
His gaze narrowed dangerously.
"Hardly. I've made sure to look away when you two start the lovey-dovey
shit. I've already been blind once in my life. I have no wish to go back to
it."
"Then why were you watching
us?"
"Curiosity mostly."
"And you're here now, why?"
"Because I'm curious as to why
the sister-in-law of Kyrian would fuck someone like Valerius."
She sneered at him. "That's
none of your damned bus…" Tabitha trailed off as the room spun around her.
Suddenly, Valerius's library was
gone and she found herself in what appeared to be a mirrored hallway. She saw
herself reflected in the mirrors with Zarek by her side.
"Where are we?"
"Olympus. I have something I
wanted to show you."
The mirror before her shimmered and
changed. It no longer reflected them.
Instead it showed her the past.
She saw an ancient canvas tent with
a bloodied man tied to a wooden frame inside it, being tortured. His screams
rang out as he begged for mercy in Latin while another man beat him with a
barbed whip.
Cringing, Tabitha covered her ears
until the beating stopped and another man dressed in Roman armor stepped
forward.
It was a young Valerius. His dark
face was in need of a shave and his armor was spotted with bloodstains. He
looked tired and ill-kempt, as if he hadn't slept in days, but still he held
that regal air of superiority.
He threw water into the man's face.
"Tell me where they're marching to."
"No."
The Latin words echoed in her head
along with the sight of Valerius ordering a soldier to beat the man more.
"It was your lover who blinded
me," Zarek snarled in her ear as the mirror clouded, then cleared to show
her the image of two small boys.
One lay on the ground, curled into a
ball while the other beat him with a whip. One of the lashes cut deep into the
one boy's eye, causing him to scream as he covered it with one grimy hand.
"I'm the one on the
ground," Zarek snarled in her ear. "Valerius is the one beating me
mercilessly and you fucked him."
Unable to watch the cruelty, Tabitha
turned and ran into someone else.
She started to fight until she
glanced up to see Ash looking less than pleased.
"What are you doing, Z?"
"I'm showing her the
truth."
Ash shook his head at the former
Dark-Hunter. "I can't believe you married a justice nymph and have yet to
learn anything from her. There are always three sides to every memory, Z.
Yours, theirs, and the truth, which lies somewhere in between the two. You're
only showing her a single sound bite to prove your point. Why don't you give
her the whole clip?"
Ash turned her back toward the
mirror. "I'm not going to lie to you, Tabby, or try and sway your opinion.
This isn't Zarek's memory or Valerius's. It's just the untarnished, objective
truth of what happened to them."
She saw the child Valerius again as
a man in a toga who looked remarkably similar to Zarek stepped forward. He had
to be their father.
Laughing, he patted Valerius on the
shoulder. "That's it, my son. Always strike where they're the most
vulnerable. You'll make a fine general one day."
The child Zarek glared at both of
them as if he could kill them where they stood. Their father jerked the whip
from Valerius's hand and commenced to beating him again.
His face horrified, Valerius ran
from the room, sobbing. He looked as if he were going to be ill as he stumbled
across an old Roman courtyard until he fell down by a huge fountain in the
center of the atrium. He braced his folded arms on the edge of the fountain and
lay his head down.
"I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm
sorry," he repeated over and over again as he cried.
His father came running out of the
house, toward him.
"Valerius!" he snarled as
he came up to the child. "What are you doing?"
Valerius didn't answer. His father
pulled him up from the ground by his hair.
The horror on the boy's face seared
her.
"You pathetic little
worm," his father sneered. "I should have named you Valeria. You're
more woman than man."
His father backhanded him so hard
the sound echoed and sent several birds into flight. Unbalanced by the blow,
Valerius fell back to the ground.
His nose and cheek bleeding,
Valerius tried to push himself up, but before he could regain his feet, his
father brought the whip down across his back. The boy dropped instantly.
Still, his father beat him.
Valerius covered his head as the
blows rained down on his little body.
"Get up," his father
snarled after he'd delivered twenty lashes.
Valerius was crying so hard he
couldn't speak.
His father kicked him in the ribs.
"Up, damn you, or I'll give you twenty more."
Tabitha had no idea how he managed
it, but somehow Valerius pushed himself to his feet, where he shook and
trembled. His clothes were tattered, his face covered in dirt and blood.
His father seized him by the throat
and shoved him back against a rough wall so that his ravaged back was scraped
by it.
She cringed in sympathetic pain,
trying to imagine how a child so young could stand there and not collapse.
"You will stand here until
nightfall and if you so much as bend your knees to rest them, I will see you
beaten every day until you learn to stomach your pain. Do you understand
me?"
The boy Valerius nodded.
"Markus?" his father
shouted.
Another boy who closely resembled
Valerius came running out of the house. It was obvious he was a few years
older. "Yes, Father?"
"Watch your brother; if he sits
down or moves, you come for me."
Markus smiled as if his father had
just given him a present. "I will, sir."
Their father turned and left them.
And as soon as he was out of sight, Markus turned to laugh at Valerius.
"Poor little Val," he said tauntingly. "I wonder what Father
will do to you if you fall down." Markus struck him in the stomach.
Valerius groaned at the pain, but
didn't move from the wall.
That only made Markus angrier.
Growling at Valerius, he began striking him. Valerius fought back, but it was
no use. In no time, Markus had him on the ground again.
"Father!" Markus cried,
running for the door where their father had vanished. "He fell down!"
Tabitha turned away, afraid of what
additional punishment Valerius's father had heaped on him. She'd already seen
his back firsthand. Had run her hands over those scars that he bore with grace
and dignity.
He must truly hate his father, and
yet he never spoke a word against any of them. Valerius merely went on with his
life, quietly suffering and keeping all the painful memories to himself.
He was remarkable to her.
The screen went black.
"It changes nothing,"
Zarek said, curling his lip. "So he was beaten, too. I notice you didn't
correct the fact that he was torturing—"
"A Greek soldier whose army had
marched on a Roman village," Ash said, interrupting him. "Every woman
and child there had been locked inside Minerva's temple before they burned it
to the ground. Valerius was after the army to stop them before they killed any
more innocents."
Zarek scoffed. "They weren't
all innocent."
"No," Tabitha said, her
throat tight. "But he was a general during a time when things were
violent."
"Yes," Ash said quietly.
"And he did what he had to do."
Zarek snorted. "Yeah, right.
Valerius spent his entire human lifetime trying to please his father, trying to
make that animal proud."
Ash refuted that as well. "And
when you were children, he was so afraid of your father that he stuttered every
time he was in his presence."
"He never hesitated to commit
an act of cruelty to please his family."
"Never?"
Tabitha watched the mirror as it
again showed her Valerius as a child. He was around the age of eight, lying in
bed asleep. Her heart pounded at the peaceful, sweet sight he posed.
Until his bedroom door was slung
open.
Valerius jerked upright as lamplight
cut across him.
His father seized him from the bed
and literally threw him to the ground. Valerius looked at his father and then
to the one who held the lamp.
It was Markus.
"What is this?" his father
asked as he threw a blanket at Valerius.
Valerius turned pale.
"What is that blanket,
Zarek?" Ash asked.
Zarek's blue eyes turned cold.
"It's the piece of shit old horse blanket that the little bastard gave to
me one winter night and I was beaten for it."
"Valerius!" his father
shouted as he slapped the boy. "Answer me."
"B-b-blanket."
"I saw him give it to the
slave, Father," Markus said. "So did Marius. He didn't want the slave
to be cold."
"Is this true?"
Valerius looked horrified.
"Is it true!"
Valerius swallowed. "He was
c-c-c-cold."
"Was he now?" his father
sneered, "Well, better a slave to suffer than you, is it not? Perhaps it's
time you learn that lesson, boy."
Before Valerius could move, his
father tore his clothes from him, then wrenched him up by his thin arm and
hauled him from the room. Completely naked, Valerius was taken outside, where
his father tied him to a hitching post. It was so cold that their breaths
formed icy clouds around them.
"P-p-pl—"
Valerius's plea was cut short by
another vicious backhand. "We're Roman, boy. We don't beg for mercy from
anyone. For that you'll be beaten even more come morning. If you live through
the night."
Shaking from the cold, Valerius bit
his lip to keep his teeth from chattering.
Markus laughed at him. "I think
you're being too kind, Father."
"Don't question me, Markus,
unless you wish to join him."
Markus's laughter died instantly.
Without another word or looking back, the two of them turned back toward the
house and left Valerius outside alone.
The small boy sank to his knees
while he tried to loosen his hands. It was no use. "I swear I'll be a good
Roman," he whispered quietly. "I will."
The scene faded.
"You're not convincing me,
Acheron," Zarek said coldly. "I still think he's a ruthless bastard
who deserves nothing."
"Then how about this?"
This time when the mirror lightened,
she saw what appeared to be a seriously disfigured version of Zarek chasing an
older version of his father through the ancient Roman house she now knew was
theirs.
The middle-aged man was bleeding,
his face ravaged as if he'd been knocked around.
The man spilled into what appeared
to be a dining hall where Valerius sat at a desk wearing his armor, writing a
letter. Frowning, he rose to his feet as he saw his father's frantic run.
His father fell against him and
grabbed the metal straps of Valerius's cuirass. "For Jupiter's sake, help
me, boy. Save me!"
Zarek drew up short as he saw
Valerius in full military regalia. Candlelight shone off the golden armor that
was contrasted by his blood-red cape.
Valerius made a fearsome sight as he
pushed his father aside and pulled his sword out slowly from its burgundy
leather scabbard as if to engage Zarek.
"That's it, boy," his
father said with an evil laugh. "Show the worthless slave what I taught
you."
"Go ahead, you bastard,"
Zarek snarled defiantly. "I'm here for my vengeance and you can't kill
someone who's already dead."
"I wasn't planning on it,"
he said simply.
"Valerius," his father
snarled. "What are you doing, boy? You have to help me."
His face completely stoic, Valerius
looked at his father as if the man were a complete stranger. "We're Roman,
Father, and I've long since ceased being a boy. I am the general you made me
and you taught me well that we don't beg for mercy from anyone."
He handed his sword hilt-first to
Zarek.
With those words spoken, Valerius saluted
his brother, walked out of the room, and closed the door.
His father's screams echoed as he
walked slowly down the corridor.
Tabitha couldn't breathe as she
witnessed the tragedy that was both their lives. Part of her couldn't believe
Valerius had left his father to die like that and another part of her
understood it completely.
Poor Valerius. Poor Zarek. They both
were victims of the same man. One son spat upon because he was a slave and
another because he wasn't cold-blooded and unfeeling. At least not until that
one moment.
She looked at Zarek, whose eyes
still bore the hatred and pain of his past. "If you hate Valerius so much,
why didn't you kill him, too, Zarek?"
"Pardon the bad pun, but the
blind man was shortsighted at the time."
"No," she whispered.
"You knew, didn't you? You knew who deserved your hatred and who
didn't."
Zarek's sneer turned even colder as
he shot a menacing glare from her to Acheron. "This changes nothing. Valerius
still doesn't deserve peace. He doesn't deserve anything except contempt. He is
his father's son."
"And what are you?" Tabitha
asked. "It seems to me that you're the one carrying around the acidic
hatred that won't let you live in peace. Valerius doesn't strike out at other
people. Ever. To me that makes him twice the man you are."
Zarek's look pierced her. "Oh,
you think you're so special. That he's worth defending. Tell you what, sweetie,
if you want to know who Valerius really loves, go to the solarium in his house.
Imagine how much Agrippina must have meant to him that he's been lugging her
stone statue around for more than two thousand years."
"Zarek…" Ash growled in
warning.
"What? It's true and you know
it."
Zarek took a step back and then
looked as if he were trying to disappear. "What the…?"
Ash gave him a droll stare.
"Just for the record, Zarek. If you ever do hurt Tabitha, I will kill you.
Gods and goddesses be damned."
Zarek opened his mouth as if to
argue, but vanished before any words could escape.
The next thing Tabitha knew, she was
back in Valerius's library right where she'd been standing.
"Tabitha?" Valerius asked
as he walked back into the room. "Did you not hear my question?"
Tabitha reached out to touch the
shelf nearest her to confirm that she was here. Yeah, she was back. But she
felt rather strange all of a sudden.
"No," she said to
Valerius. "I missed your question, sorry."
"Otto wanted to know if you
like mushrooms."
"I'm totally ambivalent to
them."
Valerius cast an amused look at her
before he relayed the information to Otto. After he finished ordering their
dinner, he put the phone back in his pocket. "Are you all right?"
No, she wasn't. The images and words
of Zarek and Ash tumbled through her mind.
And she wanted to know who to
believe.
"Where's your solarium?"
There was no missing the wave of
apprehension that went through Valerius. "My what?"
"Your solarium. You do have one
here, right?"
"I… uh, yes, I have one."
At least he didn't lie about it.
"Can I see it?"
He went rigid. "Why?"
"I like solariums. They're nice
rooms." Tabitha headed out of the library toward the other side of the
house. "Would it be this way?"
"No," Valerius said as he
followed her. "I still don't see why you'd want—"
"Humor me. Just for a sec,
okay?"
Valerius debated. Something wasn't
right with Tabitha, he could sense it. And yet he couldn't hide from the past;
and for some reason he didn't understand, he didn't want to hide anything from
her.
Inclining his head to her regally,
he took a backward step toward the stairs. "If you'll follow me."
He led her up the stairs to the room
beside his bedroom where the door was sealed with a keypad.
Tabitha watched him key in the code.
The lock clicked. Valerius took a deep breath before he swung it wide.
Tabitha's heart shrank as she saw
the statue in the middle of the solarium of a beautiful young woman. There was
an eternal flame burning beside it
She looked up at Valerius, who
refused to meet her eyes while he stared at the floor.
"So this is why you were
freaking out about the lamp oil. You must really have loved her."
Chapter 11
Valerius looked up at the statue as
Tabitha's words rang in his ears. As always Agrippina's face stared out into
nothingness. Blank. Cold.
Unfeeling.
His chest ached from the harsh
reality of the past and his own particular stupidity of trying to hang on to
something good from his human life.
"Honestly, I didn't even know
her," he said quietly. "I most likely never spoke more than a handful
of words to her during her lifetime and yet if I could have had a woman to love
me, I would have been grateful for it to have been her."
Tabitha was stunned by his
confession. "I don't understand. Why do you take care of a statue of a
woman you didn't know?"
"I'm pathetic." He gave a
bitter laugh. "No, actually I'm too pathetic for even the average
pathetic. I take care of her statue because I wasn't able to take care of
her." His anger and pain reached out to her and seized her heart.
"What are you talking
about?"
His entire body rigid, he stared off
to the side of the room. "Do you want the truth of me, Tabitha?
Really?"
"Yes, I do."
Folding his arms over his chest, he
moved away from her so that he could stare out the dark windows of the room,
into the elegant courtyard in back. "I was a genetic screw-up of titanic
proportions and I've never understood why. I've spent my entire life trying to
understand why I give a single shit about anyone when no one ever gave a damn
about me."
His profanity shocked her. It wasn't
like him to speak that way and that alone told her how volatile his mood was.
"There's nothing wrong about caring for other people."
"Yes, there is. Why should I
care? If I died right now, no one would miss me. Most of the people who know me
would openly rejoice."
Her throat tightened at the truth of
his statement and yet the thought of him dying…
It hurt to an unfathomable level.
"I would care, Valerius."
He shook his head at her. "How
could you? You barely know me. I'm not stupid. I've seen the people who are
your friends. None of them look like me. None of them act or speak like me. All
of you mock anyone you see who looks or acts like I do. Your kind hates us. You
dismiss us. I'm rich and cultured, I come from a noble Roman family, therefore
I must think myself above everyone else, so it's okay to be vicious and cold
whenever I'm around. We have no feelings to hurt. How could a Roman nobleman
give a single rat's ass for a slave? And yet two thousand years later, there
she stands and here I am, a noble watchdog for a humble slave because she was
afraid of the dark as a child, and I once made a promise to her that she
wouldn't have to sleep in darkness."
His words touched her so deeply that
it tightened her chest and almost succeeded in bringing tears to her eyes.
The mere fact that he'd kept his vow
to a simple slave…
"Why was she afraid of the
dark?"
A muscle worked in his jaw.
"She'd been the daughter of a wealthy merchant in a town my father had
destroyed. He'd brought her back to Rome intending to sell her at market when
my grandmother saw her and thought she'd make a good companion. My father made her
a gift to my grandmother, and Agrippina lived in terror all her life that
someone else would come for her in the dark of night and destroy her world
again."
His gaze turned haunted. "She
found out the hard way that the light can never keep the real monsters away.
They could care less who sees them."
Tabitha frowned. "I don't
understand."
He turned to face her with a
menacing glare. "Do you know what asterosum is?"
"No."
"It's an ancient drug that
completely paralyzes your body, but leaves you completely able to see, hear,
and feel. Roman physicians used it whenever they needed to amputate."
He winced as if something painful
went through him. She felt the agony of it in her own chest.
Valerius wrapped his arms around himself as if that could protect him somehow
from the horror of his past. "It was the drug my brothers gave me the night they
came to my villa. I had just taken over the Celtic city of Angaracia. Instead of razing it to the
ground and killing everyone as any other male in my family would have done, I
negotiated a surrender with the Celts. I thought it would be better if their
children didn't grow up to hate Rome and strive to avenge their people as so
many had done before them." He laughed bitterly. "It was my fatal
flaw."
"How could mercy be a
flaw?" she asked, aghast.
And even as the words came out, she
remembered the sight of his father. In Valerius's world, it would have been a
crime.
Valerius cleared his throat.
"Most of my assignments were in the outer provinces, fighting the Celts. I
was the only Roman of my time who had ever been truly successful against them,
mostly because I understood them. My brothers hated me for that. To them, the
only way to conquer a people was to destroy them."
"So they thought to kill
you?"
He nodded. "They came into my
house and drugged me. I lay on the floor completely helpless as they destroyed
everything around me. After they had ransacked my hall, they took me out into
the back courtyard to kill me. It was there they discovered Agrippina's
statue."
Tabitha looked up at the white
marble face from his past. "Why did you have her statue there?"
"Like my grandmother, I thought
she deserved to be saved. To be preserved. So, I commissioned the piece for my
private garden not long after she came to live with me."
A vicious stab of unwarranted
jealousy went through her. He might not have loved the woman, but he obviously
felt deeply for her. Especially since he'd spent thousands of years keeping a
promise to her.
"How did she end up with
you?" she asked quietly.
He drew a deep, ragged breath.
"My grandmother had summoned me home from the battlefield because she knew
she was dying and she was afraid for Agrippina. She knew the temperament of her
sons and grandsons, and Agrippina was a very beautiful and delicate woman who
had grown to mean a lot to her. I was the only one who had ever come to call on
her that she didn't have to keep from Agrippina's bed. So she asked me to take
Agrippina into my house and to keep her safe from the others."
Tabitha's throat tightened at his
kindness. "You fell in love with her?"
"I loved the idea of her, she
was beauty incarnate. Soft and kind. Things that had never existed in my world
before. Whenever I was home, I spent hours watching her from afar as she went
about her duties. And I often wondered if someone so beautiful could ever love
something as vile as me. Then I would castigate myself for wanting the love of
a slave. I was a noble Roman general. What did I need with a slave's
regard?"
Yet he had craved it. She knew that.
She could feel it.
Valerius grew silent. If she didn't
know better, she'd swear she saw tears in his eyes.
"They raped her in front of me
and I couldn't help her."
"Oh, Val," she breathed.
He moved away from her as she sought
to touch him. "I couldn't even close my eyes or turn my head. I lay there
completely helpless as they took pleasure violating her. The more she screamed,
the more they laughed, right up until the end when Markus ran her through with
my sword." The words were torn from his throat as tears welled in his
eyes.
"What good was I?" he
asked between clenched teeth, his nostrils flared by impotent rage. "What
good did I do her in the end? Had I never taken her into my home, they would
have at least allowed her to live."
Tabitha choked on her own tears as
he finally allowed her to pull him into her arms. She tried to blot out what
must have happened after they killed Agrippina.
She'd seen the scars on his wrist
and knew from him that they had crucified him. The horror that must have been
that night! No wonder he didn't want to remember the past.
And she would never again ask him
anything about it.
He was rigid for several seconds
before he relaxed. Then he wrapped his arms tightly around her and held her
close.
"What kind of man am I that
every act of kindness I ever attempt ends up hurting the very people I seek to
help?"
"You didn't hurt me or Marla or
Gilbert."
"Yet," he breathed.
"Agrippina lived in my home almost ten years before the Parcae hurt
her."
"No one's going to hurt me,
Valerius, trust me."
He brushed his hand lovingly over
her scarred cheek. "You have so much fire inside you. It warms me every
time you near me."
"Warms you? Most people are
consumed by it. My ex used to say that I was completely exhausting to be
around. He'd tell me that I wore him out and that he needed at least two to
three days to recoup for every hour he spent with me."
He offered her a small smile.
"I don't find you exhausting."
"And I don't find you
pathetic."
That succeeded in bringing out a
laugh from him. "What is it about you, Tabitha? I've only known you a few
days and I feel as if I could tell you anything."
"I don't know, but I feel the
same way about you." She reached up and pulled his head down so that she
could kiss him.
Valerius moaned at the taste of her.
At the feel of her. In her arms, he didn't feel pathetic or rigid. She allowed
him to laugh and to feel joy again.
No, she allowed him to feel joy for
the first time in his life. No one but Tabitha had ever reached out and
embraced him.
She knew he was stodgy and she
accepted it. Instead of turning him away, she poked gentle fun at him and then
worked around it.
She didn't write him off.
In all of history, she alone had
befriended him. And that made her the most precious woman on earth.
Tabitha pulled back. "How much
time do we have before Otto gets here with food?"
He checked his watch. "Probably
twenty to thirty minutes. Why?"
She smiled. 'That'll do."
Before he could ask her more, she
pulled her shirt off and wrapped it around his neck, then crooked her finger
for him to follow her.
"Come with me, General. I'm
going to rock your world."
Little did she know, she'd done that
the minute he'd first seen her fighting the Daimons, and she'd been doing it
steadily ever since.
Stryker had finally managed to calm
himself. At least on the outside.
Inside he was still seething.
Damn the Destroyer and her lies and
damn Acheron Parthenopaeus for his honesty.
If it was the last thing he did, he
would rid the world of both of them. But he had to move carefully.
Strategically.
If the Destroyer ever learned that
he'd been the one to give Aima to Desiderius so that the Spathi could wound
Acheron, his life would be meaningless. No, he'd have to move with great skill
to defeat them both, and he would.
Eventually.
The air around him sizzled with a
request from Desiderius for a bolt hole so that the Spathi could return from
New Orleans to the realm of Kalosis, the Atlantean hell realm.
Here there was no light. It was
perpetually dark and dismal. Up until the night he had slain his own son, that
hadn't bothered him.
Now it did.
Stryker held his hand out and opened
the portal.
Desiderius returned, still a
bodiless mist.
Stryker curled his lip at the
incompetent Daimon. There had been a time once when he'd held the Daimon in
regard, but Desiderius's failure against a simple Dark-Hunter and his human
paramour had left Stryker completely disgusted with the being.
If it wasn't for the fact that he
didn't want to bring himself under the fire of the Destroyer, he wouldn't have
even allowed Desiderius this one chance to return to corporeal form. But in
exchange for Desiderius wounding Acheron, Stryker was willing to reincarnate
the Daimon.
"I thought you were going
to—"
"What am I up against?" Desiderius
asked as his faceless, formless essence flickered in the dimly lit chamber.
"You know what you're up
against."
"No," Desiderius said.
"What was that substance you gave me that took down the Dark-Hunter
leader?"
"It's of no concern to you.
Your only concern is to bring me the child."
"I don't understand why."
Stryker laughed. "And you never
will. Bring me the child or I will blast you into oblivion."
If he didn't know better, he'd swear
the ghost actually sneered at him.
"I was blasted out of the
bitch's body by Acheron. They are now guarded. I need another body."
Stryker paused as he heard Daimons
shrieking from outside his hall. No doubt Apollymi's Charontes were still
seeking the one who had stolen the Aima from her.
None of them would look to him for
it. They wouldn't dare.
In truth, he was in no mood to play
any longer. His mother, the Destroyer, had said to wait.
He was through waiting.
The day he had spilled his own son's
blood to appease the Destroyer was the day he had started to notice some
things.
And when his mother had bade him to
bring her the little child of a former Dark-Hunter and a human sorceress, he
had realized something. That child, known as Marissa Hunter, held in her hands
the very balance of the universe.
Whoever possessed her, possessed the
key to control the most primal, ancient power of all time.
She was the fate of the entire
world.
The Destroyer sought to have the
child for her own so that she would be in control.
Stryker bit back his bitter
laughter. She would have Marissa over his own dead body. In the end, it would
be he who controlled the Final Fate. Not Apollymi.
"Arod, Tiber, Sirus,
Allegra!" he called.
The four Spathi commanders appeared
before him. Three men and one woman. Stryker took a minute to scan their
perfect, beautiful bodies. All four Daimons appeared physically to be no older
than twenty-seven… just like him. And just like him, they had been around since
time immemorial. Allegra was the youngest of their group, but even she was a
staggering nine thousand years old.
Trained to kill and to take and
possess human souls to live, his army had no equal.
It was time mankind met them.
"You called us, akri?" Tiber
asked.
Stryker nodded. "Desiderius is
in need of a body to do my bidding."
The four Daimons looked at each
other nervously.
"Relax," Stryker said.
"I'm not asking any of you to volunteer yourselves. Oh, no. Far from it. The
four of you are to be his bodyguards."
"But, akri," Allegra said
quietly, "he has no body to guard."
Stryker laughed maniacally.
"Yes, he does." He splayed his hand out and an image appeared in the
center of the room. Dressed all in black, the Dark-Hunter was walking alone on
the streets of New Orleans.
"There's your body,
Desiderius," he said. "And there's your ticket into the Hunter
household. Now you bring me that baby or all of you will die…
permanently."
As they started to shimmer out of
the room, Stryker stopped them with one last order. "Acheron took from me
the only thing I have ever loved. In memory of my son he stole from me, I
command you to make the humans Acheron loves pay. I want to see blood flowing
in the streets of New Orleans. Do you understand?"
Desiderius smiled wickedly.
"Understood, akri. Definitely understood."
Valerius growled at how good Tabitha
felt against him. Completely naked in his arms, she kissed him fiercely as her
hand gently stroked his hard cock from tip to hilt.
His black shirt hung open. Unlike
her, he was still mostly dressed.
"Otto is on his way," he
said raggedly as she dipped her head down to suckle his hard nipple.
It was difficult to think straight
while her hand massaged him so expertly.
"Then we better get down to
business," she said with a laugh as she climbed up on his bed.
Valerius couldn't breathe at the
sight of her naked on his black duvet.
He watched as she spread her legs
open in invitation.
She hooked her ankles around his
hips and pulled him forward.
He hissed as she reached between
their bodies and lowered his pants enough so that she could slide herself onto
him.
Arching her back, she drew him in
deep as she moaned and writhed against him. Valerius leaned forward onto one
arm as he stared down at her naked body moving underneath him. With both feet
still on the floor, he thrust deep inside her warm, wet body.
"That's it, baby," she
panted as she met him equally.
Valerius thrust harder as he let her
touch soothe him. He cupped her breast with his hand, delighting in the soft,
supple texture of it. His mouth watered for a taste of her.
Tabitha groaned as Valerius dipped
his head down and took her breast into his mouth while he continued to thrust
against her hips. She loved the way this man felt when he was inside her. The
way he looked, primal and savage.
There was something seriously erotic
about a man this controlled losing it all whenever he touched her. She liked
the fact that he could drop his guard when they were alone.
That he didn't judge her.
Closing her eyes, she clutched his
head to her as he moved even faster against her. There was nothing better than
him pounding himself into her over and over again. Than his tongue working its
magic on her breast.
Unable to stand it, she pulled his
lips away from her breast so that she could kiss him. His eyes were dark with
his passion, his face a bit flushed from their exertion.
She ground herself against him as
she sank her hands into his long hair and nipped his lips with her teeth.
Valerius growled in his throat as
Tabitha licked her way to his ear where her tongue swirled around his lobe and
made chills spread all over his body.
It drove him past his control. He
wanted to be even deeper inside her.
Pulling out of her, he rolled her
over, onto her stomach and positioned her so that she was bent over the bed
with her buttocks exposed.
"Val?"
He brushed the hair away from her
neck as he drove himself back into her body. She cried out in pleasure as he
buried himself all the way to the hilt.
Some inner, wild part of him roared
to life. He cupped her breasts in his hands while the scent of their passion
filled his head.
Tabitha couldn't breathe as Valerius
took control. He left one hand cupping her breast while the other trailed down
her body, past her belly ring to bury it between her legs.
"Oh, Val," she sobbed,
aching from the pleasure of his touch. His fingers delved deep in her cleft as
he stroked her in time to his thrusts.
Her head spun.
She'd never felt so strangely
desirable. So needed.
"I love the way you smell,
Tabitha," Valerius breathed in her ear.
She felt him brush his fangs against
her throat. "Are you going to bite me, Val?"
She felt him hesitate as one fang
hovered dangerously close to her jugular.
"I've never wanted to bite
anyone before," he said raggedly.
"And now?"
He moved even faster against her.
"I want to devour you."
Tabitha cried out as she came
instantly.
Valerius clenched his teeth as he
felt her shuddering. The foreign part of him still begged to taste her. It
begged to possess her.
It was wild and frightening.
He nipped her throat, but forced
himself not to break her skin. But it was hard.
It was damn near impossible.
And when he climaxed a minute later,
he heard that alien part of himself roar in triumph.
He held her close until the last
tremor shook him. Completely drained, he turned her around and then sank to his
knees in front of her.
Tabitha was awed by the sight of the
proud Roman warrior kneeling before her. He wrapped his arms around her waist
and laid his head carefully against her stomach.
Gently, she ran her hands through
his hair.
He pulled back to look up at her
with a searching gaze that seared her. "I don't know why you're here,
Tabitha, but I'm glad that you are."
She smiled down at him.
His gaze locked on hers, he nibbled
the sensitive flesh of her stomach, just below her belly ring. Biting her
lip, she moaned as he tongued the moon that dangled from her hoop, Then he
licked in and around her navel, making her body burn even more.
And when he sank two fingers inside
her, she thought she might actually collapse.
"You are so
beautiful, Tabitha," he said, spreading her open so that he could stare at
the most intimate part of her body.
She couldn't breathe as he took her
into his mouth and used that incredible tongue to taste her intimately. She
spread her legs even wider, to give him more access as he slid his tongue
through the tender folds.
Tabitha stared down at him. He
seemed to enjoy tasting her as much as she enjoyed being tasted.
And he took his time exploring her.
"Hey, Valerius?"
He jerked away at the sound of Otto
in the hallway. Still he left one finger inside her that continued to pleasure
and probe her.
Rising slowly to his feet, he slid
another finger into her body. "What have you done to me, Tabitha?" he
breamed raggedly in her ear. "Otto's in the hallway and all I can think of
is being inside you again. Of licking you until I can taste your climax."
His unexpected comment made her moan
deep in her throat at the thought of what he described. "Get rid of Otto
and I'm yours for the night."
He kissed her passionately, then
squeezed her butt in his hands. "Stay naked. I want to eat my dinner off
you."
Tabitha bit her lip as a shudder
went through her. "You got it."
Valerius pulled away and quickly
buttoned his shirt and fastened his pants. He cast one hot, promising look at
her before he slipped out of the bedroom and left her alone.
Tabitha pulled down his bedcovers and slid herself between the dark silk sheets that held his spicy mascuhne
scent.
Wrapping her arms around his pillow,
she inhaled deeply.
"What am I doing?" she
asked herself. She was literally sleeping with the enemy and she was enjoying
it way too much.
Worse, she didn't want to leave.
Ever.
"My gift in life," she
said under her breath. She seemed to be forever drawn to the men she could
never have.
She should leave here and go bunk
with Amanda and Kyrian, but she couldn't bring herself to leave Valerius. What
would he do without her?
More importantly, what would she do
without him?
Chapter 12
Ash drew up short as he saw Kyrian
in his upstairs office through the slightly ajar door. It was well after four
a.m. and though Kyrian occasionally stayed up late with Amanda, it was unusual
to find the former Dark-Hunter up alone.
Cocking his head, he watched through
the crack as Kyrian bent over a stack of papers, pulling at his hair. Ash could
sense the frustration.
He knocked lightly on the door so as
not to startle him.
Kyrian looked up, then pulled the
glasses off his face. "Oh, hey," he said in a low tone as Ash pushed
the door open a bit. "I thought you might be Amanda, begging me to come to
bed."
"Not for all the money in the
universe," Ash said as he walked in. He moved to stand in front of the
black, kidney-shaped, Chippendale desk where official papers and handwritten
notes were scattered. "What are you doing up so late?"
"I couldn't sleep. I…"
Kyrian ground his teeth.
"What?" Ash asked, worried
about his long-time friend.
Kyrian let out one long, tired
breath. "You have no idea what this is like, Ash. How hard every day is.
Do you even remember being human?"
Ash set his backpack down on the
floor as he heard Kyrian's thoughts. They were disoriented and panicky.
Normally, Ash wouldn't answer any
questions about his past, but his friend needed comfort; in all honesty, given
the crap that had gone on tonight between Nick, Simi, Zarek, Tabitha, the
Destroyer, and Daimons, so did he. "Yeah, I remember being human, but I do
my damnedest not to dwell there."
"Yeah, but no offense, you were
young when you died. You have no idea of the responsibility I carry."
Ash had to bite back a bitter laugh
at that. If Kyrian only knew…
He'd trade fates and
responsibilities with the former Greek general in a heartbeat.
"Look at this," Kyrian
said, pushing a sheet of paper at him. "Forget the damned Daimons, the
scariest thing on this planet are lawyers and insurance brokers. My God, do you
know the statistics for traffic accidents? I'm terrified to put my kid or wife
in the car at all. My medicine cabinet that used to hold nothing but toothpaste
and bandages now has Advil, Sudafed, Bengay, Lipitor, and Benicar. I have high
blood pressure, high cholesterol—"
"Well, you did abuse your body
for the last forty years with junk food."
"I was immortal!" Kyrian
snapped, then his face went ashen. "I'm going to die again, Ash. Only this
time, I doubt Artemis will be there to offer me a trade." He raked a hand
through his hair. "My wife is going to die one day, and Marissa…"
"Don't think about it."
Kyrian's eyes snapped at him.
"Don't think about it? That's easy for you to say. You're not going to
die. And death is all I can think about, especially since Amanda keeps having
her nightmares. I'm human now. I can't protect them like I could before."
"That's why Kassim and I are
here."
Kyrian shook his head, then reached
for his glasses. "And I hate these damned things that I have to wear so I
can read all the fine print that's designed to steal my soul even more
effectively than the goddess did. What happened to me, Acheron? Yesterday, I
was the baddest thing stalking the night. The Daimons trembled in fear of me.
Now what am I? I'm so pathetic that I have to bribe Nick to slip beignets into
the house and hide in a closet to eat one so Amanda doesn't find out and ream
me a new one. I have sinus problems. My back aches at night if I sleep wrong.
My knees are shot to hell and yesterday when I bent over to pick up Marissa, I
almost fell. Growing old really sucks."
Ash gave him an arch stare.
"Are you telling me you want to go back?"
Kyrian looked away sheepishly.
"At times I do, and then I look at my wife and I think what a selfish
bastard I am. I love her so much that it hurts deep down in places I never knew
existed. Whenever I think of her being hurt or Marissa… I can't breathe. I
can't live. I hate feeling helpless. I hate knowing that I'm going to grow old
and die on them."
"You're not going to die,
Kyrian."
"How do you know?" he
snapped.
"I won't let you."
Kyrian scoffed at him. "As if
you could stop it. We both know I have no choice except to die as an old man…
if I'm lucky and make it that long and don't drop dead of a heart attack, car
accident, food poisoning, or a million other catastrophes." He hung his
head in his hands.
Ash truly felt for his friend. It
was hard to be human. Hell, it was hard to live at all.
Life was definitely not for the
meek. Every time something seemed to go right, at least three or four things
had to go wrong. It was just the law of nature.
"Amanda's pregnant again,"
Kyrian breathed after a small pause.
In spite of the dire tone, Ash
sensed his happiness. And his terror. "Congratulations."
"Thanks." Kyrian looked at
the stack of papers on his desk. "I'm trying to get my will in order, just
in case."
Ash stifled an urge to laugh at his
fatalistic friend. "You're not going to die, Kyrian," he reiterated.
He knew Kyrian wasn't listening to
him. He was too busy fixating on all the things that could go wrong with not
just Amanda and the baby, but himself.
"Will you be the baby's
godfather again?" Kyrian asked quietly.
"Of course."
"Thank you. Now, if you don't
mind, I have to have this in with the attorney and insurance company
tomorrow."
"All right. Good night,
General."
"Night, Acheron."
Ash pulled his backpack up from the
floor and shut the door as he left. He paused in the hallway to find Amanda
standing in her bedroom door, wrapped in a cream bathrobe. There were tears in
her eyes.
Ash closed the distance between
them. "You okay?"
She shrugged. "Is it like this
for all of those who regain their souls?"
Sighing, he nodded. "It's hard
to readjust. You spend hundreds to thousands of years thinking you literally
have all the time in the world where nothing can touch you and your body never
hurts for more than a few hours, only to become mortal and realize that you
only have thirty or forty years left if you're lucky. You're now susceptible to
death and disease just like everyone else. It's not an easy mindset. The first
real paper cut damn near kills them."
A single tear went down her cheek.
She wiped it away and sniffed daintily. "I wish I had left him as he was.
I wish you had told me this would happen."
"Told you what, Amanda?"
he asked. "That the two of you would spend the rest of your lives loving
each other? Raising your kids? Neither one of you have any idea how miraculous
your life is. How many people would gladly sell their souls for what you have.
Forget Artemis and immortality. What you have is infinitely more precious and
rare."
His heart clenched as his anger at
both of them swelled over the fact that they were doubting their love and
whether they had made the right decision. "Even I would trade all my
immortality for one single day of what you two have."
He took her scarred hand into his
and held it up so that she could see the place where Kyrian's soul had burned
her hand when she returned it to his body. "I asked you once if he was
worth it. Do you remember what you said to me?"
"I would walk through the fires
of hell to die for him."
Ash nodded. "And I would walk
through the fires of hell to keep you both safe."
"I know."
He tightened his grip on her hand.
"Do you really wish you had left him to his Dark-Hunter life?"
She shook her head. "I would
die without him."
"And he would die without
you."
She wiped her eyes and smiled at
him. "Oh, I'm just tired and pregnant. I hate this emotional hormonal
state. I'm sorry to dump all over you when I'm sure it's the last thing you need."
Standing on her tiptoes, she pulled him down so that she could hug him.
Ash clenched his hand into a fist
against her back as he savored the kindness of her touch. It was rare for
anyone to touch him as a friend and it meant everything to him.
"I love you, Ash," she
breathed before she kissed his cheek. "You're the best friend anyone could
ever ask for." Except for Nick…
Ash winced as he recalled his
earlier anger. He shouldn't have done what he did. It wasn't often he gave rein
to his rage. Simi was one of the few triggers that was still left inside him.
Up until Nick had sullied her, she had been the only pristine thing left in his
life.
Part of him hated Nick for what he'd
done.
But the sane, rational part of him
understood. Even so, he couldn't forgive what they had done. He was afraid of
how it would change Simi. Of what she might become…
"Is Nick okay?"
Amanda looked extremely
uncomfortable. "He was busted up pretty badly. I tried to get him to go to
the hospital, but he refused. He said he'd had enough broken ribs in his life
to know how to tend them. So Kyrian and Talon taped him up and sent him
home."
Ash nodded. "Keep an eye on
him."
"What about you? Aren't you
going to check on him?"
"I can't. At least not for
awhile. I need time to get past this and I can't guarantee that I won't hurt
him again. God knows, Nick has a true gift for saying the wrong thing in any
given situation."
He saw the agreement on her face.
"You know he loves you, right?"
"Yeah, but emotions don't have
brains."
"No, I don't guess they
do."
Ash gently pushed her toward her
bedroom. "Go get some sleep."
Amanda took a step away, then paused
and turned back to face him. "Ash?"
"Yeah?"
"Why did you put Tabitha with
Valerius?"
"For the same reason I handed
you Kyrian's soul on the day we first met."
"You have to know that there
will never be peace between the two of them. Ever. Tabitha can't bring Valerius
into our family. It's just not fair to Kyrian."
"Maybe, but the real question
is this: Had you met Valerius before Kyrian, would you still feel the same way
toward the Roman? And if Tabitha had married Valerius and then you found
Kyrian, how would you feel if she told you that you had to let him go?"
Amanda looked away.
"Exactly, Amanda. In order to
have a future, Kyrian needs to let go of the past."
Tabitha sucked her breath in sharply
between her teeth as Valerius licked the salted garlic butter off her breast.
He laughed playfully with her nipple between his teeth as he looked up at her.
He pulled back long enough to dip
another piece of shrimp in butter before holding it up for her to bite into.
Tabitha licked his fingers sensuously as she ate from his hand.
"I think we set a record for
longest meal in history."
Valerius smiled at that as he placed
another shrimp on her right nipple. The butter ran down the side of her breast.
He licked it off her skin before he went after the shrimp and devoured it.
Tabitha smoothed his hair back from
his face. "See, I knew you Romans were raw with this kind of stuff. I was
right, wasn't I?"
"You were right," he said
as he squeezed a lemon over her stomach.
Her toes actually curled as he
lapped the juice off her.
His whiskers gently brushed her
stomach, sending chills all over her. "You are so wonderful," she
said quietly.
Valerius froze at her words. No one
had ever said such a thing to him before.
No one.
And in that moment, he had a
terrifying thought. He was going to have to let her go.
Some unknown force slammed into his
chest at the thought. It stole the breath completely away from him.
Life without Tabitha.
How could such a thought slice
through him when he'd only just met her? And yet as he tried to imagine going
back to his cold, sterile world where people ignored, mocked, and disregarded
him, he wanted to shout at the injustice.
He wanted to keep her.
The desire to bind her to him was
feral and unreasoning. It was also selfish and wrong.
Tabitha had a family who loved her.
Her family had always been a major part of her life. He'd seen it himself. The
love. The care.
His family had been a nightmare of
jealousy and cruelty. But hers…
He couldn't take her away from them.
It wouldn't be right.
"Valerius? Is something
wrong?"
He offered her a half-smile.
"No."
"I don't believe you."
Valerius lay on top of her and just
listened to her breathe. She cradled him with her body and he reveled at the
feel of her skin against his. Of her arms and legs wrapped around his bare
body.
But it wasn't just his skin that was
naked. His spirit was stripped bare as well.
He would give anything to have this
woman and she was the one person he could never keep.
It wasn't fair.
Tabitha stroked Valerius's back as
she felt his emotions. He was filled with angry despair and she didn't know
why.
"Baby," she whispered.
"Talk to me."
"Why do you call me baby?"
His breath tickled against her breast.
"Does it bother you?"
"No. I've just never had anyone
else use an endearment when they talked to me. It's odd to hear it from
you."
She ran her hand over the scars of
his back as her heart clenched for him. "Were you ever in love?" she
asked.
He shook his head. "I only had
Agrippina."
"But you never touched
her?"
"No. I slept with others who
had a choice about being with me."
She frowned at that. "But you
didn't love any of them?"
"No." He angled his head
so that he could look up at her. "What about you? Have you ever been in
love?"
She sighed as she remembered her
past and the one person she had wanted to share the rest of her Me with.
"I loved Eric. I wanted to marry him so badly that when he broke up with
me, I thought I would die from the pain of it."
She felt jealousy cut through
Valerius. "Why did he break up with you?"
She traced the fine line of his left
eyebrow, then buried her hand in his hair to toy with it while she explained
herself. "He said I burned him out."
Tears filled her eyes as she
remembered that summer day when Eric had come over and ended the only decent
relationship she'd ever had. "He said that as hard as it was to keep up with
me while he was in his mid-twenties, he was terrified of trying to keep up with
me at forty. He told me that if I could give up the vampire hunting and my
store that we might stand a chance. But how could I ever give up the things
that mean so much to me? I live to hunt. I owe it to those who can't fight for
themselves."
Valerius lifted himself up and
gently kissed away her tears. "Eric was a fool."
She smiled at that as his lean,
muscled body slid sensuously against hers. Oh, he was delectable. All that
strength and power…
And she wondered who he'd gone after
once he became a Dark-Hunter.
"Who did you take revenge
on?" she asked quietly.
He went rigid as he pulled away.
"Why do you want to know?"
"I was just curious. I slashed
Eric's car tires when he broke up with me."
His face was aghast. "No, you
didn't."
She nodded. "I would have done
more, but decided that that was enough to get my anger out. He had really nice
Pirelli tires," she confessed.
He shook his head at her and
laughed. "It's a good thing I don't drive, then."
"And you're avoiding my
question," she said, tapping the end of his nose with her finger.
"Tell me, Valerius. I won't think any less of you, I swear."
Valerius lay down beside her as his
buried memories surfaced. He normally did his best not to recall those last
hours of his human life. To remember the first night of his immortality.
He propped himself up on his elbow
as he traced circles around Tabitha's breast. He adored the fact that she
wasn't body conscious. Their nudity didn't bother her in the least.
"Val?" she prompted.
She wasn't going to let him escape.
Taking a deep breath, he paused his hand over her belly ring. "I killed my
brothers."
Tabitha traced the line of his jaw
as she felt his pain and guilt.
"They were drinking and
wenching with their slaves when I arrived. I will never forget the look of
terror on their faces when they saw me and realized what I was there for. I
should have let them go, but I couldn't." He moved away from her with eyes
that were filled with torment and pain. "What kind of man kills his own
brothers?"
Tabitha sat up and caught his arm as
he left the bed. "They killed you first."
"And as the old saying goes,
two wrongs don't make a right. We were family and I cut them down like they
were enemy strangers." He raked his hand through his hair. "I even
killed my own father."
"No," she said earnestly,
tightening the grip on his arm. "Zarek killed your father, not you."
He frowned at her. "How do you
know that?"
"Ash told me."
His face turned to stone as he
glared at her. "And did he tell you how Zarek killed him? He ran my father
through with my sword. A sword I handed to him after my father begged for me to
save him."
She felt his ache and wanted to give
him peace. "No offense, but your father was a bastard who deserved to be
butchered."
"No," he said, shaking his
head. "No one deserves what happened to him. He was my father and I betrayed
him. What I did was wrong. So wrong. It was just like the night when…"
Tabitha couldn't breathe as a
terrible wave of guilt sliced through her. She sat up on the bed. "What,
baby? What night?"
Valerius clenched his fists as he
tried to block out the memories of his childhood. It was impossible.
Over and over he saw the violence,
heard the screams that echoed across the centuries even now.
He had never been able to block it
out.
Before he realized what he was
doing, he told her what he had never told another single soul. "I was five
when Kyrian died and I was there the night he came for his vengeance against my
grandfather. That was how I knew what Zarek was the night he came for my
father. How I knew to call out Artemis when I died. I…"
He shook his head to clear it. But
it was hard. The images of the past were still crystal clear and haunting.
"My grandfather had kept me up late that night to tell me how glorious it
was to triumph over a worthy adversary even if it's by treachery. I was in the
hall with him when we heard the horses outside reacting to something. You could
feel that something evil was there. It clung to the air. Then we heard the
guards shouting and dying. My grandfather pushed me into a cabinet to hide
while he grabbed his sword."
Valerius winced. "There was a
crack in the wood and I could see straight into the hall. I saw Kyrian come in.
He was completely wild as he and my grandfather fought. My grandfather was no
match for his fury. But Kyrian wasn't content to just kill him. He butchered
him. Piece by piece. Inch by inch, until there was nothing left that resembled
a human being at all. I kept my ears covered and choked on my sobs. I wanted to
be sick, but I was terrified that Kyrian would hear me and butcher me, too.
"So I sat there like a coward
in the darkness until there was complete silence in the hall. I looked and saw
nothing but the red-stained floor and walls."
He raked his hand over his eyes as
if to blot out the images that still tormented him. "I crept from the
cabinet and remember staring at the way my grandfather's blood coated my
sandals. And then I screamed until I lost my voice from the terror of it. For years,
I kept thinking that if I had run for help maybe I could have saved him. That
if I'd left the cabinet, I could have done something."
"You were just a child."
He refused her comfort. He knew
better. "I wasn't a child when I walked away and left my father to
die."
Valerius cupped her cheek in his
hand. She was so beautiful. Courageous.
Unlike him, she had morals and
kindness.
He had no right to touch something
so precious, so priceless. "I am not a decent man, Tabitha. I have destroyed
everyone I've ever touched and you… you are goodness. You have to leave while
you can. Please. You can't stay with me. I'll destroy you, too. I know I
will."
"Valerius," she said,
taking his hand into hers. She felt his aching need to touch her. Felt his
desire to keep her safe and protect her.
Pulling him into her arms, she held
him quietly in the darkness. "You are a good man, Valerius Magnus. You are
honor and decency, and I'll hurt anyone who says otherwise… even you."
Valerius closed his eyes as he held
her. He cupped her head in his hand and savored her warmth and kindness.
And in that moment, he realized
something that terrified him more than anything else.
He was falling in love with Tabitha
Devereaux. Brazen temptress, vampire slayer, complete uncouth lunatic woman
that she was, he loved her.
And there was no way he could have
her. None.
What was he going to do?
How could he give up the only thing
he'd ever had that was worth anything? Yet it was because he loved her that he
understood why he had to do this.
She belonged with her family and he
belonged to Artemis.
He'd sworn himself to the goddess's
service centuries ago. The only way for a Dark-Hunter to be free of that oath
was for someone to love them enough to survive Artemis's test.
Amanda had loved Kyrian enough.
Sunshine had loved Talon, and Astrid had loved Zarek.
Tabitha was certainly strong enough
to survive the test. But could a woman like her ever love someone like him
enough to free him?
Even as the thought went through his
head, he realized just how stupid he was.
Artemis wasn't about to let another
Dark-Hunter go free, and even if she was, Tabitha would never be his. He
refused to ever come between her and her family.
He might need her, but in the end,
she needed them a lot more. He was used to surviving alone. She wasn't.
He wasn't cruel enough to ask her to
choose the impossible when the impossible would cost her everything she held
dear.
Chapter 13
The next two weeks were truly hell
on earth after dark. It seemed as if the Daimons lived only to play with and
torment them.
No one was safe. The city had even
tried to implement a curfew at Acheron's behest, but since New Orleans was a
twenty-four-hour party town, they hadn't been able to enforce it.
The body count was unlike anything
Tabitha had ever heard of outside of a Hollywood Movie, and the Squire's
Council and Acheron were having a hard time hiding all the deaths from the
police and news agencies. But what scared her most was the fact that what few
Daimons they caught were damn near impossible to kill.
Every night she came back to
Valerius's house in pain from the abuse to her body. She knew he didn't want
her to go out with him to patrol and yet he never said anything.
Valerius merely spent an hour or two
after they returned home massaging Icy Hot into her pains and bandaging up her
wounds.
It was unfair that he never had
aches and pains, and what few scuffs his body suffered were always gone after a
few hours.
Tabitha now lay naked in the shelter
of his arms. He was asleep and yet he held her firmly tucked in beside him as
if he were afraid of losing her.
That warmed her more than anything
else ever had. She should have gotten up hours ago. It was already after four
in the afternoon, but since she'd moved in with Valerius she'd become a
certified night owl.
Her head lay against his biceps and
his right arm was thrown over her waist. She ran her hand over his forearm as
she studied that tawny masculine skin.
Valerius had beautiful hands. Long
and tapered, they were strong and well-shaped. These last few weeks they had
given her so much comfort and pleasure that she could barely breathe from the
happiness that consumed her whenever she thought of him.
Her phone rang.
Tabitha scooted out from under him
to answer it.
It was Amanda.
"Hey, sis," she said a
little hesitantly. Over the last two weeks, there had been a major strain on
their relationship.
"Hi, Tabby, I was wondering if
I could come over for a little while and talk to you."
Tabitha rolled her eyes at the idea.
"I don't need another lecture, Mandy."
"I swear it's not a lecture.
It's one sister to another. Please."
"Okay," she said quietly
after a brief internal debate, then gave Val's address.
"I'll see you in a few
minutes."
Tabitha hung up the phone, then
crept toward the bed. Valerius lay on his side with his hair fanned out around
him. Stubble shadowed his face and yet he looked almost boyish as he lay there.
Even asleep the muscles of his body
were evident and defined. Dark hairs lightly dusted every perfect dip and
curve, making the terrain of his skin all the more masculine and alluring.
But it wasn't just his handsomeness
that appealed to her. It was his heart. The way he could take care of her
without taking over her. She knew he didn't like it when she fought beside him
and yet he never said one word against it. He merely stood by and let her fight
her own battles. The only time he interfered was whenever she was in over her
head.
Then he would charge in and save her
without making her feel incompetent or weak.
Tabitha smiled at the sleeping image
of him.
How could someone come to mean so
much to her in such a short period of time?
Shaking her head, she reached to
dress and thought about the first time Valerius had seen the tattoo on the
small of her back, a small Celtic triangle.
"Why would you mark yourself
intentionally?" he'd asked as if aghast at the very idea.
"It's sexy."
He'd curled his lip at that and yet
now he took a great deal of pleasure kissing and massaging the tattoo in the
mornings when they returned from their patrols.
Impulsively, she picked up his black
silk shirt from the floor and put it on. She loved the way his spicy male scent
clung to the fabric. The way it clung to her skin.
She pulled on her pants, then went
downstairs to wait for Amanda.
"Hey, Tab."
She turned to the left at the bottom
of the stairs to spy Otto using the computer in Valerius's study. It was the
only piece of technology she'd been able to find in Val's entire house except
for the massive DVD collection that he kept hidden in a vault in his office,
which explained his knowledge of pop culture.
"Hey, Otto, whatcha working
on?"
"Trying to track the Daimon
menace as always. I'm using Brax's program to see if there's a pattern we can
follow to predict where they might be tonight."
She nodded. Otto had slowly warmed
up to her, and since the Daimon attacks had started, he'd reverted to his basic
black wardrobe.
Today he had on a black turtleneck,
charcoal sweater, and black slacks. She had to admit he was a good-looking man
when he wasn't trying to be a tasteless slob.
He'd even given up the IROC and now
drove his Jag, claiming that it was no longer fun to antagonize Valerius since
the Roman was so distracted by Tabitha that he never reacted to Otto's ribbings
anymore. Nor was Gilbert there to react to him either.
She moved into the study to look
over his shoulder. "Have you found anything?"
"No. There isn't a pattern,
yet. I just don't understand what has caused this. If they want Kyrian, why
haven't they moved on him?"
She sighed irritably. "They're
playing with us. You weren't here for Round One with Desiderius. He gets off on
making us afraid of him and on toying with our heads."
"Yeah, but I'm getting sick of
the escalating body count. Ten people died last night and the Council is having
a hard time hiding all this from the authorities. The public is freaking and
they've only heard about a percentage of the actual total."
Tabitha cringed. "How many
Daimons were killed last night?"
"Only a dozen. The four you and
Val took out, Ash killed five, and then Janice, Jean-Luc, and Zoe killed one
each. The rest of the bastards got away."
"Damn."
"Yeah, I don't like being on
the losing side of anything. This really sucks."
Tabitha scowled as his list ran
through her head. "You know, it's pretty sad when I'm human and I can take
out more Daimons than a Dark-Hunter."
Otto gave her a droll stare.
"You're not out there on your own."
She blew him a raspberry. "For
the record, Valerius helps me, not the other way around."
"Riiiight."
Tabitha laughed at his playful
scoffing until another thought occurred to her. "What about Ulric?"
"What about him?"
"How many did he kill?"
"None, why?"
None? That wasn't right. "He
didn't kill any the night before, either, did he?"
"No."
A bad feeling went through her. No,
surely she was wrong.
It wouldn't be possible, would it?
"Where did most of the kills
occur last night?" she asked.
Otto punched a key and changed the
monitor screen to a map of the French Quarter. She saw the areas highlighted in
red wherever someone had died. There was a heavy concentration of red marks in
the northeast quadrant.
"Who was assigned that
area?"
Otto checked another screen.
"Ulric."
She went cold. "And yet he
didn't kill any Daimons?" she asked in disbelief.
Otto's gaze narrowed. "What are
you saying?"
"Desiderius needs a body…
Valerius said back when all this started that if a Daimon ever took over a
Dark-Hunter—"
"That's bullshit, Tabitha. I
saw Ulric last night myself and he was fine."
"But what if I'm right? What if
Desiderius has taken him over?"
"You're wrong. Desiderius
wouldn't be able to lay a hand on him. He was a medieval warlord. If there's
one thing Ulric knows how to do, it's protect himself." Maybe.
The buzzer sounded for the gate.
"It should be my sister."
Otto swung his chair around to the
small video console that showed an image of the car's driver. It was Amanda.
He buzzed her in.
Tabitha went to meet her at the
door, even though she couldn't shake the feeling that something wasn't right
with Ulric. In spite of what Otto said, she wanted proof that she was wrong.
Tonight, she'd meet the Dark-Hunter
herself and decide if her fear held any validity and if it did, he would be
Daimon dust.
Swinging open the door, she saw
Amanda getting out of her Toyota in the driveway. She was dressed in a pair of
nice black slacks, a dark green silk top, and black sweater. It was really good
to see her again.
Silently, Tabitha stood in the open
doorway as she waited for Amanda to draw near.
Amanda gave her a tight hug as soon
as she reached her. "I've missed you."
"I'm only a couple of blocks
away."
"I know, but we haven't talked
much lately."
Tabitha squeezed her back, then let
her go. "I know. It's kind of hard to talk right now."
Amanda brushed the hair back from
Tabitha's face in a very motherly fashion and smiled. "You look happy
underneath that suspiciousness; are you?"
Tabitha frowned. "You are
seriously scaring me." She looked past Amanda and scanned the street.
"Has someone replaced my twin with a pod person?"
Amanda laughed. "No, goofball.
It's me. I've just been worried about you."
"Well, as you can see, I'm
fine. You're fine. Everything's fine. So what brings you here?"
"I want to meet Valerius."
Tabitha couldn't have been more
stunned had her sister hit her. "Excuse me?"
"Ash said some things to me a
couple of weeks ago that got me thinking. And with every day that passed
without you racking this guy and moving in with me until this is over, I did
more thinking. You've been with him night and day, haven't you?"
Tabitha shrugged with a nonchalance
she didn't feel. "Yeah, so?"
"And yet I haven't had a single
call from my homicidal twin telling me she's going to cut his head off and put
it in a bowling bag if he says or does such-and-such one more time. Why, Tabby,
I do believe that's a record for you."
Tabitha fidgeted guiltily. It was
true. Not once in all their lives had she been with anyone that she wasn't
threatening to kill the guy every other hour for some annoying habit.
But with Valerius…
Even when he annoyed her, it wasn't
so bad. And the truth was, he very seldom annoyed her. They talked about all
kinds of things and even when they didn't agree, he respected her opinions.
"You love him, don't you?"
Tabitha looked away.
"Oh God, Tabitha," Amanda
breathed. "You've never done anything the easy way, have you?"
"Don't start on me,
Amanda."
Amanda cupped her face and turned
her head until their eyes met. "I love you, Tabby. I do. Of all the
men—"
"I know!" she snapped
angrily. "It's not like I woke up and said, Hmmm, who is the one man on
the planet guaranteed to alienate me from my entire family for all eternity?
Oh, I must go and find him immediately and fall hopelessly in love with
him."
She took a deep breath before her
anger overwhelmed her. "God knows, I didn't want to love someone like
Valerius. I keep thinking that you are his perfect woman. You're elegant,
sophisticated. Hell, you actually know which fork to eat with when you go out.
I'm the idiot in college who went out with you and Dad and drank out of the
finger bowl because I thought it was some kind of fucked-up clear soup."
Tabitha scoffed at her own words.
"For that matter, listen to my language. I have to be horrifying to him
and yet when he looks at me, I shiver."
Over and over, the arguments of why
she didn't belong with Valerius ran through her mind. They should be completely
incompatible and yet they weren't. It didn't make sense. It wasn't right.
Tabitha sighed. "The other
night he took me to Commander's Palace and we sat down where they had this
really elegant display sitting in the middle of the table. It was made up of
all these exotic veggies and fruit and looked really tasty. So, stupid me, I
grabbed my butter knife and started hacking at it to eat some of it. It wasn't
until I looked up and saw the gape on the waiter's face that I realized I'd
done something completely stupid. I asked him what his problem was and he said
that he had just never seen anyone actually eat the centerpiece before. I was
so embarrassed I wanted to die."
"Oh, Lord, Tabby."
"I know. Valerius, God bless
him, didn't miss a beat. He reached over and started eating it too, then he
gave one of those haughty, regal stares at the waiter, who quickly ran off.
After he was gone, Val said for me not to worry about it. That he spent enough
money in that place that I could eat the tablecloth next if I wanted to and if
that didn't make me happy, then he'd buy the restaurant just so I could fire
the waiter."
Amanda burst out laughing.
Tabitha had laughed too when he said
it and the memory of his kindness still warmed her.
She gave her sister a sincere stare.
"Don't you think I know that I don't belong with this man? I really,
really don't. To me fine dining is slurping down oysters and drinking beer out
of a bottle. To him it's a fifteen-course meal where people actually put the
napkin in your lap for you and reset the silverware between every course."
"And yet you're still
here."
"And I don't understand
why."
Amanda smiled gently. "All I
ever wanted was a nice, normal life with a nice, normal man. Instead, I end up
with a husband who used to be immortal who has friends that are gods, demons,
and animals that can take human form. And I don't even know how to begin to
classify Nick. Let's face it, I'm married to a man who gave me a daughter who
is able to talk to animals like Doctor Dolittle and who can use her thoughts to
move just about anything in the house. And you know what?"
"What?"
"I wouldn't trade it for all
the normality in the world. Love isn't easy. Anyone who says differently is
lying to you. But it is worth fighting for. Believe me, I know, and that's why
I'm here. I want to meet this man and see if there's any way I can soothe over
Kyrian enough to where he can at least say Valerius's name without rupturing a
vein."
Tears blurred her vision as Tabitha
pulled her sister into another hug. "I love you, Amanda, I really
do."
"I know. I'm the perfect
twin."
Tabitha laughed at that. "And
I'm the psychotic one." Stepping back, she took Amanda's hand and led her
into the house.
Amanda gave a low whistle as she
came inside and looked around the elegant interior. "Very nice
place."
Otto stepped into the foyer to shake
his head at them. "Kyrian will stroke if he ever finds out you were here."
"And you'll be limping if you
enlighten him," Tabitha said.
"Don't worry. He won't hear it
from me. I'm not that stupid." Otto headed for the door. "I'm off to
meet up with Kyr and Nick. We're going to get together tonight and do some
patrolling of our own and see if we can run some of these bastards to
ground."
Tabitha nodded. "You guys be
careful."
"You, too." He inclined
his head to them, then left.
"Why don't you wait in the
library?" Tabitha said. "I'll go see if he's up yet."
Amanda nodded.
Tabitha sprinted up the stairs and
headed to Valerius's room to find him still asleep in his bed.
She lifted the silk sheet up so that
she could nip his hip with her teeth.
He made a sound of pleasure before
he rolled over onto his back.
Tabitha's breath caught in her
throat at the sight of his nude body. She could stare at this man all day or
night long.
She particularly loved the area of
his body where short crisp hairs ran from his navel to his groin. Unable to
stand the temptation, she bent over him and nibbled the little hairs there.
His cock hardened. He placed his
hand gently on her head. "You certainly know how to wake a man up happily,
don't you?"
She laughed at that before she
lightly nipped his skin, then pulled away. "I need for you to get
up."
"I am up," he said, glancing
down to the part of his body that was standing at full attention.
"Not that," she said,
rolling her eyes. "My sister is downstairs and she wants to meet
you."
"Which sister?"
She gave him a meaningful look.
His face went ashen. "I can't
meet her?
Tabitha refused to listen to his
argument. "Get dressed and meet her. It'll only take a minute and then
she'll leave."
"But—"
"No buts, General. I'll be
waiting at the stairs and if you're not there in five minutes, I'm going to bring
her up here."
Amanda sat in a burgundy chair near
a heavily draped window. She looked around the formal, elegant mansion. Unlike
her home, there was nothing inviting about it. It spoke of a man who was stern
and formidable, pretentious and condescending. Cold. Even a little evil and
scary.
Everything she'd been told to expect
from Valerius Magnus.
How had Tabitha ever hooked up with
such a man? Her sister was none of those things.
Well, Tabitha could be evil, but in
her twin's case that was an almost endearing quality.
It seemed to take forever before she
heard Tabitha coming down the stairs.
"Tabitha!" The hushed tone
was stern and commanding.
When Tabitha didn't lash back with a
caustic retort, Amanda got up to investigate. She stayed in the shadows so that
she could see Valerius with Tabitha on the stairs.
He was dressed in black pants and a
black button-down shirt. From what she'd heard of him, she'd assumed his hair
would have been cropped very short. To her surprise, it brushed down to his
shoulders. His face was elegantly sculpted. Perfect.
Power and control bled from every
part of him. This was definitely not the kind of man who attracted Tabitha. Ever.
He glared at her sister as if he
wanted to choke her. "You can't have her here. She has to leave
immediately."
"Why?"
"Because Kyrian would die if he
ever found out his wife was in my home. He'd lose his mind."
"Val—"
"Tabitha, I'm not kidding. This
is cruel to him. You have to get her out of here before he finds out."
Amanda was shocked by his words. Why
would he care how this affected Kyrian when Kyrian would gladly see him dead?
"Amanda wants to meet you,
Valerius. Please? Just for a minute and then I'm sure she'll head home."
She scowled at Tabitha's calm,
rational tone. Normally when her sister didn't get her way, she turned rather
violent. Or at the very least, shouted.
His face softened instantly as he
reached out and cupped Tabitha's scarred cheek in his hand. "I hate when
you give me that look." He brushed his fingers over her eyebrow and smiled
gently at her. "Okay." He dropped his hand to hers, then pulled it up
and kissed the back of her hand.
Tabitha kissed his cheek before she
stepped away and headed toward the library.
Her heart thumping at what she'd
just seen, Amanda stepped back into the room so that they wouldn't know she'd
been spying on them. But as she waited, images of their encounter played
through her mind…
Valerius couldn't believe he was
about to meet his enemy's wife.
Tabitha's twin sister.
He'd never been more nervous or
unsure of himself.
But he refused to let that show.
Stiffening his spine, he walked into the library, where Tabitha greeted her
sister.
It was extremely odd to listen to
them speak to each other. The only way he could tell their voices apart was
their vocabulary. Tabitha had a unique way of speaking, whereas her twin sister
was more eloquent and proper.
Amanda's eyes widened a bit as she
scanned him from head to toe. Whatever she thought of him, she gave no clue.
"You must be Valerius,"
she said, stepping forward to offer him her hand.
"It's an honor," he said
formally before he shook her hand very briefly, released it, and stepped back
six paces.
She looked at Tabitha. "You two
are the odd couple, aren't you?"
Tabitha shrugged before she tucked
her hands in her pockets. "Thank God he's cuter than Tony Randall and I
don't have Jack Klugman's nose."
Valerius became even more rigid.
Tabitha ran her hand affectionately
down his arm. "Relax, hon. She doesn't bite. Only I do that." She
winked at him.
The problem was, he didn't know how
to relax. Especially not while her twin was staring at him as if he were
something sinister.
Amanda watched her sister with the
Roman general she had assumed she would hate on first meeting. To her surprise,
she didn't.
He wasn't friendly, that was
certainly true. He stood there with a crisp, arrogant look that seemed to defy
her to insult him. But as she looked closer, she realized it was nothing more
than a facade. He actually expected her to say something vicious to him and was
just bracing himself to take it.
In fact, her psychic sense didn't
pick up cruelty of any sort. Though he looked completely ill at ease, his gaze
softened ever so subtly every time he glanced at Tabitha.
And there was no way to miss the way
Tabitha reacted to him.
Oh, good grief, they really did love
each other. What a nightmare!
"Well," Amanda said
slowly, "I can stand here making everyone uncomfortable or I can go home.
I should probably head back before it gets dark anyway. So—"
"My apologies, Mrs.
Hunter," he said quickly. "I didn't mean to make you uneasy. If you
wish to stay and talk to Tabitha, I'll be more than happy to withdraw."
She smiled at his kindness.
"No, it's okay. I just wanted to meet you for myself. I've never been the
kind of person to let someone else make up my mind for me and I wanted to know
if you really were a three-toed, horned demon. But strangely enough, you look
like an accountant."
"From her, that's a
compliment," Tabitha said with a laugh.
He looked even more uncomfortable.
"It's okay," Amanda said.
"Really. I just felt this insane need to know who was holding my sister
hostage. It's not like her to not call me three dozen times a day."
"I'm not holding her
hostage," he said quickly as if the accusation offended him. "She can
leave anytime she chooses."
Amanda smiled. "I know."
She looked at Tabitha and shook her head. "It's going to be hell at
Thanksgiving, huh? Never mind the terror of Christmas. And we thought Granny
Flora was bad with Uncle Robert."
Tabitha's heart pounded at what her
sister was saying. "You don't mind?"
"Oh, I mind, all right. I would
sooner kill myself than ever hurt Kyrian, but I can't hurt you either and I'm
not willing to lose you over something that happened two thousand years ago.
Maybe we'll get lucky and one of the Daimons'll get Valerius before this is
over."
"Amanda!" Tabitha snapped.
"I was joking, Tabby.
Really." She took Valerius's hand and held it against Tabitha's. "One
of these is not like the other, one of these does not belong," she sang
under her breath.
Then she sobered. "Are you
going to ask Ash for Valerius's soul back?"
Tabitha felt a bit awkward with that
question. "We haven't gotten that far."
"I see."
Tabitha stiffened at the
"Mom" tone Amanda used. "What's that supposed to mean?"
Amanda looked at her as if she had
no clue. "It means nothing."
"Yeah, right," Tabitha
said, her anger mounting. "I know that tone. You don't think I'm serious
about him, do you?"
Amanda sputtered. "I didn't say
that."
"You didn't have to say that,
Amanda. You know, I'm really tired of being the brunt of the family jokes. I've
never understood why I'm the weird, crazy one when Tia dances naked out in the
bayous in voodoo ceremonies; Selena chains herself to fences; Karma is a bull
inseminator; Aunt Jasmine is trying to splice a Venus flytrap with kudzu to
make a man-killing plant to devour her ex—"
"She what?" Valerius
asked.
Tabitha ignored him. "And you,
precious Amanda, who is everyone's darling. First you unknowingly date a
half-Apollite whose adopted father is out to kill you for your powers and then
you end up married to a vampire that I have to tolerate even though I
personally think he's a pompous, overbearing, humorless boor. Why am I the
crazy one in all this?"
"Tabitha—"
"Don't Tabitha me when you know
it seriously pisses me off!"
Amanda's eyes flared. "Fine,
you want to know why you're the crazy one? Because you flit from one extreme to
the other. Good grief, you had, what? Nine majors in college?"
"Thirteen."
"See? You are a
flibbertigibbet. If not for us taking care of you, you'd be one of those
homeless people you feed every night and you know it. It's why you feed
them."
"I can take care of
myself."
"Yeah, right. How many jobs did
you have until Irena left you the store? She didn't want to retire, by the way.
Dad paid her to because it was the only job you ever held on to for more than a
few days."
"You bitch!" Tabitha
lunged for her sister, only to have Valerius intercept her.
"Tabitha, calm down," he
said, holding her back.
"No! I'm tired of being treated
like the village idiot by those who claim they love me."
"We wouldn't treat you that way
if you didn't act it. My God, Tabitha look at yourself. Look at why Eric left
you. I love you, I really do, but you have done nothing but cause strife all
your life."
"Don't you dare speak to her
that way," Valerius snarled as he moved away from Tabitha to confront
Amanda. "I don't give a damn who you are, I'll throw you out. No one talks
to her like that. No one. There is nothing wrong with Tabitha. She's nothing
but kindness to anyone. If you can't see all her good qualities, then there's
something seriously wrong with you."
A smile instantly broke across
Amanda's face. "And that really was what I needed to know."
"You were playing with
me?" Tabitha snapped.
"No," Amanda said sternly.
"This is no playing matter. But before I go make my husband absolutely
miserable, I have to know that you two are serious and that Valerius isn't just
another one of your 'let me make my family crazy' fixations."
Tabitha glared at her as her
volatile emotions swirled. "There are times, Mandy, when I think I hate
you."
"I know. Bring him by the house
tonight and we'll try this again."
"I can't believe you're doing
this for us," Valerius said.
Amanda took a deep breath. "No
offense, I'm not. I'm doing this for Kyrian. Ash told me something and I'm here
to make sure it happens."
And with that, she turned and headed
for the door.
"Mandy?" Tabitha called,
stopping her before she left. "Do we have a truce?"
"No. We have a volatile,
homicidal family. But at least it won't be boring. I'll see you tonight."
Tabitha watched as her sister left.
Deep in the pit of her stomach, a strong sense of foreboding settled. It was
bleak and harsh. Frightening and cold.
It was almost as if she knew
instinctively that tonight one of them would die…
Chapter 14
Dressed all in black lace, Apollymi
sat looking to the uninitiated like a beautiful, ethereal blonde angel on her
settee. She stared out of the open grand French doors onto her garden, where
only black flowers grew in memory of her one true son who had been brutally
taken from her.
Even after all these centuries, her
mother's heart ached with the loss of him. With the feral, unending need she
had to hold her child to her. To feel his warm touch.
What good was it to be a god when
she couldn't have the only wish that had ever burned inside her?
This day was the most painful of all
days. For this was the very day when she had given birth to her beautiful,
perfect son.
And this had been the day they had
taken him from her forever.
Tears glittered in her eyes as she
lifted the small black pillow from her lap to her face and inhaled the spicy
scent of it. Her son's scent. Closing her eyes, she summoned an image of his
precious, most beloved face in her mind. Heard the sound of his commanding
voice.
"I need you back,
Apostolos." But her whisper went unheard and she knew it.
"He is here, Benevolent
One."
Apollymi paused as she heard
Sabine's voice from behind her. Sabine was her most trusted Charonte servant,
since Xedrix had vanished on the night the Greek god Dionysus and the Celtic
god Camulus had sought to free her from her prison in Kalosis.
Apollymi returned the pillow to her
lap as she dismissed the orange-fleshed, winged demon.
"You summoned me, Mother?"
Stryker asked as he came toward her.
She forced herself not to betray the
fact that she knew he had turned on her. He thought himself clever.
It was enough to make her laugh.
No one could ever defeat the
Destroyer. It was why she was imprisoned. She could be contained, but never
annihilated. It was a lesson Stryker would learn one day all too soon.
But not today. Today, she still
needed him.
"It is time, m'gios." The
Atlantean term for "my son" was bitter as always on her tongue. He
was a very poor substitute for the male child she had birthed. "Tonight
will be the perfect time to strike. It is a full moon in New Orleans and the
Dark-Hunters will be distracted."
And she wanted that human child! It
was time to put an end to her captivity once and for all.
Marissa Hunter was a mild sacrifice
she needed to return her son to his real, living state. And by all the power of
Atlantis, she would restore her son.
No other life, not even her own, was
worth one tiny part of his.
Stryker inclined his head.
"Indeed, Mother. I've already set loose my Daimons to wreak carnage.
Desiderius will return with the child at midnight and when they leave tonight,
there won't be a single Dark-Hunter left breathing."
"Good. I don't care how many
Spathi die or anyone else. I must have that child!"
She felt Stryker starting to leave.
"Strykerius?" she called.
"Yes, Mother?"
"Serve me well and you will be
rewarded beyond measure. Betray me and there is nothing that can save you from
my wrath."
Stryker narrowed his eyes on the
goddess, who refused to even look at him. "I would never dream of
betraying you, Mother," he said, masking the rancor of his tone.
No, he wasn't going to betray her
tonight.
He was going to kill her.
After leaving her temple, Stryker
summoned his Illuminati together before he opened the bolt-hole that would
take his men to New Orleans. There they would do his will while he stayed
safely tucked away from the Destroyer's notice. It was time he stopped the age-old
conflict between human and Apollite.
A new era was dawning, and mankind…
It was time they learned their
inferior place.
As for Acheron, now that he knew
what the man really was, he knew how to neutralize him.
After all, not even the great
Acheron could be in two places at once, nor could he stand against the assault
that was about to begin.
Desiderius paused outside of a small
voodoo shop. It was quaint and charming, and to most tourists, it looked like
all the others.
The only thing that separated this
store from all the rest that occupied designated areas of the French Quarter
was the fact that here he sensed real power.
Closing his eyes, he inhaled the
rich, musty scent of it. As a Daimon, he'd need her soul to live, but since he
was in the body of a Dark-Hunter…
Killing humans was done for simple
pleasure now, not for sustenance.
He smiled to himself as he stepped
inside to find his target. It only took a second to locate her behind the
counter, where she was waiting on a tourist who was buying a love potion.
"Hi, Ulric!" his victim
said excitedly as the customer walked out of the store and left them alone.
Ah, good, she knew the Dark-Hunter.
It would make killing her all the easier.
"Hi," he said, stepping up
to the counter. "How are you tonight?"
"I was just about to close. I'm
really glad you came by. After everything that's been happening around here,
well… it's good to see a friendly face."
Desiderius's gaze went past her
shoulder to a small snapshot hanging on a calendar that advertised scented
candles. It was of nine women, two of whom he knew instantly.
His gaze darkened.
"How are Tabitha and
Amanda?" he asked.
"They're doing okay. All things
considered. Mandy's afraid to leave the house and Tabby… you've probably met
her on the street."
Yes, Amanda was afraid to leave her
house, which made their getting into it almost impossible.
But there was one way he knew to
draw the sorceress out of her home.
He gave the woman behind the counter
a tight-lipped smile. "Would you like for me to walk you home?"
"What a sweetie. Thanks,
that'll be great. Just give me a sec to grab the money envelope and I'll do the
paperwork at home."
Desiderius licked his lips. He could
already taste her blood…
The night was eerily quiet as Ash
walked alone through the St. Louis Cemetery No. 1 searching for Daimons who
often came to claim the souls of the dead who had refused to move on.
The New Orleans natives called these
impressive stone cemeteries the Cities of the Dead, a title that was wholly
apropos. Because the town was below sea level, no one could bury the dead
without the bodies making a most unwelcomed reappearance.
The full moon above cast distorted
shadows of the statuary along the brick, stone, and marble crypts-some of which
were taller than even he was. Although in places rather haphazard, most of the
tombs were arranged into blocks that did in fact strangely mirror the layout
and design of a city.
Each crypt was elegantly crafted as
a monument to those whose remains it contained. There were three
classifications for the tombs: wall vaults; family vaults; and society vaults
that were reserved for specific groups, like the round Italian Society tomb, which
was the largest crypt there, and one that dominated the cemetery.
Most of the tombs showed signs of
their age by having broken pieces of masonry either missing or askew, along
with collapsed roofs, and blackened mold that grew all over them. Many held
scrolled wrought-iron gates and fences.
It was beautiful here. Peaceful.
Although the strategically placed holes in the exterior walls that allowed
muggers to come and go at will were a constant reminder of how some of the
occupants had come to reside here.
Ash reached out and touched the
grave of Marie Laveaux, the famous voodoo maven of the city. Her grave was
marked with Xs from those who would pay tribute to her.
She'd been a remarkable woman and in
his long life, she had been the only human to know him for what he really was.
Sirens sounded off in the distance
as police headed for a new crime scene.
As he turned away, Ash felt a ripple
go through him like a debilitating blow. He hissed in pain as he felt a
fragile, forbidden doorway opening and felt the evil pouring out of it.
The Illuminati were leaving Kalosis…
Suddenly, his vision became cloudy.
Ash no longer saw anything around
him, overwhelmed with sounds and images of souls screaming in agony as they
died. It was a sound unheard by mortals, but one that cut through him like
shattering glass.
The order of the universe was being
altered.
"Atropos!" he called,
summoning the Greek goddess of fate who was responsible for cutting the life
strands of mortals.
Tall and blonde with furious eyes,
she appeared beside him instantly. "What?" she snapped.
The two of them had never gotten
along; in truth, none of the Moirae could stand him. Not that he cared. He had
far more reasons to hate them than they had to hate him.
Ash leaned back against one of the
old crypts as he tried to staunch some of his pain.
"What are you doing?" he
gasped.
"It's not me," she said
indignantly. "It's something from your side, not ours. We have no control
over it. If you want it to stop, stop it."
She vanished.
Wrapping his arms around his
stomach, Ash slid to the ground. The pain… it was biting into him even more. He
couldn't breathe. Couldn't think.
The screams rang throughout his head
until it brought tears to his eyes.
Without his bidding, Simi came off
his arm. "Akri?" she said, kneeling beside him. "What hurts you,
akri?"
"Sim," he panted through
the vicious stabs. "I c-can't…" His words trailed off into a groan.
She doubled in size and transformed
from a young woman into her demon form. Her skin and horns were red, and her
hair and lips were black, while her eyes glowed a dull yellow in the darkness.
She pulled him away from the crypt
long enough to slide herself between him and the stone, then she wrapped her
body around his. Her midnight wings folded around both of them as a protective
cloak.
Ash's lips chattered from the agony
as tears flowed from his eyes. He felt as if something were rupturing inside
him. He had to block the screams or he would be useless.
Simi placed her cheek against his
and hummed an ancient lullaby as she rocked him soothingly.
"The Simi has you, akri, and
she'll make all the voices go away."
Ash leaned back in her arms and
prayed she was right. Because if she didn't restore him soon, there would be no
one to repair what was being torn apart.
Tabitha was filled with such a
sudden sense of pain that it stopped her dead in her tracks.
Gasping, she reached out for
Valerius, who was walking beside her.
"Tabitha? Is something
wrong?"
"Tia," she gasped, her
heart aching in a pain so profound that she wasn't sure how she maintained her
stance. "Something's happened to her. I know it."
"Tab—"
"I know it!" she shrieked,
clutching his shirt. "Oh God, no!" She grabbed her phone and started
dialing Tia's number as she ran toward her sister's store. They were only six
blocks away.
No one answered.
She dialed Amanda, her heart
thumping in her chest as she ran. This couldn't be happening. She had to be
wrong.
She had to be!
"Tabitha?" She heard the
tears in Amanda's voice.
"It's true, isn't it? You feel
it, too?"
"Kyrian won't let me leave the
house. He says it's too dangerous."
"Don't worry, I'm on the street
and I'll call you as soon as I know something."
Tabitha clutched the phone in her
hand as they neared the dark store.
Everything looked normal…
Valerius slowed down as he sensed
death. There was an evil pall that hung over the store. He'd been a Dark-Hunter
long enough to know even that much without any psychic abilities.
Tabitha tried the front door, which
was locked.
"Tia!" she shouted,
knocking on it. "You still here?"
No one answered.
She led him around back, into a
small courtyard. The back door to the shop had been left ajar.
Valerius held his breath at the
confirmation of his fears. Tabitha slowed down to a careful walk.
"Tia?" she called again.
Valerius pulled her away from the
back door. "Stay behind me."
"She's my sister!"
"And I'm immortal. Stay behind
me."
Luckily, she nodded.
Valerius opened the door carefully
as he looked for anyone to move on them.
No one did.
The back room appeared completely
normal. Nothing was out of place. It looked just as it had a few weeks ago when
Tia had tended him here.
His hand on the dagger at his waist,
he carefully approached the door to the shop, which was also slightly ajar. He
pushed it open, then froze when he saw the pair of shoes sticking out from
behind the counter.
His heart stopped.
"Stay here, Tabitha."
"But—"
"Dammit, Tabitha, stay!"
"I am not your bitch, General,
and you don't talk to me that way!"
He knew it was her fear that made
her so angry. She never knew how to cope with strong emotions. "Please,
Tabitha. Stay here while I look."
She nodded.
Valerius pulled away and walked
cautiously across the floor to where he saw the shoes. As he drew nearer, he
saw the rest of the body.
Shit.
His chest tight and aching, he
turned Tia over to see her glazed eyes staring out at nothing. Her neck was torn
open as if a Daimon had attacked her, but her soul was still here. He could
feel it.
Why would a Daimon not take her
soul?
As he reached to close her eyes, he
realized something else. Tabitha wasn't with him.
Panic threatened to consume him. It
wasn't like her to really listen. Rising quickly, he dashed back to the
storeroom, where he found her sitting before a video surveillance console that
showed the flickering black-and-white images of Tia's death.
Tabitha sat there with tears pouring
out of her eyes as she held her hands crossed over her lips. Her sobs were
silent, yet they shook her entire body.
"I'm so sorry, Tabitha,"
he whispered before he shut off the monitor and pulled her into his arms.
"She can't be dead!" she
wailed as she clutched him to her. "This isn't true. Not my sister. She's
not dead. She's not!"
He didn't speak as he rocked her
gently in his arms.
She screamed out in pain before she
shoved him away from her and ran for the storefront.
"Tabitha, no!" he snapped,
pulling her back before she saw Tia's body. "You don't need to see her
like that."
She turned on him with a shriek and
shoved him back. "Damn you! Damn all of you for this. Why didn't you just
kill me? Why kill my sister? Why…?"
Her eyes widened in horror.
"Oh, God, they're going for my family." She pulled her phone out, no
doubt to call Amanda again.
While she called her family, he
pulled his Nextel out to notify the others what had happened. "Code Red to
everyone," he said, his voice tight. "Tia Devereaux has been slain
inside her store. Everyone needs to pull back and secure their families."
One by one, the Dark-Hunters and
Squires checked in: Otto, Nick, Kyr, Rogue, Zoe, Jean-Luc, Ulric, Janice,
Kassim-even Talon, Kyrian, and Julian. But there was no sign of Acheron.
Valerius tried to buzz him, then
call him.
There was no answer.
His blood ran cold. Had the Daimons
gotten to Acheron already and hurt him again?
"I love you, Mandy,"
Tabitha said as her lips quivered from her grief. "You be careful, okay?
I'm going to find this bastard and I'm going to kill him tonight."
Valerius glanced to the now blank
monitor screen. "Do you know who killed her?" he asked.
Tabitha nodded. "It was Ulric
and now I'm going to kill him."
Nick was walking down Ursulines,
headed for the house on Bourbon Street that he shared with his mother. After
hearing Valerius's call about Tia, he'd gone immediately to check on his
mother, who was working late at Sanctuary.
Since he'd planned on hanging around
the outside of the bar to watch out for her until it was time for her to leave,
he'd practically been there already when the call went out.
As soon as he'd reached the
saloon-style doors that were monitored by Dev Peltier, one of the bears who
owned Sanctuary, he'd been told that his mother had left work early because she
wasn't feeling well. Nick had been absolutely furious with the bear until Dev
had told him that Ulric had agreed to escort her home.
Given Nick's busted ribs, his mom
was a lot safer with a Dark-Hunter than she would have been with him anyway.
Still, he had a need inside him to check on her to make sure she was all right.
It'd been just the two of them his
whole life. Impregnated by a career felon when she was only fifteen, his mother
had been cast out the door to fend for herself. He wouldn't have blamed her had
she given him up, but she hadn't.
"You're the only thing in my
life I ever did right, Nicky, and I thank God every night for giving me
you."
It was why he loved her so much.
Nick had never met his grandparents
on either side. Hell, he'd only met his father a handful of times and only once
that he really remembered. It'd been when Nick was ten and his father had
needed a place to crash for the longest stretch of freedom the man had known as
an adult-three whole months.
In a bad clichй, his father moved
in, drank beer constantly, and knocked the two of them around before one of his
felon friends had convinced him to take a stab at bank robbery, where his
father had shot four people dead just for the hell of it. His father had been
quickly convicted, then died a year later when some inmate had cut his throat
during a prison riot.
Cherise Gautier left much to be
desired when it came to her taste in men, but as a mother…
She was perfect.
And Nick would do anything in the
world for her.
He heard static from his Nextel,
which he expected to be Otto screwing with him again.
It wasn't.
Valerius's accented voice broke the
stillness. "Nick, are you there?"
Just what he needed tonight.
Grimacing, he jerked the phone off his belt. "What?" he snapped.
"I wanted to let you know that
Ulric is Desiderius. He's already killed Tia. I don't know who's next, but I
think you might want to check on your mother." Suddenly, Valerius's voice
changed to one that made his blood run cold.
"Oh, wait…" Desiderius
said tauntingly, "she's dead now." He made a sound of smacking his
lips. "Hmmm, type O negative. My favorite. Of course, you'll be glad to
know her last thoughts were of you."
Nick stopped moving for an instant
before he dropped the phone and started running as fast as he could toward his
house.
Over and over, he saw images of his
mother in his mind. Of her gently teasing him while he grew up. The pride on
her face the day he'd told her he was going to college.
His battered ribs ached and
throbbed, but he didn't care if he ruptured both lungs.
He had to get to her.
By the time he reached the gate to
his driveway, he was shaking so badly that he could barely punch in the code.
"Goddammit, open!" he
snarled as the first code was rejected.
He reentered it.
The gates swung open slowly.
Ominously.
Panting from fear and exertion, he
raced up the drive to the back door.
It was unlocked. Nick entered, ready
to do battle. He stopped in the kitchen to pull his Glock.31 out of the drawer
by the stove. He checked the mag clip to make sure it was fully loaded with all
seventeen rounds.
"Mom?" he called as he
slid the mag in. "Mom, it's Nick, are you home?"
Only silence answered him.
His heart hammering, Nick crept
through the house, room by room, expecting to be attacked.
He found absolutely nothing, until
he reached the upstairs sitting room. At first, it looked like his mother was
sitting in her chair like she'd done a million times before when he'd come home
to catch her waiting for him.
He'd bought this house just for this
room alone. His mother loved to read romance novels. All her life, she'd
dreamed of owning a home where she could have a perfect, five-sided room to
read her books in peace. The sitting room was lined with custom-made bookshelves.
Every inch of every shelf in here
held a paperback that she had lovingly chosen and cherished.
"Mom?" he said, his voice
breaking off into a sob. His hand shook as he held the gun out and stared
through misty eyes at the blond hair he could see over the top of the leather
recliner. "Please talk to me, Mom, please." She didn't move.
He fought back his tears as he moved
slowly forward until he could touch her. Still, she was silent.
Nick cried out in grief as he buried
his hand in her soft hair and saw the paleness of her face. The vicious
bite-wound on her neck.
"No, Mommy, no!" he sobbed
as he knelt beside her. "Dammit, Mom, don't be dead!"
Only this time mere was no comfort
to be found in her touch. No soft, loving voice to tell him that men didn't
cry. They didn't show pain.
But how could any man withstand this
kind of brutal agony?
This was his fault. All his fault.
He'd been the idiot who had befriended the Dark-Hunters. Had he ever told her
the truth… She hadn't stood a chance.
"Mommy," he breathed
against her cold face as he rocked her in his arms. "I'm so sorry. I'm so
sorry. I didn't mean to hurt you. I didn't. Please wake up, please. Oh, please,
Mom, don't leave me."
Then his rage took hold. It steamed
through his veins and screamed out in shattering waves that tore him apart.
"Artemis!" he shouted. "I summon you to human form. Now!"
She appeared almost instantly with
her hands on her hips and in a pique.
At least until she saw his mother's
body.
"What is this?" she asked,
curling her lip as if the sight of death disgusted her. "You're Acheron's
friend Nick, aren't you?"
Nick laid his mother back in her
chair, brushed the tears from his eyes with the back of his hand, and rose
slowly to his feet. "I demand vengeance on the Daimon who did this and I
demand it now."
She made a rude noise of dismissal.
"You can demand all you want to, human, you're not going to get it."
"Why not? You give it to every
other asshole who demands it. Make me a Dark-Hunter. You owe it to me."
She cocked her head and arched a
brow at him. "I owe you nothing, human. And in case you haven't noticed,
you imbecile, you have to be dead before you can become a Dark-Hunter."
She let out a disgusted sigh. "Didn't you learn anything from
Acheron?"
Artemis took a step back, intending
to return home to Olympus, but before she could, the human knelt to the ground
and picked up a gun.
"Make me a Dark-Hunter,"
he snarled an instant before he pulled the trigger.
Artemis froze at the loud, echoing
sound of the gunshot. She couldn't breathe as she took in the sight of the man
lying dead at her feet.
"Oh, no," she said
breathlessly as her heart pounded. Acheron's human friend had just killed
himself… right in front of her!
What was she going to do?
Her panicked thoughts raced.
"He'll blame me for this." He'd never forgive her. Never. Even though
it wasn't her fault, Acheron would find some way to blame it all on her, to say
that she should have known and should have stopped him.
She stared in horror at the gore
that spattered the front of her white dress. She'd never seen such before.
"Oh, think, Artemis,
think…" But she couldn't think straight. All she could hear was the sound
of Acheron in her head as he told her why Nick and his mother meant so much to
him.
"You'll never understand,
Artie. They had nothing but each other and instead of blaming each other for
ruining their lives, which many people would do, they bonded. Cherise's life
has sucked and yet she's still kind and giving to everyone she meets. One day,
Nick's going to marry and give her a houseful of grandchildren to love. Zeus
knows, they both deserve it."
Only now Nick lay dead at her feet.
Dead by his own hand, and he was
Catholic.
She could smell the sulphur already.
"Acheron!" she called,
allowing her voice to travel through all dimensions. She had to tell him before
it was too late. Only he could fix this.
He didn't answer.
"Acheron!" she tried
again.
Again, he was silent.
"What do I do?" She was
forbidden to make a Dark-Hunter from a suicide. But if she left Nick dead, his
soul would be claimed by Lucifer and he would spend eternity in hell being
tormented.
Either way, she would lose. Acheron
would blame her for letting his friend suffer. He would think she'd done this
on purpose just to hurt him.
And if she saved Nick…
The consequences didn't bear
thinking on.
But as she stood there in
indecision, one image came and stayed in her mind. The look on Acheron's face
the day she had turned her back on his pain.
It was the only thing in her life
that she truly regretted. The one thing she would change if she could.
There was no real choice here. She
couldn't hurt Acheron like that again. Ever.
Kneeling down, she pulled Nick's
body to her and restored him to what he'd been before the gunshot. She brushed
his hair back from his face and spoke the forbidden words of a long-dead
civilization.
The stone appeared in her hand. She
felt its heat as his soul entered it
Two seconds later, Nick's eyes
opened. No longer blue, they were jet-black. He hissed as pain from the light
pierced his now-sensitive eyes.
"Why didn't you call for
Acheron instead of me?" she asked him quietly.
"He was mad at me," he
said, lisping from the fangs that he had yet to grow accustomed to. "He
told me I should kill myself and save him the trouble of it."
Artemis winced as she heard those
words. Her poor Acheron. He would never forgive himself for this.
Nor would he forgive her.
Nick pushed himself up. "I want
my vengeance."
"I'm sorry, Nick," she
whispered. "I can't give it to you. You didn't adhere to the course of the
bargain."
"What?"
Before he could say anything more,
she raised her hand and sent him to a special room in her temple.
"Where are you, Acheron?"
she whispered. The world was falling apart and he was nowhere to be heard.
It wasn't like him to be so
careless.
Afraid something bad had befallen
him, she closed her eyes and searched for him.
Desiderius walked down the street as
if he owned it. And why not?
He did.
He held his arms out and leaned his
head back as he heard the screams of the innocent in his head.
"You should be here,
Stryker," he said with a laugh. Only Stryker could truly appreciate the
beauty that was this night.
But time was running out.
He had to return with the Hunter
child by midnight or the Destroyer would revoke his body.
"Father?"
He turned at the sound of his son's
voice. "Yes?"
"Acheron is still missing, just
as Stryker promised, and we've found our way in."
Desiderius laughed. At long last he
would have his revenge on Amanda and Kyrian.
And as soon as he delivered up the
child, he would finish off the main course with Tabitha for dessert.
Chapter 15
Valerius was torn between his
loyalties and his duties. The Dark-Hunter in him wanted to find Acheron, but
the man inside refused to leave Tabitha, who was keeping vigil in her sister's
store until the coroner, Tate, arrived.
One by one, she'd contacted her
family and assured herself that they were safe.
She hesitated on the last number to
be called. "I can't call my mama and tell her," she said, her tears
welling. "I can't."
The phone rang.
By the look on her face as she saw
the caller ID, he had a good idea of who it was.
Valerius pried the cell phone from
her hand and flipped it open. "Tabitha Devereaux," he said quietly.
"Who is this?" the woman
sounded a bit frantic.
"I'm…" He hesitated at
giving her his full name since she would no doubt register it as the name of an
enemy and panic even more. "Val," he said firmly. "I'm a friend
of Tabitha's."
"This is her mother. I need to
know she's okay."
"Tabitha," he said,
gentling his voice as he offered her the phone. "Your mother wants to know
if you're okay."
She cleared her throat, but didn't
take the phone from his hand. "I'm fine, Mama. Don't worry."
Valerius put the phone back up to
his ear. "Mrs. Devereaux-"
"Don't say it," she said,
her voice breaking. "I already know and I need my baby girl home with me.
I don't want her to be alone. Could you please bring Tabitha here?"
"Yes."
She hung up.
Valerius ended the call, then
returned the phone to Tabitha, who slipped it into her pocket.
He felt completely helpless against
her grief, and he hated that most of all. It seemed like there should be
something that he could say at such a moment and yet he knew from personal
experience that there wasn't.
All he could do was hold her.
"Hey, everyone?" Otto's
voice called out over the Nextel intercom. "I'm at Nick's house. The
front gate was open and something really bad went down here. I need a head
count immediately."
Kyr came back right away, as did
Talon and Janice. Julian answered in next, followed by Zoe and then Valerius.
They all waited for the next one to
check in.
No one did.
"Nick?" Otto called.
"You out there, Cajun? Come on, buddy, answer me with something
smart-ass."
No answer.
Valerius went cold.
"Jean-Luc?" Otto asked.
Again, nothing.
"Acheron?"
A feeling of severe dread ran
through Valerius as Tabitha gave him a panicked look.
They knew the next name before Otto
spoke it. "Kyrian? Kassim?" Only static filled the line.
Valerius pulled the Nextel off his
belt and pushed for Otto alone. "What happened at Nick's?"
"Cherise is dead and there's no
sign of him. I found his gun lying in a pool of blood by his mother's body with
one round missing, but it's not what killed Cherise."
Valerius ground his teeth as he
understood Otto's meaning. "Daimon attack?"
"Yeah."
Tabitha cursed, then bolted off her
stool. "I have to get to Amanda."
"Otto, meet us at
Kyrian's." He opened the line back out to the group. "Janice? Talon?
Zoe? Can you start searching for Jean-Luc?"
"Who left you in charge,
Roman?" Zoe sneered. Valerius wasn't in the mood for this bullshit as he
went after Tabitha. "Stow it, Amazon. This isn't about my heritage. This
is about your brothers-in-arms and their lives."
Julian came back at him.
"I'll meet you at Kyrian's."
"No, please. Stay with your wife
and children. Make sure they're safe."
"All right. Let me know what
you find out." Tabitha was already in the driver's seat of her Mini
Cooper. Valerius got inside and slammed the door shut.
She threw it in reverse and didn't
bother to open the wooden gate. She crashed through it as she squealed off into
the street.
Valerius braced himself against the
dashboard while she careened them through traffic at a deadly pace, toward her
sister's house.
Once they reached it, she didn't
stop at Amanda's tall iron gate, either. Valerius held his arm up to shield his
face as she drove straight through it and tore the iron posts off their stone
facings.
Tabitha skidded to a stop just in
front of the door and launched herself from the car without even turning it
off.
Valerius didn't hesitate to follow.
From the outside of the house,
everything looked normal. The lights were on, and as Tabitha kicked open the
front door, they could hear a television somewhere upstairs.
"Mandy?" Tabitha screamed
out in a shrill tone.
Her sister didn't answer her.
"Hey, Dad?" someone called
from upstairs. "Your dessert's here."
Artemis paused outside the cemetery
where she sensed Acheron's presence. She shivered in revulsion. She'd always
hated such places, while he seemed to prefer them.
"Acheron?" she called as
she walked through the stone wall.
The dark ground was uneven, making
it hard for her to walk. So she floated through the area.
"Acheron?"
A flash of fire shot near her head.
Artemis ducked and moved to return
the blast until she caught sight of Acheron's pet. She curled her lip at the
demon until she saw Acheron lying in its arms. He looked terrible as he writhed
there as if in the throes of torture.
"What have you done to
him?" Artemis demanded of the creature.
The demon hissed at her. "The
Simi did nothing, you heifer-goddess. You the one who hurts my akri. Not
me."
Any other time, Artemis might argue
with it, but Acheron lay there as if he were in excruciating pain.
"What happened to him?"
"It's the souls them Daimons
are eating. They scream when they die and there are too many of them tonight.
The Simi can't make it go away."
"Acheron?" Artemis tried
again as she knelt beside him. "Can you hear me?"
He recoiled from her.
She tried to reach for him only to
have the demon lunge at her.
"Don't you touch my akri!"
Damn the Charontes! The only one who
could control them was…
No, there were two people alive who
could control them.
"Apollymi?" she spoke to
the mist around her. "Can you hear me?"
Evil laughter echoed on the breeze.
The Atlantean goddess couldn't come out of her prison in form, but her powers
were so great that she could extend her will and voice even through her
limitations. "So, you speak to me, bitch. Why should I listen?"
Artemis clamped her temper down
before she answered insult with insult and drove the older goddess away.
"I can't help Acheron. His demon won't let me. I need your help."
"And why should I care?"
"Because I…" Artemis
ground her teeth together before she spoke the most difficult word of all for
her. "Please. Please, help me."
"What will you give me for this
service? Will you return my baby to me?"
Artemis curled her lip at the
thought. There was no way she'd ever release him. "I can't do that and you
know it."
She felt Apollymi pulling away.
"No!" she said hurriedly.
"Do me this favor and I'll release Katra from my service. She'll be yours
alone to command and will no longer have torn loyalties between me and
you."
Once more she heard the ancient
Atlantean goddess laughing at her.
The laughter ended on a short note.
"I would have helped him anyway, you gullible chit. But I thank you for
the gift."
A red, eerie haze fell over the area
as the Destroyer withdrew her voice. It formed the shape of a hand that then
cradled Acheron's body. Acheron cried out as if the pain were more than he
could bear. His whole body turned rigid and strained.
"Akri?" the demon wailed,
its face terrified.
Then suddenly, Acheron went
completely limp as the mist evaporated.
Artemis let her breath out slowly as
she watched him in fear that Apollymi might have actually worsened his
condition just for spite. The demon cuddled him to its bosom while it stroked
his long black hair away from his face.
His chest rose and fell normally.
"Sim?" he breathed as he
looked up at the demon with a tender expression that made Artemis hate him.
"Sh, akri, you needs to rest
for the Simi."
He raked his hand through his hair
until he noticed Artemis standing in front of him. All the tenderness fled his
expression. "What are you doing…"
His voice trailed off as if he
suddenly became aware of something.
He vanished instantly, leaving her
and the demon alone in the graveyard.
Folding her arms over her chest,
Artemis huffed at his rudeness. "A thank-you would have been nice,
Acheron!"
But she knew he didn't hear her. He
had a remarkable ability to tune her out.
Her only consolation was the demon
looked every bit as baffled until its eyes widened and it flashed to the form
of a human female with horns.
"They gots baby Marissa!"
the demon breathed before it too vanished.
Tabitha lunged at the Daimon, who
laughed as he stepped to the side and brought his fist down across her back.
Pain exploded down her spine.
Valerius roared with rage before he
shot a bolt at the Daimon.
It missed.
The Daimon laughed again.
"Let's see if the Roman general dies crying for his human love the same
way the Greek did."
Tabitha couldn't breathe as she
heard those words. Kyrian wasn't dead. He wasn't.
"You liar!" she snarled.
She turned to watch Valerius fight
the Daimon as more of them came running from the stairs. They swarmed into the
room like angry ants.
Two of them grabbed her. Tabitha
slugged them, but her blows seemed to glance off them without fazing them at
all.
Valerius broke free from his
opponent to hand her one of his swords.
She took it from him before she
turned to face three Daimons. She stabbed the one nearest her, but he didn't
explode.
He smiled at her instead. "You
don't kill the servants of the goddess, human. The Illuminati aren't typical
Daimons."
She swallowed her panic before it
defeated her. "Valerius? What goddess are they talking about?"
"There's only one goddess, you
pathetic fool. And it's not Artemis," the Illuminati said an instant
before sinking his teeth into her neck.
Tabitha cried out from pain.
Suddenly, she was thrown away from
them. She looked to see Valerius engaging the Daimons.
"Don't you touch her."
The Daimon tsked at him. "Don't
worry, Dark-Hunter, before she dies, we'll all sample her blood. Just as we did her sister."
Tabitha screamed as pain racked her.
"Damn you!"
Another Daimon seized her from
behind. "Of course we're damned. The Spathi wouldn't have it any other
way." He backhanded her, knocking her off her feet.
Tabitha tasted the blood on her
lips, but she wasn't daunted. She wasn't about to let them get away with this.
As she stumbled away from the Daimon
toward her sword that had skidded to the foot of the stairs, she glanced
upstairs and froze. Horror consumed her.
Kyrian lay at the top of staircase,
his body on the landing while his head rested on a step, his right arm fully
extended. A bloodied Greek sword had fallen halfway down the stairs. His
sightless eyes were open and a small trail of blood ran from his lips. But it
was the gaping wound in his chest that held her transfixed.
They had killed him.
A few feet away from his body, two
bare, feminine legs peeked out from under the hem of a pink nightgown in the
doorway of the nursery.
And then she saw Ulric stepping over
Amanda's body with a crying Marissa in his arms as he started for the stairs.
"Daddy!" the toddler
wailed as she fought against the tight hold the Daimon had on her to reach her
father. Pictures flew from the wall into Ulric, who paid them no heed.
"Daddy, Mama, get up."
Marissa pulled the Daimon's hair and bit at him. "Get up!"
"Amanda! Amanda! Amanda!"
Tabitha didn't know who at first was calling her sister's name as terror filled
her. It wasn't until she couldn't scream anymore that she realized the
hysterical shrieks were hers.
Grabbing her sword, she ran up the
stairs for the Daimon. He knocked her back. She slipped on Kyrian's blood and
went tumbling back down.
Valerius caught her from behind
before she fell the whole way.
"Run, Tabitha," he
breathed in her ear.
"I can't. That's my niece and
I'll be damned if he's going to get her without a fight."
She pushed herself away from
Valerius as a phantom wind whipped through the room. It tore through the house
with a vengeance, hurtling lamps, plants, and anything small around.
And as it touched the Daimons, they
fell one by one with nothing more than a gasp.
Clutching Marissa to him,
Desiderius, who was still in Ulric's body, ran past her and Valerius into the
living room.
Tabitha followed, intending to
reclaim her niece.
"Desi!" he cried as his
son fell and then vanished into nothingness. "Desi!"
"It hurts, doesn't it?"
Tabitha turned to face the voice she
knew so well.
It was Acheron.
He walked slowly through the
shattered doorway as if nothing odd had happened.
Marissa stopped crying the instant
she saw him. "Akri, akri!" she called, reaching out for him.
"What the hell are you?"
Desiderius asked.
Ash held his hand out and Marissa
was torn free from Desiderius's arms. She floated across the room to Ash, who
cuddled her close to his chest.
"I'm her godfather, with a
heavy emphasis on the god part." Ash placed a kiss on Marissa's head.
"Rissa want her mommy and
daddy, akri," Marissa said as she locked her tiny arms around Ash's neck
and squeezed him tight. "Make them get up."
"Don't worry, ma komatia"
Ash said soothingly. "Everything's fine now."
Shrieking, Desiderius lunged at them
and rebounded off what appeared to be an invisible wall.
Valerius stood beside Tabitha as
Acheron approached them.
Ash held his hand out and Kyrian's
sword flew into his grip. He handed it to Tabitha. "Have at it, Tabby.
Desiderius is all yours."
"Stryker!" Desiderius
called as he pulled out what appeared to be an ancient amulet. "Open the
portal."
"There is no portal," Ash
said with a sneer. "Not for you, asshole."
For the first time since the whole
horrendous night had started, Tabitha smiled. "Eat steel, you sorry
bastard!"
She ran at him.
Valerius went to help her. In her
current mood, she wasn't thinking straight and he wasn't about to see her hurt.
She'd been hurt enough.
While Tabitha attacked the Daimon,
Acheron paused on the stairs beside Kyrian's body.
"Close your eyes, Marissa, and
make a wish for your daddy to hold you."
She clenched her eyes shut.
"Daddy, hold me."
Valerius paused as Kyrian took a
deep breath and blinked his eyes. The Greek looked as dazed as Valerius felt
while he helped Tabitha fight the Daimon.
Ash handed Kyrian his daughter, who
squealed in happiness that her father was alive. Then the Atlantean continued
up the stairs.
Valerius didn't have time to
contemplate the total bizarreness of that as Desiderius lunged for Tabitha.
He pulled the Daimon back.
"Forget it," he snarled.
Desiderius fought his hold.
Yelling in triumph, Tabitha plunged
her sword through Desiderius's heart. Valerius jumped back an instant before
the blade went through the body and would have stabbed him as well.
Tabitha pulled it out and smiled
until the wound on Desiderius healed.
He laughed. "I'm a Dark-Hunter,
bitch. You can't—"
His words were silenced as Valerius
delivered the one blow that would kill a Dark-Hunter.
He severed the Daimon's head from
his shoulders.
"No one calls her a bitch and
lives," Valerius snarled as Desiderius collapsed.
Tabitha was frozen completely by the
grisly sight. She should have felt avenged.
She didn't.
Nothing could ease the pain this
night had wrought.
Valerius pulled her into his arms
and turned her away from the body as Otto came crashing through the door's
remains.
He stood there, surveying the damage
that had once been her sister's prized home.
"Do I want to know?" Otto
whispered.
She shook her head.
"Amanda," she breathed in
an agonized tone as her tears started again.
How could her twin be dead?
"Tabby?"
Tabitha's breath caught in her
throat as she heard her sister's voice from the stairs. She turned her head
slowly, almost afraid it would be another specter.
It wasn't.
Amanda stood there, her face pale,
her hair disheveled, her gown coated in blood.
But she was alive!
Shrieking, Tabitha ran for her and
pulled her into her arms, holding her tight as her tears flowed yet again, only
this time in happiness.
Amanda was alive! The words echoed
in her mind.
"I love you, I love you, I love
you!" she breathed against her sister's neck. "And if you ever die on
me again, I'll kill you so dead!"
The two of them stood there locked
in an embrace.
Valerius smiled at the sight of
them, grateful for Tabitha's sake that Amanda was whole.
His smile died when his gaze met
Kyrian's as the Greek came down the stairs with Acheron behind him. There was
nothing but open hatred in the Greek's eyes.
"Where's Kassim?" Otto
asked.
"He's dead," Ash said
wearily. "He's upstairs in the nursery."
Both Valerius and Otto winced.
Tabitha let go of Amanda as she
caught sight of Kyrian.
"You were dead," she
breathed. "I saw you."
"They both were dead," Ash
said as he stepped past the twins and headed into the living room. He held his
hand up and clenched it into a fist.
Desiderius's body vanished
instantly.
"You're a god?" Valerius
asked him as Ash's earlier declaration finally seeped into his mind.
Ash didn't respond. He didn't have
to.
"Why didn't you ever tell
us?" Kyrian asked.
Ash shrugged. "Why should I? By
tomorrow none of you will even remember that you ever learned this about
me."
Tabitha frowned. "I don't
understand."
Ash took a deep breath. "The
universe is an extremely complicated thing. All any of you need to know is that
Amanda and Kyrian are now immortal. No one will ever be able to kill them
again."
"What?" Amanda asked,
stepping away from Tabitha.
Ash looked to Kyrian. "I
promised I wouldn't let you die and I am bound by my oath."
"Wait!" Tabitha said.
"You're a god. You can bring back Tia!"
Ash's face turned pale. "Tia is
dead?"
"Didn't you know?"
"No," Ash said quietly. He
got that faraway look as if he were listening for something very faint.
"She wasn't supposed to die tonight."
"Then save her!"
He looked as sick as Tabitha felt.
"I can't help Tia. Her soul has passed on. I can't force it back into her
body against her will. Amanda and Kyrian's souls refused to leave their
daughter and I got here in time to restore them."
"What about my unborn
baby?" Amanda asked. "Was it hurt by this?"
Ash shook his head. "He's fine
and would appreciate it greatly if you'd drink more apple juice." Ash
lifted his hands and everything in the house went back to what it had been
before the Daimons had come.
Nothing was out of place.
"Ash," Tabitha said,
moving to stand beside him. "Please bring Tia back for me."
He cupped her face in his palm.
"I wish I could, Tabby. I really do. But know that she's watching out for
you and that she loves you."
She saw red at his words.
"That's not good enough for me, Ash. I want her back."
"I know, but right now I have
other people to check on."
"But my sister…"
Ash took Tabitha's hand and placed
it into Valerius's. "I have to go, Tabitha." He turned to Otto.
"Jean-Luc is alive, but seriously hurt. I need you and Nick to get him
back to his boat."
"We don't know where Nick
is," Otto said quietly. "I found his mother dead."
Ash vanished immediately.
"I really hate it when he does
that," Kyrian said as he shifted a now-sleeping Marissa in his arms.
Tabitha didn't move while her sister
sat down on the floor and started crying.
Tabitha sat beside her and pulled
her close.
"What a day," Amanda
sobbed. "I saw my husband killed. Kassim… Tia and now Cherise."
"I know," Tabitha said.
"I'm not so sure we're the ones who won this time around."
"No," Kyrian said as he
joined them on the floor. "We're still here and they're not. To me, that's
winning." He pulled his wife against his chest and kissed her on the head.
Tabitha turned to see Valerius
heading for the door with Otto.
By the time she caught up, he and
Otto were outside the house.
"What are you doing?" she
asked him.
"We didn't want to intrude on a
family moment," he said quietly. "Your sister needs you."
"And I need you."
Valerius was stunned as she walked
into his arms.
She wrapped her arms around him and
held him close while Otto turned off her car.
"I'll leave the keys in it and
see you guys later." He got into his Jag and drove off.
"Thank you," Tabitha
whispered as she tucked her head in below his chin. "I wouldn't have made
it through tonight without you."
"I'm sorry I wasn't of more
help and I'm so sorry about Tia."
He felt her tears scalding his chest
through his shirt.
"Your mother said she wanted
you home."
Tabitha nodded. "Yeah, I need
to go see her. She draws her strength from us." She pulled away as Amanda
came out onto the front porch. "I'm going to see Mom."
Amanda nodded. "Tell her I'll
be there tomorrow morning. I don't want her to see me like this."
Tabitha looked at Amanda's bloodied
gown.
"Yeah, that's the last thing
she needs."
Then Amanda did the most amazing
thing of all: She reached out and pulled Valerius close for a hug. "Thank
you for coming, Valerius, and for keeping Tabitha safe. I really appreciate
it." She kissed his cheek before she pulled away.
Valerius had never been more stunned
in his life. In that moment, he felt a strange sense of almost belonging
somewhere. It was such a foreign, odd sensation that he wasn't sure how to cope
with it.
"My pleasure, Amanda."
She patted his arm, then went back
into her house.
Valerius helped Tabitha into her
battered car and for once he took the driver's seat. He didn't say a word as
she gave him directions to her mother's house in Metairie.
Neither of them spoke the entire
way. His heart ached for her. Taking her hand, he held it quietly in the
darkness while she stared out the passenger side window.
When they reached her mother's
house, he got out and opened the door for her.
Tabitha drew a ragged breath as she
contemplated facing her mother. For once her courage was gone.
Valerius handed her the keys.
She frowned at him as he stepped
away from her. "What are you doing?"
"I was going to head
back."
"Don't leave me, Val.
Please."
He brushed a tender hand down her
cold cheek and nodded. He kept his hands on her shoulders and in truth she
needed to feel his touch as she knocked on the door.
Her father answered it, his face
grim. His dour look lightened and tears filled his eyes as he saw her and
pulled her up into a rib-crushing embrace. "Thank God at least you're all
right. Your mother has been out of her mind with fear for you."
She hugged him back. "I'm okay,
Daddy, so's Amanda and Kyrian."
Her father released her, then
narrowed his eyes on Valerius. "Who are you?"
"He's my boyfriend, Daddy,
please be nice to him."
Kindness was the last thing Valerius
expected, so when her father held a hand out to him, he was stunned.
Valerius shook it and then was led
into a house that was packed full of the Devereaux clan.
And as he stepped into the living
room, Valerius felt something he'd never felt in all his life.
He felt like he'd come home.
Chapter 16
Ash entered Artemis's temple on
Olympus without any preamble. In the middle of the large main room, which was
surrounded by columns, she reclined on a white throne that looked more like a
chaise longue.
Her koris, who had been singing and
playing lutes, immediately rushed from the room and as one rather tall blond
kori ran past him, he paused and turned to look after her.
"What are you doing here?"
Artemis asked, and for once her tone was hesitant.
He turned back toward her and
shifted the backpack on his shoulder. "I wanted to thank you for what you
did tonight, but as I considered that, it dawned on me that you have never once
in eleven thousand years done anything for me for free. The sheer fear factor
of that realization alone has made me come seeking you. So what gives?"
Artemis wrapped her arms around
herself as she sat on her white throne. "I was worried about you."
He laughed bitterly at that.
"You never worry about me."
"I do, too. I called and you
didn't answer me."
"I almost never answer
you."
She looked away, reminding him of a
cringing child who had been caught doing something wrong.
"Spill it, Artemis. I have a
lot of crap to clean up tonight and don't want you on top of it."
She took a deep breath. "Very
well, it's not like I can keep it from you."
"Keep what from me?"
"A new Dark-Hunter was born tonight."
His blood ran cold at that.
Literally. "Damn you, Artemis! How could you do this?"
She came off her throne ready to
battle. "I had no choice."
"Yeah, right."
"No, Acheron. I had no
choice."
As she spoke, his mind connected
with hers and the images of her and Nick went through him.
"Nick?" he breathed, his
heart shattering.
What had he done?
"You cursed him," Artemis
said quietly. "I'm so sorry."
Ash ground his teeth as guilt
consumed him. He knew better than to speak in anger.
His will, even when not thought out,
made reality. One wrong word… He had damned his best friend.
"Where is he?"
"The bower room."
Ash started to leave, but Artemis
stopped him. "I didn't know what else to do, Acheron. I didn't."
She held her hand out and a dark
green amulet appeared. She handed it to him.
"How many lashes?" he
asked bitterly, thinking it was Valerius's soul she offered him.
A single tear fled down her cheek.
"None. It's Nick's soul, and I have no right to it." She pressed it
into his hand.
Ash was so stunned he didn't know
what to say.
He placed it into his backpack.
Artemis swallowed as she watched him
tuck it carefully away. "Now you're going to learn."
"Learn what?"
"Just how heavy a burden a soul
is."
He gave her a dry stare. "That
I learned a long time ago, Artie."
And with that, he stepped back and
willed himself to Nick's prison. He opened the door slowly to find his friend
in a fetal position on the floor.
"Nick?"
Nick looked up, his black eyes
rimmed in red. The anger and pain Ash saw and felt from Nick tore through him.
"They killed my mother, Ash."
A new wave of guilt slammed through
him. In one fit of anger and with nothing more than a single sentence, he had
altered their fates and had stolen from Nick and Tabitha the two people that
neither of them should have lost. It was all his fault.
"I know, Nick, and I'm
sorry." He was sorrier than Nick would ever know. "Cherise was one of
the few decent people in this world. I loved her, too."
He loved the New Orleans crew a lot
more than he should. Love was a worthless emotion that had never served him
anything but misery.
Even Simi…
Ash ran his hand over her tattoo as
he fought back his emotions.
He made himself numb, then reached
out to Nick. "C'mon."
"Where are we going?"
"I'm taking you home. You have
a lot to learn."
"About what?"
"How to be a Dark-Hunter.
Everything you think you know about fighting, surviving, it's nothing. I have
to show you how to use your new powers and to see correctly with those
eyes."
"And if I don't want to
learn?"
"Then you'll die and there
won't be any coming back from it this time."
Nick took his hand and allowed him
to pull him to his feet.
Ash closed his eyes and took Nick
home.
He'd never looked forward to
training a new Dark-Hunter, but this one…
This one hurt most of all.
Valerius slipped out of the
Devereaux house an hour before dawn. Tabitha had finally fallen asleep, and he
had carried her upstairs to the room that she had shared with Amanda when they
were children.
After placing her on the bed, he'd
spent longer than he should have looking over the old photos on the wall of the
two of them together.
Of them with their sisters.
His poor Tabitha. He didn't know if
she'd ever heal.
He called a taxi and had it drop him
at his house. The place was completely dark. There was no one there now, and he
realized just how reliant he'd become on Tabitha.
These last couple of weeks…
They had been miraculous.
She was miraculous.
Now their time together was over.
Valerius opened the door to his house
and listened to the silence. He shut and locked the door, then walked up the
stairs to the solarium where Agrippina's statue waited.
He refilled the oil in her lamp
before he realized just how stupid he'd been, both as a man and as a
Dark-Hunter.
He hadn't been able to protect
Agrippina or Tabitha from the pain that was life.
Just as he couldn't protect himself.
But then, maybe life wasn't about
protecting. Maybe it was about something else.
Something even more valuable.
It was about sharing.
He didn't need someone to protect
him from the past. He needed the touch of a woman whose warmth chased away
those demons. A woman whose very presence had made the unbearable bearable.
And in all these centuries he still
hadn't learned the most valuable thing of all.
How to say "I love you" to
someone.
But at least now he understood what
feeling it meant.
His heart shattering, he touched
Agrippina's cold cheek. It was time to let go of the past.
"Good night, Agrippina,"
he whispered.
Stepping down, he blew out her flame
and walked out of the room that had been hers alone and into the one he had
learned to share with Tabitha.
Tabitha came awake to find herself
alone in her old bed. She closed her eyes and wished herself back to childhood.
Back to the days when all of her sisters had shared this house with her. Back
to the time when their worst fear was not having a date for the prom.
But time was ever fleeting.
And there was no way back.
Sighing, she rolled over and
realized that Valerius wasn't with her. She felt the absence of him
immediately.
She got up and pulled on a bathrobe
her mother must have left in the room for her. As she walked past the dresser,
she paused, then stepped back to see a ring on top of it.
Her heart pounded as she recognized
Valerius's signet ring on top of a folded-up note.
Picking it up, she read the handful
of words.
Thank you, my lady Tabitha. For
everything. Val
Tabitha frowned. Was it a kiss-off?
Oh, yeah, that was just what she needed right now.
Why not?
She was almost angry until she read
it again and realized that he hadn't signed it "Valerius."
He'd used her nickname for him.
A nickname he hated.
Her throat tight, she tucked the
note into her pocket and kissed the ring he'd left her. She slid it onto her
thumb and went to bathe.
Valerius was dreaming of Tabitha.
She was laughing in his ear as she lay beneath him.
It seemed so real, he could almost
swear he felt her hand on his back…
No, now it was buried in his hair.
And then she moved it away and ran
it over his hip, down his thigh until she cupped him in her palm.
Growling in pleasure, Valerius
opened his eyes to realize it wasn't a dream.
Tabitha lay on her side next to him.
"Hi, baby," she whispered.
"What are you doing here?"
he asked, unable to believe she was real.
She held her hand up to show him his
ring. "How could I be anywhere else given the curtness of your note?"
"My note wasn't curt."
She scoffed at him. "I almost
thought you were telling me to hit the road."
"Why would you think that? I
left you my ring."
"Consolation gift?"
He rolled his eyes at her
misbegotten reasoning. "No, that ring means that the wearer is worth his
or her weight in gold. See?" He held it up so that she could see the regal
crest.
A slow smile spread across her face.
"I'm worth my weight in gold?"
Valerius moved her hand to his lips
so that he could kiss it. "You're worth a lot more than that to me."
Her eyes misted as she looked up at
him. "I love you, Valerius."
He'd never heard anything more
precious to him. "I love you, too, Tabitha," he said, his voice
thick.
Her smile widened as she pulled him
into her arms and kissed him senseless.
She literally tore her shirt off
before she wiggled herself up under him.
Valerius laughed at her eagerness
before he kissed her gently on the lips.
She wasn't in the mood for that.
They made love furiously, as if they wouldn't have another chance again.
Afterward, they lay in each other's
arms. Valerius toyed with her hair as he contemplated their future. "So
what do we do now, Tabitha?"
"What do you mean?"
"How do we make this
relationship work? Kyrian still hates me and I'm still a Dark-Hunter."
"Well," she said raggedly.
"Rome wasn't built in one day. We take it one step at a time."
Little did she know that those steps
were going to be horrific.
The first one came the night of her
sister's wake. Valerius had driven her to her parents' only to pull up short as
they realized Kyrian, Amanda, and Julian and his wife Grace were there.
The animosity was tangible.
Tabitha had meant to stay with
Valerius the entire time, but her Aunt Zelda pulled her away.
"I'll be right back."
Valerius nodded as he went to get
something else to drink.
Julian and Kyrian cornered him in
the kitchen.
He sighed wearily as he waited for
them to start in on him. He set his cup down.
Kyrian grabbed his arm.
Valerius was about to lay him out
cold when he realized that Kyrian wasn't hurting him. He pulled back Valerius's
sleeve so that the scars of his execution were visible.
"Amanda told me how you
died," Kyrian said quietly. "I didn't believe her."
Valerius jerked his arm away.
Without a word, he started away from the two Greeks.
But Kyrian's voice stopped him.
"Look, Valerius, I have to tell you that it literally kills me every time
I see you. Can you imagine what it would be like if I had the face of the man
who nailed you to the wood?"
Valerius gave a bitter laugh at the
irony. "Actually, I know exactly how you feel, General. Every time I use a
mirror, I too see the face of my executioner."
He may not have been twins with his
brothers, but they looked enough alike that it was hard to see himself in a
mirror without seeing them. It was why he was so damned grateful Dark-Hunters
didn't cast reflections unless they wanted to.
Kyrian nodded. "Yeah, I guess
you would. I don't suppose I could bribe or bully you away from Tabitha, can
I?"
"No."
"Then we're going to have to be
grown-ups here because I love my wife too much to hurt her. She's lost one
sister, it would kill her to lose another one. She needs Tabitha." Kyrian
grimaced as if in pain, then held his hand out to Valerius. "Truce?"
Valerius took his hand into his.
"Truce."
Kyrian released him, then Julian
offered his hand.
"For the record," Kyrian
said before he left. "This only makes us friendly enemies."
Tabitha came into the kitchen as
they left. "You okay?"
He nodded. "Kyrian decided to grow
up."
She looked impressed. "I guess
immortality agrees with him."
"Apparently so."
The two of them stayed at the wake
until just after midnight when they decided to head home in Tabitha's beat-up
Mini Cooper.
As they entered the foyer, they
found Ash waiting for them.
"What are you doing here?"
Valerius asked.
Ash came forward and handed a small
box to Tabitha. "You know what to do. Just remember: Don't drop it."
Tabitha was aghast as she held the
box that contained Valerius's soul in her hand. "We had decided that we
weren't going to do this. I don't want to take Valerius's immortality from
him."
Ash let out a long, tired breath.
"Until you return his soul to him, Artemis owns him. Is that what you
want?"
"No."
"Well, there you go." Ash
headed for the door, then paused to look back at them. "By the way, Tabby,
you're immortal now, too."
"What?"
He shrugged. "It wouldn't be
fair to Amanda to lose you to old age."
"But how? How can I be
immortal?"
Ash gave her a wry grin. "It's
the will of the gods. Don't question it."
He slipped out the door and left
them alone.
"Wow," Tabitha breathed as
she opened up the box to see a royal blue medallion inside. It was vibrant with
swirling colors that made it seem as if it were living.
She closed the box. "Well, what
do you think?"
"I think you'd best not drop
it."
She agreed.
Later that night when it came time
to stake him so that she could return his soul to him, she learned something
horrible.
She couldn't do it.
"C'mon, Tabitha," Valerius
said as he sat up on the bed, shirtless. "You stabbed me the night we met
without even blinking."
"Yeah, but you were a dirtbag
then."
"I think I'm offended."
Weeks went by as Tabitha attempted
to stab Valerius, only to meet with failure.
She even tried to pretend he was a
Daimon.
It didn't work. Not to mention the
small fact that they had yet to discover what would drain his Dark-Hunter
powers and make him human long enough to die.
So they settled into a strange kind
of peace. Tabitha moved out of her apartment over her store and left that for
Marla to keep while she lived with Valerius.
They stayed together in the daytime
and hunted together at night.
Still she couldn't stake him, but at
least one afternoon, she'd learned his weakness: hurting her. It'd been an
accident. He'd been reaching for his sword when he'd accidentally elbowed her.
For two hours, his eyes had been blue.
Even so, she hadn't been able to
stab him.
It was hopeless.
Until that summer. While Tabitha and
Valerius were in the middle of training in the upstairs gym, the unthinkable
happened.
One minute, she had been playing
with Valerius; the next, Kyrian burst through the door, causing Valerius to
strike her by accident. His eyes turned instantly blue. Before she realized
what he was doing, Kyrian grabbed Valerius, threw him to the ground, and drove
a stake through his heart and left it there.
"What are you doing?"
Tabitha shrieked, rushing toward him.
Amanda caught her. "It's okay,
Tabby," she said, forcing the box that held Valerius's soul into her hand.
"Since you keep telling me that you can't do this, Kyrian
volunteered."
"Yeah, and with any luck, you
might actually drop it," Kyrian said evilly.
Tabitha scowled at him.
Grabbing the box from her sister,
she knelt beside Val.
Valerius lay on the floor panting.
His face was covered in sweat while he bled from his wound.
"Don't worry, baby. I won't
drop it."
He offered her a trembling smile.
"I trust you."
Tabitha's heart stopped as he died.
Grabbing the medallion, she cried out as it burned her palm. Tabitha bit her
lip and placed the medallion to the bow-and-arrow brand on Valerius's hip.
"Sh," Amanda said
soothingly. "It'll stop burning in a second. Just think about
Valerius."
She did, even though every sane part
of her wanted to let go of the burning hunk of lava that seared her hand.
Finally, it started to cool.
Valerius didn't move.
Tabitha began to panic.
"It's okay," Amanda said.
"It just takes a minute."
And after a few more, Valerius
opened his eyes, which were now a permanent and vibrant shade of blue. His
fangs were completely gone.
Tabitha smiled at the sight of him,
grateful beyond measure that he was alive. "You don't look right."
Valerius cupped her face. "I
think you look beautiful."
"I think I should stake him
again just for good measure," Kyrian said.
"I think we need to be
going," Amanda said as she got up from the floor, grabbed her husband, and
made a quick exit.
"Oh, c'mon," Kyrian whined
from the hallway. "Can't I please stake him one more time?"
"Hi, human," Tabitha said
before she kissed him.
Then she pulled back with a cry as
she realized something.
She was immortal. Now that Valerius
was no longer a Dark-Hunter, he wasn't.
"Oh, my God," she
breathed. "What have we done?"
But the answer was simple. They had
just damned her to live out eternity without him.
Chapter 17
Four months later Mount Olympus
"Your brother's getting married
today, Zarek."
Zarek rolled over in bed to find his
wife Astrid staring at him with that unnerving gimlet look that she seemed to
reserve solely for him whenever he irritated her. "And I should care,
why?"
"He's all the family you have
left, and I would like for my baby to know both sides of his family."
Zarek turned back to his side as he
pretended to ignore her. But that was impossible. For one thing, he loved her
too much to ever discount her, and for another, she wouldn't be ignored.
He felt her hand in his hair as she
toyed with it. "Zarek?"
He didn't answer. After Ash had
returned to earth with Tabitha, he'd spent a lot of time in the Peradomatio, or
Hall of the Past.
Astrid was wearing off on him after
all. Being married to her had taught him much about justice.
No, that wasn't exactly true. Being
with her was making the past somehow bearable, and now that she was pregnant…
He didn't want his son born into a
world where forgiveness was an alien concept.
"It's not easy to let go of the
past, Astrid," he said finally.
She kissed his shoulder, sending
chills all over him. "I know, Prince Charming." She rolled him over,
onto his back, and leaned over him.
Zarek placed his hand against her
distended stomach, where he felt his baby moving rambunctiously against his
palm. His son was due in only two weeks.
"So, do I need to get dressed
for a wedding?" Astrid asked quietly.
Zarek brushed her long, blonde hair
back from her face so that he could cup her cheek. "I prefer you naked, in
my bed."
"Is that your final
answer?"
"What's wrong, Tabitha?"
Tabitha turned around to see
Valerius behind her. He looked completely elegant in his black tie attire, but
then he always looked that way. Unlike her, he never had a single hair out of
place.
Her body wanned instantly at his
approach. She wore a strapless wedding dress and was barefoot at the moment,
having kicked off her high heels the minute they left the cathedral.
"Nothing's wrong," she
lied, not wanting him to know just how sorry she was for all the strife she'd
caused him.
And how she really would be the
death of him one day.
Her heart ached.
"Are you ready to trade me in
yet?" she asked playfully, even though her throat was really tight.
"Never, but there's a large
crowd of people out in the backyard who are wondering where the bride is."
She wrinkled her nose at that.
"Okay, I'm coming," she said, taking him by the arm.
He led her back outside into the
thick of madness that was her family.
She'd opted at the church not to
divide up the guests in the pews lest it become painfully obvious that there
wasn't anyone on the groom's side.
Even four of the seven groomsmen had
to be borrowed from her side. Only Ash, Gilbert, and Otto had been there for
Valerius.
She was still angered that no other
Dark-Hunter had come or sent good wishes.
Kyrian, Julian, Talon, and Tad had
graciously volunteered to finish out the number of groomsmen so that her
sisters wouldn't be without escorts. For that, she would love them always.
Her Aunt Sophie grabbed her and
pulled her away from Valerius.
Tabitha promised her return before
the women surrounded her.
Valerius smiled at the sight, then
turned to go get them both a glass of champagne. Laughter echoed in the
backyard, amidst the strains of the orchestra they'd hired. Tabitha had wanted
a Goth band to play, but her mother had put her foot down and insisted Tabitha
not make the ears of their guests bleed.
He looked around the crowd where
people were laughing together and talking. Ash, Otto, and even Gilbert were
standing off to the side with the other groomsmen. He longed to go over and
join them, but knew from experience that though Kyrian and Julian tolerated his
presence, they didn't like it.
How odd that he felt alienated even
at his own wedding.
Taking a drink of champagne, he
scanned the crowd until he found his wife with her sisters.
He smiled at the sight Tabitha was
absolutely lovely with her auburn hair down around her shoulders. Someone had
placed little sprigs of flowers all through her hair and sprayed glitter in it.
She looked like some ethereal fey out to seduce him.
The wedding director came up to
inform him that dinner was ready to be served.
Inclining his head to her, Valerius
went to tell Tabitha that they needed everyone to be seated.
He claimed his bride and led her to
the bridal table.
Tabitha laughed under her breath as
she sat in the chair and they actually got her scooted up without incident. She
was finally learning how to do this properly. The first time Valerius had held
a chair out for her had been a complete fiasco.
He took a seat on her right as
Gilbert sat to her left.
The waiters started bringing out
plates and filling the wineglasses.
Valerius took her hand into his,
then kissed her knuckles. The sensation of his lips on her hand set fire to
her. She'd never known a human being could be so happy and yet terrified at the
same time.
Once everyone was served, Gilbert
stood up to toast them.
The band stopped playing.
Gilbert opened his mouth, but before
he could speak, a deep, accented voice interrupted him.
"I know that it's typical for
the best man to toast the couple, but I think Gilbert might forgive me for
usurping his place for a minute."
Tabitha had to force herself not to
gape as Zarek approached their table from out in the crowd.
Valerius's grip tightened on her
hand.
Zarek paused directly in front of
them and stared meaningfully at his brother. "Weddings have always been a
fascinating thing to me," he said, his voice ringing out. "A time
when two people look into each other's eyes and promise each other that they
will never allow anyone or anything to divide them.
"Out of two families, they come
together to form a separate branch that links back to their roots. It's a time
when two families are joined together because of the hearts of two people. A
time when ill will and bad feelings should be put to rest along with the
past."
Zarek's gaze went down the table,
stopping at each of the current and former Dark-Hunters. "Weddings signify
a new beginning. After all, no human alive has ever been able to choose his
family… God knows, I would never have chosen mine." He quirked a smile at
Valerius. "But as the Roman playwright Terence once wrote, 'From many a
bad beginning great friendships have formed.'"
Zarek lifted a glass to them.
"Here's to my brother, Valerius, and his wife Tabitha. May you both come
to enjoy the happiness I have known with my own wife. And may you give one
another all the love you both deserve."
Tabitha wasn't sure which of them
was the most stunned by Zarek's words. Her family, unaware of what an
unexpected moment this was, cheered Zarek's toast.
Shocked beyond comprehension,
neither of them took a drink.
Zarek walked over and gave them a
wry, almost mocking grin. "You're supposed to take a drink now."
They did, but Valerius choked on
his. He sniffed the glass suspiciously.
"Did you poison me?" he
asked Zarek in a low tone.
Zarek rubbed his eyebrow with his
middle finger. "No, Valerius. Even I'm not that cruel."
"It's nectar," a woman's
voice said.
Tabitha turned to see a beautiful
blonde pregnant woman behind her.
The woman placed a gentle hand on
her shoulder, then kissed her on the cheek. "I'm Zarek's wife,
Astrid," she said in a low tone that only the two of them could hear. She
turned to Valerius and gave him a kiss as well. "We couldn't decide what
to give the two of you for a wedding gift, so Zarek thought the best gift would
be eternity together."
"Yeah," Zarek said in a
surly tone. "That's the polite version of what I said."
Astrid gave him a playfully mean
look before she looked back at them. "Congratulations to you both."
She handed Valerius a small bowl of
something that reminded Tabitha of Jell-O. "It's ambrosia," she said
to Valerius. "Eat it and you'll be able to hurl lightning bolts back at
Zarek whenever he gets playful with you."
"Hey!" Zarek snapped.
"I never agreed to that."
Astrid gave him an innocent stare.
"This way, I figure you'll play nicer in the future with your
brother."
Tabitha laughed. "You know, I
think I like my new sister-in-law."
Astrid left them to join Zarek, who
looked less than pleased. "Don't worry, hon, I'll make sure you have
plenty of other things to occupy your time with than harassing Valerius."
Zarek's gaze softened the instant
she touched him.
Valerius rose to his feet and walked
around the table until he stood before Astrid and Zarek. "Thank you,"
he said.
He held his hand out to Zarek, who
looked at it suspiciously. Tabitha half-expected him to turn away.
He didn't.
Taking Valerius's hand, he clapped
him on the back, then released him. "Your woman loves you more than you
know. She's a hell of a fire-cat. I probably should have given you something in
Kevlar."
Valerius laughed at that. "I
hope you two will stay for the reception."
"We'd love to," Astrid
said before Zarek could answer.
The two of them took a seat at the
table with Selena and Bill while Valerius came back to her.
"Bon appetit," Tabitha
said as she held the ambrosia out to him.
He ate it, then kissed her.
"Mmm," Tabitha breathed,
inhaling the scent of her husband. "Pedicabo ego vos et irrumabo." I intend to have my way with you
upstairs and down.
Valerius smiled. "And I intend
to let you." His face turned serious as he stared at her and his love for
her consumed him. "Amo, Tabitha. Amo."
Epilogue
One year later
"Look at the poor
bastard," Kyrian said as he sat inside the Cafй Pontalba with Amanda,
Grace, Julian, Bill, and Selena having dinner. "I should have been kind
and killed him when I had the chance."
Through the doorway on their right,
they could see Tabitha and Valerius walking toward the St. Louis Cathedral.
The women frowned as they watched
them.
"What?" Amanda asked.
"He's so screwed," Bill
said before taking a drink of his beer. "I wonder what he did wrong this
time."
"What are you two talking
about?" Selena asked.
"I know that Devereaux
walk," Kyrian said, shaking his head. "It's the 'You're not going to
get any tonight, pal, so don't even ask' walk."
"Oh, hell yeah," Bill
agreed. "Be glad you married the only one of the sisters who won't rack
you in a fit of anger, Kyrian. You seriously lucked out."
"I beg your pardon?"
Selena glared at her husband.
Kyrian laughed.
"I wouldn't laugh if I were
you," Amanda said, her voice tense as they saw Tabitha tell Valerius to
"talk to the hand."
Then she continued to walk in front
of him as Valerius followed and made placating gestures.
"I really hate that walk,"
Bill muttered.
"I think you're both going to
see that walk up close and personal tonight," Julian said before he pulled
out his Nextel phone. He scrolled through the names before he clicked the talk
button. "Hey, Otto? Where are you?"
"Cafй Du Monde. Why?"
"Can you see Valerius and
Tabitha? They look like they're heading down the Pedestrian Mall toward
you."
Otto made a sound of disgust.
"Yeah, the two of them need to go get a room."
"Pardon?" Julian asked.
"They're lip-locked like two
horny teenagers."
Amanda and Selena gave their
husbands indignant glares.
"No way." Kyrian got up
and dashed out the doorway with Bill one step behind him.
He walked the block over to see
Tabitha and Valerius stopped in front of Selena's store.
Sure enough, the two of them were
necking.
"Excuse me?" Bill said.
"You know, there are public decency laws here?"
Tabitha scoffed at Bill. "Do
you remember what happened to you the last time you tried to tell a Devereaux
what the city laws were?"
Bill went pale.
Tabitha laughed, then returned to
what she'd been doing before Bill so rudely interrupted her.
Read on for an excerpt from Sherrilyn Kenyon's next book
Sins of the Night
Coming soon from St. Martin's Paperbacks
Sighing, Danger pulled into her
driveway and did her best to clear her thoughts. She saw Keller's SUV. Damn.
She really wasn't in the mood for his five thousand questions tonight. Not
while she was trying to sort through all this.
After getting out of the car, she
made her way into her house. It was eerily quiet. How unlike Keller not to have
a radio blasting or be in the middle of a boisterous phone conversation with a
friend.
"Keller?" she called,
heading for the living room.
She paused in the doorway to find
her Squire sitting on the couch across from an unknown man.
"Hey, Danger," Keller said
in a nervous greeting. "We have a guest. He's um… he's Ash's Squire."
The man stood up and Danger's gaze
quickly fell to the white garment draped on the arm of her chair.
It was a coat.
And it belonged to Ash's Squire—who
was blond…
Danger's reaction to her
"guest" was swift and automatic, and it happened without any
premeditation on her part. She pulled out her dagger and threw it straight into
the man's heart. He burst apart into a golden dust just like any good Daimon
would.
"Mere d'un dieu," she
breathed. Kyros had been right. The man was…
Entering the room from the doorway
on her right!
Her jaw dropped as he sauntered into
the room with an arrogant swagger and a less-than-amused smirk. He pinned her
with a droll stare as he moved to stand in front of her. Her dagger shot from
the floor where it had fallen after he'd exploded into dust, and into his hand.
He held it out to her. "Could you please refrain from the theatrics? I
really hate doing that. It seriously pisses me off and it ruins a perfectly
good shirt."
Danger continued to gape as she
stared at the hole in his black turtleneck where the dagger had gone in. There
was no blood. No wound. Nothing. Not even a red mark.
"What are you?" she
breathed.
"Well, had you listened before
you stabbed me, you would have heard the 'I'm Acheron's Squire' part.
Apparently that somehow escaped your hearing and you mistook me for a pin
cushion."
He was certainly a snotty bastard.
"He has some really sweet
talents, Danger," Keller said from the couch. "He made all the
Daimons explode without touching them, but he won't tell me how he did
it."
Danger took her dagger from
Alexion's hand, then, without thought, touched the ragged tear in his shirt. He
felt solid underneath. Real. There was warm skin beneath the silk and wool
fabric and it was hard and masculine. Yet human beings didn't shatter like
Daimons and no Daimon reappeared after death…
In that moment, she was terrified of
him, and terror wasn't something Danger St. Richard felt.
Alexion ground his teeth at the
sensation of her soft touch. He felt his body roared to life as he
watched her examine him like a scientist with a lab experiment that had gone
tragically wrong. She was very short for a Dark-Hunter which meant Artemis must
have taken an unusual liking to the woman. The goddess preferred to create
Dark-Hunters who were equal in height to the Daimons they fought.
No more than five two or three,
Dangereuse was petite and athletic. He'd seen her many times lately in the
sfora as he kept watch on what the Mississippi Dark-Hunters were up to.
There had been something about her
that had caught his interest. An innocence that still seemed to be inside her.
Most Dark-Hunters were jaded by their human lives and by their duties. But this
one… She appeared to have avoided the cynicism that eternal life often brought.
Her dark, chestnut-colored hair was
worn in a long braid down her back, but pieces of it had escaped to curl
becomingly around her face. Her features were angelic and delicate. If not for
her carriage and self-assuredness, she would have appeared fragile.
And yet there was nothing fragile
about her. Dangereuse could more than take care of herself and he knew that
well. As one of the newer Dark-Hunters, she was only a couple hundred years old
and had died while trying to save the noble half of her family from the
guillotine in France during their revolution. It had been a monumental task she
had set for herself and she would have succeeded, if she hadn't been betrayed.
Not to mention the woman had the
most kissable mouth he'd ever seen. Full and lush, her lips were the kind that
a man dreamed of tasting at night. That mouth beckoned to him with temptation
and the promise of pure unadulterated heaven.
She also smelled of sweet magnolias
and woman. It had been over two hundred years since he'd last tasted a woman.
And it was all he could do not to bend his head down and bury his face against
her soft, tender neck and inhale the scent of her. Feel the softness of her skin
against his hungry lips as he tasted the supple flesh there.
But then, given her first reaction
to his presence, he didn't think she'd react much better to being mauled by
him.
Pity.
Danger swallowed in sudden
trepidation as she looked at the man before her. He was just as Stryker had
foretold… right down to the white cashmere coat.
It's all true. All of it.
He was Acheron's personal destroyer
who had come to kill them for questioning Acheron's authority. She felt the
sudden need to cross herself, but caught herself just in time. The last thing
she needed to do was to let him know she feared him.
Her extremely superstitious and
Catholic mother had always told her that the devil wore the face of an angel.
In this case, it was most certainly true. The man before her was without a
doubt one of the choicest examples of his gender. His dark blond hair held
golden highlights and brushed the top of his collar. He wore it in a casual
style that swept back from a perfectly masculine face. His well-sculpted cheeks
were covered with two days' growth of whiskers that added a savage, fierce look
to him.
Like hers, his eyes were the
midnight black of a Dark-Hunter and yet she sensed that he wasn't one of them.
For one thing, he didn't drain her Dark-Hunter abilities.
There was an aura of extreme power
and lethal danger from him. It rippled and sizzled in the air around them and
made the hair on the back of her neck rise.
"What are you doing here?"
she asked, forcing herself not to betray anything other than nonchalance.
Although the earlier dagger throw had most likely tipped him she wasn't exactly
ambivalent to his presence.
His smile was wicked and disturbing.
"You invited me."
Was that a play on her new suspicion
that Ash might be a Daimon? No Daimon could enter someone's home without an
invitation. Or was he just making an idle comment?
"I invited Ash here. Not you. I
don't even know who you are."
"Alexion." His voice was
deep and well-cultured. There was only the faintest trace of some foreign
accent in it, but she didn't know what nationality it was from.
"Alexion…?" she prompted,
wondering what his surname was.
"Just Alexion."
Keller joined them. "Ash sent
him here for a couple of weeks to check into what you were saying about a Rogue
Dark-Hunter."
She arched a brow at Keller.
"Is that what Alexion told you?"
"Well, yeah, but then I called
Ash and he corroborated it."
Good boy that he didn't accept the
man's word. "Did Ash say anything else?"
"Just to trust Alexion."
Yeah, right.
Danger sheathed her dagger before
she addressed Alexion again. "Well, it appears I spoke too soon. I was
checking into the Rogue thing myself tonight and everything's fine so you can
feel free to return to Ash now."
Alexion narrowed his dark eyes on
her. "Why are you lying to me?"
"I'm not lying."
He dipped his head down so that he
could speak in a low tone just for her hearing. His nearness was disturbing and
intense. It actually raised chills over her body as his hot breath fell against
her skin. "For the record, Dangereuse, I can smell a lie from nine miles
off."
She looked up to see the deep
curiosity in those… She frowned. No longer black, his eyes had turned to a
peculiar hazel green that practically glowed.
Just what the hell was he?
Alexion pinned her with a fierce
stare he no doubt hoped would intimidate her. It wasn't working. Danger refused
to be intimidated by anyone or anything. When he spoke, his voice was scarcely
more than a primal growl. "My only real question is why would you protect
your Rogue?"
She moved away without answering.
"Keller? Can I have a word with you in private?"
Alexion gave a short laugh at that.
"I will leave the two of you alone." He headed for the hallway that
would take him to a guest room.
Danger ground her teeth. Don't tell
me Keller already set him up in my house!
She waited until she was sure
Alexion had left them and lowered her voice. "What the hell happened
tonight? You look like someone beat you."
"They did. I ran into a group
of Daimons and when I told them to back off, they said they were untouchable
now. They said that they were working with the Dark-Hunters."
Anger whipped through her that they
would dare to beat her Squire. "They attacked you?"
"No, I beat my own self up.
What do you think?"
She ignored his sarcasm as she
realized why the plasma TV hadn't been blaring when she came in. It was
shattered. "What happened to the TV?"
Keller looked at it and shrugged.
"I don't know. I was flipping channels after we got back and I paused on
QVC to see this cool camcorder they were advertising and the next thing I knew,
it blew up. I'm not sure if it was the TV or if Alexion has a thing against
QVC."
Thank the Lord and his saints that
her Squire hadn't blown up as well.
"And where did Alexion just
head off to?"
"I put him in the guest suite
that Ash uses whenever he visits."
She clenched her fist to keep from
choking him. "I see."
"I didn't do anything wrong,
did I?"
Yes, but she didn't want to get into
it with him. If he stayed ignorant of all this, maybe Alexion would spare him.
Either way, she refused to put Keller in any danger.
"You're fine, sweetie. Why
don't you head on home before it gets any later?"
Luckily her Squire didn't argue and
he was too dense to recognize the slight tremor of fear for him in her voice.
Just in case Alexion intended to fight, she wanted Keller out of here and
tucked safely at home.
"Okay, Danger. I'll see you
tomorrow night."
"Ahh," Danger hedged at
that "Why don't you take a few days off? Go see your sister in
Montana."
He frowned at her. "Why?"
She offered him a smile she didn't
feel. "I have Acheron's Squire here. I'm sure he can—"
"I don't know," he said,
wrinkling his nose. "He seems all right, but I think I'll hang close to
home, just in case."
"Keller…"
"Don't mess with me, Danger. My
number-one mandate is to protect you. I may be human, but I'm your Squire and
that includes all die inherent risks that come with the position. Okay? I was
raised in this world and I know all the freaky shit it sometimes entails."
She couldn't argue with that.
"All right. Go home and I'll keep in touch."
He nodded, then gathered up his coat
and left
Danger took a deep breath as she
headed for Alexion's room. She really didn't want him here, but what else could
she do? Keep your friends close and your enemies closer.
So long as he was in her house, she
could monitor his activities and see what he was doing. Not to mention she
still wasn't thoroughly convinced about Kyros and his agenda. She'd heard a lot
of weird things lately, including that some of the local Dark-Hunters were
drinking human blood. For all she knew, Kyros was setting her up.
Until she had more information, she
would play this coolly and see for herself what was going on.
At the end of the hallway, she
pushed open the door to find Alexion studying one of the Faberge eggs that she
collected. He stood before the small baroque-style dressing table, holding it
carefully in his large hand as if he understood how much she loved her
collectibles. She was struck by the gentleness of his touch as he closed it and
returned it to its stand.
He was incredibly handsome standing
there and her body reacted to him with an intensity that stunned her.
Alexion felt her presence like a
sizzling caress. It was as if she made contact with his soul every time she
drew near him. Something that was completely impossible since he hadn't owned a
soul in more than nine thousand years.
He didn't know what it was about
her, but his body reacted wildly to her. Turning, he found her in the doorway,
watching him with a wary expression. Danger was afraid of him. Terrified
actually. But she was trying hard to disguise it. Why? He had done nothing to scare
her… not yet anyway.
"I mean you no harm,
Dangereuse."
"The name's Danger," she
corrected. "I haven't gone by Dangereuse in a long time."
"Forgive me."
She took a hesitant step into the
room. "So what's your story? You say you're Ash's Squire. Are you a Blue
Blood, Blood Rites, or what?"
Blue Bloods were Squires who came
from long generations of Squires. Blood Rites were the Squires who were charged
with maintaining that the rules of their world were followed. They protected
the Dark-Hunters and were a police force for other Squires. Of course, Alexion
had been serving Acheron since before the Squires' Council had existed. He
wasn't a true Squire. He was Acheron's Alexion, an Atlantean term that had no
real translation into English. Basically, he would do whatever was necessary to
protect Acheron and Simi. And he truly meant whatever.
But he couldn't tell her the truth
of his status. "I'm a barnacle chip," he answered in Squire slang,
meaning that Acheron had recruited him to be his Squire. In a weird way, it was
even true.
"How long have you served
him?"
He gave a short laugh at that.
"It seems like forever most days."
Her dark eyes flashed suspicion and
intelligence at him. "And how is it that you did that little trick with
the dagger?"
He quirked up one side of his mouth
at her vague questions. "Ask me what's on your mind, Danger. I don't like
to play games. We both know I'm not human so let's not do the polite song and
dance while you tiptoe around me trying to figure me out."
Danger seemed to appreciate his
frankness. "Are you here to spy for Acheron?"
He laughed at that. "No. Trust
me, he doesn't need anyone to spy for him. If he wants to know something, he
does."
"What do you mean?" she
asked nervously.
"I meant what I said. Acheron
is able to find things out on his own."
"Then why were you sent
here?"
Alexion glanced away. Perhaps he
should tell her the truth for once. Most likely, she wouldn't believe him, but
what could it really hurt? "In short, I am here to protect you as much as
I can."
Danger couldn't have been more
surprised had he come right out and admitted to being Acheron's destroyer.
"Protect me from what?"
"Those who would see you dead.
You are in a precarious place, Danger. The one who has gone Rogue will kill you
instantly if he learns you have betrayed him."
Funny, Kyros had been remarkably
understanding about that. "What do you know of it?"
"More than I can share."
Then they were at an impasse.
"In that case, you'll understand if I ask you to stay in a hotel room
while you're here?"
He actually laughed again at that.
"You've met with him and confronted him, haven't you?"
"I don't know what you're
talking about."
He closed the distance between them.
His presence was mammoth in the room. Overpowering and yet strangely
comforting. It was as if his aura were putting off soothing vibes. He was also
extremely compelling in a very sexual way. Acheron was the only other person
she knew who had that strange "do me" factor that enticed everyone who
came near him to strip his clothes off and throw him down for a wicked night of
play. What is wrong with me?
"You know," Alexion said
in a deep tone, "for an actress you certainly can't lie worth a
damn."
She stiffened at his words. "I
beg your pardon?"
"You heard me. So what lie did
Kyros tell you? I hope he was at least more creative than the 'old Acheron is a
Daimon' standby."
She didn't know what surprised her
more. The fact that he knew what they'd said about Acheron or the fact that he
spoke of Kyros as if he knew the man personally. "How do you know about
Kyros?"
"Believe me, I know everything
about him."
Danger was even more confused now.
Was he telling her the truth? Or was he using the truth to distract her?
"So tell me, is Acheron a Daimon?"
Those eerie green hazel eyes
narrowed on her. "What do you think?"
"I don't know." And that
was the honest truth. "It makes sense. He is from Atlantis and we all know
that the Daimons are from there as well."
Alexion scoffed at her.
"Acheron was born in Greece and grew up in Atlantis. That hardly makes him
a Daimon."
"He never eats food."
"Are you sure? Just because he
doesn't eat in front of you, doesn't mean he doesn't eat at all."
He did have a point with that.
"Then what about you? If Kyros is so wrong, how did he know that you were
going to come here in your white coat, huh?"
Alexion froze at her question.
"Pardon?"
"You have no answer for that
one, do you?"
No, he didn't. "How could he
know about me? No one knows I exist."
"Then he's right. You are lying
to me about your purpose. You're here to kill us all."
Alexion couldn't breathe as her
words went through him. How could anyone know about him? It wasn't possible.
Acheron had taken great care to make sure no one knew he existed. "No, I'm
not. I'm here to save as many of you as I can."
"And I'm supposed to believe
you, why?"
"Because I'm telling you the
truth."
"Then prove it."
That was easier said than done.
"Prove it how? The only way to prove to you that I'm not out to kill you
is to not kill you and last I checked you were the one throwing the dagger, not
me."
Danger gave him a hostile glare.
"What was I supposed to think? I come into my house to see my normally
ebullient Squire cowed on my couch, looking beat-up, and my TV blown to kingdom
come. Then this blond man, and I use that term loosely, whom I was told would
come to kill me, stands up wearing the exact white coat that I was told he'd
have on. What would you have done?"
"I would have said, 'Hello, can
I help you?'"
She rolled her eyes at him.
"Sure, you would."
Actually, he would, but then he had
one distinct advantage over her. He couldn't die. At least, not from something
born of this earth.
"Look, Danger, I know you have
absolutely no reason to trust me. Before tonight you never even heard of me.
But you know Acheron. Have you ever seen him hurt anyone? Think about it. If
Ash really were a Daimon, why would he be helping the Dark-Hunters?"
"Because he uses us to fight
his own kind so that his mother doesn't kill him."
Alexion went cold at that. Acheron
would lose his mind if he heard those words. More to the point, there would be
no salvation for any Dark-Hunter here. Acheron would destroy them all without
blinking. When it came to the existence of his mother, Acheron didn't play or
take chances.
"What do you know of his
mother?"
"That she cast him out of the
Daimon realm and now he uses us to get back at her and his people."
"Trust me, that is a complete
lie."
She snorted at him. "The
problem is, I don't trust you. At all."
"But do you trust Kyros?"
He saw her answer in her dark eyes.
No, she didn't. But it spoke a lot for her that she hadn't turned on her
Dark-Hunter brother. She was still protecting Kyros. He could admire her for
that.
"Look, Danger. Open your heart
and listen with your feelings. What does your gut tell you to do?"
"Run for the hills with my
Squire and let you guys duke it out."