Lover Mine(120)
And what a coup for a wealthy household to capture physical evidence of such ephemeral superstitions.
Especially lovely, defenseless evidence.
There was no telling what had been observed by this household over time. What oddities had been witnessed in their neighbors. What racial differences had been unexpectedly exposed and noted by virtue of the two estates being brothers in landscape.
Darius cursed under his breath and thought that this was why vampires should not live so close among humans. Separation was best. Congregation and separation.
He and Tohrment covered the first floor of the mansion by dematerializing from room to room, shifting as the shadows thrown in the moonlight did, passing around the carved furnishings and tapestries without sound or substance.
The biggest concern, and why they did not traverse the stone floors on foot? Sleeping dogs. Many of the manses had them for guards, and that was a complication they could well do without. Hopefully, if there were some within the household, they were curled at the feet of the master's bed.
And would the same be true for any personal guard.
However, they had fortune on their side. No dogs. No guard. At least, not that they saw, heard, or scented--and they were able to locate the passage that led underground.
Both of them produced candles and lit the wicks, the flames flickering over the hurried, careless workmanship of the rough- hewn steps, and the uneven walls--all of which seemed to indicate that the family never made this sojourn below, only the servants.
More proof this was not a vampire household. Underground quarters were among the most lavish in such homes.
Down on the lower level, the stone beneath their feet yielded to packed earth and the air grew heavy with cold dampness. As they progressed farther under the great mansion, they found storage rooms filled with caskets of wine and mead and bins of salted meats and baskets of potatoes and onions.
At the far end, Darius expected to find a second set of stairs that they could take back up out of the earth. Instead, they just came to a termination of the subterranean hall. No door. Just a wall.
He looked around to see if there were tracks on the ground or fissures in the stones indicating a hidden panel or section. There were none.
In order to be certain, he and Tohrment ran their hands over the walling surface and over the floor.
"There were many windows on the upper stories," Tohrment murmured. "But perhaps if they kept her above, they could have drawn the drapes. Or mayhap there are windowless interior rooms?"
As the pair of them faced the dead end they'd hit, that sense of dread, of being in an incorrect place, swelled in Darius's chest until breath was short and sweat formed under his arms and down his spine. He had a feeling Tohrment was suffering from a similar bout of anxious trepidation, for the male shifted his weight back and forth, back and forth.
Darius shook his head. "Verily, she appears to be elsewhere--"
"Very true, vampire."
Darius and Tohrment wheeled around while unsheathing their daggers.
Looking at what had taken them by surprise, Darius thought . . . Well, that explains the dread.
The white-robed figure blocking the way out was not human and was not vampire.
It was a symphath .
FORTY-FOUR
As Xhex waited outside of the weight room, she regarded her emotions with dispassionate interest. It was, she supposed, like staring at a stranger's face and taking note of the imperfections and the coloring and the features for no other reason than that they had presented themselves for observation.
Her urge for revenge had been eclipsed by an honest concern for John.
Surprise, surprise.
Then again, she'd never imagined seeing that kind of fury up close and personal, especially from the likes of him. It was as if he had an inner beast that had roared free from some interior cage.
Man, the bonded male was not something you fucked around with.
And she wasn't kidding herself. That was the reason he'd reacted the way he had--and was also the cause of those dark spices she'd scented around him since she'd gotten out of Lash's prison: Sometime during the weeks of her brutal holiday, John's attraction and respect for her had jelled into the irrevocable.
Shit. What a mess.
As the sound of the treadmill got cut off abruptly, she was willing to bet Blaylock had pulled the cord out of the wall, and good for him if he had. She'd tried to get John to stop pulling a death-by-Nike, but when reasoning with him had gotten her absolutely nowhere, she'd taken up sentry duty out here.
No way she could watch him run himself into the ground. Listening to the punishment was bad enough.
Down the hall, the glass door to the office swung open and the Brother Tohrment appeared. Given the glow that emanated from behind him, Lassiter had come into the training center as well, but the fallen angel hung back.