Black Dagger Brotherhood 11 - Lover at Last (16 page)

BOOK: Black Dagger Brotherhood 11 - Lover at Last
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duvet—and he knew whose they were. Matching Guccis, in white with the navy blue logo and the

navy blue and red cloth strapping—because according to Saxton, the traditional brown-on-brown

with the red and green was “too obvious.”

Blay shut the door quietly. His first thought was, Holy shit, Saxton knew. Somehow, the guy knew

what had happened in the training center.

The male in question came out of the bathroom with an armful of shampoo, conditioner, and

product. He stopped dead.

“Hi,” Blay said. “Taking a vacation?”

After a tense moment, Saxton calmly came over, put his load down in a travel bag, and turned

back around. As always, his beautiful blond hair was swept off his forehead in thick waves. And he

was dressed perfectly, in another tweed suit with matching waistcoat, a red cravat and red pocket

square adding just the right accent of color.

“I think you know what I’m going to say.” Saxton smiled sadly. “Because you’re far from stupid—

just as I am.”

Blay went to sit down on the bed, but had to recalibrate because there was nowhere to put

himself. He ended up on the chaise lounge, and, with a discreet lean to one side, he tucked the

wadded shirt under the skirting. Out of sight. It was the least he could do.

God, was this really happening?

“I don’t want you to go,” Blay heard himself say roughly.

“I believe that.”

Blay looked across all those duffels. “Why now?”

He thought of the pair of them just the day before, under the sheets, having hard sex. They had

been so close—although if he were brutally honest, maybe that had just been physically.

Take out the
maybe
.

“I’ve been fooling myself.” Saxton shook his head. “I thought I could keep going with you like this

—but I can’t. It’s killing me.”

Blay closed his eyes. “I know I’ve been out a lot in the field—”

“That’s not what I’m talking about.”

As Qhuinn took up all the space between them, Blay wanted to scream. But what good would that

do: it appeared that he and Saxton had gotten to the same difficult corner at the same sorrowful

moment.

His lover looked over the luggage. “I’ve just finished that assignment for Wrath. It’s a good time

to make a break, move out and find another job—”

“Wait, so you’re leaving the king as well?” Blay frowned. “However things stand between us,

you need to keep working for him. That is bigger than our relationship.”

Saxton’s eyes dipped down. “I suspect that is far easier for you to say.”

“Not true,” Blay countered grimly. “God, I’m so…sorry.”

“You’ve done nothing wrong—you need to know that I’m not angry at you, or bitter. You’ve

always been honest, and I’ve always known that things were going to end like this. I just didn’t know the timeline—I didn’t know…until I reached the end. Which is now.”

Oh, fuck.

Even though he knew Saxton was right, Blay felt a compulsive need to fight for them. “Listen, I’ve

been really distracted for the last week, and I’m sorry. But things have a way of regulating, and you and I will get back to normal—”

“I’m in love with you.”

Blay shut his mouth with a clap.

“So you see,” Saxton continued hoarsely, “it’s not that you have changed. It’s that
I
have—and I’m afraid my silly emotions have put us at quite a distance from each other.”

Blay surged to his feet and strode across the fine-napped carpet to the other male.

When he got to his destination, he was relieved to the point of tearing up that Saxton accepted his embrace. And as he held his first true lover against him, feeling that familiar difference in their heights and smelling that wonderful cologne, part of him wanted to debate this break up until they both gave in and kept trying.

But that wasn’t fair.

Like Saxton, he’d had the vague notion that things were going to end at some point. And like his

lover, he was also surprised it was now.

That didn’t change the outcome, however.

Saxton stepped back. “I never meant to get emotionally involved.”

“I’m so sorry, I’m…I’m so sorry….” Shit, that was all that was coming out of his mouth. “I would

give anything to be different. I wish I could…be different.”

“I know.” Saxton reached up and brushed a hand down the side of his face. “I forgive you—and

you need to forgive yourself.”

Whatever, he wasn’t sure he could do that—especially as, at this moment, and as fucking usual, an

emotional attachment he didn’t want and couldn’t change was yet again robbing him of something he

wanted.

Qhuinn was a fucking curse to him, the guy really was.

About fifteen miles south of the Brotherhood’s mountaintop compound, Assail woke up on his

circular bed in the grand master suite of his mansion on the Hudson. Above him, in the mirrored

panels mounted on the ceiling, his naked body was gleaming in the soft glow of the lights installed around the base of the mattress. The octagonal room beyond was dark, the interior shutters still down, the fallen night hidden.

As he considered all the glass in the house, he knew so many vampires would have found these

accommodations unacceptable. Most would have avoided the manse altogether.

Too much risk during daylight hours.

Assail, however, had never been bound by convention, and the dangers inherent in living in a

building with so much access to light were something to be managed, not bound by.

Getting up, he went over to the desk, signed into his computer, and accessed the security system

that monitored not just the house, but the grounds. Alerts had sounded several times during the earlier hours of the day, notifications not of an impending attack, but of some kind of activity that had been flagged by the security system’s filtering program.

In truth, he lacked the energy to be overly concerned, an unwelcome sign that he needed to feed—

Assail frowned as he reviewed the report.

Well, wasn’t this instructive.

And indeed, this was why he’d installed all his checks and balances.

On the images feed from the rear cameras, he watched as a figure dressed in snowfield

camouflage traveled on cross-country skis through the forest, closing in on his house from the north.

Whoever it was stayed hidden in and among the pines for the most part, and surveyed the property

from various vantage points for approximately nineteen minutes…before traversing the westerly

border of trees, crossing into the neighbor’s property, and going down onto the ice. Two hundred

yards later the man stopped, got out the binoculars again, and stared at Assail’s home. Then he circled around the peninsula that jutted out into the river, reentered the forest, and disappeared.

Bending in closer to the screen, Assail replayed the approach, zooming in to identify facial

features, if possible—and it was not. The head was covered with a knit mask, with cutouts only for

the eyes, nose, and mouth. With the parka and ski pants on as well, the man was covered in his

entirety.

Sitting back, Assail smiled to himself, his fangs tingling in territorial response.

There were but two parties who might be interested in his business, and going by the daylight that

had reigned during this recon, it was clear the curiosity was not generated by the Brotherhood: Wrath would never use humans as anything other than a last-resort food source, and no vampire could

withstand that amount of sunshine without turning into a torch.

Which left someone in the human world—and there was only a single man with the interest and

the resources to try to track him and his whereabouts.

“Enter,” he said, just before a knock sounded on his door.

As the pair of males came in, he didn’t bother to look away from the computer screen. “How did

you sleep?”

A familiar, deep voice answered, “Like the dead.”

“How fortunate for you. Jet lag can be a bore, or so I’ve heard. We had a visitor this morning, by

the way.”

Assail leaned to one side so his two associates could review the footage.

It was odd to have housemates, but he was going to have to get used to their presence. When he

had come to the New World, it had been a solo trip, and he had intended to keep things that way for numerous reasons. Success in his chosen field, however, had mandated that he pull in some backup—

and the only people you could even partially trust were your family.

And the pair of them offered a unique benefit.

His two cousins were a rarity in the vampire species: a set of identical twins. When fully clothed, the only way anyone could tell them apart was by a single mole behind the earlobe; other than that, from their voices and their dark, suspicious eyes to their heavily muscled bodies, they were a mirror reflection of each other.

“I’m going out,” Assail announced to them. “If our visitor comes again, be hospitable, will you?”

Ehric, the older one by a matter of minutes, glanced over, his face highlighted by the glow around

the bed base. Such evil in that handsome combination of features—to the point that one nearly felt pity for the interloper. “’Twill be a pleasure, I assure you.”

“Keep him alive.”

“But of course.”

“That is a finer line than you two have at times appreciated.”

“Trust me.”

“It’s not you whom I am worried about.” Assail looked at the other one. “Do you understand me?”

Ehric’s twin remained silent, although the male did nod once.

That grudging reaction was precisely why Assail would have preferred to keep his new life

simple. But it was impossible to be in more than one place at a time—and this violation of privacy

was proof that he couldn’t do everything by himself.

“You know how to locate me,” he said, before dismissing them from his room.

Twenty minutes later, he left the house showered, dressed, and behind the wheel of his

bulletproof Range Rover.

Downtown Caldwell at night was beautiful at a distance, especially as he came over the inbound

bridge. It was not until he penetrated the grid system of streets that the city’s sludge became evident: the alleyways with their filthy snowdrifts and their oozing Dumpsters and their discarded, half-frozen homeless humans told the true story of the municipality’s underbelly.

His worksite, as it were.

When he got to the Benloise Art Gallery, he parked in the back, in one of two spaces that were

parallel to the building behind the facility. As he stepped free of the SUV, the cold wind swept into his camel-hair coat and he had to hold the two halves together as he crossed the pavement,

approaching an industrial-size door.

He didn’t have to knock. Ricardo Benloise had plenty of people working for him, and not all of

them were of the art-dealer-associate type: A human male the size of an amusement park opened the

way and stood to the side.

“He expecting you?”

“No, he is not.”

Disneyland nodded. “You wanna wait in the gallery?”

“That would be fine.”

“You need a drink?”

“No, thank you.”

As they walked through the office area and into the exhibition space, the deference Assail was

now accorded was a new thing—earned through both the huge product orders he’d been putting in as

well as the spilled blood of countless humans: Thanks to him, suicides among disenfranchised males

age eighteen to twenty-nine with criminal drug records had struck an all-time high in the city, making even the national news.

Imagine that.

As newscasters and reporters tried to make sense of the tragedies, he merely continued growing

his business by any means necessary. Human minds were awfully suggestible; it required hardly any

effort at all to get middlemen drug dealers to train their own guns on their temples and pull those triggers. And in the same way nature abhorred a vacuum, so too did the demands of chemical

supplementation.

Assail had the drugs. The addicts had the cash.

The economic system more than survived the forced reorganization.

“I’ll head up,” the man said at a hidden door. “And let him know you’re here.”

“Do take your time.”

Left to his own devices, Assail strolled around the high-ceilinged, open space, linking his hands

and putting them at the small of his back. From time to time, he paused to look at the “art” that was hung on the walls and partitions—and was reminded why humans should be eradicated, preferably by

slow and painful means.

Used paper plates tacked to cheap particleboard and covered with handwritten quotes from TV

commercials? A self-portrait done in dentifrice? And equally offensive were the aggrandizing

plaques mounted next to the messes declaring this nonsense to be the new wave of American

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