Knight After Night (12 page)

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Authors: Jackie Ivie

Tags: #vampires, #knight, #paranormal romance, #vampire romance, #scottish, #jackie ivie

BOOK: Knight After Night
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“Thoran, stop this! Before you hurt yourself.”

Now that’s really stupid, Jolie.

Jolie launched through the space separating them, wrapped her arms about what she could reach of his back and held on, shuddering with each bit of emotion until they started subsiding; little by little, along with every bit of noise in the room. Then the complete silence got teased by singing and voices penetrating the shaded windows.

“I lied.” His voice was a deadly quiet tone that sent fear everywhere.

“You…lied?”

“Aye.”

“How?” She’d been mistaken. It was absolute terror that made her one word question squeak.

“I canna’ do it, Jolie. I canna’ let you go. I refuse.”

“Well…the least you could do is wait for my answer before going all berserk-o on me. I mean, honestly. Look at this floor.”

He stopped. Curved his head to look over his shoulder at where she was perched, her arms wrapped about him. There was no denying the moisture spiking his lashes, making them blacker. And more. There was pure emotion fueling him; wary molten silver-hued emotion. It reached out to her from bottomless eyes before he blinked, changing it.

“What…did you just say?”

She sighed heavily. “We’re really going to have to work on our communication skills, Thoran Alexander MacKettryck, the fifth. Or seventh. Or whatever.”

“We are?”

“Just because I say I’m sorry over the way that Clan Campbell bastard turned you, is no reason for you to think it’s my answer! Geez. Where are your wits?”

“You’re na’…turning me down?”

Jolie slid around to the front of him, gaining a spot atop his lap with the sword at her back and her front full of Thoran.

“I don’t think I can live without you, Thoran Alexander MacKettryck. And that means I’m willing. Because…I love you. It’s not a good feeling but seeing you hurt caused me pain. So there! I’ve said it. I love you! All four hundred-ish years and two hundred fifty some-odd pounds of you. You hear me?”

She was yelling it so it shouldn’t be optional, but she wanted to make sure he heard it.

“You really love me?”

God, he was adorable. And he was all hers. And all the manuals did spout how no love was perfect.

“Yes! I do. I didn’t know how much until just this moment, but if I have to live without you, I don’t call it living. And if I have to live like I’m dead, I might as well be dead. Is that enough answer? Holy crap! How did we get here?”

They were atop the bed, losing clothing and gaining volumes of harsh breathing that accompanied shaking fingers as he unfastened every little pearl button on her expensive and ancient dress. And then it was done. The mountain of satin was shoved aside, it order to settle full Highland male between her legs.

“Uh…Thoran?”

“Open for me, Jolie.”

“Will…it hurt?”

“I’ll be gentle, love. I swear. And I’ll be here for you once ‘tis done. Always.” The words whispered against her throat, causing a trill of shiver.

“But…will it hurt?”

“Jolie. I love you. Ever.”

It wasn’t an answer, and yet it was everything. Jolie arched upward into him, filling her arms and senses and world with him, putting her mind fully on how much she loved him. Despite everything. They’d be together. Eternally.

And that was all that really mattered.

She focused on every sensation. Embraced every bit of him she could reach, humming with emotion until the room rotated with sensation. And never even felt his bite.

Devouring her…exactly as she did him.

-o0o-

 

Keep Reading for a Sample from the first book in
Lori Devoti’s
new Vampire Hearts Series.

Prologue, Trust Me
 

Marie Jean

 

Ste. Genevieve, Illinois Country

 

May 1, 1785 — great flood

 

The water shifted beneath her feet, as if the Mississippi wasn’t just swollen with floodwaters, but angry, boiling.

The others had left long before, gathering whatever they held dear and scurrying for higher ground, but not Marie Jean. She held nothing dear—not since that bastard lieutenant-governor, Cruzat, doomed her to marriage with the monster others called her husband.

Damn Cruzat
.
Damn the church
. Damn everyone who told her she had no choice—that God’s will was greater than her own.

She would show them all.

Grasping the rough logs of the cedar stockade she clung to, she stared down at the water. She could give in, throw herself into the angry current of the Mississippi, but there would be no satisfaction in that—no revenge.

She had a better plan. She’d thought of it last night, when the others were packing, when her husband was chortling about the Lieutenant Governor’s denial of her request for a divorce. How she had wanted to kill him then—pick up the saber he kept hanging on the wall of their cabin and pierce his heart, stand there laughing as the black blood of his soul spilled out on the dirt.

But no, her body was too weak. He would have used the weapon on her instead, but damn his twisted soul, he wouldn’t have shown her the mercy of death—just continued the same torture she’d endured for years.

Enough
. She’d had enough.

“So you came.” The voice was low and masculine in a way that sent shivers of expectation up Marie Jean’s spine.

She turned. He stood an arm’s length away, his feet braced on the roof of a cabin, his waist-length hair clinging to his bare chest. His eyes glimmered at her in the growing darkness. A second shiver danced over her rain-soaked skin.

“You expected me?” She pressed her back against the stockade, her heart beating like a bird’s.

“Come.” He held out one hand. “The water is rising. There isn’t much time.”

She paused only an instant before slipping her work-calloused hand into his and letting him pull her to the safety of the roof beside him.

He stared down at her, his eyes an eerie blue against his dark skin.

“Will you help me?” she asked. Her fingers tangled in his hair; her palm brushed his skin.

“I’m here,” he replied. “What is it you want?”

She swallowed, her heart expanding at the thought of her vengeance. “My husband dead, and then”—she paused deciding what to ask for next—“a curse. Can you curse them all?”

He threw back his head, laughter rolling from his throat. “A curse? This”—he swept his arm out, gesturing to the hellish waters of the rising Mississippi surrounding them—“isn’t curse enough?”

She narrowed her eyes, thinking of her sister and her aunts, all prim and pious. Judging her for not accepting her fate. “Not for what they would have left me to. No, I want revenge that will last for centuries, eternity.” The last came out in a hiss.

His arm slipped around her waist, pulling her close against the hard length of his body. “You have the wrong demon,
mon oiseau
. I am no witch. I have no magic for you.”

“But…” She pushed her hands against him.

He ran his hand down the length of her back, making a shushing sound against her ear. “No magic, but if it is revenge you seek, I can give you that, and the ability to survive this.” He nodded to the water now lapping at their feet.

Marie Jean relaxed her body back against his. “Power, can you give me power?”

He nodded, his head dipping toward her neck as his hand swept her long hair over her shoulder. “Ah,
mon oiseau
. That I can do.”

 

Chapter One, Trust Me
 

Central West End, St. Louis, Missouri

 

Present Day

 

The letter was soft as cotton from being folded and unfolded, but even though Lindsey had the short note memorized, she pulled the slip from her pocket again.

Bloody Harry’s in St. Louis’s Central West End.

She was here. Feeling a bit like Dorothy when she was set down in Oz, Lindsey tugged at her khaki shorts and wished she’d worn something nicer. Wished she owned something nicer, nice enough to be dining in one of the sidewalk cafés that lined the cobblestoned street.

Beside her, a streetlight, made to look like an old gaslight, clicked on. It was just after eight on a Friday night, and the Central West End was bustling. Young professionals out and about, drinking wine and dining on food that to Lindsey’s unschooled eyes looked more like art than dinner. Soft jazz and the scent of melted butter and warm garlic wafted from one restaurant.

A girl standing behind a hostess podium glanced her direction. Lindsey dropped her gaze and hurried past.

She looked at the note again.
Bloody Harry’s
. The name itself was intimidating, but finding the place was even worse. Lindsey had searched the Internet for an address or phone number and come up empty. The email she clutched in her hand was the first promise she’d had of finding family—of belonging somewhere.

Drawing in a breath, she turned and walked back to the hostess. The woman raised a brow but more in question than in judgment of Lindsey’s appearance.

“I’m looking for Bloody Harry’s,” Lindsey mumbled.

A couple dressed for the theatre or some other high class entertainment that Lindsey couldn’t imagine brushed past her, jostling her. She took a step to the side. The hostess plucked two menus from a slot on the glossy black podium, tucked them under her arm and strode off. The couple followed.

Lindsey stared after them. Then, feeling the attention of the other patrons pressing against her, she took a step back onto the road.

“Did I hear that you are looking for Bloody Harry’s?” A woman dressed in a short flowy dress, belted at the waist, tilted her head to the side.

The woman’s eyes were bright green, an unnatural green that made Lindsey want to look away. She forced herself to keep her gaze steady and nod.

“How”—the woman placed her index finger on her lower lip and pulled, giving her a pouty screen-siren look—“did you hear of Harry’s?”

“My cousin…works there.” Cousin…family. A thrill raced through Lindsey.

“Really? Interesting.” The woman tilted her head again and studied Lindsey as if measuring her for size.

Lindsey resisted the urge to pull back her shoulders or adjust her shirt, which suddenly seemed to cling too tightly in some places and gap in others.

“Well, then…” The woman took a step closer, forcing Lindsey to move back, into the glow of the street lamp.

The woman inhaled with a hiss, and her eyes glittered.

Every instinct telling her to run, Lindsey lifted her foot. A pale hand tipped with perfectly manicured magenta nails gripped Lindsey by the arm. “Then you must be welcome at Harry’s.” She lifted her free hand and gestured across the street to a line of iron fencing. Another café sat behind it.

For a second, Lindsey thought the woman was toying with her. Then she saw the sign,
Bloody Harry’s
, small but, even in the dusk, impossible to miss.

Lindsey had walked down this street three times. How had she missed it?

“It’s in the basement, outside entrance. Tell Harry, Emilie sent you. He can pay me back later.” She laughed, a low rolling sound that made Lindsey shuffle her feet and glance toward the street.

“Anyway.” Emilie released her hold on Lindsey and waved her hand toward the sign. “You’ll want to get inside soon, while it’s still early and somewhat light.” She stepped back but didn’t leave.

A strange mixture of compulsion to do as the woman had said and a stubborn desire to do the opposite filled Lindsey She stood rooted between the two.

“Go.”

And with that one word from Emilie, Lindsey found herself moving toward the small painted sign and whatever business lay below it.

o0o

 

A café sat on the ground floor of the bar’s building. It wasn’t as busy as the café Lindsey had just left. It also had a different vibe than the other businesses she had passed, more urban grunge than upscale professional. Alternative rock flowed from the windows, open despite the heat, and the smell of coffee and burgers engulfed her, making her stomach rumble.

A slim man dressed in clothes so dark he blended into the unlit patio area’s background stood as she approached. Lindsey slowed her steps, but the man simply crossed his arms over his chest and waited.

Unsure, she walked closer, this time stopping at the top of the metal steps that led from the street to a door below. Bloody Harry’s door.

“Opens at ten.” The man from the café stood two feet away. His arms were still crossed, but his body was stiff and his gaze intense, and somehow he had moved twenty feet, past an iron fence, in a matter of seconds.

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