Read Lover Mine Online

Authors: J.R. Ward

Lover Mine (45 page)

BOOK: Lover Mine
4.43Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads
But that wasn’t the worst of his misconceptions. He’d never known she had a brother. Who was handicapped. Who she was supporting.
She’d shown him a picture of the two of them together.
And when Gregg had asked out loud how it was possible he hadn’t known about the boy? She’d had the honesty to tell him the way it was:
Because you’d laid out the lines and that was over the line.
Naturally, he’d had the normal male reaction to defend himself, but the fact was, she was right. He had drawn the boundaries pretty fucking clearly. Which meant no jealousy, no explanations, nothing permanent and nothing personal.
Not exactly the environment you wanted to make yourself vulnerable in.
That realization was what had had him pulling her up against his chest and putting his chin on her head and stroking her back. Right before she’d gone to dreamland, she’d mumbled something in a soft voice. Something like, it was the best night she’d ever had with him.
And this in spite of the monstrous orgasms he’d given her.
Well, given her when it suited him. There had been a lot of dates that he’d canceled at the last minute and phone messages that went unreturned and brush-offs both verbal and physical.
Man . . . what a shit he’d been.
When Gregg fianlly got up to go, he tucked Holly in, turned the motion-activated camera on, and slipped out into the hallway. Silence all around.
Padding down the corridor, he went back to the Exit sign and ducked into that rear stairwell. Up the steps, around the landing, another flight, and then he was at the door.
No banging this time around. He took out a thin screwdriver that was normally used on the camera equipment and got to work jimmying the lock. It was easier than he’d thought, actually. Just one poke and shift and the thing sprang loose.
The door did not squeak, which surprised him.
What was on the other side, however . . . shocked the ever loving hell out of him.
The third floor was a cavernous space with old- fashioned, rough-hewn floorboards and a ceiling that sloped at a steep angle on either side. Down at the far end, there was a table with an oil lamp on it and the glow turned the smooth walls into a golden yellow . . . as well as illuminated the black boots of whoever was sitting in a chair just outside the pool of light.
Big boots.
And suddenly, there was no question who the SOB was and what he’d done.
“I have you on tape,” Gregg said to the figure.
The soft laugh that came back at him made Gregg’s adrenal gland go into overdrive: Low and cold, it was the kind of sound killers made when they were about to get to work with a knife.
“Do you.” That accent. What the fuck was it? Not French . . . not Hungarian . . .
Whatever. The idea Holly had been taken advantage of made him taller and stronger than he really was. “I know what you did. The night before last.”
“I’d tell you to take a chair, but as you can see, I only have one.”
“I’m not fucking around.” Gregg took a step forward. “I know what happened with her. She didn’t want you.”
“She wanted the sex.”
Motherfucking asshole. “She was asleep.”
“Was she.” The boot tip swung up and down. “Appearances, like psyches, can be deceiving.”
“Who the hell do you think you are?”
“I own this fine house. That is who I am. I’m the one who gave you permission to play with all your cameras.”
“Well, you can kiss that shit good-bye now. I’m not advertising this place.”
“Oh, I think you will. It’s in your nature.”
“You don’t know dick about me.”
“I think it’s the other way around. You don’t know . . . dick, as you call it . . . about yourself. She said your name, by the way. When she came.”
This made Gregg furious, to the point that he took another step forward.
“I would be careful there,” the voice said. “You don’t want to get hurt. And I’m considered to be insane.”
“I’m calling the police.”
“You have no cause. Consenting adults and all that.”
“She was asleep!”
That boot shifted around and planted on the ground. “Watch your tone, boy.”
Before there was time to get fired up about the insult, the man leaned forward in the chair . . . and Gregg lost his voice.
What came into the light made no sense. On a shitload of levels.
It was the portrait. From downstairs in the parlor. Only living and breathing. The only difference was that the hair was not pulled back; it was down over shoulders that were two times the size of Gregg’s and the stuff was black and red.
Oh, God . . . those eyes were the color of the sunrise, gleaming and peach-colored.
Utterly hypnotic.
And yes, partially mad.
“I suggest,” came a drawl in that odd accent, “that you back out of this attic and go down to that lovely lady of yours—”
“Are you a descendant of Rathboone’s?”
The man smiled. Right, okay . . . there was something
very
wrong with his front teeth. “He and I have things in common, it’s true.”
“Jesus . . .”
“Time for you to run along and finish your little project.” No more with the smiling, which was a relief of sorts. “And a word of advice in lieu of the ass-kicking I’m tempted to give you. You might take care of your woman better than you have been lately. She has honest feelings for you, which is not her fault, and which you clearly have been undeserving of—or you wouldn’t smell like guilt at this moment. You’re lucky to have the one you want by your side, so stop being a blind fool about it.”
Gregg didn’t get shocked all that often. But for the life of him, he didn’t have any idea what to say.
How did this stranger know so much?
And Christ, Gregg hated that Holly had been with someone else . . . but she had said his name?
“Wave good-bye.” Rathboone lifted his own hand and mimed a child’s gesture. “I promise to leave your woman alone, provided you quit ignoring her. Now go on, bye-bye.”
Out of a reflex that was not his own, Gregg brought up his arm and did a little flapping before his feet turned his ass around and started walking toward the door.
God, his temples hurt. God . . . damn . . . why was . . . where . . .
His mind ground to a halt, as if its gears had been glued up.
Down to the second floor. Down to his room.
As he took off his clothes and got into bed in his boxers, he put his aching head on the pillow next to Holly’s, drew her up against him, and tried to remember. . . .
He was supposed to do something. What was—
The third floor. He had to go up to the third floor. He had to find out what was up there—
Fresh pain lanced through his brain, killing not only the impulse to go anywhere, but any interest in what was above them in the attic.
Closing his eyes, he had the strangest vision of a foreign stranger with a familiar face . . . but then he passed the fuck out and nothing else mattered.
FORTY-THREE
T
he infiltration into the mansion next door posed no problem at all.
After regarding the activity of the manse, and finding nothing to suggest movement within the walls, Darius declared that he and Tohrment would go in . . . and in they went. Dematerializing from the ring of woods that separated the two estates, they re- formed beside the kitchen wing—whereupon they simply walked right in through a stout wooden- framed door.
Indeed, the biggest obstacle to breaching the exterior was overcoming the crushing feeling of dread.
With every step and every breath, Darius had to force himself to go forward, his instincts screaming that he was in the wrong place. And yet he refused to turn back. He was out of other practical roads on which to traverse, and though Sampsone’s daughter might well not be here, with no other leads, he had to do something or go mad.
“This house feels haunted,” Tohrment muttered as they both looked around the servants’ common room.
Darius nodded. “But recollect that any ghosts rest solely in your mind, and are not among whoever tallies under this roof. Come, we must locate any subterranean quarters. If the humans have taken her, they must needs keep her underground.”
As they made their way silently past the massive kitchen hearth and the curing meats that hung from hooks, it was so very clearly a human house. All was quiet up above and all around; in contrast to a vampire manse, where this would be an active time of preparation for Last Meal.
Alas, that this household was made up of the other race was no confirmation the female was not held herein—and could perhaps recommend that conclusion. Although vampires knew for certain of the existence of mankind, there was naught but myths of vampires abounding on the human cultural periphery—because that was how those with fangs survived with greater ease. Still, from time to time there were inevitable and bona fide contacts between those who chose to remain hidden and those with prying eyes, and these infrequent brushes with one another explained humans’ scary stories and fantastical whimsies of anything from “bean-sidhe” to “witches” to “ghosts” to “bloodsuckers.” Indeed, the human mind appeared to suffer from a crippling need to fabricate in the absence of concrete proof. Which made sense, given that race’s self-referential understanding of the world and their place in it: Anything that didn’t fit was forced into the superstructure, even if that meant creating “paranormal” elements.
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
A
s 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.
BOOK: Lover Mine
4.43Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Magnolia Square by Margaret Pemberton
Killing Game by Felicity Heaton
Sassy Road by Blaine, Destiny
Ask Me Again Tomorrow by Olympia Dukakis
Pumping Up Napoleon by Maria Donovan
Untamed by Terri Farley
The Porridge Incident by Herschel Cozine
The Long Way Home by Lauraine Snelling
To Protect & Serve by V. K. Powell
Revolution by Shelly Crane