by Kallysten
He cut himself off so abruptly that it took my mind off what he’d said to focus on what he wasn’t saying instead.
“Besides what?”
He didn’t reply.
“Besides what?” I said again, more loudly now. “Why won’t you explain anything to me?”
“Besides,” he said with a heavy sigh, “it would have been in poor taste for her to give me a mindless pet.”
I couldn’t have been more shocked if he’d slapped me. I wavered a little, and he sighed again. I seemed to draw a lot of sighs from him, and not for any good reason.
“You asked,” he said in a blank voice. “And those are her words, not mine.”
“So she… she gave you… pets? Before?”
I felt a little lightheaded and had to press a hand to the doorjamb next to me. The dress suddenly felt too tight for me to breathe properly. Long seconds passed before he answered.
“Not for a very long time.”
He pushed himself to his feet and came to me until all that stood between us was the suitcase. I watched him the entire time, my heartbeat accelerating as he drew nearer.
“Turn around,” he said.
I didn’t move. I only stared at him. I could feel my pulse thudding in my ears. Just from being near him and smelling the discreet scent of his cologne—of him—my mind flashed back to last night. I wanted his hands and his mouth on me again. His cock inside me. His body sliding against mine. And at the same time I wondered how I could have slept with a perfect stranger like that.
I’d felt a connection to him, but that didn’t change the fact that we’d met mere moments before becoming intimately acquainted. Except… it’d only been a fantasy, like he’d told me. But what did that mean, exactly?
“Last night,” I started, but lost my words and had to try again. “Last night, on the balcony. Was it… was it real?”
An eternity seemed to pass before he answered—and his reply, yet again, didn’t explain anything.
“Define real.”
I didn’t want word games. I didn’t want games, period. Miss Delilah had played enough with me already. I grabbed his wrist and raised it, exposing the blood-red gem of his cufflink.
“I remember this being lost over the edge of the balcony last night.” Even as I said it, I could feel my cheeks grow warmer as the memory of losing the cufflink flashed through my mind; or rather, the memory of what we’d been doing at the time. “But obviously it didn’t happen. Did it?”
“What you mean is, did you and I have sex on the balcony?” His voice was so flat, he might have been commenting on the weather. “Our bodies did not, no. But in your mind, it happened.”
It still made no more sense than him calling it a ‘fantasy’ before. If it had happened only in my mind, how did he even know about it? I started to shake my head, but before I could ask anything else, he pulled his wrist free and continued.
“When you disobeyed Lilah’s compulsion and stopped breathing, I entered your mind. I gave you a chance for a do-over. You would have died if I hadn’t.”
It was the same explanation he’d given me the night before, and it was all still so strange—so damn impossible—that I stumbled over every other word.
“So you… you made me… have sex with you? In our minds?”
He clucked his tongue. “That’s not what I said. I reset your mind back to when you first stepped onto the balcony. Everything you did from that point was your own choice. I just played along.”
When I stared harder, he rolled his eyes. “Like I said, it was a fantasy. Fantasies are where we can let ourselves do what we usually wouldn’t.”
His voice didn’t change one bit, but his eyes seemed to flare to life on those last words. They were still just as dark, but at the same time… How can I convey what they looked like? It was like flames were dancing behind his pupils, gleaming, burning—and inescapable.
“How is this all possible?” I murmured. “How can she order me to do something to the point that my body shuts down if I disobey? How can you… get into my mind, like you said? How can you move that fast?”
It won’t come as a surprise to you, because I’ve already given away that he and Miss Delilah weren’t humans. I know, I get ahead of myself sometimes, but really how could I have kept something like that to myself for so long?
Still, try to imagine my surprise when he said in that same cool voice, “We can do all that because we are vampires.”
No, it was more than surprise. Shock. Incomprehension. Disbelief.
I wanted to laugh in his face, call him a liar, and ask how stupid he thought I was, trying to tell me tales of supernatural monsters.
But facts—simple, irrefutable facts—kept me quiet. Like the fact that my body refused to obey me every time I so much as thought of breaking Miss Delilah’s order not to leave. Like the fact that I’d almost died on that balcony. That Mr. Ward had entered my mind and shared my ‘fantasy.’ That, when he’d told me to accompany him the previous night, I’d been unable to resist him.
I could refuse to believe him, but what would that help?
“You’re a… a…” I gulped, and without thinking brought both hands up to cover my neck. “Are you going to kill me?”
I’d asked the previous night, and he’d said no. Now that I knew what he was and what Miss Delilah had meant when she told him he could ‘feed’ from me or kill me, I had to ask again.
“I already answered that question,” he said in a low voice. “The answer hasn’t changed. Now. Turn around. Please.”
He wasn’t using that compelling voice of his, but I obeyed anyway. Stupid, I know, to turn my back to a vampire even if he’d said he wouldn’t kill me. I think I just needed to look away from his eyes. They made it hard to think.
Of course, when I did turn away, I still couldn’t think clearly.
I gasped when I felt his fingers at the small of my back and held my breath after that, wanting nothing more than to move but unable to do so as the memory of his touch on my body slid over me again, raising goose flesh on every inch of my skin. In my fantasy, he’d said he hated corsets, and never got around to getting me out of my dress. Now, he was unknotting and unlacing, and as the corset loosened, my heartbeat grew faster again.
When his hands left me and the dress started to fall, I caught it, pressing a hand between my breasts to keep the bodice in place. Very slowly, I turned back to him. My lips felt dry, so I licked them.
“You’d have had a hard time getting out of that thing by yourself, Angelina,” he said without the smallest flicker of a smile, but I thought I heard his voice waver a little when he said my name.
His eyes were still burning, and they dropped to my mouth when I licked my lips again. I took a step toward him. Not even that much: half a step. A minuscule shuffle of my feet until my bare toes met my suitcase between us. I couldn’t tell you what I was doing or thinking.
And then he was gone.
As quickly as when he’d run after Miss Delilah, he left the suite. The door banged shut behind him, and I was alone again. Alone with my thundering heart, my falling dress and my damp, very uncomfortable panties.
*
Half an hour later, having taken a long, skin-scalding shower, I came out of the bathroom wrapped in the fluffiest terrycloth bathrobe I’d ever worn. I felt a little better, although I was still very aware that the nice surroundings didn’t make this room any less of a cell. I returned to the bed, where I’d left my suitcase. When I opened it, I felt an odd mix of comfort and annoyance.
My suitcase was, as might not be completely unexpected, filled with my clothes. Jeans, shirts, sweaters, and dresses from my closet. Tee-shirts, socks, and my flannel pajamas from my dresser. Underwear, too. The thought of a stranger being in my home, rifling through my things long enough to match up my bras and panties…
It was creepy. I felt extremely uneasy about it. Whoever it was had been trying to help, sure, and they hadn’t been looking at my unmentionables for th
eir own enjoyment, but still. Would you be fine with a random person looking through your underwear drawer?
Even worse: I keep my vibrator in that drawer. That’s not something I care for anyone to see.
The vibrator wasn’t in the suitcase, but a lot of other things were. My beauty bag was wedged on the side, filled with the various make-up brushes, powders, and tubes I had left spread out on my bathroom counter. There was a prescription bottle for migraines, which had been in my medicine cabinet. This month’s supply of the pill. My hairbrush. My toothbrush and toothpaste. The half-finished book that had been on my night table, its bookmark still in place. My netbook computer.
Whoever had packed hadn’t just thrown in a few clothes haphazardly. They’d tried to see my place through my eyes, tried to guess what I would take if I’d packed for myself. They’d done a fairly good job of it, too.
So, creepy but considerate. The jury was still out on whether the considerate part won over the creepy one.
I brushed my hair. Fifty strokes with one hand. Fifty more with the other. When I was done, every curl Miss Delilah had put in my hair before pinning it up was gone, and it fell on my shoulders, damp and straight. I felt a little more like myself.
I brushed my teeth. I slipped on black underwear. Jeans. A shirt. I even brushed a bit of color on my cheeks and dabbed on lipstick, the same way I’d have put on armor, I guess.
And then I realized what my mystery packer had forgotten: shoes. All I had to wear were the sky-high, peep-toe stilettos I’d worn at the party. The shoes Miss Delilah had chosen for me.
Now, I’d always rather liked my boss. She was demanding, that much was true, and took things for granted. Praises from her or words of thanks were few and far between, but they were that much more meaningful for it. I guess what I liked most about her was how she marched to her own beat, leading the way and never following. She was strong. I knew myself enough to realize I didn’t have it in me to be strong in the same way she was, and maybe I didn’t even want to be, but I did admire her for it.
At that moment, that admiration was buried beneath mounds of resentment. I remembered all too well what she’d told Mr. Ward.
Kill her. I don’t care.
She’d trapped me in this house with someone she thought would kill me. And she might have been planning it for years.
I left the shoes where I’d dropped them by the door and walked out of the bedroom. My gaze flew to the loveseat. A tiny part of me—all right, maybe not so tiny—had hoped Mr. Ward would be back. And only because I had more questions for him, not for any other reason. No reason like deep, fathomless eyes, lips soft as a dream, large hands, or an equally large—
No. No other reason at all.
The sitting room was empty, however. On the loveseat, rather than Mr. Ward, I found a silver tray with a metal dome covering a plate, a tall glass of water, a smaller one of wine, and a slice of chocolate cake.
My stomach gave a growl of approval. I was almost proud of myself when, rather than falling to my knees in front of the loveseat and wolfing down every bite of food, I managed to control myself long enough to sit down next to the tray and spread the napkin on my lap.
Only then did I wolf it all down.
I was just finishing the last bite of richly decadent cake and wishing there’d been another slice when a light knock on the door startled me.
“Yes?”
My voice wavered at the thought that it might be Mr. Ward. And yes, I was little bit disappointed when Stephen walked in. He was still wearing the same suit and gloves as the previous night, but now his shirt was crisp and his jacket flawless. He must have changed into an identical outfit. Was this what he wore every day? I’d assumed he’d only put on that elaborate livery for the party, but there he was.
“Miss Angelina,” he said, inclining his head as though in greeting. He eyed the empty tray and asked, “Did you enjoy your lunch?”
I set the cake plate down on the tray. “Very much. It was all very good. Thank you. And you can call me just Angelina.”
When he replied, “Of course, Miss Angelina,” I assumed it was his way of saying he would do no such thing. I didn’t insist. I had bigger problems than what he wanted to call me.
I always introduce myself as Angelina, but it rarely takes long before people start shortening my name. To my father, I was always Angel. To my mom, Lini. My friends call me Angela. Miss Delilah, early on, decided to call me Lina. It was actually nice to have someone call me by my proper name, even with the unnecessary ‘Miss.’ It’s a pretty name, and I do like it.
I liked the way Mr. Ward said it even more, with the trace of an accent and that rumbling voice of his…
“Was it enough?” Stephen asked, interrupting my trip down memory lane. “Or would you like anything else? Another serving of cake, maybe?”
“Tempting,” I admitted. “Maybe later.”
With a thin smile, he inclined his head again.
“Was there anything you needed?” he asked.
To go home. To find a new job. To get far, far away from people who claimed to be vampires and could control me with just a few words. To forget any of this had happened.
Well, all right, maybe I didn’t need to forget my fantasy on the balcony. It was pretty harmless, after all.
“You wouldn’t happen to know where I can find shoes, would you?”
His gaze flicked down to my feet.
“I could give you…” His voice trailed off and he appeared to change his mind about what he’d been about to say. “No, I’m sorry, I don’t have anything for you. I’ll ask Mr. Ward about getting you some appropriate footwear. I’m sure his omission was accidental.”
His omission?
“Mr. Ward is the one who broke into my apartment?”
A slight smile curled his lips. “Broke in sounds so crass. Let’s just say he let himself in. And only to bring you a few necessities.”
I crossed my arms, meager protection against the discomfort I felt. How could I be so annoyed, and yet grateful for the care Mr. Ward had put into bringing me those ‘necessities’?
“Does he do that often?” I asked. “Break into people’s homes? How did he even know where I live?” A thought occurred to me, probably born from watching too many vampire movies and TV shows. “How did he get in? I thought v-vampires needed to be invited inside a home?”
A flicker of surprise lit Stephen’s eyes, but it was absent from his voice when he said, “That’s a myth. One I suspect vampires like to propagate through popular media.”
“So… you’re not a vampire, then?”
The thick relief in my voice surprised me, but really, it was good to know I wasn’t the only human around. He seemed to understand, because he gave me a thin, wry smile.
“I am not,” he confirmed.
“But he is.”
I didn’t bother explaining whom I meant by ‘he.’ Stephen caught on easily enough.
“Mr. Ward is, yes.”
“And Miss Delilah?”
He nodded.
I couldn’t explain why, but Stephen confirming what Mr. Ward had told me somehow made it seem more real. Maybe because he looked so prim and proper in that uniform, like he was above any nonsense—any lying. That might also be why I asked him the same question I’d asked Mr. Ward twice already.
“Is he going to kill me?”
He didn’t even blink at the question, which comforted me in my belief that it was a good question, worth asking. The fact that he didn’t answer right away, on the other hand, was not so comforting.
“Did you ask him?” he said after far too long.
“I did. But why should I believe anything he says?”
“Why should you believe me?” he shot back. “Being human doesn’t make me any more trustworthy. My loyalty is to Mr. Ward. And if I may speak frankly, he’s less likely to lie to you than I am. He might refuse to answer your question, but if he does answer, it’s doubtful he’d bother lying.”
&n
bsp; Until that moment, I’d sort of seen Stephen as an ally. He worked for Mr. Ward, the same way I worked for Miss Delilah, and somehow I had assumed that put us on par with each other. Now, I realized I’d been wrong. There was one major difference between us: he knew what his employer was, and, as he’d just noted, he was loyal to him. I, on the other hand, had never had the smallest inkling that anything was different about Miss Delilah.
Stephen inclined his head once more, picked up the tray, and walked out. He left me alone with my jumbled thoughts. I tried to think back on the last five years for any clues I might have overlooked, strange things that, in hindsight, should have set off alarm bells in my mind. As hard as I tried, I couldn’t come up with anything.
I’d seen Miss Delilah in the sun. For that matter, I’d seen her in the sun just about every day. Her office was at the corner of the building, and two walls were made entirely of glass. Sometimes, it got so bright in there that I had to blink a few times to adjust my vision when coming in. Sunlight clearly didn’t bother her, the way it did vampires in movies.
I’d also seen her eat regular food. Very little of it, which I’d always assumed was because she watched her figure, but I’d definitely seen her eat.
I’d seen her reflection in a mirror. On that day when she’d walked on the runway, I’d been backstage with her, and I’d watched the stylist and make-up artist do her hair and touch up her lips and eyelashes. There’d been mirrors all around us. I remembered noticing she wouldn’t look at herself, but she did have a reflection. Now that I thought about it, it occurred to me how strange it was that there was no mirror in the dressing room in her penthouse. With an entire room dedicated to clothes, it seemed like a necessary feature.
I tried to think of what else I knew, or thought I knew about vampires. The aging thing… well, five years isn’t really enough to realize someone isn’t growing any older. What about the people who’d worked with her longer than that, though? Did they notice? Or did they simply believe she had an excellent plastic surgeon? Come to think of it, I didn’t know how old she was. Her late husband had been a lot older, but I had no idea how long they’d been married by the time he passed away.