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Scent of Salvation (Chronicles of Eorthe #1)

Page 27

by Annie Nicholas


  Sorin leaped out, racing Ahote over the edge. “I don’t care.” He crouched, searching their vicinity—empty courtyard, stables, no torches casting any light. Good.

  “It feels like I stole it.”

  Sighing, Sorin resisted the urge to shake his sensitive omega. “We have greater concerns. You can donate it to a cause later if you wish.”

  He nodded and stuck the coin in his pocket. “There’s water to wash with.” He pointed to a full trough with a hand pump next to it.

  Ahote lay in the trough and scrubbed while Sorin pumped water over his body, letting the mud slide off in clumps. The noxious smell helped them past the guards but they didn’t want to attract attention once inside. Most of the skunk washed away. Sorin shook the excess water off and reassessed the area. A stone tower rose above them. The guard had called it Lord Benic’s tower. “We’ll start the search in there.”

  Ahote stepped next to him and shook dry. “Where’s Peder?”

  Spinning around, Sorin searched for the omega. The cart lay empty with no omega next to it. “Bugger.”

  Peder returned in silence with blankets from around the corner of the stable. He handed them over. “I didn’t see anyone in feral form as I crossed the village. I think you’ll stand out naked.”

  “We’ll need clothes then.”

  A female giggled close by.

  The three of them melted into the shadows surrounding the stable.

  She strolled into the courtyard with a guard on each arm. They entered the stables.

  Sorin scratched his chin. “Peder, you’ll get a chance to wear a dress after all.”

  Inacio watched Kele with hooded eyes. The lazy interest didn’t fool her. Her father played games like this. If the incubus’s curiosity wasn’t stirred by her presence, he wouldn’t be sitting on a cushioned chair across from the bed where she’d been chained.

  His dark hair curled slightly around his ears, inviting her to run her fingers through the strands. Warm brown eyes softened by thick lashes regarded her. She didn’t enjoy the lust he invoked. The desire seemed stirred by his scent rather than from her heart.

  “I’ve never seen a shifter with pale hair. Your people are more like mine, bold in coloring and passionate.” He leaned his head on his hand.

  “Not many are born so blonde.” She ran a finger under the metal bracelet clasped around her wrist, trying to ease the tightness.

  “Is it too tight? If you shifted to feral form, it would break.”

  She scowled. If she could have, she would have been free already.

  “If you’re shy I’ll wrap a blanket around you to cover your nudity before you shift.” He gestured to the bed.

  A flush burned her flesh up to the tips of her ears. She didn’t know much about incubi except they fed from sexual energy. Indescribable and unnatural desires for Inacio burned in her blood. They were fake. She focused on the emotions Peder inspired with his shy smiles. Those were true. The need faded but did not disappear.

  Inacio chuckled. “I’m well fed, Kele. I have no interest in virgins. The meal would be so scant.”

  She narrowed her gaze. “Then ease away from me. Your scent stirs my blood.”

  “Forgive me. I did not wash after my last interlude but be assured I am a gentleman.”

  She crossed her arms as best she could with a chained wrist. “Why would you help me escape?”

  “I don’t see any keys in my hands so I don’t see how I’m helping.” He hid a smile behind his hand.

  Her blood boiled but not from lust. “You just told me I’d break free if I shifted.”

  “Yet strangely, you haven’t.” He tilted his head. “Is this some sex game you are playing with Benic? I don’t mind sharing as long as I’m included.”

  Jaw unhinged, she could scarcely breath. “A game?” The question was almost inaudible.

  “You know, a little slave and master role playing?” He batted his eyelashes. “I can be the cabin boy. I give great cunnilingus.”

  Clutching her throat, she couldn’t make any sound. Did mates play such games? An uncalled image of her parents playing this flashed in her mind. Dark night, she’d have nightmares for weeks. “Stop it. This isn’t some game.” She whipped the hair from her face and glared at the overly amused incubus.

  “So, then, why haven’t you shifted yet and torn out my throat?”

  “I can’t shift.” She tossed the words at him as if they were stones.

  He sat up, his gaze clear and bright. “Really? You’re always in civil form?” Without permission, he stroked her arm.

  She shrugged him off.

  “Are you afraid?”

  She squirmed, her heart twisting. “What kind of question is that?” Of course she was, but years of practice kept it under control. Better to be angry than afraid.

  He laughed, loud and easy. “You’ve a sharp tongue. I’m happy Benic brought you home. I could use a companion and more stimulating conversation.”

  She snorted. “I doubt you lack in companions.”

  “Then you know very little of my people.” His smile took on an edge of sadness.

  “I thought the incubi lived far south from our lands. What are you doing here?”

  “The arms of the Vampire Nation are long. I was captured and sold on the black market. Benic was kind enough to rescue me from a worse fate than being his toy.”

  Vampires traveled the world. They weren’t tied to the land. She’d been so focused on her little forest that she never gave thought to beyond the tribe’s borders. “Then you are a slave?”

  “I must repay my debt, then I am free.” He winked. “I was not cheap. Even then, what will I do? Walk back to South Amerigo? My kind is hunted outside the protection of our nests.”

  “Oh.” She hadn’t been aware of such things. “With your—power, couldn’t you persuade someone to help?”

  “Fuck my way home?” His smile grew wide as he leaned closer. “That would be dangerous.” His pupils constricted and his scent grew strong.

  Musk floated around her. She held her breath but already the muscles in her back relaxed. Her thoughts grew slow and she sighed. Scooting nearer, she strained against the chain and touched his face, but she wanted so much more.

  He retreated from her touch, leaving a void.

  She almost cried out, the emptiness that sharp.

  He watched her while pouring a cup of water from the pitcher. “What would you do for me, Kele?”

  “Anything.” She clawed at her clothes.

  He tossed the water in her face.

  The cold bit through the fog of lust. She shook her head with a growl. Blinking the water from her eyes, she tried to gather what diginity she still owned. “Don’t ever do that again.” She’d fallen under his spell so easily.

  Inacio leaned against the table. “See? If I force someone under my will, I have to keep them there. Creating the pheromone is not an easy task. At some point I need to rest. When they awakened from my influence, I would be dead or worse.”

  She retreated from him. “Lesson learned.” He spoke the truth. If Inacio had taken advantage of her she would have torn his throat out afterward.

  “I’ve never met a wild shifter. All the servants are domesticated shifters. Benic protects me too much.”

  She blinked, not sure how Inacio fit into Benic’s life. “He does?” The ferret had never mentioned Inacio once in the years she’d known him. She recalled the kiss—the promise hidden within it. All false. “Are you—together?”

  “As in being in love?”

  Treachery ripped her guts and licked at her inside. She pressed her hands to her stomach, the pain a surprise. Benic meant nothing to her.

  “You’re very innocent to think such things, Kele.”

  She turned her shoulder from him. “Then what would you call it?”

  “I’m a food source with benefits. A well-fed incubus or succubus can sustain a vampire much longer than any other creature.”

  The pain grew
worse as Benic’s duplicity deepened. “What about humans?”

  Inacio shrugged. “Never heard of them.”

  “Benic stole one today when he took me.”

  “Oh, that female? I doubt she’s for feeding. He took her to his laboratory where he conducts experiments.”

  A shiver ran up her spine. She twisted to face him once more, her earlier anger forgotten. “What kind of experiments?”

  He shrugged. “You can ask him yourself. He shouldn’t be long. The laboratory is above us, on the top of the tower.”

  “Inacio, please. Tell me what he’s doing to her.”

  “I don’t know but don’t worry so. He studies blood, Kele, not torture.”

  A knock on the door sent her into a defensive crouch.

  A servant girl entered carrying a tray. Food. She was starved.

  Two guards stood by the entrance.

  Inacio moved out of the servant’s way, turning his back to the door.

  Kele’s gaze met one of the guard’s and her heart stopped. Ahote. She gasped.

  The incubus spun around as her pack mate attacked and punched him with a quick, hard jab. Inacio crumpled to the floor unconscious.

  Dropping the tray on the table, the girl rushed to her. “Did he hurt you?”

  Kele looked closer at the familiar face. “Peder?” Not a girl. Her omega wore a dress. He’d braved the dangers of the castle to rescue her. With a soaring heart, she hugged him tight. “No, he was—nice, in an odd way.”

  Ahote shouldered between them. “This is all very touching but have the reunion later.” He grasped her metal bracelet, his thick civil fingers barely fitting. The muscles of his shoulders bunched and strained as he tried to force it open.

  She gasped.

  “You’re hurting her.” Peder wrestled with Ahote’s wrists.

  A pop vibrated through her body as the bracelet clattered to the floor. She sucked in a long breath and watched her guardian shake off Peder.

  She cleared her throat and rubbed her wrist. “Susan’s at the top of this tower. Benic might be with her.”

  Sorin, standing in the doorway dressed as the other guard, left without a word.

  Ahote glanced at Kele and Peder then back at the exit.

  She waved him away. “Go. I’ll wait with Peder.”

  Before he stepped out he twisted around. “You need a better disguise. Wear the dress. Peder, take the male’s clothes.”

  Peder knelt next to Inacio and undid the fastenings of his clothes. He glanced at her. “Kele?”

  “Yes?”

  “You should undress.” He tugged the shirt over the incubus’s limp head.

  She nodded. Undress. Yes, she could do this.

  “Kele?”

  She opened her eyes, surprised that she had closed them. “I can’t. Not with you in the room.” Her voice quivered as she spoke. Weakness. She shouldn’t express such submissive behavior.

  Peder took her hands. “I’ll turn my back.” He smiled. “You can trust me.”

  A knot in her chest unwound. She squeezed his hands, leaned forward and rubbed her cheek against his.

  He pulled the pink dress over his head and handed it to her. “It will look better on you.”

  “Thank you.”

  “The color suits you.” He turned his back and dressed in Inacio’s clothes, keeping his promise to not peek.

  She’d never owned anything pink before. Her mother detested the color. It was now Kele’s favorite.

  Chapter Thirty-Nine

  Cramps assaulted Susan’s abdomen. They grew more intense with each wave. The damn vampire had known this would hurt, yet refused to ease her pain. She watched Benic gather ingredients from his worktable and pictured staking him like she’d seen in the movies.

  Unbelievable.

  She’d been infected by a mutating virus. She kept praying for someone to shout cut and see a movie set pull apart.

  Benic left his table and hovered over her face. Placing his hand on her forehead, he appeared concerned. “You need willow bark tea for the fever.” He glanced at his equipment and grimaced. “I don’t have any here. It’s in my storeroom. I won’t be long.” He hurried from the room and left the door open. A cool breeze brushed over her.

  The brilliant idiot truly was sorry. She believed his sincerity but it wouldn’t save her. Like in a horror stories, she was turning into a monster, except she didn’t know what kind.

  She shivered and pulled the blanket tighter around her shoulders. She was going to die.

  The Black Plague received the name for a reason. It wasn’t called the Happy Plague or the Sunshine Plague. This version of the disease would try to change her DNA.

  On a scientific level, it amazed her into awe. Humans had studied DNA for decades and hadn’t produced such effects. Yet a little virus had figured it out. The universe never stopped evolving.

  Would Benic’s medicine work? Her system would help fight the virus but she had two strains attacking her body—shifter and vampire.

  Virus and bacteria infected people differently and treating them needed separate tactics. Moldy bread juice wouldn’t help. The Apisi had a bacterial lung infection so the simple form of penicillin should cure them. Her treatment wouldn’t be so easy. She was armed only with her immune system and luck.

  They needed to stay ahead of her fever so her brain wouldn’t fry. She had to keep hydrated no matter how nauseated her stomach became. A little prayer or a miracle wouldn’t hurt.

  She drained the flagon of water Benic left on the side table by the cot. The tepid liquid soothed her sore throat. She tongued her sore gums and tasted blood. Lovely. Ebola caused hemorrhaging. What if she’d caught something else from Benic’s blood? HIV, herpes, syphilis? The vampire could be a petri dish of diseases.

  The sound of heavy footsteps climbing the stairs traveled into her room. She sat up on the cot, her head spinning. “Did you ever consider humans are frailer than vampires?” Her voice faded at the end of her question.

  Sorin had stepped through the doorway dressed like a medieval guard in chainmail.

  She gasped. Her world tilted yet she couldn’t pull her gaze from him. God, he looked fantastic. She reached for him. “Sorin,” she whispered. Darkness folded around her like a scorned lover, yanking her from Sorin’s presence.

  Benic hadn’t given her the immunity-boosting medicine yet.

  A roar shattered her thoughts as she slipped into oblivion.

  Sorin ran to Susan’s cot on the other side of the room where she had collapsed. He knelt next to it and shook her shoulders. “Susan?” Running his hands over her, he couldn’t find a wound. Sweat covered her skin, pasting her thin dress to her body.

  Ahote charged into the room. “What’s wrong?”

  “She’s not waking up.” Her flesh burned just like the sick in his pack. She’d been dealing with the ill. She could have caught the chest disease. It wouldn’t be long before the cough set in. “She’s sick. We need to get her home and give her the medicine she made for my pack. It saved them and should save her.” He prayed with all his soul it would.

  “Let’s go.” Ahote gestured to the door.

  Sorin gathered her slim form in his arms. How would they travel through the castle unnoticed with a female in his arms?

  A table filled with glassware stood in the center of the room. What was Benic doing with Susan? He’d been worried about rape but this appeared more sinister.

  The bloodsucker would pay. He wanted to hunt him down and pluck his limbs off one by one. Benic had stolen his mate then left her to die all by herself in this horrid room. Once Susan was safe, he’d come back. Vampire lord or not, nobody stole from Sorin.

  Ahote scouted ahead, descending the stairs.

  When Sorin reached the room where Kele had been kept, he paused.

  She and Peder waited by the door. Both dressed in castle garb. From a distance they appeared like a couple.

  “You look normal,” said the alpha.

 
They glanced at each other.

  “Normal enough to walk out through the gate with the cart.” Sorin raised his eyebrow at them. “You should try to hide your hair, Kele. Not many blondes in this part of the world.”

  She hurried to Susan. “What did he do to her?” She examined her throat and wrists. “I don’t see any bites.”

  “She’s ill.” He contained a snarl. Benic feeding from his Susan hadn’t crossed Sorin’s mind. “I think she may have caught the illness afflicting my pack. We need to return her to the den where we have medicine to save her.”

  Peder paled. He met Sorin’s gaze, his eyes filled with sorrow and knowledge on how fast the disease killed.

  Sorin wasn’t ready to mourn Susan. He’d fight tooth and claw with death if necessary. Holding her close, he pressed his nose in her hair and savored her scent. How could he live without her? He’d just discovered love, and fate would tear them apart?

  “We’re wasting time,” he snapped. “Cover your hair, Kele.”

  She ran into the bedroom and returned with a scarf wrapped around her head.

  “Exit through the front gate facing the forest. Bring the cart we used to get in. We’ll use it to carry Susan.” He led them out of the tower.

  Ahote stood guard by the door they had used to gain access earlier. Security entering the castle was tight but once inside, it lessened.

  Peder approached Sorin. “I don’t think we can fool the gate guards with another sick person in the cart trick. How do you and Ahote plan to pass as guards? They probably all know each other.”

  “Valid concerns. Susan will remain with me and Ahote. We’ll leave the castle by descending the walls.”

  Peder offered him a doubting look but kept silent.

  “Don’t worry. Meet us where the road enters the forest.”

  “Yes, Alpha.” He took Kele’s hand and led her toward the stables and into the night.

  “I don’t like the way he’s touching her.” Ahote’s glare could have stabbed the omega right through his back.

  “Worry about Kele’s virtue later. Peder will protect her with his life, and she has a better chance of escape with him than with us. Give me your belt and cloak.”

 

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