The Dark Ones

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The Dark Ones Page 10

by Rachel Van Dyken


  I'd only planned on taking another few drops.

  But she turned her head, causing my fangs to graze down her neck.

  Blood dripped.

  So I licked, savoring the feel of her warmth on my tongue.

  And when I accidentally grazed her again…

  I bit.

  CHAPTER TWENTY

  Genesis

  THE MINUTE HE BIT DOWN — I KNEW-I'd just done something I couldn't undo… experienced something I would never, in all my days, be able to forget.

  He said I'd know when he bit.

  What he'd meant was I'd know when he finally gave into his instincts. It wasn't fast, like I'd expected, where he greedily sucked, pulled from my life source until I was drained.

  Instead, the minute his teeth slid into my neck…

  The world stopped.

  Time stopped.

  I closed my eyes, only to open them again and watch the world go by me in slow motion. Dust flicked in front of my face. The clock on the far side of the hallway moved… slower. Everything was slowed, even my heartbeat, and for those brief seconds or maybe even minutes…

  I felt every single part of him.

  Every stretch of muscle.

  Every breath.

  His pleasure was mine. It was almost hard to breathe because my senses were so overwhelmed with not only him, but with the world around me. The world I'd always known to be normal… was anything but normal.

  The color of the wall had been blue.

  Now it was electric blue.

  Even Ethan's skin looked different, almost transparent as he clung to my body, his fingers digging into my flesh.

  It was indescribable, and I was failing at trying to soak everything in.

  His tongue swirled across my neck, and then I felt him draw a little bit more; this time the feeling changed, and suddenly all I could smell was burnt sugar — like Christmas, only better.

  My body felt heavy; it pulsed in perfect cadence with him.

  Ethan sighed against my neck, and the world returned to normal bland colors. The clock finally made it to the next minute.

  And I had to fight to keep myself from crying out for him to keep going.

  "I'm sorry." His voice was so low, so hoarse it was almost hard to understand his words. "I — you—" He cursed and pulled back.

  His eyes were so green that I looked away. I had to because I was afraid if I kept staring, they would somehow burn my irises, blinding me.

  "Don't be," I whispered. "I offered. Besides, you pulled me from my dream last night. It was the least I could do, right?"

  "You have no idea," his lips lingered in front of mine, grazing my mouth with each word he spoke, "how good you feel — how wonderful you taste."

  I leaned forward; the temptation to kiss him was too much.

  A throat cleared. "Uh, do you still want eggs?"

  I pushed against Ethan's chest, taking a step back, and glanced at Mason. His eyes betrayed nothing, so I wasn't sure if he'd seen us, or if he'd just assumed I'd been offering up myself as Ethan's breakfast.

  "Yes," Ethan answered for me. "She's lacking protein."

  "Huh?" I asked, dumbfounded. "How would you know…?"

  He smirked.

  "How's my iron?"

  "Perfectly balanced."

  We shared a smile. It felt good to talk to him like he didn't hate me, yet I still felt like I had no choice but to keep my guard up. It was a tie between wanting to open up to him, yet knowing that if I did and he rejected me again, I'd have no one to blame but myself.

  I needed to remember he was still an immortal.

  School really hadn't prepared me for what I was up against.

  "Eat," Ethan urged. "I'll wait for you in the study. We can go over your horrible education after Mason's convinced you've eaten enough."

  Mason held up the pan of eggs again in his hand.

  Ethan kissed my head and left, leaving me and Mason alone in the hallway.

  "So…" Mason moved out of the way so I could step by him. "Good morning so far?"

  I fought to hide my grin. "The best."

  "Wait until you eat my eggs."

  "You mean it gets better?" I joked, elbowing him in the side.

  "Yes, but be warned, I made the whole carton on account I'm used to cooking for more than one person. You'll insult me if you don't eat. Besides, according to your mate, you're lacking in protein."

  I rolled my eyes and sat at the table while Mason served me an ungodly amount of eggs.

  Both Stephanie and Alex were nowhere to be found.

  I shoveled some eggs into my mouth and fought back a moan. The man could cook. They might tease him about eating berries and pinecones, but his eggs were fluffy. "So what do you guys do during the day?"

  "As opposed to during the night?" Mason laughed. "Tell me, are you under the impression I go outside and howl at the moon when night falls?"

  I felt my cheeks heat.

  He barked out a laugh. "I may sit in on your studies this afternoon just so I can watch you blush the entire time."

  I poked a few more eggs. "So?"

  "The four of us are Immortal Elders, not only do we each have business holdings all over the world — ones we're still very much involved in — but we keep the peace."

  I frowned. "Like the police?"

  "Sort of." Mason shrugged. "I guess, in a way, I'm pack leader. I check in on the different families of werewolves in the Greater Seattle area and keep in constant communication with them. Some of the families like to live outside of the city and, naturally, outside of the country, so I get reports on them on a daily basis."

  "Alex and Stephanie? What about them?"

  "Sirens," Mason leaned back in his chair and lifted a mug of coffee to his lips, "tend to focus on play more than work."

  "Meaning?"

  "Curious little thing, aren't you?"

  "Well…" I put down my fork. "I'm curious because, to be honest, when I was in school, I was taught you guys kept to yourselves. Nothing ever mentioned jobs or hobbies. I guess I assumed you just sat around and thought about your own immortality."

  "How boring…" Mason's eyebrows lifted. "To sit around and only think about yourself. Sounds more like a Dark One than a werewolf."

  "Is that what they do?"

  "I'll let Ethan explain exactly what Dark Ones do, other than rule with an iron fist and petition archangels."

  My ears perked up. "Real archangels?"

  "No, fake ones… we just like the name because it sounds cool." He smirked. "Yes, real ones."

  "You've seen them?"

  "Once, a very long, long time ago. As long as we keep the peace between all species, they don't interfere. They have no reason to."

  "And if war breaks out?"

  Mason glanced over my shoulder, his eyes drawn to the hallway. "Ethan's irritated with me for keeping you so long. Two more bites then go back down the hall, first door on your left."

  "But—"

  "Two bites." Mason held up two fingers. "And then you get to go to school with a vampire."

  I felt myself blush again because all I could think about was Ethan, in all his sexiness, trying to teach me something — anything — in that deep seductive voice of his. Yeah, it was going to be a really long day.

  CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE

  Ethan

  I PACED IN THE STUDY LIKE SOMEONE who'd just drunk an entire pot of coffee and needed to work it out of his system.

  All I tasted was her.

  Her blood was still on my tongue — on my lips — and her memories, the ones that came with her blood — the ones that came at the price of me sharing my own — were so horrific I'd checked my watch at least five times to see if I'd make it across town and back without her knowing.

  I wanted to murder her mother.

  And the rest of the humans she'd been studying with.

  Yes, secrecy was necessary, but to force the humans to think so little about themselves — especially Genesis — was c
riminal.

  She was nearing. I could smell her.

  Two footsteps and she'd be in the room.

  And I'd probably lose my mind with the madness that always came with her scent.

  "Nice study." Her voice was husky, dripping with seduction without even trying.

  I broke the pencil in my hand and dropped it to the ground, turning on my heel, knowing that just staring at her would cause my heart to pound.

  "Thank you." I managed the words between my lips, but they sounded more like a hiss — or possibly a choked whisper.

  She pointed at one of the chairs. "Are we sitting?"

  The damn chair taunted me. What I wouldn't do to have a king-sized bed in that room I could toss her onto.

  I coughed into my hand. "Yes, the chair is fine."

  Genesis tucked her golden hair behind her ears and sat, folding her arms across her chest. "So, school's in session?"

  And you've been a very bad, bad, girl.

  I groaned and turned back around, focusing on the dusty textbooks lining the walls. "Yes… why don't we start with what you know. Or at least what you've been learning up until now."

  She took a deep breath.

  I waited.

  Still not turning back to face her because I was having a hell of a time keeping my body under control.

  "I'm ugly."

  Not what I expected.

  "What?" I hissed, nearly knocking over the table in front of me to get to her. "What did you say?"

  Her face paled. "The first phrase I remember as a child."

  "Explain." Murder was definitely going to be on the agenda. Exquisite, painful, spectacular, satisfying murder.

  Experiencing her memories of indoctrination by humans who were supposed to love her, provide for her, protect her, was one thing. But hearing the testament of the ugliness she was forced to endure—it was hell. It was heartbreaking, to still have her taste on my lips — to know the purity of her soul — and hear the firsthand account of a mother who basically spat in her face.

  "I think most normal children imagine their first Christmas or their first birthday. All I can remember from my childhood is my mom telling me that I was ugly. She even wrote it on a piece of paper and put it on the bathroom mirror so I wouldn't become vain."

  "Why would she do that?"

  "It may sound cruel." Genesis nibbled her lower lip as tears filled her eyes. "But it's what we've been taught all our lives. We'll never live up to immortal standards, never be loveable, never be beautiful. We're mere objects. We study as hard as we can so that if our number is called, we can do a good job and bring honor to our families. My family has a sort of black mark on it for reasons my mother never told me. I never expected my number to be called, but in case it was, that's the only phrase she kept repeating to me. 'You are nothing. You are ugly.'"

  "It's a lie," I whispered fiercely, taking her chin in my hands so she couldn't look away. "It's an absolute falsehood. You aren't ugly."

  "It's okay if I am." Genesis's eyes were glassy with tears. "I mean, compared to immortals I'm—"

  "Perfect," I finished for her. "And if I ever hear you say that about yourself again, you'll be punished."

  "Punished?"

  I released her chin. "Yes… I'll force you to eat pinecones instead of Mason's eggs."

  She let out a laugh.

  "You're beautiful, Genesis." I swallowed, placing my hands on the table in front of her. "Immortals would fight wars over you, and not just your face or your hair or the way your smile penetrates to someone's very soul — but because you're good."

  "You don't know that. I could be a horrible person…"

  "Your blood would taste bitter," I said honestly, "because the emotional manifests into the physical. Your blood would be repugnant to me, and other immortals would shy away from you because the last thing any immortal wants is to mate with a human who is pure evil."

  "Oh…" Her breathing picked up speed. "They didn't teach us that."

  "They wouldn't. It's a secret." I winked.

  Her smile brightened considerably. "Thank you… for saying that. But it's hard to believe you after everything I've already seen and the way I seem to repel you and—"

  I burst out laughing. "Oh, Genesis, if only you did repel me, things would be so much easier."

  Her eyebrows squeezed together; I could read the frustration on her face.

  "What else?" I sat down on the table in front of her. "What did they teach you?"

  "They taught us that you scorned technology, that you didn't have time to teach your children what was necessary to survive, so as humans, it would be our job to educate your children as well as the families we were placed with."

  "A glorified nanny."

  "Yes." She nodded. "Exactly. And if we served the family well, then word would spread and more immortals would want me or my bloodline specifically."

  "I wonder…" I tapped my chin. "Why they would lie?"

  "Maybe because telling us our only job as a human was to become a mate to an immortal would terrify some people?"

  "Possibly…" My mind reeled. None of it made sense. Sure, we'd kept our secrets over the years to protect ourselves, to protect the humans from getting greedy. "A hundred years ago, the schools taught respect for immortals and gave you knowledge about our world, about your place in it, about the balance. Why would they suddenly change that?"

  Genesis shrugged. "If I had to guess, it may be because humans started dying. You said so yourself."

  "There is that." I gritted my teeth together, suddenly worried that I wasn't doing enough to nourish her, to take care of her. It was my job, damn it!

  "Ethan?" She licked her lips and leaned forward. "Your eyes are turning black again."

  "Yes, they do that."

  "Why?"

  "Because they can."

  "Seriously?"

  I smiled. "No, because sometimes I can't control myself. They lose color when I'm feeling something extreme. The green simply fades into black. A lack of color doesn't mean I'm soulless or anything ridiculous. It just means the vampire blood has spread to other parts of my body, readying me for a fight."

  "Hmm…"

  "Your eyes turn green too, you know."

  "What?" Her eyes widened. "What do you mean?"

  "I've shared blood with you. When you're feeling something extreme, your eyes will turn green like mine. They match your mate's. You'll also notice that you don't need as much sleep as usual. Your skin will become softer. Think of it as having a very nice beauty regimen." I laughed at her excited expression. "You're welcome?"

  "Wow."

  "Not that you need it," I added quickly. "The last thing you need is to offer more temptation for me and my kind."

  She didn't say anything.

  "I'm curious to learn more about you," I said honestly. "But I don't want to keep you cooped up in the study all day. You don't seem like the type who enjoys studying."

  She sighed. "What gave me away?"

  "Your emotions easily betray you — and if they didn't, your blood surely would."

  Red stained her cheeks, causing all of my blood to once again whoosh from my face to my lower extremities—only this time I wasn't bracing for a fight, but for a few hours tangled in bed with her.

  "Why don't I take you to that bookstore we told you about? You can meet Drystan and see if it's something that you'd enjoy doing while I work."

  "You work?"

  "I'd like to think so."

  "Like Mason?"

  "Like Mason. Unlike Stephanie and Alex, however." I held out my hand. "I'll show you after the bookstore. Would you like that?"

  "Yeah." She took my hand then squinted down at it.

  "Something wrong?"

  "I'm just trying to figure out what a vampire does for a job."

  I barked out a laugh and wrapped my arm around her shoulders. "Yes, well, I think I may keep you in suspense until later."

  She leaned into me.

  I inhaled he
r scent, and my body shuddered with awareness.

  It was horrible knowing that my reaction to her was so strong, yet she had no idea the war that raged inside of me, the desire I had to tell her everything, to cut myself open and show her my pain, my shame, and ask her to take it all away.

  I was balancing with my life — possibly hers.

  And yet, I couldn't find myself to regret anything.

  Not anymore.

  Not after talking with her.

  Not after truly tasting her.

  "Hungry again?" she asked.

  "What?"

  "You were licking me."

  "Uh…" Damn it, I really needed to stay focused. I moved away from her, enough to evade the temptation of her neck. "Sorry."

  She glanced up at me through hooded eyes. "It's okay."

  I growled.

  She bit her lower lip.

  And again, we were in the damn hallway. What was it about the hallway that destroyed every shred of sense I possessed?

  "Ethan?" Mason called from the kitchen. "You going out?"

  "Yeah…" I called, never taking my eyes from Genesis. "The bookstore."

  "Get me berries!" he yelled. "We're out."

  I shook my head, the spell broken. "Eat meat, for God's sakes, wolf."

  "Berries," he repeated.

  Genesis laughed softly.

  "Damn berries." I led her to the door. "Shall we?"

  "Should we ask him if he needs pinecones too?"

  A pinecone flew by my head. "Clearly, he still has some left if he's using them as ammo."

  CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO

  Genesis

  "I'VE BEEN HERE BEFORE," I BLURTED when Ethan pulled up to a downtown book shop around fifteen minutes from his house. It was one of my favorites. It had the best scones in the world, and the coffee was well-known in the area. "It's called Wolf's."

  "Funny, right?" Ethan smirked.

  I rolled my eyes and got out of the car. Did that mean I'd met the owner before? The bookstore wasn't huge like a Barnes and Noble, but it was big enough that it had two levels and multiple employees.

  The bell on the door chimed as Ethan opened it and ushered me in. The smell of books was so familiar my knees almost gave way.

  "Ethan." A man who looked like he was around my age smiled in our direction and made his way toward us. He seemed younger than Mason even; he had the same shaggy hair and really dark brown eyes — almost black. "So this is… Genesis."

 

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