by Tina Folsom
“Everything will be fine, my love; they’ve got her. She can’t hurt you anymore,” she whispered to him. His eyes fell shut again, and then he let go of her wrist. She looked at Amaury, alarmed.
“It’s fine. He’ll take however much his body can process at a time. He’ll need more, later. We’ll have a donor by then,” Amaury assured her.
She shook her head. “No. I won’t allow it.”
“How cute,” Ilona spat out.
Delilah ignored her. “He’ll only drink from me, nobody else.”
“But it’s too dangerous. He needs too much blood,” Amaury warned her.
She lifted her hand in protest. “Only from me.”
Then she gave Ilona another look and took off her jacket. She rolled it up and rested Samson’s head on it, before she got to her feet, still wobbly. Her ribs hurt, and she put her hand to her side to support her movements.
Amaury offered his arm to steady her, and Delilah gladly took it.
“What are we going to do with her?” Delilah asked him.
“We?” Amaury gave her a stunned look.
“Yes, ‘we.’ And don’t even think about excluding me. I have every right—”
“You’re not going to have a little mortal tell you want to do, are you?” Ilona taunted Amaury as she struggled in the grip of the two vampires holding her. “Wimp!”
Amaury gave her a nonchalant smile. “You should know that I’m not susceptible to your insults, Ilona.”
“You’re gonna screw her too once Samson discards her? Or maybe even before?”
“I think you should shut up while you have a tongue,” Amaury warned her. Delilah shot him a surprised look.
“Oh, yeah, bitch. That’s what he does, the high-and-mighty Amaury. He fucks Samson’s castoffs.”
“As if you hadn’t asked for it,” he retorted.
Ilona let out a bitter laugh. “I wonder whether your friend knows about it. Maybe somebody should tell him.”
Delilah’s look bounced between the two. Clearly they knew each other more intimately than anybody would have guessed. Had Amaury somehow been involved in Ilona’s and Samson’s breakup? Had he betrayed his best friend?
“It’s not working, Ilona. You can’t finagle your way out of this one. So, where is Milo?”
“Milo?” Delilah echoed.
Amaury gave her a sideways glance. “We’ve just found out that Milo is Ilona’s brother and is behind the entire scheme to rob millions from Samson’s company. He deceived Thomas and got access to his password.”
Delilah stared at him in shock. “Milo masterminded this?”
Ilona blew out an annoyed huff. “That idiot couldn’t plan anything. He couldn’t even execute what I told him to; otherwise, you little bitch, you’d be pushing up daisies by now. But no, he had to give the job to some idiot human who screwed it up every time. I should have done it myself in the first place,” she ranted.
“Shoulda, coulda, woulda,” Delilah replied sarcastically.
Ilona snarled at her. “You think you can have him and all his money? Think again. He’s just playing with you: Samson never loved anybody but himself. He’s a selfish man and an even more selfish lover. He’ll grow tired of you, and then he’ll dump you.”
“Just because you couldn’t give him what he needs doesn’t mean I can’t. And as for being selfish, why don’t you look in the mirror sometime—you’ll see who’s selfish. Oh, sorry, I forgot: you can’t look in the mirror, can you? Then I guess you don’t really know how ugly you actually are, so I’ll just give you the skinny—you’re a fucking hag.”
Ilona hissed and struggled to free herself from her two guards, murder in her eyes. “Let me just get my fangs into you, bitch—I’ll show you how ugly I can really be!”
“Enough! Where’s Milo?” Amaury gave the two vampires a nod to increase their hold, twisting Ilona’s arms back to an unnatural and painful position. She winced.
“I don’t know where the idiot is.”
“Fine, then we have no more need for you.”
Delilah looked at Amaury. “You’re not letting her go, are you?”
“Letting her go? No. We’re killing her.”
Amaury pulled a wooden stake out of his jacket pocket. Delilah stared at the stake then back at Ilona, whose eyes had grown wide. She knew what was coming. Yes, she would die, but Delilah wanted to be the one to deliver the final blow. It was her man Ilona had nearly killed, so it would be only right for her to punish the woman.
Delilah made a grab for the stake in Amaury’s hand, but he stopped her.
“No, it’ll be my pleasure. Samson is the best thing that ever happened in my life. Anybody who wants to hurt him had better defeat me first.”
Delilah had to concede. Amaury’s determination was palpable.
“Thanks for the great sex, but as I said before, it’s all meaningless. See you in hell.”
Ilona’s eyes widened as if she couldn’t believe he’d actually do it. Her lips opened, but no words came out. Amaury raised his arm and slammed the stake into her heart. For a split-second disbelief spread over Ilona’s face. A second later she was dust. The air picked up the tiny kernels of dust and carried them away.
When Amaury turned back to Delilah, he gave her a long look. “Without emotions, it’s all meaningless.”
Amaury organized Samson’s transport back to the house while more vampires were dispatched to hunt down Milo.
Carl expected them when they returned and had already prepared Samson’s bedroom, placing clean sheets on the bed. Carl and Amaury helped cut the torn clothes off Samson’s body and clean his wounds before they placed him onto the bed and put a single white sheet over his body.
“He’ll need fresh blood every couple of hours,” Amaury advised. “You can change your mind, you know. He wouldn’t expect you to do this. In fact, he’d want me to dissuade you from continuing this.”
Delilah shook her head. “He’s hurt because of me. I’ll give him what he needs.”
She’d changed into a t-shirt and leggings and sat next to him on his bed.
Amaury nodded. “Carl, we’ll have to mix Delilah some strengthening tonic so her blood regenerates faster. We should have everything we need in the kitchen.”
Samson stirred.
“He needs you now.”
Amaury and Carl left the bedroom, and Delilah leaned down to Samson, placing her wrist at his mouth. Without opening his eyes his fangs sank into her skin.
“Yes, drink, my love. We’re home now.”
She cradled his head in her lap as she fed him. Already she could see that some of the wounds had started closing. The blood flow had stopped, and the blood was clotting, creating a crust over the wounds. The healing process had started.
The sucking sensation on her wrist wasn’t painful; on the contrary, it filled her with peace.
When Samson finally let go of her wrist, his lips moved. “Delilah,” he whispered, but drifted back into unconsciousness instantly.
Delilah held him while she watched every movement of his body. This time she had not hesitated when action had been required of her. This time she hadn’t stood by to let somebody she loved die. She had acted. She had surprised herself at how strong she’d been there on that street. The courage she’d felt when being confronted with Ilona had been new to her, but knowing that all the vampires that had surrounded her were on her side, had helped.
Amaury came back to the bedroom, bringing her a disgusting-looking concoction of vile-smelling liquid.
“What’s this?”
“You don’t want to know. But it will help you sustain the blood loss.”
Delilah believed him. How had her world changed like this? She was lying in bed with a vampire who she would give as much blood as he needed and willingly drank the vilest liquid her lips had ever touched, trusting the vampire who handed it to her.
“I’ll keep you company.” Amaury pulled the armchair closer to the bed before sitting down. “He’
ll need about twenty-four hours to recuperate.”
“But he’ll pull through, won’t he?”
“With your help, he will.”
Amaury rested his head against the high backrest of the chair.
“Tell me what happened,” Delilah wanted to know.
Amaury nodded. “Samson told you about Ilona, about their breakup?”
“Yes. He told me about her. But he didn’t mention that you and she …” Delilah cleared her throat.
“He didn’t know.” His look when he met her eyes was sincere. “Listen, there’s no need for him to know. I didn’t betray him. She came to me after he’d thrown her out of his life. Hey, I’m not proud of it, but I’m not exactly choosy when it comes to women.”
“You killed her as if you felt nothing for her.” The thought made her shudder. What did it take for a lover to be so cold? When she looked into his eyes, she recognized pain.
“Sex is just sex for me. Nothing else. It’s something I need, and I pretty much don’t care who provides it. I don’t mean to shock you, but that’s who I am. It doesn’t change where my loyalties lie.” His gaze drifted to Samson, and she understood. “Without Samson, I wouldn’t be here today. He saved my life numerous times. He’s a good man.”
She nodded and stroked Samson’s cheek. “And he’s mine.” She looked back at Amaury just in time to catch his warm smile. “What was Ilona’s plan?”
He sighed. “She wanted to be mistress to a multimillion-dollar fortune. She wanted what is his. If Samson had blood-bonded with her, Milo would have killed him. And all the money would have been Ilona’s.”
“Oh my God, she wanted him dead?” Cold fear gripped her.
“That’s what greed does to people. Living off his fortune wasn’t enough for her.”
“What do you mean?”
“When a vampire blood-bonds, his mate has a right to everything that’s his. They will become joint owners. It obviously wasn’t enough for her. She wanted it all. When Samson broke it off with her, her dream went up in smoke. So she had to figure out something else.”
Delilah shook her head, trying to shake off the images in her mind. “What was she planning?”
“First she had her brother, Milo, infiltrate us. We had no idea. She was new in town herself, and suddenly Milo showed up and … well, it wasn’t that hard for him to seduce Thomas, I guess. He’s a big softy at heart, and frankly, even in San Francisco, there aren’t that many gay vampires. So his choices were always a little limited.
“Milo figured out enough about the internal workings of Scanguards to know that just stealing Thomas’ password wasn’t enough. So he dug around in the records, and must have found out about John’s little depreciation fraud and used it to blackmail him. It was easy enough. You were on the right track, you know, with your audit. You would have found it eventually.”
He gave her an approving look.
“You did half the work,” she conceded.
“Only after you showed me which way to go. Ilona was smart. Carl told me earlier today that he saw her at Samson’s computer once, possibly trying to get into the system, but he’d never given her his logon or password. So she obviously had the idea before.”
“Are you sure? He gave it to me, and he’s known me a lot less time than he knew her.”
“Not even I know his password, and I’m his closest friend. He trusts you like he’s never trusted anybody else. I don’t think he ever trusted Ilona, even though he was prepared to marry her. I guess the loneliness was finally getting to him. He always wanted a family.”
Amaury smiled softly, his look drifting to Samson on the bed.
“Once Milo had John’s password, he was able to upload encrypted wire transfers. He then just had to go back in with Thomas’ password and authorize them.”
“Thomas must be devastated.”
“Milo overpowered him earlier tonight and chained him with silver.”
“With silver?”
“It’s the only metal we can’t break or bend. Vampires can’t escape silver chains. And it burns our skin. We were lucky to get to Thomas in time. He was in a lot of pain, but he’ll be fine. Personally, I’m surprised Milo didn’t kill him. Maybe there were some feelings involved after all …”
“I feel sorry for Thomas to be tricked like this by his lover. Do you think John knew what Milo was up to?”
“Probably not,” Amaury guessed. “And even if he had an inclination, he probably just ignored it, figuring the less he knew the better. John was really a pawn in this game. Not quite an innocent, but he certainly didn’t deserve to die.”
“What’s going to happen to his family? He had a wife and children.” Delilah could only imagine the pain his wife was experiencing.
“Samson will take care of them. We have a large charity fund which helps the families of those employees who die in the line of duty. It happens, you know, with some of our bodyguards. And even though John didn’t die in the line of duty, Samson will do right by him.”
“And the man who attacked us?”
“I’ve sent two of our men to release him. They have instructions to erase his memory of anything related to Samson, you, or any other vampire. There is no need to punish him any further. John’s wife will need all the support she can get.”
“Others in your situation wouldn’t be this kind.”
“You mean because we’re vampires?” There was no accusation in Amaury’s voice.
“Even humans would be crueler. I certainly didn’t expect this kind of consideration from vampires—no offense.”
Amaury shook his head. “It has nothing to do with being a vampire or not. There are good and bad among us, just like there are good and bad among humans. Turning into a vampire doesn’t make you bad. And being human doesn’t make you good.”
“And you and Samson, you are good.”
“We’re no saints, but we try to be as good as we can. It’s a constant struggle, but we win more often than we lose.”
Delilah smiled at him. “How did Samson find me in time?”
“Your scent. He could have tracked you through the entire city. He knew your scent so well, and then of course, he licked your blood from your hand—that only intensified it. When Carl told him you were gone, and we knew Milo and Ilona were loose in the city … I’ve never seen him so panicked in his life. He was ready to kill somebody.”
“I’m sorry.” She truly was.
“Next time you’re planning to leave him, give me a heads-up, will you? So I can get out of the line of fire.”
She wouldn’t leave him again. If he still wanted her, she’d be his. She planted a kiss on Samson’s forehead and ran her hand through his hair.
“That won’t be necessary, Amaury.” She smiled at him and saw that he understood.
“He’ll be glad to hear that when he wakes up. Why don’t you sleep a little? I’ll watch over him and make sure he feeds when he needs to.”
“Thank you, Amaury; you’re a great friend.”
Her eyelids were heavy, and within minutes she was out, sinking back into the pillows as she kept Samson’s head cradled in her lap.
SEVENTEEN
“Delilah, wake up,” Amaury’s voice came through her dreams. She tried to ignore it, but it wouldn’t stop. “Delilah.”
She opened her eyes and looked at Amaury holding a glass of the same horrible liquid he’d made her drink twice already. She had no idea what was in it and had no intention of ever finding out. For all she knew, it would be toadstool—or just the toad.
“Again?” She’d practically gagged the last time she drank it.
“Sorry, but you need it. He’s been taking a lot of blood from you.” She drank, trying to ignore the awful taste.
Then Delilah followed Amaury’s look, resting on Samson beside her. He looked better. His wounds had closed, and new skin was growing over them.
“How much longer?”
“Soon. In the meantime, you’re needed downstairs in his
office. There’s somebody who wants to talk to you.”
She gave him a questioning look. “Who?”
“You’ll see.”
Her gaze drifted back to Samson, not wanting to leave him. “What if he wakes up while I’m gone?”
“I’ll be here. I’ll call you immediately.”
Reluctantly she got out of bed. She felt dizzy when she suddenly stood. Her body swayed, and Amaury instantly grabbed her. A low growl came from the bed.
Both she and Amaury turned their heads to look at Samson. He was seemingly still asleep, but his fangs were showing. Amaury instantly let go of Delilah’s arm. Samson’s fangs retreated, and his lips closed.
“He can sense you even in his sleep. He doesn’t like you being touched by another man.”
“But, you were just trying to help me,” Delilah protested.
“A vampire who’s found his mate is very possessive.”
Delilah smiled at Samson. Even in his sleep he was trying to protect her. “I’ll be back in a short while, my love.”
She saw a content smile form around Samson’s lips as if he could hear her.
Carl expected her in Samson’s office.
“Please take a seat here, in front of the computer, Miss Delilah.”
“Carl.”
He looked at her questioningly.
“I’m sorry. Did I get you in trouble with Samson? I’ll talk to him when he’s better. I don’t want you to be punished for letting me escape,” she said ruefully.
“It doesn’t matter what happens to me, as long as Mr. Woodford will be alright.”
“What will he do to you?”
“I was ordered to protect you, and I failed. All that’s important is that he got to you in time.”
“But it was my fault. I tricked you.”
He gave a faint smile. “No matter, Miss. I shouldn’t have let you trick me. If I may say so, for a human, you’re very smart.”
“And if I may say, for a vampire you’re very kind.”
He nodded. “Mr. Woodford has arranged a teleconference for you.”
Carl pointed to the computer screen. She sat in the chair he held out for her.
“A teleconference. What for?”
Carl switched on the monitor. A picture of what looked like a hospital room came into view. He adjusted the small camera on the top of the monitor and pointed it directly at Delilah.