Lothaire iad-12

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Lothaire iad-12 Page 11

by Kresley Cole


  Not to mention her delectable blood. She tastes of wine and honey—just as his father had said. Lothaire’s fangs sharpened even now.

  “What about wine and honey?” Thaddeus asked. “You’re not making sense.”

  I spoke aloud? As if to dislodge the memories, Lothaire shook his head hard, inadvertently stepping back into the line of the wraiths.

  “Watch out!” Thaddeus cried.

  Before Lothaire could trace out of their path, they’d clawed at his face, leaving bloody furrows.

  “Are you all right, Mr. Lothaire?”

  Pain. Grasp at a thread of lucidity. Show no weakness, demonstrate no madness.

  When blood dripped to his lip, he darted his tongue for a taste. He detected a top note of Elizabeth’s blood mixed into his own, and it calmed him.

  The wraiths slowed, and their leader gazed at him with a spectral face.

  “I alone know how to destroy you,” Lothaire grated. “Touch me again, Scourge, and I will demonstrate.”

  She shrieked; Lothaire smirked. “I knew you when you were pretty.”

  Her face flashed to her former visage, that of a beautiful Macedonian warrioress.

  In a contemplative tone, Lothaire asked, “Didn’t I do you when you were pretty?”

  Another furious shriek, then she was swept away in the tide of their tempest.

  Lothaire shrugged. “Guess I did.” Onward to Chase.

  Thaddeus persistently followed. “What do you want with DC?”

  “I’m going to reach inside his mind and read his thoughts.”

  “How?”

  Imploring the sky for patience, Lothaire bit out, “I drank blood from him, and then I later gifted him with my own. We’ve a bridge between us forever.”

  “So that’s what you meant when you warned Regin about unbreakable ties.”

  Partially.

  Thaddeus planted himself in front of Lothaire. “Why should I let you mind-meld or whatever with DC?”

  Lothaire gave a bitter laugh. “What can you do to stop me? Now step aside.” He almost added, “Or I’ll kill your beloved adoptive mother and grandmother for your insolence,” but the rána arose in his throat.

  Which meant that would be a lie. Why would I not murder two insignificant humans? Why would he feel even a scrap of allegiance to Thaddeus?

  Because there was one instance with the boy that affected me. A demonstration of loyalty . . .

  Thaddeus put his shoulders back. “I could raise the alarm.”

  And I could snatch your throat out before you took a breath to yell. But because of their past interactions, Lothaire would spare him this eve. “I plan to use Chase’s memories to find Commander Webb—the one who ordered our abductions and those tedious experiments. The one who could still hurt your family.”

  The one who holds the key to my entire future, in the shape of a ring.

  The young man’s fangs lengthened. “I want to hunt him too.”

  “Why would you possibly think I need help carrying out a blood vendetta?”

  Don’t I? Lothaire had yet to complete his age-old ones. He recalled Olya, that human female in Helvita, recalled how badly he’d wanted to murder her. She’d been drained by Stefanovich long before Lothaire could get to her.

  He remembered the mortals brutalizing his mother. “Avenge me!” she’d screamed.

  Only now was Lothaire on the cusp of retribution. To find Serghei at last . . .

  “Don’t care if you need it, Mr. Lothaire. I’m hankering for vengeance too. Besides, we are friends. And friends watch each other’s backs. Just like you and me did on the island.”

  In the heat of the escape, Lothaire might have saved the boy a few times, without receiving anything in return from Thaddeus, but only because it served Lothaire’s own ends.

  He’d also endangered Thaddeus’s life repeatedly.

  Lothaire cut off further arguments with a curt: “We’ll discuss this later.” To make the statement true, Lothaire envisioned the extent of their “discussion.”

  Thaddeus would ask, “Can I go with you?”

  Lothaire would reply, “No. Now, fuck off.”

  “I’m gonna hold you to that, Mr. Lothaire. Now what exactly are you looking for with your mind-meld thing?”

  Below the window of Chase’s room and out of the way of the wraiths, Lothaire answered, “He must have visited Webb’s hideout. If I can access that memory, I can trace directly to it, as if I’d been there myself.”

  “Then access it, and let’s go kick ass!”

  “Step one is you shutting up.”

  Thaddeus nodded eagerly. “Right on.”

  Lothaire steadied his breathing, calming his heart as he listened for Chase’s own heartbeat. Once it began to grow loud in his ears, like a repetitive quake, Lothaire briefly closed his eyes—but he still could see. Straight into Chase’s afflicted mind.

  Lothaire found . . . blackness there. Blankness.

  No thoughts, no dreams. Is he in the grip of death?

  Gods, to have his own mind at rest like this? Might be worth dying. He delved deeper, but all was quiet.

  There’d be no thoughts of Webb anytime soon, and Lothaire couldn’t scratch at all the scars in Chase’s mind to search for a specific memory. He might as well try to navigate his own. At least he knew where the black holes were, the quicksand traps and points of no return.

  He released his hold on Chase, exhaling with frustration. Nothing to show for his trespass, no new information.

  His claws bit into his palms. Chto za huy! Must have that ring! Kept from him though it was his.

  Thaddeus asked, “Did you find Webb? Anything to help our mission?”

  “Our mission? I didn’t see anything to help my aims! You say nothing of this—of anything concerning me—to anyone.”

  “Why should I keep secrets from my other friends? Do you mean any of them harm?”

  Lothaire didn’t have time to do any of them ill. “I don’t. Not yet,” he added to prevent the rána.

  After a hesitation, Thaddeus said, “Okay, I’ll keep it close to the vest. But I need to know how I can get in touch with you. What’s your number?”

  Lothaire stared at him. “Number? Why do you want this?”

  Thaddeus rolled his eyes. “One more time. Because—we’re—friends. I plan to help you with Webb, and give you some backup against Dorada. They said she’ll be coming for you.”

  She is. When last Lothaire had seen her—mummified, hideous to gaze upon—she’d been shrieking, “RIIIIINNNNNGGGGG,” as she hunted him through the Order’s prison, her Wendigo lackeys prowling beside her.

  He’d had quite a surprise waiting for them all. . . .

  “Lothaire? Hellooo.”

  “What?”

  “I said, I want to meet the missus.”

  Lothaire tensed, slowly craning his head around at the boy. “Missus?”

  “They say you’ve got your Bride now.”

  “They meaning Nïx.” Lothaire bared his fangs, felt them drip on his tongue. Yes, he’d toyed with his enemies, threatening their families, mocking their frenzied reactions while he was ever cold and calculating.

  No longer.

  Unaware of Lothaire’s rising impulse to do murder, Thaddeus continued, “There are a lot of folks around here talking about the bounty on your lady—”

  Before Thaddeus could blink, Lothaire had his hand around the boy’s throat, squeezing. . . . “What’s the bounty? Who posted it?”

  Foolish, Lothaire! Why hadn’t he acted uncaring? Why reveal his crazed possessiveness of Saroya?

  How smug I was in the past, confident I’d never care about anything enough to reveal a weakness.

  Thaddeus bit out, “I don’t know what it is . . . but they said it’s priceless. Don’t know who . . . posted it.”

  Priceless? “Someone set hunters on our trail? Then he’s sent me meals to torment. If my deadly Bride doesn’t get to them first.” Lothaire released Thaddeus with a shove th
at sent him sprawling to the ground.

  Between wheezes, the boy said, “I knew you had a lady, then! You made some comments. . . . That’s why you would’ve done anything to get off the island.” He was delighted by this, scrambling to his feet and dusting himself off as if nothing had happened. “That’s the reason you screwed us all over. I knew you weren’t as bad as Regin and Nïx and Cara and Emma and—”

  “Enough!” The soldiers of the Vertas army—the supposed white hats in the Lore—acted holier-than-thou. Yet they would punish a female who’d never harmed any of them?

  Hypocrites in league.

  Have to turn her into an immortal as soon as possible. Saroya had to be able to defend herself, to trace in escape if necessary.

  “Well, then, what is she?” the boy pressed. “Not a vampire, ’cause Regin told me there were no female ones left. Maybe she’s a demoness or a witch?”

  Can’t think . . . can’t think. Why this interest from Thaddeus? “Did they plant you here, to get information from me?”

  “No, of course not!”

  Even if Lothaire kept Saroya behind a boundary, nothing in the Lore was foolproof. Panic tightened his chest.

  Return. Never leave her unguarded again. To Thaddeus he grated, “You forget you ever knew me, boy.” Then he disappeared.

  13

  When Lothaire returned to the apartment, he found Elizabeth just setting out from her room.

  Against his orders.

  She’d removed all that makeup; though Lothaire was loath to admit it, he found it an improvement. She’d also changed into jeans that lovingly outlined her pert ass—a fact that offset the worst of his anger.

  Going exploring, are we? When he imagined her little mortal brain struggling to process her new environment, he decided to shadow her, making himself invisible so he could study her reactions.

  When she entered the first unlit bedroom and the lights came on automatically, she spun in a circle, demanding, “Who’s there?” Then she stepped out of the room. The lights clicked off. “Oh.”

  In the living room, she pressed a button for the TV. When it rose from a console, she went wide-eyed.

  The theater room elicited an exclamation: “Hoo!” Which he supposed was Hillbilly for “Excellent.”

  In the kitchen, she peeked into the refrigerator, grimacing at his pitchers of blood. As Lothaire dimly wondered what the mortal chef had thought of his stores earlier today, she sniffed one, then quickly returned it. She investigated the cabinets, finding them all empty. After examining the appliances, she sang, “Meet George Jetson.”

  Whatever that meant.

  In fact, her exploration consisted mostly of button pushing and jumping back in fear.

  She might as well have been in a foreign land. She seemed alternately suspicious and dazzled.

  But in the main foyer, she gazed up at the crystal chandelier for long moments, tilting her head in different directions, following the complex design with her gaze.

  Lothaire could see the prisms of light reflected in her wide gray eyes. She had . . . intelligent eyes. Perhaps more was there than he’d allowed himself to see.

  He stared at the delicate shape of her face in profile. From this angle, he could see her lips were a touch fuller in the middle, giving them that bow shape.

  She was so fragile. Touching her would be like handling gossamer. Claiming her would be impossible. She had to be stronger.

  The idea of himself in a blood rage, desperate to spend deep inside her . . .

  He ran his hand over his face. If he took her in that state, he could rend her in two, could pulverize her bones.

  She rubbed her nape under that fall of lustrous hair, then self-consciously tucked a lock behind her ear. Did the mortal actually sense him watching her?

  Some humans possessed a kind of sixth sense. Few of them ever seemed to trust it.

  A vampire is eyeing you like prey. Can you feel it, Elizabeth?

  She narrowed her gaze, peering around her.

  Can you feel me . . . ?

  After a moment, her suspicious mien turned determined. With a purposeful stride, she returned to that first bedroom. Inside, she worked the bedside table away from the wall, then dropped to her knees.

  What is she doing? he wondered vaguely, his gaze locked on her rounded ass and taut thighs—until he heard the wallpaper ripping. He traced to mere inches from her to get a look at what she was up to.

  She’d been digging for a phone jack. Without a phone? Why?

  She would search in vain. There were none in the apartment. All had been removed and plastered over.

  By the third bedroom, she must have concluded the same, because she sat back on her heels and blew her hair out of eyes. “Sumbitch.”

  Now she’ll put her head in her hands and cry while I look on impassively.

  Instead, she slapped one thigh, then rose, marching to the kitchen. Retrieving a butter knife and a chopping blade, she returned to the television console, maneuvering the weighty piece away from the wall.

  Then she went back on her knees, her new tools at the ready.

  He lifted his brows as bits of hardware began to fly out from behind the console. Small screws, a cable jack plate, sections of wire . . .

  The cable box disappeared from its shelf, yanked back by the peculiar mortal.

  Again, he traced closer to see her. He found her lying on her front, fiddling with the box.

  “Come on, come on.” She bit her bottom lip. “Message button.”

  She endeavored to send a signal through the cable! No, Lothaire wasn’t very often surprised; she continued to take him aback.

  Elizabeth had proved . . . trickier than he’d assumed. And the flare of surprise wasn’t unenjoyable.

  Just when he was about to stop her, she muttered, “No, no. Damn you, Motorola!” She sat up, leaning against the wall, knees to her chest.

  Her eyes started to water. Now she’ll cry while I gloat about predicting this very thing.

  Yet as suddenly as her sadness had appeared, it vanished. She slammed the bottom of her fist against the floor, then began setting everything to rights, at least superficially, hiding the bits she’d removed.

  Another determined look lit her face, and she returned to her room. What would she do next?

  For some reason, I can hardly wait to know.

  She began eyeing the lock on their adjoining door.

  No. No way . . .

  * * *

  Though dawn neared, Ellie still didn’t hear Lothaire inside his room. And she wanted in.

  She tested the lever-style door handle. The lock was a standard pin and tumbler, wouldn’t be too hard to pick.

  But what if he returned? She recalled how he’d tossed her across the room that afternoon as his eyes glowed red like flames.

  He might have a phone in there. Decided.

  She rushed to the bathroom for supplies. In a grooming kit, she found tweezers. She pulled them wide like a wishbone, then bent one end against the counter into a ninety-degree angle. Perfect for a tension wrench. An opened hairpin would act as a rake.

  Back at the door handle, she inserted her jimmied tension wrench into the lock plug. With her other hand, she eased the hairpin in beside it to rake the pin stacks.

  Adjust tension. Rake. Adjust tension. . . .

  Click. “Candy. Baby.”

  She cracked open the door, stowing her tools in her jeans pockets.

  Lothaire’s room was a twin to hers in size and configuration, but the colors in this one were more masculine, with rich earth-toned wallpaper and carpets. Special lights accented paintings on the walls. The pictures looked classy, like they were one of a kind.

  Heavy drapes covered his balcony’s French doors. His bed was unmade, his sheets twisted. Was that a metronome sitting on his nightstand?

  Across the room, an antique-looking desk was covered with complicated 3-D puzzles. Several were complete, but a few appeared ongoing.

  She lifted one th
at consisted of metal rings and wires. It wasn’t a brainteaser—it was a brain paralyzer. Another one was mechanized. Shining silver blocks and triangles made up a third.

  Beside them, a book lay open to a chapter titled: “Mechanical Puzzles, the Goldberg Principle.” Geometric theory applied to puzzle making? Had Lothaire created some of these puzzles?

  Moving on, she gazed to the left of the desk. Strewn over the floor were wadded-up letters in a language—and alphabet—she couldn’t read.

  Ever fearful of his return, she swiftly investigated his bathroom. Surprisingly, it looked like a normal male’s: shaving cream, razor, soap, a toothbrush. Gotta keep those fangs white.

  The cabinet contained no medicines. She supposed vampires didn’t have ailments.

  His closet was filled with expensive clothing—scores of long, lean slacks, tailored button-downs, and jackets, all in variations of black. Polished boots filled the shoe racks.

  The vampire loves him some clothes. She leaned in to smell one of his coats, taking in his masculine scent—smooth, woodsy, with the faintest bite of evergreen?

  Just as mesmerizing as his looks. When she found her lids growing heavy, she gave herself an inward shake, then dragged herself away from the coat.

  In an accessories drawer, he’d precisely organized sunglasses, watches, cuff links, and engraved money clips. Toward the back of the closet, she saw a number of swords laid out on a felt-lined shelf. The bottom of each sword hilt was an inch or so away from another one’s tip.

  In fact, she’d bet they were exactly one inch apart, as if he’d taken a ruler to them.

  These weapons didn’t appear to be decorative like the one she’d almost stabbed herself with this afternoon—open mind—but more like useful accessories. A timely reminder that he was a warrior, a deadly male.

  What am I doing in here? Curiosity killed the Ellie.

  And for all her searching, she’d garnered little insight to help her against Lothaire—and no new hope of escape.

  Now that the rush of breaking in had dwindled, she exhaled with fatigue, picturing her new bed. Though she worried about Saroya rising, nothing could keep her from it. Ellie hadn’t slept last night before her execution.

 

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