“You were not thinking of me, though,” she pointed out.
“Would that make a difference.”
“Yes.”
“You sure about that,” he said dryly.
“You didn’t do anything about it, did you. And that one feeding is not going to be enough—you must know that. It has been too long for you. You have already come so far, but you are going to need more soon.”
As he cursed, she lifted her chin once more, unwilling to back down.
After a long while, he shook his head. “You are so… odd.”
“I shall take that as a compliment.”
From across the bedroom, Tohr stared down at No’One and had to respect the shit out of her—even though it was clear she was nuts: She was utterly unbowed, in spite of the fact that she had bite marks on her neck, had woken up screaming, and was facing off with a Brother.
Christ, when he’d heard that scream, he’d all but broken down the damn door. Visions of her with another knife of some kind, doing hell’s own amount of damage, had thrown him into action. But all there had been was her on the middle of that bed, oblivious to anything but whatever was playing in her head.
Salt licks. Fucking hell.
“Your leg,” he said gently. “How did it happen.”
“He put a steel cuff around my ankle and chained me to a beam. When he… came to me… the cuff bit into me.”
Tohr closed his eyes against the images. “Oh, God…”
He wasn’t sure what to say after that. He just stood there, powerless, saddened… wishing that so many things had been different in both of their lives.
“I think I know why we’re here,” she said abruptly.
“Because you screamed.”
“No, I mean…” She cleared her throat. “I’ve always wondered why the Scribe Virgin brought me to the Sanctuary. But Lassiter, the angel, is right. I am here to help you, as you helped me long ago.”
“I didn’t save you, remember. Not at the end.”
“You did, though.” He was shaking his head when she cut him off. “I used to watch you sleep—back in the Old Country. You were always to the right of the fire, and you slept on your side facing me. I spent hours memorizing the way the low glow from the peat played over your closed eyes and your cheeks and your jaw.”
Suddenly, the room seemed to retract in on them both, growing tighter, smaller… warmer. “Why?”
“Because you weren’t like the
“I never knew.”
“I did not want you to know.”
After a moment, he said grimly, “You always planned on killing yourself.”
“Yes.”
“Why not do it before the birth?” Man, he couldn’t believe how candid they were getting.
“I did not want to curse the babe. I had heard the rumors about what happened if you took matters into your own hands, and I was prepared to accept the consequences for myself. But the unborn? It was coming into the world in such sadness to begin with, but at least it could make of its destiny what it could.”
And yet she had not been cursed… maybe because of her circumstances—God knew, she had suffered enough on her way to the exit.
On that note, he shook his head again. “About the feeding. I appreciate your offer, I really do. But somehow, I can’t imagine a repeat of that scene downstairs is going to do either of us any good.”
“Admit that you feel stronger.”
“You said you haven’t dreamed of that shit since it happened.”
“One dream is not—”
“It’s enough for me.”
That chin of hers went up again, and damned if that habit wasn’t… well, not appealing, no. No, it was not appealing.
Really.
“If I can live through the events,” she said, “I can get through the memories.”
In that moment, staring across the room at her show of will, he felt a tie to her, sure as if a rope had linked the pair of them chest-to-chest.
“Come to me again,” she announced. “When you are in need.”
“We’ll see about that,” he dismissed. “Now, are you… okay? Here in this room, I mean? You can lock the door—”
“I shall be all right, if you come to me again.”
“No’One—”
“It is the only way I have to make things right with you.”
“You don’t have to make anything right. Honest.”
Turning away, he went to the door, and before he stepped out, he glanced over his shoulder. She was staring at her entwined hands, that hooded head of hers bowed.
Leaving her with what little peace she had, he took his grumbling stomach to his room and disarmed. He was righteously starved, his appetite for food carving a bottomless pit out of his lower torso—and though he would have preferred to ignore the demand, he didn’t have a choice. Ordering up a tray from Fritz, he thought of No’One, and told the
Then it was shower time. After he turned on the water, he undressed and left the clothes on the marble floor where they landed. He was in the process of stepping over the mess when he saw himself in the long mirror over the sinks.
Even to his uncaring eye, it was obvious his body had rebounded, the muscles tightening under his skin, his shoulders back where they should be instead of down around his diaphragm.
Too bad he didn’t feel better about the recovery.
Getting into the glass-enclosed space, he stood under the jets, braced his arms out, and let the water run off his flesh.
When he closed his eyes, he found himself back in the pantry, at No’One’s throat, working her vein. He should have taken her wrist, not her throat—matter of fact, why hadn’t he—
Abruptly, the memory went full-bore on him, the tastes and scents and feel of that female against him shutting his mind down and cranking up his senses.
God, she had been… a sunrise.
Opening his eyes, he stared down at the erection that had made itself known at the first image. His cock was in proportion to the rest of him—which meant it was long, thick, and heavy. And capable of going for hours.
As it strained in a demand for attention, he feared the arousal was like the hunger in his gut: going nowhere until he did something about it.
Yeah, whatever on that. He was not some posttrans with a perma-boner and a hairy palm. He could choose whether or not he jerked off, for fuck’s sake—and that would be a big NO.
Snagging the bar of soap, he sudsed up his legs, and wished he was V—no, not with the black candles and shit. But at least if he had that vampire’s mind, he could think of, like, the molecular makeup of plastic, or the chemical composition of fluoride toothpaste, or… how gasoline powered cars.
Or he supposed he could think of dudes—which, given that he wasn’t attracted to them, might well lead to a merciful deflation.
The problem was, he was just Tohrment, son of Hharm… so he was stuck trying to remember how to make Toll House cookies: He didn’t know shit from Shinola about science, he didn’t give a crap about sports, and he hadn’t read a newspaper or watched the TV news in years.
Plus those were the only goddamn anything he knew how to make… what did you put in them? Butter?