'You don't think you're going to survive Saer,' I said, reading the echo of his thoughts even though he struggled to keep them from me. 'You think he's going to destroy you, and you don't want to leave me unprotected, a Beloved without her Dark One. Why, Adrian? Why would you think your brother would try to destroy you?'
He pulled my hands off his ears, gently pushing me back onto the seat. 'You do realize what casting a curse involves, don't you?'
'Other than invoking ill will on someone, no, and don't change the subject. Why do you think Saer is going to mash you into vampire pulp? And why don't you think you can beat the pants off him if he tries?'
'To conjure a curse, you must first call a demon. It is through the demon that the curse is cast.'
'Why do you think Saer is… a demon?' I stared at Adrian in growing horror. 'You mean a
'Yes,' he said, opening the door as the taxi stopped in front of the pink part of Gigli's house.
I scurried out after him, waiting until he paid the driver to ask, 'I don't suppose there are any good demons, are there?'
'A good demon?'
'Yeah, you know, kind of how you're like a good vampire. I was hoping maybe there is a lesser sort of demon that isn't too bad that I could work with.'
He looked at me like I was crazy. 'No. There are no good demons.'
'Oh.' I thought that over as we made our way upstairs, Adrian nodding to Jada as she tossed a drunken patron down the stairs. I looked after the man in surprise. He had to be at least a foot and a half taller and fifty pounds heavier than Jada, and yet she tossed him down the stairs like it was nothing.
'Strength spell. Not even the biggest of the lot can fight it,' she told me, her blind eyes on me for a moment before turning to Adrian. 'Gigli is expecting you. Don't forget to ward yourselves this time.'
Adrian swore under his breath as Jada cackled her dry, ancient crone cackle, dusting off her gnarled hands with satisfaction before reclaiming a comfortable-looking rocking chair next to the door. 'You must draw the ward, Hasi,' he said.
'Why? If you know how to do it, it makes more sense for you to do it than me. I'm not sure how much warding charge I have in my mental batteries.'
'I cannot ward.' Adrian pulled me toward the door at the end of the short hallway, behind which I could hear the dull throb of music. I shivered, remembering how that music had seemed to burn into my blood, pushing my need for Adrian to the forefront of my mind.
'Really? Dark Ones can't draw wards?'
'Others can, I cannot. I am cursed, bound to a demon lord, which leaves me without the resources to ward. The glamour ward is drawn thusly…'
It took me five minutes of practicing before I could draw the ward to his satisfaction.
'I hope that does it,' I said as I finished drawing the ward over him. It glowed weakly for a moment, then evaporated into the air, leaving behind a faint pattern I could see only when I wasn't looking directly at it.
Adrian took my wrist as I reached for the door. 'No. You must be certain that you drew the ward correctly. The power of a ward comes from your belief in the ability to draw it. If you do not believe, the ward will offer no protection.'
'It won't? No one ever told me that before.' I bit my lower lip. 'Maybe we should ask Jada or someone to ward us? I'm not sure that my ward will hold up—'
'I believe it will,' he answered, rubbing this thumb over my abused lip. 'I have confidence in your abilities, Hasi. You have great power that you have not yet touched.'
I opened my mouth to protest, but the look of pride in his sapphire eyes brought a warmth to my heart that I hadn't known was missing. I touched his cheek and knew he was telling the truth—he really did have faith in me. He believed I could do anything I tried. That knowledge glowed inside me, reinforcing the wards I had drawn on us both. They flared gold for a moment, then shimmered into the air.
'Right,' I said, my hand on the doorknob, feeling reckless and invincible, as if we were starring in a high- budget action flick. 'Come on, Vampbo, let's get this over with, so we can go find your brother and get that ring back.'
'Vampbo?' Adrian sighed as I threw open the door and marched into the room, my head held high, pushing my way through the small, crowded dance floor. 'Never has anyone treated me like you do. I am feared and shunned by all. I am never mocked or teased. I am the Betrayer—'
'And I'—I elbowed my way through the crowd, tossing a smile over my shoulder at Adrian—'am your Beloved, which makes me the Charminator! Out of my way, dancing humanoid! The Betrayer and I have important business to attend to.'
I heard Adrian sigh again, but paid his faux regret no attention. I knew from touching him just how much he cherished the fact that I wasn't afraid of him, that I would fight for him, that I had chosen him over freedom.
Now we just had to see about salvaging that soul of his...
Chapter Thirteen
'Do I have the word
'What?' Adrian's whisper was no louder than mine, but the touch of his breath on my ear sent shivers of delight down my arms.
I leaned closer to Adrian, so we wouldn't interrupt Gigli from chastising a recalcitrant sylph. 'Why is it that everyone we meet seems to know I'm a Charmer just by looking at me? Is there some sort of mark on me that I've never seen before? How do they know?'
'Members of the immortal world see things differently than mortals,' he answered, his lips brushing the curve of my ear.
I fought the need to turn my head and kiss him until his fangs dropped, contenting myself with nibbling on his earlobe as I mumbled, 'Yeah, but Seal isn't an immortal.'
'He has submerged himself in our world long enough that he sees things as we do,' Gigli answered, having shooed the flighty sylph out a door. It didn't close all the way, the pulsing throb of the music drifting in to wrap around us. A shock of electricity zapped through me at the sound, sending my heart racing as my libido shifted into overdrive.
Gigli gave us the eye. 'If you two would like a room, I would be happy to oblige. Other than that and the plane tickets, there is little more I can do for you.'
The alacrity with which both Adrian and I stood up at her offer, not to mention the wave of desire that washed over me as his scent teased my nose, gave ample evidence to the fact that although Adrian might have every confidence in my ward-drawing skills, I had a long way to go yet.
'Ward's fading. Need charm book,' I gasped, never taking my eyes off the blazing blue of Adrian's eyes. I clutched the small green book when it was placed in my hand, following him when he grabbed my wrist and dragged me toward a side door.
'Room?' he asked Gigli.
'Seventeen is free, or if you'd prefer, I can let you have the presidential suite. It has a hot tub.'
'We'll take it,' Adrian yelled as he hauled me out the door into another hall, Gigli's laughter trailing behind us.
This hallway was different from the other; the walls here were lined with what looked on first inspection to be your standard erotic photography, but as I stood before one picture while Adrian opened a door marked
'Is that what a poltergeiiiiiiii—'
The door to the presidential suite slammed closed behind me as Adrian literally tossed me onto the huge bed that dominated the room.