Dark Needs at Night's Edge Excerpt
A femme fatale? With
a history of burlesque dancing? You must have the wrong girl. I'm naught but
a humble ballet dancer, a mere delicate sparrow.
—Néomi Laress, prima
ballerina, former femme fatale and burlesque dancer
(b. approx. 1901—d.
August 24, 1927)
I hereby vow to
devote my life to annihilating the vampiir.
None shall know my
presence and live.
—Conrad Wroth, age
thirteen,
upon being inducted
into the Order of Kapsliga Uur in the year 1709
Prologue
New Orleans
August 24, 1927
I'll kill
you for spurning me. . . .
Struggling to block out memories of Louis
Robicheaux's latest threat, Néomi Laress stood at the top of her grand
staircase and gazed out over the packed ballroom.
As she might cradle a babe, she held bouquets of
roses swathed in silk. They were gifts from some of the men in the crowd of
partygoers below, a
motley mix of her rollicking set, rich patrons, and newspaper reporters.
A sultry bayou breeze slid throughout the space, carrying strains of music
from the twelve-piece orchestra outside.
. . .
you'll beg for my mercy.
She stifled a shiver. Her ex-fiancé's behavior
had become more chilling of late, his atonement gifts more extravagant.
Néomi's
long-standing refusal to sleep with Louis had frustrated and angered him,
but breaking off their relationship had
enraged him.
The look in his pale eyes earlier tonight . . .
She gave herself an inward shake. She'd hired guards for this event—Louis
couldn't get to her.
One admirer, a handsome banker from Boston,
noticed her aloft and began to clap. The throng joined in, and in her mind
she envisioned a curtain going up. With a slow, gracious smile, she said, "Bienvenue
to you all," then began descending her stairs.
No one would ever
sense her anxiety. She was a trained ballerina, but above all things, she
was an entertainer. She would work this room, dispensing teasing nibbles of
sarcasm and softly spoken bons mots,
charming any critics and coaxing laughter from even the most staid.
Though her arms already ached from cradling so
many bouquets, and flashbulbs went off in glaring succession, her smile
remained fixed. Another gliding step down.
She'd be damned before she'd let Louis ruin her
night of triumph. Three hours ago, she'd given the performance of a lifetime
to a sold-out house. For tonight's soiree celebrating her newly renovated
estate, Elancourt, the Gothic
manor house was resplendent with the glow of a thousand candles. Through her
dancing, she'd
paid for the painstaking restoration of her new home and all the sumptuous
furnishings inside it.
Every detail for the party was perfect, and
outside, a sliver moon clung to the sky.
A lucky moon.
Her dress for this evening was a more risqué
version of the costume she'd worn earlier, the satin as black as her jet
hair. It had a
tight bodice that she laced up the front like a bygone corset and a slit in
the skirt that almost reached up to where her garter belt snapped to her
stockings. Her makeup was styled after the Hollywood vamps—she'd kohled her
eyes with a smoky hue, donned lipstick of oxblood red, and painted her short
nails a dark crimson.
With her jeweled choker and dangling earrings,
the ensemble had cost a small fortune, but tonight was worth it—tonight all
her dreams had finally come true.
Only Louis could ruin
it. She willed herself to ignore her apprehension, inwardly cursing him in
English and in French, which helped ease her tension.
Until she nearly
stumbled on the stairs. He was there, standing at the periphery, staring
up at her.
Usually so perfect
and kempt, he had his tie loosened, his blond hair disheveled.
How had he gotten
past the guards? Louis was filthy rich—had the bastard bribed them?
His bloodshot eyes
were burning with a maniacal light, but she assured herself that he wouldn't
dare harm her in front of so many. After all, there were hundreds of people
in her home, including reporters and photographers.
Yet she wouldn't put
it past him to make a scene or expose her scandalous history to everyone.
Her uptown patrons winked at her and her friends' colorful
antics, but they had no idea what she was—much less of her past
occupation.
Chin raised and
shoulders back, she continued down, but her hands were clenching the roses.
Resentment warred with her fear. So help her, God, she'd scratch his eyes
out if he ruined this for her.
Just before she
reached the bottom step, he began elbowing his way toward her. She tried to
signal the burly guard at the opened patio door, but the crowd enveloped
her, effectively trapping her. She attempted to make her way to the man, yet
everyone wanted "to be the first to congratulate her."
When she heard Louis
pushing people behind her, Néomi's soft-spoken apologies—"Pardonnez-moi,
I'll just be a moment"—turned to "Let me pass!"
He neared. Out of the
corner of her eye she spied his hand fiddling with something in his jacket
pocket. Not another gift? This will
be so embarrassing.
When that hand shot
out, she whirled around, dropping her bouquets. Metal glinted in the light
of the candles. Eyes wide, she screamed—
Just before he
plunged a knife into her chest.
Pain . . .
unimaginable pain.
She could hear the blade grating past her bones, felt a force so jarring the
tip pierced through her very back. As she clawed at his arms, ugly sounds
erupted from her throat; those nearest her backed away in horror.
This can't be
happening. . . .
Only when he released
the knife with splayed fingers did her body collapse to the floor. Rosebuds
scattered around her, their petals wafting around the jutting hilt. She
stared dumbly at the ceiling as warm blood seeped from her back, pooling all
around her. She perceived the silence of the room over Louis's harried
breaths as he knelt beside her, beginning to weep.
This isn't happening.
. . .
The first hysterical
scream rent the quiet. People fled the scene, shoving and tangling all
around them. She heard the guards finally yelling and fighting past the
crowd.
And Néomi lived
still. She was dogged, a survivor—she would not die in her dream home on her
dream night. Fight—
Louis fisted the hilt
once again, jarring the knife inside her.
Agony . . . too much . . . can't bear
this . . . But she had no breath to scream, no strength to raise her
limp arms to defend herself.
With a choking bellow
he twisted the blade in the pocket of her wound. "Feel it for me, Néomi," he
gasped at her ear. Pain exploded, radiating out from her heart to every inch
of her body. "Feel what I have suffered!"
Too much!
The temptation to close her eyes nearly overwhelmed her. Yet she kept them
open, kept living.
"See how much I love
you? We'll be together now." The knife made a sucking sound when he yanked
it from her. Just before he was finally tackled to the ground, he sliced his
own throat ear to ear.
Her blood had begun
to cool by the time a doctor crouched to grasp her wrist. "There's no
pulse," he said to someone unseen, his voice raised over the commotion.
"She's gone."
But she wasn't! Not
yet!
Néomi was young, and
there were so many things she had left to experience. She
deserved to live.
I'm not dying. Her hands somehow
clenched. I refuse to!
Yet as the breeze
picked up once more, Néomi's vision guttered out like a candle.
No, no . . .
still living . . . can't see, can't
see . . . so scared.
Rose petals caught on
the wind and tumbled over her face. She could feel each cool kiss of them.
Then . . .
nothingness.
CHAPTER 1
Outside Orleans
Parish
Present day
Stay sane, act
normal, he
chants to himself as he strides down the rickety pier. On either side of
him, water black like tar. Ahead of him, muted light from the bayou tavern.
A Lore bar.
A lone neon sign flickers
over flat skiffs below. Music and laughter carry.
Stay sane . . . need
to dull the rage. Until the endtime.
Inside. "Whiskey."
His voice is low, rough from disuse.
The bartender's face
falls. Like last night. Others grow skittish.
Can they sense that I ache to kill?
The whispers around him are like metal on slate to his ragged nerves.
—"Conrad Wroth, once
a warlord . . . madder than any vampire I've seen in all my centuries."
—"A killer for hire.
If he shows up in your town, then folks from the Lore there'll go missing."
Missing?
Unless I want them found.
—"Heard he drains 'em
so savagely . . . nothing's left of their throats."
So I'm not
fastidious.
— "I heard he eats
them."
Distorted rumors.
Or is that one true?
Tales of his insanity
spreading once more. I've never
missed a target—how insane can I be? He answers himself:
Very fucking much so.
Memories clot his
mind. His victims' memories taken from their blood toll inside him, their
number always growing. Don't know
what's real; can't determine
what's illusion. Most of the time, he can scarcely understand his own
thoughts. He doesn't go a day without seeing some type of hallucination,
striking out at shadows around him.
A grenade with the
pin pulled, they say. Only a matter of time.
They're right.
Stay sane . . . act
normal.
Glass in hand, he chuckles softly on his way to a dimly lit table in the
back. Normal? He's a goddamned
vampire in a bar filled with shifters, demons, and the sharp-eared fey.
Christmas lights are strung up in the back—through the eye sockets of human
skulls that frame a mirror. In the corner, a demoness lazily strokes her
lover's horns, visibly arousing the male. At the bar, an immense werewolf
bares his fangs, bowing protectively as he tosses a small redhead behind
him.
Can't decide if you
should attack, Lykae? That's right. I don't smell of blood. A trick I
learned.
The couple leaves,
the redhead all but carried out by the Lykae. As they exit, she peers over
her shoulder, her eyes like mirrors. Then gone. Out into the night where
they belong.
Sit. Back against the
wall. He adjusts the sunglasses that shade his red eyes, dirty red eyes. As
he scans the room, he resists the urge to rub his palm over the back of his
neck. Watched by someone unseen?
But then, I
always
feel like that.
He swoops up the
drink, narrowing his eyes at his steady hand.
My mind's decayed, but my sword
hand's still true. A ruinous combination.
He takes a liberal
swallow. The drink. The whiskey
dulls the need to lash out. Not that it has disappeared.
Small things enrage
him. An off look. Someone approaching too quickly. Failing to give him a
wide enough berth. His fangs sharpen at the slightest provocation.
As though a living thing hungers
inside me. Ravenous for blood and a throat to tear. Each time he acts on
the rage, others' memories blight more of his own.
He still has enough
sanity to stalk his targets—his brothers. He will mete out retribution to
Nikolai and Murdoch Wroth for doing the unspeakable to him. Sebastian, the
third brother, was a victim like him, but must be slain—simply because of
what he is.
And my time grows
nigh. Like
an animal, he recognizes this. He's found them in this mysterious place of
swamps and haze and music. He's seen Nikolai and Sebastian with their wives.
He might have felt envy that his brothers laugh with them. That they touch
them possessively, with wonder in their clear eyes. But hatred drowns out
any confusing jealousy.
Offspring will
follow. He'll kill their females as well.
Destroy them. Destroy myself. Before
my enemies catch up with me.
He adjusts the
bandage under his shirt on his left arm. The slashed skin beneath it will
not heal. Five days ago, he was marked by a dream demon, one who tracks him
by this very injury. One who promised that his
most coveted dream and most dreaded
nightmare would follow the mark.
His brows draw
together. The hunter will soon become the hunted—his life is nearing its
end.
A whisper of regret.
The thing he regrets most. He tries to remember what he covets so dearly.
Another's memories bombard him, exploding in his mind. His hand shoots up to
clasp his forehead—
Nikolai enters the
bar, Murdoch behind him. Their expressions are grave.
They've come to kill
me. As he
expected. He thought he could draw them out by returning here again and
again. He lowers his hand, and his lips ease back from his fangs. The bar
empties in a rush.
Then . . . stillness.
His brothers stare at him as if seeing a ghost. Insects clamor outside. Rain
draws near and steeps the air. Just as lightning strikes in the distance,
Sebastian enters, crossing to stand beside the other two. He's allied with
them? This he hadn't expected.
He removes his
sunglasses, revealing his red eyes. The eldest, Nikolai, stifles a wince at
the sight, but shakes it off and advances. The three seem surprised that
he'll stay to engage them, that he hasn't traced away. They are strong and
skilled, yet they don't recognize the power he wields, the thing he's
become.
He can slaughter them
all without blinking, and he'll savor it. They haven't drawn their swords?
Then they walk to their doom. Can't
keep them waiting.
He lunges from his
seat and hurdles the table, knocking Sebastian unconscious with a blow that
cracks his skull and sends him flying into the back wall. Before the other
two can raise a hand in defense, he snatches them by their throats. One in
each tightening hand as they grapple to free themselves. "Three hundred
years of this," he hisses. Their struggles do nothing; their shocked
expressions satisfy. Squeezing—
Wood creaks behind
him. He shoves back and heaves his brothers at a new enemy. Too late; that
Lykae's returned and slashes out with flared claws, ripping through his
torso. Blood gushes.
He roars with fury
and charges the werewolf, dodging claws and teeth with uncanny speed to barrel him to the
ground. Just as his hands are about to meet around the Lykae's corded neck,
the beast claps something to his right wrist.
A
manacle? Clenching harder, he
grates out a rasping laugh. "You don't think that will hold me?" Bones begin
to pop beneath his palms. The kill is near, and he wants to yell with
pleasure.
The werewolf cuffs
his left wrist.
What is this?
The metal won't bend. Won't break.
They goddamned mean to take me alive? He leaps to his feet, tensing to
trace. Nothing. Sebastian on the floor, pouring blood from his temple, has
him by the ankles.
He kicks Sebastian,
connecting squarely with his brother's chest. Ribs crack. He whirls
around—in time to catch the bar rail the Lykae swings at his face.
He staggers but
remains on his feet.
"What the fuck is
he?" the Lykae bellows, swinging the rail again with all his might.
The brutal hit takes
him across his neck. A split second of faltering. Enough for his brothers to
tackle him.
He thrashes and
bites, snapping his fangs. Can't
break free . . . can't . . .
They attach the manacles at his wrists to another chain. He kicks
viciously, stunned when they trap his
legs as well.
Choking with rage, he
strains against his bonds with all his strength. The metal cleaves his skin
to the bone. Nothing.
Caught.
He roars, spitting blood at them, dimly hearing them speak.
"I hope you came up
with a good place to put him," Sebastian says between ragged breaths.
"I bought a
long-abandoned manor," Nikolai grates, "place called
Elancourt."
Chills course through
him even through his fury; pain erupts from the injury on his arm.
A dream. His doom. He can never
go to this Elancourt—knows this with a savage certainty. He's too strong for
them to trace him—there's still time to escape.
If they take him
there, they won't take him alive. . . .
* * *
Under a clouded
nighttime sky, the spirit of Néomi Laress knelt in the drive at the very
edge of her property line, gazing hungrily at the newspaper, lying wrapped
in wet plastic.
Today the
deliveryman—that capricious fiend—had missed the drive again, this time
tossing the bundle squarely onto the desolate county road.
Néomi was starving
for that paper, desperate for the news, reviews, and commentary that would
break up the monotony of her life—or her eighty-year-long
afterlife.
But she couldn't
leave the estate to seize it. As a ghost, Néomi could manipulate matter
telekinetically, and her power was nearly absolute at Elancourt—she could
rattle all the windows or tear off the roof if she wanted to, and the
weather often changed with her emotions—but not outside the property.
Her beloved home had
become her prison, her eternal cell of fifteen acres and a slowly dying
manor. Among fate's other curses, each seemingly designed to torture her in
personal and specific ways, Néomi could never leave this place.
She didn't know why this was so—only that it was, and had been since she'd awakened the morning after her murder. She recalled seeing her haunting reflection for the first time. Néomi remembered that exact moment when she'd realized that she'd died—when she'd first comprehended what she'd become.
A ghost. She'd
become something that frightened even her. Something unnatural. Never again
to be a lover or friend. Never to be a mother, like she'd always planned
after her dancing career. As a storm had boiled outside, she'd silently
screamed for hours.
The only thing she
could be thankful for was that Louis hadn't been trapped here with her.
She stretched harder.
Must . . . have that . . . paper!
Néomi wasn't certain
why it continued to arrive. A past article had recounted the problems
inherent with "recurrent billing of credit cards," and she supposed she was
the benefactress of her last tenant's credit card negligence. The delivery
could end at any time. Every one was precious.
Eventually she gave
up, defeated, sitting back in the weed-ridden drive. Out of habit, she made
movements as if she was rubbing her thighs, yet felt nothing.
Néomi could
never feel. Never again. She was
incorporeal, as substantial as the mist rolling in from the bayou.
Thanks, Louis. Oh, and may you rot in hell—because surely that's where you went.
Usually, at this
point in the newspaper struggle, she'd be battling the urge to tear her hair
out, wondering how much longer she could endure this existence, speculating
what she'd done to deserve it.
Yes, on the night of
her death, she'd refused to die, but this was ridiculous.
But even as desperate
as she was for the words, she wasn't as badly off as usual.
Because last night a
man had come into her home. A towering, handsome man with grave eyes. He
might return this night. He might even move in.
She shouldn't get too
excited about the stranger, to have her hopes crushed yet again—
Lights blinded her;
the shriek of squealing tires ripped through the quiet of the night.
As a car shot forward
onto the gravel, she futilely raised her arms to protect her face and gave a
silent cry. It drove straight through her, the engine reverberating like an
earthquake when it passed through her head.
The vehicle never
slowed as it prowled down the oak-lined drive to Elancourt.
CHAPTER 2
Néomi blinked, her
strong night vision returning slowly. Even after all these years, she was
still surprised that she was unharmed.
She recognized the
sharp, low car from last night, so markedly different from the trucks that
usually chugged by on the old county road. Which meant . . . which meant . .
.
He's returned!
The grave-eyed man who came here last
night!
The paper forgotten,
she materialized to Elancourt's landing, overlooking the front entrance. She
moved as if to clutch the sides of the window there, her arms floating
outspread.
And there sat his car
in the drive.
Won't you move in?
she'd
wanted to beg last night as the man had examined the manor. He'd tested the
columns, drawn sheets off some of the remaining furniture, and even yanked
on the radiant heater in the main salon. Appearing satisfied that it was
solid, he'd followed the contraption's underfloor pipes by stomping on the
marble tiles.
The heater will work,
she'd inwardly cried. Ten years ago, the manor had been modernized by a
young couple who'd stayed for a time.
Yet she couldn't
relate the merits of Elancourt to this mysterious stranger. Because she was
a ghost. The act of speaking, or at least talking in a way that others could
hear, had proved impossible for her, as had making herself visible to
others.
Which was probably
for the best. Her reflection was haunting even to her. Though Néomi's
appearance was a close facsimile of how she'd looked the night she died—with
the same dress and jewelry—now her skin and lips were as pale as rice paper.
Her hair flowed wildly with rose petals tangled in it, and the skin under
her eyes was darkened, making her irises seem freakishly blue in contrast.
She focused on the
car again. Deep masculine voices sounded from within it. Was there more than
one man?
Maybe there'd be two
more "confirmed bachelors" like the handsome couple who had lived here
during the fifties!
Whoever was within
the car needed to hurry inside. Autumn rains had been tentatively falling
all night and lightning had begun flaring in a building rhythm. She hoped
the men didn't catch the front façade lit by the glow of lightning. With its
arches and overhangs and stained glass, the manor could appear . . .
forbidding.
The very Gothic
traits she'd admired seemed to drive others away.
The vehicle began to
rock from side to side on its wide wheels, and the voices grew louder. Then
came a man's bellow. Her lips parted when two large boots kicked through the
back window, shattering it, glass spraying out into the gravel.
Someone unseen hauled
the booted man back inside, but then a rear door began to bulge outward.
Were cars so weak in this age that a man could kick it out of shape? No, no,
she'd dutifully read the crash test reports, and they said—
The door shot off its
hinges, all the way to the front porch. She gasped as a wild-eyed, crazed
man lunged out of the vehicle. He was manacled at his wrists and ankles and
covered in blood. He immediately fell into a deep slick of mud, only to be
tackled by three men.
One of them was her
prospective tenant from last night.
She saw then that
they all were covered in blood—because the chained one was spitting it at
them as he thrashed.
"No . . . no!"
he yelled, struggling not to enter the house. Could he possibly sense there
was more here than could be seen? No one ever had before.
"Conrad, stop
fighting us!" the tenant said through gritted teeth. His accent sounded
Russian. "We don't want to hurt you."
But the madman named
Conrad didn't let up one bit. "God damn you, Nikolai! What do you want with
me?"
"We're going to rid
you of this madness, defeat your bloodlust."
"You
fools!"
He laughed manically. "No one comes back!"
"Sebastian, grab his
arms!" this Nikolai barked to one of the others. "Murdoch, get his damned
legs!" As Murdoch and Sebastian rushed to action, she realized that they
both resembled Nikolai. All three had the same grim expression, the same
tall, powerful bodies.
Brothers.
Their captive must be
one as well.
They carried the
bloody and flailing Conrad toward the front double doors. Blood in her home.
She shuddered. She detested blood, hated the sight of it, the scent of it.
She'd never forget how it'd felt to be bathed in her own, to have it thicken
and cool around her dying body.
Hadn't Elancourt seen
enough of it?
In a panic, she raced
downstairs and shot her hands up, exerting an invisible force against the
doors. She used all her strength to keep them sealed tight. No one could
bust through this hold—
The doors flew open.
The men barreled through her, making her shiver as though she'd walked
through a cobweb. A gust of wind rushed inside, following them in to stir
the leaves and grit coating the floor.
Just how strong were
they? Yes, they were huge, but she'd held the doors with what had to be the
strength of twenty men.
Once inside the
darkened room, Nikolai cast a chain across the floor with no care for her
Italian marble.
The lunatic broke
free once more, making it to his feet. He was towering! He lumbered toward
the door, but his bound ankles ensured that he careened into an antique
armoire covered with a sheet. It collapsed under the impact.
Crushed.
She'd had to dance
two performances to afford that piece and remembered lovingly polishing it
herself. It was one of the few original furnishings that remained.
After Murdoch and
Sebastian hoisted him out of the wreckage, Murdoch wrapped his thick arm
around Conrad's neck, cupping the back of Conrad's head with his free hand.
She could see that Murdoch was tightening this hold with all his might, his
face drawn with the effort, the muscles in his neck standing out with
strain.
Somehow Conrad was
unaffected for long moments. Eventually, his thrashing eased and he went
limp. While Murdoch laid him on the ground, Nikolai hastily affixed the
chain to the same radiator he'd tested last night, then attached the other
end to Conrad's handcuffs.
That's why Nikolai
had been assessing it? Because he intended to jail this lunatic here?
Why here?
"Could you have found
an eerier place to keep him?" Sebastian said
between breaths as they all stood. At that instant, lightning crackled just
outside. The high stained-glass windows were broken in places and cast
tinted light, distorting the shadows within."Why not use the old mill?"
"Someone might come
across him there," Murdoch answered. "And Kristoff knows about the mill. If
he or his men discover what we're planning . . ."
Who's Kristoff? What
are they planning?
Nikolai added,
"Besides, Elancourt was recommended to me."
"Who would ever
recommend this?" Sebastian waved a hand around. "It looks straight from a
horror movie." She wished he was wrong, but a bolt flashed then; hued
shadows appeared to slither and pounce. Sebastian raised his brows as if his
point had been made.
Nikolai's gaze
focused on his brothers' faces, studying their reactions as he answered,
"Nïx did." He hesitated, seeming not to know if they'd laugh, rail, or nod.
Murdoch shrugged and
Sebastian nodded grimly.
Who's Nïx?
Sebastian glanced
around. "Raises my hackles, though"—another flash of lightning—"almost like
it's . . . haunted."
Sebastian gets a
cookie.
"And it spooked
Conrad as well."
Yes, because
otherwise he clearly would be fine.
"The weather makes it
seem worse." Nikolai ran his hand through his wet hair, then wiped his face
with his shirttail. "And if there are spirits lingering about? You forget
what we are—any ghosts would do well to fear us."
Fear them? No living
thing could touch her.
"It's actually ideal
because the place scares people away," Nikolai continued over another bout
of thunder. "And the Valkyrie compound isn't far from here—not many from the
Lore will venture anywhere near their home."
Valkyrie? Lore?
She
remembered a newspaper article a few years back on "Gang Speak." These men
were speaking Gang. They had to be.
Murdoch said,
"Perhaps the Valkyrie won't appreciate vampires so close to Val Hall."
Vampires? Not Gang?
They're all mad. Mon Dieu, I need a
bourbon.
"Is it even
habitable?" Sebastian asked in a
scoffing voice.
Nikolai nodded. "The
structure and the roof are solid—"
As rock.
"—and once we do some
modifications, it'll be suitable for our purposes. We'll fix just what we
need: a couple of bedrooms, a shower, the kitchen. I already had the witches
come around today to do an enclosure spell along the perimeter of the
estate. As long as Conrad's wearing those chains, he can't escape the
boundary."
Witches?
Oh, come now! Néomi moved to rub
her temple, felt nothing, but was somewhat soothed by the familiar act.
In the lull, Murdoch cased the main
salon, plucking at cobwebs. "Conrad knew we were going to be at the tavern."
"No doubt of it,"
Nikolai answered, crossing to a dirt-caked window to glance outside. "He was
awaiting us. To kill us."
"Obviously he's
gotten good at it." Sebastian patted his ribs in an assessing manner and
winced. Looking more closely, she could see that they all seemed injured in
some way. Even Conrad appeared to have been clawed across the chest by some
beast. "He likes it."
Likes to kill? A
murderer in my home.
Again. Was he the same kind of man as Louis—one who would stab a defenseless
woman through the heart? Tamp it
down, Néomi. . . . The wind picked up.
Control the emotion.
Murdoch said, "I
suppose he'd have to, if the word about his occupation is true."
A professional
killer?
"Finding him now . .
. it couldn't come at a worse time," Sebastian said. "How are we going to
manage this?"
"We fight a war,
deceive our king, try not to worry about our Kaderin and Myst, all the while
attempting to salvage Con's sanity," Nikolai replied evenly.
Murdoch lifted a
brow. "And here I thought we would be busy."
The brothers began
exploring nearby rooms, testing wood for rot and pulling sheets from furniture,
examining their surroundings.
In the past, she'd
been fortunate with those who'd occupied Elancourt. Nice families had come
and gone, a few harmless vagrants. Nothing about these men said
We're nice and harmless!
Especially not the
chained murderer. He lay on the floor, blood collecting at the corner of his
parted lips to drip down.
Drip . . . drip . . .
A crimson
pool was stark against her marble. Just as before.
Tamp it down. Control it.
The madman's eyes
flashed open. She couldn't warn the others! In the space of a bolt of
lightning, he somehow shot to his chained feet, hobbling forward with
unnatural speed. Before she could even
raise her arms to exert pressure against him, he'd stretched the chain taut
. . . the radiator was bending under the pressure.
He couldn't break it.
Imposs—
Like a whip, it
snapped free as he charged across the room for the door—the door where she
stood. As she stared in disbelief, the radiator trailed in his wake,
destroying everything in its wildly sweeping path.
Suddenly, the
underfloor web of attached heating pipes burst up through the floor, foot
after foot of groaning metal and exploding marble and splinters.
The three men dove
for him once more, the pile of them skidding to a stop right at her
slippers.
She gaped. Her home,
her beloved home. In fifteen minutes, the madman had wrought more
destruction to Elancourt than it had sustained in the last eighty years.
Her hands fisted.
Control it. But her hair had
already begun to swirl about her face, rose petals floating in a tempest
around her body. Outside, the wind kicked up, streaming through the holes in
the high windows, sweeping the grit and dust until she was able to see all
the destruction.
The marble! When her
eyes watered with frustration, rain poured outside.
Tamp it down.
Too late. Lightning
bombarded the house, illuminating the night like successive bomb blasts.
From under the pile of men, Conrad yanked his head up at her.
In a flash, Néomi
twisted round, sweeping her hair over her face as she dissipated. Reemerging
on the landing, she gazed down at him.
Conrad continued to
stare at the spot where she'd stood, blinking and easing his struggles as if
dumbfounded.
Had he . . . had he
possibly
seen her?
No one ever had
before. Ever. She'd been so uniformly ignored for so long that she'd begun
to wonder if she truly existed.
Up close, she'd been
able to see that the whites of his eyes were . . . red. She'd thought he'd
been injured, with burst blood vessels shooting across, but in fact, they
were wholly glazed with red.
What were these
beings? Could they truly be . . .
vampires? Even in light of what she'd become, she still struggled to
believe in anything supernatural.
With a shake of his
head, Conrad frenziedly renewed his flight for the door, gaining inches,
even as the three wrestled with him.
"I didn't want to
have to do this, Conrad!" Nikolai dug into his jacket pocket. As
the others pinned Conrad, he bit the end off what appeared to be a syringe
and injected its contents into Conrad's arm.
Whatever it was
slowed him, making him blink his red eyes again and again.
"What did you give
him?" Sebastian asked.
"It's a concoction
from the witches—part medical, part mystickal. It should knock him out."
For
how long would it knock Conrad
out? How long were they expecting him to stay here? To spit across her floor
and roar within her halls? She'd be damned if she allowed another of Louis's
ilk to taint her home once more! This Conrad was an animal. He should be put
down. Or at the very least, put out.
She'd show these
trespassers power like they'd never seen, sweeping them into the yard like
trash! She'd toss them by their feet all the way to the bayou!
Néomi would
demonstrate what happened when a ghost went poltergeist—
"Where
. . . is she?" Conrad grated between heaving breaths.
Néomi froze. He
couldn't be talking about her, couldn't have seen her.
"Who, Conrad?"
Nikolai demanded.
Just before the shot
knocked him unconscious, he rasped, "Female . . .
beautiful."
