Read A Touch of Midnight: A Midnight Breed Novella (Midnight Breed Vampire Romance) Online
Authors: Lara Adrian
“It’s okay.” She shook her head where it rested against his chest. “I learned from it. It made me more careful. More protective of myself, of my heart. And then you came along...”
She looked up into his eyes. “I’ve never imagined I could feel all the things I feel with you, Gideon. I never understood how lost I’ve felt--all my life--until I found you. I think it must’ve been fate that brought us together at the library a few nights ago.”
A pang of guilt stabbed him at the mention of how they’d first met. Only he knew it hadn’t been fate at all that sent him to her that night. He’d first sought her out as a warrior on a private mission to gather intel on the sword and whoever had it now.
That mission had soon changed, once he came to know Savannah. Once he came to care about her so swiftly, so deeply. He should have come clean about their initial meeting before now. He should have done it right then--would have--but before he could summon the first word, she covered his mouth in a tender kiss.
It was all he could do not to end her sweet kiss and blurt out the other damning words that were on the tip of his tongue:
Be with me. Bond with me. Let me be your mate.
But it wasn’t fair to ask so much of her, not when she was just entering his world and he still had unfinished business to attend.
He still had hidden enemies to eliminate. And he wouldn’t assume for one moment that killing the Rogue who’d accosted her at South Station removed the whole of the threat that was stalking Savannah.
Recalling that encounter made him go tense and sober. She must have felt the change in him, for Savannah drew back from him now. “What is it? What’s wrong?”
“Last night, at the bus terminal,” he said. “Did you notice anyone following you? Watching you, before or after you arrived? I don’t mean the Rogue that cornered you, but someone else. Someone who might have been aware that it was happening.”
“No. Why?” Apprehension flickered in her searching gaze. “Do you think the Rogue was with others? Do you think I was targeted somehow?”
“I think it’s a very real possibility, Savannah. I’m not willing to assume otherwise.” Gideon didn’t want to alarm her unnecessarily, but she also had to understand how dangerous the situation could be for her outside. “I think the Rogue was sent to find you for someone else.”
More than likely, sent to silence her, a thought that made his blood go icy in his veins.
Savannah stared at him. “Because of what happened to Rachel and Professor Keaton? You mean, you think the one who attacked them is now after me? Why?”
“The sword, Savannah. What else did you see when you touched it?”
She shook her head. “I told you. I saw the Rogues who killed those two little boys. And I saw you, striking someone with the blade. You killed someone with it.”
Gideon gave a grim nod. “In a duel, many years ago, yes. I killed the Breed male who made the sword. His name was Hugh Faulkner, a Gen One Breed and the best sword maker in London at the time. He was also a prick and a bastard, a deviant who took his pleasure in bloodshed. Particularly when it came to human women.”
“What happened?”
“One night in London, Faulkner showed up at a Cheapside tavern with a human female under his arm. She was in bad shape, pale and unresponsive, nearly bled out.” Gideon couldn’t curb the disgust in his tone. There were laws among his race meant to protect humans from the worst abuses of Breed power, but there were also individuals among their kind like Faulkner, those who regarded themselves above any law.
“Few of the Breed males in the establishment would consider rising up against a Gen One, especially one as nasty as Faulkner. But I couldn’t abide what he had done to the woman. Words were exchanged. The next thing I knew, Faulkner and I were outside in the darkness, engaged in a contest to the death over the fate of the woman.” Gideon recalled it as if the confrontation had just happened yesterday, not some three-hundred years in the past. “I had earned some renown for my skill with a sword, more so than Faulkner, as it turned out. He lost his blade almost immediately and stumbled. It was a fatal misstep. I could’ve taken his head then and there, but in an act of mercy--stupidity, in hindsight--I stayed my hand.”
“He cheated?” Savannah guessed.
Gideon gave a vague nod. “The minute I turned to walk away and retrieve his fallen blade, Faulkner began to rise up to come at me. I realized my mistake at once. I recovered quickly--and before Faulkner could get to his feet, I rounded back on him and cleaved him in half with his own damned sword.”
Savannah sucked in a soft breath. “That’s what I saw. You, killing him with the sword I touched.”
“I won the contest and sent the human woman away to be looked after until she was well again,” Gideon replied. “As for Faulkner’s sword, I wish I’d left it where it lay that night, next to his corpse.”
Understanding dawned in Savannah’s tender eyes. “The twin boys I saw playing with the sword before they were attacked in the stable by Rogues...”
“My brothers,” he confirmed. “Simon and Roderick.”
“Gideon,” she whispered solemnly. “I’m sorry for your loss.”
“A long time ago,” he said.
“But you still feel it. Don’t you?”
He released a heavy sigh. “I was to blame for not protecting them. Our parents were dead. The boys were my responsibility. Several weeks after the confrontation with Faulkner, I was out carousing in the city. Simon and Roddy were young, not even ten years old, but old enough to hunt on their own as Breed youths. I took it for granted that they’d be safe enough on their own for a few hours that night.”
Savannah reached over and pulled his fisted hand up to her lips, kissed the tightly clenched knuckles with sweet compassion. He relaxed his fingers to twine them with hers. “My brothers were the reason I came to Boston. I joined the Order t hunt Rogues, after killing the three who murdered the boys, as well as dozens more for good measure.”
“Hundreds more,” Savannah reminded him.
He grunted. “I thought killing Rogues would make the guilt about my brothers lessen, but it hasn’t.”
“How long have you been trying to make it better, Gideon?”
He exhaled a low oath. “Simon and Roddy were killed three centuries ago.”
She lifted her head up and stared at him. Gaped at him. “Exactly how old are you?”
“Three-hundred and seventy-two,” he drawled. “Give or take a few months.”
“Oh, my God.” She dropped her head back down on his chest and laughed. Then laughed again. “I thought Rachel was nuts for lusting after Professor Keaton, and he was only in his forties. I’m falling in love with a total relic.”
Gideon stilled. “Falling in love?”
“Yes,” she replied quietly, but without hesitation. She glanced up at him. One slender black brow arched wryly. “Don’t tell me that’s all it takes to scare a three-hundred and seventy-two-year-old vampire.”
“No,” he said, but he did feel a sudden wariness.
Not because of her sweet confession; he would come back to that tempting pronouncement another time.
Right now, his warrior instincts were buzzing with cold alarm. He sat up in the tub, frowning.
“Keaton,” he said flatly. “When is he due out of the hospital?”
“He is out,” Savannah replied. “I saw him yesterday on campus. He looked awful, but he said he’d made a full recovery and the hospital released him earlier than expected. He was acting kind of odd--”
Gideon tensed. “Odd in what way?”
“I don’t know. Weird. Creepy. And he lied to me when I asked him about the attack.”
“Tell me.”
She shrugged. “He told me he saw who killed Rachel and attacked him that night. Keaton said it was a vagrant, but the glimpse I got from Rachel’s bracelet showed me a man in a very expensive suit. A man with amber eyes and fangs.”
“Holy shit.” Why he didn’t see it before, Gideon had no idea. The attacker killed Savannah’s roommate, but left the professor alive. That was no accident. “What else did Keaton say to you?”
“Nothing much. Like I said, he was just acting strangely, not like himself. I didn’t feel safe around him.”
“Did Keaton know you were going to the bus station last night?”
She paused, thinking. “I told him I was going home to Louisiana. I might have mentioned I was taking the bus--”
Gideon snarled and got out of the tub. Water sluiced off his naked limbs and torso. “I need to see Keaton for myself. It’s the only way I can be certain.” He thought about the hour of the day--probably just past noon--and cursed roundly.
Savannah climbed out too, and stood beside him. She put her hand on his shoulder. “Gideon, what do you need to be certain of?”
“Keaton’s injuries the night of the attack,” he said. “I need to know if he was bitten.”
“I don’t know. I didn’t see that much when I touched Rachel’s bracelet.” She stared at him in confusion. “Why? What will it tell you if Keaton was bitten?”
“If I see him, I’ll know right away if he’s still human or if he’s been bitten and bled by his attacker. I need to know if he’s been made a Minion to the vampire who took that sword from the university.”
“A Minion.” Savannah went quiet now. “If Keaton was bitten, that will tell you what you need to know?”
“Yes.” He raked a hand over his scalp. “The problem with that is, I’m trapped indoors until sundown.”
“Gideon,” she said. “What if I see Keaton now?”
“What do you mean?” He bristled at the thought of her getting anywhere near the man. “You’re not going anywhere without me. I won’t risk that.”
She shook her head. “I mean, maybe I can tell you if Keaton was bitten during the attack.” At his answering scowl, she said, “I still have Rachel’s bracelet.”
“Where?”
“Here, with me. It’s in my purse in the other room.”
“I need you to go get it, Savannah. Now.”
Chapter 13
Savannah woke up from an unusually heavy doze, in bed alone.
How long had she been asleep? Her head felt thick, like she was coming out of a light anesthesia.
Where was Gideon?
She called out to him, but the empty house was silent. Pushing herself up from the mattress, she made a bleary-eyed scan of the dark bedroom. “Gideon?”
No response.
“Gideon, where are you?”
She sat up and tossed the sheet away from her. Turned on the bedside lamp. On the pillow next to her lay a piece of paper. A note scribbled on the back of the unused bus ticket that had been in her purse. The handwriting was crisp, precise, forward-tilting and bold--just like him.
Sorry had to do it like this. You’re safe here. Back soon.
Savannah looked around the bedroom. Gideon’s clothes were gone. His boots and weapons. Every last trace of him, gone.
She knew where he went.
Through the fog of whatever he’d done to her, she recalled his explosive reaction when she’d used Rachel’s bracelet for another glimpse of the vampire attack that night in Professor Keaton’s office.
Keaton had been bitten, just as Gideon suspected.
No longer the man he was, but a slave to the command of his vampire Master.
An individual Gideon seemed hellbent to find.
He had nearly climbed the walls with restless energy as the afternoon dragged on outside the house. He couldn’t wait to get out of there. He’d paced anxiously, waiting for the chance to head out and confront Keaton, then hunt for the Minion’s Master.
Savannah had wanted to go with him, but his refusal had been harsh and unswerving. He’d been adamant that she stay right where she was, leave him to deal with the situation as he saw fit--alone. Or with his brethren of the Order, if necessary.
It wasn’t until she had insisted she wouldn’t stay behind, digging her heels in with determination equal to his own that he finally gentled.
He’d kissed her tenderly. Brought her into the shelter of his arms, and carefully touched his palm to her forehead. Then...
Then, nothing.
That’s all she could remember of the past couple of hours at least.
Sorry had to do it like this,
he’d written in his note.
Damn him!
Savannah vaulted off the bed. She threw on her clothes, ran to the front door. She yanked on the latch. It wouldn’t budge.
He’d locked her inside?
Pissed now, she went to the windows and tried to open them. Sealed permanently shut, each of them shuttered from outside. The whole house was locked down, she realized, making a frantic perimeter check of the entire place.
She finally came to a rest in the small, empty kitchen, breathless with outrage.
There was no way to get out.
She was imprisoned here, and Gideon was somewhere out there, looking to face off with a powerful enemy on his own.
She knew she couldn’t help him--not in the kind of battles he was used to fighting. But to leave her behind like this to wait and worry? To strong-arm her into complying with his will by flexing his Breed power over her? If she wasn’t so worried about him, she’d want to kill him herself the next time she saw him.
She choked back a panicky breath.
God, please, let me see him again.
She sagged down to the rough plank floor on her knees...and noticed something in the far corner of the kitchen that she hadn’t seen in her search for a means out of the house.
There was a door in the floor.
Hardly visible, fashioned out of the planks and perfectly level with the rest of the flooring.
With a mix of curiosity and foreboding, Savannah crept toward it and felt around for its seams. She pried her fingers between a couple of the planks and found the hidden, square panel was unhinged and unsecured. She lifted it, slid it aside, and sat back as a draft of cool, damp air breathed out of the dark opening.
Savannah peered down into the space, trying to see if it the gloom led out of the house somewhere, or merely down to an old cellar. A prickle at her nape told her it was neither, but now that she had opened the door, she couldn’t simply close it again without having the answer.
A crude ladder was built into the earthen wall below. She slipped down into the hole and carefully climbed about twenty feet to the bottom.
It was a deep pit, lightless, except for the scant illumination spilling in from the kitchen above.
Had she thought the house felt like a tomb last night, when she and Gideon first arrived? This hand-hewn chamber in the cold, dark earth brought the feeling back tenfold.
Who made this?
What was it for?
Savannah peered around the forlorn space. Nothing but dank walls and floor, a place of sorrow and isolation. A place of forgetting.
No, she thought, seeing the purpose of the hidden room only now--a niche carved into the far wall, created to hold the crude wooden box that had been carefully placed within the nook.
This hole in the earth was a place of remembrance.
Of penance.
She drifted closer to the alcove and the aged box it contained. Even without touching it, she could feel the anguish that surrounded the reliquary.
Where had the box come from? Why was it here? Who had set it so deliberately in this place?
She had to know.
Savannah ran her bare hand lightly over the top of the ancient box.
Grief swamped her, seeping straight to her marrow.
A young woman’s remains were inside from long, long ago. Ash and bone, anointed in tears. A man’s tears.
No, not a man.
A Breed male, unfamiliar to her, mourning his dead mate. Blaming himself for her demise.
Savannah saw him in a flash of her extrasensory gift: A massive warrior with shaggy, tawny hair and piercing gem-green eyes. Eyes that burned hot with rage and sorrow and self-loathing.
His pain was too much, too raw.
Too wrenching for her to take any longer.
She drew her hand away in a hurry and backed off, putting as much distance as she could between herself and the terrible past contained in the box.
Shaken, wanting no more knowledge of this house’s hidden rooms or secrets, she ran back upstairs to wait for Gideon’s return.
~ ~ ~
After pulling a B&E on the Faculty Administration building at the university as soon as night had fallen, Gideon headed into the working-class neighborhood of Southie, his sights set on the home of one Professor William Charles Keaton.
The run-down, turn-of-the-century New Englander didn’t exactly scream swinging bachelor pad, but there was a flashy white Firebird parked on the side driveway that was advertisement enough for a coed skirt-chaser like Keaton.
Or rather, a skirt-chaser like he had been.
After hearing Savannah confirm that afternoon what Gideon had suspected--that Keaton had, in fact, been bitten by the Breed male who attacked him--Gideon was pretty sure the only thing that interested Keaton now was obeying his Master’s orders.
Gideon needed to know who Keaton served.
He needed to know who wanted Hugh Faulkner’s sword bad enough to kill for it, and why.
He wasn’t holding out much hope that Keaton would give up those answers easily, if at all. Interrogating Minions wasn’t often the most productive effort. A mind slave’s allegiance belonged totally to its Master.
Still, Gideon had to try.
For Savannah’s safety, if nothing else.
He’d hated like hell to have to resort to trancing her just before sundown, but he didn’t see where he’d had much choice. He never would have gotten out of that house without her. Locking her inside probably wasn’t going to win him any hero awards, either.
Shit.
He’d have to add another apology to the rest he owed her--starting with the one he planned to open with as soon as he saw her again.
The one about how he’d let her go on thinking all this time that the way they first met had been simple serendipity. Fate, as she’d christened it, just before her sweet confession that she was falling in love with him.
She needed to know that despite his reasons for seeking her out in the beginning, what he felt for her now--immediately after meeting her, if he were being honest with himself--was real.
She needed to know that she mattered to him, even more than his personal quest for answers about the damned sword and the Breed male who’d been willing to kill for it.
She needed to know that he loved her.
He didn’t know a better way to prove that than removing the threat of anyone who sought to do her harm.
Starting with the Minion inside this house.
Gideon entered stealthily, the feeble lock on the old front door no contest at all for the mental command he gave that opened it. A television blared unattended in the living room just off the entryway. A day-old dinner sat dried out in its foil container on the TV tray next to a cushioned brown recliner. Spread open on the seat was a state map of Louisiana.
Son of a bitch.
Gideon had to clamp down hard on the fury that began to boil in his gut as he noted the penciled line tracing down to the south central region of the state.
He swept his gaze all around him, searching for the bodily energy of the house’s occupant with his ESP talent. He found Keaton’s faint orange glow beneath the floorboards at his feet. The Minion was in the cellar.
Gideon stalked toward the hallway stairwell leading to the basement below.
A dim light was on down there.
Sounds of vague rummaging filtered up the steps...then, abrupt silence.
The Minion had just clued in to the presence of a Breed male other than his Master.
Gideon had one of his guns in hand as he descended the stairs into an open area of the basement. Keaton was gone, fled somewhere to hide, no doubt. Not that he could get far.
Gideon walked down, his gaze straying to a rough-hewn workbench and wallboard hung with home improvement tools and small containers of supplies. A dark duffel bag sat open on the bench. Inside it were coils of rope, a hunting knife, a roll of silver duct tape.
Gideon’s blood seethed at the sight of an obvious abduction kit.
Keaton’s Master had apparently changed his mind about siccing Rogues on Savannah and now wanted her taken alive. The thought didn’t sit any better with Gideon.
He swung his head around the cluttered basement, looking for the Minion.
Found him lurking in a back room of the space.
Gideon strode forward, toward a connected room separated by a beaded curtain. He swept it aside and entered a room decorated in what could only be described as Assorted Early Warfare. The walls sported an extensive collection of muskets and maces, rapiers and powder horns. Evidently, Keaton preferred his history with a dash of bloodshed.
Gideon stalked toward the glow of Keaton’s form, concealed behind a closet door at the far end of the room. Gideon wanted to blast a hole in the bastard through the wood panel, but he needed the Minion breathing so he could wring the name of his Master from him.
“Planning a road trip, Keaton?” he asked.
No reply. The Minion made small, urgent movements inside the closet, movements Gideon saw as slight shifts of the human’s energy mass. He couldn’t kill Keaton outright, but taking off a limb at a time might prove his point.
“We need to have a talk, Keaton. You need to tell me who you serve.”
The Minion snickered now. Gideon blew out a curse and shook his head. “You can come out now, or you can come out in pieces.”
Again, no response. So Gideon fired a shot into the door.
The Minion grunted upon the impact, but hardly reacted to the pain. Then he started chuckling. Tittering maniacally.
Gideon realized his mistake only a fraction of a second too late.
Keaton opened the closet door. He was smiling, holding two World War II-era grenades in his hands. The pins were already gone.
Holy Christ.
Gideon turned and sped in the other direction.
Made it halfway up the stairs just as the grenades detonated.
The blast threw him into the wall, smoke and debris flying all around him. He hit hard, felt the burn of random shrapnel peppering his back. But he was alive. He was still in one piece. Relief washed over him...until his nostrils filled with the alarming scent of his own blood.
A lot of it.
He shifted from where he had fallen on the stairs and looked down to assess the damage. Hundreds of lacerations and singed skin where the hot shrapnel had hit him. Nothing his Breed genetics couldn’t heal on their own in a few hours’ time.
But it was the other wound that gave him pause.
The catastrophic rip in his left thigh, which had nearly severed the limb and was currently gushing like a geyser with each heavy pound of his heartbeat.