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Authors: Carla Susan Smith

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BOOK: A Vampire's Honor
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Chapter 18
L
aycee had used my absence to re-comb her hair and freshen her lip gloss. Something that ordinarily I wouldn't think twice about but now I found strangely annoying. Did she think primping was going to have an effect on Gabriel? If he refused her request, assuming that he could do what she wanted in the first place, then no amount of champagne-pink pearly lip gloss was going to persuade him otherwise. I was about to say something sarcastic, but the sudden feel of strong fingers tightening around my hand stopped me. Gabriel's firm reassurance prevented me from possibly hurting the feelings of the one person who, until recently, had been the most important in my life.
I watched as Gabriel took Laycee's hand and kissed her chastely on the forehead. “I think motherhood agrees with you.” I could hear the smile in his voice. “The birthing went well?”
“Um, yes, very well, thank you.” Flustered by the intimacy of Gabriel's greeting, Laycee was as startled as I was by his question.
I couldn't speak for her, but I know my astonishment wasn't so much at the odd phrasing as the fact he'd even asked the question in the first place. The kiss on the forehead I could accept, but asking about the birth process seemed inappropriate to me. But maybe I was overreacting and it was no more than vampire politeness.
“Would you like to see her?” Laycee asked. One hand fluttered nervously around her throat while the other pointed to the bassinet.
My astonishment changed to stunned silence as Gabriel parted the blanket with his long fingers for a better look. He murmured appreciatively, and while his voice didn't have quite the seductive tones that could liquefy my spine, I wondered if he would have used the same modulation had Baby Jenna actually been Baby Jake.
He can't help himself; it's the way he responds to the female aura. Just be thankful you're the only female who can bring him to his knees.
My inner bitch, who was keeping me company less and less these days, sounded slightly amused by my nascent feelings of jealousy.
Is that what you think I do to him, I snorted back inside my head, bring him to his knees?
Oh yeah . . . every single time he looks at you, and trust me, honey, he wouldn't have it any other way.
“She is very beautiful,” Gabriel said, “and obviously favors her mother.” His compliment made Laycee blush. Returning to my side, he pressed his lips against my temple and linked his fingers with mine. Sometimes my inner bitch gets it right, and knowing I was all Gabriel would ever want gave me the confidence to smile at Laycee with genuine warmth. “Rowan tells me there is something you wish to ask of me.” His voice was suitably solemn.
Laycee licked her lips, taking off most of the shine, which told me she was nervous, and rightly so. I now had to wonder if this was the real reason she had waited before calling me. A reason that had nothing to do with saving me from her family's version of the Spanish Inquisition regarding my love life. What she wanted from Gabriel was something she would never share with her family . . . or her husband. My only concern was which worried her more. That Gabriel wouldn't be able to fulfill her request . . . or that he would.
“How safe am I from that crazy bitch?” Laycee asked in a low voice.
I was leaning against Gabriel's chest and felt him stiffen. “I assume you mean Katja?”
Laycee nodded and narrowed her eyes. “I know you told me she was taken away by . . .” She frowned as she struggled to recall the dark-haired vampire's name.
“Ryiel,” Gabriel said softly.
“Yes, that's right . . . by Ryiel.”
There was a slightly dazed look to Laycee's eyes as she repeated his name, which I found a little disturbing, but I was willing to blame it on postpartum whatever rather than any real desire.
“Why are you asking about Katja?” I asked, refocusing Laycee's attention.
“Well, surely you of all people can understand where I'm coming from? If she comes looking for you, there's a good chance she's going to find me first, and somehow I don't think she's going to want to friend me on Facebook.” There was a slight frostiness to Laycee's tone as she chided me. “Only it's not just me anymore, and I don't want to spend the rest of my life looking over my shoulder every time I leave your house. Especially at night.”
“It's not my house anymore,” I muttered under my breath, but not low enough.
“I doubt that crazy bitch actually knows that, and even if she did, do you think she's going to give a damn?”
Of course not.
“But Katja is with Ryiel—” I began.
“I know that!” Laycee snapped irritably. “Stuck somewhere in the Himalayas or wherever the hell it is,” she paused, taking a breath and putting aside her exasperation. “But can you say, with absolute certainty, that she will stay there until me and my kids and grandkids are all dead and buried?”
She was upset, and I wanted to calm her fears. I opened my mouth to speak, offer some meaningless platitude, but Gabriel interrupted me.
“No,” he said in a voice that was firm and decisive. “There are no guarantees, Laycee. The only certainty is death, which comes to us all. Even vampires.”
“Strangely, I don't find that very comforting,” Laycee told him, doing a poor job of hiding her disappointment. Baby Jenna, sensing her mother's change of mood, suddenly wailed, and Laycee went into immediate maternal mode. For the next few minutes, no one said anything while the fractious newborn was soothed. When Laycee did look up again, she seemed apprehensive.
“What is it you think I can do for you, Laycee?” Gabriel asked, his hands moving to rest on my shoulders.
“I want you to protect my baby from Katja . . . and any other vampires.” Saying the word made her shudder and caused an unexpected tremble to sweep through me. I held onto Gabriel's arm. Even though she had told me what she wanted to ask him, it was still a shock hearing her say the words. Especially after what she'd been through with Katja.
“What you ask is no small matter,” Gabriel said quietly.
His words startled me. “You mean you can do this?” I blurted as I glanced up at him over my shoulder. His expression was serious, but the uncharacteristic downturn of his mouth said that whatever he could do to ease Laycee's state of mind, there would be consequences. The kind that Laycee might not want to know about. But she was my friend, and even though our relationship was moving in a new direction, I would always care about her and her family. Something that was even more important after hearing how Aleksei had lost his.
“I can't un-see what I've already seen, and I can't pretend you guys don't exist. If all vampires were like you, and Ryiel and the big Russian guy, then we wouldn't be having this conversation.” She paused and gently rocked the baby in her arms. “But I know what an unhinged, crazy vampire can do, and take it from me, it wasn't pretty. And as for the creepy guy—”
“It wasn't his fault he was like that,” I interjected, coming to Oscar's defense. “It was because Katja had deliberately starved him.”
Oscar had been as much a victim of Katja's scheming as both Laycee and I, and even though I knew that, given the chance, the starving vampire would have drained me dry, it made no difference now. Of course, it's easy to be magnanimous when the threat to your life has been decapitated.
“You know, I still can't decide which was worse,” Laycee continued. “Seeing Ryiel remove creepy guy's head with his bare hands, or watching psychotic Vampirella rip my best friend's neck open.”
“Oh my God, Laycee . . .”
“Like I said, the view from your bedroom window is pretty good.” After repositioning the blanket in her arms, Laycee addressed Gabriel directly. “If crazy vampire bitch could do something like starve another vampire, then there's no telling what else she's capable of.” I watched as she unconsciously began to flex her wrist. The same one Katja had broken and Aleksei had fixed. “Look, I know I'm not supposed to know about vampires, and all I can do is give you my word I won't tell anyone about you, not even Jake”—I felt rather than saw Gabriel smile at her promise—“but please understand I don't ever want to be that scared again, or have my kids that scared.”
“It's against the law for a vampire to take the blood of a child,” I told her.
“And what law would that be exactly?” She didn't try to hide her sarcasm.
“It's vampire law,” Gabriel said.
“Well, did your vampire law say it was okay for Katja to starve creepy guy—”
“His name was Oscar.” Annoyance made my words sharper than I intended.
I don't think Laycee was being deliberately disrespectful, but even so. She blinked, and the expression on her face told me our friendship had just received a hairline fracture. It wasn't huge, it wasn't a crack or gap or even a fissure, but it was a definite weakness.
“—or rip Rowan's neck open like she did?” Laycee continued as if I hadn't spoken. “I don't think someone capable of doing that really gives a damn about the law, no matter who made it.”
She had a point, and if it were I with an infant in my arms, I would probably be asking the same thing. A small wail suddenly erupted from the pink blanket, and Laycee began shushing and cooing, apologizing to her daughter for upsetting her. Taking advantage of her distraction, I turned to face Gabriel. “Can you really do something?” I asked in a low voice.
He looked down at me, his eyes darkening to a shade that made them unreadable. “Yes, but what you are asking comes at a price.”
“But can it be done?”
“Of course, but—”
“Outside, now,” I said, taking him firmly by the hand and marching toward the door. “We'll be back in a minute,” I told Laycee, who gave me a distracted wave and occupied herself with Jenna.
“Don't you want to help her?” I hissed once the door to Laycee's room had closed and we had the semi-privacy of the hall to talk in. “It's not like she's asking anything for herself. This is for her baby.” I put an unfair emphasis on the last word.
Gabriel let go of my hands and put his own on his hips as he dropped his eyes and looked down at the floor. I'd seen him adopt this posture before, usually when he needed me to see his point of view and didn't want to lose his temper over it. “There are consequences to be considered, Rowan. What you are asking—”
“I'll pay it,” I said suddenly. “That's the reason you're stalling, isn't it?” He stared at me, his eyes glittering in the low light, his hair shimmering. I saw the tips of his fangs behind his upper lip. “Whatever the cost of this protection you can give, you're worried that I won't like it. Well, let me tell you something: Laycee is as important to me as Aleksei is to you. If you could have saved his family— saved his mother, his sisters, and his brothers—wouldn't you have done it?”
“Rowan, that's not the same thing.”
“Isn't it? The specific circumstances might be different, but you can't tell me the feelings aren't the same. We're talking about protecting someone who can't protect themselves.”
I wasn't playing fair, but I couldn't let him turn his back on a helpless child, not when it was in his power to help her. I grabbed hold of his hand and brought it to my mouth, pressing my lips against his knuckles. “Do whatever you need to do, Gabriel, to give Laycee peace of mind. Do it for her. Do it for her baby. Do it for me.”
He stared at me long and hard, and I could feel the conflict within him . . . and knew the moment he capitulated.
“I understand there are terms, and it doesn't matter what they are. If it's up to me to pay them, then I will and gladly, I'll—” The rest of my words were shut off as Gabriel covered my mouth with his, effectively silencing me.
“Don't say anything else,” he instructed when he finally let me go.
“But you'll do it, won't you?” I completely ignored his directive, adding, “You'll help Laycee and her baby?”
“Rowan—you have no idea what you ask of me!”
“It's a lot, I know, but . . . please?”
“The consequences . . .”
“Are they really so terrible?” I asked. C'mon, this was a baby we were talking about protecting. How awful could it be to agree to do this? I reached for his hand, holding it and rubbing my thumb across his knuckles. “I'll do whatever is asked of me, Gabriel, but please do this.”
He twisted the hand I held and pulled me up against his body, kissing me with a fierce kind of desperation. I could feel the pounding beat of his heart, feel the blood rushing through his veins. And when he let me go, he looked strangely grim.
“Thank you,” I murmured as he pulled open the door to Laycee's room.
Chapter 19
T
his time Laycee had not freshened her makeup. Instead she was starting to look a little frazzled, a combination of little to no sleep and worry. She began to chew on her lip, smearing what was left of her lip gloss, and for the first time I realized just how scared she truly was. “So . . . can you help my children?”
Going to the end of her bed, Gabriel looked at her solemnly. “What you are asking is not possible for Jake's older children,” he told her in a voice that carried the weight of centuries. “Such a request can only be asked, and granted, within the first twenty-four hours of birth.”
She sighed with relief. “So you can protect Jenna?”
“You are absolutely certain this is what you want?” Gabriel asked, his voice calm and steady, his focus completely on Laycee.
She shook her head. “No, what I really want is to have a do-over where I know nothing about vampires.”
“But you can't put the genie back in the bottle,” Gabriel said, giving her a tight smile.
“A genie I might be able to deal with,” she assured him. “But seriously, yes. Whatever protection you can give my daughter is what I want.”
“And you ask this of me with a free will?” She swallowed convulsively a couple of times, and then nodded her head rapidly like a bobblehead doll that was possessed. “Very well,” Gabriel said. “I agree to give your daughter my protection.”
The look he gave me said he was doing this for no one but me.
“Will it be enough?” Laycee asked, her china-doll eyes opening wide.
Gabriel gave a humorless laugh. “It always has been before. Any vampire who gets close to your daughter will recognize my scent and know that touching her in any way will result in his—or her—immediate death.” He raised a brow. “This is all I can offer. Are you satisfied?” Laycee closed her eyes for a moment and then nodded. “And you,” Gabriel said, turning to face me, “are you also satisfied by this agreement?”
“Yes,” I said, wondering why he was asking when he already knew it was what I wanted. “Wait a minute, though.” I put my hand on Gabriel's arm and asked the obvious. “Just how is this done?”
“With blood, of course,” Gabriel answered, surprised that I hadn't already guessed this. Nearly all rituals of any importance in the vampire world were bound by blood.
“Okay, but whose blood?”
His dimple winked at me, and now he brushed his lips lightly over mine before saying, “Only mine, sweetheart, no one else's.”
Oh well, that was okay then. The momentary fear in the pit of my stomach went back to sleep. From the look on her face, Laycee had been given a similar jolt of terror at the thought that Gabriel was going to need her baby's blood to do whatever he was going to do. I gave her a reassuring smile as the sound of rustling silk filled my ears. I turned my head to see Gabriel pulling his shirt free of his pants.
“Don't tell me you've gotta be naked to do this,” I mumbled as he began undoing buttons. Over the years I'd shared a lot of things with Laycee, but I'd never planned on her seeing Gabriel in the buff. I'm a generous friend, not a stupid one.
“Don't worry,” he said with a teasing grin that would have put an exotic dancer to shame. “I only need to remove my shirt. Skin-to-skin contact is vital.”
“Holy Mary, Mother of God . . .” Laycee murmured from her bed. The fact that she had given birth less than twelve hours ago did not stop her appreciation for a well-muscled torso. “And to think you can see that anytime you want,” she added with enough envy in her voice that it made me preen.
I saw tiny beads of perspiration break out across her upper lip as Gabriel stood by the side of the bed and held his arms out. If Laycee was going to change her mind, now was the time to do it. All she had to do was refuse to hand over Jenna and Gabriel would put his shirt back on and none of us would ever mention this again. And for a moment, I thought that's exactly what she was going to do. Let's face it, what mother would willingly put her newborn infant into the outstretched hands of a vampire? And not just any vampire, but an Original Vampire at that. Laycee may have had some hesitation, but Baby Jenna did not.
“Would you look at that?” I murmured, slightly awe-struck. “Not even twenty-four hours old, and she's reaching for him.”
And it did appear as if that was exactly what she was doing.
A small chubby fist rose up from the cloud of pink, accompanied by a soft cooing sound, and grabbed a handful of Gabriel's long hair as he took her from her mother's arms. Cradled against his chest, Jenna lay nice and easy, her small body resting along the length of his forearm. It seemed to me that Gabriel had never looked so big, or perhaps it was just that the newborn looked so tiny dwarfed by his broad chest and massive shoulders.
Holding her in one arm, her small body pressed against his bare skin, Gabriel smiled down at her. She waved her arm and made baby gurgling noises, and I saw his smile widen as she tugged playfully on the strands of hair caught between her fingers. Not taking his eyes from the tiny face that looked up at him, Gabriel murmured to me, “You might want to hold Laycee's hand.”
I understood the need for his instruction a moment later, because Laycee almost broke my fingers seeing Gabriel drop his fangs. Concerned that she might launch herself at him, I put my free arm around her shoulders and offered a comforting squeeze. Gabriel had assured me the only blood to be used was his own, and I had no reason not to believe him. I watched as he scored his free wrist and then held my breath as he held his hand over the baby's face.
A single drop of blood, no more and no less, fell with exact precision between the open lips of a tiny rosebud mouth, staining her tongue a brilliant crimson before being absorbed by her own genetic material. Making a single sweep of his tongue across his wrist, Gabriel sealed the wound. Then he pressed his lips against Jenna's forehead and placed her back in Laycee's arms.
“That's it?” Laycee asked. “She's safe now?”
“Yes. Any vampire will know she is under my protection.”
Gently Laycee passed her forefinger across her baby's lips, as if worried some of Gabriel's blood might escape. “Thank you. I can't ever—oh, holy shit!”
The sudden outburst startled me, and Gabriel, who had been putting his shirt back on, paused for a moment before giving a shrug. Laycee may have had nothing but glowing admiration for his front side, but she was having a completely different reaction at the sight of his back. I knew it wasn't his tattoos that were responsible for her sudden outburst, but the cruel thick scars that curved along each shoulder blade. She covered her mouth with her free hand, mumbling an apology for her tactless eruption.
Slipping the shirt the rest of the way on, Gabriel pressed his lips against my forehead before saying, “I'll wait for you down the hall.”
Once the door closed with a soft whoosh, I turned back to meet Laycee's stare. I hadn't thought it possible for her eyes to get any bigger, but apparently I was wrong. If she wasn't careful she'd look like one of those female anime characters. Nothing but eyes and boobs.
“Oh God, Rowan, I'm so sorry. Why didn't you tell me?”
“Tell you what? About his back?” She nodded, her expression stricken. “I guess I've just gotten used to it,” I said with a shrug. “I find his tats very sexy, and I honestly don't notice the scars anymore.”
It was a lie, but Laycee didn't need to know that. Just as Gabriel was reminded of what he had once been every time he looked in the mirror, I was reminded every time my hands passed over the ropey, thick scar tissue. And every time I had to force myself to push aside my anguish and despair.
“But they look like . . .” I watched her brows pull together. “It sounds silly, but it's almost as if he'd once had wings.”
“Yeah I know, I thought the same thing the first time I saw them.”
“What happened to him?”
I shrugged. “I don't know exactly.” It was kind of, sort of the truth. My memories had been returning, but with no reference point to guide me, they remained a jumble of images. Some were pleasant, some not so much. I couldn't say on which side my recollections of Gabriel's cruel disfigurement would fall, but I was inwardly bracing myself for them to be in the not-so-pleasant category.
My sense that I had been a witness to that cruelty was strong, and it explained why I was hesitant about telling Gabriel I was starting to have such recollections. When the memory was complete, and I had a better understanding of my own involvement, then I would tell him. At least that's what I told myself. Truthfully, I was terrified what such a remembrance would bring with it.
“It's not something he likes to talk about,” I said, answering Laycee's question.
“Oh. I'm sorry I asked.”
A sudden wail broke the tension. “I think someone's hungry,” I said, feeling a smile tug at the corners of my mouth. “Remember to send me pictures, lots and lots of pictures. A daily update would be good.” I slipped out of the room before Laycee had a chance to say anything else.
BOOK: A Vampire's Honor
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