Read Cloak of Deceit: An Alex Moore Novel Online

Authors: Gwen Mitchell

Tags: #College Age, #Suspense, #Paranormal, #New Adult, #action, #Adventure, #dark, #urban fantasy, #Psychics, #Emotional, #Contemporary, #Vampires, #Romance, #Gritty, #paranormal romance

Cloak of Deceit: An Alex Moore Novel (13 page)

BOOK: Cloak of Deceit: An Alex Moore Novel
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“Thanks.” I frowned. I’d heard that line before. Would Julian really just leave me, after assuring me he wouldn’t? I wanted to think not, and yet here I was: waiting for a guy I barely knew, with no idea where
here
was.

“Don’t worry, hon.” Dawn patted me on the shoulder. “He’ll be back. Julian keeps his word.”

I nodded, giving her a reflexive smile. So far, I had been selling Julian short, letting my issues and past color my opinion of him. Maybe he really was coming back. “Thanks for the clothes. I really would love a shower.”

“You betcha. The bathroom is two doors down on the left. Make yourself at home.” Dawn waved as she backed out of the room.

I picked up the bundle she’d brought and followed her out. I couldn’t tell if I was in a really nice hotel or some sort of high-end institution. Was this what they called a safe house? Everything was nice, earthy with a touch of luxury. But there were no windows. My instincts told me we were underground, but I had no sense of direction. I found the bathroom where Dawn had promised.

I slid thankfully into a hot shower and washed away the toil of the past day and a half with expensive fragrant soap. My body was pain free, and the slash of bruises across my chest from the car accident had pretty much vanished. It felt strange, with the wreck and battle of the night before so fresh in my memory. I could still re-live the pain, like a phantom of what it should be…I just didn’t feel it anymore.

I wiped the mirror when I got out and stared at my reflection. Other than a little tired, I looked normal. It felt wrong, like an illusion. On the inside, I was battered and completely worn out. Exhausted. Bereft. But the girl staring back at me was just the image of calm.

“Go figure,” I muttered as I combed out my hair.

Women’s clothing — what a novelty! I pulled on a pair of jeans and a sweatshirt that were used, but clean, and much closer to my size. I bundled Julian’s borrowed sweats into a tight ball, but kept the sandals. The hallway was empty and quiet as I slinked back to my room, and I decided the next thing on the agenda was some exploring. Getting clean and dressed had lightened my mood considerably. Plus, I didn’t want to be sitting around waiting for Julian to show up — I’d been that girl too many times before. Time to get proactive.

My plan stalled when I found a boy sitting cross-legged on one of the floor cushions in my room. I looked around, thinking I had taken a wrong turn, but there was Julian’s duffle bag of pain, and the bed I’d just vacated. “Uh…hi.”

“You must be Alex?” My unexpected guest stood, and I saw he wasn’t a boy. He was over six feet of slender muscle when he unfolded himself from the floor, and his voice sounded deep and manly, though he still had a smooth baby face.

“I’m Carl.” He bowed, showing me the crown of his platinum head. I laughed at the awkward, yet gallant gesture. I was beginning to think Julian really had dropped me off at an institution. Everyone seemed way too serene and happy to be there — probably over-medicated.

I narrowed my eyes as I took Carl’s hand. The gentle pad of his heartbeat in my palm confirmed he wasn’t an Undead. His skin was warm and dry, and his pulse jumped when we made contact, making my mouth water. I didn’t mean to, but like a pair of second eyelids, my aura-vision came online. A soft green light surrounded Carl, offsetting his light blue eyes. With his almost white hair, it made him seem about as threatening as the Easter Bunny.

“Sorry.” I dropped his hand and blinked until I was seeing normally. At least sensing auras didn’t bring the voices.

“That’s all right.” Carl smiled. “I understand you being curious about my intentions.”

“You…I mean, how did you know what I was doing?”

“I’ve been around psychics for most of my life.” Carl eased back into the room.

I nodded and set my things down on one of the chairs. “You’ve met others like me?”

“Well, no.” He barely covered his excited smile. “Not like you. Never an Undead that was also—”

“Right.” I held up a hand to stop him before he ruined the good impression he’d made. I gestured back to the cushions on the floor. “Would you like to sit down?”

Carl followed my cue as I settled down on a peach-colored silk pillow across from him. It felt a little weird, hosting someone in a room that wasn’t mine, but I went with it. I repressed the urge to offer him something to drink, since I had no idea how to go about obtaining said beverages. And besides, this didn’t feel like a social call. I had a feeling someone had been instructed to keep me monitored while Julian was gone. I couldn’t blame him.

Carl’s blue eyes were wide and inquisitive when I met them again. He smiled brighter. He could have been in a Colgate commercial. He was actually pretty cute, with his glitter of golden lashes. But more than anything, I could sense his keen curiosity about me. Heat rushed to my cheeks as if I were under bright stage lights. It felt almost that way, with Carl beaming at me.

“So…” I raised my brows in question.

“You want to know why I’m here.”

I lifted one shoulder in a half-shrug. “Actually, I was going to ask where
here
was.”

“Oh!” He laughed, a sound that was both deep and light at the same time. “Right. This is Monique’s half-way house.”

“A half-way house?” I furrowed my brows.

Carl nodded and grinned.

“For the terminally Undead?”

He laughed again. I never knew I was so funny. But it made me smile to be having a somewhat normal conversation with someone.

“It’s a safe haven for orphans and runaways who have certain knowledge or abilities that make them…not fit in the human world. Though, she doesn’t go around advertising the last part.”

Orphans and runaways? So Julian had dumped me here? Ignoring the pinch in my throat, I nodded. “Which one are you? Knowledge or ability?”

He shrugged. “I have some telepathic senses. Nothing like what you probably have, but enough to get me in a bit of trouble as a kid. Mostly now, I think I know too much for my own good.”

Good to know.

He smiled again, unconcerned. “And I like it here.”

“Oh, yeah.” I glanced around the harem-inspired room. “It’s nice.” It was cozy. Especially if you had nowhere else. Sounded like exactly where I belonged.

“It’s home.”

Was it my home now? Was Julian coming back? If not, would I stay here?
Could
I stay here? “Who’s Monique?”

“She’s a friend of Julian’s,” Carl said.

I shook the surprised scowl off my face and wiped my hair back. Julian knowing someone that harbored others like me had come out of left field. He’d told me that psychics were enemies of the Undead. How many other things had he not bothered to clue me in on? “Is she a psychic?”

“You’ll see when you meet her,” was all that Carl said. “But now, we’re back to where we started. Why I’m here.”

I gave him an indulgent smile. “Okay, sure. Why are you here?”

He grinned. “I’m your breakfast.”

If it were possible for my eyes to pop out of the sockets, they would have. After an awkward moment of choking on my own spit, I finally gasped, “I’m sorry, what?”

“We don’t keep a stock of blood on hand here,” Carl explained, patting my back, “and Julian said you would need some.”

“Oh.” He did? That was thoughtful of him. Forgive me for not being thrilled with the idea of sucking on a total stranger. Or anyone. I crawled away from Carl’s reassuring petting and stood up, gaining back some of my composure. “Thanks, but I think I’ll pass.”

He slumped back to the floor and looked up at me with an angelic smile, both amused and patient. “I was trying to break the ice.”

“Oh, it’s broken.” I laughed and shook my head. I was torn between shock, embarrassment, and outrage. Behind that hovered a nagging thought that Carl’s blood would probably be
sweet,
just like him. An intense pang of thirst that made me a little woozy.

I heard when Carl’s heartbeat increased, could almost feel it in my head. He gazed up at me, completely trusting. The lamb before the slaughter.

I shuddered. No way. I just couldn’t do it.

You’ll weaken and die — very painfully, and very slowly
. Julian’s voice echoed in my head and I closed my eyes. Was he coming back? I could go for a
while
without blood, couldn’t I? When I opened my eyes, nothing had changed. I was still standing there wringing my hands together. Carl was still sitting in front of me, far too trusting.

I frowned. “Did Julian really tell you to come here and…?”

Offer yourself up as sacrifice?

Carl nodded, his manly voice that didn’t match his young face took on a somber note. “Yes, he did.”

“But why would you do it?” I lowered myself to the floor so that he didn’t have to keep craning his neck to look up at me.

“I don’t mind.” Carl smiled again, brilliant as the first day of spring, and his cheeks flushed a vivid pink. No coincidence it made me think of budding flowers. No, what surprised me were my other thoughts that followed on the heels of that one — thoughts of tasting him. Not just his blood, but his rosy lips, and his fresh, supple skin. His untainted desire…

“Oh, for Christ’s sake!”

I shook my head and willed it to clear. As if an inhuman thirst for blood weren’t enough, I also had to be cursed with uncanny senses that told me the very young man before me was still a virgin. Julian had sent me a virgin sacrifice.

What a jerk.

“Carl, I think you should go.” I pressed the heels of my hands into my eye sockets, my stomach wrenching into tight knots. I could barely squeeze the words out, because a part of me didn’t want him to go at all. That part of me wanted to grab a hold of him and pull him close, to wrap my body around his, and to
drink
. I was so thirsty, and he was within arm’s reach, and willing. But I
wouldn’t
do it.

Then he was right next to me, the fresh scent of mint coming off of him in waves, coiling through my head. He took both my hands in his and pulled them away from my face. I squeezed my eyes shut tight. The heat of his body soaked into me like the sun’s rays, easing my muscles, melting my self-control.

“Alex,” he whispered from inches away. I shook my head, still refusing to look at him. “Alex.”

Just listening to him, all of his apparent youth seeped away. It wasn’t only the deepness of his voice, but the knowledge that laced it. Carl may have been a virgin, but he was no innocent.
I know too much for my own good
, he’d said. Did he really know what he was offering? What he was asking?

“Better than you do,” he said.

My eyes shot open in surprise. He could hear my thoughts?

“Sorry.” He smiled bitterly. “Bad habit.”

I swallowed, willing my shoulders to un-bunch. “I don’t know how to do this.”

How could Julian send me a living blood donor and expect me to just figure it out? What if I killed him? What if I
turned
him?

Carl’s golden lashes fell to shade his sky-blue eyes. He licked his lips. I was entranced by the subtle motion, riveted, like a cat fixed on its quarry. I felt a familiar prickle in my gums, and a tingle of anticipation zipped through me. I sighed, and even to me, it sounded wistful. Lustful.

“Don’t worry — I trust you. Just let your instincts take over.” He knelt on one of the pillows at our feet and looked up with a confidence that seemed oddly fitting on his handsome, unfinished features.

His words were echoed again by Julian’s voice in my head.
Your instincts will take over
. And just remembering Julian’s voice, something inside me snapped. It was enough to crumble the fragile hold I had on my moral objections. The drive was too overpowering.

I leaned in and kissed Carl full on the mouth.

It wasn’t tender or soft. It was ravenous.

For a moment, he froze, shocked, or overwhelmed — I didn’t care. Then his arms wrapped around me and crushed us together. I heard a sound like a battering of wings in my head, and we fell back to the floor, a tangle of limbs and tongues and teeth.

The first tang of blood hit me in a crimson wave of earth-shattering desire. Carl gasped when my fang cut him, then moaned as I swirled my tongue in his mouth, coating mine with the gift.

His beautiful gift
. The force of his life, for mine. In the heady rush of blood and Undead pheromones engulfing me, I loved him just a little bit. Loved him, even though I didn’t know him. It would have seemed strange, if I had still been myself. But I wasn’t. The person I had been was lost. Carl’s offering, his blood, was the only thing that made sense to me.

I whispered something to him, something meaningless, and he answered by pulling away and baring his throbbing neck.

I paused. A tiny voice that used to be my conscience screamed to the surface, but was quickly silenced by survival instincts I had no control over. I stared at the bounty before me, my fangs almost aching. They pulsed matching the beat under Carl’s skin. His blood clung to my palette and blossomed into a mouth-watering bouquet, mingled with the sweetness of his sweat and the scent of male arousal tingeing the air.

“Alex.” He sighed, squeezing me to his chest. “Please.”

His words made me dizzy. It was exactly what I wanted to hear, and yet I hesitated. I couldn’t make a victim out of someone else. “Are you sure?”

Of its own accord, my tongue snaked out to trail along his straining muscles.

“Yes,” he hissed, rolling me on top of him.

I bit him, too swept away to be gentle. I only knew what I wanted lay behind a layer of skin and flesh in my way. Carl cried out, but I bit down harder, claiming the piece of him that was mine. He had given it to me, and it was mine. My senses drowned in the initial onslaught, like the first storm after a long drought. I wanted to bathe in it, to open my arms and let it rain down on me.

My instincts did take over. My throat worked, my lips creating a tight suction, not wasting a drop. My arms locked around his shoulders, but he didn’t fight. As I drank, Carl lifted his hips to press against me, moaning, and not from pain. I bore my weight down on him, claiming his body as I claimed his blood, wanting both with a razor sharp hunger. All my life I had chased this feeling, and now, when I was dead, I found it. It was like the night I had been bitten by Cody, only now I wasn’t numb, but hyper-aware. As I drank down Carl’s hot, crisp essence, I knew what it felt like to be truly at peace.

BOOK: Cloak of Deceit: An Alex Moore Novel
7.05Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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