She strangled out a scream, kicking, wild, but he trapped her between his legs and the chair, grabbed her head and forced it to the side. Her body heaved against his, and he heard her soft, mewling sobs. Her fingers trembled as they pressed into his shoulders.Pushedinto his shoulders. Shoved…
He bent to the wounds, holding his breath, forcing himself to think of…something…other than the taste of her blood, the salty citrus of her skin, the feel of her curvy, womanly body struggling against his. The raging of his cock, straining to find her center.
Finish it.
With a deep groan of effort, he fit his mouth over the bites and slipped his tongue over the sleek skin, hot with blood and marred by the punctures. He was holding her too hard, his fingers biting into her skull and her shoulder as he slicked healing saliva over her wounds.
And then, with great effort, he thrust her from him, down into the chair and turned away.
Done.
Voss staggered away, wishing for the whisky or the wine. Hardly aware of his surroundings, he fumbled with the latch on the door, vaguely remembering to leave the red string inside when he opened it—keep her safe— and then he stumbled out of the chamber.
Out, to freedom.
Angelica sat in the chair,unmoving, long after Voss staggered from the chamber.
She wasn’t certain if she was afraid he would return…or afraid he wouldn’t.
The wounds on her neck had ceased to bleed, and although they pounded gently as if to remind her they were still there, she felt no real pain or discomfort. The last vestiges of pleasure and the effects of the whisky had long fled her body, leaving her with the ugly realization.
Voss was avampir.
Some time later, when the sounds beyond the walls of this small, filthy chamber grew louder and more raucous, she stood and moved to the door through which he’d disappeared. Even through the fog of shock and horror, she knew that beyond this door, in the corridor, was a place no lady should ever be.
Yet another violation he’d visited upon her reputation. It would be God’s miracle if she came out of this alive, and without being ruined.
Tears, hot and angry more than pained, rolled from her eyes as she pulled at the latch. She wasn’t going to wait for him to return and do whatever he wished. She’d take her chances out there.
Surely someone would help her call for a hack. Or even send a message for assistance.
The latch clunked aside. She opened the door to peer out into the corridor and found herself face to face with Voss, who stood directly outside.
Angelica gave a little gasp and reared back.
His eyes went to her neck, where her hand had flown to cover the marks there. “Stay in there,” was all he said. “I’ve sent for Corvindale.”
And he shut the door.
Narcise Moldavi staredout the window of the inn, watching the grooms in the stable yard below. The sun still sat upon the horizon, fat and orange and taunting. So slow to go to bed.
It would be more than another hour before they could be on the road again. And until then, she would observe the courtyard, watching for any sign of familiar horses or persons.
She gripped the shutter and tried not to think about Cezar and what he would do if he found them. Whether he believed she was dead or alive, or had gone willingly or unwillingly, he wouldn’t rest until he found Chas.
Chas had humiliated him by taking her—his prized possession. And the last thing Cezar would suffer was being humiliated, by anyone. He’d had enough of that in his youth. And now as a Dracule, he had the means and the power to fight back. Unfortunately, he took his fury out on the innocent as well as anyone who’d done even an imagined slight to him.
She suspected that, despite having been alive for more than a hundred years, Cezar still couldn’t grow beyond the strange, weak boy he’d been.
Thank the Fates she was away from him now.
Her fingers tightened and she leaned her cheek against the edge of the wooden shutter. Chas had risked so much for her. How would she ever repay him?
How could she?
As if her thoughts had beckoned, the door to the room they’d let opened. Heart pounding, Narcise turned, her muscles bunching and ready. She didn’t relax until she smelled him and recognized his lean, feline form slipping through the opening. Like a shadow, with his Romany skin and hair, and ebony eyes, Chas moved and hid in the night as easily as a Dracule.
“Still watching?” he asked, closing the door. His eyes met hers and she gave a little shiver of pleasure and anticipation.