And then the human pulled the trigger and shot himself in the head.
As the body dropped to the pavement and the sound of the shot echoed around, the remaining men’s eyes drew wide in horror even as their bodies remained immobilized.
“You,” Assail said to the one closest to the sedan. “Bring me what I bought.”
“I-I-I…” The man swallowed hard. “We don’t got nothing.”
With hauteur worthy of a king, Assail countered, “I’m sorry, what did you say.”
“We dint bring nothing.”
“And why not.”
“Because we was going to…” The man had to take another stab at swallowing. “We was going to…”
“You were going to take my money and leave me for dead?” When there was no reply, Assail nodded. “I can see the value in that. And no doubt you’ll understand what I must do now.”
While the vampire puffed on his cigar, the man who had been speaking began to reposition his own gun, the muzzle ending up upon his temple.
One by one, three more shots rang out.
And then the vampire sauntered over and extinguished his cigar in the dead mouth of the first to go down.
Xcor laughed softly as Assail returned to his vehicle.
“Do we follow him?” Zypher asked.
Wasn’t that the question. There were lessers to fight here in the downtown area, and there was no reason to care if Assail was making money off the addictions of humans. Still, there was a lot of night left to be utilized, and there might as yet be a meeting between the male and the king forthcoming.
“Aye,” Xcor replied. “But only myself and Throe. If there is a rendezvous with Wrath we will find you.”
“This is why we all need cell phones,” Throe said. “Faster, better coordination.”
Xcor ground his teeth. Since their arrival in the New World, he had allowed Throe to engage one such cellular, and no others: A fighter’s sense of smell and hearing, his instinct honed by training and practice, his knowledge of his enemy and himself, these did not come with a monthly bill, the need for recharging, or the threat of being laid aside and lost or stolen.
Ignoring the commentary, Xcor ordered, “The rest of you go forth and find the enemy.”
“Which one,” Zypher said with a hearty laugh. “There are a growing number from which to choose.”
Indeed. For Assail was not behaving like an aristocrat. He was acting like a male who might be trying to build some kind of empire of his own.
It was entirely possible this member of the glymera was Xcor’s kind of vampire. Which meant he might well have to be eliminated at some point—and not simply as collateral damage.
There was room for only one king in Caldwell.
TWENTY-TWO
As Tohr resumed form at the Brotherhood mansion, he was pissed off at the world. Rankly ugly. Rattlesnake mad.
Pushing his way into the vestibule, he prayed that Fritz just released the lock remotely and didn’t go the personal route. No one needed to see him like this—
His prayers were answered as the inner door gave way, and he marched into the foyer to an audience of nobody: All around the first floor the house was silent, the doggen taking the opportunity to attend to the upstairs bedrooms before beginning preparations for Last Meal.
Shit. He probably needed to text Phury about where Layla was—
On a sudden, gripping instinct, his head cranked around on the top of his spine, his eyes focusing on the dining room.
Some inner cue told him to get walking, the impulse carrying him through the arches, past the long, glossy table… and out the flap door into the kitchen.
No’One was at the counter cracking eggs into a ceramic bowl.
Alone.
She stopped in midstrike, her hood coming up and turning to face him.
For some reason, his heart started beating hard. “Did I imagine you?” he said.
“I’m sorry?”
“Did I imagine you in the foyer before I left.”
No’One slowly lowered her hand, the egg saved from shattering. Temporarily. “No. You did not.”
“Take your hood off again.”
It was not a question, but a demand—the kind of thing Wellsie would never have stood for. No’One, on the other hand, solemnly obeyed him.
And there she was, revealed to his eyes, her cap of blond hair terminating in the start of that rope-thick braid, her pale cheeks and eyes luminous, her face.…
“I told Lassiter…” She cleared her throat. “Lassiter asked me if I would feed you.”
“And you said.”
“Yes.”
All of a sudden, he pictured her in that pool, floating on her back, utterly naked, with the water’s pervasive tongue licking at her warm flesh.
Everywhere.
Tohr threw out a palm and braced himself on a cupboard. Hard to know what was rocking him most: the sudden need to be at her throat, or his utter despair at the thought of it.
“I am still in love with my shellan,” he heard himself say.
And that remained the problem: All the resolving in the world, all the turning-the-new-leaf-and-letting-go shit, hadn’t changed his emotions in the slightest.
“I know,” No’One replied. “And I am glad.”
“I should use a Chosen.” He took a step closer to her.
“I know. And I agree. Their blood is purer.”
He took another step forward. “You are from a good bloodline.”
“Was,” she said starkly.
As the fragile expanse of her shoulders began to tremble ever so slightly—like she had sensed his hunger—the predator in him awoke. Abruptly, he found himself wanting to jump over the island she was standing at, just so he could…
Do what?
Well, that was obvious.
Even though his heart and his mind were nothing but an empty ice-skating rink, frozen over and flat as fuck, the rest of him was alive, his body throbbing with a purpose that threatened to mow down good intentions, proper decorum… and his grieving process.
As he took yet more steps to her, he had a horrifying thought that this was what Lassiter had meant by letting go: In this moment, he had left Wellsie behind. He was aware of nothing except the diminutive female in front of him who was fighting to stay in place as she was stalked by a Brother.
He stopped only when he was no more than a foot away from her. Looking down past her bent head, his eyes locked on the fragile pulse at her jugular vein.
She was breathing as hard as he was.
And as he inhaled, he caught a scent.
It was not fear.
Dearest Virgin Scribe, he was enormous.
As No’One stood in the lee of the great warrior who had come upon her, she felt the heat coming off his massive body sure as if she were in front of a raging fire. And yet… she was not burned. And she was not afraid. She was warmed in someplace so deep, so buried within her, that she did not immediately recognize it as part of her internal makeup.
All she knew for sure was that he was going to take her vein within moments and she was going to let him—not because the angel had requested it of her, and not because she had vowed to, and not to make up for something in the past.
She… wanted him to.
As a hiss boiled out of him, she knew Tohrment had opened his mouth to expose his fangs.
It was time. And she did not pull up her sleeve. She loosened the top of her robe, peeled it wide to her shoulders, and tilted her head to the side.
Giving him her throat.
Oh, how her heart beat.
“Not here,” he growled. “Come with me.”
Taking her hand, he drew her into the butler’s pantry and closed them in. The squat, cramped room was lined with shelves of colorful canned fruits and vegetables, the still, warm air smelling of freshly milled grains and the dry, cakey sweetness of flour.