CHAPTER NINETEEN
RED, RED WINE
Our dinner party was assembled in another
room accessible through the atrium, a space in the warehouse nearly
as large as the joint office had been. This one looked like a room
for special events; tonight, a single, rectangular table was set in
the middle of the room, a handful of modern-style chairs
surrounding it.
Gabriel Keene, head of the North American Central
Pack of shape-shifters, stood beside the table with his wife,
Tonya. The Masters were already moving toward their chairs, having
apparently already offered their introductions, which left the
shifters to me.
I walked toward them, ignoring the vampire behind
me and the others in the room. I wouldn’t call Gabriel and Tonya
friends per se, but Gabriel certainly had more foresight than
Darius, which I could respect.
“I understand congratulations are in order,” I
said, offering them both a smile.
Gabriel was as manly as they came—big, brawny,
tawny-haired, and honey-eyed with a love of leather and fine
Harleys—but his face beamed with paternal pride. “We have a
beautiful baby boy at home,” he confirmed. “We appreciate the
sentiment.”
“It was nice of you to join us tonight,” I said
with a teasing smile. “I can’t imagine you’d normally prefer
vampire company to your newborn son’s.”
Gabriel cast a suspicious glance at Darius and the
others. I understood the feeling. “There are things in life we need
to do,” he said, “and there are things in life we must do. Although
I don’t anticipate we’ll stay very long.”
Smiling, Tonya fished a tiny wallet out of her
clutch. “Who could leave this face for long?” She held out a small
photo of an admittedly adorable baby in a blue onesie. Gabriel
smiled at the sight of the picture. He was clearly smitten.
There was a wealth of pride and love in his eyes,
but when he raised his gaze to me, I could see the hint of fear
behind it. The fear that comes from loving something so much you
feel weighted down with it, nearly crushed by it. The fear of
potential loss, of potential heartbreak, that you might fail the
thing you worked so hard to bring into the world.
Parental fear, I suppose, made worse by the fact
that being leader—Apex—of the Pack was hereditary. Connor was born
a prince among wolves. He’d been born beneath a mantle of power,
but also bearing the mantle of a responsibility he couldn’t even
begin to fathom. It must have been a lot for Gabriel to bear,
knowing the responsibility he’d one day hoist upon his child’s
shoulders.
“You’ll do right by him,” I whispered. I wasn’t
sure if the words were elegant enough, but they seemed right
enough. And Gabriel’s small nod told me I’d said just the right
thing.
“How are things otherwise?”
“Well, we aren’t being used as scientific
experiments,” Gabriel said dryly. “That’s a small victory.” One of
his concerns about announcing shifters’ existence to the world was
the fear they’d become fodder for military or medical research—the
kinds of things you saw in monster movies and horror flicks. It
wasn’t exactly a pleasant thought, and I was glad to hear it hadn’t
come to pass.
“It’s not that I think humans don’t believe we’re
threats,” he added. “They just aren’t entirely sure what to do with
us.”
Shifters were generally considered the most
powerful supernatural beings, at least of the groups I knew about
so far. I considered humans’ ignorance on that point a
benefit.
“And the shifters who attacked the House?”
His expression darkened. “They’re working their way
through the penal system just like any average human
criminal.”
While I grimaced, Scott clapped his hands together.
“Welcome, all, to Grey House. I appreciate your attendance here,
and hope this can be a step toward friendship among us. Shall we
dine?”
Before we could answer, men and women in chef’s
whites began pouring into the room bearing silver dome-topped
trays. I took a seat beside Ethan as the trays were deposited
before us. Two vampires traveled around the table with carafes of
lemon water and bottles of a deep red wine, pouring as the vampires
requested. Only Ethan, Jonah, and I opted for the wine; I guess we
needed a drink worse than the others.
Other vampires lifted the domes, revealing a meal
that might have been described as “Predator’s Delight.” Loins,
roasts, cutlets. Sausages, steaks, filets. All laid out with
artistic perfection. Oh, to be sure, there were sides, as well.
Small fingerling potatoes, corn, and a grain salad of some kind.
But in a room of vamps and shifters—predators among humans—the
carnivorous urge was undeniable.
My stomach chose that moment to growl in a rumble
that nearly echoed across the room.
As my cheeks heated, all eyes turned to me. I
smiled lightly.
Gabriel smiled back, then lifted his water glass
when the chefs disappeared from the room again. “Thank you, Mr.
Grey, for the opportunity to share grain and beast with you. This
is a meaningful gesture to us, and we hope our families can
continue to commune in peace in the years to come.”
“Hear, hear,” Darius said, raising his glass, as
well. “We are now neighbors in this fine city, and we hope that our
days of strife are behind us, and that we can work together in
peace and allegiance for millennia to come.”
Gabriel offered a polite nod and gestured with his
glass again, but didn’t exactly commit to the “allegiance” bit.
Vamps collected formal allegiances like baseball cards; shifters
weren’t exactly crazy about that kind of thing.
“And since I’d truly rather Merit focus on her meal
than on me,” Gabriel said with a wink, “let’s stop talking and
start eating.”
But, of course, that would have been much too
simple.
I don’t know why it surprised me that Scott
offered up a mean feast. The man loved the Cubs, he had an amazing
warehouse turned House, and Benson’s was his House bar. Those facts
screamed “Quality Master.”
The food was no exception. The meats were choice
cuts that even my particular father might have served to dinner
guests. They were tender enough to make a knife irrelevant, and
seared to perfection on the outside. He couldn’t have done better,
especially for a group of predators.
Honestly, if I’d been a guy, I would have finished
my plate, relaxed in my chair, and unfastened the top button of my
pants. Food that good deserved undisturbed digestion.
Unfortunately, it wasn’t to be.
I’d just taken another sip of wine—grimacing at how
dry it was—when the door at one end of the room burst open. Five
vampires rushed in, some in black street clothes, but a couple
wearing blue and yellow hockey-style jerseys with GREY HOUSE in
capital letters across the front. They all had swords in hand and
malice in their expressions.
“This is how you treat us?” asked one Grey House
vamp who wore number thirty-two. “Some fucking shifter and his
bitch get fed like kings?”
The Grey House vamp on the other side wore number
twenty-seven. “And the GP, too? Shit is falling down here in the
States, and we’re serving steak to a vamp from the UK? Does that
seem right to you?”
Within seconds, my dagger was in hand. And I wasn’t
the only one on alert.
Scott Grey jumped out of his chair and marched to
the end of the table. “Matt, Drew, back the fuck off. Drop the
swords, and march right back to the door.”
The Grey House vamps wavered, probably the result
of some mental Master juju Scott was throwing their way. But the
rest of them didn’t seem to be affected at all.
I carefully got to my feet and moved toward them,
spinning the dagger in my palm as the anticipation built. All five
vamps wobbled a little on their feet, their movements erratic,
their eyes darting around the room. As I moved incrementally
closer, I could see the cause in their eyes—they were almost wholly
silver.
“Scott, it’s V,” I warned him.
“Any easy solution for handling them?” he called
back.
“Not without a sorcerer,” I told him. “We’ll have
to knock them out the old-fashioned way.”
“Then that’s what we’ll do,” Ethan said, stepping
beside me, a knife from the table in his hand.
“Nice of you to join us, Sullivan,” I teased, my
gaze following the vamps as they spread out in a line, ready to
rumble, whatever the cost. And with Darius, an Apex, and three
Masters in the room, the cost would be high. . . .
“Let’s go, old man,” Thirty-two said. “You want to
fight your own vampires? You want to take his side over
theirs?”
“Liege,” Jonah said, “as your captain, I’m going to
request you move into a safer position.”
“Request it all you want, Red,” Scott told him, a
mirthless smile on his face. “But that’s not going to stop me from
putting these dumbshits in their places. That’s what they get for
doing V.”
Ditto what he said, Sentinel, Ethan silently
told me. I suppose he wasn’t going to let me argue he should just
sit this one out.
The Grey House vamps seemed equally eager to brawl.
“Oh, go to hell, man,” Twenty-seven said.
“Only if you join me,” Scott said pleasantly, and
before another second passed, the room erupted into violence. Jonah
and Scott took the Grey House vamps. Gabriel, Darius, and Tonya
were sitting this one out. That left the Rogues to me, Ethan, and
Morgan.
“I got the one in the middle,” I called out.
“That leaves the other two for us,” Ethan said.
“Greer, take the one on the left.”
And with that, we moved. I slipped between the
in-House squabble to the angry-looking Rogue behind them, his eyes
just as silver as the Grey vamps’ had been. He was a big guy, and
beads of sweat formed at his temple as he fought the rush of the
drug. But this guy didn’t care whether it was rage or drugs fueling
his attack. He bared his teeth and moved in.
I had to give him credit—he was faster than I would
have imagined given his bulk. He moved like a spider—his weight
carried delicately on small, mincing feet.
He slashed, stepping into the movement like a
trained fighter. I blocked the knife with my dagger, but
miscalculated his speed and felt the cold burn of pain on the back
of my hand. My own blood scented the air, pushing my vampiric
instincts into overdrive.
I glanced down and saw the thin line of crimson.
Only a couple of inches long and not terribly deep. It was a
glancing blow, but that didn’t ease the burn.
“Not cool,” I said, moving into a spin, the dagger
in my hand slicing through the front of his shirt. He muttered a
few choice phrases but jumped back again. I stayed on the
offensive, my intent to make this guy as uncomfortable as
possible—to keep him as off balance as possible—while watching for
a chance to knock him out.
“You think you’re any better than the rest of
them?” he muttered, raising the sword over his head and slashing
down. I jumped back and out of the way, but my heel caught in a
knot in one of the planks. I stumbled backward and into one of the
room’s giant wooden posts, catching myself with a hand.
Ethan’s concerned voice echoed through my head.
Sentinel.
I’m fine, I assured him, then kicked off my
shoes. A vamp didn’t need to fight in stilettos, anyway.
When I was upright again, I recentered the dagger
in my hand and stared back at the vamp. “You were saying?”
“Bitch,” he called out, swinging his katana in an
awkward cross-body slice that would have been better suited for a
broadsword than fine Japanese steel. And I cringed on its behalf as
I ducked, and felt the echoing shudder of the column as his katana
made contact—and stuck there. What a waste.
I spun out from beneath him as he loosened his grip
on the handle and began stepping backward, eyes widening as if
suddenly aware that the Sentinel from Cadogan House was on his
case.
Maybe the drug was beginning to wear off.
“I’m going to do you a solid,” I said, holding my
dagger out to the side. “I’m going to toss this away, so we can
have a fair fight.”
I saw the relief in his expression as I chucked the
steel. And when his eyes shifted to watch it spin across the floor,
I made my move. I threw out a roundhouse kick that connected with
his head. He went down hard, like a sack of vampire potatoes, then
bounced a little before finally rolling to a stop.
Sure, roundhousing someone while wearing a cocktail
dress wasn’t exactly ladylike, but it certainly was
effective.
With my Rogue out of commission, I glanced over at
Ethan. He was in the process of putting his on the floor with a
twisting judostyle drop that rattled the floorboards. When he was
down, Ethan used an elbow at the neck to knock him out.
When the guy was still, he looked up at me, then
noticed my guy was down. Roundhouse? he silently
asked.
It is a classic, I said, glancing up. The
rest of the party crashers had been bested, as well, all five of
them out cold on the floor.
Jonah looked around the room, his gaze stopping
when he reached me. “You okay?” he mouthed.
I nodded back. That definitely seemed
personal.
“Scott,” Darius called out, “What the fuck was
that?”
Before Scott could answer, I filled in the blank.
“With all due respect, Sire—those are your errant vampires.”
Scott’s guards, including Jonah’s friends Jeremy
and Danny, stormed the room not a moment later, pulling out the
unconscious users. But they left the katana in the column—a visible
sign to others in the House who might be stupid enough to try
V.
We said goodbye to Gabriel and Tonya, who,
understandably, left the House as soon as the coast was clear.
Scott escorted the rest of us into the atrium while the remains of
dinner were cleaned up. Charlie and Darius stood quietly together;
Morgan stood alone. I was standing near Ethan when Scott and Jonah
moved our way.
Scott looked between us. “Thanks for the
assist.”
Ethan nodded graciously. “It happens to the best of
us, unfortunately.”
“How are the vamps doing?” I asked.
“They’re still out. They’re in the infirmary under
guard for the moment. When they’re awake again, we’ll have a
lengthy conversation about drugs and responsibility.”
“Did you know them well?” I asked.
“Only as applicants to the House,” Scott said.
“They’re relative newcomers. Members of your Initiate class.”
“What’s a ‘newcomer’ in immortal terms?” I
asked.
A smile perked at one corner of Scott’s mouth.
“Anything less than a decade.”
Which made me a baby vamp.
Ethan slid a glance to where Darius stood, now
offering up some sort of instructions while Charlie tapped at a
tablet computer. “Do you think he’ll consider the threat any more
real now?”
“The GP has an odd attitude about things like this.
I’m still not sure he sees us as anything other than troublemakers
at this point. Squeaky wheels taking him away from real business in
the UK.”
“Are you going to investigate?”
Scott blew out a breath. “That’s a tough one. This
is a problem in my House. It has to be addressed.”
“And if you discover Celina had anything to do with
it?”
“Then we didn’t have this conversation, but the
Chicago Houses agreed to quietly deal with the problem as it
exists.”
Scott and Ethan looked at each other until Scott
extended a hand. Ethan shook it, the deal struck.
Scott gestured toward his office. “I’m going to
have a chat with my guards for a moment. I assume Darius will want
to speak with us before you leave.”
“We’ll wait here,” Ethan agreed.
“I think Luc was right,” he added when they were
out of earshot. “I can hardly take you out anymore.”
“I just took out a vamp twice my weight while
wearing a cocktail dress and three-inch heels. I think I deserve
some credit for that.”
“Is that so?” he asked.
That’s when I first felt it—that rumble of warning
from somewhere deep in my bones, telling me something wasn’t right.
But I ignored it and challenged him anyway.
“Yes,” I baldly said. “You’re fortunate I was there
to help.”
“Fortunate? I believe I bested my own foe, Merit.
Perhaps you should thank me for my assistance.” He raked his gaze
up and down my body. “I’m sure I can suggest some small measure of
gratitude.”
The blood began to pound in my ears, my skin
prickling with sudden heat. I had no doubt my eyes were silver, but
I didn’t care. I slipped a finger into one of the belt loops on his
trousers and tugged him closer. “What did you have in mind?”
His eyes changed, his pupils mere pinpricks of
black against the swirling quicksilver of his irises. He began
moving forward, pushing me backward, and he didn’t stop until my
back was literally against the brick wall of the atrium.
Before I could object, his hands were on my face,
his mouth against mine. His lips pulled at my mouth, kissing me
hungrily, greedily.
In some satellite part of my brain, it occurred to
me that it was odd that Ethan was kissing me in someone else’s
House. And yet, even as I thought it was weird, my blood began to
warm and boil with a heat I’d never experienced before. It itched
beneath my skin, adrenaline pushing through my veins as if I were
still midbattle with the Grey House vampires.
“Ethan,” I managed, calling his name in warning,
even while I let him kiss me there in the middle of Grey House. He
changed tactics and kissed me slowly, languorously, before finally
opening his eyes and looking at me. There was an apology in his
eyes.
“Something is . . . wrong.”
I nodded my head, knowing that he’d meant this
wasn’t just love or lust, but a different kind of force, but the
thought was distant, and the burning need was here and now.
It was immediate.
Intense.
I rolled my head to the side, my eyelids
fluttering, the invitation overt.
“Do you need something from me?” His voice was low,
more like the warning growl of a tiger than the question of a
vampire.
I swallowed . . . and nodded. I felt like a
teenager at a first dance. I didn’t know the music, wasn’t savvy to
the steps, but the emotions were so basic, so fundamental, that it
wasn’t possible to dance them incorrectly.
Ethan lifted a hand to my neck, the bare touch of
his fingertips nearly buckling my knees. And before I could ask why
he was apologizing, he kissed me. His kiss was firm, insistent, and
questing. He moved closer, wrapping his arms around my back and
deepening the kiss. His tongue explored as he pressed harder
against me, the sudden length of his unmistakable erection pressing
against my stomach.
I should have been shocked. Should have reminded
him that this was neither the time nor the place, that we’d seen
how bad things could get.
But with each possessive rumble in his throat, our
own magics twined together. I was drawn in—by the magic, by the
kiss, by the possessive bite of his fingers. I pulled him toward
me, my fingers slipping into the belt loops on his trousers, and
leaned up to deepen the kiss. I was as hungry for him as I’d ever
been for blood, but this hunger was now. It was immediate,
and it demanded to be sated.
Love was a dangerous drug.
Oh, God. That was it. Ethan wasn’t overpowered by
love or lust or the sudden, romance-novel-esque realization that
He Had to Have Me Now. This was unprompted aggression,
albeit of a slightly different variety than we’d seen before. . .
.
“Ethan, I think we’ve been drugged.”
He ignored me, instead growling and tangling his
fingers into my hair. My heart tripped, not out of lust this time,
but out of fear, because the growl had changed, become
meaner.
I switched tactics, giving him a telepathic order
that I hoped would push through the haze of drugs to the part of
his brain that was still functioning. Ethan, stop.
He lifted his head, and I saw the conflict in his
eyes. His brain ordered him to stop, but his body was propelling
him forward—evidenced by his eyes. They were nearly all
silver.
“What?” he asked.
“I think we’ve been drugged. Someone slipped us V.
Maybe in the food?”
A wave of hot, itchy anger rushed through me. I
squeezed my eyes shut and my fingers into fists, pressing until the
pain in my palms helped slow the spinning of my mind.
“The anger found a different outlet,” he said, his
voice hoarse. “Perhaps a different dose. Maybe in one of the
meats?”
I shook my head. “The wine,” I answered. “I think
it was in the wine. It had an odd taste. Really, really
bitter.”
“Who else drank the wine?”
I thought back. I’d had wine, as had Ethan. And the
only other person who’d had wine was Jonah. But I was saved the
trouble of telling Ethan.
We both looked up as Jonah burst through the
foliage in front of us. His eyes, already silver, became fierce as
he stared Ethan down.
“It isn’t nice not to share.”
Ethan growled, low in his throat, a warning to
Jonah. “I don’t share.”
Jonah clucked his tongue. “You should. Life is so
much more interesting, don’t you think, when all of us get a
taste?” I’d heard of girls being thrilled to be fought over before,
but I didn’t like feeling like a piece of property.
“I’m no one’s to offer up,” I said.
“But you could do so much better,” was Jonah’s
retort.
It’s just V, I silently reminded Ethan.
He had the wine, too.
“Regardless the cause, he’d best behave himself,”
Ethan gritted out. He stared Jonah down, fangs bared. They were
nearly the same height, close to the same build. Ethan was fairer
than Jonah, but they’d have made equally matched opponents, if not
for Ethan’s position, which surely would have reaped Jonah more
trouble than the fight would have been worth.
“Jonah,” I warned, standing up, as well. “Back
off.”
But instead of backing off, he bared his fangs at
Ethan, hissing in warning that he’d found a prize and didn’t plan
to give it up.
I wasn’t sure where the sudden interest had come
from, but seriously doubted it had anything to do with me. More
likely, Jonah had been drawn in by the magic that Ethan and I had
spilled into the room. And in classic V fashion, he’d become
unreasonably angry.
“Jonah, come on,” I urged. “You need to back off.
You don’t want to fight a Master, especially not when Darius is
here.”
My voice was pleading, and he threw me a glance.
His brows were drawn together, as if he was trying to puzzle out
exactly why he was standing in the atrium, ready to fight for a
girl he’d only recently come to respect, much less actually
like.
But Ethan apparently hadn’t noticed the
self-reflection, and took a menacing step forward. “She is
mine.”
Jonah shook off rationality and faced him down.
“That decision is hers to make, and it doesn’t look like she’s made
it yet.”
“She sure as fuck won’t be choosing you,” Ethan
growled out.
Jonah lifted his arm. My own instincts kicked in,
protecting Ethan at the top of my list.
“Step back, Jonah,” I warned him, but he
still hadn’t managed to push through the V. He cocked back to
swing. I reached forward to pull him off, but he swung blindly out.
As if time had slowed down, I watched his fist move toward me, a
swat to push me away. He made contact.
The lights went out.