Books by Maggie Shayne (201 page)

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Authors: Maggie Shayne

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Or maybe he could.
 
But he didn't notice her.

She'd planned to make her escape tomorrow while he... slept.
 
But she couldn't wait, not now.
 
He was too confusing... and too angry at her for her feelings.

Her hand rose to touch the spot where he'd fed at her throat, and she felt the tiny wounds there.
 
Not sore, but tingling with erotic awareness, so tender now, so sensitized.
 
Just touching them reawakened the memory of his kiss, his touch... his mouth working her there.

She had to pause, lean back against a cool stone wall and draw deep breaths into her lungs.
 
She wanted him.
 
She desired a man she truly didn't know, though it felt as if she'd always known him.
 
A vampire, but that made no difference to her.

She couldn't stay, because Lord only knew what she might do if she stayed.
 
If he came to her room again, kissed her again...

But he wouldn't.
 
He didn't want to care for her, he'd made that clear.
 
Straightening, she squared her shoulders, and followed the corridor to the library.
 
Then with one last glance behind her, to confirm he hadn't followed, she went inside.
 
The French doors remained as they'd been before.
 
Closed, but unlocked, and a moment later she was outside the castle.
 
Free, in his beautiful garden of night.

For a moment she hesitated.
 
It was such a contradiction, a man like him, having a place like this.
 
As S he was capable of appreciating pure beauty.
 
As if he had the soul of a poet, and not a determined hermit.

Shaking that thought away, she walked around the castle, each step faster than the one before, until at last she was running.
 
Her hair blowing in the night wind as she pushed her muscles to their limits, racing through the darkness along the path, ever farther from the castle and toward the road that led to it.
 
A road that meandered among woods, and later fields, and the village itself.

Free.
 
She was free at last.

And that was when she heard the hounds.

 

Chapter 10

 

Hounds?
 
She didn't understand.
 
Not at first.
 
But then she heard the men's voices in the distance, village men.
 
And then the hounds drowned them out.
 
Crying, baying in a horrific cacophony of noise that chilled her blood.

Marney Neal's hounds, she thought vaguely, knowing the animals were trained hunters.
 
But they didn't hunt game, they hunted men.
 
Marney trained them for that purpose.
 
So if they were out tonight they must be after some criminal.

Then why were they heading toward the castle?

Donovan?

She swallowed hard, but her throat was dry.
 
And then she stood there, frozen in fear, as the hounds rounded a curve in the road and came into sight.
 
Running, bearing down on her.
 
A horde of galloping, baying death.
 
She whirled, panic taking hold as she surged into the woods, even knowing they'd offer no protection.
 
But the dogs were too fast, too determined.
 
One leapt, and his forelegs clawed
  
her back, propelling her forward.
 
Instinctively she rolled to her back, but the beast was upon her, teeth flashing.
 
And then, suddenly the dog was hurled away.

Donovan.
 
He stood above her, surrounded by the dogs, wielding a club as they lunged and snapped at him.
 
"Go," he shouted.
 
"Run for the castle.
 
Go!"
 
One snatched his arm in horrible teeth.
 
She heard fabric tearing, saw blood as Donovan clubbed the animal uselessly.

Shaking, dirty and terrified, she struggled to her feet.
 
And then she staggered toward the road.
 
But she stopped as Donovan went down and the dogs leapt in for the kill.
 
Screaming, she crouched low, scooping up hands full of debris and hurling it at their tawny bodies to get their attention.

"Here, you filthy beasts!
 
Here!
 
Come!"
 
One dog turned toward her snarling.
 
"Come for me then," she cried, and then she turned to run, knowing they'd follow.

And they did.
 
She made it to the road with the hounds on her heels, now.
 
But the men were in sight, and she cried out to them.
 
"Marney Neal, call off your hounds!
 
Call them off!"

"Sakes, 'tis Rachel!" someone said.
 
But then the dogs were on her, knocking her down once more.

One of the men raced forward, shouting commands at the dogs.
 
Thankfully, they were trained well enough to obey at once.
 
The dogs fell away from her as one, and sat as docile as pups, awaiting the word of their master.
 
And then Marney himself, beer on his breath, was leaning over her, helping her to her feet.

"Rachel, fer the love of God, where've ye been?
 
We've been worried to death for you!
 
Are you harmed, girl?
 
Are you harmed?"

She let him help her to her feet.
 
"What in the name of God were you thinking, turning those killers lose on me like that, Marney Neal!
 
I should have you jailed!"

"Nay, 'twas for you I done it, child.
 
You disappeared and we feared the murderin' O'Roark had taken you to his lair!"

"What utter foolishness!"
 
She brushed the dirt and twigs from her clothes, and sent a furtive glance toward the j woods where Donovan must still by lying.
 
Perhaps dead already.

"Is it, Rachel?"
 
Marney eyed her suspiciously.
 
"I take the hounds through these woods every night since that bastard has been in residence.
 
Just to be sure he stays within his castle walls, and doesn't venture out to make victims of my neighbors."

"You're a superstitious fool.
 
Donovan O'Roark is harmless."

"Then what are you doin' here wandering these godforsaken lands?
 
And where have you been these past two nights, Rachel?"

She lifted her chin, met his eyes.
  
"Had I agreed to wed you as you wanted, I'd feel that to be your business, Marney Neal, but since I turned you down I've nothing to say."

"You've been at the castle.
 
As his lover?" he asked.

"As a guest, Marney.
 
No more than that.
 
Mary knows full well my interest in the legends associated with Donovan's ancestor.
 
He's offered to help me with my research."

"Indeed!"
 
Marney huffed, and eyed the castle as if it were something demonic.
 
"Well, you're found now.
 
Come with me, back to the village.
 
Mary will be relieved to see you there, and well."

She glanced again toward the woods, then quickly at Marney again.
 
"No.
 
I'll return to the castle tonight.
 
Tell Mary I'm fine and will contact her shortly."

He set his feet, hands on his hips.
 
"I'll not have it."

"You
have no say in it.
 
Now kindly take your hounds and go home, Marney, before I decide to inform the authorities about this deadly pack you set on me.
 
They nearly killed me.
 
No doubt the law would see them all shot just to preserve the safety of the citizens."

"You wouldn't—"

"I will, I swear on my mother's grave.
 
Unless you leave now, I will."

His eyes held hers only for a moment.
 
Then lowered.
 
"You've changed, Rachel Sullivan.
 
The States have done this to ya, no doubt.
 
Or perhaps 'twas that monster in the castle."

"I've grown up.
 
I won't have you or anyone running my life for me.
 
Not anymore."

"Fine.
 
Ye deserve whatever fate befalls ye.
 
But mark my words, Rachel, the man of that castle is no human being'.
 
He's a monster, and more dangerous to you than my dogs ever could be."

He turned to go, with his dogs leaping up to follow, tails wagging.
 
Harmless pets.
 
Rachel waited until they were out of sight.
 
Then she turned and ran back into the darkness of the trees, falling to her knees beside the dark shape on the ground.

"Donovan?"

He opened his eyes, his face pain-racked and pale in the night.
 
"You could have gone with him," he whispered.

"Aye, I could have."
 
She tore strips from her skirt and tied them tight round the wounds to stanch the bleeding.
 
She'd never seen so much bleeding.
 
"Can you stand?
 
Walk?"

He tried to get up, faltered, and Rachel gripped him quickly, helping him to his feet.
 
Then, pulling his arm around her shoulders, she propelled him forward, through the woods toward the castle.
 
The road would be easier, but she'd prefer they not be seen by prying eyes.
 
Especially Marney Neal's.

"There's a trail to the left," he managed, though he spoke through gritted teeth.
 
"A shortcut."

She took him that way, found the trail and followed it, but felt his eyes on her face.
 
"Why?" he asked her, breathless, still bleeding.

"Don't ask foolish questions, Donovan O'Roark."

He leaned on her heavily, and when he spoke, his words were slurred.
 
"Is it foolish to ask why?
 
You were free.
 
It's what you said you wanted."

"I wanted my freedom, yes," she said.
 
"But not at the cost of your life."
 
She shook her head.
 
"You jumped into the midst of those hounds as if you thought yourself invincible.
 
You could've been killed."
 
He said nothing, and she tugged him faster.
 
"Don't be telling me again how you can care for no one besides yourself, Donovan O'Roark, for 'tis a bald-faced lie an' you know it."

"No—"

"No?
 
No, you say?
 
Why, then, would you risk your own life to save mine?"

He shook his head.
 
She couldn't see his face, because he kept it so low.
 
Or perhaps he had no choice, too weak to hold it upright.

"You're no more selfish than you are a hermit," she said.
 
"You're selfless, and more lonely than you even realize.
 
An' I'll tolerate no more of your nonsensical lies.
 
I've seen through this mask you wear, Donovan, and you can't don it again."

"You're seeing what you want to see."

Her hand felt damp, and she looked down to see the blood dripping from it where she clung to him.
 
"Damnation, why do you bleed so?"

"It... it's part of what I am.
 
Bleeding to death is one of the few ways I can die."

"That and sunlight," she whispered, glancing at the sky between the trees.

"There's plenty of time before dawn, Rachel.
 
More's the pity.
 
It is only with the day sleep these wounds will heal.
 
Until then—"

"Until then I'll stay beside you and be sure you don't bleed to death," she told him.

*
   
*
   
*
   
*
   
*

It shocked me.
 
Astounded me, really.
 
But that was precisely what she did.

My unwilling captive vanished, the rebel was gone.
 
Her stubborn determination, her boundless energy, was directed toward helping me now, rather than escaping me.
 
She eased me onto the settee in the great hall, then ran back toward the door.
 
For the briefest of moments I thought she would run from me now that she'd seen me safely back to the castle.
 
I was utterly bewildered when, instead, she turned the lock.

"What—"

"For Marney Neal and those narrow-minded fools like him," she said, back at my side now.
 
"Those hounds were meant for you, not me, Donovan.
 
You must know it.
 
An' those men would have stood gladly by an' let them tear out your heart had it been you and not me on that road."
 
She knelt on the floor beside me, shoving her hands through her hair, her cheeks pink with exertion, or frustration, or anger.
 
"Lordy, how do you live like this?"

It wasn't a question she expected me to answer.
 
Already she knelt beside the settee tugging my shirt away to reveal the jagged tear in my side.
 
Tearing the skirt she wore, until little remained but shreds, she packed the wound, and wrapped strips around my waist, tying them so tightly I could scarcely breathe.
 
Her every touch brought on the most intense pain—and the most excruciating pleasure—I'd ever known.
 
I thrilled at her hands on me, no matter the reason.

"Why do you come back here at all, Donovan," she asked.
 
"There must be places in the world where you're safe."

"There are."
 
I looked around the hall, my gaze straying to the hearth where Dante and I used to sit and talk for hours on end, or read in companionable silence while the fire danced.
 
"But this place is... dear to me."

"Then move it."

I only frowned at her.

'"Tis done all the time.
 
Rich folk buying castles and having them moved stone by stone to the place of their choice."

I shook my head slowly.
 
"It wouldn't be Ireland."

"No."

"You came back, Rachel.
 
Despite the narrow-mindedness, despite the unwanted attentions..."

Her head came up sharply.
 
"An' what would you know of that?"

"I know.
 
Marney Neal would do well to know when to give up."
 
I smiled slightly, despite the burning pain in my side.
 
"Before you do him bodily harm."

"Aye, an' he's lucky I didn't tonight."
 
She eyed my skin, shaking her head at all the blood.
 
"You've watched me, haven't you?"

So she knew.
 
I'd sensed it before.
 
That she was aware somehow of my presence those nights when I'd drawn near to her, pulled as if by some irresistible force.

"There was a time, long ago," she whispered, dabbing now at the blood with a dry bit of crumpled fabric, 'when I nearly drowned in the river near my home.
 
Someone plucked me out, breathed into my lungs, and brought me back.
 
But even as I lay there, choking, he vanished."
 
She stopped wiping and met my eyes.
 
"'Twas you, wasn't it?"

I lowered my head.

"And later, after my folks passed on.
 
When I lay awake, frightened and alone, someone came to me in the darkness.
 
Just a dream, I thought when I was older.
 
But 'twas no dream, was it, Donovan?
 
'Twas you, the man who told me he was my guardian angel, that I'd be safe, always."

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