Lara Adrian's Midnight Breed 8-Book Bundle (106 page)

BOOK: Lara Adrian's Midnight Breed 8-Book Bundle
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She looked at him—at his scarred, yet ruggedly attractive face, the powerful body contained within his expensive new clothes, and she wanted to know more. She wanted to know his name and all the rest of his secrets, which she was certain had to be plentiful. He was a mystery she wanted to solve, and she had to admit that interest had very little to do with the cave, her story, or even her own sense of self-preservation.

“I’ve gone through your computer files and e-mail,” he told her, ignoring her question like she fully expected him to do. “I know you’ve sent the cave photos to several individuals, including your employer.” He calmly rattled off the full names of her boss, Janet, Marie, Nancy, and her mom. “I’m sure we could find them with little effort, but this will go much faster if you give me their current addresses and places of employment.”

“Forget it.” Dylan bristled at the idea of her privacy being so casually invaded. Inappropriately intrigued by him or not, she was not about to unleash this man or his shady cohorts on anyone she knew. “If you have a problem with me, fine. But don’t think I’m going to drag anyone else into this.”

His face was grimly set, unflinching. “You already have.”

Dylan’s heart sank at the flat statement that seemed so calm, yet so ripe with threat. When she said nothing else, he got up out of the dainty chair. God, he was huge, every inch of him swathed in lean, powerful muscle.

“Now that you’re awake,” he said, “I’ll see that you have something to eat.”

“And give you the opportunity to drug my food? No thanks, I’d rather fast.”

He exhaled a low chuckle. “I’ll bring you some food. Whether or not you choose to eat it will be up to you.”

Dylan hated that her stomach seemed to churn eagerly at the thought of eating. She didn’t want to accept anything from this man or his associates, even if it meant starving to death in the process. But she was beyond hungry and she knew that even if he brought her a bowl of lumpy, ice-cold gruel she’d gratefully gobble it down.

“Don’t get any ideas about leaving this room,” he added. “The door will be locked from outside, and I’ll know the instant you try anything. I think you know that you wouldn’t get far before I caught you.”

She did know that, in a place inside her that was all raw, animal instinct. This man, whoever he was, now held her completely at his mercy. Dylan didn’t like it, but she was smart enough to know that whatever she was dealing with here was deadly serious. Like the woman in her, the journalist couldn’t deny a certain fascination too, a need to know more—not only about what was truly going on, but also about the man himself.

About Rio.

“What, um…what happened to you…to your face?”

He threw a scowl at her, one that said of all her many questions, this one angered him the most. She didn’t miss the way he turned his head slightly to the left, an almost unconscious move that helped to hide the worst of the damage. But Dylan had already seen the burn scars and pebbled skin. From the look of them, she guessed that they had to be combat wounds. Very grave, frontline combat wounds.

“I’m sorry,” she said, although whether she meant she was sorry for asking or sorry for what he went through, she wasn’t totally certain.

He reached up with his left hand and raked it through the thick hair at his temple, like he didn’t care if she stared now. But it was too late for him to call back his initial self-conscious reflex, and no matter how darkly he glared at her, Dylan knew he was bothered by his condition.

And as he moved, she caught a glimpse of an intricate pattern of tattoos on his forearm. They peeked out on both arms from under the rolled sleeves of his shirt, quasi–tribal markings done in a unique, variegated color blend of pale scarlet and gold. On first glance, she thought maybe they were some kind of membership markings, like the kinds American gangs used to show their allegiance.

No, not like that,
she decided the longer she stared at them.
Not like that at all.

The markings on Rio’s arms were very much like the symbols and strange writings that were on the walls and crypt inside that cave.

He brought his hand down and the flash of warning in his eye all but dared her to question him about them.

“Tell me what they mean,” she said, looking up to meet his hard gaze. “The tattoos. Why do you have the same kind of symbols on your body that were in that mountain cave?”

He didn’t answer. In silence, he stood there unmoving, looking even more dangerous in his civilized, tailored clothing than he had in the tattered rags he’d been wearing before. She knew he was immense, tall and broad and covered in lean, hard muscle, but he looked even more so as she approached him, determined to have this answer.

“What do the markings mean, Rio?” She took hold of his arm. “Tell me.”

He stared down at her fingers wrapped around him. “It doesn’t concern you.”

“Like hell it doesn’t!” she replied, her voice rising. “Why would you have the same kind of markings on your body that are in that cave—on that crypt?”

“You are mistaken. You don’t know what you saw. Then or now.”

It wasn’t an argument so much as a complete refusal to take the conversation any further. And that really pissed Dylan off.

“I’m mistaken, am I?” She grabbed her long, loose hair and lifted it around to one side of her neck. “Look at this and tell me I don’t know what I saw.”

She bent her head, putting the exposed base of her neck—the patch of skin that bore her unusual birthmark—in plain view to him.

The silence seemed endless.

Then, finally, a hissed curse.

“What does it mean?” she asked him, lifting her head and letting her hair fall back in place.

Rio didn’t answer her. He backed up as if he didn’t want to be near her for another second.

“Tell me, Rio. Please…what does all of this mean?”

He was quiet for a long moment, his dark brows low over his eyes as he stared at her.

“You will know soon enough,” he said softly as he went to the door and stepped outside.

He closed her in, then turned the lock, leaving her in there alone and confused, and very certain that the path her life had been taking had just irrevocably changed course.

CHAPTER
Nine

A
Breedmate.

Madre de Dios,
but he hadn’t been expecting that. The small crimson birthmark on the nape of Dylan Alexander’s slender neck changed everything. The teardrop-and-crescent-moon skin marking she bore wasn’t something that occurred very often in nature, and its meaning was indisputable.

Dylan Alexander was a Breedmate.

She was a human female, but with the specific, extremely unusual blood properties and DNA that made her cellular physiology compatible with that of the Breed. Females like her were rare, and once women like Dylan were known to Rio’s kind, they were cherished and protected as closely as blood kin.

They had to be. Without Breedmates to carry the seed of future vampire generations, Rio’s kind would cease to exist. It was the curse of the Breed that all offspring of its hybrid race were born male—a genetic anomaly that occurred when the cells of the vampiric otherworlders mixed with those of the special human females that bore their young.

Women like Dylan Alexander were to be revered, not stalked like common prey and abducted off the street in fear for their lives. They were to be treated with great respect, not locked up like prisoners and held against their will, no matter how elegant the cage.

“Cristo en cielo,”
Rio muttered aloud as he stormed down the Darkhaven estate’s gleaming mahogany staircase to the foyer below.
“Un qué desastre.”

Yes, this truly was a disaster. He himself was a disaster—one that worsened by the moment. His skin was tight with hunger, and he didn’t have to check the
dermaglyphs
on his forearms to know that they were probably no longer their normal pale henna hue, but reddish-gold, reflecting his mounting need to feed. A nagging throb was kicking up in his temples, portent of the blackout he’d be dealing with if he didn’t lie down soon or get some nourishment to stave it off.

But sleep was out of the question and so was hunting for a blood Host. He needed to check in with the Order and fill them in on the added complication to a situation that had been fucked-up royal to begin with, all thanks to him.

He took the stairs a couple at a time, wishing like hell he could just continue walking right out the front door of the Darkhaven and into broad, deadly daylight. But he’d made this mess, and he’d be damned if he was going to leave it for anyone else to clean up.

As he hit the marble of the foyer below, Andreas Reichen was just opening the double doors from within one of the many rooms situated on the first floor. He wasn’t alone. An anxious-looking Darkhaven male with a mop of strawberry blond hair was with him, both of the vampires coming out of the dark-paneled study in the midst of a hushed conversation. Reichen looked up at once and met Rio’s eyes. He murmured something reassuring to his civilian companion as he clapped him gently on the shoulder. The younger male nodded, then politely got the hell out of the area with only the most furtive glance at the scarred warrior standing nearby.

“My nephew, bringing me some unpleasant news from one of the region’s other Darkhavens,” Reichen explained once they were alone in the foyer. “It seems there was an incident a couple of nights ago. A rather high-profile individual was found missing his head. Unfortunately for him and his family, the killing occurred at a blood club.”

Rio grunted, thoroughly unmoved. Blood clubs had been outlawed as barbaric underground sport decades ago, and most of the vampire population agreed with the ruling. But there were some within the race who still got off on the secret, invitation-only gatherings where human victims could be chased down in a contained area, raped, fed upon, and murdered like wild game. Helpless wild game, since not even the strongest
Homo sapiens,
male or female, was any match for a pack of bloodthirsty vampires.

The blood club killing was obviously a Breed-on-Breed altercation.

“Did they get the vampire who did it?”

“No. They’re still investigating the murder.” Reichen cleared his throat and went on. “Since the deceased was an elder—Gen One, in fact—and a member of the Enforcement Agency, there is understandable concern that the whole thing is set to explode into scandal. It’s a very sensitive situation.”

Rio gave a wry snort. “No doubt.”

Well, at least he wasn’t the only one among the Breed with piss-poor judgment lately. Even the fully sane, cultured members of the vampire nation had their bad days. Not that it made Rio regret his own fleet of mistakes any less.

“I need to touch base with Boston,” he told Reichen, running his palm over his brow to wipe away the sheen of cold sweat that was beginning to gather there. A wave of nausea tried to rise up on him but he held it back with sheer willpower. Damn. He had to hold his shit together at least until sundown, when he could run out for a while and feed.

If the coming blackout didn’t drop him before he got the chance.

“Is anything wrong?” Reichen asked him, concern furrowing his brow.

“I’m fine,” Rio muttered.

The other vampire didn’t look the least bit convinced, even if he was too well-bred to say so. His dark gaze flicked down to Rio’s arms, where beneath the rolled-back sleeves of his shirt, his
glyphs
were infusing with deeper, more intense color. He could claim from here to Sunday that he was right as rain, but those skin markings would give him away every time. The damn things were emotional barometers that visually broadcasted a Breed vampire’s state of mind—from hunger to satiation, rage to joy, lust, contentment, and everything in between.

At the moment, Rio’s
dermaglyphs
had saturated in hues of deep red, purple, and black—plain evidence that he was hurting and hungry.

“I need a phone with a secure line,” he told Reichen.

“Now. If you could, please.”

“Of course. Come, you may use my office.”

Reichen gestured for Rio to follow him back into the room where he’d been meeting with his nephew. The study was large and richly appointed, full of Old World elegance like the rest of the Darkhaven estate. Reichen went around a claw-footed monstrosity of a desk and opened a small hidden panel built into the polished mahogany surface.

He pushed a button on an electronic keypad, which made two of the tall bookcases across the room begin to separate, revealing a large, flat panel screen mounted behind them.

“Video teleconferencing, available if you wish,” he said, as Rio came farther into the room. “Dial an eight to reach our operator for a secure outside line. And take as long as you like in here. You’ll have complete privacy.”

Rio nodded his thanks.

“Do you need anything else right now?” his generous host asked. “Or anything for our, ah, guest upstairs?”

“Yeah,” Rio said. “Actually, I told her I’d bring her something to eat.”

Reichen smiled. “Then I’ll go have something special prepared for her.”

“Thank you,” Rio said. Then, “Hey, Reichen. There’s something you probably should know. That female up there…she’s a Breedmate. I didn’t realize it until just a few minutes ago, but she’s got the mark. It’s on the back of her neck.”

“Ah.” The German vampire considered that for a moment. “And does she know what that makes her? What that makes the rest of us?”

“No. Not yet.” Rio picked up the cordless phone on Reichen’s desk and hit the number eight on the keypad. Then he started dialing the private line that would route him to the Order’s compound. “She doesn’t know anything about any of that. But I have a feeling I’m going to be spelling it all out for her real soon.”

“Then perhaps I’d better have a cocktail prepared for the lady as well. A strong one.” Reichen strode to the open double doors of the study. “I will let you know when her meal is ready. If there is anything you need, just ask and it is yours.”

“Thanks.”

When the heavy wood doors clicked shut, Rio turned his full attention to the ringing phone line on the other end of his call. The compound’s computerized answering intercepted and he punched in the code for the tech lab.

Gideon picked up without hesitation. “Talk to me, buddy.”

“I’m at Reichen’s,” Rio said, unnecessary information since the compound’s system had certainly already confirmed the incoming phone number. But Rio’s head was pounding too hard for him to do a lot of extraneous processing. He needed to convey his relevant intel while he was still making sense. “The trip was uneventful, and I’m here with the woman at Reichen’s Darkhaven.”

“You got her contained somewhere?”

“Yeah,” Rio replied. “She’s cooling her heels in a guest room upstairs.”

“Good. Nice work, man.”

The unwarranted praise made him clamp his teeth together hard. And the combination of his churning hunger and the spin of his head made him suck in a ragged breath of air. He let it back out on a low curse.

“You all right, Rio?”

“Yeah.”

“Yeah, my ass,” Gideon said. Not only was the vampire a genius when it came to technology, but he also had the uncanny ability to smell a load of horseshit when it was being shoveled at him. Even when it was being shoveled at him from another continent away. “What’s going on with you? You don’t sound good at all, amigo.”

Rio rubbed his drumming temple. “Don’t worry about me. We’ve got a bigger problem over here. Turns out the female reporter is a Breedmate, Gideon.”

“Ah, fuck. Are you serious?”

“I saw her birthmark with my own eyes,” Rio replied.

Gideon murmured something urgent yet indiscernible to someone else apparently in the lab with him. The answering deep growl of a cool Gen One voice could belong to none other than Lucan, the Order’s founder and leader.

Great,
Rio thought. Although it wasn’t as if he was planning to keep the news from the highest-ranking warrior of the group, so he might as well clue him in on all the facts now.

“Lucan’s here,” Gideon informed him, in case he missed that fact. “You alone over there, Rio?”

“Yep. Sitting all by my lonesome in Reichen’s study.”

“All right. Hang on. I’m gonna put you on video telecom.”

Rio’s mouth twisted grimly. “I thought you might.”

He glanced up as the large flat-panel blinked on across from him. Like a window opened on a next-door room, the screen filled with a real-time image of Gideon and Lucan seated in the Boston compound’s tech lab. Gideon’s eyes were intense as he gazed over the rims of his pale blue shades, his cropped blond hair a spiky, mad-scientist mess, as usual.

Under Lucan’s furrowed black brows, his gaze was also serious, his light gray eyes narrowed as he leaned back in one of the big leather chairs that circled the Order’s conference table.

“The female is safe here at the Darkhaven, and she has not been harmed in any way,” Rio began without preamble. “Her name is Dylan Alexander, and from what I’ve gathered off her computer files she lives and works in New York City. I’m guessing she is in her late twenties, but there’s a chance she could be near thirty—”

“Rio.” Lucan leaned forward, peering intently at the video screen where Rio’s image was being projected back home. “We’ll get to her in a minute. What’s going on with you, man? You’ve been out of contact since February, and no offense, but you look like hell.”

Rio shook his head, raked a hand through his sweat-dampened hair. “I’m good. Just want to take care of this problem and be done with it, you know?”

He wasn’t sure if he was talking about Dylan Alexander and her photos, or the other, longer-term problems he’d been dealing with since the warehouse explosion that might have killed him. Should have killed him, damn it.

“Everything’s cool with me, Lucan.”

The vampire’s expression held steady, measuring on the other end of the video feed. “I don’t appreciate being lied to, my friend. I need to know if the Order can still count on you. Are you still with us?”

“The Order is all I have, Lucan. You know that.”

It was the truth, and it seemed to satisfy the shrewd Gen One. For now.

“So, the reporter you’re holding over there is a Breedmate.” Lucan sighed, rubbing his palm over his strong square jaw. “You’re going to have to bring her in, Rio. To Boston. You need to explain a few things to her beforehand, about the Breed and about her link to us, and then you need to bring her in. Gideon will handle the transportation.”

The other warrior was already typing away furiously at his keyboard, making it happen. “I can have our private jet waiting to pick you up at Tegel Airport tomorrow night.”

Rio acknowledged the plans with a firm nod, but there were still a few loose ends to consider. “She was booked on a flight out of Prague to New York today. She has family and friends who’ll be expecting her home.”

“You’ve got access to her e-mail,” Gideon put in.

“Send a group message using her account, explaining that she’s been delayed for a few days and will be in contact as soon as possible.”

“What about the pictures she took of the cave?” Rio asked.

Lucan answered that one. “Gideon tells me you have the camera and her computer. She needs to understand that everyone who has copies of those pictures is a risk to us—one we can’t afford to let slide. So, she’ll have to help us by killing her story and destroying every copy of every photograph she’s let loose.”

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