The Dark-Hunters (282 page)

Read The Dark-Hunters Online

Authors: Sherrilyn Kenyon

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Romance, #Paranormal, #Vampires, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Paranormal & Urban

BOOK: The Dark-Hunters
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“Should I leave the two of you alone?”

He looked up as if startled by her question, but made no comment about her sarcasm. “What does chocolate taste like?”

Her frown deepened at his unexpected question. “Open it and see for yourself.”

He sighed heavily before he set it aside. “It wouldn’t do me any good.”

“Why not?”

“I can’t taste anything.”

That surprised her. She couldn’t imagine going without her tastebuds. God knows, she certainly got a great deal of pleasure from eating Hershey’s and other things that would most likely harden every artery in her body if she were still human. “Absolutely nothing?”

He shook his head as he looked back at the Hershey’s bar. “I know Simi likes to eat chocolate. She talks about it all the time, but she’s never brought any home for me to see. She only eats barbecue and popcorn around me, which she says is very tasty and really salty.”

“Simi?”

If she didn’t know better, she’d swear he became instantly uncomfortable, as if he’d slipped up by mentioning the name. Without answering her, he picked up her coffee can and smelled it too. She could tell that was about as productive to him as eating the chocolate he couldn’t taste.

Which made her wonder about something really important. “So if you can’t taste food, what do you live on? Blood? Souls?”

He gave her a bored look as he pushed the can back into place. “I told you, I’m not a Daimon.”

“Yeah, but when I stabbed you, you poofed like a Daimon. You’re blond and you don’t eat food—”

“I’m not a Daimon,” he repeated.

“Uh-huh, ever heard the saying that if it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck—”

“It’s not a Daimon.”

Well, he was quick with that one. She had to give him credit there. “Then what do you eat?”

He gave her an intense, hot once-over. “Woman al dente.”

Danger’s jaw dropped at his unexpected vulgarity. She made a disgusted face at him. “That was uncalled for.”

“Then stop asking me questions.”

Charm was most definitely not his forte. But then he didn’t really need it. There was such a deep sadness in his eyes that it actually made her ache for him in spite of her common sense, which said she should stake him again … just for good measure.

She moved closer to him so that she could study the handsome lines of his face.

His features were perfect. Manly. The dark blond brows were arched perfectly over those eerie eyes of his. His cheekbones were high and dusted with a hint of stubble. It was the kind of stubble that made a woman want to stand up on her tiptoes and nibble it until her lips were raw from it.

It was then that she realized something …

Alexion, unlike her and the rest of the Dark-Hunters, didn’t have fangs.

How could that be?

But at least it marked the Daimon question firmly off the list. No full-blooded Daimon could live without feeding.

“What are you?” she asked. “Really?”

He looked at her as if the question bored him “We’ve already had this discussion.”

Yeah, but they’d never finished it. “You have asked me to trust you. Fine. I’m willing to give it a go. But if I do, then I deserve the same amount of respect in return.” She gave him a meaningful stare. “Trust me with the truth of you.”

She saw the debate flashing across his green eyes before he finally responded. “Let us just say that I am ‘other.’ I’m truly unique in this world. I’m not a human. I’m not a Dark-Hunter and I’m not a Daimon or Apollite. I’m just me. Plain and simple.”

She fought the urge to laugh at that last statement. There was nothing plain or simple about this man.

His gaze narrowed on her and a deep-seated hunger sparked in his eyes. He moved his hand toward her face.

Danger instinctively moved her head away.

His eyes continued to burn her with the intensity of his powerful stare. “Would you let me touch your cheek, Danger?”

She would have said no had it not been for the peculiar note in his voice. If she didn’t know better, she’d swear it was one born of needful longing. “Why do you want to?”

He dropped his hand and looked away as if trying to banish a nightmare. “Because I live in a place where there is no human to touch. I miss the warmth of a woman’s skin. The softness.” He closed his eyes and drew in a deep breath. “The heady, feminine scent that is unique to all women. You’ve no idea what it’s like to crave human contact to the point that it permeates your entire being with a need so strong that at times it makes you wonder if you’ve gone mad and that your whole life is nothing but a fucked-up delusion brought on by the insanity.”

Now that was a scary, intense thought. So much so that she had to force herself not to back away from a man who made Norman Bates seem normal. All he needed was Mother in the rocker.

Good thing she wasn’t blond and preferred a bath to a shower …

You’re rambling, Danger.

You think? I got a lunatic in my house sent to me by Ash. Thank you, Ash. Any other loons you want to offload on me? And I thought my aunt Morganette was insane. At least she only thought her cat was Uncle Etienne who she kept dressed in breeches and knee coat. That was almost cute, but this …

Oh, yeah, send me the straitjacket, Ash. You owe it to me.

Yet even in the midst of her mental rant, something he’d said struck her and calmed her down a degree. “What do you mean that you live someplace where there aren’t any humans?”

His eyes were an almost normal shade of hazel. “In a realm far away from here.”

“Is that like in
Star Wars?
A long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away? Want to tell me where
your
Tatooine is located? Is it anywhere in this universe? Near Toledo maybe? The one in Ohio or Spain? I’m not picky. Can I MapQuest it?”

Alexion laughed bitterly. “You know the biggest difference between men and women? Whenever I was sent to a male Dark-Hunter, he never asked me any questions. I simply told him that I’d been sent by Acheron and he either accepted it or tried to kill me. If he accepted it, then he went about his life as if I weren’t there, but you … you want to know every little detail of my life and being.”

She gave him a miffed stare. “Gee, you think? Here’s an interesting tidbit about me. I don’t let strangers into my house. Ever. So if you expect to sleep here, then you owe me some answers about who and what you are. Now let’s get back to this realm thing where you live. What is it?”

Honestly, she didn’t expect an explanation, but to her amazement, he gave her one after a brief pause. “It’s like heaven or hell. In a weird way, it’s a combination of both. It exists in a place that most humans would call another dimension. Sort of.” She could tell he was struggling to explain so that it would make sense to her. “Let’s just say that there is no MapQuest for it. It leaves Hammond completely stumped.”

Well, at least that was a beginning. And it did go a long way in almost soothing her.
Yeah, right. You still don’t know anything about him.
No, but at least he’d tried to explain it to her. That was a big leap forward for Mr. Spooky.

He lifted his hand toward her cheek again and froze before he touched her. “May I?”

You really ought to run out of this room and lock your door, Danger. That’s what a smart woman would do.
The urge to comply with that was strong, but she didn’t listen. It had never been in her nature to run from anything.

Taking a deep breath, she took his hand into hers and pressed it to her face. His touch was cold. Icy. There was absolutely no warmth whatsoever to his skin.

But the look on his face was one of pure pleasure and it made her stomach flutter. No one had ever taken such joy from touching her. At least not this platonically.

“You are beautiful,” he said in a breathless tone. His eyes filled with wonder and lust, he cupped her cheek in his palm as he searched her gaze with his. “How long has it been since you last made love to someone?”

She was stunned by his question. “I beg your pardon?”

A wicked light danced in his eyes. “I know, none of my damn business.” His face turned somber, then he let his hand fall away. “But I, too, have moments of profound curiosity.”

“Yeah well, that particular curiosity is likely to get you cold-cocked.”

His features softened as if the thought amused him. “I suppose even painful contact with that area is better than none at all.”

Her jaw dropped in disbelief. “What?”

He gave her a wicked grin to let her know that he was teasing her again. “You have to forgive me if my social skills are a bit rusty. I don’t interact with others much.”

“No?”

“No.”

She considered all of his disclosures. He didn’t seem like the kind of guy who confided in others easily and that made her wonder how she got to be so lucky. “So you don’t eat. You don’t interact. What do you do?”

Once again, he didn’t answer—an action that reminded her much of Acheron and his vagueness whenever someone asked him a personal question.

Instead, Alexion walked away from her.

Danger wasn’t willing to let this go. She followed him down the hallway.

Halfway down, he stopped. He had his eyes closed and his head tilted as if he were listening to something. It was a very Ash-like pose.

“Is something wrong?” she asked.

“Do you hear that?”

She listened for a few seconds, but all she could hear was her own heart beating. “Hear what?”

He didn’t respond. “Someone’s watching us.”

Danger went cold with dread as she turned around slowly, searching every corner of her house with her gaze. “Who? Where?”

“I don’t know. But I can feel it.”

He could feel it. Well, that just explained it all, didn’t it?

Danger let out a tired breath. “Maybe you’re just overworked.”

“Acheron?” he called out loud.

Danger frowned, half expecting Acheron to make one of his surprising appearances in her house.

He didn’t.

It was just the two of them, standing there in her hallway, looking for ghosts in the shadows. Oh yeah, this was so comforting. Like a porcupine in a condom factory. She fully expected something to jump out of the walls at them.

Alexion swore under his breath before he walked away from her, into her living room. He stood in the center and looked around.

“Artemis,” he growled, “I summon you to human form.”

Part of her waited expectantly to see if Artemis would really show. After a few minutes and no miraculous goddess appearance, she realized he was full of crap. “Artemis can’t come here. Remember? I have no soul and the gods won’t come near us because of that.”

“No,” he said from between clenched teeth. “The Greek gods can be around you if they want to, they just don’t because most of them are assholes. As for Artemis, she won’t come because she’s getting back at me by not responding.”

“Back at you for what?”

“Oh, there’s a multitude of reasons for why she hates me.” He glowered up at the ceiling. “I swear, Artemis, this isn’t the way to endear yourself to me.” He shook his head in disgust. “Simi’s right, you really are a heifer-goddess.”

“Who is Simi?” she asked again.

He finally looked at her. “Like me, she’s ‘other.’”

“Ahh, that explains so much. I truly appreciate your trusting me with the honest truth. It just warms me through and through.”

A tic started in his jaw as he moved toward the stairs. “Whether you want to believe it or not, there’s someone in this house with us.”

He was right, she didn’t want to believe it. In fact, she knew better. “No there isn’t. Believe me, Alcatraz had less security than this house.”

“And they had how many people escape?”

He was seriously starting to irritate her.

Danger followed him up the stairs as apprehension ran rampant through her system. Did he really sense something that she couldn’t? It wasn’t likely that someone could be in here, but then most people would say that her dead existence in the world of the living wasn’t possible either. Maybe he did know something she didn’t.

He crept down her hallway like a large panther on the prowl. Room by room, he went in and searched. By the time they reached the last bedroom she was tired of it.

“I told you, no one is here.”

He cocked his head. “Simi?” he called out. “If that’s you, stop playing with me and go buy something.”

Danger rubbed her temples. “Do you always talk to your imaginary friends?”

“Simi’s not an imaginary friend.”

“Oh, then she must be your invisible friend. Would Ms. Simi like her own room while you stay here?”

She could tell by the look on his face that she was working him into apoplexy.

“I don’t understand why you can’t accept that there are things that exist beyond your knowledge and understanding. To humans the idea of a Dark-Hunter is preposterous. They have no idea that your world, or that of the Daimons, exists. The world that I know is just as real as this one and it is even more carefully guarded—just because you’ve never heard of it doesn’t mean I’m making it up. You’ve never met the Squires’ Ruling Council either, but you know they’re all alive and well.”

He did have a point. Still. “Yeah, and children the world over believe in Santa Claus and the tooth fairy, which are all figments of their imagination.”

Alexion ignored her. He clamped his temper down as he tried to reach out with his senses. There was a hum and an airy sensation that came whenever someone used a sfora to spy on events. He’d learned that aeons ago, once Simi discovered she could use a sfora to watch him while she was home in Katoteros.

But if it wasn’t Simi …

That would leave someone from the other side. To his knowledge, Apollymi didn’t need a sfora. She used a pool in her garden to spy on others. Which begged the question of who else would be interested in his presence here?

Why were they watching him?

Danger sighed. “Look, I don’t want to stand here and watch you commune with ‘other.’ It’s been a long night, my brain is fried and my emotions shot. You can stay here and do your hocus-pocus cat prowl, looking for your invisible friends all you want. I’m going to head off to my media room and veg.”

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