Where Demons Fear to Tread (9 page)

Read Where Demons Fear to Tread Online

Authors: Stephanie Chong

BOOK: Where Demons Fear to Tread
5.16Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

She wore that adorable little scowl of hers. The heat of their kisses still stained her cheeks, and her blush intensified with her rising indignation. Angry, she was magnificent. “Not in a million years,” she ground out. “Anyway, aren’t you in the middle of filming right now, Nick?”

“I’m a star,” he said, shooting her an irritated look. “If I want to take a week off, I can.”

“This seems like a really bad decision. I don’t think you should go anywhere with this man. I certainly won’t,” Serena said.

“It’s your choice,” Julian told her. “It’s a pity Nick here will have to get along without his yoga lessons for the next week.” Then he dropped the bomb. “Maybe Andrew would like to come with me, too. It might give us an opportunity to bond. And then there’s Meredith…” He let his voice trail off for effect.

Serena gasped, her lovely blue eyes going enormously round. She was just as delectable when she was shocked as when she was angry. “You wouldn’t.”

“Why not? The more the merrier. Perhaps you might reconsider and join us, as well, my dear?” he said.

He summoned a pair of Gatekeepers, who brought the roommate and the brother from the corner of the garden, where they’d been detained on a thin excuse that had kept Andrew busy photographing shots of random guests. Julian caught the look of helplessness that passed between the two angels. His Gatekeepers had done their job and blocked Meredith’s intended escape.

Julian strode up and gave the brother a hearty slap on the back. “Andrew, my good man. How have you been enjoying your evening?”

Andrew looked stone-cold sober, which was a disappointment. The Gatekeepers had instructions to ply him with alcohol and drugs, but Meredith must’ve succeeded in preventing that much.
Trust an angel to interfere with a perfectly good binge,
Julian thought.

“Fine, thanks, Julian,” Andrew said. “I think I’ve got enough images for your publicity shots.”

“Thanks so much for your help, Andrew. Your presence here has been very much appreciated. Listen, I have a proposition for you.”

Julian felt a touch on his arm. Serena whispered, “Wait.”

“What’s that, my angel?” he said casually. He knew what was coming, but he tried to contain his smugness.

“I need to speak with you alone,” she said, eyes downcast.

“Again, my dear? Andrew, Meredith, would you excuse us for a moment?” he asked, taking her by the hand and pulling her into a far corner. The roommate glared as Julian led Serena away. But the music from the orchestra and the mounting noise of the guests was enough to drown out their conversation from the redhead’s prying ears.

Serena turned to him. “Let Andrew leave.”

“Now, why would I do that? Andrew can make his own choices. It would be a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for him to come to Vegas with me,” Julian said.

“Let me substitute myself for Andrew. If you let him go, I’ll come to Vegas with you.”

Julian’s heart soared, but he allowed no sign of it on his face.

“But I need to know I’ll be safe with you,” she demanded.

“I promise it. I swear it on my mother’s grave,” he said.

“For all I know, you might have knifed your own mother in the back. I want your promise in writing.”

That hurt, more than she could know. The gentle touch of his mother’s hand on his hair floated into his mind, the ghost of a memory so sweet it made him miss her, dead these long centuries. He shook the feeling away, forced himself to say lightly, “I loved my mother dearly, and of course I would never have harmed her.”

She folded her arms across her chest. “Write it down or I’m not coming.”

“Fine.” He sighed. He took a pen from the inside of his suit pocket and scribbled on a napkin from one of the cocktail trays:
I, Julian Ascher, promise not to harm an angelic hair on the head of Miss Serena St. Clair during the week she has agreed to spend with me in Las Vegas
. He signed it with a flourish.

She scanned the napkin and blinked, hesitating for a moment. “I want you to promise to leave me, my family and my friends alone afterward.”

“If you so desire, consider it done,” he said, scribbling in the extra phrase to placate her. After seven days with him, Serena’s prudish resolve would be broken, cast to the wayside. And he would have no further use for her family and friends, anyway.

“And separate rooms,” she insisted.

He bent again to write, resisting the temptation to roll his eyes. If he wanted to take her, he would have her, separate bedrooms or not. Her fear of him bordered on the insulting. He’d never forced a woman. He’d never had to, and he wouldn’t have to force
her,
either. She wanted him—he’d known that when he held her body against his and felt her submit. No, when Serena came to him, she would come willingly. More than willingly. He would make her crave his touch. Yes, he would have her writhing under him, calling out his name and crying for more. At the end of seven days, she would not want to leave him.

“Julian?” Her voice broke him out of his reverie. “Julian, did you hear a word I just said?” She held out the paper, glaring at him with that sweet little scowl.

“Yes, of course,” he said absently. He hadn’t heard her. He was too busy imagining her writhing bare-breasted beneath him.

“I want you to play fair,” she said, scolding him like an angry wife and snapping him back to reality. “No lying, no cheating, no trickery while we’re together.”

He grinned. “I may be a demon, Serena, but I’m an honorable one. My word is as good as gold.” And as malleable as gold, too.

Oh, she was so naive.
An honorable demon.
Did such a being exist? Certainly, every demon had to observe the rules between angels and demons. Promises made between them must be honored, or there were dire consequences. Yes, he knew that. But even if there was such a creature as an honorable demon, he might not break the rules, but he would do his damnedest to bend them. And he had no plans to change his nature overnight.
No,
he thought,
that would be like asking a wolf not to hunt.
But since he knew she wouldn’t appreciate that sentiment, he refrained from sharing it with her.

Instead, he headed back to where Andrew and Meredith stood. He clapped Andrew heavily on the shoulder, and said, “Here’s what I wanted to propose. You’ve done such a wonderful job that I’m going to double your rate. Send me the proofs and I’ll be in touch shortly. Can’t wait to see those photos. I’m off to Las Vegas for a week with my lady friend.”

Meredith’s eyes went large and round. “But…but you can’t!”

“It’s okay, Meredith. We’ll talk about it later,” Serena said. She started toward the doorway, gesturing for her roommate and her brother to follow her.

Julian caught her arm. “Where do you think you’re going? You and I are leaving now.”

She stiffened, looking toward Andrew and Meredith. “I’m going home to pack.”

“Don’t worry about packing,” he said. “Everything you need will be provided.” He gestured to one of the staff, instructing the man to have a car brought around.

In the doorway, Meredith hesitated, waiting for Serena.

“Go,” Julian said to them. “She’s coming with me.”

Serena stood by his side, the napkin with his scribbled promise dangling from her fingers. Her shoulders hunched forward and the corners of her mouth sagged as she nodded her assent. Meredith sent her a last worried look before ushering Andrew away. For a second, Serena looked so dejected that Julian felt a strange pang in his chest. It felt suspiciously like guilt. He ignored it, knowing it would eventually dissipate, as guilt always did.

She turned to him. “I need to make a couple of phone calls.”

“That wasn’t part of the deal.”

She looked at him through narrowed eyes, with a particularly unangelic expression that he might even have described as murderous. “You get a phone call even when you’re sent to prison.”

The sensation in his chest intensified. He ignored it. “Forget it.”

She clutched her cell phone, glaring at him. It was all so pathetic. But he refused to feel sympathy for her. She was the one who’d started it all by invading
his
territory last Saturday night, trying to mess around with
his
business. She was the one who’d embedded herself into his consciousness like an unscratched itch. She was the one who needed to learn to accept the consequences of her choices.

Julian reached over and took her cell phone, stuffed it in his pocket. A tear slipped out of the corner of her eye. She raised her hand to swipe at it, but he caught it before she did and blotted the tear with the pad of his thumb.

“Come now. It’s only a week. Am I really that bad?” he coaxed.

She didn’t speak, but he suspected he already knew her answer.

She was conspicuously silent as he led her back through the house, toward the front entrance. The party was just reaching its zenith, having mushroomed far beyond the original two hundred invited guests. People spilled out of every room, stumbling and laughing in the hallways. As Julian and Serena passed through the foyer, the Nakara caught sight of him. Apparently the creature had tired of remaining in its frozen position. As it saw him, it launched itself from its pedestal as though in protest for having been forced to endure hours of stillness. In a few flaps of its crystalline wings, it began soaring beneath the vaulted ceiling.

The foyer erupted into chaos. Guests began to stampede for the door, screaming and pushing each other down to get to the exit. Some ducked and tried to protect themselves from the Nakara’s icy claws. As it flew, it let out a shriek that was like the sound of nails scraping down a chalkboard, but magnified through a loudspeaker. Julian shook his head at the flying monstrosity, directing it to return to its place. With a final shriek, it complied, winging back to the pedestal and settling grudgingly into place once again.

Julian bellowed over the noise of the panicking crowd, “No need for concern, ladies and gentlemen! It’s merely a magic trick—an illusion for your entertainment!”

When they saw the beast had returned to its pedestal and resumed its petrified stance, the guests stopped. After a dazed pause, some began clapping. The applause escalated, and people clustered around the ice sculpture, speculating about how the trick had been done.

Serena said nothing. She glared at Julian through narrowed eyes, her lips pressed into a line.

“Your lips don’t have their usual appeal when you flatten your mouth like that,” he said, smirking down at her.

“Someone could have been seriously hurt,” she said tersely.

“If there was any potential harm, it was from the humans themselves and not from the Nakara,” he said. “Most of them would gladly have crushed each other to escape the danger.”

Stepping through the crowd, he led her out the front entrance and ushered her into the passenger seat of his waiting Maserati. For all he cared at this moment, the damned ice demon could swallow the entire houseful of screaming humans. He wrapped his hands around the cool black leather of the steering wheel, and accelerated down the driveway.

He couldn’t remember a moment in years that he’d felt this gratified. Let the staff deal with the aftermath of the party. He was taking Serena to Vegas.

Chapter Six

S
erena awoke alone the next morning.

Thank heaven for small miracles, but at least there was that.

Only a thin crack of sunlight streamed in through a gap between the heavy velvet curtains. Otherwise, it was dark in the lavish bedroom where she lay, in a bed fit for royalty, on the softest sheets she’d ever felt. Overhead, filmy white fabric hung from a massive canopy.

Her mind scrambled for details of where she was, and how she’d gotten here.

And it all came flooding back. The party. The kiss in the library. The three-hour drive to Vegas at ninety miles an hour. The silence between them as Julian drove. Her fear as she’d clung to the door handle despite the smoothness with which Julian handled the break-neck speed. The towering hotel, its name emblazoned in ornate letters:
The Lussuria.
The grand lobby with its art-deco embellishments, its elegant color scheme of gold and muted blue.

Julian had settled her in this sumptuous hotel room and left her alone for the rest of the night. Relieved, she had bolted the door from the inside, removed her dress and promptly fallen asleep here on this haven of a bed. Into as deep a slumber as she could ever recall.

Now, lying here in this ethereally beautiful place, the horrifying realization of what she’d done began to sink in.
I’ve made a deal with a demon.

A door swung open.

Not the front door she’d come in through last night, but a door she had thought was a closet. Clearly, it was
not
a closet.

And Julian had the key.

He stood in the doorway, clad in a white bathrobe, the color a stunning contrast again his tanned skin. “Good morning, sunshine,” he said.

She flung the sheet over her half-nude body, but not quite fast enough.

His gaze slid over her, something dangerous stirring in those blue-green depths. “A very good morning, indeed,” he mused.

While she scrambled to cover herself, he sat down on the edge of the bed, so close that she inhaled the scent of healthy male and a trace of cologne. He clasped his hands behind his head and reclined on the pillows. She struggled to move away from him, but it wasn’t easy. The king-size sheet refused to cooperate as she yanked hard to free it from the foot of the mattress where it was carefully tucked.

“You might try the robe,” he said. He gestured to the white terrycloth bathrobe that lay folded on a divan at the foot of the bed.

She slid awkwardly under the sheet to reach the robe and pull it on. Settled herself on the bottom corner of the bed, as far away from him as possible. “This was not part of our deal,” she snapped. “We’re supposed to have separate bedrooms.”

He shrugged, toying with the belt of his own robe as he continued to watch her. “We do. But I never said I would stay out. Your room happens to adjoin my suite. I slept in my room last night, of course. I
am
an honorable demon.”

She narrowed her eyes at him, wishing he wasn’t quite so handsome. Or quite so close. Cinching the robe shut, she said, “You never mentioned an adjoining door.”

“I’m still a demon, after all,” he shrugged. “What did you expect?”

Lounging on the white sheets, he was magnificent. Six feet of tanned, athletic masculinity, displayed for her benefit. Without even looking, she could feel his half smile beckoning her. To reach out and touch him, to slip her hand beneath that soft robe. The belt was loosely tied, as easy to undo as the sash on her dress last night…. She turned her attention toward the windows instead, just for somewhere else to look. Swallowing, she said, “What time is it, anyway?”

“Just after two in the afternoon. Time for breakfast,” he said. Then he picked up the phone and ordered room service, as nonchalantly as if it were the most normal thing in the world to be breakfasting in the middle of the day. As he spoke, his gaze raked over her. She wrapped the robe a little more tightly around herself.

When he’d hung up the phone, he told her, “You’ll find other clothes hanging there for you in the closet near the bathroom. I took the liberty of having a personal shopper deliver a few items.”

She didn’t want to ask
when
he’d had time to do so. But he was, after all, an Archdemon. He could probably materialize gold from straw if he wanted to.

“Where’s Nick?” she said, keeping her tone deliberately sullen. She might have agreed to spend a week with Julian, but she hadn’t agreed to be pleasant.

“Stop worrying. Nick will fly in from L.A. with Harry later today. Your little friend will join us tonight for dinner, along with my business partner. Relax, angel. You and I are going to be spending a lot of time alone together this week.”

Alone. With Julian.
And all either of them had to do was reach out an arm across the expanse of rumpled bedclothes. Her heart began a rapid palpitation. She must put distance between them, she knew. She padded across the cool marble floor to the window. Throwing open the curtains, she blinked in the sunlight as her eyes adjusted to the brightness.

What lay outside was a spectacular view of the Las Vegas Strip. Even in the daylight, neon lights flashed, decorating the hotel and casinos lining the street as far as she could see. Next door, a miniature version of the Eiffel Tower stretched up into the cloudless blue sky. Across the street, fountains sprayed hundreds of feet in the air from the middle of a man-made lake. She sighed, dropping the curtains shut again. Julian’s world was full of material extravagance and artificial beauty. But all the slick buildings, the mirrors, the gilt and glittering lights left her with a vaguely sticky feeling. All she wanted was to be back in her own home, and teaching classes at the yoga studio. Instead, she was here, in Sin City.

During her human life, she’d never been remotely interested in what this city had to offer. “What happens in Vegas stays in Vegas”—the popular motto of this adult playground—offended her sensibilities and went against everything she believed in. Gambling, drinking, strippers…everything this city stood for was in stark contrast to her life of moderation and constraint. And as an angel, coming here was completely out of the question. Unless Arielle had given her some assignment that brought her here, she would never have had a reason ever to set foot in this godforsaken place.

Why, oh, why had she promised to stay with him for a whole week? She’d fallen straight into Julian’s trap. But with her brother as bait, there’d been no real choice. Andrew was a strong, ethical person, but clearly he’d been no match for Julian.

“The Lussuria,” she said, testing the hotel’s name on her tongue. “Pretty. What does it mean? Luxury?”

Behind her, he laughed, still lounging on the bed. “
Lussuoso
is the Italian word for luxury.
Lussuria
means lust.”

She shivered, turning toward the bathroom. “I’m going to shower,” she announced, hoping he did not hear the tremble in her voice.

He was gone from the room by the time she’d finished, presumably showering in his own bathroom. For the first time since they’d gotten in the car last night, she might have a few minutes alone. She needed to call Arielle. Julian had just used her room’s telephone to call for room service, but now the phone was gone. He must have taken it with him. Peering behind the bedside table, she looked at the empty telephone jack and swore out loud.

She had to get out of here.

Yanking open the closet, she grabbed her dress, ignoring the other items that hung there. There was no sign of the strapless bra she’d worn last night, but she didn’t have time to look for that now. She slipped into the dress, grabbed her shoes and ran for the front door.

Her heart pounded as she rode the elevator down, glancing at the illuminated floor numbers as she descended from the forty-fifth floor. She fished in her purse, gathering cash and a credit card in her shaking fingers as she began to formulate a plan. It would be easy enough to grab a taxi from the lobby, go to the airport, catch the next flight home. But what if Julian came after her? Would he try to stop her?

And suppose she did manage to escape. Would he unleash his wrath on Andrew or on Nick, as he’d threatened? Her Assignee would be arriving later today, and she knew that he would not be spared. She had seen for herself what went on at Devil’s Paradise. Julian was capable of anything.

The elevator doors opened, and she stepped out into the luxurious lobby of the hotel. Tourists milled there, oblivious to the ominous air that chilled her to the core. A vast archway stretched into the casino, where on this bright Sunday morning the crowds were already massing amidst the ceaseless electronic beeping of the slot machines, the rattle of the roulette wheels. In the other direction, the entrance to Julian’s club waited. A large silk banner above the closed doors announced the grand opening of Devil’s Ecstasy next weekend.

She stood at the lobby’s edge, surveying the scene. This was no innocent pleasure destination, designed for entertainment. It was a lair of evil, a sanctuary for demons. She could feel it in her bones, in the pit of her stomach. She wished to God she could walk out the front door and never look back.

But she knew that was impossible. She thought of Nick and Andrew, shivering as she speculated about what Julian might do to them if she left. No, she could not go. She knew what she had to do—she had no other choice.

Surprising Serena in bed was a moment Julian would savor for a long time to come. As he showered, his erection remained as his mind pored over the details of her body. She was deliciously built, with lithe, toned muscle giving way to soft curves that would fit his hands perfectly. It was as though she had been created to satisfy his every desire. He thought of her perky breasts tipped with rosy nipples. Looked forward to exploring every inch of her luminous skin, to arousing her erogenous zones and enjoying the height of her pleasure. And the height of his own pleasure, too.

He stepped out of the shower, dried himself with a thick bath towel and slid back into one of the hotel’s robes. He sauntered through the living room and opened the door to her bedroom. The only thing there was silence.

“Serena?” he called. No answer. He checked her bathroom. She was not there, either. Then he saw that the closet was open, and her dress and shoes were gone.

Well, it was nothing that he hadn’t expected, after all. She was a feisty little piece of work, and from the looks of things, not easily mastered. But she’d return. He would have bet on it.

He opened a newspaper and sat down to wait.

When Serena got back up to the suite, Julian lounged in an armchair with his feet propped on a footstool, his expression maddeningly relaxed. He smiled over the top of his newspaper as he saw her.

“So glad you decided to rejoin me, after all. You made a prudent choice,” he said easily. “However, I don’t feel I can trust you entirely. You attempted to break our agreement. If you do so again, I’m afraid I’ll have no choice but to arrange for your brother to come out here to take some photographs.”

Serena marched past him and into her bedroom without saying a word.

She slammed the door and lay on the bed, desolation washing over her. Julian had outmaneuvered her at every turn. If she’d been willing to stoop to his level, she wouldn’t be in this mess right now. But that was impossible. Serena might not be able to talk to Arielle right now, but she was sure that at the very least, her supervisor would tell her to stick to her values. To play fair and have faith that the divine was on her side. That was becoming increasingly difficult, if not altogether impossible.

Oh, if she could just hear Arielle’s voice, if only to assure her that there was someone out there who had some clue about how to undo the horrific situation she’d gotten herself into. About how to protect her brother without sacrificing herself.

It was the scent of fresh baking and bacon wafting from the living room that finally lured her out of the bedroom. She had to face Julian at some point, and she might as well pacify her growling stomach while she was at it.

A young woman in a hotel uniform was unloading plates from a room-service cart onto the polished mahogany table in front of Julian. “I wanted to bring up your breakfast personally, Mr. Ascher,” she said. “We’re so pleased to have you staying with us again. Mr. Ranulfson sends his regards and extends his invitation to dinner at our five-star restaurant, Firebrand. If you need anything, my name is Tiffany. I’m the chef’s assistant.”

“Thank you, Tiffany,” he said.

The woman continued, “I hope you’ll make use of all our amenities. If there’s anything you wish for—” her voice dropped into a slight hush “—anything at all, please don’t hesitate to let us know. I will be personally available to cater to your every need,” she said.

Serena watched her, wondering if she was discreetly flirting with Julian. Well, who could blame her? Julian was a handsome man—a very handsome man—and obviously attractive enough to draw female attention. Even if he
was
pure evil.

Julian seemed oddly immune to Tiffany, despite the way she flipped her shiny brown hair and smiled at him almost adoringly. He indicated Serena, saying to the chef’s assistant, “And the needs of my guest, Miss St. Clair.”

Tiffany’s smile thinned as she looked briefly at Serena. “Of course, sir.”

As she walked out of the room, she threw one last glance at Julian, although he did not return it.

When the woman was gone, Serena collapsed into an overstuffed armchair, tucking her feet beneath her. “I thought only demons would work here. I didn’t know there would be humans, too.” Unable to help herself, she added, “She seemed eager to serve you.”

He chuckled to himself, poring over the selections on the table. “We like to keep a mix of employees. Easier to blend with the human world that way.” He heaped plates with eggs Benedict, buttermilk pancakes and fresh fruit, and handed one of them to her. “You’re not jealous, are you?”

She straightened in her chair and balanced the plate on her lap. “Of what? You’re perfectly free to associate with whomever you choose. Please don’t let me cramp your style,” she said, giving an egg yolk a vicious stab and watching it bleed yellow on her plate.

Other books

Death of an English Muffin by Victoria Hamilton
His Hometown Cowgirl by Anne Marie Novark
The Summer the World Ended by Matthew S. Cox
The Silver Dragon by Jean S. MacLeod
Hitched by Ruthie Knox