Page 20 of Dark Promises


  Fane hooked his hand around her neck, laughing softly. "I will take care of the aches and pains and see to any of your requests on my return."

  He leaned close, brushed his lips over hers and just like that he was gone. As in gone. The magician kind of gone. As in vanishing in thin air, which was a little disconcerting to say the least. What was he? If he was a vampire, wouldn't he feel evil even if he didn't look evil? Frankly, she didn't care. She was in a foreign country. No one, not even Teagan, knew where she was. Well. Not precisely. She was going to take as much as she could get from Mr. Gorgeous and then carry it home with her. A wonderful secret.

  He'd woken her body after so many years of emptiness. Of being alone. When she was with him, she didn't feel alone. She felt alive and incredibly happy. She loved her girls and her great-grandchildren, but for the first time in her life, she felt beautiful and special to someone.

  "Although," she murmured aloud, "I'd feel a lot more special if he had a bed."

  She went to the door and opened it, looking out into the night. Fog swirled above the monastery. It was dense and dark, like a veil pulled over the entire fortress. She heard voices, muted, but male. They didn't sound happy, and she shivered and stepped out of the building. She was exhausted and nothing that had happened to her since she'd entered the monastery seemed real, but she knew it was. She wasn't caught in a dream or a hallucination. She couldn't conjure up a Mr. Gorgeous, not like him--she didn't have that kind of imagination.

  Her granddaughters thought she was going insane when she made the mistake of telling them about vampires. Esmeralda had shown her video recordings and at first she thought they were faked, but eventually she became certain they were real. The idea of those monsters living anywhere near her grandchildren made her crazy. She'd protected them all her life, and Esmeralda admitted that Teagan would be a prime candidate for a vampire's victim. He would be drawn by her gifts. Everyone knew Teagan had gifts.

  She'd been just as susceptible to Esmeralda's bullshit as she had been to Fane's touch. She was fairly certain her loneliness had made her susceptible. She didn't have that many friends, and she found herself on the Internet in the chat rooms with Esmeralda as often as she could, just because they laughed so much together. She loved having a friend.

  Another sound reached her ears. Not male this time. Distinctly female, and whoever the woman was, she was crying. Muted. But definitely weeping. Like her heart was broken and there was no fixing it. Trixie tried to appear tough and mean, but she'd raised five girls and she was just as susceptible to a girl's genuine tears as she was to Esmeralda's bullshit and Fane's touch.

  The sound was coming from inside a building. Fane had told her not to go into any of them, but she couldn't bear the sound of those heartbroken sobs. She made her way across the yard barefoot, because when Fane had clothed her, he had remembered underwear but forgotten shoes. She frowned. She didn't think Fane was the type of man to forget too much, and she couldn't get very far on the mountain, hiking around barefoot. Maybe it wasn't a mistake after all.

  The dirt was soft under her feet, not at all rocky like she expected, almost like a thick carpet. She could see it was rich in minerals and somehow, although she wasn't a barefoot sort of woman outside, she liked the connection to the earth. The soles of her feet seemed to absorb the minerals, and the spots where she was aching from the hours of hiking in her boots just seemed to heal. No blisters. No pain at all. She curled her toes into the dirt while she stood at the door, staring at it, listening to the sound of sobs. She raised her hand and knocked.

  The sobbing didn't stop. She was fairly certain whoever was inside hadn't heard. She dropped her hand to the carved handle and pushed the door open easily. Just as Fane's house was only four walls and a roof, with a dirt floor, so was this one. In the middle of the floor was a young woman lying curled up on a thick carpet. A blanket lay over her, but it was clear she was naked underneath it.

  Moving closer to the crying woman, Trixie could see marks on her skin. Bruises. Love bites. Smudges that looked like fingerprints. Her heart turned over. What if this had been Teagan or one of her other girls? She couldn't leave her like this. In fact, she needed to come up with another weapon or two and help this child escape.

  Trixie crouched down beside the girl and laid a gentle hand on her forehead. "Honey-child, you're going to make yourself sick."

  The woman lifted her tear-soaked lashes, now long and spiky, her gaze startled, her dove gray eyes swimming with tears. "I'm sorry," she whispered. "Did I disturb you? You could hear me?" She sounded frightened, and she sat up, pulling the blanket around her.

  At least the woman had a carpet to sit on, much better than Trixie's sleeping bag. Trixie sat on the edge, close to the woman without waiting for an invitation. "I'm Trixie. Trixie Joanes."

  "Gabrielle Sanders," the woman introduced herself. "You must be related to Teagan."

  "I'm her grandmother." Trixie smiled her encouragement. "Do you know her?"

  Gabrielle shook her head. "I know her lifemate, Andre."

  There was that word again. Lifemate. Clearly it meant something and no one took it lightly. Still, she'd come back to that. She touched Gabrielle's shoulder gently. "Did someone hurt you?"

  Fresh tears flooded Gabrielle's eyes. She shook her head and pushed back her hair. "Not like you're thinking. No one hit me. I'm just a . . . a mess. It's me. Not him. I screwed up so badly there's no fixing it."

  "Honey-child, there is always a way to fix something. I raised five girls. I've seen and heard it all. Just talking to someone else helps sometimes."

  Gabrielle pressed her lips together. "How are you inside the monastery? No one is supposed to be here."

  Trixie waved her hand airily. "Fane is my lifemate." She had absolutely no idea what that meant, but Fane had said it and she was going to put this child at ease by using that as an excuse for her presence.

  Gabrielle's eyes widened. "That's amazing. And good. No, great. I'm Aleksei's lifemate." She burst into a fresh storm of tears.

  Trixie gathered her into her arms, blanket and all, holding her like she had her daughter and granddaughters when life had been cruel--and she was fairly certain life had been cruel to this woman. She looked young, very young, to be all alone, lying on a carpet naked, covered in bruises and up in the mountains inside a hut with four walls, a roof and dirt floor.

  "Talk to me, Gabrielle. I've seen a lot of life." And tasted bitterness and cruelty. She knew those things. She knew about giving up dreams. She knew about loss.

  Gabrielle looked up into Trixie's face. The woman was beautiful. She had exquisite skin and incredible hair. Gabrielle wasn't certain how old she was; she seemed elegant and timeless, even in her cargo pants and bare feet. Still, she'd been attacked by a man who wanted to kill vampires, and she couldn't allow herself to be deceived.

  She chewed on her lower lip. She had never pushed her way into another's mind. Not once. Not for any reason. She could talk telepathically to her sister and brother. She could use the common path of the Carpathians, but actually invading someone else's mind, or having them in hers, seemed far too intimate. She had planned to give that to Gary. At the thought tears welled up again.

  Trixie put her hand over Gabrielle's. "I raised five girls, and I can't have you lying in this empty shell of a house crying your heart out. Talk to me. Let me help. If nothing else, use me for a sounding board."

  Gabrielle looked into Trixie's eyes. More than anything else, it was the kindness in her eyes that allowed a very private and distrusting Gabrielle to blurt out her sins to Trixie.

  She confessed everything to this total stranger, but Trixie actually seemed to care. She actually seemed sympathetic. Gabrielle needed someone she wasn't afraid of to talk to. How could she just stop loving Gary? It wasn't possible. She couldn't let Aleksei into her mind, but she knew sooner or later he would just stop giving her that and take it. He would know how she felt about Gary. She had sworn her allegiance to Aleksei, and she c
raved him. He did fill her mind and her thoughts. He owned her body. But the betrayal was there now on either side. She betrayed Gary with Aleksei and Aleksei with her feelings for Gary.

  Throughout her entire confession, Trixie remained silent, intently listening, her hand rubbing Gabrielle's back gently.

  "You can't have your Gary?"

  Gabrielle shook her head. "Worse, he won't be able to feel anything for me. Well, that's worse for me, but thankfully not for him."

  "If you could have him, would you leave Aleksei for him?"

  "It isn't possible. I'm Aleksei's lifemate. We're bound together."

  Trixie frowned, looked as if she might question that and then shook her head. "That isn't what I asked you. If you could, right now, after all that's happened, after spending time with Aleksei, would you leave him and go to Gary?"

  Gabrielle opened her mouth to explain she couldn't--that Aleksei wouldn't let her leave and Gary might not want her even if he could feel because she'd been with Aleksei--but she closed her mouth. Trixie asked a legitimate question, and why wasn't her answer a firm and resounding yes? She should have jumped at that. She should have immediately, without thought, said yes. Why didn't she?

  She blinked several times, veiling her eyes from Trixie's penetrating gaze. "I don't know," she finally confessed in a low, shocked voice. Not shocked. Horrified. Aleksei was terrifying. He had a temper. He was her worst nightmare. Gary was sweet and kind. Everything she ever wanted. "I don't know if I could." The admission brought a fresh flood of tears.

  Gabrielle looked up at Trixie. "What is wrong with me? What kind of a person am I? I know that I love Gary. I know it. But Aleksei has taken me over so that I'm obsessed with him. I crave him. I don't know how I could go from having the kind of sex I have with Aleksei to being with anyone else. He makes me feel . . ." She stopped, biting her lip hard. "He just makes me feel," she added lamely. "I don't know how to describe it, but . . ." She broke off, throwing her hands in the air. "I'm such a slut. How could I even consider trading a man I'm certain I love for sex?"

  "You want to make it work with Aleksei?" Trixie asked gently, ignoring her drama.

  Gabrielle was fairly certain she had lots of practice ignoring drama, what with raising five girls. She nodded slowly, trying to be as honest as possible. She was mixed up and confused, but still, there had to be honesty. "Aleksei scares me. He's the scariest man I've ever met and I've met a lot of them. Male Carpathians are dangerous. It shows in everything they say or do. But Aleksei, he's a little different. Something inside him that is so dark . . ." She trailed off again, because saying that felt like another betrayal. She didn't want to say anything bad about him behind his back. "I want it to work," she whispered firmly, meaning it.

  "But you're feeling guilty because you feel loving Gary has betrayed Aleksei. In fact, still is betraying him? Have I got that right?" Trixie asked.

  Gabrielle wiped at her tears with the edge of the blanket. "That's about it," she admitted. "And making the decision that I know is the right one makes me feel guilty about letting Gary go. And it makes me feel slutty and selfish. How could I betray Aleksei?"

  "You didn't know him."

  Gabrielle sighed. She shoved both hands through her hair, keeping the blanket in place with her elbows. "But then I turned around and now I'm betraying Gary."

  Trixie smiled at her. "Child, loving someone is never wrong. Never. There are all kinds of love in the world. Gary was sweet and kind to you when you needed it. You didn't have anyone and you didn't have any experience. He was the first man you fell in love with. In essence, your teenage love. Think about it. He had work in common with you and he made you laugh, but you didn't have sex with him. You didn't take every minute you could to be alone with him, sneaking off because you couldn't keep your hands off each other."

  Gabrielle frowned at her. "I don't know what you mean."

  "Can you keep your hands off this Aleksei of yours?"

  "Well." Gabrielle thought about it. Not when she was with him. She wanted him touching her. Kissing her. She mostly wanted him inside of her. "No. But that's just sex. We don't make love. He isn't gentle."

  "But you like what he does."

  "Yes. A lot." Gabrielle was honest. She had to be if she was going to sort this out. And she needed to sort it out fast. Before he came back.

  "There are all kinds of ways to make love. If it's good, that's what you need. But going back to your Gary. You clung to him because he made you feel grounded. Everything around you was so different and you didn't know how to handle it. I think you do love him, Gabrielle, but I don't think you're in love with him. If you were in love with him, you wouldn't feel as if all your loyalty should belong to Aleksei."

  "I know that I love him and he loved me."

  "Yes," Trixie agreed. "But I doubt if either of you were in love. Not a soul-destroying kind of love. If you had been, you would have been like you and Aleksei, all over each other. You love each other because you both are intelligent, have a lot in common, make each other laugh, all those things. But, child. Where was the passion?"

  Gabrielle closed her eyes. Trixie was making sense, and that only seemed to make her feel worse.

  "Gabrielle. Think about it. This man, Aleksei, frightens you. He doesn't give you one single thing you thought you wanted or needed. But you're reluctant to say anything that might put him in a bad light. You refuse to say one bad thing about him, and looking at you, seeing your misery, I think there are a few lessons that man needs to learn about women and he needs to learn them fast."

  "You don't understand the enormity of what I did," Gabrielle said. "You can't possibly understand yet. You're still human. You don't even really know about Carpathians. The betrayal went so deep." She frowned and waved her hand. The moment she did, she was fully clothed, although, like Trixie, she'd left her shoes off.

  "How do you do that?" Trixie demanded.

  Gabrielle blinked as if coming out of a deep fog. "It's because he's my lifemate."

  "That's another thing. Maybe you should explain Carpathians and lifemates to me, because I don't quite get that, either."

  Gabrielle turned her head, sweeping her long hair over her shoulder to stare at Trixie in shock. Clearly shocked. "You told me you're Fane's lifemate." Her heart began to pound. Hard. What if she'd made a mistake? She couldn't trust her own judgment anymore. If she was talking to this woman, taking her at face value, and she was there hunting them, she had just helped convince the hunter to kill them.

  "That's what he told me," Trixie said. "But I don't understand exactly what that means."

  Gabrielle bit her lip hard. Hard enough that her teeth drew a small drop of blood. Trixie winced for her, but Gabrielle didn't really do more than register that small movement. She didn't know what to do.

  There was one moment when she felt something stirring in her mind. And then he was there. Pouring into her. Warm. Intimate. It didn't feel at all like an invasion. She felt complete. Safe.

  Kessake. What is it? What has you upset?

  Didn't he mean more upset? If he knew she was worried about something he had to have known she was crying her eyes out. How? If he hadn't been in her mind . . . Had he lied to her?

  I cannot lie to you. I will not lie to you. Your soul is tied to my soul. I feel your emotions, just as you can feel mine should you try. I entered your mind because you are very troubled. I am your lifemate and if you have need of me, I will come to you. Tell me. Now.

  12

  Gabrielle knew Aleksei had just given her an order. If she didn't tell him what he wanted to know, he would take the information from her mind. She took a deep breath. Submitting. Not because she was afraid of him, but because she was afraid for him. She was afraid for all the residents of the monastery.

  There is a woman with me. Her name is Trixie Joanes. She said she's Teagan's grandmother and lifemate to Fane. I've . . . God. God. Why was she so gullible and stupid? Why didn't she think before she acted? Now she had this hang
ing over her head as well. I've told her things that revealed a lot about what you are. She could be an enemy. I didn't think, but I could have put everyone here at risk.

  What we are.

  She swallowed hard at the tone he used. Velvet over steel. A rasp she felt inside her body like a caressing stroke, but something else that set her heart pounding. I don't understand.

  We are. You. Me. We. We are both Carpathians. If you put me at risk, then you have put yourself at risk as well. And. I. Am. Not. There.

  Uh. Oh. She got that. She got that right away. He was not happy with her at all.

  What should I do?

  Fane says the woman is his lifemate. What is she doing with you?

  This was getting worse by the moment. Still, there was something in his tone that compelled her to answer. I need to sort myself out. She's someone I can talk to. Maybe she can help me.

  Fury. Hot. Wild. Intense. It poured into her. Filled her mind. O jela peje terad, emni. Sun scorch you, woman. Get rid of her. You talk to me. We sort you out together. Not an outsider. You. Me. Together.

  She held herself very still. She knew she'd gone pale, she could feel the blood leaving her face. You swore at me. In Carpathian. That's considered swearing, isn't it? And you keep saying the word peje to me.

  Scorch. Scorching. Like the more modern fuck.

  She winced. Not only did he get angry with her, over the top, crazy angry, but he swore at her. She was trying to sort herself out, for him. Okay, she'd screwed up royally, but she was trying. She wasn't at all certain he was.

  Well, I don't like it. She would have settled for scorch or scorching if he hadn't compared the word to fuck. Scorch didn't sound half as bad. And she got the implication. Sun scorching a Carpathian was burning him to death or sending him to hell, or in this case, saying fuck you.

  Not fuck you.

  I still don't like it.

  Get used to it. Get rid of her. Now.

  Gabrielle gritted her teeth. Trixie is no threat to us. Clearly. You can't dictate to me who I can see or talk to or be friends with.