by Tracy Tappan
Confession three had taken the women on their first detour into weirds-ville: the explanation of why these women were the only ones the men of Ţărână could have children with: their unique Dragon heritage.
Lots of what the hell? skepticism had made the rounds over that.
Confession four, the biggie, had trekked the women directly out of weirds-ville and into freak-out-city. Ahem, yes, tap-tap, the men and women of this community are actually a different breed of human called Vârcolac, who in some ways resemble mythical vampires.
That double-decker whopper was followed by one of those black hole silences reserved for funerals, or for the you-have-six-months-to-live kind of bad news.
Someone finally cleared her throat. “Excuse me?”
Another woman snorted sardonically. “Delusional much?”
A laugh rang out, uncomfortable and incredulous.
In the back row, aerobics instructor Abby Fiske pushed to her feet. “I’m outta here.”
Tonĩ remained calm, which was admirable, considering the number of eyes that were looking at her like her phone was off the hook. “Vârcolac aren’t coffin-sleeping ghouls who transform people with their bites,” she said. “That’s just invented Dracula stuff. There’s no reason to be afraid of—”
“Oh, I don’t think fear’s the issue here.” Abby crossed her arms firmly in front of her. “The issue is that there’s no such thing as vampires or Vârcolac or whatever mind-fuck you people are trying to put over on us.”
No such thing as vampires meant it was time for the men to perform an array of dancing monkey parlor tricks to prove that, surprise-surprise, they were very real.
Thomal was called upon to demonstrate his Dragon speed, running across the room so fast he disappeared. Gábor presented the Pure-bred specialty of making his eyes glow preternaturally bright. Then Jaċken, who was the only one besides his brothers who could control his fangs without the usual stimulations of aggression, blood, or sex, stepped up to do the shit job of flashing a set of elongated canines. This, of course, raised the newbies’ barely contained fear of him to new and dizzying heights of terror, and resulted in that trip into freak-out-land by convincing them.
The women started screaming like they were surrounded by a bunch of salivating beasts, which was always insulting, no matter how much their reaction was supposed to be understandable.
“Pipe the hell down!” Jaċken roared, his sharp glare and the tone of his voice effectively quieting the mass tantrum down to sniffles. “We’re not monsters,” he ground out. “After three months of living with us, you know that, for chrissake.”
From there, more explanations had followed, the whole nine yards laid out for the newbies, the goods and the bads. Emphasis was placed on the benefits of hooking up with a Vârcolac: increased health, a doubled lifespan, and significantly decreased aging, which all resulted from long-term exposure to Fiinţă, not to mention the indescribable pleasure experienced from being juiced up with the elixir. Then the blood-bond was described, how after feeding and sex took place, a biological transformation occurred that rendered the mated Vârcolac dependent on the blood of his or her mate for the span of that person’s life. Yoo-hoo, that’s why nobody’d been doing the nasty for three months; Vârcolac weren’t physically capable of having sex until they were blood-bonded.
Dev gave Sedge and Arc a stormy look. “Well, let’s see, Susan nearly puked at the sight of a pair of fangs, by the expression on Hadley’s face when she saw Thomal’s scaly dragon tattoo, I strongly suspect that she now thinks of him as Lizard Man, and Abby’s going to bail on us because, and I quote: ‘I don’t want to have children with birth defects.’ That’s us, man.” He leaned back and flung his arms wide. “Walking talking birth defects.”
Arc’s nostrils went white.
Hell, Dev almost longed for the days when they used to kidnap women. This is who we are, there’s no getting out of here, so deal with it.
Sedge powered his legs into a pair of blue jeans. “Jesus, didn’t any of them take it well?”
Dev drew a labored breath. “Chelsea did.” Gábor, that lucky fuck. “She practically creamed herself when she realized that she could finally get herself a bad boy who wouldn’t cheat on her. The rest are guarded about it right now.” Which he supposed was fair. “After the dust settles, we’ll see what—”
The door to the locker room swung open and Thomal stepped inside, his expression calm—unnatural calm. Powder-keg calm. With hard, remote eyes, he glanced at the damaged wall, then at Arc and Sedge, and finally at Dev.
The two of them shared a moment of violent pain.
Dev forced the word up his larynx. “Hadley?”
With a strange economy of movement, Thomal looked up at the ceiling, then at the row of metal lockers. “Packing.” His blue gaze flattened. “Marissa?”
The words choked to death inside Dev’s throat as memories of facing down Marissa after the Big Reveal raged through his head…
* * *
Dev closed the door to the mansion’s Asian Parlor with a sharp click and leaned back against it, trying to look like his ears and his pride weren’t still taking a pounding from all of the freak-out screaming he’d just endured. Steam formed behind his eyeballs as he watched Marissa move to stand near a gigantic Buddha sculpture, her hands wrung together at her waist. Like she might be afraid of him now.
Please, don’t do this.
He moved his jaw back and forth. “So, is this your version of losing it over the Big Reveal?” he asked. “Absolute silence?” She hadn’t said a single word all through Tonĩ’s speech.
A swallow worked its way down the length of Marissa’s throat. “I’m just absorbing everything.”
He skimmed his eyes over her. “Are you trying to talk yourself out of it being true? We gave you women a pretty convincing demo, but maybe you’d like to rationalize that away.” Others were; he’d seen it on their faces.
“No. I…believe it. I mean, it caught me totally off guard, trust me, but…” A thready breath came out of her. “The night you and your men saved me from Mürk and Tëer, a lot of surreal stuff happened, and…so this makes sense, in a very unexpected way, but, yes. I also trust that Tonĩ isn’t insane.”
He narrowed his eyes on her through another inspection. “Something’s got you unhooked.”
“I…” Color flared in her cheeks. “Thinking of you as a…as sexually inexperienced is, uh, taxing my imagination.” She smiled weakly. “You look like you could keep Playboy Forum supplied with articles for months.”
“No,” he responded in a level tone. “Vârcolac mate for life; one partner, that’s it.” He pushed himself off the door. “I’d think that’d be a huge selling point.” The image of Chelsea throwing her arms around Gábor flashed into his mind, followed by an unpleasant grab of jealousy.
Marissa turned around and paced away from him a few steps, sweeping a hand over her hair. “Truthfully? The all-or-nothing of it scares me.” He saw her shoulders move up and down with a deep breath.
A three-hundred-pound circus lady sat on his chest.
She turned around. “Getting together with you means forever, Dev. Not just the idea of taking marriage as a serious commitment forever, but really forever. If I understand this biological bond correctly, it means that I could never leave you. If I did, you’d die.” She threw her hands out. “Die, Dev! Not just devastate you with a divorce, but fricking kill you!”
“Ah.” His jaw throbbed as he felt her steadily slipping through his fingers. “I hadn’t realized you planned on leaving me. That does complicate matters.”
“Nobody plans on these things,” she snapped back. “I’m being practical and realistic here. I would never go into a marriage with divorce in mind, but there are no guarantees in life. What if after we bonded, you…you figured, ‘hey, I’ve got her trapped now,’ and turned into an abusive asshole.”
He took a swift step back. “What did you just say?” He clutched both sides of his hea
d. “You seriously think I’m capable of—”
“No.” She dropped her eyes and ran a hand over her mouth. “But I’ve only known you three months.” Her voice was low and strained. “And even at the end of my stint in Ţărână, I didn’t see us getting married. I’m not ready for that kind of commitment—especially not a bonding level of commitment. I wanted us to continue dating, but…it doesn’t sound like the community is going to loosen up and allow movement in and out of the town. So…I don’t know where that leaves us.”
He fought for air, that fat circus bitch still on top of him. “You know exactly where it leaves us, Marissa.” He jerked the door open. “With a nowhere future ahead of us, why the hell should we keep seeing each other?”
Chapter Twenty-seven
Marissa’s cook station was behind a tall counter situated a few yards inside the front door of her restaurant, Marissa’s. Not a very inventive name, and not her first choice, but any time she’d tried to call her place anything else, people just said, “Let’s go to Marissa’s,” anyway, so, she’d given up and gone with it.
At first it’d been weird for her to cook out in the open like this, where all and sundry could watch her work. But her architect, Luken, had strongly suggested that she stick with the design. He’d said that the people of the community would want to chat with her when they came to dine, and better that they just lean an elbow causally on the tall counter rather than consistently overrun a kitchen in the back. He’d been right, and now she loved the arrangement.
She was doing some prep work for tonight’s dinner menu, chopping green peppers and parsley. It was usually a time she loved in her workday, when things were quiet, the main dining room lights dimmed, and a CD of her own choice—right now, Daughtry—spinning out on the sound system to keep her chopping away. But these days, quiet time just led her to crawl around inside her own head too much, thinking about how lonely she was. None of her friends had abandoned her when she decided to finish out her year in Ţărână—the community was honoring their half-million-dollar offer—but Dev most certainly had. In the week since the Big Reveal, she hadn’t seen him once. After they’d ended it, she didn’t know what she’d expected, but…she supposed she hadn’t thought he’d remove himself so completely from her life. Maybe that made her naïve, but what did she know? She’d never had a breakup like this before, so damned painful.
She grabbed another green pepper and—
The door to her restaurant crashed open, hinges rattling and glass quivering as Dev loomed inside, his smoldering eyes locking on her like some great beast of prey.
Marissa froze for one shuddering beat of her heart, then drew a breath that expanded her chest.
The men and women living in this community are vampires.
Oh, ya think? Every day that made more and more sense.
Letting the door smack shut behind him, Dev started toward her, his face chiseled with dark emotions.
She stole a glance at the well-oiled movement of his hips, and her mind headed straight into the gutter. She’d almost forgotten what a hot son of a bitch he was.
He drew up to her tall counter and laid a forearm on it.
She fluttered her eyelashes at her ex-boyfriend, giving him a determinedly false smile. “Sorry, sir, we’re closed.”
One side of his lip edged upward. Not into a full sneer, but almost. “You have some of my wine.”
“No, I don’t.” She neatly sliced through the center of the green pepper. “Not unless you want that bottle of Côtes de France Bordeaux back that you gave me the night of our last dinner together. Which would be the height of tacky, by the way.”
A tightness passed through Dev’s hand, as if he was trying oh-so-very hard not to make a fist. “You ordered wine for your restaurant, and I ordered wine for my collection, but the Travelers accidentally delivered everything here.” He gestured curtly at the two crates stacked against her wall.
“Oh. Well, okay. Go ahead and take a look.”
Rolling his eyes, he crossed to the crates, muttering, “pain in the trash,” although it might not have been exactly that. He crouched down, and she stared at his broad back, watching his muscles flex beneath his shirt in a dance of perfect symmetry as he opened the first box and began to search it. She traveled lower, to his hard, powerful buttocks visible against the tight stretch of his jeans. A tremor of longing coursed up her spine. God, how she’d missed him, missed holding his hand and kissing him, longed for the time they used to spend together, laughing and sharing. In a couple of years, they probably would’ve been able to finish each other’s sentences.
She set down her knife and held up a basket of steaming bread. “Hey, do you want a roll?” Maybe he’d take it as a peace offering.
He cranked his head slightly sideways, his eyes seaming tight.
Or maybe not. “It’s one of my specialties.”
Nothing.
She set down the basket. “I just thought…maybe we could talk, Dev.”
“About what?” He rotated toward her, setting a palm on top of his corded thigh. “Since you’re obviously a chicken shit about bonding with me, there’s nothing—”
“Oh, that’s real nice,” she cut in hotly, her breath coming fast. “Thank you very much for giving my position no respect or understanding whatsoever.”
“’Cause you’ve done so well respecting my side,” he snarked back.
The CD of Daughtry ended. A pot on the stove came to a boil and hissed into the silence.
“Just because I’m not running off to bond with you, doesn’t mean I’m disrespecting you.” She shook her head at him, her chin tight. “You’ve lived with the concept of mating forever for your entire life. It’s no big deal to you, but for me…” She picked up her knife and stabbed it into one half of the green pepper, letting it stick there. “I can’t even sleep with you first,” she said through stiff lips. “A couple should at least be able to test the waters for compatibility before committing to drink from the same well for all-fricking-eternity, shouldn’t they? That’s how humans do it.”
“Yeah, I get it.” He reached inside a crate, eased up a bottle, and glanced at the label. “You’re worried we’ll suck in bed together.”
She flushed. “No. I’m sure we’d be fine with…I didn’t mean—” Water boiled over the lip of the pot, shish-shish’ing onto the burner. “Dammit!” She cranked the knob down.
He dropped the bottle back into its slot. “Or maybe it’s just me you’re worried about. Gotta test drive ol’ Dev before you decide if he’s worthy of your love, right? Heaven-fucking-forbid that you should be patient and understanding with a guy who might know jack shit about what he’s doing in the sack.”
She stared at him, her lips trembling. “Why are you doing this?” she rasped out.
“Hell, it’s probably a good thing you threw me over.” A cold laugh jerked out of him. “I wouldn’t have wanted to put my dick under that degree of stress.”
“I didn’t want to throw you over.” A feeling of cold desolation washed through her. “I thought we could…why can’t we stay friends?”
“Fuck friends!” He surged to his feet in a fluid explosion of energy. “I love you, Marissa. Do you hear me? Love. In the Vârcolac world that means I’m already tied to you. Your scent is planted so deeply inside my head, it’s like you’re a part of me. I need you to get that. When I’m near you, I can smell everything about you; if you’re fighting a head cold, or you’re nervous, when you’re on your damned period, when you’re”—his voice lowered to a resonant growl—“aroused.” He reached down and slammed the lid of the crate shut. “Being around you, smelling you, causes me actual physical pain because I’m not with you and I need to be. I was barely able to endure it back when I thought we’d be together some day. But now that you’ve rammed your stiletto heel right through the center of my heart—”
“D-don’t.” Her chest cramped, like a steely fist clenched around her heart: Dev’s fist. “You don’t think this is
painful for me, as well? I-I…” I love you, too.
“You know one of the worst fucking parts about this?” He stalked right up to her, stopping only inches away. “On the day of the rock wall climb, you said you were the type of woman who wouldn’t run away from me. And I believed you.”
Her throat spasmed a couple of times with the threat of tears. “I’m not stepping back from us because you’re a v-v-v…”
His face hardened. “Right.”
She pressed a hand over her eyes. Crap. She just wasn’t used to saying that word, yet.
“Thank you for turning me into a circus act, Marissa. I love being a monster.”
She dropped her hand and glowered at him. “Would you stop it? This has nothing to do with you. I’m stepping back because I have important plans for my life, Dev. I’ve always wanted my own restaurant. I promised myself that—”
“Gee, and here I thought you had one.”
“It’s not the same here in Ţărână,” she flared. “This is a hidden community, for God’s sake. If I’m successful, I’ll never feel that to any depth; no restaurant critic will write me up, no Michelin stars will ever be awarded to me, no—”
“You’re willing to give up a life of happiness for that?”
Hot rage speared up the back of her neck. “I can’t believe how cavalierly you’re brushing this aside. You know the life I’ve had.” She felt her hands curling in on themselves. “I’m twenty-five and haven’t done anything. I spent the first fourteen years of my life at a fricking standstill, and then after that it was one responsibility after the next; I’m the one who had to drop out of college when my mom got sick; I’m the one who couldn’t go to a prestigious culinary school because of family obligations; I’m the one who had to help take care of my younger sister when my dad died. Oh, and that was a favor she repaid, by the way, by one-upping me in everything I’ve ever tried to do my adult life: stealing jobs out from under me and sleeping with my boyfriends, at least three that I know of, maybe more. But with half a million dollars, I’d be able to buy my own restaurant, free and clear, and that’s something Natalie could never take from me. Don’t you see? This is my chance, finally, to make something of myself, Dev, to prove that I’m not still that girl in the back brace. I have to take it. If I don’t, I’ll always regret it, and probably end up resenting you for it. Is that really what you want?”