I Only Have Fangs For You yb-3

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I Only Have Fangs For You yb-3 Page 18

by Kathy Love


  “Come here,” he said, crooking a finger at her, giving her that lopsided smile that she loved so much.

  Even with all the doubts still whirling in her mind, she was helpless to deny him. She stepped closer and he pulled her against him. Gently his lips pressed against hers, soft and strong all at once-with hunger and possession lurking just beneath his gentleness. A heady combination. A thrilling promise of more to come.

  He continued to kiss her like that for several minutes not forcing more reaction from her than she was willing to give. And because of his lack of demand, she gave him more. Opening her mouth for him. Her tongue brushing his.

  She pressed her body to his lean strength, her fingers tangled in his silky hair. She moaned as he broke off the kiss, not ready for his wonderful mouth to leave hers.

  “Come with me to my apartment.” The invitation, offered in his low, velvety voice, was as tempting and delicious as his kisses.

  She nibbled her bottom lip, still tingly and sensitive. She didn’t know if she could do this. She wanted to. Lord, she did. She wanted to feel normal and whole. She wanted only him to make her feel that way. No one else. Ever. And that scared her, because she knew that wasn’t what he was offering. He would live forever, but he wouldn’t love forever. She knew that.

  She stared at him again, his beautiful face, his mesmerizing eyes, and she nodded. She had to take this chance. She hadn’t felt this way in over a hundred years, and she couldn’t give up a single moment with him.

  He smiled reassuringly and then lifted the gate to the elevator. A loud, metallic clatter echoed down the hallway, and Mina couldn’t help hoping it was the sound of her prison finally being opened. Maybe she’d finally be free-free of her awful past. Free to feel again.

  Linking his fingers with hers, he led her down the hallway. Her hopeful feelings diminished slightly as she stepped inside Sebastian’s beautiful apartment. The place, despite its warm, homey atmosphere, was still where he brought all his women. His love nest.

  “Would you like to have a seat?”

  She nodded and perched on the edge of the plush gray sofa. He glanced around as if he didn’t know quite what to do. His uncertainty made her feel a little better, for some reason.

  “Would you like something to drink? Wine?”

  She nodded again. She needed some other focus than Sebastian.

  He nodded in return and then crossed the room to a small sideboard arranged with several bottles and glasses. He started to pick up one of the bottles and then paused, glancing over his shoulder.

  “White or red?”

  “White,” she said automatically. For once in over a hundred years, she wanted to drink something that wasn’t red. The beginning, maybe, of a different life.

  He turned back to the drinks, and she studied his back. His broad shoulders and the way the muscles rippled with each of his movements under his black shirt. She couldn’t remember ever looking at a man’s back and wanting him. Not even…

  Sebastian finished pouring the drinks and carried them over to the sofa. He sat down beside her, leaving a little space between them as he handed her the wine goblet.

  “Mina, we still have more that we need to talk about.”

  “Like what?” She looked down at her glass, pretending she didn’t know what he meant. But she did. He wanted answers to her behavior in the airport restroom.

  Sebastian reached out, hooking a finger under her chin, gently forcing her to meet his gaze.

  “I don’t know,” he said, his expression searching. “That’s what I want you tell me.”

  “I’m not sure what…»

  “I want to know why when we kiss it usually ends with you attempting to do me bodily harm?”

  That wasn’t true, was it? She knew she’d panicked, but she hadn’t hurt him, had she?

  She opened her mouth to deny that, but he continued, “And why you don’t know anything about being a vampire. And why you are so scared.”

  She looked back down at the goblet that she now gripped in both hands.

  “Mina, please. Tell me.”

  She gazed into the pale gold liquid in her glass, watching the way the light shimmered in its depths. So sparkling and fresh. She wanted to go back to when she’d been that way. Sparkling, fresh, able to believe in the goodness of others, unafraid.

  “I’ve only drunk wine once before,” she said suddenly. Maybe it was the memories brought on by the wine. Or maybe it was going to the Society meeting and realizing they weren’t what she’d believed. Or it was just Sebastian himself, but she suddenly needed to talk. She needed to tell someone-no, not just someone. She needed to tell him about her past. Even though she was ashamed of it.

  “Really? Only once?” he said. His voice was falsely interested in that way that people responded when they weren’t sure where the conversation was going.

  “Yes. My twenty-second birthday. Rather old, I guess. But my father was very strict. He had to be.”

  “Why?”

  “Well, all his daughters were heiresses, of course. We had to make good impressions, and we couldn’t make any bad choices. My father was a firm believer that alcohol led to many bad decisions.”

  “I’d have to agree with that one,” Sebastian said, even as he took a sip of his own drink. Hard liquor of some sort, golden like his eyes.

  She sipped hers too, amazed she could still remember the tangy sharpness of the flavor, even after all these decades. It was amazing what could stay buried in the recesses of the mind. Sharp and clear and unforgotten.

  “Both you and my father were right,” she said. “I only drank one night and that night I made the worst choice of my life.”

  CHAPTER 18

  Sebastian watched Mina as she took another sip of her wine, grimacing just slightly at the taste.

  He waited. He wanted to understand her, to know how she’d become a vampire. He needed to know how she’d come to be as old as she was and still have no idea how to use the powers that she’d been given. But most important, he wanted to know why she was scared of him.

  “It was the evening of my twenty-second birthday. I remember him walking into the ballroom. And I remember thinking he couldn’t be real-that men weren’t really that beautiful.” She laughed slightly, the sound eerily hollow.

  Sebastian started to reach for her, wanting to soothe away the distant, haunted look in her dark eyes, but he was afraid the touch might startle her. Might stop her. And he had the feeling she needed to tell him this as much as he wanted to hear it.

  “He came to one of the house parties we held every summer at our estate in Newport. It was a week-long event. The Rockefellers, the Carnegies, all the rich and famous attended. But from the moment Donatello strolled into my parents’ home, I couldn’t see anyone else.”

  Sebastian shifted, his chest contracting at her words. Disgust, he told himself, because he knew what this Donatello was. Not because Mina had once longed so intensely for another man.

  “He was different from all the other men in the room. Tall, dark, breathtakingly beautiful. Mysterious too.”

  Another sharp squeeze. Oh yeah, he hated this guy.

  Sebastian watched Mina take a drink of her wine.

  “My eldest sister, Lorelei, was the lovely one. She was tall and elegant and-” Mina sighed. “Well, she always captured notice. She couldn’t have stopped it if she wanted to, which she didn’t. My second sister, Ava, was also beautiful and intelligent and bold. She drove my parents mad with her antics, but they also adored her. Then there was my baby brother. The son that a father always wants. Daddy doted on Bertram. And between the second daughter and the favored son was me. Another girl. Plain and bookish and socially inept-at best.”

  “Mina,” Sebastian said, no longer able not to touch her. He reached for the hand that rested on her knee, but she moved it out of his reach.

  “I’m not telling you this to make you feel bad for me.” She shot him a look that dared him to pity her.

  �
�I know,” he assured her. “I just want to hold you.”

  She hesitated, staring at the hand he extended. Finally she slipped her hand into his, her fingers slender and cold. Protectiveness filled him at her delicateness.

  She took another sip of her wine, then she continued, “When Donatello arrived at the house party, my sisters noticed him right away. But he didn’t seem aware of them. He centered all his attention on me. That should have been my first warning sign.”

  “Mina-”

  “Let me just keep going. Please.”

  Sebastian nodded.

  “But I’d drunk that wine, and I felt bold. So I talked with him. And danced. As I said, the party was a week-long affair, and every night Donatello was there at my side, attentive and charming. He listened to my interests. Telling me all the things I longed to hear. Oh, I wasn’t so naïve that I didn’t suspect he was after my fortune. Of course, he had to be-or so I thought as well.”

  Sebastian frowned at the offhanded certainty. Didn’t she have any idea how lovely she was? How sweet and funny and perfect?

  He squeezed her fingers, but didn’t interrupt to tell her his opinion, because he knew she wouldn’t want to hear it.

  She didn’t acknowledge his touch.

  “My parents didn’t approve of him. They knew, too, that he had to be after my inheritance and they didn’t hesitate to tell me so. They told me if the man was truly interested in a love match, then he would have chosen Lorelei or Ava. But if he wanted only money, then I was the obvious choice.”

  “Why?”

  “Because I was quiet and meek and wouldn’t give him any trouble when he decided to spend my money freely and to find satisfaction elsewhere.”

  Sebastian couldn’t keep his thoughts to himself any longer. “Forgive me, but your parents sound like assholes.”

  Mina blinked at him, and he expected her to be furious. After all, they were her parents. And he knew no one should insult someone else’s family. Hell, he’d even defended Christian a time or two, and he’d been pure evil at the time.

  Instead, she just shrugged.

  “My parents were nothing if not practical.”

  Sebastian gritted his back teeth. There was nothing practical about their behavior. It was cruelty. How could parents hurt a child like that? How could they openly favor certain children over another? His parents had never shown preference to one of their children. He and his brothers had all treated their sister, Elizabeth, like a pet. But she was the baby and the only girl. And never had their parents favored her.

  “Even though I knew my parents were probably right, I ignored their warnings. I sneaked around, finding ways to meet Donatello.” She stared straight ahead, her expression faraway as if she was recalling each of their clandestine meetings.

  Sebastian didn’t want her remembering those meetings, moments locked in another man’s embrace. Suddenly he realized he was more worried that she was recalling pleasant memories rather than bad ones. Selfish of him but true.

  “I never saw him in the daytime,” she said suddenly as if just realizing that fact for the first time. She laughed slightly, the sound hollow. “But I guess it wouldn’t have made any difference if I had noted that fact. Thinking someone is a vampire isn’t one’s first suspicion, is it?”

  Sebastian shook his head. Not until after the fact, no.

  “As the end of the week neared, Donatello became more insistent that I needed to meet him away from my home. He told me he wanted to be alone, where no one could find us.”

  “And you went.”

  She nodded, still staring out at the room.

  “Where did he take you?”

  “We agreed to meet in the woods on my parents’ estate. It was private, and I knew my parents would never go there, but it was still close enough if I had second thoughts and wanted to leave, then I could.” She took a deep breath, and if possible, her complexion grew even paler. “Or so I thought.”

  Sebastian squeezed her fingers. They were freezing and stiff like icicles against his palm.

  “Once in the woods, Donatello started acting so strange. Not at all like the man who’d charmed me for the week before. He was aggressive and… ” she took a breath, and Sebastian could see she was starting to panic at the memory.

  “Mina, baby, don’t. If it hurts too much, you don’t have to talk about this.”

  She turned to him, and for the first time since she started the story she really seemed to register him beside her. Unshed tears made her eyes sparkle like sapphires. The pain there nearly made Sebastian gnash his teeth. He wanted to kill this Donatello. Rip him to shreds.

  “I–I need to tell this,” she whispered.

  He nodded.

  “It started to rain. Pouring rain.” She shivered as if she could feel the rain now. “I told him that we should go back. Wait for another night. He laughed at me and told me that a little rain wasn’t going to stop his plans. He’d waited as long as he was going to for me. He pushed me up against a tree, holding me there. I screamed, even though I knew no one would hear. I fought, but he was very strong. Of course, I didn’t know how strong and that I didn’t stand even the slightest chance of escape.”

  She took another gulping breath, talking quickly as if she had to get the story out as fast as she possibly could.

  “His touches were brutal and degrading. I thought he planned to rape me, but that wasn’t the plan. That wasn’t his interest.”

  Sebastian felt his muscles relax just a little at her words. He knew what had happened to her had been violent, and had ultimately taken her human life. But he couldn’t bear to think of this monster violating her that way, too.

  “We’d brought a lamp with us, and I remember him grabbing it and holding it up to his face. His beautiful features were gone, replaced by a hideous, distorted mask, pointed, razor-sharp teeth, glowing eyes.”

  Sebastian paused at her description. Glowing eyes? Vampires didn’t have glowing eyes. When a vampire got ready to bite, their features did change and their pupils dilated until the eyes looked totally black. They only glowed in the movies. She must have distorted that memory, the attacker becoming something of fiction.

  “I remember thinking that this couldn’t be happening and that I was going to die.” Mina’s voice broke, and Sebastian forgot about the strange description of his cruel vampire.

  “Mina.” Sebastian couldn’t stop himself; he caught her around the waist, lifting her easily onto his lap. She was stiff against him, but she didn’t struggle to get away.

  If she had, he would have released her. He didn’t want to be anything like this asshole she was describing. He never wanted her to think she was being forced to do anything against her will again. Never.

  “He told me that he was going to kill me.” She took another breath. “But then he pretended to ponder the idea. He told me that he did rather like me, and he’d let me go. All I had to do was agree to let him cross me over. I had no idea what he was talking about, but I would have agreed to anything. Anything to get away from him, to go home. I just wanted to go home.”

  Sebastian hugged her to his chest like a child, wishing he’d been there. That he could have protected her.

  “I remember screaming yes, he could cross me over, then I don’t remember much after that. Just pain. Extreme pain. Then blackness. When I came to, I was lying in the mud and he was gone. It was early morning, overcast, pouring down rain. I remember the smell of the ocean being so overwhelming that I nearly vomited. Of course, I didn’t realize that was because I’d changed. That I was now undead, and every sensation was overwhelmingly intense.”

  The vampire had just left her. Suddenly, her lack of understanding about herself made some sense. Although he still had no idea how she hadn’t learned anything in the past hundred years. And why would a vampire cross over a mortal and just leave them? It made no sense. Why hadn’t the vampire just killed her?

  “Somehow, I managed to get home,” she continued. “I remember stumbl
ing into my house, yelling for my parents. But they didn’t come for me. They couldn’t leave their guests. They couldn’t reveal what happened to the world’s elite. The servants hurried me away to my room. My parents didn’t even come see me until the next day. Once all the guests had left.»

  Sebastian heard her voice crack, and he pulled her tight against him, rubbing his cheek against the top of her head, wanting desperately to take away her pain, even as he seethed over her parents’ cruelty. In their own way, in a worse way, they had been as vicious as the vampire.

  She fell silent then. Not until he felt her tiny trembles did he realize she was crying.

  “Mina,” he murmured against her hair. “I’m so sorry.”

  She didn’t answer; she just nestled against him as if she wanted to burrow into his skin. He held her, whispering to her, not even sure what he was saying, just knowing he wanted to take away her pain. He wanted to protect her.

  He’d suspected her fear had been based around sex, since she had panicked whenever they’d gotten intimate, but that wasn’t it. Was she simply scared of him because he was a vampire? Did the act of kissing and making love remind her of the moments leading up to her attack? He still wasn’t sure.

  And he still didn’t understand how she could have survived. Left alone with no understanding why or how she’d changed. He didn’t think her parents would have been too accepting of what she’d become. Had they even known? Had they believed?

  “Mina, I know you’re upset, but I have to ask this.”

  She nodded, not lifting her head from his chest.

  “How did you survive? What happened after that night?”

  She was silent for a moment, then she pulled in a breath that seemed to shudder her whole body. “I–I had no idea what was happening. All I knew was I couldn’t stand the light. It hurt and felt heavy on my skin. I was starving, but I couldn’t keep food down. I remember feeling crazed like a caged animal.”

 

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