Lara Adrian's Midnight Breed 8-Book Bundle

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Lara Adrian's Midnight Breed 8-Book Bundle Page 116

by Lara Adrian


  “She was afraid too,” Dylan pointed out, and Rio was glad not to hear any trace of pity for him in her voice. Her fingers were warm and reassuring as she took his hand in her grasp. The hand he’d just told her could wield death with a touch. “The both of you must have felt so isolated and alone.”

  “Yes,” he said. “I suppose we did. It all ended about a year later. Some of the village men saw my mother and took an interest in her, apparently. They showed up one day at the cottage while we were sleeping. There were three of them. They kicked in the door and went after her. They must have heard the rumors about her because the first thing they did was bind her hands so she couldn’t touch them.”

  Dylan’s breath caught in her throat. “Oh, Rio…”

  “They dragged her outside. I ran after them, trying to help her, but the sunlight was intense. It blinded me for a few seconds that felt like an eternity while my mother was screaming, begging them not to harm her or her son.”

  Rio could still picture the trees—everything so green and lush, the sky so blue overhead … an explosion of colors he’d only seen in darker, muted shades when he was out in the safety of night. And he could still see the men, three large human men, taking turns on a defenseless female while her son watched, frozen by terror and the limitations of his five-year-old body.

  “They beat her, calling her ugly things: Maldecido. Manos del diablo. La puta de infierno. Something snapped in me when I saw her blood run red on the ground. I leaped on one of the men. I was so furious I wanted him to die in agony … and he did. Once I understood what I’d done, I went after the next man. I bit him in the throat and fed on him as my touch slowly killed him.”

  Dylan was staring at him now, saying nothing. Standing there, so very still.

  “The last one looked up and saw what I’d done. He called me the same things he called my mother, then added two more names I’d never heard before: Comedor de la sangre. Monstruo. Blood-eater. Monster.” Rio exhaled a brittle laugh. “Until that moment, I didn’t know what I was. But as I killed the last of my mother’s attackers and watched as she lay dying in the sunlit grass, some knowledge buried deep within me seemed to come awake and rise up. I finally understood that I was different, and what that meant.”

  “You were just a child,” Dylan said softly. “How did you survive after that?”

  “For a while I went hungry. I tried feeding from animals, but their blood was like poison. I hunted my first human about a week after the attack. I was out of my mind with hunger, and I had no experience with finding my own food. I killed several innocent people those first few weeks I was on my own. I would have gone Rogue eventually, but then something miraculous happened. I was tracking prey in the woods when a huge shadow came out of the trees. It was a man, I thought, but he moved so fast and so stealthily I could hardly keep focus on him. He was hunting too. He went after the peasant I’d set my sights on, and with a grace I was sorely lacking, he brought the human down and began to feed from the wound he’d opened in the man’s throat. He was a blood-eater, like me.”

  “What did you do, Rio?”

  “I watched in fascination,” he said, remembering it as clearly as if it had just happened a few minutes ago.

  “When it was over, the human got up and walked away as if nothing out of the ordinary had occurred. I was astonished, and when I drew in my breath, that’s when the blood-eater saw me hiding nearby. He called me out and after hearing that I was alone, he brought me with him to his home. It was a Darkhaven. I met many others like me, and learned that I was part of a race called the Breed. As my mother had not seen fit to give me a name, my new family in the Darkhaven gave me the one I have now.”

  “Eleuterio de la Noche Atanacio,” Dylan said, the words sounding far too sweet as she spoke them. Her hand, as she placed it tenderly on the scarred side of his face felt far too comforting. “My God, Rio … it’s a miracle you’re standing here with me at all.”

  She moved closer to him now, looking up into his eyes. Rio could hardly breathe as she rose onto her toes and tilted his chin down to meet her kiss. Their lips came together for the second time that night … and with a need that neither one of them seemed willing or able to conceal.

  He could have kissed her forever.

  But it was at that precise moment that the quiet promenade erupted in a sudden cacophony of gunfire.

  CHAPTER

  Twenty-Four

  Panic flooded Rio’s veins like acid.

  The gunfire came again, another rapid report that split the night. The sharp staccato pops were coming from somewhere close; in his head they were cannon fire, the sound of them—the shock of a sudden attack—ripping through his senses, filling his mind with a thick fog that swallowed the here and now.

  Dylan, he thought fiercely.

  Had to keep her safe.

  He was only barely conscious of his actions as he grabbed her by the shoulders and threw her down onto the grass beneath him. Her cry of alarm was muted, more felt than heard as he covered her body with his, willing to sacrifice himself for her.

  Protecting her was all that mattered.

  But as they hit the hard earth together, Rio felt his mind splintering off. Past and present began to blend, mesh … morph into a hazy confusion of thought and fracturing logic.

  Suddenly he was in the warehouse again—Lucan, Nikolai, and the other warriors moving in on a raid of a Rogue lair in Boston. He was glancing up into the rafters of the abandoned building, noting the movement of enemies in the shadows.

  Seeing the silver glint of an electronic device in the suckhead’s hands.

  Hearing Niko shout a warning that a bomb was set to blow…

  Ah, fuck.

  Rio roared as remembered pain blasted into his head, into every inch of his body. He felt like he was on fire, flesh burning, filling his nostrils with the stench of seared skin and hair.

  Cool hands came up to his face, but he was too far gone to make sense of what was real and what was a nightmare from his recent past.

  “Rio?”

  He heard the soft voice, felt those soothing hands moving over his face.

  And, from somewhere not far away the hoots and chortles of several human youths. The laughter was accompanied by the slap of sneakers on pavement, all of it growing distant now.

  “Rio. Are you all right?”

  He knew that voice. It filtered through the swelling madness that was engulfing him, a lifeline thrown to him in the dark of his mind. He reached for it, feeling her voice ground him where nothing else ever had.

  “Dylan,” he managed to rasp out between the panting of his breath. “Don’t want you to get hurt…”

  “I’m fine. It was only firecrackers.” She smoothed her fingers over the cold clamminess of his forehead. “Those boys set them off by the railing over there. It’s okay now.”

  Like hell it was.

  He felt one of his blackouts coming on, and coming on fast. He rolled away from Dylan with a groan. “Shit … my head hurts … can’t think straight.”

  She must have leaned over him, because he felt her breath skate across his cheek as she blew out a low curse. “Your eyes, Rio. Shit. They’re changing … they’re glowing amber.”

  He knew they must be. His fangs were biting into his tongue, his skin tightening up all over his body as rage and pain transformed him. He was at his most deadly like this, when his mind was not his own. When his devil’s hands were at their most unpredictable, and most powerful.

  “We have to get you someplace less public,” Dylan said. She slipped her hands underneath his shoulders.

  “Hold on to me. I’m going to help you stand up.”

  “No.”

  “What do you mean, no?”

  “Leave me,” he rasped.

  Dylan scoffed. “Like hell I will. You can’t lie out here like this in the middle of Manhattan and expect not to be noticed. Now, come on. Get. Up.”

  “I can’t … don’t want to touch you. I don�
��t want to hurt you, Dylan.”

  “Then don’t,” she said, and put her weight into the task of hoisting him up onto his feet.

  Rio had no choice but to put his hands on her shoulders to steady himself as the fog in his mind grew thicker, swallowing up his vision. He fought to keep the blackout at bay, knowing Dylan would be safest only if he remained lucid.

  “Lean on me, damn it,” she ordered him. “I’m going to help you.”

  Dylan wedged herself under Rio’s arm and took his wrist in her hand, bearing as much of his weight as she could while she tried to find somewhere private for him to deal with the aftershocks of the attack that had come over him. She led him off the riverside walkway and up a one-way side street where there was less traffic, and far less people around to get close enough to see his transformation.

  “Still good?” she asked him, hurrying toward an old brick church with plenty of shadows behind it. “Can you make it a bit farther?”

  He gave a nod and grunted, but each step was more sluggish than the last. “Blacking … out…”

  “Yeah, I kind of figured that,” she said. “It’s okay, Rio. Just hang in with me for another minute, okay?”

  No answer this time, but she could feel him working to stay upright and moving. Struggling to stay lucid long enough for her to help him.

  “You’re doing great,” she told him. “Almost there.”

  She pulled him into the dark behind the building, guiding him to an alcove near a rusted, padlocked door. Using the brick wall as back support for Rio, Dylan carefully eased him down into a sitting position on the ground. She threw a glance in both directions, relieved to see that they were fairly concealed from the side street and any passersby. They were safe there for now.

  “Tell me what to do, Rio. What do you need to get through this?”

  He didn’t answer. Maybe he was incapable. Dylan smoothed his dark hair away from his face and searched his eyes for any sign that he was still cognizant. The thin vertical pupils were always a shock, but no more so than the blast of amber that surrounded them. Rio’s eyes burned like hot coals set into his skull. Anyone driving or walking past the small church would have to be blind to miss the otherworldly glow.

  Dylan glanced at the old door and its decrepit lock. She’d seen Rio turn on lamps and water spigots with his mind, so pulling off a B&E on the church should have been no big thing. Except he clearly was in no condition to attempt it. His head slumped down onto his chest and with a pained groan, he started listing to the side.

  “Shit,” Dylan hissed.

  She left him only long enough to search the lightless lot for something heavy. She came back with a piece of broken cinder block that had been keeping the lid of a Dumpster closed. The brick was rough in her hands, and made an echoing crack and a bright spark as she slammed it against the padlock on the church door. It took two more hard strikes before the lock dropped away with a thump.

  “Rio,” she whispered fiercely as she lifted his thick shoulders back up. “Rio, can you hear me? We have to get you inside. Can you stand up?”

  She raised his chin and stared into open eyes that were unseeing now, vacant pits of fire.

  “Goddamn it,” she muttered, then winced at the poor choice of expletives, considering she was about to bring an unconscious creature of the night into a heavenly sanctuary for protection.

  Dylan eased the church door open and listened for any signs of occupation. It was all quiet, not a single light on inside the small antechamber or in the main area of the nave beyond.

  “Okay, here we go,” she said under her breath as she went around to Rio’s head and grabbed his arms to pull him over the threshold.

  He was heavy as hell, two-hundred-plus pounds of solid muscle and bone, none of it cooperating with her. Dylan tugged and dragged him into the darkness, then closed the door behind them.

  It didn’t take long to find a couple of candles and a box of matches in the cabinets. Dylan lit the pair of white tapers then ducked back outside to grab the cinder block as a makeshift holder. She stuffed the candles into the cylindrical holes of the cement brick, then went to check on Rio.

  “Hey,” she said softly, leaning over his sprawled, unresponsive body where he lay on the floor. His eyes were closed now, but restless behind his lids. A muscle in his jaw twitched, his limbs unmoving yet tense with a coiled energy Dylan could feel as she got near him.

  She stroked his face with a feather-light touch, running the backs of her fingers over the flawless cheek that made him so jaw-droppingly gorgeous, and the other side that completely broke her heart. Who could have predicted these past several days, and all the things she would experience? What could possibly have prepared her for meeting this complicated, incredible man?

  Would she ever truly be able to forget him, even if he erased himself from her memory like he intended to do?

  She doubted it. Even if her mind were forced to forget him, she didn’t think her heart ever would.

  Dylan bent down and pressed her lips to his slack mouth.

  Rio’s eyes snapped open. His hands shot around her throat so fast, she didn’t have a chance to draw breath enough to cry out.

  CHAPTER

  Twenty-Five

  He didn’t know what yanked him harder out of the dead fog of his mind: the feel of soft lips on his mouth, or the realization a split second later that he was holding a slender throat in his hands. Squeezing tight, fury flowing from the confusion of his blackout into the tips of his fingers where they pressed with deadly intent on a delicate female larynx.

  He couldn’t let go.

  His eyes were open, but he couldn’t focus on the face before him. He heard a choked gasp, a moan vibrating against his locked thumbs.

  None of it broke him out of the thick darkness.

  It wasn’t until he felt soft hands come up to his face—his scars—that he felt the first glimmer of clarity.

  Dylan.

  Cristo … he was hurting her.

  With a roar, Rio threw himself off her, releasing her the instant he realized what he was doing. He scrambled into the shadows of the unfamiliar surroundings, horrified at what he’d done.

  Holy hell … what he might have done, if he’d held on any longer.

  He heard her suck in a few rapid breaths of air behind him. He waited to hear her footsteps take off at a panicked run. He wouldn’t have blamed her. He wouldn’t have gone after her either. Not even for the purpose of scrubbing her mind in protection of the Breed and the secret let loose from that Bohemian cave.

  If she ran now, she would have her freedom from him completely.

  “Go, Dylan. Get far away from me … please.”

  He heard a rustle of movement as she got up. He closed his eyes, ready to let her go.

  Praying she would.

  Instead she drew nearer to him. Rio flinched as her hand landed gently on his head and then drifted slowly down his hair.

  “Go,” he rasped. “Before I lose my fucking mind again and do something even worse. For fuck’s sake, I might have killed you just now.”

  He hissed as she knelt down beside him on the floor. With the slightest coaxing, she brought his head around to face her. “I’m okay, as you can see. You scared me a little, but that’s all. God, Rio … how often does this happen to you?”

  He scowled and shook his head, not interested in having this conversation right now.

  “How do you get through it?” she asked. “I’d like to help you—”

  “You can’t.”

  He couldn’t force his gaze away from her throat as he said it, hard as he tried to avoid looking at the graceful column of Dylan’s neck. He hadn’t bruised her—a small miracle—but he could still feel the velvety skin against his palms, the heat of her still tingling in his fingertips.

  And there, near the hollow at the base of her throat, beat a strong, tempting pulse.

  “You need blood, don’t you,” she said, too smart to miss the weakness that he couldn�
��t conceal. “Would it be better for you if you fed?”

  “Not from you.”

  “Why not, if you need it?”

  He cursed, head still pounding from the lingering effects of his meltdown. “Your blood in my body will create a lasting, unbreakable bond. I would always feel you—be drawn to you—for as long as you are alive.”

  “Oh,” she said softly. “And we definitely wouldn’t want that. Not when you prefer to feel isolated and alone.”

  Rio scoffed. “You don’t know how I feel.”

  “When did you start hating yourself?” she asked, unfazed by the fire he was throwing off with his narrow glare. “Was it after Eva betrayed you, or much earlier than that? Back in that forest cottage in Spain?”

  He snarled, turning away from her before she stoked his anger any higher. He was volatile in his current state, a deadly predator teetering on the very edge of sanity.

  Just another good reason why he should put the beast down. Before he hurt someone again. Before he let himself think that the future might hold anything of worth for him.

  And damn well before he considered Dylan’s reckless offer any longer than he had already.

  “My mother’s been fighting for her life for nearly a year. You can’t wait to throw yours away.”

  “What do you think you’d be doing if you let me drink from you now?” he shot back, his voice rough, combative. A bit desperate, even. “I’m the last thing you need, Dylan. If you reach into the trap to pull me out, I can’t promise I won’t take your arm off in the process.”

  “You’re not going to hurt me.”

  Rio grunted, a coarse, animalistic sound. “How do you know I won’t?”

  “Because I’m going to trust you not to.”

  He made the very grave mistake of turning back to look at her. With her eyes on his now, Dylan pulled her hair over to one shoulder and moved closer, until her neck was poised near his mouth. Rio stared at the exposed column of pale skin, his gaze rooting on the rapid tick of her pulse beneath the tender flesh.

  He growled a violent curse.

 

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