Hunt the Darkness(12)

“Your room I assume?” Roke smiled with wicked amusement as he pushed the door open to take a peek at the pink bedspread on the narrow bed and lace curtains. “It’s very . . . frilly.”

She sent him an evil glare. “Not all of us sleep in moldy crypts.”

He wandered forward, studying the poster hung over the bed. “The Backstreet Boys?”

“I’ve always preferred my men cute and sexy.”

He glanced over his shoulder, the memory of her melting beneath his kisses shimmering in his eyes.

“Not anymore.”

She rolled her eyes, but even as she searched for the words to deflate his ego, Levet was scooting past her and heading directly to the bed.

“What do I sense?” he asked, opening the nightstand to pull out the plain wooden box she’d kept hidden from her mother.

“It’s just a music box,” she readily answered. “I found it here not long after we arrived at this cottage.”

The gargoyle glanced at her, his tail twitching. “You found it or it found you?”

Sally blinked. “I don’t understand. It was tossed in a pile of rubbish behind the shed. If I hadn’t been hiding from my mother, I would never have seen it.”

Roke’s momentary amusement was snuffed out. “Why were you hiding from your mother?”

She wrinkled her nose. “I was playing with her favorite crystal and set the curtains on fire.”

“And you were afraid you were going to be punished?”

“It wasn’t that. I was used to being punished.”

Roke’s jaw clenched. If the witch wasn’t already dead, he would take great pleasure in skinning her alive.

“Then why were you hiding?”

“I had to get rid of the crystal. I didn’t want her to know—”

“The level of your talent,” he finished for her.

“Exactly.” Sally unconsciously rubbed her arms as Roke’s anger dropped the temperature in the room. At least he hadn’t brought the ceiling down on their heads. “My mother liked to believe that she was the most powerful witch ever born.”

“How old were you?”

“Six.”

Six? Christ. She’d been a baby.

Levet cleared his throat. “Tell me exactly how you found the box.”

Sally furrowed her brow as she shifted through her memories.

“I intended to hide the crystal until the spell wore off so I went behind the shed and stumbled over the pile of rubbish.”

“Was the box dirty?” Levet prodded. “As if it had been there a long time?”

She shook her head. “No, but it could have been tossed out by the previous owners.”

“Did you feel drawn to it?”

Sally lifted her hand in confusion. “Any six-year-old girl would be enchanted by a music box.”