Dark Deception (Vampire Royals of New York #1) - Sarah Piper Page 0,111

How is Charlotte, by the way?”

The kindness and authenticity in his question took Dorian by surprise, and he didn’t know how to answer.

“She’s… well. Sleeping in the bedroom.” Despite his dour mood, Dorian’s lips curved into a smile as he pictured her in his bed, her auburn hair fanned out across his pillow, her rosy lips parted. He reached for his drink, eager to finish it off and get back to his woman. “Thank you for the update, Colin. I should—”

“Dorian, wait. There’s more. It’s… it’s about Father’s work.”

Dorian’s hand stilled on the glass, his heart thudding. “Have you deciphered the mysterious illness?”

“That’s just it. There was no illness.”

“But he was searching for a cure. I’m certain of it.”

“Yes, but not for any ailment.” Colin sighed, his voice dropping so low, Dorian had to strain to hear him. “He was searching for a cure for vampirism. And I believe he found it.”

“What are you saying?” Dorian’s own words were a whisper now too, the pounding of his heart nearly drowning them out.

“Father cured himself of vampirism. He was in the process of turning human again. That’s what killed him, Dorian. Without his immortal blood, his body began to rapidly age, his cells deteriorating much faster than they could heal or regenerate. Essentially, he aged two hundred and fifty years in the span of a few months.”

Dorian’s ears rang, his mouth turning to ash. After a long pause, he finally said, “But why? Why would he do such a thing, knowing it would kill him? Knowing it would kill us? Bloody hell, if word got out, it could be the end of all vampires.”

“Not just vampires. It looks like he found cures for shifters and demon-occupied humans alike, though I haven’t been able to locate the specifics.” Colin’s voice dropped again. “I don’t know how long he spent on such work, but one thing is certain, Dorian: Father gave his life in an attempt to usher in the end of supernatural existence as we know it.”

Dorian’s head spun with this new information. As much as his rational mind railed against it, he knew—deep in his bones—that Colin was right.

And he knew, with equal certainty, that if word got out, it would unleash a war the likes of which their communities—despite a long, blood-drenched history—had never seen.

“Who else have you told?” Dorian asked.

“Only you.”

“I’ll be back at Ravenswood tomorrow afternoon. Do not speak to the others until I arrive—we’ll do it together.”

“You have my word. What should we do about the—”

“Hold on.” Dorian cocked his ear, a strange sensation creeping along his skin. “Something’s wrong. I thought I heard…”

“Dorian? What is it?”

Dorian closed his eyes, trying to pinpoint the source of his sudden unease. The hair on the back of his neck stood on end, a chill racing suddenly down his spine. When he took his next breath, he tasted brimstone.

And then, in the span of a single heartbeat, a shriek of raw terror pierced the night, and the scent of warm blood flooded his senses.

Dorian’s heart shattered like a bomb.

The scream—as well as the blood—had come from his bedroom.

Chapter Forty-Seven

The unmistakable scent of Charlotte’s blood wrapped him in a haze of delirium, but Dorian fought through it, half-blurring, half-stumbling across the penthouse.

There was a demon in his home. He felt its dark presence. His lungs were already burning, the taste of hellfire a grim warning in the back of his throat, but there was no time to heed it.

Charlotte was all that mattered. He had to get to her.

When he finally reached the bedroom, he was so weak from the hellfire, he could barely stand.

“Charlotte,” he choked out.

She was naked, tied to a chair in the corner of the room, bound and gagged. A bright red gash wept from her wrist, ruby liquid spilling down her fingers, dripping onto the carpet.

Her wide, frantic eyes implored him, and she shook her head, shouting something he couldn’t understand through the gag—another warning unheeded.

With a burst of new energy, Dorian shot forward.

But he didn’t get far.

A force like a freight train slammed into him from the side, and a sharp pain bit into his neck. Seconds later, he felt his heartbeat slow, his muscles twisting as if they’d come loose from the bone.

He dropped to his knees, and the room spun before his eyes.

Charlotte screamed and rattled in her chair, but her cries were still muffled by the gag, the scent of her blood still flooding his senses.

“Good evening, your highness,” came the cruel

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