dropped. “My lord, I can feel your p—”
“I'm perfectly fine.”
She hesitated a moment. And then quietly disappeared.
Ten minutes later he came up to the drawing room.
“Fritz?” he called out.
“Yes, master?” The butler seemed pleased to have been summoned.
“Do you have some red smokes on hand?”
“Of course.”
Fritz went across to an antique mahogany box. He brought the thing over, opening the lid and angling the contents outward.
Wrath took a couple of the hand-rolled cigarillos.
“If you have a taste for them, I'll get more.”
“Don't bother. This is enough.” Wrath wasn't into drugging, but he was willing to put the smokes to good use tonight.
“Will you be needing something to eat before you go out?”
Wrath shook his head.
“Perhaps when you return?” Fritz's voice grew small as he closed the lid.
Wrath was about to shut the old male down when he thought of Darius. D would have treated Fritz better. “Okay. Yeah. Thanks.”
The butler's shoulders squared off with purpose.
Good God, he seemed to be smiling, Wrath thought.
“I shall make you lamb, master. How do you like your meat cooked?”
“Rare.”
“And I'll wash your other clothes. Shall I also order you a new set of leathers?”
“Don't—” Wrath shut his mouth. “Sure. That'd be great. And, ah, could you get me some boxers? Black? XXL?”
“With pleasure.”
Wrath turned away and headed for the door.
How the hell had he found himself with a servant?
“Master?”
“Yeah?” he growled.
“Take care of yourself out there.”
Wrath paused and looked over his shoulder. Fritz seemed to be cradling the box against his chest.
It was goddamned weird having someone waiting for him to come home, Wrath thought.
He left the mansion and walked down the long drive to the tree-lined street. Lightning streaked across the sky, a promise of the storm that he could smell brewing to the south.
Where the hell was Darius's daughter right now?
He'd try her apartment first.
After Wrath materialized in the courtyard behind her place, he looked into her windows and returned her cat's purr of welcome with one of his own. She wasn't inside, so Wrath took a seat on the picnic table. He'd give her an hour or so, and then he was going to have to find the brothers. He could always come back at the end of the night, although given how things had gone the first time he'd come into her place, he figured waking her up at four A.M. wasn't the smartest move.
He took off his sunglasses and rubbed the bridge of his nose.
How was he going to explain what was about to happen to her? And what she'd have to do to live through the change?
He had a feeling she wasn't going to be too happy about the news flashes.
Wrath thought back to his own transition. What a goddamned mess that had been. He hadn't been prepared either, because his parents had always wanted to shelter him, and they'd died before they'd told him what to expect.
His memories came back with a terrible clarity.
London in the late seventeenth century had been a brutal place, especially for someone who was all alone in the world. His parents had been slaughtered in front of him two years before, and he'd run from his species, thinking his cowardice on that awful night was a shame only he should bear.
Whereas in vampire society he'd been nurtured and protected as the future king, he'd found the world of humans to be based largely on a physical meritocracy. For someone built as he'd been before he went through his change, that had meant he'd been on the bottom of the social rung. He'd been whip-thin then, scrawny and weak, and easy prey for human boys looking for fun. Over the course of his time in London's slums, he'd been beaten so many times he'd grown used to parts of him not working right. It was nothing new to have a leg that wouldn't bend because the kneecap had been stoned. Or to have an arm that was useless because it'd been popped out of his shoulder as he'd been dragged behind a horse.
He'd been living off garbage, squeaking by on the edge of starvation, when he'd finally found work as a servant in a merchant's stable. Wrath had cleaned shoes and saddles and bridles until the skin on his hands had cracked, but at least he'd been fed. His pallet had been in the stables, on the second-floor hayloft. It was softer than the ground he'd grown used to, but he'd never known when he'd be woken up with a kick to the