he was expecting her to buy a line of bull that she knew was false.
While he was stroking her face like a lover.
He must think she was a moron.
“Look, I've seen my records.” Her voice didn't waver. “My birth certificate lists my father as unknown, but there was a note in the file. My mother told a nurse in the delivery room that he'd passed away. She was unable to disclose a name because she went into shock from blood loss thereafter and died herself.”
“I'm sorry, but that's just not what happened.”
“You're sorry. Yeah, I bet you are.”
“I'm not playing games—”
“The hell you aren't! God, to think for even a moment that I might know one of them, even secondhand…” She stared at him with disgust. “You are so cruel.”
He swore, a nasty, frustrated sound. “I don't know how to get you to believe me.”
“Don't bother trying. You have no credibility.” She grabbed her purse. “Hell, it's probably better this way. I would almost rather he'd died than know that he was a criminal. Or that we'd lived in the same town all my life but he never came to see me, wasn't even curious enough to know what I looked like.”
“He knew.” Wrath's voice was very near again. “He knew you.”
She spun around. He was so close he overwhelmed her with his size.
Beth leaped away. “Stop this right now.”
“He knew you.”
“Stop saying that!”
“Your father knew you,” Wrath shouted.
“Then why didn't he want me?” she yelled back.
Wrath winced. “He did. He watched over you. All your life he was never far away.”
She closed her eyes, wrapping her arms around herself. She couldn't believe she was tempted to fall under his spell again.
“Beth, look at me. Please.”
She lifted her lids.
“Give me your hand,” he said. “Give it to me.”
When she didn't respond, he placed her palm on his chest, over his heart.
“On my honor. I have not lied to you.”
He became utterly still, as if giving her a chance to read every nuance of his face and his body.
Could this be the truth? she wondered.
“He loved you, Beth.”
Don't believe this. Don't believe this. Don't —
“Then why didn't he come for me?” she whispered.
“He hoped you wouldn't have to know him. That you'd be spared the kind of life he lived.” Wrath stared down at her. “And he ran out of time.”
There was a long silence.
“Who was my father?” she breathed.
“He was as I am.”
And then Wrath opened his mouth.
Fangs. He had fangs.
Her skin shrank in horror. She shoved him away. “You bastard!”
“Beth, listen to me—”
“So you can tell me you're a fucking vampire?” She lunged at him, punching his chest with her hands. “You sick bastard! You sick… bastard! If you want to role-play your fantasies, do it with someone else.”
“Your father—”
She slapped him, hard. Right across the face.
“Do not go there. Don't even try it.” Her hand stung, and she tucked it in against her belly. She wanted to cry. Because she was hurting. Because she'd tried to hurt him back and he seemed utterly unaffected by the fact that she'd hit him.
“God, you almost had me, you really did,” she moaned. “But then you had to take it one step too far and flash those fake teeth.”
“They're real. Look closely.”
More candles came on in the room, lit by no one.
Her breath left her in a rush. Abruptly, she had the sense that nothing was as it seemed. The rules were off. Reality was sliding into a different realm.
She raced across the room.
He met her at the door and she crouched, as if she had a prayer of keeping him away from her.
“Don't come near me.” She grabbed for the handle. Threw her whole body into it. The thing wouldn't budge.
Panic ran like gasoline through her veins.
“Beth—”
“Let me go!” The door handle cut into the skin of her palms as she wrenched it.
When his hand came down on her shoulder, she screamed. “Don't touch me!”
She leaped away from him. Careened around the room. He tracked her, coming at her slowly, inexorably.
“I'm going to help you.”
“Leave me alone!”
She dashed around him and dove for the door. This time it opened before she even got to the handle.
As if he'd willed it so.
She looked back at him in horror. “This isn't real.”
She bolted up the stairs, tripping only once. When she tried to work the latch on the painting, she broke a nail, but eventually got it open. She ran through the drawing room. Burst out of the house and—