and wondered who the hell he was talking to. The Scribe Virgin?
“Wrath?”
He yanked Beth against him, holding her tight, as if he could physically bar her from her fate if it was a bad one.
“Wrath,” she said into his shoulder. “Wrath, honey, I can't… I can't breathe.”
He loosened his hold immediately and looked down into her eyes, trying to force his to focus. The strain pulled the skin of his temples tight.
“Wrath? What's wrong?”
“Nothing.”
“You didn't answer my question.”
“That's because I don't know the answer.”
She seemed taken aback, but then arched up onto her tiptoes. She kissed his lips. “Well, however long I've got, I wish you would stay with me tonight.”
There was a pounding on the door.
“Yo, Wrath?” Rhage's voice carried through the steel. “We're all here.”
Beth stepped back, wrapping her arms around herself. He could sense she was closing up on him again.
He was tempted to lock her in, but he couldn't bear to keep her as a prisoner. And his instincts told him that however much she might wish things were different, she was resigned to her fate, as well as his role in it. She was also safe from the lessers at this point, as they would see her only as a human.
“Will you be here when I get back?” he asked, drawing on his jacket.
“I don't know.”
“If you leave, I need to know where to find you.”
“Why?”
“The change, Beth. The change. Look, it'll be safer if you stay.”
“Maybe.”
He kept his curse to himself. He wasn't going to beg.
“The other door out in the hall,” he said. “It opens into your father's bedroom. I thought you might like to go in there.”
Wrath left before he embarrassed himself.
Warriors did not beg. They rarely even asked. They took what they wanted and killed for it if they had to.
But he really hoped she'd be there when he got back. He liked the thought of her sleeping in his bed.
Beth went into the bathroom and took a shower, letting the hot water soothe her nerves. When she got out, she dried off and noticed a black robe hanging on a hook. She put it on.
She sniffed the lapels and closed her eyes. Wrath's smell was all over it, a combination of soap and aftershave and…
Male vampire.
Good lord. Was she actually living this?
She walked out into the chamber. Wrath had left the closet open, and she went over to look at his clothes. What she found was a cache of weapons that petrified her.
She eyed the door that led out into the stairwell. She thought about leaving, but as much as she wanted to go, she knew Wrath was right. Staying was safer.
And her father's bedroom was an enticement.
She would go there and hope that whatever she found didn't give her palpitations. God knew, her lover was providing one shock after another.
As she stepped out onto the bottom landing, she pulled the lapels of the robe closer together. The gas lanterns flickered, making the walls seem alive as she stared at the door across the way. Before she lost her nerve, she walked over, grabbed its handle, and pushed.
Darkness greeted her on the other side, a wall of black that suggested either a bottomless pit or an infinite space. She reached past the jamb and patted the wall, hoping she'd hit a light switch and not something that would bite her.
No luck on the switch. But a minute later her hand was still attached to her arm.
Stepping into the void, she moved slowly to the left until her body hit something big. Given the clapping of brass pulls, and the smell of lemon wax, she figured the thing was probably a highboy. She kept going, feeling her way around until she found a lamp.
It came on with a clicking sound, and she blinked at the glow. The lamp's base was a fine Oriental vase, and the table under it was made of mahogany, and very ornate. No doubt the room was done in the same fabulous style as the upstairs.
When her eyes adjusted, she looked around.
“Oh… my… God.”
There were pictures of her everywhere. Black-and-whites, close-ups, colored ones. She was all ages, from infancy through childhood and into her teens. In college. One was very recent, having been taken while she was leaving the Caldwell Courier Journal's office. She remembered that day. It had been the first snowfall of the winter, and she'd been laughing as she'd looked up at the sky.
Eight months ago.
The idea that she had missed knowing her father