His voice ricocheted around the room, startling her.
"What?" she whispered.
"I stopped screaming. After they were finished with my parents and the doggen, I stopped screaming. The lessers were looking through our quarters. They were searching for me. And I stayed quiet. I clamped my hand over my mouth. I prayed they wouldn't find me."
"Of course you did," she said gently. "You wanted to live."
"No," he shot back. "I was afraid of dying."
She wanted to reach out to him, except she was certain he would pull away.
"Wrath, can't you see? You were a victim as much as they were. The only reason you're here today is because your father loved you enough to keep you safe. You stayed silent because you wanted to survive. That's nothing to be ashamed of."
"I was a coward."
"Don't be ridiculous! You'd just seen your parents murdered!" She shook her head, frustration making her tone sharp. "I'm telling you, you need to reexamine what happened. You've let those horrible hours mark you, and who could blame you for that, but you're looking at it all wrong. All wrong. Put down this warrior-honor crap and give yourself a break!"
Silence.
Ah, hell. Now, she'd done it. The guy opens up to her and she throws his shame back at him. Way to encourage intimacy.
"Wrath, I'm sorry, I shouldn't have - "
He cut her off. Both his voice and his face were like stone.
'"No one has ever spoken to me as you just did."
Shit.
"I'm really sorry. I just can't understand why - "
Wrath dragged her into his arms and hugged her hard, talking in that other language again. When he pulled back, he ended the monologue with something like leelan.
"Is that vampire talk for bitch?" she asked.
"No. Far from it." He kissed her. "Let's just say I respect the hell out of you. Even though I can't agree with your take on my past."
She put her hand on his neck, giving his head a little shake. "You will, however, accept the fact that what happened doesn't in any way change my opinion of you. Although I do feel tremendous sorrow for you and for your family and what you all had to endure."
Long pause.
"Wrath? You will repeat after me. 'Yes, Beth, I understand and will trust your honesty about your feelings for me.' " She shook his neck again. "Let's say it together." Another pause. "Now, not later."
"Yes," he gritted out.
God, if those lips of his were any tighter, they'd snap off his front teeth.
"Yes, what?"
"Yes, Beth."
" 'I trust you to be honest with me about how you feel.' Come on. Say it."
He grumbled his way through the words.
"Good man."
"You're tough, you know that?"
"I'd better be if I'm going to hang around with you."
Abruptly, he took her face into his hands. "I want that," he said fiercely.
"What?"
"For you to be around."
Her breath caught. A tenuous hope took fire in her chest. "Really?"
He closed his glowing eyes and shook his head. "Yeah. It's fucking stupid. It's crazy. It's dangerous."
"So it'll fit right into your life script."
He laughed and looked down at her. "Yeah, pretty much."
God, his eyes were breaking her heart, they were so tender.
"Beth, I want to stay with you, but you have to understand, you'll be a target. And I don't know how to keep you safe enough. I don't know how the hell to - "
"We'll figure it out," she said. "We can do it together."
He kissed her. Long. Slowly. With precious care.
"So you'll stay now?" he asked.
"No. I really do need to get to work."
"I don't want you to go." His hand cupped her chin. "I hate that I can't be with you outside during the day."
But the locks sprang free and the door opened.
"How do you do that?" she asked.
"You will be back before dusk." It wasn't a request, not by a long shot.
"I'll be back sometime after sunset."
He growled.
"And I promise to call if anything weird happens." She rolled her eyes. Man, she was going to have to recalibrate her standards for that word. "I mean, weirder."
"I don't like this."
"I'll be careful." She kissed him and then headed up the stairs. She could still feel his eyes on her as she pushed open the painting and stepped into the drawing room.
Chapter Thirty-two
Beth went to her apartment, fed Boo, and got into the office just after noon. For once, she wasn't famished, and she worked through lunch. Well, sort of. She couldn't really concentrate and mostly engineered a rotation of the paper piles on her desk.