have it locked away.
Not when . . .
She grimaced again. Why not admit it? Not when Santiago might be harmed.
Thrusting aside the vulnerable thought, she met the fiery dragon gaze. “It was contained by the Oracles by a rift in space.”
“When?”
Santiago moved to stand directly behind her shoulder at Baine’s sharp tone, but he was smart enough to keep the sword at his side.
“I don’t have an exact date,” she admitted. “But it was when the world was still young.”
“The Veil,” Baine murmured.
“Yes.”
An odd purring filled the air. Not the cute purring of a kitten, but the lethal vibration of an irritated dragon.
“I should have suspected the idiots were hiding something.”
“No love lost for the Commission?” Santiago demanded.
A tiny wisp of smoke curled from one nostril, revealing the dragon’s opinion of the ultimate leaders of demon kind.
“They have tried to pass themselves off as impartial judges who rule the demon world with no thought beyond justice.” He made a sound of disgust. “When the truth is much less noble.”
“Definitely no love lost,” Santiago muttered.
Nefri studied Baine’s finely carved features, sensing his dislike of the Oracles was more personal than irritation with their positions of authority.
“You weren’t aware of why they created the Veil?” she asked.
“No.” Another wisp of smoke. “Tell me more of the creature.”
She felt the light skim of Santiago’s fingers down the curve of her spine. As if she needed the silent warning to be careful. The very air was heating with Baine’s rising temper.
“Unfortunately I know little more than it was dangerous enough to prompt the Oracles to bar it from the mortal world,” she carefully confessed. “And that it’s currently traveling with a vampire named Gaius.”
“And you believe the vampire is infected?”
“Gaius seems capable of spreading intense emotions among the humans with his bite. Fear, violence, lust . . .” She shook her head in frustration. Until she understood how and why he was infecting humans, she couldn’t risk coming into contact with him. “We don’t know if it’s a deliberate act or a symptom of his own sickness.”
The amber eyes widened, as if her words had startled the dragon. Rather amazing considering the beast was rumored to be older than the world and possessed the knowledge of thousands of species.
Then, without warning, a mysterious smile was curling his lips. “Intense emotion?”
“Is something funny?” Santiago growled.
Turning with a sinuous motion, Baine paced across the narrow room, his chuckle sending a rash of unease over Nefri’s skin.
“It really is the perfect irony,” he murmured.
“Do you know this spirit?” Nefri asked.
“Perhaps.”
“Are you going to share?” Santiago snapped.
Nefri elbowed him with enough force to make him wince in pain.
“Santiago,” she muttered.
Baine slowly turned back. “I must consider what I’m prepared to reveal.”
“Thank you.” Nefri dipped her head in respect. “We would appreciate any information you can share.”
“Ever the diplomat, eh, beautiful Nefri?” Baine drawled.
Nefri shot a chiding glance toward the vampire still scowling at her side. “It’s necessary when surrounded by impetuous males who love to flex their muscles.”
Baine sent a mocking glance toward Santiago, at the same time waving a slender hand toward the double doors on the opposite side of the throne. With a faint squeak one door swung slowly inward, as if it hadn’t been opened in centuries.
“The hallway leads to a private suite,” Baine told her. “We will speak again when I’ve made my decision.”
“Of course.”
Grabbing her companion by the arm, she led him toward the door before he could demand the dragon tell them what he knew.
There was nothing they could say or do to force Baine to speak. Not even the Hope Diamond could sway him.
For now they would have to wait until he decided they were worthy of his secrets.
And pray that it didn’t take until the next millennium.
Chapter 16
Santiago allowed Nefri to lead him down the long, shadowed hallway. Not that he was happy about it.
A dragon. A freaking dragon.
Like it wasn’t bad enough to be chasing a mysterious spirit and his crazy-ass sire who could infect humans. Now he was trapped in the lair of a dragon.
“You have a habit of collecting dangerous friends, cara,” he growled, his wary gaze trying to focus on the paneled walls that seemed to waver in and out of focus. As if they were walking through the strange corridors between dimensions.
Nefri had the nerve to send him a puzzled frown. “Dangerous?”
He snorted. “Dragons, Oracles . . .”
“Baine is hardly a friend,” she interrupted him.
“And the Oracles?”
She grimaced. “I’m nothing more than a lowly servant