knew that, you saw it with your own two eyes! That's why you wanted to have him killed!"
"But now when I think on it, I wonder... why did he feel nothing for you? Perhaps you didn't work hard enough to engage his interest."
Marissa felt a raw fury. And the emotion grew hotter as her brother said, "And as for choices, you could have stayed out of that human's hospital room. You chose to go in there. And you chose to... you could have... not Page 114
J R Ward: Lover Revealed
layed with him."
"Is that what this is about? For God's sake, I'm still a virgin."
"Now you lie."
The three words snapped her out of her emotions. As the heat drained away, clarity came, and for the first time, she truly saw her brother: brilliant of mind, devoted to his patients, loving of his dead shellan... and utterly rigid. A male of science and order who liked rules and predictability and enjoyed a precise vision of life.
And he was clearly willing to protect that worldview at the cost of her future... her happiness... her very self.
"You are absolutely correct," she said with a strange calm. "I do have to go."
She glanced at the boxes that were filled with the clothes she'd worn and the things she'd bought. Then her eyes found him again. He was doing the same, staring at them as if measuring the life she'd led.
"I shall let you keep the Durers, of course," he said.
"Of course," she whispered. "Good-bye, brother."
"I am Havers to you now. Not brother. And never again."
He dropped his head and walked out of the room.
In the silence that followed there was the temptation to fall on the bare mattress and cry. But there was no time. She had maybe an hour before light.
Dear Virgin, where would she go?
Chapter Sixteen
When Mr. X came back from meeting the Omega on the other side, he felt like he had heartburn. Which seemed logical, as he'd been fed his own ass.
The master had been teed up about a variety of things. He wanted more lessers, more vampires bleeding out, more progress, more... more... But the thing was, no matter what he was given, he would always be unsatisfied. Maybe that was his curse.
Whatever. The calculus of Mr. X's failure was up on the blackboard, the mathematical equation of his destruction outlined in chalk. The unknown in the algebra was time. How long before the Omega snapped and Mr. X got recalled for eternity?
Things needed to move faster with Van. That man had to get on board and in place ASAP.
Mr. X went over to his laptop and fired the Dell up. Sitting down next to the dried brown stain of a blood pool, Page 115
J R Ward: Lover Revealed
he called up the Scrolls and found the relevant passage. The lines of the prophecy calmed him: There shall be one to bring the end before the master,
a fighter of modem time found in the seventh of the
twenty-first,
and he shall be known in the numbers he bears:
One more than the compass he apperceives,
Though mere four points to make at his right,
Three lives has he,
Two scores on his fore,
and with a single black eye, in one well will he be
birthed and die.
Mr. X eased back against the wall, cracked his neck, and looked around. The stinky remnants of the meth lab, the filth in the place, the air of bad deeds done without remorse were like a party he didn't want to be at but couldn't leave. Just like the Lessening Society.
Except it was going to be okay. At least he'd spotted the lesser exit.
God, it had been so weird how he'd found Van Dean. X had gone to the ultimate fighting brawls to troll for new recruits and Van had immediately stood out from the others. There was just something special about him, something that elevated him above his opponents. And watching the guy move that first night, Mr. X had thought he'd spotted an important addition to the Society... until he'd noticed the missing finger.
He didn't like to bring in anyone with a physical defect.
But the more he saw Van fight, the more clear it was that an absent pinkie was no liability at all. Then a couple nights later he saw the tattoo. Van always fought with a T-shirt on, but at one point the thing got shoved up around his pecs. On his back, in black ink, an eye stared out from between his shoulder blades.
That had been what