she cleared her throat.
"Then maybe I should just keep it."
The car dangerously swerved before Dante could regain command of himself. Bloody hell, the woman never failed to catch him off guard. Slowing to a mere crawl, he shot her a disgruntled frown.
"Yon don't know what you're saying," he growled. 'You haven't been prepared to become the Chalice."
She gave a lift of her brows. "Was Selena?"
He grimaced as he recalled his former mistress. Although Selena had been human, she had always possessed the arrogant belief that she was above others. Not surprising for the daughter of a duke who considered himself on equal footing with his own god. Selena had viewed the power and immortality of the Phoenix as her right rather than her duty.
"She knewwhat she was getting into," he muttered.
Abby reached out to lightly touch his arm. 'Then tell me."
Dante carefully chose his words. He didn't want to add to her terror, but then again, he had to make sure that she understood precisely why it was impossible for her to carry such a burden.
"Can you imagine what it is like to be immortal?" he at last demanded.
"Well, I can imagine it makes life insurance a rather moot point."
"Abby," he rasped.
She gave a lift of her shoulder. "I'll admit I've never had reason to give it much thought."
"It means watching your family and friends wither and die while you remain precisely the same," he informed her sharply. "It means watching life pass by without ever touching you. It means being utterly alone."
She offered a humorless laugh. "My so-called relatives could have posed for the poster of dysfunctional families. My father terrorized and then abandoned us, my mother drank herself into an early grave, and my brothers fled Chicago the moment they could escape." There was a brief silence. "I have always been alone," she whispered in the dark.
Dante flinched. "Abby."
She sucked in a sharp breath, clearly regretting her brief moment of vulnerability.
'What else?"
"You will always be hunted," he retorted starkly, thrusting aside the urge to offer her comfort. He had to make her see sense. "Every moment, some evil will be plotting your death."
She turned in her seat to regard him squarely. "But you said that the Phoenix is beginning to disguise itself."
"It is, but there are always those with enough power or desperation to track you down. That was why I was chained to the spirit as protection."
He could feel her gaze sweeping over his rigid profile.
"Then you can protect me."
Dante stiffened, his skin prickling with a sudden wave of self-disgust.
"Like I protected Selena?" he growled.
"Dante, you can't blame yourself—"
"It is not a matter of blame; it is a matter of knowledge," he retorted in black tones. "Bloody hell, I don't even know what killed her. Which means the sooner I get you to the witches, the better."
"Dante—"
"No." He turned his head to stab her with a fierce glare. "We must do this for the Phoenix, Abby. It must be protected by those who are best suited to keep it from harm."
Neatly outmaneuvered, Abby offered a frustrated scowl before throwing herself back into the soft leather of her seat.
'You don't fight entirely fair, you know."
His lips twisted with wry humor. "A vampire, sweetness, never fights fair. We only fight to win."
Nearly an hour later, Abby gamely battled her way through the weeds that had taken command of the fields about the industrial park.
Weeds and obnoxious, nuclear-mutant thorn bushes, she discovered as she halted for the hundredth time to salvage her jeans from destruction. Hell, she had never liked nature. It was dirty and filled with crawly creatures and things that made her sneeze. And this little jaunt wasn't making her any fonder. Why the witches couldn't have set up shop in the local mall defied her imagination.
Of course, the weeds and thorns were only a small part of her current discomfort, she ruefully conceded. The knots twisting her stomach and the dryness of her mouth was entirely due to the witches that they currently sought
Dante was adamant that it was their only option, but she was not nearly so convinced. Whatever their noble motives, she had witnessed Selena's screams of mercy as they had forced the powerful spirit into her body, and worse, their contempt of Dante as they had bound him with their magic.
Gould women capable of such acts truly be trusted?
Feeling a nervous sickness clenching her stomach, Abby turned to regard the man walking at her side. She was in dire need of a distraction if