Darkyn - Private Demon Part 20
You’re reading novel Darkyn - Private Demon Part 20 online at LightNovelFree.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit LightNovelFree.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy!
"You showed me your secrets. This is mine. This is what I was." He looked around them, as if he wasn't sure.
Then, with more a.s.surance, he said, "I lived a lifetime in this place. Killing for them. For G.o.d."
"It's not such a bad place." No, it was, but this didn't seem the time to get girly about it. She had blood from the table on her hands, and the cut she'd made across her palm stung. "Do you have to stay here?"
He stepped back, stunned. "Of course."
"But you could walk out anytime you want."
"Walk out? When Shujai and al-Ashraf had caught us in their trap, squeezing us to death between Beirut and Haifa?" He spoke as if it were something happening this moment, just on the other side of the walls.
"You were in Desert Storm?" He didn't look that old.
"Only two strongholds remained, Tortosa to the north, and Castle Pilgrim at Athlit, to the south. I was at Castle Pilgrim, sent there to safeguard the Christian pilgrims come to the Holy Land. Only none dared to come. There were only Saracens." Hatred and sorrow wove tight threads through his voice. "I wanted to go home, but I honored my vows."
"Tortosa? Castle Pilgrim..." Jema shook her head, completely confused now. "Those were Templar castles. What are you talking about?"
"Tortosa was abandoned first, and then ten days later the order came. We were to retreat to Ruad, where s.h.i.+ps were waiting to take us home." He looked around him. "Someone had to stay behind until the last man left. I volunteered to stand watch against the Saracens."
"There aren't any Saracens here." She nodded toward the door. "The only person out there is a milkmaid. I think you could probably take her."
"Angelica." His mouth thinned. "She betrayed me. She sold me and our son and my family to the devil."
"I didn't know you were involved."
"You don't know anything about me. I was a Templar. I became a monster." He opened his mouth, and two long, sharp-looking white fangs appeared. "I have walked the earth for more than seven hundred years. I feed on the blood of the living."
She had to say something. "Have you read The Purpose-Driven Life?"
"Do not jest about this. I am a demon, Jema, simply not the one you've imagined. And I will never leave this place."
He turned away from her, and his voice changed. "I can't. I've been here too long."
"That is such c.r.a.p." Jema picked up something wet and dripping and threw it at his back, smacking him in between the shoulder blades. Anger became horror as he looked at her. "I'm sorry. I shouldn't have done that."
He strode to the table, grabbed her by the calves, and yanked them, laying her out flat on her back.
Under him.
Not where Jema wanted to be. Not on a rock bed awash with cow tartare. Not when she had a pretty good idea of what he was going to do with those fangs.
She rolled, but not in time to avoid being pinned between his thighs. He brought his full weight down and flattened her against the stone. Things squished under her front and she fought to keep her face out of the gore. Behind her, his hands manacled her wrists and stretched out her arms so she couldn't use either elbow. His heavy legs were locked on the outsides of hers. So, this wasn't good, Jema thought. At all.
His badly tailored pants were on the thin side, and her nightgown had ridden up, exposing her legs. She could feel just about every inch of what he had shoved against the curve of her b.u.t.t. He wasn't having a problem with the ambience of the setting.
The problem was, neither was she. She was buried in gore, but she was smothering in the scent of gardenias.
Everything below her collarbone wanted her to flip over and spread her legs and shove him into her. The heat and ache were so bad she nearly screamed for him to do it.
Not that he was going to do anything of the sort. Jema couldn't wriggle or breathe or make a sound, and he wasn't lifting up to let her. Darkness grew obese in front of her eyes, so she let herself go gradually limp and didn't move.
He fell for it and rose up.
Jema jerked her head back, driving it into his face, stunning him enough to wrench one arm free. She grabbed the edge of the table and used the wet surface to slide out from under him. His hands s.n.a.t.c.hed at her back, but the gore had left her slippery. She was over the edge of the table and had her feet on the floor again before he scrambled off.
She was closer to his sword than he was, and she could have grabbed it, but something made her hesitate. As if putting one hand on it would be worse than rolling around with him in all the blood and guts.
"What do you want from me?" she shouted.
"I want to save you." He looked at his bloodstained hands. "I cannot, Jema. I cannot even save myself."
"I'm not a damsel in distress." She stepped around a carca.s.s, feeling behind her with her hands so she could keep her eyes on him. "I don't need saving."
"I could kill you." Not a threat, but a fact, presented with fangs and eyes that were cat-slitted and glowing.
"Really. You couldn't even keep me on the slaughtering table." Finally she felt a doork.n.o.b, and although it was as fun as peeling off her own skin with a dull b.u.t.ter knife, she turned, pulled it open, and ran through it.
No, Jema. No.
A huge hand yanked her back and into the dark, and for a moment she floated, a rag doll suspended from that hand, until her feet found solid ground.
Jema was standing on a silver-wooded pier that led to an old-looking boat tied to the end of it. The ocean around it was dark blue, the sky was a slate gray, and the salty air felt ice cold against her face.
She whirled around, but the farm and the slaughterhouse were gone, and only her demon stood behind her, his white tunic back in place and looking as pristine as if the wrestling match in the slaughterhouse had never happened.
Her nightgown was clean, too.
"I like this better," she thought she should mention, "and I'll really like this if it's tonight's wrap-up."
He stared past her at the boat. "It will not end. Not for me." He looked into her eyes, and for a second she saw something too awful for words. Not tears, not fear, not anger. Despair. The bottomless, abandon-hope-all-ye-who- enter-here variety. "I would trade my life for yours."
"I don't like where you work, and my mother can be a handful." She was going to wake up soon, and she didn't want the slaughterhouse to be the only thing she remembered. They had so little time together as it was. "What's your name?"
When he started to answer, she shook her head. "Your real name, not the ones you make up for me."
"I am nothing, no one. Everything I had is gone." He seized her by the arms and shook her. "I am Death."
"You evidently have issues I don't know about," she said, trying to sound reasonable, "but I'd still like to know your name."
All the anger seemed to evaporate out of him. "Thierry. My name is Thierry."
"Thierry." She liked it, and smiled. "Was that so terrible?"
He let her go. He wasn't looking at her anymore, either; he was staring past her at the boat. "It is too late for me, little cat."
She turned to see what had his attention. The sky had turned black, and the sea a choppy, angry yellow-green. The boat had changed into a silvery, unearthly clipper s.h.i.+p with sails so crisp and white they seemed cut out of paper. Eerie blue light streamed through square holes in the railing around the deck. Planks exploded into the air as the boat's metallic hull slammed into the pier; then the snowy sails fluttered, and it swung away into the swelling waves.
A woman, dressed in a black robe and standing on the upper deck lifted a black-gloved hand. It wasn't a wave, but it was definitely a gesture of good-bye. Then the wind caught her hood and flung it back, exposing a beautiful face.
"Ex-girlfriend?" Jema guessed.
"My wife." In a toneless voice he began telling her about the woman, whose name was Angelica.
Jema could hardly stand to listen, for the story of what his wife had done to him was far worse than anything in the slaughterhouse. When he was finished telling it, they stood side by side and watched the boat sail off into the storm. The wind howled around them, and sleet and rain hurled down from the sky, but it didn't touch either of them.
When the s.h.i.+p finally disappeared, Thierry put his arm around her, and turned her to face him. It was almost a hug, only without the nice body-to-body-pressing part.
When she looked into his eyes she knew they weren't going to kiss, or pet, or do anything as before. There was death in his eyes, the pupils two vertical slivers of obsidian, the golden irises paling out until they matched the whites, and then they glittered with death, a flat, frozen void beyond white that was filled with bleached bones, drained flesh, and grinning skulls.
Jema could see her reflection in his eyes. Her eyes were so dark they looked black, and they glowed with heat. If there was such a thing as black fire, it burned in them.
Thierry lifted his free hand up and held it palm out. She folded her fingers through his, and felt something gentle and terrifying wrap around her heart.
He didn't say anything, and she didn't expect him to. The silence between them was a minefield. If they had been anywhere else, Jema would have expected to hear a minister say, "If anyone knows of a reason why these two people should not be joined in holy matrimony..."
Warm wetness distracted Jema from his eyes. Blood welled from between the intersections of their fingers to trickle down the backs of their hands. Nothing hurt, but it didn't stop. She didn't feel alarmed, but watched the two of them bleed together as if that, too, was meant to be.
They were joined now, in some way she couldn't fathom.
Thierry seemed to be waiting for her to say something. "What happens now?"
He leaned forward, not to kiss or hug, but to whisper against her ear, "You will not go into the dark alone. When it is time, I will take you. I will go with you."
"No." She twisted against him. "I won't let you." The night constricted around them, blanking out everything but his touch. "You don't die for me or with me. You stay alive. You go on without me."
He was trying to kill her now, taking the air from her lungs and changing it into gardenias.
"We'll go together," he promised, just before he kissed her. "Tonight."
His mouth touched hers, and she went with him.
Chapter 15.
Jema? Something thudded.
Jema.
Another, harder series of thumps. "Jema."
It was the jangle of keys that tore Thierry out of the dream and back to reality. He was kneeling in the center of Jema's bed, her limp body in his arms. Her mouth and his were bloodied. L'attrait permeated the air in her room, made icy by the balcony window he'd left open.
How had he come in here? What had he done to her?
Thierry had been in thrall more than once and recognized the deep, aching pull of the blood dreams to which he had nearly succ.u.mbed. He felt for a pulse at her throat and nearly collapsed in relief when he found one. She was still alive, and not in rapture.
The keys. Someone was opening the door.
Thierry laid Jema on the bed and jumped from there to the balcony. Outside, he vaulted over the edge, where he hung from the frost-covered stone by one hand.
"Jema, it's freezing in here." The old doctor coughed as he turned on the light. "Did you break a bottle of perfume?"
Thierry kept his head down as he heard Bradford walk over to shut the balcony window and pull the curtains closed. Ice and stone cracked as he dug his fingers in, praying the edge would hold. When Bradford's footsteps moved across the floor, Thierry pulled himself back up and looked through a gap in the curtains on the other side of the window.
Dr. Bradford was covering Jema with her quilt and calling to her. He took her pulse, frowned, and turned away, moving out of Thierry's sight. When he returned, he held a needle in his hand, which he used to inject Jema. Then he sat with his fingers pressed to her wrist, looking down at her face. He sat in that manner for five minutes, and then nodded and gently placed her hand on the bed before turning out the light and departing.
Thierry waited a long time before he went back into the room. He had to be sure he hadn't harmed her and performed his own examination. Jema was in a deep sleep, but her pulse was strong, and she moved restlessly when he said her name. Had she been enraptured, she would not have had the ability to move at all.
He hadn't killed her. She would live another day.
Leaving her tore at him, but Thierry moved back out onto the balcony, where he watched the snow fall around him. He had not fed before coming to Shaw House. She had been awake and reading when he had arrived, and so he had stayed in the shadows, waiting for her to fall asleep.
The long hours, the cold, and lack of blood had instead sent Thierry into a troubled sleep.
How had she slipped into his nightmare? Humans did not have talent; she could not enter the dream realm by her own will. Yet somehow she had-or he had lured her in. He had been a fool not to realize it was Jema's mind, not his fantasy of Jema, in the charnel-house nightmare. No, he had been too busy relis.h.i.+ng the chance to tell her everything.
So he had told her. He'd told her of his dead wife, his ruined faith, the Kyn curse under which he lived-his name; he had told her his name. Everything that she was not to know about him had come out of his mouth. Thierry was surprised he hadn't given her the numbers to all the bank accounts he kept around the world.
Sometime during the dream his sleeping body had left the balcony and gone into her room. That was when the dream changed, and the feeding l.u.s.t came over him. He had taken her blood again, almost draining her. It was only blind luck that Bradford had come in when he had.
Thierry left the balcony the usual way and went back to the Nelsons' home, but only to gather his weapons and belongings. He had gone too far with Jema this time, and he could not go back. He could not trust himself anymore.
Not when his feelings for her had nearly resulted in her death. He had fallen in love with her. So much so that it had nearly put him in thrall to her.
Five hundred years ago, these feelings would have tempted Thierry to change Jema with his blood into his sygkenis-something he had never been able to do with Angelica, as she had risen to walk as Kyn, as he had-but the curse only killed humans now.
How had she done this? Jema had won his heart in the strangest fas.h.i.+on. Not in the midst of pa.s.sion, but in the face of his anger, when he had displayed every secret, revolting part of himself in the blood dreams, and she had not turned away. She had embraced him. She had offered herself to him. She had even laughed at him. Yet when he had tried to give her some comfort in return, when he had told her that he wouldn't let her die alone, only then had she rejected him.
If that was not love, then Thierry did not want to know what it was.
Their hands, entwined, bleeding together. He looked down at his fingers, turning his hand over, expecting to see the mark of her blood on it. He didn't understand what it meant-it may have meant nothing at all-but it had felt like sanctification. As if something greater than him and Jema had given a blessing to their love.
What sort of G.o.d gave a dying woman to a cursed demon? Was it punishment for him, or for her? That G.o.d would do such a thing to her made him wish he could challenge the Almighty himself. Whatever Thierry had earned for his mortal sins, Jema Shaw was an innocent. She had not earned him.
There was a certain irony to it. Thierry had always wanted love. Within the heart of the warrior was a desperate need for peace, and gentleness, and kindness. A life lived to its fullest, with a lady at his side. A lady like Jema. He had wasted his love on a woman who had used it to destroy him, to drive him mad. He had nearly destroyed the woman who had brought him out of madness, who would have kept his love safe.
Thierry had no answers, no thought of how to cope with this new torment. He knew only that he could not stay away from her. He could protect Jema and follow her, and watch over her, and a.s.sure that nothing and no one harmed her.
He could not stay away from her, but last night would have to last him a lifetime. The risk of thrall and rapture was too great; he might not be able to leave the blood dreams a second time.
He could never permit himself to touch her again.
Darkyn - Private Demon Part 20
You're reading novel Darkyn - Private Demon Part 20 online at LightNovelFree.com. You can use the follow function to bookmark your favorite novel ( Only for registered users ). If you find any errors ( broken links, can't load photos, etc.. ), Please let us know so we can fix it as soon as possible. And when you start a conversation or debate about a certain topic with other people, please do not offend them just because you don't like their opinions.
Darkyn - Private Demon Part 20 summary
You're reading Darkyn - Private Demon Part 20. This novel has been translated by Updating. Author: Lynn Viehl already has 491 views.
It's great if you read and follow any novel on our website. We promise you that we'll bring you the latest, hottest novel everyday and FREE.
LightNovelFree.com is a most smartest website for reading novel online, it can automatic resize images to fit your pc screen, even on your mobile. Experience now by using your smartphone and access to LightNovelFree.com
- Related chapter:
- Darkyn - Private Demon Part 19
- Darkyn - Private Demon Part 21