best counter
Search
Report & Feedback

Chapter no 6

Six Scorched Roses

It was long past midnight by the time I reached Valeโ€™s mansion. It was drizzly and cold, as it often was this time of year. I knocked on the door and received no answer.

I was tired and damp, uncomfortable and oddly on-edge after my

encounter with Farrow. I was in no mood for games.

I pounded hard on the door, five six seven eightย nine times, and when there wasย stillย no answer, I opened the door myself. Vale still didnโ€™t lock his door. Why would he?

โ€œLord Vale?โ€ I called out into the cavernous darkness as I closed the door behind me. I heard nothing, saw no movement. Perhaps Vale had decided he was tired of me, and heโ€™d ignore me until I went away. Or maybe heโ€™d lure me in and wait until he could grab me and devour me.

I wandered through the master hallway, and when I found nothing, decided, after a moment of hesitation, to climb the stairs.

I told myself that I was simply accomplishing a taskโ€”but if I was honest with myself, Iโ€™d acknowledge the little trill of delight that ran up my spine.

My mother used to say that I enjoyed the sciences because I was a naturally nosy person. She was probably right. She had always known me better than anyone.

I collected facts the way other people collected jewels, and Valeโ€™s home was overflowing with themโ€”both factsย andย jewels. The stairs led to a long hallway, just as cluttered and architecturally dissonant as every other part of the house that Iโ€™d seen so far. The walls were lined with artwork, most of it depicting vampires with feathered wings gutting, stabbing, burning, and

otherwise brutally killing their victimsโ€”most often vampires with bat-like wings. But these halls also held other artifacts, too. One stretch displayed a set of grand wing bones, which unfolded along the peeling gilded wallpaper. I had to pause to stare at them in awe.

Incredible.

Iโ€™d never seen such a work of biological art. Each wing was longer than I was tall, the bones a delicate gleaming ivory. But despite their light elegance, they were also clearly powerfulโ€”even without muscle, I could see that.

I must have been right about Vale. He must be a Nightborn vampire from the House of Nightโ€”the kingdom of the only winged vampires.

What didย hisย wings look like?

A distant voice jerked me from my thoughts. I tensed, face snapping to the end of the hall.

The sound had come from around the corner, and it came again. A voice, I realized after a momentโ€”though too high to be Valeโ€™s, and wordless. A cry. Pain?

My heart quickened a beat.

I hadnโ€™t thought much about whether Vale did indeed eat humans. And if, when he did so, he dragged them back here to do it.

I probably should have run. But there was no use fighting nature, and I was a curious creature. So I went not away from the sound but closer, creeping down the hall and around the corner, where cool lantern light spilled from an open door at the end of the corridor.

The sounds grew louder, closer.

And a flush rose to my face when, a few steps away from the door, I realized that what I was hearing were not cries of pain. Very much the opposite, actually.

The moans rose to a crescendo.

No, Vale was not alone. And whoever he was with was having a wonderful time.

The door was wide open. Who could blame me for looking?

I peered around the frame. It was Valeโ€™s bedchamber, a grand room covered in silks and art, with messy trinkets strewn over each surface. A large bed with a carved frame sat in the center of the room. Fine bedsheets were mussed and tangled over it.

And tangled over it, too, were two figures so entwined I wasnโ€™t sure where one of them ended and the other began.

She was beneath him, an expanse of golden skin gleaming beneath the messy curls of red hair, and he leaned over her and clutched her hips from behind. I mostly saw his back and her tangles of hair, her arms splayed and gripping the bedsheets to brace herself as he drove into her viciously. With every thrust, his muscles flexed beneath his skin, rippling over the broad expanse of his back, the curve of his backside, the lean muscle of his upper thighs.

He looked as majestic and beautiful as those wings had. I imagined that perhaps, covered in muscle and skin, they might look almostโ€”almostโ€”as beautiful as he did now.

My face was very hot.

I couldnโ€™t look away. I really did mean to announce myself, or back away, but I found myself frozen.

The woman bent down against the bed, the pillow slightlyโ€”but only slightlyโ€”muffling her rising cries of pleasure. Valeโ€™s movements grew faster, harder, flesh slapping against flesh, leaning against her and falling over her back.

I watched, unblinking, as he held her down, mouth going to her shoulder as they came together. He made a sound only then, a rough exhale that made the hairs rise on my arms, and I had to strain hard to hear it over the sound of her.

They collapsed together, and with their breath, I let out my own. My fingers loosened around the doorframe. I hadnโ€™t realized Iโ€™d been clutching it.

Vale whipped around. โ€œLilith.โ€

For just a split second, he actually looked shocked. Frazzled.

Then his face hardened, going smooth and angry. He turned his back to me and rose from the bed, yanking a crumbled-up pile of fabric from the floor and giving me another distracting view of his backside.

โ€œWhat,โ€ he snapped, โ€œare you doing here?โ€ โ€œYou didnโ€™t answer the door.โ€

My voice sounded a little weaker than I would have preferred.

The woman made no attempt to cover herself. She rolled over and stretched. I realized that she was covered in blood, especially around her

throatโ€”the dark color of the bedsheets had hidden that from me before. She smiled, revealing pointed teeth.

โ€œYou invited a human friend, Vale?โ€ she said, with a deep inhale that had me stepping backwards.

Vale shot her a warning glance that made her smile disappear. โ€œA mouse,โ€ he sneered. โ€œNo, a rat. An uninvited pest.โ€

He shook out the robe heโ€™d picked up with a single violent movement, then threw it over his shoulders.

โ€œI knocked,โ€ I said. โ€œYou didnโ€™t answer. I came when I said I would.โ€ โ€œOh, so did I,โ€ the woman said, laughing softly to herself, and Vale shot

her another unamused stare.

โ€œWhat?โ€ she said. โ€œYou donโ€™t want to share?โ€

โ€œLetโ€™s not make any more a mess of my home than we already have.

Can you give us a moment?โ€

She sighed, then leaped from the bed with the grace of a cat. She snatched a piece of fabric from the bedside table and wiped the blood from her chest and throat. โ€œI should be going now. Thank you for the hospitality, as always, Vale.โ€

She slipped into a plain black shirt and trousers that had been lying on the floor, then sauntered past me, casting a lingering, curious glance that began at my feet and ended at my face.

Vale stared out the window, silent, until her footsteps had faded away. Only then did he turn. He was now dressed in a dark red, velvety robe, loosely tied around his waist, exposing a long strip of his chestโ€”covered in curly black hairโ€”but, almost disappointingly, nothing below the waist.

My lips pressed together.

The robe was soโ€ฆ

โ€œWhat?โ€ he snapped. โ€œWhat?โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re laughing at me.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m not laughing at you. Iโ€™m laughing atโ€”โ€

I closed my mouth. Telling people that I was laughing at their clothing, I realized, was probably not very polite.

โ€œWhat?โ€ he bit out, irritated.

โ€œThe robe. Itโ€™s justโ€ฆ itโ€™s very vampiric.โ€

His lips went thin. โ€œYes, well. I am a vampire. So I see now why youโ€™re at the top of your field.โ€

I stifled my laughter. Right. Work.

โ€œIโ€™m here for your blood. Itโ€™s been a month, as we agreed.โ€ โ€œAnd payment?โ€

I reached into my bag and withdrew a rose, carefully wrapped so not a single petal was bent or crushed. He outstretched his hand, and I hesitated, to which he heaved an irritated sigh.

โ€œWhat?ย Nowย I scare you?โ€

He didnโ€™t scare me. It just smelled like sex in here. I crossed the room, eyeing the bloody, rumpled sheets as I passed. Vale took the rose and stared at it, unimpressed.

โ€œThe one you gave me last time seems to be totally unremarkable,โ€ he said.

โ€œYouโ€™ll have to be patient.โ€ โ€œIโ€™m not a very patient man.โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t lie, Lord Vale. Theyโ€™re special. I promise.โ€

โ€œYou can just call me Vale,โ€ he grumbled. โ€œI suppose that once someone has seen my bare ass, we can drop the titles.โ€

He dropped heavily into a velvet chair next to the window. โ€œLetโ€™s get this over with.โ€

โ€œHere?โ€

โ€œYes, here. Is that a problem?โ€

I glanced again to the bed, and he let out a low, silken chuckle. โ€œWhat? Are you really so distracted by sex?โ€

Itย wasย distracting, but I wasnโ€™t about to admit that. I dropped to my knees before him and withdrew my equipment from my bag. When I took his arm to guide the needle into his veins, I was acutely conscious of every patch of my flesh that touched his.

He laughed again as I thrust the needle through the resistance of his skin.

โ€œI can hear your heartbeat. Is that nervousness or excitement?โ€

I could hear my own heartbeat, too, and I wished it would calm down.

Even I wasnโ€™t sure which it was, but neither was welcome.

โ€œI think itโ€™s amusing that you wandered into my house without a care in the world,โ€ he said, โ€œbut the sight of fifteen seconds of sex triggers your

nerves. I will never understand humans.โ€

โ€œIโ€™ve had plenty of sex.โ€ And the minute I said it, I cursed myself for it

โ€”why in the gods names did I just say that?

Vale now looked very, very amused, and I absolutely despised it.

โ€œHave you, now? Did some gawky farm boy from next door take you for a ride?โ€

My lips thinned.

Eron had been gawky, and he was a farm boy, and that summer when I had been sixteen and curious, we had indeed explored each other in the deserted moments behind the barn, when no one else was around. I didnโ€™t want to die a virgin. I was certain, then, that I wouldnโ€™t live to see the winter, so I saw all of Eron instead.

But fifteen years later, I was still here, and six months ago, I swept Eron off the church floor after his funeral, when his mother was too hysterical to do it.

โ€œYou know, I did wonder at first,โ€ I said, โ€œwhy you didnโ€™t kill me when I came into your house. Now I understand itโ€™s because youโ€™re a bored, lonely man, desperate for any kind of company.โ€

I didnโ€™t look away from the vial, his blood dripping and rolling against the glass. But I felt his stare, and in the moment of silence, I wondered if Iโ€™d hit my mark.

โ€œAs you just witnessed,โ€ he said, coolly, โ€œI can get all the company I want.โ€

โ€œCompany that got what she wanted from you and then left without saying goodbye.โ€

โ€œWe got what we wanted from each other. It wasnโ€™t conversation that I was looking for.โ€

And yetโ€ฆ he was sitting here talking to me.

โ€œWhat do you need this for?โ€ he asked. โ€œThe blood?โ€ โ€œAs I told youโ€”โ€

โ€œMy blood isnโ€™t a cure for anything, I promise you that.โ€

โ€œIt appears, Lโ€”โ€ I caught myself. โ€œVale, to be a cure for death.โ€

He scoffed. โ€œNo human encounter with vampire blood has ended particularly well.โ€

That tone piqued my curiosity almost enough to make me forget my irritation at his insults. I peered up at him. He was looking out the window

now, the cold moonlight tracing the outline of his jawbone, especially strong from this angle.

โ€œWere you Born or Turned?โ€ I asked.

There were two ways to make a vampire. Some were birthed, just like the rest of us. But more interesting was Turningโ€”the process of drinking a humanโ€™s blood, and offering theirs, to create a new vampire.

Iโ€™d thought a lot about it these last few weeks. What that must be like. What other animal could do that? It was a transformation as impressive as a caterpillar becoming a butterfly.

His gaze shot to me, insulted. โ€œBorn. Obviously.โ€ โ€œWhy is that obvious?โ€

โ€œBeing Turned isโ€ฆ undesirable.โ€

I knew only a little about vampire anatomy. It was difficult to study them when they were so reclusive. And when so many of the humans who went to Obitraes never returned.

โ€œTurning is dangerous, isnโ€™t it?โ€ I asked.

โ€œYes. The majority die during the process.โ€

โ€œBut if someone survives it and becomes a vampire, theyโ€™re consideredโ€ฆ undesirable?โ€

โ€œPart human. Part vampire. Their blood will always hold the taint of humanity.โ€ His nose wrinkled. โ€œLess pure.โ€

โ€œBut if they survived such a dangerous thing, doesnโ€™t that make them the strongest among you?โ€

Vale opened his mouth as if to argue with this, then shut it. He looked conflicted, like heโ€™d never thought of it that way.

โ€œItโ€™s just not how it is,โ€ he said, at last.

The first vial was full. I switched to the next. โ€œWhy did you leave Obitraes?โ€ I asked. โ€œAnd I thought you were nosy last time.โ€

โ€œMost humans never get to speak to a vampire. I should take advantage of it, shouldnโ€™t I?โ€

โ€œArenโ€™t you so very lucky.โ€

A few seconds passed. I thought he didnโ€™t want to answer, but then he said, โ€œI wanted a change.โ€

โ€œWhy?โ€

โ€œWhy not? Have you always lived in that little town?โ€ โ€œI studied in Baszia.โ€

He scoffed. โ€œA whole ten miles away from home. Howย exotic.โ€

I did despise that he was so judgmental, and I despised even more that his sneers prodded at a selfish little wound I tried to ignore. I would never get to see the worldโ€”but that didnโ€™t mean I didnโ€™t want to.

โ€œNot all of us have the resources to travel,โ€ I said. โ€œHumans and your money.โ€

โ€œI didnโ€™t say money. I said resources.โ€

He glanced at me in confusion. I gave him a grim smile.

โ€œTime, Vale,โ€ I said. โ€œTime is the most valuable resource of all, and some of us are perpetually short.โ€

You'll Also Like