I hated sitting still.
Despised it, actually.
Vale all but threw me back into the bed, and I sat there for half an
hour before I was fidgeting, trying to get up only to immediately stumble again. He caught on fast, soon taking watch at my bedside.
โYouโre self-destructive,โ he muttered, visibly irritated with me. โIโm busy.โ
โYouโre ill.โ
So what?
But before I could come up with another protest, he went to the bookcase, withdrew some books, and plopped them heavily onto the bed. โHere. If you want to work so badly, then work.โ
I picked up the books. They were all written in a language I had never seen before.
โIs thisโฆ Obitraen?โ
Only at my tone did Vale seem to recognize the flaws of his plan.
โWhatย areย these, anyway?โ I picked up another one of the books and flipped through it. It was illustrated. Graphically so.
My cheeks tightened as I turned the book sideways, taking in a full-page spread. โMy, Vale. Your taste isโฆโ
He snatched the book away. โFine. Then sit here doing nothing.โ
โWhat is it, exactly, that you think Iย do, if you thought you could give me a random collection of books written in a language I didnโt understand and that would qualify as โworking?โโ
His face flushed with something that almostโalmostโresembled embarrassment. Gods, I wished I could capture that expression. It was a thing of art.
โYouโre awfully ungrateful of my hospitality,โ he muttered, turning away.
โWait.โ
He stopped at the door and looked back.
No, these books, whatever they wereโand I was very sure they had absolutelyย nothingย to do with my fieldโwouldnโt help me work. Butโฆ still, curiosity nagged at me. How many humans had gotten to read Obitraen books?
โYou could read them to me,โ I said. โIf youโre justย soย desperate to host.โ
โRead them to you?โ
Was the twinge in his voice disgust? His lip curled as if it was.
โI donโt know Obitraen, but you do. If you want me to stay in bed, it would be easier if I had something to do.โ
Vale thought for a moment, then snatched one of the books from the bed
โnot the illustrated one, sadlyโand sat in a chair by the window.
โFine,โ he huffed. โIt isnโt as if I donโt have much more important things to do, but Iโll indulge you if youโre bent on being difficult.โ
โAn honor,โ I said, unable to suppress a smile. โI know youโre very busy.โ
But Vale, for all his supposed busyness and his grumpy reluctance, launched into those stories with all the enthusiasm of a man who would rather be nowhere else in the world.
Iย LOSTย myself in those stories. It was too easy. My mind was thick and muddied, and I was exhausted. The first book Vale had picked up was a history book, vampire lore told in short vignettes. Their history wasโฆ appalling, but also riveting, every myth and legend woven into a tapestry of blood and betrayal. And yet, even when telling such horrible tales, his voice
was smooth and deep, rising and falling like the swells of the ocean. Steady, like a heartbeat or breath. Elegant, like the way his blood looked on the wall.
I didnโt remember falling asleep, only that Valeโs voice and his stories followed me into my dreams. And I didnโt remember lying down or pulling the covers around myself, only that when I awoke, I had been carefully tucked in, silk sheets smoothed tight around my body.
I felt hot and weak, but worlds better than I had before. So I did the only natural thing: I got out of bed and started exploring.
I still couldnโt decide if Valeโs mansion was the ugliest or most beautiful place I had ever been. Each room I wandered into was more cluttered than the lastโan absolute mess, but with the most fascinating objects. I came to the conclusion that Vale must only live in a very small section of this enormous house, because almost every room I peered into seemed to be used as storage. All of them were stunning, but the fourth room made me stop in my tracks, awed.
Weapons. Everywhere, weapons. I was an academic, a farmerโs daughter raised in a farmersโ town. Iโd never held a swordโhad barely even seen any, save for those on the hips of city guards. Theyโd always seemed to be simplistic and brutish instruments to me. Unremarkable.
Not these.
These were works of art. Even I, a woefully untrained eye, could see that immediately. Swords lined the walls, hung straight up and down in slashes of silver and gold along dark wallpaperโswords of every size, every shape, some nearly as tall as me and others light and delicate. On one side of the room, several sets of armor were mounted on wooden frames. Gorgeous, even from a distanceโsilver metal and black leather and capes of purple silk. Freestanding racks, haphazardly arranged about the space, held axes, bows, arrows.
A few, I realized as my eyes adjusted, were marked with spatters of black.
And there, on an end table right within the door, was a rapier stained with dried red bloodโdried,ย freshย red blood. Perhaps from only a few days ago.
The hairs prickled on the back of my neck. The beauty of it all collided with the realization that dozensโhundreds, maybe thousandsโhad almost certainly been killed with the instruments that surrounded me now.
โYouโre very bad at resting.โ
I jumped and almost fell into a rack of arrows before Valeโs hand snaked out to catch me. He pulled me upright, but didnโt let me go. Our bodies were close. His eyes were slightly narrowed, searching my face, and I struggled to decode the complexities of what lay within them.
Annoyance, yesโthat I expected. But something else, too, like he was waiting for the answer to a question and was nervous about what it might be.
โSo I take it youโre feeling better,โ he said.
โYes. Better.โ I cleared my throat and pulled away. Then looked to the room.
โYou shouldnโt be in here,โ he said. โHow did you get all of this?โ
โI take my field seriously, just as you do yours.โ โAnd that field isโฆ?โ
โI was a general.โ โA good one?โ
Even as the question left my lips, I knew it was a stupid one. Iโd seen Vale fight now. Like it was an art.
โThe third best in the House of Night,โ he replied, very seriously, and thatโwell, I wasnโt expecting that kind of honesty.
โThe first two must have been something to behold, now that Iโve seen you in action.โ
The corner of his mouth lifted. โThey were. But they are dead, and Iโm still here.โ
And if anything startled me more than his first answer had, it was this. Because I recognized something in that toneโฆ something human,
something vulnerable. My gaze flicked to him, and he was staring at the weapons with an odd, faraway look in his eye. The kind of expression I saw on the faces of those who walked by their familyโs grave sites.
โYou said you oversaw the loss of a war,โ I said. He flinchedโactually flinched.
โYes.โ
โAnd thatโs why you came here.โ โYes.โ
โWhy did you keep all of this?โ
โItโs valuable. I wouldnโt leave it behind.โ
It was more than that. Perhaps the long, hard stare I gave him told him I knew it, too.
โTheyโre mine,โ he said, after a moment. โIf I sold them or left them in Obitraes, they would have been used in someone elseโs war. Maybe they would have been used against the same men I led. I wouldnโt let that happen.โ
Strange, how vampires and humans were so different and yet so much alike.
โDid you save them because you thought you might need them again?โ
A long, long silence. Valeโs eyes went distant, his body stillโI had never seen a creature who could be so, so still, as if he didnโt even breathe.
โNo,โ he said, at last, and closed the door.
Then he turned to me and said, โDo you need my blood, if youโre going to insist on wandering around?โ
VALEโS SKIN WAS WARM. I felt like I noticed a new thing about it every time I touched him. Even his veins were more elegant than those of a human, the pattern to them more delicate and intentional, the darkness visible in streaks of color like embroidery under the thinnest skin of his inner wrist.
We sat in silence as I took the first vial of blood.
He looked past me, and I followed his gaze to the vase on the coffee tableโcontaining three flowers. Iโd given him the last one when I was still half-unconscious, apparently, though I didnโt remember doing this. It had gotten a little crumpled in all the excitement of the last few days, but was still just as beautiful as its siblings, petals perfect black and vivid red.
โI still see nothing remarkable about them,โ he grumbled. โTheyโre very remarkable. I promise.โ
โIโm starting to think you might be lying to me.โ โAnd if I am?โ
My voice was surprisingly flippant. I was no longer as concerned as I once had been that Vale would, at best, kick me out of his house, and at
worst, eat me. Maybe I even suspected some part of him enjoyed having me here.
I watched his blood fill the glass vial. But I could feel his eyes on me, steady and sharp.
โThere would be consequences.โ
Something in his voice made me pause. It wasnโt a threat. It wasnโt a joke, either, though it held the sweet lilt of one. I could feel his stare on me, and I knew before I looked up the expression that would be on his face.
I didnโt move my hands, but the sensation of his skin against mine was suddenly overwhelming.
I met his gaze. The expression was just as Iโd imagined itโthe faint smirk, the cool stare. And yetโฆ something a little less removed flickered in his eyes as they lowered slightly. Lowered, I realized, to my mouth.
โConsequences,โ I scoffed.
โWhat? Iโm a dangerous man. You arenโt afraid of what punishment might be?โ
Goosebumps rose to the surface of my skin, coaxed by the mocking melody of his voice over the word, drawn out slow.
Even I knew that what he was enticing me with, what he was offering, was something very different from what heโd done to my attackers in the forest.
Maybe just as dangerous, though.
When my eyes met his, I couldnโt look away. My fingertips tingled, acutely aware of every muscle beneath my hands. My heart raced a little faster, and I knew he could sense it.
He had invited me to his bed before. I had been tempted then. Iโd be lying if I said I wasnโt tempted now. Curiosity was my greatest weakness.
Iโd spent the past weeks preoccupied with thoughts of Vale. In some ways, I was obsessed with him. I spent all day, every day, observing his bloodโadmiring its beauty and the way it moved with the same timeless grace as the rest of him.
I had to admit to myself that he was a very handsome man. He leaned forward, just slightly.
โTell me, mouseโโ
BANG. BANG. BANG.
I jumped. The needle jolted from Valeโs arm, resulting in a spray of blood over my chest. I knocked down one of the vials with my elbow, and before I even had time to be horrified by it, his hand had snaked out to catch itโa movement so smooth and quick I didnโt even see it happen until he was handing me the vial.
โCork that. Apparently my blood is valuable stuff.โ
BANG BANG BANG.
The knocks grew more persistent. Vale looked over his shoulder, into the main hallway and the front door beyond.
I put away the vials, a little flustered.
My first thought was that someone found out what Vale had done to defend me and was coming for revenge. But though the knocks were loud, they werenโt frantic or angry. And Vale didnโt look concerned, only irritated.
He didnโt move.
โDo youโฆ want to get that?โ I asked. โNo, I donโt.โ
Iโd forgotten. He didnโt like answering his doors.
But theย BANGsย continued, a rhythmic beat growing steadily faster, until Vale finally let out an aggravated sigh, rose, and went to the door.
I followed him. I couldnโt help it. He was right; I was nosy. Vale opened the door with a single abrupt movement.
I stumbled backwards.
The person at his doorstep had no face.