Byzantine Heartbreak (22 page)

Read Byzantine Heartbreak Online

Authors: Tracy Cooper-Posey

She shook her head and gave a tiny shrug, as if it was a tiny matter of no consequence.

Cáel gave a low laugh and kissed her lightly. “One thing I do know from studying you for over a year, Nia...I nearly always know when you’re lying. And you’re lying now. So tell me.”

She licked her lips, feeling a wild reluctance to speak of it. Heat bloomed in her cheeks.

Cáel smiled. “Shall I guess?”

Nayara let out a rushed breath and rolled her eyes. “You already know, don’t you?”

“That you find the idea of me and Ryan together arousing? It wasn’t even a guess, Nia. You’ve already lived in one ménage. Once I knew you responded to me, I knew you would be intrigued by the idea of Ryan and I together.” His smile was warm. Accepting. His fingers were drawing lazy circles over her hip and keeping her just on the edges of aware and aroused. “Did catching us together keep your mind occupied with erotic fantasies, Nia? Did you wonder what we did together and how it might look?”

She jumped, her heart leaping. “Cáel!” She didn’t know if she was shocked or amused. Or perhaps she was neither. The images and scenes she had spent days trying to repress and dismiss from her mind came surging to the fore now, stronger than ever.

And her body tightened instantly, including her pussy, which was still sheathed around Cáel’s cock.

Cáel’s hand on her hip paused. “Oh,” he breathed. “I felt that.” His gaze came back to her face. “You like the idea of us more than just a little bit, don’t you?”

“It’s just fantasies, Cáel. Don’t read more into it than that.”

He rolled onto his back, bringing her with him and Nayara found herself straddling him, his stiffening cock lodged very deep inside her. He fitted his hands around her waist. “I take nothing more from it than you are an incredibly sensual woman and I am going to make the most of it.”

 

Chapter Twenty-One

 

The Agency satellite station. 2263 A.D.

Justin glanced at the discreet number glowing over the door. “This is it,” he told Dionne, who stood behind him in the corridor, clutching a few bare essentials Brenden’s staff had scrounged up for her. He pointed to the side of the door. “It’s keyed to your voice. Just tell it to open.”

“Just say ‘open’?” she asked dryly.

The door slid aside obligingly.

Justin stepped out of the way, letting Dionne go in. She hesitated, looking in.

“It’s not the Sukioma Ritz,” he said. “But it’s better than having Gabriel or his people rooting around in your head.”

She glanced at him and stepped reluctantly inside. One pace and she stopped and turned to face him. “They trust me, don’t they?” she asked.

Justin glanced up and down the corridor. He stepped into the room and let the door close. “They wouldn’t have included you in the meeting if they didn’t. The Wardens cleared you. So did Brenden’s people. Why?”

She put the tiny pile of bathroom supplies down on the narrow cot pushed up against the painted steel wall. “I thought I was at the meeting to...” She shrugged. “Account for myself.”

Justin stared at her, slightly amazed. “But you sat there, helping them plan things. The meeting was four hours long. That whole time, you were waiting for Ryan to land on you?”

Dionne shrugged. “It seemed to me that if tonight was going to be my last opportunity to help, I shouldn’t waste it.”

Justin let himself stare openly at her. “Barmy,” he muttered.

“Excuse me?” she said, her hand going defensively to her hip. “What does that mean?”

“Ya don’t know Australian?” he asked. “Want me to translate? Stupid, kinked, off yer rocker.”

Her jaw flexed. “I know Australian just fine,” she said evenly. “I fail to see how it applies to me.”

Justin leaned against the door and crossed his arms. “Easy. Do you know how many of us, given our druthers, would trade places with you in a heartbeat, if we had one?”

Dionne’s hand was still parked firmly on her hip. Now the other one came up to the other hip. She was wearing one of those grey silk business robes that made the fabric look like it was screaming in agony from being stretched so taut across her torso and hips. Her fingers dug in. “That just makes you the stupid one.”

“Live a few hundred years and try saying that.” He shook his head. “You have no idea what misery and heartache you’ve bargained yourself into, Rinaldi. You should take the money, instead. Buy yourself a regeneration.”

Her green eyes widened.

“That
was
your back-up plan, wasn’t it?” Justin asked. “If we turned you down on the whole vampire immortality deal?”

She pressed her lips together. “You have no idea who I am and what I want, Kelly.” She turned her back to him. “Please leave.”

He pushed himself off the door and wrapped his arm around her from behind, yanking her backwards so she was held up against his body. She was long, lean and lithe and as she twisted, trying to evade his arm, he could feel every curve and dip of her against him.

His body tightened and thrummed. He cupped her chin and turned her face so he could see it. “I know enough to know one thing you want,” he said. His voice was thick with his sudden raging lust. Her body against his had triggered it.

She gasped and grew still. It was an electric sound. Low, uneven.

Her neck was exposed to him. Justin leaned down and inhaled her scent. Delicious. His want of her leapt tenfold. He ran his tongue from the base of her neck, along the vital line, up to her ear, along the hot flesh.

Dionne shuddered and grew still. Her breath quickened.

Justin reached for the slit in the front of her robe, where her slender knees had been peeking out every time she walked, or sat, or moved, all day and evening. He gripped the edge of the slit and drew it aside.

The silk gave way with a tired ripping sound. The gown split apart up the middle, until the tear reached the neckline. It fell to either side of Dionne’s body.

She gave a tiny exhalation.

Justin stripped the ruined gown from her and tossed it on the bed. He discovered she was naked beneath it, apart from her high shoes. Her nipples were hard pebbles, the breasts high, rounded and full, like her hips.

Dionne reached up and pulled a long silver clip from the careful arrangement of curls of blonde locks on the tops of her head and shook her head. Her hair tumbled down around her shoulders, a mass of waves and curls, to bounce down about her waist.

She held the clip out to Justin. “You missed something.” Her voice was a low, highly charged, sultry purr.

Justin growled, his lust leaping to a ravening need. He picked her up and pushed her up against the wall, roughly throwing her legs about his waist. Dionne looked down at him, her breath coming faster, making her breasts rise and fall quickly.

Justin sucked in the tip of her breast, feasting on it. He bit and drew the nipple between his teeth and rubbed the end of it with his tongue, lashing it.

Dionne slapped the wall with the flat of her hand, moaning and gasping, her hips thrusting into him as she reacted to what he was doing. It only encouraged him to do more. He moved to her other breast, treating it the same, making her cry out again.

As he worked, he used one hand to strip himself of his clothing, until Dionne was bucking against his naked body and his cock reared up against her cleft, brushing it with each jerk of her pelvis, until he couldn’t stand the proximity of her pussy anymore, if he was not in it.

He gripped her hips and battered his way inside her, with a heavy exhalation that was almost a grunt.

Dionne thrust her hands into his hair, her fingers curling and gripping tightly. Her eyes were narrowed. “Fuck me, Justin,” she breathed, her voice ragged with her arousal.

Her voice and the used, needy quality of it was a powerful goad. Justin cupped her ass, steadying her. He slid in and out of her, maximizing his thrusts so that she would feel every inch.

Quickly, Dionne began to pant, squirming against the wall and making little desperate sounds that told Justin she was close to climaxing. She clutched at his shoulder, her fingers digging in. “Justin!” she warned him, her voice hoarse.

Justin took off the brakes. He leaned against her and thrust deep and quickly, feeling her body close like a vice around his cock. Dionne’s arms wrapped around him.

It took perhaps five more thrusts and his climax shot through him. Dionne’s climax was far more intense and she filled her lungs to scream. Justin got his hand up to cover her mouth just as her lungs began to vibrate.

He held her against the wall as she shook, staring into her very human green eyes as the pleasure took her. He looked and mourned.

* * * * *

 

Southwest Western Australia, 1973 A.D.

Cáel used the wood burning stove to brew Turkish coffee, which they both liked and of which Nayara had a small stash stored away in the cabin. He brewed it in a battered percolator on the stove top while she sat in the wooden chair pulled up to the table. He seemed quite at home with the equipment and the stove, which let her relax and tell her story.

“When Salathiel and the psi-filer disappeared from the institution, we reconstructed what had happened by looking at security tapes. Of course, in hindsight, everyone smacked their foreheads. It’s perfectly obvious that you can’t lock up a jumper, but they were just learning this stuff, back then. That was a major lesson for them.

“We turned the globe upside down looking for them and we found her. She was a gibbering mess.” Nayara paused, remembering the woman as they had found her, curled up in the corner of the tenement apartment, talking about doom and the devil. “The psi had glimpsed a future we didn’t know was coming and she was terrified.”

“She knew Salathiel had gone back to mess with the past,” Cáel guessed.

“I think she glimpsed it in his mind. She was an A-file and back then, they bred only for psychic ability. They went for power with a capital ‘P.’ I think not only did she read his mind, but she may even have had some ability to glimpse the future and she knew the time wave was coming. But along with her psychic abilities, she was socially dysfunctional, barely able to hold a conversation. It took a while for the breeders to figure out an acceptable balance of social skills and talents.”

“The File P’s. Pritti. It took them nearly two hundred years.”

“Yes,” Nayara agreed. “Two hundred years before they declared it a failed experiment and in all that time, their by-products have been breeding indiscriminately, here on Earth and across the nine worlds to where they got shipped as a work-force when nothing useful could be found for them.” Her mouth turned down. “Well, payback is hell.”

Cáel placed an old fashioned teacup in front of her, three-quarters filled with the strong coffee. “Drink,” he encouraged and sat next to her on the stool, the only other seat in the cabin.

He blew on his cup and sipped. Then, “Did the psi tell you where Salathiel had gone, or did you guess?”

Nayara sighed. “I guessed. It wasn’t hard. There were only two or three possible times that were critical to changing his past so that it would be ‘better’ in his eyes. Only one of those would have kept him human.”

“Stopping his making.”

Nayara nodded. “We knew he wouldn’t be content with just interfering with than one night. She had an oath to fulfil and just halting that moment might simply divert her temporarily to let her try again. He would stop her permanently.”

“It didn’t bother you that you were contemplating Salathiel committing murder?”

Nayara shook her head. “Salathiel had become someone we didn’t know, Cáel. He had moved far beyond the man we loved. Ryan and I knew without doubt that he would kill his maker. We just had to figure out when. So we judged that going back a week before the collapse of the wall and watching the maker until Salathiel turned up would be the only way to find him back in the past.”

She cleared her throat. Even now, the fear that first jump had created could close it down almost completely. Raw panic.

“We stumbled through that first jump, Ryan and I. Sheer dumb luck.” She licked her lips. “We had a time marker we both remembered vividly because...” She glanced at Cáel. “Well, we had made love, Ryan and I, in a little alley off the main markets. It had been spontaneous and we hadn’t been discovered despite people walking past barely a few feet away.”

Cáel’s eyes met hers and heat flickered deep within them. “I can understand why that memory might stick.”

“We didn’t realize that we were doing the exact right thing. We were focusing in on an emotional memory. Both of us were guessing how to do this, using the ramblings of the psi-filer and the security tapes, piecing it together using guesses and the psi-filer’s talent that she gave us. We tried jumping within contemporary times, practicing. But before we could actually jump back, the time-tsunami came through.”

Cáel reached over and carefully unwrapped her hand from around the teacup. “You might break it,” he said. “Here, I can probably take more than the china can.” He held her hand. “I’ve heard other describe the time wave, when it hit. I’m glad I wasn’t around for it. It sounds like sea sickness and far too many hangovers rolled up together.”

“It was all that,” Nayara agreed. “Even vampires weren’t spared, which was alarming for us. We never get sick. It lasted nearly two hours and I think some of our kind thought we were dying...except that the humans were sick, too. Everyone was, everywhere. Then it was suddenly over and that’s when we began to discover the changes. And the disease.”

Cáel covered her fingers with his other hand. “Constantine’s Curse,” he said, naming it.

Nayara looked at him, horrified. “No one of our kind names it,” she said.

Cáel smiled. “It’s just a name. It’s not an invocation.” He leaned over the corner of the table toward her. “Did you know, Nia, that my entire family were destroyed by Constantine’s Curse? Including the man and woman who would become my parents?”

She flinched. “No,” she said stiffly.

“It went through the Greek islands inside three days. Our DNA was particularly vulnerable to the disease and there was a 98% mortality rate.” He frowned. “I should say, there was a 98% infection rate, because the Curse was incurable and 100% mortal. Once you caught it, your DNA was dissolved within twenty-four hours.”

“I know this,” Nayara said, acutely uncomfortable.

“Yes, I imagine you know it all too well,” Cáel replied. He lifted her hand to his lips. “What you did afterwards restored my family and millions of others. I don’t supposed anyone ever got around to thanking you, did they?”

“I think everyone was too busy being relieved,” Nayara told him, truthfully. “Including Ryan and me.”

Cáel stood up and leaned over the table again. His kiss, this time, lingered. She tasted coffee and his distinct scent. He tasted ambrosial.

“Thank you,” he said softly. Earnestly.

Ridiculously, she felt tears well up in her eyes. His thanks meant that much to her.

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