Fangs for the Memories (35 page)

Read Fangs for the Memories Online

Authors: Kathy Love

Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Paranormal

“He hadn’t been in
London
very long when all communication stopped. Christian wasn’t exactly the most dependable person, so at first, I didn’t really worry about it. But after two months without a letter, I decided I’d
better
go see him.”

Jane considered his words.
A letter?
Not a call or an e-mail? That seemed odd. The average person didn’t generally correspond with letters these days, much less a wild young man. But she didn’t say anything.

“The row house was lavish. Our parents had left us well provided for, and Christian fell into the life of the idle rich. When I got to the house, the place was in complete disarray, from parties and other decadence. Much of the staff was gone.”

Again she wondered at his wording. It was as if he was telling her a story in the very same way that “Rhys the viscount” would have.

“Christian didn’t even look like himself. He was pale, unkempt, his eyes wild. And I knew then he was mixed up with something.”

“Drugs?” she asked.

Rhys laughed
humorlessly
. “You could say that.
Lilah
was definitely a drug to Christian.”

“How so?
What did she do?”

“She controlled him. He did whatever she said.”

Jane frowned at the barely contained hatred in his voice. “Christian said you became obsessed with her, too.”

He raised an eyebrow at that, another humorless chuckle escaping him. “When I met
Lilah
, I will admit, I was immediately drawn to her beauty. She was very beautiful.” He admitted that as though he’d rather not. “But it didn’t take me long to see beyond that illusion of beauty to what lurked under the surface.”

Jane couldn’t hide her confusion. “What lurked under the surface?”

His eyes suddenly found hers, and his gaze seemed a little disoriented, as though he’d been back with
Lilah
, seeing— what?

He rubbed a hand over his face. She noticed that his hands seemed unsteady.

“She wasn’t a nice person,” he said finally, but Jane knew that description stopped far short of whatever he was remembering.

Jane wanted to ask more, but didn’t. She didn’t think Rhys would tell her. Instead she told him what Christian had implied. “Christian made it sound like you… attacked her.”

He shook his head, Christian’s belief still injuring him. “No. I didn’t attack her. But…” He turned away from her then. “We did have sex.”

Rhys, no.

His admission staggered her. Disbelief, disappointment and jealousy jumbled inside her. Rhys wouldn’t do that. He wouldn’t ever hurt his brother. No.

“It was one incident,” his voice was low, shaken. “And I was sick with myself at my weakness. I should have been able to deny her.
To stop it.”

Jane blinked at him. At his broad back and slumped shoulders. She couldn’t see the man who’d cheated with his brother’s lover. Or even the cold man who had pushed her away earlier today.

She just saw a man who had carried too much weight on his shoulders for too long. She saw Rhys, and she knew he ached over things in his past—enough to try to erase them from his memories.

And she also knew, without a doubt, that he wasn’t telling the whole story. He wasn’t weak. He never would have touched his brother’s lover, much less sleep with her. What had really happened?

She rose off the sofa and crossed to him. She slipped her arms around his stomach and pressed her cheek to his back, wanting to take away his pain. Wanting to carry a little of his burden.

He stiffened under her embrace, but he didn’t pull away.

“What did
Lilah
do to force
you
?”

He remained perfectly still. Her hands brushed over the clenched muscles of his belly. Her cheek nuzzled the tenseness of his spine.

“What really happened?” she whispered.

Rhys remained motionless, though his entire body felt weak.
Weak with relief and humbled by her trust.
Jane didn’t believe Christian. She didn’t believe he would intentionally hurt his brother that way. She didn’t believe he would ever force himself on a woman. Even after the way he’d just taken her, rough and half-crazed, against the wall, she still didn’t believe him capable of violence.

But he was capable of extreme violence. He could kill if necessary. He’d kill to protect her.

He turned then in her arms, staring down at her open, trusting face. He could kill for her, but he wouldn’t let her die for him. She had to leave. Even without the threat of Christian, she wasn’t safe. He wanted her too much.

“What happened doesn’t matter. It’s over now. Christian will forever believe what he believes, and I will go on without my brother. That’s just how things are.”

She shook her head, her goodness making her assume all things could be fixed. All rifts mended. All pains healed.

He knew they couldn’t.

And he wasn’t going to allow her to become another loss he couldn’t overcome. Another “if only” that he couldn’t go back and change.

“Can’t you talk to him? Tell him the truth?”

He laughed, the sound bitter, but his fingers on her cheek were gentle. “I’ve tried.
Over and over.
But he doesn’t want to hear the truth. He believed
Lilah
. He will
keep believing
her. That is why you have to leave here.”

She frowned, not following his reasoning.

“Christian is dangerous. And I’m afraid he could try to hurt you to get back at me. You have to leave.”

She stared up at him,
then
smiled as though she thought he was acting like nothing more than a worried mother hen.

“I’m not scared of Christian.”

Her words sounded confident, but he could sense apprehension, a subtle tang in the air.

He touched her cheek again, savoring the silky softness of her skin.
Committing it to memory.
Jane leaving would cause him pain, but as long as he knew she was out there somewhere, alive and safe, then he could bear it.

“I’m going to give you some money,” he told her.

She shook her head, but he continued, “And I’m going to have Mick take you somewhere safe. Where would you like to go? You can go anywhere.
London
?
Paris
?
Somewhere tropical, warm.”
He softened his voice, coaxing her.

She shook her head again. “I don’t want to go anywhere if it means leaving you.”

Rhys pulled away from her, irritation rising in his chest. Didn’t she understand he was trying to protect her?

“I told you earlier. I do not want to be
with
you.” The words came out rough, angry.

She remained silent for a moment,
then
said softly, “So that’s why you made love to me right in the middle of the nightclub? Why I felt the desperation in your desire?”

He stared into her eyes, his frustration rising. But she didn’t flinch under his cold glare.

Instead, she stepped forward and reached for his hands. Her small thumbs brushed back and forth across his broad palms, the caresses sweet, soothing.

“Rhys, you are in love with me. I know it. So instead of trying to figure out where you can send me where I’ll be safe, why don’t we figure out how I can stay right here and be
safe.

“Jane—”

“What will either of us gain if I leave? We both end up alone.”

“Yes,” he
agreed,
his voice wry. “But you end up alive.”

“If he wanted to do anything to me, he could have done it tonight.” Her voice was calm, reasonable, but he knew she was unnerved by the idea that anyone would want to hurt her.

“Just answer this,” she finally said, “and I’ll consider going.”

He
waited,
unsure he wanted to hear her question, but willing to answer if it would protect her.

“If I do go, and I never see you again, what would be the one thing, years from now, you would wish you’d told me?”

He raised an eyebrow. He’d have been amused if he wasn’t so worried, so frustrated. He had to give her credit; she was persistent.

But he didn’t respond immediately. Not in an attempt to hurt her, or convince her that he didn’t care about her. He just couldn’t say the words.

When was the last time he’d said them? Elizabeth? Yes, it had to have been to Elizabeth. Two hundred years was a long, long time to insulate
himself
, to attempt to remain numb. But Jane made him feel. And just like blood and heat returning to a frostbitten appendage, it hurt like hell.

He took a deep breath, afraid. Afraid to say something he would have once said so readily. Or at least he hoped he’d said it readily.
To Elizabeth.
And his parents.
Even Sebastian and Christian.

And he had to say the words now.
Even if it was only this once.

“I would wish,” he said slowly, “that I told you that I love you.”

She smiled, not the triumphant grin he’d expected, but a small, tremulous smile. Her eyes glistened.

“Thank you.”

He nodded, but couldn’t seem to respond any further.

She sniffed,
then
started to release his hands.

He clasped them before she could break the contact, and he pulled her toward him. Wrapping his arms around her, he cradled her against his body.

Now that the thaw had started, a flood followed, and he couldn’t seem to control the emotion that poured through him.

“I love you, Janie,” he murmured against her ear. “I love you more than I’ve ever loved anyone.”

She hugged him back, her arms tight around his neck.

“Then that solves it,” she said against his ear, her voice hoarse with emotion.

Finally.
Finally she’d do as he asked.
Because he loved her.

“I’m staying right here.”

 
 
Chapter 26

 

Rhys set Jane away from him and glowered down at her. “You are leaving.” His voice boomed off the bookshelves and the ceiling, but she didn’t back down.

“No. I love you, and I’m staying right here.”

He narrowed his eyes at her. Then, as if he didn’t know what else to do, he strode over to the window.

She watched him for a minute,
then
followed. Her arms wrapped around his torso. “We can’t lose this.”

“I can’t lose you.”

“You won’t.”

“I can’t watch you every minute. And you’ll never be safe with Christian out there.”

Jane knew he was looking out over the city, wondering where his brother was right now.

“It will be okay,” she assured him, even though she knew she couldn’t guarantee that. But her mind couldn’t wrap around the idea Christian would really want to hurt her.

“Please, Jane. Just go.”

She shook her head,
then
pressed her cheek against his back. “I’ve been alone for too long. I can’t leave you. I can’t.”

The muscles in his back relaxed, but she knew it wasn’t relief that loosened them. It was defeat. She’d worn him down, at least for tonight.

She didn’t feel any satisfaction in her victory.

“Come on,” she said, lacing her fingers through the hand that hung at his side, tugging his immoveable body.

He glanced at her.
“Where?”

“Let’s go to bed. We can worry about Christian tomorrow.”

He hesitated, casting another look out at the city. Then he allowed himself to be led out of the room.

 

Once in bed, they simply held each other, neither wanting anything more than to feel their bodies close together.
To know that the other one was there.

As the night turned to day, Rhys gradually fell into his usual deep sleep, but Jane couldn’t rest. There were too many questions. She tried to guess what had really happened with
Lilah
. She couldn’t figure it out, but she knew there was more that Rhys wasn’t saying.

And was Christian the only reason that Rhys had pushed her away in the first place? Or was there something more she was missing?

Finally, after only managing to doze off and on, she gave up on sleep and instead went to find food. She had to be safe in the apartment. With all the locks and Mick and the other security people in the nightclub, she had to be living in one of the safest apartments in the city.

The marble floor was cold as she padded barefoot around the kitchen. She filled a coffee mug with water and then stuck it in the microwave to heat for her tea. Then she went to the cupboard to decide on what to eat.

She felt hungry, but nothing sounded appealing.
Cereal?
No.
Toast?
No.

She opened the fridge. She could make a sandwich. But that didn’t sound very appetizing either. Her gaze landed on
Rhys’s
protein drink. She started to reach for the pouch,
then
stopped. No, the dark liquid looked disgusting.

Other books

The Golden Cage by J.D. Oswald
The Space in Between by Melyssa Winchester
Breath of Dawn, The by Heitzmann, Kristen
First and Ten by Michel Prince
The Children of Hare Hill by Scott McKenzie
The Green Gyre by Tanpepper, Saul
Moonlight: Star of the Show by Belinda Rapley
Ravished by the Rake by Louise Allen