Dead After Dark by Sherrilyn Kenyon


  "I . . . where will I go?"

  "You're coming to live with me. If you want. And even if you don't want that, you'll be free. To do what you wish."

  His eyes bounced around the room, clinging to the bed and the books.

  He was going to fight to stay, she thought. Which was a product of his decades of isolation and abuse. She needed to shake him up somehow--

  She took his palm and placed it on her belly. "Michael, while I was with you, we created something together. A baby. It's in me. Your child is in me. I need you to come with me. With . . . us."

  He went dead pale. And then . . .

  Well, the change in him would have been scary if she hadn't trusted him implicitly not to hurt her. He seemed to grow bigger even though his body stayed the same, his eyes narrowing, his face becoming a mask of male authority . . . and rank aggression.

  "My baby? My child?"

  She nodded even though she was worried now whether telling him was the right thing--

  He grabbed on to her and pulled her in so tight her bones bent. As he buried his head in her hair, his voice dropped to a growl.

  "Mine," he said. "You are mine. Always."

  Claire laughed a little. So much for her worrying about him wanting to experience life without her. "Good. I guess we're engaged. Now move it. We need to get out of here."

  "Are you well? First, tell me if you are well?"

  "Fine as far as I know. I just found out."

  "Are you sure?"

  "I can do anything I want. I'm young and healthy." She put her hand on his face. "We need to go. We really need to go."

  Michael nodded and released her. Walking calmly, he went over to where the chain around his ankle was anchored to the wall and pulled the goddamn thing out with a vicious yank. A whole hunk of masonry came with it, something about the size of a head, and Michael swung the ball into the wall, shattering it free.

  Then he came back to her like it was all nothing doing.

  "Jesus Christ! Why didn't you do that before?"

  "I had nowhere to go. No better place to be." He looked at his books one last time; then he picked up the chain, coiled it around his arm, and gallantly put his arm around her. "Let us go."

  They stepped through the door together. Fletcher was still down on the stone floor, but his eyes were open and blinking slowly.

  "Shit," she said as Michael looked at the butler. After running a quick analysis in her head, she muttered, "Let's just leave him here."

  After all, considering the man had abducted about fifty women and had unlawfully imprisoned his employer's son for half a century, it was unlikely he was going to try to come after them legally. And asking Michael to kill the guy was too horrific to contemplate. Probably because Michael would do that if she asked him to.

  She tugged on her man's arm. "Come on. Let's go . . ." The wake upstairs was a complication. "Shit, there are about a hundred people in the house. How can we--"

  Michael snapped to attention. "I know a way out. From when I was a boy. We go this way."

  They'd gone about ten yards when she spun around. The needle. Her fingerprints were on the hypodermic needle. In the highly unlikely event Fletcher decided to come after her, it would be harder without that kind of evidence. And her shoe. She had to get her shoe.

  Best to cover all tracks.

  "Wait!" She ran back. Searched for the thing. Found it still sticking out of the man's arm. He looked up at her as she yanked it out and put it into her shoulder bag. His mouth was moving. Gaping, like a fish's.

  After grabbing her shoe, she headed back for Michael, but her legs were like rubber.

  "You are weak," he said, frowning.

  "I'm fine--"

  He scooped her up and started walking twice as fast as she could, his huge strides eating up the distance of the basement corridors. He moved quickly and decisively, which surprised her a little and reminded her that sweet-natured or not, he was a man, a man who had his woman in his arms. And God, he was strong. He was carrying her full weight in addition to however much that chain weighed and none of it seemed to slow him down in the slightest.

  When he got to a sturdy door down at the far, far end of the basement's hallway, he leaned to the side and tried the handle. When it refused to budge, he took two steps back, punched his foot flat into the thing and busted it wide.

  "Christ," she said. "You make the Terminator look like a two-year-old."

  "What's a terminator?"

  "Later."

  Outside, the cool night air rushed at them and Michael faltered, his eyes peeling wide. He started to breathe heavily, like he was having a panic attack.

  "Put me down," she said softly, knowing he was going to need a minute to get orientated.

  He gently let her go and looked at the sky and the trees and the vast landscaped grounds of the house. Then he glanced up at the stone monolith he'd been trapped in for so long. She could imagine how lost he must feel, how his emotions must be boiling up, how conflicted he must be at leaving the claustrophobic comfort of his prison. But they had no time for him to acclimate.

  "Michael, my car is at the end of the driveway. In the front of the house."

  "I can do this," he whispered.

  "Yes, you can."

  She took his hand, which was clammy, and pulled him forward. Without hesitation, he hiked up the chains and led her around the side of the vast house.

  Her car was parked where she'd left it and they hustled across the lawn, staying close to a row of hedges. The grass was damp and springy under her stockinged feet and her lungs ate up the autumn's clean oxygen.

  Please, God, let us get away in one piece.

  When she was in range of the Mercedes, she hit the remote and the sedan's lights flashed.

  "What kind of car is this?" Michael asked, stunned. "It looks like a spaceship." Then he looked at the others. "They all seem like--"

  Now was so not the time for him to channel his inner Car & Driver. "Get in."

  "Ma'am?"

  Claire looked up. The parking attendant, the kid who'd seen her before, was coming down the driveway. He seemed confused, as if he couldn't figure out where she'd come from. Or maybe he was just surprised to see her with a huge man in a red silk robe with a length of chain wrapped around his arm.

  "Just leaving," she said with a wave as she hissed at Michael, "Get in the damn car."

  The kid rubbed at his spiky hair. "Ah . . ."

  "Thanks for your help." Even though he hadn't given her any.

  She was beyond relieved as she started the engine and pulled out of the spot--

  Another Mercedes appeared right behind her, ready to put the drive to use, preventing her from putting them in reverse and doing a K-turn to get right out onto the street. She had no choice but to head up the ring--around in front of the house where the attendants were all lined up and people were milling around.

  Goddamn it.

  "Put your head down," she said to Michael as they approached the front door.

  Please, oh, please, oh, please . . .

  Just as she came up to the mansion, an elderly couple stepped forward to get into their car. With the Mercedes on her ass, and the pair's Cadillac blocking her way, she was trapped.

  Sweat broke out between her breasts and under her arms and she tightened her hands on the wheel.

  The front door opened wide and she fully expected to see the butler stumble out.

  But it was just another elderly couple, ticket in hand as they approached an attendant.

  Claire's eyes bounced to the car in front of her. The man was behind the wheel, but the woman was chatting with the kid who was holding her door open. Move it, Grandma! Of course the woman didn't. When she finally sat down, she fussed with her skirt and seemed to bitch to her husband a little, then turned back to the attendant.

  One hundred and fifty-five million years later, the Cadillac's brake lights flashed and the sedan began to move at idle speed.

  Heart pounding,
hands straining, lungs frozen solid, Claire begged and pleaded with the universe to let them get away.

  And then it happened.

  The Cadillac went down the hill. And so did she. And then she turned onto the road behind the couple. And then she was going thirty-two miles an hour heading away from the Leeds estate.

  As soon as she got a dotted line, she floored the accelerator and sucked the doors off the Cadillac.

  Eyes on the road, she fumbled with her bag. She needed her phone. Where was her--She pulled it out and hit speed dial.

  As it rang, she glanced at Michael. He was braced in the seat, arms out straight against the door on one side and the armrest on the other, legs crammed under the glove compartment. He was as white as paste and his eyes pinged around his skull.

  "Put your seat belt on," she said. "It's to your right. Reach down and pull it across like I've done with mine."

  He found the strap and yanked it around himself, then resumed his deer-in-headlights routine, bracing himself for an imminent impact that wasn't going to happen.

  It dawned on her that he might well have never been in a car before.

  "Michael, I can't slow down. I--"

  "I'm fine."

  "We're going--" Her call was answered, the man's hello an incredible relief. "Mick? Thank God. Listen, I'm coming to your house and I need some favors. Huge favors that I won't ever be able to rep--thank you. Oh, Jesus, thank you. About an hour. And I have someone with me." She hung up and looked across the seat. "This is going to be all right. We're going to a friend's house in Greenwich, Connecticut. We can stay there. He's going to help us. It's going to be okay."

  At least she hoped it was going to be okay. She assumed the butler wouldn't come after them through legitimate channels, but as she drove through the night, she realized there were other ways to get someone. Ways that didn't involve the human legal system. Shit. There was no telling what kind of resources Fletcher had at his disposal, and if he had enough wherewithal to be successful at what he'd done for so long, he was smart.

  Which meant he'd taken down her license plate. And he also knew where she lived, didn't he. Because . . . oh, God, she'd woken up in her bed at home after the three days with Michael. Fletcher had somehow gotten her back there.

  Maybe he had some mind tricks at his disposal as well.

  Maybe they should have killed him.

  7

  When Mick Rhodes's Federal mansion came into view an hour later, Claire wondered whether she was doing the right thing by getting her friend involved even tangentially.

  After all, she was pulling into the guy's driveway with an escapee vampire who had a bad case of justifiable agoraphobia. Who was also carsick.

  Michael was green around the gills as she put the Mercedes in park. "We're safe."

  He swallowed hard. "And we're not moving. This is good."

  The front lights came on and Mick walked out onto the porch.

  Claire opened her door and got out as Michael did the same. "Mick is an old friend. We can trust him."

  Michael sniffed the air. "And he was your lover, was he not?" he said softly. "He remembers you with a certain . . . need."

  Jesus. "That was a long time ago."

  "Indeed." Gone was the fear and the queasiness. Michael was dead serious. And staring at Mick like the other man was his enemy.

  Vampires were evidently rather territorial of their mates.

  Mick lifted his hand in greeting and called, "Glad you made it. And who's your friend?"

  "He's going to help us, Michael," she said, going around to her man and taking his hand in hers. "Come on."

  Michael's eyes shifted over to hers. "If he touches you inappropriately, I'm going to bite him. Just so we are clear." Michael glanced back at her friend. "I'm not an animal and I shall not behave as such. But you are mine and things will go better for him if he respects that."

  Vampires were evidently very territorial of their mates. "He will. I swear it."

  Mick shifted impatiently. "Are you two coming or going?"

  "Coming," she muttered as she started to walk forward. When they got to the house, she said, "This is Michael."

  "Nice to meet you, Michael."

  Michael glanced at the palm that was offered. As he bowed slightly instead of putting his hand out, she wondered whether he didn't trust himself to touch Mick even in a polite way. "How do you do?" he said.

  "I'm all right." Mick put his hand back in his pocket with a shrug, then frowned. "Chains . . . is that what you have on your arm?"

  Claire took a deep breath. "I told you I needed big favors."

  There was a moment's hesitation. Then Mick shook his head and indicated the open door. "Come on in, you two, and how about we start by ditching your iron, buddy. Unless you're wearing it as a fashion statement? I've got a hacksaw." He glanced at Claire. "And maybe you'd like to tell me what the hell is going on here."

  An hour later, Claire was drinking a cup of coffee in the library, looking over the rim at Michael, who was free of the chain and seemingly much more himself after the nausea of the car ride had fully faded. Dressed in his robe, he fit in perfectly here, she thought. With the formal, antique feel of the library, he seemed to have stepped out of a Victorian novel--maybe the very one he held in his hands. He was loving all of Mick's books, examining their spines, taking them out, leafing through them.

  "Where did you find him?" Mick asked softly from behind her.

  "It's a long story."

  "He's . . . unusual, isn't he?"

  Christ, you have no idea, she thought, taking another sip from her cup.

  "Michael's unlike any man I've met."

  "And he's why you're leaving the firm, isn't he?" When she didn't reply, her friend murmured, "So what do you need from me?"

  "Somewhere to stay the night, for starters." She stared down into the coffee. "And I want to buy him a new identity. Birth certificate, social security number, credit history, tax payments, driver's license. I know you know people who can take care of this, Mick, and what I get for my money has to be impregnable. It has to stand up in court. Because we might end up there."

  Which was going to be no fun at all.

  "Shit . . . what kind of mess are you in?"

  "No mess." It was far, far worse than a mess.

  "Liar. You show up here with a man who's covered in iron links . . . talks like a Victorian but looks like he could cheerfully eat me alive . . . has hair down to his ass and is dressed in a red silk Hugh Hefner special. And who smells like a . . . well, he smells really good actually. What kind of cologne is that? I think I want some."

  "You can't buy it. And Mick, frankly, the less you know the better." Because she was about to become a white-collar criminal. "I also want to use your computer. Oh, and we have to sleep in your basement."

  Michael turned, frowned at the two of them standing so close together, and came across the room, putting his hand on her shoulder. Mick had the smarts to step back.

  "So will you help us?" she asked Mick.

  Mick rubbed his face. "Let me buy the identity for you. The man I know is really touchy and he won't accept a payment from anyone else but me. You can reimburse me somehow. And you're serious? You want to sleep in my basement? I mean, I've got six guest rooms in this ark and this is an old house. It's not nice down there."

  "No, downstairs is better."

  "We shall stay in a proper bed," Michael announced. "We shall stay upstairs."

  She looked over her shoulder. "But--"

  His hand squeezed gently. "I shall not have you sleeping in quarters unfit for a lady."

  "Michael--"

  "Perhaps you will show us to our room, kind sir?" Okay, clearly when her man decided something, that was that.

  Mick frowned. "Ah . . . yeah. Sure, buddy--"

  Michael wheeled toward one of the windows. And positively growled.

  "Stay inside," he said. Then disappeared into thin air.

  Mick barked out a curse, bu
t she wasn't about to worry over her friend. Claire ran for the window and watched as Michael took form on the side lawn in the moonlight.

  The butler was back. Fletcher was standing there like something out of a nightmare, glowing like a ghost though his form was solid.

  Her first thought was that he'd probably put some kind of GPS device on her car. It was the only explanation for how he could have found them. But then she realized he was not human. So God only knew what kind of shit he had at his disposal.

  "Who is that?" Mick said from behind her. "Or . . . Christ, Claire, should the question be what?"

  What happened next was gruesome and horrible and the only option. Michael and the butler faced off, and they fought to the death.

  Fletcher's.

  Claire couldn't watch, but Mick did and she tracked his face as he witnessed the carnage.

  "Is Michael . . ."

  "He's doing--" Mick winced. "Yeah, there's not going to be much left of that other guy to bury."

  She knew it was over when Mick took a deep breath and rubbed his face. "Stay here. I'm going to go see about . . . your man?"

  "Yes," she said. "He's mine."

  Mick went around the corner to the front door, and she heard the men talking softly from the other side of the doorway.

  "Claire?" Michael said without coming into the room. "I'm fine, but I shall go get cleaned up, shall I?"

  It wasn't a question even though he'd posed it as one. She knew he was staying outside because he didn't want her to see him, but screw that.

  She walked across the library and through the--

  Okay, that was a lot of blood. But it didn't appear to be his because it was on his hands and his . . . mouth. As if he'd bitten Fletcher. A number of times.

  "Oh, God."

  Except then she looked into his eyes. They were grim and serious and resolute. As if he'd done what he'd had to and that was that. But there were shadows in them, as if he were afraid she'd think he was a monster.

  She pulled herself together and walked over to him. "I'll help you wash."

  After she bathed Michael, she got him some clothes. Which was a joke. Though Mick was a big guy, the only thing that fit her man even remotely was a pair of flannel pajama bottoms and a button-down shirt--and even still, it was all tight and showed a lot of ankle and wrist.

  But he looked good, his hair damp and curling at the ends as it dried, its red and black colors coming to life.

  Mick showed them into a lovely bedroom that mercifully had only two windows and thick drapes. Hopefully that would be enough protection.

 
Previous Page Next Page
Should you have any enquiry, please contact us via [email protected]