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Carpathian 20 - Dark Slayer

Carpathian 20 - Dark Slayer

Titel: Carpathian 20 - Dark Slayer Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
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spraying across the room.
    He landed in a crouch, senses flaring out, scanning, his mind racing, trying to fit all the pieces of the puzzle together. He had escaped at last. His mind almost couldn’t grasp the truth of it. He remembered running through the snow, shivering, his strength so far gone he couldn’t control his body temperature, but he forced himself to keep going until he didn’t have a single ounce of strength left. He had to get far enough away that Xavier and his servants wouldn’t find him before the sun rose. The sun. Every Carpathian’s last resort was to cleanse their soul with the bright white light. Even that had been denied him.
    Xavier had been careless. Fear had been his downfall. Fear that if he fed Razvan too much, he would lose control of him, so the mage had forced his grandson to go for weeks without blood.
    Yet Xavier took from him daily—until finally Razvan was too weak and sick to stand, or to supply the greedy mage with the life-giving Carpathian fluid.
    He remembered that empty, weak feeling, the near insanity of hunger, his body crying out, his teeth sharp and needy every moment that he was awake. Chained, he couldn’t hunt for his own food. There were not even animals near to call to him.
    Every cell, every organ cried out, until his brain was nothing but a red haze of need. Now he felt only mildly hungry, not the constant gnawing hunger that had ruled his life for so many centuries.
    He looked around him, realizing he was still deep beneath the earth, but it was warm. Somehow, glittering moonlight streamed in from above, yet he was deep beneath the earth in a rock cavern. He heard the sound of water but little else. He waved his hands, and candles sprang to life all over the room, instantly transforming it into a feminine sanctuary. The layers of rock above them were intricately carved with beautiful pictures, sweeping landscapes and trees and shrubbery, as if the outside world had been brought inside one small piece at a time, until the walls were a thing of beauty.
    Feminine—the woman—the reason he was seeing in blazing color. The light and the color dazzled his eyes, burned after so long of seeing in gray and black and white. He remembered the soothing touch of her hands; her voice, soft and compelling; the way her blood tasted, addictive and hot as though made specifically for him. She had saved him when he’d told her not to do so. She’d worked a compulsion on him in spite of all his warnings, and now . . .
    He felt . Everything. All of it. The guilt and the rage and the sense of absolute loneliness. He had no idea how to behave in civilized society. He had no knowledge of much other than deceit and torture, and now here he was, completely unprepared to be alive and well for the first time that he could remember in his centuries of existence.
    Razvan stretched, feeling the play of muscle beneath his skin.
    His body felt so different, warm, alive, steel running beneath skin, so much power he trembled with it, uncertain how anyone could wield such strength without harming everything around him. He drew in a shaky breath and looked around again.
    The woman—his lifemate—must have taken hundreds of years to carve out her home. It was unusual, but it appealed to him. There was something safe and comforting about it. He was upset with her for saving him. He couldn’t stay to reprimand her or be tempted by her, of course, but at least he now had a fighting chance when he went after Xavier, and he knew he would. He couldn’t allow the mage to continue spreading his evil through the world. He had to stop him, and now he might have the ability.
    Razvan knelt to examine the large basin of soil. The depression was made of sheer rock. Impenetrable rock. The circular hollow that was her bed had been carved out, deep and wide, and then filled with the richest, purest, most heavily mineraled soil he’d ever seen. Unable to resist, he sank his hands into the black loam, feeling the soothing, rejuvenating properties.
    Where had it come from? He sank back on his heels and studied the wide, deep hole. This soil had been brought here, one small bit at a time, yet now it was so many feet deep, he almost hadn’t realized there was a bed of rock beneath it.
    Who had the kind of patience it would take to first carve out a large chamber in a rock bed and then fill the basin with soil? It must

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