Hunted
staring at me and slowly turned to Rephaim, who was crouched in the corner of the room, his terrible human hands pressed around the knife that still protruded from his bird chest.
“Is this true, my son? Did one of my children cause the priestess’s wound?”
“I have no way of knowing, Father. Not all of the sentries have returned,” Rephaim spoke between short, panting breaths.
“It is true,” Darius said.
“Of course that is what you would say, Warrior,” Kalona said.
“I give you my word as a Son of Erebus that I tell you the truth,” Darius said. “And you have seen Zoey’s wound. Surely you recognize an injury made by the claws of one of your own children.”
I was glad to see that Darius wasn’t all puffed up and ready to continue the fight, like an idiot teenage boy would have been (hello, Heath and Erik!), and then I understood. Darius was still protecting me. If Kalona knew a Raven Mocker had almost killed me, without getting the rest of the story about it having been an accident, then maybe he would at the very least not leave me alone with one of them, and at the most warn his nasty children to stay away from me. That is, if Kalona still wanted me alive.
Then I quit babbling anything in my mind because Kalona was closing the space between us. I stood very still, staring straight ahead at his bare chest as he reached out, stopping just short of touching me. Slowly, with one finger he traced the path of my wound without actually stroking my skin, but still I could feel the chill that came from his body. I had to grit my teeth hard to keep myself from either shivering and cringing back or looking up into his eyes and taking the chance that I would lean forward just enough for his cold finger to touch my heated flesh.
“It is the mark of one of my sons,” he said. “Stark, this time do not kill the warrior.” I had just heaved a long sigh of relief when Kalona added, “Of course, I cannot allow him to wound my beloved son without redress. But I prefer to admonish him myself.”
Kalona’s voice was so calm, so matter of fact, that I didn’t really get the meaning of his words until, like a cobra, he struck. The warrior only had time to begin to take a defensive stance when Kalona whirled, pulled the knife from Rephaim’s chest, and in one motion raked the blade down the side of Darius’s face.
Darius staggered under the blow, and then fell as blood sprayed all around me, a heavy, scarlet rain in the little room. I screamed and tried to go to him, but Kalona’s frigid hand closed around my wrist, jerking me back against him. I looked up at the immortal, willing the anger and horror I felt to burn through his awful appeal.
And I wasn’t drawn to him! His spell didn’t work on me! Young and inhumanly beautiful as he was, I still saw him as a dangerous enemy. He must have seen the triumph in my eyes because suddenly his warlike expression changed to a slow, knowing smile. He bent and whispered for my ears alone, “Remember, my little A-ya, the warrior can protect you from all others except me. Not even the power of your elements can keep me from claiming what will eventually be mine again.” Then he pressed his lips against mine and the wild taste of him was like a blizzard rushing through my body, numbing my resistance and freezing my soul with a forbidden desire that utterly overwhelmed me. His kiss made me forget everything and everyone—Stark, Darius, and even Erik and Heath were frozen from my mind.
He released me and my legs would not hold me up. I crumpled to the floor as he strode from the room, laughing, with his wounded favorite son hobbling behind him.
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CHAPTER NINETEEN
I was sobbing as I crawled over to Darius. I had just reached him when I heard a terrible sound coming from the doorway. I looked up to see Stark. He still grasped his bow in one hand. The other was holding on to the doorpost so tight that his knuckles had turned white, and I swear I could see his fingers making indentations in the wood. His eyes were blazing red and he was bent slightly over, as if his stomach was causing him pain.
“Stark? What is it?” I wiped the back of my hand across my eyes, trying to clear the tears from my vision.
“The blood . . . can’t bear it . . . have to . . . ” He spoke in broken starts and stops and then, as if against his will, he took a staggering step into the room.
On the floor beside me Darius got to his knees. He grabbed the knife from the
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