It would be easy to take her in his arms and transport them to a hotel in the city. Easy, but not smart.
“No one will know,” she said.
“I’m not going to take you out here, in the mud,” Zack said. “And leaving Wolfram could be dangerous.”
“My bedroom?” she suggested.
“And have your mother or father walk in on us?”
“We could lock the door.”
He laughed. “Yeah, like that would fool your folks. Or keep your father out.”
“Don’t you want me?”
“More than you know.” He snorted softly, unable to believe he was turning her down. He had bedded a lot of women in a lot of places, but Kaitlyn was a forever woman, not a quick roll in the hay. He wouldn’t take her out in the open, like some rutting stag, or defile her in her father’s house. And while he was pretty sure they’d be safe at a hotel in town, he wasn’t going to take a chance on putting her life at risk.
“Zack.”
“Sorry, darlin’,” he muttered. “But one of us has to stay rational.”
“Why? I’ve always been a good girl,” she said, her voice smoky with desire. “Can’t I be bad, just once?” He was weakening; she could see it in the sudden heat in his eyes, feel it as his arm tightened around her waist. A thrill of excitement shot through her. Tonight, she thought, tonight she would be his in every sense of the word.
The thought had no sooner crossed her mind when she suddenly found herself standing in Zack’s arms in the main room of the castle.
“I guess you really meant no,” she said sulkily.
“I smelled one of your kind out there, just beyond the wall.”
“What?”
Before he could explain, Drake appeared in the room, bare-chested and barefooted. His gaze moved quickly over Kaitlyn. “Are you all right?”
“Yes, fine.”
“You smelled him, too,” Zack said.
Drake nodded. “Stay here. I am going out to have a look around,” he said, and vanished from the room.
Just then, Elena came hurrying down the stairs, tying the sash on her bathrobe. “What’s going on? Where’s Drake?”
“He went out to have a look around,” Zack explained. “Someone’s out there.”
“Nadiya?” Elena asked, worry furrowing her brow.
“No.”
Elena wrapped her arms around her waist. “I wish this was over.”
Kaitlyn looked up at Zack. “Me, too.”
He grinned as he pulled her against his side. “So do I, darlin’,” he whispered for her ears alone.
“I don’t like this,” Elena said. “Drake should have been back by now.”
She had no sooner spoken the words than he appeared at her side. “Whoever it was is gone,” he said, slipping his arm around her shoulders. “I think he was just checking to see if we were still here.”
Zack nodded. “Was it anyone you recognized?”
“No. It was most likely one of Lucien’s kin. I would have recognized the scent if we shared the same blood.” Drake paused a moment, then said, “You and Kaitlyn were outside earlier. Stay inside.”
Zack nodded. It galled him to take orders from another vampire, especially when that vampire was younger, but in this case, Drake was right. Another vampire couldn’t enter the castle without an invitation, but that restriction only extended to the house itself. Anyone, friend or foe, could have come over the garden wall.
Drake came forward to kiss his daughter good night, then he swung Elena into his arms and carried her swiftly up the stairs.
Zack stared after them, wishing he had the right to sweep Kaitlyn into his arms and into his bed, to make love to her until the sun chased the moon from the sky. And he would, just as soon as she was rightfully his.
He wasn’t sure where this newfound code of honor came from, but it was sure as hell playing havoc with his love life.
Zack prowled the halls and corridors of Wolfram Castle long after everyone else had gone to bed. He paused outside Kaitlyn’s door just to listen to the even sound of her breathing, to assure himself that she was safe.
Now and then, he heard an errant sound from her parents’ bedroom that told him Drake was making love to his wife, perhaps for the last time.
Returning to the main hall, Zack paced the floor in front of the hearth. He needed to call Scherry and check on things at the club. He needed to feed.
He needed Kaitlyn. Needed her as he needed blood to survive. Needed her goodness in his life. That knowledge, combined with the fear that he might lose her, scared him right down to his socks. He had never needed anyone before. Not even Colette. He had loved his pretty dancer, though his love for her, when compared to what he felt for Kaitlyn, was like comparing a match to a forest fire. He had grieved when Colette died, but her passing had barely made a ripple in his existence. He had laid her to rest and moved on. But if he lost Kaitlyn . . . He stared into the cold ashes of the hearth. Kaitlyn. She had insinuated herself into his heart, into his very soul. If he lost her . . . He shook his head. Without her, his life would no longer be worth living.
As if his thoughts had conjured her, Kaitlyn floated down the stairs toward him, a raven-haired vision in a long white gown that billowed behind her. Her bare feet made no sound as she closed the distance between them.
Standing on tiptoe, she kissed his cheek. “What is it that troubles you so?” she whispered, her gaze searching his.
He wrapped his arm around her and pulled her up against him. “Are you reading my mind now, Katy darlin’?”
“Not exactly, but I felt your distress. What’s bothering you, Zack?”
“I’ve never been afraid of anything before,” he said, his voice so low she could scarcely hear it. “But I’m afraid of losing you. Afraid of what it would do to me.” He lifted a lock of her hair, let it sift through his fingers. “I love you, Katy.”
“I know.” She cupped his face between her palms and kissed him lightly. “Don’t be afraid. In life or in death, I’ll always be with you.” She pressed his hand to her cheek. “Come to bed with me, Zack. Let me hold you until you fall asleep.”
He shook his head. “I don’t think that’s a good idea,” he muttered, but he didn’t resist when she tugged on his hand. Like a man in a trance, he followed her up the stairs and down the hall to her room.
He stood in the center of the floor while she closed and locked the door. Stood there, hardly daring to breathe, as she removed his shirt, unbuckled his belt, unfastened his trousers, then climbed up on the bed and slipped under the covers.
Expelling a deep breath, he heeled off his boots, pulled off his socks, stepped out of his trousers, and left them all in a heap on the floor.
“Are you sure about this?” he asked gruffly.
“Very sure,” she said.
Wearing only his briefs, he slid in beside her. “You know where this is likely to end, don’t you?”
“I hope so.” She wrapped her arms around him.
“What has you so worried? You don’t think Nadiya will come here, do you?”
“I don’t know. I’ve just got a bad feeling about this whole mess.”
“Are your premonitions usually right?”
“No. But I’ve never been this worried about anyone before.”
She was close, too close. He could feel the heat of her body warming his, smell her desire, hear the slow, steady beating of her heart. And overall, the scent of her blood calling to him.
He muttered an oath as his honor faded away, overcome by a yearning so primal there was no denying it any longer. He groaned her name as he captured her mouth with his.
And he was lost.
One sharp yank and her gown was on the floor on top of his trousers. He crushed her close, marveling at the velvet smoothness of her skin, the warmth of her breasts against his chest. He rained kisses over her forehead, her cheeks, along the length of her neck, and then, unable to restrain himself, he closed his eyes and drank. It was the first time he had taken her blood without asking, but she didn’t protest, only moaned with pleasure when his fangs pierced her flesh.
When he lifted his head, she smiled up at him. “My turn?”
“Be my guest.”
She drank eagerly, careful not to take too much. Sighing with pleasure, she fell back on the bed.
“You look like the cat that ate the canary,” Zack observed.
She looked up at him and grinned. “Meow.”
He growled low in his throat.
“Oh, I’m scared now,” she said with mock terror.
“You should be.”
“Oh?” She propped herself up on one elbow, her fingers drawing figure eights on his chest. “Why is that?”
“Because everything about you tempts me.”
“What’s wrong with that?” She traced the ridges of his six-pack abs. “Aren’t you supposed to find me tempting?” She certainly found him tempting. “We’re getting married, after all. It would be awful if you didn’t want me.”
“Oh, I want you. The thing is, I don’t know how much longer I can keep my hands off you.”
“Then touch me, Zack. I don’t want to wait any longer. All I could think of when I was Nadiya’s prisoner was that I might die without ever having made love to you.”
“Dammit, Kaitlyn. I’m not made of steel.”
“Why are you fighting me?”
“For once in my life, I’m trying to do the right thing. Dammit, girl! Your father and mother are down the hall. . . .”
“I’ll be very quiet,” she whispered.
“Yeah? Well, I can’t make that promise.” Taking her in his arms, he kissed her until she gasped for breath. “When I take you the first time, I want to hear you screaming my name. And I want my ring on your finger.” He kissed the tip of her nose, then slipped his arm around her shoulders. “Now, go to sleep. It’s almost dawn.”
He closed his eyes as he felt the tightness in his skin that meant the sun was rising. Darkness engulfed him, stealing the strength from his limbs as he tumbled gratefully into oblivion.
Kaitlyn heaved a sigh of exasperation as Zack’s eyes closed and he surrendered to the dawn. Stubborn man! Even when she tried to seduce him, he refused to give in. How did he manage such self-control? She knew he wanted her.
Turning on her side, she studied his profile. Now that she had cooled off and she was thinking with her head instead of her hormones, she knew he was right. This wasn’t the time or the place. When they made love the first time, she wanted it to be in their own home, not under her father’s roof. Not with her parents just down the hall.
She would have suggested they go to the hotel in town, but she wasn’t foolish enough to go traipsing off into the night when Zack and her father had detected the presence of another vampire lurking nearby.
She rested her head on Zack’s shoulder, her fingers splayed over his chest, and prayed that the trouble with Nadiya would be over soon.
Chapter 37
Kaitlyn’s yearning for a quick end to the conflict between her father and Nadiya waned as her father prepared to go to the Fortress to meet Lucien. Her father was a strong man, never defeated in battle. But Nadiya and Lucien were not to be trusted. In a fair fight, Kaitlyn was certain her father would emerge victorious. But Nadiya had already proved she didn’t fight fair.
Her father spoke briefly to Zack, then strode toward her. He was, she thought, the personification of a warrior about to go to battle. If he was worried about the outcome, there was no trace of it in his bearing or his expression.
Kaitlyn blinked back her tears as her father embraced her. “Do not worry,” he said, smiling. “I will be back soon.”
She nodded, unable to speak past the lump in her throat.
He hugged her fiercely, kissed her cheek, and let her go.
Kaitlyn watched as her parents embraced. The love between her mother and father was a palpable presence in the room. They gazed into each other’s eyes for a moment and then, between one breath and the next, her father was gone.
Unable to hold back her tears, Kaitlyn stared at the place where he had been standing and wondered if she would ever see him again.
“He’ll be all right,” Zack said, taking her in his arms.
“I know.” She drew a deep breath. For her mother’s sake, she had to stay calm and positive.
As was her wont when she was worried, Elena cleaned house. She didn’t ask for help, but Kaitlyn pitched in, glad to have something to do. They mopped the floors, they washed the windows, they stripped the beds and turned the mattresses. Elena cleaned the refrigerator. Kaitlyn scrubbed the stove.
Zack watched the women with envy, wishing he had a way to expend the nervous energy building inside him. He had never liked waiting, would have preferred to be at the Fortress, in the thick of whatever was taking place there. But leaving Kaitlyn and her mother unprotected was unthinkable.
And so he paced the floor hour after hour while the women scrubbed the castle from top to bottom as if their lives, and their sanity, depended on it.
Finally, needing to do something, he went outside and spent a few minutes chopping wood for the fireplace, wishing, all the time, that the ax was a silver-bladed sword and the log in front of him was Nadiya Korzha’s slender neck.
Drake stood outside the Fortress, his senses probing the night around him. His brothers and other relatives were near. He had warned them not to interfere unless he called them. He did not expect Lucien to meet him honorably; if he lost the battle in a fair fight, he had instructed Zack to flee the country with Elena and Kaitlyn and take refuge with his half sister in Russia in hopes that Nadiya would never find them. As for Liliana, he had no idea where she was. Liliana didn’t carry a cell phone. Hopefully, she was safe at home. He should have insisted she stay at the Fortress, but she had been determined to go to her own house, and there had been no stopping her once she made up her mind.
Striding toward the entrance of the Fortress, Drake wiped everything from his mind but the battle ahead. He knocked on the door, hard enough that he heard it echo inside.
One of Lucien’s sons bid him enter.
Drake pushed the man aside and strode down the corridor toward the council chamber.
The door stood open. Lucien sat in Drake’s chair on the dais. Nadiya stood beside him, looking regal in a long black gown. The chairs at the council table were filled with Lucien’s kin.
“I am here,” Drake said, his hand on the hilt of the sword sheathed at his side. “Are you ready?”
Lucien looked fleetingly at Nadiya, then stood. “There is no need for us to fight.”
“There is every need.” Drake glanced at Nadiya, then back to Lucien again. “You have aligned yourself with a woman who is my enemy. You have usurped my rightful place by treachery. If you will not yield to me, then you will die, either on the field of battle, or now, in this room.”
The air in the chamber seemed to thicken as those assembled waited for Lucien’s answer.
Drake watched him through narrowed eyes. If Lucien refused to fight, he would be branded a coward, scorned by all who knew him.
“Answer him!” Nadiya hissed.
Lucien sucked in a deep breath. “I will meet you on the field of battle. Have you a second?”
“I do. He awaits outside.”
With a last glance at Nadiya, Lucien left the dais.
It was a solemn procession that made its way down the side of the mountain to the clearing below. Four men clad in black cloaks, each carrying a torch, led the way. Drake and Lucien followed the torchbearers. Because Drake did not trust Nadiya at his back, he had insisted that she walk at the head of the procession. Lucien’s second trailed behind.
When they reached the clearing, the four torchbearers formed a large circle. Drake and Lucien took their places in the center of the circle, facing each other.
Lucien’s second took a place outside the circle. A moment later, Stefan emerged from the trees and took up his position on the opposite side of the circle.
Nadiya stood apart, her long gray cloak billowing in the faint breeze.
One of the torchbearers walked to the center of the circle and stood between Drake and Lucien. “Lucien Muscarella, Master of the Carpathian Fortress,” he intoned, “be it known that Drake Sherrad, former Master of the Carpathian Fortress, has challenged your right to rule, claiming you have obtained it by treachery. He has come here this night demanding satisfaction. Should he be the victor, he will take possession of all your lands and holdings, both here and in Italy. Do you accept his challenge? Or concede?”
Lucien cleared his throat. “I accept.”
“Francisco Muscarella. Stefan Sherrad. You have been chosen as seconds. Step forward.”
Francisco and Stefan did as bidden, bowed to the torchbearer, and then returned to their respective places outside the circle.
“All those required to be in attendance are here present,” the torchbearer said solemnly. “Let whatever blood is shed this night be done with honor.” And so saying, he returned to his place in the circle.
A low, keening wind sprang up, rattling the leaves of the trees. The torches flickered erratically, sending dancing shadows across the ground.
Drake stared at his opponent. He could almost taste Lucien’s fear, his reluctance to fight. “Yield to me, Lucien, and I will spare your life.”
Drake had no doubt that, had Nadiya not been present, Lucien would have surrendered.
Lucien wiped his palms on his trousers. Opened his mouth and then snapped it shut. With a mighty cry, he lunged at Drake, his sword hissing through the air.
Uttering a battle cry of his own, Drake brought up his sword, parrying Lucien’s thrust. The ringing sound of metal striking metal rose in the air, along with the dust stirred by the combatants. Lucien circled Drake warily, testing the strength and mettle of his opponent. He roared with triumph when his blade found its mark and he drew first blood.
Drake paid little heed to the pain of the wound or the blood running down his arm, his only thought to destroy the man in front of him, to reclaim the Fortress that was rightfully his, to protect the women he loved. So long as he lived, they lived.
Spurred by fear, Lucien lunged and parried frantically.
Drake fought coolly, slowly wearing down his opponent. He had no thought for those who watched. No thought for his wounds. For this moment in time, Elena and Kaitlyn had ceased to exist. There was only Lucien and the need to destroy him.
Sensing defeat, Lucien made a last bold lunge, his sword coming up hard and fast, only to be deflected by Drake’s blade.
Howling with fear and fury, Lucien backpedaled, his sword swinging wildly from side to side.
Certain of victory, Drake spun in a circle, feinted left, charged right, and drove his sword into Lucien’s heart. Lucien staggered backward, his sword falling from his hand, a look of surprise spreading over his face as he fell to his knees, then toppled sideways to the ground.
A collective gasp rose from those watching as Drake swung his blade again, cleanly severing Lucien’s head from his body.
But there was little time for victory. He had scarcely wiped the blood from his sword when Stefan shouted, “Behind you!”
Drake ducked and whirled around as a sword whistled past his head. With a cry, he plunged his sword into his attacker’s heart, then spun around as another man charged toward him.
Men began to appear out of the trees on all sides. The air rang with the sounds of battle as Drake’s brothers engaged Lucien’s kin.
During a brief lull, Drake searched for Nadiya, but there was no sign of her. And no time to worry over her whereabouts as another of Lucien’s people lunged at him.
The air reeked of blood and death by the time Stefan dispatched the last of Lucien’s men.
There was little conversation as the victors made sure their foes would not rise again. One common grave served as the final resting place for the deceased.
When all was done, Drake led the way up to the Fortress. Apparently word of Lucien’s defeat had preceded Drake’s arrival. The massive front door stood open. None of Lucien’s kin remained.
As those who had fought with him entered the Fortress, Drake thanked each of them in turn for their assistance. And then, with little thought for the wounds he had sustained or the blood dripping on the floor, he called home.
Elena sighed as she closed her cell phone. Murmuring, “He’s all right, thank the Lord,” she sank down on the sofa next to Kaitlyn. “He’ll be home soon. He’s going to stay at the Fortress until Andrei can get there. Stefan and Ciprian are notifying Northa and the others in case they want to return.” She smiled through the tears of joy shining in her eyes. “The rest of his brothers are getting in touch with their families so they can all move back to the Fortress.”
Kaitlyn threw her arms around her mother. “That’s wonderful news!” She looked up at Zack, who had been adding wood to the fire. “What’s wrong?”
“Did Drake mention Nadiya?”
“She’s disappeared again.” Elena’s smile vanished as she looked at Zack. “You don’t think she’ll try something else, do you? Not after this?”
“I don’t know. She doesn’t seem like the kind to give up. On the other hand, she’s lost three sons, and she no longer has Lucien to fight her battles.”
“Well, I’m not going to worry about her anymore,” Kaitlyn said. “I have a wedding to plan.”
Apparently the word
wedding
possessed some kind of magical properties, Zack mused. The smile returned to Elena’s face and the next thing Zack knew, the two women had their heads together, talking about dresses and veils, what kind of flowers to order for the church, and what kind of a bouquet Kaitlyn would carry. Flowers weren’t part of vampire weddings, but Kaitlyn and Elena had decided to overrule Drake’s objections and ignore coven tradition. Kaitlyn wanted flowers and a church wedding, and that’s what she was going to have.
Zack frowned. The last time he had been inside a church had been for Colette’s funeral. When he’d proposed to Kaitlyn, he hadn’t given any thought to where they would get married. He had foolishly assumed they would just fly to Vegas for the weekend, get married in one of the chapels, then take an extended honeymoon in Italy or France. He grunted softly. So much for that idea. It was obvious that Kaitlyn wanted a big wedding—long white dress, flowers, bridesmaids. He grimaced. A groom wearing a tuxedo. The whole nine yards.
Looking at the excitement in her eyes, the flush in her cheeks, he figured it was a small price to pay to make her happy.
Until the next night, when he realized that, as long as Nadiya was still a threat, he was going to have to act as chaperon while the ladies went shopping.
Of course, every cloud had a silver lining, and this one came in the form of a blue Porsche Panamera 4S. The Sherrad family seemed to have a thing for Porsches, Zack mused. And this one was a beaut.
“I know you two want to gab,” Zack said as he opened the rear door for them and bowed them inside.
Moving around to the driver’s side, he slid behind the wheel and turned the key in the ignition. He grinned as the engine purred to life. The Panamera was a sweetheart of a ride, able to go from zero to sixty in four-point-eight seconds and reach a speed of a hundred and seventy-five miles. Although he was itching to put the car through its paces, now wasn’t the time, not when Kaitlyn and her mother were in the backseat.
He put the car in gear and headed down the mountain. The Porsche took the curves with ease; the low hum of the motor like music to his ears. He couldn’t help feeling a moment of regret when, all too soon, the city came into view.
At any other time, he would have dropped the women off and waited in the car, but recent events were too fresh in his mind. After parking the car, he escorted them to the bridal shop, then stood near the door, arms folded over his chest, while they picked out a dozen dresses for Kaitlyn to try on.