Fate Forsaken (14 page)

Read Fate Forsaken Online

Authors: Chauntelle Baughman

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Romance, #Paranormal, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Urban, #Psychics, #Vampires, #Werewolves & Shifters, #Paranormal & Urban

BOOK: Fate Forsaken
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Chapter Fourteen

A
s Eldon weaved through the darkened Paris streets, Rho rested her chin on her hand and stared out the passenger window. The cobblestone paths were probably a sight to behold around here at night, but she couldn’t focus her thoughts long enough to appreciate them. The sour stench of Eldon’s anger and disappointment permeated the car, suffocating her as she sat in silence.

This car was bad luck.

On their way to meet with Tim and Preshea earlier, she’d been mad at him for not telling her about Trinador. Now she got to take a turn on the guilty bus, Eldon’s quiet fuming doing nothing but frazzle nerves that were already shot.

As they rounded another curve on the winding road, she recognized the view. They weren’t far from the flat, and she had to break the awful silence. She swiveled in her seat to face Eldon. “The silent treatment doesn’t work for me either, you know.”

The muscles in his jaw twitched, but he didn’t respond.

“So is that how you’re going to be?” she asked. “Do I need to remind you about the whole ex-girlfriend stunt you pulled tonight? Or did you conveniently forget about that?”

She could hear his teeth grinding together as his hands flexed against the leather wrap of the steering wheel. He cranked the thing to the right and made his way around another tight corner.

God help her, she’d prod him into talking if she had do. For some reason, she needed to know they were still okay. “Just so we’re clear, we didn’t have sex back there just because—”

“I don’t want to talk to you right now,” he cut her off.

Well, that was something. But not good enough. “I don’t care. We’re in this thing together and we need to talk.”

“Later.”

“Or we can talk now.”

He gazed out the windshield in a daze, as if his mind was in a million other places. “No, we can’t.”

“Why the hell not?”

“I have nothing to say.” The frustration rang clear in his tone, despite the fact that he’d done the exact same prodding to her on the way here.

“Liar.”

“Just stop.” He slipped the car into a tight parking space before shifting it into park. Closing his eyes, he sucked in a deep breath before letting it out slowly. The muscles in his shoulders relaxed as he turned to face her. “I’m going to jump Tim and Preshea. We can talk after I get back.”

He finally lifted his eyes to meet hers. And she nearly shattered. His stare said everything she knew he wouldn’t say out loud, telling her instantly that he wasn’t as angry as she’d thought. Just disappointed. Worried. Concerned.

Her breath hitched. She studied him, his blue eyes intense and his hand still clutching the gear shifter. There was nothing she could say to him to make things better right now. He wasn’t in the mood to hear it. She drew her brows together and bit her lower lip. For some reason, she couldn’t form the words she knew needed to be said. They just weren’t there.

“Go.” He reached across her lap and pulled the lever on the passenger side door. “We’ll talk when I get back.”

She took in the chiseled features of his face, his strong jaw set defiantly. A tiny piece of her heart crumbled under the weight of his stare, making her feel empty inside. “I’ll be here.”

“I know.” With a quick nod, he vanished from the driver’s seat in a puff of blue smoke before she could say another word.

Shaking her head and breathing slowly to keep herself from falling apart, she climbed to the top floor and wrapped her hand around the round knob. The lock sprang free, courtesy of the doorknob spell Evette had cooked up before they’d left. She’d somehow tuned the knob to each of their auras, keeping any unwanted visitors out upon penalty of electric shock. Brilliant mover, that one. Eldon swore she could protect anything.

Rho stepped inside the flat and closed the door behind her, craning her head to the side to listen for company. Based on the lack of sound and movement, no one was home. Just as well. She needed some time alone to collect herself.

She made her way into the kitchen and pulled the carafe from the coffee machine before filling it with water. Without Eldon here, she’d have to settle on making coffee the old-fashioned way. She stifled a laugh. Only a few months ago, she’d thought that there was only one way to make a pot of coffee. Funny how things changed when your world opened up to entirely new possibilities. Hunger stirred in her gut as she doctored a cup with a little cream and sugar. Coffee wasn’t blood, not by a long shot. She’d need to feed within the next day or so.

Would Eldon still be upset when he returned? Upset enough to refuse her?

Her stomach dropped to her feet as she considered it. He’d been really upset when he’d left. But was he upset enough to turn her away? Would he still want to be with her? The idea of feeding off another man made her sick to her stomach, and wasn’t that a turn of events. For years she’d only fed off strangers and never thought anything of it. Now the idea of using an unfamiliar vein tore her heart open. Tears burned in her eyes at the thought of losing Eldon, and she blinked them back.

No, she couldn’t think like that. She wandered over to the window and brushed the blackout curtains aside then lifted the glass frame and pushed the shutters open to expose the dark Parisian street below. The sun was close, only about a half hour or so from the horizon. She leaned on the banister and took a sip of her coffee, gazing up at the dwindling remains of the night sky.

How had she managed to screw everything up so badly? She’d made a huge error of judgment. No, make that a series of epic mistakes.

Like not telling her teammates immediately that she’d be going on trial. Not telling them she was probably going to die. Not telling Tim and Preshea she had a telepathic connection to Eldon. And refraining from mentioning to her boyfriend that she’d now been deemed a threat to the highest order of the DarqRealm and its people.

Damn it.
She’d really messed this up. Squeezing her eyes shut, she rested her head against the frame of the open window.

She wasn’t sure how long she’d been standing there before a loud pop interrupted her thoughts. She whirled around as her eyes fluttered open, revealing Preshea and Eldon in the center of the living room. He didn’t even glance in Rho’s direction before he disappeared, leaving Rho alone in the loft with Preshea.

Awesome. Nothing like a bitchy brunette with claws to really polish off a craptacular night.

Not long after Rho’s multitude of secrets were exposed, Cadence had disappeared with their two attackers, a pair of movers who’d just so happened to show up at the basilica the same time the team did. Rho didn’t believe in coincidences anymore.

Once the Collective leader had poofed those two men across the ley lines, only the team had remained. And then Rho told her teammates everything. About the Council knowing about her past, Cadence’s history with her dad, and even the trial and what it probably meant for her livelihood.

Well, everything but her connection to Eldon. She’d had every intention of telling Tim and Preshea about that, but for some reason it didn’t seem appropriate to reveal anything until she discussed it with Eldon. His brain was the one connected to hers, and she didn’t want to blindside him again. He was mad enough right now. No need to fuel that fire.

“You should know…” the shifter said, interrupting her thoughts. She stood quietly in the center of the room for a moment before pacing over to the kitchen table and taking a seat. “Just because I’m pissed at you doesn’t mean I want you dead.”

Rho snorted. “How thoughtful.”

“Seriously.” Preshea’s hard, blue stare locked with Rho’s. “When are you going to get your head out of your ass?”

“This is really none of your business.”

“Bullshit. That’s complete and utter bullshit and you know it.”

Rho cranked a brow. “Excuse me?”

“I’m sorry, did I miss the memo?” Preshea tilted her head innocently. “Oh, that’s right. My bad. Only
you
are allowed to save people.”

Rho shook her head and glanced down at her boots. Her leathers were filthy from the tumble in the grass but still in one piece. “I never said that.”

“What was it that Eldon said earlier? Actions speaking louder than words?”

The sound of his name ripped Rho’s chest apart, and she closed her eyes. “That’s a low blow, Preshea, and you know it.” The sadness in his eyes just before he’d vanished to get Preshea had knocked the breath clean from her lungs. Rho opened her eyes again and locked eyes with her teammate.

“Then wake the fuck up.” Preshea’s stare pressed against Rho’s skin. “You saved my sister when you didn’t have to. You took that death mark when you didn’t have to.”

“What does any of that have to do with anything?”

“It has
everything
to do with
everything
. You don’t get to be the only one on this team who gives a damn. We all care about you, whether you like it or not.”

The cold determination Rho had been clutching onto fractured. Preshea had never openly admitted to caring about anyone other than her sister. To know that she gave a damn only made her feel worse. Which was probably the point.

“I just don’t want you guys involved with this,” Rho said softly, her throat tightening as tears threatened to surface again. Her teammates were her friends. She couldn’t bear to see anything happen to them.

“Not sure if you’ve noticed, but the Council got us
all
into this mess. Every one of us. So as far as I can tell, we’re all knee-deep in this mess of shit together.”

Rho tossed her a sidelong glance and sucked down another sip of coffee. “How eloquent.”

“What would you call this?” Preshea made a sweeping motion with her arm. “Running around, trying to play catch-the-relic while getting nailed with magick every other day? If you ask me, I’m
happy
you can play with fire.”

Rho’s eyebrows shot sky-high. “How can you say that?”

Preshea shrugged. “Tim and I can’t manipulate the ley lines. In the beginning, neither could you. It’s damn hard to help Eldon when he and our enemies have powers we can’t touch.”

Despite Rho’s desire to argue to the contrary, she could see the shifter’s point. “I can agree with that.” Watching Eldon work his magick was unlike anything she’d seen before. Such remarkable power.

“Then why are you fighting him on everything?” Preshea rose from the table and wandered over to the window. “Why won’t you trust him to help you?” She reached out and closed the shutters before sliding the window closed.

Memories swirled through Rho’s head, the timeline of events since she’d joined the team somehow crystal clear. He’d never, ever hurt her. Quite the opposite. Eldon and his sisters had been researching tirelessly to find a cure for her death mark.

Maybe she needed to think things through from a different perspective. Eldon had been willing to put his friend’s life—and magick—on the line for Rho’s safety. Granted, the woman carried the ex-girlfriend title. But if Rho was being completely honest with herself, she knew instinctively that Eldon would never cheat on her. Not if he’d been soul struck. Not even if he hadn’t been. She knew him better than that.

Blaming her actions on her possessive, selfish vampire nature would be a lie. She was being a territorial brat.

Damn, that hurt to admit. “I guess I figured I’d only make things worse. Make it harder on him if I had to be…exterminated.”

Preshea snickered as she tugged the curtains closed and turned around. “I wouldn’t worry about that.”

“How could I not?”

“The Council said it themselves.” Preshea’s eyes narrowed. “
You
are valuable. They aren’t keen on trashing things—or people—they think they can use.”

Rho gulped. She hadn’t exactly thought of things that way. “I won’t be a puppet.”

“No one said you had to be. But you need to get a harness on those powers of yours.”

“Only to have it destroyed?” Seemed like a futile effort.

“From where I’m sitting, I’d say you have exactly the gifts you need to be worth keeping.”

“How do you figure?”

Preshea lifted a finger. “You’re a trained fighter.” She lifted another finger. “You have the immortality of a vampire combined with an ability to play with magick.” Another finger. “And your gift means you can suck power away from your enemies. So yeah, I’d say that makes you a pretty powerful weapon.”

“Powerful enough to be a threat?”

Preshea shook her head. “Powerful enough to be an asset.” She wandered over to the fridge and pulled out a Coke. “Don’t screw up the opportunity.”

Relief swamped Rho’s thoughts, and she blew out a breath she hadn’t realized she was holding. Tension lifted from her shoulders, making her feel lighter where she stood. Opportunity. Not a liability. If Preshea was right, the only thing that guaranteed her second death could also be the only chance she had at staying alive.

Preshea popped the top on the can and took a swig. Then burped.

“You’re so gross,” Rho said.

“Practice your craft. Embrace this magick thing. Learn how to use it.” Preshea ignored the commentary. “And while you’re at it, apologize to Eldon for the head-fuck you just gave him.”

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