“Show yourself,” Trehan demanded of his seemingly empty apartments. He sensed danger looming. A regular occurrence for him in Dacia.
His gaze flickered over the shadowed corners of the gilded sitting area, then up to scan the vaulted ceilings. He stole a quick glance down the two adjoining corridors. One led to his bedchamber; the other opened up into a wing with unending bookshelves.
When only silence greeted him, he returned to his task: researching.
He’d assured his newfound Bride that he had no plans to return for her. True at the time. But now . . .
The idea of never seeing her again made him crazed.
She’d asked him, “What do you want from me?” He wanted to go back in time and answer: “Everything! Everything that is mine by right!”
But he’d done the rational thing—and left her. Never had he regretted a rational decision.
Might I now?
He’d told himself he simply didn’t have enough information to conclude anything about her. He needed to contemplate this in a logical fashion, gathering facts.
So he’d turned to his books, retrieving a tome on vampire physiology, the weighty Book of Lore, and a recently published history of the various demonarchies. Laying the books out on one side of his large desk, he’d set the tournament invitation on the other.
In the physiology manual, Trehan confirmed the harsh realities of his situation. Unless a vampire claimed his Bride completely, he would be filled with aggression, irrational jealousy, and uncontrollable sexual urges.
Perhaps Trehan should have agreed to her offer and taken her. Aggression? Check. Irrational jealousy? When he thought of Bettina responding with such abandon to Caspion, Trehan traced to his feet, wrestling with a murderous rage. Check.
Uncontrollable sexual urges? Upon returning home to wash and change, he’d grown achingly hard just from the evidence of his release in his pants. After all, he hadn’t scented or seen it for the better part of a millennium.
The book also said that a vampire must penetrate his mate with his fangs. As the demons and Lykae did. Which we consider barbaric.
But this book had been written about vampires—in general. Dacians were different, superior to other factions like the Horde and the Forbearers. He assured himself of this, even as he recalled how badly he’d craved biting her.
Dominion . . .
With an inward shake, he turned to the demon history book, to the Abaddonae entry.
Aptly named, the Deathly Ones derived strength from every kill they made, so historically they’d been at war more often than not. Their plane was an isolated swamp realm of no consequence, with a typical off-world time variance.
Time, like life, moved more slowly in Abaddon. . . .
Princess Bettina was the first daughter born in generations, described as “elfin” in appearance. Though a halfling, she’d inherited no outward demonic traits, yet she was reputed to possess a notable—but undisclosed—Sorceri power.
Fascinating. A delicate, little sorceress born into an archaic and violent demon world.
Her paternal ancestors had fought proudly and died in various battles, most often with other demonarchies. Just a decade earlier, her father, Mathar, had gone to the aid of one of his Pravus allies, perishing on the front line.
Apparently his sorceress queen, Eleara, had been killed by Vrekeners just after Bettina’s birth. Those winged creatures were mortal enemies of the Sept of Sorceri, considering themselves a check on Sorceri evil.
Trehan could find no more history on Eleara’s side, so he read in the Book of Lore about the Sorceri in general. Distantly related to witches, each was born with a root ability that they considered akin to a soul.
Their species was one of the weakest of all immortals—at least in matters of physical strength and healing—so they adorned their bodies with protective metals, especially gold.
They had no claws, so they wore metal ones. The masks they favored unsettled their enemies.
They were at once merry wine drinkers who worshipped gold—and fearful magicians, living in constant dread of ceding their powers to another.
What was Bettina’s power? Why hadn’t she used it against him when he’d been on the verge of taking her neck?
With these three books, he’d established a trio of facts.
His physical need wasn’t only grueling, it was dangerous.
Though her line was partly demonic, it was proud and worthy.
The little sorceress would be under constant threat and would need him as well.
But some things couldn’t be uncovered through books, and Trehan had more questions than answers regarding his Bride. He wondered what her personality was like, what her favorite color was. What were her hobbies? What made her laugh?
He considered what he did know about her.
She would bravely—if wrongly—sacrifice herself for the male she loved. She was sensual and curious about sex; no innately cold Bride for him. Yet again he recalled that shy grin as she’d bared her breasts. She wasn’t brazen by nature, but when pleasured, she grew beautifully wanton.
Judging by her book collection, she was fixated on her craft. Trehan was as obsessed with arms as any Dacian, probably more. He surveyed all his weapons displayed in gold cases and thought, She creates weapons; I wield them.
He gazed down at his injured hand. Ah, but she wielded one as well. Was that to be their initial common ground?
The wounds were fading; he found he didn’t want them to. No, he hadn’t sunk his fangs into her flesh, but she’d given him her own bite. When he remembered the blood welling across his palm and her flash of pride, for some reason he grew aroused once more.
Glancing from the invitation . . . to his books . . . back to the invitation—
Cold steel pressed against Trehan’s neck.
Must be Viktor. He wondered if his cousin would finally land a deathblow. They’d been trying to kill each other for hundreds of years.
“You let me take you unawares?” Viktor grated. “What occupies your thoughts so completely?”
“Not completely occupied.” Trehan prodded Viktor with the blade he’d managed to slip from his sword belt, the blade now pressed against Viktor’s scrotum.
Viktor laughed at Trehan’s ear. “I might temporarily lose my balls, old man, but you’ll lose your life.”
“I’ve been castrated before. The regeneration was such that you might find my headless fate preferable,” he said, cursing his carelessness. Tonight was a night of firsts for Trehan: allowing Viktor to take him unawares, leaving a target alive, his blooding—even his rejection by a female.
Viktor hesitated, then backed away. “It won’t prove amusing to end you without a fight.” He loved nothing more than fighting. Not surprising—he was the last scion of the House of War, the wrath of the kingdom. “Take out your sword, Cousin.”
With a weary exhalation, Trehan sheathed his short blade, then drew his sword. The weapon was one of the only belongings he truly cared about. It had been given to him by his father with the instructions: “Be an example, Son.”
Ignoring the twinge in his injured hand, Trehan traced to face Viktor. Though their temperaments were directly opposed—one cold and methodical, one warlike and rash—their looks were so similar they could have been brothers.
Viktor narrowed his green eyes at Trehan. “You’re even more pensive than usual. Trouble with your target?”
You have no idea, Trehan thought as he launched the first strike.
Viktor deflected it, and the clang of steel echoed in the spacious library.
“It was that new demon, right?” Viktor asked as he charged. Trehan neatly dodged his sword. Centuries of nearly constant battles between them had made them both superlative swordsmen. “Caspion the Tracker, the one all the females favored?”
All the females. Even mine.
Viktor feinted left, making a short jab to the right; Trehan arched his back, narrowly escaping the sword tip.
“Did the great Trehan actually leave a target alive? No, no, because then you wouldn’t be back here.” Another thrust.
Trehan parried. “I didn’t engage him,” he answered, half-tempted to tell his cousin everything. If not Viktor, then whom could he confide in?
No one.
Their relationship was complicated, to say the least. As the last members of their respective houses, they’d been trying to kill each other for most of their lives, yet there was no one Trehan would rather have at his back if they fought a mutual enemy. Viktor also kept his cousin’s secrets, refusing to sully himself and Trehan with court politics, preferring to settle their grievances by combat.
Trehan swung; Viktor blocked. Their swords connected, quaking in their hands.
“You’re strong tonight,” Viktor observed with approval. He venerated strength and relished violence.
Viktor was perpetually disappointed that their hidden kingdom afforded no chance for open conflict. As he’d once said while in his cups, “I’m the general of the world’s proudest and most perfect army—one that will never go to battle.”
Strike; swift parry. Slash; deflect.
“What is this I hear?” Viktor suddenly exclaimed. “Ah, Trehan, your heart beats! That’s where this new strength hails from.”
A vampire derived strength from age, Dacian blood, drinking straight from the flesh—and his blooding. “So it does.” He didn’t know if Viktor was blooded. His cousin utilized an old witch’s spell to camouflage whether he had a heartbeat or not.
Trehan had a theory about that. . . .
“Where is your new Bride?” Viktor risked a glance past Trehan. “Why were you reading when I stole upon you?” A look of confusion followed. “Why are you not rutting her even now? Perhaps I’ll find her sprawled across your bed with a soothing pack of ice between her legs?”
“You’re crass.” Another flash of his sword. “That’s my Bride you speak of!”
Another parry. “Then where is she?”
“There were challenges inherent with her.” He traced away from Viktor’s charge, appearing feet away; the blade sliced the air where Trehan had just been.
“Tell all, Cousin!”
“It doesn’t matter. She wouldn’t be suitable for me.” Bettina had her own realm to rule. She could scarcely be expected to live in this underworld with him.
She’s in love with another.
“Did you claim her?” Viktor asked.
A sharp shake of his head. “And it’s just as well. Once I take the throne—”
“So certain you’ll be king?” Slash.
Dodge. “Unfortunately, yes. You know I’m the logical choice.”
He was the most qualified to rule, but in fairness, each of the contenders had strengths. Trehan had cultivated an order of trained assassins. Viktor controlled the military. Their cousin Stelian governed who entered or exited Dacia. The youngest male cousin, Mirceo, was the most beloved by the people and had a loyal ally in his little sister, Kosmina.
However, Trehan was the most “Dacian” of the royals, believing in this kingdom, like a religion.
“Ah, that vaunted Dacian logic,” Viktor sneered, feinting a trace to the right, then striking to the left. With a well-timed block, Trehan deflected, but Viktor’s leg shot up, booting Trehan in the stomach.
If Viktor wanted to fight dirty . . .
Between breaths, Trehan grated, “Perhaps you wouldn’t resent that trait in others . . . if you weren’t the most illogical of the family?” Like a blur, he swept down, kicking Viktor’s legs out from under him.
Just before Viktor’s back met the floor, he traced to his feet. “King Trehan? Never while I live.”
They faced off once more. “You’re too hostile and rash,” Trehan said. “Mirceo’s too self-absorbed and hedonistic, not to mention young. And Stelian is nearly too drunken to handle his responsibilities as gatekeeper.”
“And you are too emotionless.”
I haven’t been tonight. Gazing down at Bettina’s eyes, watching them glitter with need, Trehan had been filled with emotion. He hadn’t been emotionless when he’d come in his Bride’s soft hand. . . .
Distracted once more, he barely dodged Viktor’s next strike.
“The people would wither under your stifling rule, Trehan. You are the sword of the kingdom, a cold, unfeeling blade.”
“This is a debate for another night.”
“So be it. Back to your missing Bride . . .” He trailed off, his gaze landing on Trehan’s desk—on the invitation. Before Trehan could reach the parchment, Viktor had snatched it up, swiftly perusing the writing. “Abaddon? I’ve been there! Used to go watch the fights. The mist blends with that fog so seamlessly, you know. Wait, this is her, isn’t it? ‘Challenges inherent’? I should say so. She’s a godsdamned tourney prize!”
“Enough, Cousin.”
“Not even close! Why are we wrangling over this crown when you can just go get another one?”
“I have no interest in that kingdom—solely the girl.”
“The one who just happens to be under the protection of a Deathly One and the most powerful sorceress ever to live? Did you try to steal her from them this eve?”
“I did,” Trehan admitted. “But she’s bound to that plane.”
“Wait, she’s a . . . a demoness? Again, why are you not bedding her right now?”
“For the record, she’s half sorceress. And she knows my target. They’re . . . close. She will hate me forever if I kill him.”
“You don’t have a choice.”
“And why’s that?”
Viktor rolled his eyes. “Because you’re a slave to your duty, to your house.”
Over the last millennium, Trehan had sacrificed everything for the good of Dacia. For once in his life, would he have what he desired? “What if I . . . wasn’t?”
Viktor backed away, unsure what to do with that. “Perfect, selfless Trehan Daciano entertains selfish thoughts? This I must explore. Truce for one eve?”
Trehan exhaled. “Pour the mead.” Once he cautiously sheathed his sword, Viktor did as well.
“Tell me about her.” Viktor traced to the sideboard, selecting a crystal decanter filled with mead-laced blood.
“She’s young. Lovely.” Talented, creative, innately sensual. With the sweetest skin I’ve ever imagined.
“How young?” Viktor handed him a glass topped off with crimson.
After a hesitation, Trehan said, “Kosmina’s age.” Mirceo and Kosmina were so much younger than the elder cousins that they called each one “uncle.”
Viktor’s lips parted. “You’re jesting.”
“Not at all.” He took a drink, but found the blood tasteless. Again he wondered what Bettina’s would be like.
Observant Viktor narrowed his eyes. “Did you bite her?”
Came so close. He recalled how his fangs had ached to pierce her—completely beyond his control. Like an ungovernable erection.
Would he be able to stop himself from tasting her blood if given a second chance? How did other Dacian males keep themselves in check?
Is something . . . wrong with me?
“You did!” Viktor raised his glass. “How very deviant of you, Trey! Did you mark her skin? Did you take her memories into you?”
“Don’t be absurd.” One of the reasons Dacians disavowed drinking from the flesh was because of the cosaşad—the ability to read memories through blood. When a cosaş took blood directly from the flesh, he took his prey’s memories into his own consciousness, even from the merest drop on the tongue. The coldly rational Dacians believed this to be a pollution, an intrusion into their pure minds.
If I’d taken Bettina’s memories, what would I have witnessed? Probably scenes of her lusting after Caspion. Trehan just stopped himself from crushing his goblet.
“Thinking about it even now?” Viktor said. “I can’t believe you used your fangs on her—Trehan the Perfect is actually perverse!”
“I didn’t bite her.” He glanced up. “You look disappointed. So eager to see me fall?”
“But you wanted to.”
Will fantasize about it for the rest of my life. “If I did, I’d never admit anything so shaming to you.”
Viktor gazed away. “You might have once.” He took a deep drink. “Back to the matter at hand. What are your options with the girl?”
“Kill Caspion. Forget her and move on.” As he said the words, they burned like a lie. Forgetting her wasn’t an option. Could he possibly move on?
There were so many questions surrounding her, so much to discover. He felt as if he’d read the first page of the most absorbing book he’d ever opened, only to have it slammed shut. “Second option: kill Caspion, find a way to steal the girl’s medallion, then abduct her.” Would she truly hate Trehan forever? Surely in a few decades she’d get over her displeasure.
Viktor shook his head decisively. “Morgana’s magics won’t be circumvented, not even by the likes of you. We have no spellcaster to aid you, much less one who could take her on. Logically, you know stealing the medallion isn’t an option. A campaign like that would be doomed to fail.” He lowered his drink, growing very serious about the topic.
This could be because Viktor had identified an enemy in Morgana, one who was thwarting the desires of a fellow Dacian. Or perhaps he was sensing imminent violence and hoping for a part of it. Maybe Viktor wanted to help because he sought to damage Trehan’s chances at the throne.
Likely all three motives.
For a brief moment, Trehan considered that Viktor might be moved to help because once, long, long ago, they had been friends. Then he dismissed the idea. They had too much history between them.
Trehan said, “I’d contemplated appealing to her godparents before the tournament begins. But how exactly would I present my case? Should I say, ‘I can’t tell you who I am, what royal line I descend from, where I hail from, or what my properties used to be. But give me your ward anyway’?”
“What about stealing her after the tournament—but before the full-moon wedding?”
“Back to the summoning medallion. Whoever wins it will control her movements.”
“If you entered, you’d have to leave the mist? To be seen by all?”
Trehan just stifled a shudder. “Yes. By all.”
“You’d be banished—and then I wouldn’t have to kill you,” Viktor said smugly. “At least not pressingly.”
Trehan gave him the look that comment deserved.
“Just think, you’d be king of one realm at least.”
“That’s actually a negative for me. Ruling a rainy, backwoods swamp plane filled with Deathly Ones? What do I know about ruling demons? Or about rain, for that matter?” He waved to indicate Dacia’s stone sky. “And why would they accept a nameless vampire to govern them? Clearly, the tournament is not an option. I could never turn my back on my kingdom and abandon my house, not when the Dacians need a king.”
“There’s another who could rule us.”
Trehan drank deeply, keen to get to the mead. “Lothaire again?” Lothaire Daciano, the Enemy of Old, was a three-thousand-year-old vampire gone red-eyed and insane from bloodlust—a prime example of why Dacians refrained from drinking others.
Lothaire was half Horde, half Dacian. Wholly mad.
Did he have a claim to the throne? Undoubtedly. His own house had always ruled.
What he lacked was a grasp of reality. Though the cousins had intermittently kept tabs on him, they’d never revealed themselves to him. “You’d truly accept a red-eyed king?” Horde vampires drained their prey to the quick, becoming addicted to the power and madness that act brought. Lothaire was rumored to have countless memories rattling around in his head.
In fact, it was said that he used the cosaşad to his advantage, drinking chosen victims just to get to their secrets.
“Perhaps I admire him,” Viktor said. “His bargaining is masterful. He would bring his fabled book of debts to the kingdom like a dowry.”
Lothaire’s book was also legendary. For millennia, he’d maneuvered Loreans into life-or-death situations, offering to save them—for a price. Rumor held that his debtors had vowed to do anything he asked of them when he called in the debt, and that he’d recorded their bargains meticulously.
“He’s probably the strongest vampire alive,” Viktor continued. “We could do worse for a king. Besides, I thought you’d be all for it, eager to end all our family animosity.”
“Don’t you tire of it?”
“Who are you talking to, Trehan? I live for animosity.”
And Viktor had plenty of cause for it. Trehan’s own father had killed Viktor’s. Of course, Viktor’s mother had slain Trehan’s. Throw in Stelian’s parents and Mirceo’s and they had all ended up dead eventually.
The blood vendettas of the Daciano houses were legion, inherited from their ancestors, with each generation adding new ones. “Then why would you even consider Lothaire?”
“Maybe I have no desire to be king either,” Viktor said. “Perhaps I only fight for it because I know I’d be better at it than any of you. Give me a vampire who’s actually more powerful than I am, and I’ll help guide him as he rules.”
From what Trehan had heard—and seen—of Lothaire, the male wouldn’t prove easy to “guide.”
Viktor viewed the invitation once more, this time with a look of lust on his face. “Zeii mea.” My gods. “Fights. To the death.” He actually groaned. “You could be in that ring. And with your clear eyes, everyone would think you’re a Forbearer.” One among an army of turned humans who didn’t drink from the flesh. Viktor smiled evilly. “They’ll believe you are weak, having no idea what you really are. Already an advantage.”
Trehan gazed down at his drink, lost in thought. The fighting didn’t factor into his decision whatsoever. If he chose to enter the tournament, he would win. Period.
Instead, his thoughts centered on another battle. Could I possibly win Bettina’s affections? On that score, he was much less certain.
“Come, Cousin, there’s more that you’re not telling me.”
Trehan quickly glanced up, the words falling from his lips: “She’s in love with another. With . . . Caspion.”
Damn it, what did she see in that demon? If those two had had some kind of relationship, then Caspion hadn’t been true to her, had been in a brothel this very night.
Viktor winced. “Bloody bad luck, Trey.” He sounded genuinely sorry for Trehan.
And yet tomorrow Viktor would plot to murder him all over again.
Unless I’m not here.
“He must die,” Viktor said. “Even Mirceo has accepted that.”
Mirceo had been Caspion’s sponsor into the kingdom, using all his influence to campaign for the demon’s acceptance. Mirceo had never expected Caspion to bolt, a first for the charming Dacian.
“You have other assassins under your command,” Viktor pointed out. “Get someone else to kill the demon.”
Trehan rubbed his brow. “By my hand or by my command won’t make a difference with her.”
“Is the demon entering the tournament? Then you could kill him in combat.”
“I haven’t relinquished Dacia yet, Cousin. If I decide to enter—”
“You’ll enter.”
“—then I will have spent my entire life in service to the kingdom, only to abandon it in a time of need, for a female who doesn’t even want me!”
“It makes sense that she would prefer Caspion,” Viktor said in a thoughtful tone. “Apparently, he is irresistible to females—and not a few males. There’s a reason Cousin Mirceo petitioned for him to enter Dacia. Alas, the demon is much better-looking than you are, old man.”
Trehan scowled. “I’m barely older than you are.”
“You said your Bride was young. She likely doesn’t know her mind yet. Her feelings for Caspion could be nothing more than a schoolgirl infatuation with a dashing demon.”
Bettina was woefully young, and she’d obviously been overprotected. Perhaps she simply hadn’t been around other males? She might have bonded with the one given most access to her.
Or was this only wishful thinking? He knew his looks didn’t compare to the demon’s—admittedly Caspion was . . . without flaw—but Trehan had other laudable qualities.
I’m a good killer. A talented scholar. Fuck. How could she possibly resist?
Then why has fate chosen her for me?
Bettina, Princess of Abaddon, was the only female in existence—and in all times past and future—who’d proved to be his Bride. . . .
He reminded himself that she had responded to him. She’d inhaled deeply of his skin, moaning in reaction. She’d moistened her bloodred lips as she’d investigated him with her soft fingertips. She’d murmured in a throaty voice, “My gods, I love your body.”
She’d delighted in touching me.
If he could seduce her into a similar situation, he could make her realize who’d awakened those feelings in her.
He had to believe that, given the chance, he could make her desire him again.
But that was the crux of this all: the mere chance would cost him dearly. His house would perish forever, his duty—and honor—with it. Competing in that tournament will cost me everything.
“You’ve obviously got it bad, old man,” Viktor said. “The girl burned a hole in your brain, did she?”
Trehan recalled how she’d looked in the throes of passion—her shimmering eyes pleading for more of his touch—and muttered, “A fiery arrow through the fucking temple.” She’d quivered against his hand, so close to coming for him. . . .
“What are you going to do?”
“What any logical male would.”
Viktor raised brows. “Then I am at a loss. Enlighten me.”
Trehan said, “I’m going to gather more information about her before rendering a decision.”