Chapter 16 #3

Voss had abducted Angelica Woodmore, but he’d claimed it was to keep her safe from Moldavi’s men, who’d, predictably, followed Woodmore and Narcise from Paris.

Giordan had been in London—although with Rubey and not in attendance—the night of the abduction, when Belial and three others had entered a masquerade ball and murdered three people.

That night and the next day, he and Dimitri had had to work together to enthrall witnesses and change stories.

Otherwise, the news might cause a mad panic in London such as there had been in Brussels some years back after a similar occurrence.

Shortly after, Giordan left to meet Woodmore in Reither’s Close and break the news of Angelica’s kidnapping.

But by the time Giordan had returned to London, with, presumably, Woodmore on his heels, Angelica had been safely retrieved by Dimitri.

Still, the earl was furious with Voss for taking one of the Woodmore sisters while he was responsible for them during their brother’s disappearance, and by the tone of his message tonight, he intended to find Voss and square things with him.

Which, in Dimitri’s mind, likely meant to kill the bastard.

Ever since the incident in Vienna a century ago, when Dimitri’s house had gone up in flames, there’d been bad blood between the earl and Voss.

This current situation involving Angelica—which the earl would interpret as impertinent and insolent, at the very least, and a grave insult at worst—made the situation even more untenable.

And therefore, Giordan would answer the summons if for no other reason than to reason Dimitri out of cold-blooded murder, and to help him find Voss if necessary.

Which was, it seemed, how far the bonds of friendship extended.

Blackmont Hall—which was nearly as dreary and cold as its name and resident suggested—was surrounded by high, smooth, brick walls that were topped with sharp metal and wooden pikes and studded with gas lanterns.

The two dozen lamps were lit every night and extinguished every dawn whether the earl was in residence or not.

Aside from that structural barrier, Dimitri had an entire retinue of guards—both mortal and make—at his disposal, watching the sisters and the grounds.

If there was a place in London safe from Belial or unwanted guests, it was the Corvindale residence.

Giordan was well-known to the gatekeeper, and he was waved in after he removed the hat and cloak he’d donned against the ever-present drizzle.

Crewston, the Blackmont butler, opened the front door and said, “His lordship is in his office with several persons. Including his young wards.” His tone indicated his disdain for the inclusion of the two Woodmore sisters in a meeting clearly meant for men only.

“Apparently there was some sort of event this evening.”

Handing his hat and cloak to the butler, Giordan stepped into the foyer and stilled.

Narcise.

It was with great effort that he didn’t pause in his strides, although he did slow and his movements turned jerky as he walked past Crewston down the corridor.

His heart pounded, his blasted hands wanted to become damp, but by the Fates, he wouldn’t allow that.

He swiped his palms on his trousers and kept walking.

Pausing outside the study door, which had been left slightly ajar in—he suspected—a show of empathy and warning for him by Dimitri, Giordan listened, waiting for an opportune moment to make his entrance.

The earl had given him the advantage of surprise, and he was going to take full advantage of it.

Someone was speaking in tones threaded with distaste. “You must be Narcise Moldavi. The vampire.” He recognized the voice wafting through as that of Angelica Woodmore.

“I am.” Narcise’s voice was low and dusky as it always was, yet it carried a hint of annoyance. Giordan’s heart thumped uncomfortably and he squeezed his eyes closed for a moment, nearly missing the Woodmore sister’s response.

“Are you here so that we can welcome you to the family?” came Angelica’s reply.

Clearly, she wasn’t any more fond of the idea of Narcise and Woodmore being together than Giordan was.

Or, no, perhaps it wasn’t that the two of them were intimate that disturbed Giordan, when one came down to it. It was more the fact that she was here. He’d have to see her. He might even have to speak to her.

All the while pretending he didn’t want to kill her.

“In fact, mademoiselle, I’m here, endangering my person only because of you.” He heard the faint clink of a glass over Narcise’s voice. She sounded hard and unemotional. “When your brother learned that Voss had abducted you, he insisted on coming to London, despite the danger to me.”

Suddenly furious that Narcise would blame the young mortal for her own failings, Giordan opened the door.

He stepped inside with smooth, controlled movements, his face expressionless.

“You know very well you didn’t have to come to London with him.

Don’t blame your own cowardice on the girl, Narcise. ”

He couldn’t have planned for a better entrance. All eyes swung to him, but he was only looking toward one pair. They flashed with bald shock and a ripple of fear…and then into cold, emotionless sapphires.

Fear, oh, oui, it was there. And well it should be. If she had any concept how deeply he hated her…how much, even now, after his change, that he’d risk it to have revenge….

Oh, yes. A woman could indeed drive a man to do what was unimaginable. To do something he could hardly conceive. For love or, just as readily, for hate.

A little shudder of nausea rippled deep in his belly.

Narcise was standing near the liquor cabinet, dressed in masculine clothing.

He could see that she’d been disguised as a man—and an elderly gent, if one accounted for the faint lines that had been drawn on her face to emphasize wrinkles and aging.

Ironically, it was Giordan who’d taught her that trick during his clandestine visits to her.

Smudges added to the gauntness of her face…

a face that was still as beautiful and perfect as it had always been. A mask covering perfidy and fickleness.

She held a hat that, presumably, had just been removed in an exposure of her gender and identity.

Narcise didn’t respond to Giordan’s entrance other than to add a flash of fangs to her sneer as she tossed the hat onto a table. Sipping from a glass of whisky, she walked over to stand deliberately next to Woodmore.

But Giordan was no longer paying attention to her. He’d turned his back—although he was aware, of course, precisely where she was standing and how she’d moved. He forced his curling fingers to loosen as he looked at the other occupants in the chamber.

“Miss Woodmore, Angelica, meet my friend Mr. Giordan Cale.” Dimitri spoke, rising from his seat in the corner.

“Chas, what in heaven’s name is going on here?” Maia Woodmore demanded.

“I’ve been attempting to tell you,” Woodmore replied mildly. “And I will…if we aren’t going to have any further interruptions?” He glanced at Narcise, but it wasn’t a look of reproach as much as it was one of affection.

Ah, the damned fool loved her.

“You’re taking us home, Chas,” Maia said firmly, and at that moment, Giordan felt a bit of sympathy for Dimitri. This elder of the sisters was clearly as headstrong and stubborn as her brother—and not nearly as tactful. “Tomorrow.” It was more of a command than a question, or even a request.

Narcise shifted, and so did her lover. “I’m afraid that’s impossible right now,” Woodmore said.

“What do you mean? You’re here, you’re back. There’s no reason for us to stay here any longer,” Maia said.

“Don’t disappoint the girl, Chas,” the earl said. “Take her home.” Then he glanced over. “Or perhaps Giordan would like to take on governess duties?”

Giordan snorted in return. “I wouldn’t dream of depriving you of the honor, Dimitri.” He bared his teeth in a false smile and accepted a glass of much-needed whisky from the earl. It was all he could do to keep from slugging it down.

“But why can’t we go with you, Chas?” demanded Maia.

“Corvindale is and will remain your guardian for the foreseeable future,” Woodmore replied flatly, “but I wasn’t going to stand aside and let Voss compromise my sister.”

“I’m not compromised,” Angelica said stubbornly.

“It doesn’t matter,” Woodmore replied, glancing around the room. “We know he was here tonight, Angelica. Whether you invited him or welcomed him or—”

“I certainly didn’t invite him!” The girl was clearly outraged and offended. “I wouldn’t invite a terrifying creature like him anywhere!” And apparently, she shared her brother’s distaste for the befanged Dracule...except, also apparently, for Narcise.

“It doesn’t matter,” Woodmore continued sternly. “Corvindale and Cale are going to help me find him. And then I’m going to kill him.”

Giordan kept his tickle of annoyance at Woodmore’s assumptions to himself, and felt rather than saw Narcise move to the other side of the chamber behind him.

She stayed carefully out of his eyesight.

Her essence stirred the air, still as lush and feminine as it had been in Paris… but yet not quite the same.

“Since it appears that you will be under this roof for some further time, Miss Woodmore, Angelica—perhaps you might find your way back to your chambers,” Dimitri said abruptly, standing from where he’d been brooding in a corner chair. “The night is waning.”

Giordan, who, in some ways knew his friend better than Dimitri knew himself, suspected the man had used up his not very extensive patience.

The earl’s library and office had been invaded, not to mention his hermit-like lifestyle disrupted by the new additions to his household, and would be, it seemed, for sometime to come.

The earl wanted everyone gone.

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