Chapter 9
Chapter Nine
Rowan
The first person Rowan saw when he left the office in the morning was Ivor, who still wore the same clothes he’d had on the night before. He didn’t look as if he’d gotten as good a sleep, his hair pulled back in a tangled tail, faint shadows under his dark eyes.
He still looked fucking beautiful. He was the most beautiful man, or whatever, that Rowan had ever seen.
He offered Rowan a tired smile. “Did you sleep well?”
“Like a log. I needed it.” Rowan clutched his bag to his chest. “Is it okay if I get that shower? I know Xavier planned to have breakfast, and I’m running late.”
“Of course.” He led Rowan to the bathroom at the end of the walkway that overlooked the cubicles below. He pointed back toward the short staircase. “Xavier’s office is there. Just meet us there when you finish.”
“Thanks.”
The shower in the bathroom was surprisingly big for an office restroom.
He guessed because a lot of the bodyguards he’d glimpsed wandering about were huge.
A couple had been over seven feet tall. He hurried through, feeling so much relief in getting truly clean for the first time in days.
He’d showered in one of the motels, but he’d been so scared it had been super fast.
He dressed in jeans and a black sweatshirt before shoving his feet into socks and his tennis shoes. He didn’t bother to comb his hair, just letting the waves fall as they willed.
A lot more noise filled the huge office area when he left the bathroom, and he looked over the rail.
He recognized some of the creatures who milled about, including an ogre, who fascinated him with his green horns and small tusks jutting from his lips.
He spotted pointed ears on others and one guy with scales over his skin.
It was wild to see so many preternaturals gathering in one place, but Rowan didn’t stay to stare because that wouldn’t be polite. He walked to Xavier’s office and knocked on the door, going inside when Xavier called out.
His office was decorated in a modern style—all blacks, grays and whites.
There were lots of old books on the shelves and a few crystals and candles.
A spread of donuts and breakfast biscuits was laid out on his desk.
Rowan met Ivor’s eyes, giving him a small smile that Ivor returned. Emory was also there along with Xavier.
“Take whatever food you’d like, and there’s also coffee,” Ivor said as he handed Rowan a tall cup with a lid. “It’s black because I don’t know how you take it. There are condiments there.” He pointed to small pile of creamers and packets.
Rowan was too nervous to doctor his coffee, but he did grab one of the breakfast sandwiches before settling on a gray couch that was a little too hard to be comfortable. Xavier waited until he was settled, then launched into what was going on.
“I’m convinced that this,” he said holding up the arm ring, “is a part of a phylactery.”
Rowan had heard of that before. “Like Dungeons and Dragons?”
Xavier’s smile held true humor. “In a sense, yes.”
He searched his memory. If he was remembering correctly, a phylactery was a magical item that had something to do with a powerful, dark creature called a lich. “I thought a phylactery had to have a space inside for a scroll or something.”
Xavier nodded. “They can and often do, but souls can be trapped in anything when one has enough power.”
Rowan choked on the bite he’d taken of the biscuit as he felt all the blood rush from his face. He stared at the ring. The one he’d been wearing daily since his great grandfather had given it to him at twelve. “There are souls trapped in it?”
“Yes,” Xavier said. “But they are no longer sentient, just traces of magic that the lich can use to be reborn. The jewels that were on it are also a part of the phylactery—jewels the draugr now has. I’m glad you brought this here, because it’s my plan to capture the draugr then release it to track down the lich.
The lich is no doubt very powerful and could wreak havoc if completely reborn. ”
Rowan was still completely stunned by the knowledge that he’d spent most of his life walking around with trapped souls in a ring around his upper arm. His stomach lurched, the bite he’d swallowed feeling like a lump in his gut. He set the sandwich down.
Ivor came to sit next to him on the couch. “You didn’t know what it was.”
“But this whole time, they’ve been there. With me. So I’ve been, what? Attached to this lich somehow?”
Ivor patted his arm. “The draugr was trapped, or that arm ring with the stones would have never gotten out of its possession. It’s not your fault, and you couldn’t have realized.”
“But I normally feel magic. It’s hard to believe I never sensed that there was that much magic tied to that thing.”
“The magic in this arm ring is contained, and it’s tied to the lich, so it makes sense that you didn’t sense anything,” Xavier said.
“Will the draugr come back after me if you release it after trapping it?”
“Not if it has the ring.”
“But you don’t want it reunited with the jewels, right? Doesn’t that give the lich its full power back? I mean, I’m just going off the lore I know from the game here. What exactly is a lich? It’s a wizard, right? Or a sorcerer?”
“It could be either. It’s someone with great power who did some really bad things in order to make that phylactery.
We live long lives, but it’s possible whoever this is had reason to believe he or she wouldn’t have a long life.
So they created the phylactery. It’s possible that since its phylactery has been gone so long and separated into pieces, it’s in a state of stasis.
The draugr’s only directive is to get the phylactery back to it—”
Xavier suddenly stopped speaking, his head tilting for a moment before he shot up from his chair and grabbed a big green stone off his desk. “The draugr is here.”
Fear spiked through Rowan, making him stand as well as the others ran out of the room.
He followed as they moved down the flight of stairs and, instead of using the elevator, opened the stairwell to the right of the elevator.
He didn’t know what he could do to help—all he knew was that he wanted to be near Ivor, and Ivor was currently headed outside.
When they reached the first floor, a loud scream sounded from outside. There were windows, and the door was glass, so it was easy to spot the draugr, which was slamming its body against an invisible force field several yards from the front door.
Ivor burst through the door and sped toward it, drawing out his daggers as he ran, his braid streaming out behind him.
Rowan wasn’t even afraid of the draugr getting through—he was too mesmerized by the way Ivor moved. He was like the personification of grace as he leaped through the air and swung his daggers down. One of them sliced clean through the draugr’s shoulder, severing its arm.
It hissed at him, spinning around to face other preternaturals who circled it. It must have realized it couldn’t win this fight because it misted away. Rowan’s gaze darted left and right as he waited for it to reappear like it had the first time he’d seen it, but it never did.
Xavier, who stood next to him, cursed softly. “Trapping this creature isn’t going to be easy,” he murmured. He looked at Rowan. “But we will. As you could see, it can’t get into this building again. I have a feeling it will be a while before it tries again.”
“And it’s okay if I just stay here?”
“Of course. As I said, it’s my fault the draugr got free.” Xavier stared out over the parking lot as if he didn’t truly believe what he’d said and thought that creature might appear. Then he looked at Rowan. “What do you need while you’re here?”
Rowan could only think of one other thing besides his Kindle. “It’s too bad you guys don’t have a kitchen here. I usually bake when I’m upset.”
“Sorry, we don’t. I could move you to one of our safe houses, but the wards here are stronger.”
“I’m fine here,” Rowan said as he watched Ivor walking back toward him. “Honestly, I am. I finally got the sleep I needed because I felt safe. Especially with him here.”
“Ivor?”
Rowan gave Xavier a sheepish smile. “I make no sense, I know. But something about him makes me feel that way. I don’t even know what he is.”
“Ivor is an incubus.”
“Well, that explains the other things he makes me feel,” Rowan muttered mostly under his breath. He wasn’t quiet enough, though, because Xavier chuckled.
“Yes, he has that effect on people and preternaturals alike.”
An incubus! Basically a being made for sex because he fed on sex.
At least if the books he’d read carried any thread of truth.
No wonder the man drew him in so strongly.
Just the way Ivor walked was hot as hell.
Sinuous, but kind of predatory. And as he came closer, Rowan felt heat flash through him and could only hope the red of his cheeks could be attributed to the cold.
Ivor made him yearn for something he’d never had.
Absolutely fantastic, mind-blowing sex.