Chapter 7
Seven
Ronan shuffled down the hallway to his hotel room, digging into his pocket for the plastic key card.
The night wasn’t a total loss. He and Aiden had talked.
They’d played. For the first time ever, they danced.
He’d gotten to feel Aiden in his arms. Toward the end, Aiden had even relaxed against him as if he were enjoying it, drawing them just a tiny bit closer.
There had been the most wonderful hints of the old Aiden.
Bold and daring, cocky and playful. The man he’d fallen for so long ago.
And that dance! He should have done that when they were human.
It probably would have gotten them both killed, but it would have been worth it.
Holding Aiden so close, he saw in those warm, golden eyes hints that maybe all his old feelings for Ronan weren’t gone.
Maybe Aiden could find a way to love him again.
A few more minutes, he might have even gotten a kiss…
until Ronan managed to fucking step in it with his big mouth.
Lesson one: Don’t talk about the woman.
At least not yet.
He’d wanted to explain that he wasn’t jealous. If anything, he wanted to get on his knees and kiss her feet for being there for Aiden. She had to have loved Aiden and made him happy, considering the devotion he still showed her. She’d given Aiden four amazing sons to fill his life and his heart.
If Aiden hadn’t found this Julianna Varik, what would have happened to him?
There was a good chance Aiden wouldn’t have still been alive, and Ronan would never have found him.
Ronan had seen it time and again in his long existence.
If a vampire didn’t have something to devote himself to, to distract his mind, then he got careless. A careless vampire was a dead vampire.
Well, really dead.
Speaking of Julianna had also revealed a hint of the new Aiden.
His friend had always been cautious, but there was a sharp fear in his eyes Ronan had never seen before.
Aiden had suffered painful loss—with Ronan and Julianna.
That pain was making him fearful of losing again.
And he had a lot to lose when it came to his sons.
Aiden wouldn’t do anything to risk that, but did it mean he was willing to walk away from Ronan to keep his family safe?
It was something he would definitely need to consider when approaching Aiden again.
Their night might not have ended on the positive note Ronan would have preferred, but he was still here.
Aiden hadn’t demanded that he leave his domain.
Not that Ronan was entirely sure he’d leave even if Aiden asked.
His old friend could be stubborn and short-tempered when pushed too far, but he always came to regret it later.
Of course, the key to their larger problem was convincing Aiden that he was trustworthy. That he didn’t have some secret motive that had to do with the European Ministry.
Maybe he should focus on getting the sons to trust him? They likely held some sway with Aiden. If he could get them to trust him, they could put in a good word for him.
Ronan stopped outside his door, the hallway completely silent at the late hour, and wrinkled his nose.
Considering the little meeting held in his room earlier that day, he had a feeling that he had a much better shot of getting Aiden to fall in love with him again than convincing the Varik boys to trust him.
Unlocking the door, he halted just over the threshold as the scent of lavender hit his nose. Someone was waiting for him. But at least he knew exactly who this someone was. He’d been expecting this meeting, but not like this.
Swallowing an irritated growl, Ronan stepped inside and allowed the door to slam shut behind him.
He shoved the card into his pocket as he walked down the short hall to find Mara seated in the chair positioned at the foot of the bed.
Michael was standing with his back to the window, arms crossed over his chest like some angry golem protecting his charge.
He’d never worked with either vampire before, and he couldn’t be more grateful that this was a one-time deal.
Mara possessed the warmth and personality of an icicle.
Michael was just around to be her silent bodyguard.
Sadly, Ronan was supposed to be on this little trip for the same reason, but he’d joined the envoy for an entirely different purpose.
And judging by the scowl on Mara’s plain face, she’d figured that out as well.
“I had no idea the hotel had such shitty locks on its doors,” Ronan muttered as he crossed the room. He toed out of his shoes and dropped onto the middle of the bed, his hands folded behind his head as if he didn’t have a care in the world.
Technically, he didn’t. He was older than Mara by several centuries, and unless she had some utterly devastating secret power, she was no threat to him.
Michael was significantly older than Mara and stronger than his vacant stare would have anyone think, but Ronan still felt confident he could take the vampire.
It wasn’t a question of whether he could kill his two companions, but the kind of shit storm that would rain down from the European Ministry if two of its emissaries were killed while in Aiden’s territory. He was not going to start a war that would put Aiden and his family in danger.
“It would seem that you withheld some vital information from us,” Mara said.
Her usually dull, lifeless voice was sharper and almost vibrated with her ire.
Ronan fought a smirk. She looked like the type to ball up her fists and stomp her foot when she didn’t get her way.
Of course, she also looked like the type to tell Michael to bash his face in if Ronan laughed at her, so he pushed those thoughts aside.
“What information would that be?”
Mara jumped to her feet so she could loom her entire five-foot-three figure over him on the bed. “You know Aiden!”
He was right. Her hands were balled up, and he was sure he was one sarcastic comment away from a foot-stomp.
“I do,” he admitted. There was nothing to be gained by denying it. He didn’t want to risk being spotted with Aiden later and Mara losing her shit.
Mara’s mouth fell open, but no sound came out, as if he’d struck her mute with his careless confirmation. Sucking in a sharp breath, she tried again. “And you didn’t think that information would be of use to us?”
Ronan managed a small shrug of his right shoulder. “I wasn’t sure it was him until I saw him at the party last night.”
“But you must have suspected, if you were going to waltz into the ministry and demand to be sent on this mission to meet the wannabe king.”
Clenching his teeth, Ronan had to take a couple of seconds to fight his natural instinct to snap at the woman over several of her word choices.
Aiden was no pretender king, he didn’t waltz—well, not without Aiden in his arms—and he didn’t make demands of the Ministry.
He’d pretty much begged to be sent on this mission just to keep the peace between Aiden and the Ministry.
But none of that was important and he certainly wasn’t going to waste his time correcting Little Miss Temper Tantrum.
Instead, Ronan shrugged again because the motion seemed to drive Mara slightly insane. “I suspected there might be a chance it was the man I knew.”
“And…?”
“What?”
Mara threw her hands up in the air and paced a short distance away from the chair before spinning back to glare at him. “You couldn’t have told us? You couldn’t have shared what information you had about the man prior to boarding the damn plane to come to this godforsaken country?”
“No. I knew him when I was still human. That was a very, very long time ago.”
Mara turned to him, her gaze more speculative. “So, he’s as old as the rumors claim.”
Ronan kept his fucking mouth shut. Ronan had never confirmed his age with any vampire.
The few that knew his age firsthand were dust now.
There were rumors about how many years he’d walked the earth, and they didn’t come close to the truth.
A vampire’s age was a private thing. It tended to give away critical things like their strength and experience.
An old vampire didn’t need to advertise.
Another vampire could feel the weight of their years when they walked into the room.
Ronan refused to destroy any potential advantage Aiden might have that would keep him alive.
Mara walked over to her chair and sat, crossing her legs at the ankle while giving him her full attention. He nearly groaned. This was not a conversation he wanted to have.
“What can you tell us about him?” she demanded.
“Nothing you don’t already know.” Ronan pushed himself upright so that he was sitting. “I knew the man he was, but I’ve not seen him in centuries. As I’m sure you know, people change over the years. I don’t know the vampire he is now.”
As he finished speaking, pain squeezed his heart.
It was something he’d not let himself think about since he’d first heard about the infamous King Aiden.
The man he’d known a thousand years ago was dead.
Yes, the creature he’d danced with tonight still had Aiden’s lovely dark-golden eyes and lush brown hair.
He had Aiden’s laugh and wonderful smile with the little crinkles at the corners of his eyes.
But the man he’d known was gone.
Was he fooling himself, pursuing Aiden like this? Was he trying to recapture something that was long gone just so he didn’t have to spend another second regretting the chance he never took?
Was it fair to Aiden? The vampire had moved on. He’d loved and created a family. He had a new life that looked to be fantastic without Ronan. Would Aiden be happier if Ronan boarded a plane and returned to his life in Europe?