Crave Me Immortal Vices and Virtues Book 4 by Lexi C
Crave Me Immortal Vices and Virtues Book 4 by Lexi C
Crave Me Immortal Vices and Virtues Book 4 by Lexi C
Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author’s
imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business
establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
Crave Me
Copyright © 2022 Lexi C. Foss
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means,
including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except
for the use of brief quotations in a book review. This book may not be redistributed to others for
commercial or noncommercial purposes.
Editing by: Outthink Editing, LLC
Proofreading by: Katie Schmahl & Jean Bachen
Cover Design: Clarissa Yeo, Yocla Cover Designs
Cover Photography: CJC Photography
Cover Models: Peter Stelling & Jenna Elisabeth
Published by: Ninja Newt Publishing, LLC
Digital Edition
ISBN: 978-1-68530-077-7
To Iceland, for continuing to inspire stories in my head. Your magical
landscapes and stunning waterfalls (Fosses!) are among the most beautiful
I’ve ever seen. I can’t wait for us to meet again.
And to Kel, for creating this gorgeous world and allowing Nyx to crash-land
on the shores of it. I hope she makes you laugh, my dude. Oh, and please
send my love to Uriah. #SoulMate
CONTENTS
About Crave Me
A Note from Lexi
Prologue: Nyx
1. Vesperus
2. Nyx
3. Vesperus
4. Vesperus
5. Nyx
6. Vesperus
7. Nyx
8. Vesperus
9. Nyx
10. Vesperus
11. Nyx
12. Vesperus
13. Nyx
14. Vesperus
15. Vesperus
16. Nyx
17. Vesperus
18. Vesperus
19. Nyx
20. Vesperus
21. Nyx
22. Nyx
23. Vesperus
24. Nyx
25. Nyx
26. Vesperus
27. Nyx
28. Nyx
29. Vesperus
30. Vesperus
31. Nyx
Epilogue: Nyx
Chastely Bitten
About Lexi C. Foss
Also by Lexi C. Foss
Once upon a time, a series of portals opened on Earth, allowing magic to
spill into the human world.
Houses were created. Supernaturals were assigned. And a new balance was
formed.
All new arrivals are required to join a House.
But this is the tale of a goddess who refused and the House King who brought
her to heel.
Nyx.
Goddess of Night.
My newest obsession.
Oh, there were so many things I wanted to do with that disobedient little
mouth of hers. But she was much stronger than she led anyone to believe.
Now I’m left with a craving I can’t quite sate.
Because one bite wasn’t enough.
You may be the Goddess of Night, but I’m still your king.
You will kneel.
You will beg.
And most importantly, you will bleed.
Welcome to the House of Gold and Garnet, where power defines the
monarchy and blood is a preferred currency.
Proceed at your own risk.
For fans of the Blood Alliance series, this is the story of Nyx and
Vesperus, the goddess and her vampire lover that started it all…
H ELLO AND WELCOME TO THE CHAOS INSIDE MY HEAD !
This was such a unique book to write. It’s very much part of the Immortal
Vices and Virtues world, but it also leads into another series of mine that
some of you might have read—the Blood Alliance series.
However, the tone of Crave Me is just so much different as a result of the
world rules and the voices I chose to explore.
Nyx is quite possibly one of the most powerful heroines I’ve ever written.
But she’s not over the top in her strength; she’s… quirky. She’s a goddess
exploring a realm and the magic within it. And she’s not letting anyone tell
her what to do or where to go. Not even the vampire king who finds her.
Therefore, I would categorize this as a “lighter” read from me (if
comparing it to the Blood Alliance world). But I still have my blood-play
moments. Vesperus is a vampire, after all. So if biting isn’t your thing,
then… that might be a problem.
But if you’re looking for a standalone read filled with humor, sensuality,
a little blood play, and forbidden romance, then you’ve definitely chosen the
right story.
Crave Me can be read without knowledge of any of my other books, and
it’s a complete standalone in the Immortal Vices and Virtues world.
It just also happens to be the origin story of how Nyx met Vesperus. And
to my Blood Alliance fans, it’ll tell you what led Nyx to create the Blessed
Ones… ;)
R OUGHLY T HREE M ONTHS A GO
A NOTHER REALM .
Another failure.
I sighed and flipped the enchanted obsidian medallion through my
fingers.
This was my seventeenth universe, and it was somehow even worse than
the last sixteen. No magic. No supernatural presence. No excitement. And no
moon.
I turned my gaze up to the smog-covered sky, my lips curling down. The
mortals of this realm had polluted their atmosphere so spectacularly that there
was no longer any light here. And most of the humans were dead as a result.
No sun meant no plants.
Which led to no animals.
The sense of starvation was so potent that I could almost taste it in the
dirty air.
There wasn’t even any water left, the sewage having tainted the streams
and oceans and reducing it all to toxic waste.
Definitely not my ideal reality, I decided. Again.
The other realms had at least offered me a few months of intrigue. This
one hadn’t even lasted days.
“Right.” My fingers stilled as I focused on the magic embedded inside the
crescent-shaped medallion in my hand. “Shall we try again?”
No one could hear me.
But I was used to that.
I often existed in my own world of creation, which was what had inspired
this hunt to begin with. I wanted a home. A partner. A fulfilling existence.
Friends.
Alas, I was beginning to think that fate disagreed with my desires.
Well, too bad, Goddess Destiny. I want more than to just exist in the
background of a world. I want a true purpose, whatever that may mean.
I closed my eyes and focused on the obsidian stone, words of the ancient
tongue spilling from my lips as I ignited the enchantment that would help me
traverse reality once more.
The magic hummed around me, stirring a flicker of light behind my
closed eyelids that almost made me dizzy. It was a subtle warning that said
I’d used the charm again too quickly, but I had no choice. This realm was
uninhabitable.
Perhaps if you sent me somewhere more accommodating, I wouldn’t have
to do this, I thought at the stone. However, you seem determined to—
A blast of power shocked my system, lighting my veins on fire and
eliciting a sharp gasp from my lips.
My eyes flew open, searching for the threat, only for my world to be
flipped upside down as a whirlwind of dark energy caught me in its web.
I growled, my own energy flaring to life as I called upon the moon to
light up this inky abyss.
A sprinkling of starlike orbs appeared in my peripheral vision, my magic
flickering to life. But it wasn’t fast enough.
The dark spiral swallowed me whole, sending me into a whirl of foreign
energy that had me crashing into a wave of icy water.
I sputtered, my feet kicking on instinct as I forced myself to the surface.
Just to be sucked back down again and spun in a lethal circle that shoved
me into a jagged wall of sharp rock.
I grasped at the wall, searching for something to grip to try to yank
myself up out of the waves, but the water was too powerful, the moon
controlling the tide.
Mine, I thought, lassoing the old magic I felt swirling around my
birthright. You are mine to command. Hear me!
It took several tugs for the tide to settle, the moon shifting and allowing
me to temporarily control the waves enough for me to break free. The whole
world would feel it. But they wouldn’t be able to explain the shift.
A majestic event, the humans would say. A phenomenon that can’t be
described.
Assuming the mortals of this world were like all the rest, anyway.
I spat out a mouthful of water as I used the tide to take me around the
rock cliff and toward a nearby shore.
Then I collapsed against the dark sand and heaved a breath as I released
my control over the moon.
Magic fizzled over my skin, the world righting itself again.
The ocean rebelled with a massive wave that nearly sucked me out to sea
once more, but I pushed it back with a blast of energy, reminding the
substance who the real master was here.
I’m the Goddess of Night. The Mistress of the Moon. A queen who will
not bow.
I’d been called so many names throughout my existence, all of them
accurate. But I usually just preferred Nyx.
I rolled to my back and admired the beautiful midnight sky above, noting
the lack of clouds and inhaling the clean air.
Much better, I thought dreamily. No smog. No pollution. Just an invisible
layer of… I frowned, my hands going to the earth as I tried to push myself
upward. Well, that’s new.
This world had magic.
A lot of it.
I could feel the energy pulsing all around me, the vivacious nature of it an
intoxicating presence that sent blissful shocks through my veins.
My lips began to curl, my heart skipping a beat.
Have I finally done it? Have I finally found a proper—
A harsh zap rippled up my arm, making me drop my stone in the sand.
“What—”
My eyes rounded as the obsidian medallion dissolved into ash.
No, not ash.
Sand.
Except… I ran my fingers through it, my brow furrowing. “That’s
impossible.”
I could still feel the power shimmering in my spirit, the stone’s magnetic
energy having simply been transferred to something else.
My legs shook as I forced myself to stand, my gaze searching the beach
and nearby rocks for the mystical source. Where did you go? I wondered,
spinning around. I can feel you. Why can’t I see you?
I glanced again at the tiny pile of sand that used to resemble my
medallion, my lips curling downward. “Is this a punishment for using you
again too soon?” I asked it.
The magic seemed to shimmer in response.
“I see.” I narrowed my gaze. “So you’ve moved into a new object, and
now you’re going to make me work to find you.”
A majestic game of hide-and-seek.
I pinched the bridge of my nose and shook my head. This was going to
take a while. Because the magic could be anywhere.
I whispered an enchantment, one meant to make moon energy appear
only to me. But other than the tide behind me, my senses picked up on
nothing.
Which meant the magic had left this area for another. Fortunately, it still
existed in this realm. If it didn’t, I wouldn’t even be able to feel it.
Fine, I thought at it. I’ll hunt you.
And in the meantime, I would explore this magical world. See what it had
to offer. Maybe even stay for—
A bullet cracked through the air, making me phase on instinct to about
twenty yards to my left. The sound of a male cursing followed, with another
yelling, “There!”
Two more shots fired, forcing me to wrap myself in shadows and phase
again.
“What the fuck is that?” one of the men demanded.
“I don’t know, but it isn’t registered. Kill it.”
My eyebrows lifted. “Excuse me?” I materialized beside the one
demanding that the other kill it. “I’m not—”
His hand appeared with a blade, the metal sharp and nearly puncturing
my chest as he lunged for me with a feral growl. Magic rippled around him,
telling me he wasn’t human. And neither was his friend.
Nor were the three others who had suddenly appeared with weapons, all
aimed at me.
“Well, this is quite a primitive welcome,” I muttered as I hit them all with
a gust of energy.
The tide responded to my call, the water whirling in the air and slamming
the five offenders against the beach.
I stood before them, hands on my hips, as they all grappled for their
weapons. “I don’t appreciate—”
Another bullet fired, this one nearly hitting me in the head, but I phased
before it could meet its mark.
“Rude,” I growled, moving to the being in question who had just tried to
shoot me between the eyes. I tsked. “You have very bad manners.” I yanked
his gun out of his hand and threw it into the sea.
Only to be tackled by a wolf.
Shifter, I realized immediately, my eyes narrowing as his teeth attempted
to sink into my throat. That would not end well for him.
I shoved him off me with a harsh push that sent him back a good twenty
feet, causing all the others to curse in his wake.
I’d clearly gotten off on the wrong foot with these inhabitants. With a
sigh, I attempted to brush the sand off my damp clothes and take on a regal
position. “Now. If you would be so kind as to allow me—”
Magic hummed in the air, warning me of the incoming army of
supernaturals. There were at least a dozen, all of their auras aggressive and
filled with a mixture of energy.
My lips flattened.
I did not want my grand entrance to a potential new home to be defined
by bloodshed. I was not Ares. He might have chosen war, but I preferred
more amicable introductions.
I would deal with these beings after I had a proper shower, napped, and
dried my clothes.
Then, if I was feeling better, I would make my presence known.
Or maybe I’d poke around a bit first. Learn the rules and laws of the
place. Decide if I wanted to stay.
And search for my lost obsidian magic in the process.
Yes.
A sound plan.
“Enjoy your night,” I told them as I pulled one last massive wave from
the ocean. It was meant to be a distraction more than a retaliation, but the
moon sensed my displeasure and reacted accordingly.
So the wave was more of a tsunami in size.
It wouldn’t kill anyone. However, it would certainly send a message.
A goddess walks among you. Be respectful. And maybe, if she likes this
realm, she’ll choose to stay.
I smiled. Time to explore.
CHAPTER ONE
VESPERUS
T HIS WAS THE ENTITY RESPONSIBLE FOR THE BAR EXPLOSION . T HE BEING WHO
had entered our realm illegally. The bounty my men had been searching for
all these months.
The immortal I’d fully intended to hunt down and slay as a result of
Klas’s untimely demise.
A goddess.
Yeah, I believed that, with her hypnotic gold irises, thick dark lashes,
softly curved chin, and full, fuckable lips. She certainly fit the part
physically.
But also in power.
It rippled around her in tangible waves, making her long black hair flow
with every movement. Even her dress—which was better suited for a beach
in Greece than winter in Ireland—seemed to move as though energized by
her very spirit.
Ethereal described her physical presence. Stunning, too.
And she was staring at me as though she wanted to devour me.
Not in a murderous way, but in a sensual manner.
The tightening in my chest urged me to let her do whatever she wanted to
me, too.
Because this female—this being whom I’d fully intended to kill mere
hours ago—was mine.
My fated mate.
My future.
I’d felt her presence like a knife through my heart. Her energy had
warmed the air, insisting that I turn to face her and claim her.
Only, she’d been encased in shadows, hiding from everyone on this street
except for me.
One look from me and she’d dispelled that magical cloak, allowing me to
really see her.
And, fuck me, I liked what I saw. I liked it so much that I hadn’t even
reacted to her approach.
I’d just stood here like a lovestruck fool, allowing this ancient magic to
take hold of me as it demanded that I accept my fate.
This isn’t me, I thought, still speechless by this female’s presence.
“Who are you?” she’d asked.
And I found myself wondering the same damn thing.
Because I didn’t feel like an ancient vampire right now, or a powerful
king.
Just a man entranced by a woman. My woman.
I could feel the pull wrapping around my heart and redirecting all of my
instincts toward a primal need to possess her. To touch. To bite.
Not to kill or to capture or to punish.
But to fuck.
It left me feeling off-kilter. Punched in the chest. Winded.
Only for the sound of metal whizzing through the air to cut through the
moment and ground me in reality once more.
My hand flew upward to catch the knife aimed at my fated mate’s head.
Her eyes widened, her focus going to my palm and the deadly blade
embedded into my skin. I’d caught it by the sharp end.
Rather than pocket the item, I dropped it and looked at the source of the
throw.
Kaspian. I growled at him.
“She’s enchanting you,” he warned, another knife already in his hand.
“She’s some sort of goddess-witch hybrid.”
Nyx made a sound of protest, suggesting his terminology had insulted
her.
I ignored her and stared calmly at my best friend. She’s my fated mate, I
told him. Not all vampires possessed the ability to speak into another’s mind.
But I did.
Kaspian couldn’t reply that way. But his expression told me he’d heard
me just fine.
Because his cheeks had gone white.
She’s also the entity we’ve been hunting, I added, in case that wasn’t
clear. So I’m not enthralled, just surprised.
Each word spoken into my second’s mind further cemented me in reality.
I could still feel the pull to take, but the overwhelming shock of the
moment was slowly yielding to sense once more.
Kaspian’s dark eyes rounded. “Fuck.”
Yeah, I agreed. Though, I wasn’t sure if it was because that was what I
wanted to do—fuck—or because of the situation.
While Nyx certainly reminded me of a succubus, I wasn’t under her
thrall. I was just a slave to our joint fate.
A fate I could reject with a few carefully spoken words. They would free
me instantly and give me back my steadfast control.
Except I found myself struggling to voice them.
Because I can use this, I thought to myself, my link to Kaspian having
disappeared shortly after my last reply. I can use this to make her explain
herself. Then I can reject her.
It would hurt. But I didn’t want to be mated to this creature. She had no
House affiliation. She shouldn’t even be here. And she’d killed Klas.
I’d gather information, escort her to the appropriate portal, and then send
her back to her realm of gods.
Or maybe I’d reject her and kill her.
Being here without an association to a House was a death sentence
anyway.
Depending on how she answered my questions, maybe I’d make it quick.
Or prolong the agony if she showed no remorse.
My experience with gods fell firmly in the latter scenario—they very
rarely seemed to regret their choices. They were all-knowing and arrogant as
fuck as a result.
The ancient mate magic tying my soul to a goddess seemed appropriate,
given my history with the gods.
And fate loved to test me.
Fortunately, I’d always enjoyed a good challenge.
This one just happened to be wrapped up in a sexy midnight dress that
hugged her assets in a way that tempted me to admire and touch.
Instead, I returned my attention to the goddess’s alluring golden irises and
focused on my task.
Gather information. Then break her.
“Goddess Nyx?” I asked, tasting her name and finding that I rather liked
it.
She stepped closer, her sensual form scant inches from mine. She seemed
to be studying me again, her gaze leaving mine to stare at my mouth and then
my shoulders before venturing lower.
“You can call me Nyx,” she murmured. “I prefer to avoid titles. I’ve
found that they don’t mean much, and sometimes they provide a false context
for one’s true power in life.”
A wise sentiment. However… “Titles can also demonstrate respect for a
well-deserved position.”
She shrugged. “There are better ways to show someone respect.”
I tilted my head, curious. “Such as?”
“Such as not throwing knives at them,” she replied with a pointed glance
toward my second-in-command. “Or calling them a goddess-witch hybrid
after already being given their title.” She looked at me again. “But as I said,
titles are a false context. I could demonstrate my power instead, if you’d
like?”
“Like you did with the bar?” I gestured to the remains and arched a brow.
“I think we all received that message loud and clear, Goddess.”
Her forehead crinkled a little as she glanced between me and the
destruction she’d caused. “Are you referring to how I excavated everyone
after the explosion?”
Now it was my turn to frown. “Excavated everyone?”
“Well, technically, I teleported them out from beneath the rubble.” Her
gaze flickered over the crowd. “Like that one.” She looked pointedly at
Slater. “He was in pretty bad shape because of all the bricks holding him
down, but he started to heal the moment I removed him from the rubble.”
She continued surveying the scene, finding Nolan next.
“Him, too,” she murmured. “But there were two I couldn’t save in time.
They were too close to the blast.”
She shuddered, suggesting that the memory of the event irked her.
Which didn’t make sense at all.
“Did your power call me out here to provide my statement?” she
continued, her focus returning to me. “It’s very impressive. I imagine you
have a title to go with all that intoxicating energy.”
Her palm went to my sternum, her nostrils flaring as she inhaled my
scent.
“You smell like a decadent dessert.” Her whisper was low, meant for my
ears alone. “It makes me want to lick you from head to toe.”
I caught her wrist before her hand could wander, but I didn’t release her. I
simply held her to me and said, “Three men.”
Her brow furrowed. “What?”
“There were three men who didn’t make it out alive, one of whom was a
member of Gold and Garnet.” Saying the words served as a reminder for my
purpose—one this little vixen seemed intent on distracting me from.
Because that touch was burning a hole through my suit and scalding my
skin beneath the layers of fabric.
I should push her away.
Except…
Keeping her close makes her easier to read, I reminded myself.
It was an excuse. A good one. But still an excuse just to continue
touching her.
Recognizing that weakness, however, allowed me to maintain control of
it.
And it had me locking in on my truth-seeking abilities, too. I always used
them—they were second nature to me—but I wanted to be absolutely sure
about her answers.
Which thus far had been truthful.
“From the explosion?” she asked, searching my gaze. “There were three
who didn’t make it?”
“Yes. Three died from your attack.” Not two like she’d previously said.
Her eyebrows flew upward as she tried to take a step backward, but my
grip on her wrist held her in place. “My attack? I tried to help them, not attack
them.”
“By blowing up the bar?”
“Why would I blow up the bar?” she demanded, her regal tone heating
my blood. Because I’d always enjoyed a strong woman. And knowing this
one was meant to be mine only increased my interest.
An interest I ignored in favor of seeking the truth.
“You blew up the bar because you knew my men were close to capturing
you,” I told her.
Or that had been my theory, anyway.
Until I’d met her.
Now I wasn’t so sure.
Primarily because I hadn’t scented a single lie on her yet. Every word
she’d breathed thus far had been the truth.
Including her comment about wanting to lick me.
But I would handle that one later. In private.
“Capturing me?” She blinked a few times. “Why would they capture
me?”
“Because you’re in this realm illegally.”
“Illegally?” She gaped at me. “How does one ‘illegally’ enter a realm?”
“As a goddess, you should have come through the portal in the
Himalayas. That’s where your realm seeks permission for entry.” Something
she should already know, as not only was it the first portal that had opened on
this earth, but it’d also sprung to life several thousand years ago.
Yet her confused expression only deepened. “My world does not have a
portal to yours.”
“Yes, it does, Goddess. In the Himalayas.”
“Nyx,” she corrected. “And there is no portal between my realm and
yours. I’m only here because of my medallion, which is also the reason I
haven’t left yet. Because it’s…” She trailed off, frowning. “The magic
decided to go on holiday in your world somewhere.”
I stared at her. “The magic decided to go on holiday?” I repeated.
She blew out a breath, her frustration oddly kind of endearing. “It’s mad
at me for using it to realm-jump too quickly, so it’s teaching me a lesson by
taking me on a tour of your world. I thought I felt it here in Dublin, but…”
Her lips twisted to the side. “It’s gone now.”
All truth, I discerned, both surprised and confused.
Either this being had figured out a way around my family’s ancient talent
for lie detection, or she’d meant every word.
Either way, it was interesting.
“I’ve done all I can,” Trixie said, her exasperated tone pulling my focus
away from Nyx and redirecting it at my second-in-command and the witch
walking toward him.
Trixie was the one with healing powers that Kieran had found for us.
I didn’t know her well, as I tended to avoid those affiliated with the
House of Spirit and Sapphire—they were all as pretentious as their rulers.
But this witch had been helpful, so I owed her a debt of gratitude.
Hmm, I’d probably gift her some of my vampire venom.
Witches often used various supernatural essences for potions, or simply to
trade. As an ancient of my kind, and the descendant of a powerful vampire
family, the venom in my mouth would be worth more than most. She could
use it to craft a truth serum or something similar.
It was a form of payment I didn’t often provide, as it hinted at my
inherited abilities, something most master vampires preferred to keep hidden.
But I could easily tell her I’d procured it from someone else, and she’d be
none the wiser.
“I can’t cure that kind of darkness,” she went on, her vibrant blue eyes
glowering up at Kaspian as he towered over her petite frame. “You’ll need a
coven of Triarchy-like power to accomplish that.”
I looked around the witch to find Slater shaking his dark head a few feet
away, his slate-gray eyes narrowed in annoyance.
“Darkness?” Kaspian repeated, his voice holding a dubious note to it. “He
seems fine to me.”
“Because I am fine,” Slater insisted.
“You’re not,” the witch warned him. “You’ve lost all your light.”
Slater glanced down at his tanned arms and back up at her. “I’ve always
been this way. Comes with being a raven shifter, darling.”
“Stubborn males,” she muttered, turning away from them with a wave of
her pale hand. “I don’t have time for this.”
She sauntered off to heal a vampire across the road, leaving us all to
frown at her back.
Odd bird.
Slater looked well healed and as good as new.
Well, apart from a need to shave. His usual dusting of dark hair along his
jaw had lengthened to an unkempt sort of look, one that I had no doubt he’d
fix as soon as he returned home.
Which he could do now that we’d caught the errant supernatural
wandering the globe.
The rest of this problem was officially mine, what with her being my
fated mate and all.
Her comments regarding her realm not being attached to this one were
also going to be a problem. A political one. Because I’d felt the truth in her
words.
Which meant we had yet another realm of supernaturals accessing our
world.
And this being was powerful. Too powerful. Hence the reason there was a
bounty on her head. Everyone had felt her arrival, and she had more than a
few kings—myself included—who wanted her gone.
Except she’s apparently my mate, I thought, returning my attention to her.
Nyx was studying my neck, her pupils dilating as she licked her lips. It
seemed her annoyance at my questions had disappeared, leaving only stark
fascination behind.
I arched a brow. “Do goddesses bite?”
“This goddess does,” she whispered, her hungry gaze lifting to mine.
“Your power is a drug.”
I nearly grunted. I could say the same about you, sweetheart.
“You must have a title.” Her nails dug into my dress shirt, reminding me
that I still had her wrist caught in my hand. “A powerful vampire.” Her eyes
searched mine. “A king.”
“King of Gold and Garnet,” I confirmed. “Vesperus.”
“Vesperus.” My name resembled a benediction on her lips, the sultry tone
one I’d enjoy hearing her repeat in my bed.
Yeah, this is definitely a problem.
I knew fated bonds could tame even the most powerful of beings, but I’d
walked this earth for over fifteen hundred years and I’d yet to feel a pull
toward anyone.
Until her.
This otherworldly being spouting explanations that defied what I’d
thought I knew about the situation.
It could all be a dangerous ruse, a way to usurp me. Or fate tying me to
the most dangerous of complications.
“So if you didn’t cause the explosion, what did?” I asked, needing to take
control of the situation again.
“I don’t know,” she answered.
And again I tasted the truth.
“I was searching the bar for my missing magic when everything burst
with light. Then I woke up covered in rubble.” Her brow puckered. “I
shadowed everyone out. But two of them were already dead.”
The third must have died before Trixie had arrived on the scene.
But that detail wasn’t important.
What mattered was the truth in Nyx’s words. If she’d caused the
explosion, it didn’t appear to be intentional.
And considering she hadn’t tried to hurt anyone else—that I knew of,
anyway—it seemed in line with her behavior thus far.
Of course, this had been the first time my men had come close to
capturing her.
“So you arrived in this realm via a magical medallion that you’ve since
lost. And you’ve been, what, just wandering around searching for it all these
months?”
“Yes.” Her lips twisted again. “Well. I’ve also just been enjoying the
world and deciding if I want to stay. That’s the point of my journey—I’m
looking for a new home.”
My eyebrows lifted. “A new home?”
“I’m bored with creationism. I thought it could be fun to live in an
existing reality, and this one has intrigued me the most so far.” Her eyes went
to Kaspian. “Except everyone here seems to want to kill me.”
“Because you entered illegally and therefore have no ties to any of the
Houses,” I told her. “We don’t tolerate outsiders here. Affiliating with a
House is how we stay alive.”
“I’ve stayed alive just fine on my own,” she returned, her expression
darkening as she met my gaze once more.
“Because you haven’t crossed a being of equal or greater power yet.” I
tightened my grip on her wrist. “But now you have.”
Her nostrils flared. “Don’t make a mistake by underestimating me, King.”
“I don’t make a habit of underestimating anyone, Goddess. But the fact
remains that you arrived via illegal channels. And you have no House
affiliation. That’s why there’s a bounty on your head, one my House has
personally been overseeing.”
She frowned. “So you all want to kill me?”
“Yes.” A blunt response, but I believed in the truth. Which was why I
added, “But I’m willing to grant you temporary asylum with the House of
Gold and Garnet.”
CHAPTER FOUR
VESPERUS
T HIS MALE .
This sensual, intelligent, calculative being.
Mmm. The energy around him pulsed in expectation, ready to strike at
any moment.
“Because you haven’t crossed a being of equal or greater power yet. But
now you have.”
Some supernaturals boasted their skills unnecessarily, entirely
underestimating their contenders. However, this man—this king—wasn’t
overconfident in his assessment. Simply self-aware of his prowess and
abilities.
It would be a decent fight.
One I would win, but not without effort. And pain. Not to me, but to the
others around us.
Two powerful beings attacking each other in the street would not end
well. And I really didn’t want to take this man away from his role. The air of
reverence here wasn’t directed at me, but at him—the Gold and Garnet House
King.
No one had interrupted our conversation. No one had attacked me after
Vesperus had caught the single knife aimed at my head. No one had
questioned him offering me temporary asylum either.
They’d all just accepted his word as law.
Not because he was a tyrant, but because they respected him.
This was the kind of male I wanted to know, and not just as a
consequence of his intoxicating magic. Even now, I could feel it thrumming
in my chest, beating a rhythm that begged me to take him, to accept him, to
worship him.
No one had ever cast such a magnetic energy over me before.
And I desperately wanted to learn more about this foreign sensation. It
was so new and addictive, leaving me really with only one option.
Accept his offer.
Which I’d already planned to do. I could easily play along and escape
later, hopefully without causing too much damage to his kingdom in the
process. Because I really didn’t want to battle him or the others. I just wanted
to exist in peace.
And find my errant magic.
He’d offered me his resources. Why not see what that meant? Why not
explore? Why not indulge in this attraction just a little bit more.
I tilted my head to the side, my gaze on him. “You should know that my
blood is very powerful.”
“As is mine,” he replied, his accented voice a touch deeper now.
A predator about to strike, I thought, admiring the silver in his irises. It
blended with the black edges, reminding me of a bursting star. Alluring.
Tempting. Sinful.
“Are you accepting?” he asked, his English lilt more prominent now and
giving away his anticipation.
Yes, he definitely wants to taste me as much as I want to taste him.
“I am, yes.” Bite me, if you dare, King of Gold and Garnet. Because your
reaction to my blood will show me if you’re really worthy of my time.
Only the strongest could handle an essence as intense as mine. Hence my
warning. But he’d responded confidently, as he had with everything else.
A true leader. A royal. A vampire king.
His expression shadowed, some intrinsic part of him understanding the
challenge I’d just laid at his feet.
You’re mine now, Goddess of Night, he seemed to say as he pulled me
impossibly closer with his arm around my lower back. His hand remained
against my nape, giving it a subtle squeeze as he lowered his lips to my neck.
His fangs brushed my skin, stirring a trail of goose bumps along my arms.
Yes…
So much power.
So much dominance.
A worthy counterpart, my soul whispered, causing my heart to skip
several beats.
Vesperus released a low growl against my skin, the predator within him
sensing my excitement. I wasn’t going to hide from him. If anything, I
wanted to invite him to act faster.
His tongue circled my pulse, drawing out the moment, making me pant
for it. I clung to his shoulders, my eyes falling closed.
The auras around us all pulsed with interest, heightening my expectation.
This… this is so unlike anything—
My lips parted as Vesperus bit down, his fangs unleashing some sort of
euphoric venom into my bloodstream that had me clutching him harshly.
Oh, stars… I wanted to rip off our clothes and fuck him in front of all
these supernaturals. Allow our power to truly mingle. To test his full
potential, see exactly what this heated enchantment inside me meant.
Does he feel it, too? This strand of energy tying us together? Is it real? A
figment? My own magic playing tricks on me?
I shivered, losing myself to the intensity of his mouth, the powerful tug of
his essence on mine as he swallowed my blood.
He didn’t convulse. He didn’t react as though I’d poisoned him.
No, he drank from me as though I had just redefined his meaning of life.
But all too soon, he stopped, his tongue tracing the mark on my neck to
gather some of the blood.
Which he brought down to the crescent moon hanging between my
breasts.
Power hummed along my skin as he painted the golden surface with my
blood.
My thighs clenched at the intimacy of the act, his eyes on mine the whole
time.
Eclipse, I breathed, noting the inverting color of his irises. They’d been
silver surrounded by black before. But now they were black and edged with
sparks of silver, reminding me of that majestic moment when the moon
covered the sun.
Striking.
Enigmatic.
Rare.
His lips returned to my neck to seal the wound with his venom, his
essence making me tremble with intrigue and need.
I wanted to bite him.
Kiss him.
Mount him.
What is this insanity?
He pulled away to look at me again, his mutual interest a hot promise that
had me nearly stripping out of my dress with the demand to take me.
I’d experienced attraction before. But nothing on this level.
Is it the magic of this plane? The rules of this world? Something he’s
doing? Should I—
“My liege,” a deep voice interrupted. I recognized it as belonging to the
vampire who had tried to throw a knife at my head. “Kieran has arrived, and
he’s brought a few phantoms with him who are interested in Gold and
Garnet.”
Vesperus said nothing for a moment, his gaze still holding mine. Then he
finally glanced at the male beside us. “Is it something you can handle? Or
would it be prudent of me to attend the meeting?”
I followed his stare to study the dark-haired male with the penchant for
throwing daggers first and asking questions later.
Dark, soulful eyes.
Athletic form.
Deadly.
The latter I assessed as a result of his powerful aura, the energy around
him almost as intense as the one holding me.
Yet I didn’t feel any sort of pull toward him. No squeezing of my chest or
invisible strands of alluring magic. Nothing.
Just a frank assessment of power.
What makes this one different? I wondered, my gaze returning to
Vesperus as he and the deadly vampire spoke about Kieran and his phantoms.
I ignored their idle chitchat, instead choosing to focus on the pulsing
energy encircling Vesperus’s spirit. It was so warm and intoxicating, making
me want to lick him all over again.
Bite. Suck. Taste.
This attraction was borderline toxic, like an enchanting spell that had
woven our souls together in an unbreakable embrace.
What is this magic? I marveled, my gaze on his neck.
More words thudded in my chest, a chant demanding that I take, take,
take.
But when I leaned forward to kiss his throat, his hand on my nape pulled
me back. “Not yet,” he said, his tone a command I longed to disobey.
I’d never been one for orders.
Obedience had to be earned. And in my very long existence, there were
few who had ever come close to making me want to submit.
You bit me. I’m going to bite you.
I used my shadowing ability to break free from his hold and appeared
behind him, my mouth a scant inch from his neck.
Only to find my back slammed against a nearby brick wall with a heated
Vesperus pressed up against me. “Patience,” he said quietly. “Or has no one
taught you that virtue?”
My lips curled. “I live by a very different set of virtues, King.”
I phased out of his grip again but found myself right back in the same
position as he shifted with me.
My eyes widened at the display of power, stunned by his ability to keep
pace with me. That… that shouldn’t be possible.
And his expression told me he agreed.
But a sense of understanding seemed to overtake his features as his gaze
went to my neck.
My powers.
He… he imbibed them…
Well, that’s new.
He wasn’t the first to have ever bitten me, but everyone else had been
almost repelled by the intensity of my essence. He’d not only swallowed it
without issue, but he’d also absorbed some of my power with it.
“Oh,” I breathed. “That…”
“Is impressive,” a new voice said, the dark quality of the male tone
underlined with sardonic intrigue. “It seems I’ve missed some sort of party.
Care to enlighten me on what’s happened in Death and Diamond’s territory?”
Vesperus slowly looked at the newcomer, his irises still resembling that
of an eclipse. “You mean the territory that used to be Gold and Garnet’s up
until fourteen days ago? That territory?”
I evaluated the man beside us, noting his mixed-magic aura. A vampire-
fae hybrid. One with death magic. That’s interesting.
“Yes, the territory that now belongs to my mate, Baroness Sabrina,” the
male replied. “The same territory that I kindly allowed you to enter in pursuit
of…” He trailed off, his piercing gray eyes meeting mine. “Her.”
“Hello,” I greeted, feeling the need to speak so these males remembered
that I was a living, breathing being with a brain, not a conversation piece.
“Her name is Nyx, Goddess of Night.”
The male arched a black brow, the color matching his long hair. “Hello,
Nyx. I’m Kieran. No title. Well, not one I care to use, anyway. Just Kieran
will do.”
“Owner of the ouchie-maker,” Vesperus murmured. “Seems a fancy
enough title to me.”
Kieran startled at that, his eyes flashing to Vesperus. “Did you just make
a joke?”
“I don’t lack humor,” the vampire king deadpanned. “And I would still
like to know what the fuck it is.”
“I can give you a hands-on demonstration, if you like,” Kieran offered,
the words somewhat resembling a threat. “Is there any information you need
gathered from Nyx? I’ve never tested the device on a god or a goddess
before.”
Vesperus growled, the sound low and vibrating against my chest. “No.”
Kieran shrugged. “Another time, then.”
“No,” Vesperus repeated, that menacing note still in his tone. “No one
touches Nyx apart from me.”
“Nyx is right here and capable of issuing her own requests,” I interjected.
“Understood?” Vesperus added, ignoring me.
I rolled my eyes. “Men.”
“I see.” Kieran glanced at me before returning his focus to Vesperus.
“This may cause some discussion amongst the Houses.”
“I’m counting on it,” Vesperus replied.
“Hmm,” Kieran hummed, then looked at the two men behind him. “Then
you may want to interview these two faster than anticipated. They might be
able to help you.”
Help what? I wondered, glancing over their strange mystical auras. Ohhh,
they’re phantoms! “I’m intrigued by your kind,” I murmured, admiring their
ethereal energy. “Very intrigued.” But not in the same way that Vesperus
piqued my interest. Only his power seemed to have this magical hold on my
being.
Hence the reason I hadn’t tried to shove him away from me yet. I rather
liked the way he felt pressed up against me.
“I’ll be with you in a moment,” Vesperus told Kieran. “Kaspian will fill
you in.”
The vampire-fae dipped his head. “I can take a hint.”
“Good. Respecting your elders is rule number one for surviving in this
political arena,” Vesperus replied.
“And there you go giving me advice again,” Kieran drawled. “Don’t
make a habit of it, or I’ll think you have a crush on me.”
Vesperus smiled, but it didn’t appear all that friendly. “I just want to
make sure my former territory thrives in your care.”
Kieran rolled his eyes, then led the two phantoms at his back down the
alleyway toward the street beyond, leaving me alone with Vesperus once
more. “You and I need to have a conversation on manners,” he informed me.
I smiled. “Is this where you tell me that I need to bow to you as king?”
“Yes.”
My lips curled even more. “Goddesses don’t bow.”
“If you want to survive, you will.” The severity in his tone matched the
narrowing of his gaze. “Gold and Garnet thrives on respecting the hierarchy.
You are a temporary member, which means you need to behave. Or I will be
forced to exile you.”
His hand went to my throat before I could speak, his power forming a
noose around my neck.
No, not his power.
My power.
The power he’d inherited via his bite.
“I’m not the kneeling type,” I promised him, ensuring he felt the push of
my energy against his. He might have imbibed my strength, but I’d lived with
it my entire existence. I knew how easily it could overwhelm someone else.
Although, he was admirably in control, something I respected on a deep
level.
He wasn’t threatening me right now, just holding me in place.
“Nyx, I offered you a temporary reprieve. I need you to honor that gift by
following my lead. At least while I handle this situation. Because everyone
out there, including the essential monarch that you just met, all feel you are
responsible.”
“I’m not,” I said immediately.
“I believe you,” he replied, shocking me a little. “But they’re not going to
listen unless they see you being respectful. So I need you to keep that
seductive mouth of yours away from me while I work through the political
bullshit.”
“Seductive mouth?” That had me smiling again. “Tell me more.”
“Nyx.”
“Vesperus.” He really did have a sexy name.
He sighed, the sound exasperated. “I have a job to do. If you want me to
help you, you’ll let me do that job.”
“And then?” I prompted, arching a brow.
His gaze went to my lips before slowly tracking back upward, that eclipse
still shining brightly in his alluring orbs. “And then we’ll have a further
conversation about that seductive mouth and what you can make it do.”
He released my throat and took a step backward, but the heat in his gaze
left behind a brand that seared my entire being.
Yes, this male had certainly been worth meeting, I decided, evaluating his
towering frame and sensuous features.
It was a risk dancing with this powerful being. But it also offered
something new.
Which was the only reason I slightly lowered my head in a respectful
gesture. I’d never truly bowed for anyone, and I wouldn’t be starting now.
However, I could feign reverence for an immortal of worth.
“I’ll behave,” I promised him. “But only to clear my name.” Not that I
should really care what these supernaturals thought of me. They hadn’t been
all that welcoming, and I wasn’t even sure I wanted to stay.
Alas, it seemed I might be here for a while if my magic continued to defy
me.
Is this what you want? I thought at it. For me to give a realm a proper
chance?
Maybe that would provoke the mischievous enchantment into returning to
my palm.
I could test that possibility and play with Vesperus in the interim.
The magic in my chest pulsed at the thought, approving of the notion.
Yes. Play with Vesperus. And continue hunting for the magic.
“Lead the way, my king,” I said, doing my best to appear obedient.
The dark glitter along the edges of his silver irises told me he saw right
through the act.
But he silently offered me his hand anyway.
I accepted it, more than happy to resume touching him again.
Is this how he behaves with all his new House members? I wondered as
we started walking, my lips curling down. I certainly hope not.
Which was a strange thought.
Why should I care how he interacted with others?
A weird vibration shook my chest, the sensation reminding me of a
growl. Strange. But the idea of him touching anyone else suddenly had me
wanting to commit murder.
I blinked, startled by the foreign inclination.
This magic is… dangerous.
Yet I couldn’t seem to dismiss it. I didn’t want to ignore it. Or reject it. I
wanted to embrace it. To revel in it. Thrive.
Vesperus gave my hand a squeeze. “I’ll do the talking.”
Like you did with Kieran? I thought, snorting.
“Nyx.”
I glanced at him, arching a brow.
“Respect,” he mouthed at me.
Respect is earned, I thought. So we’ll see.
But I didn’t say that aloud.
Instead, I smiled and gave him my best obedient tone as I replied, “Of
course, my king.”
CHAPTER SIX
VESPERUS
I woke up alone with Vesperus’s side of the bed cold to the touch.
Did you even sleep? I wondered, surveying the neatly tucked covers. Or
did I sleep too long?
I slipped out of the sheets and wandered to the curtains he’d gestured to
on his brief tour of his quarters. Peeking through them, I noted the sun’s low
position in the sky.
It was maybe two o’clock local time, then?
I wasn’t certain, but the sun being out indicated it was afternoon for
winter in Iceland.
Regardless of the physical clock, it was clearly time for me to explore.
Smiling, I retrieved my dress from the bathroom and laced up my shoes.
A little stardust helped me fix my hair, and I was ready to go.
Where shall I go first? I tapped my chin and shrugged. Anywhere.
Vesperus had mentioned the need for a wardrobe, so perhaps I would
seek that out during my tour.
I wrapped myself in shadows and phased to the park I’d seen from his
roof. It placed me behind his estate on a snowy landscape littered with
smaller trees.
The sidewalk was plowed, the lingering energy telling me it’d been done
by magic and not a person. Similar to whatever enchantment had swept
across the roads last night.
Exceptionally intriguing, I marveled, loving the kiss of vitality in the air.
This really could be an ideal home.
I skipped along the path, enthused by the prospect of staying here. Would
I keep Vesperus as a mate? Stay with him forever? Serve this territory as a
queen?
How would that look in the long term?
So many questions. Rather than dwell on the answers, I chose to revel in
the moment and continued my journey through the park.
It eventually ended at a fence that I phased through to reach the street on
the other side.
Left or right? Left or right?
I spun instead and walked in the direction my spinning ended on—which
happened to be right.
And a natural choice, too. Because it led me directly into the heart of
town.
It seemed my wardrobe task would be successful after all.
Hmm. I perused the shop windows until I found one that appealed to me,
and I stepped inside.
Fortunately, it was during working hours, so I would be able to properly
pay for my clothes.
Well, sort of. That part needed to be negotiated.
“Hello?” I called out to the shop owner as I wandered through the
clothing racks.
“Yes?” The female voice came from behind me, causing me to whirl and
face a tall female with bright orange hair.
A shifter of some kind, I sensed. But not a wolf. A large cat, perhaps? I
nearly asked but didn’t want to appear rude, so I kept my conversation
professional.
“Hello, I’m Nyx. I’m a new member of Gold and Garnet.” I gestured to
my crescent necklace. “And King Vesperus says I need a wardrobe. May I
shop here for one?”
She blinked at me, the yellow slits of her irises confirming my guess
about her being a cat shifter. “King Vesperus is paying for your new
clothes?”
“Er, no. I can pay for that. You accept supernatural elements as currency
in this realm, yes?”
She blinked again, her lids double-layered and making her eyes appear
white before flickering back to her yellow coloring. “Blood is our form of
currency in Gold and Garnet, but yes, we accept other forms as well.” She
looked me over. “What are you?”
Oh. Apparently, she didn’t mind personal questions. “A goddess. You?”
“A tiger shifter.” She folded her arms, appearing unimpressed by my
presence. “What can you offer me? I don’t see a purse or a bag, and that dress
isn’t hiding anything of value either.”
I smiled. “I don’t require a bag.” Rather than elaborate, I held out my
palm to display a small pile of stardust. “I have this.”
She eyed my hand with distrust evident in her expression. “And what’s
that?”
“Stardust.”
Her brow furrowed. “I’ve never heard of it.”
“No, I imagine not. It’s quite rare.” I closed my hand, hiding the magic.
“How about a demonstration? That will help you determine the worth, and
then you can tell me what I’m allowed to buy. Fair?”
That distrustful glint didn’t leave her features. “I don’t know…”
“I promise you’ll be pleased. We’ll just do a tiny wish, something
tangible.”
“A wish?”
“Yes. That’s how my stardust works. You wish for something as you
sprinkle the powder, and the wish comes true.” Like wishing upon a star,
which was popular among humans in other realms. But I wasn’t sure she
would understand that here.
“A wish,” she said again. “Like, I can wish for anything and you’ll give it
to me as if you’re some kind of genie?”
“Not me, but the stars. And there are limits to what a wish can become.”
Mostly because I controlled how much stardust I shared. “Here.” I held my
hand out toward her. “Wish for something tangible. Something you want to
appear in the store. That’ll help you see how this works.”
She still didn’t appear very believing, her arms remaining crossed as she
stared at my hand. “And you’ll, what, sprinkle that over me?”
“No, I’ll place it in your hand for you to sprinkle on the ground in front of
you while you make your wish.”
“Out loud?” she asked.
“In your mind is fine,” I murmured. “Just make sure it starts with the
words ‘I wish.’ Then the stardust will do the rest.”
She studied me for a long moment before finally shrugging. “All right,
then. Something tangible? Like a thing I want right now to appear before
me?”
I nodded in encouragement. “Yes.”
She looked at my hand, her nose twitching as though to scent out the
magic. When she couldn’t sense anything—because stardust had no fragrance
—she held out her palm for me.
I released enough dust for her to create something special and took a step
back to let her work.
Her expression told me she felt this was a waste of time, but she finally
closed her eyes, and eventually she opened her hand to release the magic.
The store owner in Dublin wouldn’t have known any of this, which was
why I’d left the stardust on her counter with a wish of prosperity. She would
likely experience a boom in sales as a result. Maybe a little more luck. And
not much else.
But this shopkeeper was in for a real treat because she’d just used the
stardust to create, which was my true form of power as a creation goddess.
As evidenced by the swirling magic dancing through the air between us.
She jumped back as it reached over six feet in height, making me wonder
just what she’d wished into existence.
Then my lips parted as a bare, masculine back appeared before me.
Oh. Ohhhh. She’d… she’d created… a man.
And not just any man. He appeared to be a fae with pointy ears and long
blond hair.
“Oh my gods,” the shopkeeper breathed. “Is it…? Is it real?”
“Erm, yes,” I said, my lips twisting to the side as I moved around the fine
male specimen to stand beside her. “Very real.” And well-endowed, too.
“You wished for a naked fae?”
“Technically, an elf,” she whispered, her eyes wide as she stared up at the
handsome male. “From… from an old movie…”
The creature before us blinked a few times. “Hello,” he greeted. “Where
am I?”
“Iceland,” I replied. “Um. Hmm.” I wasn’t sure what to say. My stardust
could create anything, even this. “I thought you would wish for a jacket or a
necklace or something.”
Not a naked.. elf… with abs. And very muscular thighs…
“Is he going to disappear?” she asked, her eyes on his groin. “Or do I get
to keep him?”
“I… I don’t think it’s wise to keep a living being. But no, he won’t
disappear. He’s alive and—”
A blast of power shook through the store, sending me several paces
backward as a shot rang through the air.
My eyes widened as the elf crashed to the floor.
With a bullet lodged in his forehead.
Dead.
I gaped at him, stunned, my stardust immediately building a shield around
me and the shopkeeper as the dark energy shifted closer to us.
“What the fuck, Raymond?” the shopkeeper shouted, jumping forward to
throw open the door to her shop. “You owe me a new window! And a new
elf!”
I blinked several times. What?
“A new elf?” a deep voice repeated. “You can’t just conjure creatures
with spells, Lissa. You know the rules.”
“Technically, I didn’t conjure anything. I wished for it.”
I crept forward to see her staring down a male nearly twice her size on the
street.
“You wished for it?” he deadpanned. “Sure. With what?”
“Stardust,” she replied, pointing at me. “From her.”
The big man’s eyebrows shot upward, his gun immediately raising in my
direction. “Who the fuck are you?” he demanded. “And where’s your
marker? What House are you aligned with?”
“Why is everything about Houses with you people?” I muttered, flicking
a clump of stardust off my dress. “And why do you all feel the need to point
weapons at me?”
It was truly starting to grate on my nerves. I’d thought this territory would
be different. Alas, no. They still wanted to shoot first and ask questions later.
“She’s a goddess, and her crescent is marked with blood,” the shopkeeper
—Lissa—told him. “She said King Vesperus sent her here to buy a wardrobe,
and she offered me stardust as payment.”
Not exactly the sequence of my statements, but her explanation was close
enough.
“And you believed it?” Raymond snarled. “I could smell her power a
block away. She’s not one of ours. And you let her make you a bloody elf?”
Lissa rolled her eyes. “Don’t get jealous, Ray Ray. I just wanted to play a
little.”
“Play a little?” he repeated. “With a sexy, naked elf?”
She blew out a breath, causing her orange hair to flutter over her
forehead. “I wasn’t going to touch it.”
No, she just wanted to keep it.
“I’ll deal with you in a minute,” Raymond growled, his focus returning to
me. “Let me see your marker.”
I narrowed my gaze. “Why?”
“To see if you’re legit.”
“Why don’t you ask your king?” I countered, arching a brow.
He huffed a laugh. “Because I’m not going to bother him with this
nonsense. And your reluctance is all the proof I need, sweet cheeks.”
The bullet cracked through the air, hitting my stardust shield and
rebounding toward the moron who had tried to shoot me.
Lissa screamed, falling to the man’s side as he crashed against the icy
ground. The shot had ricocheted into his shoulder, the force of it taking him
down. He’d live.
But Lissa’s fury came out on a loud roar, telling me our brief friendship
had probably just come to an end.
I retracted my magic from her and took several steps backward. “I don’t
mean any harm,” I promised her. “I just wanted some clothes.”
Her snarling reply was unintelligible yet conveyed everything I needed to
know.
As did the flurry of shouts in the street that soon ended in a blaring alert
that had me clutching my ears.
I stand corrected—this territory is not an ideal home. It’s chaotic
violence and unwelcoming and—
I phased as a fiery substance shot through the air toward my head.
And downright rude! I finished, irritated with these hostile beings who
continued to try to kill me without preamble.
I’m done.
I called a wall of stardust to my aid and used it to shove everyone away
from me.
Only for a trickle of magic to sneak through the wall and slam right into
my chest.
I stumbled backward, confused by the familiar touch. Why? I thought at
it. Why would you do that?
Because it was my medallion enchantment that had knocked me down.
I shook my head and tried to clear it.
And realized I was now the focus of at least a dozen pissed-off
supernaturals.
Ugh. Here we go.
CHAPTER TWELVE
VESPERUS
A F EW M INUTES E ARLIER
I WOKE UP ALONE .
Again.
For the eighth morning in a row.
My gaze narrowed at Vesperus’s side of the bed, his blankets perfectly
creased as they were every time I opened my eyes.
It was almost as though our evening ritual was an illusion—him finding
me on the roof, indulging in intimate conversation beneath the moon, making
me see the stars without really touching me, and leading me back to his
room, where he showered alone before tucking himself in beside me.
We’d repeated that pattern for the last seven nights, never deviating,
never going further than some groping and a kiss, and always waking up to
the pristinely pressed sheets and comforter on his side of the bed.
I sat up. “Not today,” I decided out loud.
While I didn’t mind our evening routine, I did mind our morning one.
Well, mostly.
The notes he left on his pillow for me every morning were kind of fun.
I picked up today’s paper with the masculine script on it.
Don’t forget to eat breakfast, Nyx.
—V
P.S. I spiked your orange juice. ;-)
My eyebrows lifted as a laugh escaped me. I’d avoided eating every
morning this week, preferring to find Cara and go exploring.
I wasn’t naïve. I knew she’d been assigned to watch me, but I didn’t
mind. Mostly because I liked the fae female. She didn’t mince words and
spoke her mind, which was something I appreciated.
What I didn’t appreciate was Vesperus running away every morning. I
wasn’t even sure if the damn male slept.
Maybe he just needs an orgasm, I thought. If he would let me reciprocate
and lick him, I could give him one. But no. He seemed content to kiss me and
pet me instead.
Which I admittedly enjoyed, particularly as we spent most nights learning
about each other.
Such as last night when I’d discovered he could speak over a dozen
languages.
And the night before when he’d admitted to having a medical degree.
“Why?” I’d asked him. “What made you study medicine?”
He’d shrugged. “Unlimited access to blood.”
I’d thought he was joking.
He hadn’t been.
“But it’s also useful to know how human bodies work. Vampires have
similar anatomy. It’s come in handy a few times,” he’d added.
“To save someone?”
He’d shaken his head. “No, to kill them.”
“Definitely not a hero, then.”
“Not to humans,” he’d agreed. “My devotion is to my House. I’d do
anything for them.”
Including not mating me if I can’t conform to this world, I’d thought, the
same words repeating in my mind now.
It was a pragmatic stance, one that explained his reluctance to do more
than kiss me at night. He was maintaining control.
As much as I wanted to push the boundaries and experience more of what
he had to offer, I wouldn’t. Because I respected his choice.
Just as he respected mine—which had included me continuing my hunt
for my magic.
I could sense it lingering nearby, remaining just out of reach.
It was the first time in months that I’d been able to truly sense the familiar
energy, with the first burst of it having been in Dublin.
Now it was hiding around me, confirming that it had wanted me in
Iceland all along.
I just didn’t fully comprehend why.
To mate Vesperus?
To make this place my home?
To complete some other task before allowing me to leave this realm?
What…?
What do you want from me, medallion?
All questions I would ask the sentient strand when it returned.
Alas, it continued to remain elusive, simply pulsing somewhere close to
me without revealing itself.
I’ll find you, I promised it as I rolled out of the bed. But I’m going to
indulge Vesperus in breakfast first.
Because he’d spiked my juice. And I knew he wasn’t talking about
alcohol.
I showered and dressed in my new wardrobe—another black gown, but
this one had slits up the sides and a modest neckline. No back, though. So I
used my stardust to add a gold chain down my spine that met the dress just
above my rump. Then I put on my crescent necklace again, the gold still
stained with my blood.
And now Vesperus’s, I thought, eyeing the charm in the mirror. He’d
added a drop of his own essence the other night, deciding it would help mark
me as his, and not just a temporary member of Gold and Garnet.
No one had given me any issues since the storekeeper incident, but the
people here hadn’t been all that willing to talk with me either.
Maybe I’d ask Cara if we could try visiting a pub today for a drink.
Perhaps that sort of activity would be seen as normal enough to make me
approachable.
Decided, I laced up my sandals—which Cara gawked at every time she
saw me, saying something about it being beach appropriate, not Iceland
appropriate—and shadowed into the kitchens.
“Oh!” Chef Betty exclaimed, dropping a pan and making me wince.
“Nyx!”
I winced again. “Sorry.”
“You have got to stop doing that,” she scolded me, the witch one of the
few who didn’t seem to fear me. Probably because this was her space as head
of the kitchen.
“To be fair, it was only the second time,” I told her. Because I’d skipped
breakfast every other day this week.
Hence Vesperus’s reminder this morning.
“Well, maybe if the breakfast was spiked with your blood, I would
remember to eat it,” I’d told him last night. He’d remarked on my penchant
for skipping meals, and I’d bluntly responded.
“Vesperus mentioned orange juice,” I said now, smiling hopefully at
Betty.
She rolled her almond-shaped eyes at me and stalked over to an
industrial-sized oven with a heat rack on top. “Crepes, too,” she told me,
grabbing a plate with an oven mitt before continuing on toward one of the
room’s many fridges. “And yes, he made you orange juice. Freshly squeezed,
too.”
There seemed to be a pun in that last sentence, one that made me grin.
She set me up in the dining room that was closest to her kitchen, which I
didn’t really need, but I’d learned early on that disagreeing with Betty earned
me nothing. I’d still end up at this table, eating whatever food she desired.
As she was a rather skilled chef, I truly didn’t mind.
Thus, I settled into my chair and enjoyed the crepes before treating
myself to Vesperus’s freshly squeezed orange juice.
So good. And definitely not alcohol.
His blood was as decadent as any dessert, yet not exactly a chocolate
flavor like his scent. More of a sweet ambrosia that I could drink for days.
Unfortunately, it didn’t seem to give me any of his abilities. Otherwise, I
would have used telepathy to thank him for the delicious drink.
“There you are,” Cara said, entering the dining hall with a huff. “You’re
supposed to call me when you leave your room. Remember?”
She’d given me a phone the other day for that purpose. However… “I left
it on the nightstand.”
“I know,” she deadpanned, sliding the device across the wood.
I stared at it. “My dress doesn’t have pockets.”
“So wish for some,” she countered.
My lips pursed. Pockets will really ruin my gown.
I studied the phone, searching for a solution, then sprinkled some stardust
over it as I wished for it to turn into a bracelet.
My lips curled as the metal morphed into a golden cuff with a moon
etched into the center. “That’s so much more fashionable,” I told Cara.
She glared at me, her expression suggesting she was about to lecture me
on something unhelpful.
So I ignored her, slipped on the bracelet, and pressed the moon. Magic
created a screen that allowed me to send her a text.
I’m in the dining room drinking blood-spiked orange juice. I won’t be
sharing.
Cara’s glare melted into laugh lines as she shook her head. “You’re a
brat.”
“I’m a goddess,” I corrected her, closing the screen. “And I don’t need a
babysitter, nor do I need to eat breakfast. But the orange juice put me in a
good mood, so I’m willing to overlook the insults of being treated like a five-
year-old.”
I set my napkin to the side and stood.
“Where can I go to appear natural in this territory?” I asked Cara. “I
would like to make friends.” It would help me decide if I wanted to remain
here.
Cara covered her heart and feigned injury. “Ouch.”
I frowned. “What?”
“And here I thought you and I were friends,” she continued, her voice
overly dramatic and filled with false sadness.
“Are we friends?” I asked curiously.
She straightened and gave me a look. “I’ve hung out with you every day
this week, Nyx. Pretty sure that makes us friends.”
“We both know I’m an assignment,” I told her.
“Yes, but you’re an enjoyable one.” She shrugged. “Beats the hell out of
paperwork.”
“I’m not sure if that’s flattering or sad,” I deadpanned.
“Definitely the latter. This whole territory shift has Vesperus drowning in
relocation requests. He’s been working with Niamh most of the week on it.”
“That’s one of his territory advisors, right?” He’d mentioned a few of
them by name, telling me a bit about each of them. “The one from Ireland?”
Cara nodded. “Yeah, but we call them sovereigns. And she’s been here
since their meeting last week. He’s working on her reassignment.”
“Because he doesn’t need an advisor in that part of the world since it’s no
longer his territory.” Yes, he’d spoken about that as well. “I’m glad she can
help with the paperwork.”
“Have you met her yet?”
“No. She’s not been staying here, and Vesperus tends to keep me away
from his work.” I looked over Cara. “He gave me a babysitter as a
distraction.”
She laughed. “I’m not a distraction. If you want to see him, we can do
that before you change clothes.”
My brow furrowed. “Change clothes?”
“Yes,” she confirmed. “You said you wanted to go somewhere and
appear natural in this territory. To do that, you need to dress for the climate.”
She made a show of gesturing to her sweater and jeans.
“Hmm.” I no longer liked my plans for today. If I had to dress to impress,
then I wasn’t sure I wanted new friends.
“Come on,” she encouraged. “We’ll go check on Vesperus and his
mountain of paperwork. If Niamh’s there, you can make a new friend. Then
I’ll try to help you find more in the city.”
I could hear the teasing in her words, but I shrugged, agreeing to her plan.
It meant more exploring in the end, which could help me try to pinpoint
my errant magic while continuing to evaluate the territory.
“All right.” I started toward Vesperus’s office, aware of its location, when
a tingling sensation shot down my arm.
I frowned, pausing midstep, and glanced at the goose bumps pebbling
along my skin.
Have you decided to return to me? I thought at my errant magic, my gaze
searching for the source.
But my medallion wasn’t in the palace, just nearby.
Close. Very close.
I shifted directions, heading toward the back of the house through the
kitchens and out the doors to the park area.
“Nyx?” Cara’s voice reminded me that I wasn’t alone. The other woman
stood just a few steps behind me on the patio that wrapped around the back of
the estate.
“Oh.” I blinked at her. “My magic is calling for me. This way.”
I didn’t explain more beyond that, too eager to follow the familiar strand.
“Calling for you?” Cara repeated as she fell into step beside me on the
path.
I showed her the bumps along my arm. “Yes.” I picked up the pace as the
enchantment tugged on my spirit, the urgency seeming to increase.
What’s wrong? I asked it. Why are you yanking on me like a leash?
It responded by sending another jolt of electricity across my being. The
panic in that stroke had me hurrying, my feet moving across the stone path at
a jog that Cara easily maintained alongside me.
When we reached the back gate, I phased through it. Then I paused to
wait for more directions from my magic while the metal clinked behind me.
Cara joined me on the path, her expression curious. “Well?”
“I’m listening,” I murmured, hushing her.
I closed my eyes and shivered when the magical essence touched my
senses again.
It took me right, reminding me of my first day here.
Only, I didn’t go to Lissa’s shop this time, but two blocks beyond it.
Where my energy disappeared.
My gaze narrowed. “This game of hide-and-seek is growing tire—”
The enchantment pierced my heart, causing my knees to buckle and
drawing a gasp from my throat.
I clutched my chest as glass exploded behind me, the sensations
confusing and making the world spin deliriously around me.
Cara screamed my name, but I couldn’t look at her. I was too stunned.
Too… too overwhelmed.
What’s… what’s happening? Why did you…? I blinked several times.
Why did you shock me?
The magic hummed urgently in response, drawing my focus to a woman
nearby, her vibrant green eyes sparkling with power.
A witch? I guessed, confused by her aura. So dark. Fractured. A soul…
divided.
I could feel her pain, almost taste it on my tongue. My enchantment
whirled around her in desperation, trying futilely to reach her shattered spirit.
To… to fix her.
I stared, not fully discerning the scene before me.
Wind rippled around her in the darkness, the nearby building seeming to
disguise her presence.
Or is she shadowing? I marveled. Who are you? What are you?
Cara shouted my name again as glass continued to shatter, flames
billowing in the air.
I tried to move, to stand, to see.
My legs shook as I forced myself upright, the shock of my power having
rendered me temporarily useless.
But the street was beginning to clear, the chaos swirling around me
becoming evident.
Another explosion.
I gaped at the destruction, startled by its sudden presence.
I took a step forward, my instincts firing as I searched for any auras that
might need to be saved.
But my attention went right back to the inky presence nearby, that woman
with the fragmented spirit.
I locked gazes with her and gasped as a bolt of pure fire pierced my
sternum.
No. Not fire.
A bullet.
I belatedly heard the crack of it in the air, the scene shifting around me so
brokenly that I hadn’t… I hadn’t sensed it properly.
And now…
I glanced down, noticing the blood on my fingertips.
I…
My knees buckled again, sending me to the ground. I caught myself on
one palm, then fell sideways to curl into a ball.
This… this is no ordinary… bullet.
I could feel it… shredding me.
No.
Burning me.
Like poison. Like… like acid.
A scream left my lips, the sound one of agony and fear and anger.
I tried to claw at the sensation, to pull the source of it out of me. But the
world… the world was… blackening.
My enchantment touched my skin, the sentient energy concerned.
I tried to grasp it, to… to pull it to… into me.
Only, I couldn’t.
I couldn’t… I couldn’t do anything.
I could barely even… breathe.
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
VESPERUS
A F EW M INUTES E ARLIER
A MORTAL .
I cursed.
Because it was similar to what I’d already thought about with Nyx’s state,
but I hadn’t considered treating her as one.
“She’s lost a lot of blood,” I said, thinking out loud. “She… she needs…”
My brow furrowed, another thought occurring to me. “She needs blood.”
My blood.
I bit my wrist—hard—creating what would have been a fatal wound on a
human. But I needed this to remain open long enough to bleed.
Rather than bring my wrist to her mouth, I pressed it to her sternum,
willing my blood to mingle with hers.
The moment I felt my skin stitching back together, I bit my other wrist
and repeated the action.
All while Kaspian watched.
“Do you want me to add mine?” he asked when nothing seemed to
happen.
My jaw clenched, the notion of another being’s essence inside my mate
making me want to commit murder. But if it saved her, then so be—
A flutter in the air caught my attention, the glimmer so light and airy that
I almost missed it throughout all the surrounding smoke. I blinked at it, not
quite sure it was actually there. But it shimmered, dancing closer to me.
Is this…?
No.
I had to be seeing things.
This couldn’t be Nyx’s soul, right?
That… that wouldn’t…
No. Her heart is still slowly beating.
So what is it?
“Ves?” Kaspian pressed. “Do you—”
“Hold on,” I whispered, lifting my hand toward the golden sheen dancing
toward me.
I could feel Kaspian gaping at me, because yeah, I was acting fucking
nuts, but something about that energy strand felt right.
It continued gliding in the air, trickling toward me as though it were
cautious of my existence. My conversation with Nyx regarding her sentient
medallion came back to me, making me wonder if this hint of magic was
linked to her creation.
Or this could be because of the explosion, I thought, pulling my hand
back a little.
Cara had mentioned that Nyx had been entranced.
Because of something like this? I wondered.
The magic seemed to pause, the golden flare vibrating as though huffing
at me in annoyance.
How bizarre.
“What are you looking at?” Kaspian whispered.
I swallowed. “I don’t know.” It could all easily be in my head. Or… or it
could be something that might help Nyx.
Or it could be a trap.
I narrowed my gaze at the energy strand and lifted my hand again. “Keep
watch,” I told Kaspian, devoting my focus to this foreign spell. “And knock
me out if I do anything weird.”
“Like holding your arm up in the air while focusing on some sort of
figment?” Kaspian muttered.
I ignored him, instead coaxing the energy closer. “You want me? Come
get me,” I dared it.
The substance seemed to shimmer as though puffing out its chest.
Then it came right at my palm, coiling tightly together into…
A pile of stardust.
“Holy fuck,” Kaspian breathed.
“No,” I replied. “Holy goddess.”
“So not only can you teleport now, but you can also create fairy dust,” he
said, sounding impressed.
“Stardust,” I corrected him as I ran my thumb over the soft substance, my
gaze returning to Nyx’s ashen features.
She’d explained enough for me to understand how this worked—I needed
to make a wish.
Gods, I feel like I’m five fucking years old and wishing on a star, I
marveled, shaking my head in astonishment.
This sweet goddess creature was dismantling every facet of my life. And
despite sitting in the middle of chaos, I couldn’t fault her for any of it.
All right, Goddess, I thought at her, holding my hand over her still-
bleeding wound. I wish for you to heal. I released the stardust over her
sternum and watched as it began to trickle over her, each speck dissolving on
impact.
Kaspian whistled, drawing my attention to his gaze—which was on Nyx’s
arm.
Where a golden hue had blossomed on her fingertips. My lips parted as
the color began to spread, inch by inch, up her hand to her wrist and
gradually up her arm, chasing away the ashen quality of her skin and leaving
behind a healthy glow.
“Holy goddess indeed,” Kaspian whispered
It turned out that Paxton had been wrong—I didn’t need to treat Nyx like
a mortal. I needed to remember that she was a fucking goddess.
A blood sacrifice, I thought, staring down at my healed wrists before
glancing at her sternum. The wound hadn’t closed, but she was no longer
bleeding.
Because she’s finally healing.
I pressed my forehead to hers, a breath escaping me on a relieved sigh I
hadn’t exactly meant to reveal, but it felt as though a weight had been lifted
off my heart.
And my soul, I thought, inhaling her scent and noting the underlying hint
of orange lingering on her lips.
If it were any other moment, I might have smiled. But I couldn’t. I was
too exhausted to function, too beat down to do anything other than hold her.
“I need to take her back to my room,” I told Kaspian, my eyes having
fallen closed. “Can you handle everything here?”
He didn’t answer, making me frown.
“Kaspian?” I asked, forcing myself to sit up and meet his gaze.
Only, he wasn’t there.
Because Nyx and I were no longer on the street, but on the floor of my
bathroom.
“Did I…?” I trailed off, looking down at the resting goddess. “Or did
you?” It came out on a slow exhale, one that sounded tired to my ears.
I’d barely slept in over a week.
And now this… I was at the end of my rope.
However, I couldn’t leave Nyx in this state. Her skin was finally
beginning to mend, but there was blood—both from me and from her—all
over her chest and her dress.
Her skin was still regaining color, too.
She needed to be bathed. Cherished. Brought back to life.
I swallowed, my forehead touching hers once more. “I don’t know what
this was, but it had better not happen again.”
At least I knew how I’d feel without her.
Even with the rejection in place, I was still somehow bound to her.
Is it because we keep drinking from each other? I wondered, at a loss for
any other explanation. That’s not how fate bonds work.
But maybe… maybe that was how they worked for her kind?
Except she’d said fated mates didn’t happen in her realm.
So what is this, then? I wanted to demand. Why am I so connected to you?
It went beyond lust. I’d felt her loss in my fucking heart as though I’d
been the one to take that hit to the chest. Some fate beyond anything I could
even begin to understand had brought us together, and it surpassed all the
logic of my world… and maybe even hers.
Regardless of the reason, we were together now.
Which meant we needed to find a path forward—one where we moved as
one, not as two separate entities.
Because it seemed fairly clear to me that we couldn’t just reject this.
The only way out is death.
And if today’s demonstration was anything to go by—death would apply
to both of us.
I ran my hand over my face and blew out a breath. “Right.” I could dwell
on this all afternoon and evening, and it wouldn’t fix a damn thing.
But I could help her right now, right here, by ensuring she woke up warm
and comfortable.
I stood and turned on the bath, finding the right temperature, and let the
tub pool with water. Then I removed my soiled clothes and tossed them into
the corner to be burned. They weren’t too bloody, as my sleeves had already
been rolled to my elbows, but they reeked of death.
Of Nyx’s death.
And smoke.
And carnage.
And destruction.
Just like her dress, which I carefully removed, along with her sandals.
I put everything in the same pile to be dealt with later.
Then I checked Nyx’s sternum and back, noting the fresh layers of skin
covering her previous injury. Her unconscious state told me she was still
healing her insides, but externally, she appeared healthy again.
Minus the blood hardening on her skin.
I considered the bath, noting the low water level, and decided to pull her
into the shower first. Otherwise, we’d just be sitting in our filth.
Laying her on the bench, I turned on the various showerheads and
grabbed a removable one to begin washing her off. She didn’t wake, but her
skin turned a rosy shade beneath the warm spray.
The blood and grime swirled around the drain, followed by soap as I
cleaned us both.
By the time I finished, the bath was ready, the faucet having
automatically turned off when it’d reached the appropriate level.
I added some citrusy scents to the water, then returned to grab Nyx from
the shower.
And found her sitting on the bench, observing me with a curious
expression.
I froze, her golden irises making me forget how to breathe.
Because she was staring at me like I was prey.
“You’re naked,” she said, those alluring eyes tracking downward. “And
wet.” She canted her head, her gaze on my groin.
Which had started to react to her perusal.
Because she was naked, too.
And looking very hungry.
She licked her lips. “Hmm, that was worth the wait.”
I lifted my brows. “You didn’t have to nearly die to see me naked, Nyx.”
I would have gladly stripped for her and done anything else she’d desired if it
had meant never having to see her wounded and dying in the street.
“Die?” she repeated, her gaze returning to mine. “What do you mean?”
She glanced around. “Is that… is that why I can’t remember how or when we
ended up here?” Some of her hunger seemed to subside as she sat up a little
straighter.
The action made her wince, her hand coming up to touch her sternum.
“Oh,” she breathed, massaging her breastbone. “I don’t…” She frowned.
“I don’t remember anything.”
“What’s the last thing you do remember?” I asked, walking slowly
toward her in the shower.
She shook her head. “Everything… everything feels fuzzy. But I think…”
She touched her lips. “Was there orange juice?”
I squatted before her, my hands on her knees, and nodded. “I spiked your
orange juice today. I wanted to make sure you ate something.” Because she
kept skipping meals. And while I understood that she didn’t need food, some
instinctual part of me wanted her to eat anyway.
She lifted her hands to rest them over mine, her fingertips cooler than
they should be. But the color of her skin was right, her golden hue healthy
and glowing.
“How are you feeling?” I asked her softly.
She shook her head again. “Confused.” Her eyes searched my face.
“What happened?”
“Cara said you were tracking your magic when someone shot you.” I
looked at her sternum. “There.”
“Shot by what?” she asked. “Something large?”
“No. A bullet.”
She stilled. “A bullet? As in… only one?”
“Yes.”
“But that… that shouldn’t…”
“That shouldn’t have been able to almost kill you?” I suggested, finishing
the sentence for her. “Yes, I agree. But I had to use stardust to bring you
back.”
“Stardust?” she repeated, her nose scrunching. “But how did you…?” She
trailed off on a shiver, her skin cooling even more against my skin.
Her body was clearly still healing and reallocating energy as needed.
“I think your magic helped me,” I admitted, frowning. “It… it sort of
appeared and then pooled into a pile of dust in my hand.” I squeezed her
thighs. “So I wished for you to heal.”
She blinked at me. “You had to wish for me to heal?”
“Yes. You were bleeding out.”
“That’s impossible.”
“I would normally agree, but it’s what happened,” I told her, standing
again. “Let’s finish this conversation in the bath. It’ll help keep you warm.”
And her fingertips were beginning to feel like ice.
Rather than help her stand, I bent and scooped her up off the bench. She
didn’t complain, just stared at me as I carried her over to the stairs that led to
the whirling pool of warm water. The jets had turned on when the water had
shut off.
Nyx still felt utterly weightless in my arms, her size and stature so much
clearer to me now that I’d seen her in such a fragile state.
She’d always been smaller than me; I just hadn’t realized how much
smaller until today.
However, I had no doubt she could handle my power.
So long as she wasn’t shot, anyway.
“Paxton thinks it might have been an enchanted bullet,” I told her as I sat
on one of the benches with her in my lap. “They’re looking for the fragments
to confirm.”
“An enchanted bullet,” she echoed, still studying me. “One that kept me
from healing?”
I nodded. “That’s our best guess at the moment.”
“And who… who is Paxton?”
“Kaspian’s assistant,” I explained. “He’s a warlock.”
“I see.” Her brow furrowed a little, her gaze drifting away from my face
to stare at the water for a minute. Then she shook her head. “I don’t
remember anything.”
“You’re still healing, Nyx,” I murmured, running my hand along her
thigh. “Give it time. Your mind will catch up.”
She swallowed, her head bobbing a little. “But I’m healing very slowly.”
“Because of whatever tried to kill you,” I reminded her.
“Yes, I understand that. But even with the stardust…” Her eyes returned
to mine. “You made a wish for me to heal, right?”
“I did.”
“Then I should be healed already,” she replied. “That’s… that’s how it
works. It’s not gradual. It’s immediate.”
I frowned. “Did I do it wrong?” Or maybe… “Is it because I sort of
conjured the stardust, and not you?”
“No, I don’t think so.” She considered me for a moment, then lifted her
hands to reveal the ashen color returning to her fingertips. “I… I think I need
more energy. Maybe from the moon?”
I swallowed and shook my head. “It’s… it’s not up yet.” It was only
midday in Iceland, the sun still in the sky.
“Then I need something… else.”
“Blood?” I offered.
“Maybe,” she whispered, her hand returning to the water. “I don’t feel…
complete.”
I understood that sensation because I felt it, too. Almost as though that
hollowness in my chest hadn’t yet abated.
Because of our missing link.
Except it wasn’t missing. That much had been proved over the last few
hours.
“Maybe I need sleep,” she added, yawning as her body twisted over my
lap so she could rest her head on my shoulder.
However, the movement had her stilling again.
“Or maybe…” She shifted just her head until her lips were near my
throat. “Maybe I need you.”
CHAPTER NINETEEN
NYX
T HE E ND
Curious to know what utopia Nyx and Vesperus created? Check out the
Blood Alliance series. But be warned—the world isn’t sunshine and roses.
It’s dark and deadly, and humans aren’t magical. They’re cattle.
Curious about some of the other mentioned characters?
You can find Slater’s story in Corrupt Me by Everly Frost. Kieran’s story is
available with Haunt Me by Amanda Pillar. Volker can be found in Queen
Me by Amber Lynn Natusch, and Elias is the hero in Reject Me by Kel
Carpenter and Aurelia Jane.
Up Next: Expose Me by Kaydence Snow, featuring Sky Serpell from Spirit &
Sapphire.
More Immortal Vices and Virtues world books can be found here.
Lastly, Fallon will have her own story, too. Join my newsletter or Facebook
Group to be among the first to learn more. Details coming soon.
C HASTELY B ITTEN
Once upon a time, humankind ruled the world while lycans and vampires
lived in secret.
This is no longer that time.
Juliet
There is no escape.
Nowhere to run.
Follow the rules or die.
I don't want to die.
Darius
She's alluring.
She's perfect.
And she's mine.
Welcome to the future where the superior bloodlines make the rules.
Proceed at your own risk.
****
"D..." My mouth felt dryer than it should. Heavy. I tried to lick my lips but
couldn't move my tongue.
Numb.
Darius.
Midnight consumed my vision as I blinked into a starless night.
So alone.
I always expected to die...
I never expected to want to live.
Until today.
Until Darius inspired hope.
Another cruel Vampire joke.
A MAZON
USA Today Bestselling Author Lexi C. Foss loves to play in dark worlds, especially the ones that bite.
She lives in Chapel Hill, North Carolina with her husband and their furry children. When not
writing, she’s busy crossing items off her travel bucket list, or chasing eclipses around the globe. She’s
quirky, consumes way too much coffee, and loves to swim.
Want access to the most up-to-date information for all of Lexi’s books? Sign-up for her newsletter here.
Lexi also likes to hang out with readers on Facebook in her exclusive readers group - Join Here.
Other Books
Scarlet Mark - Standalone Romantic Suspense
Rotanev - Standalone Poseidon Tale
Carnage Island - Standalone Reverse Harem Romance