Part 2 (1/2)

Gavin had no doubt the Fate referred to him. He decided to give them some s.p.a.ce to talk, and walked through the living room into a bright, almost painfully white kitchen. Before he could open the first cupboard, he spotted the liquor cabinet through an arched doorway leading into a formal dining room done in medium blue tones and more pale wood. The liquor cabinet looked like an antique, at least by human standards. Gavin wondered if the Fate had purchased this bit of furniture when it had been new. Considering the lack of Chala to protect these days, he doubted there were very many Fates being created, so William was probably pretty d.a.m.n old.

Gavin flipped over a cut crystal lowball gla.s.s, splashed a hefty amount of whiskey into it, then took a generous swallow. With a sigh, he leaned back against the cabinet and contemplated his current situation.

I found my mate.

He'd given up on the possibility seventy-five years ago, when he had been unable to save the last Chala he even knew existed. She had already been mated when he met her, but had been carrying a babe in her womb when she died. Gavin had teamed up with her mate to protect her, secretly hoping the babe would be a female, and likely, another Chala. If so, he'd planned to claim her instantly. He was a patient s.h.i.+fter, when necessary. He could wait twenty years or so to bed his mate. He had already waited over a hundred years by that point, what was another twenty?

But he and the Chala's mate had been unable to fend off the wave of Rakshasa who were determined to kill her. When she died, not surprisingly her mate had been devastated, and as was an unfortunate common practice of Light Ones who lost their mates, had impaled himself with one of the attackers' knives, leaving Gavin to fend for himself among twenty-eight bloodthirsty Rakshasa. He had barely escaped alive. Because he, too, was a Rakshasa, that should have given him some measure of protection, but he was cursed, forced to protect humanity against his evil brothers and sisters, and they knew it.

Despite the fact that it had been seventy-five years ago, Gavin could easily bring up a mental image of the Chala he hadn't been able to save. She had been a dark, sultry beauty with large, heavy b.r.e.a.s.t.s and-before she'd begun to grow thick with child-a narrow waist and wide hips. An hourgla.s.s figure. Exactly Gavin's type. He had hoped her child would turn out just like her.

Sydney and William stepped into the kitchen at that moment, and Gavin watched as William walked over to the refrigerator while Sydney followed in his wake, chattering away, firing questions at him like bullets.

This was his mate?

She was a blond. He had never really been attracted to blonds. She had big blue eyes, cornflower blue, which lent her an air of distinct innocence that certainly did not attract Gavin. He preferred women who knew their way around a bedroom, and if her personality was any indication, he had his doubts Sydney had ever even spent the night with a man. He should be excited over the prospect of being her first time, but in truth, he didn't want to be a trainer. He wanted a woman in his bed who took control, who wasn't afraid to ask for-h.e.l.l, demand-what she wanted.

Sydney was tall and skinny, too, which was another strike against her. The last Chala he met had been short and curvy. When he indulged with human women, they were always dark, short, and curvy. Sydney was a frigging Disney Princess. The Ice Queen bit was not his thing.

But she was a Chala, quite possibly one of the last in the world. Her blood had smelled so intoxicating, he had been singularly unable to resist having a taste. At that moment, when he had lapped at her wound as if it were the tastiest bit of chocolate he had ever eaten, he would have gladly laid her on the cold, slushy ground and taken her right then and there. At least while the taste of her blood had been on his tongue, she had been the most beautiful, the most attractive, the most tempting female he had ever come across. Ever.

Her blood still sang through his veins, now mingled with his own, but the whiskey burned the taste from his tongue, enabling him to see his situation through less rose-colored lenses. And what a situation it was.

A Chala who, until a short time ago, apparently had no earthly idea what she was. Based on the way she chattered at her Fate, she still didn't believe what Gavin had told her back in downtown Detroit.

A Chala who was, unfortunately, not really all that attractive, to him, at least. And a Chala who, instead of having a mate to protect her, had her own personal Fate who was a cross-dressing male the size of a Mack Truck. A Fate who had made it clear on the phone earlier that he was none too pleased to learn Gavin had claimed her.

Well, too d.a.m.n bad. Gavin drained the rest of the whiskey in the gla.s.s. Sydney was his. He was nearly four hundred years old. He'd spent more than half his life living with a curse that had him convinced his own d.a.m.n kind was the enemy. He battled his own personal internal demons, because the curse hadn't taken away any of his Rakshasa urges, it simply overrode them with the need to protect humanity. He, more than anyone, understood how d.a.m.n lucky a normal Light One had it.

They lived to protect humanity. It was all black and white to them. They weren't conflicted in the least. They could kill a wave of Rakshasa, go home, take a shower, and then go to bed with a clear conscience.

He, on the other hand, felt guilty for killing his own kind, and then guilty some more for not killing enough of them, and then frustrated and angry that he should feel any guilt at all.

d.a.m.ned curse.

”Oh, good.” He strolled into the kitchen. ”I'm starved.”

William was in the process of a.s.sembling a platter of what looked like cheese and crackers. He stiffened as he pulled a bowl of grapes out of the fridge. ”This isn't for you, Rakshasa.”

Gavin ignored the comment and reached around him to snag a handful of grapes. William slapped his hand and the skin where the Fate had touched him began to sizzle.

”d.a.m.n it!” Gavin jerked his hand away.

”Oh my G.o.d,” Sydney said, her voice breathy with unsuppressed awe. ”How did you do that?” Her eyes were wide and round again, an almost perpetual state since she spotted the dead Rakshasa on the ground near the convention center.

With her flaxen blond hair and simple sweater and slacks underneath that Pillsbury Doughboy coat, she looked like a twelve-year-old girl. How the h.e.l.l was he supposed to muster up the desire to bang a Chala who looked too d.a.m.n young to even be able to produce children?

William cut his gaze to Gavin, and the look he gave spoke volumes: I hate you.

Gavin smirked. ”Too d.a.m.n bad,” he said to William. ”She's mine. I've already claimed her.”

William threw a startled look at his charge. ”You slept with him?” Shock and disapproval were etched into his words.

”What? No! Are you kidding me? Gross!”

Gavin gave her a disgruntled look. ”Gross? Is that your favorite word? Do you have any idea how many females I've bedded in my three hundred and eighty-seven years? And not a d.a.m.n one has ever used the term 'gross' in reference to what we did together.”

”Luckily, I'm not one of those females and-gross.” She wrinkled her nose. It took another two years off her appearance.

He was mated to a child. Lovely. He wondered if he would even be able to get it up enough to do what was necessary to plant a seed in her womb.

”Wait. Did you just say you are three hundred and eighty-seven years old?” Sydney's tone held stark disbelief.

”Yep.”

She turned to William. ”I told you he was crazy.”

Gavin rolled his eyes and snagged another grape.

William pursed his lips and said, ”Sydney, sweetie, why don't you go down to the bas.e.m.e.nt and get us a nice bottle of pinot grigio?”

”You're trying to get rid of me.”

”Yes. Now go get the wine.”

A look pa.s.sed between them, a look Gavin did not understand, and then with a huff, Sydney stomped down the stairs to the bas.e.m.e.nt.

William rounded on Gavin. ”How did you figure out she was a Chala?”

Gavin narrowed his eyes and studied the Fate for a moment before answering. ”She was attacked. By a Rakshasa. He cut her arm.”

A Chala's scent was not recognizable until another s.h.i.+fter drew her blood. Most Chala lived among the s.h.i.+fters, the Light Ones, so their blood was drawn inevitably as a child, during any number of silly childhood games. But not Sydney.

”How is it that was the first time a s.h.i.+fter drew her blood? She looks young, but not that young.” Gavin glanced at the stairs leading to the bas.e.m.e.nt. ”How old is she, anyway?”

William closed his eyes and leaned back against the counter. ”You've ruined everything.”

”How so?”

”I have kept her hidden-in plain sight-for the past seventeen years. Other-”

”So she's thirty?” Sydney had mentioned William came into her life when she was thirteen. Gavin continued to stare at the staircase leading to the bas.e.m.e.nt, picturing the woman who had disappeared down there a moment ago. Chala aged well. She barely looked old enough to have graduated high school.

William opened his eyes to glare at him for a few heartbeats before continuing. ”Other than the attack that killed her father, we've managed to live a peaceful, quiet, s.h.i.+fter-less life. Until now. Until you came along.”

That certainly explained why Gavin hadn't recognized her as a Chala. ”Hey, I'm not the one who cut her. Nor am I the one who let a Chala wander around the streets of Detroit alone. Do you have any idea how many Rakshasa live in Detroit?” Gavin's voice was thick with accusation.

”You're one of them.”

”Was,” Gavin admitted. ”I've been cursed for two hundred years. I've killed more of my own kind than I ever killed Light Ones.”