Part 24 (1/2)

”But I had to lure him up here without alerting him to the trap,” she continued in uneven tones. ”The Medallion was all I could think of.”

”Yes.” Lucien gave a slow nod of his head. ”He was so obsessed, he did not even consider his danger. Not until to was too late.”

The memory of those pale, fevered eyes made her stomach clench in disgust. He had been obsessed. Even mad. He would have done anything to claim the Medallion as his own.

”He is dead?” she demanded, needing to be rea.s.sured that it was truly at an end.

”Quite dead.”

She heaved a faint sigh. ”I suppose that I should feel guilty. I have never deliberately harmed another before.”

”No.” His gaze returned to her darkened eyes, his features suddenly grim. ”He would have killed the both of us without thought and ravaged his way through England. He had to be halted.”

Jocelyn winced as she recalled poor Molly and the other women who had been ruthlessly murdered by the vampire. Lucien was correct. She could not have allowed further innocents to be brutally tortured by Amadeus. He might even have attacked the children.

The thought was enough to harden her heart.

”Yes,” she said.

He grimaced as he studied her shadowed eyes and the pain that still lingered.

”I am sorry, however, that you were forced into such a position. I should have confronted him the moment I arrived in London.”

Jocelyn frowned at the self-contempt that laced through his dark voice. She would not allow Lucien to blame himself. Not when he had nearly died attempting to save her.

”Lucien.” She lifted her hand and pressed it to the side of his face. Her skin tingled as it encountered the satin warmth of his cheek. ”You could not have known what he would do.”

His own hand rose to cover her fingers, his golden eyes haunted with remembered pain.

”I knew he was dangerous.”

”Enough,” she said sharply.

His brows lifted at the stubborn jut of her chin. ”What?”

”It is the past. We cannot change what has occurred. All we can do now is consider the future.”

There was a long pause, almost as if he battled the urge to argue with her sensible words.

Then the grimness of his features softened and the golden eyes were lit with that warm, rich light that so touched her heart.

”When did you become so very wise?”

Wise? Jocelyn gave a soft chuckle. No one could ever accuse her of being wise in the past. Not when she had so recklessly played the flirt with Lord Patten. Not when she had meekly allowed her parents to force her from her rightful place in their life. Nor even when she had determinedly set upon a new path without first accepting and forgiving the mistakes that she had made.

But now . . . now she realized she possessed a wonderful clarity. She knew precisely what she desired from her life and whom she desired to share it with.

Devoting her life to others was all well and good, but at the moment she wanted to think only of herself.

And this wonderful, glorious gentleman at her side.

”When you walked into my home and rented my garret,” she said with a smile.

”Ah.” He reached down to softly brush his lips over her forehead before pulling back to regard her with a teasing expression. ”I thought you were going to toss me back onto the streets.”

”I desired to. I knew you were a dangerous gentleman the moment you entered the room.

Only my need for your coin forced me to allow you to remain.”

”Do not tell me that you love me only for my fortune,” he chided gently.

”And your laughter. And your kindness. And your amazing ability to know my heart better than I know it myself.”

He stilled, his fingers moving to trail over her cheek and down the length of jaw. Jocelyn could not halt the tiny s.h.i.+ver of response to his light caress.

”And my kisses?” he prodded.

Jocelyn forced herself to pretend to consider his words. ”They are bearable, I suppose.”

”Bearable?”

With a low growl he slowly bent his head to touch his lips softly to her own. Jocelyn readily arched toward him. It was not a kiss of pa.s.sion or physical need. Instead, it was a tender rea.s.surance that they had survived the nightmare and managed to escape with their lives intact.

For moments they clung to each other, drawing strength from the warm emotions that bonded them together.

Then with obvious reluctance Lucien at last pulled back to carefully tuck a stray curl behind her ear.

”Well?”

”Mmm. Perhaps they are wondrous.”

”That is considerably better.” His smile faded as he drew in a deep breath. ”Ah, Jocelyn. I feared that you would never forgive me.”

Her gaze dropped as she recalled her horror at discovering the truth that he was a vampire. It was not, after all, every day that a maiden discovered the gentleman she had tumbled into love with was not human, she acknowledged wryly.

And, of course, there had been the fear that she had been played the fool once again. Echoes of the betrayal she had felt at the hands of Lord Patten had made her lash out with an instinctive need to protect herself from further pain.

But Lucien had nothing in common with the shallow, absurdly idiotic Lord Patten.

He had not been attempting to use her for his own pleasure. He did not consider her a mere object that was to be gained and then tossed aside when he grew weary of her.

He had wanted only to protect her.

And to bring a smile to her face.

Realizing that he was regarding her with a growingly concerned expression, she offered him a smile.

”I will admit that I was rather shocked to discover that you were not a simple rogue but a vampire in disguise.”

His expression cleared at her light tone, his brows wiggling in a ridiculous fas.h.i.+on. ”I prefer a roguish vampire.”