Part 53 (1/2)

”No.”

”Aren't you afraid of... it?”

She held her arms out. ”Come here. I want to hold you. You look like you've got a case of the rattles.”

He approached the bed slowly, as if he didn't want her to feel stalked or something. She motioned with her hands, urging him to hurry up.

Rhage lay down beside her, but didn't reach for her.

After a heartbeat she went for him, wrapping her body around his, running her hands over him. When she brushed against his side, catching the edge of the dragon's tail, Rhage flinched and s.h.i.+fted.

He didn't want her anywhere near the tattoo, she thought.

”Roll over,” she said. ”Onto your stomach.”

When he shook his head, she pushed at his shoulders. It was like trying to move a grand piano.

”Roll over, d.a.m.n it. Come on, Rhage.”

He complied with no grace whatsoever, cursing and flopping onto his belly.

She ran her hand right down his spine, right over the dragon.

Rhage's muscles contracted in random order. No, not random. They were the parts of his body that corresponded to where she was touching the tattoo.

How extraordinary.

She stroked his back some more, feeling as if the ink were rising up to meet her palm like a cat.

”Are you ever going to want to be with me again?” Rhage said stiffly. He turned his face to the side so he could see her. Except he didn't look up.

She lingered on the beast's mouth, tracing the line of its lips with her fingertip. Rhage's own set parted as if he were feeling her touch.”Why wouldn't I want to be with you?”

”That was a little weird, wasn't it?”

She laughed. ”Weird? I'm sleeping in a mansion full of vampires. I've fallen in love with a-”

Mary stopped. Oh, G.o.d. What had just come out of her mouth?

Rhage pushed his upper body off the bed, twisting his chest around so he could look at her. ”What did you just say?”

She hadn't meant for it to happen, she thought. The falling or the telling.

But she would take neither of them back.

”I'm not sure,” she murmured, taking in the brute strength of his shoulders and arms. ”But I think it was something along the lines of 'I love you.' Yeah, that was it. I, ah, I love you.”

Now, that was lame. She could do a h.e.l.l of a lot better.

Mary grabbed his face, planted a good hard one on his mouth, and looked him straight in the eye.

”I love you, Rhage. I love you something fierce.”

Those heavy arms wrapped around her and he buried his head in her neck. ”I didn't think you ever would.”

”Am I that hardheaded?”

”No. I'm that undeserving.”

Mary pulled back and glared at him. ”I don't want to hear you say that again. You are the very best thing that's ever happened to me.”

”Even with the beast?”

Beast? Sure, she'd sensed something else was in him. But a beast? Still, Rhage was looking so worried, she humored him.

”Yeah, even with him as well. Only can we do it without all the metal next time? I'm very confident that you won't hurt me.”

”Yeah, I think we can lose the chains.”

Mary urged him back into the crook of her neck and found herself focusing on the Madonna and Child across the room.

”You are the oddest miracle,” she whispered to him, looking at the picture.

”What?” he said into her throat.

”Nothing.” She kissed the top of his blond head and went back to staring at the Madonna.

Chapter Forty-six.

Bella took a deep breath and smelled dirt. G.o.d, her head hurt. And her knees were killing her. They were jammed against something hard. And cold.

Her eyes flew open. Darkness. Blackness. Blindness.

She tried to lift a hand, but her elbow ran into a b.u.mpy wall. There was another wall at her back and in front of her and to the sides. She banged around in the small s.p.a.ce, panicking. Opening her mouth until it gaped, she found she couldn't breathe. There was no air, only the smell of damp earth, clogging... nose... she- Screamed.

And something above her moved. Light blinded her as she looked up.

”Ready to come out?” a man's voice said softly.

It all came back: the race for her house across the meadow, the fight with the lesser, the blacking out.

With a quick jerk she was lifted by a chest harness from what she realized was a pipe in the ground. As she looked around in terror, she had no idea where she was. The room was not large and the walls were unfinished. There were no windows, just two skylights in the low ceiling, which were both covered with black cloth. Three bald lightbulbs hung from wires. The place smelled sweet, a combination of fresh pine boards and the lesser's baby-powder scent.

When she saw a stainless-steel table and dozens of knives and hammers, she trembled so badly she started to cough.