Part 30 (1/2)
It was the meal she'd made for herself the night he had come back to her apartment to return her cell phone. The meal that sat cold and forgotten on her counter while she and Lucan went at it like minks. ”You remembered what I was cooking that night?”
He gave a mild shrug. ”Sit down. Eat.”
”There's only one place setting.”
”Were you expecting company?”
She looked at him. ”You really can't eat any of this? Not even a bite?”
”If I did, I could only stomach a small amount. ” He motioned for her to take a seat. ”Eating human food is merely for appearances.”
”All right.” Gabrielle sat on the floor cross-legged. She slid the creamy linen napkin out from under the silverware and draped it over her lap. ”But it doesn't seem fair for me to stuff my face in front of you.”
”Don't worry about me. I've had enough female fussing and concern for one day.”
”Suit yourself.”
She was too hungry to wait another second and the meal looked far too delicious to resist. Using the edge of her fork, Gabrielle cut off a bite of the manicotti and chewed it in a state of absolute bliss. She ate half of it in record time, pausing only to pour a gla.s.s of wine, which she also consumed with ravenous delight.
The whole time, Lucan watched her from the bed.
”Good?” he asked when she flicked a sheepish glance at him over the rim of her winegla.s.s.
”Fantastic,” she murmured, shoveling in a mouthful of vinegarette-drenched field greens. Her stomach was much happier now.
She swallowed the last bite of salad, then poured another half gla.s.s of chianti, and settled back with a sigh. ”Thank you for this. I'll have to thank Savannah, too. She didn't have to go to all this trouble.”
”She likes you,” Lucan said, his studious expression unreadable. ”You were a big help last night. Thank you for looking after Rio and the others. Myself, as well.”
”You don't have to thank me.”
”Yes, I do.” The small, st.i.tched gash in his forehead bunched up with his scowl. ”You've been kind and giving all along, and I-”
He broke off, muttering something under his breath. ”I appreciate what you did, that's all.”
Oh, she thought, that's all. Even his grat.i.tude came fully equipped with emotional barriers now.
Suddenly feeling too much like an outsider with him at the moment, she was more than willing to change the subject.
”I hear Tegan made it back in one piece.”
”Yes. But Dante and Niko nearly tore him apart on sight, after he pulled that disappearing act during the raid.”
”What happened to him last night?”
”One of the Rogues tried to slip out a back door at the warehouse as things heated up. Tegan tailed him into the street. He was going to take the suckhead out, but decided to follow him first, see where he might run. He tracked him to the old asylum outside the city. Place was crawling with Rogues. If there was any doubt, now we're certain it's a large colony. Probably an East Coast headquarters.”
A chill went through her when she thought that she had been to the asylum by herself-had been inside the place-unaware that it was a Rogue location.
”I have some pictures of the interior. They're still in my camera. I didn't have a chance to unload them yet.”
Lucan had gone stock-still, staring at her as if she just told him she'd been playing with live grenades. His face seemed to go a bit more ashen beneath its fatigued pallor. ”You not only went there, but you broke in to the place?”
She shrugged, guiltily.
”Jesus Christ, Gabrielle.” He threw his legs over the side of the bed and sat there for a long moment, just looking at her. It took him a while to form words. ”You might have been killed. Do you realize that?”
”I wasn't,” she answered, lame observation, but still fact. ”Not the point.” He ran both hands deep into the hair at his temples. ”s.h.i.+t. Where's your camera?”
”I left it in the lab.”
Lucan picked up the phone beside his bed and speed dialed on intercom. Gideon came on the other end.
”Hey, what's up. Everything good?”
”Yeah,” Lucan said, but he was glaring at Gabrielle. ”Tell Tegan to put the asylum recon detail on hold for now. I just found out we've got pictures of the interior.”
”No s.h.i.+t?” There was a pause. ”Ah, f.u.c.k me. You mean, she actually went in the G.o.dd.a.m.n place?”
Lucan arched a wry I-told-you-so brow at her. ”Load the images from the camera and tell the others we'll meet in an hour to discuss the new strategy. I think we just may have saved some crucial time here.”
”Right. See you in sixty.”
The call ended with a click of the intercom.
”Tegan was going to go back to the asylum?”
”Yeah,” Lucan replied. ”A likely suicide mission since he was lunatic enough to insist that he infiltrate solo tonight to gather intel on the place. Not that anyone was going to persuade him differently, least of all me.”
He got up off the bed and began inspecting some of his bandages. As he s.h.i.+fted, the top of his robe sagged open, revealing most of his chest and a wedge of his abdomen. The unique markings on his chest were a pale shade of henna, lighter than they had been last night. Now they looked as sallow as the rest of him. Parched and nearly colorless.
”Why are you and Tegan at such odds with each other?” she asked, keeping a close eye on him as she dared the question that had been on her mind ever since Lucan had mentioned the warrior's name. ”What happened between you?”
At first, she didn't think he was going to say anything. He kept prodding his injuries, testing the flex of his arms and legs in silence. Then, just about the time she would have given up, he said, ”Tegan blames me for taking something from him. Something he cherished.” He looked squarely at her now. ”His Breedmate died. By my hand.”
”Good lord,” she whispered. ”Lucan... how?”
He frowned, glanced away again. ”Things were different in the Old Times when Tegan and I first knew each other. Warriors, for the most part, chose not to take Breedmates because the dangers were too great. There were few of us in the Order then, and protecting our families was difficult when combat took us leagues away from them, often for months at a time.”
”What about the Darkhavens? Wouldn't they have provided some protection?”
”There were fewer of those then, too. And even less that would welcome the risk of housing a warrior 's Breedmate. We, and those we loved, were consistent targets of Rogue violence. Tegan knew all of this, but he bonded himself to a female anyway. Not long afterward, she was captured by the Rogues. They tortured her. Raped her. And before they sent her back to him, they nearly drained her. She was an empty husk-worse than that, she was made a Minion of the Rogue who ruined her.”
”Oh, my G.o.d,” Gabrielle gasped, horrified.
Lucan sighed, as if the weight of the memories pressed hard on him. ”Tegan went insane with rage. He became like an animal, slaughtering everything in his path. He would appear so awash in gore that many thought he had bathed in blood. He gorged himself in his fury, and, for nearly a year, he refused to accept the fact that his Breedmate 's mind was lost forever. He kept feeding her from his vein, unwilling to see her corruption. He fed to feed her. He didn't care that he was steadily sliding into Bloodl.u.s.t. For that entire year, he defied Breed law, and would not put her out of her misery. As for Tegan himself, he was slowly, but surely, going Rogue. Something had to be done... .”
When he let the statement hang, unfinished, Gabrielle spoke for him. ”And as leader, it fell to you to take action.”
Lucan gave a grim nod. ”I put Tegan in a thick stone cell, and then I put his Breedmate to the sword.”