As he lathered her up with the soap, Heidi couldnât resist but to take a peak over her shoulders at the man. When her eyes met his, she heard him question,
âWhat is it?
âYou were being quiet.â
âIs that so unusual?â at the nod of her head, he asked, âWhen did you receive the mark on your back? Where the Curtisâ family who bought you?â Last night they hadnât found the time to talk about everything and Heidi knew that Nicholas would have questions about it, âIf you donât want to talk about it, you donât have to,â he added.
âI was seven when I received the mark. I ran away from the slave establishment,â at Heidiâs confession, Nicholas raised both his brows. Slaves rarely tried escaping from the prison like environment the slave offered due to the punishment that was implemented, âI donât remember how I got in there. I donât have memories of my biological parents but I do have memories of the confined walls of the building I was in. The slaves, the head guard. I see them in my dreams sometimes. During my stay there, there was a woman there who took care of me like her own daughter. Unfortunately I donât remember her name, maybe we never exchanged our names. She took care of me, even going an extra mile by giving me her share of food. She was a good person,â Heidi said softly.
âDid she die?â Nicholas asked her.
âThe guard killed her in front of me. She was supposed to go with the guard to an auction but she refused that day. Disobedience is not taken lightly there and the guardâs word is absolute. He...butchered her in front of me,â she whispered as her voice wavered unsteadily. Nicholas rubbed her shoulders to comfort her. Bringing her closer to him so that he could hug her, âAfter she died I couldnât bear the pain and I tried escaping but it didnât go well and the seal of slave was placed. I took another chance and finally did outrun the guard in charge of the facility. I ran for days until I ended up in Woville and in front of my uncle, Raymond Curtis on the street.â
âI didnât want to get married to Warren initially and I ran away.â
âYou seem to hold a successful record when it comes to escaping,â Nicholas commented teasingly making her smile.
âI wasnât successful though.â
âWhy not?â he asked, curious with the story.
âMy family arenât fond of vampires and when father heard that Nora was going to be sent here, he and my uncle switched her place with me. I...I didnât want a marriage like that. If my mother was alive she wouldnât want that for me. Even if it werenât for the uninvited marriage, I would have left. I saved enough money to start life anew but things didnât go according to plan,â Heidi sighed, âMy sister found out about it and our caretaker, Howard was beaten by the Dukeâs men.â
âDuke?â Nicholas questioned her. He didnât miss the fear that had begun to creep into her eyes and there was a change in the rhythm of her heartbeat. Nicholas was aware with the fact that there was something more than her familyâs ill-treatment and now that she had finally opened up to him, he waited for her to speak patiently.
âDuke Dorian Scathlok. My uncle Raymond is well acquainted with him. He was the one who proposed our names for the truce to Lord Wastell. I, the Duke kept Howard in proposition that he would keep him alive and breathing if I complied with the truce without any resistance. He planned to kill you through me.â
âDid he now. The plan must have gone awfully bad if Iâm still alive,â he joked, âWhat about your caretaker?â he inquired
âIâm not sure if Howard is fine,â she said worried.
âI will see if I can find anything about him,â he offered.
âYou will?â she turned around to face him, forgotten about their naked bodies.
âAnything that will ease your mind, sweetheart. Did anything else happen during your time in Woville?â he asked her casually to see her dart her eyes.
She nodded her head, taking time to put her thoughts into sentence, âThe Duke tried to-he tried what you did a few moments ago here,â Nicholasâ eyes narrowed at her words and he evened his temper when she looked up at him, âA-arenât you mad at me?â
âFor what reason? It isnât hard for me to point an unfaithful person in a crowd who is going to kill me. And frankly, you donât look the part. Your beating heart gives away a lot of things. I am sorry to hear what happened. You wonât have to meet your family or the Duke from now,â he dropped a tender kiss on her head,
âDonât be so nice to me,â she could feel her eyes water.
âWhy not? Donât tell me youâre the kind to believe you donât deserve it.â
âThings donât stay the same,â she murmured but he heard it well.
He knew it was the wrong time to smile but he smiled anyways which she couldnât see. It was ironic how both of them worried about the same things.
âLet me tell you this, Heidi,â he said, still holding her in his arms, âI have no plans to leave you. Not now, not in this lifetime nor in the next one. I will spoil you with everything I am capable of. You have nothing to fear,â and when she turned around, he saw her anxious to which he leaned forward but this time to place a kiss on her forehead.
Once Heidi left the room clothed, Nicholas sat in front of the fireplace in his room which was extinguished. It was no wonder she could withstand a gory scene. To witness something so horrific at a young age, he thought, only few were chosen to such destiny.
He hadnât heard the name Doriam Scathlok before and Nicholas was the kind of man who remembered people, unless he hadnât spoken to the man before. He recollected his butler saying how he found her to be shaken after meeting a man on the day of her and Warrenâs engagement. All this while Heidi had the key to who was trying to create trouble in Woville against the vampires.
Then there was the other person was another person Heidi had mentioned. Calos Juves. He knew the man. He was the guard who had been assigned before he bought Stanley from there. He was the in charge, the head of authority in the slave establishment after Wilford.
Nicholas laughed at a private joke.n/o/vel/b//in dot c//om
He remembered the night he had gone to visit one of the slaves he had put in himself when he saw a child running past him, several yards away. Usually he would have picked the runaway slave and would have put the person back in the establishment but he wasnât in the mood that night. Going to the building, he had met the guard to see a freshly carved mark on his face. It wasnât uncommon but neither was it common for slaves to escape due to the tight security the facility provided. If his calculations was right, the child he had seen running past his gaze was none other than Heidi.