Ethan
I knew heâd visited her the minute her eyes met mine. She should still be on fire for me; instead, she feltâwarm.
Yet her heart still pounded for me. That was all that mattered. Thatâs what I told myself as I gripped the steering wheel and drove us toward her motherâs residence.
âCassius.â I hated that she said his name with such familiarity. âYou said heâs like your king?â
âMmm-hmm.â
âWho does he report to?â
âThe archangels.â I sighed. âWhen they care enough to check in on us.â
âAre they bad?â
âHumansâand please donât take offense to thisâlike to categorize things so they can better understand them. If something is bad, they stay away. If itâs good, it must be safe.
âBut is chocolate really good? Perhaps to you, but what if someoneâs allergic? Whatâs worse, what if you gorge yourself?
âThen something that was once good in your eyes is suddenly very bad because it has the power to kill you. The same goes for immortals. Are all Dark Ones bad? No. But they arenât good.
âAre archangels bad? Yes. In a way, they can be very bad, but they also have such goodness that itâs blinding. What you should concern yourself with is not trying to understand because you never will.â
Genesis let out a frustrated sigh. âEasier said than done.â
âIf I told you he was bad,â I reached for her hand, âyou may stay away longer, but it may also cause fear to grow in your heart, and fear is not an emotion I want you to feed.â
She nodded. âIâm afraid now.â
âOf me?â
âMy mother.â Her eyes were distant, locked on the house Iâd just pulled up to.
It looked better, as if someone had made repairs. The shutters no longer fell from the window, and the porch had been rebuilt.
âSay the word, and I end her life,â I vowed. âNow hold your head high.â
Genesis nodded wordlessly and followed me out of the car to the door.
Her mother was by herself; I picked up only her scent. I knocked.
Footsteps creaked against the wood floor. And a short woman with graying brown hair appeared in the door. Her eyes were bland, her skin wrinkled.
Life had been hard on her, or maybe that was humanityâs punishment for being such a horrible mother.
Her eyes met mine, widening briefly before settling on her daughter. Her smile was full of venom. âSo, you're his whore now?â
With a hiss, I shoved the woman into the house and walked her backward until she was against the nearest wall. I gripped her throat with my hand, lifting her until her feet dangled beneath her.
âSay it again,â I dared her.
Tears filled her eyes.
âWhat? Trouble breathing?â I tilted my head. âCare for me to end your miserable existence?â
She croaked out a no.
I released her then whispered in her ear, âDisrespect my mate one more time, and you wonât even feel the slice of my teeth across your throat.â
The woman paled.
Genesisâs hand gripped mine, steadying my heartbeat, when all I wanted to do was rip her motherâs throat out and laugh over her dead corpse.
âMother.â Genesis trembled next to me. âWe wonât be long. I just had a few questions.â
âKnew you would.â She snorted. âBut I donât have answers for you, at least the ones youâre looking for.â
I moved away from Genesis, walked down the familiar hallway, and located the picture. I pulled it from the wall and tossed it to her mother. âThis woman. Who is she?â
Her motherâs face paled as she stared at the picture. âDead.â
âCaught that,â Ethan hissed. âWho is she?â
âAra was her name.â Genesisâs mother petted the picture as if she was reliving something. âEveryone hated her.â
I tensed.
âShe was beautiful, and she knew it⦠so vain that she made the family look bad. Her number was called, but of course it was. The rest of the families were jealous. And then she failed.â
âYour great-grandmother?â
âGreat-aunt.â Her mother set the picture down on the table. âSheâs a stain upon the family name. We donât discuss her.
âThis is the first time our number has been called since Araâs disgrace.â She snorted. âAnd I knew it would happen the minute Genesis was born â that skin, that hair.â She rolled her eyes.
âSo beautiful, just like Ara.â
Genesisâs heart thumped wildly, so loudly I had to concentrate on what her mother was saying in order to hear the words above the beating.
âI made her strong.â Her motherâs eyes met mine. âBetter she hate her own reflection than fall prey to it.â
âHow tragic,â I whispered, âthat you felt the need to shame a little girl for having golden hair and pretty eyes.â
âIt worked!â her mother screamed. âLook! Mated to an Elder! A vampire, no less!â
âIt worked,â I repeated, âbecause her blood is pure⦠because her soul is pure.â Anger crashed over me at her motherâs proud expression.
In a flash, I moved behind her, biting a small mark on her shoulder and whispered, âFor the rest of your days you, will see nothing but Araâs reflection when you look in the mirror.
âYou will hate, and it will drive you mad. That is the gift I leave with you for bestowing such kindness upon the woman I love.â
Her mother swayed and then fell to her knees. A tear fell down her cheek. âNo, please no. Donât do this.â
âItâs done.â I gripped Genesisâs hand. âWeâll bother you no more.â
Genesis didnât want to follow me; her feet dug into the ground, so I tossed her over my shoulder and carried her out of the house.
When she still didnât make a noise, I buckled her seatbelt and peeled out of the parking spot, driving like hell back toward our homeâtoward safety.
Ready to lose my mind, I opened my mouth to apologize when she blurted, âYou love me.â
âIf thatâs what you wish to discussâ¦â I reached for her hand.
She squeezed mine. The heat from my blood took over, making her skin hot to the touch.
âAnd you wonât leave me? Ever?â
âNo,â I vowed. âI donât think Iâm capable of surviving such a loss.â
She nodded, wiping a tear from her cheek. âCassius visited today.â
âI know.â
She sighed. âHe told me things⦠about you. About Ara.â
âDid he touch you?â
âNo,â Genesis whispered. âBut one day soon, he will. He touches all the human mates.â
I scowled. âSo he told youâ¦â
âTo test them.â
âYes.â
âIâm going to pass.â
âAlright.â
âYou donât believe me?â She pulled her hand away.
I sighed and focused on the road ahead of me. âI have no reason not to believe you.â
Genesis let out a loud sigh. âDo you think the only reason you love me is because Iâm related to Ara?â
âNo.â The entire idea was ridiculous. âNot only was she horribly selfishâsomething Iâve finally come to terms withâbut youâre nothing like her.
âBesides, you donât stop and stare at yourself every time you see your own damn reflection.â
âThanks to my mother,â Genesis mumbled.
âThatâs it.â I pulled the car over, forced it into park, and reached for Genesis. With a growl, I tugged her body across the console and into my lap. âShe did you no favors.
âThat woman was no mother to you. A weaker female would have crippled beneath that type of emotional scarring. I should have killed her for what she put you through.â
Genesisâs eyes pooled with tears.
I cupped her chin. âBeautiful inside and outâ the last thing you need to be is afraid of your own beauty. Embrace it, but donât let it overtake all sense of reality. You are beautiful.
âYou are strong. You are pure. Those are simple facts. Outside of that, nothing else matters other than the way I feel about you.â
âIf being beautiful means I turn into Ara, Iâd rather be ugly.â
âYou could never turn into her.â I pressed an urgent kiss to her mouth. âYouâre⦠you.â
Genesis returned my kiss, biting down on my lips.
I flicked her tongue with mine then deepened the kiss. âHome.â
âBed.â
âYes,â I growled, rubbing my body against her. âNow.â
She let out a little gasp.
âOr here.â I tugged her shirt over her shoulder, kissing the bare skin. âVampires can be very⦠creative.â
âShow me.â Her eyes burned bright green.
I ripped the rest of her T-shirt with my teeth. âNever⦠challenge me.â
Frenzied hands reached for my jeans while I reached for hers, both of us colliding with one another as we tried to peel clothing away.
Layer after layer went flying.
And then she was naked, straddling me.
âMmmâ¦â I took her fingers between my teeth. ââ¦Iâve never tasted anything so incredible.â
âMy hands?â
âYour skin.â I chuckled then placed myself near her entrance. âYou know⦠we could always wait until we get home andââ
She welcomed me into her body.
But didnât move.
I let out a frustrated growl and gripped her hips. âYou think to tease me?â
âI was told never to tease a vampire.â
A mixture of laughter and ecstasy left my lips as our bodies began to move.
âNo bite this time?â she asked.
âSometimes,â I growled, thrusting hard, then pulling out, âfaster is better.â