Stephanie
âI want to show you something.â Cassiusâs deep voice caused my body to shiver in anticipation, delight, lustâtake your pick.
I lifted a shoulder. âOh?â
âI doubt Ethan would mind if we borrowed his car for the evening.â
âEvening?â My entire mouth went dry. Hadnât we just spent the evening together? At least dinner?
I watched helplessly as the rest of the crew piled into Ethanâs car and drove off, leaving me alone with Cassius, so very much alone. âThe whole evening?â
Cassius grinned. âYou look scared.â
âTired,â I blurted. âThis is the look of exhaustion.â
âPity.â He pulled the keys from my hand and opened the passenger door, ushering me in. âI guess Iâll have to do my best to keep you from overexerting yourself, then.â
I gulped. âGuess so.â
Cassius didnât respond, but he did seem amused at my expense as he started the car and weaved through traffic, nearly clipping two cars in the process.
âThought you didnât know how to drive,â I said through clenched teeth.
âFast learner.â He flashed another smile and kept driving at breakneck speed until we took the next exit.
I frowned as he went toward Lake Stevens.
The sun was setting, the sky was growing dark. Demons would soon be out and about, seducing humans, biting them, drinking their blood just because they could.
Vampires would be sleeping because as much as people liked to believe they only came out at night, they could do whatever the hell they wantedâwithin reason.
âWhat will you do?â I cleared my throat in an attempt to rid my mind of what dangers prowled at night. âIf you havenât finished this little test before the next council meeting?â
Cassius stared blankly at the road ahead, giving nothing away. But the dim light from the dash revealed that he was gripping the steering wheel so tight his knuckles were turning white. âThat wonât happen.â
âBut it could.â I frowned. âAnd if the Vampires, Demons, heck if anyone sees you like thisââ
âThey wonât!â He yelled.
I held up my hands. âOkay, sensitive subject, but Iâm glad youâre that confident in this whole testing thing.â
He scowled. âConfidence has nothing to do with it.â
âOh?â
As the car rolled to a stop at the light, he turned toward me, his face void of emotion. âIf I fail, I die, case closed.â
What? Panic rose in my chest. âIf you fail as a human you die? If you fail with me?â
Color tinged his cheeks as he slammed down on the accelerator. âRight, something like that.â
âHow many days did he give you?â
âThirty.â
âAs of today?â
âAs of two days ago.â
âYou have twenty-eight days!â I shouted, frosting the windows with ice.
He muttered a curse and quickly turned on the defrost. âCareful, youâre going to make me think you actually like me.â
I crossed my arms and gazed out my window. âYou know I like you.â
He was quiet for a minute then cleared his throat. âDo you like me enough to trust me? Do you like me enough not to kill me?â
âWhat is this? First grade?â I laughed, his teasing eased my fear. âCassius, I like you, Iâm circling yes on the note you just passed me, whatâs your deal?â
âIâm not familiar with that expression.â
I pinched the bridge of my nose. âYou arenât familiar with anything.â
âThatâs not true.â He steered the car down a winding road near the lake.
âYes it is! What have you been doing, you know other than watching over me making sure I donât know my full potential, keeping your dirty secrets and making sure immortals donât go to war?â
âYou want to know what Iâve been DOING?â he yelled as he stomped on the brake and the car jerked to a stop.
âYES!â I matched his voice. âWhere do you go when shit gets real, Cassius? When life gets too hard. When youâre forced to face your demons.â
âWeâre here.â
âWe arenât done discussing this!â
Cassius sighed and pulled the keys from the ignition. âI meant weâre here, here is the place I go to. My home.â
I jerked back and fumbled with the handle to the car door and jumped out of the car.
We were in front of a house.
A giant modern white house, with large bay windows, nestled between at least a dozen or so trees, just feet from the lake.
It was beautiful.
Not what Iâd imagine a Dark One living in. âThis doesnât look like you at all.â
âOh?â Cassius chuckled. âAnd what did you expect?â
âA cave.â I nodded as the white pristine house caused unwelcome sensations to bubble up within me. This part of Cassius just made me more curious. âPossibly hell.â
âGreat,â he said in a low voice. âYou think I spend my time in the fiery pits of hell until Iâm ordered to go eat small children, is that it?â
I shrugged, technically the shoe fit, not that Iâd say it out loud.
He cursed.
As if things had been going well up until this point?
The sound of crunching gravel as he walked away was really the only indicator that Cassius wanted me to follow. I moved slowly behind him as we neared the house.
He pulled a key out from under the mat and slid it in the door.
âClever, nobody would ever look there.â I nodded my head.
Cassius stopped and turned, his blue eyes menacing. âDo you truly think I care if someone steals from me? Or tries to break in? Believe me, it would be more of a nightmare for them, than for me.
Iâd simply⦠make sure they ceased to exist.â He snapped his fingers into the air.
âDone it before, have you?â I arched my eyebrows up.
âOnce.â Cassius shrugged and moved in through the doorway. âHe was at least eighty, I thought it a kindness to further things along, his memory wasnât well, had no family. I touched him andââ
ââhe died?â
âQuickly,â Cassius said smoothly.
âThatâs horrible!â
âAs opposed to him dying alone in his home? He died with meâan honor I donât bestow on just anyone.â
I frowned. Is that what was going to happen to me? Iâd touch nice old men and decide to steal their lives?
As if on cue, a Darkness started spreading throughout my stomach, like a warmth I couldnât control, and then as soon as it appeared it dissipated like it was never there in the first place.
Unsettling.
I hated feeling out of control.
âYou forget.â He turned to face me, his face dazzling beneath the moonlight and stars. âWe are better than them. We always will be. Thatâs not me being cruel or arrogant, itâs a simple fact. The blood that runs through your veinsâ¦â
His fingertips danced across the pulse point on my wrist. âItâs holy.â
I licked my lips in irritation. The last thing I felt was specialâand definitely not holy. âDoesnât feel that way.â
âYouâre part Angel,â he said slowly. âIt will never feel the way itâs supposed to simply because you are missing half of the whole. Being a Dark One means being in a constant state of loneliness without any way to alleviate the pain.â
I flinched. Was that what this feeling was? This hollowness in my chest that made me stare like a lunatic at every single human relationship like I was starved for attention? For physical touch?
âAhâ¦â Cassius nodded knowingly. âYouâve been wondering if somethingâs wrong with you, am I right?â
I swallowed and broke eye contact unable to bear his scrutiny; he saw too much, even as a human it was like he saw beneath the surface of everything.
âSo, you really were at a coffee shopâ¦â He reached out and touched my face. His fingertips were warm. âWatching humans hold hands, laugh, loveâ¦â
His head tilted to the side, not in a mocking way, almost like he was puzzled. Or maybe I was the puzzle. âTell me, did it burn?â
âWhat?â I croaked, how did he know?
âAfter the hollowness slices open your chest.â He moved closer to me, dropping his hand so that his body was almost pressed against mine.
âI used to call it the burn of wanting what I knew I could never have. Humans were created for partnership, companionship.â
âAngels, as you know, are the exact opposite. Thus, the burn, the feeling of being ripped in half.â
âYour Angel blood tells you itâs ridiculous, stupid even, to want what you canât have, and why it says, why want something so weak when you are who you are, what you are?â
His voice broke. âBut the human side of you⦠it longs. It desires.â His forehead touched mine.
âOh⦠it burns all right. It burns you from the inside out. And the darkness beckons during the burn, it calls.â
âDoes it ever go away?â I whispered, completely unnerved by our conversation. I had a sudden urge to itch my chest, to make the burn go away because even then my body was remembering it, like a thirst I couldnât quench.
He let out a long sigh then backed away from me, away from whatever private moment we were sharing. âIt can.â
âDid it for you?â
He froze, his hand midair as he was reaching for a light switch. âOnce.â
âWhen?â The air stilled around us. âWhen did it stop?â
Cassius hung his head.
âThe minute our lips touched, those brief seconds you saved me, touched me, joined with me. For those measly secondsâseconds of living a lifetime of a million lonely secondsâI was complete.â
I covered my face with my hands.
âLetâs go,â he said gruffly. âThereâs more to show you.â
He left the room.
But I was glued to the spot, unable to do anything except focus on breathing in and out.
I wanted to ask so many more questions. Was he angry at me because the only moment of peace heâd had was in my arms? Was that it? My heart clenched as rejection washed over me.
Of course.
Thatâs why heâd run offâhidden.
Maybe that was why he was being punished, because he did hide, he did run. And it was my fault.
Iâd made him want.
And now⦠he was forced to spend the next twenty-eight days with me. I guess the only positive out of the situation was that he was human. I had no effect on him.
Because if I did, heâd have already fallen.
Humans were weak.
Slaves to their emotions.
Dark One or not, in an entirely human state, Cassius wouldnât have stood a chance against me.
But he continued to do so.
Which made the rejection sting all that much moreâas a Dark One, I couldnât even entice him.
âStephanie,â Cassius barked from somewhere deeper in the house. âWe donât have all night.â
Scowling, I stomped after him. I could last the next three and a half weeks with him. I just needed to keep my heart on lockdownâjust like he was doing.
If a measly human could do it.
There was no reason I couldnât.