Chapter 142
Allure Of The Night
The following morning, Eve was woken up by the chirping of the birds that had perched near the trees of Vincentâs office. When she tried to stretch her body, she winced in pain as her skin that was healing didnât allow it. Pushing herself from the couch, she noticed the sunâs rays passing through the roomâs windows.
Vincent wasnât in the room, and Eve wondered where he had gone.
The last thing she remembered was Vincent drinking blood from her. Her hand touched her neck, recollecting the previous night. It felt like he had some sort of mental switch last night, and she had never seen him look at her like that before.
âFriends,â Eve muttered before rolling her eyes.
After a minute, Eve heard the key and door knob turn before the office door opened. Vincent stepped inside the room, and their eyes met. She wondered if all vampires perhaps lacked shame, which is why they didnât care about drinking blood from a male or femaleâs neck. Because Eve was still embarrassed at the memory of his lips sucking her neck.
Internally, Eve sulked in the corner of her mind for being touched by a man who wasnât her husband.
Though her employer appeared to be his usual self, Eve couldnât be entirely sure because she didnât know what had triggered the man yesterday. It was as if he had suddenly turned thirsty and had pounced on her.
âHowâs my breakfast doing?â Vincent questioned, with a twinkle in his eyes, and Eve looked at him wearily.
âLast night you almost killed me,â Eve accused him, her lips setting themselves in a thin line.
âYou are still breathing and talking. I wouldnât call it almost,â answered Vincent, and he placed a bag on the desk.
âI fainted while you drank my blood,â said Eve, and she could only thank her luck that she was still alive and the vampire hadnât sucked her dry.
âIf thereâs anyone to blame here, it is you,â remarked Vincent, and Eve frowned. âYou fainted because of exhaustion, not because I took your blood. You are a person with lack of experience here to claim I almost killed you, while I know exactly when a person is going to die. Donât be upset, I am sure you will come to learn in the coming days, to know what it means to be on the verge of your death. Take this,â he jerked his head towards the bag.
Eve looked at the bag and asked, âWhat is that?â
âClothes for you to wear. Unless you donât mind meeting the head council in here with your current attire,â Vincentâs eyes swept across the shirt and trousers Eve wore. âI am being considerate and you accuse me. I am hurt, Eve. Especially when we are friends.â
Eve stared at him for a few seconds before walking to the desk and picking up the bag. She offered a bow, âThank you for bringing me clothes to wear.â Just because he had a flippant attitude didnât mean she had to forget her manners along with him, thought Eve.
The dress that Vincent had brought for her was way more expensive than any of the clothes she had back home. It was a grey dress with a white inner skirt and scarf around her neck. The sleeves were long yet loose enough not to press on her wounds.
Once Eve was ready to meet the higher ups, they stepped out of the office and started to walk in the corridor. Unlike last night, when the corridors were empty, many people were walking back and forth now.
âWhere did you get the dress from?â
âThe mice and the birds helped me weave them. Would you like to thank them?â came Vincentâs sarcastic words and he said, âOne of my men bought it. This way your name will be cleared faster.â
âWhy do you say that?â
Vincent placed his hand on Eveâs back and smiled, âItâs how the world works, darling. I am sure even you know that well dressed people are often favoured more than the ones who have nothing and are easier to be blamed. It is what appeases peopleâs eyes.â
âThatâs horrible,â Eve was disappointed, and they walked past another council member. âDoes that mean people with no resources suffer and take the blame?â
âSuffer no, blame yes. Just like you heroically took the blame for Mr. Fowlerâs murder. Itâs just that it takes a little more time to get the innocent out,â replied Vincent.
âMy faith is dissolving,â Eve muttered, and on hearing this, Vincent chuckled.
âThis is why it is better to live your life on your own terms. Though the unfortunates lack that privilege and have to follow the herd,â stated Vincent. Eve didnât have to know who was the unfortunate one here.
When they approached the double doors made of dark wood, he said,
âKeep your answer clear and donât be scared. They will pick up on the change of your heartbeat, but you seem to know how to calm it during danger, donât you?â It was because Vincent hadnât been able to pick her heartbeat during the time in the dungeon, and he wondered how she had trained to do it. âLeave the rest to me.â
The two guards who stood at the door bowed and then pulled open the door for both of them to step inside. Eve, who had anticipated seeing a room with two-three people, was surprised to find that they had not stepped into a room but into a long corridor with a high ceiling.
A long carpet was spread to walk on, and on either side stood white pillars. They walked until the end, where a big window of a tomb shape was present. In front of the window sat six people, watching every step she placed on the floor. They were all men, and out of six people, one of them was a small boy.
Eve bowed her head, feeling their piercing stare.
âRaise,â said one of the councilmen there. âDo you know why you are here?â he questioned while staring at her with his gold eyes. The other five people who sat there were vampires, humans and another werewolf. And though they belonged to different kinds, Eve could tell by their looks that they all belonged to high-status and wealthy families.
Eve nodded and said, âYes.â
The man looked down at the parchment in his hand and said, âIt is mentioned that you were found near the corpse of Jones Fowler. Taken to the dungeon and stayed there for over twenty-four hours. And then Vincent Moriarty brought you out of the dungeon by breaking the protocols and killing the guards, before keeping you here in the council until now. Am I right?â
âYes,â Eve turned slightly nervous as these men were no common people sitting in front of her.
âIt looks like Moriarty needs to be subjected to disciplinary actions for breaking the code of conduct,â stated a man who had a thick moustache above his lips. He was a vampire.
âMore than me, your men are in need to be taught on how to handle a case and not find the first person to be guilty,â answered Vincent before adding, âYou have already spoken to the village head, who has cleared all the doubts you had earlier.â
âMr. Cripps will be facing strict actions and have already spoken to him, but we cannot overlook what you did. You could have informed us and taken up the signed seal to take the woman from there, but you decided to do what you want,â stated another man, who was a werewolf. âYou seem to hold a record when it comes to breaking the laws and rules set by your seniors. What were you doing in the dungeon?â
âIt seems like you want to call me the murderer,â said Vincent calmly, âIf you insist on knowing, I had my doubts that someone tipped the head guard to kill this woman to close the case, with all the blame on her.â
While the men continued to discuss, Eve felt some stare at her. One belonged to the small boy, and then was another man, who played with the beard on his chin in thought.
âI find it rather surprising that you, Mr. Moriarty, decided to visit the dungeon.â
âWe will discuss it later, Dave,â remarked the small boy, who sat at the centre.
Eve looked at the boy, who skimmed and scanned her with his red eyes. The boy spoke, âI am Clayton Turner, the head of this place. Ms. Barlow, can you tell us what happened that day?â
Eve nodded before starting to explain it to the person.
âOne thing is clear that the murderer is still on lose and we have only delayed our search,â said another person, who appeared young and had downturned eyes.n/o/vel/b//in dot c//om
Clayton raised his hand to silence the members from discussing. He said to Eve,
âHaving heard Mr. Cripps who was handling the case, the head villager who witnessed Jones Fowlerâs death