: Chapter 11
Fury Frayed
âIs there any chance I can sleep over tomorrow night?â Eliana asked.
I held the phone to my ear while muting the T.V., the current device to fend off boredom.
âSure. Why? Whatâs up?â
âHumans are going to start coming into town for the Fall Festival first thing in the morning. Iâd rather not be anywhere near that mess until the last minute. Plus, if I stay over, we can drive together. We need to show up around three.â
âAh. Yeah, itâs fine if you come over. Iâm running low on food, though. Would you mind taking me to the grocery store for some food after you get here?â
âNo problem. Talk to you after sessions tomorrow.â
I set the phone next to me and blindly stared at the TV. Nothing about the festival appealed to me. I knew myself well enough to know Iâd end up getting into trouble somehow. Yet, the restless boredom that kept crawling under my skin had me almost looking forward to it, trouble and all.
âObviously, I have issues,â I said before turning up the TV volume.
After I finished watching the current show, I shut everything off and went to bed. Just as I started to drift off, I heard something. It sounded like it came from above rather than below. I waited for it to come again, but the house remained quiet, and I eventually drifted off to sleep.
In the morning, I dusted the spare room, removed webs from the corners in the upstairs hallway, and washed the steps. Everyone thought having their own place was glamorous because no adult told them what to do. They didnât stop to think that meant there would be no adult taking care of the crap jobs like cleaning, laundry, yard work, and paying bills. The reality wasâ¦adulting sucked.
When I had the upstairs clean enough for Eliana to stay over, I started in on the downstairs. The kitchen didnât take much time because I kept up with it daily. Nothing had really been deep-cleaned in the living room, though. I pulled the couch into the entry along with the two chairs, the old oil lamp, and side tables. With the room mostly clear, I wiped the baseboards and mopped the wood floors. For the first time, the house took on a completely fresh scent. Rolling with it, I opened the windows.
Doing all that work helped cure a little of the restlessness and brought back Momâs words about exercise. I needed some kind of daily activity. A routine that would help keep me from going crazy. The money Mom had left could easily buy a treadmill, but I hesitated to use any of it for more than the basics. I had no idea if there were house payments Iâd need to make or what other bills might come with this place. Which was also why purchasing a car seemed like a bad idea. Not only would it be a chunk of money, it would also take me to places where there were people. Hitching rides with Eliana seemed smarter, for now.
Finishing the task at hand, I moved the furniture back into the room and went to read lecture notes for the current weekâs sessions.
The restlessness was back by the time Eliana pulled into the driveway, and I had my coat on before she reached the door.
âReady?â she asked when I met her.
âYep. Iâm going crazy here and have come to the realization that, as much as I seem to hate people, I need them, too.â
She smiled as she walked back to the car with me.
âItâs almost the same for me. As much as I fear what I want to do to people, I need them, too.â
âAnd, what do you want to do with people.â
Her blush answered me.
âOh, you sassy girl,â I teased. âI canât wait until you take the plunge and actually make out with someone.â
Her flushed face immediately paled.
âHey, kidding. It will be fine. Youâll see.â
She nodded, and we both got in. She didnât make any move to start the car, though.
âIâm sorry,â I said, feeling guilty that she still looked pale.
âItâs not that.â She exhaled heavily. âItâs this weekend. If I want any chance of leaving this place ever, I need to show some progress. I need to kiss a human.â
âSeriously?â
âYeah. Iâm so scared. What if I canât stop at a kiss? What if I jump them and take everything?â
âYou wonât. I wonât let you. Iâll tackle hug you to the ground like you did for me.â
She turned her big brown eyes on me.
âDo you swear?â
âI promise. And in return for interrupting any possibility of a booty call, Iâm hoping youâll do the same for me. Not the booty call part. Thereâs no chance of that. The fighting. Someoneâs going to piss me off big time, and I donât want to go to jail for kicking some grandmaâs ass.â
Eliana snorted a laugh and started the car.
âI swear to keep you from kicking granny booty.â
We waited until the last possible minute to leave for the festival. Even the weather seemed to know it wasnât a day for fun. The overcast sky and cool damp air hinted at storms before nightfall. None of it would stop the festival from taking place, though.
Eliana took her time on the country roads, unlike the day before when we went to town for groceries. I knew she was still terrified of what she needed to do today.
âWhat happens if we donât go?â I asked.
âWeâd fail our human relations sessions. Youâre in Principles of Human Integration, right? I think they put you there because youâve lived outside of Uttira for seventeen years. I had to start with the beginner course, and Iâm still there. Trust me when I say you donât want to hear the same lectures for more than one semester.â
âGot it. Not showing up is an automatic fail.â
âAnd for me, not kissing a human is an automatic fail.â Nervous energy rolled off her with those words.
âDonât think about it,â I said. âWe have all afternoon. When we get there, letâs just check out the booths and not worry about the humans. Okay?â
âOkay.â
The town was crawling with people. We had to park seven blocks from the actual downtown area.
Eliana looked pale again.
âItâll be okay,â I said. âWeâll stick together.â
She nodded shakily, and we got out and started walking. The wind toyed with my hair, using the ponytail like a whip.
Weâd barely reached the edge of the festival when Adira found us.
âGood afternoon, Megan and Eliana. I wish you luck. Eliana, the kiss isnât as important as much as the way you control your feeding. Do you understand? You must feed the way every succubus is meant to feed. No more denying yourself.â
Adiraâs gaze turned to me.
âToday is about control for you, too, Megan. Remember what we discussed in my office. Examine your anger before you give in to it. Ask yourself why, and see if you can discover a reasonable justification for your reaction.â
âAnd if I canât?â
âWeâll try again. I need to find Fenris now. Excuse me.â With that, she walked away.
I turned to Eliana, the snarky comment dying before it reached my lips. Not a trace of color remained in her ashen face, and tears welled in her eyes.
Grabbing her hand, I tugged her behind the nearest vendor booth.
âBreathe, El. You got this. Donât let what Adira said get in your head.â
âHow? She wants me to feed. Iâve never even kissed someone without feeding, and she wants me to do it with feeding?â
Color returned, but not the right kind. Her skin took on a greenish hue.
I grabbed her arms before her knees gave out.
âLook at me, El. Look. You know what you are. You know what to watch for. I know, too. I wonât let you do anything bad. Okay? Do you trust me?â
She nodded weakly.
âThen pucker up buttercup.â
Before she could guess what I intended, I pressed my lips to hers. She immediately stiffened but didnât jerk away. Since Iâd only ever had the one boyfriend, and not for very long, my little pool of experience didnât give me much to go on. I relaxed my hold on her arms and lifted one hand to gently cup her cheek. She exhaled softly against me and tilted her head. I felt the moment she started to feed. The ever so subtle stirring of lust in my belly caught me off guard.
âIâve died and gone to heaven,â a familiar voice said. Fenris. The sound of his voice acted like a bucket of ice water, breaking the spell of her kiss and the lust snaking its way through my blood.
âShut up,â Oanen said.
âHow can you not think thatâs hot? Iâm not even sure I can walk right now without breaking something,â Fenris said.
I gently pulled back and looked at Eliana. Based on the expression on her scarlet face, she looked ready to bolt. But not sick or ready to hurl. Mostly just embarrassed.
âAre you mad at me?â I asked.
Eliana shook her head.
âDo you feel like jumping me and taking the rest?â
âPlease say yes,â Fenris said under his breath.
I shot him a look, but he only held his hands up pleadingly. Beside him, Oanen watched me, the intensity of his gaze a contradiction to his impassive expression.
âNo, Iâm okay,â Eliana said, almost sounding impressed.
Focusing on her, and not our unwanted audience, I grinned at her.
âThen go try that with a human.â
âBoo,â Fenris pouted.
âAdira was looking for you. Why donât you go find her instead of tormenting us?â I asked, arching a brow.
âTormenting? No way. Iâm encouraging. I think itâs great that Elianaâs embracing what she is.â
I glanced at Eliana. She didnât look like she believed him; she looked like she wanted to fall into a hole. I wrapped my arms around her and hugged her close, letting her hide against my shoulder.
âAdira sent us to keep an eye on you,â Oanen said.
âSheâll be fine,â I said. âIâll keep an eye on her.â
âNot Eliana. You.â
âMe?â I looked at both of them over Elianaâs head.
Fenris nodded.
âWhy me?â
âAubrey,â Fenris said.
âYou like to fight,â Oanen said at the same time.
âSheâll be fine,â Eliana said, pulling away from me. âWeâre going to stick together. Iâll make sure Megan doesnât fight.â
Oanen shook his head and glanced at our joined hands.
âThatâs not going to help you do what you need to do, Eliana. You need to focus on yourself.â
An adult poked his head behind the booth. His forehead went from smooth skin to a third, scowling eye in a blink.
âYou guys need to find somewhere else to talk. Get going.â
Too stunned to protest, I followed Elianaâs insistent tug until we found ourselves on the main thoroughfare, weaving our way through the clusters of people. With her hand wrapped around mine, I barely felt the brief flares of anger. Being free of it meant that my other senses actually had a chance to work.
âDo you smell that?â I said, tugging her in a different direction.
âPumpkin pie?â she asked.
âIs that what that is? It smells so good.â I found the vendor booth where the ladies were taking slices of hot pie and putting them into to-go cups topped with a generous amount of whipped cream.
âOh, I need some of that,â I said.
Elianaâs chuckle died almost as quickly as it started. When I looked to see why, I found her staring hungrily at a guy around our age. The sheer look of torture on his face as he walked behind his parents begged for rescue. However, in a single glance, I knew he wouldnât be a good candidate for Elianaâs first feeding.
I tugged her to my side and whispered in her ear.
âNot him. Heâd fall hopelessly in love with you and follow you everywhere. You need a player. Someone whoâll kiss you and walk away.â
She took a slow breath and tore her gaze from him with effort.
âLetâs get some pie and walk around. Weâll find you someone.â
âHere,â Oanen said from beside me. I looked down at the pie-filled cups he held out.
âThank you.â I didnât hesitate to snatch mine and take a huge bite. The cup warmed my cool hand, and the pie tasted even better than it smelled. I groaned.
âYouâve never had pie?â Oanen asked.
âNot that I remember. Mom cooked, but she didnât bake,â I answered absently, doing my best to ignore our babysitters.
The crowd flowed around us as I took my second bite. Although there seemed to be a good number of families strolling around, I still spotted plenty of people our age wandering on their own. Eliana would have no problem finding someone with all these people. But, would she be able to feed with our shadows around.
The sudden urge to hit something sent my cup of pumpkin pie slipping from my fingers. Oanen deftly caught it, but I barely noticed. My gaze shifted to the man passing beside us, the source of my anger.
As I clenched my fists, Adiraâs words came back to me. What about him made me angry?
It took every ounce of control that I didnât think I had to study him instead of fly at him. Older. Physically fit. Neatly dressed. Alone. There wasnât anything that stood out as wrong. He walked far enough away that the anger faded. Instead of letting him leave and taking the non-encounter as a win, I started to follow him.
He made his way to the center square, where people lounged on the benches, and took a seat. Then he people-watched. That was it. I leaned on a pole not far away and scrutinized him.
âAre you okay?â Eliana asked softly beside me.
âNo. I want to make that man over there bleed, and asking myself why, like Adira said to do, isnât helping anything. Thereâs no logical reason that I can see. Heâs just a guy sitting there watchingââ
His gaze met mine. He gave me a slight smile, stood, then headed our way.
âHi, girls. This is something, isnât it?â
I wanted to hurt him so badly my hands shook. Elianaâs hand slipped under my shirt, and her fingers touched the skin of my back.
âIs this your first time here?â Eliana asked.
âIt is. You two from around here?â
âWe are,â I said, feeling more in control. âDonât let this fool you. Uttira is boring as hell.â
His grin widened. âThereâs nothing for two, pretty girls like yourselves to do around here for fun? Thatâs no good.â He took his wallet out and gave Eliana a card. It had a number on it. That was it.
âIf youâre ever bored enough and want to have some fun while earning some serious money, give that number a call.â
He moved like he was going to go back to his previous spot. Something told me not to let him walk away.
âI donât think we want to wait. Letâs have some fun now,â I said, thinking quickly. âMy friend and I were taking bets on you.â
âOh?â He looked amused and completely interested in hearing what I had to say.
âWe thought you were the kind of man willing to give a girl a kiss in public.â
âMegan,â Eliana whispered. That single word held so much worry. Her fingers twitched on my skin as I continued.
âObviously, I thought yes. She thinks no. I know of a quiet spot.â
âA quiet spot would be perfect.â
âThen follow us. At a distance.â I grabbed Elianaâs supporting hand and started walking.
âWhat are you doing?â she whispered harshly. âI canât kiss him. Thatâs so gross.â
âCan you feed without kissing?â I asked.
âI donât know. Maybe. Iâve never done this before. But the sexual energy coming off of him is so disgusting. Please donât make me do this.â
âYou donât have to. I just figured you could get a hit off someone who didnât really matter before I kicked his ass.â
âWhy are you kicking his ass?â
âMostly because I feel like it and partly because heâs a pervy old guy.â
âHe didnât do anything wrong, though. Just talked to us.â
âAnd gave us a card with a number and a promise of good work. Come on, Eliana. Nice people donât do that.â
We ducked behind one of the closed shops. Cars lined the back alley but remained empty of people except us.
âWhat happened to Fenris and Oanen,â I asked, for the first time realizing they werenât with us.
âTheyâre close. Watching but staying out of it unless it looks like you need them.â
The man walked around the corner.
âWell, girls. What did you have in mind?â
My rage knocked me blind for a moment. I breathed through my nose and fisted my hands.
âWhatâs wrong, Megan? You look upset.â He still sounded so calm. âI hope youâre not going to try to change your mind now. Guys donât like girls who go back on their word.â
Someone stepped in front of me, blocking my view.
âSheâs mad because I get to go first.â
Before I could push Eliana aside, she moved close to him and brought her hand to his cheek.
âWhatâs your name?â she asked. Her voice didnât sound like Eliana anymore, and that broke through the haze of anger.
His gaze heated as he stared down at her.
âJesse. Whatâs yours?â
âDoesnât matter.â She trailed her fingers over his skin. He groaned and closed his eyes. âWhat matters is what you want to do to me, Jesse. Tell me.â
He proceeded to tell her in great detail how he would use her body then sell her to the highest bidder. Gently used young women were in high demand. He couldnât promise gentle though because he ached for her.
âThatâs okay. Iâll help with that ache.â She pulled him down to her mouth. Instead of kissing him, she inhaled. From my standpoint, it looked like a backward attempt at mouth to mouth without the contact, until I saw her eyes.
Theyâd turned black again. The guy sheâd held didnât seem to notice, though. His eyes were rolled back in his head.
âEliana? I think you might need to stop,â I said. âNot that I really care, but he doesnât look so good, and I donât want you to be upset by that.â
She immediately pulled away with an âeep!â Like a puppet without its puppeteer, Jesse fell to the ground with a thud.