Chapter 20
Taint (Formerly Claimed) Dark Midnight 1
*If this chapter doesn't make sense in any way, please let me know. Â I had a bout a billion people distracting me as I tried to edit/write this and I wouldn't be surprised if something got effed up.
As always, thanks for reading!*
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âHey!â
Miriam jumped. Eliot flinched.
They sprung apart as harsh beams of a flashlight stung through the branches. Heavy footsteps crunched over the snow in their direction, and Miriam turned just in time to catch the burly figure of a cop staggering from between the trees.
âI said,â he panted as he came closer, waving the flashlight. âWhat the hell are you two kids doing out here?â
Miriam blinked, giving Eliot enough time to maneuver his way in front of her, blocking her view.
âWe were walking,â he said in a polite, casual tone.
He sounded so sure. It could have been the truthâthat they, two teenagers, had just gone for a nice soothing walkâ¦
Through the aftermath of a winter storm.
That little detail kept the lie from being believable, and though Miriam couldnât see his face, she could tell that the police officer was skeptical.
âIn the snow?â
At the brusque tone, anyone else would have faltered.
Eliot just shrugged. âShe wanted to see if it felt like being inside a snow globe,â he explained on a bit of laughter. He sounded amused, like someone indulging a girlfriend; hahaha, you know how girls areâ¦
âThat true?â The cop demanded.
Miriam figured that only she caught the way Eliot's eyes cut to her in a way that said better than words; play along.
Slowly, he moved to stand by her side as the officer turned his focus on her.
"Is that true, young lady?"
âMmmm.â She nodded stiffly. âI thought all the snow lookedâ¦pretty,â she almost had to force herself to say the word, âfrom my bedroom window.â
âPretty?â The officer, a man with dark hair and a graying beard, gave her a sour look, but with a sigh, he lowered his flashlight.
âDonât you kids know what happened out here, last night?â He demanded, exasperated.
Miriam couldnât help it. Her eyes darted to Eliot, who looked utterly smooth and in control as he uttered an innocent, âno officer. What happened?â
His voice didnât even crack. His gaze didnât waver. He looked like the pure definition of truth, and Miriam might have laughed if she wasnât so uneasy.
It took practice to lie like that, she couldnât help thinking. Years and years of practiceâ¦
âThere was a murder last night,â the officer explained, almost angrily, cutting into her thoughts. âSomeone was killed.â
While Eliot seemed to be the reigning champ at lying, Miriam wasn't too bad at it either. Â She didnât even have to fake her fear as she stared at the cop with wide eyes.
âM-murdered?â
Rather than elaborate, the officer eyed her as if seeing her fully for the first time. Suspiciously, he turned to Eliot.
âJust where to you two kids live?â
Eliot didnât miss a beat. âOver there,â he said, pointing over his shoulder. âThose two houses. Weâre neighbors,â he added.
Miriam had to fight to keep from flinching at thatâshe didnât think it would be wise to mention that they were only âneighborsâ as of yesterday night.
She also didnât think that his habit of breaking and enteringânot to mention stalkingâwould go over well with the cop either.
So, she kept her mouth shut and let Eliot do the talking as the officer pulled a small notepad from his pocket.
"I didn't think anyone lived here," he grumbled, flinty eyes sharp. He jotted something down on his pad and glared from her to Eliot. âNames?â
âEliot Marexsson,â Eliot said without missing a beat, âand Miriamâ¦â
It was a cold moment before she realized that he didnât know her last name.
Though it was incredibly stupid to at the present moment, she still couldnât help but feel a bit smug at that.
So Mr. Perfect didnât know everything.
âSpriller,â she blurted as the copâs gaze began to narrow. âMiriam Spriller.â
Without a word, the cop added another line of scribble down on his notepad, and Miriam couldnât keep from fidgeting as her eyes caught sight of two more police cars zooming down the road.
They had to of had half the task force out here, by nowâwhich said along when you factored in the heavy snow storm...
They had finished setting up the tape, she saw, and now they just stood in a huddle, speaking in hushed voices.
âWhat happened?â She asked without thinking. âI was here all night. I didnât hear a thing...â
Though that wasnât much of a stretch, considering that she had spent a majority of the night curled up in the corner of the room with her baseball bat clenched in her fists.
âMe neither,â Eliot pitched in, though this timeâ¦she couldnât help thinking that his voice sounded a little too forced.
As if he really wasnât too concerned, but was just trying to pretend that he was.
As if he had a damn good idea of just what had happened and didn't need any explanation.
The officer didn't answer.
âYou kids get back home,â he said on a sigh as he tucked the notepad pack into his pocket. âItâs not safe out in these woodsâespecially with all this snow.â
He waved them off and turned around, but not before Miriam caught sight of the look in his eyes. As if he were hiding something.
âWaitââ
She took a step after him, but Eliotâs firm grip on her arm held her back.
âYou really donât know when to quite while your ahead?â He mused quietly.
Miriamâs head jerked up, eyes latching onto his, but all she saw in them was amusement.
Those red eyes sparkled as he gazed over her head toward the milling officers, but the set of his jaw made him look like a stone statue.
âI doubt he would have told us much anyway,â he muttered. âWith it being an open investigation and allââ
He broke off as Miriam wrenched her arm away and took a step back.
Even though heâd only touched her through the sleeve of her coat, she still felt an icy chill that went deep down to the bone. But notâ¦physically, if that made senseâit went deeper than that.
Like being shocked by lightning.
Or burned...by ice.
âD-didnât anyone ever tell you how rude it is to man-handle people?â She snapped if only to hide her reaction.
The anger might have seemed a little more convincing if her fingers werenât trembling as she absently rubbed the spot on her arm heâd touched.
Eliot shrugged and crossed his arm over his chest. âNo.â
âW-well, itâs rudeâ¦â Miriam blinked, and tried her hardest to ignore just how brightly his eyes glimmered in the dark of the woods.
Like rubies, or embers, or some other kind of precious gemâ¦
They were beautiful...
Stop it, she told herself. His eyes were beside the pointâthe main one being that, with his massive body, once again he was currently blocking her only exit.
Somehow he seemed to realize this. He glanced around toward the police who ignored them, to her house sitting what seemed like a ways away on top of that narrow hillâ¦
Then, that gaze roved slowly to her, pressed back against a stupid tree.
He took a step closer.
And then another.
And anotherâ¦
Until he blocked her in completely.  Until he was close enough to touch.  Or push away, she thought sternly.
So close, she could feel the icy cold that wafted from him again. Colder than even the chilly wind nipping at her bare skin.
Those red eyes sparkled as he leaned downâjust enough to make her flinch. Enough so that he had no trouble reaching down, with those pale fingers to graze past her neck.
âYou should have called for help when you had the chance,â he said in a low murmur.
The words should have been threatening, but Miriam could only stare, heart pounding, as he reached upâbrushing so close past her skin she could almost feel the whisper-light touchâto finger a loose curl of her hair.
The motion was so odd she blinkedâ¦but his hand was still there. Playing with a lock of her hair.
The brown strands almost looked like gold against his pale skin as he rubbed them absently between his fingertips.
Onceâ¦
Twiceâ¦
It was almost mesmerizing watching him.
He caught her stare, and those amber eyes held hers captive for merely a second. Then, very deliberately, he slipped the curl behind her ear.  So quickly he didn't even touch her skin.
âYouâd make it too easy,â he muttered, almost to himself.
But she barely heard him.
Her eyes were on his chest, firm beneath his sweaterâ¦and eerily stillâeven though she could feel hers heaving like mad beneath her coat.
But no matter how long she stared, his chest didn't move. Â Not once.
Waitâ
Even as she blinked and leaned closerâ¦
Nope, it still wasnât moving.
He could be holding his breath, she thought frantically, but a part of her didnât buy it.
He had to be breathing as his eyes held hers for a moment longer before breaking away.
He had to be breathing as he turned away without another word, leaving her alone at the edge of the woods.
Even though he was colder than ice and his chest wasnât moving, he still had to be breathingâ¦
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The basement of Alazzdriaâs house was home to all sorts of interesting objects that must have been left behind by the past tenants. Â Trapped in this old house, they must have gathered dust for years...
There was an old-fashioned bar in the far corner, on top of which several silver candlesticks gleamed beneath sheets of cobwebs. Anotherâirreparably brokenâpiano stood by a high window.
There was a stack of wooden chairs leaning against the staircase.
And, in the center of it all, two, sleek black coffins had been laid neatly on the remains of an old rug.
Eliot had waited patiently until sundown. Until he could barely feel the prickle of daylight upon his skin.
Only then did he go down into that makeshift crypt and kick the lid off the nearest casket.
Thud!
Without hesitation, he reached inside and dragged the half-slumbering body out onto the faded Persian carpet.
âBloody hell, Eliot,â Sage grumbled as he rubbed his dark eyes. âIs there a reason for this rude awakening? Itâs not even midnightââ
Digging his nails into the pale flesh of the other vampireâs shoulder, Eliot ignored him.
âDid you do it?â He snarled. He was surprised by how harsh his own voice sounded. Acidic.
Even Sage flinched, though his mouth curled up into one of his characteristic cocky grins.
âIâve done a lot of things in my lifetime, Eliot old, boy,â he quipped.
He barely got the last word out before Eliot slammed his head against the coffinâs edge.
Crack!
A thin line of blood dribbled down the side of Sageâs chiseled jaw.
âDid you do it?â  Eliot demanded.  He didnât know why he was so angry. Why a burning rage prickled down his spine.  Or why he had the sudden urge to march over to those wooden chairs by the steps and break off a nice long piece.
Perfect to run Sage through with.
âMind if you at least let me in on my crimes, here?â Sage asked, casually. âIt gets so hard to keep them straight.â
He shrugged his slender shoulders, even though Eliot gripped them so tightly he could easily break an arm if he wanted.
Gritting his teeth, Eliot stood back, but not before shoving the other vampire hard against the floor.
âDid you attack her?â
His own choice of words startled him so badly he might have stumbled to the bar and collapsed into one of the ancient stoolsâif he wasnât sure that Sage would have used that time to run him through with something sharp.
So he kept standing, even as his throat went dry.
Sage watched him, black eyes innocently wide. âAttack who? Damn it Eliot, weâve only been here for a day.â
Eliot wasnât fooled.
Sage had done much, much worse when left off his leash for even a minute.
Little Miriam was more lucky than she even knew...
âThe girl,â he snarled. âThe one in the house beyond the hillâDid. You. Attack. Her?â
Sage grinned wickedly and rubbed at his forehead, even as the bleeding gash along his temple healed in the blink of an eye. âRefresh my memory.â
Eliot took a step forward, lip peeling back from his upper teeth. He could feel his fangs slip down to press against his bottom lip.
âThe girl, Sage,â he growled. âWith brown hair. Home alone.  Pale,â he added, thinking of that smooth, white throat...
"Hmm."  Sage wiggled his eyebrows. âTry to be a little more specific. I have terrible memory, you knowâ¦â
âI know you were thereâI could smell you," Eliot hissed. Â His fingers curled into fists, but even as he fought the urge to smash one into Sageâs perfectly smug face, another thought caught him off guard.
âButâ¦you didnât feed from her...â
Which just didn't make sense, because Eliot knew that feeding was the vampireâs sole purpose for seeking her out in the first place.
Sage never liked to play a game he couldnât win.
ââ¦Why?â
Sage casually leaned back against the floor and bit his lip thoughtfully. There was a lethal gleam in his gaze now. His fangs sparkled in the waning light filtering in from the room's only window.
He had dropped the innocent act.
âOh you mean her,â he said, sounding almost bored. âThe girl with tainted blood.â