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I walked over to her dressing table, picked up a gold-backed hairbrush. ‘Alan Hinkley’s story about Melissa being killed by magic: I take it that was just so I’d check out her body for the spell?’
‘We thought the spell had been given to her.’ She watched the brush. ‘Only we weren’t sure how.’
Sliding the brush back onto the table, I asked, ‘What does the spell do?’
‘I don’t know.’
‘C’mon, Fiona,’ I gave her a sceptical look, ‘Declan must have told you.’
‘Maybe he did, but I don’t remember.’ Her voice trembled like an old woman’s. ‘Memory for me is ... difficult. Sometimes it is mine, more often it belongs to a stranger. Sometimes all my mind seesis the future. It is both my gift and my curse.’ Her pale brows creased. ‘If I know what the spell does, that knowledge is not mine at the moment.’
Mick patted her glove again.
I walked behind her chaise, lifted the edge of one curtain. Yep, I’d been right. No windows. ‘What did you seewhen you touched me?’
She twisted her head, straining to keep me in sight. ‘Without Declan, Ms Taylor, I would not be able to control my ability. Neither Patrick nor Seamus is strong enough to help me. I would very quickly go insane.’ She slumped down on the chaise. ‘When I touched you, I sawthat you would cause Declan’s death. I will not allow that to happen.’
‘So you decided that it would be much more convenient if I wasn’t around.’
‘It was nothing personal.’
‘Great!’ I snapped. ‘I can’t tell you how much betterthat makes me feel.’ I stalked towards the double doors, heading for the room beyond. ‘So how am I supposed to cause Declan’s death?’
Fiona struggled up, looking anxious. ‘The vampires are to Challenge each other over you. Declan would not stand down; it is not in his nature.’ She clutched at Mick for balance. ‘But he ca
My stomach twisted into a tight knot. That so was not the information I wanted to hear. ‘I can tell you now,’ I said, ‘I don’t intend to be anyone’s prize.’
‘I don’t think you have any choice in the matter,’ she said softly. ‘The future is decided.’
‘Something else you saw.’ I made it a statement rather than a question. Then I opened the double doors.
It was a bedroom. The rose and ivory décor continued right down to the rose silk sheets that covered the massive bed. The two vampires sprawled naked, their ivory skin gleaming in the rose-shaded lights on either side of the bed. Declan lay on his side, dark head pillowed on his arm, one knee drawn up. Next to him, lying on his front, arms and legs spread like a starfish, was one of his brothers, Patrick, I guessed. Somehow I couldn’t see Mick or Seamus sharing this little ménage à trois.
I knew they would rise close to sunset, but they were lying so still, that it seemed they were more than asleep ...
‘Please don’t hurt them.’ Fiona’s slippered feet scuffed over the carpet as she hurried to stand beside me.
‘Why would I harm them?’
‘You are angry.’ She cast a fearful look at the two brothers. ‘Hurting them will not change what will happen.’
‘What will then?’ I demanded.
‘I have lived a long time around vampires, Ms Taylor.’ She sighed. ‘When they want something, they usually get it. Fair means or foul. If they want you—?’ She gave a delicate shrug. ‘But I will keep Declan from the Challenge. I imagine that after it has happened your fate will be decided one way or another and you will no longer be a threat to us.’
‘When’s this Challenge supposed to happen?’
‘Tonight.’
My pulse jumped.
Turning to look at her, I said, ‘You know he’s not going to be very happy when he wakes up and finds you tried to kill me.’
‘This morning, I knew you weren’t dead.’ She clutched the edges of her negligée together. ‘I knew then I couldn’t change your future, but I thought that maybe I could change theirs.’
I narrowed my eyes. ‘How?’
She puckered her lips and blew a breath towards me. ‘Do you recognise the smell?’
A bittersweet scent drifted in the air. ‘No.’
‘She poisoned herself.’ Mick put his arm round her. ‘Nightshade.’
Fiona gestured at the two vampires. ‘They will feed once they wake. It will take some time for their systems to neutralise the effects. It should keep them here until the night is past.’
I blinked. ‘You’re going to feed them both?’
‘Of course.’ Her lips lifted in a small smile. ‘I always feed them on waking.’
‘Won’t they notice you’re unwell?’
‘Not until it’s too late.’ She leaned into Mick. ‘Mick will give me the antidote once they have fed.’
She looked ill enough that I thought Mick should be giving her the antidote right now.
I waved at the bed. ‘Declan lied to me.’
‘Did he?’ She frowned.
‘Melissa wasn’t a faeling.’
‘No, she wasn’t.’ Her voice carried faint confusion. ‘Did he tell you she was?’
I thought back. ‘Declan told me that Melissa had fae blood in her.’
‘She did,’ Mick broke in. ‘Bobby was always doing experiments, and we did one where he injected Melissa with my blood. Bobby said it was like she suddenly got somuch more attractive. That’s why Declan made her his spy. All of a sudden the vamps were round her like she was a bitch in heat.’
Now that was a nice image, not!
I stared down at the naked vampires. Declan may not have lied to me in words, but the magic didn’t always take notice of semantics, only intent.
A memory edged into me.
Matilde, my stepmother, raging at my father, screaming at him to stop.
My father, drenched in blood that smelled like sweet apples, his voice calm. ‘Genevieve gave me her word that she would not see the beast again.’ Gripping my arm, he forced my nine-year-old self to kneel on the ground. The blood was still warm and it squelched under my knees and soaked up into my nightie. ‘The waterhorse was a danger to us all. Now she will understand the result of her lack of honour.’ The sleek ivory body of the kelpie was almost unrecognisable, but for patches of skin that still gleamed like pink-stained moonlight.
My father hadn’t killed the kelpie; the local people had. They’d been frightened that the kelpie would drown them and steal their souls.
The kelpie would have left before they found him if it hadn’t been for me. I hadn’t seenhim again, but I had gone and talked to him—for the magic, that had been enough.
A noise beside me brought me back to the present.
‘Melissa wasn’t killed by magic,’ I said.
Fiona gasped. ‘How do you know? Have you seen her body?’
I turned to her. ‘I don’t need to. Melissa was killed just as the police have said: her blood drained by a vampire.’ I pointed at Declan. ‘Tell him that. And tell him I have honoured my side of the bargain. Now he must honour his.’
She frowned. ‘I don’t understand.’
‘Never break a bargain with a fae.’ I smiled, and it was bitter. ‘The magic always has its price.’
Mick gave me a sullen look. ‘Go away, Ge
I sighed. Fiona and Mick had confirmed what I’d already guessed, and if they did know about the spell, short of trying to beat it out of them, they weren’t going to tell me. I’d fulfilled my obligation, but I hadn’t learned anything really useful by coming here ... yet.
Was Fiona right about what my future held? There was only one way to find out.
I clasped her arm, just above her glove, skin to skin.
Mick shouted, clamped his hands round my wrist as Fiona’s eyes went wide, startled, her pulse jumping like a frightened animal under the thin skin of her throat. I held on tight, though Mick tried to pry my fingers from her flesh. She sagged, falling heavily to her knees, her mouth gasping like a waterless fish.
‘Please,’ she cried, her lashes fluttering on her cheeks, ‘no more.’