Total pages in book: 134
Estimated words: 124479 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 622(@200wpm)___ 498(@250wpm)___ 415(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 124479 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 622(@200wpm)___ 498(@250wpm)___ 415(@300wpm)
Watching the Archive.
Watching Delphine’s workplace.
He circled through connecting alleys, approaching from an angle that would bring him behind the watcher without crossing open ground. The vampire remained fixed on the Archive entrance, attention so focused he did not notice the shadow moving through peripheral darkness until Bastien stood three feet from his back.
“You’re a long way from your territory.”
The vampire turned—fast, but not fast enough to mask surprise. Male, appearing mid-thirties, with sharp cheekbones and pale coloring that marked him as European-born before his transformation. Bastien had seen him once before, at a gathering of minor house representatives two years ago. House Chardon, if memory served. One of the nine houses that had voted against the Marchande-Levesque compact in 1847.
One of the five houses that had already lost members to the killer.
“Bastien Durand.” The vampire recovered quickly, his expression shifting to practiced neutrality. “What a coincidence.”
“There are no coincidences on this street.” Bastien kept his voice low, pitched to carry no further than the space between them. “Why are you watching the Archive?”
“I wasn’t—”
“You’ve been standing there for at least twenty minutes. Your position provides clear sightlines to the entrance and both visible windows. You haven’t moved except to avoid notice when pedestrians pass.” Bastien stepped closer, close enough that the vampire had to tilt his head to maintain eye contact. “I’ll ask once more. Why are you watching the Archive?”
The mark warmed steadily beneath his sleeve. Patient. Satisfied.
His forearm pulsed — not warmth this time, but recognition. He had been broadcasting, and this vampire had been receiving since he took his position on this street.
He knew where Bastien would appear because he had been waiting for precisely that appearance.
“House Chardon has interests in historical records,” the vampire said. “The Archive contains materials relevant to our family’s Louisiana holdings. I was simply observing.”
“You were observing a mortal woman who has no connection to your house and no knowledge of vampire politics.” Bastien let the statement land without question marks, without room for denial.
The vampire’s expression flickered. Not fear, not yet, but calculation—assessing threats, weighing options, considering how much truth to offer in exchange for safe passage.
“She works with you,” he said finally. “She has provided research assistance during your investigation. That makes her relevant to those tracking your progress.”
“Those tracking my progress.”
“Your mark ensures everyone knows where you are. Your meetings, your movements, your…” He paused, choosing words. “Your attachments. You’ve visited this building multiple times. You’ve walked her home after dark. You’ve—”
“I’ve conducted professional consultations with a research specialist.” Bastien kept his voice flat. “If House Chardon has concluded otherwise, House Chardon has concluded incorrectly.”
But the vampire smiled, and the expression contained knowledge that tightened Bastien’s chest.
“Professional consultations don’t require the expressions you show when you look at her. Professional consultations don’t require the attention you pay to her safety.” He stopped, reading something in Bastien’s posture that made the smile fade. “I’m not here to harm her. I’m here to understand.”
“Understand what?”
“Why you care about a mortal woman enough to make yourself vulnerable. Why someone who has maintained neutrality for over a century would develop attachments that could be leveraged.” The vampire’s voice carried genuine curiosity beneath the political calculation. “The houses are watching you, Durand. They’re watching everything about you. And they want to know what makes the fallen angel soft.”
The admission confirmed what Bastien had suspected since the mark’s behavior changed. Not merely broadcasting his location—broadcasting his vulnerabilities. His patterns, his priorities, his attachments. Every moment spent with Delphine had been observed, cataloged, analyzed for weakness.
“Tell your house that my professional relationships are none of their concern.”
“Is that what I should tell them?” The vampire’s eyebrows rose. “That the woman you watch over, protect, visit repeatedly despite the attention such visits generate—that she’s simply a professional contact? That the way you position yourself between her and any possible threat, the way you check the streets before walking her home, the way your attention fixes on her whenever she enters a room—that all of that is professional distance?”
Bastien moved before the vampire finished speaking.
His hand closed around the vampire’s throat, lifting him off the ground and pinning him against the brick wall of the adjacent building. Not squeezing—not yet—but holding with enough force to make clear how easily he could crush what lay beneath his fingers.
“Listen.” Bastien’s voice dropped to something barely above breath, words emerging with the weight of centuries behind them. “I don’t care what the houses think. I don’t care what they’ve observed. I don’t care what conclusions they’ve drawn about my attachments or my vulnerabilities or my capacity to be leveraged.”
The vampire’s hands gripped Bastien’s wrist, but he made no serious effort to break free. He knew what Bastien was. They all did.
“What I care about is this: if anyone from House Chardon, or any house, approaches that building again with observation in mind—if anyone follows her, studies her, positions themselves in her space without her knowledge—I will consider it an act of aggression. Against me. Personally.”