The sound of his name stabbed me. “Rurik’s dead.” I could barely hear my own whisper.
“Really? How?” Tane stood so close if he took a deep breath he’d touch me.
“Dragos attacked his home last night.”
“You saw him dead?”
“No, but his ashes were everywhere.”
“The ashes. How interesting.”
“We made a deal.”
He turned his back to me and returned to his seat. “And?” The vial looked small in his hand as he lifted it to examine the contents.
“Is your word worth nothing?”
“My word? Now there’s an old concept. I also remember the part of the deal which you’re not to tell anyone I hired Colby.”
“I didn’t”
“Liar. You told him not to trust his source, may as well have told him. You sent him straight here and I’m going to keep him.” He grinned at me, his fangs glinted in the dim light. “Unless you want to make another agreement. One that you will keep.”
Red was right. This plan sucked. What other choice did we have? I didn’t know what to do. Making another deal with Tane, my personal demon, seemed suicidal.
“What do you want?”
“I need you to agree to do it before I tell you what it is.”
“Absolutely not.”
“Very well, but listen to what I have to offer first.” He leaned forward with his elbows on his knees. “I will give you Colby.” His black soulless stare pierced me from across the deck. “And I will give you back your Rurik.”
“What? How?” My heart raced at the thought. Could Tane be so powerful to resurrect the dead?
“Rurik lives. Those weren’t his ashes.”
The world spun. He lived. I could have cried if I had any tears left. My legs gave out and nausea boiled in my gut. I found myself sitting on the deck with Tane holding my head between my knees.
“If you vomit on my boat all deals are off.”
I swallowed.
Tane released his hold on my head so I could sit. He settled himself onto the deck next to me. “Those ashes belonged to two of my men. Rurik killed them before we subdued him. They turned to ash with the sunrise.” A ring on his little finger caught my attention. He lifted his hand for me to see. It was the Budapest Overlord’s ring. “My reward from Dragos for Rurik. The city’s mine now.”
“He thought you were his friend. No matter how hard I tried to convince him he wouldn’t believe me.”
Tane’s eyes widened. “I am his friend. If I wasn’t would I bother giving you the chance to rescue him? I could have just offered you Colby but I’m generous enough to offer both.”
“For a price.” With a friend like Tane, I had to wonder how Rurik ever survived.
“Of course.” He chuckled. “You mistake me for a modern vampire. A post-Christian one, maybe? I may enjoy some of Rurik’s philosophies but at heart I’m still Dragos ’ kindred.” An amused grin spread across his face as he leaned back and looked at the stars. “Do you truly love him as a man or does it border closer to worship?”
“He’s not a god. I love him as a person.” More than I probably should after only a few days.
“But he’s not.” He glanced at me. “We used to be. Once again you find yourself in a position of choice. You could stay here on the boat and ride out the oncoming storm or you can cast yourself out on the mercy of the waves.”
“Or I can build my own damn ship and conquer the storm. I won’t give up on Rurik. We’re in love.”
“Yes, oddly you are. You’re not his type, he usually likes happy women. You’re so raw and sore inside. You broadcast your pain to every vampire around you. ‘I ache and grieve. Kill me. ’ To most you’re a gourmet meal.”
I was speechless. Embarrassed. Mortified. His words described what I’d felt when I arrived in Budapest but Rurik changed all that.
“You didn’t know?”
“No.”
“Beautiful.” He chuckled. “He’s so beautiful.”
“Who?”
“Colby, of course, the way his mind works. The way he hunts us so efficiently, using someone that broadcasts like you as bait. Marvelous. You never wondered why most vampires were drawn to you?”
“No.” I thought I was just easy pickings. How naïve. I ground my teeth in frustration. None of this mattered. It might have yesterday. Tane was the king of deceit, he told me this to hurt me, to make me angry at Colby. Yet, he’s expressed his admiration of Colby many times. Did he have a crush? I shivered. Maybe he wanted me to hate Colby enough to leave him behind?
I wouldn’t leave my worst enemy with Tane.
Even his confession of Rurik’s captivity made me suspicious. I kept this news foreign to my heart to protect what was left. Hope made me more afraid than dealing with my demon. I wouldn’t survive if Tane lied and I’d allowed myself to embrace the giggle of joy fluttering in my chest. I’d take any chance though to be reunited with my vampire lover, no matter how slim.
“Doesn’t matter why Colby hired me, it’s the past. Rurik’s my future, I’ll take the deal. What do you want in return?”
“What I’ve always wanted.” He turned to face me, the earlier amusement replaced by a somber expression. “Dragos dead.”
Chapter Twenty-Four
A sharp bark of laughter detonated from me. “You want me to kill Dragos? Maybe you’ve had one too many martinis. Have you looked at me? I can barely row a boat.”
“Yes, your lack of physical prowess has crossed my mind.” Tane stood and gestured me to sit with him on one of the white leather couches. “Fortunately, this doesn’t require skill or I would have done it myself. My plan needs bait, someone who meets Dragos ’ tastes.”
“Someone who broadcasts like me, you mean.”
“It’s why Rurik chose you at the club. Dragos expressed an interest in you when he’d seen you at the hot springs. We needed someone he wanted to feed on.”
One shock after another, Tane didn’t hold back on his info punches. “You were both working together to kill him then?”
“We’ve been allies in this for decades. Killing such a powerful Nosferatu takes careful planning. I’ve walked a fine line to remain close to our Magistrate for a long time and it’s grown thinner since the party.”
“But Rurik drugged me before he even asked me to the party, never even gave me a chance to refuse to accompany him. Why? How would that become an assassination attempt?”
“The drug in your system interrupts psychic abilities, both human and vampire. It decreases response time and thought processes, then the victim is easy pickings. The key is to get him to ingest it.”
“So you want Dragos to feed from me. Why not spike his drink?”
“He doesn’t indulge, not with drinks anyway.” The way he trailed his eyes down my body explained what Dragos might want from me.
“Rurik made a deal with me at the party. If I allowed Dragos to feed he’d protect me from him drawing too much. Can you offer the same?”
Tane scratched his chin. “I don’t see how. The party was a unique opportunity. There was a lot of public feeding. Who knew Colby’s team would be so resourceful and almost kill Rurik instead. I could have staked myself. We were so close and I screwed up by hiring competent slayers.” His fist hit the table and rattled the pitcher, it echoed over the water. “Then he falls in love with you, the imbecile. This time there can be no mistakes. You’ll have to take the chance he won’t bleed you out on his first bite. If you fail, not only do you die, but Rurik too.”
He retrieved the drug vial from the table.
“You want me to drug myself and let Dragos feed from me.” I’d felt terror before, especially these last few days, but not this bone-deep knowledge that I wouldn’t live through this. “Then what?”