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When I didn’t move he sighed. “The least you can do is keep me warm.”

I leaned into his chest and pressed my back to the soft silk of his robe.

He tucked the blanket around us, leaving his arms free with the book resting on his thigh. Without a heartbeat to compete with, his deep voice resonated in his body.

Reciting a poem about a frosty lake, Tane droned on and on, until I lost the meaning of the words and heard only the rhythm.

My eyelids grew heavy as my warmth encompassed us.

Chapter Nineteen

Someone wrapped a curl of my hair around their finger then unwound it with a gentle pull, only to start the process again. I pressed my cheek into the soft silk of my pillow, but it didn’t budge and it didn’t feel stuffed.

Rubbing my face on the surface, I sensed a nipple under the material. I must be sleeping on Rurik again. When did he start wearing silk? The man would go around naked twenty-four seven if I let him.

In a languid stretch, I raised my arms over my head and rubbed my body against him.

He stiffened.

Not the response I expected. I opened my eyes to meet his clear blue ones except they stared at me from across the room.

My heart stopped.

I twisted to find Tane still in his red robe with a little drool stain on his chest where I had slept.

He gave me a crooked smile. “Sleep well?”

I wiped the corner of my mouth with the back of my hand. Some women awoke looking beautiful. I’m not one of those. As I checked my surroundings, I found Archios sitting in a chair next to Rurik. “Good morn—evening.” I cleared my throat. My curls moved on my head as if they had a life of their own. I’d gone to sleep after the bath without drying them. No makeup, drool on my face and a ball of blonde fuzz on my head—a picture of elegance.

“Good evening.” Archios shifted in his seat and couldn’t meet my stare. He wore a white dress shirt buttoned to his neck and gray slacks perfectly creased. A stack of files and papers sat on the table in front of him. He flicked at some imaginary dirt on his lap.

Rurik, dressed in black shorts and t-shirt, quirked an eyebrow at me while he leaned his chin on his hand. No anger apparent on his face or outraged rants after finding me with Tane again. Not happy, though. He didn’t bother to hide the hurt in his expression.

“You’re thinking too hard.” I offered him his favorite accusation and got rewarded by a small twitch of his lips.

“No, not thinking. Maybe feeling too deep.”

Tane shifted his weight behind me. “Archios has brought paperwork for you to sign.”

At the mention of his name, the vampire sat straighter. He plucked a folder from the table, opened the file and offered it to me with a pen, then turned to my lover. “I’ll need a copy of your passport as well, Rurik.”

“I have it in my luggage.” He started to rise from his chair as if anxious to leave the room.

Tane lifted his hand. “Don’t go yet. I wanted to finish discussing Colby with both of you.”

I snapped the folder shut. “What about Colby?”

Rurik sat forward, clasping his hands in front of him. “Tane saw him running through the jungle while hunting the assassin.”

“You invited him here last night.” I glanced over my shoulder. “He came to examine the body and where we found it.”

“A body?” Archios’ exclamation surprised me. I guess Tane hadn’t informed him.

Oops.

I heard my master sigh. “Rabbit and Gwen found a body in the jungle. An investigation team was asked to come.”

“I wasn’t aware of any of this, Master. Why not use our own people to take care of this problem?” I understood his confusion. It would be easier to have Tane’s werewolf force make the problem disappear.

“Can I trust all of them?” Tane plucked the file containing all my new bank information out of my hand and flipped through the pages. “My own home has a traitor.

Someone is trying to undermine my power and make me look weak.” His voice deepened and took a threatening tone, which made me scoot away from him on the couch. “These jackals in court are circling me like a wounded animal, but I will stick to our laws. No tolerance. Whoever is killing these humans will be brought to a public trial and executed.” He closed the file and set it on the side table then stood, resettling his robe.

“As for Colby,” he turned to me, “I saw him last night two hours after his team left my property. He carried a crossbow. I think my enemies are gathering to destroy me.”

“Really?” I couldn’t deny the possibilities. Colby hated Tane. “He wanted to kill me too?” That stung deep. We were never friends, however we respected each other. Ever since I left the team to be with Rurik, my relationship with Colby became strained, but I never would have thought he’d try to murder me. Even if the second arrow was a misfire, trying to kill Tane would mean my death too.

“Colby doesn’t know about your blood bond to Tane. He still thinks it’s between us.” Rurik, my voice of reason, offered this slight reassurance.

“Crap.” I leaned back into the sofa cushions and stared at the ceiling. Talk about conflict of interests. “Are you sure it was Colby?”

“No other person could have evaded me like he did. I hunted him until the dawn saved his ass.” Admiration for my former boss was apparent in Tane’s voice. “I can’t allow a wild card like him running around. There is too much at stake.”

“You should send your brothers out to hunt him,” Archios offered.

“They would kill him.” Rurik responded before I could.

Tane’s silence answered us.

I untangled myself from the blanket and rose to my knees on the seat cushion so I could touch Tane’s hand. “Don’t.”

He frowned.

“Everyone deserves a trial. Let him explain.” Who was this rational, calm person speaking? Oh yeah, me.

A stubborn set in Tane’s shoulders told me I hadn’t changed his mind. This vampire came from the eye-for-an-eye age, kill-first-ask-questions-later era.

“For me, please. Master.” I forced that title from my mouth. If Colby got proven innocent, I’d make my former boss pay. Otherwise, he’d get what he deserved.

Rurik’s eyebrows rose high enough to disappear under his bangs. I didn’t need to be psychic to read his thoughts when I called Tane my ‘master’.

“What do you suggest we do then?” Tane crossed his arms over his chest.

“We use bait.”

He barked a laugh. “You want me, I take it, to lure Colby into a trap.”

“What a brilliant idea.” Archios gaze glinted with interest. “He would definitely show up, but it would have to be away from the mansion.”

“Absolutely not,” Rurik added. “We can’t risk Tane. What if Luckard shows?”

I shook my head. “Let me finish. Using Tane would be obvious. Colby’s not stupid, he makes a living running these kind of operations. If he hasn’t already left town, he’ll be looking for information.” I glanced from Archios’ blank stare, to Tane and Rurik’s introspective ones. “I’m his go-to girl."

Rurik stared at me. “Do you have his cell number?”

“No, he’ll know the call’s a trap.” Tane rubbed his chin in thought. “We’ll use Rabbit’s idea. I’ll have a rumor spread tonight that she’s left Rurik. By morning, Colby’s contacts should hear about it.”

“How will he find me?” My heart raced. The irony that I was bait for the man who taught me how to lure vampires to their death wasn’t lost on me.