Gabriel dismissed his actions easily. “You are not less than I, Francesca. You have never been less. You saved lives and I took them. Who is the greater?”
Her slender arms crept up around his neck seemingly of their own accord. “You saved our people. You saved the human race. Not once, but decade after decade. It was your nature that allowed you to do so.” Her voice whispered over him, a soft sound of admiration, a seduction in itself.
The faint stubble on his jaw caught the silken strands of her hair as he rubbed his chin on the top of her head in a little caress. “You must feed, honey. You are drooping with weariness.” His coaxed her gently.
“Brice is right outside the door. They’ve given up on saving Thompson. He’ll be in any moment.” Her soft voice brushed his body like her fingers, producing a savage, unrelenting ache, but Gabriel kept himself strictly under control. She needed to be held, to be comforted, to be taken care of, not assaulted.
“Take what you need, I am quite capable of sustaining an illusion for humans.” There was a faint husky note in his voice, one that was aching and lonely, turning her heart over. He needed the intimacy of providing for her as much as she needed the nourishment.
Almost blindly Francesca turned her face into his throat, inhaled the spicy masculine scent of him. His heart beat strongly, in rhythm with hers. The blood ebbed and flowed in his veins calling to her, an enticement. The warmth of her breath against his skin heightened his pulse, tightened his body to such a painful ache, he clenched his teeth in response, his hand bunching in the thickness of her hair.
Her mouth moved over his skin, soft, sensuous, seductive. At once need slammed into Gabriel so hard it shook his entire frame so that he trembled with urgent desire. Her teeth scraped once over his pulse, her tongue swirled in a velvet soft caress. Gabriel’s fist tensed in her hair, pressing her closer to his suddenly heated skin. In response to his urging, her teeth sank deep, lancing him with white-hot lightning and a blue flaming fire that would never be quenched again. It was in his body for all time, in his mind, in the taste of his mouth, a fiery ache in his heart that danced in his very blood.
Warmth spread like thick molten lava. His heart was aching for her. It was not simply the physical demands of his body beating at him like a jackhammer, but something that went far deeper. The closeness of her mind, the right-ness of the way she fit against him, crawled inside his skin. He recalled the tears she had wept for a stranger, her courage in facing the monster that posed as a man, and realized she was far more than a body to sate his wild appetites and an anchor to keep him safe from the growing darkness.
He was aware of Brice in the hallway turning slowly to stare at the door with a frown on his face and suspicion in his mind. Brice would have to be handled carefully. But not too carefully. A slow smile curved Gabriel’s mouth, and there was little humor in it. He waved his hand and cloaked his body and Francesca’s so that they were invisible to the human eye. He built the illusion of Francesca leaning close to Skyler, whispering softly to her with encouragement. His clone was in the corner, giving the two women a semblance of privacy.
Brice pushed into the room, revealing something very close to fear in his eyes when he looked over at Gabriel’s clone. He glanced at Francesca talking so intimately with the teenager, and stopped himself from speaking. He glared at Gabriel, who smiled rather sardonically at him, arrogance etched into his classical Greek features. It annoyed Brice that the man was so good-looking, so tough. Gabriel’s rescue of Francesca made him look bad. He couldn’t afford to take a chance on breaking his hands. He was a doctor, for heaven’s sake.
Gabriel half closed his eyes as Francesca swirled her tongue over the tiny pinpricks in his neck to close them, savoring the moment, the feeling. She lifted her head, her gaze drowsy, sexy, satiated, almost as if they had made love. He bent his head and kissed her forehead gently, holding her close for one more heartbeat before reluctantly allowing her to slip away, to take the place of the clone in the chair by the bed.
“Thank you, Gabriel, I feel much better.”
From the corner he bowed, an elegant, courtly gesture as Francesca turned with a small, secret smile. Brice’s hands clenched into two tight fists. There was something different about Francesca, something he couldn’t quite put his finger on. She was more beautiful than ever, but it was something elusive. Something she shared with Gabriel.
“I must speak with Francesca about my patient,” Brice announced and then was annoyed with himself for sounding like a loud, defiant child. Abrasive. Harsh even. He made an effort to lower his voice. “Privately if you don’t mind, Gabriel.”
“Of course not.”
Brice winced at the purity and goodness in that voice, at such odds with his own. It was as gentle as a summer’s breeze, as soft as velvet.
Brice took possession of Francesca’s elbow and all but pulled her out of the room. Francesca tried not to notice the difference in the way the two men touched her, but it was impossible. “What is it, Brice? You’re upset.” She spoke calmly even as she removed herself from his grip.
“Of course I’m upset. I just lost a man who had absolutely nothing wrong with him. Except a crushed hand. It was pulverized. The bones were crushed like matchsticks.” It was an accusation and once more Brice realized he had raised his voice.
She lifted one perfect eyebrow. “I don’t understand what you’re saying. Skyler’s father died of a crushed hand? How strange. I didn’t know that was possible.”
“You know damned well it’s not,” he snapped. “He strangled. His throat swelled, was completely closed, just like that, for no apparent reason.”
“Are they going to do an autopsy?”
He raked a hand through his hair. She drove him crazy. She just didn’t get it. “Of course they’re going to do an autopsy. That isn’t the point.” He clenched his jaw. In his head he swore he heard Gabriel’s taunting laughter, low and amused. “It’s that man.”
“What man?” Francesca’s black eyes were wide and beautiful, entirely too innocent. Of course she wouldn’t know, she would never suspect anyone of wrongdoing.
Exasperated, Brice took a step toward her, wanting very much to shake her. At once he felt an oppressive malevolence gathering in the hall, thickening the air, the exact same feeling that had been in the room before Gabriel entered. Nervously Brice glanced at the door. He cleared his throat, jerked his head toward Skyler’s room. “Him.”
“Gabriel? Are you implying Gabriel had something to do with Thompson’s death?” Francesca sounded somewhere between outraged and amused. “You can’t be serious, Brice.”
“He crushed his hand, Francesca. Your Gabriel did that. Crushed his fist with one hand. I watched him do it and he wasn’t even straining. I never even saw him come into the room. He was just there. There’s something not quite right about him. His eyes. They aren’t human. He’s not human.”
Francesca stared at him wide-eyed. “Not human? As in what? A phantom? A ghost that flies through the air? A gorilla? What? Maybe he lifts weights. Maybe he’s strong because he lifts weights and his adrenaline was pumping. What are you saying?”
“I don’t know, Francesca.” Brice raked a hand through his hair again. “I don’t know what I’m thinking, but his eyes were not human. Not when he was confronting Thompson. He’s different.”
“I know Gabriel. I do. He’s perfectly normal,” Francesca insisted softly.
“Maybe you
knew
him. People change, Francesca. Something happened to him. Of course he’s no phantom, and he can’t fly, but he’s dangerous.”