Santiago tightened his fingers on his sire’s throat. “Now take me to Nefri.”
“Yes.” With a visible effort, Gaius lifted his hand to cover the medallion around his neck. “Hold on tight.”
Santiago scowled. “Why?”
“The medallion,” Gaius rasped. “It will take us to Nefri.”
“Wait,” he commanded, glancing toward the wide-eyed witch. “Tell Styx what happened here. . . .”
His words were lost as blackness surrounded him and they were being catapulted through a rift in space.
Mierda.
Chapter 28
It was a gross understatement to say that Roke’s patience was strained. It was, in fact, hanging on by a very slender thread.
Which was why it was no surprise that it snapped the second he heard Santiago’s roar.
It wasn’t that he didn’t believe Sally’s soft whispers in his mind (her ability to reach him telepathically was astonishing since it was a rare talent that usually only manifested itself between pairs that had been intimately bonded for centuries).
He fully believed that the spirit was capable of taking command of a vampire. And he equally understood the logic of keeping the creature contained by shutting him off from available hosts.
But logic was no contest against the instincts of a newly mated vampire, and the need to get to Sally was a force that wasn’t going to be denied.
No matter what the consequences.
He stepped forward, ignoring Styx’s grim presence. Jagr had taken the Ravens to circle the warehouse, making sure nothing could escape, and Levet had thankfully remained at the lair with his odd demon friend. But it wouldn’t have mattered if they’d all stood between him and his goal.
He was getting to Sally.
Now!
He swung his arm, hitting the brick wall with enough force to make the entire building shudder.
“Dammit, Roke,” Styx growled. “You said that Sally warned us not to enter.”
“To hell with that,” he muttered. “I’m done waiting.”
“But . . .” Styx reached to grasp his wrist before he could widen the crack he’d just created in the wall. “You’re going to bring the entire building down on our head.”
Roke yanked his arm free, his fangs throbbing and his temper threatening to explode. “I don’t care what I have to do. I’m getting into that room.” His eyes narrowed. “Got it?”
“Yeah, yeah, I got it,” Styx muttered. “Stand back.”
Lifting his leg, Styx used his Sasquatch-size boot to kick the center of the door. Steel screeched in protest, but with two more kicks the stubborn door at last twisted off the frame, and before Styx could open his mouth to protest, Roke was leaping through the wreckage.
He had a brief glimpse of Santiago holding on to a vampire, or at least he thought it was a vampire—the pathetic male looked more like a rotting zombie. Then, just as he began to move across the floor, the two vampires simply disappeared.
Ignoring the bizarre vanishing act, Roke’s attention honed in on the tiny female who stood near the safe hidden behind the crumbling wall.
The tightness in his chest eased at being able to see her and catch the sweet scent of peaches. But the driving fury at the knowledge she’d been stolen from him, snatched from beneath his very nose, had him storming forward, not halting until he’d wrapped his arms around her slender body.
“Are you hurt?”
“No, I’m fine,” she said, but her voice quavered and her body shivered with the terror she’d been forced to endure.
“I swear, I’ll kill that bastard,” he snarled.
Her hand lifted to his chest. “Roke.”
He gave a low growl as he sensed she was about to pull away, burying his face in the curve of her neck.
“Don’t move.”
“What are you doing?”
Like he knew? He was running on a primitive impulse and gut need.
“Just . . .” His hands ran a compulsive path down the curve of her back. “Give me a minute.”
Styx cautiously moved to stand at their side, leaving enough space not to set off Roke’s possessive fury. No doubt he sensed that Roke was on a hair trigger. Or maybe it was his bared fangs that gave it away.
“Tell me what happened,” he said to Sally.
She gave another shiver and Roke tightened his arms around her, his head lifting to watch his Anasso with a feral warning.
“That creature—”
“Gaius?” Styx asked.
Sally nodded. “Yes, although it wasn’t really him. He was being controlled by something inside him.”
Styx glanced toward the safe just visible through the jagged hole in the wall. “He brought you here to get the book?”
“Yes.”
“Why?”
“It can harm him.”
Roke glanced down at her in surprise. “A book?”
She grimaced. “That or the magic in the book.”
Styx matched her grimace, shifting uneasily. Roke sympathized with his king. Any vampire would rather fight an entire tribe of trolls bare-handed than deal with magic.
“Why you?” Styx abruptly asked.