Her pupils dilated slightly, but her knees clamped together and she stiffened and then turned away. Her mind was battling with her body.
He relaxed back against the marble, willing her body to win the war. “I won’t touch you. I promise. The water is perfect.”
She looked at him over her shoulder, and he almost shouted “Hallelujah.” She was close. He knew it.
“I didn’t violate you last night at the hotel. I promise not to touch you now…”
She jerked around, leaving her back to him again. Her shoulders rose and fell with rapid breaths. So close.
“Unless you want me to.”
Her breathing stopped. He had no doubt she craved his touch, but he also knew she was stubborn and scared. Her world had changed completely in the last two days. He wished they could have met under different circumstances—just a man and a woman with no barriers between them.
“And if I don’t want you to touch me?” she whispered, still facing away.
“Then I won’t.”
She swiveled to face him. “I don’t.”
Liar. “Very well.”
She set the tray down and stood, clutching the top of the towel wrapped around her. “Please turn around.”
“You didn’t.”
Her face flushed red.
God, she was beautiful. He almost couldn’t stand it. He had to find a way to help her—to save her from her fate. Hell, to save him from her fate. There had to be a way to trick biology. He turned away to give her privacy. When he heard the gentle splashing as she entered the water, he almost groaned. When he met her eyes, he did.
A startled look crossed her face, and she slumped lower in the water until the bubbles were up to her neck. “You promised.”
Unsure of how his voice would come out at that moment, he simply nodded.
“This tub is like a swimming pool,” she said after a few moments. “Huge.” She ducked under, and he offered her a washcloth when she surfaced. She wiped her face. “Exactly what is…um…?” She pointed with her thumb to the door.
“Stefan Darvaak?”
“Yeah, Stefan. What is he?”
“A pompous asshole.”
She wiped her hands on the cloth and grabbed a piece of cheese, exposing the side of her breast as she did. Nikolai let his head fall back against the tile with a thud.
She settled into the water. “Seriously. He’s not a Slayer, obviously. And he’s not a vampire. What else is there?”
Nikolai closed his eyes to prevent going crazy at the sight of her. “You name it, it’s out there. Conjurers, sorcerers, channelers, vampires, shifters, Banshees, Skin Jumpers, demons of all kinds, and even Time Folders like Stefan Darvaak.”
“Time Folder,” she repeated.
Something brushed his lip, and he sat up and opened his eyes with a start. She smiled and waved the piece of cheese. He opened his mouth, and she dropped it in, pulling her fingers away before he could suck on them again.
“So what does he do?”
He shrugged. “Besides piss me off? He makes an obscene amount of money.”
She rolled her eyes. “Why is he called a Time Folder?”
“Because he folds time…if you pay him enough.”
She sat forward, and for a moment, he thought her breasts would rise above the bubbles. Correct that. He hoped they would, but they didn’t. God, he wanted to touch her. She was only a foot or so away from his hands—and other parts of him for that matter.
“He folds time. What does that mean?” Her color had returned, and she sounded more like the Elena he enjoyed. The feisty one that had had told him to kill her then and there because she would not go with him. Thank goodness he hadn’t and she had.
“It’s hard to explain, but he can manipulate time and travel back via limited parameters to observe. It’s very useful to the Slayers. He can be an eyewitness to crimes.”
She scraped some hair from off her forehead. “It’s a good thing I’m not going to be around long because I’d never get this stuff straight.”
He leaned forward. “What do you mean, ‘not be around long’?”
She grabbed his shoulder, desperation clear in her touch and expression. “You have to promise me something: Don’t let me become one of those creatures. I can’t live like that. You have to promise to use that sword and end me before it happens.” A tear ran down her cheek, and he brushed it away with his thumb. “Promise me,” she insisted.
He shook his head. “Humans don’t just change over into vampires. They replicate by killing humans, draining their blood, and replacing it with some of their own. You were born of one, not bitten and turned by one. It’s unprecedented.”
“Promise, Nikolai, or I’ll kill myself before it happens.”
Seeing her fear made him ache. If a promise would make her feel better, he would give it, even if there was no way he could carry it out. He reached under the water and grabbed her ankle, then gently tugged her closer from her side of the tub. “I promise you, Elena Arcos, I will kill you.”