Doomsday Brethren, Book 04: Entice Me at Twilight (26 page)

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Authors: Shayla Black

Tags: #Romance, #Fantasy, #Fiction, #Contemporary, #General

BOOK: Doomsday Brethren, Book 04: Entice Me at Twilight
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“But you’ve had … dozens? Hundreds?” She flinched. “Thousands of women? I’m not glamorous or sexy or—”

“Not sexy?” he snarled. “Damn it, I have no words for how incredible the sex between us is. I only know that I want more of you and that won’t change. Ever.”

“You think that now, but what if your feelings don’t last?”

He glanced upward, tense, grappling for patience. “If someone didn’t break your heart, what the hell happened?”

Felicia drew in a trembling breath. A refusal to answer sat on the tip of her tongue. She didn’t share Deirdre’s story with just anyone. The pain was too personal, too sharp.

Simon sent a concerned glance at her, and the sincerity on his face made her pause. He had sacrificed so much to save her. He’d risked family dissension, caused a scandal, given up his magical bachelorhood. He’d whisked her from danger twice, and hadn’t asked her for half as much, merely for answers. And he was right; she did feel something for him. Those feelings grew by the minute, both warming her and scaring the hell out of her. How could she deny him?

She clasped her hands in her lap and squeezed tightly so he wouldn’t see them shaking. “The Saffords adopted me when I was five. My father was a barrister, like Mason. My mother was a self-absorbed socialite who looked forward to club luncheons and galas. I suppose they married because
he was wealthy and she was good arm candy. I don’t know if his firm frowned on the fact that he had no children or if they thought children would save their marriage. My mother didn’t want to ruin her figure with pregnancy. So they visited an orphanage and picked me out, based on a list of desired attributes. Somewhat like shopping for groceries. I was the most beautiful child, my mother said.”

“I’m certain you were. But certainly, they came to see how good and intelligent you are.”

“She didn’t care if I might be sweet, smart, interesting, honest, kind … whatever. She mostly concerned herself with whether I looked perfect in Christmas pictures they mailed to their friends and associates.” Felicia tried not to sound bitter, but knew she failed. The old hurt never faded.

Simon reached over and squeezed her hand. “I’m sorry, Sunshine.”

“At the time they adopted me, they also adopted my older sister, Deirdre. We couldn’t be more opposite. She had dark hair like a raven’s wing. Glossy, straight. Sleek. When she smiled …” Felicia felt her own lips lift as she recalled her sister. “She lit up a room. It’s a cliché, I know, but she did. She loved people and life. When she went to uni, she’d come back on weekends and drag me to parties. I was always the wallflower, but by the end of every night, she had men pledging her eternal devotion and women their lifelong friendship. I adored her.”

“I can tell.” Simon squeezed her hand again. “But why would that make you so violently against love?”

Now the story got difficult. Felicia drew in a steadying breath, praying for strength. “About five years ago, Deirdre met a Russian diplomat’s nephew, Alexei. The man had the devil’s own good looks. Sophisticated. Beyond charming. Deirdre brought him home for the holidays to introduce
him to our parents. He said he loved her.” Felicia clenched her teeth, molten fury coursing through her. “I knew he was lying. Deirdre was the only I’d told about my gift, and I begged her to break it off. She insisted they were in
love
,” Felicia spat. “She bloody moved to Russia with the bastard.

“About a year later, she called me late one night, sobbing hysterically. Alexei had left her after admitting that he was married. And had a new mistress. Deirdre had merely been a fling. But he’d grown tired of her. God …” Felicia clenched her fists. “Her sobs tore at my heart. She begged, told him she loved him. He shrugged and told her to vacate the flat before Christmas.”

“Fucking bastard.”

“If I knew where to find him, I’d string him up by the balls.”

“I don’t doubt that,” Duke murmured. “I’d help you. What happened next?”

“I wired Deirdre money to return home for the holidays. She came, but Alexei had ripped all the life out of her. She stared at walls with these eerie, vacant eyes. She didn’t eat or sleep for days. Just sobbed. I’m certain our parents hoped her heartache would quickly pass. They went skiing for Christmas.”

Duke recoiled. “They just … left?”

“They were very attentive when it came to appearances, grades. We had all the best money could buy. Emotions? They never knew how to deal with those, so they swept them under the rug.” Bitterness slashed a jagged gash in her belly. “I took Deirdre to a counselor, set her up with a support group, rocked her when she screamed. Nothing helped.” Felicia swallowed, unsure she could even say the next words. She struggled against fresh tears. “Deirdre … committed suicide a few weeks later.”

No avoiding the tears now. They fell in a hard rain as she remembered Deirdre’s pale body lying lifeless on the brightly tiled bathroom floor. Felicia slammed her eyes shut and clutched her stomach as the sobs wracked her. “In-never thought she’d swallow a bottle of sedatives. She was my friend, my sister. All I had.”

Simon reached over and wiped away her tears. “I’m so sorry.”

“Sh-she said that love was the worst thing that ever happened to her. She wished to God she’d never given her heart.”

“And you saw what she went through and vowed you never would?”

“Deirdre shielded me from a lot of my parents’ coldness and expectations. She
deserved
happiness, not …” Felicia couldn’t say another word past her tears.

Simon caressed her back, and she curled her knees up to her chest, almost afraid to believe in his comfort. “I understand how much her death must hurt.”


Hurt?
It b-broke something in me. I-I miss her s-so damn much.”

“I know. But Deirdre wanted you to live. She took you to parties because she wanted you to have fun, meet people. Connect. You’re not honoring her wishes.”

Felicia clenched her fists, fury pounding in time with the roar of her heart. “You never met my sister. Don’t presume to understand what she wanted or thought or believed. She’d want me to be happy above all.”

“And are you? Truly? Would you be happy married to a man who couldn’t be himself with you, who hid his feelings because he feared losing you too much to pursue the relationship’s full potential? And you, refusing to love him but keeping his house and bearing his children—would that
really
be happily ever after? What would Deirdre have said about that?”

That it was pathetic. Cowardly. Felicia shuddered, burying her tearful face in her hands. “Have you ever had your heart ripped out and—”

“No. But neither have you. You’ve let no man close enough, have you? What about Tristan? Why did that end?”

Wiping away tears, she shook her head. “I don’t know. Does it matter? We had little in common. He was a musician, played long hours. I hated the club scene.”

“That’s scenery. I’m not hearing a
reason
.”

At the time, it seemed they simply grew apart. But when had their relationship truly ended? He’d asked her to meet his parents, and she’d been uncomfortable. She’d stopped returning some of his calls, hoping he’d understand that she simply wasn’t ready for such a step. It hadn’t taken long for him to stop ringing her up at all.

“He wasn’t the one,” she defended.

“Neither was Mason, but you agreed to marry him because he was willing to take whatever scraps of affection you tossed his way. I’m betting Tristan wouldn’t. I bloody won’t.” He curled a hand around her neck. “Listen, I’m not Alexei. I’d never treat you that way.”

Hadn’t she just thought a few hours ago that he wasn’t at all like her sister’s tormenter? Yes. And in her head, she knew that Simon would never abandon her so cruelly. But even if he’d love her madly forever, giving him the power to hurt her terrified Felicia. “What if you grow tired of me someday and want to leave me? If I let myself love you …” She shook her head.

It would kill her.

“You’re not so weak that you can’t survive a broken heart. Even if you gave yourself completely to me and it didn’t
‘work out,’ would you choose Deirdre’s option? Really?”

God, he was right. In Deirdre’s shoes, she would have never let Alexei defeat her. “No.”

“Time would heal you. Completely. Humans fall in love more than once in a lifetime.”

“Humans? You say that like magickind is different.”

“It is. We are like wolves, in a sense. We mate for life. I knew you were my mate after our first kiss.”

“You mean, you knew then that you wanted … me?” She almost couldn’t wrap her head around the concept. “For life? For hundreds of years?”

He nodded. “I told you, when we mate, we lose all desire for others. We
don’t
fall out of love. While I was willing to sever the bond because you wished it, we rarely abandon our mates.”

“But Anka—”

“If Mathias hadn’t come between them, she would still be with Lucan happily, I have no doubt. Look at Tynan. After losing Auropha, he’s had no romantic feelings for another, and he never even formally took her as his mate. Believe me, I am, and always will be, yours.”

His declaration ripped the air from her lungs. Felicia closed her eyes. He meant what he said. And she shook. Felicia didn’t want to be responsible for anyone else’s heart. She was so afraid of her own.

“You can’t leave me, ever?”

He frowned. “Technically, I suppose it’s possible. As Bram said, mate bonds can be broken. But they rarely are. Me behaving like Alexei should never even enter your mind.”

So she had a man who would be faithful and love her for the rest of his life, guaranteed? Why wasn’t she giving in to all the new and warm feelings pouring through her chest? Why wasn’t she grabbing on to him and blurting everything
in her heart, too? A part of her longed to. If he couldn’t hurt her … But she still hesitated. Giving in and giving her heart gave him terrifying power over her. She wasn’t ready for that.

Felicia squirmed in her seat. “I have to think about this.”

He stared out at the road, but she saw disappointment cross his strong features. “It’s a big change in a few days. Remember, this isn’t a game to me. You’re my mate. I want you as my wife.”

A million conflicting feelings coursed through her, and she sighed. Marrying Mason now wasn’t an option. She couldn’t hide behind him any longer. It wasn’t fair to him, and she was ashamed that she’d been willing to use him to find a semblance of a happy life, rather than having the courage to actually seek one. But marrying her fiancé’s brother? Yes, she was Simon’s magical mate, and it was binding in his world. But in hers … Could she take him as her husband, knowing he’d do everything possible to work his way completely into her heart?

“I’ll play my part for the cameras.”

He clenched his jaw, gripping the wheel so tightly his knuckles turned white. “But will you marry me?”

“I’ll … think about it.” Even that terrified her. Simon wouldn’t be content with anything less than everything.

“I won’t stop trying to convince you.”

A sudden smile crept across her mouth. “Why doesn’t that surprise me?”

He grinned at her, too. “You’re getting to know me.”

Neither said anything for a long moment. In the silence, Simon’s mobile phone rang. He answered immediately, turning on the speaker.

“Bram, what happened?”

“The women are all fine.”

Felicia breathed a sigh of relief. She didn’t know the other
women well, but the thought of something happening to them, especially at Mathias’s hands, horrified her.

“Excellent,” Simon said.

“They’re at Kari’s pub,” Bram added. “Caden and Ice are with them. Lucan and Ronan are doing a bit of cleanup at the caves. I’ve transferred Rhea back to my dungeons so we can guard her there. I think there’s enough left to hold her comfortably while we rebuild the house. We’ll join up soon to determine our next steps.”

“And Tynan?”

Bram sighed. “Still no word.”

Simon tightened his hand on the wheel, and Felicia reached out to caress his shoulder. He was worried about his friend.

“Did you find Shock?”

“No. Unreliable bastard,” Bram groused.

After what Anka had told her and the other women before the attack, Felicia had to concur.

“What happened with Mathias?” she blurted.

“We found him, but the dodgy son of a bitch got away again. Teleported out when I cornered him. We killed our fair share of Anarki, at least. Lucan zapped Zain with a hell of a spell, but he crawled away like the slime he is. Frustrating night all the way around. I’ve advised the rest of the Council that Mathias is getting more brazen.”

Disappointment slashed through Felicia. The Doomsday Brethren weren’t her people, yet she was at the center of their fight. They’d done so much to protect her, make her feel welcome. Yes, she wanted Mathias stopped, not simply for her own sake, but theirs, as well.

“Let me guess. The Council doesn’t care,” Simon drawled.

“It doesn’t affect them and doesn’t make them lose face
with magickind, so no. It’s our problem because we’ve failed to fulfill our assignment and kill him.”

Simon scoffed.

“Where are you taking Felicia?” Bram queried.

“London.” A smile played at the corner of his mouth.

“Will we see you?”

“Perhaps. But you’ll definitely hear of us. When you reach Kari’s pub, have Sydney call me. I need to speak with her former boss. Holly is the perfect person to help me.”

“Holly?” Bram choked. “Everything you say will be printed and spread around and—”

“Precisely.”

“Have you gone barking mad?”

“No. I’m getting smart about Mathias.”

“If you say …” Confusion rang in Bram’s tones. “When you get settled, we’ll set up guard rotation around your location.”

Simon shrugged. “It may not be necessary, but it can’t hurt.”

They ended the call a few minutes later, and Simon and Felicia rode for long minutes in silence. Simon turned up the radio, something soft, romantic. He grabbed her hand.

At some point, she lay her head against his shoulder and drifted off to sleep, lulled by the soft purr of the engine and his nearness. She awoke to a dawning day on London’s outskirts, and the sounds of Simon speaking softly into his mobile.

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