Torn (Demon Kissed #3) (25 page)

BOOK: Torn (Demon Kissed #3)
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Puzzled, he looked down at the crinkled paper, and smoothed it out. Walking over to a desk, he put it down and ran his finger over it. After a minute, he shook his head. “I don’t know. It’s coded or something.” He crumpled it and threw it back to me.

“No! You have to read it!” I yelled, smoothing the paper again and thrusting it at him. He wouldn’t take it back and just turned to look at me. There was no bond with Eric, nothing to tap into to see what he was feeling, but something had changed in the past few hours. He didn’t go back to being the evil monster again. He stayed trapped somewhere in the middle. “I know you read it.” I saw the flick of his eyes once he identified the pattern. I didn’t think he wouldn’t tell me…
Especially if it didn’t matter.

“Maybe I did,” he said, shirking off the paper.
“So what?
You don’t need what’s on there. Go suck your boyfriend’s soul out and get your life back.”

What did he just say? Shock washed over me as my heart pounded in my chest. He knew what we were trying to do? He knew everything.
But how?
I stared at him in disbelief with my mouth hanging open. And, he could read that page, too. Too stunned to speak, I watched as Eric sat down in the chair and kicked his boots up onto the desk. He stretched, putting his hands behind his neck. The neck I almost severed…

Completely, frustrated, I made a face. “If you can read it, why won’t you tell me? I need to know what it says.”

Eric looked at me, his face expressionless. “It doesn’t tell you what you want to know. Bring me the rest of the book and I’ll find it for you.” With that he shot out of the chair and left me alone.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE

 

Effonating sucks. Before I completely lost my mind and willingly elected to stay with Eric, I left. When he wouldn’t read the page to me, I left it on his desk and wrote on top of it. The message was stupid, embarrassing really. I scrawled, I still believe in you. As if I had any reason to. Deranged and homicidal weren’t two of my favorite characteristics in a friend, but apparently, it was growing easier to overlook terrible shortcomings.

When I appeared back at St. Bart’s, several days had passed. I fell on the kitchen floor, screaming, with more skin spliced off my body than last time. Al found me first, with Collin right on her heels. I was quickly doused in the mixture to ease the pain. After the skin regrew, I felt weak, but had enough strength to talk. I told them some things, and intentionally left out other things…like my new Eric addiction.

 
When I awoke, I realized that strange dreams didn’t plague me. Slowly, my eyes opened and I noticed that Collin held me in his arms. He pushed back a stray curl and said, “You seemed restless. I held you for a while, and chased off the dreams that usually plague you.” His fingers brushed the hair away from my face as he looked at me. “It’s kinda weird to be in bed with a hot girl in a church with a nun who doesn’t seem to mind.” He smiled at me.

I laughed and sat up, feeling awkward—and guilty for kissing Eric. I don’t know if I was truly attracted to Eric, or if was because of his blood. Looking at Collin, I felt sad.

He lounged on his side, on my bed, and looked up at me. A black tee shirt clung to his chest, revealing perfectly sculpted arms. Dark hair fell into his eyes as he leaned toward me, asking softly, “What happened?”

I told him most of the story, leaving some things out. Collin hated Eric when he was a Martis, but now that he was a Valefar, his dislike turned to seething hatred. As I was talking about Eric, the bond was in turmoil. Collin was trying to hide his feelings, but the more I spoke about Eric, the worse it got. I left out the kisses, not wanting to cause him anymore pain. But I wondered if that counted as cheating on him. I was afraid that if I had to ask that question, then it was.

“So, he read the page?” Collin asked, shocked.
“How?
How did he remember it?”

I shrugged, “I don’t know. But he won’t tell me what it says without the rest of the book.”

“Of course not,” Collin mumbled. “No doubt he’s going to steal the book and go after Satan’s Stone himself.”

I straightened, “I don’t think so. It’s hard to get a read on Eric, but he seemed like he couldn’t be bothered with this stuff. It sounded more like a favor, for me.” I looked up at Collin and realized that was the worst thing I could have said.

He asked me, “Did he do anything to you? You may not have noticed before, but that guy has always wanted you.”

I smiled, not believing Eric wanted me at all before, and took his hands between mine. “I’m fine. He didn’t hurt me. But I need this. Please, Collin? Please let me bring him the rest of the book. We can copy the pages so we have them too—in case he does something stupid.” I looked up into his eyes, pleading with him.

He looked away from me. “Whenever Eric is around, bad things happen to you. I don’t want you involved this time. Let me or Al do it, all right?” I agreed. It was the best I could get. I just hoped Eric would behave and do what he said he would do.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER THIRTY-TWO

 

Al took the large leather book to the center of the clearing at the old park. Trees surrounded the wide field, jutting up jagged, leafless branches into the night sky. Eric didn’t choose this place, we did. It made us think that things would at least partly go in our favor, but everything fell apart that night. Thinking about it makes me shiver. It was so obvious, but I never saw it coming.

Al held the book between her ancient hands waiting to see the boy she raised as her own—the boy she’d kill without an instant of hesitation if she had to. I wasn’t a Martis and I was glad I wasn’t. I didn’t understand them at all. Everyone made me think the next time I saw Shannon that she would best me if I gave her the chance, but she was a mindless blood junkie living in Eric’s closet, waiting for her next fix. It angered me that Eric tried to do the same thing to me, but he wasn’t able to. That was the only reason I got away from him. But the words he said when he shattered the silver chains and stole me from the diner echoed in my mind,
She’s
mine
. He could have said a million different things, but that was what he chose to say. On some level now, I knew that I would always be his. I’d crave him and long for him in ways that made me feel torn inside. I pushed the thought away, too upset to deal with it right then.

I looked over at Collin. We were waiting for Al, under the trees about not too far away. We were close enough to see, but we wouldn’t be able to hear her. I sat on top of a worn out wood picnic table with Collin sitting opposite me on top of another table. A question I forgot to ask crossed my mind. Now wasn’t really the right time to ask, but we were alone, and I didn’t want Al to hear. I watched the old woman, standing defiantly in the field.
Waiting.

I asked softly, “Why didn’t you tell me about the blood?” Collin glanced up, startled by my question. His leather jacket was hanging open, and he shoved his hands into the pockets. “Why didn’t you tell me that Valefar blood had an addicting quality? That Eric would be able to mesmerize me like that? I don’t see why you hid that from me…”

Collin stared at me as I asked, and shook his head. “Ivy, we can’t talk about this now. We need to watch Al in case she needs us. I don’t like you being here at all.” Collin kept looking around; acting like something was going to happen.

Irritation shot through me. He was hiding something from me, and I wished he weren’t. I glanced back up at Collin, not wanting to drop it. “He trapped me so easily because you didn’t tell me something…something that you already knew.”

Collin’s blue eyes were stormy. He leaned forward on his elbows, hands clasped together. “You didn’t need to know that.
The odds of him doing that to you with his blood were miniscule.
You didn’t tell me that before. I didn’t realize he’d done it to you before.” He was angry.

I slid off the picnic table and walked over to him. Moonlight shone through the branches forming jagged patterns on the ground. “Why are we hiding things from each other? Just tell me, Collin.” I placed my hands over his. “You knew, didn’t you? You knew that Valefar blood can do that? He has Shannon locked in a closet, begging for more. It gave him control over me that I didn’t think he had.”

Collin jumped up, pushing me away. “It’s never that severe. Valefar blood should have never trapped you. It just makes you crave it, and want more—more of the person who gave it. It makes you lust after it when it’s gone. It does that to pure Martis. You aren’t a pure Martis. Its effect on you should be miniscule.” He shook his head, folding his arms close to his chest as he looked down at me. “Eric’s stronger than I thought. He’s stronger than any of us thought.” He glanced back at Al sharply, and then at me. He was shaking his head, “This is a bad idea, Ivy. This is a trap. It has to be. He doesn’t want the book. He’s coming after you.”

Exasperated, I sighed and shook my head. “He had me Collin. He could have made me stay, but he didn’t. I didn’t escape… He let me leave.” The expression on Collin’s face changed from fear to shock. His wide eyes were impossibly blue as he reached for me, wrapping his fingers around my wrist.

He said, “We need to leave.
Now!”
Panic spilled across Collin’s face as his gaze cut between Al and me, looking for Eric.

But I jerked away from him. “No. Tell me first. Tell me now! Why didn’t you say anything to me about his blood?” I stared up into Collin’s eyes. His mouth hung open, like he wanted to tell me but no words would come out.

The voice came from behind a tree standing right in front of us. “I know why.” Eric moved from the shadows and came into the little clearing filled with tables. “Want me to tell her?”

Collin moved in front of me quickly, as if he thought Eric might hurt me. But Eric laughed. “Ivy can choose whoever she wants. Some days she wants you. Some days she wants me…” Eric said, talking calmly, while he walked in circles us.

My heart was caught in my throat. I watched as he paced around us, unsure of what he was doing. Collin turned his body, pushing me behind him as Eric circled us. He was trying to keep him away from me.

“This isn’t your place,” Collin growled through his teeth. “Leave before I make you.” Every muscle in Collin’s body was tense, and ready to fight.

Eric stopped pacing and his golden eyes lingered on me as Collin stood in front of me. His voice was seductive, “Ask your question, Ivy. I have the answers. I’m not trying to be something I’m not. I don’t pretend with you, and you know it. There’s a simple reason why he didn’t tell you about the blood… there’s a simple reason why you’re so enamored with him…” Eric’s eyes gleamed.

I looked up at Collin, not following what Eric was saying, “What’s he talking about?” I laughed as if what Eric was saying couldn’t possibly be true. “He didn’t feed me his blood. That isn’t why I love him.” Those sentences began as statements. I was telling Eric that he was wrong, but as I finished speaking I could barely breathe.

Watching the expression in Collin’s eyes—I saw something that made me question him. “Collin?” I looked up at him. His jaw was tense, as he gazed over my head at Eric with hatred. When he looked back down at me, my stomach twisted as all the air was crushed from my lungs. “You didn’t?” My voice trembled as I asked him, but I already knew the answer. Disbelief engulfed me. It couldn’t be true. It couldn’t be! I used the bond, expecting it to tell me that Collin loved me and would never do something like feed me demon blood. I pushed into him with my mind and was overwhelmed with feelings of regret. Wide-eyed, he stood in front of me unable to hide it any longer.

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