![]() |
The
last leg of their journey took them to another small airport. No car
greeted them here. Jack, however, knew the owner very well and used
one of their cars to drive his clients to their destination. Almost
twenty four hours ago, Evonne was in the Jeep with Gabriel, heading
to meet Demetrius. The final flight north was spent in anticipation
for her. She wasn’t sure where the car took them, but most of the
area had farmland and pockets of forests. The houses in the area ranged
from the simple to the extravagant. The house they finally pulled up
to looked like an estate from the 1600s.



Gabriel
was the first to step from the car. Demetrius followed, wearing a new
set of clothes given to him by Gabriel: a dark, long sleeve shirt and
jeans. With a change into the simple attire, Demetrius was beginning
to look normal.
Evonne
followed him to the front door, while Gabriel remained by the car to
speak with Jack. Evonne’s muffled senses were unable to pick up their
conversation. She waited by the large door, her arms crossed over her
chest and her eyes closing longer with each blink. She looked cold.
But it wasn’t the cold she fought against. She felt Demetrius brush
the loose hair from her face. Her eyes fluttered back open.
“No
more traveling,” he said, his hand dropping to her shoulder.
She
wanted to smile.
His
hand then pulled her close as his arms wrapped around her. Evonne was
too tired to care about anything in this moment, but the small embrace
comforted her. She rested her head on his chest.
Evonne
heard the car leave the driveway, and then Gabriel approach. She lifted
her head to see him set their bags down and raise the metal knocker.
He let it drop. The loud clang jolted Evonne.
They
waited. A long minute passed before the door clanked open. A man in
his late sixties answered. The look of annoyance left his face as he
saw Gabriel.
“I
was expecting you until spring,” he said, opening the door further
and stepping to the side. “You should have informed me.”
The
sound of his accent placed Evonne even further at ease. Moving from
Demetrius, she followed Gabriel inside. The large foyer was met with
a curved staircase that led to the bedrooms upstairs. Though the exterior
of the house was trapped in the past, the interior shown more of a modern
look.
“Something
unforeseen has happened,” Gabriel informed as the man closed the door.
“Philip, I would like you to meet my guests, Demetrius and Evonne.
They will be staying here, as well.”
The
man nodded at them. “A pleasure to meet you.” He then addressed
Gabriel once more. “I shall prepare the house for your arrival.”
“That
will not be necessary.”
Philip
went to speak but stopped. He finally said, “I’m glad you have returned,”
and then bowed and left the room.
Turning
to Demetrius, Gabriel waited for his analysis.
“His
grandson is staying here,” he whispered. “He fears your reaction
to this.”
Gabriel
muttered as he walked toward the stairs, carrying the bags, “Why must
he always fear me?”
Evonne
caught up to him. “Is this your house?” Even though she knew
where they were heading when they began this trip, she was still shocked
to finally see his house.
“Not
since 1866,” he answered, reaching the top of the stairs.
Demetrius
walked behind them.
“I
gave the house to the Bennett family,” continued Gabriel. “They’ve
been taking care of it for me ever since.”
“With
Eden’s resources in SEVEN,” Demetrius began, “it won’t be too
difficult for them to trace you here.”
“My
name no longer appears on the property.”
“Information
about a property’s former owners can be easily located.”
Gabriel
looked annoyed at Demetrius’ attempts to play Devil’s Advocate.
“I’m not too concerned about that. In all honesty, do you believe
SEVEN would come looking for a werewolf hunter in the middle of a pack’s
territory?”
Worried,
Evonne’s eyes went from Demetrius to Gabriel. “Is it safe for us
to be here?”
Gabriel
stopped to face her, trying to ease her alarm. “I gave the house to
Abraham Bennett, a human liaison to the Alpha at the time. As the pack’s
territory expanded west, I gladly handed over my house and the property.”
“But
why do that?” Evonne asked.
“Anonymity.
I can come and go as I please, as long as I draw no attention to myself
and keep my weapons aimed away from their pack.”
Demetrius
smiled. “I’m amazed to see that you listened to me all those years
ago.”
“Did
I have a choice?” said Gabriel as he continued walking. “The caretaker
and his family live in the downstairs bedroom, once the head servant’s
quarters. The bedrooms on this floor are empty. Take your pick.”
Leaving
them for the nearest room, Demetrius entered without closing the door.
Evonne, however, stayed with Gabriel as he entered the room at the end
of the hall. He placed the bags on the floor and began the brief task
in removing the sheets from the furniture. Gathering them all, he sat
them in an antique chair.
Evonne
watched him ready the room.
“Take
your bag and pick a room,” he said, double checking the heavy drapes.
She
stopped herself from questioning him; instead, she picked up her bag
and headed down the hall. She found Demetrius standing back at the top
of the stairs, looking toward the area Philip scurried off to.
Approaching
him, Evonne listened, as well. She could here the mumbling of voices
but nothing more.
“What’s
going on?” she asked.
“The
old man is speaking to his grandson,” he said. It was difficult for
him to pick up anything else besides the words. “It’s not Gabriel
he fears. He carries much respect for him. But having his grandson here,
the man sees it as a breech of trust. But Gabriel could care less that
the boy is here.” With nothing else left to see or hear, he turned
to Evonne. “Have you settled on a room?”
She
shrugged. “I haven’t really decided…
I thought—”
“That
you’d be sharing a room with him?” He moved away from the stairs.
“It’s not that he doesn’t wish for you to stay with him, he wants
you to have some time to yourself. Ever since you left Eden, he’s
rarely been out of your sight. There’s no need to take his actions
personally. He wants you to feel safe here, with no real reason to constantly
remain at his side.”
Evonne
looked away and freely admitted, “I feel like a burden to him. He’s
doing all of this because of me.”
Demetrius
took her free hand. “Let us find you a room to your liking.” He
led her down the hall.
As they
passed one door, Evonne stopped in her tracks. The strong, musty scent
of old books beckoned to her curiosity. She released Demetrius’ hand
and opened the door. Sheets upon sheets covered the dozen or so bookcases.
Off to the side sat an old desk, it too covered with a sheet. Evonne
sat her bag on the floor and began to strip the sheets from the bookcases.
Demetrius
stepped into the room. “For someone who has yet to finish reading
a single book, you find great interest in this room.”
Standing
back to look at all of the books, Evonne admitted, “I don’t know
why.”
On the
desk, still covered in a sheet, a single book sat. Demetrius picked
it up, flipping the pages to stir up the faded scent. He looked at the
cover, amused.
“Wolves,”
he scoffed, tossing it back onto the desk. “They have a strange sense
of humor.”
Curious,
Evonne went over to the desk and looked at the book. An old copy of
Bram Stoker’s Dracula stared back. She laughed away the obvious
insult.
“Why
read it when you can watch the movie, right?”
“Béla
Lugosi or Gary Oldman?” he asked, glancing over the books in a nearby
case.
“You
watch movies?” It was the oddest thing she had heard him say.
“From
time to time,” he said as he picked out one book and scanned through
its pages. “Which portrayal do you prefer? Lugosi or Oldman?”
“Honestly? I never watched them. The genre never interested me. I
like sci-fi and fantasy. Give me aliens and dragons any day.”
“I
found Oldman’s portrayal to be the most intriguing. But there are
many who would argue my choice.” He looked at her and smiled. “But
I’ve never read the book.”
Placing
the book back into the case, Demetrius took Evonne’s hand once more.
“You are still in need of a room, and I think Gabriel wouldn’t like
you sleeping in here.”
As they
neared the door, Evonne grabbed her bag and followed him down the hall.
She mentally counted six rooms upstairs, one being the study filled
with books, and the other the bathroom, equipped with a large shower
and bath.
Demetrius
opened the curtains to the last bedroom they entered. The room was large,
but not as extravagate as the master bedroom. Below the window, in the
yard behind the house, an old work building and barn sat. The moon’s
light shown the true scope of the surrounding land. A series of fences
lined the fields, sectioning them off into three areas, but no livestock
could be seen. Beyond the fields, a dense forest blanketed the land,
concealing their real source for blood during their stay. Evonne mind
grumbled at the thought. More deer.
“How
long are we going to stay here?” she asked, setting her bag on the
floor. Her eyes remained on the scene outside the window.
“As
long as Gabriel wishes.”
She
rolled her eyes. “That really answers my question.”
“A
month or so. Perhaps longer.”
“What
are we going to do about… you
know.”
Demetrius
looked at her, amused. “Still embarrassed to even mention the words?”
Evonne
squirmed as she searched for a response. “It’s just… I don’t know how to explain it.”
“You
see it as an intimate act,” he said for her. “Even the occasional
act of tasting Gabriel’s blood stirs embarrassment for you. Why this
alone? The intimacy between you two goes further than that. Yet you
shudder at the very thought of using your teeth.”
She
looked away and sat on the bed. “Why can’t it just go away?”
Demetrius
sat on the bed beside her. “The feeling you are talking about is remaining
threads of your humanity. Even though your true humanity ceased the
night you were turned, your mind has trouble accepting mortal death.
It took Gabriel more than forty years to shed his humanity.”
“Why
so long?”
“It
isn’t my place to speak of his past. This is something he must tell
you when he is ready.”
She
sighed. “I wish he would. I don’t know anything about him.”
“You
found nothing within the information you stole from SEVEN?”
“Nothing
really,” she said, keeping her eyes from him. “Only the dates and
places he’d been seen at.”
“Nothing
about his past? I find that hard to believe. I thought SEVEN knew everything
about us?” He laughed.
“I
didn’t find anything about you, either,” she tried to cover-up.
“You
don’t have to lie to me.”
Evonne
gave a weak smile as she looked at him. “I didn’t believe any of
it.”
“Humor
me.”
Giving
a shrug, she tried to recall what she read. “Most of the information
was based stories and rumors. Myths, basically.”
He took
interest in her words. “What you read was true. I am myth.”
Evonne
stared at him in shock. Her mind scrambled to fully remember the entry
on him. “Is she real, too?”
“You
speak of Laurel, my wife.”
Confused,
she asked, “The information mentioned the name ‘Dianthia.’ ”
“Her
name from birth was Dianthia. She goes by the name Laurel now.”
Again,
she looked at him in shock. “She’s alive? It mentioned that she
died a long time ago.” She studied him in disbelief. “Wow. A wife.
I never would’ve guessed.”
“Why
is it so hard to believe?”
“I
don’t know. I guess…”
“That
marriage doesn’t apply to our kind?” He paused, choosing his next
words carefully. “Marriage is union between two individuals. Though
not a true marriage as seen through the eyes of a church, our union
goes beyond fragile paperwork or a simple ceremony. And in a marriage
such as ours, there is no discrimination or divorce. We are forever.”
“That
takes real commitment. No divorce?”
“Divorce
was created by man. There are some human rules we follow, but that is
not one of them.” He looked around the bedroom. “No on to other
matters. This room, is it to your liking?”
Evonne
gave a small shrug. It matter little to her about the rooms. All she
needed was a bed for the day. “It’s nice,” she finally said.
“Then
this will be your room.”
“And
the other thing?”
“We
will hunt animals.”
Looking
at him, her eyes shown worry. “On land belonging to werewolves?”
“Gabriel
hunts here, as well. We will follow his lead. But since dawn is nearing
too soon for a hunt tonight, you will have to take what you can.”
Demetrius began to roll up his sleeve. “This will calm your hunger
for one day.”
She
shook her head. “I can’t. Last time I did something like that
…
I’m still regretting that mistake.”
“I
will not be taking yours, so there will be no bond.” He gave her his
wrist. “A blood bond with a werewolf. How very ambitious.”
“How
very stupid,” she scolded herself, looking at his wrist.
“Curiosity,
that’s all.”
Taking
his hand, Evonne’s embarrassment waned as she placed her mouth to
his wrist. Biting down, the taste of his blood entered her. Through
her closed eyes, she envisioned a kaleidoscope swirling to life, filling
every corner of her mind. Though Evonne knew this to be the taste of
vampire blood, the differences between Demetrius and Gabriel, similar
in some ways, stood out in contrast to each other. Was this the result
of their heritage? Would the blood of a vampire from Jharell’s line
taste differently?
Evonne
withdrew. Her hunger quieted almost instantly.
Standing
from the bed, Demetrius pushed his sleeve down and went over to the
window and closed the curtains. “Conserve your strength and rest now.
If you need anything, I will be in the room next door.” He leaned
down and gently kissed the top of her head, then left the room.
Evonne
curled up on the bed and forced herself to sleep.



