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Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter Colletion_ Books 6-10 - Laurell K. Hamilton [863]

By Root 3433 0
crowd fell quiet. “I think we have had our climax for the night.” A smattering of laughter at that. “We will save our show until tomorrow, for to do less would be to dishonor what we have been offered here tonight.”

The woman, who was still standing to the back of the dance floor in her robe, said, “I can’t compete with that.”

Narcissus blew her a kiss. “It is not a competition, sweet Miranda, it is that we all have our gifts. Some are merely more rare than others.” He turned and stared at us as he said the last. His eyes were pale and oddly colored, and it took me a second or two to realize that Narcissus’s eyes had bled to his beast. Hyena eyes, I guess, though truthfully, I didn’t know what hyena eyes looked like. I just knew they weren’t human eyes.

He knelt beside us, smoothing his dress down in an automatic and strangely odd gesture that I’d never seen a man make before. Of course, he was also the first man I’d ever seen in a dress. There was probably a cause and effect.

Narcissus lowered his voice. “I would love to speak with you in private about this.”

“Of course,” Jean-Claude said, “but first we have other business.”

Narcissus leaned in close, lowering his voice until it was necessary to lean forward to hear him. “As I have two of my guards waiting with her leopards so no harm will come, there is time to talk. Or should I say, your leopards, for surely now, what belongs to one, belongs to all.” He had leaned so far over that his cheek nearly touched Jean-Claude on one side and my face on the other.

“No,” I said, “the leopards are mine.”

“Really,” Narcissus said. He turned his face that fraction of an inch and brushed his lips against mine. It might have been an accident, but I doubted it. “You don’t share everything, then?”

I moved my face just far enough away so we weren’t touching. “No.”

“So good to know,” he whispered. He leaned forward and pressed his mouth to Jean-Claude’s lips. I was startled, frozen for a second wondering exactly what to do.

Jean-Claude knew exactly what to do. He put one finger in the man’s chest and pushed, not with muscle, but with power. The power of the marks, the power that we had all just moments before solidified. Jean-Claude drew on it as if he’d done it a thousand times before, effortlessly, gracefully, commandingly.

Narcissus was pushed back from him by a rush of invisible power that I could feel tugging on my body. And I knew that most of the people in the room could feel it, as well. Narcissus stayed crouched on the floor, staring at Jean-Claude, staring at all of us. The look on his face was angry, but there was more hunger in it than rage, a hunger denied.

“We need to talk in private,” Narcissus insisted.

Jean-Claude nodded. “That would be best, I think.”

There was a weight of things left unsaid in that short exchange. I felt Richard’s puzzlement mirror my own, before I turned my head to glance back at him. The movement put our faces close enough so that we could almost have kissed. I could tell just by the expression in his eyes that he didn’t know what was going on. And he seemed to know that I could tell, because he didn’t bother to shrug or make any outward acknowledgment. It wasn’t telepathy, though to an outsider it might look that way. It was more extreme empathy, as if I could read every nuance on his face, the smallest change, and know what it meant.

I was still pressed in the circle of Richard’s and Jean-Claude’s arms, a strange amount of bare skin touching all of us—my back, Richard’s chest and stomach, Jean-Claude’s arm. There was something incredibly right about the touching, the closeness. I felt Jean-Claude’s attention turn, before I moved my head to meet his eyes.

The look in those drowning eyes held worlds of things unsaid, unasked, all so tremblingly close. Because for once he didn’t see in my eyes the barriers that kept all those words trapped. It had to be the marriage of the marks affecting me, but that night I think he could have asked me anything, anything, and I wasn’t sure I’d say no.

What he finally said was, “Shall we retire to privacy

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