Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter Colletion_ Books 6-10 - Laurell K. Hamilton [941]
I pushed away from him and found him crying, and the fear sat like stale metal on my tongue. I was so scared my body went quiet, not racing, but almost as if every beat of my body, every breath, had simply stopped, and all there was to fill me was fear.
“What have you done to me?”
“I thought at first that you were not vampire, and it would not be a true hunger. But watching you today, I know that it is as it was for me. You must feed. You must not deny yourself. To do so is to court madness, or worse.”
“No,” I said.
“If you had withstood the Nimir-Raj’s advances, then I would say that your strength of will might conquer it. If you had withstood the desire to feed on Nathaniel, I would say you would master it. But you fed on him.”
“I did not have sex with Nathaniel.”
“No. And wasn’t what you did instead more satisfying to some part of you than mere intercourse would have been?”
I started to say no and stopped. I could still feel Nathaniel’s flesh in my mouth, the touch of his skin under my hands, the taste of his blood on my tongue. The memory brought the hunger over me in a hot rush. Not merely the lust, but Jean-Claude’s craving for blood, and Richard’s beast—or my beast—wanting to take that last bite and tear flesh for real, no pretending, no holding back.
I had an awful idea. “If I deny one hunger all of them grow worse, don’t they?”
“If I deny the lust, I need more blood, and the reverse is true.”
“I don’t just have your blood lust, Jean-Claude, I have Richard’s beast—or mine. I wanted to tear Nathaniel up. I wanted to feed on him for real, the way an animal does. Will that grow worse, too?”
His face started to slip back into careful, neutral lines. I grabbed his shoulders, shook him. “No! No more hiding. Will it grow worse?”
“I have no way of knowing for certain.”
“No more games! Will it grow worse?”
“I believe so.” His voice was very soft as he said it.
I drew back from him, huddled against the headboard, stared at him, waiting for him to say, “sorry, just kidding,” but he just met my eyes. I stared at him, because I didn’t want to see anyone else’s face. If I saw pity, it might make me cry. If I saw lust, it’d make me mad.
I finally said, “What am I going to do?” There was no inflection in my voice, just a dragging tiredness.
“You will feed, and we will help you. We will keep you safe.”
I finally glanced at the others. Every face was either carefully neutral or, in Nathaniel’s case, staring down at the bed, as if he didn’t trust me to see his eyes. Probably smart of him.
“Fine, but I think we can do better than condoms.”
“What do you mean, ma petite?”
“Nathaniel can put his shorts on, and I’ll find my jammies.”
“I still think . . .”
I held a hand up, and Jean-Claude fell silent. “They can put them on underneath their clothes, just in case, but I know that if I tell Nathaniel not to . . . that he won’t.” I frowned at Jason.
“I’ll be good,” he said.
“I am not afraid that Nathaniel will disobey you, ma petite.”
The tone in his voice turned me from Jason’s face to his. “What do you mean?”
“I am worried that he will indeed do everything you tell him to do.”
We stared at each other for a long space of my heartbeats. I understood what he meant now. It wasn’t the boys he didn’t trust, it was me. I would have liked to say, I would never ask them—either of them—to do that to me, but there was something in Jean-Claude’s eyes, some knowledge, some sorrow, that kept me from saying it.
“How much control am I going to lose?” I asked finally.
“I do not know.”
“I’m getting really tired of hearing you say that.”
“And I of saying it.”
I finally asked what I had to ask, “What do we do now?”
“Our pomme de sangs fetch their clothing and yours, and we feed.”
And as much as I hated it, as much as I wanted to deny it, I knew he was right. I’d been trying not to be a sociopath because it made me a monster. I just hadn’t