Kiss of Midnight_ A Midnight Breed Novel - Lara Adrian [483]
“Jesus,” Dylan gasped. “So she got what she wanted?”
“Not exactly. The Order was ambushed, based on information Eva delivered, but the vampire she bargained with had no intention of upholding his part of their deal. He sent in a bomb. The explosion might have killed them all, but ironically, Rio took the biggest hit. And then he had to learn afterward that it was Eva who made it happen.”
Dylan couldn’t speak. She tried to absorb the weight of what it must have been like for him—not only the physical pain of his injuries, but also the emotional hurt of a deception like the one dealt to him.
“I saw her.” Dylan glanced over at Tess and saw her frown deepen, confusion evident in her questioning gaze. Dylan hadn’t known this woman for more than a few minutes, and she wasn’t used to sharing herself with anyone, especially not the secret that made her so different from other people. But something in Tess’s caring eyes let her know that she was safe. She felt an instant affinity that made her trust she was with a friend. “The dead come to me from time to time—well, women do, anyway. Women who are no longer living. Eva came to me a few days ago when I was hiking with friends on a mountain outside Prague.”
“She…came to you,” Tess said cautiously. “How do you mean?”
“I saw her spirit, I guess you’d say. She led me to a hidden cave. I didn’t know it, but Rio was inside. She—Eva—led me there and asked me to save him.”
“My God.” Tess slowly shook her head. “Does he know this?”
Dylan glanced meaningfully at the destruction lying at her feet. “Yeah, he knows. When I told him, that’s when he really lost it.”
Tess’s look was apologetic. “He has a lot of anger where Eva’s concerned.”
“Understandably,” Dylan replied. “Is he okay, Tess? I mean, considering what he’s gone through, is Rio going to be…okay?”
“I hope so. We all hope so.” Tess cocked her head slightly, studying her somehow. “You’re not afraid of him.”
No, she wasn’t. She was curious about him absolutely, and uncertain of his intentions where she was concerned, but she wasn’t afraid of him. Crazy as it was, even after seeing him as he’d been a short while ago in this very room, Dylan wasn’t afraid. In fact, just thinking about Rio did a lot of things to her, none of them scary. “Do you think I should be afraid of him?”
“No,” Tess said without hesitation. “What I mean is, this can’t be easy on you. God knows I didn’t take it very well when I first heard all of this talk of blood and fangs and war.”
Dylan shrugged. “I write for a quasi-tabloid newpaper. Believe me, I’ve heard a lot of bizarre things. I don’t shock easily.”
Tess smiled, but she didn’t hold Dylan’s gaze for long. The words she didn’t say were clear as a bell in those quickly averted eyes: This wasn’t just a bizarre tabloid story. This was real.
“What was in that cave, Tess? It was apparently some kind of crypt—a hibernation chamber, I heard Rio call it. But what the hell was in there? Did something get loose up there on the mountainside?”
Tess lifted her eyes, but only gave a small shake of her head. “I don’t think you really want to know.”
“Yes, I do,” Dylan insisted. “Whatever it was, it’s obviously important enough that Rio felt he had to kidnap me and lock me up to keep me quiet about what I saw.”
Tess’s silence put a knot of dread in Dylan’s gut. The Breedmate knew what was in that cave, and the knowledge of it clearly terrified her.
“Tess, something was sleeping in that hidden tomb—from the look of it, I’d say it had been holed up there for a very long time. What kind of creature was it…or is it?”
Tess stood up and dropped some broken glass into a wastebasket beside the bureau. “Let me take a look at your cut. We should clean it up and get a bandage