A split second of faltering. Enough for his brothers to tackle him.
He thrashes and bites, snapping his fangs. Canât break freeâ¦canât⦠They attach the manacles at his wrists to another chain. He kicks viciously, stunned when they trap his legs as well.
Choking with rage, he strains against his bonds with all his strength. The metal cleaves his skin to the bone. Nothing.
Caught. He roars, spitting blood at them, dimly hearing them speak.
âI hope you came up with a good place to put him,â Sebastian says between ragged breaths.
âI bought a long-abandoned manor,â Nikolai grates, âplace called Elancourt.â
Chills course through him even through his fury; pain erupts from the injury on his arm. A dream. His doom. He can never go to this Elancourtâknows this with a savage certainty. Heâs too strong for them to trace himâthereâs still time to escape.
If they take him there, they wonât take him aliveâ¦.
Under a clouded nighttime sky, the spirit of Néomi Laress knelt in the drive at the very edge of her property line, gazing hungrily at the newspaper, lying wrapped in wet plastic.
Today the deliverymanâthat capricious fiendâhad missed the drive again, this time tossing the bundle squarely onto the desolate county road.
Néomi was starving for that paper, desperate for the news, reviews, and commentary that would break up the monotony of her lifeâor her eighty-year-long afterlife .
But she couldnât leave the estate to seize it. As a ghost, Néomi could manipulate matter telekinetically, and her power was nearly absolute at Elancourtâshe could rattle all the windows or tear off the roof if she wanted to, and the weather often changed with her emotionsâbut not outside the property.
Her beloved home had become her prison, her eternal cell of fifteen acres and a slowly dying manor. Among fateâs other curses, each seemingly designed to torture her in personal and specific ways, Néomi could never leave this place.
She didnât know why this was soâonly that it was, and had been since sheâd awakened the morning after her murder. She recalled seeing her haunting reflection for the first time. Néomi remembered that exact moment when sheâd realized that sheâd diedâwhen sheâd first comprehended what sheâd become.
A ghost. Sheâd become something that frightened even her. Something unnatural. Never again to be a lover or friend. Never to be a mother, like sheâd always planned after her dancing career. As a storm had boiled outside, sheâd silently screamed for hours.
The only thing she could be thankful for was that Louis hadnât been trapped here with her.
She stretched harder. Mustâ¦have thatâ¦paper!
Néomi wasnât certain why it continued to arrive. A past article had recounted the problems inherent with ârecurrent billing of credit cards,â and she supposed she was the benefactress of her last tenantâs credit card negligence. The delivery could end at any time. Every one was precious.
Eventually she gave up, defeated, sitting back in the weed-ridden drive. Out of habit, she made movements as if she was rubbing her thighs, yet felt nothing.
Néomi could never feel. Never again. She was incorporeal, as substantial as the mist rolling in from the bayou.
Thanks, Louis. Oh, and may you rot in hellâbecause surely thatâs where you wentâ¦.
Usually, at this point in the newspaper struggle, sheâd be battling the urge to tear her hair out, wondering how much longer she could endure this existence, speculating what sheâd done to deserve it.
Yes, on the night of her death, sheâd refused to die, but this was ridiculous.
But even as desperate as she was for the words, she wasnât as badly off as usual.
Because last night a man had come into her home. A towering, handsome man with grave eyes. He