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A Most Welcome Interruption
* * *
The vampires looked like any other gentlemen, dressed for the opera in dark coats with tan or fawn-colored breeches, adequately knotted cravats, and gloves. “Our apologies for being tardy,” one of them said with a bow to Conte Regalado, who had risen to greet the men.
Not men, vampires.
Victoria remained in her seat, turned away from the opera, watching and waiting. Her nerves tingled, and the nape of her neck prickled. Her fingers itched to pull the stake out from under her gown.
There was a sense of expectation in the air, and she didn’t know where to look. Max studiously refused to turn in her direction as he stood and greeted the newcomers. Regalado and Galliani seemed pleased as well by the arrival.
What did this all mean? Did Regalado know they were vampires? Surely a powerful member of the Tutela would.
“Mrs. Withers, may I present an acquaintance of mine to you…Signore Partredi.”
The vampire bowed, took her hand with his surprisingly warm one, and raised it to his lips. “A pleasure to meet you, I’m certain.” Being familiar with vampires, as she was, she read an entirely different message in his eyes. And it wasn’t pleasant at all.
To her dismay, he took the seat next to her that had been vacated by Galliani. Regalado sat back down in his seat, and there she was, sandwiched between a vampire and a Tutela leader. When the second vampire chose the seat behind her, where Max had been sitting, she felt even more boxed in. Surrounded on all sides by danger. And she could do nothing.
Victoria was uncertain where Max was, and of course Sebastian was still gone with Placidia. She dared not turn to look about the room. She must appear as though nothing were out of the norm.
As the opera dragged on, with one aria after another, she reflected on that terrible night at the Tutela meeting; remembered the horror of being controlled, of being attacked from every side, of the warm surge of her blood under the teeth of the vampires. Her head felt lighter, easier…her pulse slowed. She had to blink to focus. The small box became stifling and warm.
Victoria closed her fists, digging nails into her palms, using pain to send away the gentle lull she’d begun to feel. Sitting next to a vampire, feeling the sleeve of his jacket brush against her bare arm, allowing his presence to sink into her consciousness…it was a different way of becoming enthralled. Not a common one, for most often when she was faced with a vampire, the moment was all action, movement, battle.
This was a different sort of battle. One of wills.
Thus far, truly, it had been easy. The vampires had made no threats, no move to hurt anyone. She could sit and focus her energy on fighting off the subtle attempts to capture her consciousness, pretend to watch the opera, and perhaps, just perhaps, that would be the end of it.
But it was during a rare, brief moment of silence from the stage that Victoria’s hopes deflated. A soft gasp and sigh caught her ears, and she felt the hair along her arms lift, sending a surge of sharp prickles over her abdomen.
She turned in her chair. Behind her, the vampire who’d taken Max’s seat had also taken his place at Sara’s side. When Victoria looked, the truth of what was happening struck all of her senses at one moment: the smell of fresh blood, the faint, very faint whistle of suction, the dull glow of Sara’s white neck and half-exposed bosom with her blood trickling down it, and the renewed rush of sensation over Victoria’s own body.
She looked away, her eyes skittering from the scene that appeared more sensual than horrific, and clashed with Max’s gaze. He stood near the door at the back of the box in a pose that struck her as being imminently dispassionate. When their gazes met, she looked for something there, some signal or
sign…but he merely raised his brows in that sardonic manner of his and casually shifted his glance.
Apparently it was of no concern to him that his fiancée was being fed upon by a vampire.
On the other side of the vampire Partredi, Portiera was watching the performance, seemingly unaware of what was going on behind her.
Victoria shifted in her seat and returned her attention to the opera. Her heart was pounding. She made herself think through everything that was happening, even though every instinct in her body urged her to grab for the stake and plant it in the chest of the being that stole from Sara.
But Sara wasn’t fighting. She was not restrained. She made no sounds, other than soft sighs and gasps that sounded as though she were responding to a lover rather than an attacker. She did not need Victoria’s help. She wasn’t being mauled or torn apart. A vampire could feed without permanently injuring a person, as Victoria well knew.
She could leave it alone. In good conscience, she still did not have to act.
Licking her lips, she tried to watch the opera, tried not to listen to the sounds behind her. Tried not to feel the pull, the incessant pull, of the one next to her.
She knew the moment the vampire behind her finished feeding and braced herself for what might happen next.
Partredi placed his hand on her wrist, holding it on the seat’s arm. Victoria’s breath caught. She was strong; she could pull away…but should she?
Then on the other side of her, Regalado closed his fingers over her other wrist. “Now, just relax, my dear,” he murmured into her ear. “Surely you will find it as enjoyable as my daughter has.”
Her heart rammed in her chest. Victoria felt her breath catch as something happened in front of her to obliterate the stage below…someone was pulling the box curtains closed.