Authors: Melissa Marr
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Paranormal, #Social Issues, #Drugs; Alcohol; Substance Abuse, #Love & Romance
But he still had to fold his hand into a fist at his side. The urge to lay his skin against hers was a compulsion he hadn’t felt so strongly in centuries. He stared at her, looking for some clue as to why her, why now.
Leslie realized that Niall was staring at her again. “That’s sort of creepy, you know?”
He looked amused, the corner of his scar wrinkling as he smiled ever so slightly. “Did I offend you?”
“No. But it’s weird. If you have something to say, speak.”
“I would if I could figure out what to say,” Niall said. He put a hand on the small of her back and nudged her forward gently. “Come. The club is a safer place to relax than out here”—he gestured at the empty street—“where you are so vulnerable.”
Seth cleared his throat and scowled at Niall. Then he told Leslie, “The club’s right around the corner.”
Leslie walked a little faster, trying to move away from Niall’s hand on her back. Speeding up didn’t help: he kept pace with her.
When they rounded the corner and she saw the dark building in front of them, she felt panic well up. There was no sign, no posters, no people hanging outside, nothing to indicate that the building in front of them was anything other than abandoned.
I should be freaking out.
She wasn’t, though, and she couldn’t understand why.
Niall said, “Head toward the doorman.”
She looked back. Standing at the front of the building was a muscular guy with an ornate tattoo covering one half of his face. Spirals and lines disappeared under hair as black as the ink. The other side of his face was inkless. The only ornamentation was a small black tusklike piercing in his upper lip, the white match of which was in the corner of his
mouth on the inked side of his face.
“Keenan cool with her being here?” The man pointed at her, and Leslie realized that she was still staring—in part because she couldn’t fathom how she could’ve missed seeing someone like him standing outside the door.
“She is a friend of Aislinn’s, and there are
unpleasant
guests in town. The”—Niall paused and crinkled his face into a wry smile—“Aislinn is with Keenan.”
“So are Keenan and Ash good with it or not?” the inked man asked.
Niall clasped the man’s forearm. “She is my guest, and the club should be near empty, yes?”
The doorman shook his head, but he opened the door and motioned to a short, muscular guy with the most incredible dreads Leslie had ever seen. They were thick and well formed, hanging like a mane around the guy’s face. For a moment, Leslie thought it
was
an actual mane.
“We have a new
guest
,” said the doorman as the dreadlocked guy came outside. The door thudded shut behind him.
Dreadlocks stepped closer and sniffed.
Niall quirked his mouth in what looked like a snarl. “
My
guest.”
“Yours?” Dreadlocks’ voice was low—harsh like he lived on cigarettes and liquor.
Leslie opened her mouth to object to the proprietary tone in Niall’s voice, but Seth put a hand on her wrist. She glanced at him, and he shook his head.
Dreadlocks said, “My pride is in—”
Seth cleared his throat.
“Go tell them,” the doorman said as he opened the door and motioned Dreadlocks back inside. “Two minutes.”
They stood there awkwardly for a moment before the tension felt too unbearable for Leslie. “If this is a bad idea—”
But the door had already reopened, and Seth was stepping into the shadowy building.
“Come on.” Niall went inside.
She went only a few steps before she stopped, unable to think what to say or do. The few people inside were all wearing strange and ornate costumes. A woman passed by with vines draped all over her arms; the vines seemed as if they flowered.
Like the living art at the museum.
Another couple wore feathered wigs; still others had blue faces and misshapen teeth, not like the vampire teeth the costume places sold at Halloween—but each tooth jagged, like sharks’ teeth.
Niall stood beside her, his hand resting on her back again. In the odd blue lights of the club, his eyes looked reflective; his scar was a black slash on his skin.
“Is it okay that we don’t have costumes, too?” she whispered.
He laughed. “Quite. These are their everyday wear.”
“Everyday? Are they like one of those reenactment groups? A role-playing group?”
“Something like that.” Seth pulled out a tall chair. Like the rest of the furniture, it was a polished wood. Nothing in the low-lit club seemed to be made of anything
other
than wood, stone, or glass.
Unlike the rough-looking exterior, the inside of the club was far from run-down. The floor gleamed like polished marble. Running the length of one side of the room was a long, black bar. It wasn’t wood or metal, but it looked too thick for glass. As the rotating club lights hit the bar, Leslie saw streaks of color—purples and greens—shimmering in it. She gasped.
“Obsidian,” said a raspy voice beside her ear. “Keeps the patrons calm.”
A waitress in a skin-suit with shimmering silver scales all over her legs and arms stood there. She circled behind Leslie and sniffed her hair.
Leslie took a step away from her.
Although neither Niall nor Seth had ordered yet, the waitress handed them drinks—a golden-colored wine for Niall and a microbrew for Seth.
“No drinking age in here?” Leslie’s gaze wandered over the room. The people in their odd costumes all had drinks, though some of them looked younger than she was. Dreadlocks was with a group of four other guys with pale brown dreads. They were sharing a pitcher that looked like it was filled with the same golden wine Niall was drinking.
A pitcher of
wine?
“Now you see why I prefer to come here. Seth cannot
relax as well at the Crow’s Nest, and they do not carry my preferred vintage”—Niall lifted his glass and sipped—“at any other club.”
“Welcome to the Rath, Leslie.” Seth leaned back in his chair and motioned to the dance floor, where several almost normal-looking people were dancing. “Weirder than anywhere else you’ll ever see…if you’re lucky.”
The music grew immediately louder, and Niall tipped back his glass one more time. “You could relax more fully, Seth. Some of the girls—”
“Go dance, Niall. If we don’t hear from Ash within the next couple hours, we’ll need to get Leslie to work.”
Beside her, Niall stood. He sat his half-f glass on the table and gestured to the dance floor. “Come join the dance.”
At his words, Leslie felt a whispering need to refuse and a simultaneous tug of impatience to go toward the small group of costumed people who were dancing almost manically. The music, the movement, his voice—they all beckoned her, pulled her as if she were a marionette with too many strings. Out there in the throng of swaying, shifting bodies, she’d find pleasure. A sea of lust and laughter floated in the air around the dancers, and she wanted to swim in it.
To buy a moment to steady her nerves, she grabbed for Niall’s glass. When she lifted it to her lips, it was empty. She stared at it, turning it in her hand by the fragile stem.
“We don’t drink this in anger or fear.” Niall put his hand over hers so that they were both holding on to his glass.
It wasn’t anger or fear she felt; it was longing. But she wasn’t telling him that. She couldn’t.
The waitress stepped from somewhere behind them. Silently, she tilted a heavy bottle over the glass Niall and Leslie both held. From this close the wine looked thick as honey. Spirals of iridescent color shimmered as it filled the cup. It was tempting, smelling sweeter and richer than anything she’d ever known.
Her hand was still under his when Niall lifted the glass to his lips. “Would you like to share my glass, Leslie? In friendship? In celebration?”
He watched her as he sipped the golden drink.
“No, she wouldn’t.” Seth slid his beer across the table. “If she wants a drink, it’ll be from my glass or my hand.”
“If she wants to share my cup, Seth, it’s her choice.” Niall lowered the glass, still holding her hand over the stem.
The drink, the dance, Niall—too many temptations were in front of Leslie. She wanted them all. Despite how weirdly Niall was acting, she wanted that tumble into pleasure. The fears that had been binding her since the rape were loosening lately.
The decision to get tattooed did that. Freed me.
Leslie licked her lips. “Why not?”
Niall lifted the glass until the rim was touching her lips, close enough that her lipstick smudged the glass, but he didn’t tilt it, didn’t pour that strange-sweet wine into her mouth. “Indeed, why not?”
Seth sighed. “Think for a minute, Niall. Do you really want to deal with the consequences?”
“Right now, more than anything I can think of, but”—Niall pulled the glass away from Leslie’s lips and curled their hands until her lipstick smudge was against his mouth—“you deserve more respect than this, don’t you, Leslie?”
He drained the glass and set it on the table but kept hold of her hand.
Leslie wanted to run. His hand still held hers on the glass, but his attention was no longer intense. Her confidence faltered. Maybe Aislinn had good reasons to keep Keenan’s family away from her: Niall alternated between fascinating and bizarre. She licked her suddenly dry lips, feeling denied, rejected, and angry. She shook off his hand. “You know what? I’m not sure what game you’re playing, but I’m not interested in it.”
“You’re right.” Niall lowered his gaze. “I don’t mean to…I don’t want…I’m sorry. I’m not myself lately.”
“Whatever.” She backed up.
But Niall took both of her hands in his, gently so that she could pull away if she wanted. “Dance with me. If you’re still unhappy, we’ll see you home. Seth and I both.”
Leslie looked back at Seth. He sat in a club that she hadn’t known existed, surrounded by people in extreme costumes and bizarre behavior, yet he was calm.
Unlike me.
Seth tugged at his lip ring, rolling it into his mouth as he did when he was thinking. Then he motioned toward the floor. “Dancing’s fine. Just don’t drink anything he offers you—or that anyone else offers you, okay?”
“Why?” She forced the question out, despite her instant
aversion to asking, to knowing.
Neither Niall nor Seth answered. She thought to press the matter, but the music was beckoning her, inviting her to let go, to forget her doubts. The blue lights that came from every corner of the club spun across the floor, and she wanted to spin with them.
“Please dance with me.” Niall’s expression was one of need, of longing and unspoken offers.
Leslie couldn’t think of any question—or answer—worth refusing that look. “Yes.”
And with that Niall spun her into his arms and onto the floor.
Several songs later, Leslie was thankful for the long hours of waitressing. Her legs ached, but not as much as they would have if she’d been out of shape. She’d never met anyone who could dance the way Niall did. He led her through moves that made her laugh and taught her strange steps that required more concentration that she thought casual dancing could ever need.
Through it all, he was curiously careful with her. His hands never strayed out of the safe zones. Like at the museum, he was almost distant as he held her. If not for a few flirtatious remarks, she’d suspect she’d imagined that delicious look when he’d invited her to dance.
Niall finally paused. “I need to check in with Seth before I”—he burrowed his face into the side of her neck, his breath almost painfully warm on her throat—“give in to my unconscionable desire to put my hands on you properly.”
“I don’t want to stop dancing….” She was having fun, feeling free, and didn’t want to risk that pleasure ending.
“So don’t.” Niall nodded to one of the dreadlocked guys who’d been dancing nearby. “They would dance with you until I return.”
Leslie held out her hand and the dreadlocked guy pulled her into his arms and spun her across the room. She was laughing.
The first guy passed her to another dreadlocked guy, who spun her toward the next. Each of them looked identical to the last one. There were no pauses in their movements. It was as if the world had begun spinning at a different rate. It was fabulous. At least two songs passed, and Leslie wondered how many guys there were—or if she was dancing with the same two over and over. She wasn’t sure if they really were identical or if the illusion was a result of being spun so impossibly fast. But then she stumbled to a halt. The music hadn’t ended, but the dizzying movement had.
The dreadlocked guys stopped moving and she realized there were five of them.
A stranger walked across the floor toward her, moving with languid grace like he heard a different song than she did. His eyes were surrounded by dark shadows.
He
looked like he was surrounded by shadows, as if the blue lights glanced away without touching him. A silver chain glinted against his shirt. Dangling from the chain was a razor blade. He waved a hand dismissively at the
dreadlocked guys and said, “Shoo.”
She blinked when she realized she was staring. “I know you. You were at Rabbit’s once…. We met.”
Her hand drifted to the top of her spine, where her not-yet-complete tattoo was. It suddenly throbbed like a drum-beat caught under her skin.
He smiled at her as if he could hear that illusory beat.
Two of the dreadlocked quints had bared their teeth. The others were growling.
Growling?
She looked at them and then back at him. “Irial, right? That’s your name. From Rabbit’s…”
He stepped behind her, slid his hands around her waist, and pulled her back to his chest. She didn’t know why she was dancing with him, why she was still dancing at all. She wanted to walk off the dance floor, find Niall, find Seth, leave, but she couldn’t walk away from the music.
Or him.
Her mind flashed odd images—sharks swimming toward her, cars careening out of control in her path, fangs sinking into her skin, shadowy wings curling around her in a caress. Somewhere in her mind she knew she needed to step away from him, but she didn’t, couldn’t. She’d felt the same way when she’d first seen him: like she’d follow him wherever he wanted. It wasn’t a feeling she liked.