“Yours? You’re a warrior? A lass?” In spite of his throbbing head, he gave her an indulgent smile. The trauma of this place must have gotten to her.
Anna’s shoulders straightened. Her beautiful eyes were fierce. “I’m a warrior.”
“You’re not a…prostitute?”
“What?” She gaped at him.
“I thought…your dress, it was…short.”
“No, I’m not a prostitute.” If she spoke the truth, and he believed she did, she should have been more offended. As it was, she looked intrigued, as if she’d solved a mystery. “I’m from Clan Connor.”
He struggled to catch his next breath. “Connor?”
Her eyes narrowed, making them look like slivers of jewels. “Do you know the name?”
“I don’t know.” But his head felt like it would split down the middle. “How could I be one of these warriors and not remember such a thing?”
“It’s amazing that you’re not a vegetable after all they’ve done to you. All the drugs and beatings. After we get out of here, I’ll take you to a doctor I know. Maybe that’ll help us find out who you are.”
It gave him a warm feeling that she had said us after all she’d suffered at his hands. “I’m sorry for everything.”
“If you apologize again, I’m going to hit you.” She stared at him, her face fierce.
While he was trying to figure out what to possibly say, she looked around the room. “We have to figure out where we are.”
“It’s a sight better than that dungeon. It looks like a tower.” The room was round, with stone floors covered by plush rugs that must have cost a fortune. The bed they were in was a four-poster. The comforter was a rich brocade like he’d seen once in a palace in India. India? Another memory? Tapestries and sconces hung on the walls, while ornate tables and chairs decorated the room.
“I don’t care if it’s the White House. I want away from this place,” Anna said.
He didn’t know what a white house was, but he was all for leaving too. “Got any fig leaves? I’ve broken out of towers before, but never naked—damnation, I think I remembered something else. A castle…and screams.” He was so encouraged by the glimpse, he started to get up, but stopped when he saw her eyes widen. “We can’t stay under the covers forever. There’s got to be something in here we can wear. I’m going to see what I can find.” He slipped out of bed, holding a pillow over his groin. He walked around the room, looking for anything that might be used for clothing, taking care to keep his arse turned away from her. He must have failed because in a minute she cleared her throat.
“You need another pillow,” she said.
He glanced back at her and saw her quickly look away. “Or you could just close your eyes.”
She snorted. Snorted?
Did all female warriors make such rude sounds? Though she looked very bonny when she did it. He was relieved she was acting more like the brave, bold woman he’d seen when she’d first arrived. Not the one who’d looked haunted and broken. He didn’t particularly like bold women, but it was the lesser of two evils. “Why would they move us from the dungeon to a tower?” He opened another drawer and found it empty. “And why did they take our clothes?”
“Remember what the guard said about breeding? Tristol mentioned testing. Maybe you passed the tests.”
“You think Tristol is planning to breed me to his demons? Like hell he will. I’ll rip his bloody bonny head off, demon or no.”
“I doubt that.”
He glared at her. “You think I can’t do it?” How could he protect a woman who had no confidence in him? Hell, how could he protect a woman when he didn’t know his own name?
She shrugged one shoulder, a lovely shoulder. “It wasn’t an insult. Tristol is a demon of old.”
“What does that mean?”
“The ancient demons are incredibly powerful. They have to be assigned.”
“Assigned?” The headache was coming back.
“They have to be matched to a warrior’s skills and strength.”
“Assigned or not, I won’t sit here and let him breed me like a stallion.” And what about her? Was she part of this breeding plan too? If this Tristol didn’t have some use for her, he would have killed her. I remember a roar, she’d said. The only roar he’d heard had come from the hybrid. A male.
He saw a door and opened it, thinking it might be a closet.
“Bollocks. What’s that?”
“Have you found a way out?” Anna grabbed a pillow from the bed and joined him. “It’s only a bathroom.”
“Bathroom?” There was a tub, but it was large enough for a small family. It had basins and a pot like the one in his cell, and another contraption enclosed in glass. It was strange looking, but he had a feeling he’d seen one before. He tried to focus on the strange room and not all the bare skin sticking out from behind the pillow next to him. He stopped and turned to the tower door. “Someone’s coming.”
“I don’t hear anything.”
A moment later, a voice ordered, “Open it!”
The prisoner grabbed a heavy vase from a table and stepped in front of Anna.
“The master will be angry,” another voice said.
“I’ll do it myself.” The door flew open, and a man stepped in. He was dressed in black and had long blond hair, pretty as a woman’s, and pale blue eyes.
Anna softly gasped and stepped beside him. The bloody woman wasn’t easy to protect.
Another man rushed into the room, holding a box. Tristol’s manservant. He’d seen him a few times before. “Are you a fool?” he asked the blond, without his usual quiet dignity. “Someone might have seen you. You know he has this section secured.”
The stranger came closer, his movements smooth, as if he slid across an icy loch. “I’ll be damned.” His blue eyes moved intently over the prisoner, from the pillow covering his groin to his hair. “The resemblance is amazing. I would believe it myself, but I saw him recently, and he didn’t have this.” He reached out and tugged the prisoner’s beard.
The prisoner reacted so quickly it surprised even him. He grabbed the pale-haired man’s arm, gripping it hard.
The man hissed, revealing broken fangs.
The prisoner jumped back in alarm.
“Who are you?” the blond man asked.
The prisoner didn’t answer.
“Who wants to know?” Anna asked.
The blond frowned and then looked at Anna. “So this is why no one can find you. How did she get here?” he asked the servant.
“Apparently she sneaked inside the dungeon.”
The pale-haired man looked around the room. “This is as good a place as any to keep them while I unravel this mystery.” He moved toward the door. “Say nothing to Tristol. I don’t know who he has here, but it’s not the Mighty Faelan. I’ll try to find the real warrior and capture him before Tristol realizes he’s been duped. Otherwise, all our lives are going to be hell.”
He breezed out of the room, and the servant stared at the prisoner. His face seemed to ripple, and for a moment the prisoner thought he glimpsed a woman’s face.
He turned to them, his expression blank now. “I’ll be back with food.”
“I’d rather have answers and some bloody clothes,” the prisoner said.
“The master has new clothes for you as well.” He set a box down. “I believe you’ll find everything here.”
“Did you see his teeth?” he asked when the servant had gone.
“Fangs. He’s a vampire.”
“Vampires don’t exist.” Not anymore. He frowned. Was that another memory?
“I wish, but I’m afraid they do.”
“Are you certain?”
“I killed one on the way here. And unless I’m mistaken, this blond is the one Ronan’s been following.”
“Damnation.”
“You say that a lot.”
“What?”
“Damnation.”
“My apologies. I shouldn’t curse in front of a woman.”
“I don’t mind. I just know someone else who says that.”
“This Ronan who’s following the vampire?” She seemed overly familiar with too many men.
“No, not Ronan.”
“Who is he?”
“A warrior. We’re part of the same clan. He’s obsessed with the blond vampire. He got away from Ronan when we were fighting Druan.”
“Druan. I think I’ve heard that name before.”
“I’m not surprised. Every warrior knows his name. He’s powerful.”
“Like Tristol.”
“Yes. I have to let the clan know that Tristol is here and that he’s working with vampires. Obviously he wants Faelan for his breeding plan. Bree isn’t going to like that.”
“Is she another warrior?”
“And then some.”
He didn’t understand her meaning, but they had other priorities. “Then let’s get dressed. I don’t feel like fighting in nothing but my skin.”
Anna took her clothes into the bathroom while he shaved and dressed in the clean kilt and shirt the man had left. When she reappeared, his mouth dropped. Her dress was indecent, cut up to her thighs and down between her breasts.
“You can stop gaping,” Anna said.
The prisoner averted his gaze. “Surely you don’t plan to wear that.”
“It’s this or the sheet.”
He looked at the bed, as if considering it. “How can you even climb in that garment?”
“I’ve climbed in worse.”
“He’s coming back.”
The servant entered the room and set down a tray of food, better than what they’d been fed in the dungeon. Her stomach growled, but there was no time to eat. As soon as he turned to go, Anna grabbed a napkin and put it behind her back. Just before the door closed, she darted forward and stuck the folded napkin between the casing and the lock.
The prisoner looked impressed.
“The oldest trick in the world,” she said. She put her ear to the door. “It’s quiet.”
“Wait a moment until we’re certain he’s gone.”
“We can’t wait long. He’ll be back.” She didn’t want either of them here for whatever Tristol had planned. Flashes of a dark room and mournful cries stirred in her mind, but she couldn’t sharpen the image. She wasn’t sure she wanted to. “We need weapons. I wish I had my talisman.”
His hand rose to his neck. “I know that word.”
“Talismans are a warrior’s weapon against demons, though they don’t work on vampires. The only way to kill the creatures is to cut off their heads or pierce their hearts. We need a sword or something sharp.”
The prisoner braced his foot against the four-poster bed and yanked, breaking off a jagged piece of the antique post. He grinned and gave it a couple of practice swings, as a warrior might with a sword. “Like this?”
“Good thinking.” Anna broke off another post, and the prisoner emptied a pillowcase and put the food and bottled water inside. Armed with their crude weapons, they slowly opened the door. The structure they were in was round with stairs circling the outer perimeter. “We’re definitely in a tower.”
“That should make it easier to determine where we are,” the prisoner said.
“I don’t know. This fortress had several towers. Guess we’re going down. We’ll have to risk running into someone.”
“Towers often have a door leading to the roof. Perhaps we can climb down and avoid getting caught.”
He was remembering more about his past. She had her own theories, but she didn’t want to spring them on him. Now wasn’t the time. “If I remember the size of this fortress, we’d have a long drop if we fell. But it’s worth a try.”
They checked the small area but didn’t find any other way out. “I guess we take the stairs,” he said.
They crept down the narrow staircase, armed with their bedpost stakes and the pillowcase of food that the prisoner held in his other hand. “We should be nearing the bottom,” Anna said after they had descended dozens of steps.
“I hear voices.”
His hearing must be excellent. Hers was as well, and yet she hadn’t heard anything. “We’ll have to be very quiet from here on out.”
“I’m not as light of foot as my brothers,” he whispered. “They say I stomp like a bull—” He stopped and frowned.
“Your memory is definitely coming back.” If his brothers were quieter than he was, then they were damned good.
They continued without speaking and soon came to a door. The voices were louder. “We must be on the second or third floor,” Anna whispered. “I’ll check.” The door was unlocked. She eased it open and saw a large room filled with people. Before she could move, a woman walked by. There wasn’t even time to shut the door. Anna froze, but the woman moved on without a glance. A man followed behind her, pausing briefly to sniff the air as he passed.
“They can’t see us,” the prisoner whispered after they were gone.
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