Elancourtâs had been navigable, but over the years, debris and grasses had choked the cove until the area looked more like a swamp.
Wildlife teemed. Snakes, alligators, and mink made their home here. Nutriasâlarge, aquatic rodentsâfrolicked among the lily pads, flashing their orange teeth.
This was one of Néomiâs favorite spots on the property. Sheâd spent the entire day on the bank, crouched at the edge of the water, watching tadpoles growing limbs.
It was the best she could come up with to occupy her so she wouldnât return to the vampireâs room.
âStay away from me,â heâd warned. Bonne idée, Néomi had decided.
Because she was attracted to him. Softened by the knowledge of his heroism in the pastâand awed by the sight of his naked bodyâsheâd begun feeling a strong pull toward him. Their interaction had been heady and addictive for Néomi. Even his fearsome bellowing hadnât dampened it.
And it would only get worse.
So what would happen when he left? Again, sheâd be all alone in her empty house, enduring her empty life. With no mad but sexy vampire to distract her from her existence.
For someone as sociable as Néomi, getting used to the loneliness and the interminable days after her death had been grueling; it was even more devastating when the tenants left.
They always left.
Conrad Wroth will, too.
The idea so depressed her, sheâd vowed to stay away from them all. Iâd best not get accustomed to them being around.
Her battle to stay away this long had taken all her willpower, but she didnât foresee a victory this eve. Soon the sliver moon would rise like a pale rip in the fabric of the sky, and she was feeling vulnerable, as she always did.
Néomi had told Conrad that she felt nothing, which wasnât entirely true. When she danced at midnight, she would feel the pain of her death, that agony relived.
I donât want to be alone. Not tonightâ¦
At twilight, she found herself making her way to him as if pulled by an invisible string. When she hesitated just outside his door, he said, âGhost, come to me!â
Enjoy the interaction, she commanded herself. Just donât get used to it!
âI know youâre there.â His voice sounded weary. âAre you frightened of me now?â
Sheâd never forget the terrifying sound heâd made, the aggressive growl that threatened pain, a sharp reminder of what he was. But she wasnât afraid of him.
She bit her lip. When I go inside, I wonât find him as handsome as Iâve been thinking. She floated through the closed door and immediately glared. No, he was more handsome. Très beau .
Why was he so appealing to her? Sheâd always favored older men, established in their lives, with some of their fire already subdued by lifeâs trials.
Conrad was all fireâ¦. A beautiful madman.
âWhere the fuck have you been?â he immediately snapped. His red eyes flickered over her face, her breasts, down her body and up again with a greedy gaze, surveying her as men had before sheâd died.
How was she going to go another eighty years without smoldering looks like that?
Unaffected by his tone, she said, âDid you miss me?â Her demeanor was breezy. Heâd never know about her struggle to remain away. âShould I have been here instead?â
âYouâd come every day before,â he said gruffly.
âYou warned me away, remember? And then you bellowed at me like some rabid bear.â
â Rabid bear? I didnât want my brothers to see you unclothed.â
âConrad, they couldnât see me at all.â
He scowled. âI didnâtâ¦recall that! Not at the time. Sometimes, itâs difficult for meâ¦â He trailed off, then added, âDamn it, Iâd just had a shot.â
Unwelcome sympathy for him bloomed inside herâagain. She wondered what it would
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