kind. “I’m Juliet and this is Victor.” She sent the vampire at her side a wry grimace. “My mate when I choose to claim him.”
Tane stepped toward the clan chief, his body rigid with the compulsion to put as much distance as possible between Victor and Laylah.
“I must speak with you in private,” he demanded.
Laylah grabbed his arm. “Tane …”
“I must warn you, Laylah, that it’s a waste of breath to argue with vampires,” Juliet murmured, moving to place an arm around Laylah’s shoulders.
“But I have questions.”
“So I heard. Come with me.” Juliet urged Laylah down the opening between cells, obviously headed for the nearby stairs. “I think I have the answers you want.”
Tane’s brows snapped together in disbelief as he watched the two women disappear. Dammit, was Laylah trying to drive him nuts?
Victor snapped his fingers in front of his face. “Earth to Tane.”
He jerked to meet Victor’s amused gaze. “Where the hell are they going?”
Victor arched a brow. “Does it matter?”
“Laylah is a creature banned by the Commission. As soon as she leaves the tunnels she will be vulnerable.”
“So? It’ll save you the trouble of… shit.” Victor’s humor was replaced with cold fury as Tane grabbed him by the neck and slammed him against the wall of the cell. “Unless you have an overwhelming itch for your grave I suggest you release me.”
Tane was rarely stupid.
He’d learned a brutal lesson in ever allowing his emotions to overcome his senses. Until Laylah.
Now he was making a perilous habit of charging from one bad decision to another.
A pity there wasn’t a damned thing he could do about it.
“The Jinn is mine,” he hissed, grudgingly releasing his hold on the older vampire.
Victor smoothed his silk shirt, his sardonic expression disguising the lingering fury that Tane could scent in the air.
“I doubt the Oracles would agree.” “I will deal with them later.”
Victor folded his arms over his chest, a speculative expression on his noble features.
“What’s going on, Tane?” he demanded. “You have a reputation as a ruthless bastard who does your duty and disappears back to your hidden lair. Like Batman, without the creepy butler.”
He hesitated. He wasn’t about to share his strange obsession with Laylah, but he was going to have to offer some explanation if he wanted Victor’s help.
“Would you believe me if I told you that I’m playing a hunch?” he at last said.
“Yes,” he agreed with a remarkable sincerity. “Let’s go somewhere more comfortable.”
Victor headed toward the door leading out of the dungeon, his Italian leather shoes clicking against the stone floor. Tane was barefoot as usual. Who gave a rat’s ass for expensive leather? Silence trumped fashion any day of the week.
Tane hurried to catch up with the clan chief, reaching his side as they climbed the narrow steps to enter the grand mansion above.
“Laylah,” he gritted.
“She’ll be safe with Juliet,” Victor promised with an offhand tone that made Tane’s jaw clench. The vampire was lucky that Tane had need of him.
“Not if half the demons in London are trying to capture her.”
“Don’t worry.” Victor smiled with smug confidence. “My mate has a collection of magical artifacts that could fill the Louvre. Somewhere among the cache are a hundred amulets, charms, and crystals that will keep Laylah hidden from nosy demons.”
They passed through the black and white foyer of the Palladian masterpiece and up an imposing staircase with a gilded balustrade. From there Victor led him through the marble hall that held a priceless collection of Greek statues set in shallow alcoves and a coved ceiling painted with fierce angels battling a horde of demons and into the formal salon.
The towering walls were covered by crimson silk panels, the rich color echoed in the upholstery of the traditional English furnishings and heavy velvet curtains that had been pulled
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