Unlike Maxâs grip, Loweâs doesnât hurt.
Itâs tight, though. And the way he presses me against the wall, like heâs trying to put his big body between me and the rest of the world, makes it difficult to breathe in without plastering my entire front to his.
âMiss Lark,â he says. Hoarse. A growl, nearly.
I swallow against the sudden drought in my throat, which makes me realize where his hand is: wrapped around my neck. Almost entirely. His fingers are so long, they touch the valleys behind my ears.
âWhat do you think youâre doing?â he asks, low and deep. Those offbeat eyes of his bore into mine. My heartbeat, which remained miraculously steady during my scuffle with Max, suddenly pounds louderâthen whisks into slow flutters when Lowe lowers his head to murmur against my temple, âWe havenât even been married for twenty-four hours. Praying mantises have longer honeymoon periods.â
Max, I could take, fairly easily. Lowe, no way. Itâs the difference between a puppy and a dire wolf.
âJust, you know.â My words sound wobbly. Iâm not proud of that. âTrying to avoid getting killed.â
Lowe stiffens for a millisecond, then pushes away. But he sticks close, palms flat against the wall on each side of my headâone still bandaged from yesterdayâs wound. It feels like a cage. A makeshift prison that heâs building, made of his body and his glare, to keep me pinned in place as he turns around to ask Max, âYou okay?â
Max looks up and nods, lips trembling. By now there are several Weres gathered around him. Alex, who glances between Lowe and me with an expression so guilty heâd probably admit to mortgage fraud if pressed ever so slightly. But also Juno, thoroughly inspecting Max for any mortal wounds I might have inflicted, and the older man and the ginger from the ceremony, who stare at me as though I just told the orphanage kids that Santa isnât real.
Everyone in this hallway looks very ready to shatter my kneecaps, maybe eat the marrow after. Which, nope.
âExcuse me.â I try to dip out of Loweâs cage to leave. He lowers one arm, locking me in more tightly.
âWhat happened?â he asks me.
Juno beats me to the answer. âShe was about to drink him dry. We all saw it.â She runs a hand over Maxâs clammy forehead. He looks briefly adrift, and then stammers out,
âSh-she was on me. Before I could do anything about it. And . . .â He bends his head, as if lost for words.
Every pair of eyes in the room turns to me. âOh, come on,â I snort.
âHer fangs were so close,â he whispers feebly, and now Iâm getting annoyed. Clearly method acting is his passion, but he did try to assault me.
âYeah, okay.â I roll my eyes. âPlease, leave me out of your erotomaniacal delusionsââ
âHave a doctor check Max,â Lowe barks, and then his hand closes around my wrist, at once gentle and unyielding. It happens so fast, I nearly lose my balance. Before I know it, Iâm scrambling to keep up with his longer legs as he drags me inside his office.
I immediately look around. I am worried about what heâs going to do with me, but this is a great opportunity. He didnât use a key, which means that he must have some kind of smart lockâ
âWhat happened?â Lowe asks. He let go of me, but still stands way too close, when thereâs plenty of space in the room to not crowd me. Itâs giving me flashbacks to our wedding, and this time Iâm not even wearing heels, which means that he gets to loom over me in a way almost no one ever does.
The door opens suddenly. Juno enters, but Loweâs eyes stay on me.
âMisery,â he growls, âhow about you fucking answer me, for once?â
âMax came over, saw me, decided to indulge in some light afternoon murder.â I shrug. âThat, Iâm used to. Itâs the subsequent lying thatââ
âBullshit,â Juno says.
I turn to her. âIâm not asking you to believe me. But reason it outâwhy would I attack a Were, on my first day in your territory, when the consequences would be my death at best, and full-on war between the Weres and the Vampyres at worst?â
âI think you canât help yourself. I think you saw him, and you wanted to feed, and youââ
ââand I was too lazy to stop by the blood-dedicated fridge fifty feet away?â I step in front of her, forgetting all about Lowe. âThatâs not how feeding works. Letâs just acknowledge that we know nothing about each otherâs species. Max came in, started telling me about how a bunch of people I share some distant DNA with killed his family, that Loweâs a traitor for marrying me, and then he . . . what?â
Juno isnât listening to me anymore. Her eyes meet Loweâs. A whole conversation passes between them in a split second.
Then she looks back at me. Furious. âIf you are trying to imply that Max is working with the Loyalsââ
âIâm not. Because I have no idea what the Loyals are.â
âMax is not a Loyal.â
âSure. Heâs not a brook trout, either. Iâm not making any ontological claims on him, but he did attack me.â
âYou areââshe takes an angry step closerââa liar.â
âLeave us.â Loweâs sharp voice reminds us that weâre not alone in the room. We turn at once. And weâre equally shocked to see that heâs addressing Juno.
âSheâs lying,â Juno insists. Itâs getting a little ridiculous, the way she points at me like Iâm a mugger who yanked her purse away. âYou should punish her.â
I snort out a laugh. âYes, Lowe. Spank me and take away my TV privileges.â
âYou blade-eared leech.â
âJuno. Out.â
However the hierarchy works among the Weres, it must be strict. Because Juno clearly wants to stay and ground me with her claws, but she dips her head once in something akin to a salute, and then murmurs a soft âAlpha,â before stalking out of the office.
It feels like respite, the door closing behind her, the blessed quiet. Until Lowe moves closer, and I suddenly mourn not having a third person in the room. The bad, as it turns out, is still better than the worse.
âMisery,â he says. There is reproach in his voice, and a bit of a rough edge, and the tone of someone who has lots of problems keeping him busy, and is used to solving most of them with a look and maybe a tiny threat of violence.
We regard each other, just me and him, and yes, I feel it loud in my blood: weâre alone. For the first timeâthough not of many to come. I doubt Lowe was planning to spend quality time with me ever again after yesterday.
Aside from a layer of stubble, he looks like he did at the ceremony, his harsh face all structure. Clearly, as my makeup artist was painting the Sistine Chapel redux, his found nothing to improve on. I notice his eyes dip to my collarbone, where a faint shadow of the forest-green markings still lingers behind the riot of waves left over from the braids. Once again, that muscle in his jaw jumps, pupils get fat all of a sudden.
This situation is a problem. The Collateral is supposed to be a nonplayable character in a video game. For the next year, I need to be invisible, unobtrusive as I search for Serena. Not the kind of nuisance who gets caught murdering a young Were.
God, I bet they call them pups.
âYou donât believe me, do you?â I ask.
He blinks, like he forgot we were in the middle of a conversation. He clears his throat, but his voice stays gravelly. âBelieve what?â
âThat I didnât attack Max.â
He presses his full lips together. âYou were showing him your fangs.â
âYou jealous?â I bat my eyes at him, not sure where this recklessness comes from. I donât think I want to provoke him. âWanna see them?â
His eyes rocket down to my lips and stay for a beat too long. Itâs almost funny, how repulsive Weres find our teeth. âWhat I am is worried that my Vampyre wife will get herself killed. Iâd have to bury her corpse in the raised bed under the plumbago, and the next batch will sprout ugly.â
I gasp theatrically. âNot the plumbago.â
âThey are my sisterâs favorite.â
âAnd she is very cute.â
He abruptly leans so close, I feel his breath on my lips. âIs this a threat?â
âNo.â I frown, bewildered. âNo.â I let out a choked laugh. âThere was no âwould be a shame if something happened to herâ implied. Despite the fan fiction Max and Juno have been writing about me, I do not usually plot the demise of children.â I think about my conversation with Alex. Whoâs probably off somewhere biting his cuticles to little stumps. âPlus, youâre the one who decided I should be living here.â
His eyebrow lifts. âIâm sure you have some excellent advice on where else I should house the daughter of the most powerful Vampyre in the council, whoâs apparently a fearsome fighter in her own right.â
âFearsome?â Iâm . . . flattered?
âFor a non-Were,â he adds, a tad begrudgingly, like he regrets the compliment. I bet this man thrives on grudges. He has a questionable temperament, stern and autocratic, and Iâve always thought of myself as too much of a survivor to be in any way mouthy, but here I am. Nettlesome.
âStill. It feels like committing to the bit a little too much, giving me the bedroom next to yours.â
âIâll decide whatâs too much.â Heâs condescending. And inflexible. A dick, probably.
âBy all means, then, letâs embrace tradition. Should we slice my palm and drip some blood on the sheets? Hang them from the public square?â
His eyes close briefly and he grits out, âI doubt there are any expectations of virginity on your part.â
âFantastic. I love surprising people.â
I see the confusion in his parted lips, before he subdues it and shifts back to his default austere expression.
Itâs amusing to me, the idea that someone who has skimmed a synopsis of my life would assume Iâve had any sort of romantic entanglement. With whom? A Vampyre, when they only see me as a traitor? A Human, who would consider me a monster?
The birth control shot I was given before coming here was a joke, not just because Lowe and I are as likely to have sex as we are to start a podcast together, but also because heâs a Were and I a Vampyre, and we couldnât reproduce even if we wanted to. Interspecies relationships are unheard ofâif not unseen, judging by all the Human-produced porn Serena and I would watch. Weâd eat popcorn and laugh at the untalented actors in purple contacts and fake teeth engaging in acts that proudly showcased their ignorance of Vampyre anatomy. Were, too. Iâm no expert, but Iâm fairly sure their dicks wouldnât get stuck in an orifice like that.
âWhere did you learn how to fight?â Lowe asks. Probably to change the topic from sex with his least favorite sentient species.
âWas it not listed in your briefing memo?â
He shakes his head. âI did wonder how you could still be alive, after seven attempts on your life.â
âSo did I. And there were more than that, though most were half-assed. We got tired of reporting them.â
âWe?â
âMy foster sister and I.â I cross my arms, and now Iâm mirroring his pose. Here we are, too close once again, my elbows almost brushing his. âWe took self-defense classes together.â
You know her, donât you? She knows you. Tell me something. Anything.
He does, but not what I want to hear. âNo fighting in Were territory.â
âSure. So, next time someone attacks me, I let them help themselves? Then again, you could be the next one to attack me. Since youâre not exactly a fan.â
The pause that follows is not encouraging. âFor as long as you live in Were territory, you are under my protection. And under my authority.â
I let out a silent, breathy laugh. âWhat are your orders for me, then?â
He takes one step closer, and the tension in the room instantly changes, shifting to something tighter, more dangerous. Fear stabs my stomach, that maybe I pushed too much. Thatâs why a Were is bending over me: to remind me how insignificant I am and say, âI need you to behave, Misery.â
His voice is all hard consonants and narrow eyes, and a shiver runs up my spine, cold and electric. My mind jumps back to Alexâs words: Even his scent was right. Everyone knew that he had the making of an Alpha. Iâm no Were, and if I inhale, all I can smell is clean sweat and strong blood, but I think I know what he meant. Somehow I feel it, the compulsion to nod, agree. To do as Lowe wants.
I have to actively stop myself. And shiver in the process.
âAt least you are clever enough to be afraid,â he murmurs.
I grit my teeth. âJust cold. You keep the temperature far too low.â
His nostrils flare. âDo as I fucking tell you, Misery.â
âBut of course.â My voice is steady, but he knows how rattled I am. Just as I know Iâm rattling him. âMay I be excused?â
He nods brusquely, and I dart for the door. But then I remember something important Iâve been meaning to ask.
I turn back to him. âCan my catââ
I stop, because Loweâs eyes are closed. Heâs inhaling deeply, as though gathering every possible air molecule within the room inside his lungs. And he looks . . .
Tormented. In pure, absolute agony. He straightens his expression when he notices that Iâm looking, but itâs too late.
My stomach twists with something slimy and unpleasant. Guilt. âI took a bath. Did that not make it better?â
His stare is blank. âMake what better?â
âMy scent.â
He swallows visibly. His tone is sharp. âThe situation hasnât improved for me.â
âBut howââ
âWhat were you going to ask, Misery?â
Oh. Right. âI have a cat.â
He scowls like I told him I keep pet centipedes. âYou have a cat.â
âYup.â I stop at that, because Lowe hasnât earned the right to any explanation for my life choices. Not that anything about Serenaâs damn fucking cat was a choice. âHeâs currently locked in my room, if your sister didnât let him out with her pilfered key. Can I let him roam around the house, or will Max try to frame him for racketeering?â
âYour cat is welcome among us,â Lowe says. If thatâs not a jab, nothing else is.
âWonder how that feels,â I say breezily, and slip out of the room without glancing at him again.