Chapter 21
Taint (Formerly Claimed) Dark Midnight 1
*Really short chapter, I know. Â But I didn't want to combine it with the other one. Â As always, let me know if something doesn't make sense. Â (again, I had several distractions as I was trying to edit). Â Don't forget to vote and comment--each one is much appreciated!*
âDid someone say blood?â The muffled voice came from inside the second coffin just as a pale hand shoved off the lid.  In a flurry of motion, two black eyes peeked from above the rim.
âIâm starving,â Hazel murmured, licking her lips. âHave you already gotten breakfast?â
Eliot ignored her.
Sage only grinned at his sister without lifting his head from the floor.
âYouâre always hungry, Haz,â he said. âBut your stomach can wait. Apparently, Eliot is accusing me of something naughtyââ
âWhat do you mean âtainted bloodâ?â Eliot demanded in a growl, cutting him off.
Sage smirked and crossed his arms over his chest. âI mean tainted. Hazelââ He cocked his head back at his sister. âWould you mind telling Eliot here the definition?â
âDisgusting,â she recited gleefully. Her eyes sparkled as she folded her hands neatly against the edge of her coffin and perched her chin on top. âGross, wrong, defective, unnaturalââ
âShut up,â Eliot snarled.
Hazelâs pink lips snapped shut, but not before she and her brother shared a secretive look.
He hated when they did thatânot only was it creepy, but those secret little looks almost always meant trouble.
âWhat were you doing over there in the first place?â He snarled, even though the answer was obvious.
Sage wasnât the kind who went around introducing himself to the new neighbors just for the hell of it.
âWhy?â Sage countered, finally rolling into an upright position. âI didnât touch the mortalâat least in theory,â he added on a chuckle.  âSo why the rude awakening? That really hurt, you know?â
He grimaced and rubbed at his pale foreheadâwhich was only for show; the wound had fully healed by now.
Still, Eliot almost felt the urge to give him another gash along his head.
Or maybe a hole made with something pointy and sharp and woodenâ¦
âHmmm?â Sage prodded. âWhy do you care anywayâ"  He broke, off and those black eyes narrowing ever so slightly.  âWait,â he said, dropping the casual tone.  âHow would you know I was even there, unlessâ¦â
âOoooh,â Hazel piped from her casket. She giggled and murmured, âEliot went hunting.â
Hunting.
He flinched.  âI was not,â he hissed, fixing Hazel with a glare that made her bite her lip.
It was the truthâbut that didnât explain why a part of him shivered as if it wasnât.
He hadnât been hunting Miriamâ¦had he?
âGoodness gracious, Eliot,â Sage grumbled, but his black eyes were oddly smug. âBut if you werenât hunting, then what were you doing in the mortalâs house?â
âYes!â Hazel pitched in, nodding in her brotherâs direction. âWhat?â
Damn it, Eliot thought simply. He wasnât even surprised that the two of them had somehow managed to turn this whole thing on himâit was how the twins operated.
They could be like a pack of hyenas tearing into a wounded animal.
No matter, he thought, feeling his eyes narrow; he was in the mood for a fight.
âBoth of you know the rules,â he began, hands curling into fists.
âOf course!â Hazel sighed and twirled a pale finger through the air. âNo feeding close to the house. No killing.â She pouted. âSame old same old.â
âThen why did you break them?â He bellowed, fixing Sage with a glare that he knew would have made a mortal shrivel up in fear.
Sage merely rolled his eyes. âI was exploring,â he said, as if it was a likely explanation.
A vampireâ¦exploring the home of lone girl in the middle of the night.
Yeah. Maybe in a predatorâs mind that explanation might have made sense.
Sage seemed to realize this, and quickly changed tact. âI was looking for breakfast,â he added, hastilyâwhich just made it worse.
Breakfast, could have come from only one place.
âI was justâ¦â Helplessly, Sage craned his head back to his sister, who promptly came to his rescue.
âWhat does it matter what he was doing?â She said on a sniff. Her black gaze was flinty sharp. âWhat matters is what you were doing, oh fearless Eliot?  He who has sworn off of human blood.â
She smiled, revealing her fangs as he flinched. âBreaking your vows, were you?â
âI was not!â He took a step forward, instantly hating himself for giving in.
Hazel just beamed, knowing sheâd drawn blood. She pulled herself upright and tapped the bottom of her chin.
âIs there something special about this human?â She asked, eyes gleaming. âMaybe I should pay her a visit?â
Most days he took pride in his ironclad self-controlâbut now, Eliot couldnât help the murderous urge that made him take a step forward in Hazelâs direction. âYou touch her and Iâllââ
âHer bloodâs tainted, anyway,â Sage piped up from the floor. His eyes were dark and his nose wrinkled as if remembering a bad smell. âIâve never sensed anything like it. Disgusting,â he added with a shudder.
Disgusting?
That made Eliot freeze in his tracks and forget all thoughts of strangling Hazel by that slender throat.
Miriamâ¦disgusting? The words didnât even seem natural in the same sentence.
How could anyoneâespecially a glutton like Sageâbreathe in one drop of Miriamâs scent and not describe it as anything other than disgusting.
Tantalizing, perhaps?
Sweet.
Alluring.
Temptingâ¦
Disgusting was the furthest thing from his mindâbut he couldnât ignore the way Sage grimaced.
âI thought I might vomit,â the vampire insisted, running a hand through his dark hair. Then he smiled and added in a wistful tone,  âluckily thoughâ¦a better feed wasnât too far behindâ¦â
Which brought Eliot's attention back to another important point.
âI told you never to kill,â he snarled. âYou idiot! If you had the stupidity to disobey me the least you could do was not do it so close to the houseââ
Sage frowned. âSorry to cut you off in your rantâyouâre doing gloriously, by the wayâbut what the hell are you talking about?â
âWhat do you mean?â Eliot felt his gaze narrow. âYou killed a girl last night. Practically on our front porch.â
Hazel gasped. âSage darling, even you couldnât be that stupid.â But even she sounded skeptical.
âI wasnât,â Sage snapped. âI mean, Iâm notâI didnât kill anyone.â
âReally?â Eliot scoffed with a cold smile. âThen who did?â
Sage shook his head. âNot me!â
Eliot expected the denial...but rather than try to effortlessly charm his way out of his lie like usual, Sage just lookedâ¦
Confused.
âThe girl in the white house freaked me out with her fucked up scent, so I went hunting in the town, instead,â he said. âI found some girl stumbling out of a barâbut I didnât kill her.â
For once, Sage seemed to be telling the truth. Eliot couldnât ignore that fact as the other vampireâs gaze bore into his.
âI swear, Eliot,â he said. âShe wasnât dead when I left her.â
âThen who the hell killed that girl out there?â Eliot demanded, jabbing his thumb in the woodâs general direction.
âIt wasnât me,â Sage insisted.
âNor me,â Hazel said quickly as he turned his gaze on her. âI prefer not to get my hands dirty.â
Eliot frowned. âThen who the hell did?â
Sage or Hazel didnât answerâbut they didnât have to.
The answer was obvious.
Someone else had been out there that night. Another predator who had sought them out and wanted to make one thing clear, and one thing only;
There was a new monster in town, and whatever it wasâ¦
It wanted to make sure they knew it.