Val’s expression didn’t waver, but Trina saw his hands tighten together, one slow pulse of tension, before they relaxed again. Nik had struck a nerve. It seemed to be a family trait.
Lanny gathered a breath as if he meant to speak, and Trina jabbed him in the ribs so hard he flinched away from her with a muttered curse. No other sound broke the strung-tight silence of the room. Trina swore she could hear the snow melting in the windowsills. The vampires probably could.
This was not, everyone save Lanny seemed to grasp—and he likely did, too, but he’d never been one for awkward quiet spells—, remotely similar to the standoff Trina and Nikita had held on the hill an hour ago. Not two family members bitching at each other over inclusion and exclusion. It was an old-school power struggle, a war for supremacy over not simply a family, but a potential army. Four of the people in this room held royal titles. One was the last tsarevich of Russia. One was not only a prince, but the son of one of Rome’s original founders. It didn’t much matter that Nik was a vampire; he’d been a civilian, unremarkable, without a drop of noble blood, forced into the Cheka to save his own royalist skin. By rank alone, he shouldn’t have been considered for a leadership role.
But she knew that everyone in this room had looked at him on more than one occasion to lead them. That when push came to shove, it was his coldness, his history, his brutal efficiency, that they all needed as head of the pack.
Even Val knew it.
But that didn’t mean he wouldn’t want to draw swords and fight him to the death on principle. He was Dracula’s brother, after all.
Amelia was already up and moving about the chamber, silk robe belted tight against the morning chill, slipper-shod feet slapping quickly across the floor as she retrieved the fireplace poker and knelt to stoke the coals in the hearth.
“No, allow me,” Cassius said, and hurried forward to deposit the breakfast tray on the table in front of the sofa. “Amelia.” There was a pleading note in his voice, one he’d never heard leave his own lips before. It startled him so badly that he tripped on the edge of the rug and nearly lost his balance.
Amelia added fresh pieces of split wood from the leather sling beside the mantel and pulled the grate closed. She stood, brushing bark and dirt off her hands, and sent him an amused look. “Did you hurt yourself?”
“No,” he said, face warm. “I was going to build the fire back up when I arrived. I didn’t expect you to be awake this early.”
“I couldn’t sleep,” she said, and folded her arms tight across her middle. Then she snorted. “Besides: I’m used to war camp hours. Do you really think me a slugabed?”
“Of course not. But I thought, after so long on the march, in bed rolls and cots, you might be in desperate need of a good night’s sleep somewhere warm and safe.”
“Safe?”
“Warm and comfortable at least.”
“Did you sleep well when you were my prisoner?” she challenged.
“At times, yes.” When her brows lifted in surprise, he said, “I was more afraid of being returned than of being killed. Whatever my fate, I took rest when I could.”
Her lips compressed, and twitched to the side, as though unhappy with his answer.
“I’ve not known freedom. Not ever. This is more of an adjustment for you, my lady.”






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