regain consciousness so she could find out.
He remained as the brothers had left him last nightâlying on the new mattress theyâd brought in for him, with his wrists chained together behind him, his muddy boots and the ankle restraints removed. His ripped clothing had dried, the material stiff with dirt. The angry red gashes on his chest had healed within mere hours.
She floated in a sitting position above the foot of the bed wondering how much longer he would be out. Sheâd thought all vampires would be comatose during the day, but his brothers were in and out downstairs, busily teleporting goods into the manor.
This waiting was unbearable. Because he possiblyâ¦saw me. Yes, no one ever had before, and, yes, this development was based solely on the idea that heâd deemed her beautiful. Maybe if he wasnât one to quibble about pink cheeks and the appearance of blooming healthâ¦?
Néomi didnât necessarily seek an acknowledgment of her presence. She could float a sheet spray-painted with â Bonjour! from le spectre!â if she wanted bad attention, or a possible exorcism. No, she wanted to be seen . She yearned to converse.
The possibility of this meant that all her grand plans to evict them had evaporated, her rancor over the damage to Elancourt temporarily soothed. Now she wanted to keep them closeâespecially Conrad.
Curiosity ruled her. Why after eighty years of sporadic tenants had the blood-spitting vampire been able to see her? Why not his brothers? When theyâd been chaining up Conrad for the day, sheâd waved her hands, yelling as loud as she could. Sheâd even thrown herself through their torsos, to no effect.
Was Conrad able to see her because he alone had red eyes?
She stood to float from one peeling blue wall to the other. The brothers had unerringly chosen for Conrad the Blue Room, the most masculine of all the guest rooms. The heavy curtains were a deep navy, and the spare pieces of furnitureâthe bedstead, the nightstand, and a high-backed chair by the fireplaceâwere dark and stout.
Though sheâd expected them to sleep in coffins, theyâd put Conrad in the made-up bed. Sheâd also believed that even indirect sun would burn them, but the room was aglow with enough pallid sunlight to illuminate the dust motes. And when the curtains wavered from a draft in the house, light would encroach all the way up to his feet.
He turned over on his back then, reminding her how massive he was, his broad shoulders seeming to span the bed, his feet hanging over the end. He must be over six and a half feet tall.
She floated above him, tilting her head as she peered down. He looked to be in his early thirties, but it was difficult to tell with the mud and blood covering his face. With a nervous swallow, she concentrated and used telekinesis to draw back his upper lip, jabbing his nose before she got it right.
She saw a slash of white teeth gleaming against his dirty face andâ¦unmistakable fangs. Just like in the novels sheâd read long ago. Just like in the vampire movies the last young couple had loved to watch.
How had these men become vampires? Were they turned? Or born that way?
At that moment a loud bang sounded from downstairs. Though she dearly wanted to investigate what they were doing to her house, she feared Conrad would wake in her absence.
The brothers had already boarded many of the windows that didnât have heavy curtains, and had brought in folding chairs, mattresses, and sheetsâeven a modern refrigerator. The plumbing had been repaired in the master bathroom. Earlier, electricity had surged to life so abruptly that the lightbulb and fixture overhead had popped and shattered, raining glass.
Sheâd floated the shards off the prisoner, a good move because he now began to twist in the tangled sheets.
When his ripped shirt rode up a few inches, she noticed a thin scar beginning just above the waistline of