Born in Blood (The Sentinels #1)(17)



It was amazing how eager his servants were to please him after witnessing him remove the heart of a fellow servant who was unfortunate enough to have returned to the house without their latest package.

“Yeah.” Stanley cleared his throat. “He should be here in two hours. Maybe less, depending on the traffic.”

“Make sure he doesn’t do anything that would attract the attention of the authorities.” His voice remained soft. Only a bully needed to shout and bluster. Zak led with pure, unrelenting fear. Far more efficient. “I will be excessively displeased if my name appears in a police report.”

“He’s a pro at avoiding the authorities. Everything’s under control.”

“You’d better pray that’s true.”

Stanley paled to an interesting shade of gray. “Yes, professor.” His hands twitched, as if he didn’t know quite what to do with them. “Will there be anything else?”

“I want to know the minute Tony arrives.”

“Of course.”

Shuffling backward, Stanley shut the door before beating a hasty retreat back to the servants’ quarters.

Zak reached for his glass, draining the cognac as he waited for the shadow to detach from the far bookshelf, revealing a female form.

He’d sensed Anya’s presence for the past half hour, but he’d been in no mood to deal with her.

Now he accepted that she wasn’t going to leave him in peace until she’d had her say.

“Thugs,” she muttered in disgust.

He set aside his glass, his gaze indifferently flicking over the tight black dress that revealed more than it concealed. With her long red hair flowing down her back in a shimmering river of fire, the witch was a fantasy come to life.

Not that he was in the mood to appreciate her beauty. Unlike most men he wasn’t controlled by his cock.

Not ever.

“True, but every general needs a few expendable soldiers to do the grunt work,” he reminded his companion.

“A pity they have to be so stupid.” She halted next to the desk, the scent of herbs and blood clinging to her. A sure indication she’d been in her rooms brewing up some concoction or another. “It’s entirely their fault the body was found by the authorities.”

Zak steepled his fingers beneath his chin. He didn’t need the reminder.

He’d been furious when his servant had returned to the house without the female that Zak had personally selected. That didn’t mean, however, he was prepared to accept defeat.

“Charles paid for his mistakes.”

“Perhaps, but—”

Zak narrowed his eyes as the words deliberately trailed away. “Say what you have to say, Anya.”

“You should have chosen another female.” She was the only creature in the world with the nerve to lecture him, although her tone was carefully devoid of censure. “It’s too risky to take the body from the police morgue.”

“It took us twenty years to track down Calso and another six months trying to find a way past his security.” He curled his lips in disgust. “Did you want to throw it all away because you have cold feet?”

“Not cold feet,” she denied in petulant tones. “But I’m not going to be happy if we’re forced to move again.”

With a deliberate motion, Zak pushed himself out of the chair, the swirl of his power tugging on Anya’s hair in icy warning.

The witch had saved his life when he’d been burning on the stake. She was also the one who’d managed to stumble across the means for his ultimate triumph.

But he’d been born during a time when only the strong survived and he didn’t believe in democracies.

He was in charge.

Which meant he didn’t confess just whom he’d encountered while he was in Leah’s mind. Or that he’d all but thrown down the gauntlet to those fools who cowered behind the walls of Valhalla.

He was done waiting for his unjust rewards.

“There will be no more running.”

Belatedly realizing she’d crossed a dangerous line, Anya took a step backward. “No, of course not,” she hastily purred, lacing her words with a spell of soothing. As if her magic could actually sway a man with his powers. “Soon you will have endless followers who will be worthy of your greatness.”

“So you have promised for the past—” He deliberately paused. “How long has it been, Anya?”

Her lips tightened. “Nearly three hundred years.”

Zak grimaced. He had a vivid memory of the night he’d been captured by the local villagers and burned at the stake. Hard not to. It played and replayed every night. Like his nightmares were stuck on one channel.

The next hundred years had been spent in a protective cocoon of magic Anya had wrapped around his burnt body that had barely clung to life, followed by another tedious century of regenerating his physical form. Time that was fuzzy in his memories.

Thank the gods.

The past hundred years had been devoted to restoring his former powers. And more importantly, to locating the key to unlocking the ancient secrets to his ultimate destiny.

“My patience is at an end,” he informed the witch.

“I understand, I truly do, but our enemies are searching for you,” Anya attempted to soothe. “It’s too dangerous to draw such attention to yourself.”

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