“We have much to discuss. You need to stay here.” Command flowed through his tone and stroked against her.

Trailing her fingers down his chest, she admired the cut of his muscles even if he was paler than the guys she might normally tease. Her sex clenched, but her internal clock ticking down warned her against giving in. “I appreciate the offer, beastie boy, I really do. But I have a show tonight…” Inspiration struck and she gave him a little shove backwards. “Midnight Mystery Lounge—come watch me. Maybe we’ll party again after.”

He let her move him, but when she tried to open the door, he pulled her back around. “No. No more shows. No more performances. It’s time for you to come home.” The demand scorched her—urged her to obey—and she shoved again. Only this time he didn’t move.

“Yeah, okay. Look—you’re great in bed. Loved the sex. Had a blast. Even enjoyed the bite. But stop being a douche. You don’t own me.” Twisting beneath his arm, she hooked her leg behind his and pushed. But he snaked an arm around her waist and instead of toppling, he had her back up against the door.

“Kristina, look at me.” His gaze pinned her. His pupils dilated. The room faded away, elongating behind him as though the world retreated in a rush. His eyes filled her vision, his heart thundered in her ears and his scent filled her nostrils. “Remember.” The word, heavy with so much meaning, pushed at her and the world snapped, like a rubber band stretched too far. The recoil stung and Kiki did the only thing she could think to do.

She drove her fist into his solar plexus. She aimed lower, but he dodged. Breaking from the trance, she wrenched the door open and marched over to the elevator. Goon One and Goon Two straightened as she exited. She punched the button to summon the elevator. Awareness blanketed her.

Richard stood at her back.

“Don’t.” She ordered. She could barely make out his reflection in the golden doors, but his hand hovered at her shoulder.

“Kristina…”

The doors opened and she stepped inside, pivoting to face him. “My name is Kiki. Thanks for the fun—and the creepy look into my eyes shtick. I enjoyed it.”

She winked and hit the down button. Richard stared at her, brows drawn together in a scowl so fierce relief flooded her when the doors closed him out. She sagged back against the wall, heart pounding. Bravado was all well and good, but she had a feeling she just poked that sexy beast a little too hard.

Rubbing her fingers against her lips, lightheadedness surged through her. She flicked a look to the controls. The elevator’s descent seemed to be taking forever. The languid heat from their lovemaking receded. Sunrise was close.

Too close.

“Hurry.” She whispered. She couldn’t afford to be caught in the open. “C’mon…” Her foot tapped and as soon as the doors opened, she rushed out.

The normal throngs of people and creatures were absent from the lobby. She cut across the sphinx’s path and circled the fountain. Stan leaned against the entrance to the theatre and her heart sank.

He just stared at her.

“I am not even going to try and explain.” She gave him a tired grin. Her cheeks ached, and it took effort to smile. Lethargy pumped through her blood. The sun’s ascent sped the day’s arrival.

“Good.” Expressionless, he nodded, but made no move to get out of her way. Kiki cut her gaze to the left. Sound muted, like a dozen cotton balls being stuffed into her ears.

“Stan…”

The guardian merely looked at her. His folded arms, firm stance and cold eyes denied her.

“I have to get inside.” She looked left again. Sunlight glittered like red fire on the horizon. Liquid gold spilled upwards behind the building…and splashed against the front windows, stretching out like greedy fingers across the marble floor.

Fear stabbed her in the belly.

“Stan…”

The guardian didn’t move. “You escaped the safety of the theatre. We cannot be held responsible for what happens next.”

The elevator doors dinged across the lobby. She twisted to look back…no, no no…not like this. She didn’t want Richard to see her. He couldn’t see her when this happened. Wrenching around, she begged Stan with her eyes. “Please…”

The sun inched closer, and icy heat swarmed over her. Her heart slowed, her hands clenched. Richard appeared in her periphery, his dark slacks open at the waist and his dark expression tight.

“Don’t look at me.” She ordered him. “Look away.” But the words garbled, mashing together with the slowness of her tongue. Denied entrance, she would die on this spot when the sun touched her. Frozen, she could only stand there and wait her inevitable end. At least she got to have sex—really, freaking amazing sex—before it ended. A tiny sigh escaped. She would like to have danced the lead too. But…

She closed her eyes, the lids fluttering down, desperate to not see his face when the end came and a sparkling gray curtain dropped over her, blotting out the world.


Rage and frustration drove Richard to follow her down to the lobby. It imploded, sucked into a black hole of horror. Malcolm had warned him. He had explained the curse trapping the dancers to their servitude—a curse that transformed them into a doll-like state while the sun rose. The sunlight trickling through the paned glass windows continued to inch forward toward her booted feet. Everything about her changed, except for her clothing. She looked like a mannequin.

The salt-and-pepper haired man she’d fled in the casino stepped forward and put his hand on Kristina’s porcelain arm. Violence strained at the leash of common sense. He needed a plan. A plan to recover her memory and free her. A plan that extended beyond attack.

“Interesting. You are not surprised.” He lifted Kristina’s frozen form to his shoulder, carrying her as he would just so much extra weight.

Surprised? No. Horrified? Yes. Richard refused to share those thoughts, however. He studied the man. He had no scent, his heart rate didn’t increase and no blood pounded ferociously through his system—there was no trace of fear on him at all. “Where will you take her?”

“Downstairs. She will be performing tonight—maybe. You can check the schedule later. And I suggest finding a shirt and shoes. Dress code is lax, but not that lax.” The man turned, and the doors opened as if by a thought, and he carried Kristina inside. Richard forced himself not to follow. When one of his men stepped forward, he held up a hand.

“Anton, find Frederick Reynolds. Now.” Malcolm’s younger, far more impulsive cousin currently worked within the boundaries of the Arcana Royale serving out a penance of his own to the overseers.

“Yes, sir.” The man spun and crossed the lobby at a clipped pace.

“Sir?” David, his second bodyguard, edged around him. “The sunlight.”

Richard glanced to his left. The pool of sunlight rippled toward him, and he watched the edge creep towards him dispassionately.

David didn’t move, but the vampire’s concern rippled across his guarded expression. The doors to the theatre closed behind his bride and her caretaker. Caretaker. The thought left a rancid taste in his mouth.

Drumming his fingers against his thigh, a blast of warm air drifted in the front doors as they opened. The sunlight intensified and a lick of it scalded his shoulder. David gave him a shove, moving him away from the light.

“Sir?” A woman appeared in his periphery—dark hair, dark skinned, with a tilt to her eyes and a Turkish lilt to her accent. Dressed in a skintight black bodysuit, she wore an air of danger and desire. She held up a cream-colored card with stylized writing.

He pivoted to face her. Too many questions without enough answers. Making love to Kristina again was everything he’d imagined and dreamed—except she still didn’t remember him. She was still trapped by some damnable curse.

“A personal invitation for you.” She offered the card, but Richard didn’t touch it. The casino specialized in games within games, deception wrapped in puzzles and ambushes disguised as aid.

“From?” A burst of noise from the main doors spilled into the lobby as a group of weres stumbled in, arms around each other for support, singing drunkenly. Richard sensed more than saw David shift his position, blocking Richard’s bare back.

The woman’s coy smile did not touch her eyes. “It is a private invitation for the prince of New York.”

“David.” Richard motioned to the bodyguard, who held out his hand and took the card without hesitation for possible spell work laid into the paper. The man’s dedication would be rewarded.

The exotic beauty bowed her head. “I am to wait for an answer.”

“I’ll send one along.” He wouldn’t be pressed into a rash act—not while his temper already danced on the precipice of the abyss. He wanted to tear the doors off the theatre and march in there to claim his bride. This woman would do well to stay out of his way.

Finished with the conversation, Richard walked away. He almost hoped she would try to pursue him—or better, attack him. It had been some time since the urge to hunt, tear and rend surfaced inside him. Sadly, she did neither and remained where she was, her gaze unflinchingly meeting his when he faced her from inside the elevator.

“I don’t smell magic.” David informed him when the elevator doors closed.

“That doesn’t mean anything.” The best spells lay dormant until activated by contact with the target or through some manipulation by the caster. The doors opened to Anton waiting with Frederick Reynolds. The younger Reynolds leaned against the wall, weariness etched into his expression, but he straightened when Richard strode out. Bowing slightly, the younger vampire said nothing.