Her dreams were filled with the images and smells of the scene at Bridge and Stokes, of shredded flesh and pools of blood, vacant eyes and mouths sagging open in shocked and ecstatic screams… of red eyes and gleaming fangs and the whir of a metal blade, slicing and slicing and slicing…
When she awoke it was from a restless movement, and she was looking into the clear blue eyes of her husband. He was not smiling.
"You were there last night. At the club. At my club."
She was so taken by surprise, Victoria could do nothing but move her mouth, trying to speak, but her lips would not form words.
"You were with your cousin. Is he really your cousin?" He was propped on one elbow, half sitting. The sheet had fallen from his bare chest and showed the curve of his arm and the dip of his elbow.
"No, I mean, yes, he is my cousin," she stammered, pulling herself up to sit. Too late, she remembered the scar on her left arm... In their haste the night before, Verbena had dressed her in a gown that had no sleeves. The gash on her arm, though healing quickly, was long and red and impossible not to notice.
Phillip did notice it, and he reached for her arm, pulling her off balance. "What is this? When did this happen?"
Victoria pulled away hard and broke his grip with little effort. She hadn't taken off her vis bulla the night before. "A few days ago. It was an accident in the stables—I cut myself on one of the farrier's tools."
"That is a very deep cut," Phillip replied, his voice neutral. "When did you say it happened?"
Victoria swallowed. The last time he had seen her nude and with bare arms was when they made love after returning from the theater—just before she drugged him, only two nights ago. "I believe it was yesterday morning, after you left to go to your club."
He looked at her. "Yesterday? It appears to have healed quite rapidly."
Her heart was pounding rampantly. "Yes, I am quite surprised. My aunt gave me some particularly effective salve."
Phillip threw back the blankets so hard they whipped over her face, falling on her head then slipping down into her lap. He moved off the bed, naked and beautiful, and very, very angry.
He stalked over to look out of the window that spanned the height of the wall from ceiling to floor, crossing his arms in front of him. As he had done before, he spoke to the wall, not to her… though the words were for her.
"Victoria, I want to know why you were at my club last night dressed in men's clothing with that Italian man you claim is your cousin. And I want to know the truth of how you received such a dangerous injury that has healed so quickly."
She drew in a deep breath. She had wanted something to change. This would be it.
"I was at the club because we—Max and I, and yes, he is my distant cousin—learned that there was going to be an attack there. I wanted to be certain you were safe."
"You wanted to be certain I was safe?" He spun from the window, and the yellow sunshine cast a beautiful golden shadow over his skin and hair. Unfortunately she was in no position to appreciate it. "What kind of nonsense are you speaking, Victoria? What could you do besides put yourself in danger?" He gestured to her arm. "It appears you already have!"
She was angry at the derision in his voice, and exhausted, and over the top with stress. She should have ended the conversation there, told him nothing else. Let him be angry.
But she didn't.
"I work with Max. It is part of our family legacy."
"You work with Max? Marchionesses don't work."
"I do." She swallowed. "I hunt vampires."
He stared at her. And stared.
And stared.
And then he said in a terrible voice, "You are mad."
"I am not mad, Phillip. It's true."
"You are mad."
Her temper snapped. She vaulted off the bed and marched over to him, stopping so close that the hem of her night rail brushed against his bare legs. "Give me your hands."
When he reluctantly offered them, she grabbed his wrists and said, "Try to break my grip."
He tried, and he couldn't. She forced his arms down to his sides, watching the expression on his face turn from anger to shock to incomprehension.
She released him. "I am a vampire hunter. It is my family legacy. I have no choice; it is what I must do."
Phillip stepped away from her, bumping into the window behind him. "I don't believe in vampires."
"That is quite foolish of you, as one nearly bit you last night… just before you saw me. Max dispatched him whilst you were talking to me."
He shook his head. "Whether they exist or not, you cannot hunt vampires, Victoria. You are a marchioness. You are a pillar of Society. I forbid it. As your husband, I forbid it."
"Phillip, it is not something you can forbid. It is in my… my blood. It is my destiny."
"You may believe that. You may think you have no choice, but if you do not leave the house to hunt vampires, you are making the choice not to follow your destiny."
"And I should just ignore it when I learn that there are to be vampire attacks… at places such as Bridge and Stokes? Let people die? You escaped, Phillip, because Max told you a lie to get you to leave. But you did not see the carnage that was left behind… of some of your friends. It was beyond horrible."
"I forbid it, Victoria."
"I'll not stand by and let people die that way."
He pushed away from the window and stalked past her into his dressing room, bellowing for his valet. "Franks!" Phillip paused at the door that adjoined the two rooms, holding the edge and looking down at the floor. "You should have confessed this before we were married, Victoria. It is unforgivable that you did not."
And he shut the door. Softly. But ever so loudly.
"They have been home from their wedding trip only two days, Nilly," said Melly complaisantly, "but I am sure I can prevail upon the ton's newest fashionable couple to attend your niece's ball."
"That would be divine!" gushed Petronilla, eyeing the platter of orange-cinnamon finger cakes. They smelled delicious, but it was that odd carroty hue that put her off. Perhaps she would have a talk with Freda about toning down the color. At least the lime biscuits weren't the nasty green shade they had been the last time Freda had made them. Now they looked rather appetizing, even with the thin veneer of white icing.
"Where is Winnie? I thought she wanted to hear all of the details of the wedding trip," Melly complained. She had none of her friend's hesitation; she snatched up two of the cakes and began to nibble on a third.