the bed, determined to get another hour or two of sleep before it was time to get up and face the day. He wouldnât come back again tonight, she told herself. It was too close to dawn for that.
She only wished she could be as certain about Elisabeta. The sleeping intruder had awoken, strong and ready for a fight. It wasnât one to which Stormy was looking forward.
She rolled over, punched her pillow and closed her eyes. And she did get the sleep sheâd been so determined to get. But it was far from restful, and filled with more pieces of her missing memories.
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Vlad built a fire in the giant hearth and yanked the dusty sheets from the furniture, making a place for them to be comfortable on the ancient but still sturdy chairs. He located food, canned stew with gravy, certainly not cuisine, but she declared it edible and proved it by devouring every bit. She was starved. The castleâs caretakers, he told her, only came in one weekend a month, and though heâd phoned ahead to tell them to prepare a room for her, the supplies theyâd left in the pantry were meager at best.
âIâm not the original Vlad Dracula,â he told her at length.
Stormy looked at him quickly. âYouâre not?â
âNo. I amâ¦far older. But thatâs unimportant right now. I was centuries old, already, when my travels took me to Romania. I cannot help but think it was fate that led me there. To her.â
âElisabeta?â
âYes.â
He was intense, his eyes focused on the dancing fire that painted his face in light and shadow, giving him an even more frightening appearance. And even more beautiful.
âThe prince, the real son of the king, had been killed in battle before he was out of his teens, his body left to rot, unidentified and unclaimed. His father never knew what had become of him, and by the time I arrived, he had been mourning his lost son for some years. I knew the young princeâs fate. Iâd heard it directly from the enemy whoâd slain him. That man panicked when he realized heâd killed the prince, knowing the vengeance the king would wreak should he learn of it. So he stripped the prince of his clothes, obliterated his face and dragged his body into a stand of brush, never to be found.â He lowered his head. âWhen I arrived, the king mistook me for his long-lost son. I didnât have the heart to kill the joy in the old manâs eyes. I saw no harm in playing the role.â
âI see.â She didnât, not entirely, but she was eager to hear more of his story. About Elisabeta, the woman who terrified her, seeming to possess her at times.
âIâd been living as Prince Vlad for nearly five years when I met her. We married a day later.â
She shot him a quick, searching look. âThatâs it? You met her and married her a day later? Thatâs all youâre going to say about yourâ¦courtship?â
Vlad lifted his brows, spearing her with his steady gaze. âWhat else is there to say?â
âI donât know. How you met her. Where. What made you fall in love with her. It must have beenâ¦intense, if you married her so quickly.â
âIntense.â He turned his eyes toward the fire, stared into the snapping flames. âThat describes it as well as anything. The detailsâ¦the details are unimportant.â
âThe details are the only thing thatâs important.â
He shrugged as if it didnât matter, and she knew he wasnât going to share his private hell with her. Not now. And maybe not ever. âThe outcome is the same, with or without my most intimate memories being spilled at your feet, Tempest. I was called into battle on our wedding night. Enemies had crossed our borders. I led our soldiers to meet them, but we were severely outnumbered. It was ugly. Bloody. Many died. I was struck down, but one of my men dragged me into shelter and left me there, safe from