Tasting Darkness By Jessicahall Chapter 28
Chapter 28
He gripped my arm, making me stop, and I almost groaned. Was that some bullshit trick?
“About this morning, it never happened, ok,” Tobias said, and my brows furrowed in confusion. Pretty sure it did, but why did he seem so nervous?
“Yeah, whatever,” I tell him. I am about to stomp off and try t o find my next class, so I am not late. There is no way I was going in that mess hall, and I would just wait until dinner.
Tobias grabs my arm with a growl and yanks me back. “Say it didn’t happen,” Tobias snapped at me. I thought his behavior was odd, his grip tight when realization dawned on me. He was forbidden to feed on me and the only person I could see him fearing would be Darius.
“Why not compel me to forget?” I asked and he tugged at the neckline of his shirt.
“Forget it,” he says, stalking off.
“Fine, it never happened, but I want to see Kalen,” I called out to him and he stopped. A growl tore out of him and he moved i n blinding speed gripping the front of my shirt. I gasped at how close his face was to mine, and his fangs protruded.
“Don’t try to blackmail me,” he snarled.
“The way I see it is the only reason you haven’t compelled me i s that you plan on using me as your blood bag, but by the way, you keep insisting it never happened. You don’t want Darius to find out,” I snapped at him. He let me go but glared at me.
“If I compel you too much, Darius will sense my magic on you, so will Kalen.”
“So you do want to continue feeding on me,” I tell him, and he looked away but nodded his head.
“Why not use the others,” Copyright by Nôv/elDrama.Org.
“Does it matter? I will let you see Kalen. Once and that’s it,” Tobias snapped.
“I see him once while you get to use me as your personal buffet?”
“You aren’t in a position to negotiate,” Tobias growled.
“And by how worried you are, you aren’t in a position to say n o to me,” Tobias grips my throat, clearly not liking me arguing with him, and my hands clutched his.
“What’s going on?” Lycus’s voice reached my ears, and Tobias let me go, he stepped away from me, and I glanced at Lycus.
“Your next class is with Darius; I suggest you get going, Aleera, ” Lycus said, although his eyes remained on Tobias. I nodded my head before I rushed off to the next class.
Thank goodness Darius’s class was a theory lesson. Although I would have preferred being anywhere else and away from Darius’s glares, surprisingly, I was left pretty much alone. Maybe because he insisted on putting a table next to his desk like I was the naughty student that needed extra supervision. Everyone worked off tablets, and I looked down at the paper in front of me before scouring the pages on elemental magic while everyone did their pop quiz on the tablet.
How was I supposed to fill it out when I didn’t even have a pen? I glanced over at his desk when he suddenly passed me a pencil without even looking over at me. Thankfully, the class was uneventful, not even a murmur while Darius spoke and explained things. Everyone seemed to be nervous around him. Not that I blamed them, he made me nervous too with his explosive temperament.
When the class ended, I waited for everyone to leave before getting out of my seat. Darius watched me for a few seconds while I cleaned my desk and handed him the paper.
“Tobias messaged me earlier and asked for you to see Kalen this afternoon,” Darius told me. He took the paper from me and glanced at it before placing it on his desk.
“After dinner, you can come to our room to see him; I don’t want you alone with him,” I nodded my head and walked out, surprised Tobias even asked. Not that I was keen to go into their room. I was hoping Kalen could come to mine, but I would take what I could get.
I wandered around the campus grounds, bored. I wasn’t
supposed to wander off, but I knew their recruits were in the mess hall or recreational rooms, and I didn’t feel like sitting in my room. Besides, I wanted to scope the grounds out and see if I could find that road I saw from the castle tower.
I was just about to the corner when I heard voices. A loud squawking noise reached my ears. The sound was terrible, and I peeked around the corner to see four demons laughing before noticing what was on the ground at their feet.
My heart sank. It was a phoenix, and I went to run out to try to save it but stopped myself knowing it would probably only end up with me getting hurt or having to explain myself to Darius. Luckily, they seemed to get distracted before they inflicted more pain on the poor thing. One of them kicked it, and a sob left my lips which made me cover my mouth with my hands. I watched them walk off laughing and chatting amongst themselves. Once they disappeared, I rushed over to the fallen phoenix. It was only a juvenile. My hands were shaking terribly, and it snapped its beak at me, probably thinking I was here to hurt it some more.
“Shh, shh, I won’t hurt you,” I tell it. The bastards burnt his feathers off, and one of his wings looked broken.
“You have to be quiet. I will help you,” I tell it, trying to get close enough to it. Phoenix hated dark Fae, all dark creatures i n fact. Phoenix’s, however, loved white Fae and also contained magic themselves.
But being a juvenile, he had no such power or healing ability.
Pheonix’s also could power share with their bonded. They bonded to their owners, primarily White Fae or other phoenixes. I scooped him up, and he squawked loudly, and I grabbed his beak.
“Shh, they hear you; they will kill you,” I tell it while holding its beak closed to stop the noise. Watching my surroundings, I raced back to the castle, making sure to remain unseen. But now what? Where could I hide him until he healed? Phoenix’s hunted food, but he wouldn’t even be able to fly for god knows how long
I glanced at the stairs leading to the rooms and the cell door. I could try to hide him down there, but they may hear him if he squawked. However, my room joined my mates, and Darius may sense him. He had no power yet, but he definitely would b
e able to be felt once he did.
The cells it was. I rushed to the door escaping inside before being caught. I flicked the light switch on, lighting up the rancid place before descending down the stairs. When I got to the bottom, I looked at the cells. I refused to look at the one I was in. The memory of Darius breaking my leg and hand down here made bile rise in my throat.