Conrad in the direct light of day? She gasped when he charged Murdoch, tackling him into the mahogany front doors. They wrenched one completely free of its hinges, flattening it onto the front porch.
Just before they surged into the morning sun, Murdoch traced back to the protective cover of the porch; Conrad continued. Should she try to stop him?
Nikolai started to follow, but Sebastian snatched his shirt and lugged him back to the shade. âHe wonât get far, Nikolai.â
Néomi stood beside the brothers. Out of habit, she shaded her eyes as the four of them watched Conrad racing down the drive. I didnât mean to drop him like that. He must be so bewildered.
âHeâs going to burn,â Nikolai said, sounding in pain.
Just as Néomi had, Murdoch put his hand to his forehead. âAnd then heâs going to learn.â
The sun sears his eyes as if theyâve been doused with acid. Fight on . The bayou is just down the drive, then across the road. He can scent the dark water.
His skin begins to burn. He grits his teeth against the pain.
Bayou just across the road. He can make it, could survive in the shade there. Flames growing.
He nears the property line. Gaining distance away from whatever entity seems bent on tormenting him. A being he canât see to fight, with no throat to savage. A disembodied voice had echoed all around him.
Almost there⦠Burningâ¦burningâ¦
Suddenly his sight goes black; a force shoves him back on his ass. Once his vision clears, his eyes widen. Crumbling blue walls surround him. He yells in disbelief. Confusion wells.
The same bedroom! Heâs in⦠the same goddamned room .
Crouched on the floor, he knocks his head against the wall again and again until the needle pierces his arm.
4
S omething is happening to the patient.
Over the last week, Néomi had begun noticing an eerie awareness in those red eyes that wasnât there before, the blankness in his gaze receding with each day.
And she would know. Sheâd done little else but study him since his bizarre return, seldom retiring to her own roomâher secret studio, hidden downstairs. Even now as Conrad lay in the bed once more, sleeping, she floated above the end of his mattress, continuing her vigil.
When heâd returned that first morning, heâd been raging, banging his head against the wall as if to blunt whatever was inside his mind. Plaster had snowed down on him and stuck to his bloody cheeks. Once the brothers had rechained himâtethering him to the bed this timeâConrad had been unreachable, drugged and muttering foreign words in his low, harsh voice.
To be fair, she wouldâve been addled, too. One moment sheâd been watching him running, the next sheâd heard his unholy roar just upstairs.
No longer was Néomi the only one trapped here. Apparently, witches truly had put a boundary spell on Elancourt. As long as Conrad wore those chains, he couldnât cross the property line. The chains also rendered it impossible for him to teleportâor trace, as they called it.
Néomi couldnât put her finger on exactly when sheâd first sensed a change in him. Whenever his brothers had spoken to him, Conrad had muttered incoherently, and yet sheâd begun to get the feeling that he wasâ¦coherent. At least intermittently.
Sometimes it seemed as if he was trying to filter a million thoughts in order to speak only one, and that was why he had difficulty talking normally. On occasion, even his accent changedâ¦.
He began twisting then, his head thrashing, no doubt caught in the grip of a horrific nightmare. Conrad routinely suffered them. With his fangs seeming to sharpen at intervals, he writhed, muscles straining, the chains cutting into his skin. She frowned. She didnât like to see that.
Even though everything about him should repel her, she found herself striving to be impassive. Heâd destroyed parts of her