Charlotte Sanguinite POV:
“Sorry, sorry!” I pushed my way past the customers already lining up in front of the counter to get their coffee. I missed the bus! "I’ll be with you in a minute, Jazz! I didn’t wait for my colleague’s response, rushing into the back room and throwing open my locker. I stuff everything inside, running my fingers through my long, red curls before tying them up in a tight bun. I’m already aware of the prominent bags under my forest green eyes. No amount of ice or cold spoons has been able to get rid of them.
Fortunately, I was smart enough to put on my uniform before leaving home. Vampires can move fast, but while I’m of that species, aside from the blood I have to drink regularly to survive, I don’t have any of their special attributes. Which is why running all the way from my apartment to the small coffee shop on Northeast 4th Avenue has me out of breath. I wheeze a bit before hurrying back out front. Jazz, with her pink hair and bold silver eyeshadow, has the customers eyeing her with blatant interest.
“Three lattes and two espressos, Charlotte,” Jazz says, her voice throaty. I notice the red marks around her neck and press my lips together, trying to rein in my curiosity about what she and her boyfriend, Marcus, were up to last night. Jazz and Marcus have a similar style of dressing: outrageously bold hairstyles, dark leather clothes, and more often than not, spiked chokers around their necks. The only reason Jazz works here is that her father recently bought this café. That’s not to say that Jazz isn’t a hard worker or a nice person. She looks intimidating, but she’s a sweetheart.
“Gotcha.” I tied the apron around my waist before calling out, “Sorry, folks. My bad. "I’ll have your coffee with you in a jiffy!” “Did you work late last night?” Jazz asks, handing me another slip and bagging a muffin. I yawn as I froth some milk in a jug. “Yeah. I was making the dough, so Gina could get a head start on the croissants. Got home around two.”
“Did you log your hours?”
“Yup,” I grin. “Need the overtime.”
“You also need sleep.” Jazz gave me a sharp look as I handed her two of the lattes. “You look like death warmed over.”
“You have such a way with words, Jazz.” I rolled my eyes at her. “New customer. Look out.”
She gets back to taking orders and filling up the cash register while I keep preparing the early morning caffeine drinks that nearly the entire street drops by to purchase. Having a coffee shop located in such a busy business district of Portland has its advantages. I always wondered why the previous owner sold off this place. But Jazz’s father, with his magic business touch, has brought new life to it. A wooden ambiance that provides a romantic setting in the evenings and a comfortable workplace for freelancers in the mornings has brought a lot of customers here. Which means the tips are hefty.
It takes us more than an hour to get through the majority of the morning rush. At the end of it, Jazz stretches her arms over her head. “Man, I hate the morning shift.”
“Why did you get assigned to the morning again?” I asked her as I prepared a vanilla frappé for her. I’m already munching on a muffin.
Jazz rounds the counter and sits down in one of the booths, stretching her legs over the seat. Dad caught me sneaking out with Marcus for a concert.
His plan is to work me to death, I guess.
I glanced at her wrist. “From the look of it, you still managed to sneak out again last night.”
She smirks and tries to rub away the stamp mark from the club she must have visited. “Marcus had his band playing there. I swear, if it weren’t for the trust fund, I would have moved out the minute I turned eighteen, two months ago.”
“Sure,” I scoffed. And leave your old father alone in that mansion of his?
With no one to look after him? I doubt it.”
“I could do it!” Jazz tries to sound convincing, and I laugh, handing her the drink.
“Jazz, you love your dad. You’re not going anywhere. He’s just worried about you. You know that.”
The teenager sips her drink. “Marcus understands me. I don’t know why that’s so hard for Dad to get.”
“I wish I could help you in that department,” I murmured as I looked out the shop window, “but my father didn’t care what I did.”
“He threw you out, didn’t he?” Jazz gives me a curious look. “Sorry, I heard Grace talking about it.”
I shrugged, warming my hands by wrapping them around the hot cup of coffee I'd made for myself. Yeah. When I was fourteen, eight years ago, I guess.
You’re lucky to have a father who cares about you, Jazz. I always say people should count their blessings.
Jazz is quiet, her expression pensive.
I rarely talk about my past. I try not to think about my family or my clan. I don't help that the compound where my clan lives is on the edge of Portland. At times, I’ve considered moving away, but I guess I don’t have those kinds of guts.
I see a man crossing the road, and my eyes widen fractionally. “Uh, oh, it’s that guy. I’m going into the back.”
“What guy?” Jazz straightens up and peers around the booth. When she sees him, the corner of her mouth tightens. “Really, Charlotte. What do you have against him? It’s not his fault his face is scarred.”
“It’s not the scar,” I say, starting to stand up. “I just don’t want to talk to him.”
Just then, a ringtone blares in the café, and Jazz reaches for her pocket. She blinked at the name on the screen before giving me an apologetic look. “Sorry, it’s my thesis supervisor. "I have got to take this.” I watched her reach for her backpack and take out her laptop. “I’m going to need the back office.” Great. I really didn’t want to have to face this particular customer. Body tense, I slid through the gap to get behind the counter. The door opens, and an older man walks in. If it weren’t for the terrible scarring on the left side of his face, he could almost be called handsome. His nose is a little crooked and his eyes a deep, cerulean blue. His dark brown hair is carefully styled, and he’s wearing a gray suit that is covered by a long overcoat, a staple for the chilly autumn weather we’re experiencing. I would put him in his mid to late thirties. But it’s not his scar or his age that bothers me. Nor is he a rude person. What bothers me is what he is. A wolf shifter. Wolf shifters have always had a barely cordial relationship with vampires. But a couple of years ago, my father and my older brother, Clyde, got caught selling a drug to the shifters that had negative repercussions on the latter. The shifters were in cahoots with two Alphas, and at the end of it all, Clyde paid with his life. Ever since, Beruth Sanguinite, my father and the leader of the Nelo Clan, has not given up on his purpose: to drive out the wolf shifters altogether. Clashes have become more commonplace between shifters and vampires, and I try to stay away from a lot of them. The scarred man approaching me was an Alpha, a prominent one. Alphas have a harsher energy about them. Vampires don’t have a very keen sense of smell, but we can read energies. This man has a blazing form, and it’s intimidating. Ever since I joined this coffee shop, he’s been coming in daily, and I’ve been avoiding him. He must know of my existence, obviously, since wolf shifters can pick up even the slightest of scents, but he’s never said anything, and he hasn’t stopped coming here.
Nervous, I waited for him to approach me, a small knife in my hand under the counter. I know a knife isn’t a sufficient weapon if he decides to reach over and rip my throat out. I don’t even have the fast reflexes my kind typically has; I’m a defective vampire up against an Alpha.
Anxiety fills me as he gets closer.
“What can I get you, sir?” The words tumble out of me so fast that they’re almost unintelligible.
He blinks at me, and I see him take a discreet sniff of the air.
My heart nearly crawls into my mouth at the sight.
“I—We have—We have a special of the day, th—the Halloween Pumpkin Frappé.”
My hand is gripping the knife so tightly, the blade slices my skin.
The scent of my blood is thick in the air now, and the Alpha studies me, frowning. I’m going to hyperventilate. I know I am.
This is not how I planned on dying. I still have my laundry hanging outside on the balcony. Who’s going to bring it in if I’m dead?
The thought is so utterly ridiculous that I blink, finding some sanity in the chaos building in my mind.
Robert Montgomery POV:Adam narrows his eyes at me. “Should I take that as a warning?”My lips curve humorlessly. “In our world, Charlotte is as weak as a human. Perhaps even weaker. I forced my way into her life. And I plan to stay. She’s mine now.”My friend looks at me thoughtfully. “You’ve got it quite bad, don’t you?”When I don’t bother answering him, he sighs. “I trust you, Robert. And I trust your judgment. Your girl has nothing to fear from me or my pack. Besides, Cynthia was pretty worried about you, so she’s going to be relieved things have worked out. However, I would advise you not to let your guard down too quickly.”I nod. He’s not wrong. I cannot let myself make eve
Robert Montgomery POV:The look of shock and guilt on Charlotte’s face confirms my suspicion.Beruth Sanguinite may have erased Charlotte from his clan’s history, but he couldn’t erase her from the memories of the people who once knew her. Harry, as my assistant, was tasked with looking up Charlotte’s past. He couldn’t find anything at first, but talking to a few vampires with whom the pack is still on somewhat decent terms revealed a lot.Charlotte Beaumont was once Charlotte Sanguinite, the oldest daughter of one of the most notorious vampire clan leaders. When Harry brought me that information this evening, I felt a variety of emotions: shock, betrayal, hurt, and anger.It was hard to reconcile the gentle Charlotte with the greedy, ambitious,
Charlotte Sanguinite POV:It’s the wetness of my cheek that makes me stir.Groaning, I opened my eyes and saw Robert’s face. For a brief moment, I felt confused and dizzy. And then, I register the pain. Along with the pain come the memories of what happened.I tried to sit up, but Robert held me down. “Easy. Not yet. You’re in no condition to move.”“I have to—I have to see the damage.”“Don’t worry about it.” He strokes my hair. “I’ve taken care of it." You need to rest.”“Arabella?”“Gone. "I didn’t kill her.” Robert’s eyes harden as he tells me that. I let out a sigh of relief, and he gave me a strange look. “She wa
Charlotte Sanguinite POV:“You,” I breathe, rooted in place out of fear and shock.The last time I saw Arabella, she was sneering at me, a kind of viciousness in her eyes that no ten-year-old should have. When it came to her appearance, Arabella inherited our father’s dark looks, her skin a beautiful olive shade, her eyes a sharp green, and her hair black as a raven’s, falling to her waistline like a waterfall. As a child, she was cute, but as an adult, she’s gorgeous. Her cheekbones are sharp, her eyes almost catlike. She has lost all her chubbiness, her figure slims like a model’s.Compared to her, I look like a frumpy maid, with my hair in disarray, my curvy figure, and the bags under my eyes.I see the way my sister looks at me, her ey
Charlotte Sanguinite POV:“And you said…?”“I said no.” I blinked several times. “He and I, we’re from very different worlds. It’s not going to work.”Clearing my throat, I began walking back to the cupcake display, my heartbeat unsteady. Jazz trails after me. “So what if he’s some crazy rich guy? He’s clearly head over heels for you! That’s gotta count for something.”I opened the display and started setting up the cupcakes. “I want a simple, peaceful life, Jazz. Robert Montgomery is the furthest thing from that kind of person.”“He seems peaceful enough.” Jazz leans over the glass display case, watching me. “Besides, if a man looked at me like he was just looking at you,
Charlotte Sanguinite POV:Ever since my night with Robert, my dreams have returned with a vengeance. I’ve tried to ignore them. I’ve tried everything I possibly could not to let them affect my daily life, but that’s easier said than done. The problem is that the man I always saw in my dreams—the faceless man who doted on me, who loved me, who made me feel special and important and everything else in between—now has a face.He has Robert’s face.And somehow, it hurts even more.Angie left that day with a warning, telling me to be careful. She was certain Robert was not done with me. But I knew he was. He had to be. Why else would he avoid me like that? And even though I kept telling myself that this was for the best, it didn’t negate