Death Deceives: Book Three (Mortis Vampire Series) (7 page)

BOOK: Death Deceives: Book Three (Mortis Vampire Series)
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“You
guess correctly.” Luc gave me a quick smile then grew serious again. “She was unable to control Geordie when his blood hunger rose. He killed several humans in a nearby village. Word of their deaths spread and the girl’s master came to investigate.”

I shook my head at how stupid she’d been but couldn’t really blame her. It was hard enough being in my twenties and
becoming a monster. Being turned into an undead teenager had to be a nightmare. Ishida, emperor of the Japanese vamps had been twelve when he’d been turned. He might be ten thousand years old but he still acted like a kid at times. “What happened to her?”

“Her master killed her, of course.”
Luc’s answer was chillingly matter-of-fact.

“Jeez, one strike and you’re out,” I muttered.

My most favourite companion nodded in agreement. “She broke the Court’s rules and had to be punished.” If the girl’s master hadn’t killed her, Luc probably would have been sent to do the job. Luc was noble, for a vampire, and I doubted he would have relished the task even if it was his job. Being the vampire equivalent of a cop, he was usually sent out to do the Council’s dirty work.

“What happened to Geordie after she died?”

“Igor took charge of him and eventually took him on as his apprentice.”

I’d yet to see Geordie behind the wheel and wondered what kind of apprentice he actually was.
“Is Igor’s master dead, too?” I was fascinated by their history. It was like a fairy story that had gone horribly wrong. I received another nod from my companion.


The Court offers jobs to the masterless, keeping them out of trouble and under the Council’s eyes. Igor is very adaptable and found a place within their ranks.”

“Huh.” I mused about this for a while. “
Why didn’t Gregor offer them a job?” Gregor disagreed with turning humans into vampires and only took on the masterless as employees. His guards were fiercely loyal to him because he treated them with dignity and respect. In stark contrast, the Comtesse’s servants were either treated like vermin or as sexual playthings.

Casting a sardonic look in my direction, Luc
winked. “He did.”

Knowing how crafty the older vampires could be, I
put two and two together. “Igor is your spy, isn’t he?”

“Yes.
We became acquainted shortly after I was turned and eventually became friends. Our friendship would have been frowned upon by the Council in the event that I ever became a Lord. It seemed prudent to pretend to be distant.”

Since Luc
had
eventually become a lord, their sneakiness had been well planned. I wondered why the Councillors were against lords and ladies having friends in lower places.
Because they’re a bunch of snobby arseholes who like to look down on everyone they consider to be beneath them,
I decided
.
Luc continued his explanation. “Igor keeps me up to date on Court intrigue during the times that I am away.”

L
uc was sent went after anyone who broke the rules and brought them to justice. In most cases, justice meant a swift stake through the heart. Fate had brought us together when he’d been sent to Australia to kill my maker. Silvius had plotted against the Council, killing several members of the Court. In a gigantic twist of irony, he’d been on the side of Mortis, who had turned out to be me. I’d had a faction supporting me before I’d even been turned into the undead.

Some of our kin believed that I would wipe out all vampires, keeping only a chosen
few around to be my generals. They thought I would then create a new army of bloodsuckers and end up ruling the world. How wrong they all were. I was far too lazy for that. Besides, the First was the one who was creating an unholy army with the intention of ruling the world. His plan was ridiculous considering how many humans there actually were. But he was going to take a stab at it anyway. I was worried that they might even have a chance of pulling it off since the imps could reproduce so quickly.

“How old is Igor, do you know?” I was bored and curious,
which could be a dangerous combination at times.

“I am not sure. I suspect
that he is far older than Gregor.”

I had the sense that
Gregor was somewhere over three thousand years old. That meant Igor must be truly ancient. “Wouldn’t that mean Igor is a Lord then?” I was still woefully ignorant about vampire culture and politics.

Luc shook his head, keeping his eyes on the road. At the speed we were going, I was glad he
didn’t allow his attention to be diverted. We’d heal if we crashed but the car wouldn’t be able to bounce back so well. “There were no Lords or Ladies until the Comtesse and her cronies founded the Council and the Court.”

“How long ago was this?” I was fascinated by the history instead of being bored
by it for once.

“The Council
came into existence when the Prophet had his visions of you. Before that, we were ruled by an English King.”

Remembering my interaction with the London sewer vamps, I could
n’t see them mustering up any kind of challenge to the Council. “What happened to him?”

“The
Comtesse had gathered quite a following of disillusioned European vampires. She convinced them to go to war with their King and won.”

That would have been a battle
of the ages. For a moment I almost wished I’d been around back then to see it. “So, who are the other Councillors?” I’d seen them a couple of times but only briefly. They’d seemed to be pompous, powerless and to be little more than mere figureheads to me.

“They were the main supporters of the
Comtesse,” Luc said. “She was smart enough not to fall into the same trap as the King. Instead of having absolute rule, she came up with the idea of a Council of nine. They promised they would come up with a plan on how to deal with you once you rose. By the time the Court was established and they realized the Comtesse was the one with true power, it was too late to change things. She had secured her position and no one was brave enough to challenge her. They found that they had simply swapped one tyrant for another.”

“Why
hasn’t someone just staked her through the heart?” It seemed like an obvious solution to me.

“She has too many guards and too many servants
for anyone to get close enough to her to kill her. What most don’t realize is that she made them herself so they can’t be bribed to turn against her.”

“Yet the Japanese imposter pretending to be me almost got to her,” I pointed out. “
I
nearly got to her, too.”

Luc took my hand briefly and plant
ed a kiss on my knuckles. “I am grateful to you for relieving her of one of her hands.”

“It was the least I could do,” I replied with a smirk and meant it
quite sincerely.

“The
Comtesse’s plan for you did not work as well as she’d hoped.” We both briefly thought of how I’d been chopped up and stuffed into multiple boxes. It was a pity for her I’d managed to piece myself back together again. “Despite the prophecy,” Luc continued, “she did not truly believe Mortis would be un-killable.”

I love it when he talks about me in the third person
, I thought sardonically
.
“Yeah, that’s a bonus for me.”

“I am very glad you were able to
make yourself whole again, Natalie.”

The look
Luc sent me made me feel almost warm inside for a second. “Me, too.” I swallowed down the lump that wanted to form in my throat. I didn’t have time to get all mushy. Not when we had a bunch of vampires to track down.

By the time we stopped to search for a place to hide for the day, we had closed the distance between us and the
courtiers only a little. I’d tried to sense them earlier but it was difficult to concentrate while we were on the move. All I could tell was that we were heading in the right direction.

Luc
chose a hotel and hired a room several floors up from our friends. I wasn’t the least bit embarrassed to have loud, satisfying sex with him this time. A human fist banged on the wall and a muffled voice shouted for us to keep it down but I just ignored them. Then Luc’s phone rang and I heard Geordie’s irate voice asking us to be less noisy next time. Luc took one look at my mortified face and laughed so hard he had to sit down.

“Frigging vampire hearing,” I muttered and headed for the shower.

It was Luc’s turn to keep watch so I went to bed alone. My dreams were dark and threatening. I felt the First watching me, waiting for an opening so he could pounce. I sensed his confusion over why I hadn’t already been drawn to his cavern of doom after he’d ordered my shadow to rise. Like most vampires, he’d heard of the legend of Mortis. He knew I was the doom of our kind but no one really knew what that meant. I wasn’t like the other undead and therefore was unpredictable.

Waking just as the sun slipped
over the horizon, I took a few minutes to focus and check on the group we were tailing. We were at a safe enough distance that they’d never know we were following them. As before, they were heading north-east.

I also picked up on a growing number of small groups of vampires, all heading in roughly the same direction. The courtiers weren’t the only ones being called to the cavern of doom.
It seemed like every possessed vampire in Europe was on their way to join the First’s army.

Sitting on a rickety chair at the tiny two-seater table, Luc
ventured a question. “Are we still heading in the right direction?”

“I think so.
” Rubbing my face, I tried to rid myself of the unclean feeling from having the First prying at my mind. “They don’t seem to be deviating from their path.”

Driving
down a scarcely populated highway later that night, we had our first inkling of where the First might have his lair. Mind numbingly boring classical music, the only kind Luc would listen to, was playing quietly on the radio when a reporter suddenly broke in. She spoke in a foreign language that my freaky brain interpreted automatically. “Reports have just come in of an invasion in the Russian Federation.” Luc and I exchanged alarmed glances and goose bumps erupted on my arms.


The army was called in after reports of,” the reporter hesitated as she re-read her notes before continuing, “strange beings attacking villagers and dragging them away. It is unknown who or what these beings are. What
is
known is that many people are now missing or dead.”

If I’d had any live blood in my head, it would have drained away.
“Oh my G-G-G. Argh!” Would I ever remember I was restricted from saying the lord’s name out loud?
Don’t count on it,
my subconscious said nastily.

“It would seem the First is makin
g his move for world domination.” Luc’s tone was calm enough but his hands were white on the steering wheel. Whiter than usual, that was. His phone rang and he fished it out of his pocket and handed it to me.

“Hi,
Gregor,” I said without checking the screen. Who else could it be? As renegades, we were on our own against the rest of the European vampire nation. It was doubtful any of the courtiers would be calling Luc for a friendly chat.

“Did you both hear?”
Gregor was a lot less calm than Luc was pretending to be. We’d known this was coming but it was still hard to believe the time had finally come.

“Yeah, we heard.”

“Well, your senses have been leading us in the correct direction if we’re heading for Russia,” he said in a falsely hearty tone. “The humans will now be aware that they aren’t the only intelligent race on this planet. They might even become aware of
our
existence.” His last sentence came out sounding a trifle hysterical.

One of the
oldest vampire rules was that we were forbidden to allow humans to become aware of our existence. To do so would mean our instant death. I could understand Gregor’s nervousness. He’d spent the past few thousand years pretending that he didn’t exist.

“The imps don’t look
even remotely human anymore let alone like us,” I reminded him. “Plus, they’re living, breathing, breeding things now. Unless one of us is stupid enough to get caught, no one will ever know that vampires exist at all.”

Gregor
calmed a bit at my soothing reminder that our grey skinned brethren couldn’t be traced back to us.
Unless someone stumbles across a sample of imp and vampire blood and compares the two.
Then they would figure it out pretty quickly.
I decided to keep that thought to myself.

“Yes, you are right, of course
,” Gregor said with relief. “We can only hope that no one from the Court falls into the army’s clutches.”

It was unthinkable that humans might become aware of us.
I shuddered to think what the results might be if they did. Instinct and common sense told me it wouldn’t end well for our kind.

C
hapter Eight

 

Dawn was closing in and we needed to find somewhere safe to hide for the day. We were on a highway again and there were very few cars at this late hour. Igor flashed his lights and Luc allowed him to overtake us. The grizzled Russian had a plan in mind so we followed him when he took an exit.

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