Immortal Danger (4 page)

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Authors: Cynthia Eden

BOOK: Immortal Danger
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She stopped at the bed. Dropped the towel and treated him to one fine view of her ass.

And of the black dragon tattoo that blew flames at the base of her spine.

He blinked.

His lust seemed to double.

Oh, he hadn't been expecting that.

His hands lifted and he stepped toward her. The need to touch her suddenly burned through him. The lady obviously wasn't the modest sort and if she hadn't wanted him to play, she wouldn't have stripped.

She had a good ass. Tight. Firm. Just the right size for his hands to grip and caress.

His fingers skimmed over her flesh.

Maya jerked on a T-shirt that he hadn't even noticed lying on the bed. Then she spun around and caught his hand. “I don't remember giving you permission to touch, Slick.”

He swallowed. His cock pressed hard against the edge of his zipper. “Thought the striptease was an invitation.”

She snorted. “When I give an invitation, you'll know it.”

He clenched his teeth and fought to rein in his desire.

She pushed him back. Reached behind her, maneuvered a bit, and pulled up a thin scrap of lace.

Probably supposed to be some kind of underwear.

His control slipped, just a bit. Now it was his turn to grab her, to wrap his hands around the silken skin of her upper arms and to yank her against him. “You like teasing men?”

Her chin lifted. “This place is the size of a shoebox. It's not like either one of us will get privacy while we're here.”

But she could have changed in the bathroom. That walk across the room, the falling towel, the bare ass, it had all been designed to get to him.

To turn him on.

“Baby, if you wanna fuck, all you have to do is say so.”

Her mouth tightened. “I'll remember that lovely little tidbit.”

Well, shit.

Adam drew a deep breath, smelled her.
Damn flowers.
How did she do it? No other vampire had ever carried a scent like—

“It's time.”

He blinked.

“Dawn's coming.”

Understanding hit. The little vampire wanted her drink.

She thought she could control him that way. Thought she'd be able to look into his mind, link with him.

Drinking from a human gave a vampire enormous power over the victim. Enough power to glimpse into the victim's mind. To see memories. To touch dreams.

Once a vampire drank, well, she'd have control over the prey. She'd be able to get him to do whatever she wanted.

No wonder Maya wasn't too worried about trust being an issue.

If he'd been human, well, she would have been right to think that way.

But since he wasn't, all bets were off.

There'd be no control. Unless he was the one doing the dominating.

“You've probably heard talk about what happens when blood's exchanged.”

Not really an exchange if he didn't get to taste her. Not that he was particularly into that, but—

Her eyes met his directly. Blue, not hunter black. Not yet. “I'll just take enough now for a bond. That way, if you get into any kind of trouble while we're working together, I'll know.”

If only he believed her.

Adam had never met a vampire who didn't lie. He tilted his head back. Gazed up at the cracks in the ceiling and muttered, “Take your drink.”
For all the good it will do you.

She rose against him. Her breath blew over his skin.

He should have been repulsed. Ashamed. He'd never given his blood to one like her before. Never offered his throat in submission.

Never been a fool.

Never been prey.

Until now.

His choices were nonexistent. If he wanted to find Cammie, Maya was his only hope.

“Relax. I told you, I not planning to hurt you.”

Actually, he believed the woman had said she wasn't going to hurt him…
much
. The pain wasn't an issue, though. He could deal with pain. He'd managed easily enough in the past.

But it burned in his gut that she was already lying to him. While he'd never been food for a vampire, he'd heard the stories from the lucky few who'd managed to survive. Ripping, slashing pain. Teeth that cut, severed.

Mental screams that were never voiced because by then, it was too late. The vampire was already in the prey's head.

He remembered the foolish humans he'd seen at the feeding room. Eyes glazed over. Blood trickling down their throats. Had they tried to scream when they realized—
too late
—that it wasn't all dark fantasies and passion? In that last second before the vampires took control, had they been afraid?

Her lips were on his throat now. Soft lips. Pressing gently. His hands clenched into fists. “Get it over with,” he growled.

“If that's what you want.” A faint whisper.

He stared up at those cracks—like spiderwebs in the ceiling.

Her tongue swept over him, a warm, wet caress that caused his cock to jerk in reaction.

He was sick. No other explanation.

The edge of her teeth pressed into his neck. The pressure was hard, and he prepared for the piercing pain as—

Heat exploded through him, a blinding flash that shook his body. For a moment, he worried that he'd lost his control, worried that the beast was free, that it would destroy Maya—

The ecstasy hit him. Waves of pleasure, the feelings so intense he shuddered—and wanted more.

His hands locked around her. One hand held her head to him, forcing her mouth tight against his neck. The other hand clenched around the curve of her ass, pressing her against his swollen flesh.

No pain. They'd been wrong. There wasn't pain, just—

Pleasure.

She could drink from him all day, he didn't care. The feel of her mouth, sucking on his neck, licking, was one of the most erotic things he'd ever experienced.

Better than sex.
Stronger, harder, so much bet—

Her head pushed against his hand. She wanted to stop.

No
.

His fingers tightened. He could make her keep drinking. There was no danger to him. He could—

What am I doing?

His hands dropped from her. He stepped back.

And immediately missed the press of her mouth.

But the haze was clearing from his eyes. The lust still blazed through his body, the remembered pleasure seared his nerves, but at least his sanity was returning.

His fingers touched the wound on his throat. The skin was tender, but he knew the wound would heal soon.

His gaze locked on Maya's face. She licked her lips, and her eyes slowly faded from black to blue.

Then that stare narrowed on him. “You don't taste like a human.”

His heart was racing. Arousal, not fear. “Oh? And just what do I taste like?”

She didn't answer. Just stared at him a moment longer as if trying to figure out some sort of puzzle.

Good luck with that one.
He'd keep his secrets from her until he was damn good and ready to reveal them.

His cock was so hard and thick that he was pretty sure the zipper of his jeans might be leaving a permanent impression on his flesh.

He'd just gotten turned on by a vampire's bite.

Impossible.

Or so he'd thought.

His gaze dropped to the front of Maya's T-shirt. Her nipples poked against the fabric, sharp, tight peaks.

She'd been aroused by the exchange.

Good. So he wasn't the only one being driven to the edge.

“We'll talk about your niece at dusk. Figure out a game plan.” She was obviously dismissing him for the time being and ignoring the tension between them, and her own need.

Interesting.

He found he wasn't quite as capable of ignoring the need. The lust pumped through his blood, driving a hunger he'd never expected to feel.

If her bite felt that good, he couldn't help but wonder,
how would it feel to fuck her
?

She walked toward the wall. She punched in a series of codes, and a faint
whur
filled the air. There was a soft
clank
as the shutters locked into place.

“What are those for?” he asked, and his voice was harder, deeper than he intended. She had control. If she could fight the desire, so could he.

Maybe.

Control had never really been his strong suit.

He tried again, clearing his throat and deliberately not looking at the bare expanse of her pale legs. But he bet they'd feel good wrapped around him. “I thought the sun didn't hurt you.” He knew it didn't. He'd once tied a vampire to a tree and waited for the sun to rise and the fire to start.

Nothing had happened.

Lucky for him, it had been easy enough to start a fire another way.

“The shutters don't just keep out the sun,” she said, yawning a little and heading toward the bed. “They keep the monsters out, too. They're made of reinforced steel. It'd take someone with a hell of a lot of strength—more strength than a vamp has—to get past 'em during the daylight.”

The lady sure believed in being prepared.

She pushed back the covers, climbed into the bed. Then she threw a pillow at him. Hard. “You should fit on the sofa in the den.”

The den? His fingers curled into the lumpy pillow. Since when did the place have a den? There was a bathroom the size of a closet, a miniscule bedroom, and he'd been pretty sure when they entered the house they'd walked through a kitchen.

Huh. Now that he thought about it, he did remember seeing a rather ragged green couch in the kitchen.

And there was really no way he was going to fit on it. “I think I'd prefer the bed.”

She stretched out. “Um, I'm sure you would.” Another yawn, one she made no attempt to cover. “But you're getting the sofa. Or the floor. Your choice.”

What a fine choice it was.

“There's food in the cabinets, if you get hungry. Pay to…keep it stocked.” Her eyelids began to lower.

“Uh, Maya?” Surely this wasn't it. The great vampire was just going to curl up now and go to sleep?

And he was going to stay up, horny, all damn day long?

What about the bite? Did she think they were linked now, that she could trust him?

A long sigh filled the room. “Slick, I've been hunting all night. I killed a demon, got my body ripped open, and had to deal with
you.
” She drew out the last, making it seem as if his presence had been the most stressful part of her night.

Adam frowned.

“Now, I'm tired, and apparently, I've got one hell of a hunt planned for tomorrow.”

But he hadn't even told her all the details about Nassor and his pack yet.

“So I'm going to bed.”

“You need to—”

Her eyes closed. “We'll talk tomorrow.” Her voice had started to slur.

Well, damn. The vampire was dismissing him.

Just curling up and going to sleep.

He spun and stomped toward the door.

“Brody.” No sleepiness in her voice now.

Glancing back over his shoulder, he found her stare trained on him.

“I've got you in me now. Got your taste.” Her eyes were wide open as she told him, “We're linked. Don't think about lying to me or betraying me. I told you that I'd help you find the girl, and I will.”

But only after she'd gotten her beauty sleep.

Adam bit back his impatience. Just because he didn't need sleep didn't mean that she could stay awake and be strong.

Even the undead had to rest.

He gave a curt nod.

“Turn on me, and I'll kill you.” Her eyes flashed black for just the briefest of moments. “Believe me, if you even
think
about betraying me, I'll know.”

No, she wouldn't. She had his blood, yeah, and though she didn't realize the fact yet, it would give her more strength than she'd ever possessed.

Maya would need that strength in the nights to come.

Yet other than the physical power the blood gave her, there was no other connection. If he wanted, he could let her into his mind. But only if he allowed it.

The vampire kept applying human rules to him.

A serious mistake. Human rules had never applied to him.

Not in all the centuries of his existence.

“Sleep well, vampire. You can trust me this day.” For the day, she could. After that, well, they'd just have to see.

Her gaze bored into him and he knew she was trying to test their blood link. He could feel her power stirring in the air around him. Deliberately, he projected a calm, steady presence back to her.

She nodded her head slowly. Settled back against the bed and closed her eyes, apparently satisfied that she didn't have to worry about him while she slept.

Adam stared at her, emotions, needs churning in him. Maya Black wasn't quite what he'd expected.

She was making him feel. Making him want.

Not an ideal situation for one of his kind. Because when creatures like him wanted something, well, they took it.

After all, they were the strongest of the beasts that roamed the land.

Yeah, if he wanted something, he took it.

And, usually, he killed anything that got in his way.

Chapter 3

“T
ell me about the kid.”

Adam looked up at Maya. She stood in the doorway, clad in a pair of faded jeans and a white T-shirt.

The sun had set less than twenty minutes ago. As it had dipped beneath the horizon, he'd heard Maya stirring in the next room. He'd stayed on the couch, not moving, too leery of finding another strip show if he walked into the bedroom.

Because what would he do then? He'd already spent the better part of the day trying to forget what the woman felt like beneath his fingers. He didn't need another visual tease to stir him up.

Maya sauntered across the room and stared down at him. “I need to know everything about her.”

He licked his lips. “Her name's Camellia. Cammie. She's nine.” But he'd already told her that.

“What does she look like?” Her gaze drifted to his hair. “Dark, like you?”

He nodded. “Same hair color, but she's got curls. Same eyes. She's kinda fragile, and small.”

“What, is she your sister's kid or—”

“My brother's. But I'm her guardian.” Protecting her had been his responsibility, and he'd failed her.

He'd just wanted her to feel normal. Going to a sleepover at a friend's house had seemed so innocent.

So human.

But Cammie wasn't normal. Never would be.

The vamps knew it. That was why they'd taken her.

“Why isn't your brother the one looking for her?”

“Because he's dead.” Jon had passed years ago. Taken his own life, right after Cammie's mother died.

“Must be tough on the kid. Not having a father.”

“Or a mother.” Hell, he hadn't meant to tell her that.

Her lips pulled down. “So it's just the two of you, huh, Slick?”

“Yeah.”

“And where's home for you and Cammie?” Maya drawled. “I get the feeling you aren't from L.A.”

No, he definitely was not. “Maine. Small town. Cotter's Ridge.” At least that's where they'd been living when his niece was taken.

“Um.” She sat on the couch beside him, her knee brushing his. “And you came all the way to L.A. in order to find little old me?”

Yeah, he had. Because Maya could lead him to Nassor.

“How do you know that it was Nassor's pack that took her?”

“A witness told me. She saw the vampires, heard them mention his name.” Nassor wasn't exactly a name that could be forgotten. Those who knew of the supernatural world, well, they usually knew of Nassor.

The vampire was old. Maybe one of
the
oldest of his kind. Writings of him began in the time of ancient Egypt.

According to the legends, he'd been favored by his gods. Granted immortality.

The bastard had been raising hell ever since.

Maya rubbed her index finger down the bridge of her nose. “Nassor's men don't usually leave witnesses behind.”

“They thought she was dead.” He still wasn't sure how Karen had managed to hold on until he'd gotten there. Sometimes, humans could surprise him. “Karen—Cammie's nanny—managed to tell me what happened.”

Maya reached for his hand. “Show me.”

He hesitated.
The bond.
She wanted in his mind. Wanted to peer at his memories.

Maybe she wanted to test him. To see if the story of his niece was true.

But he could show her this.

Only this.

He took her fingers. Held tight, and opened his mind to the vampire.

 

Instinct took him out into the night. A gut feeling that something was wrong.

He'd sent Cammie out in the limo. The nanny had gone with her. Two guards.

He couldn't keep the girl in a cage. She needed her freedom.

Going to the party—he'd thought there would be no harm in the simple trip.

Then he'd begun to fear.

He found the car first. The hood had slammed into a light pole. The limo's doors were open. He smelled the blood as he ran forward, then he saw the guards. Throats ripped open, eyes staring sightlessly ahead.

But no Cammie.

“Cammie!”

A gasp. Soft, pain-filled. Adam ran as fast as he could toward the sound.

He found her in the street, tears streaming down her face, blood pooled beneath her body. The nanny. Not Cammie, not his Cammie.

“Karen!” He reached her, dropping to his knees beside her and touching her cold flesh. He could hear the faint rasp of her breathing. He could feel death around them, waiting. So hungry.

Her eyes met his. Full of pain. Fear. “A-Adam…” She choked on her blood, barely able to get the words out.

“It's all right.” But it wasn't. Wouldn't be, not for her. The wounds in her chest were too deep. The blood loss too severe. He squeezed her hand tightly. “You're safe now.” Fear knifed through him, filling his veins, his every thought. Where was Cammie?

“T-took…her.”

His heart stopped, then began a frantic rhythm, thudding in his chest. “Cammie? Someone took Cammie?”

She tried to nod. Her head moved just a fraction and a groan burst from her lips. Her lashes began to flutter closed.

Death crept closer.

“No! Karen, dammit, no! Talk to me!” She couldn't go, not yet. “Who took Cammie?”

“C-cl-aws, t-teeth…like…” Blood gurgled past her lips, “a-animals.”

Karen wasn't like him. She didn't know about the supernatural beings that roamed the earth.

Or, rather, she hadn't known, until they attacked her.

Claws and teeth. Had it been shifters? Vampires? Demons?

“L-laughed.” She was shaking now. “B-bit me and l-laughed.”

The full moon shone brightly down on them. He could see the marks on her arms, her legs. Her neck. Very gently, he turned her head to the side.

He knew that bite.

Vampire.

“Did they say anything?” he demanded as the fear turned to rage. “Anything?”

“Th-that…she'd…g-gif–t…N-Nas-sor…”

Her gaze drifted from his. Her eyes looked up at the moon. At the heavens. “F-forgi…” Her words ended in a final gasp for breath.

Her eyes were open when she met death.

“No!”

 

Maya dropped Adam's hand. Dammit, she'd hadn't wanted to see that woman's last moments.

They were too much like her own.

Only the bastard who'd attacked her had managed to get a few drops of his blood into her mouth. She'd tried to spit them out, but, well, since she was now one of the undead, that hadn't exactly worked for her.

“I've been telling you the truth.” Adam's voice was calm.

She gave a jerky nod. She hadn't really thought the guy was lying, not about the girl anyway, but she'd needed to test their link.

“Did you see enough?” He gritted.

“Yeah.” Enough to know they were going to have one hell of a fight on their hands.
Nassor. Sonofabitch
. She'd hoped Adam had been wrong about him.

There weren't many things in this world that scared her, but Nassor was at the top of her list.

She'd been aware of him from the moment she'd woken as a vampire. It had started as a vague stirring in the back of her mind. A need to go somewhere, to search.

To find him.

In vampire land, the hierarchy was simple. The Born vampires, those rare bastards who'd been born with a thirst for blood and a curse of immortality, were the rulers. The strongest. The Born or the Blood because the power of vampirism was literally in their blood. Physically, psychically, they were the alphas. No one fucked with them—not L10s, not shifters. No one.

You didn't mess with a Born unless you wanted to die. Slowly. Very, very painfully.

The Born were the ones who'd spread the disease of vampirism. Because, yeah, she thought of it as a disease. Made her feel less like a horror movie freak. They'd bitten, exchanged blood, and infected thousands.

But the thing about the Born, whenever they created a new vampire, a Taken, well, that vamp was tied to the Born Master. And so was that Taken's next changed human, and the next and the next….

New vampires discovered that in addition to the perk of living forever, they had a not-so-nice voice whispering in their heads. The Master's voice. They could
feel
the Master. Feel him calling when he wanted them.

So far, Maya had been able to ignore that call.

She had a feeling that was about to change. “You know about me, don't you?” she asked Adam. “You know Nassor created the bastard who changed me.” Tyrus. He'd been the one to attack her in that alley. He'd been old, according to the gossip she'd heard. Two centuries. And one of Nassor's favored assassins.

“Yes.” That deep emerald stare of his never wavered. “I know you can take me to him.”

“Not that simple, Slick.” Oh, if only. “Nassor's been in the ground for the last couple of years.”

A faint line appeared between his brows. “What?”

“He's in the ground. Healing.” Or so the whispers said. “The guy was injured, pretty damn bad from all accounts, a little less than five years ago.” If the rumors were true, he'd gotten a stake through the heart and his head had been partially severed by a hunter.

He'd lived through the attack and killed the hunter. And the hunter's family.

Nassor scared her. A lot.

“His injuries were so severe,” and well-deserved in her book, “that human blood wouldn't heal him. He had to seek the darkness.” Total darkness. Deep in the earth. “His body's been regenerating since the attack.” So the tales went.

“Are you certain? Absolutely certain?”

“Yeah.” Because the moment the ground had sealed over him, that damn call in her head had dulled to the faintest of drones and she'd been able to stop fighting the near constant need to head east.

To go to him.

Not that she was planning to ever just priss over and join his psychotic little army. Sure, she felt the call, but Maya had promised herself that if she ever gave in to the summons, she'd go to kill Nassor, not to pay homage to him like some mindless sycophant.

“You can find him, though, can't you? You can track him. Find his resting place.”

“Yeah.”

He exhaled.

“But it'll be guarded by his best assassins, and I don't think it will do us any good—”

“What the hell? He's got Cammie! We can—”

“He doesn't have her yet.” She knew what the vampires in the vision had meant when they'd referred to Cammie as a gift. Every Born Master awakening was a sacred event in the vampire world.

Such an event would deserve a very fine gift.

What finer gift was there than the innocent blood of a child?

“The vampires that attacked, they haven't delivered the girl to him yet.” Because the bastard was still entombed in the ground.

But she had an unfortunate feeling he'd be rising, soon.

That droning in her head, it had started to get the tiniest bit louder.

Not a good sign.

But, on the plus side, at least the girl was probably still alive. Maya really hadn't been expecting that development. Plans began to race through her mind.

“How do you know that he doesn't have her?” Adam asked quietly.

“Because I know he's still sleeping.” Getting stronger, more powerful every day. “And that's a very good thing for us.”

Adam shook his head. “How the hell is that a good thing? You can't track the other vampires—”

“Sure I can.” Who did he think he was talking to? Some rank amateur? “I can't feel them muttering in my head, but, believe me, there is one thing in this world that I know how to do very well…and that's hunt.”

For a moment, hope flashed across his face. It was followed immediately by doubt. “You really think you can find them?”

For a guy who was paying her two hundred grand, he sure seemed to be lacking faith in her. “I know I can.” But while she was thinking about the cash…Maya pulled her cell phone out of her back pocket and tossed it to him. “Before we track down those vamps, there's the little matter of my fee.”

He'd caught the phone automatically in his left hand.

Maya held up a slip of paper. “I need those funds transferred to this account.”
Then
they'd go hunting.

“Promise me that you aren't bullshitting me.” The edge of desperation that she heard in his voice gave her pause. “Promise me that you can help me track those bastards and find Cammie.”

“Don't worry, Slick. I've got connections.”

The guy still didn't look reassured.

“I'm your best bet.” So true. Without her, well, he'd just be screwing around in the dark. But she wasn't going to promise him that they'd find the girl. She wasn't sure that was a promise she could keep. She'd try. Try her damnedest.

But she wouldn't promise.

Besides, the guy should really know better than to trust the word of a vampire.

Her fingers tapped on the sofa's armrest. “You're wasting time. If you want my help, then make the call.”

His gaze drifted to her lips. “I thought you wanted more than money.”

Ah, she did. Maya smiled. “I'll take that payment, too,
later.
” She'd fed well the night before. The bagged, ice-cold blood from the hospital had been more than enough to sustain her. Sure, it hadn't given her the wild rush that came from the blood taken straight from a source's neck, but she'd gotten that rush when she'd sampled Adam.

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