Authors: Parker Blue,P. J. Bishop,Evelyn Vaughn,Jodi Anderson,Laura Hayden,Karen Fox
Tags: #Romance, #Fantasy, #Paranormal, #Literature & Fiction, #Anthologies, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy & Futuristic, #Anthologies & Short Stories, #Paranormal & Urban
was faster.
She could hear him closing in, his footsteps drawing near. “Damn.
Damn. Damn.” If she could only get time to set up, to plunge her stake into
his heart.
Sunlight filtered inside in the distance. Close, but not close enough. Her
lungs gasped for air. The altitude had stolen it all, and she needed every bit
she could get.
She stumbled over a loose limb and tumbled to the ground, skinning
her knees through her jeans, but that was the least of her worries. Paul fell
on her with a roar.
Was this it then? Would she become the next vampire? No. She’d kill
herself first. His claw-like hands tore at her shoulder.
The stake was useless now. Sliding her silver knife free from the leather
sheath at her waist, she stabbed at him over and over until he finally drew
back screaming in pain. She scrambled to her feet and ran once more.
Not much farther.
He snagged her backpack, nearly pulling her off her feet. Hayley slid out
of it, leaving it in his hands.
Run. Faster. Faster.
She’d just reached the edge of the sunlight when he grabbed her
shoulder, tearing her shirt, digging his fingernails into her flesh again. “No!”
She struggled forward. One step. Another.
Sun rays fell onto his hand which burst into flames. With a howl of
pain, he released her, and Hayley staggered into the full sunshine.
She dropped to her knees, struggling for air, watching the tunnel
entrance. Paul remained just outside the range of the light, growling, savage,
until he finally disappeared back into the darkness.
That had been close. Too damned close.
And worse, he had her backpack. With most of her weapons.
At least she still had her knife. She cleaned it then slid it back into its
sheath. Two more stakes remained in her belt.
Finally, she climbed to her feet, her chest burning from the lack of
oxygen and the scratches aching as well. He had the advantage at the
moment. Time to regroup.
She’d go to the hotel and clean up the blood trickling down her back.
She’d get more weapons. She might be a lousy shot with a crossbow, but it
worked best in this situation. Plus she’d been practicing. Then she’d return.
HAYLEY MADE IT to her hotel room, pain throbbing through her. The
scratches on her shoulder and back burned, and the way her shirt stuck to
her skin told her more than a little blood was involved. Round two for Paul.
She needed to clean up, tend her wounds, gather new weapons, and
return to the train tunnel before the sun set. Glancing at the clock, she
swore. Sunset wasn’t that far away.
Paul would be even more difficult to take out after dark, and she wasn’t
eager to lose another chance. She had to stop him. Last night he’d only killed
a deer. What . . .
who
would provide his meal tonight?
She headed into the bathroom, wincing as she tugged her long-sleeved
T-shirt over her head. The damp feel of warm blood trickled down her back.
Definitely not good.
Sliding her bra strap off her shoulder, she angled to best see the damage
in the large mirror. She wrinkled her nose as she made out the deep gouges
on the back of her shoulder and over her shoulder blade. They looked as raw
and painful as they felt, the furrows oozing blood in a thin but steady stream.
Vampire scratches didn’t cause a person to become one or she would
have been doomed a long time ago. She grabbed her extra-large tube of
antiseptic cream and box of bandages and placed them on the counter.
“You’re hurt.”
Hayley shrieked as she whirled around to see Rurik standing in the
bedroom. “How the hell did you get in here?” She snatched her shirt and
held it in front of her, her heart racing. She hadn’t even heard him.
“I knocked. The door was slightly ajar.” A concerned frown lined his
brow. “Turn around. Let me see your wounds.”
Hayley didn’t move. The door was ajar? Usually she was fanatical about
ensuring it shut tight after her. Still, she had been concentrating more on
how much she hurt when she first arrived. It was possible. She glanced
behind him. The door was shut now in any case.
She tilted her chin toward him. “I’d prefer you left.”
“You can’t treat that yourself.” He hesitated for a moment then entered
the bathroom, making an area she’d previously considered somewhat
spacious shrink to the size of a closet. A very small closet.
Damn, why did her hormones insist on reacting to this guy she barely
knew? Where was the control she’d forced on herself?
He snatched the antiseptic cream from the counter. “Turn around.”
Part of her wanted to refuse, to face him down, but the logical part of
her insisted he was right. She’d never do a good job of it herself.
Keeping her shirt pressed to her chest, she turned around. Rurik sucked
in his breath. “You need stitches on some of those.”
“No.” She didn’t have time to mess with doctors and hospitals. What
was another scar? She’d add it to her growing collection. She met his gaze in
the mirror. “Either help out or get out.”
His gaze held hers for several moments, then he sighed. “This will
hurt.”
Hayley bit back a sarcastic retort. It wasn’t Rurik’s fault she was injured.
She was lucky it wasn’t worse. Killing vampires wasn’t easy, and this one was
turning out to be more difficult than most.
She gasped when he pressed a warm damp washcloth against the
scratches. Pain radiated from her back, and she tensed in response, her
fingernails digging into her palms.
“Easy.” Rurik’s voice held a soothing quality. “Relax or it’ll be worse.”
Once he finished with the washcloth, he applied the ointment with a
feather-light touch. “I assume you found Paul.”
“We found each other. He’s staying in a train tunnel in the hills outside
of town. I have to get back before it gets dark.”
“You’re not going alone.”
Hayley met his gaze again, noting the quick flash of anger in her own
reflection. “I’m just fine by myself. I know what I’m doing.”
“Do you?” Rurik applied more ointment, a bit rougher than before to
make his point, and she winced.
“I was ambushed. It won’t happen again.” Now that she knew for sure
where Paul was, she’d approach it differently.
“That’s right. I’m going with you.” He opened several bandages and
lined them along the counter.
“I—”
He rested his hand on her uninjured shoulder. “Is it so difficult to
accept help?”
Was it? She hesitated. She’d been fighting this alone for so long that she
didn’t dare relax. Not until the Destroyer was eliminated.
She’d never stayed long enough in any one place to make friends,
hadn’t tried, hadn’t wanted to invest the time. Her friends from her previous
life hadn’t believe her, had tried to talk her out of this mission. She couldn’t
blame them. She would’ve been the same way if not for Lissa.
But could she trust this guy?
Rurik didn’t wait for an answer, but applied the bandages with swift,
careful movements. The ointment began to work, easing the pain slightly.
Now if only the rest of her aches would go away.
“That’s better,” she murmured. It did help to have someone else do the
bandaging.
“You’re still tense.” Rurik turned his attention to the tight muscles of
her neck and uninjured shoulder. She stiffened. This more intimate touch as
he worked those muscles with his hands sent a frisson of heat along her
nerves. She tried to pull away, but he held on, massaging with an expertise
that soon had Hayley’s eyes dropping closed, her head sagging, and a sigh
escaping.
He definitely knew what he was doing. Doing
for
her or
to
her? At that
moment she ceased to care. Her muscles melted to jelly while her blood
warmed, and she found herself leaning back against him.
His warm breath caressed her neck as he dropped his hands to her
sides, his touch gentle against her flesh. Her pulse skipped several beats as
her breasts tightened in response, her mind useless while her body reacted.
He nuzzled her ear then pressed kisses along her throat, adding to her
internal meltdown. The shirt fell to the floor, her arms hanging uselessly.
“I suggest you go without a bra for a few days,” he said, his voice husky.
“To avoid irritating the wounds.”
Hayley found it a struggle to comprehend his words, her entire body
alive with new sensations. “Braless?” How could a simple massage turn her
mind to mush?
He expertly released the catch then eased her bra off to join the shirt on
the floor. The cool air barely had time to brush her flesh before he cupped
her breasts in his hands, teasing her taut nipples with his rough thumbs.
A sudden ache stabbed Hayley low in the gut. An ache of longing, of
need so intense she gasped, her eyes flying open. The mirror reflected their
images—her naked torso, Rurik’s hands working a delicious magic on her
breasts. His eyes were so dark they were black, the light in them echoing the
rough desire churning within her.
He brought his hands to her waist and turned her to face him, his
breathing as uneven as hers. “I want you, Hayley,” he muttered, his voice
rough. “You’ve intrigued me from the beginning, but now . . .”
“I—” Where was her brain? Lost somewhere in the erotic sensations
boiling in her blood.
He seized her lips in a possessive kiss as he pulled her close, her
sensitive nipples brushing against the rough wool of his sweater. His kiss
ravaged not only her mouth, but her senses until she could only focus on the
ache twisting her gut, the longing that demanded she take this man to bed.
She raised her arms to wrap them around his neck then jerked out of
the hormone-driven haze as a blast of fiery agony shot across her back. At
her cry of pain, Rurik released her, and Hayley grabbed a towel to hold in
front of her. She backed away from him as far as the bathroom would allow.
“I . . . I don’t know what you’re doing to me, but I don’t like it.” She
detested the shakiness of her voice. Where was her control?
“You do like it.” Fire blazed in his dark eyes. “And that’s what frightens
you.”
“Please leave.” His words held too much truth. No one had ever shaken
her to the core like this. No one had ever made her want with a frenzy that
yet swirled inside her.
“Are you still planning to go after Paul?”
“I . . . yes.” Yes, her mission. She had to remember that.
“Then I’m coming along.” His tone left no room for argument, but
Hayley shook her head. She needed him gone.
Rurik sighed and gentled his voice. “I can behave.” A slight smile lifted
the corner of his lips. “If stopping Paul comes first, then that’s what we’ll
do.”
She eyed him, uncertain of how to proceed. A part of her wanted to
trust him. Yeah, the part he’d stirred to aching life. “Then wait outside.”
“Okay.” He sent her a last lingering look that threatened to destroy the
wall she was struggling to rebuild, then left the hotel room.
Hayley rushed to her suitcase and pulled out a thick sweatshirt, donning
it in record time despite the pain of her back. Even the soft fleece tormented
her aching breasts, and she closed her eyes, forcing the pulsing need to
abate. Damn the man. She didn’t need this, want this.
He stirred her humanity to life, a side she’d tried to stifle in order to
complete her task. And it felt good. Too good.
She focused on grabbing new weapons—a crossbow that she could use
without getting close to Paul, wooden arrows, and more stakes. Grabbing a
large towel from the bathroom, she wrapped it around everything.
Somehow, she didn’t think the hotel management would be pleased to see
her parading through the hallways with a crossbow.
Finally, she drew in a deep breath and opened the door, uncertain
whether she wanted to see Rurik there or not.
But he was there, and his gaze searched her face. “Are you all right?”
“Let’s get this over with,” she muttered, heading down the hall, not
looking back to see if he followed. His dark eyes held a potent danger of
their own. Better to avoid them.
As she reached the hotel porch, she grimaced. The sun had already
dipped behind the mountain peaks, pulling the fading light with it. “Damn.”
“You can wait until tomorrow.” Rurik appeared by her side.
“No, I can’t.” She stalked toward her car. “I can’t let him kill again,
especially now that I know where he is. The next time might not be just a
deer.”
Rurik said nothing but slid into the passenger seat and maintained a
stony silence during the entire drive.
Hayley parked as close as possible to the hill then hiked up the slope to
the tunnel, Rurik beside her. She used her brightest flashlight this time and
swung it around them as they progressed through the bushes and trees. With