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
waves of pleasure so extreme she couldn’t think . . . didn’t want to think.
Her body arched with her release, a cry ripped from her throat as
satisfaction rippled through her, but Rurik gave her no peace. He continued
his skillful seduction, his mouth and hands in constant motion over her
body until she writhed beneath him.
“Please,” she gasped, tugging his clothes off, the need for him beyond
comprehension. She grasped his erection, caressing the silky skin, anxious to
feel him inside her.
“Soon.” The deep huskiness of his voice added to her desire. He drew
away from her grasp then caressed her breasts again while his lips wooed
hers, demanding . . . and receiving . . . a total response.
She dug her fingers into his back as she mated with his tongue. No one
had ever set her aflame like this, made her so aware of every molecule within
her. Leaving his mouth, she trailed kisses across his chest, pausing to nip at
his taut nipple.
He groaned and drew back to meet her gaze, his eyes black. “You will
be mine,” he declared then slid into her, filling her completely.
She erupted at once, pulsing around him, then found herself climbing
again as he loved her thoroughly with deep strokes, caressing hands and
tender lips. She met him equally, stroke for stroke, while she devoured his
mouth and clung to his shoulders.
Kissing her throat, he plunged deeper, creating new waves of pleasure
that triggered her gasp as she threw back her head, her body arching beneath
him.
For a fleeting moment, she felt his teeth scrape her neck. What . . . ?
Abruptly, Rurik groaned with his release, arching against her, the cords of
his neck prominent.
His tension eased, and he stole a soft kiss before rolling onto his side,
taking her with him.
“That was . . .” Hayley had to gasp for air. “That was incredible.” She’d
never believed lovemaking could be so fulfilling, so intense. Of course, her
experience was limited, but she knew what she’d shared with Rurik was not
a common thing. It couldn’t be.
Rurik smiled and brushed stray curls back from her face. “I knew it
would be like that with you.”
“Did you?” She couldn’t have imagined this even in her wildest dreams.
Her body still throbbed with complete satisfaction.
“I’ve waited a long time for someone like you. Your passion, your
fearlessness, your intelligence. They drew me in when I’d thought I’d least
expected it.” His eyes remained dark, serious, intense.
“I understand.” He’d intrigued her from the beginning, invaded her
lonely life despite her efforts to keep him away.
He continued to trace his finger over her face, lingering over her lips.
“Your wildness matches mine.”
She’d never seen herself in that light, but she liked his description.
“Wildness, eh?”
She nipped at his finger then slid her hands over his sculpted chest. As
good as Rurik looked in clothing, he appeared even better out of it, and she
wanted her chance to explore. As she brushed his nipple, he inhaled sharply,
and she smiled. Why not let that wildness roam?
Pushing him onto his back, she kissed him with a ferocity that surprised
her, yet his answering passion thrilled her. “My turn,” she murmured. He’d
seduced her. Could she do the same to him? Could she make him tremble
with the same yearning that had racked her body?
She could.
And did.
HAYLEY AWOKE IN that quiet period between night and dawn when the
gray mist of approaching morning blanketed the land. The night had been
exhausting, yet far more wonderful than any she could remember.
She stretched, aware of a slight ache in her body. A very nice ache.
Laying her head on Rurik’s bare chest, she sighed and snuggled closer
when he tightened his arms around her. She’d never expected to find
someone like him when she’d first embarked on her mission. But now she
couldn’t imagine not having him in her life.
Still, the Destroyer remained free. Here. In the city. Somewhere.
He had to be stopped before Hayley could allow herself to envision any
type of future with Rurik. For the first time, she felt confident she could
stop her sister’s killer. With Rurik by her side, she could do anything.
Sleep tugged at her, and she sighed, ready to let it take her as Rurik
lightly ran his hand down her back.
Yet something was wrong. Something that kept her from drifting away
into erotic dreams. But what?
The distant chimes of a church clock brought with it a dawning
awareness as her heartbeat pulsed in time to the bongs. Hayley frowned and
pressed her ear closer to Rurik’s chest.
He had no heartbeat.
She drew back with rising dread, realizing that the scrapes she’d left on
his chest during their lovemaking had vanished during the night. Nobody
could heal that fast. She watched him sleeping. His chest didn’t move, gave
no sign of rhythmic breathing.
No heartbeat.
No breath.
Dear Lord, Rurik was a vampire.
HAYLEY THREW herself out of bed toward her backpack of stakes but
ended up tangled in the sheet while she groped for a weapon. Finally snaring
a stake, she turned back toward the bed to find Rurik watching her, a sad
smile on the same lips that had kissed her.
“Don’t you think if I intended to bite you, I would have done so before
now?” he asked.
Was he admitting it? Hayley scrambled to her feet, conscious of her
nudity but afraid to let down her guard long enough to pull on some clothes.
“You’re a vampire.”
“I am
strigoii
. A living vampire.” He slid from the bed and stood before
her, proud in his nakedness. “I tried to explain it to you before.”
She frowned. “A living vampire? That’s impossible.” Vampires came
from people who’d been killed. How could one be living? “You’re dead. An
evil creature.” Yet he’d given her the most intense pleasure of her life.
The sadness that filled his gaze gave her a moment’s pause. “I would
have died. True. But instead, I awakened to a new life.”
She resisted the urge to lower her guard, to comfort him. She had to
remember what he was. “As a bloodsucker.”
“Not in the manner you mean.”
Rurik stepped toward her, and Hayley raised the stake, uncertain for the
first time if she could actually use it. “Don’t come any closer.”
He hesitated. “What we shared meant nothing to you then?”
“Don’t change the subject.” She didn’t want to think about it. Dear
God, she’d made love to a vampire.
More than once.
And enjoyed it.
A lot.
“The feelings are real, Hayley. Don’t dismiss them because of what little
you know about vampires.” His gaze held hers. “I care about you. You’re in
no danger from me.”
Her hand trembled as did the breath she drew in. “You’re a vampire.”
“Thus I should be eliminated?” Rurik spread his arms wide, displaying
his magnificent chest. “Very well then. Do it.”
She should. He was a vampire.
She raised the stake then lowered it. She couldn’t. Not like this.
Hayley took a step back. “Get out of here. Now.” If he stayed, he might
actually convince her he wasn’t evil, that everything she believed was a lie.
And she knew better. She’d seen the Destroyer’s victims, seen what they did
when they arose.
Dear Lord, the Destroyer!
Her blood froze. “Are you the Destroyer?” she demanded. Her
knuckles whitened as she tightened her grip on the stake. No matter what
she felt, she’d have to eliminate him.
He met her gaze. “I did not kill your sister.”
His words rang with sincerity. Would the Destroyer lie? Of course. But
now? When he had her at her most vulnerable? What purpose would it
serve? Hayley edged back toward the bathroom, hating the conflict within
her. “Get out.”
“May I dress first?” His calmness went against the behavior of every
vampire she’d ever met.
“Go ahead, but don’t try anything, or I swear I’ll stake you.” She hoped
he believed her. She didn’t. Her heart hammered against her ribs as he pulled
on his clothing, his movements unhurried and sure, his eyes sad.
En route to the door, he paused and extended his hand. Hayley jerked
back at once, and he dropped it. “We’ll talk later,” he said.
“I—”
Once you’ve gotten over your shock, you’ll have questions.” He gave
her a wan smile, nodded, then left the room.
Hayley stared at the closed door, half-expecting him to return, to attack,
to destroy as every other vampire she’d ever met. What was going on? Why
was he so different?
This was unreal.
With a dry laugh, she pulled on her clothes. Vampires were unreal. The
fact that she’d made love to a vampire was very unreal. The fact that she’d
experienced the most fantastic love-making in existence went beyond
unreal.
Could there be living vampires? Rational creatures? And what the hell
were
strigoii
?
She spent the day in a daze, wandering the streets of Manitou unseeing
of the crowds, her thoughts whirling, one question leading to another. True,
Rurik’s skin was cool but not cold. His lips . . . no, she didn’t want to go
there.
Yet he was intelligent, well-mannered, well-dressed. So damned sexy.
So . . . so human.
She’d seen him out during the day. How was that possible? She’d felt
his hot breath, heard his uneven gasps for air as they made love. Yet this
morning he’d appeared nearly dead. Did he only cease to breathe when he
slept?
By late afternoon, she sat on the bank of the river and watched the cold
mountain water dance over the stones, every bit as much in disarray as her
thoughts. Had Rurik attacked the girl in the park? He’d arrived so
quickly—just after Hayley had chased off the attacker. Could it have been
Rurik instead of Paul?
Or worse, was he the Destroyer? Had he lied to her? Had she slept with
the creature that murdered her sister? Hayley’s stomach clenched, and she
bent over her folded arms, wanting to retch.
“Hayley?”
Hearing Rurik’s quiet voice, she turned to see him standing above her
on the top of the bank. How could she have been so careless as to lose track
of time, to not notice the darkness settling? Every muscle tense, she climbed
the slope to face him.
“Tell me the truth this time. Are you the Destroyer?” Better to know, to
face certain death than to wonder.
“I told you already. I didn’t kill your sister or Paul or any of the people
you’ve had to destroy.” His words rang with sincerity. “Believe me, Hayley.
I do not kill innocents.”
She wanted to believe him. Was it her attraction to him or the days
she’d spent with him that made her so willing to listen? “What is
strigoii
?”
He extended his hand. “Walk with me, and I’ll answer all your
questions.”
Did he intend to lead her somewhere and kill her? Hayley hesitated. She
still had stakes in her belt. Slowly, she took his hand. As always, a tingle of
awareness shivered over her skin at his touch. How could it now, when she
knew what he was? Yet how could she not be aware of him? Rurik might be
a vampire, but he was also the sexiest man—dead or alive—she had ever
met.
“There are two types of vampire,” Rurik said as they walked along the
river. “The
strigoii
and the
moroii
.
Strigoii
are those deliberately made into
vampires by being given some of the vampire’s blood as they are dying.
They reach the brink of death then come back as rational vampires. They’re
transformed into a new life form while retaining all that made them
human—their emotions, their intelligence, their personality, their
memories.”
“Do they drink blood?” She had to know.
“Yes.” He met her gaze. “But it doesn’t have to be human blood.
Animal blood obtained from a butcher works just as well. We don’t kill for
our sustenance.”
Hayley tugged her hand free. “When was the last time you had human
blood?” Just because animal blood would work didn’t mean he drank it.
“About three hundred years ago. When I first became
strigoii
, I was
taught to drink human blood, but I could not accept it. I ran away from my
strigoii
family, from what I was, and taught myself to drink animal blood.”
“Three hundred . . .” Hayley blinked. She’d always known vampires
were immortal but to actually meet someone that old . . . “What did you do
then?”
“I fought in wars. Any war. Any fight that would have me. For decades.
I felt I didn’t deserve to live, yet I couldn’t die.” He gave her a dry smile. “I
won honors for my bravery, for the fact that I could eliminate many of the
enemy and returned unharmed.”
“So you do kill.” But she could feel his anguish over doing so.
“In battle, yes. Only then.” He stared unseeingly in the distance. “I
finally realized that I had to make peace with myself, with what I was. That