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
“Just as some humans do.”
Hayley hesitated. He had a point. “Then he could be anyone.” He could
have ridden in the elevator with her, passed her on the street, sat across from
her in a diner, and she never would have known. She sucked in her breath.
Hell, the Destroyer could even be a woman. “How am I ever going to stop
him . . . her?”
“You can’t. Let him go. This quest of yours will end up destroying you
if you don’t.”
Hayley pulled free of his embrace. “I can’t do that.” She ran into the
hotel, but Rurik caught her hand in the lobby.
“Wait. Please.”
When she finally looked at him, he cupped her face with his palm. “I
don’t want to lose you. Can’t you see that?”
“I have to avenge my sister and the dozens of others he murdered.”
Rurik sighed. “Then I’ll help you.”
“Can one
strigoii
slay another?”
“A stake through the heart is fatal no matter who wields it.” His
obvious distaste vibrated through his words.
“This one has to be stopped.” She couldn’t give up. “He’s evil.”
“Just as there are evil humans, there are evil
strigoii
. Do you intend to
find them all?”
She hesitated. Put that way, she could picture herself chasing the
undead for the remainder of her mortal life. Despair wrapped its cold
tentacles around her. “I don’t want to.”
“Then stop. Now.” Rurik drew her closer. “Stay with me instead.”
He cut off her response with his kiss, putting every bit of his three
hundred years of experience into it, seducing away her reluctance with true
mastery. By the time he finished, she found her hands clenching the front of
his shirt, her breathing erratic.
“That’s unfair,” she murmured.
“I know.” He claimed another kiss. “Shall we go to your room?”
She was tempted. More than tempted. The fever within her demanded
satisfaction.
He was
strigoii
.
But he was still a vampire.
Dear Lord, if only she could think clearly.
“Rurik.”
Hayley turned with Rurik to see who’d called. Barnaby approached,
Dane at his heels, then stopped before them. “I haven’t seen you in . . .
ages.”
Rurik’s smile appeared forced, his stance tense. Hayley frowned. Was
Barnaby not a friend?
“It’s been a while,” Rurik said.
“What have you been up to?” Barnaby asked.
“I have an antique shop in town.”
Rurik obviously didn’t like Barnaby. What was going on?
“An antique shop?” Barnaby laughed. “Somehow I can’t imagine the
Destroyer working in an antique shop.”
Hayley’s breath caught. For a brief moment, time froze. “The who?”
“The Destroyer. That’s Rurik’s nickname. From a long time ago.”
Backing away, Hayley stared at Rurik. He was playing her. All this time,
he’d been stringing her along, playing some kind of warped game.
“Oh. My. God,” she whispered.
Rurik started toward her. “Hayley . . .”
All the pieces finally fell into place. “You murdered my sister.”
“LISTEN TO ME.” Rurik held out his hands as he approached Hayley. “I
haven’t been called the Destroyer in over a century. It came from the way I
fought in so many battles, so many wars when I didn’t care if I existed or
not. I swear, Hayley, I’m not the one who killed your sister.”
“No.” She shook her head. He had an explanation for everything. If she
let him, he’d convince her of this, too. “No.” She backed away from him.
“It’s all been a game, hasn’t it? To make me care about you, then what? Turn
me into a
moroii
? Wouldn’t that be fitting revenge on a vampire hunter?”
“I wouldn’t—”
“Stay away from me, Rurik.” She couldn’t stake him here with people
all around. Not now. But she would. Somehow.
Whirling around, she fled, opting to run the stairs to her room rather
than wait for an elevator.
He could have caught up to her easily, yet Rurik didn’t follow. Of
course, in the stairwell, she’d be more likely to use a stake. How could she be
so stupid as to think she could trust a vampire?
But he hadn’t seemed like a vampire. He’d been caring, helpful,
wonderful.
No.
Hayley entered her room then set all the locks. Not that they would
probably do any good. Paul had managed to find his way in. Or had been let
in.
And she’d be willing to bet the door hadn’t been ajar when Rurik had
appeared in her room that first time.
Taking a stake from her belt, she stared at it. Could she plunge this into
Rurik’s heart? Hear his cry of pain before he dissolved into dust?
Her chest ached at the mental image, and tears sprang to her eyes.
Damn him. He’d made her care about him. Worse, he’d made her love him.
She was in love with a vampire. A vampire who had killed her sister.
Or had he?
He’d seemed sincere. After all the time she’d spent with him, wouldn’t
he have killed her by now if he was actually the Destroyer? Would he have
been patient enough to play this role for this long? Somehow, she hadn’t
imagined patience being the Destroyer’s strong suit.
He’d made love to her with such infinite tenderness and honest
passion. Could a killer do that?
Hayley sank onto the edge of her bed. Was she trying to fool herself
because of her feelings, or were her feelings trying to tell her she did know
the real Rurik Anatoli? That he wasn’t a murderer? That he wasn’t the
Destroyer she’d been chasing for months?
A sharp knock sounded at her door, and she tensed. “Rurik?”
“No, it’s Dane.”
Dane. He hadn’t said a word during the exchange with Barnaby and
Rurik, yet Barnaby was his friend. Barnaby had known Rurik’s old name.
Hayley flung open the door. “Are you a vampire too?”
Dane raised one eyebrow, then his vibrant smile appeared. “‘Fraid so. I
hadn’t realized Barnaby would out us that way. Of course, I had no reason to
assume you even believed vampires existed.”
“Do you know Rurik?” Were they working as a team?
“Never saw him before tonight. Barnaby’s the one who fought with
him way back when. The Crimean War, I believe.” He stepped inside her
room. “I thought, maybe, you could tell me what’s going on.”
“Don’t I need to invite you in?” Dumb question. Paul hadn’t had a
problem coming into her room.
“Not in a hotel.” Dane grinned. “Common space, you know.” He
waited for her to push the door closed and face him. “So, can you fill me in?
How do you know about us? What’s this Destroyer business?”
Hayley resisted the urge to shake her head to clear it. Was this entire
town made up of
strigoii
? Had she somehow landed in vampire central? “My
sister was murdered by the Destroyer,” she said finally. “When she rose
again, she came after me. I had to stop her.”
The shrill pitch of Lissa’s last scream still rang in Hayley’s ears, adding
to her resolve to eliminate her sister’s murderer. “I’ve been tracking him
across the country. I intend to eliminate him.”
Dane’s expression remained unchanged, but a flicker of light
shimmered in his eyes. “And this Rurik is the Destroyer?”
“He was called that once.” Did that make him the Destroyer she was
after? Could there be more than one?
“I see. Now all that in the lobby makes sense.” Dane grew serious. “So
you intend to kill the Destroyer, this Rurik?”
“I . . . don’t know.” How could she stake Rurik when her heart kept
telling her different?
“If he killed your sister, doesn’t he deserve to die?”
“Yes,
if
he killed my sister.”
“You were certain before. Now you’re not?” He sounded incredulous.
“I know Rurik, or at least, I thought I did. He’s not . . . that is, I find it
hard to believe . . .” Hayley sighed and turned to face the windows. “Before
I came here I knew exactly what I needed to do. I don’t know what to think
any more.”
“What was it you needed to do?” Dane crossed the room to stand
behind her.
“Stop any vampires the Destroyer made. Find him. Kill him.” That
purpose had consumed her since the night she’d been forced to stake her
own sister. How could a few days with Rurik have changed it?
“Then do it. Destroy him. I think he’s still pacing the sidewalk out
back.”
“I can’t.” As much as she hated to admit it, that was the truth. “I have
to talk to him first.”
“Talk? Has it crossed your mind that he’ll be ripping your throat out
now that you know who he is?”
Hayley shook her head. “That’s just it. I think I do know him.” He
wouldn’t hurt her. She couldn’t have given a killer her trust, her heart. She
glanced back at Dane. “Why do you care whether or not I stake him?”
“I could tell you that I don’t want renegade
strigoii
running loose.” He
shrugged. “Or I could say I want to remove all possible competition for you.
But neither of those would be true.”
Frowning, Hayley turned to face him. “Then what . . . ?”
He reached out to touch a stray curl. “The truth is because the
Destroyer wants to kill you without interruption.” His eyes turned red as his
hand flew to her throat, tightening, stopping the air from entering.
Dear Lord.
Dane
was the Destroyer. Not Rurik.
Hayley tugged at his arm, but he only continued to squeeze. Black dots
swam before her eyes. Summoning all the strength she could muster, she
clawed her fingernails across his face.
Dane flung her across the room with a roar of pain. Gasping for breath,
Hayley struggled to her feet, tugging a stake free. This was it. The battle to
the death. His . . . or hers.
“Why did you take Rurik’s old name as your own?” she demanded.
Dane’s eyes blazed red. “He killed a friend of mine in the Crimean War.
I vowed vengeance and took the name, hoping he’d find me. It took me
over a hundred years, but I tracked him here. Killing you should affect him
enough that I can destroy him easily.” Dane crouched low, facing her from
across the room.
“You’re going down,” she muttered as much to bolster her own
courage as to frighten him.
Amusement danced in his eyes. “Me? I doubt it. I’m not a
moroii
, stupid,
clumsy, and easy to stake. I am
strigoii
.” He circled around her, and Hayley
turned to keep him in sight. “You’re nothing but a puny human. Easy. Tasty.
Fast food, so to speak.”
“The hell I am.” She raised the stake, her throat raw, her muscles tense.
If she could only reach her crossbow . . .
He dove at her so fast she didn’t even see him move. Only a blur of
motion. She swung and missed, but he left his mark, a single scratch along
her throat. Warm blood trickled from it, and Hayley pressed one hand
against the fiery wound. Damn him.
“Very tasty, in fact,” Dane said from across the room where he sucked
her blood off his finger. “I shall enjoy draining you.”
“Think again, bloodsucker.” She nabbed her crossbow, loaded, and
fired in two smooth movements, but Dane’s speed saved him again. The
arrow bounced off the wall.
She reloaded, watching him closely, trying to judge his next action.
“Sloppy, Hayley.” His tone and grin held pure derision.
“Think again.” She aimed this time, led her target, and fired. As she’d
hoped, he darted to one side, just the wrong side. The arrow caught him in
the middle of his chest.
All amusement left his face as he glanced down at the arrow protruding
from his shirt. “I like this shirt.” He tugged the arrow free and tossed it
aside.
Looking up, he pinned Hayley with his glowing gaze. “Time to die.”
She had no time to reload before he was on her. Her heart racing, she
swung the crossbow at him, but he batted it aside with ease then seized her
waist with one arm and pulled her to him.
“No.” Though she struggled to free herself, he held on, his grip like
steel. She flailed to reach a stake, but he pinned her arms and pushed her
head to the side, revealing her throat.
“Don’t fight it, Hayley.” He drew his tongue over her skin, and she
shuddered. “It can be pleasurable if you don’t fight it.”
“No.” She’d fight until she died, but her twists and squirms were
nothing to him.
He sank his fangs into her, creating pain unlike any she’d ever known.
She screamed once before all ability to fight left her. Her energy, her life
force drained into him as he drank greedily. She could feel her blood leaving
her body, her heart slowing, her brain growing sluggish. Dear God, she was
going to die.
She
was
dying.
Her eyes drooped closed when suddenly someone grabbed her, pulling
her free from Dane’s deadly embrace. “She’s not for you.”
Rurik.
But he was too late.
She forced her eyes open to see him facing Dane. Keeping his gaze on
Dane, Rurik pushed her toward the bed where she collapsed, her legs unable
to keep her upright.
“She’s sweet,” Dane said, his mouth stained with her blood. “Very