New Order (27 page)

Read New Order Online

Authors: Helen Harper

Tags: #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Paranormal & Urban

BOOK: New Order
5.38Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Then I close my eyes while my blood begins to boil.

 

Chapter Eighteen: Rivers of Blood

 

‘I must say, Ms Blackman,’ X murmurs, ‘you do have an uncanny ability to get yourself into trouble. Did your vampire Lord have better things to do with his time?’

I pull myself as far away from him as possible. My face feels strange. I prod at it gingerly with my fingers; the magical handcuffs have vanished.

‘You’ve had to re-grow an entire new epidermis,’ X informs me. ‘Your vampiric attributes include fast regeneration. Still, you must have taken quite some time before you drank blood. Fledglings as young as you rarely recover so quickly.’ He smiles slightly. ‘The eyebrows, of course, will take far longer.’

I wince at his words then glance around, taking in my environment. I seem to have awakened in the 1980s, in a yuppie’s bachelor pad. The place is decked out in black leather and gleaming mirrors.

‘Where am I?’ I croak.

X gives me a slow smile. ‘In my lair, naturally. Where else would I bring such a delectable morsel?’

I squeak involuntarily. He laughs. ‘You called me, Ms Blackman. Or have you conveniently forgotten that fact already?’

‘Why?’

‘I have absolutely no idea. I can only imagine it had something to do with the fact that you were about to burn up and contribute to the increasing issue we have with greenhouse gases.’

‘No.’ I cough. ‘Why did you help me?’

He examines his fingernails. ‘I suppose I had nothing better to do at the time. I would also like you to return my notebook.’

I’m surprised he’s not taken it already.

‘To rummage through your belongings without permission would be incredibly bad mannered.’

I guiltily think of my own rummage through Michael’s office.

‘Ah, I see. So Lord Montserrat is unimpressed that you invaded his personal space. It’s for the best. If you really wish to return to humanity so desperately, an affair between the two of you will only end badly.’

I scowl. The daemon laughs. ‘Of course, that’s not the only thing that’s ending badly for you right now, is it? You thought your devilish murderer was the woman. Frolic.’ He shakes his head. ‘Her bottom line was profit. Passion is far more dangerous.’

I find my voice. ‘What’s that supposed to mean?’

X chuckles. ‘I’m not going to tell you. That would be too easy. I’m confident you can find out what you need to without my help.’ He stands up. ‘It’ll be dark in an hour. I will leave you in peace since my presence clearly makes you nervous. Before you go, however, check the fridge.’ He smiles. ‘I left you a couple of little gifts.’

The amusement in his face is terrifying. I watch him leave, then sink back onto the sofa. I don’t know why he’s acting so out of character for a Kakos daemon. Rescuing damsels in distress is hardly their gig. Equally, I have no idea what possessed me to trace that damned symbol. Vampirism must be making me soft in the head. It occurs to me that unless he searched my burnt mess of a jacket, he didn’t wait around for me to return his book. I shiver at the thought that it is still in my possession.

When I’m sure that he’s gone and isn’t coming back, I stand up and check myself over. As far as I can tell, X hasn’t touched me. He’s right about my skin healing quickly. I stare at myself in one of the many mirrors dotted around the room. Without my eyebrows, my forehead is bizarrely elongated, like one of those aliens you see in comic strips. My eyes appear impossibly wide, enhancing the tell-tale vampire red in the centre of each pupil.

I edge to the heavy curtains draped over the bay windows and lift one up an inch. The light outside is already dimming but I’m afraid of pulling the material apart any further to find out where I am. That’ll have to wait. Instead, I stalk round the large room. There are several doors but they’re all locked apart from one which opens into a large kitchen, replete with every modern device a cook could want, and another leads to the front door and the outside world.

I’ll never have another opportunity like this again. I’m inside the den of a sodding Kakos daemon. Despite X’s remarks about being too polite to search through my things, he’s nuts if he thinks I’m going to pay him the same respect. He could kill me with a single touch. I need to know my enemy, even if he’s not appeared aggressive towards me yet. I walk into the kitchen, pointedly ignoring the fridge and X’s ‘gifts’, and nosy around, picking up a blender and sniffing inside it cautiously. I wonder if he brews up intestine smoothies with it, but the smell gives me no clue other than the fact that he uses lemon-scented washing-up liquid. I open a few drawers and peer inside. All in all, the room is unremarkable. There are plenty of plates and utensils but nothing to suggest I’m in the abode of a heart-eating, soulless daemon.

I pad back to the living room and place my ear against each locked door. There might be victims inside, people I should rescue from X’s clutches. I knock on each one and call out, but there’s not even the faintest whisper of a sound. I’m not brave enough to break the doors down to check they are unoccupied.

Eventually satisfied that I’ve covered every square inch, I sit down on the sofa. Other than the eighties’ theme and the well-prepped kitchen, nothing gives me a clue about X’s personality. There’s a glass-topped coffee table in front of me, so smudge free that I can’t stop myself from pressing my thumb in the middle to ruin its perfection. On one side of it sits a state of the art phone. I pick it up and frown. I’ll hardly be giving away my secrets if I call the Montserrat mansion.

Taking a deep breath, I jab out the number. It rings three times before the dulcet tones of Iona, the vampire responsible for manning the mansion’s communications system, answers me. ‘Good evening. You have reached the Montserrat Family.’ She may sound brisk and efficient, but there’s a note of underlying tension in her voice.

‘Hi Iona,’ I begin.

‘Bo? Thank goodness. I thought you were another crank caller. I’ll put you right through.’

The phone clicks before I can ask her what she means. Michael’s faintly accented voice fills the line. ‘Are you deliberately trying to test me?’

I lick my lips. ‘Er…’

‘Goddamnit, Bo! When you said you’d be back in thirty minutes, I expected you to be back. The sun was rising. What the hell did you think you were doing?’

I feel a tiny thrill that, despite our last conversation, he’s still worried about me. ‘I’m fine. It was … nothing.’

That’s not strictly true and O’Connell can be damned sure I’ll pay him a visit very, very soon. It’s not going to be a friendly one, either. But right now his goons probably think I’m a frazzled pile of dust blowing around Hyde Park, so I reckon I have some time to spare before I need to confront him. The only positive he has on his side is that I believe the wanker who said O’Connell didn’t want me dead. I’m taking my almost-murder a lot better than I took the security guard’s assault. I guess my expectations are shifting now I’m a vampire.

‘Where are you now?’

‘Honestly, I have no idea.’

‘Bo…’

‘I’m telling the truth. Look, Michael, can we meet? Face to face?’

‘How do I know you won’t stand me up again?’

‘I promise that unless I drop down dead or I’m indisposed thanks to some ravaging hordes, I’ll be there.’

‘You can’t come here.’

I close my eyes briefly. ‘Yeah. You already made it clear I wasn’t welcome.’ Before he can interrupt, I move on, naming a popular vampette restaurant. I’ve never been inside ‒ I never had any call to enter such a place when I was human ‒ but I’ve heard about it.

‘When?’ he snaps.

I’m assuming – hoping –I’m still London. ‘Um, say in two hours?’ Hopefully that will give me enough time to get there.

‘Fine.’ He hangs up.

I lean back and sigh. He may be concerned about my well-being but he’s still bloody angry. I decide to tell him whatever he wants to know, even about Arzo’s ex-fiancée. I owe him that much.

Picking up my leather jacket from the back of a chair, I examine the burnt hole in the breast. I suppose I was lucky that Frolic’s files acted as an extra barrier, otherwise not only would the witch’s shuriken have penetrated it, but I’d be nursing charred skin as well as charred leather. I’m still pissed off about the jacket though. I need to find a way to get it fixed.

I shrug it on and re-check the window. Thankfully, the sky is dark enough for me to venture out without frying. I glance towards the kitchen, then pull my shoulders back and stride towards the front door instead. My hand is on the door handle when I curse. I don’t want to see what X’s gifts are, I really don’t. I shake my head, turn round and go into the kitchen. I stand in front of the gleaming fridge, biting my lip. I reach out, my fingers curling round its cold steel edge. It’s going to be gruesome, whatever it is, or why would he bother keeping it chilled?

‘Curiosity killed the cat, Bo,’ I whisper. I squeeze my eyes shut. ‘And satisfaction brought it back.’ I pull the door open, feeling a blast of cool air in my face. I open one eye and then the other.

The fridge is empty of food or drink. Nor is there a head on a platter, severed organs or a beating heart. There’s simply a small vial and a transparent baggie. I reach for the baggie first and hold it up. It’s a shuriken, covered in congealed blood. I stare at it for a second, then make a decision and take it, shoving into a side pocket.

I look at the vial. The liquid inside is unmistakably blood. It has to be from X himself. I steel myself then gingerly pick it up, as if it might bite me. It’s cool to the touch. I drop it again and close the fridge door. Even if it is X’s blood, it’s probably poisoned; goodness only knows what drinking it will do to me. I have no reason to trust either Frolic’s parting words or the daemon himself.

I spin round, take three steps, stop and growl. Damn it. I glance around, afraid someone is watching me, before returning to the fridge and opening it again. Sighing, I grab the vial and leave.

 

*              *              *

 

Fortunately, as soon as I step outside I know where I am. It’s less than an hour’s stroll to the restaurant where I arranged to meet Michael. As I walk, I rehearse in my head what I’ll say to him.

The streets are busy but no one pays me any attention. They don’t look closely enough to register that I’m a vampire. When I’m waiting for one set of traffic lights to change, however, the headline outside a nearby newsagents gives me pause: GUZZLER PETITION DELIVERED TO PARLIAMENT. I feel a squirming sensation in my stomach and turn away.

At least the restaurant is welcoming and there are no protestors nearby. The windows are darkened to create a spooky atmosphere so that will spare me from any gawkers on the pavement.

I request a table by the window. A smiling waitress comes over to take my order. ‘It’s good of you to frequent our establishment,’ she says. ‘We’ve not had many vampires in lately.’

I smile back at her but I’m pretty sure my smile doesn’t meet my eyes. She senses my discomfort, passes me two menus and leaves me in peace. With time to kill, I open one. There’s a typical array of burgers, sandwiches and platters. Assuming the second menu is for drinks, I open it ‒ then gape in horror. Happy faces beam out at me, with little bios next to each one. Adam is twenty-four years old, healthy and energetic. He’s O negative and his blood has a spicy tinge thanks to his penchant for curries. Zoe is twenty-nine. She’s more expensive because she’s the rarerAB‒. She drinks a glass of red wine every day to enhance her ‘flavour’. Jeez. I don’t know what I expected in a vampette establishment but it certainly wasn’t this.

I shut both menus quickly. There are a few tables occupied by humans nearby and I sense them sending me sidelong glances, although every time I look in their direction they avert their eyes. No doubt they’re waiting for me to drink. I feel ill. I order a glass of water, ignoring the waitress’s disappointment, then stare into space and mull over everything that happened the previous evening.

‘Have you ordered?’ Michael is standing over me, arms folded, glowering. He’s wearing another of his sharp, midnight-blue suits and there’s a shadow of dark stubble across his jaw.

‘Er, no.’

He frowns then gestures for the waitress and points to one of the vampettes on offer before sitting opposite me. ‘Order,’ he snaps.

I shake my head.

‘Order now, Bo, so help me God.’ He scowls at me. ‘If you drink properly then I won’t waste time asking what the hell happened to your face.’

I don’t need another lecture on my vulnerability, so I nod randomly at one of the pictures. The waitress scribbles down our order, then turns to Michael. She’s put on a pout to make her lips plumper and her chest is jutting out more prominently. My eyes narrow but Michael doesn’t even notice. He gives her a distant smile and hands back the menus. Frowning, she stalks away.

‘I think you’ve made a conquest there,’ I say lightly.

‘What?’

There’s something in his expression that stops me. ‘Nothing,’ I mutter.

I look down, noting his fingers gripping the edge of the table. Swallowing, I move my eyes to a point behind his shoulder.

‘We agreed that you would take Matt with you if you went out,’ he says stiffly.

‘If I’d taken him with me last night, he’d be dead,’ I answer. ‘Besides, I thought you weren’t going to ask me about what happened to my face.’

‘I’m not. I’m talking about today.’

‘Oh.’

He glances over his shoulder then back at me. ‘Bo, what the hell are you looking at?’

‘Nothing.’ I twist my fingers in the tablecloth. ‘I’m sorry,’ I burst out. ‘I shouldn’t have gone through your things. But I had to get the feather and return it by dawn. I didn’t have time to wait around for you to finish whatever meeting you were in.’

‘So did you?’

‘Return the feather? Um, sort of.’

‘And your wonderful cure? The one that’ll make all this awful bloodguzzler nightmare vanish in a second?’ He snaps his fingers and I jump.

I can’t tell him about X, I won’t put him in that kind of danger, but there’s no harm in repeating what Frolic said. I desperately want to be honest with him. I wet my lips. Michael’s eyes follow my tongue and butterflies attack my insides.

Other books

Finest Years by Max Hastings
Evil Intent by Robert Olsen
Heather Graham by Maverickand the Lady
Punish the Sinners by John Saul
Truth Game by Anna Staniszewski
One of the Guys by Shiloh Walker