Read Storm (Blood Haze: Book Two) A Paranormal Romance Online
Authors: Tara Shuler
“I feel fine,” I responded. “Have you heard
about the Council meeting?”
“Yeah,” he nodded solemnly. “Alexi told us
about it. We’re all set to take you away if the
vote doesn’t go well.”
We sat down at the patio table, and Kai took
my hands in his.
“Where are we going?” I asked.
“We don’t know,” he admitted. “Alexi has it
all planned. But he says his father can see the
future, so we’ll have to keep moving and make
only last minute decisions about where we’re
going so they can’t get there before we do. We
will have to stay one step ahead.”
“It seems like you and Max are getting along
really well with Alexi,” I noted.
“We have to,” he said. “He knows how to
protect you.”
“Kai, I’m really sorry I’ve gotten you involved
in all of this. You, Max, Jamie… you have
nothing to do with any of this.”
“There is nowhere else I’d rather be,” he said
gently. “Before I met you, my life was
completely meaningless. You’re the only thing
that makes me whole.”
I smiled weakly.
“I love you,” I told him.
“I love you, too,” he said, leaning over to
plant a gentle kiss on my lips.
A few minutes later, Alexi brought me a tray
full of food, including a sandwich, an apple, a
salad, and a Diet Coke.
“Roast beef,” I mumbled. “It’s my favorite.”
“I know,” Alexi said. “I’ve known you your
whole life, remember?”
“Oh, yeah,” I said, rolling my eyes. “I keep
forgetting you’ve been stalking me through your
dad for years.”
He laughed.
“Well, I wouldn’t put it that way,” he
chuckled. “Eat. You need your strength.”
I took a bite of the sandwich. It was just like I
liked it. The bread was soft white bread, the roast
beef was thick and juicy, and there was just a hint
of mustard for flavor.
“Good? Alexi asked.
“Yes, thank you,” I told him, and he smiled.
“I will leave you two alone,” he said, bowing
to me and backing toward the door.
“I don’t like him,” Kai muttered.
“Why not?” I asked.
“He thinks you two are destined to be
together,” he grumbled. “I’ve got news for him.
I’m not letting you go.”
I smiled.
“I wouldn’t expect you to.”
*****
Chapter Ten – Sacrifice
Liam called Alexi early the next morning to
let him know the Council meeting would be held
at noon. None of us slept much. My mother and
Jamie had taken a nap around midnight, but they
were up before dawn, and Kai, Max, Alexi, and
Will had all spent the night strategizing in the
dining room.
Our bags were packed and ready in Alexi’s
huge black Guardian – an SUV designed to be
bulletproof and extraordinarily fast. I paced back
and forth, chewing my fingernails. I’d picked up
the habit of biting my fingernails from Jamie, and
oddly enough, she’d stopped doing it recently.
This was all so frustrating. Everyone I loved
was in danger, and it was all because of me.
Somehow, my actions had led up to this
calamitous chain of events – events that
threatened the lives of everyone I cared about. I
couldn’t keep putting them in danger.
What could I do? How could I possibly
remove myself from this equation and make sure
no one I cared about got hurt? If the Council
voted to kill me, everyone I loved was prepared
to risk their lives to save me. I couldn’t allow
that to happen. Not anymore.
The more I thought about it, the more I
realized there was only one option. While
everyone was discussing strategy, I quietly
slipped out of the dining room. I took one last
longing look back at everyone, and I headed
upstairs to Alexi’s room.
It wasn’t difficult to locate what I was looking
for. Alexi’s cell phone was resting on the table
beside the bed. I noticed he’d left it there after
Liam called that morning. For weeks, I had been
sleeping in Alexi’s big, soft bed while he slept
uncomfortably in a chair in the corner, guarding
over me. I woke up when Liam called, and I’d
noticed him place the phone on the table.
With shaky hands, I fiddled with the phone. I
found Liam’s number and dialed it.
“Alexi?” Liam answered.
“No, it’s Alice,” I said.
“Alice? What it is? Is something wrong?”
Liam asked.
“Sort of,” I explained. “I want you to come get
me.”
“What? Why?”
“I want to turn myself over to the Council.”
I was met with an awkward silence.
“Liam?” I asked.
“Did I hear you right?” he said at last. “You
want to turn yourself over to the Council?
Why?”
“Because I can’t keep putting the people I care
about in danger,” I told him. “Liam, I don’t want
to do that anymore. I’d rather just turn myself
over and be done with it.”
“You’d really sacrifice yourself for them?”
Liam asked.
“Of course,” I said, as if the answer was
obvious.
“Alice, you don’t know what you’re getting
yourself into,” he told me.
“I don’t care,” I responded. “I’ll do whatever it
takes to keep them all safe. Will you come get
me?”
“If that is truly what you wish, I will be there
in about twenty minutes,” Liam said. “Meet me
at the curb.”
“Thank you, Liam,” I said.
“Twenty minutes,” he said, and he hung up.
I went into the bathroom across the hall and
turned on the shower. I was hoping that anyone
who came looking for me would assume I was in
there and wouldn’t keep looking for me. I crept
down the stairs and snuck out the back door so
no one would see me, and then I went down to
the curb to wait for Liam. True to his word, he
pulled up in a shiny red sports car exactly when
he said he would.
“Alice,” he said, nodding at me.
“Liam,” I acknowledged, returning his nod.
“Are you
sure
you want to do this?” he asked.
I sighed, looking wistfully back toward the
dining room window where I knew everyone was
sitting and planning how to keep me safe.
I nodded.
“Yes, I’m sure.”
Liam shook his head and sighed.
“Alright, then.”
He shifted gears and sped off, while I looked
over my shoulder and fought back tears. I knew I
might never see any of them again.
A few minutes later, we pulled up at the gates
of a stately manor. Liam pushed a button on the
call box, and called his name when the guard
asked him to identify himself. There was a faint
buzzing sound, and the gates slowly opened.
Liam drove through the gates and parked right
outside the front door. He turned car off and his
hand hovered over the keys for a moment. He
looked at me.
“Last chance,” he said. “Is this really what you
want?”
“Liam, I have to,” I said sadly.
He nodded.
“Alright,” he said with a shrug. “Alexi’s going
to kill me, though.”
With that, he removed the keys and slid them
into his jacket pocket, and the two of us got out.
I followed him up the grand stairs to the landing,
and the huge front doors swung open.
“Master Liam,” acknowledged a man in a
tuxedo, bowing graciously.
Liam nodded once to him, and he walked
through the doors and into the enormous palatial
estate. We were standing inside a formal entrance
that looked like a huge hallway. Overhead I saw a
massive dome-shaped skylight. The sun streamed
in and illuminated the opulent room, where
towering palm trees flanked a giant waterfall at
the far end, and priceless works of art adorned
the walls. A long red carpet ran the length of
room, stopping just before the pool where the
waterfall flowed, and each dark paneled wall held
at least a half dozen wooden doors.
In a moment, we were greeted by a trio of
cloaked individuals. All of them wore the same
black cloaks as Liam and Alexi, but around their
necks, they had large red ribbons, which held
huge silver pendants with massive rubies set in
the center.
A slight woman with high cheekbones and
shocking golden eyes was in the front, and behind
her were two men, whose faces were hidden in
the shadows of their cloaks.
“Liam,” the woman spoke. “We weren’t
expecting you until noon.”
“Veronica, I have brought someone who
wishes to address the Council,” he said.
Veronica’s eyes burned into mine as she
analyzed
me.
It
made
me
exceedingly
uncomfortable, and I looked at the floor. She
kept staring at me for several more seconds, and I
grew more and more anxious.
“Wait here,” she said at last. “I will inform the
Council.”
The trio turned and walked down the long
hallway. They disappeared inside one of the
rooms. Liam stood motionless, and I followed
suit. We waited for just a minute or two, and
Veronica stepped out of a door down the
hallway. She motioned for us to come to her, so
we obliged.
We walked into the room, and were greeted by
the piercing eyes of more than a dozen vampires.
I could feel their stares burning into me, and I
shifted uncomfortably.
They all sat around a massive table, each of
them in a high-backed brown leather office chair.
At the head of the table sat a very old man. He
had his hood off, and his milky white hair hung
down to his shoulders. His skin was snowy
white, like Alexi’s, and his eyes were the same
incredible shade of violet.
“You must be Alice,” he said in an accent
similar to Alexi’s. “Please, come here and let me
have a look at you.”
I looked at Liam, and he nodded once to let
me know it was okay. Anxiously, I crossed the
large room and stood beside the man. He peered
at me with his head tilted sideways as though he
were trying to understand me.
“You are indeed as beautiful as I remember,”
he said.
“I’m sorry, do I know you?” I asked.
He chuckled.
“No, dear,” he said. “But I know you very
well. I believe you have now saved the lives of
both my sons.”
I felt my forehead wrinkle as I thought, and
then I realized that this was Alexi and Liam’s
father.
“Oh, it’s you,” I whispered.
“I am Barnabas Christakos,” he said. “You
may call me Elder Barnabas.”
“Alright,” I answered.
“Why have you come to see us, Alice?” he
asked.
“I…” I wasn’t sure what to say, and I
stammered. “I… want to turn myself over to
you.”
Barnabas raised one eyebrow at me and tilted
his head the other way.
“Do you understand what that entails?” he
asked.
“N-no,” I admitted. “But I am aware that the
Council wishes my presence.”
He nodded. “That we do. You do not know
why?”
“I guess it has something to do with my
abilities?” I asked.
“That is but a small part of it,” Barnabas
stated. “But it is not yet time to reveal all of that
to you.”
“Why not?” I asked him.
“You are not ready,” he replied.
“When will I be ready?”
“In time,” he answered cryptically. “I cannot
be more specific.”
“I see.”
“I’m very glad you have come to us, Alice,”
Barnabas said. “In time, you will be a part of this
family. For now, please make yourself at home.
Liam can show you around the grounds.”
I turned to Liam and he beckoned me to
follow him.
“Oh, Liam?” Barnabas called.
“Yes, Father?”
“Please inform your brother that he is not to
have contact with young Alice until he hears
from me.”
“As you wish, Father,” Liam said, bowing
before him.
We left the room, and Liam led me past the
waterfall and down another long hallway, which
stretched out along the back wall of the grand
entrance hall. This opened up into a massive,
dimly lit library with dozens of tables and chairs.
Each table held a small lamp, which cast a subtle
golden light. The floor was carpeted in rich red,
and the bookshelves held thousands of books –
far more than even Alexi had.
“This is the library, of course,” Liam said.
“You will see to your studies here.”
“My studies?” I asked. “You mean I won’t be
going to school?”
“I’m afraid not,” he answered. “You won’t be
learning traditional subjects here. You’ll learn
how to hone your abilities in preparation for…
for whatever the Council wishes you to do.”
I followed him back toward the waterfall, and
we headed down the hallway on the opposite side
of the entrance hall. At the end of this hall, there
was a staircase leading up, and another
descending down through the floor.
“Upstairs is where your room will be,” he
said. “But for now, I need to show you