Vampires Dead Ahead (19 page)

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Authors: Cheyenne McCray

BOOK: Vampires Dead Ahead
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Armand didn’t even glance at me. “I will torch the Vampires to slow them down. You take the group of ten to the east. I will take the remaining sixteen.”

I nodded. Sure. No problem. I was amazed at his self-confidence in taking sixteen Vampires on his own. More power to him.

“I will wait until the humans have been set free and are clear of the church.” Armand still didn’t look at me, just continued to study and evaluate the situation. “Wait until I have set fire to them all.”

“You’ve got it.” I placed my hand on my buckler.

Both of us, still in glamour, moved closer to the Vampires. We separated and I skirted the crowd toward the east side. The closer I got to them, the stronger their smell became. I sensed their hunger, their desire for sport.

A sort of excited hush fell over the Vampires. With my keen Drow sight I could see every bit as well as a Vampire, and I focused my gaze on where the tall, slender Vampire had disappeared.

Moments later came human cries of fear and terror. My stomach twisted. What they were doing was so sick, so vile. Vampires earned whatever fate they were dealt.

The1emste hinges creaked again and I focused on the Vampire now holding the gate open.

Screams and cries and sobs became louder right before the first one ran out of the gate. It was a naked human male.

A second naked human followed the first, then another. They were being let out one by one.

The anticipation in the air thickened, the energy of the crowd like a pack of wolves surrounding their prey. Only these inhuman bastards were planning on playing with their meals first.

Ten humans came through the gate, wild-eyed with terror. A female stumbled and fell. The male behind her grabbed her by the arm to get her back to her feet before they both started running again.

When the gate closed I looked across the crowd for Armand. What was he waiting for?

A roar tore through the night followed by billowing plumes of fire from the west side of the churchyard. Shrieks and screams ripped the air. The mass of Vampires began charging in my direction.

Damn! They were all closing in on me, toasted and not.

A Dragon’s bellow rang in my ears. More fire torched the Vampires, and heat brushed my cheeks as the flames neared me.

The first charred Vampire was almost in my lap when I flung the buckler. It sliced through the head of one Vampire then took out the next Vamp as well.

Two down, eight to go, plus whatever I might need to help Armand with.

In a two-fisted grip I raised one of my seventeen-inch-long, two-inch-wide Dragon-clawed daggers and gave a Drow warrior cry as I swung the blade. I beheaded the third Vampire.

I whirled to take on the fourth and blood bathed me as the regenerating Vampire’s head flew off.

The next Vamp was too close to swing at. I ducked and rolled to the side into tall grass before getting to my feet. I leapt and forward-flipped through the air to land on the other side of the group I was taking on.

Armand was tearing off the heads of Vampires with his teeth. He was a massive Dragon, larger even than Colin, with ebony scales that gleamed in the fire he had produced.

No time to watch. A brief glimpse of Armand the Dragon and I was already drawing my second dagger.

Holding both weapons, I shouted another battle cry before I ran one dagger through the fifth Vampire’s heart and twisted the blade. She dropped.

I swung at a sixth Vamp, but my blade glanced off his shoulder when he ducked.

I twisted and caught sight of Armand as he took human form again. His movements were smooth, unconcerned, confident. He used the sword that had been sheathed at his side in simple, effortless strokes.

The remaining five Vampires snarled and shouted as they came after me. I somersaulted forward with my twin daggers extended and cut the sixth and seventh Vampires at the knees. I jumped up, brought the daggers down on the backs of their necks. They werecksforward beheaded before their bodies hit the ground.

I backflipped away from the remaining three Vampires and landed about six feet away.

Not three anymore, it was now four. Another one had joined in.

My mouth tasted foul and my breathing came fast as adrenaline rushed through my body. Anger heated me as I thought about those poor humans running blindly through the forest.

As soon as we eliminated these Vampires we needed to get a search-and-rescue team out here. Also a Soothsayer or two to erase the humans’ memories tonight.

Out of the corner of my eye I spotted one Vampire running away. Armand didn’t see him.
Let him go,
I thought. He could report back to the others. Maybe word would spread that Trackers were alive and enforcing laws.

The last four Vampires approached me with caution in their gazes, but hate, fear, and bloodlust, too.

I gathered my elements and harnessed my air power. With my elemental magic, I bound the four Vampires together so that they couldn’t move.

Armand’s arms had turned into something like giant taut rubber bands extending out fifteen feet. As he stretched them, a wooden stake in each hand, he drove into the hearts of two of the Vampires he had left to fight.

Eliminating the four I had captured with my air element would be like shooting ducks in a barrel. Out of nowhere a fifth Vampire came charging at me. I’d thought there were just those four left. I lost my concentration as the Vampire grabbed me and drove me down to the tall grass we were in. I dropped my daggers.

The huge male slammed me onto my back, knocking the breath from me. He grabbed me by my shoulders and widened his mouth. His fangs extended, his head came down in a rush of motion.

I brought my knees up and planted my boots against his chest. I shoved as hard as I could, and the Vampire flew off me.

When I started to roll to the side, two of the other Vampires dove for me.

Fear made my heart thump faster but it added to my strength and cleared my mind, too.

I brought my elbow up into the throat of one Vampire and flipped him over into the one who’d descended on me.

A tangle of bodies landed on top of me and I struggled to free myself, using my upper-body strength to get away.

My legs were still trapped but I reached out and grasped the hilt of one of my daggers. The grip felt comfortable in my hand as I brought it up and swung at the Vampire closest to me.

She cried out as my blade found its way to her throat. Her head flew from her shoulders, and her body slumped backward. Four Vamps left.

I planted my boot on the face of the other Vampire on top of me and braced him long enough to sever his head. He fell over my legs but I managed to shove him off. Another down.

I scooted backward, away from the remaining three Vampirg tme.

A burst of energy came over me and I shot forward from a sprinter’s position. I put just enough space between myself and the Vamps.

I reached for one of the grenades at my belt, pulled out the pin, and lobbed it in front of them. It exploded in a rush of water and garlic. The Vampires flailed and cried out, temporarily blinded.

I picked up my sword and swung it at one of the Vampires. Another nice, clean swipe and he was headless. The other two were starting to gather themselves, but I didn’t give them a chance.

My blade flashed in the dying flames left over from Armand frying the place. I neatly cut off one of the Vampire’s heads.

The last Vampire reached me before I had time to think. He grabbed my hair and my shoulder and jerked my head to the side as his fangs came down on me.

A rush of fear of another bite, of becoming a Vampire myself, sent strength I didn’t know I had soaring through me.

I twisted and grabbed the Vampire’s head and brought it down as I rammed my knee into his face. At the same time I dropped my dagger and grabbed a wooden stake from my weapons belt.

With all my strength I jerked his head back by his hair, hard enough to expose his chest to me. Then I rammed the stake up and into his heart.

The Vampire crumpled. I let him drop.

I felt a presence behind me and whirled to face the next attack.

Instead I saw Armand casually leaning up against a tree, watching me. I was breathing hard, my heart pounding like crazy, and he could’ve been a patron watching a Broadway show.

I kicked the Vampire out of my way. I needed something to kick given the amused smile on Armand’s face.

“Very impressive,” he said.

I pushed my hair out of my face. “Just another day at the office. Now that you’re so well rested, we have more tracking to do.”

TWENTY-ONE

Lack of sleep was eventually going to get to me.

I rested my forehead in my hands, the desktop hard beneath my elbows, and sighed.

Fae bells jangled at the front door and I sensed Olivia walking in. I raised my head and met her gaze.

“You look like crap.” Olivia pulled off her Mets jacket and tossed it on her desktop, right in the middle of the neon orange and green sticky notes.

“I bet Scott would like to see you try,” I said as I looked at her T-shirt.

SOME DAYS IT’S NOT EVEN WORTH
CHEWING THROUGH THE RESTRAINTS

A sly grin crept over Olivia’s face. “Wouldn’t you like to know.”

I leaned back in the chair. “Too much information.”

“Well, we both enjoy the struggle but you don’t want to hear about that.” She paused as if considering. “Or do you?”

I rolled my eyes.

“You need to get some rest, Nyx.” She walked around her desk and plopped into her own chair. “You’ve been putting in time all night and most of the days, too, ever since Rodán was turned.”

“Five days.” I let out a harsh breath. “And bad news in the city is getting worse by the hour.”

Olivia faced her monitor and started typing on the keypad. “What happened last night?”

“More of the same.” All of the blood and death was getting to me, too. “The Vampires in this city are getting out of control. They know our attention is divided and we can’t focus all our efforts on taking them down. It seems to get worse every day.”

She looked thoughtful. “What about Proctor whatshisname and that bunch he brought along?”

“Armand Despre probably thought he’d be able to take them all down on his own.” I rubbed my eyes again. “And the Vampires are proving him wrong.”

“You two make a hell of a team.” Olivia stared at her monitor and moved her hands over the keyboard as she spoke. “Ever since you wiped out that bunch at the church in New Jersey, you’ve taken down more Vampires than the rest of the Trackers put together.”

“I almost hate to admit it,” I said. “But he’s good, really good.”

Olivia looked at me and smirked. “I have a hard time believing you aren’t pulling your weight every night.”

I shrugged. Armand made sure I got my share of the “fun.” It irked me that he just watched while I cleaned up the last of whatever mess I was dealing with. At least he didn’t try to take over everything just to show how good he was.

And I had to admit, he was probably the best Tracker I’d ever seen—and a Proctor on top of it. Talk about hands-on management.

Olivia pulled up an online newspaper’s headlines. “This is sick,” she said.

I nodded. I didn’t want to believe what was happening. The city was in the grips of a panic with bodies turning up every day.

“Just like last fall.” Olivia scrolled through other newspapers as I looked at the monitors. “Wannabe Vamps are being blamed.” She glanced at me. “No one wants to hear the truth.”

I turned away from the headlines. “Would you believe it if you weren’t involved in the paranorm world?”

“Not a chance.” Olivia shook her head. “Speaking of unbelievers, I talked with Wysocki last night.”

I frowned. “She doesn’t get it? After the last time we dealt with Volod, you’d think a New York police captain would be a believer.”

“Oh, she gets it all right.” Olivia took out her XPhone and read through some notes she’d made. “She just can’t get anyone higher up to believe her.”

“We’ve got to find Volod.” I wished caffeine worked for me. I sure could’ve used a jolt. “Once again we didn’t get any info last night worth anything. Whatever his next step is, he is keeping it quiet. Too quiet.”

Olivia stopped flipping her pencil in the air and pointed it at me. “You know he’s coming after you, Nyx. He’s taken Rodán, he’s taken the council. He’s taking revenge on all of those who destroyed him.

“I think he plans to save you for last,” she added. “You need to be careful. You aren’t invincible and you have been bitten once. You probably shouldn’t even be here.”

“I can’t hide.” I sighed. “I’m being cautious and watchful. Volod won’t win, Olivia. He will not win. But thank you for your warning and for being such a good friend.”

Olivia resumed her pencil toss. “Oh, don’t go getting sappy on me, purple butt.”

The Fae bells at the front door did a gentle dance and tinkle, something that only happened when Megan, the new Witch Tracker, stopped by.

This time the pit bull Doppler, Bruce, and the falcon, Tate, weren’t with her.

“Hi, Megan.” It wasn’t hard to smile at the Witch. If I hadn’t seen her in action, I would have thought she was too sweet to be an effective Tracker. “What’s up?”

“If it isn’t Samantha Stevens,” Olivia said. “Do you sneeze when you wiggle your nose?”

“I need to talk with you, Nyx.” Megan parked herself in one of the two chairs in front of my desk, ignoring Olivia. Her shoulder-length blond hair swung forward. “I had a vision when I scried in my crystal this morning that involves you.”

“Okay.” I hated visions about me. I leaned forward, my forearms braced on my desktop. “What’s it about?”

She bit her lower lip as she folded her hands in her lap. “It was about a gift I thought of giving you the other day.”

“A gift?” I tilted my head to the side. “That’s what you scried about?”

She gave a single nod.

“What is it?” I replied.

“I’m going to give you the ability to read minds.”

“What?” As what she said hit me I shook my head. “No way. I don’t need or want that ability, and I don’t want any spells cast on me.”

She leaned forward, a look of utter seriousness on her face. “You are meant to have this gift, Nyx Ciar of the Drow. It might last twenty-four hours, a week, a month. But whatever the case, it will last as long as it is needed, and it may come and go.”

I raised my hands to ward her off. “No spells. Uh-uh.”

“You need to trust me, Nyx.” She spoke calmly, like a mother to her child. “As I told you, when I scry, I am never wrong.”

“Well, maybe this time you
are
wrong.” I stood up from behind my desk, afraid she was going to zap me with a spell before I could make my escape.

She got to her feet, too. Rather than a flowing dress like I was used to Witches wearing, she had on jeans, boat shoes, and a white-and-blue-striped blouse with a boat neckline. She was as fresh-faced and pretty as always.

“I can’t leave until you say yes.” There was a stubborn tilt to her chin that I hadn’t noticed before. “It’s important.”

When I glanced at Olivia she shrugged. “Go for it.”

“You’re not much help.” I turned to Megan again. “You’re
sure
I need this ability?”

She nodded. “Very.”

I let out a sigh, both nervous and resigned. “You promise this is temporary?

“Absolutely.” She gave a
come closer
gesture with her hand.

“I really don’t want to know what other people are thinking,” I said.

“You’ll appreciate it when the time comes.” She raised her hands as I reached her.

“I suppose it could be useful in learning what the enemy is thinking.” I furrowed my brow as I concentrated on what she wanted of me. “How difficult will it be to keep everyone else’s thoughts out of my head?”

“I don’t know,” she said. “I’ve never had this ability.”

I took a deep breath as I stood directly in front of her. “Have you ever done a spell to give it to anyone else?”

She took one of my hands. “No.”

If she hadn’t grabbed my hand at that moment I might have backed away. An electrical charge burst through my body.

I would have won any kind of tug-of-war match pulling my hand from hers, but I was afraid to mess up the spell she’d obviously started already.

“Close your eyes.” Her voice had lowered to a tenor; rather than the airiness that it usually had.

I took a deep breath and shut my eyes. My body filled with warmth, like a heated river of honey slowly traveling through my veins.

My ears began to burn and my head tingled. It was like something was waking up in my head.

Be still, Nyx.
I heard Megan talking in my mind.
I’m not finished yet.

The tingling in my head increased and I bit the inside of my cheek to calm down. I felt a change start to take hold of me.

When the warmth began to fade, I expected voices to bombard me.

“You’re crazy,” Olivia said. “Completely crazy to let a Witch do something like that.”

I looked at her. “Not crazy enough to let my boyfriend tie me up and stuff a gag in my mouth and leave me helplessly restrained while he goes out for Chinese food.”

Olivia raised her brows. “It worked.”

“What worked?” I said. “I can’t hear your thoughts.”

Sure you can.
Olivia’s lips weren’t moving.
You just did.

“Oh.” I blinked. “So you didn’t say the part about me being crazy out loud.”

“Nope.” Olivia shook her head. “But you really didn’t need to read my thoughts to know that.”

Was that Olivia’s evil cackle in my head?

I turned my attention to Megan. “I don’t hear anything coming from you.”

“That’s because I’m a Witch.” Megan released my hand and stepped back. “If I know what to look for, I can block it with another spell.”

“Lucky you.” I jerked my thumb in Olivia’s direction. “I keep hearing
ball gags, restraints,
and
Scott
from over there.”

Olivia loaded a rubber band. I caught the eraser before it could hit my forehead. She was a great shot, but fortunately I was faster.

“Armand needs me, so I’ve got to go.” Megan headed back to the door where the Fae chimes started dancing softly again. She grasped the door handle and looked over her shoulder at me. “Good luck to you,” she said right before she walked out the door.

The door didn’t shut, though. My Dragon came through. Colin looked at me and smiled.

So beautiful,
came the thought as he walked toward me. My cheeks warmed. I felt more than heard a depth of affection for me that I hadn’t realized existed. It was amazing what he was thinking. He loved being with me. I felt like I was invading his privacy, but it was all so good from him.

I held up my hands. “Fair warning. The Witch just cast a spell on me so that I can hear everyone’s thoughts. At least I think everyone.”

“Doesn’t matter to me. I tell you that you’re beautiful all the time and how much I care for you.” Colin smiled as he reached me. “I have nothing to hide from you, Nyx. You don’t need to worry about me.”

“Are you sure it’s okay?” I tilted my head to look up at him.

He leaned down and brushed his lips over mine. “Yes.”

“I’ll try not to,” I said. “I just don’t know if I can stop it. Megan said I’ll pick something up with certain individuals but not all.”

“No worries,” he said, and then I realized his lips weren’t moving.
Maybe you’ll start believing just how much I care for you.

Heat flushed through me again. Instead of answering I gave him a quick kiss.

“If you could only read my mind right now, Hot Stuff,” I said, “you would know the feeling’s mutual.”

“Come on.” He took my hand. “Let’s have lunch at my place. You know I make a great club sandwich.”

Olivia hit Colin right on the nose with a rubber band. “Enough mushy crap. You need to stop before I gag.”

“Do you have chips and Belgian beer?” I asked, ignoring my partner.

He grinned. “Barbecue and of course.”

I felt renewed energy.

“Let’s go.” He took my hand and we headed toward the door.

I looked over my shoulder at Olivia. “I’m betting he will remember the handcuffs tonight, and he’ll love it if you wear the leather panties.”

An eraser pinged off the open door as I ducked.

“You’d better stop reading my mind or I’ll kick your ass, Nyx Ciar,” she shouted after me as I laughed and fled with Colin.

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