Blood Hunter (The Grandor Descendant Series)

BOOK: Blood Hunter (The Grandor Descendant Series)
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Blood Hunter

 

By Bell Stoires

 

© Bell Stoires 2014

 

 

 

 

 

Book 2 of the Grandor Descendent Series

 

Even in the shadows there is light and where there is light, there is love.

 

Everything has changed for Ariana Sol; she has gone from living in sunny Australia to freezing England; she has fallen in love with a boy, quite different to any she has ever known and, she has discovered that there are things which she can do… things that ordinary girls shouldn’t be able to do.

 

Ari can stop time, resist a vampires lull and see into the future. Is this why the Ancients, the most powerful vampires in the world, want her dead? In this second instalment of the Grandor Descendant Series, Ari and Ragon find themselves questioning everything they have ever known, in their quest for the truth.    

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Text copyright © 2012 by Bell Stoires

 

 

 

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law. For permission requests, write to the publisher, addressed “Attention: Permissions Coordinator,” at the address below.

 

[email protected]

www.Bellstoires.com

 

 

Ordering Information:
Quantity sales. Special discounts are available on quantity purchases by corporations, associations, and others. For details, contact the publisher at the address above.

 

 

The Characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the author.

 

 

 

The author would like to thank Edge Concept Photography
facebook.com/edgeconceptphotography
for front cover photography; Illuminated Imagery
facebook.com/IlluminatedImagery
for front cover graphic design; Begitta Design
www.begitta.com
for styling and provision of gowns for use in cover art.  

 

 

Contents

 

 

Prologue
.
4

 

Chapter 1- Mile High Club
.
7

 

Chapter 2- New Year’s Eve
.
19

 

Chapter 3- What’s in a Name?
.
23

 

Chapter 4- The Pasteur Institute
.
33

 

Chapter 5- Cruor Halls
.
44

 

Chapter 6- Single and Good to Go
.
52

 

Chapter 7 – Vet School
65

 

Chapter 8 – A Canine Friend
.
73

 

Chapter 9 – Out of Bounds
.
79

 

Chapter 10 – The Wraith
.
98

 

Chapter 11 – Blood Candy
.
102

 

Chapter 12– Charmed
.
112

 

Chapter 13 – The Ancients
.
124

 

Chapter 14 – Death at Sunrise
.
132

 

Chapter 15 – The Monster is Gone
.
136

 

Chapter 16 – Sorry
.
139

 

Chapter 17 – There’s a Were in There
.
150

 

Chapter 18 – The Wraith of Ragon
.
157

 

Chapter 19 – Campus club for Sups
.
161

 

Chapter 20 – Self Sacrifice
.
165

 

Chapter 21- Were Patrol
170

 

Chapter 22 – Resurrection
.
185

 

Chapter 23 – Waere there’s a Clyde there’s a Way
.
193

 

Chapter 24 – An Exchange
.
203

 

Chapter 25 – The Curse
.
210

 

Chapter 26 – The Three W’s
.
233

 

Chapter 27 – Some Things Worth Dying For
242

 

Chapter 28 – Like Father Like Son
.
252

 

Chapter 29- Time Heals Some Wounds
.
259

 

 

 

 

 

Prologue

 

 

 

Behind high stone walls, three beings sat. They were seated atop a stage in the centre of an enormous room, each comfortably placed in magnificent thrones, looking down onto a vast empty space. Bare walls and high ceilings were prominent, giving the place an air of disuse and emptiness. The three beings were so still that at first glance, they appeared to be statues. They were pale, perfect and motionless, similar to marble renderings of once great leaders. Only the vibrant red hair of two of them hinted of any trace of life, but these three beings were not alive. Collectively they were known as the Ancients, the oldest family of vampires and the rulers of the vampire world. Lace and Joseph were twins; both were thin, sharing the same long red hair and light coloured eyes, amidst a pale face dotted with tiny brown freckles. Virgil, the oldest of the siblings, was quite unlike his brother and sister; he had short thin hair and honey coloured eyes, and was built twice as large.

 

Four brisk knocks sounded against a stone door. A silence followed this and then Lace spoke in a cold high voice.

 

“Enter,” she said, and a second later the door was thrown open and three figures appeared.

 

The cloaked figures swept into the room and bowed low, their knees immediately dropping to the stone floor, as their noses touched the ground in a gesture of humble respect.

 

“We have news,” said one of the bowing figures, not daring to look up as she spoke.

 

“News?” said Joseph, leaning slightly forwards as he gestured for the bowing female to stand.

 

She did so immediately, sweeping back the hood of her cloak so as to reveal a deathly pale face, contrasted radically by spiky black hair and nearly pitch black eyes.

 

“Yes master,” the female went on, while her two comrades remained bent low on the floor, “news of a blood hunter, and… and we have brought you Shok, just as you commanded.”

 

At the mention of the word ‘blood hunter’, all three of the Ancients hissed their disapproval.

 

Sensing their displeasure, the spiky haired female vampire cowered and added, “We know not where the blood hunter is, or indeed who it is, only the rumour that it has begun the quest to bring about an end to its line. Naturally we thought it imperative that you know.”

 

“I see,” said Lace, frowning.

 

For a moment Lace looked around the room indifferently, but then her neck snapped to the side and she locked eyes with her twin brother, Joseph. Though neither spoke, it was impossible to miss the way the pair’s eyes lighted up and their expressions changed, almost as if they were having a private conversation. Next to them, Virgil tensed in his chair. It was not unusual for Lace and Joseph to engage in such peculiar communication; being twins the pair shared a connection, one that had been amplified by vampirism. Though Virgil was used to it, he did not like being isolated from his sibling’s thoughts.      

 

“Bring Shok to me,” said Virgil, his eyes thin slits as he tried to ignore his brother and sister, who were nodding in agreement at each other, though still neither had spoken.

 

Immediately the two cowering males at the feet of the Ancients, blurred from the room.

 

A long silence followed this. The spiky haired female remained where she stood, not daring to move unless instructed. Lace and Joseph, who were still looking intensely at each other, seemed not to notice the irked expression on Virgil’s face.

 

Finally the door to the grand room opened again and the two cloaked men dragged in their prisoner. Though the bound man’s head was hung and he looked weak, if not at the point of death, there was still a toughened roughness about him. His shoulders were broad, even wider than Virgil’s and his arms and legs were heavily muscled. His attire of thick leather pants and a battered shirt, though not currently fitted with weapons, suggested that he was ready for combat. The two men carrying the third, threw him into the centre of the room, and quickly shackled his binds to crude pegs that were fastened to the stone floor.    

 

“You were sent from here with a mission; is the child dead?” asked Virgil, steeping down from his throne so as to inch closer to man shackled on the floor.

 

Shok did not look up as he shook his head. 

 

“You have failed me Shok,” said Virgil, “I entrusted you, my own personal assassin with a task… and you have failed me.”

 

“I… I…” Shok stammered; it looked rather bizarre seeing a man of Shok’s size and calibre cowering. “I… tried.”

 

“Enough,” said Virgil, holding up his hand for silence, a silence which came immediately, pressing down heavily against the high stone walls, despite the still distant echo of Virgil’s voice. “You know what must happen. Kiara failed and you were sent to kill her were you not?”

 

“But,” Shok started, his small beady eyes darting across the room.

 

“Please,” said Virgil, and there was a sympathetic, almost understanding tone to his voice, as if he were a father comforting a small child. “There is no need for fear. You have served me well these many years.”

 

Shok’s dark eyes looked up hopefully at Virgil. For one shining moment his face broke into a mangled smile, but then Virgil blurred towards him, moving with such speed that Shok had no time to scream, let alone respond to defend himself. There was a sharp tearing noise, the sound of a metal scraping against stone, and then Shok’s head rolled on the floor, a few feet away from his crumpling body, the hopeful smile still stuck on his lifeless, decapitated face.          

 

“Take the body away,” said Joseph, his nose curled in disgust; he had broken away from his conversation with Lace so as to watch the spectacle.

 

The two cloaked men who’d dragged Shok in now carried him away, both men holding the body, while the spiky haired female reached down and grasped the head. Just before they could leave the room, Virgil called out after them.

 

“Triad, ensure he is buried on the estate,” he said, watching the trio disappear down the hallway, just as the large stone door swung shut in their absence. “He was, after all, a dear friend.”

 

“So,” said Virgil, looking across as his siblings, “what now? We still have the child to deal with… and now a blood hunter.”

 

“But we have no idea where either are,” said Lace.

 

“Let the Elder’s deal with the blood hunter,” said Joseph, “they will be best equipped to hear when the Final Death Laws have been broken and to act accordingly. The blood hunter will not be able to hide for long; when it kills more of its line the Elders will have to act. When they do it can be killed, or imprisoned here in the dungeon. One mere blood hunter is hardly worth our troubles.”

 

“But what if it has already killed? What if it has already taken its sire’s life? The more power it accumulates, the more difficult it will be to kill,” said Virgil.    

 

“The blood hunter is of no concern. Our attention must be directed towards the child,” said Lace, her eyebrows arched as she flicked her long red hair out to one side.

 

“We should have ensured this was finished years ago!” said Virgil, shaking his head in anger while he cracked his knuckles menacingly. “We should have never sent assassins to deal with it. Not after everything we have found out about the Gran-”

 

“-assassins?” said Lace, glaring at Virgil. “I assume you are referring to Kiara.”

 

“She was your assassin was she not?” asked Virgil, “Twenty-four years ago, when we heard prophecy of the continuation of the blood line, you assured us that Kiara would be able to handle this task.”

 

“And yet
your
assassin did not fare so well either,” said Lace, glaring back at him. “You did after all just kill him for failing. At least Kiara provided us with a powerful-”

 

“-Shok did not fail us entirely either. He killed Kiara,” said Virgil.

 

“Yes,” said Lace, her voice high and outraged, “but now the child is on the run, aware that we or at least someone is after her, and we have no idea where.”

 

“Perhaps if you had not killed the witch, then she would have been able to assist us further-” Virgil screamed back.

 

“-enough both of you,” Joseph said quickly, cutting through the shrill yells.

 

It looked as if Lace was going to argue but she merely sulked and slumped in her chair, not meeting Virgil’s eye.

 

“It was our mistake to send assassins after the child; we should have entrusted this to the Triad in the first place. That the child lives is more to our failure than to its power,” said Joseph. “But we must not fight against ourselves. Our plans are so close to completion… but if it lives… if the legend of the descendant is true… everything we have worked for will be for naught.”

 

After that Joseph’s eyes settled on his twins and he inclined his head. Slowly Lace nodded, all the while keeping her gaze locked to her brother’s. Next to them, Virgil scowled at his siblings, annoyed by their private means of communication.

 

“Perhaps there is a way,” said Lace, nodding her head at Joseph.

 

“But only as a last resort,” agreed Joseph.

 

“It will be worth it if our plans are not delayed,” Lace added. “The next shipment will be ready half way through the year, and then it will not take long after that.”

 

“Who knows,” said Joseph, “this may even work in our favour; if the child could be swayed we might gain a powerful ally. We have seen the magic of her line. They are valuable allies. It would make our plans that much simpler to fulfil.” 

 

The twins were nodding at each other, small smiles creeping across their perfect marbled faces, while Virgil frowned. Apparently they had decided on a course of action, though as to what it was, Virgil did not yet know.

 
 

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