Coldstorm (Heart of a Vampire, Book 7) (8 page)

BOOK: Coldstorm (Heart of a Vampire, Book 7)
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They continued down the list of sites, another hour passing in futility. His earlier hopes of being done with all this soon were distant memories. Yet he found he didn't completely mind.

Anca laid her head back against the seat, her eyes closed. Shadows darkened beneath her eyes. She looked like she hadn't gotten much rest lately.

He sympathized, knowing the feeling well.

She'd seemed so confident at the start of this, but as he drove to the next site, she muttered, "They couldn't be shielding themselves could they?" Then she answered herself, "No. Not possible. No one can counteract magic from the Council."

He didn't know how to answer. And he didn't like the urges wakening inside him, wanting to offer her comfort and support. That's not what he was here for.

Besides, the prickly woman most likely wouldn't appreciate support from anyone.

The next place on the list was south of town, a few miles out. The train station ran all hours of the day, mostly carrying a variety of cargo from the east coast to the west. Warehouses scattered a small distance from the station had long since stopped being used. Each year, fewer shipments were sent through Moss Creek. There were easier ways to get around the mountains.

Matt pulled onto one of the narrow asphalt roads winding around the station. "This place should be the most secure. There were few people inside, other than Montgomery and his people. Only thing is, it's been about half a year since they used it."

He parked near one of the buildings furthest from the station. They got out and approached the dilapidated building. Skylights dotted the roof with empty, broken panes. Matt opened the door and waved Anca inside.

In deep contrast to the warm sunny day, inside, the building wrapped them in chilled darkness.

Anca stopped, stiffening. "What the..."

Her shrill screams rent the air.

Matt's instincts flared. Tense, he stared into every shadow, searching for a threat. All he saw were a few wandering ghosts dressed in death.

Something inside him thrummed with the need to keep her safe.

His fangs descended. His blood pumped, ready for a fight.

Anca shook violently, swaying side to side, then began to fall.

He caught her and pulled her close. "Anca?"

What the hell?

She fought his hold, screaming louder. Her nails raked long scratches over his skin. Finally, he pinned her arms to her sides and held her to his chest.

His rising instincts continued to rage with the need to protect. To stop whatever was harming her. He gritted his teeth against a boiling fury, unprepared for the extent of everything firing through him.

Damn it. There was no threat he could see.

"Anca, it's all right. Everything's all right." He shoved his limited power over her, trying to calm her. It bounced off uselessly.

She continued to scream, the shrill sound exploding with horror.

His gut churned. He bared his fangs, instinct continuing to ride him.

But there was no enemy to kill.

Not for the first time, he wished he had magics beyond only those which came from a vampire's age. He knew others with all sorts of powers that could figure out what was wrong with Anca. Help her.

He tried to pull her outside, away from the building. She fought him harder as if desperate not to leave.

Clutching her tight to his chest, he slid down the wall next to the door, keeping her on his lap. He rocked, crooning nonsense. Her screams, growing painfully hoarse, reverberated in his skull.

Time drifted. He didn't stop.

Her voice began to break, and still she screamed. After long minutes—one or two that felt like passing eons—the woman in his arms quieted, then stopped straining against his hold.

Then she yelled, "Stop! Let him go!"

"Anca, you're safe. There's no one else here." And yet that wasn't quite true, considering the dozen or so ghosts scattered throughout the building. Some appeared as they must have while alive.

But most came to Matt gruesomely ravaged by untold tortures.

Anca's magic flared, nearly burning him with its intensity.

Once more he felt the extent of her power. No wonder the Magic Council had recruited her. Her strength almost flattened him.

"Stop!" she screamed. Her body went stiff once more. "Not the child. Don't hurt the child." Her magic flared again.

It was easy enough to figure out she must be caught in some sort of magic vision. And her first through was trying to save others from being hurt.

With a surging fury, she tried to scramble deeper into the building. Matt held her, barely preventing her escape.

"No. No more!" Her words were a shocking dowse of arctic water. The pain and horror and sympathy in her voice were real enough.

His earlier musings came back. Perhaps she wasn't as cold as most at the Council.

For some reason, the thought made him tense, as if another threat was rising that he must fight or run from.

From one second to the next, Anca quieted. Stilled. Slowly, her eyes opened, her pupils enlarged and unfocused.

"Anca? It's all right. You know me. Matt, remember? You're safe." He crooned the words the best he could, keeping his voice easy.

She blinked, looking around. "What happened?"

Realizing she was better now, relief filled him.

She met his gaze.

A humming buzz zapped between them. Sparks lit over his skin, turning his fear for her into something different, if just as primal.

Hunger.

She whispered, "Matt?" Her breath caressed his lips.

"Yes. It's all right." He stared into her widening eyes, the smoky gray-blue ringed with red.

"Matt," she said again, softer still.

"I'm right here."

"It doesn't sound right."

"What doesn't?"

"Matt."

"Yes?"

"No. Matt. It doesn't sound right. It's not the name you were born with."

She made his thinking loopy.

He spoke before he realized it. "Mateo de Dizzione. But I've been Matthew, and now Matt, for nearly three hundred years."

"Mateo de Dizzione." She said his name as if tasting it, and enjoying the flavor.

Without conscious thought, he closed the slight distance between them and brushed his mouth against hers.

She gasped, but the tension holding her taut began to ease.

He brushed her pink lips again. They were soft, smooth. Her eyes widened. She stared at him as if shocked by what he was doing.

So he did it again, this time drawing in her taste. Wildness and heat.

Desire sparked in her gaze. She moaned, trying to free her arms.

He let go, expecting her to pull away.

Instead, Anca laid a hand on his chest, above his heart. The warmth of her touch burned through his thin t-shirt.

He cupped the back of her head gently, long loose locks flowing over his skin like satin. It had come unbound from her braid, and flowed freely around her shoulders.

Need drove him, but slow and easy, as if they had all the time in the world to explore each other, get to know one another.

He teased his tongue over her bottom lip. Anca moaned softly, pressing into his touch.

A flash of thought, a question of her coherence, hit him. He started to draw back.

She tangled her fingers in his hair and jerked his mouth back to hers.

Desire surged into an inferno. Uncontrollable. Undeniable. He tensed, hard and wanting so much more than just a sip of this woman. He didn't know why—it didn't make sense. Not with someone from the Council.

Across the room, metal clattered to the concrete ground.

Matt jerked back, staring through the building, his protective instincts urgently aroused once more.

One of the ghosts picked up a piece of metal and threw it. Again it rattled and clunked.

Anca scrambled off his lap, breathing heavily. Her eyes were smoky sapphires glinting at him with things he couldn't read.

His instincts remained alert for danger. Still, all he wanted to do was pull her close and continue to explore her mouth.

Explore far more of her.

He shook the thoughts away. What the hell had gotten into him? Anca wasn't his to protect. Or to ravish.

She came from the Council.

They were here to find clues to stopping the murders, not... whatever.

"What happened?" she asked softly.

His gaze jerked to her mouth. She licked her lips. Fighting the magnetic pull, Matt fisted his hands and stood up. He doubted she was asking about that mind-blowing kiss. "We came inside and you started screaming, then yelling at someone to stop hurting people."

She glanced at him sharply.

"You didn't react like that anywhere else." And damned if he knew why her reaction affected him so swiftly. So badly.

"I usually don't get sucked in like that. It's only happened a few times before." She shook her head. "Sorry."

He held out a hand, needing to touch her again and painfully unable to resist. After a long moment, she took it. He helped her to her feet, which she barely seemed to notice. The building had captured her attention once again.

She pointed to some tables on the far side, caked with dried crimson stains.

They moved deeper into the building. The smell of fresh blood grew, though he knew it had to be his imagination. "This place was used by Montgomery to torture people, mortals and Arcaine."

"Not just him," she whispered,. "What hit me was being unprepared for the recent depravities that have taken place here. Very recent."

"Not possible. The clan and the sheriff have people watching every single place we know Montgomery used, including this one."

She looked at him enigmatically. "Really? Then I suggest you question all who were responsible for watching this place. Because it
has
been used, and within the past weeks. Perhaps only days."

Horror dawned at the realization of what her words meant.

Because every last person assigned to watch this area had been a clan vampire.

***

A
nca closed her eyes, both against the press of dark magics, and the intense heat in Matt's honey brown stare.

The man had kissed her.

And she'd kissed him back.

Eagerly.

She'd snapped out of the visions—remnants of evil overtaking innocence—only to find herself pressed against the warmth of his body. He'd somehow kept the worst of the icy remnants away from her.

Anca certainly didn't want to examine the wakening rush of heady needs from his firm mouth, his confident touch. Such passion he hid behind his uptight aloofness.

She drove away the rambling thoughts. She didn't have time for this. She didn't have any desire for it, either.

An aberration.

That was all.

With a decisive nod, she assured herself it would not happen again.

Even if his rich whiskey taste lingered on her lips.

Concentrating on reading the building around them, Anca braced herself, and opened her senses. She studied the room, the swirling remnants which, now that she was prepared, could no longer drag her beneath their drowning waves.

The feel of the earth magic was weak here, and corrupt. Darker even than at the burnt farmhouse. Much blood had been shed.

Too much death—of the slow and painful variety.

She drew in a little more of the magic.

Cold. So very cold.

And oily. Like a slimy serpent slithering beneath her skin.

This place had been used very recently. "I'd say your Rogues were here within the past few days."

"You're certain?" Something in Matt's voice caught her attention. It wasn't disbelief, or doubt.

"I am. Why?"

"My clan is responsible for watching this place."

So either someone had slacked doing their job, or the traitor had been one of those assigned guard duty here. She pinpointed the emotion in his voice.

Regret.

As if he'd long ago accepted the job of dealing with those behind his clan's breach of security.

Like his King, Matt seemed to feel responsibility heavily. A rare thing in this era. Then again, he wasn't from this time, any more than she was.

Weak sunlight filtered through a few bare patches in the roof and broken skylights. Shadows danced over Matt's face, strengthened his masculine features. The snap of fire didn't fade from his hooded gaze. Neither did the ball of heat in her lower belly.

Anca shoved at the useless musings once more, struggling to ignore the lingering memory of his kiss. She got back to work, reading the magic as she strode deeper inside.

Matt's nearly inaudible footsteps shadowed her with an echo of protective strength she first avoided, then forgot to fight.

The scent of blood grew staggering. Layers upon layers of terrified despair wove through it.

The darkness wrought here was a buried heart, softly thumping, its pulsing echoes a physical sensation rippling through the air. It brushed over her skin with an acidic burn. Her resolve to ensure that the Rogues responsible for these horrors paid, and dearly, flared brightly.

The few earth spirits willing to enter this place were so weak, they were little more than faintly flickering forms. They urged Anca toward one of the metal tables. Dried blood made the gurney appear black. Reaching its side, she could clearly see the overlapping magics, could separate them, study them individually.

"Here." The word was a whisper she hadn't meant to utter.

Matt stopped a few feet away.

The torture and death of so many had sootily penetrated every last layer of magic. Blackest of all were those who had committed such atrocities. Drank in the power of such sacrifices, like some sort of depraved meal. She'd dealt with vampires who'd turned their back on their humanity. Descending into bloodlust, they wreaked havoc, killing indiscriminately, until they were stopped.

Those behind the happenings in this town weren't mindless creatures, unthinking, filled only with primal urges.

They knew exactly what they were doing.

Worst of all, they enjoyed it. And enjoyed the black powers such acts brought.

She concentrated harder, determined to memorize the remnants of their auras, their magics. She would learn them, hunt them until she found their lair.

BOOK: Coldstorm (Heart of a Vampire, Book 7)
5.39Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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