The Vampire's Redemption, A Paranormal Romance (Undead in Brown County #3) (6 page)

BOOK: The Vampire's Redemption, A Paranormal Romance (Undead in Brown County #3)
10.39Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

I hadn’t thought that far ahead, which was incredibly stupid of me. They were vampires and they didn’t know me. Even if they were familiar with Michael, that didn’t mean that Nelly or Joe would be safe from them. Or me, for that matter.

“I don’t know. I need to ask Michael about it.”

We sat in silence for several minutes, taking in our surroundings and lost in our own thoughts. The stream continued its unstoppable gurgling, shining in the morning sun and drowning out the birdsong in the background.

“Sarah…”

“Yeah?” I turned my head and found that he had moved closer.

A rampage of whirling anticipation surged through me. I couldn’t focus on anything but him, the heat in his amazing eyes and the smooth surface of his lips. I should have been moving away. I should have been thinking about something else and reminding myself that this man before me was a stranger. But it was impossible. Because what I saw in his face, what I recognized in the space of that few moments, was that he knew me.

He understood the desperation, the confusion, the loss that I had plowed my way through over the last year. I felt the truth of that. I felt him. I wanted to weep with him over the loss of his grandparents and the sudden loss of his world. Like me, Jackson had been ripped from his own reality into something else that had once seemed inconceivable.

My eyelids fluttered closed on their own. The very second that I felt his touch, my cell phone rang.

Jerking back in surprise, I opened my eyes. Without looking at him, I fumbled for my phone and looked at the display. Nelly. It was somewhat unusual for me to even be getting one bar of service that deep into the woods, so I was surprised.

I rose and moved away quickly, putting the phone to my ear.

“Is everything okay?”

Her voice was tight with fear, “Something’s happened. Joe found something in the barn that you need to see.”

“We’re at the northern edge of the woods by the creek. It’ll take a little while to get back.”

“Just be careful.”

I ended the call and finally glanced over at Jackson, who had already grabbed the backpack and water.

“We’ve got to go.”

 

CHAPTER 9 – Michael

The body was lying at the back of the barn, covered by a sheet. Joe had been determined to contact the local constable, but Nelly had talked him out of it. Sarah and Jackson were waiting at the open barn door at sunset, both looking pensive and full of questions. Victoria and Jones were out checking around the property for signs of any trespassers.

I could smell the corpse before I even woke up. It triggered memories from my past that forced me from my sleep and had me running through the caverns as if I were being chased by a ghost.

As I approached the barn, I ignored Jackson and searched Sarah’s face for any hint that she might be injured. She looked odd to me for some reason, but I couldn’t define the source of it. I attributed it to stress.

“I’m fine.” she said stiffly, “It’s in the barn.”

It was a woman, probably deceased for eight hours or so. She was middle-aged and dressed for the outdoors. She was also wearing an expensive engagement ring. There were four bite wounds. Two on the neck, one on the left wrist and one on the right shoulder. Vampires had killed her. Two of them.

I replaced the sheet and shook my head. Victoria would be expecting a call. I pulled the phone out of my pocket and started to pull her up on speed dial.

“Where’s Katie?” Sarah had come up behind me in the barn, her blue eyes swimming with apprehension. Katie. Katie. I recalled the acidic tone of her voice from the night before and her anger at me for doing nothing about Jackson.

My cell phone hit the barn wall and shattered into a hundred pieces.

 

She was gone. We knew she hadn’t acted alone, and although she had the power to invite vampires into the containment field, I was sure that hadn’t been the case. Which meant that she woke up one of the vampires in the caves, shared a meal and left with them. Once I figured out what she had done, I went back to the caves to see who was missing. There was a new hole dug in one of the side chambers that led to the tombs. The dirt and clay were still moist.

Mallory, Jacob, Kenneth, Truman and Elizabeth were still as cold and gray as they had been for decades. But there was an empty space near the back that should have held the figure of a young woman; a face and form that was more than familiar to me. When I saw she was missing, I knew we were in trouble.

Katie could have picked any of the others and it wouldn’t have alarmed me. Jacob would have been my first choice. But it was likely that the fledgling vampire had been drawn in by the pleading tones of a very old female vampire who had been waiting a long time to be set free from her tomb.

She had tried with me as well, of course. In fact, I had tried to revive her more than a few times. But even my potent blood wasn’t powerful enough to reverse the voodoo curse that had put Amanda in her recumbent state. Somehow, Sarah’s little sister had managed it.

Katie had succeeded in awakening the only vampire I’d ever loved.

There were very few who knew about my connection to Amanda. I had planned it that way. When you love someone, it’s very easy for your enemies to use that against you. I had fully intended on keeping my relationship with her a secret. Even from Victoria. But especially from Jones.

Amanda Winston had been the vicious female vampire who had turned the captain into one of the undead. She had done so with such cruelty and unbridled fury that Jones couldn’t hear her name without physically cringing. It had been his stories of her that made me curious. Once we became real friends, I suppose I also wanted to exact some revenge for what she’d put him through.

When I finally did find Amanda, fifty-six years after she had turned Jones, I didn’t introduce myself. Being the cautious creature I am, I observed her for several weeks before coming forward. She had set herself up as a wealthy New York socialite, entertaining scores of humans every evening in her Fifth Avenue flat.

With that intoxicating red hair and those dark blue eyes, she was irresistible to most humans. She was an actress at heart and knew how to play the hearts of men, moving them from casual acquaintance to utter slave with a graceful turn of her head. I was drawn in by it as well.

She was heartless with her victims, sensing the fears of each one and touching lightly until they were begging for death. She was unstoppable. I think that was the real draw for me. She was a challenge, something I wanted to conquer just to prove that I could do it.

So I trailed her one night when she went to the theater with some human friends who had yet to sample her particular brand of torture. I stood in the shadows near her theater box as they watched a performance of Macbeth. Her eyes were always vivid, dancing with excitement.

When the first act ended, she sensed me and our eyes met. If she felt threatened by the presence of another vampire, she didn’t reveal it. One corner of her glistening mouth lifted in a half smile of acknowledgement and she turned back to her friends as if I weren’t there. It was irritating to be ignored in such a way, but I realized she was playing a game and backed off.

Four days later, she came to me. We met in Central Park shortly after midnight.

It was one of the most memorable evenings of my life.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER 10 – Jackson

Michael took the body. He said he was going to bury it somewhere. By the time Victoria and Jones came back to the house, he had already finished. The three of them huddled up on the front porch, speaking too quickly and softly for me to understand. They looked like a trio of dark angels standing there with their black coats and white faces.

I turned away from the window and saw Sarah sitting on the stairs, her arms tightly wrapped around herself and shivering in fear. It seemed entirely natural to go to her, pull her up against me. I did it almost without conscious thought. Her tremors abated slightly as I held her.

“She couldn’t have done it, Jackson.”

“We don’t know yet,” I answered, trying not to think about how good she smelled and how soft her hair felt against my neck.

She sobbed and I felt her tears soak through my shirt. It made me crazy to see her hurt like that. All I could do was stand there, allow her to get it out. I could hold her a little tighter, kiss her hair. And I did all that, but it didn’t seem like nearly enough. There had to be something more that I could do to help her. I wanted to be able to prove that Katie hadn’t killed that poor woman. I needed to find a way to put her at ease.

“Let me find out what Michael knows, okay?”

Jones had started up Victoria’s sedan and it was idling in the driveway. She was still talking to Michael, but they were arguing. Their voices rose in anger as I drew open the screen door and stepped out onto the porch. They both went quiet at the same time.

“What happening?” I asked, looking at each of them carefully.

“Nothing for you to worry about. Where’s Sarah?” Michael ground out roughly.

“Inside. She’s terrified right now.”

“I need permission to leave with Jones,” Victoria said. She glared at Michael with deliberate malice.

“You and Jones may go.”

Both of them looked at me sharply.

I shrugged. “It’s in my power. When will you be back?”

Victoria shook her head. “I don’t know. We’re going to try to bring Katie back. Along with the vampire she awoke from the tomb.” Her hazel eyes fixed on Michael in a dangerous stare. “It may take a while.”

“I need to go with you,” Michael said.

“No. You need to stay here to protect Sarah in case they come back.” She settled another dark look on him before turning away.

We watched them pull away and head down the gravel driveway. Michael’s face was set in stone, his features hard with anger and frustration. As far as I knew, he was probably to blame for the majority of the things that had gone wrong out there. Which put him in the number one spot on my shit list. But getting into any confrontation with him wasn’t going to help Sarah. I needed answers.

“Michael, are you positive that Katie was involved in the murder?”

He glanced over at me dismissively. “No. But I do know that she was close to the edge last night and was probably angry enough to kill.”

“Because of me? You want to pin this on me?”

His arm snaked out and hard fingers curled around my throat, cutting off my air supply almost instantly. I struggled to pull his hand away, using all the strength I had available. It was impossible. He was immovable. When the edges of my vision began to grow dark, I vaguely heard the screen door open.

“What the fuck are you doing? Let him go!”

I was released and fell, landing hard on my right side against the boards of the porch. I struggled to drag in a breath of air somehow. Sarah’s gentle hands were on my shoulders, and I heard her verbal assault on Michael clearly.

“What is wrong with you? Don’t we have enough problems already without you attacking Jackson?”

“Your sister would still be human if it weren’t for him.”

“So it was his fault that Isaiah brought him out here and compelled him to rape me?”

There was a brief silence before his reply. When it came, it was said with undisguised revulsion.

“Maybe rape isn’t necessary with you.”

I wanted to hit him, but she did it first. I heard the smack of her hand against his face like a strike of lightning through the night air. She took a hard breath and I looked up to see her cupping her hand in pain. He was as still and dark as the shadows beyond the house.

“Get the hell out of here, Michael. I want you off my property.”

He hesitated, conflicting emotions passing over his face like storm clouds.


Now
.”

Whether it was the power of the Warden’s words or his own desire to flee, Michael disappeared. There was only a quick gust of wind across my face and then he was gone. Just as if he had never been there. I was sure that the bruises on my throat would remind me in the morning, though.

Silently, Sarah helped me to my feet. She looked shell-shocked and pale, so I took her hand and brought her inside the house. I knew we hadn’t seen the last of Michael, but I was hoping that he would at least give her some time to recover from everything.

She was safe for the moment. That was really all that mattered to me.

 

CHAPTER 11 – Sarah

“What happened between you and Michael?”

Nelly and I were in the den, watching the mid-season finale of our favorite primetime crime show. It was one of the few TV shows that we agreed on. Most of the time she watched old episodes of Little House on the Prairie and Matlock and that crap bored the hell out of me.

I shook my head. “Not now. The episode is almost over.”

The screen went black and I looked over at her in surprise. She was holding the TV remote and giving me a chastising look that I remembered well from when I was little.

“No way, young lady.”

I tossed the pillow from my lap back onto the sofa and stood up. “You really want to know? Jackson didn’t say anything about it?”

“He told me that I should ask you.” She patted the wide armrest of her chair. “Sit down and tell me.”

She wrapped an arm around me when I settled next to her.

“Michael said something that set me off. It was beyond rude. So I slapped him and told him to get off the property.”

“You think that was wise?”

I grunted, “Probably not. But he stepped over the line.”

A half grimace crossed her face as she considered my words. She tightened her fingers around my waist and leaned against me. “Honey, I think that emotions on both sides were probably running high when that happened. I know that you both care about each other.”

“If you had heard what he said, you wouldn’t be saying that. Trust me.” I gave her a quick squeeze in return and glanced at the clock on the wall. “I’m going to go out and check on Lenny before bed. He didn’t eat much of his hay earlier.”

Other books

A Widow Plagued by Allie Borne
Becoming My Mother's Lover by Laura Lovecraft
Vowed by Liz de Jager
The Muslim Brotherhood by Alison Pargeter
Ghost Times Two by Carolyn Hart
Act 2 (Jack & Louisa) by Andrew Keenan-bolger, Kate Wetherhead
The Sea Change by Joanna Rossiter
2 Multiple Exposures by Audrey Claire