The Warlord Wants Forever (5 page)

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Authors: Kresley Cole

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BOOK: The Warlord Wants Forever
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Before he could react, Myst flung herself away. Why would she do that? His hand shot out to pul her back, but she shrank from him. Why wasn’t he inside her right now?

He’d made sure she was wet, ready to receive him—

He heard movement and jerked his head around, fangs sharpening in fury.

“Look at the lovebirds.” A creature similar to Myst was standing at the entry to the cel, a bow at the ready.

A second one with bright, glowing skin joined the first, happily chewing gum and flipping a dagger in the air. “Don’t make me look—I think I’l be sick. Myst, cavorting with a vampire is a new low even for you.”

“What is this?” Wroth demanded, stalking toward them.

The archer nocked an arrow with supernatural speed and let it sing without hesitation. He lunged to dodge it, but she’d anticipated his move and the arrow pinned him to the wal. A second took his other shoulder, driling its tip half a foot into the stone. He cast her a kiling look, then lurched forward to simply let the arrows tear through him, but the shafts were ringed like shank nails.

When he realized he wouldn’t be moving, he belowed with rage.

He saw Myst puling her clothing together, turning for the door. “Don’t you walk away from me.”

“So sorry to interrupt your plans for tonight.” She cast him that hurt look. “You almost made me forget that you’d come down here to torture me. You want to learn? Know that we hate torture. It starts to add up over the years—”

“That was before I knew you were my Bride.”

Her face went cold in an instant. “Before you knew you could finaly screw me? Now that your body’s in working order, I don’t feel the skin flayed from mine?”

“You’re my Bride. Mine. You belong to me.”

She flew back at him, enraged. The bright one tossed her a dagger and Myst caught it behind her without looking. Again his mind demanded to know what she was.

She pressed the blade to his jugular. Her pupils were silver and lightning bombarded the castle. “If I belonged to every man who wanted it so or to every vampire I’ve blooded there’d be nothing left of me. But no one cares about that.”

“You’ve not blooded others. They would be here protecting you, fighting for you.”

“Not”—she leaned in closer, tilting her head like an animal—“if I kiled them al.”

Then she grabbed the back of his head and puled him to her, pressing her lips against his. She kissed him hard. Yet he soon tasted…her blood? Just as he groaned, she drew back with an inscrutable expression on her face.

Unimaginably warm and rich, her blood was as exquisite as everything else about her, and he shuddered in ecstasy at the luscious taste. “You know I’l want nothing else now,” he rasped.

In response, she snapped her teeth at him. To the others she commanded, “Leave him,” then exited the cel.

The archer and the bright one exchanged a confused glance. “And by ‘leave him’ you clearly mean leave him beheaded, disemboweled, and chock ful of quils like a pincushion.”

“You heard him—I’m his Bride.”

“Ohhh,” the bright one said, blowing a bubble. “You mean he hasn’t, uh, you know, released, the first time since his blooding?” Then with a quick glance at his crotch, she said, “And he stays like that without you, right?” She chuckled. “I’m cool with the plan.”

The archer wasn’t convinced. “Don’t get me wrong, I enjoy condemning vampires to unending sexual torture as much as the next fabulously talented huntress…” When Wroth heard a guard charging in, she leisurely shot an arrow in that direction, tilted her head at the result, then sighed to Myst, “But Vampire Bride just sounds so B-movie. He just dragged you down to B-moviedom.”

The bright one made her voice overly dramatic, saying, “For that alone…he must die. Seriously, Myst. Your ‘husband’ has irrevocably damaged your street cred unless you kil him like the others.”

They were al mad.

And stil he was hard, aching for her body, for the blood she’d given him just to torture him. “You evil, teasing bitch. Kil me then.”

For just the merest second he imagined he saw compassion in her eyes, but when she shrugged, his hazy mind finaly grasped that she was going to leave him here with nothing but a body knotted with lust for her and a taste of blood that he would go to his knees for. “You’re the most malicious bitch I’ve ever known.”

“Flatterer,” she chirped.

Across the corridor, she easily leapt to the window forty feet above, opening the shutters to draw the unfortified bars from the space as though she might pluck back a curtain. She held a hand down for the others.

“I wil find you,” he bit out. “I wil find you and make you pay for this a thousand times.”

The bright one leapt up and caught Myst’s forefinger with her own. “Sounds like he’s setting up a date,” she said as she dangled.

“Oooom,” Myst purred, her gaze flickering over him. “Dress casual.”

Chapter Four
Present Day

N ever-ending sexual desire that could never be slaked.

She’d knowingly—delightedly—surrendered him to this torment. His Bride had blooded him, giving him his first need as a vampire, then stoked it to a fever pitch—and only his Bride could work his body free to release the first time. If she had only stayed long enough for him to take her just once, or to merely touch her skin as he’d taken his own ease, she could’ve spared him this. But then she’d clearly said that that was the plan.

And for the last five years, Wroth had been cursed with more than that. He was cursed with her memories as wel.

The minuscule drop of blood taken directly from her body did more than make any other blood taste like tar to him—it did just what the Forbearers feared. With her living blood came dreams where her memories unfolded, so realistic they were as if he was there to experience scents she’d smeled and textures she’d felt. Sometimes he could even feel her hands clench in anger. But he’d told no one, keeping his secrets because he didn’t want to lose his power within their army—or be kiled.

Each sunset he rose and checked his eyes for the teltale red, and every day if he could manage to sleep, he was subjected to the same series of memories that subtly grew in detail each time.

The first found her atop a hil, sun bright, with snow stil on the ground. “I’ve cursed you to your hel,” Myst hissed at the site of a rough gravestone. She was roiling with so much hostility that Wroth knew she must have kiled whatever being lay there. She spoke an ancient language that Wroth shouldn’t understand, but he did. He felt the sensations she’d felt, the constant sway of her chain around her waist, the smel of the ocean just below her, brine on a cold day.

Another familiar dream. A drunken Roman senator kneeling at her feet. “At long last, I’m about to have Myst the Coveted. And you’l no longer be coveted, you’l be possessed.” He laughed. “You’l make me twist on your little hook no longer.”

Wroth had discovered the ful name of his tormenter. Myst the Coveted.

With disgust, Wroth saw the Roman take Myst’s dainty foot in his mouth, sucking greedily, stroking himself, as she slowly lifted her skirt up her silken thighs for him. As ever, Wroth fought not to see this, fought to wake. His violent revulsion never diminished over time.

The first time he’d had that dream, he’d been relieved when another scene unfolded before that one came to some kind of sick conclusion. But never again…

Myst was running past a Viking raiding party on the coast of some northern land. Purposely. She wanted them to hunt her. To catch her and throw her to the ground in the hard snow. What kind of twisted need did she have? She was excited, her blood pumping. Her skin felt like it was sizzling with electricity, and lightning was generated from her excitement. She stifled a smile, when with belows and cheers, the men gave chase….

As ever, Wroth fought to force his mind away before he saw a dozen Vikings rutting on his Bride. To her delight.

Tonight a new dream. Finaly. Snow outside, packed so high it covered half the window. Women, or other creatures like her, met around a great hearth. They were sisters and Wroth saw their faces as though familiar and knew their names and who they were as wel as Myst did. He recognized the archer as Lucia, and the bright one he now knew was Regin the Radiant. A vacant-eyed one was caled Nïx, the oldest of her sisters and believed to be a soothsayer. Their clothing indicated early twentieth century.

They were meeting over the fate of a baby that their leader, a somber creature named Annika, wished to keep. Myst frowned at the little girl in Annika’s arms, confused to feel some stirring of feeling for it.

“How are we to care for her, Annika?” Lucia murmured.

Regin snapped, “How can you bring a vampire among us when they slaughtered my people?”

One named Daniela the Ice Maiden knelt beside Annika, gazing up at her, briefly touching her with a pale hand. Myst shivered to think of the pain Dani had just felt to offer that cold touch. Daniela’s mother’s people had been the ice fey and she couldn’t be touched by anyone but one of them without extreme pain. “She needs to be with her own kind. I know this wel.”

Annika shook her head determinedly. “Her ears. Her eyes. She’s Valkyrie as much as vampire.”

Valkyrie…? Impossible.

“She’l grow to be evil,” Regin insisted. “She’s already snapped at me with her baby fangs. By Freya, she drinks blood!”

“Trifling,” Myst interjected in a casual tone. “We eat electricity.”

The vacant-eyed Nïx laughed.

A vampire child? Eating electricity? His heart was racing….

Annika said, “I wil keep Emmaline from the Horde and guide her to be al that was good and honorable about the Valkyrie before time eroded us.” Her words were laced with sadness and triggered a memory that Myst hated.

Wroth wanted to see it but couldn’t.

Annika rubbed noses with the baby and asked her, “Now where’s the best place to hide the most beautiful little vampire in the world?”

Nïx laughed delightedly. “Laissez les bon temps roulez…”

New Orleans.

Wroth shot up in bed, body drenched with sweat.

My Bride’s a Valkyrie? he thought with a choking cough. His mind couldn’t wrap around the idea of it.

He hadn’t known they even existed. A character from legends told around campfires was linked to him for eternity. From the dreams, he knew she was a milennias-old mystical being born of a fierce Pictish princess—who’d plunged a dagger into her heart rather than be taken alive by an enemy—and of gods.

She didn’t eat because she took electrical energy from the earth and gave it back with her emotions in the form of lightning. She was a kiler and had been a Roman senator’s whore. She despised men and enjoyed tormenting them, just as she’d done with him.

He glanced down at his throbbing erection. Even his hatred couldn’t battle his relentless need for her. The impulse to take his cock in his fist was there, but he fought it, knowing he could never bring himself to come, knowing it would only increase his pain.

For five years she’d sentenced him to suffering from this constant, grueling ache. Before he’d learned there was no relief without her, he would’ve futilely stroked himself or thrust against the bed, imagining it was Myst clutched beneath him, but he never took release.

Other females repeled him—because they weren’t her. Even if he believed he could find ease with another woman, he would never demean himself with another. He’d felt his Myst’s incredible softness, felt her wet with desire for him, her body squeezing around his fingers as she’d climaxed from his touch.

He shuddered and his cock pulsed hungrily. Linked for eternity. To Myst the Coveted, a mythological being who despised him. The only way he’d keep her for eternity would be to punish her for that long.

He knew he coveted her as none other had. And now he knew where to find her.

Chapter Five

T he fumes of swamp, steamed hot dogs and soured beer wafted up to Myst and her sisters as they perched on a roof above the chaos that was

Bourbon Street

.

There were rumors of vampires running about in New Orleans.

Vampires in Louisiana? Unheard of.

If there’d been only one account of leeches, then she and Regin and Nïx would stil be back at Val Hal, their bayou manor, playing video games. But a demon friend had sworn he’d seen one—and a phantom had whispered that there was not just one faction of vampires, but two.

Myst’s eyes darted over the scene, trying to remain focused and not notice the couples franticaly grinding against each other in dark aleys. If Daniela was here she would blow them a kiss and cool them off, freezing hands to asses in mid-grope and making her sisters chortle and rol along the roof. Myst supposed that the Valkyrie were easily amused.

But focus was proving futile ever since her heart had sped up at the idea of vampires here. If for some reason they had come to the New World—which the Horde

historicaly found vulgar and beneath them—that stil didn’t mean him.

Wroth. One of her true regrets in her life.

Every day, she mused that she shouldn’t have left that vampire to suffer—she should have kiled him.

Regin tossed her blade up, caught the point into her claw, then flicked it up once more. “You know, not that I believe there are actual vampires here—cause that’s just whacky speak—but if there were, they should know that this is our turf.”

“Should we ask them to rumble? Or maybe mash?” Nïx asked as she swiftly braided her waist-length black hair. “I’ve heard those can be a graveyard smash.” Even

sporting the old-fashioned hairstyle and an occasionaly confused glance—she saw the future more clearly than the present—Nïx stil looked like a supermodel.

“I’m serious,” Regin said. “New Orleans may have once been the mystical melting pot of the world, but we control this place now.”

“We can always send Mysty the Vampire Layer to battle them,” Nïx said thoughtfuly. “Oh wait, she’d run off with them.”

Regin added, “Or use her famed tongue assault to flail the skin from their bodies as they inexplicably line up to sacrifice themselves.”

“Har-de-har-har,” Myst mumbled, half-listening. She’d been razzed about this continualy. And she deserved it. She might as wel have been caught free-basing with the ghost of Bundy. Of course others had overheard the jokes in the coven and the word spread. Even other factions of the Lore—like the nymphs, those little hookers

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