I felt Richard scream through me and I didn’t fight it this time, I let the scream come out my mouth. If Edward hadn’t caught me, I would have fallen. “We’ve got to get to Jean-Claude and Richard. Right now!”
“You can’t even walk,” he said.
I grabbed his shoulders. “Help me, and I’ll run.”
Edward didn’t argue; he simply nodded and slid one arm around my waist.
Harley handed my knives and the Browning to Edward. I was inches away, but he didn’t try to touch me. He looked past me as if I wasn’t there. Maybe, for him, I wasn’t. I cut the legs of my jeans off, which left me in nothing but underwear and Nikes from the waist down, but I could run now, and we needed to run. I could feel it. I could feel the power growing on the summer night. Dominic was preparing the blade. I could taste it. I prayed as we ran. Prayed that we’d be in time.
44
* * *
WE RAN. I ran until I thought my heart would burst, jumping trees and dodging things in the dark only half-felt and not seen at all. Branches and weeds raked my legs in thin scratches. A branch caught my cheek and sent me stumbling. Edward caught me. Harley said, “What is that?”
There was a bright, white glow through the trees. It wasn’t fire. “Crosses,” I said.
“What?” Harley asked.
“They’ve hung Jean-Claude with crosses.” As the words left my mouth, I knew they were the truth. I ran towards the glow. Edward and Harley followed.
I spilled out to the edge of the clearing with them at my back. I raised the Browning without thinking about it. I had a second to take it all in. Richard and Jean-Claude were bound so thick with chains that they could barely move, let alone escape. A cross had been thrown around Jean-Claude’s neck. It glowed like a captive star, resting on the folds of chain. Someone had blindfolded him as if afraid the glow would hurt his eyes. Which was odd, since they meant to kill him. Considerate murderers.
Richard was gagged. He’d managed to work one hand free, and he and Jean-Claude were touching fingertips, straining to retain that touch.
Dominic stood over them in a white ceremonial robe. The hood was thrown back, his arms wide, holding a short sword half the length of my body. He held something dark in his other hand. Something that pulsed and seemed to live. It was a heart. Robert the vampire’s heart.
Sabin sat in Marcus’s stone chair, dressed as I’d seen him last, hood up, hiding in the shadows. Cassandra was a shining whiteness on the other side of the circle of power, forming the last point of a triangle with her two men. My two men lay bound on the ground.
I pointed the Browning at Dominic and fired. The bullet left the gun. I heard it, I saw it, but it didn’t go near Dominic. It didn’t seem to go anywhere. I blew my breath out and tried again.
Dominic stared at me. His dark-bearded face was calm, totally unafraid. “You are of the dead, Anita Blake, neither you, nor anything of yours may pass this circle. You have come only to watch them die.”
“You’ve lost, Dominic, why kill them at all, now?”
“We will never find what we need again,” the necromancer said.
Sabin spoke, his voice thick, awkward, as if talking was hard. “It must be tonight.” He pushed to his feet and shoved the hood back. His flesh was almost completely gone, only straggles of hair and raw, putrefying tissue were left. Dark liquid oozed from his mouth. Maybe he didn’t have one more night of sanity. But that wasn’t my problem.
“The vampire council has forbidden any of you to fight each other until Brewster’s Law is either passed or voted down. They’ll kill you for disobeying them.” I was half guessing on this, but I’d been around enough masters of the city to know how very seriously they took disobedience. The council was, in fact, the biggest, baddest, master of the city around. They would be less forgiving, not more.
“I will take that chance,” Sabin said, every word careful, showing the effort it took to speak.
“Did Cassandra tell you about my offer? If we can’t cure you tomorrow, I’ll let Jean-Claude mark me. Tonight you only have part of what you need for the spell. You need me, Sabin, one way or another, you need me.” I didn’t tell them I was already marked. They obviously hadn’t felt it. If they knew I was already marked, all I could offer was to die tonight with the boys.
Dominic shook his head. “I have searched Sabin’s body, Anita. Tomorrow will be too late. There will be nothing to save.” He dropped to his knees beside Richard.
“You don’t know that for sure,” I said.
He laid the still-beating heart on top of Richard’s bare chest.
“Dominic, please!”
It was too late for lies. “I’m marked, Dominic. We’re the perfect sacrifice. Open the circle, and I’ll come inside.”
He looked at me. “If this is true, then you are all far too dangerous to trust. The three of you together without the circle would overwhelm us. You see, Anita, I have been part of a true triumvirate for centuries. You have no dreams of the power you can touch. You and Richard are more powerful than Cassandra and I. You would have been a force to be reckoned with. The council itself might have feared you.” He laughed. “They may forgive us for that alone.”
He spoke words that curled power over me.
I walked to the edge of the circle and touched it. It was like my skin tried to crawl off my bones. I fell forward and slid down something that couldn’t be there. Jean-Claude shrieked. It hurt too much for me to scream. I lay curled by the circle, and even when I breathed, I could taste death, old, rotting death in my mouth.
Edward knelt by me. “What is it?”
“Without your other parts, you do not have the power to force this circle, Anita.” Dominic got to his feet, raising the sword two-handed for a downward blow.
Dolph had passed the circle earlier in the room where they had taken Robert’s heart. I grabbed Edward’s shirt. “You pass the circle. Now. And kill that son of a bitch.”
“If you can’t, how can I?”
“You’re not magic, that’s how.”
It was one of those rare moments when you understand how great trust can be. Edward knew nothing about the ceremony, yet he didn’t argue. He accepted what I said, and simply did it. I wasn’t a hundred percent sure it would work, myself, but it had to.
Dominic brought the sword down. I screamed. Edward crossed the circle like it wasn’t there. The sword bit into Richard’s chest, pinning the beating heart to his body. The pain of the blade drove me to my knees. I felt it enter Richard’s body. Then I felt nothing, like a switch had been turned off. Edward’s shotgun blast took Dominic in the chest.
Dominic didn’t fall. He stared at the hole in his chest and then at Edward. He pulled the sword out of Richard’s chest and slid the still-beating heart off it. He faced Edward with the sword in one hand and the heart in the other. Edward fired again, and Cassandra leapt on his back.
Harley crossed the circle then. He grabbed Cassandra around the waist and pulled her off of Edward. They fell, rolling to the ground. A gun sounded, and Cassandra’s body jerked, but her dainty fist came up and smashed downward.
Edward fired the shotgun until Dominic’s face vanished in a spray of blood and bones, and he fell slowly to his knees. His outstretched hand spilled the heart onto the ground beside Richard’s terribly still body.
Sabin levitated upward. “I will have your soul for that, mortal.”
I ran my fingers over the circle and it was still there. Edward started to turn the shotgun towards the vampire. The naked heart pulsed and shimmered in the cross’s glare.
“The heart, shoot the heart!”
Edward didn’t hesitate. He turned and shot the heart, exploding it into so much meat. Sabin hit him a second later and he went flying. He ended up very still on the ground with Sabin on top of him.
I pushed my hand forward. It met empty air. I fired two-handed at Sabin as I walked towards him. I put three shots into his chest, forcing him to his feet, back from Edward.
> Sabin raised a hand in front of his skeletal face, almost a pleading gesture. I stared down the barrel of the gun into his one good eye and pulled the trigger. The bullet took him just above the crumbling remains of his nose. It made a nice big exit wound like it was supposed to, spattering blood and brains on the grass. Sabin collapsed backwards onto the grass. I fired two more shots into his skull until it looked like I’d decapitated him.
“Edward?” It was Harley. He was standing over Cassandra’s very still, very dead body. His eyes searched wildly for the one person he recognized.
“Harley, it’s me, it’s Anita.”
He shook his head, as if I was a buzzing fly. “Edward, I still see monsters. Edward!” He raised the machine gun at me, and I knew I couldn’t let him fire. No, it was more than that, or less. I raised the Browning and fired before I’d had time to think. The first shot sent him to his knees. “Edward!” He squeezed off a round of fire that went inches above the men’s heads. I fired another into his chest, and put one through his head before he fell.
I approached him, gun at the ready. If he’d twitched, I’d have shot him again. He didn’t twitch. I knew nothing about Harley except he was genuinely crazy and very good with weapons. Now I’d never know because Edward didn’t volunteer information. I kicked the machine gun out of Harley’s dead hand and went for the others.
Edward was sitting up, rubbing the back of his head. He watched me walk away from Harley’s body. “Did you do it?”
I faced him. “Yes.”
“I’ve killed people for less.”
“So have I,” I said, “but if we’re going to fight, can we unchain the boys first? I don’t feel Richard anymore.” I couldn’t say the word dead out loud, not yet.
Edward got to his feet, a little shaky, but standing. “We’ll fight later.”
“Later,” I said.
Edward went to sit by his friend. I went to sit by my lover and my other boyfriend.
I holstered the Browning, slipped the cross off Jean-Claude’s neck, and threw it spinning into the woods. The darkness was suddenly velvet and intense. I bent to undo his chains and one of the links went spinning by my head.
“Shit,” I said.
Jean-Claude sat up, sweeping the chains down his body like a sheet. He slipped off the blindfold last. I was already crawling to Richard. I’d seen the sword pierce his heart. He had to be dead, but I searched for the big pulse in his neck, and I found it. It beat against my hand like a weak thought, and I slumped forward with relief. He was alive. Thank you, God.
Jean-Claude knelt on the other side of Richard’s body. “I thought you could not bear his touch, that is what he told me before they gagged him. They were afraid he would call his pack to aid him. I have already called Jason and my vampires. They will be here soon.”
“Why can’t I feel him in my head?”
“I am blocking it. It is a fearful wound, and I am better practiced at dealing with such things.”
I pulled the gag from Richard’s mouth. I touched his lips gently. The thought of how I’d refused to kiss him earlier that day bit at me. “He’s dying, isn’t he?”
Jean-Claude broke Richard’s chains, more carefully than his own. I helped him clear them from Richard’s limp body. Richard lay on the ground in the bloodstained white T-shirt I’d last seen him in. He was just suddenly Richard again. I couldn’t imagine the beast I’d seen. I suddenly didn’t care. “I can’t lose him, not like this.”
“Richard is dying, ma petite. I feel his life slipping away.”
I stared up at him. “You’re still keeping me from feeling it, aren’t you?”
“I am protecting you.” There was a look on his face that I didn’t like.
I touched his arm. His skin was cool to the touch. “Why?”
He turned away.
I jerked him hard, forced him to look at me. “Why?”
“Even with only two marks, Richard can try and drain us both to stay alive. I am preventing that.”
“You’re protecting us both?” I asked.
“When he dies, I can protect one of us, ma petite, but not both.”
I stared at him. “You’re saying that when he dies, you’re both going to die?”
“I fear so.”
I shook my head. “No. Not both of you. Not all at once. Dammit, you’re not supposed to be able to die.”
“I am sorry, ma petite.”
“No, we can share power just like we did to raise the zombies, the vampires, like we did tonight.”
Jean-Claude slumped suddenly downward, one hand on Richard’s body. “I will not drag you to the grave with me, ma petite. I would rather think of you alive and well.”
I dug my fingers into Jean-Claude’s arm. I touched Richard’s chest. A shuddering breath ran up my arm from him. “I’ll be alive, but I won’t be well. I’d rather die than lose you both.”
He stared at me for a long second. “You do not know what you are asking.”
“We are a triumvirate now. We can do this, Jean-Claude. We can do this, but you have to show me how.”
“We are powerful beyond my wildest dreams, ma petite, but even we cannot cheat death.”
“He owes me one.”
Jean-Claude flinched as if in pain. “Who owes you?”
“Death.”
“Ma petite . . .”
“Do it, Jean-Claude, do it. Whatever it is, whatever it takes. Do it, please!”
He slumped on top of Richard, head barely raised. “The third mark. It will either bind us forever, or kill us all.”
I offered him my wrist. “No, ma petite, if it is to be our only time, come to me.” He lay half on Richard’s body, arms open for me. I lay in the circle of his arms, and realized when I touched his chest there was no heartbeat. I turned and stared into his face from inches away. “Don’t leave me.”
His midnight blue eyes filled with fire. He swept my hair to one side and said, “Open for me, ma petite, open for us both.”
I did, sweeping my mind open, dropping every guard I’d ever had. I fell forward, impossibly forward, down a long, black tunnel towards a burning blue fire. Pain cut the darkness like a white knife, and I heard myself gasp. I felt Jean-Claude’s fangs sink into me, his mouth sealing over my flesh, sucking me, drinking me.
A wind swept through the falling darkness, catching me like a net before I touched that blue fire. The wind smelled of growing earth and the musty scent of fur. I felt something else: sorrow. Richard’s sorrow. His mourning. Not of his death, but of my loss. Dead or alive, he’d lost me, and among his many faults was a loyalty that went beyond reason. Once in love, he was a man to stay there, regardless of what the woman did. A knight errant in every sense of the word. He was a fool, and I loved him for it. Jean-Claude I loved in spite of himself. Richard I loved because of who he was.
I wouldn’t lose him. I wrapped his essence like winding myself in a sheet, except that I had no body. I held him in my mind, my body, and let him feel the love, my sorrow, regret. Jean-Claude was there, too. I half-expected him to protest, to sabotage it, but he didn’t. That blue fire spilled upward through the tunnel to meet us, and the world exploded into shapes and images that were too confusing. Bits and pieces of memory, sensations, thoughts, like three separate jigsaw puzzles shaken and tossed into the air, and every piece that touched formed a picture.
I padded through the forest on four feet. The smells alone were intoxicating. I sank fangs into a dainty wrist, and it wasn’t mine. I watched the pulse underneath a woman’s neck and thought of blood, warm flesh, and far-off and distant sex. The memories came fast, then faster, flowing like some sort of carnival ride. Blackness gained on the images, like ink filling water. When the darkness ate everything, I floated for an impossible second, then went out like a candle flame. Nothing.
I didn’t even have time to be scared.
45
* * *
I WOKE in a pastel pink hospital room. A nurse in a matching pink smock smiled d
own at me. Fear pumped like fine champagne. Where was Richard? Where was Jean-Claude? What I finally managed to ask, was, “How did I get here?”
“Your friend brought you.” She motioned with her head.
Edward sat in a chair by the far wall, leafing through a magazine. He looked up and our eyes met. His face gave away nothing.
“Edward?”
“My friends call me Ted, Anita, you know that.” He had that good ol’ boy smile that could only mean he was pretending to be Ted Forrester. It was his only legal identity that I’d ever met. Even the cops thought he was this Ted person. “Nurse, can we have a few minutes alone?”
The nurse smiled, looked curiously from one to the other of us, and left, still smiling.
I tried to grab Edward’s hand and found my left hand was taped to a board and stuck with an IV. I grabbed at him with my right hand, and he held it. “Are they alive?”
He smiled, a mere twitch of lips. “Yes.”
A relief like I’d never known flowed through my body. I collapsed back against the bed, weak. “What happened?”
“You came in suffering from lycanthrope scratches and a very nasty vampire bite. He almost drained you dry, Anita.”
“Maybe that’s what it took to save us.”
“Maybe,” Edward said. He sat on the edge of the bed. His jacket gaped enough to flash his shoulder holster and gun. He caught me looking. “The police agree that the monsters might hold a grudge. There’s even a cop outside your door.”
We weren’t holding hands now. He stared down at me and something very cold passed over his face. “Did you have to kill Harley?”
I started to say yes, but I stopped myself. I replayed it in my mind. Finally, I looked up at him. “I don’t know, Edward. When you were knocked out, he couldn’t see you anymore. I tried to talk to him, but he couldn’t hear me. He started to raise the machine gun.” I met Edward’s empty blue eyes. “I shot him. You sâw the body. I even put one through his head. A coupe de grace.”
“I know.” His face, his voice gave nothing away. It was like watching a mannequin talk, except that this mannequin was armed and I wasn’t.
Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter Collection 6-10 Page 41