Taming the Vampire: Over 25 All New Paranormal Alpha Male Tales of Contemporary, Military, Shifters, Billionaires, Werewolves, Magic, Fae, Witches, Dragons, Demons & More

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Taming the Vampire: Over 25 All New Paranormal Alpha Male Tales of Contemporary, Military, Shifters, Billionaires, Werewolves, Magic, Fae, Witches, Dragons, Demons & More Page 144

by Mandy M. Roth


  Still smiling faintly, his eyes projected a kind of magnanimity, right before he motioned at my face with a hand.

  “Okay. You may do the other now. As promised, I’ll give you a moment to speak with your husband... maybe pet him a bit. Calm him down.”

  I bit my lip, but didn’t wait, screaming out with my light.

  BLACK!? BLACK! CAN YOU HEAR ME?

  His light exploded around me, wrapping me in a volcanic-like heat. It nearly suffocated me in those few seconds, blanking my mind, making it impossible to form coherent words. The protectiveness I felt there cut my breath. His mental “voice” surprised me though, coming out calm, focused, stripped of surface feeling.

  Where are you, Miri?

  I struggled to answer him. I don’t know... I don’t know where I am... I fought with my own emotional reactions, fighting to match his calm. He’s letting me do this. He’s letting me talk to you. He has some way of blocking me the rest of the time––

  I know. Black cut in. What does he want? Whatever it is, give it to him, Miriam.

  My throat closed. That time, I felt the pain behind his words.

  Honestly, the stuff I couldn’t feel worried me a lot more.

  He was holding back a lot. I could feel it there, vibrating in the distance.

  Black... it’s okay. I really think it’s going to be okay... I didn’t fully believe my words, but tried to exude reassurance anyway. He wants my help with some friend of his. A female vampire. He claims he took me because I’m a psychologist and I know about vampires. I think she might have been in the lab with you. Whatever it is, there’s something wrong with her. She’s in some kind of shock, like she’s had a mental break...

  Tell him whatever you have to tell him, Miri. Black’s thoughts remained stripped, deadened. Do whatever you have to do. I’m coming for you... I’m already on my way.

  Fear rippled through me, not for me that time, for him.

  He took the RFID out, I sent. He said you can’t trace me here. And we’re in a plane. I have no idea how long we’ve been flying, or where we’re going. All of the blinds are down. I was unconscious. I don’t even know what time of day it is...

  Don’t worry about any of that, Black sent.

  He sent me another blast of heat, that time enough to close my eyes. I could feel the determination on him, that focus he got when he was on the job.

  But it was more than just determination.

  Rage. I felt rage on him.

  That was the part he wasn’t fully letting me see. I knew rage might be easier for him than being afraid for me, but the sheer intensity of it still scared the hell out me.

  Moreover, it gave me a glimpse into a side of him I felt like I didn’t know at all.

  Miri? He blew more warmth over me, reassurance. Stop worrying about me, all right? Stay alive. Whatever you have to do, do it... just stay alive. I’m on my way. Stay alive, honey. I’ll take care of the rest of this. I promise you.

  I swallowed, still struggling with the feeling that he wasn’t hearing me.

  I am hearing you, he sent. I’m hearing you... and I love you, Miriam. I’m coming for you, okay? I promise. Just stay alive for me. Please.

  Feeling my throat close for real that time, I only nodded.

  Then, even as I was fighting for words to say back to him...

  That heavy cloud descended back over my light.

  Within the span of one breath, I couldn’t feel him at all.

  Chapter 6

  The Freudian Cave

  Two humans dragged me out of the plane with a bag over my head.

  They looked like humans anyway, before they put the bag on me.

  Oddly, they smelled human, but maybe I was noticing my seer senses more what with being blindfolded and cut off from my psychic sight. Either way, Brick smelled different to me, although I hadn’t noticed that difference until now.

  His scent was strangely sweeter yet muskier, like he bathed nightly in cinnamon and a very male-smelling cologne.

  Unfortunately, my more highly-attuned senses didn’t do me much good.

  I smelled exhaust from the plane. The scream of airplane engines drowned out all other sounds. I definitely got the feeling it was a smaller airport, not a commercial one. But that wasn’t a particularly helpful detail considering I had no clue what continent I was even on.

  It was cold. Not freezing cold but I shivered when the wind hit me, going through my suit jacket and blouse like I wore nothing at all. The air tasted wet, with a faint flavor of greenery, like the wind touched a field on the way here. That still left a lot of options, especially since I had no idea how long I’d been on that plane.

  Canada. Alaska. Europe.

  Hell, we could be in China for all I knew.

  I strained to hear speech, listening for accents, language.

  I didn’t hear any voices at all, though, not before they bundled me into the back seat of a car. Brick sat next to me. The guy in the handcuffs with the sword tattoo sat on my other side, according to the sound of his chains clanking. I still hadn’t seen or smelled any other vampires, not apart from Brick himself and his vampire girlfriend.

  I still tried to smell the air, to listen. I didn’t come up with much. That green smell and taste. A few birdsongs, but I don’t know birds well enough to identify them. I didn’t hear cows or other livestock. I also didn’t smell them.

  We weren’t driving for very long, which again made me think it must have been a private airstrip, likely one used solely by a small group of people.

  When I got out of the car that time, Brick held my arm.

  I heard him speak to a few other people, telling them to bring the chained guy.

  Then, using a totally different voice, he spoke directly to Lily. His words came out so soft, so filled with reassurance and love, I flinched.

  “Come with me, my darling. I brought this nice lady to speak with you...”

  I fought to stifle a snort, but didn’t quite succeed. If Brick heard it, he didn’t react, nor did he take his attention off the vampire girl behind me.

  “Come, darling... please. Take my hand. I know you like to look at the trees, but I’ve got a special place all ready for the two of you so you can talk. It’s much warmer and safer and no one will bother you. We can come outside and look at the trees later, my love.”

  Again, his voice held so much tenderness it made me wince.

  Clearly, he was one of those people who could compartmentalize their minds and emotions to a deeply scary degree.

  That, or he simply didn’t see non-vampires as people.

  I flinched when he gripped my arm tighter and began leading me firmly across the gravel driveway. I still couldn’t see anything at all through the black bag, but he calmly told me when to step, where to step, and how high.

  Soon we were inside a building. My heels echoed loudly on what sounded like a stone floor under an awful lot of space. No carpet. Big entryway. The echo came from up high, however––so I guessed the entryway might be furnished. With the acoustics, it might even be a church.

  Before I could discern much more about that space, he steered me left and then down a narrow corridor. The echo faded as soon as I felt carpet below my feet. We didn’t walk down that segment for long. Brick opened a heavy-sounding door, and then he was bringing me down a long flight of stairs. The stairs weren’t carpeted; they felt like stone or cement again.

  Brick had to coax Lily to follow us.

  “It’s all right, darling. No doctors... no doctors here, I promise... it’s safer down here. Promise...”

  Safe, my ass, my mind muttered. Although maybe it is safe... for her.

  Feeling my jaw harden, I didn’t voice the thought aloud.

  We reached the bottom after what felt like an unusually large number of stairs, with no landings at all that I noticed, so no way to count floors. I heard the squeak of a door that sounded like metal, then I was brought inside a warmer room.

  I heard a fire cracklin
g.

  Then the hood was ripped abruptly from my head.

  I found myself staring around a room that was as comfortable as Brick had promised Lily, if somewhat overdone in gothic style. An art nouveau couch stood directly in front of me, with black-painted wood and forest green upholstery. It was framed on either side by matching chairs. All three faced a stone fireplace large enough to roast a pig in... or perhaps a human being.

  Over the fireplace hung a long, beautifully-forged sword with a cross for a handle.

  Flames crackled up from a blackened log. Dark rugs with Victorian floral patterns covered the stone floor, including near the hearth. The paintings on the walls were 19th Century, and mostly portraits. A few looked vaguely familiar.

  There were no windows.

  I turned back towards the door when two humans walked in. I guessed their race from their eyes, and wondered if they were the same two who’d dragged me off the plane. They half led, half carried the man with the dirty blond hair. Reaching the wall, they dumped him unceremoniously to the floor, where they promptly handcuffed his chains to a large iron ring set in the wall, like something from a medieval dungeon.

  He had a bag over his head, too. They didn’t remove his.

  I figured they must have drugged him, given how sluggishly he moved as they brought him in. Now that he slumped in the corner, he didn’t move at all.

  I turned towards Brick, who made a hospitable wave towards the forest green couch and the two high-backed chairs.

  “Will this do?” he said absently, his eyes flickering over the overall layout of the room. “It seemed suitably... Freudian.”

  He checked his watch when I didn’t respond.

  Lily was already wandering towards the couch, moving like a sleepwalking child. I watched her sit on it delicately, then bounce on it, like the springs and the fabrics fascinated her. She didn’t smile as she stroked the green velvet covering.

  “Well?” Brick said, his voice openly impatient. “Perhaps I wasn’t clear on how little time we have, Miriam... or what will happen if your husband were to interrupt us before you had finished this task for me. I thought I was. Clear, that is. Repeatedly so.”

  I glanced at those red eyes, the handsome face framed in that shoulder-length brown hair. For the first time, I noticed he looked young. Younger than Black even, closer to his late twenties than early thirties. Something in his energy, or maybe his facial expressions, made him appear much older, though.

  Older than me. Older than Black. Even older than my uncle Charles.

  Forcing my mind back on the task at hand, I exhaled, combing my fingers through my long, straight black hair. “What is it you expect from me, Brick? You can’t possibly think I can cure her with a few psychic scans and a snap of my fingers?”

  “Tell me what is wrong with her.” His accented voice grew openly angry. “I will do the rest. Give me a diagnosis... a real one... and I’ll leave you be.”

  I frowned, looking at the girl on the couch, then sighed.

  “Okay,” I said. “What was she like before?”

  Brick rested his hands on his hips, flashing silver rings he wore on all but a few fingers.

  “She was different,” he said after a pause. “She was...” He waved almost helplessly towards the woman in the indigo dress, then exhaled in a near-growl.

  “Honestly? She was more like you, Dr. Fox.” He frowned, turning slightly to face me. “She was a fighter. Present. Passionate. Beautifully alive... even ferocious when need be. She was my heart, Dr. Fox... and I do not say that lightly.” His red eyes glared into mine.

  “Oh, and also?” he said, his voice colder. “She spoke.”

  I nodded, turning my attention back to her.

  “She hasn’t spoken at all?” I said. “Not once since you got her back?”

  “Not while she’s been awake.”

  I was tempted to make a crack about coffins, but didn’t.

  “She talks in her sleep?” I clarified.

  “She screams in her sleep,” he said, shifting his eyes towards me in another flatly level stare. “She has nightmares, Dr. Fox. Every night. Terror dreams, I suppose you could say. They are quite... disturbing.”

  Remembering Black waking, sweating where he lay next to me, gripping hold of me at times hard enough to leave bruises... a wash of uncontrollable fury went through me.

  That time, I gave the vampire a death stare right back.

  “Boo-fucking-hoo,” I said. “Maybe it’s karma, Brick. Did you ever think of that?”

  His red eyes turned a darker, more blood-like as he stared at me. “Tell me what is wrong with her, and I’ll let you go, Miriam. Anything else you do here, including wasting time being offensive towards me, will not win either of us that which we most desire.”

  I bit my lip, forcing myself to acknowledge his words.

  Looking at Lily again, I assessed her child-like demeanor, thinking it over from the clinical side of my brain. Adults who fell back into the psychological affect of a a child almost invariably did so as a result of severe trauma. She kicked her legs even as I thought it, looking up at me with those wide, glass-like, tinted red eyes, almost like a twelve-year-old.

  It would have to be a severe trauma, if what Brick was saying were true.

  Or brain damage perhaps. Was that what Brick wanted to know? If it was psychological or physiological? Why not get her an MRI?

  Then another thought: would an MRI work on a vampire?

  “They were extracting venom from her fangs?” I said, clarifying what Black told me about the lab’s ghoulish experiments. “They were using her to try and make humans into vampires, correct?”

  Brick gave me a harder stare. “That’s not all they did there, Dr. Fox.”

  My eyebrows went up. That was news to me. “Oh? What else did they do?”

  His voice grew colder. “They also attempted to turn vampires into humans.” He adjusted his shirt around his jacket, his jaw harder as he stared at Lily. “My darling Lilith had the very grave misfortune of being in the second group, doctor. They... changed her in some way. It’s why your kind can now read her now, I imagine. For a seer to feel her mind at all, it must be... different somehow. Not the same as before.”

  “Different how?” I said.

  He gave me another of those death-like stares. “Different from a vampire.”

  “How would you even find that out?” I said. “About seers, I mean.”

  He frowned, exhaling, his red eyes flashing. “We have a few of your kind we employ in odd jobs from time to time.” Seeing my eyebrows shoot up, he held up his hand. “Also, I felt it in her. I felt a difference in her blood when I drank from her. I tasted that difference, so I know I did not imagine it.”

  I stared at him again. “You drank from her? Another vampire?”

  “To find out what had happened to her... yes. I did. Repeatedly, in fact.”

  “And what did you find out?”

  “I told you what I found out, Miriam,” he said, his New Orlean’s accent coming out harder, more angry. “They tried to make my darling girl human. They gave her drugs... some kind of genetic virus. They did blood transfusions and starved her. Then, when she was nothing more than bones, they committed horrible psychological tortures against her, meant to make her hate and fear her own nature. They nearly killed my beloved girl, all so they could try and strip her of her true life...!”

  I flinched a little at the intensity of his tone, then bit the inside of my cheek. Keeping my reaction out of my voice, I said neutrally, “You said you employ seers?”

  “It’s not important, Miriam.”

  “It’s important to me––”

  “––Then let me clarify,” he cut in. “I’m not going to discuss that matter with you, Miriam.” He gave me another of those hard stares. “Get to work, doctor. The clock, as they say, is ticking. For you far more than for me.”

  His voice made it clear the conversation was over.

  Even so, I struggled f
or a few seconds to remain silent.

  Forcing my eyes off him, I looked at Lily instead. I believed him that he’d kill me if I didn’t do as he asked. Despite being a sadist, he seemed to really care about this other vampire. That part didn’t feel like posturing; it felt real.

  Black told me to stay alive, to do whatever I had to do to stay alive.

  He also told me to give Brick whatever he wanted.

  So that’s exactly what I intended to do.

  Chapter 7

  The Doctor is In

  That dampening cloud lifted from my psychic sight the second I sat down on one of the green-upholstered chairs, facing Lily.

  I sent a quick word to Black as soon as I could feel my psychic abilities working again.

  Black? Are you there?

  Miri? he sent back at once. What’s happening?

  I’m here, I murmured with my mind. Underground. Stone building in the countryside. Big... high ceilings, maybe even a church...

  I went on as fast as I could, relaying every detail of what I’d seen and heard without taking my eyes off Lily. I told him everything I could think of from the trip here and the building itself. I described the room and the stairs and Lily and the two humans.

  I didn’t describe the guy with the sword tattoo. I didn’t want Brick having any more emotional leverage over Black than he had already.

  But I couldn’t stay with him long.

  Okay, I sent hurriedly. I have to go. I really have to go. I need to do this thing for him. He’s going to notice if I don’t come up with something here soon...

  I understand. He sent me another flood of warmth. Behind that, I sensed more, a lot more than he let me feel. I love you, Miriam.

  Fighting back my emotional reaction to that, I let his presence fade.

  I focused my mind on Lily’s.

  Going into her mind was like entering a mouse’s maze, only one filled with flickering strobe lights and mirrors and transparent walls. That strange mantra in the foreground of her thoughts remained, but I almost couldn’t hear it in everything else that swam forward to meet me.

 

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