Book Read Free

Bloodline Awakened Supernatural Thriller Series: Books 1-3

Page 61

by Jason Paul Rice


  “The Jersey Devil said you had a soft spot for women. Guess he was wrong.”

  “Looks like it.” I tried not to let her get to me. Coming from a shitty past, I felt for her, but sometimes life presented difficult choices. I tried not to let my sympathy cloud my head. Not everyone can survive this crazy game of life, so if it’s between me or a demon, female or not, I have to go with self-preservation.

  She started crying. I didn’t know demons cried. “What—what are you doing?”

  “I’m crying, you obdurate asshole. Am I not allowed?”

  “But you’re a demon. Demon’s aren’t supposed to have feelings.” Before a surge of sympathy ran through me, I went to the closet and picked up the bungee cords.

  Before you ask. Yes, detaining bad guys was exactly why I kept bungee cords in my office. With great care, I popped the bubble, and grabbed her ankles. After I secured her legs so she couldn’t run, I forced her arms behind her back and bound her.

  I set a protection spell on the bonds because her magic skills could easily allow her to break out of the bungee cords. I locked them into place, essentially turning them into steel, and stuffed her into the closet. Remembering that I would need to feed her in a little while, I shut the door.

  Her screams caused further regret, but she was a demon, at least that was what I kept telling myself. I rushed out the front door already feeling regret.

  I needed her to get my knife back. I’m not cruel, really. Huh. I’ve always said to never believe someone’s words, believe their actions. So I realize how this might look, but I’m not a monster. Plus she was a demon. So why was I feeling so rotten about it?

  For clarification purposes, I was given an enchanted knife from the Celtic Gods with explicit instructions not to lose it. Yes, I lost it. The condition was my life because of the destruction the object could cause.

  Right now it was in the possession of Aka Manah and the demons of the Red Cavern. The demons hadn’t rushed to my front door to make a deal. In fact, I hadn’t seen the aforementioned Chieftain since he had grabbed the knife during a huge brawl and run away from me.

  The clock was ticking. Hopefully, I can pull the trade for the demoness and save my life. I felt okay as long as no other distractions popped up. I wanted to make a bunch of calls to get some information.

  I opened my door and detected an intruder in my house. I prepared to use my magic.

  Chapter 3

  I STEPPED INSIDE MY house and sensed magic. Was another demon inside my house? Was the girl in my office a red herring? I shushed Colossus with a crazy look in my eyes and tiptoed up the steps. The sound had come from my lab so I reached the top, heightened my senses and peeked around the corner. Closed door.

  I knew it wasn’t Alayna because we had a rule of tying a yellow Beatles necktie on the outside door knob. We used the marker because my mentor/landlord came freely in and out of my apartment. Technically, her apartment.

  Detecting one person, I put my hand on the door knob and steeled myself. A crack of thunder nearly made me jump through the roof. Settling down and shaking out my nerves, I prepared to bust in and kick some major ass until the smell of vanilla and roses snuck into my nostrils.

  Alayna’s signature scent.

  Not letting my guard down, I pushed the door open and performed a cursory scan of the room.

  Only Alayna.

  The rush of incoming light caused her to shade her eyes with an open hand. “Damnit, Mike. I think you may have ruined it.” The faerie turned on the light and returned to the long table in the middle of the room.

  “Sorry. What are you working up?”

  “It’s a return agent. A liquid potion that when applied should return that person to this room. Hopefully. Let’s test it out. We’ll go downstairs to find out if it works.”

  I needed to broach the subject of the dragons. We arrived on the first floor, and I turned to my mentor. “We need to talk. In here, shall we?” I gestured to the couch.

  We sat down on my couch. I said, “I assume you either saw or heard about the dragon infiltration.”

  “No.” Her face carried a quizzical expression.

  “You didn’t hear them flying in?” I lived about ten miles from the city, but Alayna’s ears were much more powerful than humans.

  “I was up in the lab with noise cancelling headphones on and with the lights out as you saw.”

  “Okay. We got dragons in Pittsburgh. Had to come at some point, right?”

  “Dragons. What color dragons?”

  “The flying ones were black.”

  She gasped dramatically, closed her eyes and lowered her head. “Were the other dragons the long, slithery ones known as river dragons?”

  “They were calling them sewer dragons because they kept popping out of the sewers and manhole covers. But that does sound like them. Dark green and brown. Some were purple. Almost a natural camouflage. Ugly looking suckers.”

  She still had her head down, rubbing her temples with her thumbs. “I knew this day would come.”

  The whipping wind beat against my apartment, lightning flashing through the closed blinds and thunder booming closely behind. I opened the blind and was met with a gloomy darkness. I asked, “What are you talking about?”

  “I want to tell you something, but I know it could end up getting you killed.”

  “Spoiler alert. Everything I do could end up getting me killed. The Gods are going to put me to death if I can’t return that runed knife in ten days. You might as well tell me.”

  “It’s not just you who could be killed. And we’ll get that knife back.” She raised her chin, dreary eyed with crow’s feet racing back toward her temples. Her wrinkles only showed up when she was worried or scared.

  “You. Are you talking about you?”

  “I am. I haven’t told you much about my past.”

  A light drizzle started tap dancing on the roof. I said, “You’ve basically told me nothing about your past. Except that you’ve lived in the Deep Burrow. No details though.”

  “Because the details would have put your life in more danger than it already is. Imagine that if you can. If people were to find out my true identity, it would put a whole new army of baddies chasing after us.”

  “As long as it’s not the beings from Sleepy Willow, we should be fine. Right?” I chuckled, and Alayna’s unblinking blue eyes spoke louder than a scream.

  “You think that’s what this is?”

  She shook her head. “I know that’s what this is.”

  “How can you be so sure?”

  “Have you heard the story of Queen Al?”

  “I think so. You’re talking about the Queen of Sleepy Willow who was chased out.”

  “More than chased out. Tell me what you know about her.”

  The uneven winds banged against my house, rain now coming down faster. Thunder boomed and the lights dimmed before regaining full power. I said, “They said she was statuesque, elegant, the epitome of beauty. Her braided hair looked like strands of gold, woven to perfection. Her wings made the butterflies blush. Queen Al’s magic was more powerful than any wizard’s. She was a fair and just ruler until her husband, King Ballistar, turned on her.”

  Alayna was bawling and I wondered why she had asked me to tell this story. I continued, “The King was jealous of her power and ordered his evil henchmen to clip her wings, effectively killing her.”

  Sheets of rain poured down like buckets, hammering the roof of my house. A flash of lightning was punctuated by an immediate strike of thunder. A web of electrically charged light appeared in my head, illuminating the situation.

  It hit me like a lightning bolt in the heart and I began to cry. My memory flashed back to when Alayna had taken me to an underworld to smoke the Plant of Knowledge. The scars on her back. Those hideous scars. They were right in the area where wings would have been attached.

  It was her.

  It was Queen Al.

  But how?

  I reached out
and lovingly pulled her onto my lap. She wrapped her arms around me and we cried. I don’t know how long it lasted. Don’t really care.

  This was my mentor, my mother figure. She was there for me when everyone else in the entire world had given up on me. I’d given up on me. She found out about my secret bloodline with Merlin and helped me awaken it. I owed my life to her. No exaggeration. And now, I had to help her exact revenge.

  I felt a primal rage swirling inside my chest, carrying a club of vengeance, begging to bust out. If they were still alive, I wanted to kill every last person who’d made her suffer. For my savior, my mentor, my mother figure and so many more things.

  The rain continued to flow down in biblical proportions that would have made Noah anxious. It was as if the Gods, all of them from every culture, were crying with us, sharing in Alayna’s pain. I pulled her up and our watery cheeks mashed together.

  What a traumatic secret to have buried down deep for so long. She’d never even given me an indication about her past. I’d always thought she had been born in the Deep Burrow as a wingless faerie. Born that way.

  When I thought the initial overwhelming emotion had sufficiently died down, I asked, “How did you get away? The stories said that you died trying to escape.”

  She sniffled and sat up straight, wiping away some of our mutual tears from my stubbly cheek. “After my husband had his Wardens clip my wings, they expected me to drop dead. However, he failed in his treacherous attempt at uxoricide. I had one loyal friend. A dragon named Penbrooke. My friend swooped down after the guards had left me for dead in the castle square. Penbrooke held my wings in place when I placed a hex on Sleepy Willow, just before the wings dissolved into dust. I cursed the land, poisoning the food and anything that grew out of it. They’ve had to import all their food through the portals ever since.”

  “So the curse still stands?”

  “If what I hear about Sleepy Willow is true, then yes. When I ruled, it was a much rougher land, than say, the Deep Burrow. After I left things turned seedy and downright murderous, giving the land of the Fae the terrible reputation that it shares now. They did away with all laws as far as I know.”

  “How come you didn’t die?”

  “The reason I became queen was because no other faerie had ever grown to my size. I’m actually half nixie and half pixie.”

  “What’s a nixie?”

  “A nixie is a water spirit. Like a mermaid or merman. Much smaller though, which made me special. Nobody had more magic at his or her fingertips than yours truly and the King took notice. I also think that was the reason I didn’t die. My magic kept me alive. And don’t forget the help I had from Penbrooke. He flew me to the Deep Burrow. The druidic physicians and healing witches saved me, but my body had shrunk to the size you see right now.”

  “Did you at least retain your magic?”

  “Nope.” She looked at the window for a few moments, at the intense storm raging on the other side of that glass, and said, “This happened about five hundred years ago. It took me a few centuries to build my magic back up. It’s still nowhere near the level it originally was.”

  I asked, “So how do the dragons come into all this?” The window lit up, electricity dancing inside a rolling cloud on the horizon.

  “The noble dragons. My dragons banded together to leave Sleepy Willow and go to an unknown location until they were needed again. Penbrooke and all the dragons left except for two black ones that showed a loyalty to the King. The two black dragons decided to stay with the new supreme ruler and pledged fealty to the King.”

  “And he’s been breeding them for the past five hundred years.”

  “Precisely. I’d hoped that the dragons would have mating problems, but it appears that never happened. I can’t imagine why he’s chosen to attack Pittsburgh. Apparently your past can always come back to you. Has me thinking someone might have dimed me out.”

  “Could be a coincidence. How do you get your dragons back?”

  “I used to play them songs on my Dragon Horn. Sweet, lovely melodies that they would fly around and bob their heads to. When we parted ways, I told Penbrooke that I would never play the Dragonhorn again unless I was in dire need of their help.”

  “Awesome. Let’s get that badboy and you can blow into that thing. Problem solved. Where’s it at?”

  “It’s in Sleepy Willow.”

  “Excuse me?”

  “You heard me right.”

  “Why didn’t you take it with you?”

  “I was dying. I buried it beyond the great expanse. Nobody has been able to find it or they would have summoned the dragons and I would have heard about it. Just like I’d heard about King Ballistar’s dragons. The first person to blow into that horn will have the dragons under his or her command. If they are deemed fit.”

  “Wait. Who deems if the person is fit?”

  “The dragons. They are quite adept at judging character. With that said, we’ve all been fooled before. Everyone in Sleepy Willow lusts to find that horn. It’s just nobody knows where it is except me.”

  “How do they know about it? Does that mean they know you’re alive?”

  “Not exactly. The legend started soon after my failed demise. Everyone knew I used the Horn to play music for my dragons, so they tried to find the Horn around the castle. After failing at discovering it, the hunt began and the stories started. It’s in a spot that most people are afraid to traverse.”

  I asked a question I didn’t want to ask, “You’re saying we have to go to the most dangerous area of Sleepy Willow to get this thing?”

  She nodded. Her silence was deafening.

  “I’ve heard that Sleepy Willow was a dangerous place even when you ruled over the land. Now they say beings and creatures will cut your throat for fun or to drink your blood. They say outsiders, especially humans, don’t stand a chance getting in there.”

  The storm started to relent, turning into a sideways spray of mist, splattering the window in sudden bursts. Alayna tried to smile, but her mouth quivered and her lips remained stiff. “Luckily for us, we have an insider.”

  I cocked my head to the side. “Who?”

  “Me. Haven’t been back, but I’ve paid close attention to what has happened since my demise. If we can get over Geopold Lake, I can guide us to the burial spot.”

  I wasn’t sold. “Do you even know if it’s going to be there?”

  “I do not. Not sure, but I’m pretty sure.”

  “So this is basically a death wish?”

  Her eyes narrowed, tears still spilling down her flushed cheeks. “I’m over a thousand years old and I don’t plan on dying any time soon. I feel it in my bones that it’s still there. I hid it in a dangerous area that no one wanders into unless they want to die.”

  “That’s not sounding any better. Do we have any way to get there? And how do we get past the lake you were just talking about?”

  “That’s where we have a tiny problem. I don’t know how to get there anymore. From what I know though, all the portals take you to the city. We will also need a way to get through a ravaged city to get to the lake and the great expanse.”

  I sighed. “Do you know anyone who can get us there and then guide us through the city?”

  “I don’t.”

  “Well this is just great.”

  The drizzling continued, but the dark clouds parted and a shaft of golden sunlight poured in through the window.

  She smirked, although it seemed forced. “Relax, young man. You know someone who can get us in there. I’m not sure if he will help us get through the city, but he should be able to get us in the door.”

  “Great. Who?”

  “Your vampire friend, Jonathan, has traveled there many times. I don’t know if he will, but he has the ability to get us in.”

  Us? “I figured you would send me because this is too personal for you. You want to go too?”

  Alayna raised an eyebrow and gave me the ‘what are you crazy’ look. “I have to. T
he same way that you had to cleanse yourself with the patricide and killing George. I’ve been running from this for over five hundred years. I wasn’t going to attack them preemptively, but I won’t let them destroy Pittsburgh. I am going, and you just might get to see my full magical prowess too.”

  “Just me and you? Is that going to be enough? And are you sure you want to go? You’re public enemy number one there. I’m sure they’d love to torture you over cursing the crops.”

  The epic storm seemed to be over as more clouds parted, allowing sunrays to climb up the arm of the couch.

  Alayna said, “Only if we get caught. I plan to wear a disguise. The people I knew when I was queen won’t recognize me with the size difference. And if something were to happen, that’s the life we’ve chosen. I’ve had a decent run.” She chuckled. It was forced, but I smiled for her sake.

  “I never thought I’d have to go to Sleepy Willow, actually hoped I wouldn’t have to go there.”

  “That makes two of us. But we have to. We both took oaths to protect this city. The Fae have invaded our city and we are forced to take action.”

  “When you say Fae, what exactly do you mean?”

  She sighed, seemingly searching for the right words as life returned to her normally vibrant eyes. They were still holding onto the pain, glossy and red, but the silver flecks scattered around her icy blue irises were alive again. “For brevity, the Fae were my beings and creatures. Faeries, sidhe, mainly immortals among others. Just special, non-human folk. Then you have all the amazing animals and creatures, good and bad. Some call Sleepy Willow the Land of Fae, a real-life faerie tale. You’ve been conditioned from some of your visits to the Deep Burrow.”

  “I’m still shocked every time I see a new creature in that underworld.”

  “And the same shall happen in Sleepy Willow. However, the once-noble creatures have turned to a life of lies and deception, killing liberally, void of remorse. Trust not a soul and beware your past. For nothing shall shape your future more. That is one of our old sayings.”

  That used to be my attitude. I didn’t want to regress and stop trusting people. However, this was a different situation. I said, “Maybe we should stop talking about this place. You’re scaring me a little bit. On top of the dragons, it just seems like it might be too much for two people.”

 

‹ Prev