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The Vampire Gene

Page 10

by Jenny Doe


  Almost as if in slow motion he sauntered towards me, triumph in his eyes. He glanced at Lucy dismissively as she made it to the door and through it.

  Suddenly my legs obeyed the command from my brain to run, but it was too late. Jack reached out and grabbed my neck with one hand, and the forgotten shotgun still clasped in my right hand with the other. My eyes widened as his hold on my neck tightened and his mouth curled into a malicious sneer, and he flipped the shotgun so the grip lay in his hand. I watched in horror as his finger tightened on the trigger, and there was an ear-splitting explosion as pain ripped through my belly.

  I looked down at the blood blossoming on my shirt and felt my legs buckle, before I was lifted effortlessly and swung onto a muscular shoulder, the pressure against my belly making the pain excruciating, and rendering me limp and helpless. I watched my blood falling in rivulets down the back of Jack's trousers, the motion somehow hypnotic, as the reality around me gradually receded and I lost consciousness.

  Angus

  The second call came as I was turning off the motorway about ten miles away from the Colborne house.

  "Angus! Jack's got her. He somehow took her while the others were fighting. She's hurt, we don't know how badly, but there was a lot of blood on the floor..."

  I disconnected the call, and pulled up the app for tracking the GPS locator I'd hidden in one of her shoes. The beacon lit up on the screen immediately, blinking reassuringly. I removed a small tub of iron tablets from my pocket. I seldom used this immediate release formulation - it was like drinking blood, and it rendered me almost senseless with power and speed and the need, above all, to destroy. It was a trip I feared almost as much as I rejoiced in, the euphoria overshadowed in my more lucid moments by a vague concern that the beast was no longer under my control.

  Today I embraced the madness.

  Rebecca

  I woke up to a world of pain and noise, and the smell of my own blood. My eyes felt gritty, and my shoulders ached from the unnatural position my bound arms had been forced into. At first I struggled to see anything in the gloom, but the rumbling of an engine beneath my body and the darkness of the confined space that held me led me to the conclusion that I had been shut in the boot of a car.

  Again. I was seriously over this whole abduction business.

  The pain in my abdomen slowly dulled to an almost bearable ache, and the blood on my skin dried. I knew without having to look that my gunshot wounds had closed over. I lay on my side, my arms pulled tight behind me. I could feel wires cutting into the flesh at my elbows and at my wrists. My legs were free, and I used them to cautiously feel the limits of my space, occasionally kicking gently at a surface. The car boot seemed to be spacious enough, and it smelled almost new.

  I was still mentally grumbling and dwelling on my predicament when a surge of power tore through me, and left me breathless. It was followed by a second, and then a third. The exhilaration was like nothing I'd ever felt. I grinned in the dark confines of the boot. Wow, this really was something else.

  I carefully pulled my arms apart behind me, and felt the wires stretch and unravel and part. I flexed my newly vigorous muscles, twisted slightly to adjust my position, and kicked up at the boot lid as hard as I could. The lock held, but the metal buckled outwards, and slivers of light appeared at the peripheries as the deformed lid was pulled away from the edges of the boot.

  The car screeched to a halt as someone applied the brakes, and I was flung against the backs of the rear seats. I lined up a kick at the lock of the boot lid, and it sprung open as my heels smashed against it, flipping it with such force against the back window that it shattered.

  I flew out of the now stationery car, only to be confronted by Jack, who stood, huge and smug and immobile, a few metres away from me, the shotgun gripped in his right hand and levelled at my belly.

  "You don't learn, do you?" his smoky voice rasped through my head. His icy eyes narrowed. "I'm going to enjoy teaching you to lie down and take it."

  I took an involuntary step back, my eyes drawn in dismayed fascination to the gun in his hand.

  "Consider this your first lesson, bitch." he said as he shot me again.

  I watched as the shotgun jerked in his hand, and saw the spray of blood as those pellets buried themselves in the flesh of my abdomen, but this time I felt nothing. I didn't flinch, my legs didn't buckle. I just stood there as blood flowed down my legs and watched the incredulity grow in his eyes. I tilted my head sideways and considered him coldly. My arm snaked out and I grasped the barrel of the shotgun. I grinned humourlessly. And then all the frustration and rage and fear of the past week rushed from the depths of my soul and into my arm and through that gun. Jack crumpled to the ground, his eyes rolling back in his head.

  CHAPTER 13

  Angus

  I saw the car before I saw Rebecca. I took in the details as I drove cautiously towards it, approaching it from the front. It was pulled over to one side of a small rural road, the drivers door wide open. Then I saw the mangled boot lid and Rebecca standing opposite a tall vampire who held a shotgun, and I was exploding from the van with deadly intent when he shot her. As I leapt I saw how she stood firm, and how she took hold of that shotgun barrel. I reached her side just as he fell.

  She half turned towards me, relief and joy on her face, and I caught her as she stumbled. I sensed the pain start to burn through her body as it finally acknowledged just how badly it had been hurt by that shot.

  I tore my shirt off and wadded it up, and pressed it over the gaping wound in her belly. It would be a few minutes before the bleeding slowed, and too much blood loss could leave her feeling weak and delay the essential healing process. I lay her on the grass, and placed her hands over the makeshift dressing. Jack was still unconscious, but he could recover at any time. He was an imminent threat that needed to be dealt with, and the iron I had taken made me relish the prospect.

  I stepped over his body to where his hand still loosely cradled the shotgun, and twisted it out of his grip. I considered my options as I watched his chest rise and fall, trying to control the beast that wanted to rip him apart right there and then. I took a deep breath and glanced across to where she lay, my sanity. Then I leaned down, grabbed hold of his unresisting elbow and bent it backwards until it snapped, and hung useless at his side. I did the same for his other arm, and then I broke his legs below the knee. I knew exactly how long it would take for his limbs to become functional - I had just bought us three hours at least. Enough time to get Rebecca back to the Colbornes', and to deliver Jack into the vengeful hands of his sister. I recalled those few memories I had picked up yesterday as she had recounted her story while we sat around the dining room table, and I knew she had unfinished business with him. Her need for some sort of closure was much greater than mine or Rebecca's could ever be. And despite the iron I'd taken, I was still very much aware of that fact. Jack wouldn't be dying at my hands today.

  I turned back to Rebecca and lifted her gently in my arms. She smiled up at me, her pain reflected in her eyes. God, how I loved her, and how close I'd come to losing her. I carried her to the van and lay her flat on the front seat, and held the now soaked shirt against her wound while the bleeding slowed and then stopped, and her breathing gradually settled.

  "I'm OK now," she spoke softly.

  I gazed at her, absorbing the beauty and strength of her, and then I buried my face in her neck. Her hand came up to rest on the back of my head, and she threaded her fingers through my hair. That wonderful, terrible desire rose unbidden, and I automatically began to pull away, but her grip transferred to my shoulders, and she kissed me, and I lost myself in the sensations shooting through my body.

  A cry of frustration from the other side of the road recalled me to the present. I lifted my head and smiled ruefully down at her.

  "I need to sort Jack out."

  She chuckled. "I think you've done that already. I never knew that breaking bones could be so loud." She shuddered slightly.
"Are you going to, er, kill him?"

  "No. We'll take him to Julia, and let her deal with him. Believe it or not, her grievances are far, far worse than anything he has done to you."

  "Really? That's awful." She paused, then, "Well, go and get him then!" She grinned at me and pulled herself up into a sitting position. I kissed her again, and dragged myself away to fetch Jack, who lay in helpless fury on the damp grass at the roadside.

  "You bastard!" he spat at me as I approached him. I grinned back evilly.

  "Hey Jack," I said.

  "What?" he snapped furiously.

  "Bite me."

  CHAPTER 14

  Rebecca

  I lay with my head on his lap staring up at his face as he drove. Jack was all wired up in the back of the van - Angus had found a few rolls of fencing wire in the abandoned car, and had used it to good effect. Jack looked like one of those old fashioned tops - if you tugged on one end of wire he might go spinning off into the distance.

  After a while the now familiar surges of power returned as my body dealt with the shotgun pellets embedded in my tissues. I lay watching the pulse in the hollow at the base of Angus' neck, and the way his naked chest moved as he breathed, and inhaling his incredibly male scent. He glanced down at me, his brows raised. I grinned at him, and he chuckled and returned his gaze to the road, while I returned mine to the muscles in his neck where they plunged into the base of his throat. After a while he smiled, but he continued watching the road.

  Thirty minutes later we pulled into the gravel driveway. I sat up then, afraid of what might be waiting at the end of it. First thing we saw was a decapitated blood feeder hanging like some kind of bizarre decoration from and old beech tree. It didn't get much better after that. There were bodies scattered everywhere in various stages of dismemberment. It was strangely reassuring. It looked like our vampires had fought well and with spectacular, if disgusting, success.

  Angus regarded it all with a frown.

  "What?" I asked him.

  "I should have been here."

  "I'm glad you weren't. You could never have gotten to me in time if you had been here fighting these things." I waved my hands dismissively at the gory display.

  "You think I would have left you alone to go and fight?"

  "God, yes. You would have been off like a shot! I saw what a kick Marcus and Fergus got out of the whole thing. As if you would have tamely stayed behind to guard me. Ha!" I laughed aloud at the idea. It was so preposterous.

  Angus grinned at me wryly. "You're right, of course. Even now I'm annoyed that I missed it."

  I shook my head in mock despair. Just then Marcus appeared from within the mansion. He had abandoned the crossbow, but still wore the leather coat. It had great big rips in it, and was covered in blood. Angus stopped the van and we got out.

  "It's not mine," said Marcus, following my gaze to the blood on his coat.

  "I never thought it was, brother," said Angus dryly. "Is everyone OK?"

  " We're all alive, but Fergus has lost a hand, and I've just had to replace some of Oliver's small bowel in his abdomen. They're both going to be fine in a couple of days," he said reassuringly when he saw my dismayed expression.

  "I have Jack," Angus told him. An evil grin spread across Marcus' face. For a moment I felt sorry for Jack, but then I remembered how he had cold-bloodedly shot me. And how Angus had said that what he had done to Julia was much, much worse. I stopped feeling sorry for him.

  Angus led Marcus to the back of the van while I walked up the steps to the front door of the house. Julia met me at the door with a huge bear hug.

  "I'm so glad you're safe," she said as she patted my back. "We're all fine. I've reassured Fergus that the hand will grow back in just over a week. He's annoyed that it's going to take so long, of course, but there's no pleasing some people," she chuckled.

  "We have Jack," I told her.

  Her expression hardened. "Good," was all she said, but I sensed that this was a very significant moment for her. "They're all in the front sitting room. Come through and I'll show you."

  I followed her into the house, and down a short passage to the sitting room. Fergus lounged in a large leather armchair by the fireplace, a thick dressing encasing the stump of his left arm, and a grumpy look on his face, which disappeared as soon as he saw me.

  "Little sister!" he exclaimed, and stood up to hug me. I hugged him right back - I was so grateful that he and Marcus and the others were OK. Oliver lay on a three seater sofa, his naked torso and abdomen wrapped in bloodstained bandages. A nasty gash poked out above the bandages just below his collar bone. It was already in the healing stage, but it looked like it hurt. He must have sensed my sympathy, because he looked up at me and grinned and winked. I pulled a face and rolled my eyes, and he laughed.

  "They've got Jack," Julia spoke now. Oliver watched her face closely.

  "Put him in the old dining room," he suggested. "Blood won't stain those old stone floors."

  She nodded once and then left to find Marcus and Angus. We all trailed along behind her, Oliver slightly hunched and holding his abdomen. I briefly considered suggesting to him that he lie down again, but dismissed the idea very quickly. He was a vampire, and if experience had taught me anything - he wouldn't listen.

  Angus

  Marcus and I carried Jack into the old dining room. It took a few minutes but we managed to unwrap him from the wire restraining him. I might have overdone that a little. His arms still dangled uselessly at his sides and he was unable to stand, although his legs appeared a bit straighter than they had when I had originally lifted him into the back of the van. He swore throughout as we tied him to a chair with a few handy strands of wire.

  Julia walked into the room followed by Rebecca and Fergus. They each grabbed a chair and arranged them in a loose semicircle around Jack, for all the world like a particularly grim focus group. The thought made me want to laugh. Oliver came in a minute or so after everyone else. I nodded my head in silent thanks for all he and Julia had done to help us protect Rebecca, and my brothers, and he nodded back in acknowledgement. Then his attention was diverted to the snarling vampire in the middle of the room, and he too pulled up a chair and sat down, one hand pressing carefully on his injured abdomen. Marcus and I decided to lean against the stone walls on either side of Jack. I was still too hyped up after all the iron I'd eaten today, and I didn't want to sit. Marcus had his own reasons, but I suspected they had something to do with keeping and eye on Julia, who sat a couple of metres directly in front of Jack, watching his face intently. She appeared to come to some sort of decision, and she stood up abruptly and left the room. Rebecca looked at me, a question in her eyes.

  "She's coming back," said Oliver. I nodded in confirmation. Oliver and I had both sensed her intentions, and it wasn't going to be pretty. I wondered briefly if I should warn Rebecca, but I didn't think there would be any point. If it got too bad, she could leave.

  "Hey, bitch," Jack drawled, eyes fixed on Rebecca. "We would have had some fun. Well, I would have anyway." He chuckled at his own joke.

  Rebecca stared straight back at him, and I knew that she wouldn't be going anywhere.

  "Shut up, Jack," said Oliver shortly.

  "Oliver, my son," Jack turned his attention to the unsmiling vampire. "Are you really going to let your mother do this to me?"

  "Watch me," Oliver said laconically.

  "Your Uncle James told me all about you. Little did he know he was talking to your real daddy." He seemed to be pleading and insulting at the same time. Impressive. But not half as impressive as the axe Julia carried into the room a few moments later.

  "Recognise this?" she grinned at Jack as she hefted the heavy blade. His eyes betrayed nothing. He just stared at her.

  "Do you remember what you said to me that night, Jack?" She put one hand on her hip and pursed her lips. "Let me think... ah yes, I recall now." She picked up the axe in both hands. "As you said, Jack, this is going to hurt," and she swun
g that axe in an overhead arc and brought it down on his left forearm, severing the arm cleanly just above the hand.

  Jack howled as blood sprayed from the stump. The amputated limb fell with a splat to the ground. Rebecca winced, but she stayed where she was. Fergus looked a bit green, probably reliving his own experience from earlier that day.

  "You didn't know that my hands would grow back, did you, Jack? You thought you'd maimed me for life. And then..." her voice faltered as she recalled what had happened after he'd removed her hands with the axe. Images flickered through my head as she unwittingly broadcast her pain. I looked at Oliver, who sat with his eyes screwed shut as he too witnessed her suffering. I wonder how much harder it was for him, knowing that he was the product of that horrific encounter. Then the images disappeared, and Julia seemed to drag herself back to the here and now.

  "Let me explain how this is going to work, Jack," she spat the last word. "You die here today. That is not negotiable." Jack sneered defiantly.

  "You are going to tell me what you did with Anne and Lizzy. If you refuse, I will continue to remove random bits of you with this very useful axe you left me. As you can probably tell, I haven't sharpened it for some time. And don't think you will die from blood loss. I'll cauterise your wounds as I go - let's call it returning the favour." She winked at him. "I don't have a hot iron, so I'll have to make do with a blowtorch. Give me a minute."

  "Wait," Marcus interjected. She looked at him in surprise. He smiled at her. "Tell me where to find it, and I'll fetch it for you."

  Julia's expression softened as she realised the implications of his offer, the unequivocal support that he was giving her in this grim situation. She briefly explained to him where to find it and he left. Fergus suddenly stood and went over to the window. He hauled out his phone and had a hurried conversation with someone on the other end. He disconnected then returned to his seat.

 

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