Assassins Bite (14 page)

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Authors: Mary Hughes

Tags: #vampire;erotic;paranormal romance;undead;urban fantasy;steamy;sensual;vampire romance;action;sizzling;Meiers Corners;Mary Hughes;Biting Love;romantic comedy;funny;humor;assassin;Chicago;police;cops

BOOK: Assassins Bite
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Chapter Fifteen

Chicago area, 1810

The boy clawed his way from the grave in terror. He burst into the light, spitting dirt, his mouth dry. The moment he left the soil, any strength the terror had given him drained away, leaving him weak and trembling. He lay on his back, gasping, his heart rattling his ribs.

Then, in his head, he heard, “Beautiful Son. Life, friendship and love.
Fight
.”

His mother's voice focused him. The bright light resolved into a silvered moon. The rattling of his heart slowed, revealing a second heartbeat.

He didn't think, only reacted. He leaped for the heartbeat, teeth aching to bite, not knowing what he intended, only that he was so
thirsty
.

A fist sent him plowing back into the soil.

“First rule. I own you.” It was the rich trader.
The vampire.
“Your name is now Aiden. Do what I say and you'll have shelter and full veins. Defy me and you'll know more pain than you thought possible. Come.”

The boy followed, crawling after the vampire—to kill him.
Drink his blood.

He stopped, shocked at his own thoughts.

As if the trader had heard those thoughts, he turned, a smile twisting his lips. “If you attack me, I'll tear your arms from your body, break both your legs and take your head off.”

Aiden kept any further thoughts buried deep.

It took all his concentration and will to drag himself after the vampire. His limbs were almost useless. His skin was torn and his muscles aching by the time he reached the trader's home, a large two-story house. Servants buzzed in and out, maid and man. Aiden didn't detect any other vampires.

The trader bound Aiden's limbs with stout rope then signaled a burly man. The servant picked Aiden up. The man's pulse pounded just out of reach of his fangs, calling. Aiden strained but the ropes held.

The burly servant clumped down a set of stairs and dumped Aiden onto bare ground. Soft and cool, the soil felt strangely like the finest furs to Aiden's torn flesh.

The rich trader followed—and slashed the burly man's neck.

Aiden's mouth gaped in shock.

The vampire tilted the body. Blood spurted into Aiden's open mouth. He swallowed on reflex.

The blood hit his veins like air, bright, pure and alive. He swallowed more, and more, until it hit him what he was drinking.

He spat out the mouthful and clamped his lips shut. The burly man's final moments of life splattered across his face.

The trader picked Aiden up and backhanded him. Aiden plowed into the soil. Instinct made him burrow like a worm.

Hands wrapped around his ankles and dragged him topside. The vampire grabbed Aiden by the jaw—and crushed it.

Aiden screamed in pain. The vampire laughed and flipped Aiden on his back. Then the vampire seized the corpse's feet and held the body upside down over Aiden's face. Blood streamed into Aiden's ruined maw. Aiden tried not to swallow but the stuff poured in, directly into him, into his veins.

When the last drops dribbled out, the rich man threw the body away.

A loud crack shocked Aiden's ears. His pain ebbed, heralding a miracle. His jawbone was knitting.

He looked down at himself. His torn flesh had closed as well. He felt stronger. Better than he'd felt in his life.

He tested his strength on the rope. A yank of his arms and the rope didn't just break, it burst. He tore the bonds from his legs and threw them disdainfully away.

“Good.” The rich man gestured—and the long blade of a hunting knife swept into Aiden's view.

Aiden rolled. The knife slashed the soil where he'd been. Aiden sprang to his feet. A slender, quick human in black was already pulling the knife from the soil and attacking in the same motion.

Aiden stopped the blade between his palms. “Impressive,” the vampire said. “Most newly risen can barely move.” Aiden ignored the trader. He twisted the knife out of the slender man's grip and threw it away. It flew across the cellar into the fieldstone wall—embedding in the mortar. A head-butt to the jaw sent the quick man, not just reeling, but crashing.

Aiden stared at the man's broken form, fetched up against the fieldstones. How had he gotten so strong?

The trader vampire only smiled. “You have some training already. Good.” His fist plowed into Aiden's face.

Blackness.

He woke to another knife stabbing toward his chest. He rolled away, barely before it cut his heart out.

That was the start of Aiden's life with Nosferatu.

The training was harsh to the point of soul-killing, but that was the point. Aiden was the only one in those early days, and Nosferatu bragged to him of his plans to make an assassin army. The vampire meant to turn more boys, make them dependent on him, brainwash them into utter loyalty, and turn them all into killing machines with one finger on the trigger, Nosferatu's own.

The vampire master set Aiden the task of watching the graves of the bitten, waiting for the one in a hundred that rose.

Those were dark, dark days for Aiden. For all of Nosferatu's horrific training, his depredations, that was what really nearly destroyed Aiden's soul. Waiting for dead boys, killed in terror and pain, to rise. The ones who did were filled with unnatural hunger and fear. Aiden took them home to Nosferatu—where else would they go? But there he watched them transformed into monsters.

Those who stayed dead were the lucky ones.

Then one night a clever boy with hair of sunshine rose. Though an orphan like all the rest, he didn't automatically buy into Nosferatu's brainwashing. His name was Ric.

For the first time Aiden felt like he wasn't alone.

Life, friendship and love. They are worth fighting for.

Aiden only realized after Ric came, and he'd heard her once again, that his mother's voice had gone silent.

Aiden went directly to the Dawn barn from Sunny's home. He worked off his frustration from that kiss…and everything before it…by bucking freight. He did a night's worth of loading in an hour. By the time he was well and truly tired, the front office staff had gone for the night. Aiden joined a couple of truckers heading downstairs to the subterranean rec room, with its plasma television, rich soil and plenty of cold beer.

Good beer, because he'd handpicked most of the six-packs himself.

Elwood passed around pics of his new baby. His mate was a human living in St. Louis, near the southern edge of Coterie territory. He couldn't wait to get back to her.

Even last week Aiden wouldn't have understood that. Now, he thought of Sunny. To see her again… But it would have to wait until after meeting with Ric tonight. He deliberately settled back, closed his eyes and concentrated on soaking in as much energy as possible.

Chicago, 1816

Sixteen-year-old Aiden was plotting with his best friend Ric how to escape their hated maker when he felt danger on his skin.

An instant later he smelled blood. Human.

Eloise.
Their little friend was in trouble. Aiden was too young to mist, so he raced along the underground passages, Ric following. He chafed until she came into view, struggling against a muscular boy.

She was in the clutches of the assassin-trainee Nosferatu had dubbed Samson, an overdeveloped fifteen-year-old with both ego and appetite to match. A spray of posies lay scattered on the soil.

Aiden growled. She'd been mooning over the ass for weeks now. Both Aiden and Ric had warned her off, but Eloise was stubborn. Had she tried to make nice with the vampire boy? Had he smelled human and only thought food? Nobody knew Eloise was Nosferatu's daughter.

Aiden tore the boy from her throat. Her blood welled from fanglet-sized holes. Ric ran in to seal them. Aiden let his emotions get the better of him and punched the ass Samson in the nose.

Stupid, because it gave the boy time to draw his knife. Aiden disdainfully palmed the knife to one side, even more stupid because the boy had somehow gotten hold of one of Nosferatu's silver-edged blades. The knife sliced Aiden's palm, deep enough to cut tendons—and the silver meant it wouldn't heal for months.

Laughing, Samson attacked again. A mistake because Aiden was equally facile with his other hand. He blocked easily then spun a hook kick into the little bastard's head, caught the knife midair when it popped out of Samson's hand—by the handle this time—and with a couple sharp whacks made sure Samson wouldn't bother anyone for awhile.

He turned to Eloise. Her eyes were big. “My hero.”

“Hardly.” Aiden pressed the heel of his uninjured hand against the cut to slow the bleeding. “A hero wouldn't have rushed in without a plan.”

“You're hurt. Let me help.” She tore the sash from her dress. He leaned against the wall and let her wrap it around his cut, watching her. She was being unusually tender.

It made him uncomfortable, which made him brusque. “What were you doing with Samson anyway? We warned you against him.”

“He was so comely. I didn't mean any harm.” She hesitated in her wrapping. “I just wanted a kiss on the cheek. But he was mean to me.”

“Poor Eloise.” Ric patted her head. “He didn't deserve your kiss.”

She flashed him a brief smile, then went back to wrapping Aiden's hand. Still tender.

“We're your friends,” he scolded. “Me and Ric. Not asshole Samson. We're your partners and you'd do well to remember that.”

She peeked up at him. Her cheeks were rosy. “Partners.”

Aiden's neck prickled.

A stream of gray mist shot around the corner. Aiden stepped back, an arm barred over both Ric and Eloise.

The mist columned, resolving into their master, Nosferatu. “Eloise, are you all right?”

He shoved Aiden away so hard Aiden hit Ric and the two tumbled. When Aiden came to a stop the vampire was peering closely at his daughter's neck. He switched his red glare to Aiden and Ric. “If she were bleeding, you'd be dead.” He turned his attention back to his daughter, solicitous. “Come away from these ruffians. These dirty boys aren't meant for the likes of you.”

“Yes, Papa.” Eloise tucked her hand in his and went with him, her gaze on him full of filial love.

Nosferatu glanced at Aiden over his shoulder. His gaze promised retribution as soon as his daughter was safely in her room.

While Nosferatu glared, Eloise also looked over her shoulder at the boys. She tipped a smile and small wave at Ric.

She blew Aiden a kiss.

Aiden's eyes opened automatically at sunset. The television was dark, the room silent except for Elwood, quietly conversing on the phone with his mate. Aiden lifted himself from the soil and shook off most of it. For his work tonight, a little dirt obscuring his scent would help. He made his preparations then headed for the door, passing the trucker on his way with a mouthed, “I'll be out.” Elwood nodded.

Aiden had carefully picked his meeting spot with Ric. Not too exposed, not too enclosed. He'd settled on the Caffeine Café, the local 24/7 eatery. The café itself was always busy but they had a private room upstairs that was swept regularly for bugs. Not many knew about the room but Aiden made it his business to know such things. He'd called earlier to reserve it and now misted inside from a block away so his scent wouldn't lead enemies to him.

Then he waited. Enemies couldn't smell him but Ric could locate him by blood memory. Assuming Ric had driven down last night and stayed somewhere near, but not in, Meiers Corners, he'd be here soon.

Sure enough, just before nine the air swirled. Reflex made Aiden slide back into the shadows as the mist collapsed into his best—his only—friend.

Six-two with spiky blond hair, Ric Holiday's chiseled features and his eyes, the color of a summer sky, used to make human women sigh and open both their advertising purses and their beds. Now Aiden's friend only cared about making one woman sigh, his wife and expectant mother, Dr. Synnove Byornsson.

“Where's your better half?” Aiden asked.

Ric stiffened before his head came around. “I see you're still skulking in shadows, trying to scare the cool kids.”

Aiden could hear the bravado in his friend's voice. “What's wrong?”

Sure enough, Ric crumpled into a chair. “Synnove. Eloise took her.”

“What?” Aiden sat beside him.


She took my wife
.” Ric's eyes flared red, his nostrils strained white. “Eloise called me, said she had kidnapped Synnove and if I said
anything
she'd hurt her and…oh God.” He covered his eyes.

Aiden cupped Ric's shoulder. “Are you sure Eloise has her?”

Ric sighed and uncovered his face. The red of his eyes had faded and his fangs had ebbed. “Yes. Synnove was at the hospital alone—God, I was trying to give her space, her independence, like Strongwell said. Hospital staff saw several men with that bat marking grab her.”

“Damn it, why?”

“I'm not sure. Eloise kept talking about a picture of Synnove and me. How happy we looked. How Eloise still wanted to be friends. Then she said she wants to meet with me.”

“You can't.”

“How can I not? It's my
wife
.”

“Ric, stop. Think.” Aiden took both Ric's shoulders and tried to make him understand, tried to push sanity past his friend's pain. “We can't go in half-cocked. Luck favors the prepared. We'll find Synnove once we come up with a plan.”

Ric was already shaking his head. “I can't risk it. Eloise hurt you, she kidnapped Synnove—I don't know who she is anymore. I can't risk her hurting my mate.”

“Trust me. Be smart about this. We'll set a trap for Eloise and get Synnove back. Maybe Steel can GPS Synnove's phone.” He released Ric to put in a call to the techie genius, who agreed to search and to Aiden's relief, refused any payment. At least one Alliance male didn't take after his boss. Keys immediately started clicking.

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