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Authors: Amanda Ashley

BOOK: Bound By Blood
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“Maybe between the two of us, we can free him,” Kaitlyn said. She didn’t wait for an answer. Unlocking the door, she turned to face her mother. “Are you coming?”
“Your father won’t be happy about this,” Elena said. “Not happy at all . . . oh,” she murmured as the door swung open and she saw her husband standing on the other side.
“What is it I will not be happy about?” he asked, glancing from his wife to his daughter and back again.
“I want you to let Zack go,” Kaitlyn said angrily. “Right now.”
He didn’t waste time pretending he didn’t know what she was talking about. “This is between me and him.”
“No, it isn’t.”
“Drake,” Elena said, taking a place between her husband and her daughter. “Why didn’t you tell me about this?”
“Two against one,” he muttered. “That is hardly fair.”
“This isn’t like you,” Elena said. “If Kaitlyn loves him . . . we have to trust her judgment.”
“You two can argue later,” Kaitlyn said. “Dad, please get Zack down from the tower.”
Drake stared at his daughter. He had rarely refused her anything she asked for, but this . . . As far back as he could remember, he had been taught that the Others could not be trusted, that they were monsters, incapable of human emotions. And yet his daughter loved Zack. And Zack must love her in return, else why would he have come this far to find her?
“I will release him from the tower when the sun goes down . . .” He held up a hand when Kaitlyn started to speak. “But he will have to stay in the dungeon until I am sure I can trust him.”
Kaitlyn nodded, knowing that was the best she could hope for.
 
 
Just when Zack thought the day would never end, he felt the shift in the atmosphere as the sun began its slow descent. The absence of its deadly rays was a welcome relief. Its light had burned his eyes, its heat had made his blood burn like liquid fire, searing his veins. He had never realized he needed to be in a dark place for the daylight sleep to overtake him. Hovering on the brink of oblivion, unable to escape the sun’s heat, he had cowered under the blankets, squirming like a worm on a hot rock. It had been the worst day of his life. The only relief he had known came from the blood Kaitlyn had left for him. It had strengthened him when the pain grew unbearable. Bless the girl for her thoughtfulness.
Nightfall did nothing to ease the pain of the silver shackles. His neck and ankles were raw where the metal rubbed against his skin.
He had told Kaitlyn the sunlight wouldn’t make him go up in smoke, but he wasn’t sure he could survive another day in the sun.
Feeling as though he were smothering under the blankets, he jerked them away from his face. And saw Kaitlyn’s father staring down at him. He recognized the man standing in the doorway as the mortal who had accompanied Drake before.
Zack glared at Drake, wondering if the vampire was about to drive a stake through his heart. Instead, the mortal stepped forward and unlocked the chain from the bolt in the wall.
“Get up,” Drake said. “Torrance, bring him.”
Before Zack could ask what the hell was going on, Drake turned on his heel and started down the tower stairs.
Torrance tugged on the chain around Zack’s neck. Resigned, Zack followed the man, his steps hobbled by the shackles around his ankles.
When they reached the bottom of the last flight of stairs, Drake moved down the main floor hallway to a narrow wooden door that opened onto another stairway.
Zack’s trepidation increased as they descended farther and farther underground. One flight. Two. Three. And they came to another door. He swore under his breath as Drake opened it.
Zack shuddered as a miasma of pain and blood and death roiled toward him through the open doorway. How many people had suffered in this place? How many had died screaming in agony or begging for mercy?
Clenching his jaw, he followed Drake and Torrance into the bowels of the dungeon.
Drake opened the door to the last cell on the right.
Tugging on the chain, Torrance forced Zack into the cell and fastened the chain around his neck to a bolt in the wall.
“Torrance, leave us,” Drake said.
The man left without a word or a backward glance.
Zack flinched when Drake shut and locked the cell door. “What now?” he asked, turning to face his captor. “You gonna leave me down here to rot?”
“The thought crossed my mind.”
“Listen, Kaitlyn told me about your war with the Others and how her great-grandfather took ’em out. That’s got nothing to do with me.”
“Does it not?”
“No. If I was the kind of inhuman, blood-sucking monster you seem to think I am, I’d have killed Katy and bled her dry by now.”
“Katy.” Drake spoke the word slowly, so that it came out in two syllables. Ka-ty.
“Dammit, you must have some faith in her judgment. You left her alone in Lake Tahoe.”
“Where do you come from?”
“Originally? A little town outside of London that doesn’t exist anymore.”
“How long have you been a vampire?”
“Six hundred years, give or take a few.”
“Have you made others of your kind?”
“Just one. At her request. She works for me.”
“Why not more?”
Zack shrugged. “I didn’t want the responsibility. What about you? Have you made other vampires?”
“We cannot turn others into what we are. What powers do you hold?”
“Just the run-of-the-mill stuff. The ability to read mortal minds. To dissolve into mist. To transport myself across the room or across the world. To change shape.” He grinned. “Into something larger than a cat.”
Something that might have been amusement flickered in Drake’s eyes and was quickly gone.
“What about you?” Zack asked. “Any extra perks from being born a vampire?”
“None beyond what you have mentioned.” Odd, he thought, that they shared the same preternatural powers, yet acquired them in totally different ways. “Can you be active when the sun is up?”
“Only if my life depends on it, and then only indoors and for a short time. You?”
“In my cat form, for as long as I wish. And in this form, for short periods, as long as I am protected from the sun.”
“Kaitlyn’s got the best of both worlds, doesn’t she?” Zack said quietly.
Drake nodded. “You are in love with my daughter.” It wasn’t a question, but a statement of fact.
“Yessir, I am.”
“She is my only daughter, the only child I will ever have.”
“Kaitlyn told me your father had numerous wives and dozens of kids.”
“That is true, but his way is not my way.”
Zack shifted from one foot to the other. The pain of the silver was almost unbearable. Changing position caused the shackles to rub against his burned skin. It took all of his willpower to keep his expression impassive, to stay on his feet, to keep from rubbing the rawness around his neck. But if it killed him, he refused to let the other vampire know how badly he was hurting.
Drake studied Zack Ravenscroft through narrowed eyes. Dried blood stained Ravenscroft’s neck and ankles where the silver had rubbed his skin raw. He knew the other man was in pain, yet there was no sign of it in Ravenscroft’s voice or in his eyes. He stood there, tall and straight, his attitude just short of openly defiant, yet there was a trace of respect in his manner, no doubt in deference to the fact that Drake was Kaitlyn’s father.
“The silver,” Drake asked, though he already knew the answer. “Does it burn? Or merely drain your strength?”
“It burns like hellfire. And if it didn’t weaken me, I’d be on the other side of that door with my hands around your throat.”
Drake grinned inwardly as he turned on his heel and left the dungeon. He had no doubt that Zack Ravenscroft would make a formidable enemy. The worst part was that he found himself liking the other vampire in spite of everything.
Chapter 22
 
Zack cursed long and loud as he sank down on the cold stone floor. If Kaitlyn’s father was going to kill him, why the hell didn’t he just do it and get it over with? Anything would be better than this.
He wondered again how many people—mortal or vampire—had been imprisoned here. Suffered here. Died here. The floor beneath him reeked of old blood, urine, and excrement; the very air was fetid with the scent of death.
Leaning his head back against the wall, Zack closed his eyes and tried to distance himself from the stink that surrounded him, the pain that knifed through him with every movement, every breath. Knowing it was useless, he tried to dissolve into mist, but the silver rendered him powerless, helpless.
And he hated it.
Kaitlyn had asked if he liked being a vampire. He had never really answered her, other than to say that, given a choice, he wouldn’t go back to being mortal. The fact was, he loved being a vampire. He loved the physical power it gave him, the enhanced senses, the ability to read minds, to change shape, to will himself wherever he wished to go. He loved the anticipation and excitement of the hunt. He loved holding a woman in his arms, reading her thoughts, giving her pleasure even as he filled himself with her essence. And yes, if he was honest, he loved knowing that he held the power of life and death in his hands. It wasn’t something he was particularly proud of, but there it was.
“Kaitlyn.” He felt her presence, recognized her scent, even before he opened his eyes. And she was there, her beautiful blue eyes filled with sorrow as she looked at him.
She moved closer to the cell, her hands wrapping around the bars. “Are you all right?” It was a silly question. She could feel his pain, see it in the depths of his eyes, the tight lines around his mouth.
“Oh, yeah,” he muttered, his voice laced with sarcasm. “Never better.”
“I’m so sorry for all this. Zack, why did you come here?”
“I’d think that would be obvious,” he said quietly.
Kaitlyn sighed, touched by the warmth in his voice. “You must have known my father wouldn’t be happy to see you.”
He shrugged, then winced. “I had to try, Katy. I missed you.”
“My hero,” she murmured.
He snorted softly. “Some hero. So, why was your father so insistent that you come home? It wasn’t just to keep you from me.”
“No.” Grimacing, she sat cross-legged on the floor. “My father killed one of his half brothers before I was born. And then you killed Daryn . . .”
“Another brother?”
“Yes. Daryn and the brother my father killed had the same mother. Nadiya. Apparently she’s decided to avenge herself on my father for the deaths of her sons.”
“And your father’s afraid she might use you to get to him.”
“Yes. How did you know?”
“It’s not hard to figure out.” Struggling to his feet, he moved closer to the bars, the shackles that bound his ankles rattling over the stone floor with every step. “He did the right thing, bringing you here.”
“How can you say that?”
“It’s what I would have done, in his place.” Zack reached through the bars, one hand caressing her cheek. “You’re his only daughter, after all, and he loves you.”
“I know,” she said with a sigh. What would she do if her father destroyed Zack? If that happened, she would lose the two most important men in her life, because she would never be able to forgive her father if he destroyed Zack. Never.
“How are your hands?” Zack asked, remembering how the silver had burned her skin earlier.
“Fine.” She held her hands up so he could see her palms. “Silver has never burned me before.”
“Like I said, I think your father infused the chains with some sort of vampire mojo to make sure I couldn’t escape. He probably didn’t expect you to be poking around up there.”
“I knew you were nearby,” she said, a note of wonder in her voice. “I could feel your presence. I heard your voice inside my mind. I could feel what you were feeling.”
“Must be lots of fun now,” he said, grimacing.
“It’s only fair, since you wouldn’t be here if it wasn’t for me.”
“True enough.”
“Kiss me, Zack.”
“Here? Now?”
“What if we never get another chance?”
“Good point.”
It wasn’t easy, squirming around, leaning forward far enough to be able to press his lips to hers, but it was worth it. Her lips were cool and sweet and for that brief moment, he forgot he was bound with silver and locked in a putrid cell in a dungeon, forgot that every breath might be his last.
Chapter 23
 
Drake sat in front of the hearth in his Fortress apartment, his fingers drumming on the arm of the chair. He had a decision to make, and for the first time in years, he wasn’t certain that doing the right thing was the right thing to do.
“Are you going to tell me what’s bothering you?” Elena asked, perching on the other arm. She had been watching him for the last ten minutes, waiting for him to confide in her. “Or are you going to make me guess?” Although guessing wouldn’t be necessary. She knew exactly what was bothering him.
“It is Zack Ravenscroft, of course,” he muttered irritably.
“Ah.” No surprise there, she thought.
“Yes, ah! Dammit, I like him.”
“Really? Well, that does make things more difficult, doesn’t it?”
“You have no idea,” he said, his voice little more than a growl. “He seems honest and forthright. If he was lying to me, I could not tell.” He blew out an impatient sigh. “He claims to love Kaitlyn.”
“Claims to love her? Honestly, Drake, why else would the man come here? If he intended to harm her in any way, I’m sure he’s too smart to try it here, under your very nose! Besides, if he meant her any harm, wouldn’t he have done it before this?”
Drake glared at her.
“You know I’m right, so you might as well admit it.”
He shook his head in resignation. In all their years together, he couldn’t recall a time when she had ever been wrong. It was galling. And endearing.
Pulling her down into his lap, he kissed her soundly, then shook his head, his expression rueful. “Tell me, wife, what do you think it will cost me to make this right with our daughter?”
 
 
Kaitlyn’s demands were few.
“I want you to release Zack immediately. Let him shower. Provide him with clean clothes. Give him a comfortable place to rest during the day. And get used to the idea that, for the foreseeable future, I intend to spend every possible minute with him.”
“Is that all?” her father asked dryly.
“He’ll need something to drink.”
Drake nodded. No doubt providing fresh nourishment should be their first priority. Being in pain always heightened his own hunger. He guessed the same was true for the Others.
“I think you’re getting off easy,” Elena remarked.
“Hush, wife.”
“Hush yourself. I think you owe Zack Ravenscroft an apology.”
“I think so, too,” Kaitlyn said. “Now, if you’ll excuse me, I’m going to find Torrance.”
With an effort, Zack gained his feet when he heard Kaitlyn’s footsteps. She wasn’t alone. The human, Torrance, was with her. He wondered what that meant.
Kaitlyn smiled at him as she hurried toward the cell. “I’ve come to get you out of here,” she said as Torrance unlocked the cell door.
“What about your father?”
“I have his permission, of course.” She hurried into the cell after Torrance, waited impatiently as he unlocked the shackles around Zack’s ankles and removed the chain from around his neck. “Thanks, Torrance. That’s all.”
With a nod, the man left the cell.
“So, what changed your father’s mind about me?” Zack asked.
“I don’t know.” She slipped her arm around his waist. “Lean on me and let’s get out of here. How did you stand the smell?”
“It wasn’t easy.”
“I have a room for you upstairs. Once you’re cleaned up, Northa has offered to let you feed from her.”
Zack came to a stop. “What?”
“She won’t mind,” Kaitlyn assured him.
“I’m not a pet. I don’t need you to bring me food.”
“I’m sorry,” Kaitlyn said, not sure what she had said to upset him. “The humans who stay here, it’s what they do. I thought you understood that. We provide food and shelter and education for their children, and they nourish us when we need it.”
“I understand that, but it’s not my way.”
“All right.” She tugged gently. “Let’s just get out of here.”
It was a painful climb up three flights of stairs, but he didn’t complain. Once they reached the main floor, he stopped leaning on Kaitlyn. A man had his pride, after all.
He followed her down a long corridor before they came to any doors. She opened the first door on the right.
“What’s in the other rooms?” he asked.
“The room next to this one is the library. There’s a music room and an art gallery across the hall. The council chambers are in that big room at the end.”
Zack nodded.
“This is the guest room, I suppose you’d call it,” she said, stepping inside.
Zack followed her into what was a surprisingly modern room. A little too feminine for his taste, but after the tower and the dungeon, he wasn’t about to complain. A number of paintings decorated the pale yellow walls. A beige carpet covered the floor. A ceramic pitcher and a couple of glasses sat atop a three-drawer chest, along with a comb and a hand mirror. A flowered quilt covered a large brass bed. A wooden shelf held a number of books written in several different languages, as well as numerous DVDs and CDs for the TV and stereo housed in a small entertainment unit.
“There’s a bathroom in there,” Kaitlyn said, pointing at the door across from the bed.
Nodding, he went to the window and pulled back the heavy curtain. Although it was dark outside, he could see that the view was spectacular. The Fortress, situated on a mountain peak, overlooked a deep green valley bisected by a narrow ribbon of blue water. With his preternatural sight, he noticed several small cottages in the valley below, their windows glowing with pale yellow lamplight.
He could feel his strength returning. Before dawn, he would go out the window and hunt in the valley below.
“Zack?”
Letting the curtains fall back into place, he turned to face her.
“Is something wrong?”
“No.” He glanced at his bloodstained clothes. “I need to get cleaned up.”
She nodded, her smile brilliant. “I’ll wait for you in the library.”
 
 
Zack lingered in the shower, scrubbing away the dried blood and sweat that clung to him, along with the stink of the dungeon. From what little he had seen, the Romanian vampires lived like Old World royalty. He much preferred his own way. Unfortunately, it looked like Kaitlyn would be staying here until her father deemed it was safe for her to leave, although there was no telling when that would be.
So, he could either stay here with Kaitlyn and make the best of it, or head back to Tahoe alone. He thought about the casino. Scherry could run it without him for as long as necessary.
Zack snorted softly. Like it or not, he figured he would be staying here for the duration, however long that might be.
Stepping out of the shower, he toweled off. One of the best things about being a vampire was how quickly he recovered. His wounds were already healing. Once he fed, the healing process would speed up; by tomorrow night, he’d be as good as new.
He donned the black pants and dark blue sweater Kaitlyn had left for him. While pulling on a pair of soft black leather boots, he had the discomfiting feeling that the clothing belonged to her father, since he and Drake were roughly the same height and weight. He seemed to recall Katy mentioning that he reminded her of her father.
After running a comb through his hair, he left the room. His footsteps made no sound as he made his way to the library. He found Kaitlyn inside, reading a book.
She looked up when he entered the room, a smile of welcome lighting her face.
“You look much better.”
“Thanks. I feel better.” He’d feel more like his old self again once he’d fed, but that would have to wait.
“Would you like a tour of the Fortress?” Kaitlyn asked, setting the book aside.
“Sure.”
“Come on, then,” she said, taking him by the hand.
He had already seen the main floor. The other levels were all downstairs. And underground. Being a vampire, he could appreciate that.
The first floor down held the kitchen, a dining hall, and a laundry room. A low hum of conversation filled the air. Two women were in the kitchen preparing dinner; another woman was folding a load of wash. They all smiled at Zack and Kaitlyn. They were all human and seemed remarkably happy.
As Zack and Kaitlyn were leaving, a woman with curly brown hair and brown eyes entered the dining room.
“Hello, Kaitlyn,” she said pleasantly.
“Hi, Northa.” Kaitlyn hesitated, then said, “Zack, this is Northa. She’s been with us for a long time.”
“Pleased to meet you,” Zack said. He stared at the woman. Her name sounded vaguely familiar. And then he remembered why. This was the woman who had offered to satisfy his thirst.
Kaitlyn and Northa exchanged a few pleasantries, and then, with a last glance in Zack’s direction, Northa excused herself and disappeared into the kitchen.
“I take it she knows I refused her offer,” Zack said dryly.
Kaitlyn shrugged. “It’s no big deal. It’s probably just as well.”
“Oh?” He lifted one brow. “Why is that?”
“Because she couldn’t keep her eyes off of you.”
“Don’t tell me you’re jealous?” Zack exclaimed, grinning.
“Of course not.” She moved past him, walking quickly to the stairs. “This floor has been remodeled,” she remarked when they reached the next level.
There were no windows down here, since this level was underground, but plenty of overhead lights to turn away the gloom.
“There used to be dormitories here and two large recreation rooms,” she said. “Of course, that was before my time. The dorms and one of the rec rooms were turned into individual bedrooms when my father took over.”
“You don’t have any reason to be jealous, you know,” Zack said when she refused to look at him.
“The second rec room is now a combination TV room and playroom.”
“All right, have it your way,” he said, amused by the fact that not only was she jealous of a mortal woman, but she refused to discuss it.
Zack peered into the playroom. There were rugs on the floor, boxes overflowing with toys, shelves filled with books and DVDs, a wall-mounted TV, several sofas, chairs, and tables, as well as a crib in one corner.
All the comforts of home, he thought as he followed Kaitlyn. Yet it still amazed him that there were humans willing to live among vampires, to trade their blood for a place to live. Bizarre. Totally bizarre.
“Our people live here,” Kaitlyn said when they reached the fourth level down.
There were no overhead lights down here. The corridor was dark.
As dark as a tomb,
Zack thought. Which, in a way, was what it was, at least when the sun was up. He glanced at the narrow door at the end of the long hallway and shivered in spite of himself, knowing it was the door to the dungeon below. How many people had died down there in ages past? It was obvious the vampires no longer kept prisoners locked up, since there had been no scent of fresh blood—other than his own.
When they returned to the main floor, Kaitlyn’s father was waiting for them. A woman with long black hair and beautiful brown eyes stood beside him. She looked enough like Kaitlyn to be her older sister.
The woman took a step forward, her hand extended. “Hello, Zack. I’m Kaitlyn’s mother, Elena.”
He shook her hand, his mind automatically brushing hers. He was surprised to find a mental block between them. Apparently, her husband had taught her how to shield her thoughts. “Pleased to meet you, Mrs. Sherrad.”
“Just Elena. We were on our way upstairs to watch a movie. Would you care to join us?”
Zack glanced at Kaitlyn, hoping she would decline. The thought of spending the evening with her father was less than appealing.

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