Broken Heart 04 Wait till Your Vampire Gets Home (19 page)

BOOK: Broken Heart 04 Wait till Your Vampire Gets Home
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“Dad,” I said, my voice quivering. “Do you have a lighter?”

 

I didn’t know why the red dragon was bothering with the Wiccans, when I was obviously the prime target. Maybe it needed toys to play with while Synd killed me. Because I felt very much like I was dying.

 

Mom and Dad low-crawled toward me. When they reached me, Mom draped her arms around my shoulders. “How can we help?”

 

You gotta love my parents. They were the ultimate in going with the flow.

 

My throat clogged. I felt my blood thickening. All the warmth in my body was being siphoned away. “Need. Fire.”

 

Dad flicked a lighter near my fingertips. His hand shook as his gaze met mine. It was obvious he couldn’t set his little girl on fire. He looked scared, and that scared me. Dad was never afraid.

 

“Light. Me.”

 

“Are you sure, honey?”

 

“Elmore, give me that!” My mother yanked the lighter out of his hand and stuck it under my arm. The tiny flame offered a pianississimo note, so soft I could barely hear it. But it was there. I listened hard and welcomed its song.

 

“C’mon, Sybina,” I whispered. “Don’t let your brother win. Don’t let us die.”

 

My arm ignited. My mother dragged my father backward, away from me. The fire song surged through me as the flames rejoined my dragon soul. The rope of magic between me and Synd lengthened, getting thinner and thinner. His obnoxious music—Sheesh, what was that crap? Mötley Crüe on an elevator with ten seconds to live?—started to fade.

 

Synd bellowed and dove toward me.

 

Chapter 20

 

Pop! Pop! Pop!

 

The blue dragon screeched as it jerked in rhythm to each sharp crack. Several more shots were fired from invisible sources, and each one found a thigh, a wing, a leg. Wailing pathetically, Synd soared up into the inky dark and disappeared.

 

The red dragon stopped lobbing fireballs at the Wiccans. Roaring, it twisted around and flapped leathery wings double-time to catch up with its retreating companion.

 

“And don’t come back,” I shouted, shaking my fist. But I knew they would return, which in an odd way was a good thing because we still needed to get dragon spit.

 

In front of me, four large green bubbles, all emitting an electric hum, emerged out of thin air. Brady and his three-man rescue team appeared; all were dressed in a strange black material that couldn’t be burned, torn, or cut. They also held submachine guns of a make and model that did not technically exist. Both the outfits and the weapons were just more secrets Brady had brought with him from his mysterious government job.

 

The team surrounded me, Mom, and Dad, and took aim at the sky. If Synd made the mistake of returning, he’d get another round of bullets—hopefully in his big, stupid skull.

 

Brady stepped toward me and took off his headgear. His face was painted black. His brown eyes looked me over. His form of concern was to ascertain if there were injuries, and if so, how to treat them. That was about it. Brady was not an emotive man.

 

“You okay?” he asked.

 

“Peachy,” I said. My fire went out, my song shut up, and exhaustion poured through me.

 

“You’re naked,” he said. “And your hair’s on fire.”

 

I touched the top of my head and felt the heat of the flames still flickering there. I patted them out. Damn it. My body suffered no ill effects from the fire, but obviously I needed to rethink my wardrobe. Where could a girl buy clothes that were dragon-proof?

 

Without my dragonfire, I got cold, and quick. Brady removed his flak jacket and slung it over my shoulders. It was heavy but not warm. Then Dad wrapped his coat around me. I was buried to my ankles in snow. Very cold, icy snow.

 

I shivered and my teeth chattered.

 

“What’s the plan?” asked Brady.

 

“We get our daughter the hell out of here,” said Dad gruffly.

 

“I think we should stay,” said Mom.

 

“What for?” asked Dad.

 

“To meet vampires and werewolves. To study this fascinating town. To find out how our daughter became a dragon.” She looked at me, her brown eyes twinkling. “What else could you be? But mostly, Elmore, I think we should stay because the nice people headed this way probably won’t let us leave.”

 

“Men, move out.” Brady dropped his headgear and lifted his gun. “We’ll find you and get you out.”

 

He pushed a button on a wrist gadget. In the blink of an eye and a flash of sizzling green, he and his team disappeared.

 

“Wait!” yelled Patsy. She was followed by Gabriel, Lorcan, and several others. Behind them was a mud-splattered white Mercedes. On the other side of the yard, the triplets were herding the Wiccans into a large paneled truck.

 

“Oh for fuck’s sake!” She marched up to us. “Who were those guys? Where did they go?”

 

“Brady and his team go wherever they like,” said my mother. She was not the kind of woman who could be bossed around by anyone.

 

“Not in Broken Heart,” snapped Patsy. “Call them back now.”

 

Mom turned her dark eyes on the vampire queen. “No.”

 

Patsy’s mouth dropped open. It took a full minute for her to grasp my mother’s unorthodox response to facing the ruler of vampires and werewolves. Then Patsy’s eyes went red and she pointed at Mom.

 

Mom raised her palm in a “stop” gesture. “Don’t bother with the glamour. I’m immune. We all are.”

 

“How the hell—”

 

“Can we save the interrogation until we get Liberty out of the snow and into some clothes?”

 

Patsy blinked, her ire cooled by my mother’s practicality. “Yeah. Sure.”

 

“Where’s the compound?” I asked.

 

“On the other side of town. Don’t worry, Ralph and his boys made it. They’re safe.” Patsy gestured to Lorcan. “Can you do that wooky-woo stuff and clothe the woman?”

 

“What the hell is wooky-woo?” I asked, alarmed. I stepped back, my gaze zeroing in on Lorcan. “Does it hurt?”

 

“No,” said Lorcan. “I can create clothing with my magic. Would you like to go somewhere private?”

 

Well, yeah. I think I’d been more naked in Broken Heart than I ever had at the nudist colony. Quite frankly, the only person in this town I wanted to see me naked was on the other side of town. I was so relieved that Ralph and the boys were okay, and yet a selfish part of me wished Ralph was here. Or I was there. I just wanted to see him with my own eyes.

 

Lorcan escorted me inside the smoldering house. The kitchen was intact, so we went in there.

 

“I’m sorry,” he said. “I’ll have to look at you in order to . . . er, do the wooky-woo.”

 

“Hey, I’m not the one who has to explain it to your wife,” I said, shucking off the coat and flak jacket.

 

He flinched. “Don’t remind me.”

 

Lorcan pointed his pale fingers at me, and gold sparkles shot out and wove around me. The first items that appeared were a white lace bra and matching panties. Thick socks and leather ankle boots materialized next, then faded jeans and a brown cashmere sweater. He’d even managed a long wool coat with a hood, and gloves—both a luxurious cream color.

 

“Wow,” I said. “That’s the most awesome power I’ve seen yet. You’re like a walking

Saks Fifth Avenue
.”

 

“You don’t know the half of it.” He gestured for me to walk ahead of him. I didn’t know if he was being a gentleman or just cautious.

 

When I got back outside, my parents were gone, and so was everyone else. Only Gabriel and Patsy waited near the Mercedes.

 

“Where’s Mom and Dad?” I asked. Trepidation echoed in my voice.

 

“Don’t get your knickers in a knot,” said Patsy. “We sent them off to the compound. You can ride with us and tell me what the hell’s going on.”

 

Lorcan still walked behind me. Gabriel was on the other side of the Mercedes, his hand on the opened driver’s door. Patsy was in front of me, just a couple of feet away from the car.

 

I don’t know why I didn’t hear the fire song in time; the fireball that exploded the Mercedes was certainly screeching loudly enough.

 

Patsy was knocked to the ground in front me. Gabriel flew backward, across the street and into a copse of trees. I had no idea what had happened to Lorcan. Given the blaze, he might be ash. But Patsy wasn’t.

 

I grabbed her by the arms and dragged her away from the burning car. Heat buzzed in my spine and flared out to every nerve ending. Sybina was angry.

 

So was I.

 

My whole body quaked with a new power, a different energy I didn’t understand and wasn’t exactly controlling. I stared up at the creature as the electric heat whipped around me and Patsy.

 

When I looked up, I saw that the red dragon had returned. I hoped Synd was bleeding somewhere. And that he was in pain. Not very nice thoughts. Bad karma thoughts, but deserved, damn it.

 

The dragon flew backward and landed on the street. An Asian woman dressed in red leather slid off its back. Again with the leather! Ugh. She sashayed toward me, her smirk ruining an otherwise pretty face. Her aura was blue. I was beginning to understand the auras seen by my dragon half. Vampires were blue, werewolves were red, and, well, I wasn’t quite sure what purple or gold meant yet.

 

“Who are you?” she asked, though her tone indicated she couldn’t care less. Her gaze flicked to Patsy and her smarmy grin widened.

 

Energy crackled inside me. I felt encased in a tornado of heat, but the swirling power didn’t seem to impress the woman. She put her palms about a foot apart. A ball of fire formed in the space between her hands.

 

“Lia! Don’t!”

 

The shout came from above. A man dropped from the sky, landing deftly between the woman and the bubble of electricity around me and Patsy. I remembered seeing him at the meeting. He was dressed in a T-shirt, jeans, and Converses; his dark hair was savaged by my whirlwind.

 

“Hello, Ruadan.” Lia tossed the fireball at him.

 

The ground shook under our feet and split open.

 

From the gap rose a huge wave of water, which doused the fire and soaked Lia. She spluttered angrily, backing toward her dragon. The creature raised its head; smoke curled from its nostrils.

 

A well-dressed man, shorter than Ruadan, with curly hair and dark eyes, walked toward us. His hands were aimed at the water, and I realized he was manipulating it. I recognized him from the meeting, too.

 

“Velthur, you ass!” Lia screeched. “Do you know how much this outfit cost?”

 

I gaped at her. The woman was psychotic. She obviously didn’t value life, especially if she wore some poor cow’s tanned and colored skin. I bet she had killed the animal she was wearing. Argh! When it dried, I hoped it tightened to the point of cutting off her circulation. Well, if she had circulation.

 

Following the man named Velthur were three black wolves. The triplets, I was sure. I heard growls and snarls to the left of me; a really huge white wolf loped across the street. Its aura was purple, and I knew it was Gabriel.

 

The other three lycanthropes surrounded Lia.

 

“Libby,” yelled an Irish voice behind me. Lorcan. He was okay! I couldn’t believe how relieved I felt. “You have to stop,” he continued to yell, “so we can get to Patsy.”

 

“I . . . I can’t,” I said. “I don’t know how to turn it off.”

 

Chapter 21

 

The energy bubble grew bigger and bigger. I wasn’t in control of it, but I think Sybina might’ve been. At least I hoped so. All the while, I couldn’t take my gaze from Lia. She didn’t seem at all concerned that she was trapped by vampires and werewolves.

 

The white wolf crouched in front of me, howling. He couldn’t get near us. I realized Gabriel was crazy with worry.

 

“She’s unconscious, but alive,” I called. “We’ll be okay.”

 

He barked, his paws digging at the ground by the edge of the electrified field.

 

Lia was dripping wet, but she hadn’t lost her smirk. Her dragon lifted its head and shot fire at Velthur; he aimed the water at it and smacked it in the head. The dragon choked and sputtered, then lay on the street, as if defeated.

 

Ruadan stalked Lia, who retreated even closer to her dragon. Velthur kept his hands pointed at the gushing water, obviously ready to use it when needed.

 

Ruadan made two short swords appear in his hands. They were gold and bejeweled and very, very sharp. He swung them expertly, dancing closer to Lia.

 

Lia responded by creating two swords of her own, but hers were made of fire. The flames highlighted the wild look of her dark eyes.

 

“Is that any way to treat your wife?” she asked sweetly.

 

“Ex-wife,” said Ruadan. “Don’t do this, Lia. What do you hope to accomplish?”

 

“You never were ambitious, Ruadan. You, who are the child of gods, would rather live in harmony with humans. You should rule them!” She punctuated her words by slashing at him with her fire blades.

 

He dodged easily.

 

I heard Synd’s evil, screaming song. Shit. He came at us with full fire; blue-green sparks of his magic ribboned within the flames. The blaze shot toward Velthur and turned the water into steam. The vampire wasn’t deterred, even though it was obvious to me that throwing water bombs at the new threat was taking its physical toll. I stared at Synd; something wasn’t quite right with him. His fire song sounded weird and I couldn’t see his aura.

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