Authors: Amanda Ashley
Clive punched in Roc's cell number for the second time, cursing softly when all he received was a recorded message. Roc had called earlier that afternoon, reporting that he had nothing to report. Clive had instructed him to stay near the house and to call in every hour, sooner if there was any change in the situation. That had been nine hours ago. Since then, nothing.
After throwing the cell phone across the room, he began to pace the floor. Four possibilities occurred to him: Roc had lost contact with the woman and was afraid to report it; he had managed to get into the house, but hadn't been able to find the books; he had found the books and had decided to either keep them or demand some kind of a reward; or he was dead.
For Roc's sake, Clive hoped it was the latter. Those who betrayed him lived to regret it, but not for very long.
Savanah stared out the window, her elbows resting on the sill as she watched the windblown rain slash through the trees. Lightning speared the lowering gray clouds; thunder rumbled in the distance.
She was going stir-crazy. It had taken her hours to fall asleep last night, and when sleep finally came, her dreams had been populated with Vampires and Werewolves that chased her through a long dark tunnel. She ran until she couldn't run anymore and then, suddenly, in the way of dreams, the scene changed and she was alone in a theater, watching a handsome magician clad in a long black cape. She knew a moment of relief and then, with a wave of his hand, the magician disappeared and a huge black wolf stood in his place. With a low growl, the wolf sprang from the stage, landing only inches from her face, so close she could feel its hot breath on her cheeks, see its fangs. Just when she thought it was going to rip her throat out, the wolf changed again, and now it was Rane bending over her, his eyes bloodred, his fangs dripping blood.
She had stared up at him. “You told me you didn't kill anyone,” she had said, her voice shaking.
“I haven't,” he had replied with a feral grin. “Yet.”
Once again, the sound of her own cries had awakened her.
How much longer did he expect her to stay imprisoned in this house? If she didn't get out soon, she would go insane.
She tapped her fingertips on the sill as she considered her options. Her life was in danger, there was no doubt of that. She could either stay here, hiding away like some coward, or she could go home and face her fears. Her mother and father hadn't run away from danger. They had both hunted Vampires.
Yes,
a little voice murmured in the back of her mind,
and they had both been killed by Vampires.
Rane thought she should stay here, but what was the point? The Werewolf's appearance proved that her whereabouts were no longer a secret. What made Rane think that staying here was any safer than going home? Another Werewolf could show up here tomorrow. Mara could return at any time. Just because Rane said it was all right for them to be here didn't make it so. Mara might have other ideas about an uninvited mortal staying in her lair. Savanah knew good and well that she was no match for a Vampire like Mara.
She wanted to go home, and that was what she was going to do. She would fortify her house as best she could and let the chips fall where they may. She had made her first kill, and while it had sickened her, she had proved she could do it. Her parents hadn't shunned the fight, and neither would she.
Her decision brought with it a sense of peace. When she saw Rane, she would tell him what she had decided, the consequences be damned.
Humming softly, she went into the kitchen to make a sandwich. Carrying it with her, she went down to the rec room in search of something to read. There was no telling when Rane would wake. Until then, she needed something to occupy her time.
The storm didn't sound so loud in the playroom. Standing in front of the bookshelf, she scanned the titles. Mara had a vast library, everything from the works of Shakespeare, Dickens, and Milton to Erma Bombeck and Gary Larsen. It would have taken several lifetimes to collect so many books. Had Mara read them all, Savanah wondered, or did she just like to collect them?
Plucking a copy of
Wuthering Heights
from the shelf, Savanah curled up in one of the chairs and opened the book, only to stare into the distance, thinking about last night. She hadn't said anything to Rane, but he had known what she was thinking. Big surprise. The man could read her mind. He had told her he hadn't killed anyone, but the way he said itâ¦Maybe he hadn't taken a life, but she would have bet everything she owned that he had wanted to.
She nibbled on the sandwich while she tried to imagine what it was like to be constantly at the mercy of such an insidious craving. She was addicted to chocolate; there was no doubt about that. What woman wasn't? But she could go without it if she had to. And if she went without it long enough, the craving went away. She had gone a week without any chocolate once, just to see if she could do it, and she had survived with no ill effects. But Rane's insatiable lust for blood never went away. No matter how often he fed, the hunger was still there the next day and the next, and if he didn't feed, the hunger grew a little worse each day until the pain became excruciating.
Shaking off her gruesome thoughts, she looked down at the book in her lap. Where were her mother's books? What would she do if Rane refused to give them to her?
She had made her first kill. The thought was exciting and repulsive at the same time. But, having done it, she felt the need to record it. If she only knew the Werewolf's name, she could enter it in the book. And her name beside it as the hunter who had destroyed it.
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Rane woke late in the afternoon. Staring into the darkness, he assessed his injuries. The bites and scratches inflicted by the Werewolf had healed; the flesh burned by the sun pained him only a little less than it had the day before. It would be days, perhaps weeks, before the worst of his injuries were fully healed. He had forgotten how painful the touch of the sun's light could be, but he would willingly endure that and more to protect Savanah.
A harsh laugh escaped his lips. He hadn't done such a great job of protecting her. Now that whoever was after the books knew where she was, she wouldn't be safe here any longer. She was a smart girl. No doubt that fact had already occurred to her.
He took a deep breath, and Mara's scent filled his nostrils. He had felt the brush of her mind against his briefly last night. No other Vampire he knew of possessed the power to reach across continents and oceans. Truly, Mara was a law unto herself, a creature with Supernatural abilities that bordered on the divine. The inhabitants of the earth could count themselves fortunate that she had no desire to dominate them.
He opened his senses as his thoughts drifted to the other woman in his life. He could hear Savanah moving about in the kitchen upstairs, no doubt preparing something to eat. The thought of food aroused his own hunger. He needed to feed again. It was the only way to ease the pain that burned through him with every breath.
Sitting up, he swung his legs over the edge of the bed. The movement, slight as it was, made his wounds sing. Hands clenched, he took several slow, deep breaths. Damn, why hadn't he said yes when Mara offered him her blood? Had he done so, he wouldn't be hurting so badly now. One thing was for certain, if she made him the same offer again, he wouldn't refuse.
He grunted softly. Little good that did him now.
Rising, he went into the bathroom and turned on the water in the bathtub. He ran his hands over his face, wincing as his fingers brushed singed flesh. For the first time, he was grateful that he couldn't see his reflection. Imagining how he must look, he found it rather surprising that Savanah hadn't run screaming from the sight.
He undressed while the tub filled, his hands exploring the burned flesh on his arms, neck, and back. Only his legs had escaped the sun's wrath.
With a sigh, he stepped into the tub, sank into the blessedly cool water, and closed his eyes.
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Savanah glanced at the clock. It was after four. Rane was usually up by now. Of course, being badly hurt, he probably needed more rest than usual.
And more blood,
she thought with a shudder. She wondered what he would say when she told him she had decided to go home. Would he agree, try to convince her to stay here, or simply refuse to let her go?
She fixed a glass of iced tea, then went down to the rec room, kicked off her shoes, and turned on the satellite screen. Picking up the remote, she flipped through the channels until she found a movie she hadn't seen, then settled back on the sofa. Try as she might, she couldn't concentrate on the screen. Instead, she kept glancing over her shoulder, expecting Rane to appear at any minute. Where was he? She drummed her fingertips on the arm of the sofa. Had he been injured worse than she thought? Maybe he lacked the strength to rise.
She sipped her tea, her anxiety growing with every passing moment. Where the heck was he? A sudden coldness clenched her insides. What if he had died in the night? No! She shook her head. That was impossible.
But what if he had?
She was thinking about going down to the subbasement to see if she could get into Mara's private quarters when Rane walked into the room. She couldn't help staring at him.
“I'd tell you it looks worse than it feels,” he said dryly, “but it would be a lie.”
“Are you all right, otherwise?”
He shrugged. Because he hadn't trusted himself to be with Savanah until after he'd fed, he had gone hunting earlier, something made possible by the heavy cloud cover that obscured the sun. He had preyed upon four young men he had found camped a few miles farther up the mountain. They had all been strong and healthy, football players by the look of them, and he had fed, and fed well.
Still feeling the need to keep his distance from Savanah, he sat in the chair across from the sofa. He had never been vain about his looks; he knew women found him attractive, but he felt strangely embarrassed by his monstrous appearance. That in itself was odd, he thought, since he was a monster on the inside no matter what his outward appearance might be.
“What did you do with the Werewolf?” Savanah asked.
“I dumped his body in a deep ravine at the top of the mountain.”
“Did you know him?”
“No. Why?”
“I just wondered. I've never killed anyone before, you know.” She shrugged. “I didn't even know his name.”
“His legal name was Samuel Jefferson, according to his driver's license. Does that make you feel any better about it?”
“Of course not!” she retorted. “I killed a man. Taking a life may be old hat to you, but it's a new experience for me.”
Rane dragged a hand through his hair. “I'm sorry,” he said, his voice gruff. “I didn't mean⦔
“It's all right. I know you didn't mean it. We've both been under a lot of pressure in the last few weeks.”
“That's no excuse. I know how difficult this must be for you.”
“Do you?”
“Maybe not. I was no longer mortal when I made my first kill. It came easily to me,” he said quietly. “Perhaps too easily.”
“I'm not sorry for what I did,” she said, a note of defiance creeping into her voice. “He meant to kill us, but⦔
“But it's an awesome and troubling responsibility, the taking of a life.”
“Yes. But given the same circumstances, I'd do it again.”
Rane smiled in spite of himself. She had the face of an angel and the courage of a mama bear defending her young.
“I've decided to go home,” Savanah said.
“Indeed?”
She squared her shoulders and lifted her chin. “Yes, tomorrow night. I'll be needing my mother's books, so I can pack them.”
“I see. And if I think you and the books should stay here?”
“I'm going home, Rane. My whereabouts are no longer a secret.”
“I haven't done a very good job of protecting you, have I?”
“I didn't say that.”
He regarded her a moment, the tension in the air building until it hummed like a hot wire between them. And then he blew out a sigh. “I'll take you home, if that's what you want.”
“Will you stay with me for a while?”
“Stay, as in stay in the city, orâ¦?”
“Stay with me, at my house, only if you want to, of course.”
“What do you think?”
A flush rose in her cheeks. “I'm new to all thisâ¦Vampire hunting,” she clarified before he could say anything. “I could use your help.”
“Are you sure you want to team up with me?”
“I think we've done all right together so far. That Werewolf would have killed me if it wasn't for you.”
He shrugged, reluctant to admit it even though he knew it was true. “He was after the books, wasn't he?”
Savanah nodded. Maybe Rane was right. Maybe she should just burn the damn things. She stared into the distance, remembering the horror of the afternoon, reliving her fear, not only for her own life, but for Rane's as well.
Rane drummed his fingers on the arm of the chair. “I just wish I knew who sent him.”
“What makes you think he was working for someone else?” The idea chilled her to the bone. She wanted to believe that, with the Werewolf's death, her worries were over.
“Just a hunch. I keep asking myself why a Werewolf would want the books, and why a Werewolf and a Vampire are working together.”
“So he wasn't the Werewolf you smelled at my house?”
“No.” Rane ran a hand over his jaw. “I can understand why a Vampire would want the books, but a Werewolfâ¦?” He shook his head. “Unless⦔
“Unless?”
“I don't know. Vampire hunters have been disappearing, but I haven't heard of any Vampire or Vampires who've suddenly gone on a killing spree. For one thing, Mara wouldn't stand for it. So that leaves the Werewolves and the shape-shifters.” He shook his head again. “I'd rule out the shifters, so that leaves the Wolves. Maybe they want to start another war. Maybeâ¦hell, I don't know.”