SEDUCTIVE SUPERNATURALS: 12 Tales of Shapeshifters, Vampires & Sexy Spirits (36 page)

Read SEDUCTIVE SUPERNATURALS: 12 Tales of Shapeshifters, Vampires & Sexy Spirits Online

Authors: Erin Quinn,Caridad Pineiro,Erin Kellison,Lisa Kessler,Chris Marie Green,Mary Leo,Maureen Child,Cassi Carver,Janet Wellington,Theresa Meyers,Sheri Whitefeather,Elisabeth Staab

Tags: #12 Tales of Shapeshifters, #Vampires & Sexy Spirits

BOOK: SEDUCTIVE SUPERNATURALS: 12 Tales of Shapeshifters, Vampires & Sexy Spirits
13.99Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

* * *

 

The livery was filled with animals that had been bartered for money to buy mining equipment, and I was fortunate enough to have a pick of three of the heartiest horses. The expense took a toll on my savings, but there was no choice. I had to get away. I would leave a note for Sawyer under the storeroom door where only he could find it. I would explain where I’d gone and why. I would beg for him to understand. I would make amends. But I could do nothing if Jake showed up to kill me and so I had to make haste.

When I returned, Athena and Chick were waiting. I took the horses to the back and we loaded them, knowing that we might not make it through another day. I shuddered when I imagined Aiken’s reaction to finding us gone. I wished that Honey would come, too, but I knew for her, death was preferable to being responsible for what he’d do to her family.

“I’ll take care of Meaira,” Honey told us as she hugged me good-bye.

“And I’ll take care of Chick and Athena,” I said in an undertone, so Athena wouldn’t hear. She’d like as not have my head for such a presumption.

“You’re the bravest woman I’ve ever met,” Honey said as she held me tight.

Before she could step away, Aiken rounded the corner . . . and with him was Jake Smith.

It all happened fast, yet each moment imprinted in my mind. Aiken yanked Chick off her horse and pushed her back against the rail. Athena and I had yet to mount and Athena rushed to Chick’s side only to be dealt a leveling blow from Aiken. Jake had his gun pointed at my heart before I saw it clear the leather of his holster. I stared down the barrel of it, knowing my last breath was about to be drawn. “You killed my brother,” he said.

“You killed mine first,” I said back, nearly laughing at the childish exchange. But there was nothing funny about dying. Nothing funny about having your body riddled with bullets. From the corner of my eye, I saw Athena, sprawled at Aiken’s feet. He had one boot pressed against her face and was grinding her cheek into the gravel. He held Chick by the throat, as he had me last night, but there was more restraint than intent in his grip. She was sobbing, begging that he forgive her.

The weight of my failure nearly overwhelmed me. Whatever I’d intended, I’d most certainly sealed our fates with my brash plan. Had I really thought I could outsmart Aiken Tate?

“It your baby, Aiken,” Chick sobbed. “It yours cuz ain’t no one else wit me then. We was away on the trail. You ’member?”

Aiken looked dumbfounded, and I had a moment to wonder if Chick told the truth. Why hadn’t she said so before? Would it make a difference?

Aiken frowned at her. “Baby?” he sneered. “Ain’t no baby of mine.” He faced Jake again and said, “Are you going to kill her or fuck her?”

Glaring at me, Jake snorted. “Both.”

He lowered the gun and then whipped my face with it. It felt as if my cheek had exploded and I reeled back, crying out with the pain. I realized as I lay crumpled on the ground, that I was calling Sawyer’s name.

Jake leaned over me. “He ain’t going to save you, girlie.”

Then he yanked my skirts up and tore my undergarments away. My rage became something wild and living.

I had survived too much to give in to this monster. Aiken stood watching with cold enjoyment as Jake fumbled his britches open. I felt the hardness of his belt, the stiff leather of his holster and something else . . . My hands were pinned at my sides, but Jake’s knife sheath was just at the tips of my fingers.

He loosened his pants and pulled himself free. I forced myself to relax against the rocky ground and spread my legs so that he slipped between them, bringing my hands within gripping range. My fingers curled around the smooth hilt of his knife, and I slid it free just as he shoved into me. My shout was of humiliation, of violation, but most of all, of rage. I came up hard with the knife, slamming it into his side just beneath his ribs and then yanking it out as he sat straight up, reaching for the wound. Before he could react, I’d buried it to the hilt in his heart. His face contorted with pain and shock. He wavered, still between my legs, his erection not yet aware that the rest of him was dead. I pushed him back and wiggled away as he fell over.

Aiken stared at me like he couldn’t believe what he’d seen. I couldn’t believe it, either, but I wouldn’t cower. I faced him brave and bold and utterly defenseless. I realized too late I’d left Jake’s knife embedded in his chest.

Time simply stopped.

His foot still ground Athena’s face into the dirt. He still held Chick’s throat clenched in his left hand. And I stood before him.

“Let her go,” I ordered.

A bemused smile tipped his mouth. “No,” he said, but then he pushed Chick away and pulled his gun in one swift movement. All sense of time and place left me as I saw Chick stumble over Athena’s inert body at the same moment Aiken cocked his pistol. I heard the sound of the shot crack the air, smelled the smoke, tasted the gunpowder at the back of my throat, and then something slammed into me with a force that knocked me backward. I felt as if I were being smothered. My skirts had somehow tangled around my face as I fell, and I fought to get free, waiting all the while for the paralyzing pain and the blood that would spill with my life.

I heard a sound I didn’t understand as, at last, I tore free of the fabrics that caught me like a web. I struggled up and out and only then did I realize what had happened. Chick lay sprawled beside me, the back of her blue dress stained with blood. The sound I heard was Athena, keening like an animal as she clawed her way over to Chick. Her face was bloody where she’d sacrificed the skin of her cheek to get free.

I heard myself screaming, “No, no,” over and over as understanding filled me. Chick had pushed me out of the way and taken Aiken’s bullet.

I spun to face Aiken, thinking I would rip him apart with my bare hands for what he had done. He didn’t hesitate or mourn the sweet girl that lay at our feet. He raised his gun again and pointed at my chest.

“Don’t do it, Aiken.”

Honey’s voice rang out in the same instant the gunshot boomed loud around me. My hands went instinctively to my heart, trying to protect against the hard flash of death. But there was no blood to hold back. No pain to endure. Stunned, I locked eyes with Aiken.

As if rehearsed, the two of us turned our heads to face Honey. She stood on the porch, my daddy’s rifle in her hands. A small wisp of smoke drifted from the barrel.

“That’s for my baby brother,” she said. Her hands shook as she struggled to open the chamber and load it again. I saw Aiken think about how he could get the rifle away from her, but already the feeling must have drained from his fingers as his gun clattered to the ground. Blood spread in a seeping circle from the first bullet she’d put through him, and I knew it was shock more than aggression that kept him standing. She slammed the chamber shut and pointed it again.

“This is for me,” she said softly, and pulled the trigger again.

 

Diablo Springs: Chapter Thirty-Three

 

 

Reilly had seen violence. He’d been raised on it. But he’d never seen cold-blooded murder. Bill lay bleeding on the floor, and Jonathan, the man Reilly had thought harmless, held the gun pointed at Analise.

His daughter, who he’d only just met.

“I want what’s mine. I want the money. I want my
share
.”

“Wait,” Gracie said, trying to protect Analise. Brendan had moved in closer, looking for an opening. The dogs growled and snapped.

“I’ll kill those dogs,” Jonathan warned.

Reilly saw Gracie consider the odds of them getting to Jonathan before he could do any harm. Jonathan cocked the gun and kept it trained on Analise’s head.

“I’ll kill her first, though.”

Gracie told the dogs to stay. Then she held her hands out, placating him as she tried to reason with him. “There
was
money. A long time ago. My grandmother gave it to me when she sent me away. Fifty thousand dollars. I never knew where she got it, but she gave it to the woman who took me in. She used it to raise me, to help me and Analise get started in life. It’s gone now.”

The look on Jonathan’s face made Reilly’s stomach plunge, and a tightness gathered in his belly. It was a look of desperation. The look of a man who’d banked everything on door number one, only to find nothing behind it.

“It’s not gone,” he said through gritted teeth. “It’s here. He stole it from me.” Jonathan waved his free hand at the pulsing light, speaking to it like it was a person. “We was partners, and then you brought
her
here to make a mess of
everything
.
You let them gun me down like a
dog
.”

He centered his aim at Analise’s face, and Reilly took another step, gauging the distance, thinking if he could just move fast enough, he might be able to get between Analise and Gracie and the bullets.

“Get back,” Jonathan said. “I will kill both of them without even thinking about it. I
want
to kill them. I’ve wanted it for a long, long time.”

Reilly froze.

“Now,” Jonathan said to Gracie. “I want you follow Sawyer and you tell him to give me my
fucking share
.”

At their blank looks, he used his chin to point at the glowing orb.

“Sawyer,” Chloe breathed. The glowing orb danced and drifted, seemingly with purpose, until it dipped down and touched Gracie.

Jonathan made a sound that crossed anger and excitement. “Is he talking to you? Did he tell you?”

Gracie looked past him to Reilly. Fear gleamed from her eyes, but her voice was steady when she answered. “Yes,” Gracie said. “He told me. We need to follow him.”

Reilly didn’t know if she spoke the truth or if she meant to trick Jonathan, but his ship was bound to hers, no matter where she decided to sail. He’d been a fool and lost her once; he’d die before he let that happen again.

The storm outside slammed into the house, growing in intensity, and rain hit the roof in a never-ending bombardment. The orb passed through the wall and out into the raging tempest. Jonathan shoved Chloe’s frail body out front while he took Analise in the same tight, indefensible clutch that he’d held Reilly in when he’d brought him down the stairs. Gracie stayed close to her daughter. Reilly was still looking for a way to intervene without getting them both killed, but hadn’t come up with anything yet.

The dogs charged the door as soon as it closed, barking wildly as they watched Gracie and Analise move away.

“Somebody does something I don’t like, I pull the trigger. I just need one of you. The other’s security. You hear me?”

They heard. They
all
heard.

Gun still aimed at the women, Jonathan shot a fierce look at Reilly. “This is as far as you go.”

Reilly didn’t move fast enough, but Brendan did. The kid managed to push him just as the gun went off. He felt the bullet part the air where his head had been. Tangled in their momentum, Reilly and Brendan went down in the slippery mud and rolled down a slope, bouncing over rocks and jagged edges until they banked against the side of a boulder. They couldn’t see Jonathan anymore, but Reilly hoped that meant Jonathan couldn’t see them, either.

He heard the man shout, “You follow me and I will kill her just like I should’ve done before. I’ll kill them both, and I’ll like it.”

Reilly’s mouth was dry. Jonathan moved like a man who’d been born with a pistol in his hand, and Reilly didn’t doubt that when he got what he wanted, he would kill the women. He would kill everyone and think nothing of it.

He cast Brendan a look. The kid stared back, eyes hard and determined. He looked like he’d just woken up from a bad dream.

“He means to kill them, no matter what happens,” Brendan said. “
Fuck
. That animal’s been in my head. I didn’t even know he was there.”

Understanding finally came—all the little idiosyncrasies in Brendan’s personality, the passive-aggressive attitude, the sense that two men had looked out from those blue eyes, but this wasn’t the time to dwell on revelations. Reilly needed to think if Gracie and Analise were going to survive this. Nothing else mattered.

Reilly couldn’t see Jonathan or the women anymore, but as he clawed his way up the incline he’d just plummeted down, he saw the bobbing light they had been following. It moved toward the springs where other lights waited. Dead Lights, dozens of them, hanging over the rising black waters like stars pinned low in the sky.

“Follow me,” he said to Brendan.

He and the kid fought the storm as it tried to sweep them off the slippery planking that led to the springs, keeping the orb in their sights while trying to remain hidden. They needn’t have worried. They couldn’t see five feet in front them. The flood waters had breached the surface and raced fast over their feet.

They moved swiftly, though, and in minutes, they’d caught up enough that they could hear the conversation.

“Jonathan,” Chloe cried, the storm tearing her words out and hurling them into the night. “I know you’re still in there. Listen to me. Don’t let Aiken use you this way.”

Reilly could make out the murky outline of Jonathan’s silhouette. He still had the gun pointed at Analise.

“Will killing me bring you peace?” Chloe demanded. “You don’t belong in this world. You had your time.”

“My time was stolen. My share was taken.
This
is my time.”

 

Diablo Springs: Chapter Thirty-Four

 

 

July 1896

Diablo Springs

 

Aiken’s bullet had lodged itself somewhere in Chick’s body, but we could not find it to remove it. We were able to staunch the blood and then finally stop it, but her eyes never opened again. Carefully, we took her upstairs and laid her on the bed she’d been so proud to call her own. Athena grew silent and protective and refused to let us help bathe the blood from Chick’s frail body. She wrapped Chick in clean cotton strips and took up vigil beside her bed.

As Honey and I left the room, she looked at me. “Death. That all you is. Death. You take all I live for and kill it. I curse you now. No child of yours will walk proud in this world. No child will be blessed with good, only bad. I curse you.”

Other books

Piano in the Dark by Pete, Eric
The Birthday Present by Barbara Vine
The Sheep Look Up by John Brunner
Sex and the Single Earl by Vanessa Kelly
Erinsong by Mia Marlowe
Double Dealing (2013) by Cajio, Linda
My Hero by Mary McBride
Sweet Surrender by Maddie Taylor
Most Precious Blood by Susan Beth Pfeffer