Read Storm (Blood Haze: Book Two) A Paranormal Romance Online
Authors: Tara Shuler
didn’t… well, I wish…”
“I know, Kai. You don’t have to say it.”
He leaned over and wrapped his arms around
me, and I put my head on his shoulder. I felt his
jaw clench against my head, and I knew he was
upset. He must have been trying not to cry.
“I love you,” he said quietly, his voice
threatening to break.
“Oh, Kai,” I breathed. “I love you, too. I hope
you know that.”
“I do.”
“Please don’t ever forget.”
He pulled the blankets back and got into bed
beside me. Wrapping his arms around me, he fell
asleep. It felt so good to lie there with him that I
actually went back to sleep, too.
I woke up around noon, and Kai was gone. I
felt a twinge of loneliness again, and I went
downstairs. Kai was in the kitchen, and his back
was facing me. I couldn’t tell what he was doing.
He turned around and smiled when he heard me
shuffling across the floor.
“I was making you something to eat,” he said,
beaming proudly.
“Oh, my gosh, thank you,” I said, suppressing
a yawn. “I’m starving.”
He turned around with a tray in his hands. He
had a bud vase holding a single rose on the tray,
along with a can of Diet Coke, a glass of ice, and
a roast beef sandwich with carrot sticks and
ranch dressing – my favorite lunch.
“I was going to serve you in bed,” he
mentioned, placing the tray in front of me on the
bar.
I hopped up on a stool. “Are you going to join
me?”
“I’m not hungry,” he said. “But I will sit with
you while you eat.”
It was hard to choke down the food. It was my
favorite, but all of the emotions I’d felt the past
few days were still raw. Max was gone, and Kai
was too good for me. I felt like the world’s most
evil person. I’d betrayed Kai yesterday, and I was
sure he knew the extent, yet he was going to
serve me lunch in bed. I was truly, truly evil.
“Let’s do something together,” I suggested.
“Anything you want,” Kai agreed.
“Maybe we could go out to dinner tonight,” I
suggested.
“We could do that.”
“A movie maybe?”
“Sure.”
“Could we go to Tybee tonight?” I asked
quietly, nibbling a carrot.
Kai was quiet. I peeked at him, and he was
staring at me with a slight smile on his face.
“You really want to go to Tybee?”
“I think it would be good for us to be there
together again.”
“I agree,” he said.
“So let’s have dinner and a movie tonight,” I
said. “And after we’ll go to Tybee.”
“Sounds good,” he said, planting a kiss on my
forehead.
I’d been afraid he wouldn’t want to go to
Tybee – like maybe our relationship was so
damaged he wouldn’t want to go there with me
anymore, because it would taint the place. But
instead, my asking to go seemed to give him
hope that things would be okay. I guess he
thought I must really still love him if I wanted to
go there with him.
It was settled.
*****
Chapter Four – Renewal
Kai chose the movie and I chose the dinner
location. We watched an action movie, which I
was happy about. I wasn’t one for watching
sappy chick flicks, anyway. I preferred science
fiction and action movies.
For dinner, I chose Italian food. That would
have been an ironic choice if people had known
we
were
vampires,
given
the
popular
misconception that vampires are somehow afraid
of garlic. The irony had Kai and me snickering
through the whole meal.
We got to Tybee around ten o’clock that
night. It was a chilly February evening, and the
beach was completely deserted. Kai spread out a
blanket, and the two of us relaxed together. It
was an especially breezy night, and I could taste
the briny seawater in the air. I leaned against him
and sighed happily. He put his arm around me
and squeezed. I wasn’t alone, anymore.
I couldn’t believe I’d never been to the beach
before I met Kai. It was such an incredible place
at night. I could never get over the way the
moonlight sparkled like millions of glittering
diamonds across the water. I could have looked
at it forever.
When it was nearly midnight, Kai and I heard
a commotion further down the beach. It sounded
like a woman crying and a man shouting. We
went to investigate, and we discovered a couple
arguing. As we neared them, we could see the
woman had a black eye and was crying while the
man was shaking her violently.
“We should do something,” I commented.
“What can we do without calling attention to
ourselves?” Kai asked.
I looked around. There was no one else
nearby. It was just the arguing couple and us.
“I haven’t fed in several days,” I said slyly.
He grinned at me wickedly. “How can we get
the woman somewhere safe?”
“Leave it to me,” I winked.
With that, I sauntered over to the couple.
“Is there a problem?” I asked sweetly.
“None of your concern, little lady,” the guy
bellowed.
I was blasted with the stench of alcohol and
cigarettes
emanating
from
him.
It
was
nauseating.
I looked directly at the woman. She looked
terrified. “Are you okay?”
“I… I’m fine,” she stammered anxiously.
“You don’t look fine,” I commented,
scrutinizing her injuries.
“I said it’s none of your damned concern!” the
man shouted.
“Please don’t talk to my girlfriend that way,”
Kai said suddenly from behind the man. “It
makes me very angry.”
“What are you going to do about it, punk?”
the guy spat at him.
“Honey, can you take this lovely lady
somewhere safe while I deal with this… man?”
Kai asked me.
I put my arm around the woman and gently
said, “Let’s go.”
She looked at Kai and the man glaring each
other and I could tell she was afraid of what the
guy might do to Kai. I knew there was nothing to
worry about in that department. This human
male, tall and bulky though he was, would never
stand a chance against Kai.
I led the woman away from the beach, and I
asked her where she was staying. “We’re staying
at the Sea Breeze,” she told me.
I took her safely back to her hotel room, and I
gave her my cell phone number and told her to
call me if he tried to hurt her again. She insisted
she would be fine, though I wasn’t so sure.
I met Kai on the beach, and he already had the
guy paralyzed with his venom. “I saved him for
you,” he said with a grin.
“Thanks,” I winked, sinking my fangs into the
flesh of his neck.
I was thinking it was a shame he couldn’t feel
this and wouldn’t remember it the next day. I had
no patience for abusive people, especially after
seeing the way Kai had been treated.
Suddenly, I heard a deep gasp behind us.
“You!” a man’s voice shouted.
I turned to face the voice, and there stood a
very tall, muscular guy who appeared to be in his
twenties. He had intense green eyes that seemed
to reflect the moonlight, and spiky black hair.
For some reason unknown to me at that time, I
shivered.
Kai’s instinct to protect me kicked in. He
moved toward the man, intending to bite him so
his venom would erase all memory of me.
However, as he neared the man, he jumped back
in shock. The man was holding the sharp silver
blade of a hunter. It glinted menacingly in the
moonlight.
“Run!” I hissed, but Kai would not budge. He
stood between the guy and me, holding his arms
out in an attempt to shield me.
“Go!” he hissed.
I realized the hunter had only seen
me
bite the
human, so I sprang into action.
“Get out of here! This is too dangerous for a
human!” I yelled at Kai. “You don’t know what
you’re getting into!”
“You’re human?” the guy quizzed Kai, eyeing
him suspiciously.
“Go!” I shouted again.
Kai hesitated, and I whispered as quietly as I
could, “Please.”
With that, Kai took off running, careful to
keep his speed slow and even like a human.
“I have no beef with you,” I told the hunter.
“But I have a beef with you, blood sucker,” he
snarled. “You killed a whole family right before
Christmas, and now you were going to kill this
guy, too. It’s taken me months to find you, but
now you’re
dead
!”
“I didn’t kill that family,” I explained. “I
never
kill.”
“A vampire that doesn’t kill?” he growled.
“Impossible.”
“It’s true,” I tried to convince him. “Please, I
don’t want to hurt you.”
“
You
hurt
me
?” he laughed. “Don’t be
ridiculous!”
“I’m
not
the one who killed those people!” I
insisted.
“Oh, yeah?” he leered. “Then who did?”
“I… I don’t know who did it,” I lied. “But I
saw the family. I was there that night.”
“Oh, so you admit being in the vicinity the
night of the murders,” he challenged me.
“I do,” I said. “I was there. But I would
never
kill a human, and I would certainly never hurt a
woman or child.”
“Too bad I don’t believe you,” he said, glaring
at me.
He made a lunge toward me with his dagger,
but I stepped to the side. In a split second, I
jumped behind him and wrapped my arms around
his neck. He slashed at me with his dagger as I
held him tightly in a headlock. I screamed in pain
as the silver blade tore through my arm, but I
held fast. He struggled to pull my arms away,
clawing and slashing, but still I held on. In a few
moments, he slumped to the ground.
As he lay there helpless in the sand, I touched
my fingers to his neck. He still had a pulse. I ran
back to Kai’s car, where he was waiting for me.
“Thank God you’re okay!” he whispered,
embracing me tightly.
“We need to find a pay phone,” I said.
Kai nodded, and we hopped into his car. He
drove me down the street to a gas station parking
lot, and from the pay phone, I called 911. I told
the dispatcher I’d seen two men fighting on the
beach near the pier, and that one appeared to have
a knife of some sort. Then I hung up.
“That takes care of that,” I said. “Let’s get
home and warn Will and Mother.”
On the way home, I tried several times to call
Will, but he wouldn’t answer his cell phone or
the house line. Kai raced through the streets,
trying to get us home as quickly as possible. The
police would detain the hunter for a while, but it
would probably buy us twenty-four hours at the
most.
At home, I raced up the stairs and flew into
Will’s room. He was fast asleep, and he shot up
like a bullet when I burst into the room.
“What’s going on?” he gasped.
“Hunter!” I hissed, tossing him the clothes
he’d left hanging over a chair.
I knocked once on my mother’s door, and then
quickly burst in to shout, “Hunter!”
My mother was instantly on her feet throwing
clothing into a suitcase. She needed no further
prompting.
Kai had already started packing a bag for me,
and I told him to go pack a bag for himself while
I finished mine.
“The painting,” I gasped, and Kai nodded. He
knew exactly which painting I wanted to take
with us.
My mind was reeling. We had to get a head
start on this hunter. We had no idea what type he
might be. If he was a Zephyr, he would be able to
run faster than the wind, but he wouldn’t be able
to track us. He’d have the advantage in speed, but
little else.
I didn’t think he was a Psych. They could use
various psychic abilities to move objects, read
minds, and even force their victims to a
standstill. He hadn’t used anything like that on
me, so I assumed he wasn’t.
He might be a Viewer. They were the most
dangerous of all hunters. Viewers could see
through their target’s eyes, watching every detail
of everything they did at any moment. They only
needed to meet their target once, and they could
track them anywhere in the world by looking for
landmarks their targets saw. You could never run
away from them, because they could find you
anywhere.
Will peeked into my room and said, “Jamie’s
on her way.”
“What?” I shouted. “Why would you get her
involved again? Are you crazy?”
“She made me promise I’d call her if we ever
needed her again,” he explained calmly. “We
don’t know anything about this hunter, so we
need her.”
“I don’t like this,” I growled.
Unfortunately, he was right. If the hunter was
a Viewer, there would be nowhere we could run.