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Authors: Colleen Gleason

Tags: #Fiction/Romance/Paranormal

The Bleeding Dusk

BOOK: The Bleeding Dusk
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Second Edition.

The Bleeding Dusk
© 2008, 2014 Colleen Gleason

All rights reserved.

 

Ebook ISBN: 9781931419536

Print ISBN: 9781931419581

This book was previously published by The Penguin Group.

 

Cover design: Damon Za

Ebook formatting: Typesetter

 

TABLE OF CONTENTS

For Marcy

Thanks for hanging in there with me and making it happen.

+ Prologue +

In Which Max Faces the Vampiress in Her Den

The lair of the Queen
of the Vampires was tucked away in the snowy mountain range of Munţii Fǎgǎraş.

The only reason Max Pesaro had been able to find the hideaway was because of the two bite marks on his neck. Permanent ones left by Lilith herself.

They burned and tingled as he approached the entrance to the interior chamber. The throbbing never fully went away, but there were times when it ebbed enough that he could forget he was permanently linked to the vampire queen.

The back of his neck felt as though a brick of ice rested on it, but it wasn't because of the winter that blustered outside of the stone-cut chambers in the mountain. The chill that burned his neck had nothing to do with the howling winds and blinding snow that came much too early and stayed too long in these Romanian mountains, and everything to do with the fact that there were vampires nearby. As he was a Venator, it was his way of sensing the presence of the undead.

Coming here was foolish and brazen. Max was never foolish, although he had his brazen moments. But after what he'd been through in the last months, he was willing to accept the consequences of this visit. Even if it resulted in his death, he chanced it—because it could also result in his freedom.

The only reason he'd made it so far into the bowels of Lilith's refuge was the fact that he bore her Markings. Her branding of him was an obscene protection from the undead that guarded her compound.

Max passed yet another of Lilith's Guardian vampires, ones that had eyes that burned pale ruby and fangs that released a strong poison at will. She opened the heavy wooden door to Lilith's private chamber and stepped back to allow him in.

“Maximilian.” Lilith's voice was a purr, and her red-ringed blue eyes were avid as she cast her gaze over him. “I believe this is the first time you have ever come to me of your own accord. What a pleasure.”

Carved in the deepest part of the mountain, Lilith's sanctuary was as far as possible from the sunlight that would peel the skin from her body. Otherwise, its interior was like any well-appointed house in the civilized world of London, Rome, or Budapest, with the exception of its lack of windows.

Comfortable furnishings were arranged throughout the large, high-ceilinged room. Tables held lamps and sheafs of parchment, settees were covered with thick pillows and cushions. Thick Persian rugs warmed the cold stone floor. A large tapestry on the wall depicted the immortalization of Judas Iscariot, the first true vampire. Another showed him slaying the first vampire hunter, Gardeleus the Venator.

That was the first time a vampire had killed a Venator, and, Max thought grimly, it had not been the last. Fortunately there had been other vampire hunters born from Gardeleus's blood over the ages—arising randomly from far-flung branches of the family tree. And then there had been a very few—like Max himself—who were not of Gardella blood, but had chosen the path of a vampire slayer and had passed the life-or-death test that allowed them to wear the holy, empowering amulet of the Venators: the
vis bulla.

Nor were Venators protected from being turned undead by a vampire, although the power of the
vis bulla
made it more difficult for the vampire's blood to take hold in the Venator and to make one undead. Max had always felt Gardeleus's fate of death was preferable to being turned into a vampire.

The chamber was warm, and the lighting burned low. A massive blaze roared in the fireplace, taking up the entirety of one long wall and casting black and red shadows into the room.

Lilith herself was arranged casually on a long chaise, her filmy ice-blue gown draping from her hip to the floor, leaving her white feet and arms bare. Her red hair, so shiny and bright that it appeared to burn, poured over her fair skin in sensual coils that reminded Max of the locks of a copper-haired Medusa. Although she had been on the earth for more than a millennium, Lilith had the beautiful elfin face of a thirty-year-old, and a body that matched. Her pose appeared nonchalant, but a fleeting glance at her dangerous eyes told Max a different story.

He was glad for the advantage of surprise, at least.

The doors closed behind him, and he stopped in the center of the room. Wanting to keep what little leverage he had, he waited.

“You're not dead,” Lilith said after the silence stretched.

She followed suit and arched her long, lithe body as she drew herself into a seated position. One of control.

“Then you're aware I've destroyed Akvan's Obelisk. That I've kept my part of our agreement to stop your son, Nedas, from using its power.” Lilith had raised Nedas, who was the son of one of her consorts from the tenth century, from an infant, and had turned him to an undead when he was twenty.

She smiled. Her upper fangs glinted. “So that's why you have come.”

Now she stood and moved toward him, bringing with her a renewed burning in the bites on his neck and the scent of roses. Max felt her presence as it seeped into him, cloying and close, and noticed the way his breathing became heavier. Controlled.

Although he kept his eyes averted from hers, he felt the first hint of a muscle tremor deep beneath his skin.

“You agreed to release me from your thrall if I succeeded.” He drew in his breath slowly, keeping it steady with effort. “You didn't expect me to.”

Lilith tilted her head, turning her face away while keeping her gaze on him in a sly manner. “On the contrary, Maximilian. I was certain you would succeed. I had no doubts. After all” —she reached for him, brushing her long-nailed finger along one of his cheekbones— “those very characteristics attract me to you. Your strength, your determination, and your integrity.”

Max didn't flinch as the nail, death-sharp, cut a thin line into his skin. His heartbeat was still his own, and though his throat was dry, he was still steady. He wanted to step away, but he didn't. He'd faced Lilith before; he'd face her this time.

Now her hand had come to rest on one side of his chest, and they stood face-to-face, the vampire as tall as he, the weight of her hand burning through his shirtwaist. “Along with…this…” she added, smoothing her palm over his firm pectoral. With her touch came the strength of her thrall, battling to capture his breathing, the race of his heart, the surge in his veins. His desire.

“Will you not keep your word and release me?” Max closed his eyes. He knew it had been foolish to come here, but he'd been willing to try. He had little to lose. He'd even told Victoria he never believed Lilith would release him.

Both of her hands were on him now, flat palmed, sliding up and over his shoulders to cup the bare skin of his neck. Max felt the tiny, warm drip of blood from his cheek where she'd cut him, and the unbearable closeness when she leaned forward and pressed an openmouthed kiss to the edge of his jaw, over the trickle of blood.

The flood of sensation staggered him. Her lips—one cool and firm, the other warm and soft—bussing against his skin set his fingers to trembling against the sides of his trousers. Her teeth were slick and smooth as they slid against his jaw, ending in a tiny nibble. His breath caught, and he drew it in sharply, deeply, and felt the beginnings of response simmering low inside him, behind the weakness in his knees, and his lips parted with a soft puff of air.

When she kissed him he tasted his own blood, and he kissed her back, unwillingly, yet willingly.

Then through the haze of desire that pummeled him, Max remembered who he still was, and managed to slide his hand up between them, brushing against her breasts as they pressed against his shirt. He tore at its ties and at last closed his fingers over the tiny silver cross that hung from his areola.

Strength from the
vis bulla
surged through him, and he drew in his first clear breath since she'd stepped near. He pulled his face away as she realized what had happened and stepped back. Her fingers tore at his shirt, pulling it open, and with a shriek of surprise, she jerked away.

“So, you have come armed.” At first she could not look at him, could not look at the large silver cross that hung on a heavy chain around his neck. Hidden beneath his shirt, it was the only weapon he'd been able to bring into her presence aside from the tiny
vis bulla.
It wasn't as effective as an ash stake, but it had produced the effect he'd desired.

“I am not so foolish as to come to you unprepared,” Max replied, his voice easier now, although his blood still leaped and his chest was tight. “A stake would have been preferable, but your Guardians would not allow me to pass with one. I tried.”

“I would expect nothing less from you, Maximilian.” She kept her distance, kept her eyes slightly averted, but was not the crumpled heap of weakness a lesser vampire would have been. The surprise had sent her spinning away, but the mere vision of the cross was not enough to frighten a vampire of her caliber for long. As one's eyes became used to sudden light in darkness, so would she soon be able to look at him again.

But the large cross would keep her from touching him—or touching him much. And the delicate silver
vis bulla
—blessed with holy water and forged of silver from the Holy Land—gave him his Venator speed, strength, and fast-healing capabilities. But neither would damage Lilith in any other way.

Now, as she looked at him again, her eyes narrowed and seemed to focus on his half-bare chest. “That is not your
vis bulla
,”
she said suddenly, her eyes widening.

Max looked at her.

“You're surprised I would have noticed. Why should you be, Maximilian? I notice everything about you.” The purr was back in her voice again, and despite the hand-size cross hanging there, she stepped toward him. “This one is different. It's smaller.”

“But no less powerful.” It was true. He'd given his
vis bulla
to Victoria, then walked away from her on the streets of Roma a month ago. And later, when he'd decided to make this mad trip, he'd replaced it with this one— one that did not belong to him.

“No, I would expect not. But still.” Her eyes narrowed once more, and she tried again to catch his gaze but he would not play. “Not dead, and wearing someone else's
vis bulla
,”
Lilith mused. “And demanding that I comply with your wishes. Maximilian, you absolutely fascinate me. Are you quite certain you do not wish to remain here with me? Forever?”

“I have no wish for immortality.”

“But you did at one time.”

“I did. Long ago.” There was no glossing over it. Max had learned to live with his choices.

“Not that long ago. Merely fifteen, perhaps sixteen years ago. And this last year you spent living among the members of the Tutela did not raise that desire in you again?”

The mark of the Tutela had first been burned into the back of his shoulder when he was a young, naive man of sixteen and had foolishly joined them and their cause: to protect and serve the vampires in the hopes of attaining immortality and power. Now the tattoo of the writhing dog— for that was really what the Tutela were: mortals who acted as bitches and whores for the undead—seemed to itch on his skin.

BOOK: The Bleeding Dusk
7.95Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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