Authors: Pamela Palmer
Zack sucked in a breath. “This isn’t good.”
“You think?”
The rev of an engine broke the ominous silence. She glanced behind her, praying her own world had decided to make a reappearance, but no. Nothing had changed.
“And where did you come from?” the woman asked, her tone more delighted than curious.
Quinn took a step forward, placing herself between them and her brother. Zack’s hands gripped her shoulders from behind as if he meant to pull her behind him at the first sign of trouble. As if he was too much of a man to let his big sister protect him any longer.
“What is this place?” she demanded.
The man’s smile widened. “You don’t know?”
“They must have entered through the last sunbeam.” The woman stepped away from her companion, eyeing Zack hungrily.
It had been years since Quinn had practiced martial arts, but she still remembered a thing or two. Which might be helpful against opponents who weren’t
so damned fast.
“Stay back,” Quinn warned, shrugging away Zack’s hands as she went into her fighting stance, her right leg back, her hands forming fists in front of her.
“And why would I step back, sweet one?” The man smiled, his incisors looking more like fangs than teeth. “I’ve just found dinner.”
Quinn gaped.
Those fangs were growing.
“No fucking way.” Zack’s tone sounded more awestruck than horrified. “Vampires.”
Quinn scowled. “That’s ridiculous.”
The man chuckled, his eyes changing, the black pupils turning a milky, startling white as the fangs lengthened, thickened.
Sharpened.
“Is it?”
The woman lunged first, though
lunged
wasn’t the right word. She flew at Zack. By the time Quinn could move, the woman had Zack on the sidewalk six feet away, straddling him as she struck, burying her own fangs deep into Zack’s neck. She’d kill him!
Quinn roared. But before she could even take a full step toward them, the man was on her, whirling her around as if she weighed nothing, slamming her back against him, his arms pinning her to him like bands of steel. She fought against his hold, kicking back, slamming her head back, but he avoided every blow.
And, suddenly, she felt the stab in the side of her neck. Fangs.
Pain.
This was not happening! There was no such thing as a vampire, no such thing as an alternate universe.
No.
Such.
Thing.
She tried to fight but couldn’t budge. He was drinking from her. Drinking! She could feel the rush of blood through her veins and into his mouth, and it felt . . . nice.
God.
This is
all so wrong!
Movement caught her eye, and she watched as Zack’s attacker lifted her head, staring at Zack, then rose gracefully to her feet.
Zack followed, his eyes unfocused, clearly stunned. The kid was in shock.
“Zack,” she cried out.
A strange lassitude began to flow through her body, leaching the fight out of her. Making her sleepy.
A car engine penetrated her deepening lethargy, and she wondered briefly if the yellow Jeep she’d seen in her vision lived in this world, too.
“Frederick? We need to go.” The woman wiped her bloody mouth on a black handkerchief. “You’re going to drain her, sugar.”
The man only made a sound of enjoyment against Quinn’s throat.
Quinn’s eyes drifted closed.
“Let her go,” a man’s voice said. Not the oily one’s. “You do not wish to kill her.”
But the vampire continued to drink.
“You wish to let her go,” the man said, his voice calm, almost hypnotic.
And, suddenly, she was free, sinking to the ground, crumpling onto the hard sidewalk.
“She’s mine!” said the oily one. “I found her.”
She heard the sound of a scuffle, a shout of pain, then the clink of horse tackle and the fast clip-clop of a retreating carriage.
Then silence.
Arms scooped her up, lifting her as if she weighed nothing. Her mind screamed
fight,
but her body refused to answer. With effort, she forced her eyelids open and stared up at the man who held her. Not the one who’d attacked her. A little older, maybe. Not oily. A nice face.
“Zack?” The name barely formed on her lips.
“Your companion is gone.”
“
Dead?
” She stopped breathing, her vision narrowing dangerously.
“Taken.”
A flash of yellow caught in her peripheral vision, then she felt herself dropped bonelessly into the front passenger seat of a vehicle. The Jeep. She struggled without success to sit up. She couldn’t even find the energy to reach for the door latch. “Have . . . to find him. Have to . . . escape.”
“There’s no escaping V.C.,
cara.
”
She tried to look at him but couldn’t manage to turn her head. “
V . . .
C.?”
“Washington, V.C.,” he replied. “Vamp City. Your new home.”
Q
uinn walked down the busy, sunny sidewalk, her arms swinging, low heels clicking on the pavement as she hurried to get . . . where? She slowed, disoriented. Where was it she needed to go? Stopping in the middle of the sidewalk, she looked around, suddenly confused. Nothing looked familiar.
Someone bumped into her, making her stumble. “Move!” he shouted.
A woman strode directly toward her as if she didn’t see her, as if she’d walk right through her.
Quinn lifted her hands to keep the woman from running into her, but the woman flew backward, arms and legs trailing her body as she zoomed out of sight.
Around her, everything went still. Every person turned to stare at her, terror on their faces.
“Devil’s spawn!” they hissed, making the sign of the cross, backing away.
And that was when she saw Zack, sitting on the sidewalk, his back against the brick wall of a nearby building, his head down as he played his GameBoy. He was younger than she remembered. Twelve, maybe thirteen.
“Don’t look up,” she whispered to him. “Don’t look up.”
Slowly, the others turned and fled, the sidewalk and the streets emptying and turning ominously silent. The only sound remaining was the cheery, tinny music of the GameBoy.
“It’s time to go home, Zack.”
Her brother nodded, rose to his feet, and fell into step beside her, without once looking up.
Q
uinn tried to roll over and failed, startling awake. Sleepily, she fought to close her legs, spread awkwardly apart, and failed that, too, feeling the same tug on her ankles she had on her wrist.
The last vestiges of sleep fled in a stark wave of fear.
Ropes.
She’d been tied.
Her eyes shot open, and she blinked at the floral canopy overhead, framed by plain maple bedposts. Her heart pounded in her chest, her mind darting through memories as she tried to remember what happened.
Where am I?
Shifting slightly on the far-too-soft mattress, she felt the press of clothes against her skin. At least she was still dressed.
How did I get here?
The place smelled unfamiliar—musty, like an old house. The chime of a grandfather clock echoed somewhere below, cut by the laugh track of an old television show. Rolling her head to her left, she spied an old-fashioned washstand complete with porcelain water pitcher. In the small mirror above it . . . the reflection of a man.
She jerked her head the other way . . . and froze. He stood in the doorway, dressed all in black, one broad shoulder propped against the frame. He was tall and lean, well built, his skin possessing a hint of the Mediterranean, his hair a dark brown cut short, framing an arresting, strong-boned face. His cheekbones were high and pronounced, his jaw well-defined, his nose long and straight. His mouth, intriguingly sculpted, was tipped up at one corner, a match for the devilish gleam in his dark eyes.
He looked familiar. He was the one who’d picked her up and deposited her in the front seat of his Jeep. After the . . .
Memory returned with a frontal assault. The
Gone With the Wind
couple’s attacking them,
biting
them.
Vampires.
She turned rigid with shock. No. It hadn’t happened. It couldn’t have happened.
“Zack.” Her voice cracked with disuse as she stared at the man. “Where is he?”
He pushed away from the doorframe and started toward her, his eyes turning flat. Cold. “I suggest,
cara,
you worry about yourself.”
“We were attacked.” Was that part right? Or had it all been a hallucination? Well, it couldn’t have
all
been a hallucination, or she wouldn’t be tied to the bed of one of the players. Unless she was still hallucinating. “I need to know where he is. Did they kill him?”
“You worry about another when you’re tied to
my
bed?” He smiled, revealing sharp, twin incisors. “At
my
mercy.”
Oh God,
this is
not happening. He is
not a vampire.
But whatever . . . whoever . . . he was, she was in deep trouble. Her heart thudded like it meant to fight its way out of her chest. “What do you want?”
Don’t say blood, don’t say blood. Vampires don’t exist. They don’t exist!
“You know what I want.” He closed his eyes, tilting his head back as if he were in the throes of great pleasure.
Oh, Zack. What have I done? I never should have let you get near that column
.
The man opened his eyes again and sat on the bed beside her, watching her with a piercing intensity . . .
a hunger . . .
that had panic clawing at her mind. She was utterly at his mercy. Tied. Spread-eagled.
He reached for her, and she flinched, her heart thundering in her ears as his cool fingers curled lightly around her throat. Her breaths came quick and shallow, fear a living thing inside her as she watched him, as she waited for him to . . . what? Strangle her? Rape her? Or, God help her, dip his head and bite her, sucking the blood from her body?
He’s not a vampire!
She shook, in a fever of dread, yet he drew out her torment, sliding those fingers up and down her throat as he watched her with that expression, at once rapturous and hungry. And very, very sexual.
“Are you going to kill me?” she gasped.
A small, cold smile lifted the corners of his mouth. “Of course.”
Of course.
Her stomach cramped. Tears burned her eyes.
His look of intense pleasure only grew. “Eventually.” His hand slid down, pressing against her chest, sliding lower to cover one of her breasts. “But not until I’ve had my fill of you.” As her pulse raced like a runaway freight train, his fingers found her nipple, plucking at it, striking a discordant note of pleasure against the terror screaming in her head.
Still, he watched her with that dangerous intensity. He reached for her arm, the one tied to the bedpost closest to him. His cool hand curled around her forearm, his thumb tracing the vein from her inner elbow to her wrist, slowly, as if savoring the feel of the blood pumping beneath her skin. He dipped his head.
“No,” she gasped, her heart ratcheting.
But he didn’t stop. His nose teased the crook of her arm. His mouth tasted her skin as she lay, tense as a steel rod, dreading the stab of his fangs.
Instead, he slowly rose again, a dangerous smile in his eyes as if he enjoyed her fear most of all. The sadist.
He stood and moved to the foot of the bed, kneeling between her spread legs.
What are you doing?
She refused to give voice to the question that burned in her throat. He enjoyed her fear, she could see it in his eyes. And she would give him no more satisfaction than she had to.
When his hands found her waist, her breath caught on a gasp. Pushing up her T-shirt hem, he unbuttoned her jeans, unzipping her fly with deft fingers.
“Don’t,” she breathed.
But he ignored her, yanking her pants down over her hips, where they got hung up on her spread thighs. But not before he’d revealed her black satin panties.
His hand shot between her legs, sliding along her most private flesh, stroking her through the satin. In the blink of an eye, he turned to the post where her right foot was bound and untied it.
The moment her foot was loose, she struggled to kick free, to knock him aside, but his grip was like iron as he forced her legs together long enough to push her pants down past her knees and off her right leg altogether. Then he was yanking her legs apart, tying her ankle again.
“Damn you!” She fought him, but there was nothing she could do to stop him.
He smiled, a darkly satisfied look on his face as he stared at her spread before him, only the small black panties barring his way.
Her breath trembled into her lungs, her body flushing hot, then cold, then hot again as he reached for her, this time stroking her inner thigh, watching her. “Do you have any idea how fast the blood flows out of the body when the femoral artery is breached?” As he spoke, his unusually sharp incisors began to lengthen and thicken. His pupils slowly turned white, surrounded by a sea of near black. Just as the other vampires’ had.
Vampires.
Oh, God,
how
can
they be real?
Slowly, he leaned forward, his face and those awful, sharp fangs dipping between her legs. Quinn bucked in panic, terror pulling at her mind as she struggled against the ropes tying her to the bed. Cool hands gripped her thighs roughly, holding her still. Teeth grazed the sensitive flesh of her inner thigh, and she quaked with terror over the fangs that were about to steal her life.
Tears blurred her vision. She should have kept Zack safe. If only she’d ignored that strange sight in front of her apartment. If only she’d turned and gone the other way.
Without warning, the vampire rose from between her legs and came to stand beside the bed, looking down at her. He leaned over, grabbing her jaw. “Look at me.”
“I thought you were going to drain me.”
One dark brow lifted. “Disappointed?”
“No,” she gasped, her pulse pounding so hard she could barely breathe, let alone form words. “Of course not.”
“I do not kill my slaves.” He squeezed her jaw. “Nor do I wish them to fear me.”
“I’m not your slave. And you love my fear. You love it!”
“Yes. But I’ve had my fill. And now you will forget.”
She met his gaze stonily. “I’m not your slave.”
A smile lifted his mouth. “Oh, but you are,
piccola.
” He stared deeply into her eyes as if he were trying to hypnotize her or something, and slowly began to frown. His eyes narrowed. His grip tightened. “What
are
you?”
She scowled. “A woman. What in the hell do you think I am?”
True anger flashed in his eyes, reigniting her fear all over again. He leaned forward, crowding her, scaring her. “
What are you?
”
A freak. I’m a freak. A soon-to-be-dead freak, at the rate things are going.
The vampire attacked her without warning, turning her head, baring her neck, biting her. Like before, the puncture hurt for only a minute. And then he reared back, licking the blood off his lips as he stared at her.
“
Mio Dio.
”
Without explanation, he released her and strode out of the bedroom, slamming the door closed behind him. “Blood!” His voice rattled the windows.
Quinn stared at the closed door, her mouth open with disbelief.
What in the
hell
just happened?
She tipped her head back as her heartbeat slowly returned to something approximating normal, even as her mind whirled, a suffocating mass of confusion, questions, and dread.
A
half hour later, maybe—it had felt like twenty years—the door opened, and a pleasingly round woman bustled into the room, carrying a tray. Eggs, by the smell of them. And coffee.
What was the vampire doing, fattening her for slaughter? Quinn’s muscles bunched, an instinctive reaction as she fought against pulling on her ropes. Her wrists were raw and abraded from where she’d done just that too many times already. But she hated being so vulnerable.
Hated it.
“I am Ernesta.”
Quinn’s pulse, which had begun to jackhammer at the first rattle of the doorknob, slowly began to calm. How, she wondered, was she supposed to eat or drink when she was still tied to the bedposts?
“The master wishes you fed,” the woman, clearly Latino, said in accented English. She had the broad face of a South American Indian and wore a drab, plain servant’s dress. “I have brought you eggs and toast. You must eat.”
“How?”
The woman set the tray on the washstand, then turned to Quinn and began digging at the knot that held one of Quinn’s wrists.
“Thank you, Ernesta. Are you . . . a vampire . . . too?” Her mouth didn’t want to form the word any more than her mind wanted to accept that such a creature could possibly be real.
But the woman didn’t laugh or smile or correct her in any way.
“No. I am one of his slaves.”
Quinn really wished she’d laughed. “How long have I been here? It’s still dark.”
“It is always dark in Vamp City.” The woman looked at her as if she were a moron. “Vampires shun sunlight. Even through clouds they can burn.”