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Authors: Mary Hughes

Tags: #vampire;erotic;paranormal romance;undead;urban fantasy;steamy;sensual;vampire romance;action;sizzling;Meiers Corners;Mary Hughes;Biting Love;romantic comedy;funny;humor;assassin;Chicago;police;cops

Assassins Bite (19 page)

BOOK: Assassins Bite
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As we crossed the street, I caught sight of Nosferatu's brownstone, nose jutting at the north corner of the block. “Why didn't you take down that house of horrors while you were in there? I felt enough firepower under your jacket to take out Pluto.”

“No time.” He was moving more smoothly with each step. “But even if I could have shot the walls, collapsed the tunnels, Nosferatu is old. He'd have survived to start a new nest. Worse, it would be built with all the latest.”

“That would be awkward.”

“Besides, Mace and the rest…they're only following orders. Orders of a madman, but I feel sorry for them. I was in their position once. There.” He stopped at the edge of Lake Shore Drive and stared east as if he could see across all the lanes, the beach and the whole of Lake Michigan. “Stay here.”

“I'm not…”

He was already dodging across. He hopped a short fence and guard rail, ran across more lanes, then vaulted the east fence.

Stay here, right. Who was whose backup? As he dove into the water of Lake Michigan—around a chilly thirty-five degrees this time of year—I clambered over the first barrier and played my own dodge-'em.

Aiden swam toward a dark blotch bobbing in the glistening water. I was looking for broken sections of fence to get through when he burst from the water and waded out, Ric hanging limp in his arms. He jumped the fence, laid Ric on the small strip of dirt and checked his friend with frantic hands. “Broken bones—not healing. Damn.” He opened Ric's jacket and shirt to reveal red, swollen skin punctured by small arrows, the flesh around them puckered and raw-looking. “None of his wounds are healing. I need to get him out of here.”

“Your car or mine?”

He blinked and seemed to see me standing there for the first time. “I thought I told you to stay back.”

“You asked for my help,
Aiden
.”

“Our deal.” He briefly closed his eyes. “I'm sorry.”

“Thank you. So, my car?” I could see him consider the macho, going-it-alone option, despite everything. This male did not trust easily.

He lifted the broken, handcuffed body and stood. His arms shook. I knew how much it cost him when he said the word I hadn't expected him to say. “Yours. We need to gather his mate from my truck first. Then I can try to help him while you drive.”

“Right.” Turning from the gut-wrenching sight, I led the way. “What happened back there?”

“Eloise wanted me to fight Nosferatu for her. Then she blasted him in the chest. Even with a new heart, the old bastard will take a while to heal that.”

“Why?”

He shrugged. “He's her father.”

“That woman has serious Daddy issues.”

He barked a laugh that devolved into coughing. “Yes.”

We got to my car. I opened the back door and Aiden slid Ric in. As the blond's body passed me, I smelled the sweet sting of rot. “So which hospital—”

“This is beyond a human hospital. Vampires heal anything, but he isn't. We need experts.” He gritted his teeth as he got in behind Ric. “Synnove first. If she's awake maybe she can help him. If not, we'll take him to Strongwells.”

“Okay.” I started the car and drove off. “Maybe they can help you capture Eloise too.”


No
.” He released a breath. “Sorry. I've already asked too much for their help.”

We stopped at Aiden's truck to retrieve Synnove. She was still unconscious, but Aiden assured me she was sleeping off whatever drug they'd given her and her vitals were strong. She'd be fine. We strapped her into the front seat and headed for Meiers Corners. I said cautiously, “Strongwells wouldn't jeopardize your independence.”

“Maybe not them. But they're Alliance. Their boss… He was born when bartering was brand-new. You don't make a deal with him without being eventually sucked dry. I'll ask Strongwells for help healing Ric, but I'll clean up my own house.”

He was so brave, so tragically alone. For reasons I didn't quite understand, his safety had become as important to me as my own family's.

I was his backup. Eloise had hurt him, had hurt people he cared about. She wasn't getting away with that. As I drove, my jaw firmed and I sat straighter.

“Don't,” came from the backseat. “Leave Eloise to me.”

“What? I wasn't…” Even I heard the feigned innocence in my voice. “All right, why?”

“Because however determined you are, however good you are…” He paused and reluctantly added, “And you
are
good. But you're also human. Humans can't hold their own against vampires any more than cats can fight dogs.”

Aiden was pretty savvy. I should listen to him.

But Elena fought vampires, and she mentioned training. If I trained for it, like I'd trained to become a cop, if I became stronger, faster and less Rufflish…well. I had the motivation. All I needed was the know-how.

“Elena?” he said.

I thought he was reading my mind but a glance back showed he was on the phone. “I have a casualty. Ric's not healing. Can I…?” He listened then blew a sigh that was heavy with relief for the reserved male. “Thanks.”

I pushed quite a few yellow lights and a couple reds, and breathed my own sigh of relief when I turned into the alley and parked behind the Strongwells' garage. Aiden sprang out and swept Ric, sans cuffs, to the apartment's back door before I'd even switched off. I scuttled after him.

Bo hustled Aiden inside and downstairs. I told Butler about Synnove, paused to brush off the worst of my dirt, then followed.

They were in the same room where I'd last seen my brother. I stopped to prepare myself, scrubbing a hand across my eyes. With a deep breath, I stepped in.

Ric lay naked, pale and waxy on the exact patch of dirt where Dirk had been. Pain skewered me.

Elena knelt beside Ric, picking shafts from his chest, dropping them onto a metal tray lined in rubber. Aiden, stripped of jacket and vest, watched her, his jaw clenching and unclenching.

Beyond them, Bo worked a spade in the middle of the room. Digging a grave.

I sucked in a shocked breath.

Aiden spun. “Sunny.” He dug a hand through his hair. Mr. Hyperaware must have been very worried about his friend not to have sensed me. “This isn't what you think.”

“What do I think? That this is what you did with Dirk? That you
buried my brother
?”

Chapter Twenty-One

“Sunny, sweetheart.” Aiden came to me, took my shoulders. “Dirk will rise again. I promise.”

I noticed he didn't bother denying the burial. My eyes stung. I locked onto his dark, compassionate gaze. Anywhere but that gouging shovel. “He'll be a vampire, sleep in a grave.
You
sleep in a grave…” I trailed off as it hit me. Vampires were monsters. I was falling in love with a monster.

Oh God. I was falling in love?

“It isn't like that.” Aiden brushed a thumb across my cheek.

“They sleep in beds.” Elena didn't pause picking out shafts. “The soil is for energy and healing. Dirk will be fine. Bo isn't so sure about Ric. There. That's the last of them.” She rose to her feet and dusted off the knees of her pants. “We should call the Ancient One.”

“No.” The word was flat with Aiden's rejection. “I won't owe him.”

“The soil may not be enough.” Bo leaped lightly out of the grave and tossed aside the shovel. “I've never seen a poison do that.” He nodded at Ric.

“You know how old my husband is.” Elena's gaze was steady on Aiden. “If he hasn't seen anything like this—”

“All
right
.” Aiden's jaw worked like he wanted to grind the very concept between his molars. “Call him. And while you're at it, get him to talk to her.” He meant me.

“Oh no,” Elena said. “I'm not owing him for erasing her when she's just going to stumble across more.”

“She's not—”

“She will,” Bo said. “As long as she's involved with you.”

“She's not—”

“I am,” I said. “Deal with it.”

Aiden glared black death at me. A few days ago I'd have pissed my pants at those dead black eyes. But behind the death glare was something young and frightened. Calling to me. Wanting to ask for help, but not knowing how.

I put aside everything else to concentrate on him. On here and now.

Butler came in. “Dr. Holiday is resting comfortably.”

“Good,” Elena said. “Let us know the minute she's awake.”

As Butler left, Bo pulled out a cell phone and put it on speaker. It barely got through one ring.

“Emergency?” The dark, deep voice shivered through my body into my very marrow. I knew that voice primevally. Resonant and powerful, it was that of a king.

“No, sir.” Bo glanced at Ric. “But critical. Holiday was hit by Nosferatu's arrow trap and isn't healing. Since Holiday is next best thing to Nikos Sparta's brother-in-law—”

“I'm aware of the connection. I was not aware of any obligation on my part to Mr. Holiday.” A pause. “Unless Mr. Blackthorne has something to offer?”

Aiden paled.

Anger fired through me. Ric was dying and Aiden was vulnerable. Cave Voice was a manipulative bastard. I snarled at the phone, “Help him because it's the right thing to do.”

“As you do in your police work, Officer Ruffles?”

My hot anger dissolved into a shiver. How did he know me? But I managed, “I'm a cop because it helps people.”

“Do you not expect a paycheck?”

I opened my mouth but nothing came out.

“While I'd like to help simply out of the goodness of my heart, I, like my fellow creatures, have rent to pay for residing on this planet. So unless Officer Ruffles has any more objections, I'll ask Mr. Blackthorne—what do you offer?”

Something good came from my bumbling interference. I'd given Aiden time to recover. He said, “That depends on how long it takes you to help him.”

A chuckle. “I may solve the problem in a few minutes, but the knowledge that allows me to solve it took centuries to accumulate. Which time period do you mean?”

Aiden growled, low. “Dealing with you is like pinning down a drop of mercury.”

“And yet I am better than your erstwhile friend Eloise.”

“How did you know—?”

“Please. Why else would Mr. Holiday broach Nosferatu's lair again? I did warn you.”

Aiden's jaw worked, the tips of his fangs peeking out. “Fine. If you can help him, I agree to do one favor for you.” A beat. “
If
what you tell us helps.”

“Of course.” The dark voice smoothed back, all urbanity. “And since I know how you dislike owing anyone, I'll request my favor now.”

Aiden's gaze narrowed at the phone. “What is it?”

“If you find yourself at odds with me, a simple request that you discuss it with me before you take any action.”

“That's it? Talk to you first if I have a grievance? What's the catch?”

“No catch. When you have a problem with me, you talk it over first. That's it.”

“Each time?” Aiden swore. “For one-time help, that's not fair.”

“Perhaps, perhaps not. Have you another choice?”

Aiden's glare could've melted the phone. “No. Fine. Help Ric.”

“Excellent.” Satisfaction colored the deep voice. “I'd heard Nosferatu had developed a vampire poison but had no proof. I suspect in acquiring one of his lieutenants as an ally, we've made a bad enemy of another. Strongwell, send the arrows to Steel. Drain all of Holiday's blood—don't touch it, use the machine—and send that too. Give him five quarts of donor blood then bury him for one hour. If he's awake then, he should get a quart of vampire blood. Mr. Blackthorne, that's your job. If he's not awake after an hour, call me back.”

I whispered to Elena, “Who is that man?”

She nodded to the door. We went through but instead of stopping in the hallway, she strode out, through the basement and all the way upstairs before she would speak. “That is one scary ancient vampire. Kai Elias. He heads the Iowa Alliance.”

“Why doesn't Aiden like him?”

“Was it that obvious?”

“Like a meat cleaver at a turkey farm.”

“Yeah.” Elena laughed. “Elias is a tit-for-tat kind of guy. He's a huge help, but then you owe him. In case you hadn't noticed, Blackthorne doesn't like owing anyone. By the way, about Dirk. Bo says not this next sunset but the one after.”

I closed my eyes briefly. “Good. That's good. All right. While I have you away from the guys…” I told her what had happened. “You mentioned training. I want to learn how to take down a vampire.” I didn't tell her I had a specific vamp in mind, but it was Elena. I didn't have to.

She nailed me with her shrewd detective's gaze. “Anybody else, I'd say no way. But you're a cop. Bo's right, protecting is in your blood. Big plus, you're a cop immune to vampire suggestion. Honestly, we need all the help we can get. Yes, I'll train you. Come on.”

“Now?”

She arched a brow. “We're both clear for an hour. You have a better time?”

“Well, actually…I'm not clear.” I'd forgotten in my concern over Aiden that I'd skipped work.

“Yeah, Tight Ass called. I covered, though there'll be hell to pay later.” She led me to a room directly over the parlor with wall-to-wall mirrors, benches and weight sets, a changing screen in one corner.

“Okay.” She pulled out a couple mats and started to stretch. “A lot of what Mr. Miyagi taught you will transfer to fighting v-guys.”

I followed her lead, stretching neck, shoulders, arms, torso. “He knows about vampires?”

“Yes and no. He knows but then gets erased. It's a little hard keeping up with whether he's aware or not. I argue with Bo to bring him in permanently, but you know how the Viking feels about that. By the way, remember that we don't use the v-word anywhere but sealed, protect rooms. Mostly. Get into the habit.”

“V-euphemisms. Sorry.”

“That's okay. So fighting is fighting, whether in the boardroom, on the battlefield or up-close-and-personal. Know your opponent's strengths and weaknesses, and your own strengths and weaknesses.”

“Okay. My strengths? I'm a cop.” I started stretching my legs, lifting one over my head.

She paused her own stretching to stare. “Limber too.”

I managed a smile. “But I'm a Ruffles. A bad luck charm. That's a weakness.”

“I'm not so sure about that.” She shook her head. “Dirk always seems to show up in the wrong place at the wrong time—but sometimes wrong is exactly right.” She searched my eyes then sighed. “I can't explain it, but I get this feeling about you. You stumbled across Blackthorne in time to save him. Got yourself into a shitload of danger, but you both came through all right. Is that good luck, or bad?”

“I…I don't know. I never thought of it that way before.”

“You'll figure it out.” She stood and motioned me up. “V-guys are stronger and faster—but
not
smarter, mostly. You can work that to your advantage.”

She showed me a couple moves similar to those I used to fight bigger opponents. “Go for the head or heart. No heart, no circulation. No circulation, they have to shut down.” She demoed a throat jab and solar-plexus punch, followed by a spinning hook kick to the head.

I mimicked her moves. We practiced by alternating. After about half an hour, she motioned me toward a table display. “You can do a lot more with weapons. We'll start with blades. Chopping spine is hard. A little extra heft and swing makes that easier.” She pointed out axes, hatchets, sickles and
kopides
.

I nodded. “Does removing the head also stop circulation?”

“No. They can seal off the neck and, if they still have a pumping heart, they can actually move. It's weird to see a headless body groping for its head. Bo thinks maybe that's where the Sleepy Hollow legend came from.”

Yikes. “So why lop the head?”

“To remove the guidance system. The brain. Although they'll still instinctively attack prey. Or try to find their heads.”

“Which is why I punch out the heart, got it.” I pointed at a selection of pointy sticks.

“If you were a v-guy, sure. But a human? Going through the sternum or diaphragm is work. And experienced vamps will just pull the stake out.”

“Shit.”

“I know, right? So us humans, we use long-range weapons, like a crossbow.”

“Or a bazooka?”

She grinned. “Any SMAW will do”

“Can't beat a Shoulder-launched Multipurpose Assault Weapon. Where do I get one?”

“Bruno Braun, but be careful not to torch any tourists. Best bet? Lure the v-guy into direct sunlight.”

“The legend's true? Simple sunshine dusts them?”

“It's never simple, unfortunately. The weaker the sun, the longer they can be out in it. And the older the v-guy, the longer they can stand it, although then it's Towering Inferno time. But younger ones, yeah, they'll char pretty quick.”

She showed me her collection of weapons and I'd managed in my Ruffles way to nick myself on a bayonet when, in a replay of my first night on the MCPD roster, the door burst off its hinges.

Aiden stood there, magnificent chest heaving, a dangerous dark shadow in jeans and sleeveless tee. “Sunny. What the fuck?”

BOOK: Assassins Bite
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