Blood Moon (2 page)

Read Blood Moon Online

Authors: Heather Kuehl

Tags: #Eternal Press, #paranormal, #vampire, #supernatural, #werewolf, #fantasy, #Heather Kuehl, #dragon

BOOK: Blood Moon
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Chapter Two

Jared.

His name tore through my mind and it took all of my will power to keep me from crying out. It had been less than a week since I found out that Jared wasn’t in the Blood Moon Corporation’s system anymore. No phone number. No forwarding address. Nothing. That only meant one thing…

They killed him.

It made no sense.

Why would they kill him
? He didn’t do anything wrong. I was the one that broke my contract. I was the one that almost killed Jared.
It should have been me
!

They had enough chances over the past six months to take me out. My three mile jog every morning had me pass Haven, a BMC-owned home on East Battery Street. They could have easily taken me out from the second story window and made it look like a mugging gone wrong. They didn’t have to kill Jared.

I felt an icy hand on my shoulder. Dom leaned against me, giving me the comfort I needed without making my inner turmoil obvious.

At times, I loved my mentor. It was a pity the BMC let him go. So many people like me needed a teacher like him.

Just like Jared’s death, the BMC’s abandonment of Dom made no sense. Why would they get rid of one of their best teachers?

I gasped as it came to me as clearly as a premonition. I felt my connection with Damian flair as my mind went into shock, putting pieces together that I didn’t know fit. It couldn’t be…

It made too much sense not to.

I looked up at Dom. “Why didn’t the BMC save you from Marcellus?” I asked with my voice barely above a whisper.

It was the most obvious question, one that should have been asked the moment the vampire necromancer died. I had been too busy grieving over Jared to think straight.

Damian kept the metaphysical lines between us open, listening but careful not to say a word to distract me. I could feel him in my head, and I didn’t mind, one less person to tell.

Dom looked into my eyes and I could see indecision filling their black depths. He sighed as he backed away, and I thought that he decided not to tell when he faced me and said, “They ordered me to kill you.”

“And?” I asked. My blood ran cold. I felt the wolf inside me tense, preparing for an attack.

“I refused,” Dom growled with disbelief written on his features. “Sarah, you’re like a daughter to me. I could never cause you harm.”

“What did the BMC do?”

“They said that they understood. The next day they sent me to take out Marcellus.”

I licked my lips. “They sent a vampire to kill a vampire necromancer?”

“Yes, that’s…” Dom froze. “They set me up.”

“No. I don’t think they did.”

“How do you figure? Sarah, I was controlled…”

“By a creature sent here to kill Damian, not me.”

Dom cocked his head to the side, and I screamed with frustration that he wasn’t putting it altogether.

“Think about it Dom! There are four people that I can fully trust; you, Donavan, Jared, and Damian.”

“Go on.”

“They sent Marcellus here to kill Damian. If he had succeeded, that would have taken care of one of my four. In doing so, the throne of Charleston would have been open to him, and I would be out of a safe place to live. Donavan should have killed you for killing his Weres. I should have been kicked out of the Clan for letting the dead Weres happen on my watch. I would have been out of another safe house as well as a Clan to protect me. Luckily, Donavan is more understanding than the BMC give him credit for. You, a vamp that would sacrifice his own life to keep me safe. Jared…” I couldn’t say any more, and Dom started nodding as he thought it over.

“I can’t believe they would do this,” he said.

Donavan came over as Dom said these words. “Who?”

“The Blood Moon Corporation,” Dom and I said in unison.

“We’ve got to tell Damian,” Dom said as he dug into his pocket for his phone.

“There’s no need,” I said before he could pull it out. “He’s been in my head listening since I figured it out.”

I felt Damian’s anger bubble over, and suddenly I saw Damian as though I actually stood in his office. His black hair, once long enough to touch his knees, now barely brushed his shoulders. His plum-colored eyes burned with anger as he pulled book after book off the bookcase against his back wall. His clothes were enough to make my mind want to go into shock. Usually he showed off his physique in leather pants and unbuttoned shirts. Tonight he wore sweatpants and a t-shirt. I felt like saying something, but after the loss of his once close friend Marcellus, maybe Damian wasn’t feeling like himself. I sensed that my body still remained in Donavan’s foyer, but my mind was back at Malevolent Dead. Damian looked up and cocked his head to the side.

“This is a new development,” he said with a half smile. “Sorry, Sarah, but we’ll have to figure out what it means later.”

“Your clothes?” I said before I could stop myself.

“Ha ha, very funny. You’re astral projecting. Usually witches can develop that ability to be in two places at once. Since you aren’t a witch, I can only guess that our blood bound link has caused you to feel my…displeasure.”

“And what? Brought me here to rage with you?”

“In a way, yes.”

“What are you doing?” My transparent hand indicated the books. Some of them looked new, with clean crisp pages. Others were ancient, with chipped covers and pages so brittle that they looked as though they would crumble with the slightest touch. Damian opened one, flipped through it so quickly that pieces of the book’s corner drifted to the table, and then tossed it back onto the shelf.

“I’m trying to find a way to protect you, Sarah. This is ridiculous. You broke a contract. They should make you pay a fine, not try and kill you.”

“We can’t tie them to it yet,” I reminded him. “We’re lacking physical evidence. You’ll need that if you plan on challenging them.”

Damian growled, and I saw his fangs sparkle in the lamp’s light. “I’ll obliterate them all if they harm a hair on your head. I will not sit by and watch this happen.” He paused, and then whispered, “Not again.”

If we hadn’t shared blood, then I would never had heard that. I had an uncanny resemblance to Damian’s deceased wife, Phaedra. For that reason alone Damian hired me onto his staff and gave me his blood. Originally he had hoped that I was his lost love reincarnated in another life, but I wasn’t. It was just my family’s random genes. I felt happy for that, because I’d be dead right now if I didn’t look like Phaedra, but it caused a lot of problems between us. Ever since we had shared blood, an experience that left us knowing each other carnally, Damian had treated me as though I was his dead wife, attempting to kiss me, calling me by her name, and making comments like he just did. I could ignore the comments, but everything else aggravated me.

I had to find a way to reverse the connection that opened when I drank his blood. If I didn’t, I’d have to leave Malevolent Dead, and I had come to love the vampire club.

“The books will help?” I asked, changing the subject.

Damian laughed unpleasantly. “The BMC, as you call them, have not been around as long as I. There are rules that even they must follow, and I’m sure what they are doing to you is going against that.”

Rules? Beside the BMC’s guidelines, I didn’t know of any other rules. Curious, I drifted to the table to look at the titles Damian shifted through.

“Desmond would know,” Damian muttered to himself, “but he’s not allowed to tell. Damn that pompous fool.”

Desmond was the full name of Dez, a blue-haired…thing…that lived at Malevolent Dead. I had first thought he was a vampire, but the more I grew to know him the more I realized that he was something else. He had the abilities of a born vampire, but with Damian around I could tell that he wasn’t. I would never describe Dez as pompous, but Damian seemed to know him better. He trusted him too. A feat that I hadn’t been able to do, since I was out of the loop when it came to his true identity. I wondered what he could know and who wouldn’t let him tell. Maybe when this was over, I could ask. For now…

The thought created a pulling sensation in my middle. Damian glanced up.

“Go with the flow, Sarah. Your soul needs to reconnect to your body. Fighting it will only cause pain.”

“What do we do?”

“Come back here. We can keep you safe. I’ll have Dez meet you in the parking lot.”

“As soon as I’m finished, I’ll head back.”

“I look forward to seeing you tonight.”

I opened my mouth, when the pulling sensation yanked, and I returned to Donavan’s foyer.

“Figured what out?” Donavan asked. It felt as though time stood still here, while I traveled to Damian’s. While I had been at Malevolent Dead I had felt safe. Now, I felt icy fear slide across my skin as I realized how bad everything was. I’d be lucky to make it back to Damian’s club alive.

I wrapped my arms around myself. “What happened last week wasn’t the actions of a vamp wanting Damian’s throne,” I said, choosing to pick up where we had left off rather than try to explain what had just happened to me. “It was the BMC trying to kill me.”

Chapter Three

Donavan turned toward his living room. “Monique, call the Clan. Tell them to be on alert. We have a situation.”

“What’s wrong?” she asked as she came walking into the room.

“It’s a long story. Call an emergency meeting for an hour from now. I’ll have Sarah brief everyone then.”

She nodded as she took the cordless phone from its cradle and headed back into the living room.

“I’ll patrol your lands,” Dom volunteered as he watched Monique leave the room. “If anything is out of sorts, I’ll let you know.”

“I appreciate it,” Donavan said as he grabbed my arm and pulled me deeper into his home. Once Dom closed the door on his way out, Donavan locked it.

“You need to stay in here until we figure out what to do next,” Donavan said as he led me to his dining room table.

“Damian said that he wants me back at Malevolent Dead,” I said, tapping my temple to indicate how I knew Damian’s wishes. “He seems to think that I’m safer there.”

Donavan laughed. “He’s right, but we have to make sure you get there first.”

I shook my head. “I doubt they’ll come after me right this second. The BMC can’t harm you directly, which is what will happen if they come for me here. They can’t take me out when I’m driving home, because doing so will put innocent humans at risk. They have rules to follow, and they will follow them to the letter when they finally do come for me.”

“How long will that be?”

“After last week’s incident, not long. I’ll give it a day, two at most, before they show themselves.”

Donavan paused in thought. “Do you have your gun?”

I laughed. “You took it earlier, remember?”

A smile crossed his face but didn’t reach his eyes. “I’ll have Aminka get them. She’s with Monique.”

I glanced in the direction of the living room. “You don’t have to do this.”

“Do what?”

“Protect me. Risk yourselves.”

Donavan came up to me, invading my personal space until he was in my face. I could feel his wolf, far stronger than mine, bearing down on me. It took a lot of will power to not avert my gaze from his. Most Weres would see my action as a challenge, but Donavan knew better. I had never belonged in a Clan. No one taught me when I was changed over. It would take a long time, before I stopped seeing him as my equal and start seeing him as my Romi, my alpha. Donavan would wait.

“You are my Clansmen, Sarah, and second to me. You may not have been a part of us for long, but you are still Clan. We protect. It’s the way of the wolf.”

He backed away, pulled out one of the chairs, and sat down. I walked around the table, choosing to sit across from him rather than beside. I leaned back and crossed my arms, waiting for whatever was going to happen next. Over the next thirty minutes, Weres from Donavan’s Clan showed up. They never bothered to knock like I had when I came over earlier. They walked through the front door like they lived here, greeted Monique and Aminka, and came into the dining room to join us. By the time Donavan stood and banged his fist on the table to call the meeting to order, over thirty Weres were packed into Donavan’s dining room.

I felt a wave of guilt at Donavan’s small numbers. When I had first met the DeLocket Clan, we had to meet in the living room because there were so many members, but our raid on Malevolent Dead to kill Jerrikin and Jackilin Skyner six months ago cost the Clan many of its member’s lives. No one ever blamed me, at least not to my face. I knew from the hostile looks I received during the full moon that they did though.

“We have a code red situation,” Donavan said. His voice sounded firm and authoritative. I felt his presence sweep over the room, the Romi leading his Clan. “You may remember that Sarah quit the Blood Moon Corporation around the same time she joined our Clan. We’ve gotten word they are trying to kill her for breaking her contract.”

“Word from who?” Jensen Stevenson asked. Jensen had been a lone wolf until a group of rogue Weres captured his human girlfriend and tortured her in an attempt to make him join their group. Jensen refused, asking for our help to save Juliet, but it was too late. She lived, but she now ran with us during the full moon. To give her the best chance at a normal life, they joined Donavan’s Clan. Jensen’s dirty blonde hair shaded his steel blue eyes, and I could tell that he had been working in his garage before he came here. He had car grease under his fingernails and oil smeared across the thighs of his jeans. Juliet sat next to him, an arm laced through his that sported an expensive looking diamond on her ring finger. I felt happy for them and their new development.

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