Bound by the Vampire Queen (62 page)

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Authors: Joey W. Hill

Tags: #Romance, #Fantasy, #Paranormal, #Fiction

BOOK: Bound by the Vampire Queen
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“With your vampire powers alone?” Belizar took a step forward, crimson shimmering through his gaze as well. He scoffed. “You are too tainted by the Fae sludge in your veins.”

“And you are blinded by your prejudices, stumbling into walls such that you can’t move forward.” She shifted her glance to Uthe. “Lord Uthe, you have ever been a fair force on this Council. Would you say that, if I defeat Lord Belizar, strength to strength, with no evidence of Fae magic, that I will adequately prove my point? Or do I need to kill every vampire in this room?”

Uthe met Belizar’s gaze. Lyssa noted the Russian vampire’s eyes had gone full flame. He’d been council head for a while, his Cossack background making him a powerful and—up until now—justifiable figurehead. Uthe provided the balance of brains needed for leadership, when Belizar would listen to him, which had regrettably become less and less.

The rage swelling up in Belizar was beyond polite, icy missives, and she was fiercely glad to see it.

She’d fully intended to take this moment back to their bloody roots, brute strength against brute strength, and apparently she was going to succeed, at least in that.

Letting out another snarl, Belizar stripped out of his coat, providing Uthe’s answer. Rolling up his shirt sleeves, he yanked off his tie, an appropriate move since she would choke him with it. Though vampires didn’t need to breathe, extreme pressure on the windpipe was uncomfortable and distracting. He cocked a brow at her outfit. “That might be a little constricting, Lady Lyssa.”

“I appreciate your concern, my lord, but it’s become a world of amazing new fabrics. They stretch and cling at once. Do you want to fight or discuss personal fashion choice?”

He sneered. “I see you’ve co-opted our assassin for your own use.”

“Daegan is a free agent,” she retorted. “He chooses his own alliances. I’d say he chose well this time. But he will not interfere in this. This is might-is-right combat terms, what our kind respects above all others. I think there’s room for more enlightened thinking than that, but unfortunately the Council’s recent decisions seem to have forgotten that.

However, you are welcome to prove me wrong, and save yourself a beating. Simply admit defeat now and step down.”

Belizar had fought at her side in the Territory Wars, with great capability. They had a history. But he represented the pure traditionalist of the Old World vampires, and he’d not hesitated to want her dead when he found out about her Fae form. His narrow-mindedness and overbearing personality had overwhelmed many of the lesser

Council members, keeping the Council on its current path. In watching Rhoswen deal with the consequences of restrictions that had more to do with fear and control than true leadership, Lyssa had become even more convinced such an approach would fail.

As Belizar considered her, perhaps thinking of their shared history as well, she drew herself up, hardly five feet tall without her shoes. Cocking a hip, she tilted her head. “Come, Belizar. Not afraid of being beaten by a girl, are you?”

He gave her a show of fang, a flash of the dark red eyes. Reaching under his shirt, he yanked out two wooden stakes. A warrior like the men behind her, she wasn’t surprised he was armed. Mason rose with a scrape of his chair, and Jacob started forward, but Lyssa’s sharp voice was a queen’s command that reverberated through the room.

“This fight is between the two of us. If he overpowers me, he deserves the kill . That’s the whole point, isn’t it?” She cocked her head, eyes gleaming. “As it was from the beginning. You'll regret pulling those toys, my lord. You may find yourself on the wrong end of them.”

Belizar leaped. With third-mark senses, Jacob could keep up with most of their maneuvers, but some were even too fast for him to follow. At least his lady’s speed, while not the fastest he’d ever seen it, was enough to keep up with Belizar. The Council scattered further as they hit the crescent-shaped table, so hard it shattered down the middle, a startling symbolism. Mason joined Daegan in corralling their ranks as Jessica moved back into the knot of servants, the safest place for her now.

Jacob bit back an oath as he saw it was Lyssa who’d broken the table, when Belizar hurled her into the stone. She rolled back, made it to her feet. When he charged upon her, she cut under his guard and hit him hard in the solar plexus, seizing his arm to bend it back. It would have broken with a defining snap if he hadn’t twisted free with remarkable agility, turning around to plunge his fist squarely in her face.

He realized he was struggling, Gideon holding him back. Anwyn’s hand was on his shoulder as well, gripping hard, even as she held Kane on her hip. His son’s uncertain cry jerked his attention back. “Gotta be her fight,” his brother hissed. “Can’t watch all corners by myself. Get your shit together, bro.” Jacob shook himself free, tried to do just that as Anwyn pressed Kane’s head to her neck to hide his eyes, trying to calm him. He was having none of it.

His cries were stuttering to a higher level. In a moment it would be full fledged, ear splitting wails.

Lyssa and Belizar’s fight took them across the room, Belizar driving her back toward the knot of servants. As the Russian turned, he flung her toward that still group, as if he intended to knock them down with her body like bowling pins.

Too late, Jacob registered Vincent’s tense, waiting posture. Saw the gleam of the polished stake in his fist. As Lyssa stumbled, pivoting away from Belizar, Vincent lunged forward. As one, Jacob and Gideon discharged arrows for the impossible shot.

Lyssa fell back into Vincent, and he dropped behind her, providing a cushion as she rolled away unharmed. One of the arrows had pierced Vincent’s shoulder. However, that wasn’t what had him flailing now. A steel shaft punched through his chest from the back. Jessica had not hit the heart, but she’d hit the spine, immobilizing him. She’d fallen with him so she was on the ground, holding the shaft in place and him against her in a way that looked almost compassionate. Jacob even heard her murmur, “Uh-uh. Nice try. Just sit there for a bit.” Jacob snapped his gaze back to the combatants.

They were circling in the center of the room again.

His lady’s mouth was bleeding, as was her temple, and it looked like Belizar had broken a couple of her ribs. She was limping. Belizar was almost unmarked, but he was holding one arm gingerly, because she’d succeeded in snapping it. His eyes shone with the light of victory. “You may beg my mercy now, Lady Lyssa,” he said. “I will be more than willing to grant it. You know you will ever be useful to this Council.”

She came to a full stop. Her fangs had lengthened, as they did before she fed. “I have one question for you, Lord Belizar, if you'll indulge me.”

“Of course.” He nodded magnanimously, though the effort cost him, his face tight.

“Are you done dicking around, or are you ready to fight?”

Jacob didn’t know if the street language or the message itself was what threw Belizar. Or if it even mattered. Because faster than Belizar or any vampire he’d ever seen could move, she’d closed the distance between them. He saw the brief flash as she stepped inside his armspan, a frightening moment as Belizar swiped one of the wooden stakes at her chest, narrowly missing her. She turned, her back pressing into his chest, and then she’d caught him by the skull and neck. It was like a lover reaching back to caress his jaw, but she brought him over her shoulder, a graceful choreography that arced him high in the air and then slammed him with brutal force down on the tile floor.

A web of cracks shot out from the impact point.

Bones and tile broke together. The male’s neck was at an angle that only happened when the neck was snapped. Jacob knew the tile landing would also break ribs, hips and further points on the spine, immobilizing him for however long it would take the bones to heal.

Belizar let out a strangled, agonized grunt, but Jacob saw there was no fear in his eyes. Only shock, anger and frustration, the realization he’d been soundly, clearly defeated. He was at the mercy of his opponent.

The wooden stakes had fallen free from his limp hands. Retrieving them, she laid them on his chest.

Squatting at his side, Lyssa lifted his arm and brought his wrist to her mouth. She drank, the ritual spoils of a victor, and though she sank in with a deep, painful clamp, she didn’t take long. She withdrew, delicately licking her lips, then took up the two stakes, angling one against his chest. She swept her gaze over the silent, assembled vampires, meeting Uthe’s gaze before she lowered her attention back to Belizar.

“I am now head of the Council. I will have final authority on all its decisions, and who serves upon it.

You will continue to do so, Lord Belizar. You’re an old war horse, like me.” A faint smile touched her bloody lips. “And you still fight passably well. But one of my conditions for all who serve on this Council is that I will take the right of a sire’s marking. I will have the ability to be in your mind, know your heart and soul. If I sense you resisting any intrusion of my mind into yours, at any time, concealing things from me, then I will remove you from this Council.”

“I’m guessing she’s not offering a great severance package if that happens,” Gideon muttered to Jacob.

He wanted to smile, but there was still too much going on in the room, too much blood and heat.

She’d taken Belizar out in one stroke, as if she’d been capable of it all along, but he knew what her state had been only a couple days before, newly transitioned. Right now her mind was closed as a trap, and she might have used the last reserve of her strength to make that move. He wasn’t going to make the same mistake twice in his concern for her, though, thank the gods for Jessica. He kept his attention firmly on the servants, trusting Daegan and Mason to handle the vampire end of things.

She straightened then, glanced toward her son, who had tears on his face and was wailing like a banshee. When he saw her looking at him, she pursed her lips, made a soft shushing noise and gave him a half smile, entirely at odds with the violence lingering in the room like the smell of a bomb blast. It startled him enough that he bit off midcry, hiccupping uncertainly. “That’s my good boy,” she said softly. “Easy there.”

Then her attention landed on Vincent, still in Jessica’s lap. “You may remove the stake, Jessica.

He will need his Master’s blood, and his Master needs a great deal as well.” Her gaze shifted to Torrence, Helga’s servant. The male was built like a mountain, shown to good effect in white shirt and dress kilt. Even as a mere human, he probably could have swung a claymore like a feather. “Go advise the staff that three donors are needed to restore his strength. You others, help carry him and Vincent to a suitable room to use as an infirmary and make sure they are comfortable.”

She glanced at the Council members. “If you will not serve under my conditions, then you will not serve. You will be stripped of any territory or overlord titles you carry, and relegated to a territory of my choosing, where I know the overlord or Region Master is loyal to me. I will know the truth of it when I am in your minds, so you might as well speak now.”

“She has proven her worth on the field of combat.” Belizar’s voice was a weak rasp of sound. His expression showed his agony, on several levels.

While a vampire would survive and heal multiple bone breaks, Jacob knew it was not going to be an easy or pleasant few hours for him. “She is worthy to take the leadership. You are all vampire again, my lady.”

“I was always all vampire. It is what my soul is, no matter my blood.” She gave him a hard look. “I am also Fae. You’re going to have to accept that, what it means. I brought a correspondence from the Fae queen, indicating her desire for a liaison between our two worlds. While I was intended to be that liaison, in light of my taking the head position, I will ask that another Fae be assigned that role. I will be recommending the Fae Lord Keldwyn, who already serves as liaison between the Seelie and Unseelie court. He considers this world his home much of the time anyway.”

She let her gaze rove over all of them. “We will always be vampires, with predatory drives and dominant attitudes, but there is room for other things.

With only five thousand of us in the world, survival is everything. We cannot stagnate. We can be strong, true to our nature, and yet still consider changes that augment that strength and nature. This is one of them.”

At her nod, Uthe came forward, as did Lady Barbra and Lady Carola. Lyssa straightened on the other side of the injured vampire, giving them room to check Belizar’s injuries so they could instruct the staff when they arrived with stretchers to move him and Vincent.

Belizar made a strangled noise, and Jacob followed the wild flicker of his gaze as Lyssa turned to speak to Mason.

My lady.
His warning shot into Lyssa’s mind. In the same moment, Barbra closed her hand on one of the discarded stakes and surged upward toward Lyssa.

Once again, Jacob didn’t even see her move, which made him wonder if Lyssa had left the stakes there, anticipating Barbra’s move. She held the vampire female by the throat, her other hand clamped on that wrist. Her green and bloodred eyes frosted, and that chill Jacob remembered well filled the room. It was a Fae power, yes, but since she’d been known for it even before she’d embraced her Fae side, she didn’t mind using it in full force now.

“You are very foolish,” Lyssa said. “That might be excused, but I know your heart, Barbra. I don’t have to take your blood to know your mind. Thank you, therefore, for making this so easy.”

Twisting the stake clutched in Barbra’s hand, she shoved it up under the rib cage. Since she held on to Barbra’s wrist, she broke her forearm like a twig.

Barbra gave a short scream that became violent twitching, bare heels scraping the stone as she fought Lyssa’s grip. The death throes kicked her shoes free, one of them rolling across the floor. At length, the life dying out of her eyes, her legs sagged, bending limply. Lyssa dropped her then, several paces from Belizar.

Jacob noticed her gaze shifted to Daegan. As she gave a near imperceptible nod, a look of satisfaction crossed Daegan’s face, and Gideon’s as well, telling Jacob they’d had unresolved issues with Barbra.

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