Everlasting Kiss (21 page)

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Authors: Amanda Ashley

BOOK: Everlasting Kiss
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It was cool and cloudy when they arrived at LAX. Due to some engine trouble and a layover in Las Vegas, Daisy was a nervous wreck by the time they pulled out of the airport parking lot in the rental car Alex had arranged for. It had been one thing to talk about saving Erik when she was safe in her parents’ home in Boston, quite another now that she and Alex were here, in the heart of Rhys Costain’s domain.

The signs of the upcoming holiday could be seen everywhere, she thought as they drove through the dark streets, but it hadn’t felt like Christmas in her parents’ home even though her father had insisted on putting up a tree. No one in the family felt like shopping and they had decided that, in lieu of presents, they would make a donation to Brandon’s favorite charity.

Daisy was exhausted when they reached her house an hour and a half later. Every yard but hers sported Christmas lights and Nativity scenes. After unlocking the door, she switched on the lights, then dropped her handbag on the sofa. She glanced around the room. Everything looked the same, but she was different. So much had changed since she had been here last. In some ways, her life and that of her family would never be the same again.

“I’m not going to be worth anything if I don’t get some sleep,” she said, smothering a yawn.

Alex stretched his arms over his head. “I know what you mean. We can’t do much today, anyway, so what do you say we get a few hours of sack time and then figure out what we’re going to do.”

“Sounds good to me.”

Still, as tired as she was, it was a long time before sleep found her.

Chapter 29

Awareness returned slowly. Erik knew it was a sign of his waning strength that it took him a moment to remember where he was. Ah, yes, Costain’s dungeon, he thought bleakly. His body ached; his veins felt tight, shriveled.

If he didn’t feed soon, he thought he might go mad, but even that seemed preferable to the hunger that clawed at him relentlessly, demanding to be satisfied.

The faint click of metal against metal told him someone had opened the door. Her scent preceded her.

It took an effort for him to gain his feet, but his pride wouldn’t let her find him on the floor. “Mariah, what in hell brings you here?”

Her smile was decidedly nasty as she gestured at the chains that bound him. “How could I miss seeing you like this?” Her gaze moved over him. “Hungry, Erik? I’ll bet you’d like a drink.” Mariah snapped her fingers and a young man appeared at her side. Using her thumbnail, Mariah made a gash in the man’s wrist.

The rich, sweet, coppery scent of hot fresh blood filled the air, so thick, so rich, Erik could almost taste it on his tongue. He moved toward the bars, his fangs aching, everything else forgotten but the man. The mortal, an end to his torment, was close, so close. Erik tugged on the chains that bound him. If he could just reach the man, he could quench the relentless thirst that burned through him…

Mariah’s laughter rang off the stone walls as Erik tugged against the chains. “He’s sweet,” she said, her voice a throaty growl, “so sweet.” Her eyes went red as she sank her fangs into the man’s neck. The hapless mortal winced but made no sound, no effort to push her away.

Mariah drank, her gaze never leaving Erik’s face. When she finished, she let the mortal fall to the floor.

“I’ll be back,” she said, a smug smile twisting her lips. “I’ll be the last thing you see before I send you to hell.”

And so saying, she vanished from sight.

Erik stared at the place where Mariah had stood only moments before, her threat replaying itself in his mind. He was trying to determine what it meant when the man moaned softly. Lifting himself on his elbows, he tried to crawl away, but he was too weak to drag himself for more than a foot or two.

A string of curses rose in Erik’s throat. The man wasn’t quite dead. Blood oozed from the wounds in his neck. The smell of it wrapped around Erik until he could think of nothing else. In spite of the pain, he tugged against the chains, his only thought to reach the mortal who lay slowly dying just out of reach.

If he could bring the mortal nearer the bars before it was too late…. Closing his eyes, Erik tried to focus his thoughts, to meld his mind with that of the mortal, but he couldn’t think, couldn’t concentrate.

And then it was too late. The tantalizing scent of blood was replaced by the sharp stink of urine and the musty smell of death.

Shrouded in despair, Erik huddled in a corner of his cell and prayed that Rhys would soon grow weary of whatever game he was playing and end it.

Chapter 30

When Daisy awoke the next morning, she wasn’t surprised to find Alex in the kitchen fixing breakfast. As usual, he didn’t know the meaning of the word
small
, and she didn’t think he’d eaten cereal since they were kids. They weren’t having cereal this morning, either. Bacon sizzled in one frying pan, there were scrambled eggs in another.

With a shake of her head, Daisy sat at the kitchen table.

“Hey, sis, you hungry?”

“I’d better be,” she muttered, “or a lot of this is going to waste.”

Alex shrugged as he expertly flipped one pancake after another. “Breakfast is the most important meal of the day, you know that, and if we’re going after Costain, well…”

He didn’t finish the sentence, but then, he didn’t have to. If they were hunting Costain, they’d need their strength.

The
Star Wars
theme cut across the silence. With a shake of her head, Daisy reached for Alex’s cell phone, which was sitting on the table.

“Don’t answer it!” Alex warned. “It’s either Mom or Dad. They’ve been calling since daybreak.”

Daisy stared at the phone until it stopped ringing. “We probably should have left a note. I wonder why they haven’t called me.”

“Have you checked your phone? Maybe it’s dead.”

“Maybe. I’ll check it later.”

Alex handed Daisy a plate, then sat down across from her. “I’m sure they’ve figured out what we’re up to.”

“I guess so. Still…” Daisy picked up her fork. “You don’t think Dad will come here, do you?”

Alex shrugged. “I doubt it. You know how he is. He’s always let us make our own choices.”

Daisy nodded. Her parents had never tried to control the lives of their children. Noah and Irene had taught them right from wrong, then let them discover for themselves that there were rewards or consequences for every act and every decision.

They ate in silence for several minutes before Alex said, “So, how do you want to play this?”

“I’m not sure. I just know we need to find Erik before it’s too late. He’s hurting, Alex. He might be dying.”

“Come on, Daisy, he can’t be dying. He’s already dead. The only way to take a vampire out now is by lopping off their head. Or impaling them with a well-placed stake.”

“All right, maybe what’s happening to him won’t kill him, but he’s in pain unlike anything you can imagine. I dreamed about him again last night, and it was awful. I could see him. He’s in a dungeon, chained to a wall. He hasn’t fed in days…”

Alex blew out a sigh. “You know they don’t have to feed every day.”

“Stop it! I know what I’m feeling, what I’ve seen. We came here to help him, remember?”

Alex rolled his eyes. “All right, all right.” Taking up his cell phone, he turned it off and shoved it into his pocket. “Let’s get this show on the road.”

 

Finding Erik’s whereabouts proved to be much easier than Daisy had expected. She didn’t need her compass, although it was open in her lap as she drove. All she had to do was concentrate on Erik. As if guided by an internal GPS, she knew which streets to take, where to turn, and where to stop.

“You’re sure he’s in there?” Alex asked as she parked the Lexus.

“Yes,” she said, but she couldn’t help frowning as she read the small hand-lettered sign above the door.
LA MORTE ROUGE
.

“Looks like a nightclub or a fancy whorehouse,” Alex remarked. “Are you sure he’s in trouble and not just…ah, scratching an itch?”

“I’m sure,” Daisy replied succinctly.

“Uh-huh. So, where do we go from here? This is your party. You call the shots.”

Daisy closed her eyes. She could sense Erik’s presence, but only faintly. At this time of the day, she figured he was resting. So, what now? Did they try to go in the front door, or find a back entrance? She glanced at the compass in her hand. The needle glowed red. If only it could tell her how many vampires were inside.

“Daisy?”

She glanced up and down the street. There was no one in sight. “Let’s see if we can find another entrance.”

“You’re the boss.”

Daisy grimaced. That was a scary thought. Taking a deep breath, she got out of the car and walked around the corner of the building. The property in the rear of La Morte Rouge sloped downward. A narrow stone staircase led to a lower level.

She breathed a sigh of relief when she reached the bottom of the stairs. The hill leveled out; the ground was mostly flat, dotted with weeds. There were no windows on the back side of the building. There was, however, a corroded iron door. It had a lock, but no handle.

“Alex?”

“I’m on it.” Pulling out his trusty lock pick, he set to work.

“What’s taking so long?”

“Don’t get your panties in a twist. It’s an old lock.”

Daisy tapped her foot impatiently. If they couldn’t get in this way, they’d have to go through the front door. She frowned inwardly. Maybe the front door would have been the way to go. Maybe the lower floor was some kind of lair. For all they knew, Rhys could be inside.

She was about to ask Alex if they were doing the right thing when he murmured, “Bingo!” He gave a little push on the door and it swung open with a rusty creak.

Daisy took a few steps forward. She peered into the darkness beyond the doorway, wrinkled her nose against the musty smell emanating from the inside.

“Smells like something died in there,” Alex muttered as he pulled a flashlight from his pocket. “Come on.”

If she hadn’t been one hundred percent sure that Erik was in there somewhere and that he needed her, she never would have followed Alex into that foul-smelling cavern.

The corridor seemed to go on and on, with the smell of decomposing flesh growing increasingly odious until, abruptly, the corridor opened into a cavernous room that looked like something out of an old horror flick.

Alex swept his flashlight back and forth, revealing a dozen small animal cages along one wall, and six larger cells on the other.

They found the source of the horrible smell lying on its stomach a foot or so from the last cage.

Erik was in the last cell. He was sprawled on his back, his eyes closed, his arms shackled to the wall behind him.

Daisy gasped when the flashlight’s beam settled on his face. His cheeks were sunken, his skin looked like old parchment.

“I think we’re too late,” Alex whispered. “Let’s get the hell out of here.”

“Erik? Erik, wake up!” She moved closer to the cell, her hands curling around the bars. Was he breathing? He couldn’t be dead! There was no stake in his heart; his head—she shuddered—was still attached to the rest of him. “Erik, it’s Daisy. Please wake up.” She glanced over her shoulder, her unease at being in this horrible place growing by the minute. The sooner they got out of there, the better. “Erik!”

He jackknifed into a sitting position, his movement so fast, so unexpected, she jumped backward, colliding with Alex, who had been standing behind her.

Pressing a hand to her heart, Daisy murmured, “Thank the Lord!”

“Daisy?”

“I’m here.” She reached through the bars, wanting, needing, to touch him.

Erik shook his head. “Get out of here,” he said hoarsely. “Now.” He looked at Alex. “Get her out of here.”

“We’re not leaving without you,” Daisy said.

“Dammit! Rhys owns this club. He’s probably upstairs right now. Get out of here!”

“Alex, the door, hurry.” Daisy glanced over her shoulder, her memory of the last time they had encountered Rhys all too vivid in her mind.

Unlike the lock on the door to the dungeon, the lock on the cell door clicked open on the first try.

Erik hissed as Alex stepped inside. “Get out of here! Dammit, do you want to die? I haven’t fed in weeks.”

Alex took a quick step backward, putting himself out of reach. “All right, Daisy Mae, now what?”

“Give me the pick,” Daisy said.

“No way! Going in there is suicide. Look at his eyes.”

Daisy took a deep breath as she plucked the lock pick from her brother’s hand. “He won’t hurt me.”

“Are you willing to bet your life on that?”

“Yes, because we don’t have time to stand here arguing about it.”

“Daisy, no!” Erik scrambled to his feet. “Get out!” He closed his eyes as the hunger rose up within him, hot and heavy. “Go. Please, Daisy.”

“No.”

He didn’t have to open his eyes to know she was standing beside him. Her scent teased his nostrils, the rapid beat of her heart was like thunder in his ears as she picked the lock on the silver shackles that bound him.

As soon as the chains fell away, his arms closed around her.

Daisy stared up into his eyes, eyes burning with the need for blood. She took a deep breath. It wasn’t wise to show fear in the face of a predator. “Erik, just wait a few more minutes, until we’re out of here, and then I’ll give you what you need, I promise.”

It was hard to concentrate on her words when her blood was singing so sweetly, promising an end to the pain knifing through him. She was here, warm in his arms. Her blood…he needed it as she needed air to breathe. The urge to bury his fangs in her throat grew stronger. He could take her, and her brother, too. It would be so easy.

“Erik.” She stroked his cheek with her fingertips. “We need to go.”

He stared at the love shining brightly in the depths of her eyes and then, with a murmured curse, he released her and staggered out of the cell. “We need to hurry,” he said, his voice tight with pain. “Rhys is coming.”

Muttering, “I’ve got a bad feeling about this,” Alex grabbed Erik, slung him over his shoulder, and headed for the door with Daisy hot on his heels.

She blinked against the sunlight when they emerged. “Wait! The sun!” Tugging off her sweater, she threw it over Erik’s head. “The door! Shouldn’t we lock the door?”

“It won’t slow him down,” Erik said, his voice muffled by her sweater.

Daisy followed Alex up the stairs to the street, her heart pounding. She dared not look behind her for fear she would see Rhys. If she lived to be a hundred, she would never forget how it had felt to drive a stake into his back. Never forget the way he had looked at her, his eyes red and wild, his fangs dripping with Alex’s blood.

When they reached the car, Alex shoved Erik none too gently into the backseat and slammed the door. Daisy scrambled into the passenger seat while Alex slid behind the wheel, jammed the key in the ignition, and peeled away from the curb, leaving a wide swath of rubber behind.

“Go to my place,” Erik said.

Alex shook his head. “No. I don’t like that idea at all.”

“It’s closer,” Daisy said. “We don’t have time to argue.”

“Daisy, maybe he’s right for once,” Erik said. “Rhys has never been to your house. The threshold should keep him out.”

“Should?” Alex careened around a corner on two wheels. “Will it or won’t it?”

“I don’t know.” Erik closed his eyes in an effort to shut out the beating of mortal hearts, but it was no use. The sound of their rapidly beating hearts, the scent of their blood, was overpowering. The heat of the sun coming through the back window made his skin tingle, rivaling the burning pain in his hands and legs where the chains had burned his skin. Damn, he couldn’t remember when he’d felt this bad.

Twenty minutes later, Alex pulled into Daisy’s garage. Erik breathed a sigh of relief as the garage door came down, shutting out the sun.

For a moment, the three of them sat there, then Alex got out of the car, a stake in one hand.

“What are you doing?” Daisy asked, getting out of the car.

“Look at him and then ask me that. You’ve brought a monster home with you, and a damn hungry one from the looks of him.”

“He’s right, Daisy.” Erik clenched his hands at his side. “You’re in more danger from me than from Rhys.”

“I’m not afraid.”

“Dammit, you should be!”

“Let’s go inside.”

“Are you out of your mind?” Alex asked.

“Erik needs to feed,” Daisy said with a calmness she was far from feeling. “So, this is what we’ll do. I’ll let him drink from me, and you…”

“No way!” Alex said.

“And you,” Daisy continued, “will stand behind me to make sure he doesn’t take too much. And then he’s going to drink from you.”

“Like hell!”

Daisy glanced at Erik. She had never truly been afraid of him before, never believed she was in any danger from him, until now. “Alex, we don’t have time to argue.”

“Dammit, Daisy, this is the dumbest idea you’ve ever had!”

Daisy didn’t reply. Sweeping past her brother, she unlocked the door that connected the garage to the kitchen and went inside.

After a moment, Erik exited the car and followed her.

Alex glared at the vampire’s back. Muttering an oath, he slammed the car door, then stomped into the house. He found Daisy and Erik facing each other in the living room. Erik looked like death warmed over. Alex looked at his sister, wondering if she was as relaxed as she appeared.

“All right, let’s get this over with.” Daisy turned toward Erik. After taking a deep breath, she held her hair away from her neck. “Go on. If Rhys shows up, you’ll need to be strong.”

Erik stared at her. He wanted to refuse, but her blood called to him, screamed to him. “Don’t let me feed for more than a few minutes,” he told Alex, and then, uttering a vile oath, he wrapped his arms around her.

Alex stood close behind Erik, his gaze fixed on the vampire. He had hunted vampires since he turned seventeen. He had staked them. He had beheaded them. But he had never actually seen one feed. It was totally revolting and yet he had to admit that watching Erik drink from Daisy held a certain morbid fascination.

A glance at Daisy showed that she didn’t find it the least bit revolting. Her eyes were closed, her expression was one of a woman in the throes of ecstasy.

With a shake of his head, Alex glanced at this watch. Erik had said not to let him feed for more than a few minutes. How many minutes in a few? Two? Three? Five? How the hell was he supposed to know how long was too long?

He looked at Erik. The vampire’s eyes were also closed. Grimacing, Alex shook his head. If he didn’t know better, he would have sworn Erik and Daisy were making love. Hell, maybe they were. What did he know about vampire lovemaking?

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