Read Frost Burn (The Fire and Ice Series, Book 1) Online
Authors: Erica Stevens
“Angie would never hurt me and she’s
human
.”
“She is,” he confirmed. “But she’s mixed up in this somehow, and there’s a vampire involved. I will
not
take the chance of you getting injured.”
“Julian…”
He was on her so fast she never saw him move. His arms wrapped around her waist; he jerked her up against him and spun his back toward the window. Less than a blink later the large front window shattered inward with a resounding crash that echoed through the bar. A startled cry escaped her; flying shards of glass sprayed the air around them. It had to have sliced into his back, but he showed no sign of injury as he dragged her to the ground and plastered his body over the top of hers. Glass fell to the ground in a tinkling wave; loud bangs resonated throughout the building. Confusion swirled through her; it took her a few more seconds to realize it was bullets rattling through the building and shattering the bottles and glass mirror behind the bar.
Julian’s hand wrapped around her head, his weight pressed her more firmly into the floor. Across the way she saw Melissa, Chris, and Zach with their backs against the wall. Lou and Luther were lying on the floor with their hands over their heads as more bullets smashed into the walls and shattered bottles. Bits of wood exploded around the room and fell to the ground around them.
“Julian we have to help them!” she cried. The bullets wouldn’t kill the two of them, they’d sting worse than a Box jellyfish, but they’d survive. The humans wouldn’t.
“They’ll be fine. Stay where you are,” he growled in her ear.
He wrapped his arms more protectively around her face as a jagged piece of wood sliced across her cheek, spilling blood. The sound that issued from him when he spotted her blood brought to mind a wolf defending its mate. His cheek pressed against hers as more bullets crashed throughout the building. The smell of gunpowder and chipped wood filled the air; she flinched away from more splinters of wood shooting around the room.
The blessed hush that descended upon the bar seemed almost too good to be true. Terrified to draw more fire on the bar, she didn’t move. Her gaze drifted back to the humans still huddled in their defensive postures. They all remained unmoving, waiting to see if more bullets would come flying into the building as the seconds stretched into a minute.
She was still trying to get her bearings when Julian launched himself off of her. Quinn flipped herself over in time to see him leap out the missing front window in one easy bound. “Julian!” His name tore from her throat, leaving it raw and brutalized.
Adrenaline pulsed through her; she shoved herself to her feet and bolted across the floor. She leapt out the window behind him, landed easily in the parking lot and dashed into the road. She spotted Julian’s rapidly fading figure already halfway down the road. Putting her head down, her arms pumped as her legs eagerly ate up the ground in between them. She would never be able to catch up to him, but she had to keep him in view or else she could lose him completely.
The world raced by her in a blur of speed she’d never achieved before. The driving urge to get to him gave her a powerful strength she’d never felt before. She didn’t know how far or where they were running to, location didn’t matter right now. All that mattered was staying on his trail.
Rounding a corner, she saw Julian zipping in between two buildings. Following behind, she had to turn sideways in order to squeeze in between the two houses. Forced to slow down her rush, she attuned her senses to her surroundings as she searched for any hint of menace up ahead. She didn’t hear, see, or smell anything out of the ordinary, but she knew they might be running into a trap. The wood of the one house nearly pressed against her nose, the scent of the old, rotting wood of the abandoned home filled her nose.
Pausing halfway down the narrow alley, she pulled her stake from her waist before continuing on. At the end of the alley, she stuck her head out cautiously. Julian stood around the corner, pressed against the wall. He glanced back at her and made a staying gesture with his hand. She saw nothing abnormal behind the two homes. Her head tipped back, the rooftops above her appeared to be clear.
Julian’s eyes were upon her when she looked at him again. ‘Stay,’ he mouthed.
Like hell
, she thought as he slipped further into the shadows.
She glanced around again before stepping out from between the two buildings and following him down another alley running behind the double line of homes. The sagging and dilapidated houses had been beyond their prime twenty years ago, now they looked like a good wind would blow them over. She was half-afraid some of them might fall down upon them if they hit the structures the wrong way. If she was right about where their run had taken them to in the desert, these homes had all been abandoned years ago when the bridge in this town had washed out during a flashflood. The economy had quickly followed the collapse of the bridge and the people had left the town behind.
The rotting houses faded away to be replaced with the crumbling buildings and store fronts that had once made up the center of the deserted town. Being stuck in this maze of dilapidated buildings, and unable to see more than ten feet in front or behind her, was a disconcerting sensation she didn’t like. Nor did she like that she kept losing Julian in the maze. If something happened to him…
She refused to let herself think about the possibility.
Nothing
would happen to him if she had anything to say about it.
Turning the corner, she nearly ran into his back. He’d stopped in the middle of the alley and turned to face her. “I told you to stay,” he whispered.
“And?”
Tension radiated through his vibrating muscles; he gave her one of those smiles she’d hated so much in the beginning. Even now, she scowled back at him, but she couldn’t deny the smile put her a little more at ease. It bolstered her to know he was still so cocky while standing in the middle of a ghost town, hunting vampires. It sounded insane in her head and yet so entirely right for her life.
He gave a brisk jerk of his head and pointed upward. Before she could figure out his intent, he braced one foot against the back of one building and the other against the back of another. Like some kind of humanoid monkey, he began to climb rapidly up between the structures. Quinn stifled a groan; she put her stake back in its holster and braced her feet and hands against the buildings too.
She’d never done anything like this before. As she moved rapidly up the three feet of space dividing the structures, she felt like Spider-Man and had to admit it made her feel a little bad ass. Reaching the top, Julian leaned back over to look down at her. He took hold of her hand and pulled her onto the roof of the building. Quinn warily eyed the sagging roof that bowed and dipped toward the middle. The last thing she needed was to fall through the thing, with her luck she’d be staked upon landing. Julian started across the roof toward the front of the building.
Her gaze fell on the tears and blood crisscrossing the back of his shirt from the glass and wood that had sliced across his flesh during the attack on the bar. There may even be a bullet embedded in his flesh, but the wounds were already beginning to heal, his skin had knitted itself back together. Even still, she couldn’t help but wince at the reminder of the damage he’d sustained while protecting her. Her heart ached for him, she longed to reach out and soothe him in some way, but there was no time for that now.
Quinn followed behind him; they stayed toward the more stable looking edge of the roof. Julian knelt against the two-foot high wall running around the entire roof. She knelt beside him and rested her shoulder against the wall. He placed his hands onto the wall and rose to peer over the side before ducking back again.
He pulled his phone out and began to type something into it. “What are you doing?” she whispered.
“Letting the others know where we are and turning on the tracking app on my phone.”
“You have a tracking app?”
He slid his phone into his pocket. “We all do. With what we do, we tend to get separated far more often than we’d like.”
“Oh.” She didn’t know what else to say to that.
He leaned closer to her. “I don’t suppose telling you to stay here would do me any good, would it?”
“None at all.”
“That’s what I thought. When we get in there you have to be prepared for at least one of them to be able to control minds.”
Her hand flew to her mouth as realization dawned. Sickness churned within her stomach, anger rose up in her. “Angie,” she whispered.
“Yes.”
Her nostrils flared as another notion hit her. “My family.”
Julian rested his fingers against her cheek and shook his head. “No. This one is newer than the one who killed your family.”
“How do you know that?”
“Because Angie’s memories weren’t solidified, there are holes in them. She doesn’t recall what she’s witnessed, but I was able to see it the first time I touched her. I made the wrong and stupid assumption the killer was a human male and not a human with tampered memories. The vampire who murdered your family was smart, he had a lot more power if he got to your cousin and recognized what you all were. He was far older than these vamps. We’ll find the one who killed your family, but he’s not in there.”
Uncertainty swirled through her; she so badly wanted one of the bastards inside to be the one she’d been preparing to run across for the past six years. But even if he wasn’t in there, these monsters deserved to die for what they’d done to Angie. He clasped hold of her cheeks, leaned forward and kissed her. “Stay calm and stay near me,” he whispered against her lips.
He sat back to study her; she nodded her agreement. She had no idea what he’d intended when he’d climbed onto this roof. She didn’t get a chance to ask as he rose to his feet, climbed onto the wall, and then stepped off of it.
Quinn shot up like a firecracker but the sight of him standing only a foot beneath the wall and grinning up at her doused her panic. “Ass!” she hissed.
“Shh,” he said and put his finger against his lips.
He was lucky she had to be quiet; otherwise, she might have staked him herself. Instead, she swung her leg over the wall and suppressed a gasp when he grabbed hold of her waist and lifted her effortlessly into the air. Goosebumps broke out on her flesh when he slid her back down the broad expanse of his chest. Wrapping his arm around her waist, he kept her pinned against his body on the set of fire stairs running down the front of the three-story building.
“Don’t move.”
She thought he might actually be enjoying this, and she couldn’t deny the thrill of pleasure the feel of him gave her, but she kept her senses focused on the world around them as they remained immobile on the stairs. She tried not to think about how old these stairs were and when the last time they’d been maintained was. If the stairs gave out beneath them there would be no keeping their presence here a secret. Every vampire in a hundred yard radius would know where they were. And they would come for them.
The breeze tickled her hair and chilled her skin. She didn’t move so much as an eyelash as she strained to hear. She thought she caught the sound of voices and tuned out the lonely howl of the wind over the sand. Yes, there were definitely voices. She couldn’t make out what was being said or how many there were, but they were coming from inside the building. Grunting and the hollow thump of fists hitting flesh followed the voices. She frowned at the noises, unable to understand why they were fighting amongst each other.
She turned her head and rested her mouth against his ear. “How many?”
“Seven, maybe eight,” he whispered. “You really should stay here.”
She shook her head. “You’re not going in there alone.”
“You’re to stay near me, Dewdrop,” he told her again.
He released her and slid around to stand in front of her. She followed noiselessly behind as they crept down the dilapidated stairs. With every step they took, she was certain the steps were going to collapse beneath them. Miraculously they held firm until they arrived at a second floor window.
Julian kept hold of the remaining pieces of glass as he knocked them out of the already broken window. He dropped the glass silently onto the floor inside the building before noiselessly slipping inside. He had no idea where the vampire who had shot up the bar had gone. He could have continued to follow him, but his attention had been drawn to this building by the overwhelming stench of decay, and the presence of even more vampires.
He’d find the one who had fled the bar eventually, he would definitely pay for what he’d done tonight, but he couldn’t ignore the nest of vampires here. A nest he was certain the vampire he’d been chasing belonged to, but he’d purposely gone in a different direction. The vampire hadn’t realized Julian wouldn’t be so easily lost or led off the real trail.
Turning back, he took hold of Quinn’s hand and helped her inside. He didn’t like the idea of her in here with him, would have preferred to keep her far away from this, but that would have been impossible. It was better to have her with him while entering the building than to have her sneak in later.
She bent over and pulled two stakes from her boots. She handed one out to him, but he waved it away. ‘Keep it,’ he mouthed to her.
She shook her head and shoved it into his hand. Before he could protest further she tugged a knife free of a holster on her waist. He’d known she was armed at all times, but he hadn’t realized she was a walking death trap as she shoved the knife into his hand and pulled another one free. Her eyes were the color of amber when they met his again; they brought to mind a hawk’s eyes when it honed in on its prey. He hesitated, his gaze slid back to the window as he briefly contemplated dragging her back outside and far away from this place.
The vampires in this place may not be old, but they were still volatile and lethal, especially to her. She jerked her head forward and jutted her chin out. She would never agree to leave here without a fight. Julian turned away from her and focused on the cavernous room they’d entered.
The expansive space took up the entire second floor of the building. Heavy cobwebs hung from the rafters above their heads, their feet left prints in the thick dust as they crossed the floor with care. At least half a dozen five-foot tall mannequins of torsos were shoved into the shadowed corners of the room. Some had sheets draped over top of them but the sheets had fallen off of others and were a dusty heap pooled upon the ground.
He didn’t pay any attention to the floor squeaking beneath him. The rats he heard in the walls and scurrying through the shadows were more than enough to cover a noisy floorboard or two. At the end of the room was a single wooden board running from the wall to the set of stairs winding down to the first floor. Light flooded up from below, it bounced off of the dark ceiling beams and illuminated the first five feet of the loft area they stood in.
Voices reverberated through the room. A low moan sounded, he could hear the solid thwack of a boot connecting with someone’s ribs. Something cracked, a squeal sounded from below and then the hollow thuds stopped. Small mewls and whimpers continued, but the beating had ceased, for now.
“What is his problem? Why did he flip out like that?” a voice demanded from below.
“I don’t know,” someone else answered.
Bending down, he crept forward the last few feet, and held his arm back to keep Quinn at a safe distance away. He peered over the edge of the loft at the eight men gathered below. One of the men was curled up in the fetal position on the floor. The pitiful noises were coming from him as he kept one hand clasped against his caved in cheekbone and the other against his concave chest.
“Kill me,” the pitiful, bloodied and broken vampire moaned. “Please just kill me.”
“Shut up,” one of the others said and spat at the writhing man.
Julian’s lip curled in revulsion as his gaze drifted away from the pathetic excuse of a vampire lying on the floor. Before he’d looked over, he’d already known what to expect as the stench of rotting flesh and coppery blood filled his nostrils. The spectacle of the piled bodies below was enough to make even
his
stomach turn.
He rested his hand against the railing and wrapped his other hand around Quinn’s arm in order to hold her back. It would be impossible to keep this from her, but he’d like to be able to do so for a little bit longer. There were at least a couple dozen bodies of women and children lying in a heap near the back of the building. These vampires were the worst form of life. They killed innocents, and slept and lived with the remains of their food. Animals had more care for their environment and conditions than this.
He was going to enjoy killing these bastards.
Bloodlust built within him, excitement pulsed through his body; his fangs tingled as his body swelled with power. Quinn’s hand wrapped around his bicep drawing his attention back to her. She crept closer to him and rested her hand on his cheek.
She affected him in some strange ways, but he wasn’t prepared for the sense of calm that slid through his body at her touch. He placed his hand over top of hers and turned his lips into her palm. She tried to take a step closer to the edge; he kept her back and shook his head no. ‘Not yet,’ he mouthed against her palm.
Her eyes flickered toward the lower room, but she didn’t try to fight him on it. From below the sounds of more blows falling upon the flesh and bone of someone drifted up to them. He leaned over to see three of them beating the one on the floor again. With the way they were going, they were going to kill him before Julian had to worry that he and Quinn were outnumbered four to one.
Julian pulled Quinn back when the front door opened and moonlight briefly spilled inside the building. Thick leather boots resounded on the wooden floor as the vampire he’d been chasing strolled inside with a cocky grin on his face. His long brown hair stood up in spikes on top of his head. Julian’s fingers flexed on his free hand, as he imagined driving his fist into the smirk on this guy’s face.
“Where have you been?” one of the others inquired.
“I decided to pay our friends a little visit,” the shooter replied.
A man who had been hanging back, watching the others beat on the broken vampire on the floor held up his hand to halt the others. They reluctantly stepped away from the now unmoving form curled into a ball. “What?” the man who had halted them barked.
The shooter shrugged and ran his hand through his hair. “It will make them think twice about snooping around again.”
“Are you out of your mind?” The man strode across the open floor toward the shooter. The shooter’s eyes darted nervously toward the others, but they all stayed where they were. Julian focused on the one approaching the shooter; the one he assumed was their leader. “Who gave you permission to do that?”
The shooter took another step back. “We can’t continue to hide from them, I thought…”
“No one said you could think!” The bellowed words reverberated through the rafters of the building and shook the walls. “You just poked at a nest of rattlers.”
“They’re only two vampires,” the shooter stammered as he began to back peddle faster.
“I told you last night, after you sent the child to leave them alone! I won’t tell you again!”
The crunching sound of a punch hitting shooter’s cheekbone echoed through the building. He felt the small flinch that ran through Quinn’s body. She was tough, she’d been through a lot, but she didn’t have this level of viciousness and cruelty within her. He pulled her closer against his side in the hopes his touch would be able to pacify her as much as hers did him. The piercing snap of a bone cracking was followed by a squeal that reminded him of a frightened pig. The shooter hit the floor with a loud thump. His going down didn’t stop the other vampire from continuing to pummel him.
He knew he could take them out, but he worried about Quinn. She would never agree to stay up here and out of danger. The others would be arriving soon, he could always wait for them but he’d never been one to wait, or require help. He’d also never had anything worth waiting around for. He squeezed Quinn’s hand reassuringly again.
The shooter lay unmoving upon the ground; blood seeped out around him and covered the one who had been beating upon him, but Julian knew he wasn’t dead. Kneeling down, the one who had been beating on the shooter removed a knife from the holster at his side. Julian pulled Quinn further back; he shot her a silencing look when she started to protest. She didn’t need to see the man having his head methodically sawed off.
When he finished separating the head from the body, the vampire Julian assumed was the leader of the group holstered his knife, rose to his feet and kicked the head carelessly aside. It rolled across the floor before knocking up against the wall. “We’re going to have to go and finish what this moron started.”
“But you said we should stay away from them, Drew,” one of the others protested.
“That was before this
idiot
,” he punctuated the word with a severe kick to, “idiot’s,” ribcage on the ground. “Went and declared war on a vampire that’s easily a hundred years older than us.”
Julian scoffed at their deadly wrong assumption that he was only a hundred years older than they were. They had absolutely no idea what they were dealing with, which only led to his growing belief that the oldest amongst them was at most a hundred. The Elders had needed to be destroyed, but jackasses like these guys were the bad side of having the hierarchy of vampires removed. Even if The Elders had mostly faded away into oblivion after The Slaughter, the knowledge of their existence had been enough to keep vampires like these assholes from stepping out of line.
They’d spent the past two years concentrating on trying to gather the straggling remainders of the Hunter and Guardian lines together, but he realized now they’d made a big mistake by ignoring the vampires still out there. They’d given little consideration to the younger and therefore less of a hazard, vampires. Vampires like these were a big menace to society and their way of life, if they believed it was remotely ok to start shooting up human establishments and attacking other vampires in public.
“Let’s go,” Drew commanded.
Those words made his decision for him, he couldn’t allow them to leave this building. Turning toward Quinn, he tugged her up against him so he could whisper in her ear. “I’m going down there. Wait here until I tell you differently.” He could see the argument building in her eyes as they shimmered with defiance. “The two of us in here without them knowing is our biggest element of surprise right now. If we don’t go down there together, they might assume I left you behind when I chased our attacker. Just wait.”
Her eyes were narrowed upon him, he had no doubt she wouldn’t wait for long; he could only hope he’d be able to take out a couple of them before she followed. He wrapped his hand around the rail and gave it a forceful tug. Dust fell down from it, but it held up beneath his jerk. Switching both of his weapons into his left hand, he seized the board with his right and climbed onto it. He remained crouched on it for a second before launching himself over top of the stairs and out over the first floor.
Air rushed up around him, it whipped his hair back from his face and beat at his clothes as he fell from the sky. He didn’t make a sound as he landed in the center of the building with his knees bent to absorb the impact. His left hand rested on the floor, the knife and stake pressed firmly into his palm as he met the startled eyes of the men surrounding him.
He remained crouched as he stared at the men. Three of them glanced wildly toward the front door. “I’ll rip your head off before you make it ten steps,” Julian promised them.
“Hey now,” Drew’s tone of voice made Julian’s fingers curl into the wooden floor as his upper lip curled into a sneer. “We’re all the same kind here; we’re all friends.”
“You may be vampires, but you’re not my kind, and we are
not
friends.” They exchanged uneasy looks, but none of them made a move. His gaze flickered over all of them as he waited for the telltale niggle at the base of his skull that would alert him to who he was searching for.
And then he felt it, the distinct sensation of something trying to wiggle its way into his mind like a worm slithering into the earth. His nostrils flared, his head turned to take in the one he sought. His eyes settled on the disheveled man across from him. He looked no older than twenty, his collarbones stuck out from his torn shirt and there was enough dirt on his face to give Pig-Pen a run for his money.
The boy’s eyes were focused on Julian, the niggling at the back of his skull intensified. Julian held his gaze as he broke into a slow smile and gave the kid a wink. The boy did a double take, his forehead creased in confusion before he took a step back. With a burst of speed, Julian sped toward him, grabbed him by the neck and drove him into the floor. A startled cry escaped the boy; his fingers tore at Julian’s hand.
“Don’t poke at those whose minds are far older than yours,” Julian snarled before driving the stake into the boy’s chest.
The boy convulsed beneath him; his fingers clawed at the stake before he went limp. Julian jerked it free and spun to face the other six as they started toward him. Though he hadn’t given the signal, Quinn leapt onto the railing of the loft and swung out to grab hold of a beam over her head. He’d been hoping to take more down before she decided to disobey him, but his biggest concern of taking out the one with mind control had at least been accomplished.