Obsidian Flame (27 page)

Read Obsidian Flame Online

Authors: Caris Roane

Tags: #Vampires, #General, #Romance, #Fantasy, #Psychic Ability, #Fiction

BOOK: Obsidian Flame
11.38Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Thorne laughed and as the mist shifted, he flipped him off. Luken grinned a little more.

Thorne turned and two death vampires were on him, long black hair gleaming, dark eyes glittering, and that pale almost bluish skin a beacon in the dimly lit Convent halls. They both came from his left.

He turned and, with his left hand, grabbed a dagger from his weapons harness. In a single smooth stroke he jammed it into the throat of the pretty-boy whose sword was high, inches away, and ready to cleave Thorne’s head in two.

Thorne dropped and with preternatural speed rolled beneath the second death vamp, then thrust his sword up. He caught the second bastard in the gut. The momentum of both death vamps, one with a knife in his throat, one with his stomach slit open, forced them into a collision. They bounced off one wall and fell into a writhing heap.

Thorne did what he had to do.

He took the head of the pretty-boy he’d gutted. The other one, trapped beneath his buddy, stared up at him, the hilt bobbing as he tried to swallow or breathe or maybe both.

Thorne reached down and grabbed the dagger, pulling it out. Blood spurted with each thump of the bastard’s heart. It wasn’t long before his eyes glazed over.

Two more down. His tally was already at five. The vision had shown about thirty death vampires in all. Casimir wasn’t taking any chances. Too bad he hadn’t known that Marguerite would be able to reach pure vision.

He had half a minute or so before the mist shifted again. Sweat dripped down his face. He folded a cloth into his hand from his Sedona house, wiping his face then his knife. He slid the dagger back into its sheath on his weapons harness. He really hated this fourth dimension shit and all this silence.

He withdrew his phone from the pocket at his waist and thumbed. Ten seconds later Jeannie began her cleanup job. He couldn’t imagine trying to battle on these stone floors, all slippery with pretty-boy blood—not to mention the sheer gymnastics it would take to circumvent these big bodies while trying to wield a sword.

“Close your peepers,” Jeannie said.

He did. The light flashed. Thank God for Jeannie and the women at Central.

The mist would shift soon. He could feel it now, a very faint vibration in precise timing with Marguerite’s vision. He dropped into a half crouch, his sword in both hands and upright.

But when the mist shifted again, he faced one huge-ass death vampire, bigger than any he’d ever seen on Second Earth. In the vision, the bastard had looked smaller. What the hell? He had to be at least as tall as Medichi, maybe even taller.

As he engaged the first sword-strike, however, he caught the scent of rose. Shit, that meant Marguerite was somewhere nearby. Was she safe?

If he hadn’t been battling for centuries, his worry for his woman might have caused him to falter, but he wasn’t a Warrior of the Blood for nothing.

*   *   *

 

Leto sat on the edge of the bed, breathing hard, spots still dancing in front of his eyes. What the fuck was going on? Where was Grace? He had to get to her. But he couldn’t hear anything.

He stared at a wall of mist that kept shifting and changing its location in the cell. He’d never seen anything like this before.

His stomach had started cramping again. He rose to his feet, fighting the urge to vomit the whole time. Sweat poured from him. He was shaking, but he wanted to be ready since the mist would probably shift again.

He shuffled his feet apart to get his balance. “Grace,” he shouted.

All that returned to him was his voice in a series of echoes. Casimir had to be behind this. No Second ascender that he knew of, including Greaves or Endelle, had the power to make mist that moved around.

“Grace,” he called out again. His arms shook, but not from weakness. This time, his need to get to her took control of him, even strengthened him. Some of the nausea eased, and he found he could move.

He paced the cell, if slowly, and wiped his sleeve over his forehead. Jesus, he still wore the wool from Moscow. He shed it now, even though the cell was frigid. Grace lived in the vilest of places.

Oh, God, he had to figure this out.

He stopped moving and drew in a deep breath. That’s when he caught her scent. The mist could do many things but it couldn’t keep her earthy wildflower scent from him.

He took another step forward, in the direction of the hallway, where the door would be on the other side of the mist. The scent grew stronger.

She was there, near the door and not far from him.

He tried to reach through the mist but couldn’t. It was as much a physical barrier as a shroud over the space between.

But one thing he knew to be true—the mist would move again. And when it did, he wanted to be as close to her as he could get.

*   *   *

 

Thorne?

He heard Marguerite’s voice in his head like a sharp bell. He was surprised because though he couldn’t communicate telepathically with any of his warriors, he could hear her.
Breh-hedden,
maybe?

He wanted to answer her but damn, he’d never seen such a big-ass death vampire in his entire fighting life. And the bastard had mad sword skills.

Little busy here,
he finally managed between heavy grunts.
You okay?

Yeah, I’m fine. I’m safe. Never mind, I’ll figure this out.

The confines of the hallway and the physical barrier of the mist left little room to maneuver, to get in a killing strike. He’d seen the bastard in the vision, but yeah, he’d looked smaller, probably because he’d been alone and there hadn’t been any other pretty-boys to compare him to.

The death vamp whirled, caught him with a fist against his chest, and slammed him against the way-too-solid mist. Thorne jumped back, crouched, sword upright. This asshole had to be six-eight and built like Luken. He’d been around a good long time. Besides the usual faint bluing of the skin, he also had darker blue markings in curves just in front of his ears. He wore braids to keep the hair out of his eyes.

“I’ve been waiting for this a long time,” the vamp bellowed. He spun, raising his sword, and before Thorne could get in a thrust the bastard brought his sword down fast, preternaturally fast, almost as fast as Kerrick. Thorne blocked with his sword, but shit, what the hell was this?

His arm vibrated from the blow and his shoulder muscle seized, but like hell he was going down for this prick or any other death vamp. He grunted hard, spun and tried for an upper thrust, but the pretty-boy’s sword was just there. And he wasn’t even sweating. What the hell was he looking at?

He folded behind the pretty-boy, using one of his best spinning moves, but that asshole was again right there with him as he materialized and once more that sword-strike sang up his arm.

What the fuck?

The bastard’s eyes glittered. “Something wrong, Warrior Thorne? You out of your depth here?”

“You’re what’s wrong, you stinking pile of blue shit.”

Something deep within, however, whispered to him, some kind of preternatural intuition. Then he understood. He was looking at a Third Earth death vampire, something new in Greaves’s arsenal—or maybe this was Casimir’s idea.

It didn’t fucking matter. Thorne was officially up shit creek. Right now, he needed more power, plain and simple, or he was going down. He might have stood a chance if the space hadn’t been so tight, but the size of this motherfucker, and the power he wielded, made movement all but impossible.

From deep within his mind, that same intuition moved and shifted about. What came to him in a blinding flash of awareness was that he needed Fiona and her obsidian flame power right now, the one she’d shared with Jean-Pierre more than once, the same one that Endelle had used to save all those people just a few weeks ago.

But how to get to her through all this fourth level mist?

Telepathy?

He moved backward, away from the blue prick, trying to give himself just a few extra seconds to figure this out. He wasn’t able to reach his warriors telepathically. On the other hand, he could converse with Marguerite, but he had assumed that was a result of the
breh-hedden.

What if it wasn’t? What if somehow he was connected to her obsidian flame power? What if that was why telepathy worked between them?

Was it possible a simple telepathic message would reach Fiona?

He stopped debating the matter and sent a hard-driving piece of telepathy in a beeline straight at Fiona, holding her image as the bastard moved in on him.

The pretty-boy came at him hard and fast. Thorne sprinted, preternatural-style, doing a roll and coming up on his back only to barely block a heavy sword-swipe. He rolled and gained his feet, then sprinted back to where he’d begun.

Thorne, is that you?

Fiona, thank the Creator. Listen, I need your obsidian flame help now. Can you hook me up? I need to expand my sword speed fast.

There was a slight pause, then she said,
I’ll have hell to pay with Jean-Pierre. He’s a little possessive, as you know, but you got it.

As he stood at the ready, crouched, his sword upright, his gaze glued to the death vamp’s laughing eyes, he suddenly felt Fiona right beside him, her shoulder to his shoulder, her hip to his hip, then a kind of melding took place.

I’m right here,
she sent.
Can you feel me?

Yep.

Which power do you want me to enhance?

My sword-arm. I need a goddamn blur of speed.

Here ya go.

He felt the tingle, then the vibration all down his right arm. His muscles bunched in just the right way. He could feel the enhancement.

He blurred as fast as he could. He folded just two feet behind the Third asshole and caught him through the spine in a quick powerful thrust, faster than anything he’d ever done before.

And identified swords were fucking sharp.

The pretty-boy screamed and Thorne gave a hard jerk to the right, severing the spine, then withdrew. As the death vamp started to fall and as though time just about stopped, Thorne turned so that his shoulder squared up to the bastard. Without missing a beat, he continued making use of Fiona’s channeling power and with incredible speed took the pretty-boy’s head. It hit the stone with a thump, but the body landed on solid knees and wavered. Thorne shoved his foot against the asshole’s back and the whole thick meaty body flopped forward.

Good.

He was breathing hard, sweat streaming. There was blood everywhere.

Thorne?

Yeah, Fiona. I’m here.

We good?

He smiled.
We’re perfect. Thank you. But I want you to know, I owe you one. Just let Jean-Pierre know that I was battling a Third Earth death vampire.

What?

Yes, you heard me right, which is why I called on you.

I guess Greaves has turned up the heat again.

Afraid so. You’ll let your
breh
know.

Of course.
There was a beat, just a short one, of silence, then a very quiet,
And Thorne?

Yeah?

Come home soon. We need you.

He withheld a sigh.
I will.

He felt her separate her channeling powers from him then depart. That was one fucking gift Fiona had, to combine forces like that. She’d saved Jean-Pierre more than once because of her ability. Now she’d just saved his ass. Obsidian flame had some goddamn righteous potential.

Could the other warriors call on Fiona? On Marguerite?

Fiona had been right to be worried about Jean-Pierre’s reaction to her connecting with Thorne. Warriors didn’t share their women … ever. So just how would he feel if all his brothers had access to Marguerite?

The dangerous vibration that lanced through his body was answer enough. Okay, there was a lot of shit to work out. But not right now.

He called Jeannie and once more closed his eyes for the powerful flash of light that would take dead bodies away and leave no trace behind. He thanked her and thumbed his phone.

But why was he able to communicate with the obsidian flame women, and not with his own men?

He didn’t have time to contemplate the subject, since the mist shifted—and what do you know, three more blue assholes appeared in the newly created space. This time they were Second-ascender-sized, though, so he smiled.

*   *   *

 

Marguerite tried yet again to fold into another newly created space of mist that still kept her separated from Grace. She didn’t understand why she was so limited when she’d been able to fold into the cell in the first place.

Other books

Letting Go by Kennedy, Sloane
Fall From Love by Heather London
The Pleasure Tube by Robert Onopa
The Ships of Aleph by Jaine Fenn
Bowie by Wendy Leigh
The Eternal Philistine by Odon Von Horvath
Hardball by CD Reiss