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Authors: Nancy Holder,Debbie Viguie

BOOK: The Damned
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She moved her hand and whispered a dispersing spell; the people eased away from her and Holgar, leaving the field around them clear. It was safer for everyone that way.
Protective magick; it’s okay.

Holgar gave her a lopsided smile as he tugged on the wooden cross Father Juan had given him at graduation. Hanging from a leather cord around his neck, the cross had a lamb carved into its center, and the arms of the cross ended in intricately carved wolf heads.

“Christians, witches, beasts—I guess sooner or later we had to end up in a coliseum,” Holgar said.

Skye couldn’t help but grin back. No matter how bad things got, Holgar always managed to find the lighter side of a situation, or at least pretend to. Not that there was a light side to getting slaughtered, but somehow his attitude made it easier to cope.

The bullfighters were performing a sort of ballet of stylized grace. Their red capes were draped over small swords with sharp-looking tips, which flashed with the vampires’ movements.

“We’ll have to dodge those swords,” Skye said.

“I will if you will,” Holgar told her.

Discreetly they placed themselves between the vampires and the hysterical captives. The plan was to thin the ranks of matadors as much as possible before the hunters started herding the humans toward the invisible hole. Skye was fairly sure the presence of the hunters had not yet been detected. For the moment they held the element of surprise.

She cast one more glance in Holgar’s direction as the bullfighters took off their black caps and bowed to the stands. It appeared to be the signal that the fighting was to begin. One of the matadors headed her way, a cocky grin on his face. Gold tassels swayed against scarlet satin and ebony silk as he advanced. Skye held her ground. Eyes glowing red, fangs extended, he brandished his cape and shook it at her, engaging in the ancient ritualistic death dance.

“¡Olé!”
the vampires cheered. The few humans among them cheered too. Collaborators, fraternizers. Skye had other, harsher words for them. Maybe they were simply people, so afraid of dying that they would do
anything
to survive. Perhaps they were to be pitied more than hated, but Skye was not yet that evolved.

The matador had closed up the space between them and thrust forward his cape, shouting, “
¡Toro, toro!
” at her. Rather than cower, as he seemed to expect, she spun to the side, grabbing for the cross she had tucked in her waistband. As he charged her, she pulled it out and thrust it into his face. The crowd began to jeer and hoot, as if she’d been caught cheating.

The Cursed One jumped backward with a snarl, raising his cape to shield his face as he stumbled, falling right onto the stake Holgar extended as he rushed to help Skye. With a whoosh the vampire disintegrated, turning to ash.

“Nice!” she cried to Holgar. He grinned at her, then scanned the ring for the next attack.

The crowd roared, but whether in approval or disapproval Skye couldn’t tell. A couple of the humans in the ring turned to see what had happened, sensing a shift in the balance of power.

If only they were all that easy
, Skye thought.

A second matador approached, taller and more muscular, and from his cocky demeanor Skye knew that this one would be much, much harder to kill.

“I’ll take this one. Get some of these people out of here,” Holgar said, moving close in. Vampire dust coated his cheeks.

Skye hesitated, not wanting to leave her fighting partner unprotected.

“I’m serious.” He kept his eyes on the bullfighter, head dipped to avoid his mesmerizing gaze. “Save as many people as you can before the other C.O.’s get wise.”

“Are you sure?”

“Yes, go!”

Skye ran toward a man and a woman who had stopped to see what had happened. They both looked dazed. She grabbed their arms and tugged.

“I’m going to get you out of here. Come with me! You, and you, let’s go!”

Skye quickly gathered more and more people. Bewildered, nearly paralyzed with fear, they did as they were told, stumbling as they followed her toward the wall. Like the Pied Piper she gathered them with magicks, trying to reach them while attempting to remain unnoticed.

She had collected maybe twenty. When they were steps from the hidden hole in the wall, she turned and scanned the arena. No one else in the ring was looking at them, and those in the stands seemed to be fixated on the fighting. Eriko and Jamie were ducking capes with Krav Maga movements, but she couldn’t locate Antonio and Jenn.

“It’s a wall,” one of the women protested.

“It’s magick,” Skye said, shoving them both through the hole.

She turned and headed for the next closest group of people, prepared to do the same, just as Holgar decapitated the second matador with one of the short swords. The head burst into dust, and the crowd in the stands booed.

Miss me?
the voice asked in her mind, returning. She halted in her tracks, her own fear now vying with her need to get people to safety.

Then, shouting and booing, the Cursed Ones in the stands leaped down into the ring, grabbing at anyone they could, sinking their fangs into their necks, draining their blood in an instant, and dropping the bodies to the ground. The jig was up. It was time to go.

Antonio and Jenn ran toward her, herding as many people in front of them as they could. Eriko appeared behind Jenn and Antonio, carrying Jamie’s body over her shoulder. The sight of him limp and bloody galvanized Skye into action, and she sprang forward.

“This way!” she screamed. “You can’t see it, but it’s there!”

Holgar loped across the blood-drenched dirt, shouting in Danish and pointing toward the location of the hole. Several dozen Spaniards poured through. Eriko darted in with Jamie. Antonio and Jenn were next, and then Holgar was dragging Skye along with him. As the hole began to close, Skye looked back. Dozens of bodies lay sprawled, their limbs at impossible angles, and at least fifty of the living raced around, shrieking—people the team could no longer help.

The hole closed.

Tears streamed down Skye’s face as the team retreated, veering off from the locals, who were scattering to their homes or other places of safety. Enraged vampires denied their sport erupted from the bullring in pursuit.

With only seconds to their advantage the hunters wound through twisting streets lined with gold-colored stone buildings with arched windows, racing away in full retreat. They needed a safe house. Moncho was to have provided one, but he had still not appeared.

They ran down passageways and alleys like fleeing rats. Vampires shouted to one another, searching for them. Human screams pierced the night as Pamplonans were dragged from their homes and interrogated:
Have you seen six humans traveling together? Are you hiding them?

Spaniards screamed.

Died.

The hunters kept running. Draped over Eriko’s back, Jamie was pale as death. Skye gave them all a magickal boost of energy, but she was exhausted. She couldn’t go on much longer.

“Goddess, help us,” Skye murmured. “I am your faithful daughter. Grant me this boon.”

And then, as they passed a large house of weathered brick with concrete medallions and a sloping tiled roof, Skye felt . . . nothing.

“Jenn, here,” Skye whispered sotto voce. She stopped in her tracks and pointed at the ancient structure. Jenn raised a hand, and the others stopped too.

Very slowly, a broad wooden door edged with wrought iron creaked open. Leading the way, Jenn crossed the threshold, the others following. The door slammed shut behind them, and they stood inside a dark foyer.

Then the foyer melted away, and they were in a parlor, where half a dozen men and women had risen from dark wooden chairs set around a table covered with tarot cards and a crystal ball. The scent of burning sage—a cleansing herb—wafted in the air. Between oil portraits and landscapes on the walls, and on the bare stone floor, dozens of signs and sigils, markings of protection, had been painted or carved. Skye read them, understanding them at once, as she had been classically educated in the Art. These were medieval symbols designed to ensure the safety of the house and its inhabitants by making the house seem uninteresting. It was that void created by the markings that she had felt. Most places gave off their own vibe, much like people did, but this house was neutral, missing its echo of time and emotion. Only magick could do that to a house as old as this one.

“I’m a White Witch.” Skye addressed the coven as a whole. She held up her ring, a crescent moon, and the Spaniards reacted, murmuring to one another.

A woman in a black dress decorated with silver crescents identical to Skye’s ring opened wide her arms. “Welcome,
hermana,”
she said in heavily accented English
.
“The blessings of the Goddess upon you.”

“Jenn, we’re among friends,” Skye told her leader.

“We’re hunters,” Jenn said, panting. “I’m the leader. Please help us.”

“The vampires seek you, eh?” the woman said.

“Sí,”
Jenn replied. “We were in the bullring. We helped a lot of people escape, and now the Cursed Ones know we’re in town. If you can keep us safe until they’re gone, we would be grateful.”

“Of course,” the woman said. “My brothers and sisters, we must help these people. Carlos, Amalia,
por favor.”

Her words galvanized the group. A man and a woman rushed to Eriko’s side. They led her to an upholstered sofa, where she carefully laid Jamie down.

“Are you resis—,” Jenn began, but Skye cut her off. If these witches were involved in the fight against the Cursed Ones, they would not join a resistance cell. They would be members of the Circuit, and she, as a Circuit member, had pledged never to reveal the existence of the group of witches dedicated to the freedom of humanity.

Of course, she’d broken that vow, blurting out the truth to Jenn. And after New Orleans, Skye had confessed as much to the Circuit, and they had cut her off, refusing to help her anymore.

“I am the High Priestess of this coven,” the woman in the dress informed Jenn. “We will shelter you until the search is called off and you may safely leave Pamplona.”

“Blessed be,” Skye whispered.

“Merrily met,” the woman replied.

“Not so much,” Jamie muttered, his lids fluttering, and Skye’s heart leaped. Jamie was as snarky as ever, which meant that he’d live. He sat up on the couch and yawned, as if their near escape from death had been a trifling bore.

“Don’t suppose you could spare a bit o’ sumpin? Pint of ale, a bit of whiskey?” he asked the High Priestess.

The High Priestess’s mouth twitched. “I suppose,” she said. “But please, everyone, sit down before you fall down. All of you. Eva, Estrella, see to their injuries. I will get a ‘bit o’ sumpin.’”

“Thank you,” Jenn said, taking a chair. She sank down wearily.

“No, we thank you. We are in your debt,” the High Priestess said. “Unlike you, we cannot fight. But we can heal the fighters.” Her eyes glinted like flint. “And we will.”

CHAPTER THREE

Salamanca Hunter’s Manual: Allies

As the Hunter, you must walk alone. Beware of entanglements. You cannot love as others do. You must love duty. You cannot have friends. Others will curry your favor, only to betray you in your darkest hour. Your sacred duty is not to save, but to hunt. Stake twenty vampires, and thirty souls will curse your name because a child was taken. Stake a hundred, and you will be hunted because the village burned. The Savior is aptly named, and so are you.

(translated from the Spanish)

P
AMPLONA,
S
PAIN
T
EAM
S
ALAMANCA:
J
ENN AND
A
NTONIO,
S
KYE AND
H
OLGAR, AND
J
AMIE AND
E
RIKO

The witches of Pamplona kept the hunters of Salamanca safe while the Cursed Ones went from house to house, searching for the humans who had dared to vanquish their matadors in the ring. The High Priestess, who was called Maja, created a spell to muffle the screams and shouts erupting from the night as the vampires terrorized the neighborhood. But Skye could hear them in her aching heart. How many were they killing in retaliation? Were any of them escapees from the bullring? Would it have been better for Pamplona if the hunters had not come?

“This is why we do not fight,” Maja said to Jenn. “We only heal.”

Skye stared down at the floor, and Jenn moved to her side. Protectively, Jenn laid a hand on Skye’s arm.

“Someone
has to fight,” Jenn shot back.

“I don’t mean to judge you,” Maja said. “I agree. Someone has to fight. If, perhaps, more had fought earlier, we wouldn’t be in such a desperate situation now.”

Two of the witches and Holgar went on recon in an effort to assess when it would be safe for the group to head back to their well-concealed van. Everyone cleaned up, and the witches gave the hunters fresh clothes. About three hours later Maja herself joined an escort of four witches to magickally protect the hunters as they snuck back to the van.

Antonio drove. It was a distance of two hundred fifty miles, and they were cutting it close to sunrise. It was true that vampires could not walk in the sun. If Antonio stayed out of direct sunlight, he would be safe, but the rays of the sun fatigued vampires and made it difficult for them to function. They felt a pull to go down to the earth—into coffins, catacombs, basements, sewers—which was one of the reasons the gods of their faiths ruled the underworlds: Hades, Baron Samedi, or in the case of Antonio’s sire, Orcus.

During their drive home Jenn called Father Juan and told him about their failure via cell phone. So many had died, and they still had no idea what had happened to the resistance members they had gone to meet.

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