Authors: Nicole R. Taylor
Copyright © 2013 Nicole R. Taylor
Kindle Edition– published 2013
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system without the written permission of the author, except where permitted by law.
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
Cover Design: Regina Wamba – Mae I Design
Nothing is ever certain.
Lake District, United Kingdom
Autumn, 43AD
A
eriaya was the last daughter of the stars to walk the earth.
The last of the race known as the Celestines.
She was
twenty five
of what the humans called years and she alone held the weight of an impossible responsibility on her shoulders. She was to be the last caretaker of the earth.
Sunlight filtered through the dense canopy of the forest, casting its dappled fingers through the deep green grass below. It was an abnormally warm day, the earth still damp from the morning mist, thousands of tiny dewdrops clinging to Spanish moss covered trees.
Aeriaya wandered through the wood, her long pale fingers playing through the light, savoring the small points of warmth. Coming to a clearing she smiled, her long silver hair blowing across her face in the sudden breeze. The sun had coaxed the little field to come alive with small white flowers, their yellow centers bright and happy. Pulling her hair back into place, she walked out into the sunlight, beginning to gather as many of the blossoms as she could carry. She knew that
her mother would love them
,
they were simple yet stunning
.
Catching a glimpse of a figure approaching her from the side she shook her head. She wasn't meant to be out walking today, but she needed the peace of the forest, if only for an hour or two. Smiling, she turned, expecting to see her brother emerge from the forest, come to take her home. He had a habit of following her and playing tricks when she least expected it. Instead, she gasped as she caught sight of a menacing figure in the tree line, shadowed by the forest around him. Dropping the flowers in surprise, she took a hesitant step back. He was covered head to foot in black heavy linen and leather clothing, not an inch of skin showing. A large hood had been pulled low over his eyes, shielding his face from the sunlight. She took a few steps back, fear creeping into her heart, knowing that if she ran, she wouldn't be able to escape.
A satisfied smirk pulled at his lips as he watched her back away. "Celestine," he whispered.
How did he get here? He shouldn't have been able to find the clearing, let alone get into the forest. She should have sensed his approach, but even now, it was as if she were alone. He was not one of them, neither was he human. He was...
dead
?
Aeriaya stood frozen in fear, not able to tear her gaze away from him. Something was terribly wrong.
Before she could react, the man lunged forward, faster than she thought possible, and grasped her around the waist, flinging her over his shoulder. Looking within herself, she sought the coil of power that was the center of her being. Her parents always taught her to use it for good, that to kill and destroy was wrong. Surely this time was different? She let her power wash over her, but nothing happened. It sputtered and died, leaving her empty.
"No!" she cried, beating her fists against the man's shoulder. It couldn't be. "No!" Letting out a blood-curdling scream, she beat her fists harder against his back, trying to free herself, but his grip was like iron. He was so strong, her
fists
and raking fingernails had no effect on him. Even when she tried to bite and kick, he continued to run.
The
forest grew dark as he took her further and further
away from her home, the air colder and more desolate. She pleaded with the man to let her go, but he wouldn't respond, instead running faster, never seeming to tire.
She didn't know how much time had passed, but before long, she was dropped like a stone onto a hard floor, the air pushed from her lungs. Taking heaving gulps, she looked around wildly. She was in a dark stone room, surrounded by four men and one woman, but she couldn't sense their presence, either. They were dead, just like the man who had taken her.
Panic overtook her and she scrambled backwards, trying to get away from them, crashing into something hard. Looking up, she gasped as she realized she had collided with the man's legs. Jerking forward in horror, he laughed down at her, a satisfied smirk pulling at his lips.
There was a scraping sound as a heavy wooden door opened opposite and a woman walked into the room, closing it behind her with a dull thud that echoed off the walls. Looking
around
for the first time, she realized that the stone room wasn't just any room. The earth was all around
her,
she could feel it through the walls. The room was a dungeon.
The woman paused just inside the doorway for a moment, a look of triumph plastered on her face. She was tall and slim, fiery auburn hair that fell in waves over her shoulders and her heart beat in her chest. Aeriaya regarded her warily as she walked forward and surveyed her terrified form on the ground with hazel eyes. This woman was very much alive and very much a witch. This was all so very wrong. She must be one of the Five. And if that was true, then she had betrayed them all. Just by looking at her, she could tell the witch had created the dead creatures that stood around her. The power she had been granted had been corrupted.
"Well done, Regulus," the woman caressed the man's face with a delicate hand.
The man who had taken her from the forest.
"
Very
well done."
"Who are you?" Her musical voice sounded misplaced in their dark surrounds. "What do you want?"
"Oh, forgive me," she exclaimed. "Let me introduce you to my family. Regulus you have already met on such intimate terms. This is my lovely daughter, Octavia.
And my sons, Marcus, Titus, Caius and Arturius.
And I, I am Katrin."
She knew that name. She
was
one of the Five.
"What have you done?" she whispered, still cowering on the floor.
"They're dead," Katrin laughed. "They're vampires. The creatures of myth, brought alive by my will. Bound to the night, slaves to blood." She gestured to the six vampires, who began to move forward.
One of the men grabbed her roughly around the waist and hauled her up, holding her lithe form in place. One by one, the vampires came forward and dragged her head to the side and sunk their fangs into the soft skin of her neck, consuming her blood. At first she tried to fight, but each burning tear into her jugular made her limbs heavier.
Why were they doing this to her? She'd never done anything to hurt anyone. Was she to die?
Once they had all drank, she was let go, the cell door slammed closed and locked. Alone in the darkness, she sunk to the floor and sobbed, her tears dripping into the hard dirt floor.
Aeriaya didn't know how long she was in the cell before someone came. Darkness and fear were her only companions until she heard footsteps approaching. Scrambling back as far as she could, she curled herself into a ball and waited to see what would happen next. Her neck stung from the wound they had inflicted, dried blood stuck to her pale skin and stained her dress.
As the door scraped open, she held her hand over her eyes at the sudden light that filled the cell. One of the vampires was standing just inside, holding a flaming torch, which he put into the holder on the wall.
Curling herself up tighter as he approached, she watched him with frightened eyes. There would be no choice for her in what happened next. Her power was gone. Whatever Katrin had done she had given the means to the man, Regulus, to take it away. She was completely at their mercy.
The vampire crouched down, gazing at her almost sadly. She knew he was one of the people who called themselves
Romans,
he had that look about him.
Broad shoulders, dark curly hair that had been cropped close to the scalp, deep set brown eyes.
A long scar that began above his right eye and ended below his cheekbone had marred his face.
White and puckered, ugly.
"Are you ill?" His rough voice was a surprise, just as much as his concern was. When she didn't answer he said, "I'm sorry. I don't want to hurt you."
"But you did," she whispered, tears spilling down her face.
"I'm sorry," he frowned. "But you must understand. I cannot go against the others so openly."
She was confused. Was he really sorry? Would he try and help her? She had to escape this place. Her family had to be warned about the witch and what she had created. She had not been granted this gift to use it in such a way.
"I cannot be here," she said.
The vampire frowned and looked at his hands. Reaching out towards her, he went to grasp her hand that was clutched around her knees, but she jerked back, afraid of his touch.
"What is your name?" he asked, letting his had fall away. She didn't answer, staring at him with unearthly blue eyes. He looked at her a moment, unsure of how to proceed. Finally he said, "I am Arturius. I must go before I am missed, but I will return."
Standing, he regarded her once more before turning and leaving, the door closing and the heavy bolt driving home with a thud. He left the torch behind, the smoke spiraling upwards towards a grate in the ceiling high above. One small kindness, so she didn't have to endure the darkness.
Arturius came to see her many times over the coming weeks. He brought food with him, having stolen it from the kitchens right under the noses of the servants. He would never eat anything, content to watch her state her hunger. In all that time, she heard nothing of the outside world.
Nothing of her family or why she had been taken.
She was at the mercy of the witch and her Roman vampires. They came to visit her as well, but it was only to take more of her blood. For what reason, she did not know.
The young Roman, Arturius, told her much about his life before he came to Briton. He told her stories about his family back in Rome, how he became a soldier in the Legion and how he had come to be here, on the other side of the ocean. The ocean, he said, was beautiful as it was deadly. Blue, sparkling water as far as the eye could see, it's surface choppy with waves, the bow of their great ship dipping in and out as they travelled, giant ocean fish racing them, leaping from the water.
He was a commander, he said, before he met Katrin. He told men what to do, he was a fearsome leader, respected and admired. He'd fought many battles defending Rome, the realm of goodness and light.
Learning and science.
The day that Katrin had made them into vampires was the day he realized that the world he knew was a lie. There were no gods. No god would do this to him, he said. Not even the all the gods in the underworld.
And Aeriaya felt sorry for him. Katrin had betrayed them, too, had she not? She had coerced them into servitude, linking them to her through what Arturius called magic. All of them had come willingly, but had been tricked into their own prison. Their free will had been taken. If Katrin willed it, they had to see it through.
"That," he said, "is why I cannot free you. I want to, so badly. But I cannot." He sat beside her, his back resting against the wall, his arm touching hers. Taking her delicate hand in his, he ran a thumb across her knuckles.
"I would do anything for you," he whispered, letting his lips brush against her cheek.
She shivered and looked
away,
suddenly shy where previously she had become so comfortable with him. Arturius had shared so much of himself with her and she had told him nothing, yet he still gave.