Vampire Mine (13 page)

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Authors: Kerrelyn Sparks

Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Paranormal

BOOK: Vampire Mine
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“I am no‟ worthy—”

“None of us are worthy,” Father Andrew snapped, irritation flashing in his eyes. With a sigh, he dropped his hand. “Do you know why I became a priest?”

“To help—”

“That‟s my reason now. But originally, I took my vows out of guilt. As a young man, I was stupid and selfish. I drove while intoxicated and slammed into a tree. Killed my best friend.”

Connor inhaled sharply.

“Appalling, I know.” Father Andrew‟s mouth twisted. “Did you think Vamps have a monopoly on tragic mistakes?”

“I‟m sorry.”

Father Andrew patted him on the back, then went back to gazing at the stars. “Can you imagine thousands of angels all around us, and we do not see them? There is so much I cannot see, but I have a strong feeling that tonight is important. There is a reason you found Marielle.”

“Perhaps.” Connor wasn‟t sure his faith could stretch that far. Still, it was lucky that a Vamp had found her. A mortal would have died trying to help her.

“Be careful.”

“I will.” He would have to keep his hands off her. Let her remain innocent and angelic.

“She wants to go back to heaven.”

“Don‟t we all.” Father Andrew headed back to the porch. “Let‟s see how our angel is doing.”

“S
ay cheese!” Gregori leaned close to her, grinning.

“Why?” Marielle blinked when a bright light flashed.

“It came out well enough, I think.” Robby turned the camera to show them.

She had a glimpse of her startled face next to Gregori‟s before he grabbed the camera for a closer look. “Thanks, Marielle. My mom‟s gonna love this.”

“I‟m sorry I wasn‟t able to meet her.” Marielle sighed. “And I‟m truly sorry about your friend Shanna. I hope you know I would never purposely harm anyone.”

Robby gave her a skeptical look. “Ye‟re an angel of death. No offense, but I would call that a wee bit of harm.”

“We‟re called Deliverers, actually. And we‟re not supposed to take someone before their time.”

“How does that work?” Gregori lifted his camera, focusing on her. “I mean, do you just go down a line, saying, „Eenie meenie mynie moe, sorry, dude, you gotta go‟?”

“Excuse me?” She squinted her eyes as the camera flashed. Tiny lights sparkled in front of her.

“What the hell are ye doing?” Connor‟s voice boomed from the back of the cabin.

Her heart warmed at the sound of his voice.

“Oh, now there‟s a pretty smile.” Gregori snapped another photo of her.

She shook her head as she glanced toward Connor. Flickering lights danced around him as he walked through the kitchen followed by the priest.

“Hey, we should make a video,” Gregori suggested. “We could put her in a white silk choir robe and call it
Visitation by an Angel
.” He turned to her, his eyes bright with excitement.

“Can you do any sort of supernatural tricks?”

“Bloody hell, she‟s no‟ a circus performer.” Connor grabbed something off the kitchen counter.

“It would be the hottest thing ever on the Internet,” Gregori announced.

“Ye‟re no‟ marketing an angel!” Connor took aim and threw.

“Hey!” Gregori jumped to the side. “Would you stop throwing coasters at me? I‟m not talking about making money off her.”

“That‟s a relief,” Father Andrew said dryly. “I was about to excommunicate you.”

Gregori scoffed. “I‟m talking about doing something good for mankind. Imagine how awesome everyone would feel if they knew all that holy stuff was real.”

“Stuff?” Father Andrew muttered. “Four years of giving sermons, and that‟s what I get back? Holy
stuff
?”

Robby chuckled.

Gregori rolled his eyes. “I meant heaven and God stuff. Don‟t you think it would give people some badly needed comfort and reassurance if they saw Marielle?”

“No!” She shook her head. “Please! You mustn‟t tell anyone about me.”

“What?” Gregori gave her an incredulous look. “Don‟t you want people to believe?”

“It wouldn‟t be belief if you make my presence known,” Marielle insisted. “That would ruin everything.”

“She‟s right.” Father Andrew strode toward them and stopped on the far side of the couch. “People have to believe by faith. If you prove her existence, then everyone would accept her as fact.”

Marielle nodded. “And they would lose their free will. Our Father wants us to . . .

choose.” Her throat constricted with a sudden itchy, desperate feeling. She was the last being on Earth who should lecture about making choices. She‟d made the wrong ones, and now she was paying the penalty.

“Are ye all right?” Connor‟s eyes narrowed.

She opened her mouth to speak, but choked. She coughed, gasped for air, then coughed some more. And more.

She felt a twinge of panic for she no longer had control over her new body. Tears leaked from her eyes. That was strange. Why did a cough cause her to cry?

Connor pressed a bottle of water into her hand. “Drink.”

She sipped some water, then coughed some more, though not as badly. “I don‟t know what happened.” She wiped the tears from her face.

“Don‟t worry.” Father Andrew smiled as he sat on the couch. “It happens to everybody.”

She sipped more water. Good heavens, now her nose was leaking.

Connor handed her a white tissue.

She dabbed at her nose, but the leak didn‟t stop.

Connor stepped in front of her and whispered, “Ye need to blow.”

Blow?
She took a deep breath and blew air toward her nose.

His mouth twitched. He took the tissue from her hand and placed it over her nose. “Blow out yer nose, lass.”

She replaced his hands with her own and blew. Amazed, she wiped her nose. “That was so strange. Coughing and leaking and blowing—these bodies do the oddest things.”

“Aye, that they do.”

She glanced at his smoky blue eyes and was instantly lost in the intensity of his gaze. He wanted to touch her again, she could feel it.

Warmth spread to her cheeks. What was it about this man that made her react so strongly? She could just look at him, and her heart would squeeze in her chest. If he touched her, her heartbeat raced and her knees grew weak. She‟d kissed him twice. In one night!

The desire she felt was so new to her, so obviously nonangelic. It was tempting to put the blame completely on this new body and its ability to make her feel sensations she‟d never experienced before, but in her heart, she knew that wasn‟t entirely true.

There were other men in the room, and she had no desire for them. It was all so strange.

For millennia, she‟d always loved mankind in general, all equally and from a distance. But now, her heart was yearning to be close to only one. Connor.

And he was feeling the same way. He‟d admitted it.
Desire. Longing
. Her skin tingled with goose bumps. She wanted him to touch her again.

When he‟d kissed her in the bedroom, she‟d caught another glimpse into the darkness that surrounded his heart. An image of a young blond woman had flashed through her mind, a woman named Darcy. Why did she cause Connor so much guilt?

Marielle was impatient to ask him, but she knew it should be done in private. Even then, he might insist it was one of those personal things that humans didn‟t talk about.

She wanted to do more than talk. She wanted to kiss him again. She wanted to feel his arms around her and his breath against her cheek. Such a human desire. The demon had warned her that the longer she remained on Earth, the more human she would become.

She had to resist getting too involved with him. The Archangels would never let her back into heaven if she couldn‟t prove herself worthy.

“Thank you.” She handed the tissue back.

An odd look passed over his face, then he walked stiffly back past a smirking Gregori to toss the tissue in a trash can.

“My dear, I would love to hear about your life as an angel,” Father Andrew said. He glanced pointedly at the other men. “Anything we hear must be kept confidential.”

Gregori sprawled on the couch. “My mother will kill me if I don‟t tell her everything.”

“My wife will want to know, too,” Robby protested. “And Angus and Emma.”

The priest sighed. “Fine. I‟ll probably need to tell Roman. We‟ll keep this within our small community. Is that all right with you, Marielle?”

“Yes. I‟m grateful that you and your friends are helping me.” She knew enough about the current world to know she‟d have great difficulty surviving on her own. She had no proof of identity, no birth certificate since she‟d never been born, nor any currency to purchase food, shelter, or clothing. Furthermore, it would be nigh impossible to live among humans without inadvertently touching someone and causing a death.

The best place for her was this community of good vampires, and she knew it was more than a coincidence that she‟d been found by one of them. Her previous thoughts returned to her.

If she could accomplish some sort of noble mission here on Earth, she might be deemed worthy of rejoining the Heavenly Host.

She sat in the rocker and winced at the strange sensation of jeans hugging her thighs and bunching at her knees. Her T-shirt was black with the words
Bite Me
across the chest. An odd shirt to wear among vampires, but apparently, death didn‟t diminish their sense of humor. In fact, for a group of Undead souls, they were remarkably lively.

She cleared her throat, aware that all four men were watching her expectantly. Robby and Gregori were sharing the couch once again with Father Andrew, while Connor stood behind them, his arms crossed over his bloodstained shirt. Her blood. A wave of grief flooded her once more over the loss of her wings. What if she never flew again?

She swallowed hard. “I want to assure you that I mean no harm to anyone. I believe my powers will fade over time, but for now, I will be very careful not to touch any humans.”

“Thank you.” Father Andrew smiled. “But to be perfectly honest, it‟s going to be difficult to know if your power fades away. No mortal is likely to volunteer to test it.”

She nodded.

“So how old are you?” Gregori asked.

Robby grunted. “No wonder you doona have a girlfriend.”

She smiled. “It‟s hard to say. We don‟t view time the same way as you. My full name is Marielle Quadriduum. I was created, along with thousands of other angels, on the Fourth Day.”

“Damn,” Gregori muttered. “You‟re like . . . ancient.” He winced when Connor cuffed him on the back of the head. “Well, she is. And I thought
you
were old.”

Connor arched a brow at him.

“The Fourth Day,” Father Andrew murmured. “The same day God created the sun and moon.”

“Yes. And millions of other suns and moons.” She sighed. “I was assigned to supervise a solar system.”

“Wow!” Gregori grinned. “You were like Empress of the Galaxy. Cool.”

She gave him a dubious look. “There were only three planets.”

Gregori leaned forward. “And one of them had intelligent life?”

“Aye,” Connor muttered, “but ye wouldna recognize it.”

Gregori shot him an annoyed look while Robby chuckled.

Father Andrew shook his head. “Please continue, my dear.”

She leaned back in the rocker. “Each of my planets consisted of a huge, frozen rock surrounded by a thick atmosphere of methane gas.”

“Bummer!” Gregori looked offended on her behalf. “Out of all the planets in the universe, you got stuck with some duds.”

She laughed. “I hate to tell you this, but most of them are duds. Or they appear to be.

Many of them still serve an important purpose.”

“Like Jupiter attracting meteors to protect the Earth?” Connor asked quietly.

She nodded, smiling. “Yes.” Leave it to Connor to know about planets that served as protectors.

Gregori glanced over his shoulder at Connor. “You know about astronomy?”

He scowled back. “I‟ve been looking at the night sky for almost five hundred years. Why would I no‟ learn about it?”

“By the Sixth Day, I was so bored, I asked for a transfer,” she continued. “The Father had created mankind and all sorts of animals on Earth, and He was exceedingly pleased. In fact, we were all fascinated, and the Father wanted to protect His new creations, so many angels were reassigned. Some became Guardians and God Warriors. Others became Healers and Deliverers.”

“Like you?” Robby asked.

She frowned. “I was originally a Healer. Buniel was my supervisor, and we became close friends. I loved healing.”

“What happened?” Gregori asked.

“I . . . disobeyed. The first time, it was in Eastern Europe, toward the end of what the humans call the medieval period. I was reprimanded, and I managed to behave myself for several of your centuries. But the second time I disobeyed—” She shuddered. “It was really bad.”

“You needn‟t tell us if you don‟t want to,” Father Andrew said quietly.

She didn‟t like talking about it, but when she looked at Connor, she felt a sudden urge to confess. She wanted him to know. “I was told to heal a woman in a hospital in Missouri. I did, but as I was leaving, I heard the desperate prayers of another woman, who was crying over a dying child. The little boy was only a year old, and I couldn‟t understand why he wasn‟t on my list. The woman and child were in so much pain, I couldn‟t bear it, so I touched her to give her comfort, and then I touched the boy. When Zackriel arrived to deliver the boy, he was furious that I had healed him. He wanted to take the boy but received orders not to interfere. I would have to watch the result of my wrongdoing. ”

“What could be wrong with saving a young child?” Connor asked.

She winced. “The mother came to believe that her son was special, incapable of being harmed, and therefore, superior to all others. She raised him with that belief, and he . . . he became warped.”

“What did he do?” Father Andrew asked.

Her throat constricted, but she forced the words out. “He murdered. Over and over. And he enjoyed it.” She closed her eyes. “It was my fault. I should have let him die.”

“Ye had no way of knowing,” Connor said.

She opened her eyes to see the compassion on Connor‟s face. He wasn‟t judging her, and that touched her heart. “It was still wrong of me. I should have trusted in the Father‟s wisdom.”

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