Vampin Box Set (7-9)

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Vampin Box Set (7-9) Page 23

by Jamie Ott


  Chapter 5

  They landed on the bank of Lake George half an hour later. Starr hated telling the Fleet she’d known where Lucenzo was for a while, and had not even bothered telling them or trying to take him out.

  Worse, she hated betraying Lily, but what could she do? Lucenzo and Amir had to be stopped, or they would continue their attempts at a world takeover.

  It may not have been a perfect world for a vampire, but she couldn’t imagine a world run by Lucenzo and Amir. She wanted the world she knew, the world as it was, now.

  Starr especially didn’t want a world policed by the stinking scent of the new species. What would it be like to see them on every street corner, forcing people, like Starr, to do as a dictator commanded?

  Over and over, she wondered what she would do with Lily, once she got there?

  Turn her?

  She was only thirteen.

  Well, hopefully, Lucenzo would have been kind enough to entrust the antidote to her, for, even if he didn’t survive, he was extremely loyal to her. And, as long as she had the recipe for the antidote, then Starr would do whatever it took to procure it for her.

  Their arrival to the lake further proved that Starr was right: Lucenzo and Amir needed to be taken down, immediately.

  “Is that what I think it is?” asked Michelle, a look of petrified fear on her face.

  Looking up the bank, into the trees, the backs of many bodies stood stiff, not turning to look at them, not flinching, or fidgeting, but standing like hundreds of statues in the trees.

  “Why don’t they attack us?” asked James.

  “Lucenzo controls them, probably the same way that Starr did, back at the U.N.,” Alin answered.

  “I don’t want to go in there,” whimpered Michelle.

  “We have to,” said Alin, who walked up the bank and into the trees.

  She and the others followed.

  “Starr,” said Alin. “Walk up front with me, please.”

  Standing next to every other tree they passed were the still bodies of vampires, all standing and staring in the same direction, which was toward the cabin where she met Lucenzo, last time, she soon realized.

  “My god,” Alin breathed. “There’s got to be thousands in this forest, alone.”

  Their white skin gleamed under the rays of light that poked through the leaves of the tall trees.

  As she passed them, she looked at their faces, wondering if it were possible to break them from Lucenzo’s control; in other words, relinquish his mental hold on them, perhaps by striking them.

  The answer to her question came, a moment later, when there was the sound of something large toppling onto leaves, making loud crunching noises.

  They turned back and saw Michelle looking down at a vampire she’d run into. It fell over and laid there like dead weight, and didn’t stir furthermore.

  She tried to sense if they were hungry, like she did with the alligator, but it was as if they were pieces of cold cement.

  When they approached the cabin, Starr stopped a moment.

  “What’s wrong? Why have you stopped?” asked Alin.

  Starr’s chest heaved and moisture bespeckled her face.

  Alin looked at her and said, “Don’t be frightened, Starr. You’re stronger than they are. I can sense this about you. Even if you can’t fight them all, I don’t think they’d hurt you, anyway, not as long as Lily wants you alive.”

  She patted him on the shoulder, sighed and walked up the steps, across the porch and opened the door without knocking.

  The room was dark.

  Instinctively, her demon came out. She felt her fangs extend, and suddenly her night vision became even clearer.

  “No one’s here,” said Alin, whose fangs were bared, and eyes a glowing shade of red.

  “Do you smell that?” asked Chanler, with lavender and red iridescent eyes.

  Starr inhaled; there was a draft of air flowing into the room.

  “It’s coming from the kitchen,” said Emil around a mouthful of fangs, and who was giving off a hazy white aura.

  Carefully, they followed the draft to the kitchen, and, carelessly, down into a cellar.

  Across the room, the ground door was open.

  They intended to continue outside, but then someone shut and barred it. Quickly, they turned to exit back through the kitchen door, but it was shut, too.

  “God, we’re so stupid!” yelled Saul. “How could we fall for that?”

  “Who cares?” asked Michelle. “Doors can’t keep us!”

  “Don’t you think they know that, Michelle?” asked Chanler.

  But then things got worse.

  “Do you smell that?” asked Sari in a slightly higher voice.

  Suddenly, the walls were engulfed in bright orange flames.

  A loud wailing noise, like an elephant only worse, came from Michelle.

  “Shut up!” yelled Alin, whose demon voice, now, sounded digitally altered, like in a movie. “God, Michelle, I don’t know why we keep you!”

  “What do we do?” asked Starr.

  “Let me think.”

  “Okay, I got an idea. Can you burst the pipes?”

  “What?”

  “Explode them, the way you blew up the vamps, back at the U.N.?”

  She shook her head, “I don’t know.”

  “Just try! You’re our only hope; there’s no way we can break through the ceiling before we’re toast,” said James.

  At first, she didn’t know how to go about doing such a thing, but, then, they told her to concentrate, and they all got really quiet. All she heard was the flames licking. She told her inner demon to help her find water in the walls.

  After a moment, she’d located the pipes. Starr saw them, clearly, in her mind, and focused on heating the metal.

  Seconds went by; she saw the pipes expand under her concentrated pyrokinesis. Then, suddenly, she felt little trickles of water, but as the others took steps closer to her, Starr began to panic because she knew the fire was closing them in.

  She’d felt fear a lot, in the last few weeks, and, once again fear gripped her; a feeling that was hard for vampires to come by.

  Her chest tightened, and her skin got extremely warm. She couldn’t do it, and she felt tears run down her face, again.

  The panic became even more real, when she saw a flame ignite Chanler’s pant leg, making her scream, and, with her scream, jolted her emotions, making not only the pipe burst, but the entire ceiling split down the middle.

  Next thing she knew, the fire was out, but they were up to their middles in water.

  Chanler sighed loud and gratefully.

  James and Sari ran at the kitchen door and easily kicked it in; Starr and the others followed them out.

  “They’re moving!” he said, looking out the window.

  Out onto the porch, and true enough, the vampires had begun to recede into the woods.

  “Let’s see where they’re going!” shouted Alin urgently.

  He leapt off the porch and ran into the trees, followed by Starr and the others.

  Quickly, they ran past them, trying to find the lead, that is, the beginning of the herd.

  They follow them for a quarter of a mile, at which point, the vampires had begun to assemble themselves into a line, almost like an invisible funnel forced them.

  They followed the line, and it led them to a curved road where half a dozen semi trucks were parked. The vampires crawled into their beds and stood face to face in them.

  As the first one got full, the line moved to the second and third truck.

  “We gotta stop these trucks from leaving,” said Michelle.

  “Tell us something we don’t know,” Emil retorted.

  “Well, this ought to make things easy,” said Chanler as he pulled his hand gun.

  The others followed suit, and they began shooting the vampires in the head, one by one, while Saul went to disable the trucks from under their hoods.

  St
arr and Alin combined their pyrokinesis and set to burning up the first full truck. Alin could have done it himself, but he wanted Starr to practice controlling it, since she was new at it.

  They’d only managed to kill off a few hundred vampires before they were attacked by a dozen people in black outfits with masks to match.

  Their attackers flew at them from the sky. Two came at Starr, pointing guns at her.

  Starr looked at their weapons and heated them, making them release their grips. Then she ran at them both with a scissor kick, dropping them instantly.

  She turned to help Alin, who was getting his head kicked in. Starr dragged the assailant back, with an arm around the neck, and landed an axe kick when he turned around.

  They went around to help the others, and it wasn’t long before the Fleet had their attackers bound.

  Next, they returned to killing the vampires, but then they started to move away from the trucks.

  “What is going on?” asked Emil.

  “They’re turning on us,” said Starr.

  And though they fought hard, there were simply too many of them.

  It wasn’t long before they were surrounded.

  “Starr, stop them!” shouted Alin.

  “I can’t! Lucenzo’s mind control is stronger than mine!”

  Once more, Starr thought it was the end, but then her skin got really warm, and a tingling sensation traveled her every pore, almost as if her blood had come to life and was traveling in her veins.

  A familiar sensation came over her.

  “Look,” said Chanler, pointing at the large white moon.

  She looked up and saw the figure of a woman, highlighted by the moon, flying in their direction.

  The figure stopped above them and pushed the vampires back, telekinetically, and then she proceeded to killing them all.

  She was strong, probably the most powerful vampire in the world, for she could kill with just her will.

  As simple as turning off a light switch, they all dropped dead, one by one.

  Once done, she landed on the ground, looking majestic as always, with waist length black hair and eyes glowing like embers.

  Credenza was frighteningly beautiful, but her skin was a mask of the person she was, inside, which was cold and deadly. The blood in Starr told her that and, for a moment, she felt like she was Credenza.

  “Nice job, protecting my protégé,” she said, a hint of sarcasm in her voice.

  The vampires in masks began to stir. Starr looked to them, but was distracted by a disturbance of the moon’s ray.

  From the sky, the light was partly obscured by a row of vampires flying towards them.

  They were even more majestic, more god like looking creatures than Credenza. Each one was seven feet or taller with long hair and eyes with flames that danced inside them.

  Starr found them hard to look at.

  “Where do you think you’re, all, going,” Credenza asked of the vampires, who were trying to escape.

  Then, like an invisible hand pulled them, they were yanked back to the ground and pinned there.

  “Starr and I will go after Lucenzo and Amir, I hear them up aways,” she said, looking back into the forest, and then her eyes settled on Starr’s. “We need to talk.”

 

  Meeting Again

 

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