Kick The Candle (Knight Games)

Home > Romance > Kick The Candle (Knight Games) > Page 21
Kick The Candle (Knight Games) Page 21

by Genevieve Jack


  I punched into the side of her head as her nails dug in over my heart. Her grip on my neck was brutal, and the lack of oxygen made my vision swim. I thought I was dead, until a black wind blew over me, knocking Bathory’s hand away. From my supine position, I watched the darkness collect into a familiar vampire.

  “Julius!” Bathory growled. “Back off. The book is mine.”

  “Over my undead body,” Julius crooned. He brushed a stray tress out of his face and lowered himself, ready to brawl.

  I turned my head to see the Mill Wheel vamps close in around the two, but Julius hadn’t come alone. A small army emerged from the darkness. I recognized Gary right away. His nocturnal eyes passed over me but didn’t linger.

  “Leave now, Julius, or I will be forced to end you,” Anna said.

  Julius laughed. “Give it your best shot.”

  They collided in fast-forward, teeth and claws, a tangle of black fog. The other vamps rushed in to help only to be thwarted by the other side. A battle raged around the book and the fire. I watched Naill slowly back away, disappearing into the woods to save his lucky ass.

  I began working on my other wrist in earnest. Yes! I’d moved to my ankle when a beast I recognized crept out of the forest. I supposed it could be any werewolf, but the wound in its side and the way it limped toward me told me it was Silas. I jerked back as his weighty paw lifted and swiped for me. Only his aim was purposefully off. The rope binding my ankles split in two. Silas meant to free me.

  “Thank you, Silas,” I whispered quickly, then bound off the table and raced for Nightshade.

  Chapter 29

  The Sun Also Rises

  My limbs tingled from the cold and numbness of immobility but I forced them to obey my command. I leaped over the fire and reached for my blade. Nightshade’s hilt slid into my hand with urgency as if she’d been straining to help me. Underneath her blade, the burlap sack rustled. I untied it and freed Poe. “Help Rick down,” I ordered. He nodded once and took to the sky.

  A hand landed on my shoulder. I whirled around to face a Mill Wheel vamp. He yanked me into a bear hug. Poor sucker must have been young or stupid. My blade sank into his gut and he exploded into a shower of ash. The other vamps were distracted with the fight, although that wouldn’t last forever. Some were already down for the count, the winners joining in the tussle between Julius and Bathory. It didn’t matter who won that fight. If either were left standing, I’d lose.

  What I needed was to get out of there, but I couldn’t leave Rick, Soleil, or the book. Think! I noticed Silas then, sniffing Soleil like a dog whose master comes home smelling of another pooch. The nightmare was still inside her, throwing off her scent. “Smart doggy.” I smiled and sprang into action.

  Rounding the skirmish, I shuffled to her side. I pressed Nightshade into Soleil’s chest. At the site of the knife, Silas growled at me menacingly. I wondered how much of himself Silas had left when he shifted. “Don’t worry. I won’t hurt her.”

  “What are you doing?” the tenor voice asked through Soleil’s mouth.

  “Banishing you.” Nightshade glowed ever brighter.

  The nightmare growled and squirmed against Soleil’s bindings.

  “I sentence you to an eternity in hell.” I felt rather than saw the immediate results of my sentence. My blade suctioned to her chest and then slowly, like a worm being drawn from the dirt, the nightmare wrapped around the blade, inch by inch from her chest. Tighter it squeezed until it poofed into nothingness. Soleil took charge of herself.

  “Ew. I need a shower,” she said, shivering.

  “Just what I had in mind.” I cut her free and pushed her down in the snow.

  “Hey!”

  “The mud, Soleil! Get it off.” I turned my back to her and faced the brawling vampires. One by one, they noticed me, turning fanged faces in my direction. Even Bathory and Julius recognized the threat, pausing their war and fixing deadly eyes on me. I raised Nightshade. “Any time, Soleil. Could really use some help here.”

  “Almost there.” I glanced back to see her rubbing herself with snow, steam filling the space around her.

  Glancing back was a big mistake. Bathory barreled into me, thrusting Nightshade above my head. In no time, I was at the bottom of a very large heap of vampires. Fangs ripped into my flesh. I heard Soleil scream and knew she was in the same predicament.

  I was battered and bleeding. And then, like a far off memory, Rick’s words came back to me, “An entire universe of magic is at your fingertips.” He was wrong. It wasn’t at my fingertips. It was in the air I was breathing, the night air that surrounded us. Night air that was the source of my power.

  The magic slammed into me like a tidal wave when I called, the air thickening to the density of pea soup. The power yanked me from under those vamps with windy tendrils that circled the camp, casting the undead aside in a wintry hurricane. The vamps covered their eyes against the blowing snow.

  I used muscle and the mounting storm to reach Soleil. “Come on. You’ve got to flame out now!” I yelled. My power was already draining. The vamps were pushing through the wind to get to us. I couldn’t hold them back forever.

  “I can’t,” she yelled. “I tried. The mud’s effect lingers.”

  Bathory and Julius reached for me, leaning into the wind and snow. “Sorry, Soleil, but desperate times call for desperate measures.”

  “What?”

  “I yanked her into my arms. Holding her, screaming, in front of the vamps, I used Nightshade to slice a shallow cut across her chest, shoulder to shoulder. She screamed, but the cut paid off. Sunlight bled from the wound, and then the sun rose. Far from the dingy gray of a winter’s morning, a blazing hot ball of orange swept through the clearing. Vampires burst into flame. Bathory wrapped one dying vamp around her like a coat and fled into the darkness of the woods, Julius right behind her. All of the vamps scattered or burned in the sunlight. When all were gone, I released Soleil, spinning her around to check her wound.

  “I am fine!” she said, clutching the cut. “The vampires are gone. We are saved!”

  “Sorry I had to do that.”

  Gradually, she began to pull her light back inside and heal herself. “It is nothing. I should have thought of it sooner.” Her rose colored lips pressed together.

  I nodded, turning in a circle to assess our surroundings in Soleil’s fading light. A few vamps lay burning near the fire. All the others had made for the shelter of darkness. My eyes swept across the trees, looking for any stragglers that thought they might try to return for the Book of Flesh and Bone. I raised Nightshade when I saw a man stagger from the woods. Only, it was Silas, human again, naked and shivering. Soleil’s light had broken the moon’s hold on him. She opened her arms and he ran into them. The embrace was desperate, therapeutic. How long had Silas been possessed? Soleil captured? Seeing them together was a beautiful thing.

  The romantic scene in front of me brought my eyes up to the cage where Poe was nudging Rick with his head and beak. “He will not wake,” Poe said, worriedly. “I cannot cut him down like this. I might kill him.”

  I nodded, sheathing Nightshade and rushing to the place the rope was tied to a nearby tree. I worked the knot free, then carefully lowered the cage. When Rick was at my level, I could see how bad he’d been hurt. His fight with the nekomata had left him with an arm bent at an awkward angle, probably broken, and long shredded wounds, still oozing blood. I swung open the door and he collapsed into my arms. With two fingers I felt for his pulse. Weak. He was barely alive. I positioned myself to feed him my blood, then stopped. Was he human? Did the candle burn all the way down? If it had, my blood could make him sick. I had to find out.

  “I need to get him home.” I looked from Soleil to Silas to Poe.

  It was Poe that came to my aid. “I can not deny a witch who knows what she wants.” He rolled into a ball, stretched and gathered himself, morphing into a beautiful black stallion.

  “I love you, Poe,” I said.


  “I know,” he answered.

  Calling on my witchy strength, I slid Rick’s body over Poe’s shoulders and pulled myself up behind him.

  “Can I trust you two to protect the book?” I looked at Silas and Soleil.

  Soleil spread her arms to display the gash across her collarbone. “There is no place safer than with me. I will keep it for you. Save your caretaker.”

  I nodded. “Silas, which way to Rick’s cottage?”

  The detective looked at me with pity. “About a mile that way.” He pointed into the trees.

  Just as I thought. We were near Avery’s cottage in the woods behind Rick’s place. Using every ounce of strength I had left, I gripped Rick against my chest and prodded Poe forward, praying for the first time to my goddess mother for help.

  * * * * *

  By the time I reached Rick’s house, my arms and legs burned. I was exhausted, mentally, physically, emotionally. But I refused to give up. This man in my arms who had always seemed larger than life, now so human, so fragile, was suddenly more important to me than anything—even the Book of Flesh and Bone. I still couldn’t believe I’d left the tome under Soleil’s watch. If you added up all of the minutes I’d been in the same room as the fae, it wouldn’t equal a day. Maybe not the smartest thing I’d ever done, but necessary.

  The door to Rick’s cottage was hanging open. But then Silas’s werewolf probably didn’t have good door closing skills. I thanked Poe, and half carried, half dragged Rick inside. A ring of skulls glowed from behind the couch. At the center, the three-inch thick, purple candle I’d seen before with the scarab beetle imprint had burned down to its last inch of wax. A tiny blue flame struggled at the top of a pool of wax.

  “Rick? How do I stop this?” I jostled him carefully in my arms.

  His eyelids fluttered. “Out the flame.”

  “Put out the flame before it burns down? And you’ll get your power back?”

  His head listed to the side, in what I interpreted as a nod.

  Carefully lowering him to the floor beside me, I licked my fingers and shot my hand out to snuff the candle. Bad idea. My fist bounced off the barrier of the skulls and a magic zap landed me on my ass.

  “Rick?” I shook his shoulder. “How do I get to the candle?”

  He opened his eyes and looked up at me, the ghost of a smile crossing his lips, a deep breath of air escaping through his nose. “You don’t.” His gray eyes were wet.

  “Bullshit. There has to be a way.”

  “Only I can do it.”

  “Then do it! You’ll die if you don’t.”

  He shook his head. “I do not want to live this way. I’ve loved you too long to spend a lifetime watching you love someone else.”

  I lowered my head until my mouth was almost touching his bloodied face. “You won’t have to. I promise you, I am yours. Only yours.”

  “You are saying this to save me. I don’t want your pity. I want your heart.”

  I lifted his hand and placed it on my chest, my eyes searched each of his as tears welled and spilled from my face. “You have it. How can I prove it to you, Rick? I am yours.” It wasn’t enough. If I was going to give myself to him, I had to give it all. “I… love you. I love you. Not the memory of you, not what you do for me, but you. I think I always have. I was just confused because everything happened so fast. I didn’t want to get hurt again. Everyone I’ve ever thought I’ve loved, I’ve lost. My mother, Gary, a dozen boyfriends, even my father has pulled away from me. I just couldn’t open myself up to it. You suffer enough pain and the walls come up. It’s a protective instinct. But I’m opening up now. Fuck, I am wide open. I’ve painted a bull’s eye on my chest, okay. I love you. I do. Please don’t hurt me again.” The last part came out on a whisper that cracked in the middle like a brittle bone. With my whole self, I begged him to stay with me, tears falling, lips hovering over his, and my body tensed as if one heavy word from him would break me. My muscles shivered with the strain of waiting for his answer.

  He swallowed hard, closed his eyes, then opened them again. “On one condition.”

  “Anything.”

  “Marry me.”

  I froze. Warring empires collided within me; fear of commitment battled a love that was ancient, although new to me. Out of the corner of my eye, I saw the candle flicker. There wasn’t time for logic, only feeling, only intuition.

  “Yes,” I said, breathless. “Yes, I will marry you.”

  Our eyes locked and a current of magic traveled through me. I wasn’t sure what it meant but I suspected my promise was binding. His fingers reached out, knocking one of the skulls aside, breaking the protective ring. I did not hesitate. I threw myself into the candle, snuffing it out and knocking it to the floor. The hot wax splashed over my fingers, burning me, but the candle was out.

  I turned back toward Rick but he looked the same, weak, in pain. “Did it work?”

  “Yes, mi cielo, it did. But it will take me some time to recover.” He held up a hand. “For now, I am…human.”

  I knew what he meant. From his hair to the way he stretched on the floor, was as mundane as it could be. While the candle burned down over the last day, he had transformed into a normal man, and although I’d stopped the magic in time, it would take just as long for him to transform back. Unless I helped him recover.

  Glancing down at myself, I noticed I was covered in blood, mud, and other unidentifiable but grotesque things. I stood, then helped him to his feet, half dragging him into the bathroom, where I situated him on the floor.

  “Rest here for a minute.”

  Eyes already closed, he dipped his chin in response.

  “I’m going to give you a bath.”

  Rick’s eyes popped open, and he raised an eyebrow, a smile breaking through the exhausted expression on his face.

  I winked at him and started the water to warm it up. While I was waiting, I started peeling off bloody clothes, leaving them in a pile next to the toilet. Thankfully, most of the blood wasn’t mine. The last thing I removed was Nightshade. I leaned her against the wall near the cabinets.

  “We got our caretaker back,” I whispered to her, glancing at Rick, who’d fallen asleep against the wall. The hum that came from her thin bone edge seemed to say she understood.

  Chapter 30

  Healing

  Rick had fallen asleep against the wall. I sensed he needed the rest and took the opportunity to shower. Blood washed off me in maroon waves, and the deep grooves the ropes had left in my wrists filled in minute by minute. The bumps and bruises, as well as the sore muscles, were well on their way to recovery. Part of the healing was due to my advanced regenerative abilities as a Hecate, but the speed of my cell repair was also thanks to Rick. He’d given me so much blood after my last run in with Bathory, it was still in my system. Now it was time for me to return the favor.

  After drying off, and brushing out my hair, I dug in his drawer for a candle, a fat red one I’d seen in there before. I placed it on the side of the sink. Although I couldn’t find any matches, I’d learned I didn’t need any. Placing my hand behind the candle, I blew across the wick, picturing a flame in my mind. The air curved against my palm, circled the candle top, then ignited, blazing a good three inches before settling into a more even burn.

  “You are learning, mi cielo.” Rick’s eyes were open again.

  I straddled his body and lowered myself to a squat over him, not even worrying that I was naked and exposed. I wanted to be at his level to talk to him and there was nothing he hadn’t seen before. “I’m not so much learning as remembering. Some things I know from copying into my database. Others just pop into my head when I least expect them.”

  “You were amazing tonight. Strong. Intelligent.”

  “I thought you were unconscious.”

  “I was in and out, but I saw enough.”

  I sighed. “I got lucky. If Julius hadn’t shown up to challenge Bathory, I’d probably be a heart lighter.” I rubbed the spot on my
chest where the vampire had dug in her nails.

  “Judging by the storm you called, I’m not sure you needed Julius at all.”

  “I couldn’t hold it for long.”

  “Not everyone would have thought to use Soleil as you did, especially after she’d been compromised by the nightmare. How did you know the mud’s effect wasn’t more than skin deep?”

  “I didn’t. I just knew I couldn’t take them all out on my own and hoped for the best.”

  He nodded, eyes traveling down the length of my arm as if he’d just noticed I was naked.

  “I left the Book of Flesh and Bone with Soleil and Silas. Do you think that was a mistake?”

  “No. I’ve known Soleil for over one hundred years. She’ll guard it with her life. And I believe Silas is as trustworthy.”

  “Me too.”

  In the silence that followed, the fluorescent bathroom light suddenly became annoying, competing with the gentle glow of the candle. On a whim, I raised a hand and blew a strong breath, willing the lights off. I meant to throw the switch. Instead the bulb exploded in a shower of sparks. “Whoops.”

  “I never liked that bulb anyway.”

  I watched him for a second, his gray eyes twinkling crisp and clear in the candlelight, more human than usual. His lips twitched, and I broke into laughter.

  “I’m going to clean you up.” I nodded toward the full tub and tugged at the bottom edge of his shredded sweater. “This needs to come off.”

  He obliged, sitting up a little so I could peel it over his head. The shirt snagged on his wounds, dried to the skin with so much blood, and he cried out as I pulled it off.

  “I’m sorry,” I said. “I’ll be more careful.”

  I removed his shoes and socks, then helped him stand and stripped off his jeans. Slowly, I helped him lower himself into the warm water. He winced as the liquid hit the lacerations. I climbed in behind him so that he was leaning against my chest, his waist between my thighs. The tub was large, but still he had to bend his knees to fit.

 

‹ Prev