SCROLLS OF THE DEAD-3 Complete Vampire Novels-A Trilogy

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SCROLLS OF THE DEAD-3 Complete Vampire Novels-A Trilogy Page 27

by Billie Sue Mosiman


  This was the true joy of being immortal and vampire. No one had told him how exquisite warm, fresh blood could be. They had failed to instruct him in making clean kills, assuming he would always buy their plasma bags, but he thought that occasionally he would take a human. Maybe more than occasionally. He felt more powerful than ever. He was indomitable.

  He could be king.

  The phrase slipped into his mind and stayed. He could be king. He was already higher than any man. If he wanted, he could rule over the vampires, take over Ross' control, do away with Mentor, and lead the rest into the future as they did his bidding. Why shouldn't he?

  He stripped off his clothes, throwing the boxed diamond bracelet onto the top of his dresser. One of his women was coming over tonight. This was her gift. She'd do anything for diamonds.

  Upton stood naked before a full-length mirror and felt both love and loathing for his body. It was hard and strong. His teeth were his own and were white as bone. But it was his skin, the unblemished skin, that sent him into ecstasy. God, he had yearned for years to be free of the sores. But his body was old, so old. He was skinny-legged and his buttocks drooped. His face was wrinkled and he hadn't much hair left, the remaining sprigs a shade of yellowing white.

  He wondered if he would be trapped in this old body forever. He got women because he was rich and because he could use his power to lure them. He could make them believe he was handsomer than he was.

  Why were there so many drawbacks to his new immortality?

  As he showered, he pondered the question of his aging form and what he might do about it. Surely there was a solution. Look at Ross, he was a beautiful immortal. He didn't walk around in an aging body, trapped within it. He'd have to ask Ross what he might do about his age, find out if it could be reversed or something.

  As he dried off, he relived the murder of the jewelry store manager, losing himself in how wondrously exhilarating it had felt to drink the man's blood.

  When the woman arrived and George showed her to Upton's bedroom, he handed her the box. He listened while she gushed over the beauty of the bracelet, but all he could think about was sinking his fangs into her beautiful, swanlike throat.

  He made up his mind. Before she was able to leave tonight after their lovemaking, he would kill her.

  ~*~

  He would kill whomever he wanted, whenever he wanted to. He had a whole world full of victims to prey upon.

  No one could stop him.

  Ross brought the problem to Mentor's attention. "I should have killed that old bastard."

  "For once I'm inclined to agree."

  Charles Upton was totally out of hand. He had sold out his business and the twin-tower building he owned in Houston and moved his operations to Dallas in order to be in the midst of his kind. He was no longer ill, but strong and growing braver and more wicked each day. "Nothing and no one can stop me," he was heard to say often when thwarted in business affairs. "Either get out of my way or I roll over you."

  He wanted the Strand-Catel operation, and he wanted to ease Ross out of his position. He had not done one thing to increase Ross' power. He'd reneged on his deal, forgetting what he owed his maker. In fact, Upton took it upon himself to announce he was the only Predator with the business acumen to bring all the clans together and help them infiltrate and gain control over industry in the Southwest. Then they'd move out to the West, the North, and the East. His plan was national and in years to come would evolve into international.

  "We don't live in the dark anymore," Upton proclaimed to anyone who would listen. "It's time we came out into the light and made this world our world. For those of us who don't have the guts for it, the Cravens, and the weak beasts—they need to be cut off from the tree."

  "Although I agree with Upton in principles—I've been saying the same thing for years—he's a megalomaniac," Ross said. "And I'm here to tell you he needs putting down."

  "If you hadn't made him like us . . ."

  "I know. For the first time I trusted a mortal. It won't happen again."

  Mentor said he would take care of it, as he always did. Without spilled blood, without rancor and riot.

  "I don't know why I keep listening to you," Ross said. "I wish you'd just take him out and let me help you bum him."

  "We won't do that unless we have to," Mentor said.

  He walked with Mentor through Bette Kinyo's neighborhood. It was twilight, and children were being called indoors. As the lights came on and the cars turned into the driveways, they passed by Bette's house. "Here, for instance," Ross said, pointing at the front door. "So far she's kept her promise, but she's human, Mentor. She's prey to vanity and ambition, morals and laws. I don't trust her."

  "She's never brought us harm. You must never come here without me." As they walked by, Mentor glanced longingly at the house.

  Ross flung his head and his long hair fell back on his neck. "I don't know how we've kept things going here the way you let everyone do as he pleases. Upton's going crazy, just crazier every day. That woman in there and her man, they could bring us down anytime they feel like it. And Dell. Running off with that boy, turning her back on the rest of us, breaking every code we ever taught her."

  "You're intolerant, Ross. It must make your life miserable to see so many things you want to put to rights and they're all out of your reach. Dell's doing fine. She's gone away on her own and living the life she was meant to live."

  "I don't think she should have done it. And none of these people are out of my reach, Mentor. You know better than that."

  It was true things had changed, but they always did. It was the only certainty, Mentor realized. The world turned and change came and they adjusted. He had no worries about Bette or Alan, but he did keep a mental watch on Dell and he was in constant surveillance of Charles Upton.

  Though he knew Dell was pregnant, which presented a whole new set of problems, it was Upton he must do something about right now. Immediately. He was one of the most powerful Predators who had ever been made since Ross, perhaps since Mentor himself, and that made him a great danger. Mentor was going to have to go to him, to reason with him. If it didn't work . . .

  "It won't," Ross said, reading Mentor's thoughts. "He has to be put down."

  "All you ever want to do is kill."

  Ross stepped close to a hedge growing at sidewalk's edge, reached down quickly, and came up with a silky, long-haired white cat. It spit and clawed at him, instinctively knowing it had been trapped and now was prey. “I don't kill for fun," Ross said, slipping one hand around the cat's head to break its neck. "Just for the blood of it."

  Mentor reached out and held Ross' wrist. "Let it go. You're just testing me. It's tiresome."

  Ross looked him in the eye and loosened his fist. The cat fell to its feet and scampered away like a flash of silver in the darkness. "You're no fun at all. You're the prissiest Predator who was ever made."

  Mentor laughed, his laughter booming out from deep in his chest, and it made him feel almost human. "Prissy, am I?" He laughed more, laughed so hard it brought a smile to Ross' full, red lips.

  "And not only that, but you're old and incredibly wrinkled and look like a sack of bones. When are you going to drop that suit of flesh and get one that won't scare birds from the trees?"

  When Mentor left him, Ross headed into a violent Fort Worth barrio where gangs drew blood every night of the week. He would prey there, taking some young buck and draining him dry before dropping him into a dumpster or a ditch. "I hate that stuff we call blood in the blood bank," he said, leaving Mentor. "It's colored water compared to the real thing. You ought to try it again sometime. Maybe you wouldn't act so grouchy."

  Mentor shook his head and went on his way into the heart of Dallas, moving slowly toward Charles Upton. Work to do, always there was work to do.

  ~*~

  George answered the door. He bowed his head and led Mentor inside to wait in a comfortable room overflowing with rich gilt, ornate cornices, a hammered
tin ceiling, and a dead fireplace filled with a vase of lilacs. Where Charles had found lilacs Mentor could not fathom. They must have been trucked in from some northern clime where the heat did not kill them.

  "Hello, and how are you?" Charles asked, bustling into the room like a man half his age. "I don't have much time, I have a phone call coming in a few minutes."

  "We have to talk, Charles. Forget the business." He noticed a faint smear of blood on the old man's cheek. He wondered about it, but dared not probe the other vampire's mind just yet.

  "We have nothing to talk about. You do your job, and I'll do mine. Now if you'll excuse me . . ." He turned to leave, dismissing Mentor.

  "Come back here." Mentor did not raise his voice, but his command could not be disobeyed when he sent it with the power of his mind.

  Charles turned slowly. "I don't like you coming here," he said. "I didn't like you with me when I died, and I haven't liked you any better since. You shouldn't even be allowed to call yourself vampire. All you want to do is help people. It's a weakness I really despise."

  "You and several others," Mentor said, thinking of Ross. At least Ross could be made to listen to reason—either with talk or with battle—but he feared Upton could not.

  "All right, all right, what do you want? You're wasting my time."

  "What do you plan to do, Upton? Take over the world? And what's that blood doing on your face? Have you been killing?"

  Upon squinted his eyes. All his sores had healed, strength returned to his muscles, and even his face had relaxed, though his lips had long since forgotten how to smile with genuine feeling. He stalked closer, his fists balled at his sides. "I kill when I want to. You can't stop me. I'll take over the world if I want, too. Do you hear me, Mentor? When it's time and when everything is in place, I will indeed rule this world. It may take me years, decades, even a century, but it will be mine. Is that what you wanted to hear? Is that what you feared in the dark dream when I was made, when I embraced the Predator's life? That one day I would rule over even you?"

  "I don't think that will ever happen."

  "Won't it?" Upton turned on his heel, but before he reached the doorway Mentor was at his side. He had him by the arm, staying him.

  "Upton, I tried to talk to you. I've tried to understand the agony you suffered in your human form and believed you could get over it now that you have a second chance. But you nurse the past, don't you? You blame the universe. You blame God."

  "God!" Upton spat out the word. "Never speak to me of a god. One who let me shrivel up and break out in sores. One who lets children get run over, molested, and mauled and mutilated. One who lets the world suffer floods and fires and winds and pestilence. What God?"

  Mentor sighed. He dropped his hand from Upton's arm. "I'm sorry, Charles, that you feel that way. You have to come with me now."

  "With you? I'm not going anywhere with you. I'm not spending another minute on you."

  Mentor moved as fast as light, wrapping his arms around the old man, holding him to his chest, his face in Upton's, so that his words would not be mistaken. "We're going away, Upton. To a place where you'll be safe and the world will be safe from you."

  "I will not. Let me go."

  George ran down the hall and stopped at the doorway, where the two men were locked together. "Mr. Upton?"

  Mentor turned his head and looked at George. "Stay here as long as you wish. Say good-bye to Mr. Upton. This time it's forever. If you ever speak of this, I'll come for you."

  "George, get him off me!"

  "Let's go, Upton. It's time to go."

  Mentor whisked his charge from the house, through the door that he opened by the force of his mind. Once outside, he took Upton with him straight up through the Dallas night sky. They sped faster than any machine man had ever devised until they were high above the Earth, watching it turn. The last time Mentor had done this had been with Dell. It was at least a year ago on another summer night in the endless stream of summer nights that were to come.

  Upton turned and twisted, bit and spat and cried. Mentor hung onto him. They sailed down, down, dropping with dizzying speed toward Thailand. Toward the only safe place for Charles Upton, the vampire who possessed no control, no soul, no feeling for the human race from whence he'd been born.

  The monks wrestled Upton into chains. Mentor knew he would one day realize his power and try to leave, but he'd not get far.

  "I'll get you for this," Upton shouted. "You can't do this to me."

  "We have to do it, Charles."

  "I'll . . . I'll stop killing, is that what you want? I only did it twice!"

  "That's only part of it. And you'll never stop killing. What I want is for you to be a creature who understands consequences. And either you do and don't care, or you don't possess the capacity to understand. You must stay here until we find out if you'll ever change. The only other alternative is to kill you."

  "If you leave me here, I'll make you pay, Mentor. I swear it."

  Mentor paused at the prison cell door and stared at the old man. He shuddered inside. He had tapped Upton's mind and knew he not only meant it, but he would work every single second of his existence to make it true.

  "You can try," Mentor said finally. "But I would advise against that route. Stay here and listen to the monks, Charles. Learn from them. Maybe one day you can be free." Even as he said it, Mentor knew he was wrong. Upton could never be free.

  Upton spat at his captors as they padlocked his chains to the damp, smelly wall. "I will never speak to these mothers of monsters again," he shouted, twisting away from them. "I'll kill them the first chance I get.”

  Mentor thought he would never get that chance.

  Walking down the corridor, he glanced in on Madeline and took her abuse before leaving her to her papers and her writing. In the chapel, while red candles burned and the subtle scent of incense wafted through the air, Mentor knelt on the hard stone floor and hung his head. There was no evidence of a crucifix or any other religious artifact in the monastery, but Mentor knew it didn't matter. Prayers had been said here for hundreds of years. Maybe the God Upton didn't believe in would hear Mentor's pleas.

  Being vampire was no easier than being human. It was harder. It was always a hard-fought battle between evil desire and higher morality, no matter what type of vampire you became, Natural, Craven, or Predator.

  Do you hear me? Mentor cried out silently. Have you ever heard any of us and have you any mercy for us in the end?

  After his meditation, Mentor rose and left the monastery. In his mind he could hear Upton calling after him, threatening, weeping, begging. He would probably have to remain in his cell until the end of time. Mentor did not believe Predators such as he ever reformed. He was a human born bad, with evil in his heart, and there it remained. While Madeline grieved through a thousand years, Upton would plan and scheme, rant and rave. Let him. If he ever devised an escape, they would all track him down and set him on fire, scattering his being to the wind.

  ~*~

  Ross sat in the office waiting for the acting president of Upton Enterprises. David would do as he said. He had no choice.

  Ross did not bother to rise when David entered the room. He immediately took over his mind, leading him to sit in a chair opposite. He put suggestions and commands into the other man's brain so that he would do as instructed, the way someone would who has been successfully hypnotized. Mentor called it mesmerizing. Ross just called it control.

  I will supply a body, he said telepathically, from people I have in a Houston hospital. They will contact you when it's ready. There will be a closed casket funeral for Charles Upton. You will arrange the funeral and return to take over the company. Your press release will say what the death certificate says: Upton died of his disease. From that day forward, you will report to me only. I am your boss, your master. All profits will be put into my account in Switzerland. You will run things for me, handle all daily affairs, and you will never question either your former emp
loyer's death or my command. Do you understand?

  David nodded mechanically.

  "That's fine, then," Ross said, standing and speaking aloud. "Tomorrow you will send out word Charles Upton is dead. He is dead. You understand?"

  "Yes, sir."

  Ross patted the man on the back and left the office. Upton Towers in Houston would have been dwarfed by the new building they'd bought in Dallas. It rose in gold glass from the center of the Dallas financial district, towering over lesser buildings. And it was all his with Upton out of the way. Sometimes Mentor did him great favors without even realizing it.

  Ross smiled and punched the elevator button for the lobby. He hoped Upton was enjoying his sojourn in prison. He never should have betrayed a business partner that way. It had been his undoing.

  ~*~

  Charles leaned against the cold stone in his cell concentrating on moving his mind beyond the monastery's walls. He could not reach either Ross or Mentor, but after several attempts, he was able to connect with David.

  He tried to converse with him, but it was as if he were roaming a vacant bank vault. Finally, he settled for reading the memories in David's mind. When he got to a recent memory involving Ross, Upton halted, biting down on his tongue until it bled into his mouth.

  He was going to be reported dead. No one would look for him. They were going to supply a body, a death certificate, and tell the press the wealthy financier had been killed by his disease. No one would ever question it since it was public knowledge he had suffered from a terminal illness.

  Upton struggled against his chains, screaming out vocally. A monk passed his cell, paused, looked in, and moved on.

  Upton tried to reach David's mind again, succeeded after much effort, and searched his memory for all the details.

  Ross was taking over.

  Mentor had put him away so that Ross could take over.

  Together they'd found a way to make him disappear so they could cheat him and use his power.

 

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