Roaring Dawn: Macey Book 3 (The Gardella Vampire Hunters 10)
Page 18
He saw the way she stiffened, lifted her face, and seemed to respond. Her body softened from its ready stance, and her knees appeared to give way a little.
“Macey,” Max snapped, suddenly nervous, trying to jolt her out of the murk.
She shivered, as if struggling to listen to him, to hear him, and Iscariot made a sharp gesture. The vampire goons holding her arms released them, and Macey actually took a step closer to the evil lord. Then she stopped, fairly vibrating in her place, seeming to fight the urge to move again. Max saw her chest shudder as if she were attempting to draw in a deep breath—or fighting to keep her own breath and heartbeat.
“A life worse than death,” Iscariot murmured. “What would be the worst thing that could happen to you, Max Denton? Sending you to your grave—oh, that’s far too easy. But destroying someone you love…now there’s an idea.” He turned from Macey, breaking the thrall, his eyes wild and excited as he turned them onto Max—who managed to avert his own just in time. “Watching you live through yet another loss would be beyond entertaining.”
“Just try it, Nicky,” Max sneered. His heart was pounding normally again, now that Macey seemed to be free for the moment. Still, she wasn’t moving, just stood there. He tried to catch her eye, tried to let her know he was here, to give her strength, to remind her how strong she was—but she was watching Iscariot. An unpleasant tremor rippled through Max and he gripped his stake tighter.
The vampire lord was too smart to stand in a position in which Max could hit him with his stake; no, the creature stood at such an angle that there was no possibility. Not yet, anyway.
“But…wait. I’ve an even better idea,” Iscariot said. “She’s much too lovely to be wasted on a mere coffin. And I do get lonely sometimes.” He smiled at Macey. “Perhaps you’d like to be my consort.”
“I don’t think so,” she replied, and Max’s heart started up again.
“But it would be wonderful. I’ve always had a soft spot for you, lovely Macey. Ever since the first time I tasted you.” Iscariot stilled, his attention focused on her. “I could even learn to forgive you for marking me…because, after all, I’ve done the same to you.” His hand moved sharply, and she looked down, as if her gaze was drawn by a string.
Max saw it too: a stripe of red down the front of her blouse, seeming to connect the buttons that held it together. And another one, around the front of her breast.
“You want the pyramid,” Max said in an attempt to distract the vampire lord from his current tack.
“Oh, yes, and I’ll have it…have no fear. But I think I’ll also have this lovely woman as well. And…I think…she’s going to come to me quite willingly…aren’t you, Macey, my darling?”
“Yes…yes, I think I shall,” she said. And stepped toward him.
FIFTEEN
~ Our Summas Miscalculates a Second Time ~
Macey dared not look at her father. She kept her eyes directed at Iscariot, but slightly averted—safely focused on the inside edges of his two dark brows, right where they nearly met at the bridge of his nose.
Strangely enough, the fear that had simmered below the surface whenever she thought of Iscariot had evaporated the moment she stepped into this room. It was as if she were somehow charged with purpose, as if she’d somehow realized now was the time to make her stand—and that, powerful as he was, he would lose to her.
Now, as she moved closer to the vampire lord, pretending to be drawn by him, she could smell the excitement wafting off Iscariot. It was tinged with death and darkness, and she wanted nothing more than to sneer at him, and tell him he stank.
But not yet.
Max was looking a little disheveled—though she’d seen the way he hacked off the undead’s head with nothing more than a dagger, and had annihilated three vampires with spectacular skill and speed. Macey knew Iscariot wasn’t finished with him yet—with either of them.
She’d already managed to have Iscariot make the two brute vampires release her by pretending to consider his offer, and acting as if she were about to collapse. Or, rather, to allow Iscariot to think he was enthralling her enough that she was actually considering it.
She’d also refused to look over at the body lying on the floor near the windows. It had to be Grady, and from what she could tell…it was not good. But she also noticed Linwood and another police officer climbing in through the window. She hoped with every fiber of her being that they would see to Grady, get him out safely, instead of attempting to join the fight against the undead.
Though she no longer had a stake in hand, beneath her shirt, Macey was still well armed. She wore the large silver cross, and had a stake secreted along the side seam of her shirt, one beneath each arm. She just needed the opportunity to use them.
“Macey,” Max said. His voice was tight, and she knew he was becoming terrified as she seemed to succumb to Iscariot’s will.
She turned slowly toward him, as if pulled by his voice, but kept her expression blank and her eyes unfocused. She couldn’t let on, even to him, that she was pretending—mostly pretending, anyway. Iscariot’s thrall was wickedly strong, and she had felt herself lulled more than once.
But when she concentrated on the heavy weight of the silver cross, and the tiny spark of energy from the vis bulla, she felt their protection wrap around her like a cocoon…and she was able to focus on a pinpoint of clarity in the very center of her mind. She held it there, like a small flame, even when she swayed and trembled and felt as if her knees were to give away.
“Did you hear that, Denton?” Iscariot crowed. “She is coming to me. What a long, lustful life we’ll have together. And, my pet, with Rekk’s Pyramid, we’ll be rulers of more than the underworld.” He held out a skeletal hand to her. She took it, forcing herself not to cringe at the feel of his cool, dry flesh.
Max moved sharply, and something whipped through the air. But Iscariot was fast, and he yanked Macey into his arms in a lovers’ embrace—and a shield.
She cried out as the stake meant for the vampire’s heart plunged into her shoulder, lodging there from behind, then heard Max’s own cry of rage and horror, followed by the mad shuffle of fighting.
“Now see what you’ve done, Denton. Impaled your own daughter! It’s no wonder she chooses me…over you. She chooses immortality over a life doomed to fail…as yours is.”
Macey’s head swam against the pain—her father was supremely strong, and with impeccable aim—and she realized with a nauseating start that the stake had gone all the way through the soft part of her shoulder…and a shallow wooden point emerged from the front. Now her blouse was blossoming red there as well.
She didn’t have much time; her head was light and tremors had begun to take over from deep inside. She sagged against Iscariot, doing her best not to gag at the feel of his stringy muscles—and other parts she preferred not to think of—pressing against her.
“Macey,” Max called out, desperation in his voice.
She couldn’t see him, but the ugly noises coming from behind indicated he was battling for his life—possibly even unarmed at this point. She wished she could somehow give him a look—a sign, hope—to let him know she was all right.
But she wasn’t all right, she realized murkily. The blood streamed from both wounds, and Iscariot was holding her upright more than she was standing on her own. Her vision swam, her muscles suddenly protested, and when Iscariot gave a soft chuckle in her ear, she hardly shuddered.
“I don’t see any reason to waste more time,” the vampire murmured. “Let me welcome you to your new life, Macey Denton.”
And he slid his fangs into the side of her neck.
SIXTEEN
~ Fear and Regret ~
Max fought like a berserker, trying to free himself from the four undead who now held him, all the while watching in horror as Iscariot gathered his daughter up like a lover—then plunged his fangs into her.
Macey. Dear God, Macey…
How could he have miscalculated?
r /> How could he have thought she’d be strong enough to face Iscariot?
How could he have made such a mistake?
He shouldn’t have left her all these years. He should have been here when she took the vis, when she learned who she was. He should have been the one to face Iscariot…not his daughter.
Not his daughter.
And now it was too late. Now, he’d fairly sent her to her death—no, not to her death. To her undeath. Unless he could save her before Iscariot drained her dry and forced his evil, undead blood upon her.
Max had one stake left, only one, and he couldn’t quite reach it in his other boot.
His vision had gone red with fury, and he punched and kicked like a wild man. But the four undead were vicious and strong, and they tore at him with long nails—though none had gotten close enough to bite.
He whipped his aching head back into the face of an undead behind him, then pretended to collapse in the grips of the remaining ones, becoming a dead weight in their hands. In that brief, quiet heartbeat of a moment, as one grabbed his head to hold him still for a bite, he drew on every bit of strength and cunning he possessed, every bit of divine assistance that came from the vis bulla, and asked for help.
And when it came, it was like a white light, shooting through him, exploding into each of his limbs. All at once, he had the strength to vault upright, to whip himself—and his clinging attackers—in the direction of the sunshine block, forcing them to follow with him, to stumble and fall into the sanctuary of light.
They screamed, releasing him just before—or, in the case of one, just after—the light hit them. That was all he needed; the stake was already in his hand, and Max spun like a dervish, striking out while they still roiled with agony.
Plunge…stab…shove.
Poof, poof, poof.
Max spun around, dashing the hair and sweat from his eyes, to see Iscariot and Macey, still locked in that horrifying embrace. She was moving, struggling against him, her arms trapped between herself and the vampire—blood streaming from the wound at the back of her shoulder, the wound Max himself had delivered.
He shoved back the guilt and self-loathing—there’d be time for that later—and bolted toward them.
He was almost there when the last vampire, a large, solid one who seemed to come from nowhere, grabbed him. Max swore, twisting and fighting; he’d get there, by God, he’d get there—there where he could strike, there where he could plunge the stake into Iscariot’s heart. He inched and fought to get closer, closer…fighting all the while.
He bucked and struggled, uncaring that he was held, uncaring that fangs were tearing into his own shoulder. His mind was focused on one thing: the target of Iscariot’s back. His vampire attacker had him from behind, strong hands grabbing him by the hair and gripped the arm that held the stake.
Max didn’t even try to use his weapon on him. He focused, twisted, turned, until finally, at last he had the target in sight.
Iscariot’s back—the stake would go right through to his heart.
In smooth, rapid movements, Max flipped up the stake from his imprisoned limb and caught it with his free one, then jammed it point first backward into the face of the undead behind him to catch the bastard off guard. The vampire screamed, loosened his hold—but not altogether—and Max readied the stake for his last chance.
Just as he saw Macey lift her head from where it sagged to the side—she seemed to be saying something to Iscariot, and the creature drew back his head to respond—Max whipped the pike forward, flinging it in a straight, smooth shot toward the back side of Nicholas Iscariot’s heart.
Then he shoved his attacker into a square of sunlight.
SEVENTEEN
~ Like Father, Like Daughter ~
Despite the pain and murkiness from her wound, Macey had managed to slip a stake from beneath her blouse into one hand.
Iscariot had been so determined to taunt her father, and to sink his fangs into her, that her contortions had been unnoticed—or assumed to be struggles.
Her vision wavered, and she felt the blood draining from her body—though the stake that had impaled her shoulder held off a full stream of it—but she held on to that slender wooden talisman, waiting for the right moment. The right position. The strength to use it.
She heard Max’s cry of horror when Iscariot bit into her, and the sounds of his struggle—flesh against flesh. But moments later, the scent of undead ash was strong in the air and she felt a leap of pride and relief.
The stake was in her hand, in position—all she had to do was use it.
“Nicholas, darling,” she said in a weak voice—it wasn’t difficult to feign a weak voice—“I have a question for you, about all of this.”
He withdrew his fangs and pulled back to look down at her, as if he really meant to answer her question. Blood dripped from the corners of his mouth, and his eyes were slitted with lust. He smiled down at her, and that was all she needed.
Macey shifted and gave a little upward thrust…and plunge.
In went the point…and right then, Iscariot jolted sharply against her, into her stake—as if he’d been shoved from behind at the very same moment.
And that was when Macey saw her father, just beyond Iscariot’s shoulder…and the second spike that had gone into him from the back.
She shoved Iscariot away, stumbling backward as the root of malevolence, the condemned evil, the lord of vampires, froze with shock at being skewered—not once, but twice, simultaneously, by the father-daughter Venator team.
“Goodbye, Nicky,” she said, panting, shaking, bleeding…
And then her knees gave out.
Someone caught her—Max, of course—and the next thing she knew, he was holding her tightly, hugging her.
Her father—whom she hadn’t touched or embraced for thirteen years—was holding her, and his face was wet with tears—or maybe it was sweat—and the big, powerful man was trembling. Possibly even crying.
Was she dreaming? Was she dead?
“Macey, God, I’m so sorry,” he said into the top of her head. “We need a damned doctor!” he shouted, heedless of the proximity of her ear.
“A doctor?” Macey mumbled. “I don’t need a doct— Ugh!” Her eyes bolted wide and she shrieked as something splashed over her wounds—salted holy water.
And then she fainted.
+ + +
After dousing her liberally with salted holy water, Max reluctantly relinquished Macey to the surprisingly efficient Dr. Fintucket and his staff.
In so doing, he was also required to brush off the insistence that he be taken off in an ambulance and treated as well.
Bugger that.
If they’d been back in Rome, Macey—and possibly Max himself—would have gone to the Consilium to be treated by the Venator medic—a descendant of the excellent Ylito, who’d saved Victoria Gardella’s life, among many others.
As it was, Max would have to rely on so-called modern medicine…at least initially. The bloody stake he’d embedded in his daughter would have to be removed, she’d be stitched up, and Max would make certain to replenish and use his supply of salted holy water and the salve the Venators favored to help their wounds heal even more quickly than usual.
She’d live, thank God.
Thank God.
And, almost as importantly, Nicholas Iscariot was dead. Max could hardly believe it.
“Max!”
He turned to see Savina rushing toward him. She threw herself into his arms, heedless of the blood and sweat plastered all over his skin. “Oh, God, thank God, Max! You’re safe!”
He squeezed her tightly, inhaling the scent of her hair—clean and fresh, and untainted with the blood and violence in which he’d been immersed for more than an hour.
She was safe too. He drew in a shaky breath.
“And Grady,” Savina began—not the best way for their reunion to start, he thought, and eased up on his grip of her—“he’s going to make it. They’re taking h
im to the hospital—he’s alive.”
“That’s excellent news,” he replied, aware of how stiff his lips felt when he formed the words, how inside him there was a strange, curdling feeling. How he suddenly wondered why he was holding Savina so closely when only last night she’d been so cozy on the sofa with his friend.
But he couldn’t let go. For until this moment, he hadn’t admitted how terrified he’d been that Iscariot would have targeted her in order to get to him. “And my daughter,” he said coolly, “she’s going to be fine as well. In case you were wondering.”
Savina pulled away and looked up at him, brushing a lock of hair from her eyes. “I know, thank God—I heard about it. But what about you? I think you should go to the hospital—”
“Don’t be ridiculous.” Now he did step back. “I’m barely touched. I have work to do—other work. There are far too many people who saw too much today.”
“Right. Of course.” She was looking at him curiously. “I didn’t realize you had the golden disk. Or a golden disk.”
“I have something similar.” Though he was crumbling with uncertainty inside, he couldn’t keep from looking at her, devouring the sight of her. As if it might be the last time he did.
Unlike most everyone else in the area, Savina was not disheveled. In fact, she looked as if she’d just stepped out of a Paris café—except for the streak of blood he’d deposited on her cream-colored blouse. Unless it was from Grady, whom she’d probably embraced with just as much enthusiasm as she’d done Max.
That thought didn’t sit well with him at all.
“You’re not going to the hospital with Macey?” she asked, frowning.
He drew himself up. “I’ve got work to do—things to take care of.”
She shook her head, her attention falling away, her beautiful lips tightening with disgust. “There’s always work to do, Max. But maybe it’s time you took a moment to be a father, instead of a Venator. For once in thirteen years.”