Fury Calls

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Fury Calls Page 5

by Caridad Piñeiro


  From the corner of his eye, Blake admired all her curves beneath the loose checkerboard chef’s pants and the small black tank top she wore, reminiscent of what she had worn on the day they had first met. Desire rose and he soaped up and scrubbed his arms and then splashed bracing cold water over his face, hoping to quell the need she would not appreciate.

  He was about to reach for a towel, but she was there, handing him one, challenging his control.

  “Thanks.”

  As he toweled down, he noticed that she had slipped on a tight-fitting denim jacket and loosened her blond hair from the French braid she usually wore while she cooked. She looked so young. A pang of guilt rose up—thanks to him, she would always be that young.

  Some women might have liked that, but not Meghan. In the last four years he had come to know that much about her—she feared little. He suspected that was why after her initial reaction to being a vampire, she had settled into immortal life.

  With the damp towel, he motioned to the kitchen. “This seems to suit you.”

  She crossed her arms and the action plumped up her already generous breasts, dragging his gaze there. Aware of his interest, she immediately changed her pose and said, “It wasn’t quite what I had planned for my life, but I like it.”

  He tossed his dirty towel into the laundry bin. “What had you planned on, love?”

  “You mean what had my parents planned for me,” she said. Before he could respond, she continued, “Going back home after college. A nine-to-five job somewhere with the requisite husband, house and a few kids.”

  “Can you say ‘boring much’?”

  Blake hadn’t expected that she would reply, but he sensed her pique as he walked to the pantry, snagged his black leather jacket from a hook on the wall and slipped it on. When he turned, she was so close, he nearly knocked her down.

  He took a step back to give her some space, but she advanced on him and poked him in the chest. “So I suppose you had so much more planned for your life. Tell me, Blake. What did you want from life?”

  She probably wouldn’t understand, but he gave it a shot. With a long heartfelt sigh, he said, “Just to survive, love. Just to survive.”

  Chapter 6

  Wales, 1858

  Blake’s pockets hung heavy with the new potatoes he had pilfered from the abandoned farm up the road from the meager cottage he shared with his mother and five brothers and sisters. The smallish potatoes were all he had managed to round up that day to feed his family.

  With the latest accident closing the coal mine, there had been too many young men like him in town, looking for either jobs or handouts. It was possibly harder now than it had been when his da had passed in an accident nearly a dozen years earlier. At least back then he had found a way to put food on the table.

  A chill sweat erupted through his body at the memory of what he had done for the coins for that food. Of the old man’s cold touch and the press of the papery dry lips against his. The slide of a gnarled hand into Blake’s pants. Pants made loose from weeks of hunger.

  He had survived those weeks by finding greens in the forest and boiling them with water to make a thin soup that somehow managed to sustain him. Whatever food he had been able to scrounge back then, or buy with the coins the old man gave him in exchange for the liberties he took, he had left for his family.

  Luckily the mine had reopened several weeks after the accident that killed his da. With the mine shorthanded due to the men that had been lost, Blake had secured a job going down into the pit in place of his da and labored there for over a dozen years. His young boy’s body had become a man’s, filled out with thick, hard muscle from the arduous labor and the food he had been finally able to put on the table.

  But then another, much larger accident a month ago had forced the closure of the mine. The main shaft had been too badly damaged to repair, and the mine had nearly been tapped out anyway. With only one other mine left in town, many men had lost their livelihood, Blake included.

  As he approached their small homestead, guilt assaulted him that all he had to show his family was a few handfuls of stolen potatoes. At least it would be enough to take the edge off their hunger, he thought.

  To Blake’s surprise, the smell of something rich and earthy filled the room when he entered the cottage, making his stomach rumble and clench. He approached his mother as she stirred the pot at the stove, laid a hand on the small of her back as he had watched his da do for so many years. He leaned over her petite body and glanced at the thick, meat-filled stew simmering on the stove.

  “Ma, that looks wonderful. Where did you—”

  “Bryan caught a pair of rabbits in his snares this morning. Managed to find a patch of wild carrots as well,” his mother replied. But her anxious glance told him she didn’t quite believe Bryan’s explanation for the sudden bounty.

  Neither did he, judging from the thick diameter of the carrot pieces floating in the stew. No wild carrot he’d ever seen was that plump, not to mention that the wild rabbits had been scarce that spring, a by-product of the many snares that had been set to catch them.

  “I’ll talk to him, Ma,” he said, and emptied his pockets onto the work-rough surface of the kitchen table.

  His mother picked up one of the potatoes. “These will make a nice addition to the stew. You’re a good son, Blake.”

  He took hold of her hand and squeezed it tenderly. “Don’t worry about Bryan, Ma. I’ll see to it that he stays out of trouble.”

  His mother shot him a grateful glance and a nod of approval. “I know you will, son.”

  With that, he walked out of the cottage and toward the ramshackle shed where they kept a few scraggly chickens that occasionally provided them some eggs, and sometimes a meal when a hen became barren. As he did so, he waved at two of his sisters as they tended the tiny plot of vegetables that somehow managed to grow in the rocky soil.

  By the shed he ran into Bryan, who was tossing a handful of seed to the scrawny chickens within.

  Crossing his arms, he asked, “Where’s William and Edward?”

  “Snuck off to try and catch some fish,” Bryan answered, as he put down the nearly empty seed pail.

  “Figured they were going to get as lucky as you and hook a few fat bass for us to eat?”

  Bryan tensed, and when he looked, Blake’s worst suspicions were confirmed.

  “You went to ol’ man Winchcombe, didn’t you?”

  His brother’s head dropped down as he took a step to walk past him, but Blake snared his arm and roughly pulled him close.

  “You’re not to go back there, Bryan.” For good measure, he jerked on his brother’s arm to bring the point home.

  Bryan ripped from his grasp. “What if I did go to him? What does it matter—”

  “It matters, Bryan. You don’t need to do this. I’ll find a way—”

  “Like you did last time, Blake? Winchcombe told me. He told me—”

  Blake struck out, punching his brother in the mouth and sending him sprawling onto the ground, but that wasn’t enough to stop Bryan. His brother sat up, bracing himself on arms too thin for a thirteen-year-old. Tears mingled with the blood from the cut on his lip as Bryan said, “He said he liked that I looked like you. That you had known how to please him.”

  Fear and rage filled his gut. Jabbing a finger at his brother, he warned, “Don’t go back there again, Bryan.”

  He whirled on his heel, away from his brother and back in the direction of town, his long legs eating up ground quickly as he hurried along. Bryan was too much like him, both physically and mentally. His younger brother would go back to Winchcombe if he thought that would put food on their table, much like he himself had done a dozen years earlier.

  Blake wasn’t about to let that happen to Bryan again.

  The Winchcombe mansion hadn’t changed in over a dozen years.

  Why should it have? Blake thought. The blood and sweat of hundreds of men down in the mines provided ol’ man Winchcombe with t
he money he needed.

  The hunger of the miners’ young sons provided Winchcombe with the prurient pleasures he needed to satisfy his physical needs.

  But no longer, Blake thought, as he pounded on the door of the mansion, rattling the thick wood against the door hinges with the force of his blows.

  Winchcombe’s retainer slowly opened the door, seemingly unfazed by Blake’s angry summons.

  Michael Dillon was a large forty-something man who had once worked belowground as a miner. Much like the house, Dillon didn’t seem to have aged at all in the dozen years since Blake had last come to earn some coins. He was still a strapping man, thick across the chest, and at least a foot taller than Blake, making him an imposing figure as he stood in the doorway.

  “Is he here, Dillon?”

  “Didn’t fancy seeing you here again,” Dillon said, and crossed his arms, obstructing the entry with his immense size. But Blake wasn’t about to be dissuaded. He viciously shoved past the larger man and stormed into the house, calling out Winchcombe’s name as he did so.

  “Come out, you old pervert!” he called out, as he walked into the front parlor. Dillon grabbed him from behind.

  “You don’t want to do this.” Dillon jerked him back toward the front door, but Blake planted his feet. With the muscles developed in the mine, and some knowledge of fighting from an occasional Friday night brawl at the pub, he tossed the big man up and over himself.

  Dillon landed with a thick thud and appeared stunned for a moment before slowly rising to his feet, his hamhock-sized hands fisted at his side. “You’re strong for a puny man.”

  “Tell Winchcombe—”

  “Why don’t you tell me yourself?” a cultured voice asked from above.

  Winchcombe appeared on the second-floor landing. He took a step forward and seemed to float down the stairs, freezing Blake in his place.

  Blake took a step forward, the need to please the older man almost ingrained in him from the many years he had answered Winchcombe’s call. But he was no longer that scared and hungry young boy, and he didn’t intend for his brother to take his place. He battled back the fear within him and fury rose in its place.

  “Do not go near Bryan again,” he warned, his voice low and filled not with threat, but promise. He clenched his hands at his sides, ready to fight both Dillon and Winchcombe if need be.

  Dillon chuckled and was about to advance on him when Winchcombe laid a pale thin hand on the other man’s broad chest. “I’ll see to this myself.”

  Blake braced himself since the old man still seemed quite capable of causing injury. In fact, Winchcombe seemed not a day older than when Blake had first come to his door.

  “Stay away from Bryan,” he threatened yet again.

  With a burst of speed, Winchcombe was suddenly standing in front of him, a broad smile across his face.

  “Do you plan on taking his place, Blake?” Winchcombe caressed his jaw, and as much as Blake wanted to retreat from the embrace, his feet seemed rooted in place.

  Winchcombe moved his hand downward to Blake’s chest, where he ran it across the lean, corded muscle there. The smile on the old man’s face tightened with seeming displeasure.

  “You’re no longer a fine young lad, but you’ll do,” Winchcombe said. He grabbed Blake’s shoulder, imprisoning him in a surprisingly strong grip. His long, bony fingers dug painfully into Blake’s shoulder.

  Then Winchcombe slowly transformed before Blake’s eyes, stunning Blake into nonaction. Winchcombe’s rheumy brown eyes brightened, becoming a startling shade of glowing green-blue unlike anything he had ever seen before. When the smile on his face broadened, Blake saw his teeth turn to fangs, which extended beyond the old man’s lower lip.

  His knees weakened at the sight, but Blake forced himself upright. “You can’t scare me, ol’ man,” he said, grabbing the man’s wrist and trying to break the nearly intractable grip Winchcombe had on his shoulder. He noticed then how thin the other man’s wrist was. How cold and dry the skin felt beneath his fingers.

  Winchcombe laughed, and an odd growl tinged his mirth.

  “I like spirit in a man, Blake. So much so that I think I’ll keep you around for a while.”

  Before Blake could protest, Winchcombe had him in a powerful embrace, but Blake rocked from side to side, trying to free himself. As he glanced up at the demon the old man had become, he said, “You’ll never get my spirit, ol’ man.”

  Winchcombe roared with laughter and then bit down on Blake’s neck even as he continued his defiant struggles.

  Pain erupted through Blake’s skull, followed by need so great that he soon found himself clutching the old man close, welcoming his virulent embrace. The pain slowly fled, but the desire remained, only it wasn’t human desire.

  This need was bathed in violence, filled with a fury unlike any he had ever experienced in his life. It called to him for fulfillment. It called to him for vengeance. The need that grew was so strong that Blake soon found himself able to deflect whatever power the old man had on him.

  Yanking Winchcombe away from his neck, he held the old man at arm’s length, emboldened by whatever was growing within him, taking hold of him body and soul. Strong and uncontrollable, it demanded satisfaction.

  Winchcombe hung from his grasp, an astonished look on his face as blood dripped from his fangs.

  His blood.

  At the sight heat coalesced in Blake’s center and suddenly erupted throughout his body, staggering him with its force. He battled back the sensation, but it struck him again until the heat fully enveloped him and everything around him grew brighter and more vibrant.

  Beneath his fingers was the papery feel of Winchcombe’s cold skin and the fragility of his throat as he held him and raised him high above the floor. He reveled in the sight of the old man dangling weakly from his hand and Dillon backing away from them, as if sensing that control had turned. Fear filled the big man’s face as he beheld what was happening before his eyes.

  Blake breathed in deeply and the smell of the blood on the old man’s breath saturated the air.

  His blood, he thought again. His blood and that of his father and brother and dozens of other men. Blood that would continue to be shed unless…

  He knew what was needed next and with that realization, his own fangs erupted from his mouth.

  Winchcombe shivered in his grasp as he brought him close and bared his neck. He begged and pleaded much as Blake had done years earlier. Cried out loud with fear much as Blake had when Winchcombe had satisfied himself on his young boy’s body.

  Now he would be satisfied.

  As he brought his mouth to the old thin skin beneath which there was a barely perceptible pulse, the old man implored him once more for mercy.

  Blake just smiled and said, “You will never lay a hand on my family again.”

  Chapter 7

  “Blake…” Meghan cradled his face, pulling him back into the now, but he reared away at her touch, feeling dirty from the memories. Feeling unworthy and angry.

  “I don’t want your pity.”

  She snatched her hand back and tension crept into the lines of her body. Narrowing her eyes, she examined him sharply, her gaze now filled with hostility at his rebuff. It beat the sympathy he had seen there just moments before. He needed no one’s sympathy to lift his shame.

  “What do you want, Blake?”

  To make amends, he thought. Since the day he had sired her he had known that he had to make it up to her, but at first her rage at him had been so great that none of his actions had reached her. When they had all been taken captive two years ago by a mad scientist, he had protected her even at the risk of his own life. That had defused her anger somewhat, but he had known that it wouldn’t be enough to put things right between them.

  As he took note of the tight lines of her body and the disapproval stamped on her face, for the first time it occurred to him that he might not ever be able to square things between them.

  “What do
you want?” she pressed again, but he wasn’t ready to answer her. Not when he was so unsure of the reception his confession would receive.

  “It’s late. I’ll see you home,” he said. As he turned and walked out into the night, he thought he caught sight of something at the far end of the service alley.

  “Did you see that?” he asked, as Meghan walked out beside him.

  As she peered over the edge of the metal railing, he noticed a flash of something large and white-haired hopping away from the Dumpsters.

  “Well, did you?” he repeated, but Meghan shook her head.

  “I didn’t see a thing.”

  Blake bounded down the steps and hurried to the end of the alley. He stopped short at the sight of the feet poking out from between two of the smaller garbage cans. Meghan bumped him from behind, caught unaware by his abrupt stop. As she saw the feet, she mumbled a curse beneath her breath.

  “Stay here,” he ordered.

  But she immediately countered with, “Where you go, I go.”

  “How I wish that were true, love,” he mumbled, too low for her to hear before hesitantly edging to the garbage cans and shifting them aside to fully reveal the body lying on the ground.

  “Sweet Jesus,” he said, peering down at the remains of the male vampire. His throat had been ripped out so savagely, Blake could see the vertebrae of his neck, gleaming a sickly pink white in the light of the moon.

  “Not again,” Meghan whispered, and covered her mouth with her hand.

  Blake shot a look at her. “Seen this before, have you?” He bent closer to inspect the body, but as he did so, the smell of the blood pulled at his demon to come out and feed.

  He heard a growl from behind him and looked up. Meghan was also transforming.

  “Control it, love. There’s nothing here for us tonight,” he said, calling back his own demon. Judging from the lack of blood on the ground beside the corpse, this vampire had been drained dry.

 

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