MIDNIGHT CONQUEST: Book 1 of the Bonded By Blood Vampire Chronicles
Page 25
Alert to any noise through the halls, he waited for any movement or sounds signifying people milling about. Silence. He stalked over to one of the side tables. Broderick cleansed and rinsed the jar in what appeared to be remnants of the dish water from this evening’s meal. With the jar bathed and dried, he replaced it on the pantry shelf. Now to catch up with Amice.
Broderick led the wagon horse and started his way back down the path to the Gypsy camp at a steady pace. Davina’s mortality hit him harder than he wanted to admit. Seeing her pale and ashen from being poisoned, his heart constricted with an ache that left him uneasy, but that settled once the tea mended her. A smiled tugged at the corner of his mouth. It was love at first sight with Cailin. In an instant, he lost his heart to her, too.
Ahead of him, Amice trod along the road, slow and weary. Dismay rolled off her like a heavy fog as he drew near. His heart went out to her. He knew this grief for her daughter, Veronique’s mother, and also the familiar heaviness of regret and guilt. “You must stop blaming yourself for her death, Amice.”
Her head still bowed, she nodded. “Aye, my son. I understand what you tell me. My heart will not listen, though.”
Broderick ambled alongside his old friend. Placing a comforting hand upon her shoulder, he drew her close as they continued down the road. “Though I didn’t witness her death first-hand, remember, I know everything. Your whole life is within me, just as if I experienced it, when I fed from you those many years ago. Veronique…” Broderick wanted to tell her Veronique wouldn’t follow the same fatal path of obsession as her mother, but reflecting over Amice’s memories of her daughter, he had to admit he shared the same fears.
“Even you cannot tell me Veronique is unlike her mother. She has gone as far as poisoning Davina to make you her own. What will she do next? Unless you surrender to her need, she will not stop…or she will…” Amice choked back the words and stood before Broderick with pleading eyes. She grabbed his shirt in desperation. “I cannot stop her, Broderick. I cannot make her realize love is not one-sided, or as much as her heart hurts, she must let go of someone who does not love her the same way. I do not understand this obsession. She tells herself again and again she is following the right path. I feel it every day from her, Broderick, and I’m helpless to stop it.”
Broderick held Amice in his arms, her delicate, old body wracked with sobs, her heart breaking. Was this a demonic possession? Was this a generational curse for Veronique? Why could she not see reason or the truth? What compelled her to use everyone around her in the name of what she called love? Frustration surfaced. “I can perform simple mind tricks on my victims, or wipe away horrific memories from helpless children. Why can I not change Veronique’s mind on this, though I have indeed tried?”
“Nay, my son. Altering memories is one thing. Changing someone’s free will is an entirely different matter.”
He nodded. “Let me try one more time to speak with her,” Broderick endeavored. “There must be some way to reach her. We have a slight advantage in the legacy of her mother’s death. Methinks she’ll see the mistake Monique made and be the wiser for it.”
“Oh, Broderick, I have tried for so long! I have seen the signs since she began growing into womanhood and you were so prominent in her life. You became her hero as her protector and that is my fault. I should have never asked you to take on that role.”
Broderick pushed Amice back and held her by the shoulders, boring into her eyes. “Pray never regret meeting me or my joining you and Veronique. I love you as my own mother, and she as my sister. You have both been my light in the darkness. You have filled a void created so many years ago.” He sighed. “Whether I or any other man came into her life, Veronique would have made the same choices.” He hugged her once more, and then they continued down the path. “Come. We will go back to the camp and talk with Veronique. This conversation is well overdue.”
When Broderick and Amice approached the camp, he sensed the panic rise in her. “Where is she?” Amice checked inside the wagon and around the campsite. “Veronique?”
“She is here, Amice.” Nicabar peered out of his caravan, and then ducked back inside. Struggling against both Nicabar and Rosselyn, Veronique made a desperate effort to get away from her captors. “We were headed back to the castle when she tried to leave the camp.” Nicabar and Rosselyn each held Veronique by the arms, dragging her to Broderick and Amice. In one final attempt to escape, Veronique bit Rosselyn’s hand, who yelped and slapped Veronique across the face.
“Why, you little vixen!” Rosselyn grabbed Veronique’s hair and the two began fighting. Nicabar tried to grab Rosselyn, but the women flailed around too much for him to do anything.
Shaking his head, Broderick marched up to the two women, grabbed them by the back of their bodices and yanked them apart. “Enough.” He threw Rosselyn toward Nicabar, who caught her and held tight. Veronique kicked and scratched at Broderick, but he threw her to the ground. “I said, enough!”
Amice went to her side, but Veronique pushed her grandmother away. She stood her ground, eyes wide as she glared at Broderick. “How dare you—!”
Broderick stood towering over her and with one step, silenced her. “How dare I? I should slap you across that audacious mouth of yours. You almost killed a woman, yet you have the gall to condemn me for putting you in your place?”
Veronique sat in silence, her chest heaving and fire in her eyes.
“Have you no remorse? Do you not understand that you almost killed Davina over your selfish ideas of love?”
“Veronique,” Amice said. “You must understand the seriousness—”
“Do not plead with her, Amice!” Broderick growled and turned back to Veronique. “How can your selfishness rise to the point of disregarding someone’s life?”
“I did not intend to kill her.” Veronique wiped her eyes and stood, stepping back from Broderick and Amice, and dusted the dirt from her hands and skirt.
“But you would have! You almost did! Had it not been for what Amice did for her, she would be dead!”
Veronique reached trembling fingers toward his cheek. “Do you not see how I love you, Broderick? Can you not see she is wrong for you?”
He stood aghast, his mouth open, and slapped her hand away. Anger tumbled down upon him like a landslide, blurring his vision, and though he tried to stop, this was too much for him to understand. “She almost died,” he thundered, and Veronique quailed, her eyes wide. “You think you are more suited? Your selfishness knows no bounds. Why would I want to spend any time, let alone an eternity, with a self-centered, conniving bitch like you?”
Amice gasped and stood between Broderick and her granddaughter. “Broderick!”
“Nay, Amice. This should have been said long ago. This is an obsession, Veronique. An obsession that has nothing to do with me. Your idea of love has nothing to do with anyone but yourself and the fantasies you created in your twisted little mind.” He closed the distance, Amice still standing between them, but he ignored the old woman and spoke over her head. “Understand, Veronique, that you’re not the center of everyone’s attention, or you’ll end up dead like your mother.”
“That is enough,” Amice cried out and turned to hug her granddaughter, but Veronique pushed the old woman aside once more. A guttural screech poured out of Veronique’s mouth, and she disappeared inside the wagon.
Broderick could feel the heartache of both Amice and Veronique, but he didn’t care. Turning his back on them, he stomped into the forest, waiting until he was out of sight to run through the trees, almost blinded by his anger. The Hunger flooded his body, fueling his speed, bent on taking advantage of the first opportunity to unleash its fury.
* * * * *
Clyde Samuels raised a hairy knuckle to the side of Rhona’s face and caressed her cheek, wiping away her tear. “Aw, I speak sweet words to you and you cry?”
“Oh, tears of joy, my love, tears of joy.” Rhona smiled and kissed his nose.
She shif
ted her position on the rock, perhaps getting more comfortable, and she snuggled in closer to him. On the stroll back to their home, the night was cold, but she wanted to admire the moon and stars peeking through the clouds, so he humored her. While she gazed at the sky, he gazed at her lovely face and knew he was the luckiest man in all of Scotland.
“Clyde, you’re everything I hoped for in finding a husband, and I think of what a fool I was not to see it earlier. You have always been a good friend. Why did I not see? All the time we wasted—”
“Now, none of that talk,” he said, placing his fingertip on her lips. “We cannot change the past. We can only take what we have and move forward.”
Her smile returned and she nodded. “Wise words. I will say nothing more on the matter.”
Kissing her mouth with reverence, he took her hands and pulled her to her feet. “‘Tis cold out here. What say we go home and do this before a warm fire?” Hooking her arm in his, Clyde led her back to their original path where they stepped together down the road, their footsteps crunching in the snow.
“Did the Gypsy truly tell you we would wed?” she asked with wonder.
“Aye!” Clyde squeezed her hand in his excitement. “Well, he didn’t say you by name, but he said I wouldn’t have to bide long before me land would bring forth new wealth, or before I married and had children. Not a fortnight later, I needed to see your brother, and there you were, visiting him at the same time. You took me breath away and came back into me life. I say it was meant to be, and therefore what the Gypsy foretold.” A rustle from the brush off the road drew his attention, and he peered into the darkness.
“Did you hear something?”
Clyde nodded, his eyes searching for any movement. “A noise in the bushes,” he answered. “Aye, probably just a rabbit.”
They continued walking and a low, menacing chuckle came from the same direction of the rustling. Rhona squeezed his hand. “Come, Clyde,” she whispered. “Let us quicken our pace home.”
He nodded and wrapped a protective arm around her as they pressed into a faster gait. Rounding the bend in the road, the way became darker as the path went under the heavy limbs of the trees and the moon ducked behind the clouds. “Just a bit more, Rhona,” Clyde encouraged.
Rhona gasped as Clyde stopped short and crushed her to his side. A tall figure stood on the road before them, blocking the path, most of his face hidden in shadow. The wide shoulders and the red hair caused Clyde to relax. He breathed a sigh of relief.
“Broderick,” he said. “I didn’t expect to see you all the way up here near Strathbogie. You gave us a start. We were just talking about you.”
As the man stepped closer, Rhona shrank from him. Clyde noted his intimidating size and deliberate movements, which seemed unnatural, and understood her reaction. Nevertheless, Broderick’s lack of return greeting gave even him pause. How odd that this man wore a thin linen shirt on such a cold night and yet seemed unaffected by the harsh temperature. Before Clyde could open his mouth to say anything, the Gypsy pounced on them, pushing Clyde down into the snow so hard, something snapped as he put his arm out to brace his fall. The sharp pain in his left forearm followed, and Clyde cried out, hugging his arm to his chest. Turning his head, he tried to see Rhona through the tears in his eyes. Clyde blinked to clear his vision, and still he didn’t believe what he saw. The Gypsy fortune teller stood bent forward, holding Rhona’s limp body in his arms, his mouth latched onto her throat and blood staining the back of her dress. Her heavy shawl lay tossed to the snowy ground.
“Rhona!” Clyde struggled to get to his feet, but stopped when the attacker glared at him. Even in the shadows, he could see the blood flowing down Broderick’s chin, and his eyes glowing silver like a cat peering from the darkness. The Gypsy smiled and dropped Rhona like a sack of grain before dashing into the forest like an apparition.
Tears dripping from his face, Clyde crawled toward Rhona, whispering her name and grunting from his broken arm. His knees and hand stung from the wrist-deep snow. His progress slow and painful, he inched toward her for an eternity before he reached her side. Her pale form lay with her limbs at odd angles. “Nay, Rhona,” he whimpered. “Please be well. Please, dove.” Her skin was cold, unresponsive, missing that element of life and he cried harder. He threw his right arm around her and nuzzled his face against her cool cheek, rocking in his sorrow. “Why?” he groaned. Shouting into the forest, he demanded of the absent Gypsy, “Why would you do this to her? Why would you foretell our marriage and then take her away from me?”
“Because he’s a heartless monster,” a voice said from behind him.
Clyde turned with a grunt to see a man standing in the road. He stood tall in the pale moonlight, his auburn hair tied back, a heavy coat over his broad shoulders. “Let me help you, friend.”
“Did you see him? Did you see what he did?” Clyde clung to Rhona, moving aside so the stranger could see what the Gypsy did to the woman of his heart.
“Your cries led me here,” he said, stepping forward and kneeling. “I’m sorry I was too late. I’ve been hunting him for many years, and I know his pattern too well.”
“He has done this before?” Clyde shuddered.
“Aye, that he has, but you can help me stop him.”
Clyde stared in disbelief. “Injured as I am and you have been hunting him for years? How can I help you?”
“Do you want to help me catch him?” The man grabbed his shoulder for emphasis.
“With my last dying breath, if I can, but how?”
“We must first get you mended.” The man rolled his sleeves up and took a knife from his belt. Examining Clyde, he reached for his broken arm. “We have to set the break first, so this is going to hurt, but not for long. Can you bear it?”
“Do as you must.” Clyde gritted his teeth, bracing himself.
With a nod, the stranger grabbed his arm, pulling and twisting while Clyde let out a guttural cry. Quickly, the stranger cut Clyde’s arm open near the break and then cut his own arm, letting his blood fall into Clyde’s open wound. Before Clyde could back away from this ghastly procedure, the pain vanished from his arm, the wound healed, and he could almost feel the bones mending under his flesh. The stranger’s cut healed even faster.
Clyde sat with his mouth open. “What are you? Who are you?”
“Angus Campbell,” he said standing. “And you’re welcome.”
“Oh.” Clyde stood. “I apologize and I’m very grateful. Thank you. I’m Clyde Samuels. But—”
Angus nodded and then stared at Rhona. “I’m truly sorry for your loss, but we must move quickly. Let us take her to your home to keep her body safe. I will explain everything—who I am, what I am, and how you can get your revenge against the Gypsy, Broderick MacDougal.”
* * * * *
Broderick cursed and tossed another log onto the campfire. Sparks burst and floated into the air in a dazzling display. The Gypsy camp lay quiet, all asleep in their caravans and wagons. Broderick paced in the small space before the fortune-telling tent. He had enough sense to calm the Hunger with the blood of animals, before he actually found a thief in Stewart Glen on which to satisfy the Hunger enough to hold back its demands. After that, he’d spent the night combing the area, searching for any signs of Angus, and came up with nothing. Still, he dared not venture too far from Stewart Glen or the Gypsy camp to put those he loved in danger. Images of Davina and Cailin falling into Angus’s hands flashed through his mind and he shut his eyes, helpless as he sat and waited for Angus to make his next move.
The hairs on the back of his neck bristled, and Broderick clenched his jaw as he turned his head in the direction he sensed Angus. Ensuring he had his silver sword strapped firmly to his side, he took off toward his enemy, pumping his legs as fast as his immortal strength could muster. The cold air whisked past his face and ears in a rush as he dodged trees and brush, through the forest and across the pathways, gliding over the snow while leaving no tracks. Angus’s presence gr
ew closer and faster, as if he was running toward Broderick, which caused him to smile, certain that Angus still didn’t sense Broderick’s presence. Angus would be in for a surprise. Pushing even harder, he pressed on toward a hopeful encounter and finally the opportunity to confront Angus. This would be over tonight.
There! Broderick knew the standard boundary had been reached, and he could feel Angus retreating. Drawing his sword, he turned as Angus’s presence changed direction and headed north. Broderick reached his limit on speed, unable to go any faster, but refused to give up the chase. This time he would catch up with Angus, and confidence rushed through him. Tracks appeared in the snow and Broderick followed them. He closed in on Angus, but something nagged at him. Something didn’t seem right. Angus never left tracks before. Another tingling at the back of his neck caused him to slow his pace—a different tingling. Angus’s presence faded, replaced by another Vamsyrian presence, pushing in toward Broderick. He slowed to a stop and scanned the forest with his eyes. Angus’s essence lingered just slightly before it completely dropped off. This new Vamsyrian spirit dominated his senses, heading straight for Broderick. He stood his ground, waiting for the arrival of this stranger. Crunching through the snow, a silver glow in his eyes, a familiar figure ran toward Broderick. He stood flabbergasted as Clyde Samuels—a Vamsyrian with rage in his eyes—charged forward, screaming at Broderick with his hands outstretched. Broderick quickly sheathed his sword and dodged the crazed man to avoid hurting him.
“I will see you dead this night, Gypsy!” Clyde took another leap at Broderick.
Chapter Twelve
Amice rose with a start and glanced around the tiny caravan, her eyes falling on nothing but the faint light of fire coming through the cracks in the door. She shivered at the vision of the man in her sleep. She had to get out of here to keep him away from Veronique, if she could. Dressing in haste, she grabbed her heavy shawl and eased out of the wagon with as little noise as possible, so as not to wake her granddaughter, who lay under a mound of covers in her bed, a lock of golden hair shining in the firelight. Latching the door behind her, Amice tended the fire and put some fresh snow in the pot to boil.