The man scurried away as fast as his limp would allow, the sound of his inane ranting trailing behind him.
“So, werewolf, you’re awake.”
“Where am I?” Her throat protested vigorously at having to speak at all, but Sonja forced out the question in a croak.
“You’re alive. That should be your most immediate concern for the time being.” Perkins snide retort made her temper flare. His intimate perusal of her body beneath the sheer material of her nightgown repulsed her.
What was it about men like Perkins, which made them think all women were objects to be possessed? She intentionally turned her head, studying the accommodations. The room was small and dank. The cold stone bench she’d rested on was damp as well. Her body suffered for it. Rubbing absently at her arms to promote some blood flow, she concentrated on the fire in the heart. Vampires were scared of flames, so the warmth of the fire surprised her. Perkins was a vampire, Sonja was sure, as sure as she could be without examining his fangs. She’d smelled him out the day he road into her yard and stepped on her porch. A draft of air and the man stood next to her. Sonja head came up. She stared into those black eyes with a sneer forming on her lips. Perkins backhanded her. Stars burst behind her eyes as Sonja cried out. She tasted blood and silently cursed the Yankee cur for his cruelty. “You must enjoy hurting women, vampire.” Wiping the blood trickling down her jaw, Sonja glared at him. She wouldn’t be unprepared the next time.
“Women are one thing, bitches are quite another. You’ll find it best to hold your tongue around me, bitch.” He smirked as he glanced into the fire before focusing on her once more. “I’m told you hold the gift.”
The weight of his statement settled solidly on her chest. The last fragile thread of hope dissolved with his words. Sonja had hoped there wasn’t any truth to Hortence prediction. The witch had seen a vision in the smoke, the vampires would come seeking her life giving gift. The tale had been passed from generation to generation that a great she wolf would arise and vanquish the enemies of the wolves. But, the elders also said if a vampire drank all the blood of the gifted one, then they would be invincible even to wooden stakes and fire. Soon, vampires would kill all the remaining wolves and rule over the human world for eternity. That is, unless she stopped them.
“I’ll take the gift to my grave. You’ll never see a drop. Do you understand me?”
He chuckled. His belly shook with the ill placed humor, he laughed aloud. “Oh, to be sure, I understand, bitch.” He bent, bracing his hands on his thighs. Peering deep into her eyes, he countered in a gravely sincere tone. “To be sure, she-wolf, you will go to your grave, but I will have all of your blood first.”
Something snapped inside. Sonja acknowledged it briefly before she growled, lunging for him. Perkins bared his fangs and braced for the fight. Their bodies slammed into each other and rolled toward the hearth. Straining to hold him at bay, Sonja bore down. The vile stench of his demonic aura poured from his pores. The demons utilized the odor to hypnotize their enemies. Her blood protected her against the aura. She remained unaffected.
The likelihood that she would survive was slim. Sonja fought the vampire with all her will to live. She wanted more than anything else to live she realized despite the fact she was a werewolf. The gift wasn’t who she was, the gift was merely a part of what she had to deal with. Throwing her weight into the counter move, Sonja flipped Perkins head over heels before springing up, ready for the next attack.
His chest heaved, but his dead, dark eyes remained focused. “Too bad about the witch,” he taunted. “You really shouldn’t have led me straight to her hovel.”
Perkins words struck her in the heart. Sonja realized she’d put Hortence in harm’s way by seeking her out. “What have you done?” she snarled. Her breath came ragged and rapid now. Her blood ran hot under her skin.
“Oh, to be sure, she put up a good fight. Even tried a spell or too on us.” Perkins stepped sideways stalking her. “She put up a good fight. But in the end, our superiority won out.” He shook his head as yellowed teeth shone in an evil grin. “You were too late to save her. My condolences,” his tone sarcastic and cruel, Perkins threw back his head, laughing aloud. Motioning to the guard, he pointed to Sonja. “Take her to the cell.”
“No!” Sonja howled. “You won’t get away with this. I’ll kill you with my bare hands, demon. Count on it.” With that, she lunged at the guard’s throat, teeth snapping, she sensed the change even before it began. Pain, excruciating and powerful gripped her. Her bones broke, reforming as muscles wrapped and reformed to meld with the infinite change she endured. With a glance in the glass pane, Sonja realized Hortence had been right. The full moon appeared. She’d become the creature of lure and fantasy. She latched on to his neck, sinking her fangs into his flesh. Flesh, soft and pliant gave with the attack. Decade and rancid, the taste of the vampire’s flesh had her wanting to retch. Sonja held on though, and soon the warm, coppery taste of blood filled her mouth, running down her jaws to mingle with her white fur. The tingling sensation that filled her as she stood atop the vampire grew in intensity as she tore at his flesh, ripping his throat. Somewhere in the recesses of her mind where rational information lay, she found what she was looking for. Sonja shredded his neck. When she’d reached his spine, she ripped it from his body, slinging it in a kind of frenzied triumph. She vanquished her first foe.
The rest of the Yankee vampires charged the bolted door. Her mind reeled with the heady satisfaction of the kill, but with that knowledge also came the warning she was still in grave danger.
The bolt on the door gave and in rushed the vampires. She counted four welding swords. Realizing she was out numbered, she attempted to make it to the doorway. If she could escape, at least in the open she had a better chance of getting away.
In numbers, the vampires crossed the floor bloodied with their leader’s lifeless, headless body and came for her. The first axe sank deep into her hind leg. Excruciating pain like she’d never experienced before gripped her in its teeth. One vampire launched himself at her neck. Despite her efforts to hold him off, the vampire managed to sink his teeth deep into her throat. The blood rushed through her veins as if commanded by the vampire’s fangs. With so many on her, she struggled, fighting with everything, she had, but in the end, it would be for naught. Her strength under such odds was failing. Her power though magnificent at the skill to heel proved no match when confronted by so many evil demons at once.
Suddenly, the sunlight broke through the gloom that hung in a great cloud over the forest. Weak with exhausted, unable to go on, Sonja imagined she witnessed what happened next.
On a steed as black as coal, he rode. The gleam of his long sword bore witness to his strength. His face, though concealed held determination in the clinching of his jaw, She could see his eyes glowing from beneath the brim of his hat with a brilliant blue light.
“Demons, meet your maker!” he bellowed. Swinging the sword, he decapitated the nearest vampire. The one with the axe shifted, welding the weapon at the rider. The air sizzled with the speed of the blade as it sliced near his leg in the stirrup. Deftly, the rider countered the blow. The demon’s head went rolling with a backhanded sweep from the sword.
Ty’s voice called to her. “Nymph, seize the moment. Make them pay.” From deep within her, a renewed surge of strength reared up, washing over her.
A determined smile creased her mouth as she caught the blade the rider threw her. With one hand on the demon’s hair, she pulled the vampire from her neck. Quickly, she sliced across his throat using a flip of her wrist. He slumped at her feet on the stone floor now coated in blood. Only one remained. Sonja sprang to her feet, the cut in her thigh already beginning to heal. Before the rider could turn the horse, the vampire used the reaction time to disappear out the door and vanished completely.
Sliding from the black stallion, the dark haired rider came toward her. Sonja still riding on a battle high dose of adrenalin stood feet braced, hands at the
ready for any aggressive move on his part. Gathering her close despite her own strength and resistance, the rider removed his hat. She looked into Ty eyes. Dazzling with the rush of battle still surging through him, he paused, his gaze intently vigilant on her face. Running his fingers along the slim line of her thigh, he traced the wound, noting the encouraging pink skin beginning to cover the opening.
Without an anchor in a storm that could switch course at any moment, Sonja stood in her lover’s embrace, waiting. What he had to say was the most important thing she would ever hear.
“I take it I scared you back at the house.” His glance strayed from the examination of her wounds to her eyes. The coolness to his tone left her with a strangled sense of dread.
Words eluded her. Sonja’s throat ached with the pain she was harboring. How could she explain her reasons for using her blood to heal him? Selfish and greedy, she had taken his choice from him, giving him, a burden no one deserved. Unable to hold his gaze, she dropped her eyes to the hilt of the bloody blade in her hand.
“I…I wanted…to tell you.” She turned beseeching eyes on him and wished fervently for some sort of help. The room remained coldly silent. Sonja shook with the chilly dread building in her.
“Did you really?” His question hit her in the heart. He mocked her.
“I didn’t know what else to do!” she blurted. With a plea for understanding, she splayed her hands still coated in blood and took a tentative step toward him.
Ty stepped back. The look on his face broke her. Tears began to fall unheeded.
“Don’t you think those are a bit much?” He shook his head. “After all, you tricked me. Now you expect me to believe you’re sorry?”
“Hortence didn’t tell me what my blood could do.” Her voice ranged out of control. Sonja dropped her head. Tears mingled with the blood on the blade. “She had only time enough to assure me I had the gift.”
“The gift,” he repeated.
Wiping at the tears staining her face, Sonja nodded. “Yes, she said I was the chosen one. The one to which the new generation would be born.” She wiped at her eyes. Sniffing, she wiped her nose on the bloody sleeve of her nightgown. Blinking, she looked up into his face and tried again. “With my blood, my pack and all those that followed would never die, no matter what. The healing is part of the gift.” She laid the blade aside, before managing to gather her hands in clinched fists. “Don’t you see, Ty? When I found you, you were dying. Hortence told me the blood had healing powers. You were too far gone for any help, so…I…gave you my blood.” She hung her head. Misery, Sonja thought she’d experienced. Yet, this was so much more. Her heart didn’t beat for her any more, it beat for him. Shimmering into a wolf, she disappeared into the woods surrounding Hortence cabin.
***
Unable to process the words she said, Ty stood rooted to the spot in the tiny room. A weak gurgling broke him from his musings. He turned to find the witch lying amid the debris and blood. Dropping down, he cradled her broken body in his arms.
“She speaks the truth, newborn.”
Frowning, Ty shook his head. “Why call me that, old woman. I’m a man full-grown.”
“Not anymore. You are but a pup in the eyes of time. Your linage has only begun.” Watery eyes sought out his understanding. “Do you comprehend what I speak of, Lieutenant?”
Ty grimaced. His teeth clinched and un-clinched at the possibility she referred to. He’d witnessed the wolf change back into Sonja in his own arms in the wee hours before dawn. Time, reason and logic flew with the tingling and burning he’d experienced as he clutched her close. The wolf she’d been disappeared and in its place she lay as perfect as he remembered. Is this the phenomenon Sonja had been trying to explain? “What now, old woman?” With the weight of the world on his shoulders, Ty searched the witch’s eyes.
“Find her. She is your mate for all time. This is your destiny. I’ll look out for you both.” With that, Hortence slumped and expelled a slow release of air.
“No! Don’t you die on me, you old hag. Damn you. Wait, come back. Auhhh!” He shook the woman’s shoulders. Checking for a pulse, Ty realized she lived no more, he threw back his head and howled in utter misery. He needed answers. He needed Sonja.
***
Rage, pure and simple had taken over. His mind was not his own. What he’d seen was merely somebody’s idea of a cruel joke. No one turned into a wolf and disappeared into the woods. Ty struggled with the sight of Sonja transforming into a white wolf before she bounced off into the bushes. He was hallucinating! Moving in the direction she’d taken, he shoved at the image of her becoming a four-legged animal. It had happened so fast. In the blink of an eye. Growling low in his chest, Ty attempted to focus instead on finding her before harm came to her like the she-wolf he saved the night before.
Voices bombarded his mind with all sorts of questions, answers and innuendos. One stood out – Sonja. “Don’t follow me. I’ll only cause you pain.”
“No!” he shouted to the wolf as she turned to disappear once again. Damn it! Ty charged forward. Briars close in snagging his flesh. He kept moving. The undergrowth bowed over him, tighter still. He fought to scratch his way through. With each step, the path grew closer together until he had to use his teeth to tear a hole in the thicket. Vines all but wrapped around his legs forcing him to reach back, ripping them apart before continuing. Great holes in the earth appeared beneath the briars. Tripping, he fell into one. He clawed his way out only seconds before the ground closed shut. Apparently the forest didn’t want him going after her or so it seemed. He howled out in pain when one thorn covered briar slithered across his legs deftly binding them to the earth. He fell head first into the dirt. Snarling, Ty yanked free and kept going. His breath came in pants, his mouth parched, and he licked at his lips. He could still hear the faint sound of the she wolf as she crashed through the bushes up ahead. Her scent, the scent of a female, permeated the air around him. With all his strength, Ty rose, untangling the briar from his leg, which now bled from several deep puncture wounds. He pushed on.
“Halt! Stop or I’ll shoot.” The man’s voice held a southern drawl.
Ty obeyed out of sheer desperation. They couldn’t discover the wolf. She would have a better chance of escape if he detained them.
Chapter 5
“You’ve traveled a long way, son.” The general sat behind a desk made from wooden sawhorses hastily constructed for the purpose. An old plantation door lay atop the sawhorses, serving as a table.
“Yes, sir.”
“Is that blood you’re wearing? Are you injured, Lieutenant Loflin?”
“No, sir.” Ty glanced down at the scratches along with several deep punctures left from his war with the briars. The shackles the Confederates had put him in connected a long chain to cuffs around his hands. Though still able to walk, he was limited to a hobble by the chain.
“My men reported they could hear you for a mile screaming and ranting like a madman. One even said he heard a wolf howling.” General Stewart ran a speculative eye over Ty’s person. “Do you mind telling me what you were doing out there in the middle of nowhere carrying on at the top of your lungs?” Without waiting he kept going, “What’s this business about being tied up with vines and briars? Good God, man, you look like an escapee from a mental hospital.” Stewart scowled at his lieutenant.
“My apologies, General. I can’t explain my condition. He shifted with the pain from his injuries visible for a second on his face. Soon the wounds would heal. He should be by himself when that occurred. Squaring his shoulders more, Ty continued, “I have information regarding the Union Army….of the Union Army’s whereabouts.” He continued to stand at attention. Someone had covered his nakedness in a sheet before he appeared before the general. Thankful for small favors he wished his explanation could be so easily covered.
“At ease, Lieutenant. Can I get you a brandy?”
“No, but thank you, sir.” Ty relaxed his stance like General Stewart had a
sked him to. He wanted a shot of something so bad, he’d fight for it, but now wasn’t the time.
“Continue, Lieutenant.”
“I have a feeling you already know the reason I’m here. I don’t expect you to comprehend where I ‘ve been all this time, nor do I expect you to understand why I haven’t contacted you sooner.” He rested his hands on either side of his hat, the tattered cavalry hat, which was all he had remaining of the striking Confederate uniform encrusted with gold braid and brass buttons from a little less than four years prior.
“You have something to say, son? Something other than your report, I take it.” Stewart’s eyes never left Ty’s.
“Yes, sir. I do. I’ve come to a conclusion, sir. I’m not meant for the Army. If I had my weapon and bars I’d turn them in, sir.”
The general didn’t say anything as he rose to stand to all of his impressive six foot, four inches. Instead, he walked to the opposite side of his tent and peered out at the men under his command.
Ty’s hearing caught Stewart chewing on his cigar, the steady grind of tobacco between molars. The general never lit a cigar, preferring instead to ease the tension of command by the simpler act of tasting the juice. “That’s a punishable decision, Lieutenant. I’ve never known you to walk away from a fight even if it was a losing one. May I ask why?”
With abloom he wasn’t sure would hold, Ty spoke up, “I am unable to explain my reason, sir. It’s not one which can be explained.”
“I find it hard to believe, Lieutenant Loflin.” The beginning of irritation laced the General’s reply. “There’s a rational explanation for everything under God’s heavens.”
Without so much as a flinch, Ty shook his head, I disagree, Sir.” He met the commander’s bland stare head on. “My reason isn’t of God’s making, sir.”
Hands still secured behind his back, Stewart turned back and stared out of the tent. “Perhaps you’d better start from the beginning, Lieutenant. Explain your movements on the night of May 16th, 1863.” The words were stern.
The Lady in the Mist (The Western Werewolf Legend #1) Page 12