Knights, Katriena - Vampire Apocalypse Book II.txt

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  Vampire Apocalypse

  Book Two:

  Apotheosis

  ***

  Katriena Knights

  Lilith shook in Jarod’s arms

  He looked at her. She was staring out the window, pupils dilated,

  breathing fast and ragged.

  “Lilith?” He tried to turn her away from the window but failed.

  Gently, he ran his hand over her hair, pressed his lips against her throat.

  “Lilith.”

  Her lips strained for words, finally produced a raspy sound. “Kill

  me,” she breathed. “Ialdaboth will have you all, through me, if you

  don’t.”

  “There’s a way to save you,” he said, “and we both know what

  that is.”

  “If I take you now, I’ll kill you.”

  “No, you won’t.”

  Her eyes had widened, desperate and wild. “I will. I need it so

  much.”

  “Then take it.” Clenching his teeth, he broke the scabs on his

  wrist and held the wound to her lips. The blood reddened her mouth

  and her pupils contracted

  She turned away from the window, grabbed him, and sank her

  teeth into his throat.

  Her fangs stung sinking in, tiny scalpels puncturing skin and vein.

  His hands went up involuntarily, but when he grasped her arms, he

  couldn’t push her away. She was immovable. Her mouth pulled at his

  throat, drawing mouthful after mouthful of blood. The pain, though, had

  stopped, leaving behind only the rhythm. It matched his heartbeat. She

  shifted, and he felt her body against his, her breasts pressing softly

  against his chest, her hands spread on his back.

  Let go, he thought. That’s enough. I can’t take anymore.

  I can’t, her answer came. I can’t stop.

  He would have called for help if he could, but his voice stopped in

  his throat behind her penetrating teeth. His heartbeat filled his head,

  pounding, pounding . . . how long until it stopped?

  To Doug

  Other Books by Katriena Knights

  Vampire Apocalypse Book One: Revelations

  Time and Time Again

  The Haunting of Rory Campbell

  Vampire Apocalypse

  Book Two:

  Apotheosis

  ***

  Katriena Knights

  Prologue

  From Lucien’s personal journals

  To Whom It May Concern:

  I leave this document behind in the hopes that no one but myself

  will ever read it. For if this is found and I am not here, then I am most

  likely dead, and all has been lost.

  Enough with the melodramatics. On with the story.

  Let’s start with me. I was born twelve thousand years ago, give

  or take a century, in a cave in the Carpathian Mountains, the offspring

  of a virgin girl and the demon to whom she was offered in an effort to

  placate the angry gods. I had three half-brothers, each born to different

  mothers. We are not vampires, but we birthed that entire race

  through exchange of blood. May I take this moment to apologize on

  behalf of the four of us? After all, the gods, unplacated by our births,

  continued to be angry, and the vampire race has not yet been much of

  a boon to the planet.

  They might be, though, someday. That’s where the rest of the

  story comes in.

  Four and a half thousand years ago, I died. More or less. It was

  the Flood, the big Black Sea flood the Sumerians wrote about. The

  Hebrews did, too, if I remember right. There was torrential water and

  mud, and I didn’t get out in time.

  Neither did my half-brother, Aanu. We drowned and were lost in

  the mud for a century or two. And we dreamed.

  Eventually, we clawed our way out. When we compared notes,

  we discovered we’d dreamed the same dreams. Or overlapping dreams,

  something of that nature. In any case, when we started writing them

  down, they fit together. So we compiled them and gave them a fancy

  name—The Book of Changing Blood.

  We weren’t sure what they all meant. Prophecies, maybe. But

  over four thousand years passed before they started coming true.

  Okay, here’s the part where you need to start paying attention.

  Because if the unthinkable happens and we have lost and Ialdaboth

  has won, the only way to salvage anything might be to reconstruct the

  sequence of events. Otherwise there will be no shoveling us back out

  of the darkness.

  It started with an old Indian shaman—some variety of Sioux, I

  think, but I’m not sure—and some herbs given to his tribe by an unnamed

  vampire back in the mists of time. His people safeguarded the

  herbs until, one day, the vampire Julian washed up on the banks of their

  favorite fishing river. With the aid of these herbs, Julian abstained from

  human blood for over two centuries.

  Abstaining changed him. He became less sensitive to daylight

  and able to consume some forms of solid food. His transformation was

  kicked into high gear when he fed from two other vampires, then from

  the Senior of the New York City vampire enclave. Normally, this should

  have killed him—instead it killed them. I never knew the Senior’s name.

  It’s not important. He was old. Very old. Old as dirt, even, but not quite

  as old as me.

  The interaction of the different blood within Julian’s body changed

  him yet again. But he needed one more catalyst, which he found in the

  blood of one Lorelei Fletcher, coincidentally or, actually, probably not—

  the woman he met and fell ass-over-fangs in love with.

  When he took her blood, he became something else. Something

  no longer a vampire. He no longer fed on blood but on human energy.

  I do that, as well, but when I take energy, it depletes the person from

  whom I feed. Julian’s feeding amplifies the energy of the fed-upon. It’s

  a strange and rather miraculous process, with implications which have

  yet to be fully explored.

  There’s a Dr. Greene here with us, in the enclave, who’s experimenting

  with different blood combinations, isolating catalysts, things

  like that. He was able to use Julian’s blood, combined with blood from

  another vampire named Nicholas, to cure cancer. That should give you

  some idea of where all this could be headed.

  Much of this, I’ve discovered, is outlined in the Book of Changing

  Blood, or what remains of it. Because a good deal of it was destroyed

  by my two brothers, Ialdaboth and Ruha, and their followers,

  who believe vampires should not change, that we and our Blood-Born

  progeny are demons and will always be demons, and we should just

  deal with it. I don’t believe that is true. I don’t believe the vampire race

  was created to drag the world into hell. I believe we and our Children

  have the potential to save the world, or at least part of it.

  So some of our wo
rk has involved reconstructing the Book. And

  the rest has been figuring out what the hell is going on as the shit hits

  the fan around us. For instance, Julian got Lorelei pregnant. We have

  no idea what that’s going to mean. Vampires are sterile—but he’s not

  so much a vampire anymore, is he? So we’re waiting to see what

  happens, waiting to see what kind of progeny she produces. Then there

  are the Children—vampires who were Changed before they reached

  puberty. Julian has Dr. Greene working on a way to return their mortality.

  If it works for them, could it work for other vampires?

  The biggest obstacle right now, though, is Ialdaboth. He’s determined

  to stop us, and if you find this place in ruins, with my bones

  decorating the office and slaughtered vampires strewn about in the

  halls, he’s done just that. He tried to finish off Julian, kidnapping Lorelei

  as bait, but his former minion Lilith got in his way and stopped it. She

  was dead for about five minutes until Julian got to her. Ialdaboth blasted

  the living hell out of her, and Julian brought her back to life. Brought her

  back to life. I can’t stress that enough. We’re not sure where her

  loyalties lie, but we are sure that Ialdaboth will try again. And if he

  does, we have to stop him.

  Have to. Because if we don’t, everything we’ve found is lost, I

  am dead, and you are reading this.

  Let’s just hope to God no one ever reads this.

  Julian’s Journal

  We strive for a world in which there are choices. The choice to

  be vampire or mortal. The choice to be a child—to live the life that was

  taken.

  Does immortality become a gift I can bestow, without the curse

  of vampirism? Can I also give mortality to those who desire it?

  What is my vision for the community of vampires? Not only those

  whose enclave I now guide, but all of them, everywhere, throughout

  the world.

  Do we become a force for good, or do we become a catalyst for

  evil?

  My touch, my blood, can perform miracles, can give life where

  there was none, can restore mortality where there was only the curse

  of undeath.

  What have I become? What has Lorelei become? And what of

  the child she carries? Children—twins. Will they be human or vampire?

  Or something else altogether?

  Then there is the matter of Ialdaboth. We defeated him once,

  Lucien and I, but only temporarily. I have doubts about whether we

  can do it again. We need more. More power, more knowledge.

  I should know more than I do. The Senior knew things I do not,

  but I can’t access all his memories. I should be able to, but there are

  barriers. Perhaps I have to go through all of the Senior’s life, his time,

  his powers, and his loves, to find what I need.

  I don’t look forward to the process. There are places in there I

  really don’t want to go. So I fill my time with other concerns, gathering

  what information I can.

  Lilith must know something. She was with Ialdaboth’s enclave

  for a long time. Could she be the key? I wonder whenever I visit her,

  watching her as she lies in her hospital bed, a pale, beautiful thing. She

  looks as if she is made of white wax, or marble. What knowledge lies

  behind those quiescent eyes?

  Lilith

  . . . likewise joy shall be in heaven over one sinner that

  repenteth, more than over ninety and nine just persons, which need

  no repentance.

  Luke 15:7

  It is impossible for those who were once enlightened . . . if

  they shall fall away, to renew them again into repentance.

  Hebrews 6:4-6

  If they want to come, let them come. I’m not turning anyone

  away.

  Email—Julian to Lucien

  Blessed be the Children of the Dark, for they may return to

  the Light, and thus be saved.

  The Book of Changing Blood

  One

  Lilith hurt everywhere, deep, pervasive pain that filled every inch

  of her. She could barely move without it shifting, growing and receding

  and always moving, as if some bizarre form of life had taken root just

  beneath her skin.

  She supposed she shouldn’t complain, though. Not that long ago,

  she’d been dead.

  It was hard to judge the passage of time, but she thought it had

  been about three days since Julian, Lucien, and Lorelei had brought her

  here. Her sworn enemies, up until that time. Until Julian had brought

  her back to life.

  Here, in this part of the vampire Underground, there was no real

  day or night, but the pull of the daytime Sleep still claimed her at appropriate

  intervals. Here they fed her on harvested blood and kept her

  carefully alive in spite of the role she’d recently played in Lorelei’s

  kidnapping.

  If she’d returned to her own people, she would be dead by now.

  Instead she’d passed into the realm of the enemy and remained alive.

  She blinked at the pale green ceiling of what she supposed could

  most accurately be called a hospital room. It still amazed her that they

  were leaving her alone. She could have yanked out her IV and slipped

  away, feeling her way—somehow—out of the convoluted turnings of

  the corridors and tunnels of the Underground. But she had no desire to

  go anywhere. Once or twice Julian had come in and said hello to her,

  held up his end of a short, inane conversation while his dark eyes had

  studied her with discomfiting intensity. Lucien had done the same, though

  he hadn’t bothered to talk. He’d just looked at her. She had no doubt

  that they both could read every thought that meandered through her

  head. So they knew where she stood. They knew she was, at least for

  the moment, conflicted enough to be considered safe.

  The door to her room squeaked, and she looked up to see Dr.

  Greene enter. He came every day at about this time to check on her.

  He smiled. “Good evening. How are you doing?”

  He took her chart from the table by the door and looked at it. She

  wondered why. He couldn’t have that many patients, not here. Surely

  he could remember what her problems were.

  “Like shit,” she answered.

  He nodded soberly. “I’ve been running some cultures in the lab.

  My prediction is that the pain will start to decrease in about twelve

  hours.”

  “That’s a relief.”

  He checked her IV drip, where rich, garnet blood had begun to

  enter her system minutes after she’d returned from the Sleep. “Are

  you hungry at all?”

  “No. Not really.”

  “It’s not quite the same, is it?”

  “No. Not quite.”

  Her system’s dissatisfaction with the stale blood was secondary,

  though, to the consuming pain. Still, the doctor’s understanding surprised

  her. He was a mortal, after all, full of live, pulsing blood. He

  would have made a damned fine breakfast.

  Seemingly unconcerned by his status as possible food item, the

  doctor checked her IV again, adjusted the timer, looked at the machine

  that blinked with her vital signs. “You’ll be all right.”


  “Yeah.” She doubted that. She’d made some very dangerous enemies

  by protecting Lorelei and her unborn child. Ialdaboth wanted her

  dead. Sooner or later, she knew he would get what he wanted.

  Dr. Jarod Greene closed the door behind him and leaned on it,

  gathering his thoughts. Lilith was improving rapidly. No surprise there.

  Vampires healed with predictable rapidity when given half a chance.

  That Lilith had been technically dead for a time didn’t seem to have

  affected her recovery rate.

  Yes, physically, she was recovering nicely. But he was still concerned

  about her mental and emotional states. Especially since he knew

  Julian and Lucien would be all over her with questions as soon as he

  declared her healthy.

  And so went his dilemma as a doctor. The information Julian wanted

  from Lilith was important, but Jarod didn’t want to risk her health. Nor

  did he want to endanger Julian’s plans to move against Ialdaboth’s

  forces. He had to make the right call, and he wasn’t sure yet what that

  was.

  In any case, Julian was expecting him—again—right now. These

  daily meetings were starting to get tedious.

  As usual, Julian and Lucien were waiting for him in his office.

  Jarod had asked them repeatedly not to touch anything in there—he

  had a number of projects and experiments underway. Still, as he entered,

  Lucien snatched his hands away from a shelf and hid them behind

  his back. Julian gave Lucien a wry look.

  “You can talk to her tomorrow,” said Jarod. He hoped giving them

  an answer up front might gain him some privacy.

  No such luck.

  Julian settled onto the edge of the desk. “What’s your opinion of

  her?”

  “My opinion?” Jarod shrugged. “I think she’ll be well enough for

  you to talk to her in twelve hours.”

  “I mean as a person.”

  He rarely got any but medical questions from his patients. He

  liked it that way. It made everything less personal and helped him forget

  he was the go-to medical guy for a colony of vampires.

  “She’s not a person,” he said, not really thinking. “She’s a vampire.”

  His lack of tact registered when Julian narrowed his eyes, his

  mouth compressing.

  “All right then,” Julian said, his tone clipped. “What do you think

 

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