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Christine Feehan 5 CARPATHIAN NOVELS

Page 75

by Christine Feehan


  Rafael shifted simultaneously with Vikirnoff so that the skeletons rushed past into the brilliant light. The bones disintegrated, exploding into splintered fragments. The flames flickered and died. There was another eerie silence.

  The hunters moved further through the tunnel, proceeding with caution, shifting back to Carpathian form in order to utilize all of their senses. Rafael reached out with every sense he had, gathering information, allowing his brain to assimilate every smell and sound that came back to him. “We are running out of time. If we do not find him soon, we will have no choice but to seek rest and we cannot do so in these mines. It is his lair and it is well guarded.”

  “He is counting on that fact. All he has to do is keep us from finding his resting place until the sun is high,” Vikirnoff agreed. “I have never fought a vampire with such safeguards.”

  “He has had centuries to perfect his skills.” Rafael turned his head, listening to the rustles coming from behind them. “Do you hear that?”

  “The skeletons are trying to re-form for another attack.”

  They were in a maze of tunnels and for a moment remained motionless, trying to get a feel for Kirja’s resting place. “He is also very good at leaving no trace of his existence,” Rafael added. He indicated the fungus growing on the walls of one of the tunnels. “That would be my best guess. That fungus is not growing anywhere else and I would venture it is another safeguard.”

  Vikirnoff peered closely at the strange warted growth. “I do not like the look of this, and there are millions of centipedes covering the floor. The timbers are rotted almost completely through. I say we do not touch anything as we go down this tunnel.”

  Rafael took one look at the carpet of centipedes. He swore in the ancient language. “Kirja is well aware we are close. I can feel him now. He cannot hide his hatred of me. He takes my hunting him far too personally.”

  Vikirnoff raised his eyebrow. “I cannot imagine why.”

  Rafael flashed a brief grin. “He knows my aversion to centipedes. A childish thing, but of course he would use it.”

  The eyebrow rose higher. “We are of the earth. How could a creature such as a centipede bother one such as you? You have dominion over such things.”

  “I had four brothers, Vikirnoff,” Rafael pointed out. His form shimmered, became transparent, and shifted to that of a very small bat.

  Vikirnoff followed suit, but not before he glanced back toward the tunnel where the bones were making frantic scratching noises as they tried to re-form to carry out their master’s orders. We will have to watch our backs.

  Only if we do not get to him. Once he is gone, all of his servants will cease to exist. I say we move fast. Watch that fungus near the entrance to this shaft on your right. There is something strange about it. Rafael used the bat’s radar to calculate the distance to the plant, but it kept changing, as if the plant moved.

  Something struck at the bat hard, clipping a wing and knocking it to the ground. The centipedes immediately began to feast. Vikirnoff shifted one wing, reaching down to drag the small bat from the grasp of the greedy insects. Bite marks covered the body and small patches of blood seeped from various wounds.

  Rafael shook off the clinging centipedes, flapping his wings to gain height. Thanks. Now we know what that fungus is. It has teeth.

  Probably poison.

  I felt it go in. Burns like hell. He is close. Go to the right, Vikirnoff. Watch yourself. The fungus is everywhere.

  There is a pocket of gas here.

  He is behind that mass of boulders. I feel him. The centipedes are frantic to get at us and the fungus is snapping teeth like mad dogs. He has to be inside the chamber.

  Rafael. I am trying to tell you gas is seeping out into this tunnel and filling it.

  A trick. He is up to his old tricks. He loved to play with fire.

  I do not want to get cooked. Vikirnoff was adamant about it.

  It is time to let him work for us. I have an idea. Go back to the tunnel entrance. Rafael followed Vikirnoff and shifted back to Carpathian form just out of reach of the fungus and centipedes.

  “What is the plan?” Vikirnoff asked.

  Rafael gestured toward the heavy boulders guarding the entrance to the chamber at the end of the tunnel. “That is.”

  Soon, clones of the two hunters stood near the chamber entrance, centipedes swarming up their bodies and fungus striking viciously while Rafael directed the clones to unweave the complicated safeguards the vampire had erected around his lair.

  As the clones worked, Rafael removed the remaining poisons from his body. The process went more slowly than normal; Rafael fed most of his power into the illusions he’d created. He had to make them real enough to generate body heat. “If we are lucky, Kirja will believe those clones really are us and if he does, he’ll try to kill us by igniting the gas. We will not risk triggering another one of his traps and it will leave us free to unravel the safeguards.”

  “I hope he hurries because I can hear the skeletons heading this way,” Vikirnoff said grimly. “I would recommend we levitate to keep away from his warriors, but he would have thought of that.” He didn’t say what they both knew. Time was running out on them. The sun was climbing higher outside the mine and both of them would soon be hit with the terrible lethargy of their species. They could not go to rest in the mine with Kirja so close. It would be far too dangerous.

  “I cannot sustain the illusion and make it realistic and work the safeguards. You will have to unravel the guards. Stay well back from the entrance,” Rafael cautioned.

  Vikirnoff began the complicated procedure of unlocking the spell guarding the vampire’s lair. Behind them the clack and rattle of bones grew louder. The floor rustled with dark, malevolent insects, and the shadows wailed at them, held off only by the white-hot light Rafael continued to maintain.

  The explosion came without warning, rocking the entire mine. The trapped vampire had ignited the pocket of gas. A red-orange fireball roared down the length of the tunnel, incinerating everything in its path. It blew out everything inside the long tunnel, killing the carnivorous plants and searing the carpet of centipedes, leaving the shaft burned and foul smelling, but clear for the two hunters.

  As the hunters moved cautiously down the now-empty mine shaft, Vikirnoff’s hands flowed gracefully in the air as he hurried to unravel the vampire’s safeguards. Rafael continued to feed energy into the white-hot light surrounding them, keeping the shadows at bay. More than once, the dark, amorphous shapes lunged at the Carpathians only to shriek and fall back when Rafael struck at them with the lasered beam of light.

  “The last safeguard is down,” Vikirnoff said.

  “Stand clear. He will have something waiting in the chamber.” Rafael pressed his body against the blackened side of the tunnel and waited for Vikirnoff to do the same before waving his hand to send the boulders rolling away from the entrance.

  Gas and steam poured from the interior, carrying with it a noxious, foul odor. Bats with sharpened fangs followed, a dark cloud of them, swarming the hunters instantly. Vikirnoff flung up a barrier as he and Rafael peered into the heated cavern. The bats crashed into the invisible barrier over and over, smashing their bodies in frenzied need to carry out the commands of the undead. The hunters stepped onto the steaming floor of Kirja’s lair.

  The chamber was hot and the vaporous gas held traces of sulfur and poison. The Carpathians floated upward as the acids in the soil melted their boots, seeking to penetrate to their skin. “Good one, Kirja,” Rafael muttered, shaking his head to rid himself of the lethargy seeping into his body and mind, making him careless.

  They began to quarter the ground, seeking the exact position where the vampire lay beneath the poisonous brew of acid and foul soil. “Here, Vikirnoff,” Rafael said, indicating a spot directly below him. “He is here.”

  The two began to unravel the final safeguards, going fast, but being careful to remain alert. Movement on the ground caught Rafael’s eyes jus
t to the left of where the vampire lay, a small spewing of dirt, a disturbance beneath the soil. As he watched, the same thing happened in a half dozen other places, until he and Vikirnoff were surrounded by a loose circle. The soil burst open in a dozen spots and ghouls poured out of the earth.

  “Keep going, Rafael,” Vikirnoff said. “I will hold them off.” He was already dropping low, flying at a ghoul with tremendous speed. He wrenched at the ghoul’s head, knocking the creature off its feet so that it landed hard in the poisonous soil.

  Rafael concentrated on unraveling the last lock to get to Kirja while Vikirnoff’s battle with the ghouls raged ferociously around him. Several times he heard Vikirnoff grunting as he took a particularly nasty hit, but Rafael remained focused on disassembling the vampire’s final safeguard. The moment the last element clicked in place, the ghouls howled and shrieked in fury, redoubling their efforts to destroy the hunters. Vikirnoff kept the dozen zombies away from Rafael, giving him the time needed to peel back the layers of soil from the vampire’s resting place.

  And then the last of the soil fell away and Rafael found himself looking down into Kirja’s hate-filled eyes.

  For a moment there was an eerie silence. The vampire was utterly motionless, trapped in the earth by the terrible lethargy of his kind. You will never win, Rafael. You are doomed. The voice rasped with hate even as Rafael plunged his fist through the vampire’s chest cavity and ripped out the blackened, rotted heart of his childhood friend.

  Kirja screamed, and Rafael hissed as the acid from the vampire’s blood burned through his skin and muscles right to the bone. He threw Kirja’s heart to the ground, but before he could call fire to incinerate the decayed thing, it burrowed deep into the soil, making its way back to its host. Black hatred vibrated in the air between them, then triumph as the heart reunited with its host. Cursing, Rafael drove his fist a second time toward the vampire’s chest, staring down into the red-rimmed eyes.

  But it was no longer Kirja lying helpless in the earth. Rafael stared down at Colby, her beautiful face, her wealth of red hair, her incredible soft skin. For a moment he hesitated as he leaned over the undead.

  “Rafael,” she cried softly, “help me.”

  “Colby?” Rafael blinked in confusion and shook his head and for one uncertain moment, he hesitated.

  Kirja struck. Rafael screamed and the illusion of Colby dissolved as the vampire’s razor-sharp talons pierced Rafael’s chest. Breathless with agony, he could feel the hand of the undead clawing for his heart, shredding through muscle and sinew with murderous intent. Kirja shrieked in triumph and Rafael screamed again as the tips of the vampire’s nail gouged at Rafael’s heart.

  Pain swamped Rafael, excruciating pain the likes of which he’d never known in all the centuries of his existence. For one agonizing moment his muscles locked in spasms of torment, then he screamed again from another driving pain as Kirja’s talons pierced the outer walls of his heart.

  Blood spurted from Rafael’s heart. There wasn’t much time. He had to finish this now. Quickly.

  He dragged himself over Kirja’s body. The vampire once again assumed Colby’s shape, but this time Rafael didn’t hesitate. Once more he drove his fist deep into the vampire’s rotten chest, crying out as the acid blood ate through the flesh of his already wounded hand. His chest was on fire, the vampire’s razored claws shredding the muscles of Rafael’s heart. Blood jetted out of his chest in great deadly spurts, but Rafael could not afford to stop his heart and shut down his body’s functions to save himself. Kirja must be defeated.

  Rafael would protect Colby and those she loved with his last dying breath. As long as Kirja remained alive, he would retain his hold on Paul and put Colby’s family at risk. It had to end here. Now. Rafael would remove this threat to Paul, give the boy back to Colby in sanity and health. He would not fail her this time with yet another in a long line of selfish choices. He could give her this one gift even if it meant the loss of his own life. She was Dragonseeker, she was strong, she could go on without him as Rhiannon had. For a moment he wavered. Had it been a spell of Xavier’s that had prevented Rhiannon from joining her lifemate? Would Colby survive his death? He had to believe it.

  He felt Kirja’s fingers close around his heart, the nails digging deep, lacerating, shredding. He heard his own screams echo through the chamber, but he hung on tenaciously. He would not fail her. His death was the only thing he had left to give her.

  No! Nicolas shouted the command.

  Faintly, from far away, Rafael heard his other brothers, but maybe that was an illusion, too. The voices of Carpathians near and far seemed to melt into a single voice crying protest.

  Rafael held on grimly, dragging the black vampire heart from Kirja’s chest. Blood loss had made Rafael extremely weak and the heart struggled wildly to get out of his possession and back to its master. He fought to keep the rotted organ caged in his hand. The acid burned through his skin to his bones, but that pain was nothing compared to the agony of Kirja’s fingers literally ripping Rafael’s heart to pieces.

  Deep beneath the earth, Colby felt the rending and tearing of Rafael’s heart. Her eyes flew open, her heart shuddering in shared pain and slamming with relentless terror against her chest. The pain nearly shattered her. Rafael!

  The undead will not get your brother.

  Rafael’s voice was ragged, frayed with pain. In that instant she saw him in the dark of the mine with the ghouls fighting to get to him, with his arm and hand burned raw from the vampire’s blood. And she saw the vampire’s fist buried deep in his chest. She felt the fingernails ripping and gouging at Rafael’s heart in an effort to kill him. For a moment time stopped. The world went utterly still. Realization struck her in that blinding moment.

  She loved him.

  All this time when she thought she was fighting him, she’d been fighting herself as well. Pitting her enormous will against her heart, the heart that had begun to love Rafael when he had rushed into a burning building on her behalf.

  Rafael had freed her to be who and what she was born to be. She would finally be able to use her extraordinary gifts she had spent a lifetime hiding. She would be accepted for who she really was, not who she pretended to be. And in that moment of realization, Colby knew she could bear anything, sacrifice anyone or anything else, but not Rafael.

  Tell me what to do! She issued the order to Nicolas. And it was an order. She began to claw her way through the earth to the surface. Every ounce of iron will she possessed, the will that was her birthright, that had been honed in her sweat and tears, the unbending will that had refused to let her believe she could come to love Rafael, that will she now focused on reaching him. She would save him. There was no other choice.

  Stay with him. Do not allow him to separate himself from you. He will hold on with everything he is, not wanting to chance that you will die with him.

  Colby concentrated on holding Rafael to her. She could see through his eyes and hear the wailing of the ghouls and the horrible cries of the vampire.

  Deep in the vampire’s lair, Vikirnoff continued his battle with the relentless ghouls, but he could sense how close Rafael was to death.

  “Rafael,” he commanded, “throw the heart to me now.” He kept his voice calm in the midst of the chaos reigning. He knocked back another ghoul, but it rose to confront him again as the others closed in.

  Kirja’s razor-sharp fingernails worked to drag Rafael’s heart from his body, a slow but extremely painful process. The strength was ebbing from the vampire, but it was draining almost as quickly from Rafael. He could barely move, barely think, his body failing to obey the dictates of his brain as blood loss and lethargy from the rising sun sapped his remaining, rapidly dwindling strength.

  He felt Colby moving in him, searching for a way to aid him. He couldn’t protect her from the pain in his body. He felt the blow of it, nearly driving her to unconsciousness, felt her regroup, accept the pain. Then her strong will rose up, the unwavering determination
of the Dragonseeker blood.

  You will not die! She made it a decree. An order. Throw the heart to the hunter. Take my strength and rid the world of that disgusting creature. Now, Rafael. I won’t let you go.

  Using the burst of strength, he did as she commanded, tossing the vile organ through the air to Vikirnoff. At once Rafael’s strength ran out and he began to topple. It was too late for him. His heart was shredded, his blood loss too great. But Colby and Paul would be safe and Vikirnoff would get out of the mines alive. Rafael closed his eyes and let go.

  Colby merged her mind with Rafael’s. She was strong. She’d always been strong, so much so that her powers couldn’t be managed in her human state. She felt them now, running through her body, and she took a quick inventory of her abilities. Everything was different now, with the special gifts of the Carpathian blood running through her veins. She reached for the power, embraced it instead of shrinking in fear from it. She would save Rafael, hold him to her with her last breath even though his life force was no more than a small, dim light flickering weakly, all but extinguished. She held him to her with all of her strength, preventing him from falling to the acid inferno of soil in the chamber, at the same time, keeping his spirit from fading away.

  Bring him to me. Hurry. She sent the order to Vikirnoff, on the mental path she found in Rafael’s mind. The soil is rich in minerals and it is our only chance.

  Vikirnoff incinerated the vampire’s heart, stoically ignoring the acid burning his hand and arm as the blood ran down his skin. Kirja screamed horribly, his body going limp, his fist falling from Rafael’s body with a horrible sucking sound. The Carpathian’s lifeblood splattered over him. He grimaced and licked at it in a last, vain attempt to heal himself.

  Vikirnoff directed a second white-hot ball of energy at the vampire.

  Blackened noxious smoke rose and Kirja gave a final hideous, wailing shriek and his foul life at last found its end. Vikirnoff caught Rafael in strong arms before Colby could let him fall to the poisonous ground and sustain further burns. The moment the vampire was fully destroyed, the ghouls dropped to the ground, lifeless without their master to give them orders. The soulless shadows ceased their continuous wails and the bones dropped back to the ground.

 

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