Age of Vampires- The Complete Series

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Age of Vampires- The Complete Series Page 15

by Caroline Peckham


  “Vow?” My voice was low and my mind whirled with the strange possibilities that were suddenly before me.

  “If you choose to embrace your slayer nature, you will have to take a vow to place the destruction of the vampires above all else. Your life’s purpose will be to bring them down and destroy them. That is not something to choose lightly. There are repercussions; you may not be able to choose your own husband or make your own decisions on having children. You may be forced to sacrifice your own life or that of others for the sake of the cause.”

  “I don’t want a husband anyway and I definitely don’t want children,” I said firmly. The sacrificing myself part I wasn’t so sure on.

  Magnar sighed and looked away from me into the fire. “You might not be able to choose not to have them either. If the cause demands you take a husband and produce more children to inherit the gift then you would be obligated to do it.”

  “The cause? Aren’t you the cause? I mean, it doesn’t seem like there are any other slayers left so I’m guessing those decisions would be down to you.”

  Magnar shrugged. “The runes still hold power. It is possible there are more of us out there. The gods may decide to speak to us and tell us their wishes. Or a prophecy might come to light which demands such things of you. Or of us.”

  “Us?” I stared at him for several seconds before realising what he was implying. We might have been the only two slayers in existence so if some prophecy demanded slayer babies... I got to my feet quickly and walked away from him to stand by the small window which looked back towards the stream. “No way. I’m not some hapless fool you can use to have little vampire-killing offspring with.

  Besides, doesn’t this mean you might be my great great great great grandad or whatever?” I shook my head. “I’ve had more than enough of being told how I’m going to live my life. Twenty-one years in a prison is more than enough, it’s too much in fact. From here on out I’ll be making my own decisions and no prophecy or vampire or any other supernatural bullshit is going to decide for me.” My chest heaved with the sudden onslaught of emotion and I shook my head in anger.

  Magnar looked at me curiously, the light of the fire sending shadows dancing across his bare chest and making some of his scars stand out fiercely.

  “I didn’t mean us like that,” he said and a trace of irritation flitted across his face. “If I take on your training then no such thing could ever take place between us anyway. So your disgust at the idea is unwarranted.”

  I opened my mouth to protest. I hadn’t meant it like that. It wasn’t that the idea of me and him was the problem, it was the fact that I might not get to choose it for myself. Who would want to be with someone without making the decision to do so of their own free will? Before I could think of the right way to correct his misunderstanding, Magnar stood.

  “I’m going to check the wards again. We both have a lot to think on.” He headed out of the small room and I watched him go without saying another word.

  Nice work Callie.

  Guilt tugged at me but I wasn’t sure what I was supposed to do about it. All Magnar wanted was to find some of his kin and now I was standing right before him, telling him I didn’t want to be one of them. Or was I? The thought of having even a fraction of his gifts definitely called to me but the trade-off against my own free will felt like such a high price to pay.

  I’d only held freedom in my hands for a matter of days and now I was being asked to consider enslaving myself to some cause for the rest of my life?

  No way.

  I moved towards the fire and sank down before it, letting the heat of the flames warm me as I turned everything over in my mind. A faint whispering echoed at the edge of my thoughts and my hand drifted to the blade at my hip.

  Fury sighed in satisfaction as I gripped its hilt. Perhaps I wasn’t going mad after all. Maybe the things I felt from the blade had something to do with the slayer blood that coursed through my veins. Magnar said that everything innate in my blood came from the memories of my ancestors so perhaps the blade could help me to understand that.

  I concentrated on the feeling of the blade in my hand as I placed it across my lap and closed my eyes. Show me, I asked it, wondering if I really was going insane.

  The blade grew hot beneath my fingers and I could feel its eagerness to share its life with me. Images started to flash through my mind of people wielding Fury before me. I was a man creeping through a dark cave. A dark-skinned woman fighting with my back against a wall while more vampires than I could put a number to came at me. A child learning to hunt in a forest. An old woman defending her grandchildren from a hungry wolf.

  More images than I could count. More people than I would have thought possible. Year after year, the blade passed from hand to hand. I felt its love for those who’d wielded it, its hate for the vampires it vanquished. And somehow they were all a part of me and yet not me at all.

  I wasn’t sure how long I sat there, watching as my ancestors fought and died. Loved and lived and passed the blade on through the generations.

  My palms felt cold and it took me a moment to realise Fury was no longer in my grasp. I fluttered my eyes open in confusion and found Magnar kneeling before me.

  What the hell was that?

  He was staring into my eyes with a fierce intensity. “What did you see?” he demanded.

  “Everything, everyone who came before me.” I frowned, unsure of how else to describe it.

  “You’re sure it was before?” he asked. “It wasn’t still to come?”

  “No. It was definitely before.” I knew that deep within me.

  He reached out and took my hand in his. “You’re freezing,” he said irritably. “You went too deep.” He released me and moved to grab his cloak from the back of the moth-eaten sofa before draping it around me. He left his arm around my shoulders, pulling me closer to lend me some of his warmth.

  “Too deep?” I shook my head as my mind returned sluggishly to the present. I turned to look at him, his face just inches from mine and he stilled under my scrutiny. “You shaved.” There was still stubble lining his jaw but the beard was gone.

  He sighed and released me, shifting away a little and leaning towards the fire. “The beard was irritating me,” he replied vaguely.

  I watched him as he worked on building the fire back up. Without the beard he looked younger than I’d presumed before. His face seemed a little softer too and I could see more of his strong jaw. I wondered how old he really was. Not counting the thousand years he’d spent asleep.

  “How old are you, were you… you know what I mean…”

  His mouth twitched in amusement. “Discounting the thousand years I spent in an unageing slumber? I lived twenty seven years with my kin and spent ten of those as an Earl hunting the Belvederes to the ends of the earth.”

  I nodded, trying to pretend I knew what he meant by that. I was pretty sure being an Earl meant that he’d been a leader. He was certainly bossy enough for me to believe he was used to being in charge of people.

  When he was satisfied with the fire, Magnar turned his gaze back on me and the heat in it made me squirm internally.

  “If you are not too tired, I would like to try something,” he said seriously.

  “Okay,” I said in response, unable to turn away from him.

  He leant around me and I froze as he drew close enough to touch me but instead, he pulled one of the long blades he usually wore across his back into his lap.

  “You can feel a connection with Fury. I want you to see what you can feel with this.” He held the heavy weapon out to me and I eyed it nervously. I could already feel the energy pouring off of it. Fury was a much smaller blade and its power almost overwhelmed me. I wasn’t sure what would happen when I accepted that weapon.

  I licked my lips and cautiously held out my hands, palms up. Magnar lowered his blade onto them and the solid weight of it took me by surprise. I had no idea how he managed to wield such heavy weapons with the speed he
did.

  The sword didn’t sing to me like Fury did. Its response was sluggish and resistant. I ran my fingers across the runes carved into the hilt, trying to feel more from it.

  “Tempest,” I breathed, though the name hadn’t come to me willingly.

  I urged the blade to show me more but it resisted. The power in it felt dark and roiling, waiting to be released. As I pushed harder, it finally showed me a few scraps.

  I was Magnar, fighting shoulder to shoulder with many men and women dressed like gladiators. We cut through vampires like they were blades of grass.

  Everything around me shifted but I was still Magnar, back to back with a man I knew was his brother as we faced a cavern filled with vampires. Outnumbered but not outmatched.

  I saw him hunting a raven-haired male vampire across the land and sea, his heart aching for vengeance as grief for his father drove him on. His thirst for that vampire’s death motivated him like nothing else. I tried to push for more information on his identity but the blade drew me away.

  I was Magnar decapitating the red-headed vampire who had come for me after my dad and Montana were captured. I saw myself through his eyes as I stared up at him in gratitude and fear. He felt an overwhelming urge to protect me but I couldn’t tell why.

  Magnar pulled the blade from my grasp. “Well?”

  “Tempest,” I said again, clearing my throat before I continued. “I think that blade is a lot more loyal to you than Fury is. It didn’t want to show me anything and all I did see was you.”

  He nodded. “Fury was given to me as a gift by the leader of the Clan of Dreams. It was forged to be wielded by those of their bloodline and has never connected to me as it has to you.”

  “What does that mean?”

  “That I’m not your great great grandfather, though I could have told you that myself as I neither married nor had children before I slept,” he replied with half a smile. “Your bloodline is of the Clan of Dreams. I am of the Clan of War.”

  I couldn’t help but laugh. “Of course you are.”

  He smirked in response. “You do not have to be afraid of this part of yourself. And don’t think about the vow for now. I have never known someone to find out about their blood right at your age. Our children always knew what they were. They knew they could take the vow when they turned eighteen and had all of that time to make their decision. You should feel no pressure either way. It is a decision you must come to on your own.”

  “Thank you.” I reached out and took his hand for a moment and he looked down at the point where our skin met.

  The fresh cut on his arm already looked like it had half healed and I frowned as I pointed it out. “Didn’t you get that yesterday?” I asked, pulling my other hand out of his.

  He looked at the long wound and grunted dismissively. “It was a clean cut. It will heal well.”

  “But it already looks like it’s a week old,” I insisted.

  “Those of my clan’s bloodline heal faster than most mortals. Injury is a peril of war.”

  “Right.” My head was starting to feel fuzzy with all of the information he was putting on me. “Today has been... a lot to take in.”

  “Sleep. Let your mind and body rest. We can talk more on it tomorrow.”

  I wanted to protest and ask him another of the thousand questions which were racing through my mind but exhaustion tugged at me. I settled myself down in front of the fire and let my eyes fall shut.

  Despite all of the concerns being a slayer raised, I could be sure of one thing. It could only help me when it came to getting Dad and Montana out of the blood bank and that was really all that mattered.

  When I woke, I found a long white dress waiting for me laid across the velvet chair. A hand-written note from Erik was attached to it. My dad had tried to teach Callie and I to read, but I'd always been better at it than her. I still struggled to decipher Erik’s curling handwriting, but eventually managed it.

  If you're not wearing this by the time I knock on your door this morning, you're going to meet my angry side. And no, you haven't met him yet.

  Your humble ruler, Count Erik.

  God, I hated him. It writhed in me like a living thing. I'd always hated the vampires, but this was personal.

  A knock came at the door, making me jump.

  Shit, I'd promised to do as Erik said. And if he was ever going to help my family I needed to stick to my word. Ripping my nightwear off, I grabbed the dress and threw it over me. My head got stuck and I realised there were buttons at the neck stopping me from getting it on. I flailed, desperately trying to undo them and make my way through the head hole.

  Damn damn damn!

  Erik's raucous laughter pounded in my ears and I turned scarlet from my head to my toes.

  “Help,” I said weakly, giving up and standing with the thing half-on, knowing I looked like a complete idiot.

  Strong hands grabbed me and in moments the dress was yanked down to my heels. I was eye-level with a gleaming broach holding a cloak in place around Erik's neck. He pushed me back a step and I finally dared look at him properly. He was dressed regally in a fine black uniform with silver embroidery on the lapels.

  “That note was so worth my time,” Erik remarked.

  “I hate you,” I said, but if my comment affected him his face showed no sign of it.

  “Remember what I said about your tone?” He turned me around sharply, fastening the buttons up to my neck, his cool fingers brushing my skin. A shiver gripped my spine and I fought hard not to twitch away from his electric touch.

  “Something about respect?” I bit out. Which I have none of for you.

  “Oh good, it listens.”

  I pursed my lips, fighting back a torrent of abusive language as he flipped me around to face him once more.

  His eyes whipped up to my bed hair and he glanced over at a brush as if he actually considered doing it for me.

  “I can manage,” I said quickly in case he followed through on that thought.

  Heading to the dresser, I picked it up and started combing out the tangles in my mane. My curls soon fell loose around my shoulders, but my hair never did what I told it to for long. Not that I cared.

  Erik was so silent as I rubbed the sleep from my eyes and pinched life into my cheeks that I very-nearly forgot he was there. Apart from the fact his aura was like a bell ringing in my ears.

  My eyes found his in the mirror as I discovered him watching me. Guess vampires have reflections then...

  His expression was impassive, but his eyes vaguely curious.

  “That good enough for you, your highness?” I asked sweetly, raising my brows. You better keep up your end of the deal, your royal assholeness.

  “Passable,” he muttered, glancing away. “Come on then, let's not stand here until we turn to dust.”

  I wish you would turn to dust. “Okay,” I said instead with a forced smile that didn't fool him in the slightest. Putting on the delicate shoes I'd worn the previous night, I glanced at myself in the mirror. I took in the strange sight of myself looking almost as good as a vampire in my fine dress.

  He offered me his arm and I took it without hesitation this time. His fingers curled tightly around my wrist, sharply reminding me I was still his prisoner.

  We stepped into the corridor and he guided me downstairs and through a marble hallway. We arrived in the expansive entrance-way with stone pillars intersecting a bright marble floor.

  Two guards stood sentinel on either side of the arching doorway. They saluted Erik before pulling the doors wide for us and we walked out into the daylight. Cloudy daylight, but I supposed Erik wouldn't step out of his front door under the midday sun. Not that that was a common occurrence. Even during the summer months, I'd rarely witnessed full-blown sunshine. I wondered whether the rumours were true that sunshine could kill the vampires. I decided to air my thoughts as we made our way down the series of stone steps towards the beautiful woodland.

  “What do you do in the summer,
Erik? Live indoors?” I allowed a little bit of mocking into my voice. I was obeying, but I wasn't bowing down.

 

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