The Complete Vampire Project Series: (Books 1 - 5)

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The Complete Vampire Project Series: (Books 1 - 5) Page 43

by Jonathan Yanez


  “Brenda.” Aareth spoke the word as if learning to speak English for the first time. “Brenda, it’s me, it’s Aareth. Do you remember me?”

  “My name is Ashley. Ashley Brookhaven,” Brenda said, shaking her head, trying to discern fact from fiction. “I don’t understand what’s happening to me or to you.”

  For the first time, Aareth felt panic. What if she couldn’t remember him? What if whatever it was that had been done to her had completely wiped away the person she had been, along with all of their memories together?

  “No.” Aareth grabbed her hands into his own. “Your name is Brenda Emerson. You’re my wife. You were—you were killed and now somehow, someone brought you back.”

  “I’m sorry.” Brenda ripped her hands from Aareth’s own. “I don’t remember you.”

  Grief only comparable to the sorrow he felt when Brenda had first died washed over Aareth’s naked body. What if she could never remember who she had been before?

  “We’ll figure this out.” Aareth looked at the black fur piled all around him, the only physical representation that remained to prove his time as a monster had been fact and not fiction. “We’ll figure out what’s happened to you and what’s happening to me. We have time now.”

  Brenda’s eyes were vacant. She nodded, but there was no real commitment in her face.

  Chapter Eighteen

  Jack

  Jack and Abigail ran past the guards standing sentry at the back of the queen’s private garden.

  “Stop! You there, halt!”

  “In the name of the queen, stop!”

  The shouts only made Jack and Abigail run harder into the twisting streets of New Hope.

  The city of New Hope sprawled out in front of them with gigantic brick buildings and winding cobble streets. People filled the pavement, while horses and carriages lined the actual roads. The noise brought on by so many people in such a small area drowned out Jack’s own beating heart.

  The two only allowed themselves a moment of respite when they were sure they had lost any sign of the soldiers chasing them.

  Jack’s lungs burned. His mouth was dry, while the first trickles of sweat slipped down the back of his neck. Abigail stopped beside him, her hands on her knees, bent over. She was breathing hard.

  “We have to come up with a plan to go back.” Abigail straightened, letting out a long, cleansing breath from her overexerted lungs. “We can’t leave Elizabeth in there.”

  “We will.” Jack did his best to straighten his shaggy, brown hair and wipe the sweat from his face. A few New Hope citizens were already taking too much interest in the pair for Jack’s liking. “But we need a plan first. We need help. Our best chance of getting Elizabeth back isn’t going to be through brute force. Leah’s too strong.”

  “Okay.” Abigail placed her hands on her hips. “Well, we have no money, no idea what happened to our friends, and no one else in the city we can turn to for help… so what do we do now?”

  “They all can’t be bad, can they?” Jack shook his head, racking his brain for anyone he could think of who would be willing to help. “What about Private Pia, Sergeant Harrison, even Lieutenant Baker? Do you think they’ve all just fallen in line with the queen?”

  “The queen,” Abigail repeated Jack’s words. “How could she have done this? How could we have been fooled for so long?”

  “I don’t know.” Jack shaded his eyes from the morning sun. “But when I was traveling the Outland with my father, the best places to gather information were always the bars and taverns. I can’t imagine things are much different in New Hope.”

  “It’s a plan.” Abigail nodded her agreement. “Not that we have money to buy anything while we’re there, and Leah will be looking for us.”

  “Right.” Jack mentally kicked himself again for his lack of knowledge in the magical art when it came to anything outside of the simple fighting and hunting techniques his father had taught him. “Disguises and money first, then hopefully we can get that information we need.”

  “You have no idea how to do either of those things, do you, Jack?” Abigail looked at him with a raised eyebrow.

  “Yeah, well.” Jack cleared his throat, looking anywhere but into Abigail eyes. “I guess I’m kind of limited.”

  “You’re in luck.” With a wave of her hand, Abigail motioned for Jack to follow her. She started walking down the main street again, this time intermingling with the crowd. “When my mother left us, I went through a bit of a rebellious spell in Burrow Den. I wasn’t the best daughter. I found the rush that stealing brought, and well, I became addicted.”

  Jack furrowed his brow, trying to imagine the Abigail he knew stealing from the town folk in Burrow Den. The image wasn’t only comical, it was downright hilarious.

  “What would you steal?” Jack laughed out loud. “Farmer Maggot’s watermelons?”

  “Oh, nothing crazy.” Abigail brushed by a woman she passed on the street. Her hand moved in and out of the large pocket in the woman’s coat so quickly and smoothly, Jack wouldn’t have seen the motion unless he was looking for it. “A book here or a piece of jewelry there. It was a dark time in my life.”

  “Did you just steal something from that woman?” Jack looked at Abigail’s hand that clutched a compact wallet. “I don’t know if we should be doing this, no matter how hard up for money we are.”

  Abigail ignored Jack’s words. Instead, she ducked into a side street with less foot traffic. She did a double check to make sure they weren’t being followed. It didn’t seem like anyone was even looking in their direction.

  “We don’t have the luxury of morals right now.” Abigail opened the small clutch. Inside was a wad of bills and a few gold coins. “She didn’t look like she was hurting for money, either.”

  Jack felt an internal battle waging inside him at the moment. He understood what they were doing was very wrong, but at the same time he found himself justifying their actions.

  “I feel like I don’t even know you right now.” Jack shook his head with a sigh. “But I guess we don’t have a whole lot of options.”

  “Come on.” Abigail pointed across the street to a clothing store. “Clothes first, then food and information.”

  Chapter Nineteen

  Leah

  “I want you to understand that showing you this does not bring me any sense of joy.”

  Leah stood with Elizabeth in the empty room previously occupied by Jack and Abigail. They were alone. Leah looked over at the young girl with regret in her eyes, or as close to the look of regret as she could feign.

  “When did they leave?” Elizabeth asked just above a whisper. “Why—why would they have gone without me?”

  “I’ve told you before, but you won’t trust me yet.” Leah placed a comforting hand on the girl’s shoulder. “They fear us, because they don’t understand us. They fled the palace in the early hours of the morning, even killed a few guards in their hurry to escape.”

  “No.” Elizabeth turned to look at Leah. “Abigail wouldn’t have killed anyone. She’s not a murderer.”

  “How well did you really know her?” Leah asked with a shrug. “You didn’t think she’d leave without you, either, but she did that, as well. The truth is, she’s happy with Jack. They’re off probably already outside the walls, starting their life together.”

  One of the many gifts Leah possessed was the ability to read people. What she saw in Elizabeth’s eyes now was someone close to the edge, so very close in believing the lies she was being spoon fed. In cases like this, a simple nudge was all that was required.

  “As soon as you complete your training, you’ll be free to go after them, if that is what you choose.” Leah looked at Elizabeth once more. “But I cannot, in good conscience, allow you to leave until you have a better understanding of your gifts.”

  The witch and her apprentice stood in the vacant room. The stillness was so complete that Leah could hear the beating of her own heart in her ears. She knew what was coming
next; she had seen it before.

  “Okay.” Elizabeth moved toward the open door. “Teach me. I want to learn.”

  “Wise choice.” Leah followed Elizabeth from the room and through the palace underbelly. “You’re progressing through each lesson faster than even I anticipated. Give me a few more weeks, and you’ll have what you need.”

  Elizabeth didn’t say a word. Her short, determined steps said everything her breaking heart could not.

  Teacher and student passed through the calm palace labyrinth that made up the training area for Elizabeth’s lessons. They passed large chambers, living quarters, and storage rooms. Leah looked at each chamber with a smile. She had spent a large portion of her time below the palace, perfecting her art as well as experimenting and training those she had hoped would be the answer she was so desperately seeking.

  But none of her subjects had proved as valuable or as powerful as Elizabeth. The girl was one of a kind. Perhaps one day she would even be more powerful than Leah herself. The thought scared her at first. It was something she had never had to worry about before. Even with Ashley, who was a master behind the mage blade and a heartless killer.

  Elizabeth was special because the girl already had the potential to use magic when she was born. The experiments done on her had only amplified what was already there. These thoughts led to Leah wondering who the girl’s mother could have been. She had read the reports on the Burrow Den incident. Abigail and Elizabeth’s father was nothing to consider. He was fanatic, but no magic flowed through his veins.

  The thoughts came to a halt as Leah followed Elizabeth into their training room. This room was like no other in the palace underbelly. Where everything else was sparsely decorated with plain, grey stone walls and floor, this room was made up of shiny, white marble flooring and white pillars standing side by side that didn’t hold a ceiling at all.

  In place of the stone ceiling that should have been, was a view of the stars and galaxies beyond. The pillars rose ten feet tall until they simply vanished into space. Gazing at the beautiful scene had been Elizabeth’s favorite thing since she was introduced to the room, but not today. Today she was on a mission.

  Elizabeth stalked to one end of the long room, ignoring the many magical artifacts along the walls that usually gave her pause. With the queen’s unlimited recourses, Leah had quite the collection of magical artifacts. Ancient books with worn leather covers stood neatly in the corner of the room, staffs and wands etched with magical runes had been placed on holders and mounted on the wall.

  Elizabeth ignored them all. She reached the end of the room and turned to Leah. She shrugged off her black cloak and took a stance, one foot in front of the other, arms wide, legs bent. Magical yellow flames burst to life in her open palms.

  “Let’s start.” Elizabeth nearly shouted the words.

  Things couldn’t have been going more perfectly if Leah wanted them to. She could practically see the hurt and anger in her apprentice’s eyes.

  “It’s obvious that you’re angry for being abandoned by those you thought you could trust.” Leah shrugged off her own cloak and took a similar stance at her end of the room. “Use that anger now. Let that drive your actions and give you strength. Begin!”

  Chapter Twenty

  Sloan

  It was the best she could do, still he deserved more. Sloan stood at the cemetery in Term only a few hours after Oliver had died. The cemetery itself was a poor, dilapidated piece of land, but it would have to do. The plot of earth that acted as the place for Term’s residents to be laid was a dry patch of square ground littered with deteriorating grave markers and withered flowers.

  Sloan found a spot near the left corner of the plot of land for Oliver. No matter how dead on her feet she felt, Sloan had insisted on helping with digging the grave. She, Aareth, and Ashley took turns shoveling the rock-hard soil, while Edison and Elwood fashioned a makeshift headstone.

  It was a small gathering: Edison, Elwood, Aareth, Ashley, and herself. If it weren’t for the occasion that had brought them all together, it would have been a nice day. The sun was high overhead with a warm breeze that kicked up puffs of dirt like someone blowing soft puffs of smoke from a cigarette.

  The five escapees from New Hope stood in a circle around Oliver’s body once the grave had been dug. It was a peaceful silence that they all shared. They all understood how important a moment like this was.

  “He took me in and believed my story when no one else would,” Ashley started with her unemotional, almost cold way of speaking. “I don’t know where I would be without him, or what would have happened to me.”

  “I probably had the least amount of interaction with him.” Aareth stood beside his wife but not as close as Sloan would have guessed. He wore borrowed clothes from one of Kimberly’s guards that was a size too small for his muscular frame. “But he had to have been a smart and brave man. He knew what the queen was doing before any of us, and he was already making moves to block her plan of attack. Granted, he did try and have Jack and I killed during that meeting of The Order, but he thought we were working for the queen at the time, so I guess I can forgive him for that.”

  All eyes remained down as Aareth’s words died on the wind. Sloan knew she should say something, but the words just weren’t ready to come out. She was battling a heavy sense of regret at not seeing, in the queen, what Oliver had from the beginning, and at always being so cold and distant toward him.

  “He was a brilliant mind,” Edison said through a quivering voice and a heavy onslaught of tears. “He started the revolution against the queen. It’s our job that history remembers him as a hero, not a criminal.”

  Elwood took a small step forward, running a finger across his bulbous nose. “Eeheeeee teeeeeenaaaa feeeeeedom toooooo. Keyblah sheeeenow sacka doooo.”

  “Elwood says that he was a good man and friend,” Edison translated for the rest of the group. “He also used some vulgar language about the crown that I’m not going to repeat. I didn’t even know he knew some of those words.”

  The scene stilled again. Sloan knew she had to say something. Although all eyes were still down out of respect, she understood everyone was waiting on her. Never the shy type, Sloan was now having a problem speaking.

  “I … I knew him for a long time.” Sloan fought the tears that stung her eyes. “He was always just this guy who worked alongside Edison and the crown. I was … I was always rude to him, and he didn’t deserve that.”

  Sloan studied the patch of soil between her boots. All of a sudden it was the most interesting thing in the world. Tears dropped down her cheeks and made tiny craters in the dusty ground. Although the tears came, her voice never quivered.

  “He would always ask me out, and I shut him down every time.” Sloan couldn’t help a tiny laugh as she shook her head. “Who would have thought that he was actually the best of us? We didn’t deserve him, but by God, we will avenge him.”

  Sloan was done crying. The few tears she shed were enough. Her mind was already transitioning from remorse to vengeance.

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Sloan

  Once they had lain Oliver’s body in the ground and covered it, Edison and Elwood rolled the headstone over. It was nothing more than a simple rock, too plain to be what Oliver deserved, but it would have to do for the time being. The inscription was short and to the point, chiseled in with a hammer and chisel provided by Elwood. It read:

  Doctor Oliver Livingston

  The best and brightest among us. Your death will not be in vain.

  Sloan walked with the rest of the group back to Kimberly’s estate. Aareth and Ashley walked in silence. Edison was explaining to Elwood why they couldn’t just bring Oliver back from the dead like Ashley.

  Citizens from the town of Term walked by on their various day-to-day tasks, stealing glances at the group. It was impossible for anyone to have missed the events of the previous night. Sloan and Kimberly’s slug match would have been enough to cause chatter, l
et alone the altercation between the New Hope soldiers and Aareth.

  Sloan couldn’t help seeing that a few of the glances sent their way were more sneers than simple intrigue. One face in particular made her pause. Kade was under the shade, the porch of The Shifter provided. He leaned against one of the posts, arms folded across his chest.

  He waved to Sloan and motioned her over.

  “I’ll meet you back at the estate,” Sloan said to the rest of the group. She was beyond exhausted, but seeing Kade reminded her of a promise she had only recently made to herself about not having any more regrets.

  “Are you sure?” Aareth spoke for the first time since they left the cemetery. He eyed Kade up and down. “We don’t know anyone here.”

  “I’ll be fine,” Sloan said over her shoulder as she crossed the dirt road and joined Kade on the porch.

  “I don’t think that big guy likes me very much,” Kade said, loud enough for Aareth to hear. “He looks like he wants to hurt me.”

  “Yeah, well, Aareth is going through a lot right now.”

  “So are you.” Kade nodded toward the cemetery. “I was going to ask if you needed anything, but it looked like a time for you to share with your friends.”

  “You were right, thank you.”

  “Listen, I know you’re dead tired, but word on the street is that you, Kimberly, and some kind of wolf shifter killed the entire detachment of New Hope soldiers last night.”

  “Word on the street would be right.” Sloan took the opportunity to sit on the railing that surrounded the porch of The Shifter. “Before you say it, I know. More soldiers will be coming soon.”

  “I was going to say that.” Kade took a seat next to her, so close their arms brushed. “But I was also going to say you should talk to the people here in Term. They’re a salty bunch, but they’ve all had their run-ins with New Hope. Along with that, Kimberly has a strong say in the goings-on in the city. If the two of you work together, you might be exactly what this city needs.”

 

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