CHAPTER 20
“NOW WHAT?” Sarah asked.
“No fight, Sarah? No bold words?” he asked, stepping toward her. “Are your knives all that give you courage?”
“My knives are necessary for me to kill your kind,” she answered. “But they aren’t my courage. I’m not begging for my life, either.”
“You never will, will you?” he asked, as he took hold of her right arm. He bent his head down to the rose and licked away the thin line of blood that had gathered on the stem. Then his lips moved to her throat.
Once again she started to pull away, but this time she had no knives to threaten with, and Nikolas’s grip was tightening. His fangs brushed across her throat and she braced herself for pain.
He raised his head to look her in the eye.
“It doesn’t hurt, Sarah,” he said, as if reading her mind. “And I’m not going to kill you. What are you afraid of?”
The unknown, Sarah thought. What exactly did this creature have planned? But she didn’t ask, because she didn’t really want to know. “Just get on with it.”
With his free hand he leaned her head back, his fingers running through her hair, strangely gentle.
“Nikolas, let her go.”
Nikolas raised his head, allowing Sarah just enough room to look to the speaker.
“Christopher.” Nikolas’s eyes lit up as he whispered his brother’s name. “Care to join me?”
“Let her go, or I will take her from you,” Christopher ordered, his voice unwavering.
“You can’t,” Nikolas answered. “You could, physically — you know I wouldn’t fight you — but you can’t by law.” Nikolas gestured to the thin line of blood on his side where Adianna’s knife had pierced the skin. “Her sister drew blood. I have claim on Adianna and her relations.”
Blood claim was one of the few laws vampires regularly followed. In return for the blood Adianna had drawn from Nikolas, no other vampire was allowed to interfere if he wanted to harm her or anyone in her family.
Christopher closed his eyes for a moment, taking a deep breath. “Don’t hurt her.”
“Whoever said I was going to hurt her?” He sounded so innocent, it made Sarah nervous.
“I know you, Nikolas,” Christopher argued.
“Once you did,” Nikolas said quietly, sadly. “We — not I, but we — were the most feared of our kind. Rome, Paris, New York — every city in the world was ours. What happened to Kristopher and Nikolas, who would hunt side by side, sharing the blood, dancing in the streets?”
Nikolas gestured to the wounds on Sarah’s arms. “These marks were ours, not mine, and everyone knew it. Now, even the hunters have forgotten you. When was the last time I saw you place your mark on your prey?”
“Marguerite,” Christopher answered, lost in memory. He stepped forward until he was standing in front of his brother. “She was the last.”
“Why?” Nikolas asked, voice barely audible.
“Let it go, Nikolas,” Christopher ordered, his voice shaking slightly “That was fifty years ago.”
“I can see it in your eyes, Christopher,” Nikolas whispered to his brother. “You remember. Why did you leave me?”
“I stopped killing, Nikolas —”
“You stopped living!” Nikolas shouted, his emotion breaking any control he had. “I look at you, and all I see is pain. For you I tried to survive on anything but the blood of humans, but I couldn’t stand the pain. I couldn’t walk in the sunlight. I couldn’t stand to be near humans. One day I ran into a human girl on the street, and before I knew it she was dead in my arms. An innocent human girl, Christopher, who didn’t deserve to die.”
Sarah’s confusion escalated. Since when did Nikolas care if his victims were innocent or not?
You were always stronger,” Nikolas finished. “I don’t have your control.”
Christopher looked anything but strong. Sarah could see the bloodlust close to the surface. She was still trapped in Nikolas’s arms, and her wounds had opened enough for blood to bead around the edges. The scent of her witch blood was in the air, laced with power and a hint of danger.
“Why did you leave me, Christopher?” Nikolas asked as he reached around Sarah to take his brother’s hands. She was trapped between the two vampires, and not sure how to react. Christopher’s control was obviously slipping — if she fought now, she would destroy it altogether. She did not want Christopher’s life to be the price of her escape.
“You remember Marguerite,” Nikolas said. “She picked us. She knew what we were and what she wanted —”
“She said she wanted to die,” Christopher whispered. The memory was so strong in his voice that Sarah could almost imagine the scene, and the vision caused her to pull at Nikolas’s grip for a moment before she forced herself to stop.
Christopher’s control was so thin. If he could contain the bloodlust long enough to get his brother to let her go, she would be grateful. If he lost it, she would fight.
It no longer mattered who was speaking as they continued the tale, both lost in memory. “Two of us, like a mirror. We both fed on her, you on the left, and me on the right. You marked her first, putting your signature forever on her skin, and then I followed.”
“And when she woke she was afraid, but there was passion there too. She was given the finest wines and the softest silks to wear, rich foods, chocolates —”
“We approached her again, both of us taking her blood, but this time we only took a taste —”
“And then we both cut ourselves, here, just below our throats, and she leaned forward to drink.”
Disgust flashed in Sarah’s mind, as she weighed the brothers’ every word for a hint of what their next action would be. So the girl had wanted to die. Instead they had blood bonded her, given her all but immortality.
Nikolas drew his brother forward, and then placed Christopher’s hand over the uncut skin on Sarah’s left wrist.
“Why is there nothing here, Christopher?”
Both of the brothers seemed entranced by their pasts. Finally, Sarah spoke.
“You said you haven’t hunted since Marguerite, Christopher,” she said, loudly, in an attempt to break the spell. “Why?”
Christopher blinked and looked at Sarah as if he were seeing her for the first time.
“Nissa took him away from me,” Nikolas answered sullenly.
“Nissa needed me,” Christopher answered tiredly. “You saw how she was, Nikolas. She hadn’t fed in a week. If I hadn’t —”
Nikolas’s voice was quiet as he interrupted. “Don’t you know how lonely it is hunting without you?”
“No,” Christopher answered, still looking at his brother. “I don’t. I’ve never hunted alone.”
Nikolas once again drew his brother forward, this time placing Christopher’s hand just above the pulse on Sarah’s throat. She checked her reaction to jerk back, knowing that an attempt to flee would only bring out the predatory instincts that Christopher was fighting.
“Can’t you feel the life there, Christopher?” Nikolas pressed. “Don’t you want it?”
Christopher closed his eyes, turning his head away.
“Christopher —”
“Sarah, don’t talk,” Christopher said quickly, sounding pained. He jerked his hand out of Nikolas’s grasp and stepped back.
“Christopher, don’t leave me again,” Nikolas pleaded, childlike in his fear of loneliness. “I don’t want to be alone anymore. Nissa needed you then, but I need you now.”
“Let Sarah go.” Christopher’s voice wavered.
“She hurt you,” Nikolas argued. “I saw you after she turned you away. You wouldn’t even talk to me. I can’t stand to see you in pain, Christopher. In the old days we would have hunted her down together.”
“I don’t want to kill her,” Christopher said. He finally gathered the strength to meet his brother’s gaze again. “And I won’t let you.”
“I won’t kill her if you don’t want me to — if I was willing to do that she would have been dead the instant she entered my home. But you know I can’t just turn her loose. She hunted me down once. Do you really think she would stay away if I let her go? Do you really think her family wouldn’t track down you and Nissa if they couldn’t find me?” Nikolas’s voice was cold, but filled with pain.
“Nikolas —”
Nikolas removed his knife from his pocket and opened it.
Nikolas, what are you doing?” Christopher demanded, but his brother did not answer as he caught Sarah’s right wrist in a grip she could not break, and skimmed the blade across the back of her hand, drawing a thin line of new blood.
“Damn it, Nikolas!” Christopher shouted, spinning sharply away so the blood was not in his sight. “Don’t do this to me!”
“Just once, Brother, be the Kristopher I know.”
Christopher was trembling as he fought the blood-lust.
“Please, Brother. For me, kill the pain.” Holding Sarah by the throat with one hand, Nikolas reached out and turned his brother around with the other. Christopher’s eyes immediately fell on the blood that was dripping from Sarah’s hand.
“Christopher, no —”
“Shut up, Sarah!” Christopher shouted when she tried to argue, his voice strained. He turned to his brother. “We’re both damned. You know that, don’t you?”
And then Christopher took Sarah’s hand, lifted the wound to his lips, and licked the blood away.
“Christopher, I’m your friend —”
“No, Nikolas.” Roughly, Christopher shoved himself away from her, sending Sarah stumbling back into Nikolas. She could see him shaking from the effort it took him to break away.
“Kristopher, have you forgotten everything?” Nikolas pleaded, the hurt clear in his voice.
“Please, Nikolas, let her go.”
“Why?” Nikolas’s voice was childlike, hurt. “You were the first one,” he reminded his brother, “to pick up a knife.”
Sarah felt Nikolas’s hold on her wrists lessen as he focused on his brother; if he continued to be distracted, she stood a chance of getting out. She had lost hope that Christopher would help her — he wasn’t strong enough to ignore his bloodlust.
“Please, Kristopher,” Nikolas implored.
“Not Sarah.”
That last, painful argument almost caused her to hesitate, but even as she yanked her arms out of Nikolas’s grip she had made her decision. Survival. She threw herself forward, and before either vampire could react, she had pinned Christopher to the floor, a hand over his throat.
“Sarah —”
He didn’t have another chance to speak before she violently dragged at Christopher’s power with her own. He gasped, unable to fight back, and she winced at the pain she knew her magic caused him.
There were nine energy centers in the body, called chakras, that witches could use to manipulate the energies of another, usually in order to heal. Her line had learned another way to use them, one no witch would ever use on another mortal creature: to inflict pain, and to kill.
It was a desperate move. Any vampire strong enough to control his own power could reach along the line she had opened and attack her, and she would have no defenses.
But Christopher had not fed on humans for too long. He was powerless against the deadliest of her attacks.
Nikolas froze when he heard his brother scream. Sarah saw him hesitate as he tried to figure out what she had done.
“Let me go, Nikolas,” Sarah demanded. “Call that girl back down and tell her to get my knives now, or I will drain every drop of power from your brother’s body.”
“You wouldn’t,” Nikolas answered softly, a small amount of fear in his voice.
“He just licked blood off my hand,” she growled. “That gives me the motivation to cause some exceptional pain if you do not give me back what is mine and let me out of here.” She didn’t want to kill Christopher. She didn’t even want to hurt him. But the choice was between letting him go and having Nikolas kill her, and hurting him and living through this night.
Nikolas stepped forward and she once again reached into Christopher’s power and twisted what she found there.
He shouted out in pain and Nikolas winced, stopping.
“I can kill him in less than a second if you make another move toward me,” she warned, and it was true. As entrenched in Christopher’s power as she was, she could tear, tangle, or destroy with a thought.
“Marguerite, get the knives,” Nikolas whispered, and the human who had been watching from the doorway ran upstairs. Sarah had seen the fear on the girl’s face — fear for Christopher’s life, for the vampire who had fed on her years ago when she wanted to die, and then given her this life in exchange for the one she had abandoned.
Nikolas took a step back, but Sarah could see pure hatred smoldering in his eyes as he did so.
Marguerite returned and held Sarah’s knives out to her. Keeping her right hand over Christopher’s throat, she returned all the knives to their rightful places with her left. Still holding Christopher by the throat, she stood.
“I am going to let him go, and you are going to leave me alone. Do we have a deal, Nikolas?”
“I’m going to kill you the first chance I get,” he growled back, and Christopher once again shouted out in pain.
“Do we have a deal, Nikolas?”
“For tonight, I will let you leave safely,” he answered.
“Agreed,” she said, as she relaxed her hold on Christopher, who collapsed to the floor. “He’s going to die if he doesn’t feed soon, Nikolas,” she warned before he had a chance to make a move.
Without hesitation Nikolas drew Christopher to his own throat.