13
Zacarias dragged Marguarita to her feet,
clothing her quickly in the garments he preferred, a long skirt and
blouse covering the temptation of her body. His fingers closed over
her upper arms like twin vises and he forced her to look into his
eyes.
“You will do exactly as I tell you, Marguarita. You
are my greatest vulnerability, the biggest liability to me. There
can be nothing of you within me. No trace. No scent. Nothing. Once
I withdraw, you cannot reach for me, no matter how long, or what
occurs.” He gave her a little shake. “Do you understand me?”
She shook her head, tears swimming. It couldn’t
matter to him. He couldn’t look at those tears and ache inside.
There could be only ice and stone, no traces of this woman who had
the potential of getting thousands of people, both Carpathian and
human, killed. He could have no trace of her in him or on him. He
needed to shed the scent of her beloved horses as well.
Marguarita blinked several times, shock and pain in
her eyes. He’d put that there, but he couldn’t comfort her. He
couldn’t be part of her. She was not yet Carpathian and she didn’t
understand the way their world worked. She looked around her, as if
coming out of a dream, dazed and confused. He couldn’t blame her,
his entire body felt as if it had been going up in flames. He’d
been very lucky he was so tuned to danger.
The horses reared and pawed the air, slashed at
their stall doors and screamed a protest. Marguarita turned toward
the horses, her face going pale.
Her breath caught in her throat. Do you feel
that? They’re afraid—but not of you. There’s something else,
Zacarias, something deeper. There’s a thread, a tendril . .
.
He reacted instantly, jerking Marguarita around to
face him, half shaking her, his fingers biting into her shoulder
like a vise. “Do not try to follow it. It is vampire. The undead
has spread his tentacles out and is reaching for you even now
through the very animals you love.”
I’ll sound the alarm and the boys will help
fight.
“You will trigger the alarm that tells them to seek
shelter. They would be in my way and witnessing a battle will only
make them fear me more.”
The tears spilled over and fear shimmered in her
enormous eyes. Nothing can happen to you. They could help. I
could help.
He gave her a little shake. “You will do as I tell
you without question. I will take you to the house quickly.” He
wrapped his arm around her waist and lifted her feet from the
ground. “You will stay there until I come to get you, no matter how
long that takes. Do not speak to me. Do not connect with me. I
expect your obedience in this.”
He felt the urgency consuming him, the one that
told him the battle was close. He had to weave safeguards over the
houses and stables to prevent destruction of life and property,
which vampires were prone to do just for fun. Most of all he had to
banish every trace of Marguarita from his mind and body, from his
heart and soul. There could be no hint of her where the enemy could
catch even the faintest of scents.
He flew with dizzying speed, masking them as he
took her into the house. He went right on through to the master
bedroom; the walls were the thickest there and shoved her into a
tight little alcove against the wall. “Do not move. If you do,
Marguarita, there will be severe consequences.”
She drew up her knees, nodding, wrapping her arms
around her knees to hold herself tight. Her face streaked with
tears, but the fear in her eyes was all for him, not for what he
might choose to punish her with if she disobeyed.
Zacarias couldn’t think about the taste of her
breath, or how she felt pouring into his mind, he had to shut down
completely and become empty, a warrior alone and without anything
to lose. He turned his back on her and hurried out to weave his
strongest safeguards over every building on the property. It took
strength and stamina to hold such strong weaves in the face of the
approaching vampires.
He inhaled the night. Three of them. Ruslan would
not send his best on the first outright attack, but he would send
seasoned vampires. They were coming from three directions, trying
to box him in and pick the battlefield. Zacarias wanted them far
away from his woman and everything she loved. He took to the air,
streaking toward the far end of the De La Cruz ranch, where the
rain forest met the clearing, where Ruslan had tried to infiltrate
with his poisonous plant and set a trap to aid his advancing
vampires.
A game of strategy then. Ruslan was a master at
strategy and he would do his best to manipulate Zacarias into a
trap. This attack would be the opening gambit to test his strength
and resolve. He had stayed too long in one place so Ruslan would
assume, since he hadn’t moved on, that Zacarias had been mortally
wounded in the battle in Brazil. It would have been reported that
there were droplets of blood in the air. Ruslan’s hounds would have
followed that blood trail to Peru, to the De La Cruz hacienda.
Ruslan would be thinking his recovery was slow and that he was
vulnerable.
Zacarias was vulnerable, but not for the reasons
Ruslan believed. He made certain that he removed all scent from his
body, and all traces of her from his mind. Loneliness hit hard,
nearly unbearable, now that he knew what it was like with her
inside of him, filling him up. Without her connection to him, the
world went gray and dull. Everywhere he looked, the vivid color was
gone. The bright vibrant greens of the rain forest, the bursts of
brilliant colors of flowers winding up the trunks of trees, even
the hues on the lacy ferns all had disappeared to be replaced by a
dreary gray.
Resolutely, he turned his mind away from
Marguarita. It took a great deal of discipline to do so. Lifemates
needed one another. Once those threads were woven, they were
unbreakable, and his mind would forever seek to touch hers. Add to
that the need to see in color, the ability to feel only when she
was connected to him, and he felt tremendous need. Fortunately, he
was an ancient warrior, and his priority above all else was
Marguarita’s safety.
He turned his back on the human structures, homes
that meant so much to them. He had never understood before. He was
a nomad, continually moving for self-preservation, not even
allowing his brothers to know his resting places or his secret
lairs. He had dozens throughout South America, places he could
retreat to and rest in when necessary, but now, he understood what
a home was. Not the structure. Not the place. The woman.
He took to the sky, a thin stream of vapor,
drifting with the slight breeze, riding the drafts, feeling his
way, searching for the exact location of his enemy. In the
distance, he could see a single black cloud churning madly, heading
toward the pasture where the herd was bedded down for the night.
Angry red ropes of lightning lit the edges of the black, turbulent
cauldron.
He marked the cloud, but remained a distance from
it. Ruslan would have coached his vampires. He would warn them of
Zacarias’s personality. He was a fighter and unlike Ruslan, he
didn’t hesitate to face his enemy. The master vampire would have
told his pawns that Zacarias wouldn’t run, that in fact, he would
go straight for trouble. The giant storm cloud, looking so very
evil in the otherwise clear sky, was merely a calling card to draw
him out—and a rather weak one at that.
He sent an illusion streaking toward the cloud, a
mere replica of himself that was more air than substance, but he
was embedded in that vague shape, just as a master was in all
illusions. He felt the puppet of himself hit something unseen,
something solid and sharp. His illusion shredded. Instantly he grew
one long nail and tore a laceration in his wrist. He called a soft
breeze and shook droplets of blood into the wind, sending it out
over the battlefield he’d chosen, that smooth field where Ruslan
had so carefully arranged a trap with his foul plant.
His blood was powerful. He was ancient Carpathian,
unquestionably one of the most powerful hunters alive. The scent of
his blood would draw the vampires like hounds. They would sniff
those droplets and the power contained in a single drop of blood
would be a prize to fight for. They would also transmit
triumphantly to their master that Zacarias was indeed wounded and
that they had scored the first coup with their simple trap. Ruslan
would believe that Zacarias was still hurt, but he would know the
ruse of a storm cloud had not drawn him out.
He hovered over the field, allowing the breeze to
take more droplets of blood into the air and scatter them wide. It
was a call that would be irresistible. A newly made vampire would
have already crawled out of the bushes to try to find a precious
bead and lap it up quickly before it was taken from him. The fact
that there was no stirring right away told Zacarias that Ruslan had
sent experienced fighters after him.
Instincts rose. The primal hunger for the fight. He
lived for it. Knew the rush as intimately as he did the kill. He
waited with endless patience born of a thousand such battles. It
took seven minutes and the first of the three vampires showed
himself. The brush just inside the rain forest nearest the fence
withered, turned brown and shrunk away from the unnaturalness of
the undead as he parted the long fronds and peered into the
field.
Zacarias had seen this one before, only a few years
earlier, or perhaps it was more—time passed now and meant
nothing—but even then, before the Carpathian had turned, Zacarias
had known he was already lost to honor. Zacarias had avoided him,
as he did all Carpathians. He was a hunter, no friend to any of
them. He didn’t want to know them before he killed them. This one
was no more than five or six hundred years old and someone turning
at that age was beneath even contempt. What could possibly drive a
Carpathian who had not suffered the full ravages of time to turn
away from honor?
The vampire raised his nose and sniffed the air,
drawing the potent scent of ancient Carpathian blood into his
lungs. His tongue flicked out greedily, his nostrils flared. He
grimaced, showing the rotting, pointed teeth, already blackened and
sharp. His name had been something to do with the forest—Forester,
or something close. It mattered little. Before, Zacarias thought of
him as man of little honor; now it was man of no
honor.
Zacarias allowed the breeze to cease, so that the
air became very still, the potency of his blood-scent increasing.
Man of no honor shrank back into the withering ferns, his head
turning first one way, and then the other, a wary, animalistic
gesture, before he again found the courage to stick his head out
into the open.
Zacarias studied the battlefield. Nothing else
moved. Not a single blade of grass, or the leaves on the trees. Two
of Ruslan’s undead pawns had enough discipline to resist the call
of such potent blood. They believed him wounded, but still, they
were patient enough for him to show himself, and intelligent enough
to use their more impatient partner as bait.
Zacarias recognized that his trap could easily
become one for him. The ice chilled more, a blue glacier adding
layers as the chess game progressed. This was his world. He
understood it. He watched the man of no honor crawl from the
shelter of the dense shrubbery, a mere shadow sliding across the
field. In his wake, the light-hued grass turned a murky dull brown,
creating a swath of destruction the vampire didn’t notice. He was
so caught up in collecting the drops of blood on his tongue that he
had forgotten how nature rebelled against such an unnatural being,
creating a path that pointed straight to the undead.
The shadow stretched as the vampire slithered on
his belly, lapping at the blades of grass, eager for the powerful
rush giving him a dangerous high. Careful to keep every movement so
small that it was impossible for the two hidden vampires to detect
the stir of power, Zacarias sent a sudden massive wind shooting
through the field of grass. At the same time, he edged the
individual blades, turning them to vicious saw grass.
The vampire screamed and rolled over, holding his
bleeding mouth as a thousand cuts streaked his blackened tongue and
lips. Zacarias didn’t bother to look at his handiwork, he studied
the ground and trees and even the sky. A shadow moved in the dark
roots of a kapok tree, just the slightest of movements, but it was
enough. Zacarias closed the laceration on his wrist and removed all
scent of blood. He allowed the shifting winds to take him in the
direction of the rain forest, right to that tall, imposing tree
rising like a sentry above the canopy emerging into the night
sky.
No bats clung to the roots. No birds rested in the
branches. The leaves drooped and shivered. There was no telltale
sap running down the trunk, no hint of tree cancer, just that vague
movement he’d caught out of the corner of his eye. The wind had
died down to a soft breeze and he let himself drift right into that
large root cage. The foul stench told him he was close to his
prey.
Once in the shelter of the spacious enclosure, he
was painstakingly cautious to remain very still. The dirt floor had
bat droppings and small fruits scattered over the dirt. He studied
the root system. He could see where the undead had entered. As
careful as he’d been not to touch the tree itself, he’d brushed
against one of the thick fins reaching out over the forest floor,
slightly blackening it. The blight on the root was faint,
indicating the vampire was cunning and much more careful than
most.
Zacarias knew he was in a small confined space with
another predator, one evil and cunning, one willing to sacrifice
his hunting companion to the hunter in order to kill a Carpathian.
One wrong move and he was dead, yet there was no fear, no
apprehension. He was in full warrior mode. He understood kill or be
killed—and he didn’t make mistakes. He had endless patience. Sooner
or later, this vampire would stir to check what was happening on
the field. He would see his companion crawling through the saw
grass, cutting his legs and belly. By now, man of no honor had had
a taste of Zacarias’s powerful blood and the subtle compulsion
would be working on him, growing his addiction until nothing
mattered but another taste of that blood.
Zacarias waited there in the darkness, trying not
to breathe in the stench of the undead’s rotting flesh. The tree
groaned, the only sound other than man of no honor’s continual
weeping as he continued to quarter the ground, seeing the elusive
droplets of blood. The saw grass cut his hands, his arms and belly,
even his face and tongue, but the compulsion was on him now, the
terrible need for more of that precious blood.
A careful stirring just to the left of Zacarias
gave away the position of the enemy. The creature moved silently
forward in order to get a better look at the field. He was growing
tired of waiting. Zacarias knew he was beginning to question
whether or not Zacarias was really there at all. He hadn’t rushed
to the storm cloud as Ruslan had said he would. He hadn’t shown
himself. They had followed the blood trail and scented fresh blood.
Zacarias might have fled to find another place to heal what was
most likely a mortal wound.
As a Carpathian hunter, Zacarias had seen it all,
he knew the workings of the minds of his opponents. Patience was
never a strong suit of the nosferatu, although, so far, the
third conspirator had not given himself away. He moved into
position behind the foul-smelling vampire, careful not to disturb
the air in the now rank cage of roots. The air was so still, the
slightest draft could warn his enemy. Once in the perfect location,
he positioned his fist a scant inch from the back of the undead and
slammed through bone and sinew, straight to the heart. At the same
time, he trapped the vampire’s throat, preventing him from crying
out.
The acidlike blood, thick and black, poured over
his hand and arm as he slowly extracted the pulsing, withered,
organ. His fingers of his other hand dug into the throat, ripping
out the voice box, so no sound could emerge and betray his
presence.
Overhead, in the sky, whips of lightning began to
strike the field, hitting the open meadow where man of no honor
crawled. Hundreds of strikes shook the ground, lightning rained
from the sky, great jagged swords slamming again and again, a
dizzying attack that was everywhere. It was impossible to see where
every strike hit, the range was so wide, yet none exploded the
trees, only struck near them.
One of the whips hit the heart just outside the
cage of roots where Zacarias flung it. The heart incinerated
immediately. Ruthlessly, Zacarias tossed the vampire carcass
through the bars of the thick woody fins, allowing the lightning to
burn that as well. He rinsed his hands and arms in the white-hot
cleansing energy, allowing the lightning strike to continue a few
more moments over the field, so as not to give away his
location.
All went dead quiet again. The sky cleared, stars
shining above, and only the single rolling mass of turbulence
indicated there was trouble. The grass appeared blackened in spots
and there were a few small burning blades that sent sparks along
with spiraling black smoke into the air. The fire leaped and
danced, multiplying quickly, just tiny little blazes sending that
wispy black smoke into the air. Several fires sprang to life around
man of no honor.
Zacarias allowed the breeze to slide over the
canopy so that the leaves on the trees rustled and stirred along
the fence line a hundred feet away from him. Instantly the ground
burst open near the tree with the glittery leaves, the dirt rising
like a geyser, a tangled vine exploding upward, wrapping around the
tree, strangling the trunk and rising higher, toward the canopy,
smothering everything it touched, everywhere it reached. It wound
tighter and tighter, choking the tree so bark popped off in strips
and with alarming force, shot from the tree. Limbs cracked under
the weight, eventually shattering into pieces and falling to the
forest floor.
The vampire had struck quickly and precisely, but
he hadn’t given away his position. Impressive. Ruslan had sent one
who was possibly a worthy opponent. Zacarias allowed the breeze to
expand and blow out over the field so that the plumes of smoke
began to stretch over the area and join together, partially
obscuring vision. He drifted into the smoke, his color identical to
the smoke, nothing but grayish-black, nearly transparent vapor that
merged more and more together from the small fires until the smoke
became a solid veil, nearly impenetrable, obscuring all
vision.
Below him, man of no honor wept, his tears burning
blades of grass, but still he continued, frantic now, slithering
like the lowest worm, desperate to find more of the powerful blood.
He couldn’t live without it now, and nothing else mattered to him,
certainly not Ruslan and his threats and empty promises. Only the
blood. He needed the blood. He whimpered and slobbered, uncaring
now of the thousands of cuts to his face and body, seemingly
unaware the saw grass had sharp serrated edges that cut deeper and
deeper into him. Only the blood mattered, only that next
drop.
Man of no honor didn’t notice the flames on the
ground or the smoke layered thick over his head. He scented the
treasure—that wonderful, amazing, powerful treasure that
only he could have. He would never share and it would make him
invincible, impossible to kill, more powerful even than
Ruslan—after all, this lone hunter was the one Carpathian Ruslan
feared above all others. He would be ruler of the vampires and
eventually Carpathians. Humans would be nothing but puppets and
cattle to him.
He sniffed the air. Was that a droplet above his
head? He rolled over, his tongue frantically trying to find it in
the smoky air. If the Carpathian would show himself, he would rip
out his heart and devour it, and then consume every drop of blood
the hunter had in him. He needed that blood. His tongue found
nothing, but his nose scented more. Rich. Tantalizing. The droplets
had fallen directly into the wounds in his chest and belly. The
Carpathian had to be close and had to be bleeding.
His sharp fingernails lengthened to razor-sharp
talons and he began tearing at his own flesh, ripping and peeling
to get at those precious drops of blood. The sounds were
horrendous, shrieking cries of agony, desperate whimpers of hunger
and need that resounded through the night. The horses in the
stables reacted, kicking and stomping, in a frenzied attempt to
escape the sound. The cattle in the distant fields came to their
feet, nearly all at the same time as though an electric charge had
run through the herd.
In the distance, Zacarias heard the
whop-whop of the helicopter blades. Cursing in his native
tongue he struck hard and fast, extracting the heart of man of no
honor and flinging it far out into the field. He moved under cover
of the smoke, careful to float with the breeze and not give his
position away by trying to hurry. He knew the other vampire would
strike at his screaming partner, certain Zacarias was somewhere in
the smoke next to him. Again, lightning lit up the sky, streaks of
it, looking to all the world like a modern war zone, the spears of
white-hot energy slamming to earth. One bolt struck the heart,
incinerating it, and then jumped unerringly to the vampire’s body,
destroying that as well.
The cattle were going to stampede. The vampire
would realize instantly that the people in the helicopter worked
for the De La Cruz family. The ranchers would pour out of their
homes in spite of the order to remain inside, their instincts to
save the herd overriding the command. More bait for the vampire—he
would expect Zacarias to protect them.
Zacarias reached for the turbulent cloud the
vampire had spun to use as a trap, rolling and spinning in the sky.
It was heavy with moisture, spinning larger and growing into a
lumbering tower, a dark malevolent funnel of spinning rage.
Zacarias opened the floodgates, allowing the trapped drops to pour
down over the field and extinguish all the flames. The black smoke
mixed with gray vapor, growing dense and churning with the wild
wind until the air was thick with smoke, dust and debris.
He streaked through the haze toward the helicopter,
cursing as he did so. The vampire surely would attack the craft
first. It was far easier being a Carpathian warrior uncaring of
anything but killing his enemy. Protecting humans added a huge risk
factor and his mind kept turning resolutely toward the reason. He
shut it down fast and hard, but a knot began to grow in the pit of
his belly.
He slipped into the helicopter right behind Julio.
Get out of here fast. A vampire is here.
As soon as he’d pushed the warning into Julio’s
mind, he was gone, throwing a protection ring around the craft. The
strike came just as expected, a missile streaking through the air,
leaving behind a trail of vapor. The projectile hit the protection
ring and exploded. Lea, the helicopter pilot, screamed and banked
sharply. She had not seen Zacarias, nor was she aware of the
warning. Looking below, she couldn’t fail to see the thick
smoke.
“Get us out of here, Lea,” Julio demanded.
“I’m trying,” she shouted back, although they both
wore a radio.
The helicopter lurched as something exploded very
close to them.
“Someone’s shooting at us,” she cried.
“No, it’s an explosion from the fire. Can you see?”
Julio asked.
“The smoke is so thick,” Lea responded. “How can it
be so thick everywhere?”
Zacarias could hear the humans’ frantic discussion
as he followed the trajectory of the missile back to the origin.
The vampire would have moved as fast as he’d delivered the attack,
hoping to bring down the helicopter, but his moving left a trail.
And Zacarias could follow any trail no matter how slight. He
streaked across the exact vapor trail left by the missile, using
the line of trajectory to scan below.
Above, caught in the smoke, the helicopter seemed
to be in trouble. The vampire fed the smoke, pouring more into the
sky and field so that it was dense, nearly impenetrable. Zacarias
went after him. If he stayed and tried to help the two in the
helicopter, the men rushing from their homes to get to the cattle
would be in danger. He had to stop the undead.
The vampire had been very clever, hiding almost out
in the open. Once straight overhead the hiding place, Zacarias
could see where he had utilized the natural terrain as it dipped
below the sloping fence line. Bushes were thin there, but he had
managed to secrete himself in the sparse vegetation without
touching a single leaf. The grass where he had stood was shrunken
and a dull brown, some blades shivering, testifying to the fact
that the undead had recently abandoned his hiding place.
The vampire moved under cover of the thick smoke,
hastily changing his position, passing close to the vine-covered
post on the outer fence. The leaves and tangle of shrubbery
recoiled subtly. Zacarias followed that faint path. In the
distance, he could hear the frightened bawling of the cattle and
the sounds of men rushing to horses. The undead had a target.
Stampeding the herd, bringing out many potential victims, would
give him advantages.
Above Zacarias the helicopter lurched awkwardly as
another projectile exploded against the protection ring. He soothed
the wild wind, sending it out and away from the funnel cloud to
disperse the smoke, giving the helicopter pilot a way to see an
open spot to bring the metal bird to the ground safely.
Men poured from the houses, leaping onto the backs
of horses, racing wildly toward the far fields where the cattle had
been semisheltered by the gently rising slopes and tall shade
trees. Zacarias streaked ahead of the vampire, throwing up a
barrier so the undead hit it hard and bounced back, finding himself
sitting in the middle of the burned field.
Zacarias materialized a distance from him. “I know
you. You should have known better than to hunt me.”
The vampire picked himself up slowly, dusting off
his clothes with meticulous care. He bowed low, and then stood
straight and tall. “Who could resist pitting wits against the great
and all powerful Zacarias De La Cruz? You are the thing of legends.
Any who defeated you would be known for all time.”
“And you are just the man to manage it,” Zacarias
said softly. He kept his voice pitched low, melodious even, a stark
contrast to the vampire who had to work to modulate his voice. All
the while he listened to sounds of the frantic men trying to calm
the restless herd.
The buildup of electricity in the air told him the
vampire would attempt to use a lightning whip to prod the cattle
into stampeding. Zacarias waved a casual hand toward the sky
countering the electrical charge. The air stilled, all clouds
disappeared.
“An old trick,” the vampire said. “But you cannot
protect them all from me.”
Insects burst from the ground, thousands of them, a
plague of starving bugs, desperate for food. They took to the air,
flying straight at Zacarias, the migration heading for the cattle,
horses and men behind him. He seemed a small obstacle in their
path.
Zacarias shrugged. He stood calmly, not moving as
the insects approached him. “What does that matter to me? I have
one purpose. One.”
He smiled as his wind shifted, picking up, driving
away from him straight at the vampire. Blades of serrated saw grass
speared through the air like a thousand knives. The insects tried
to devour it in midair, the force of the wind blowing them backward
along with the grass. The blades struck the vampire with such force
they went through his body before he even realized they were
concealed in the mass of insects. Hundreds of grass spears impaled
him from his head to his feet. At once the insects covered him,
desperate to feed at the wounds.
Zacarias materialized inches in front of the
vampire, slamming his fist through bone and muscle, through the
acid blood. Insects rained to the ground, dying as they touched the
hideous unnatural blood of the undead.
“I destroy vampires,” Zacarias whispered, looking
him straight in the eyes, his dispassionate gaze saying it all.
“That is my one purpose.” He extracted the blackened, wizened heart
and tossed it into the mass of wiggling, dying insects.
Lightning forked across the sky and slammed into
the mountain of bodies, incinerating the heart as well as the
insects. Zacarias stepped back calmly and allowed the body to fall
so the white-hot energy bolt could incinerate the remains.
He stood for a moment, allowing the cool night air
to take the stench of the undead from his nostrils before he turned
to make certain the helicopter had landed safely. Julio ran across
the open ground just in front of the hangar, Lea’s hand in his,
both headed toward the stables, presumably to help with the
herd.
In spite of the way the ground shook under the
pounding hooves as the cattle began to run mindlessly, Zacarias’s
gaze was pulled unerringly, even compulsively, to the hacienda. She
was there. Marguarita. Huddled inside. Alone. He had ruthlessly
abandoned her, and he would do it again and again, over and over.
He ran his fingers through the mass of thick hair.
There were no lights on in the main house—the only
structure still dark on the property. As soon as the alarm had gone
out that those guarding the cattle would need help, every home on
the property had come to life—with the exception of Marguarita’s
home. He could have touched her with his mind—certainly every cell
in his body needed her, needed that deep connection—but he
refused.
The moment he touched her, he would feel. Fear
mounting to terror would crawl through his body—fear that she would
regret her choice, fear that she would want to sever the ties
between them. Standing alone in the middle of the empty, burned
field, he didn’t have to feel anything.
Behind him he heard Cesaro shout. The massive herd
sounded like thunder approaching. Cesaro, Julio and two others were
trying to turn the running animals. The steers were large, big
muscular animals, heads down, eyes rolling as they pounded toward
the fence separating Zacarias from danger.
Cesaro fired his rifle into the air in a last-ditch
effort to turn the cattle. They crashed into the fence with their
broad chests, snapping wood like twigs. The cattle bellowed and
bawled, dust rising into clouds as they tore through the
fence.
Zacarias could hear the shouts of Cesaro and his
son, warning him to run. He turned to face the huge steers, one
hand in the air. Allowing the predator to rise to the surface, he
hissed a warning into the air between them, pushing the scent of
dangerous predator with it. He sent that intimidating threat in a
straight line out just feet from him, a long wall of
deterrent.
The lead animals abruptly turned, swinging around
in a semicircle, suddenly more afraid of what was in front of them
than the animals pounding behind them. More animals rushed toward
him, but the scent of danger was overwhelming. It didn’t take long
for the cattle to become confused, bawling and slowing, circling,
allowing the cowboys to take control.
Julio rode closer. The horse danced sideways,
trying to get away from Zacarias. “The pilot, Lea Eldridge, isn’t
one of us. She saw things I can’t explain to her.”
Zacarias nodded his head. Julio remained
stationary, controlling his horse with his knees and hands.
Zacarias arched an eyebrow in inquiry.
“It’s just that she saved Ricco’s life and she’s
Marguarita’s friend.”
Julio’s voice told Zacarias much more than Julio
was prepared to give away. He might say the woman didn’t belong in
their part of the world, but secretly, he wished she did.
“I will be careful which memories I remove when the
time comes,” Zacarias said.
“Are you all right?”
“Why do you ask?”
Julio hesitated. “Your eyes, señor, they’re
glowing. Do you have need of . . .”
Zacarias shook his head. Destroying the undead took
a toll on every hunter. The taking of lives was not done lightly or
without consequence. Julio already feared him—all the workers
did—even Cesaro. He couldn’t explain the dangers he faced each time
he took a life—even that of the vampire. Taking blood was a
temptation, a very dangerous one after the taking of lives. He
inclined his head in thanks, and then turned away from the man. In
truth, he turned away from the sight of the nervous horse.
Marguarita had pointed out that the Peruvian Paso,
at least those bred on his ranch, were bred for temperament as well
as abilities. They were renowned for their steady natures in the
face of adversity. He’d finally been able to ride, flowing over the
ground, his spirit connected to the animals, yet now, the horse
didn’t even recognize he was the same person. The killer was far
too close to the surface.
Zacarias turned away from the battlefield, the
lingering smoke and drifting scent of death, and walked back to the
main house—back to her. Marguarita. Susu—not his birthplace,
but home was a woman he called päläfertiil—lifemate. The
only place he could find peace was in her. The only time he truly
came alive was with her. The only way he could leave the half world
of shadows was by filling his empty spaces with her bright light.
Marguarita was sívam és sielam—his heart and soul. There was
no getting around the fact that without her spirit brushing his, he
had no heart or soul, just places that were now sieves, filled with
millions of holes no longer connecting to anything worth
saving.
He hadn’t wanted this. He was too far gone and,
while he’d been searching for the undead, a solitary hunter, living
in strict isolation, the world had long since passed him by. He
didn’t understand modern ways. So many centuries of walking the
earth hunting prey had kept him remote, removed from other species.
He knew nothing of humans and certainly nothing of women, but after
feeling her inside of him, after being inside of her, there was no
going back.
He walked the worn path to the front steps,
noticing the flowers and shrubbery. All were a dull gray, no bright
colors for him until he stepped inside and joined his mind to
Marguarita’s. A part of him resisted this new path, but she was
already a drug in his system, an addiction he couldn’t defend
against. He needed the vivid colors, the rush of emotion, the pure
pleasure he’d never experienced. Marguarita was laughter and
frustration. She was an intriguing puzzle he couldn’t solve.
He walked up the stairs, a simple act, yet
something inside him, something hard and edgy seemed to settle. He
felt her close. She was still closed to him and he didn’t allow his
mind to seek hers. He needed to see her face—to know that she could
accept this part of him. He was the predator the animals
recognized. He knew his face was honed in battle, rough and etched
with the stamp of a killer. His eyes would still be glowing, his
canines would be sharp and a little extended.
She had to see him as he was. It was difficult to
accept the Carpathian, but the hunter was terrifying. He had no
idea what he would do if she rejected him. Take her off to his lair
and try to find a way to make her happy, perhaps? Impossible. He
shook his head, his palm resting on the door, just the height of
her head. This was an impossible situation. By all that was holy,
what was destiny thinking? A Carpathian woman, an ancient, would
have had difficulties with him. But a human? A woman with no
experience with a rough, dominant male who would rule her without
the tender things a woman needed? How could she possibly cope with
him?
He was careful to remove all safeguards. The
Carpathian men could leave their houses, but getting back inside
would have been difficult—painful—and dangerous. He opened the door
and went inside. Normally, inside a structure, he found it
difficult to breathe. Outside, the wind kept him apprised of
danger. Inside, the scents of the humans and the way they lived
overrode everything of value to him. Now, when he inhaled, he drew
in—Marguarita.
Her fragrance was all woman. Soft and subtle. She
smelled like a miracle. Clean and fresh and belonging to the rain
forest—to him. He padded silently down the hall, not wanting to
give her time to prepare herself. She needed to see him as he was
and he needed to see her face, her true expression. Touching her
mind would tell him everything, but once her mind was in his, the
lifemate bond would take over and mask her fears and her initial
true reaction to him.
He stepped into her bedroom. The room was
completely dark. The drapes remained closed, blocking out the moon.
Marguarita huddled in a corner, on the floor. Her face was streaked
with tears, her hands were pressed tight over her ears. Of course
she’d heard the sounds of the battle, the screams of her beloved
horses and the bawling of the cattle. She couldn’t fail to know the
herd had stampeded, not with the crashing, thundering hooves
pounding into the ground. His blood had heightened all of her
senses.
Her long hair was down, all those silken strands
and even now, in his worst predatory state, he could see that thick
mass was a true black, gleaming without even light to show the
hidden blues. He watched her for a long moment, prolonging the
wait, not wanting to know the truth, but needing it at the same
time. He took a breath, drew her into his lungs and willed her to
look up.