“You lie!” Maxim hissed. “I know you lie.”
“You know I do not,” Manolito replied calmly, once more circling Maxim. “You have always been of superior intelligence. I do not flatter you when I remind you of that. You could reason things out. Xavier lacks the ability to think of anything new. He relies heavily on the things he knew before, and I doubt he remembers much of that.” He stopped again on the vampire’s other side and whispered in that ear. “Why do you think he seeks the book?” Xavier had compiled his spells into one book, now guarded by the prince of the Carpathians.
Maxim growled and swung his head back and forth, his eyes glowing with red-hot flames. “He is a powerful man.”
Manolito nodded and once more began walking in a circle, moving his feet in a dance pattern as he went, watching the master of the undead try to follow the intricate, hypnotic steps. “Very powerful. In spite of the fact that he no longer makes up his own spells, he is still a powerful mage. But he cannot do what he promises you and your brothers. He cannot open the portal to allow your army of the undead to come forth. That’s why he has given you the ancient spell of the shadow warriors.”
Maxim continued to turn in a circle with him, following his every movement with suspicion. When Manolito stopped and leaned in close, he automatically did the same.
“He knows Vikirnoff ’s lifemate can send the warriors back to their own realm. He was using her spells, and now he no longer has control of her. He’s left with nothing, but dares not let Ruslan and your brothers know the truth. Of what use would he be then to them?” Before Maxim could answer, Manolito once more took off circling.
The vampire gripped his own head in agitation and screamed, the sound rubbing across nerves like sandpaper. “It does not matter, Manolito. Xavier did not figure out what to do; Ruslan did, and he is always right.
Always.
Zacarias was a fool to follow Vlad instead of Ruslan. We had a code, a blood oath, and you broke it.”
“Our blood oath was to one another and to the prince, Maxim. The De La Cruz family was always loyal to the Malinovs.”
“We gave you the opportunity to join us. We talked all night of it. You insisted on following the prince and his murdering son.” Maxim spat out the last words, his face contorted with hatred and rage. He stepped up toe-to-toe, staring Manolito in the eyes, so that the red flames burning in his sunken eye sockets were plainly visible. “Betrayer,” he accused. “You deserve to die.”
Manolito didn’t flinch away from the foul stench of Maxim’s breath or the savage hatred on his face. “I did die. How else would I be here?”
“You went back, and that means it is possible. Xavier will find a way to return me to the others or he will die a long, painful death. He knows not to betray us. Our memories are long, and you will suffer for your betrayal.”
“Will I?”
Maxim’s fury erupted so strong there was no containing it. He threw back his head and howled, reaching to seize Manolito’s shoulders with his claws, the talons piercing deep and tearing through the flesh so that blood ran and the other vampires erupted into a frenzy, racing forward in an attempt to lick at the dark red streams.
For one moment, pain burst through him, bright and hot, twisting his gut and beating at his brain, but Manolito quelled his body’s reaction and stayed perfectly still as the vampires swarmed around him. He shoved down his revulsion and smiled at Maxim, his gaze calm. “Do you think to trick me so easily? It is an illusion. Nothing more. You cannot kill what is already dead. I have no body in this place. These fools want to believe, but even they can only taste the dirt on the ground as they root around.”
Contempt on his face, he touched one with his foot as the undead clawed at the barren ground. The noise was hideous as they all tried in vain to get to fresh blood. Growls and hisses, animals gone mad. “This is what you have been reduced to, Maxim? You were once a great man, and now you wallow like swine in a pen.”
Screaming with rage, Maxim struck him repeatedly in the face, shredding flesh with his long yellow nails. It was difficult to stand still under the attack, to keep his mind from believing what was happening was real. Flesh appeared to fly in all directions. Blood splattered everywhere.
Manolito kept his arms loosely at his sides and forced the smile to remain, even when the other vampires went mad, trying to shove bits of his flesh into their mouths, going so far as to sink teeth into his shoulders and chest. It was one of the most difficult things he had ever done in his life, standing there while the undead gathered around him in a feeding frenzy, tearing the flesh from his bones and trying to eat him alive.
He kept his mind fixed on MaryAnn. He thought of her smile, her hair, the way her eyes lit up when she laughed. Ah, the sound of her laughter was warm and bright in his mind, drowning out the sound of the vampires tearing at him. He fixed his mind on every detail of her body and the way she wore her so-fashionable clothes. Her red heels and her soft boots. Even here, in this land that made no sense, she came to his rescue, keeping her courageous image between him and madness.
“Enough!” Maxim shouted and waved the vampires away from Manolito. The undead obeyed reluctantly, some crawling along the ground trying to scoop up flesh and blood and getting only handfuls of the alkaline dirt. Some caught Maxim’s legs and fawned, begging for more, their faces smeared with mud. He kicked them away from him impatiently and glared at Manolito. “Get the sneer off your face.”
“I am not sneering, Maxim. I feel only pity for the creature who used to be my friend and was once a great man. Now you are content to serve these worthless ones. You have become worm fodder by your own hand. And you have lost the one thing that mattered—your keen intelligence. How could a man with a brain as sharp as yours ever believe a word Xavier said? It makes no sense that you or Ruslan—or any of your brothers for that matter—would waste your time on him.”
Manolito was careful to keep the flattery to a minimum as he brought the vampire’s focus back to the mage. Maxim was cunning, and he would notice if Manolito went overboard. He kept his tone very cool and slightly filled with contempt, which he knew would grate on Maxim.
The master vampire sucked in his breath, the air whistling between the jagged pegs of his teeth. Manolito could see him struggling for control, for dignity. He stepped away, placing his hands behind his back and schooling his face into even lines.
“You are mistaken about Xavier, Manolito. He will bring my army through the portal and no one will be able to defeat us. You cannot fight the dead.” He laughed without mirth as if he were very amusing.
Around them the other vampires began to pull themselves together, following Maxim’s example, opening their mouths wide to let out sounds that were a terrible parody of laughter. The din was grating, a wild screeching that echoed through Manolito’s head and set his teeth clenching. He forced a flash of his teeth, keeping his gaze fixed on Maxim’s, trying to read whatever was behind that evil mask.
“Do you really believe that, Maxim? Do you think Xavier has the power to bring you back? He created the shadow-warrior spell when he was at his peak. Now he is an old worm, feeding on the blood of young children and claiming lesser mages’ magic. Do you really believe he can bring you out of here?”
“
You. You
are going to bring us out,” Maxim snapped, the truth spilling explosively. Spittle sprayed from his mouth and the flames in his eyes leapt even higher. “So smug like always, little man. That is what you really are. Your brothers knew the truth. You are a little man who whines to become someone of importance. You think to fight us, but you cannot. You never could. You dared to enter my world, and you had the opportunity once again to join us. Twice I have given you the chance.”
“You wanted me to slay my lifemate.”
“You would have joined our ranks and served me. With your brains, we could have gone far, but you never could see the bigger picture. You wanted to fawn on that fool Dubrinsky. And you never understood, not even Zacarias understood: Vlad Dubrinsky betrayed you for his son. He betrayed all of us for his son.”
Manolito stiffened, his mind racing. The answer was right in front of him if he could just fit the pieces of the puzzle together. Maxim wanted to tell him, wanted to show his superiority; Manolito just had to have patience and lead him in that direction. “Do you think your childish taunts are going to impress me the way they do your ridiculous dogs?” Deliberately his gesture took in the vampires desperate for Maxim’s attention. “I am a hunter. I have been a hunter for a thousand years. You have become amusing, the greatness in you long gone. You turned yourself into a puppet for the likes of Xavier.”
Maxim looked as if he might explode. His eyes spun in the deep sockets, glowing red orange and yellow. He spewed venom from between his teeth, the acid landing on Manolito’s skin, where it sizzled and smoked.
Manolito remained stoic beneath the attack, never blinking, never changing expression, simply watching Maxim with that same small smile of contempt that continued to get under the vampire’s skin.
“You know nothing.
Nothing.
You also thought your intellect superior to everyone’s. You and your precious brothers. Zacarias ordering us to follow that murdering, sniveling prince. Dubrinsky could have a female killed, but not his own son, and the De La Cruz brothers follow like puppies.”
Manolito rolled his shoulders in a casual shrug. “Like you are doing with Xavier. Believing in his lies. He does not want to be fodder for the undead. He will tell you whatever you want to hear.”
“I
saw
the portal,” Maxim snapped. “And she will return. You are the conduit. She will come for you when she hears you screaming.”
Manolito felt his heart jump, but he kept his expression the same, careful to keep his gaze filled with contempt and not blink at the revelation. He had expected it, but hearing it brought fear for MaryAnn. He pushed emotion down somewhere deep and faced the master vampire. “It will be interesting to see you do that.”
“At this very moment my puppets do my bidding, attacking her while your body lies vulnerable. We will burn it and there will be no hope for your return. She will hear you screaming and she will merge with you fully as she did before. Once she is here, we can use her living spirit to return.”
Manolito tasted fear now, but he forced his heart to beat with an easy rhythm. “And just how do you intend to make me scream, Maxim? So far you have failed utterly.”
Maxim smirked. “There is only one capable of following every path of communication.” He waved his arms, satisfaction glowing in his eyes. “Meet Draven Dubrinsky, Mikhail’s older brother.”
Manolito turned, and Vlad’s son stood behind him, glowing with the power of his family’s legacy, his eyes bright with hatred, his handsome face twisted with malice.
“She will come for you,” he agreed. He stood tall, his arms out from his side, and Manolito felt the power of his mind-merge the moment it hit him.
17
T
he vampire crashed through what remained of the barrier surrounding MaryAnn, shredding Manolito’s safeguards. The creature’s talons were extended in an effort to reach Manolito’s body as it sat on the deck high in the canopy. The werewolf met the undead in midair, the two slamming together, the wolf driving the vampire backward with the force of her forward momentum. Like a child protecting a cub, she slashed relentlessly at the vampire as they fell together.
They dropped toward the forest floor, the wolf on top of the undead, the two writhing forms breaking branches as the vampire hit bough after bough with his back as they fell one hundred and fifty feet. All around them the jungle came alive with the noise of the battle, the shriek of hundreds of birds, the cries of the monkeys, the growls of the vampire and the crack of splintering wood as they plummeted the distance.
The vampire clamped his spikes of teeth into the wolf ’s shoulder and tore, savaging with talons, raking at the wolf ’s belly. MaryAnn felt the talons digging deep; she could even hear the sound of flesh and fur being torn from the wolf. Her stomach lurched, but the wolf knocked the head aside, tearing the teeth from her shoulder, ignoring the blossoming pain as flesh shredded and blood spattered across the leaves.
The vampire hit the ground, half-formed, trying to dissolve out from under the wolf, but MaryAnn’s guardian was relentless, teeth driving for the throat, claws digging through the chest wall for the withered, blackened heart. It was instinctive, an age-old legacy passed in collective memory from one generation to the next. Deep inside where nothing could touch her, MaryAnn vowed never to go anywhere without her pepper spray. The wolf could have blinded the vampire with it and at least given herself a reprieve from those terrible teeth.
She landed on top of the vampire, and they rolled, the vampire hissing, its breath fetid. The creature reeked of decaying flesh, offending the wolf ’s acute sense of smell. The vampire grabbed the wolf and threw it, taking the opportunity to dissolve into vapor and stream upward toward the deck on the canopy.
MaryAnn’s heart crashed against her chest. She heard herself screaming, tried to reach, tried to take over the body so she could get to Manolito, but the wolf was already in motion, leaping up the tree branches with incredible speed, springing for the vampire as he reformed beside Manolito’s body. This time the wolf caught the vampire’s head in her claws and wrenched. The vampire’s neck snapped and the head flopped to one side. Growling, eyes glowing with hot rage, the creature lowered his shoulder and drove the wolf backward, once again taking them over the edge of the railing.
MaryAnn felt herself falling, felt the slam of branches against her back, but all the while the wolf was in control, muzzle burrowing toward the prize of the undead’s heart. Blood coated the wolf ’s body, burning like acid, searing bone-deep, but the guardian refused to stop. In desperation, the vampire threw himself off the wolf, and both landed hard on the ground.