Death Deceives: Book Three (Mortis Vampire Series) (24 page)

Already, I could hear the distant sound of an elevator in motion, descending towards my floor.
The imp returned and materialized beside me. “The soldiers will be here very soon,” it warned me.

Working fast and grimacing in pain as I did so, I
plucked my right eye from its socket. The last time I’d tried to possess my detached body parts, I’d failed completely. The imp blood had been fresh in my system then. I was pretty sure I’d regained full control again but there was only one way to find out.

Holding my eye
up to my face, I sent some of my consciousness into the orb. I closed my left eye and saw my face through the detached one. The socket I’d plucked it from welled with dark, sluggish blood. It wasn’t a pretty sight.

Relief coursed through me so I continued on with my plan.
Step one was complete and I gingerly placed the eyeball on the floor. Then I took my right hand by the wrist. I was about to tear it loose when a red mark appeared where it had previously been severed. As if in reaction to my thought that I wanted it to detach, the hand popped free. I half expected it to start moving on its own but it remained unanimated.

Splitting my consciousness, I possessed
my hand. Righty flexed its fingers then gave me the thumbs up. I was pretty sure it was acting on my orders and I had subconsciously made it do that.

It was time for phase three of my plan so
I bent and picked up my eye. Righty cupped the orb protectively and I tossed the pair out through the hole in the window. My hand bounced then skidded a couple of feet. Hearing just how close the elevator was now, I forced my hand to scuttle down the hallway. The stump had already stopped oozing sluggish blood so no drops would be left to betray its progress.

Using the optic nerves that
dangled from the back of my eye, I wound them around two of my fingers and held on tight. At a casual glance, the orb would appear to be a gigantic, gaudy gemstone. But gemstones didn’t have veins filled with black blood, an overlarge pupil or dangling fibres.

Now that it didn’t have to grip the orb,
Righty could move a lot faster. I spied an open door and Righty scrambled inside just as the elevator dinged to announce its arrival.

Shifting
my consciousness for a short while, I moved my body away from the door and turned as a number of soldiers sprinted down the hallway. Crossing my arms over my chest, I hid the evidence of what I’d done from them. All they’d be able to see was the smashed window, my unnatural blood smeared all over the plastic shards and my back. The imp stood beside me, facing the door.

“Cover me while I take a look inside,” one of the American soldiers said to
the others.

“Ok
, but remember not to look into its eyes,” another soldier warned him. “Not unless you want to become its unholy slave.” I rolled my remaining eye at being referred to as an ‘it’.

The first soldier shuffled forward to
peek inside my cell. He quickly moved away again then spoke into his radio. “The creature is still in its cell, Colonel. One of the black unknown entities is also there. The window in the door is broken and blood indicates that the vampire tried to escape but it wasn’t able to fit through the opening, sir.”

I heard the Colonel’s reply clearly. “What
are they doing right now?”


Both are just standing there. The vampire has its back to us, sir. The unknown entity appears to be watching the door.” He controlled it well but fear came off the soldier in waves. I could smell his and his colleague’s terror sweat from across the small room.

Sanderson heaved a tired sigh
after thinking through the problem. “Two of you remain behind and watch the door. If the vampire tries to escape again, shoot it in the head. Bullets won’t kill it but at least they knock it down for a few hours. Alert me if the unknown entity does anything…strange.” Its mere existence was strange so I understood his inability to be more specific than that.

“Yes, s
ir.” The soldier signed off then chose one of the men to stay behind and keep watch with him. The rest trooped back to the elevator and presumably to their posts.

Chapter
Twenty-Five

 

Sending my consciousness back to Righty and my eyeball, I studied the room they’d scurried into. Being so low to the ground, everything looked gigantic. A metal table sat in the middle of the room with four metal chairs neatly tucked under it. An elderly refrigerator sat to the left of a stainless steel sink. A long counter was to the right of the sink. Plain white cupboards ran from beneath the sink right along the counter.

Seeing
nothing useful in the lunchroom, I turned my eye back to the door. Being able to hear the pair of soldiers wasn’t enough, I also needed to see them if I wanted to formulate an escape plan. I’d prefer to use my own eye rather than rely on what the imp saw. We may not interpret what we saw the same way.

Creeping s
lowly and carefully, Righty carried my orb over to the doorway. It moved forward just enough for me to peer around the corner. The soldiers kept their attention on my cell door, barely taking their eyes from it. Neither wore a helmet. They’d probably been in too much of a rush to stop me from escaping to outfit themselves completely. No helmets meant no cameras, which meant I might just have a shot at getting out of here.

They might be helmetless but b
oth held machine guns ready to cut me in half, or to explode my head again as per the Colonel’s order. I’d never be able to coax them close enough to the door to bedazzle them both at the same time. The imp at my side frightened them too much for either of them to want to come any closer.

An idea tickled the back of my brain then burst into life.
What if I took my eye to the guards instead? I had no idea if I could hypnotize them with a detached eye or not but it was worth a try. If my plan didn’t work, I’d have to kill them both. It would be regrettable but I couldn’t stay locked in the cell until Sanderson finally decided what to do with me.

Swivelling my orb down to look at my fingers, I
noted just how much they stood out against the white floor. They were pale but still had more colour than the stark white paint. I wouldn’t be able to sneak Righty down the long hallway to the pair of men without being discovered.
I need some kind of camouflage.

Maybe
I’d find something useful up on the bench. Getting up there would be a challenge. Studying the counter, I saw that my best bet was to use a tea towel hanging from a hook on the far right. With my orb clinging to my fingers with the optic fibres, I moved closer until the hand was directly beneath the towel.

Hoping
my eye wouldn’t come loose, I flattened the fingers down. Springing upwards, Righty grabbed the bottom of the stained, once yellow and now brownish tea towel. Taking a firm grip, it began to swing from side to side. When the arc was at its highest, Righty launched itself at the counter. Landing on the edge, it immediately began to slide backwards. The surface was much slicker than I’d expected.

A heavy wooden cutting board
sitting only a couple of inches away was my only hope at keeping the appendage up there. I quickly rolled the eye down my fingers to the pure white bench top. Keeping hold of my middle finger with the dangly optic nerves, it rolled over to the board and around the corner. It wedged itself firmly against the rough wood just as Righty slipped over the edge. Halting in mid-fall, suspended by my overstretched optic nerves, my fingers clutched the edge of the bench and blindly hauled itself up to safety.

Back o
n solid ground, Righty scampered over to my eye. Once it was in place again, the orb took in the white expanse of the bench. A few plain black canisters were lined up neatly against the wall. Righty moved closer so I could read the Russian words printed on each container. When I saw one titled ‘Powdered Milk’, my mouth smiled craftily down the hallway.

A short time later, I had the lid of the container open and
was balanced on the edge, inspecting the contents. The canister was nearly full of fine off-white granules. Dropping back down to the bench again, Righty waited for my eye to roll to safety before moving to the sink. It turned the cold water tap on just enough to let out a slow trickle of water that couldn’t be heard down the hall. When it was soaked, it turned the tap off again. It moved over to the canister of powdered milk then sprang into the air, aiming for the opening above. A puff of white powder exploded from the container as Righty landed with a small plop. The powder settled almost invisibly on the bench. Righty rolled around in the stuff until it was completely coated then scrambled out. I didn’t bother to put the lid back on the canister. I doubted either of the guards was going to stroll down the hall for a cup of coffee.

Inspecting Righty, I deemed it to be far less conspicuous now.
My eye wrapped its dangling fibres around my fingers again but this time it hid behind them, cupped protectively in the palm rather than sitting on top. The enlarged pupil would stand out far too much against the white floor. Dropping to the ground, Righty kept low and stopped in the doorway. I peeked out and saw both men still watching my door.

I’m
going to try to hypnotize one of the soldiers
, I thought at the imp, warning him that something strange might be about to happen.

Turning its head to me, I sensed its puzzlement. “How are you going to do that with your back turned to the meat sacks?”

Meat sacks? Is that how imps see humans?
Even vampires weren’t that callous towards the beings that we’d once been. Well, some of them weren’t.
I’m going to use the eye I popped out before,
I explained silently.
My hand is sneaking it over to one of the soldiers right now.

“Do you really think that will work?” it asked sceptically.

I have no idea but we’re about to find out.

Righty padded silently down the hallway towards the soldiers.
The one closest to it turned his head with a frown and my hand froze. I peeked out between the tiny cracks my fingers made. The nervous soldier searched the hallway, shook his head and returned his attention to my door.

“What’s wrong?” his partner asked.
His voice had shifted up a few octaves, indicating he was still terrified despite how calm he was pretending to be.

“Nothing.
I thought I saw something but it must have been my imagination.”

“No wonder, consideri
ng what we’re guarding. Man, it’s bad enough we’ll be going to war against seven foot monsters but now we have actual
vampires
to contend with as well.” His tone shifted between being awed and frightened.

“What about that…shadow thing in there?
What’s up with that?”


Are you talking about the one that looks like an unknown entity or the four human looking ones?” the other man said dryly.

“What do you think
they’re doing in there?” the second guard asked as Righty began its stealthy approach again.

“I don’t know and I don’t care. All I know is if
the vampire moves, its dead.” His voice had deepened again as he masked his fear. They were both putting on a brave front but I was about to shatter it completely.

The second guard shifted uneasily at his choice of words. “If it could survive having its head blown apart, I’m pretty sure we won’t be able to kill it with these.” He indicated his
gun and didn’t notice that Righty was now climbing up his leg.

“Did you see the video of it munching down on the Russian soldier?”

Nodding, the second soldier seemed unaware that my hand was creeping up over his shoulder. “I heard the poor bastard is in a psychiatric hospital. He’s being tested to make sure he isn’t still under its spell.”

Speaking of being under my spell,
I thought as Righty reached out with one finger and stroked the soldier’s cheek. As he turned to see what had touched him, I split my consciousness. Simultaneously staring into his eye with my detached orb, I turned my body around to distract the second soldier.

“Oh, Jesus,” the
second soldier moaned when he saw my face. “Are you seeing this? Her
eye
is gone.” He nudged his partner with his elbow but received no response.

It was too late for the other
man, my eye had done its job and held the soldier spellbound. A large, goofy smile lit up his face. The second soldier dropped his gaze from the gaping socket where my eye used to be to my crossed wrists. At first he didn’t seem to realize that one of my hands was gone. Then his face went white with shock when he understood what I’d done. Before he could raise his gun and riddle my head with bullets, Righty pounced.

Leaping the short distance between the two men, my hand landed on the soldier’s chest. Screaming,
he backed into the wall, slapping at Righty. Dodging the blows, my hand swiftly climbed up to the man’s chin. My eye popped up between my fingers and the soldier opened his mouth to scream. The scream died before it was even born when he focussed on the orb. Helpless to resist, he fell beneath my dark magic.

Other books

Keeper of the Keys by Perri O'Shaughnessy
Jeanne Dugas of Acadia by Cassie Deveaux Cohoon
Callander Square by Anne Perry
Diva by Alex Flinn
Renhala by Amy Joy Lutchen