Death's Redemption (The Eternal Lovers Series) (5 page)

“You okay now? Can you handle this?”

Rubbing the corner of his mouth, he nodded. “Yes.”

“Then let’s hurry. I don’t enjoy lugging around a corpse.” Stepping aside, Frenzy spread his arm and waited for the priest to pass.

“You do understand that without the woman being awake the bite will not transmit.”

That fact hadn’t escaped Frenzy. He could only trust that Lise would work her superpowers as she’d promised.

Mila looked same as she had earlier: a mess of slashes and bites and almost unrecognizable as human.

Running his hand over the body, George shook his head. “However I bite her, her condition will remain.”

“Meaning what?”

“Meaning”—he touched the tip of his nose—“I do not carry pack magic in my bite. She will not heal as a normal shifter would.”

“Vampires heal, don’t they?” Frenzy asked.

“They do”—he nodded slowly—“but she will be a hybrid. It is possible that she will not receive the ability to heal from them.”

Licking his front teeth, he finally got it. “The tears and bites.”

“Will stay. Unless we fix them first.”

“And how do you propose to do that?”

Walking over to a large wooden chest in the corner of the room, he lifted the lid, rusty hinges groaning loud. Reaching in, he extracted a small round tin, then returned.

“We sew the wounds shut.”

“The hell we do.” Frenzy snorted, eyeing the ridiculously large bone needle and thread in the wolf’s hand.

Mouth thinning, George lifted a brow. “It’s either do this or stare at open wounds for the rest of her life.”

Staring at the face of the woman, Frenzy snarled. “They’ve ruined her, George. Doing this seems pointless. She has no eyelids, we can’t sew shut the bite marks…She won’t thank us.”

Huffing, George threaded the needle. “Move.”

“What?”

“Move out of my light. I’m going to sew her cheeks shut.”

Clenching his jaw, Frenzy shrugged. “Then by all means, monk, do what you can.”

Nodding swiftly, George bent over and very gently inserted the needle into her cheek, falling into an easy and practiced rhythm.

It took less than ten minutes. Cocking his head, Frenzy studied the sharp planes of her cheekbones, the heart-shaped jawline, and concluded that at one point she must have been a beautiful woman.

Looking into those amber eyes, he wondered all over again why they were doing this. Mila hadn’t wanted to come back; she’d wanted to die rather than become a vampire. What would she think if she knew that he was now asking a shifter to turn her into one of them?

He doubted she’d be happy.

Setting the needle down, George picked up her hand. “She’s still in stasis.” He shook her hand.

The priest turned to look at him, a question in his eyes.

“Lise,” Frenzy muttered not knowing what else to do, “if you’re hearing, the time is now.”

The air quickened, tightened with sparks of raw power. Tingling and rolling across his skin like a burst of lightening. George hissed, shaking his head with a dazed look.

A large, indrawn breath gasped and rattled.

“Now!” Frenzy pointed at Mila. “Do it now.”

Bringing her wrist to his mouth, George bit.

F
ire.

She was covered in it; it was rolling inside her, through her. Running down her arms, legs, pumping like a fiery fist through her heart. Mila wanted to scream, but when she opened her mouth, it was like someone had fused her vocal chords. All she could do was grunt and cry and wish like hell she’d just die already.

“Hold her down,” a hard male voice grunted, and then two sets of hands clamped down on her arms.

Last thing she remembered was staring into a pair of silver eyes. Silver eyes that belonged to the man with fire in his hair, whose movements made her think of the rapacious glide of a panther, both deadly and graceful.

She’d begged him not to let her turn. Begged him. With what little strength she’d had left in her body, she’d told him to never let it happen.

But she felt the change happening, felt her blood bubbling, frothing, evaporating inside her veins. Spasming, she screamed inside her brain.

The moment she turned, she’d drive a stake through her heart.

*  *  *

“What’s happening to her?” Frenzy scowled, turning to George.

Holding up his hand, George nodded. “She’s necrotizing. This is the process. If you can’t handle it, then go someplace else.”

From the moment George had bitten Mila, she’d begun the change. To the shifter’s credit, he hadn’t stayed on her long.

Her skin had slowly leached of color, turning from a muted pink to an ivory so pale it almost appeared tinted with shades of blue. The veins underneath stood out in bold relief, a vivid greenish blue, but as time continued they grew more and more pale.

The blood that’d been coating her face and neck was literally absorbing into the skin, which was starting to gleam like a freshwater pearl. Blond hair that’d appeared ashen before was doing something strange. Instead of color leaching out, it was growing bolder. Brighter. Shot through with veins of gold.

“What the hell is happening to her?”

George shook his head, his eyes roaming her face. “I told you I wasn’t sure what would happen. She’s been bitten by two sets of species.”

Ripping the shredded section of shirt off her stomach, Frenzy pointed. “The bites are fading, and look at her eyes.”

A thin film of translucent flesh grew over the eyes, gradually shifting from clear to the same odd grayish-pearl tone of the rest of her body.

“A lone wolf cannot regenerate.”

Pulling her lips back, Frenzy touched the tip of his finger to her canine. “She obviously is. But look at this, it’s not growing.”

She didn’t seem to be turning into a vampire; a vampire was useless without its fangs. But she was definitely regenerating, so did this mean that she’d be one of the rare viable hybrids?

Tracing the length of her sewn-up cheek, George shook his head. “This isn’t healing.”

Her mouth opened then, and a scream ripped out of her throat, followed by large amber-colored doe eyes turning to him with a hostile glare. The silence was almost eerie after that earsplitting shriek.

“You,” she hissed and sat up, clutching at the tatters of her shirt. Then her eyes landed on George, her chest heaved in and out, and her nostrils flared as panic scrawled a hard line across her brows.

But rather than freak out and scream again, she merely stared, the silence confounding Frenzy.

Whatever transformation was going to happen to the mortal seemed to have occurred. Her skin was alabaster smooth, and her nails were long and deadly sharp looking. The hair was supple and silky and falling like a billowy wave across her shoulders. He slowly tracked the length of her long, long thighs, the graceful lines of her calves, and the dainty, bare feet.

She was as beautiful now as she’d been damaged then. There was not a flaw on her, save for the sewn sections of her cheeks, reminding him of a macabre porcelain doll.

“I dreamt of you,” she said, voice even and smooth. Apart from her outburst the moment she woke up, she was now the picture of composed calm.

George and Frenzy exchanged glances. Not sure what that meant or whether there was even any true meaning behind it, so much as a muddled brain still working through the “change,” he choose to ignore the comment for now.

She lifted a brow, holding her hand up in front of her face. “So I’m a vampire now, right?” There was a small hitch to her voice, something that would barely be discernible to anyone without his ability to hear the scamper of mice ten miles downfield.

There was an absolute stillness to her body, not a wrinkle or a frown around her eyes or mouth. She hardly took a breath.

George shook his head. “Actually, no.”

At the sound of his voice, she turned. She was measuring him, it was obvious by the way her eyes touched his cassock, moved across his face and hands. Frenzy was amazed she didn’t rail or shiver, violently questioning who, what, when, where, or how? Maybe she was in shock.

Those haunting amber eyes were cold, hard, and unswerving.

“Why didn’t you kill me?” she all but growled at Frenzy. “You have no idea what you’ve done.” Gaze dropping to his bony hand for a split second, she whispered, “You should have killed me.”

“Why?” It was George asking. “Who are you? Why has the Ancient One taken such an interest in you?”

All questions at the forefront of Frenzy’s mind, but he’d been unable to voice them because he couldn’t make her out. Most humans would be falling over themselves with gushy tears of joy that they lived, had a new lease on life. Instead she seemed not only pissed, but disappointed in him. The thought prickled.

“You don’t seem shocked by this,” he finally spoke up.

Violently yanking on a thread poking from her robe, she shook her head. “Should I be? I knew the second they found me it was done.” Rubbing the bridge of her nose, she inhaled deeply and then paused. Frowning, she inhaled again. “I smell…dirt?” She sniffed again. “And acorns?”

George’s brows dropped, gathering in a caterpillar bunch at the center of his forehead. Kneeling, he crept slowly forward, cocking his head to the side and studying her like one of his specimens.

“What?” she snapped at him.

“It’s just that”—pausing, he glanced back at Frenzy briefly as an astonished question mark flitted through the film of his eyes—“you
feel
different.”

“Different?” Her tone dropped, became deeper and richer.

“How are you?” George asked her, not bothering to answer her question.

Running her hands across her flat abdomen, down her thighs, and up her biceps, she shrugged. “I feel fine. Great, actually.” But then her fingers touched the scars on her cheeks and she hissed. “What is this?”

Crossing his arms, Frenzy decided he was done with this game of fifty questions. “Enough. You want answers, so do we. Start with who you are.”

Nostrils flaring, she jerked to her feet. Her movements were swift, so fast, she obviously hadn’t been prepared for it. One second she was scooting off the bed, the next she was on the domed ceiling with her fingers driving through the stone, anchoring her firmly into place, looking much like a terrified house cat.

“Let go.” George’s accent thickened as he shambled slowly to beneath where she was clutching onto the roof and breathing heavy, panicky breaths.

A cascade of blond hair waved in front of them as she shook her head. “Give me a second.” Her voice wavered, but again, it wasn’t nearly as thready or panicked as it should have been.

When Frenzy killed the man responsible for taking his Adrianna’s life he’d siphoned her last moments from his mind. She’d been pleading, crying huge, angry tears, and begging for her life. Screaming as the knife plunged over and over into her body, whispering with her dying breath for him to let her live.

This woman was doing none of those things. It unnerved him in ways he didn’t want to analyze at the moment.

Taking a deep breath, her body tightened, and then she jumped gracefully to her feet. Licking her lips, she looked up at the ceiling before finally dusting her hands off on her pants.

“I’m thirsty,” she said and then shuddered, her shoulders rolling and her mouth turning down as she glanced at her feet.

Holding up a hand, George shambled over to the corner of the room where he’d kept his meat. Stooping, he retrieved the final squirrel and handed it to her.

A blank stare was all that met the gift. Then a hard swallow and licking of her lips. “I…”

Her fingers convulsed around the furry body.

“Do you want to drink from it?” Frenzy inquired.

Confused amber eyes met his, nodding softly, her lips thinned. “I want to…to—” Lifting the rodent to her nose, she inhaled deeply, and this time when she shuddered it didn’t seem to be in revulsion: a moan as of pure ecstasy spilled out her throat. “Take it away.” She held it back to George. “Get it away from me. I’m not hungry.”

But it wasn’t true, because the irises in her eyes were bleeding a deep shade of crimson. The hunger, that vampiric need for blood that was so all-consuming, had made itself manifest.

“Yes, you are.” Pushing George’s questing hand out of the way, Frenzy stepped around the monk, forcing Mila to look at him.

“I’m…not.” The breathless tone of her voice filled with the raw shiver of desire, and he smirked.

Fluttering his bony fingers along her jawline, he quirked a brow, realizing instantly that Lise had not lied. He still sensed the effervescence of her soul pulsing against his fingers, but she was immune to his touch.

Her gaze was instantly drawn to his hand, but again, she said nothing. Irritated at his curiosity, he growled. “Your throat is spasming, so dry all you can think of is that wet warmth sliding down.”

Grabbing ahold of her stomach, she shook her head. But it lacked heat.

“Can you see the red, creature?”

She licked her front teeth, tongue lingering along the blunt edge of her canine.

Taking the squirrel from her lax fingers, Frenzy used the bone of his hand like a saw, inserting a roughened edge into the animal’s pelt, just enough to create a small tear. Enough for her to see the pink meat inside.

Closing her eyes, she turned her face to the side. Taking perverse pleasure in her obviously disgusted desire, he chuckled.

“It is here. For you. Must you be so difficult?”

“Difficult?” Snarling, she whipped around. “How dare you? Do you have any idea what you’ve done to me? Who I was? That I can feel these…these…” Dropping her eyes toward the red pelt with a mixture of revulsion and pure unadulterated need, she shook her head.

“Wants. Needs. Desires?” He took a step forward.

“Yes! These perversions,” she cried with force. “I told you to kill me.” Breath sawing raggedly through her lungs, she stood before him like a shieldmaiden ready to do battle.

An answering thrum of awareness, of her strange scent of sun-kissed raspberry and freshly turned leaves, the way she moved and pierced him with honeyed amber eyes flecked with crimson—it took seconds for Frenzy to note them all. Not wanting to, he mentally compared her to the only other woman in his life who’d ever made him this aware, and discovered that he liked the fire. Liked her heat. After years of feeling nothing but the drudgery of life, he laughed and the sound came from deep inside. Filled with the raw excitement of the unknown.

“You do not act surprised by me.” He cocked his head.

Her nostrils flared and she crossed her arms, pointedly not looking at the squirrel he still held.

He took a step into her, just to test her, to see what she’d do. Whether she’d back up or stand her ground. He felt strangely delighted that she did neither. Planting her hands on his chest, she shoved him back hard using the supernatural strength inherent to her now. But she was a baby in monster years; her strength was nothing to his.

“What do you know?” he asked, tracing the curve of her jaw with bone.

Lifting her chin, body vibrating like a tuning fork, she snarled. “Damn you, grim reaper. I know enough to know that you should never have let me live. You stupid, dumb arsehole. I should have died tonight, and now everything’s in peril.”

*  *  *

Mila tried to ignore the slab of meat cooling in his bony hand, not sure which she was more disturbed by—the fact that she craved that squirrel like a junkie with his fix, or the fact that she was standing in front of a grim reaper. The reaper she’d dreamt of for the past three years.

He lifted a brow, and her heart thumped violently. While she’d known of each subset of supernatural baddies living and working in San Francisco, it was one thing to have book knowledge, and it was quite another to be confronted with one so…

Potent.

So…man.

He was Michelangelo’s sculpture breathed to life; he was all that was male beauty. A strong square jaw with a light dusting of facial hair—eyes the color of liquid mercury that gazed at her with the intensity of a predator spotting prey, making her feel exposed, alive, incensed, desperate.

His hair was fire, like hot molten magma, falling to his shoulders. A patrician nose that made him seem both cold and aloof, except for the fact that he kept touching her with the bone of his fingers. Caressing the scar of her cheek so softly, tenderly. But doing it in such a way that she wasn’t even sure he realized he was.

But the most arresting part of the reaper was how his eyes seemed to drink her in, how they’d roll across her body like a lover’s touch, how they’d land on her face and stare deep into her own eyes. There was a mystery behind his gaze, a powerful urge to return his touch consumed her, filled her limbs, and made her fingers twitch by her sides.

Discombobulated, disgusted by her obsessive need to take that squirrel and greedily slurp it down, she jerked out of his reach and snarled. Her skin itched and her ears throbbed with too much noise.

Fifty paces ahead a cricket kept rubbing its back legs together, the booming vibrations of his hairy bristles scrubbing her ears raw. The shifter standing in the cassock before her kept gulping, glancing down at the carcass in the reaper’s hand.

God, why was she still here? She should have been dead. She’d tried to escape, but the moment she’d realized the futility of it she’d given herself into the hands of the vampires, goading them to a blood frenzy because she’d known no matter what, they could never take her alive.

Other books

Statistics for Dummies by Deborah Jean Rumsey
Lost Girl 3 by Short, Elodie
Flirting with Sin by Naima Simone
Snow Blind by P. J. Tracy
Status Update by Mari Carr