Forbidden Blood (Vampire Venators Romance Series) (13 page)

She looked around her bedroom at her belongings, her gaze skipping over the stack of French books on her mahogany dresser, and realised that she didn’t have that much to pack for her move after all.

Other than the photos of her brother at his Paris apartment and her parents at their villa in southern France that decorated her dresser and mocked her chilly British life with their warm smiles, there was nothing else she would take with her even if she were never coming back.

Amber stared at the French books next to the framed photographs, feeling none of the excitement she had before when looking at them. She felt less certain about her trip now, and it wasn’t just because she knew that vampires existed and were likely to be in Paris too.

Her gaze strayed to the door that led back to the hallway and Kearn.

There was already a part of her that didn’t want to leave him, and she knew that with every hour, let alone day, that she spent with him, that part of her would grow.

Moving to a new country didn’t seem anywhere near as exciting as the past few hours she had spent with Kearn.

She picked up her bag, sighed, and walked back along the hall to him. He looked positively bored but his green eyes warmed when he turned to face her. She stared into them, remembering how red they had been and how sharp his fangs had looked.

She stopped just short of him, held her bag in both hands in front of her, and hesitated. He would be angry if she asked him, but she had to know.

“Do you bite people? Is that what you had for breakfast?”

He frowned. “No. I do not bite people.”

Amber dropped her gaze and bit her lip, feeling her cheeks burn. At least he didn’t look bored now. He looked mortally offended.

Finding her courage, she raised her eyes to his.

“What… what would happen… if you did bite someone?” It started out as a whisper but she was close to normal volume by the time she added, “Would they die?”

“No.” His green eyes lost their hardness. “
You
would not die.”

Her blush deepened. Was she that obvious?

“You would become like me.”

“Just from a bite… no swapping blood. I would die and change just like that?”

“A single bite is all it takes to infect you. You would not die. Over a period of two years or less, you would gradually change until your thirst awakened.” His expression turned serious again and his gaze fell to her throat. “It would not even take a bite. A scratch from my fangs would be enough.”

The edges of his irises burned red and then faded to green when he looked away.

He wanted to bite her. She touched her neck and then dropped her hand before he noticed. He didn’t need her drawing attention to it if he was struggling against a desire to drink her blood.

“Is it the same for all vampires?”

“No. Only those bitten by a vampire of the noble houses can do such a thing. A vampire born to parents of a pure bloodline.”

“Like you?”

“Like me.”

And Kyran. And she suspected those friends of Kyran’s were probably vampires too. No wonder Kyran knew Earl Huntingdon. They were both vampires of noble blood. If she had kept reading the book, would she have found Kearn’s name in there and that of his brother?

“How do other vampires… if that man bites me—”

“I will not allow that,” Kearn interjected.

“But what if it did happen?” She had to know what she was up against and what might happen to her. She had always faced things and this time wasn’t going to be any different.

“If he is like me, you would become like us.” Something akin to concern shone in his green eyes.

“If he isn’t?”

“You will die.”

Three words that fell like lead on her chest. She would rather become a vampire than die.

“Why?” Her voice trembled.

“Because I doubt he would give you his blood to complete the process of a Commoner.” Kearn walked to her and took her bag. The silver strands of his hair partially obscured his eyes as he frowned. “Something tells me that the man we seek is not of common blood though.”

“That isn’t comforting in the slightest, and it isn’t the whole truth either is it?” Her bravery almost faltered. She had felt the lie in his words.

He shook his head.

“So stop telling me the bedtime story version.” She tilted her chin up and straightened, denying her creeping fear. “What would they do to me?”

“Bleed you… without biting you.”

“Kill me? For my blood?” A chill chased down her spine and arms. She could see herself tied up and slowly bleeding to death in front of that vampire while he grinned at her.

“No. Killing you would mean an end to the supply. They would sooner turn you, risking your blood gradually losing its effects with each day you progressed in your transition, than kill you. At least then they would have a year or two in which to harvest your blood.” He paused and frowned, his expression turning troubled, and she sensed he didn’t want to say anything else on the matter. She gave him a look that demanded he tell her and he sighed. “They would not kill you or turn you, Amber. They would take enough blood to keep you alive and weak, and under their control. I have seen it done. Whenever you recovered, they would take your blood again, harvesting it.”

Amber gasped and shook her head. Tears blurred her vision. They were going to torture her by keeping her on the edge of death. If that man gave her blood again, she would do as he commanded—eating, drinking, restoring her blood so he could drain her again.

Her knees gave way but Kearn caught her arm, supporting her with one hand.

“It will not happen to you, Amber.” There was a promise in his eyes. The terrifying vision of the man using her as a slave drifted away as she looked into them. “I will keep you safe.”

Amber nodded and held on to his arm until her legs felt strong again. Her eyes didn’t leave his. She drank her fill of the emotions in them. She could see beyond the barrier, down into his heart. She had opened it and she didn’t want it to close again, even when she knew it would.

“So we’re partners?” she whispered up at him.

A sense of sorrow and emptiness filled her and it was there in his eyes too. Loneliness.

He nodded and then turned away.

“Partners.”

CHAPTER 8

K
earn’s phone rang in his pocket when they were halfway to his car. He pulled the black mobile out and glanced at the display as he brought it to his ear. His brother.

“Where have you been?” Kyran’s voice crackled. The reception was poor. “I have been trying to call you since you left the club.”

“What is it?” He handed the bag to Amber and pulled his car keys from his trouser pocket.

“Your boy and his entourage were here.”

Kearn paused with his finger on the button that would unlock his car.

“He was there?” He looked at Amber. Her eyes silently asked him what was happening.

“It might have been him. It was difficult to tell. I did not see his face but he was definitely a vampire, a Noble no less, and he stopped at the spot where I had found Amber and spoke to the bartender.” Kyran sounded clearer now. Kearn unlocked his car and hurried to it.

“What did he say?”

Amber’s eyes were still on him, burning into his back with their question. Her heart beat fast, calling to the blood in his veins. She was frightened but resolved. He was glad she had found the strength to come with him, although he wasn’t convinced that she trusted him.

He had scared her. She could deny it but she couldn’t hide such a thing from a vampire. His senses were tuned to fear above all over emotions. Blood tasted even sweeter when they were frightened.

Kearn got into the car and started the engine. Amber sat in the passenger seat, her bag on her lap, and struggled to buckle the seatbelt. Kearn didn’t bother with his.

“I did not hear him, but Marshall did. The man asked about the woman who had been sitting there. He held the glass out to the bartender and threatened him. The bartender said she had left alone.”

Damn.

“How long ago?”

“Fifteen minutes, not more. Marshall followed them to the corner of Wardour, heading down from Oxford Street. They are on foot.”

“Thank you.” Kearn closed the phone.

He knew where they were going.

A Noble. He wished it wasn’t true. Noble blood was strong. How much had the man given Amber? There was a chance it wouldn’t have left her system yet and the man had only been biding his time.

Kearn’s gaze slid to Amber. Her eyes were glassy, fixed ahead, and it didn’t surprise him when she spoke.

“Come to me, Lover,” she whispered, distant and hollow. “Let me taste you like you let that damned Venator.”

Lover?

Kearn growled.

Over his dead body.

He gunned the engine and sped through the streets of London suburbia, heading back into the centre of the city. He knew exactly where to find the vampire.

His heart beat harder, quicker, almost human in its speed. Amber’s continued to race and her eyes didn’t leave the road. She wasn’t with him. She was miles away, with that bastard.

He had to calm down. Amber was supposed to be bait for the man, not bait for him, but the man was using Amber to lure them to him. Kearn wasn’t sure what he was going to do once he got there. There had been three of them when he had saved Amber, but the warehouse had given him the impression that more were involved. He should have asked Kyran how many had been in the vampire’s entourage and asked him to tell the Venator where to meet him.

One on one with a Noble, he would be able to cope without a problem. If there was more than one Noble, it was going to be difficult, or impossible if they had recently fed on forbidden blood.

And he didn’t have his gun.

This was a stupid and dangerous move, but he had to make it.

“Ahead.” Amber pointed. “Almost there.”

The old redbrick factory building stood before him. What was the vampire playing at? Did he want Amber’s blood so much that he was going to attempt to take her from him?

It seemed both he and the vampire were willing to take great risks to get what they wanted.

He pulled the car to a halt in the side road and turned off the engine and the lights.

“Stay close to me.” He touched Amber’s hands where they clutched the bag.

Amber looked at him at last. Her hazel eyes were still dull and empty.

Kearn hated seeing her under the control of the vampire, and he hated himself for allowing it. He wanted to use the connection between their blood to free her but he needed her to lead him to the man.

She stepped out of the car, placed her bag in the foot-well, and walked away. Kearn got out, closed his door and then the passenger side one, and locked the car. He followed her around to the front of the empty factory. His fingers twitched. Cold blue light crept over the marks, seeping along his fingers until they glowed, and then started over his hand. He shook it away, not wanting to waste his strength. He had to wait until he had the man in his sights. He couldn’t risk draining himself, not when he didn’t have his gun with him.

Amber pushed the gates open and continued. He let her remain a few paces ahead of him. She walked into the empty dimly lit building and through it, moving slowly across the bare concrete floor as though she was sleepwalking. In effect she was. The vampire had control of her body and she could only obey him. Kearn could end her living nightmare for her, could free her. He didn’t want her to go near the vampire again.

But she was bait.

While he had been fine with it before, the thought of using her like that now left him feeling uneasy. He shouldn’t allow a human to affect him in such a way, but he couldn’t help it. He didn’t want her to get hurt and he didn’t want that man touching her. He wanted to protect her.

The kiss had changed things.

It had changed him.

Now that she knew what he was, he had no reason to wear a mask around her, and his heart wanted to open to her, even when he feared the consequences. A human had no place in his world.

The alternative didn’t bear thinking about.

He wouldn’t allow her to become like him.

Amber ascended the stairs to the next floor. Kearn followed in silence and focused on his surroundings. It was difficult to sense the vampires. It felt as though there was only one besides him. That couldn’t be right.

She stopped at the top of the dark stairs. Could she see where she was going? Only the streetlamps outside lighted the floor and they barely cut through the darkness near the windows. The rest of it was pitch-black.

Kearn’s eyes bled into red and his vision sharpened. The darkness lifted enough for him to see that the entire floor was as empty as it had been last night.

Amber started moving again, heading into the gloom. Kearn kept his distance and listened to the building. The vampire was still here somewhere.

Bright lights burst on, blinding him. His eyes switched back straight away but it wasn’t soon enough. Spots danced across them, dulling his vision. It quickly cleared and Kearn didn’t like what he saw.

Amber stood in the middle of the expansive grey room facing him.

A man dressed in a sharp black suit stood behind her.

The man was older than he was, his long black hair tied back in a ponytail. Kearn didn’t recognise him but he was the same height and build as the man who had attacked Amber. The man grinned, revealing long canines.

Kearn’s arm activated, the power rolling up it quickly this time. It glowed blue at his side and whispered to him, urging him into dispensing justice and feeding it the vampire’s soul. It was hungry.

The man’s red eyes fixed on the nape of Amber’s neck.

Amber raised her hand, sensually running it over her chest and into her long chestnut hair, pushing it up and exposing her throat. She smiled at Kearn, tilting her head to one side. The sight of her pulse beating below her jaw was torture. He took a step towards them.

“What are you waiting for?” Her smile turned seductive and she lowered her hand, grazing her fingertips down her throat and over her cleavage. “I thought you wanted this, Venator?”

Other books

The Pirate Devlin by Mark Keating
Critical thinking for Students by Roy van den Brink-Budgen
Heaven in a Wildflower by Patricia Hagan
Baby, Come Home by Stephanie Bond
The 42nd Parallel by John Dos Passos
The Terror Time Spies by DAVID CLEMENT DAVIES
A Solstice Journey by Felicitas Ivey
The Mind and the Brain by Jeffrey M. Schwartz, Sharon Begley
The Joys of Love by Madeleine L'engle