Forbidden Nights With A Vampire (22 page)

Read Forbidden Nights With A Vampire Online

Authors: Alyssa Day

Tags: #Humor, #Mystery, #Fantasy, #Romance, #Paranormal, #Adult, #Vampire, #Urban Fantasy

He seized the hem of her jeans and yanked them off. “You have five seconds to remove your underwear or I’ll shred them.”

She wiggled out of her panties and feigned a shudder. “Oooh, I’m scared. The big bad wolf’s in town.”

With a grin, he stalked toward her on his hands and knees. “My, what sweet legs you have.” He nipped at her thigh.

“The better to squeeze you with, my dear.” She sat up to remove her bra.

His eyes gleamed blue. “What sweet breasts you have.”

“The better to entice you with, my dear.”

With a growl, he shoved her back on the bed. He drew a nipple into his mouth and suckled.

She moaned. “What a great tongue you have.”

He looked at her with twinkling eyes. “The better to eat you with.” He nibbled down her belly.

Moisture rushed to the apex of her thighs just in time to meet his inquisitive, insistent tongue. Within seconds she was squirming and panting. He teased her clitoris with the ruthlessness of an animal.

She squealed as a climax jolted through her. He watched her, a wolfish grin on his handsome face.

“Ready?” He moved between her legs.

“Wait.” She rested her hands on his shoulders. “After dressing like a cowgirl, I have a strange desire to ride.”

He chuckled and fell onto his back. “Saddle up, sweetheart.”

 

An hour later Vanda sat in bed relaxing and drinking from a bottle of cold synthetic blood. She stretched her legs, feeling the pull of sore muscles. She couldn’t even recall how many orgasms she’d had over the course of the night. It had been one long delicious, forbidden night of sex, mixed with heart-wrenching confessions that made the lovemaking even sweeter.

She felt the tug of sleepiness. The sun must be nearing the horizon. She sipped more blood. Phil had brought it up to her in the loft. He’d washed up at the sink and gone to the cellar to put his clothes back on.

From the clunk of cowboy boots and clanking of pans, she could tell he was in the kitchen now. Her nose twitched, catching the smell of coffee.

She hoped morning had already come to Robby, wherever he was. Death-sleep would not only put him asleep, but also his torturers. His body would heal while he slept. She hoped his mind would, too.

With a sigh, she sat up and began to dress. She had just finished zipping up her jeans when she heard booted feet at the cabin’s front door.

“Phil!” Brynley shouted. The door shook. The bolt was still in place.

Vanda heard Phil’s footsteps approach the door. She slipped on the western shirt and fastened the snaps.

The door creaked open.

“Phil!” Brynley’s voice was full of excitement. “You’re an Alpha! It’s so amazing! How on earth did you do it?”

“Bryn, we need to talk.”

“We are talking. You wouldn’t believe how excited the guys are. We were talking about it all the way back to the cabin, and the only thing we can figure is that somehow you managed to go Alpha on your own. Is that true?”

“I wasn’t alone, but I wasn’t with a pack either.”

Brynley squealed. “This is so freaking fantastic! No one’s ever done that before. Dad is going to be so—”

“Don’t tell him.”

“What?”

“I mean it, Bryn. Don’t tell him. It’s none of his business.”

“Of course it is! Phil, every Lycan in the territory is going to want you for the next Supreme Pack Master. I can see it now. Dad will throw you a giant party to welcome back the long lost prince.”

Prince? There it was again. Vanda padded to the edge of the loft. Brynley was back in her jeans, tank top, and open plaid shirt, but Vanda noticed a few leaves in her hair and a bloodstain on the shirtsleeve, as if she’d wiped her mouth on it.

Brynley’s gaze shifted to the loft and her eyes narrowed. “She’s still here.”

“Yes.” Phil crossed his arms. “And you owe her an apology.”

Brynley snorted. “For what? Being myself?”

“For purposely trying to scare her away,” he replied.

Brynley scowled at him. “I was doing her a favor. She needed to know the truth about you.”

“Yes, I did.” Vanda was tired of being talked about like she wasn’t in the room. She grabbed her bottle of blood and floated down to the ground floor. “Thank you for scaring the crap out of me.”

“Any time.” Brynley smiled grimly. “So why are you still here? Can’t you get a job in Hollywood? I hear vampires are all the rage right now.”

“She’s under my protection,” Phil said. “This is my house, and it will be a sanctuary to Vanda whenever she needs it.”

With a huff, Brynley stomped to the kitchen. She grabbed a cup from a cabinet and poured a cup of coffee.

Vanda sat at the kitchen table and sipped from her bottle. Another wave of sleepiness swept through her.

Phil strode to the kitchen. “Who were those puppies with you last night?”

Puppies? They’d seemed plenty big to Vanda.

Brynley sipped her coffee. “They’re friends.”

“They’re underage.” Phil sat at the table next to Vanda. “They’re supposed to be with their pack when they shift.”

Brynley snorted. “Since when do you follow pack rules? The boys can’t shift with their pack. They can’t even live with their families. Or go to school. They’ve been banished. I’m sure you understand how that happens.”

Vanda gave Phil a questioning look.

He shrugged. “I was banished at eighteen. After a year of near starvation, I found Connor, and he gave me a job and a place to live.”

Vanda winced. That was when he’d worked at the townhouse and she’d tormented him. “How could you be banished? I mean, if you’re really a prince, who would have the power to do that to you?”

His mouth thinned. “My father.”

Brynley waved a dismissive hand. “He just wanted you to learn a lesson. He expected you to come back in a month or so.”

“With my tail between my legs,” Phil muttered. “What kind of Supreme Pack Master would I make if I was that big of a wimp?”

Brynley sighed. “I know it’s hard to submit to Dad’s every wish and command. That’s the sort of thing that got these boys in trouble. They challenged their pack masters’ authority. Then their masters appealed to Dad, the Supreme Master, and he kicked them out.”

“Sounds like dear old Dad hasn’t changed,” Phil murmured.

“They’re just teenagers,” Brynley continued. “They had nowhere to go. I knew your cabin was empty, so I let them stay here.”

Phil snorted. “They’re your Lost Boys? Are you sure your name isn’t Wendy?”

She made a face at him. “They’re more a pain in the butt, actually. It takes half my monthly allowance to feed them. They’re bottomless pits. And rowdy as hell.”

“Wouldn’t you be in big trouble with your father if he knew what you’re doing?” Vanda asked.

Brynley’s eyes narrowed. “Are you threatening to tell on me?”

“No. I just find it interesting,” Vanda said. “It sounds to me like you’re rebelling against your father just like Phil did.”

Brynley scoffed. “Believe me, if Dad says jump, I ask how high. I…I just felt sorry for these boys. They have nowhere to go.” Her eyes lit up. “But that’s all changed now that Phil’s back. Phil, they want you to be their pack master!”

He looked stunned. “I…can’t do that.”

“Of course you can,” Brynley insisted. “You can’t be an Alpha without a pack.”

“I have other things to do. Important things. There could be a battle after sunset tonight.”

“A vampire battle?” Brynley’s eyes flashed with anger. “You’re going to help them and ignore your own kind?”

“I’ll do what I can to help the boys, but I can’t be their master.”

Brynley made a noise of frustration. “You haven’t even bothered to meet them. They’re so excited about you, Phil. You’re the first sign of hope they’ve had in months.”

He stood. “Where are they?”

“In the stable. Don’t be surprised if they cheer for you when you walk in. You’re their hero.”

“Great.” He gave Vanda a wry smile. “Just what I needed.”

She smiled back. “You’re my hero, too.”

He leaned over and kissed her brow. “I’ll be back soon.” He strode out the front door.

Brynley refilled her coffee cup, then moved to the kitchen table and sat across from Vanda. “Alone at last. We need to talk.”

Chapter Twenty-one

W
ell, you’ll have to make it quick,” Vanda said. “In about five minutes I’ll be falling into my death-sleep.”

Brynley nodded. “This battle Phil talked about, how bad will it be?”

Vanda was surprised. She’d expected Phil’s sister to tell her to get lost. “We’re at war. The Malcontents want to kill us.”

“I’ve heard that vampires have the power of mind control. Is Phil under their influence, or does he really want to do this?”

Vanda tamped down her growing irritation. “Everyone I know in the Vampire World has the utmost respect and fondness for Phil. They would never control him. They consider him family.”

“He has family here.”

“His family here banished him.”

Brynley took a sip of coffee. “Did he tell you about himself?”

“He told me how your ancestors became werewolves.”

“Ancient history.” Brynley waved a dismissive hand. “Did he tell you about his life here?”

Vanda was tempted to ask, What life? but she was too curious to brush Brynley off. “Is he really a prince?”

Brynley nodded. “A direct line from the old Welsh princes. Dad came from Wales about a hundred and eighty years ago and started his first ranch in Montana. Some of the clansmen followed him here. Over time the clan grew, and Dad became more and more powerful. He owns over fifty ranches now, spread over Montana, Idaho, and Wyoming. The entire western territory—that’s over sixty packs—swears allegiance to him as Supreme Pack Master. No one dares disobey him.”

“Except Phil.”

Brynley shrugged. “It’s hard for someone like Phil to submit. Dad understands that. Believe me, he’ll be so proud when he finds out that Phil acquired Alpha status without the aid of a pack. It’s never been done before. Phil is truly amazing.”

“I have to agree with that.” Vanda yawned as sleepiness tugged at her.

“And since Phil’s one of the most powerful werewolves in the country, it’s obvious that he has an important future with us.”

Vanda rubbed her brow. “You want him to come home.”

“Yes.” Brynley leaned forward. “He belongs with us. Did you know he was betrothed to a werewolf princess?”

So, Princess Diana was a werewolf? An image flitted through Vanda’s mind of a mangy wolf wearing a diamond tiara. “He never mentioned it.”

“He was ten years old when Dad arranged his betrothal to Diana. She was two.”

“How romantic.”

Brynley snorted. “Diana’s father is the pack master for Utah. And he owns several ranches. She’s an only child, so that makes her a very powerful and wealthy heiress.”

“Good for her.”

Brynley’s eyes narrowed. “She can give him children. The royal line would continue.”

Damn. Vanda closed her eyes.

“I’m sure you’re a nice person, Vanda. My brother wouldn’t care for you so much if you weren’t. But try to look at this with an open mind. If Phil comes back, he can be a powerful leader. If he stays with you and your kind—what sort of life would he have? He would always be an employee, at the beck and call of a vampire. What would you wish for Phil: a life as a leader where he has wealth, power, and children? Or a life of servitude where he can’t have children at all and his life is in constant danger?”

Vanda swallowed hard. The sun drew close to the horizon, dragging her into death-sleep. But she knew the heaviness in her heart wasn’t caused by drowsiness.

“I’ve heard enough.” She stood and trudged toward the trapdoor.

“Think about it, please,” Brynley said. “If you love him, you should let him go.”

 

As Phil walked back to the cabin, he noted the pink and gold streaks brightening the sky. The sun was breaking over the horizon, so Vanda would already be asleep. Dammit. He trudged up the porch steps. He would have liked to discuss this new problem with her.

He opened the door, and Brynley greeted him with a big smile.

“Well, did they cheer for you?”

“Yes.” He glanced at the trapdoor. “Did Vanda make it into the cellar all right?”

“Yeah, she’s fine. We had a nice talk.”

He arched an eyebrow at his sister. “You didn’t try to scare her away?”

Brynley snorted and strode to the ice chest. “Would you like some breakfast? I could scramble up a few dozen eggs.”

“A few dozen?”

She removed two cartons from the ice chest. “I told you the boys are bottomless pits. They took down an elk last night, but I bet you they’re already hungry again.”

He filled up his coffee cup. “What do they do when you’re not here?”

“I leave as much nonperishable food as possible. And they have hunting rifles. They manage.”

Phil sipped some coffee. He’d had a good talk with the boys. There were ten of them. The youngest was thirteen. The oldest, seventeen. They’d all regarded him with a look of wonder, as if he were the answer to all their problems.

A surge of anger shot through him that his father would banish children and let them fend for themselves. “How long have they been here?”

Brynley cracked eggs into a mixing bowl. “The youngest, Gavin, came about a month ago. The oldest, Davy, came two years ago.”

“He’s been here for two years?”

She turned on the gas and lit a burner on the stove. “Davy was fifteen when he came here. What else could he do?”

“He could finish school, for starters. None of those boys have a high school diploma.”

She banged a frying pan down onto the burner. “I can’t enroll them in school. I’m not their legal guardian. I’d teach them myself, but I’m only qualified to teach elementary.”

“You got your teacher certificate? I didn’t think Dad was going to allow you to go to college.”

She sighed. “He was worried I might get involved with a non-Lycan. But I was able to go to the local community college.”

Where Dad was on the board. “Aren’t you sick of him controlling every aspect of your life?”

“I’m happy with my life. And in case you didn’t notice, Dad doesn’t control everything I do. He has no idea I’m helping these boys.”

“You’re not helping them. You’re enabling them.”

“What?” She poured the eggs into the frying pan. “I gave them a home.”

“They’re doing nothing, Bryn. They should be finishing school, getting jobs.”

“The only jobs around here are on ranches that are either owned by Dad or someone he controls. The boys are stuck.”

“As long as they’re here, yes. They need to leave.”

Bryn gasped. “You would kick them out?”

“No.” He drank some coffee. “I’ll think of something.”

“Like being their pack master?” She gave him a hopeful look. “They need a father figure. They need you.”

He began to pace. The last thing he wanted was to act like a father.

He had wanted to go away to college, but his father hadn’t seen any point in a higher education. Dad had every detail of his life already mapped out—the ranches he would run, the female werewolf he would marry, and his eventual ascension to the role of Supreme Pack Master in about three hundred years. All the wealth and power would be his, if he could just behave himself and do as his father said for a few centuries.

Maybe it was time for a change. Roman Draganesti had revolutionized the Vampire World when he’d invented synthetic blood. Modern Vamps, no longer shackled with the need to feed every night, were now engaging in careers in science, business, entertainment, whatever they wanted.

Maybe it was time for a similar revolution in the Lycan World. He’d broken free from the pack and all the old traditions and restraints. Maybe these boys could do it, too.

 

Phil spent the day preparing for the battle that night. He borrowed Brynley’s car and drove to the nearest town, where he purchased more clothes and bottled blood for Vanda and more ammo for himself. It occurred to him that she might need more than a whip for protection, so he bought her a handgun plus a hunting knife with a sheath she could strap to her calf. And if anything happened to him, and she ended up on her own, she would need a cell phone to help her teleport.

On the drive back to the cabin, he charged his cell phone and Vanda’s new one. Then, at the cabin, he downloaded all the contact numbers from his phone onto hers.

He heard the boys outside and peered out the window. They’d divided into two teams and were playing touch football in the meadow.

He stepped onto the porch.

Brynley was sitting in the rocking chair, creaking it slowly back and forth. “So are you really going to fight in that battle tonight?”

“Yes. I’m leaving Vanda here. I’d appreciate your help in keeping her safe.”

Bryn nodded. “I can do that.”

Phil leaned against a post. “How long can you stay? Don’t you have a teaching job you need to get back to?”

She frowned. “Dad didn’t want me to work. He thought it was beneath me.”

Phil shook his head. “I know a school that would love to hire you. The boys could go there, too, and live on campus.”

Her eyes widened. “Where?”

“The location is kept a secret ’cause the students are…different. Some are mortal children who know too much, some are half-vampire children with special powers, and others are were-panthers. I think these boys would fit right in.”

She frowned. “I don’t know. It sounds so far removed from the Lycan World.”

“They can’t have a life in the Lycan World, Bryn. They were banished. There’s no going back.”

“Hey, Mr. Jones.” The youngest boy jogged up to the porch. “You want to play?”

“Sorry, Gavin. I need to conserve my energy.”

“I told you he wouldn’t,” Davy grumbled. “He doesn’t want anything to do with us.”

Phil frowned. “That’s not true.”

“You refused to be our master!” Davy shouted.

Phil shot his sister an annoyed look.

She shrugged. “They wanted to know. What else could I tell them?”

“I said I would help them.” Phil turned to the boys, who were clumped together in the pasture, watching him with injured expressions. “Okay, listen up. You were all banished because you challenged the authority of your masters, right?”

Davy lifted his chin. “So? You got a problem with that?”

“We wouldn’t challenge you,” Gavin insisted, his eyes pleading. “We think you’re totally awesome.”

The boys all murmured in agreement.

“Is it true you went Alpha without a pack?” a redheaded boy named Griffin asked.

“Yes.” Phil held up his hands to quiet the boys, who were growing too excited. “Look. There’s a good reason why you challenged your masters. It’s because you all have natural leadership abilities. Each one of you has the strength, courage, and intelligence it takes to be a pack master, and your masters knew it. You’re their worst nightmare—young Alphas in the making. The only way they could keep control was to get rid of you.”

“Yeah, so we’re tough,” Davy growled. “We already knew that.”

Phil smiled. “I’m sure you do. You also have the confidence it takes to be a leader. But consider how the Lycan World is set up now. With Alphas in charge who can live to be five hundred years old, how can someone like you become the leaders you were born to be? You’re a threat to the leaders in power now, so they kicked you out. And all that’s left in the Lycan World are the wimps and weaklings who are happy to submit. Over time the Lycan World will become weak and ineffectual because they rejected the strongest and fiercest of their youth.”

“That sucks,” Griffin mumbled.

“Do you know why I don’t want to be your master? Because you would accept me, and it would hold you back. Each one of you has the potential of becoming Alpha, and I intend to help you achieve it.”

The boys gasped.

“We could be like you?” Gavin asked.

“But there can only be one Alpha in a pack,” Davy protested.

“According to the old rules, yes,” Phil said. “But the old ways rejected you. Why should you follow them? Why should you accept being less than you can be?”

Gavin stepped forward. “I want to be an Alpha.”

“You can do it.” Phil looked each boy in the face. “You can all do it. I know a school where you can go.”

“School?” Davy wrinkled his nose. “Who needs school?”

“You do. You need a high school diploma at the very least,” Phil explained. “And then you’ll be free to follow whatever aspirations you might have.”

Davy snorted. “I want to kick ass.”

Phil smiled. “I know the perfect place for you. It’s a security and investigation company that would hire you in a second. But you’ll have to learn how to fight.”

“We know how to fight.” Griffin elbowed the boy beside him, who pushed him back.

“You’ll have to become experts in firearms, martial arts, and fencing. There’s an enemy out there that wants to take over the world, and they tend to fight with swords.”

“Cool,” Davy said.

Phil snorted. “This is not like a hunt. You’ll be up against a foe that actually fights back.”

“Awesome,” Griffin whispered.

Phil gave him a stern look. “They fight to the death. They’re an evil group of vampires we call the Malcontents. They have super speed and strength.”

“So do we,” Davy insisted. “We can take them on.”

Phil smiled. “I’m sure you can. But first you have to be trained. Each one of you can achieve Alpha. Take that power. Seize it and make it your own. Together, we can change the outcome of this war. We can save the mortal world. We can defeat evil. What do you say?”

The boys cheered.

Brynley leaned close to him and whispered, “If you get one of them killed, I’m going to be royally pissed.”

He gave her a wry look. “Why don’t you come work at the school, then you can watch over them?”

“Dad would never allow it.”

“You’re twenty-seven, Bryn. Time to break free.”

She sighed. “I’ll think about it.”

“I’ll leave you the number for Shanna Draganesti,” Phil said. “She’s in charge of the school. If anything happens to me, call her and get the boys enrolled.”

Brynley scowled. “Don’t you dare get yourself killed.”

“I don’t intend to.”

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