Invincible (A Centennial City Novel) (19 page)

Jason smiled disarmingly. Did glamour work with the supernatural? I supposed I was about to find out.

"There is no need for violence," he said. "Just let us rest here and then we will be out of here, out of your casino, out of your town. It will be as if we never came here. Surely, you can see the wisdom in letting us pass?"

The werewolf let out a sigh and rubbed the furrow between his dark eyes. "I just don't even know what to do anymore."

Jason bowed low. "We will go now."

Was this it then? Would we be able to leave without a fight, without a drop of blood spilt on the magenta carpet that seemed as though it would mask the color of blood well, perhaps too well?

Marcus sighed. "Vincent'll kill me if he finds out."

"He doesn’t need to know."

The werewolf let out a loud, guffawing laugh. "Are you kidding me? That man knows everything. It's fucking crazy how well he knows his stuff. No wonder that bloodsucker's got Centennial City sitting pretty in the palm of his hand. Wish I could do the same to here."

Camden? This terribly depressed little town? How terribly unambitious.

Someone brushed past us, an elderly couple, one with a cane, the other in a walker and I realized something, something that just might be the death of us.

People were leaving.

Yes, they were quiet, yes, they meandered from here to there, but from the way the doors never stopped moving, it was very obvious the casino was beginning to clear out.

A trap?

Slowly, I managed to extricate my wrist out of Jason's grip. "We need to go."

The werewolf made as if to step towards us, and I leapt back, the bi-su clenched parallel to my arm. There was no one around us to say a thing; they were all behind us, a mass exodus to the doors that seemed to grow farther and farther away with every second we stayed.

"Stop," I said between clenched teeth, one arm extended to keep Jason behind me, keep him closer to the doors.

I swore to protect him.

Without my word, I was nothing.

For better or worse, I was
Ailward
.

Jason drew in a sharp breath. “Ran.”

The werewolf was sweating openly now. “Now, now...we can talk about this. We should really, really talk about this.”

His bodyguards had their hands on their holster, ready to pull their firearm out and shoot me in the face.

And that would be the end.

“Is this what you would call an impasse?” asked Jason.

Why did I want to laugh? Was it because I saw no way out of this situation? Was it because I knew if I so much as moved a finger, we would be dead? “No. It’s not. This is what you call a last stand.”

Jason laughed under his breath. Did he understand our pathetic helplessness as well as I did? Was that why he laughed? “I didn’t know you were so funny, Ran.”

“I’m not.”

My eyes never left the alpha. “Choose. Either you kill us and risk making Vincent angry, or you let us go and no one gets hurt.”

The werewolf chewed the corner of his lips. “It’s a tough decision.”

Hands almost too sweaty, I felt Jason push past my arm, taking one step towards danger.

Don’t!

“You can see, the only true option is to let us go,” he said in that same, maddeningly calm voice. Did he not see the danger we stood upon, its knife-thin edge? “Live and let live. Is this not your motto?”

My arm wavered dangerously and I saw the flicker in the werewolf’s eye.

He was going to do it!

“Jason!” I screamed.

Marcus leaped towards Jason, his dark eyes filled with a bloodlust, a bloodlust that would splatter my Master’s blood across the shiny chrome casino machines.

Jason surged forward to meet his attack, mouth open wide in a wordless, soundless battle cry, arms open as if he meant to meet his death in a close embrace.

Would this mean his death?

That I could not accept.

The dagger wasn’t nearly as long to cause grievous damage to the alpha, but if I could just get his attention, get his attention long enough to get Jason out of the casino, then I would use it.

Besides, it was better than fighting a werewolf with my bare hands.

Fully aware of the risks at hand, I crossed in front of Jason and let his momentum into my back catapult me into Marcus’s flailing hands, his nails already lengthening into truly awesome proportions.

I ducked, feeling the the wind from his left hand disturb my hair.

Shifting my grip on the bi-su, I brought my arm up, and slashed him across the eyes, feeling the delicious friction of the blade biting into skin and then into...other.

It was not a deep cut.

But as far as wounds went, it was a debilitating one.

The werewolf roared and reared back. In my haste to back away, I caught a glancing blow on my shoulder and that single blow sent me careening into the side of a slot machine, the metal bashing into my left side.

Lights exploded across my vision and I forgot how to breath, literally.

And then my Master attacked.

 

12

 

 

 

 

It wasn’t as though I had never seen him fight before.

Indeed, I had been a witness to his sparring sessions with his Domina, and I knew the damage he could elicit on a being not vampiric in nature.

In truth, I was apprehensive. For one so young, did he have the power to take upon an alpha wolf, a man who had clearly clawed and bit his way to the top of dead bodies?

But in a split second, I knew all my worries to be for nothing.

This...this being in front of me...

He was power.

He was strength.

He was
invincible
.

With a single blow, Marcus was bowled upon on his back and when Jason almost casually placed a hand on his neck, he ceased to move.

If one had blinked at the wrong time, they would have missed the whole thing.

But I did not blink.

I saw everything.

Marcus’s chest moved up and down at a frenetic pace and his hands twitched uselessly at his side. And despite the mess I had made of his eyes, he did not keen in pain, did not even refer to it. I stared at the blood running down the side of his face and felt nothing. Would he ever see again? I did not know.

“What the hell are you?” he asked.

Jason’s hand tightened and the werewolf let out a small, strangled sound. “Oh, dear. Do forgive me, won’t you? I don’t know my strength quite yet. Although, this seems small compared to what she has done to you.”

The wolf coughed, a wet sick noise, as he drew in another breath. “Once again, I ask you, what the hell are you?”

The smile did not reach my Master’s dark eyes. “Me? I’m just a vampire, remember? A vampire who will now take his leave, along with his human companion.”

A human companion.

I was his human companion.

Upon retrospect, it supposed it was easier to call me that rather than
servant
or
bodyguard
.

Although, now I felt rather moot. “Jason.”

His gaze never left that of the wolf. “Yes.”

“We need to go.”

“Understood.”

Jason straightened up, and stepped away from the shivering alpha, wiping a hand on his jeans as though he couldn’t bear to get the touch off his hands. “He seemed easy enough to bring down.”

Two bodyguards, motionless until now, sprang into action, putting an arm under each shoulder and bringing Marcus up to his unsteady feet.

The wolf laughed softly and then coughed again, a splatter of blood spraying down his front. I had known this was easy, too easy, but still Jason had done damage. He had salvaged a hopeless situation and this was something we would discuss, soon. “Well, I certainly did try. Although, your Master did surprise me quite a bit. Of course, I will have to report this to Vincent when he comes to hear my report.”

He sounded almost regretful.

“Will you?” I asked.

“I called him,” he said and coughed again, a wet, sticky sound that made my stomach twitch. “As soon as my boys let me know you two had passed through the doors...I had to let him know. He sent out messages to all supers within a hundred mile radius of Centennial.”

“Supers?” asked Jason.

“It’s slang,” I said, almost automatically. “It’s what we call supernaturals...the ones who aren’t human.”

“Ah.”

One of Marcus’s bodyguards pulled forth an immaculate white handkerchief from inside his blazer and began to dab at his Master’s eyes, bringing forth a slow hiss from Marcus’s lips.

“I’m sorry,” I said. I wasn’t particularly apologetic, but it seemed the best to say.

Considering.

He laughed, a low guttural sound and I watched the kerchief turn a brilliant red. “Don’t be. You did what you had to, didn’t you? You’re his Ailward. Your life is as he dictates. I would not have expected any less from someone as esteemed as yourself. You have done well, Ailward. Don’t let anyone say otherwise.”

Jason put a hand on my shoulder, squeezing slightly. “I have chosen well.”

There was no time. “Let’s go.”

Without another word, Jason pushed me into the dark night, the cold not at all like the balmy night from even half an hour ago. It had begun to snow, soft, feathery flakes of white that spun like feathers ripped from a pillow.

The doors closed behind him and he raised up the collar of his woolen peacoat, shoved his hands deep into his pockets. “Let’s go. We need to--”

He stumbled and almost fell down the steps.

In the surprisingly empty street, just under the streetlight, face shadowed from the overhead light, stood a brunette, the honey-sheen glimmering under the flickering streetlight.

I couldn’t help but wonder if she still wore nothing under the knee-length black leather trenchcoat.

Arms crossed, she stared at us as we came down the stairs, our footsteps muted on the concrete floors, the snow crunching under our feet.

“Didn’t I tell you to stay the fuck away from him?”

I drew in a deep breath and felt the frost coat the inside of my throat like oil. “As always, such

impeccable usage of the English language.”

She snorted and a brisk wind blew past, ruffling the bottom of her coat. Obviously, the cold had gotten too much for her because this time, I did see her legs clad in black. At least, she didn’t have zero common sense. “Fucking humans. You just never listen, do you?”

Jason stopped at the step below mine and slanted a glance at me. “Do you know her?”

“Regrettably, yes.”

Her eyes narrowed as they centered on the dark-haired man in front of me. “Jason.”

He let out a sound like someone getting punched in the stomach. “Shannon.”

Of course.

Of course.

I should have known. “Weren’t you supposed to be pregnant, vampire?”

A very human emotion crossed those harsh, lovely features. “I was supposed to be a lot of things. As you can see, I am not. For those like me, the act of carrying a child...never works.”

The corner of my lips rose in a sneer. “I’m sure you were pleased.”

She took a step closer to us, on the street and darkness clouded her face. “Whatever. Anyways, I have been sent to bring you two to my Master.”

I heard Jason swallow. “Shannon, why--”

“Jason, be quiet,” said Shannon.

Call me heartless, pitiless, but right now, Jason was worse than useless and I held him up when it seemed as though his legs could not support his body any longer. He smelled like a pine forest in the winter and I drank deep of his scent, letting his ex-fiance see the joy in my eyes.

Was it jealousy?

Jealousy that filled my body watching my Master utterly destroyed by the entrance of the woman he had spent years searching?

Did I hate her because she was a vampire?

Or did I hate her because she affected Jason like this?

Questions I wasn’t sure if I ever wanted to answer, to address. Ever.

“And what exactly does your...Master need with us?”

She tossed her hair over one shoulder and in that instant, I realized I hated her more than anything I had ever experienced. Hated her more than I hated my father, hated her more than my mother for the way she let him step all over her, hated her more than this life that would not let me die. “Should you really be standing there asking questions, hm? Wasting time?”

Jason was heavy in my arms but in that moment, I truly thought I could support him for eternity as he stared at the wraith of a woman he loved.

“I think I would rather brave Vincent’s anger than walk off with some vampire who swore to kill me if I involved myself further with Jason,” I said.

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