Zane’s Redemption (4 page)

Read Zane’s Redemption Online

Authors: Tina Folsom

Tags: #vampire romance, #Fantasy, #Paranormal Romance, #vampire, #contemporary romance

Lauren tilted her head and gave a sad smile. “You know, your idea would really be great, but unfortunately, it won’t work either. The sperm has to be ultra-fresh, and it has to be delivered with a flesh and blood dick. So whatever turkey baster method you’re thinking of, it’s off the table.”

This revelation hit her just as hard as the disappointment earlier in the evening. She dropped her head. “Why? Why?”

“I wish I could tell you something different, but that’s how it is.”

Portia lifted her head. “What now?”

“I think we should look for Eric.”

Portia felt her palms dampen at the thought. “Now? Why don’t we wait a little while and see if we can figure out another solution. There must be something else.”

Lauren shook her head. “There’s no other solutions. Trust me, you’re not the first hybrid. You’ll survive. I hear Eric is good between the sheets.”

Portia groaned.

***

A half hour later, Portia found out first hand that Eric was a passable kisser. Only, no matter the contortions he put his tongue through, she wasn’t getting turned on. She remained strangely detached from the entire situation. In fact, none of the guys she’d kissed before had really made her feel like she wanted more. Sure, it had always been pleasant, just like sitting in the sun and eating ice cream was pleasant.

Was she frigid? Was that the reason why she hadn’t pursued sex and why it hadn’t bothered her that her father didn’t want her to date yet?

This wasn’t going to work, not with Eric. He was a nice guy and all, but for her first time she wanted to be wowed and not feel like it was a chore. She wanted to feel weak in her knees with her heart fluttering; she wanted a man who robbed her of her breath when he kissed her and whose touch made her skin sizzle. And Eric wasn’t that kind of man.

She was about to extricate herself from his embrace when a sudden tingling on her skin arrested her heart. Another vampire had entered the bedroom she and Eric had found to have some privacy. Portia knew the signature of the vampire’s aura only too well.

A split-second later, Eric was yanked from her and slammed against the wall. Her father’s eyes glared at her when he pointed his finger in her face. “You, young lady, home. Now.” His voice was a low growl, one she knew well enough.

He was angry. But so was she.

Portia lifted her chest and raised her head, adding another two inches to reach her full height of five nine. With her two inch heels she was almost eye level with him. “You can’t tell me what to do!”

“I’m your father, and you’ll listen to me!” His hand clamped around her wrist like a vice, and despite her own vampire strength, she was no match for her father. He was older and stronger than she.

“No! You have no right to order me around anymore!” He’d lost that right when he’d betrayed her.

“You’re not of age!”

Portia froze. In vampire society, parents remained the legal guardians of their children until the child’s body had reached its final form, which occurred on its twenty-first birthday. Only then was a hybrid considered mature. How could she have forgotten that her father had been the one who’d told her about this rule many years ago when she was a child? He had every right to issue orders. But she was done following them.

“I won’t remain a virgin!”

“I’m not going to have you throw yourself at some dirty lowlife who doesn’t deserve you! You’ll only mate with someone your equal! Someone I’ll choose for you.”

She shook her head in quiet disbelief. No! She wouldn’t bend to his will anymore. She was ready to rebel. Better late than never.

Her father yanked her toward the door. Portia glanced at Eric who still lay on the floor. He stirred, groans of pain coming from him. She extended her mind to him, directing her powers to erase his memories of the last half hour. She needed no witness to her humiliation.

Chapter Five

 

Samson motioned his friends Gabriel and Amaury to take a seat in his study as he continued pacing.

“He needs to be punished,” Gabriel started.

Amaury shook his dark mane. “I disagree. Punish him and he’ll derail completely.”

“A crime like this can’t be left unpunished.” Gabriel shot a pleading look toward Samson, silently asking for support.

“I’m not saying that we won’t do anything about it, but if we punish Zane outright, he’ll go off the deep end. What he needs is rehabilitation,” Amaury insisted.

A short knock on the door interrupted.

“Come,” Samson answered, sensing who requested entry.

The door swung open and Thomas strolled in, his heavy biker boots scraping loudly against the wooden floor. He gave an apologetic smile as he pulled his second leather glove off and shoved both of them into his jacket pocket. Then he combed his fingers through his sandy blond hair, fluffing what his helmet had flattened. “Sorry I’m late; I had some problems with the bike.”

Samson motioned to the couch, and Thomas let his leather-clad frame fall onto it, making the furniture groan. His leather outfit easily added fifteen pounds to his weight.

“I thought your Ducati was in top shape,” Amaury wondered.

“I didn’t take the Ducati. I was taking the R6 for a spin.”

“That thing is a pile of junk,” Gabriel commented, shaking his head.

“It’s a World War Two antique,” Thomas corrected. “I’ve been fixing it up for the last two months.”

Samson smirked. Thomas’ passion for bikes was legendary, and he spent every free minute tinkering with one of his many acquisitions. “As much as I’d like to discuss your talents as a mechanic, we have more urgent things to talk about.”

Thomas nodded. “What are we gonna do about Zane?”

“Amaury was thinking rehabilitation rather than punishment.” Then Samson addressed Amaury, “What did you have in mind?”

Amaury moved to the edge of his chair. “We expose him to the softer things in life.”

“Excuse me?” Gabriel tossed his friend a confused look, the scar on his face, which reached from his ear to his chin, jumping at the same time.

Thomas scoffed. “Give him soft and he’ll smash it to pieces.”

“He’ll spit in your face,” Samson added.

Amaury’s blue eyes sparkled. “He didn’t spit in your daughter’s face.”

Samson didn’t bother suppressing his scowl. Delilah had told him the minute Zane had left the house that Isabelle had bitten him. The first bite of a hybrid baby was a significant event. It meant that his daughter had chosen her mentor, her godfather. Only, Samson had hoped that she would pick somebody like Gabriel or Amaury, or better, Thomas who was a great mentor to Eddie, the young vampire under his wings, but not Zane. However, there was no way around this. Isabelle had tasted Zane’s blood and would be instinctively drawn to him to seek his advice. While Samson and Delilah were Isabelle’s primary caregivers, Zane would play an important role in her life.

“Which makes it even more important to deal with him now before this gets out of hand. I can’t have a loose cannon around my daughter.”

“Nobody wants that.” Gabriel pulled the band around his ponytail tight and shifted in his seat.

“Suggestions then,” Samson said and gave Amaury an expectant nod.

“First of all, no more high-risk assignments. You were right to pull him off his current one. He doesn’t need to be in constant assault mode. We’ll have to condition him to use non-violent responses to aggression.”

“Interesting,” Gabriel snorted. “Good luck with that.”

Thomas shook his head. “Let’s face it: take violence out of Zane’s life and his shell will collapse. It’s the only things that keeps him alive.”

Samson raised his hand. “Maybe Amaury is onto something. What else have you got?”

“He needs to see Drake.”

“You want him to agree to see a shrink?” Gabriel shook his head. “That’ll go down well. Just make sure I’m not around when you tell him, ‘cause I'd kinda like to keep my head attached to my neck.”

“I didn’t say it was gonna be easy to get him to go.” Amaury shrugged. “We just have to make sure he knows what’s at stake if he doesn’t.”

Samson stopped pacing. “You’re right. The carrot and stick approach. Show him what he can have, then threaten to take it away. It could work.”

“And what are we gonna take away?” Gabriel asked.

“His job.”

“He won’t be hurting for money,” Gabriel countered.

His second-in-command was right of course. Any vampire who’d been around for a few decades had invariably accumulated wealth simply by investing money in low risk assets such as real estate and bonds. Knowing Zane, he’d probably taken a riskier approach and amassed an even greater fortune.

“Money isn’t the reason he works for us,” Samson explained. “We’re his family. He needs us.” Just like they needed him. Each and every member of Scanguards was essential, and the inner core, consisting of Amaury, Gabriel, Thomas, Zane, Yvette, Quinn, and himself was vital for the survival of the company. They were the driving force.

Slowly, Gabriel nodded. “True. Then I have a suggestion to make. Let’s fly Quinn out from New York. He’s the one closest to Zane. Quinn brought him in. If anybody can get to Zane, it’s Quinn. He knows what makes him tick.”

“Who will run New York headquarters in the meantime?” Samson asked.

“New York is such a well-oiled machine, it runs itself,” Gabriel claimed confidently.

Thomas grinned. “I suppose that means we can put a monkey at its helm and it’ll still run?”

“Almost.” Gabriel nodded. “Unfortunately, I’m fresh out of monkeys. We’ll have to use someone higher up the food chain.”

“Who did you have in mind?” Samson asked.

“Quinn mentioned a promising vampire the other day. His name is Jake and he’s been working with Quinn for six months now. He might be ready to take on more responsibility.”

“Quinn vouches for him?” Samson contemplated Gabriel’s words.

“He’s diligent and ambitious.”

“Fine, let’s do it,” Samson agreed. “Call Quinn and fill him in. Now, we need to keep Zane occupied. Do we have a desk job we can park him at?”

Gabriel shook his head. “Nothing open. I could shift people around though, unless—” He scratched his head before he continued, “We just got this babysitting job in.”

“Babysitting?” Amaury echoed.

“I’ve gotta hear that,” Thomas mumbled under his breath.

“Couple of vampires, moved here about six months ago. A father with his hybrid daughter. She’s friends with G’s daughter. Goes to USF. Her father is leaving for a business trip for two to three weeks and needs us to babysit her twenty-four-seven.”

“She goes to college and needs a babysitter? Where’s her mother?” Samson asked.

“Died in a car accident six months ago.”

“But the girl is what, eighteen, nineteen?” Amaury asked, confusion pasted on his handsome features as he swept his shoulder length black hair back.

“Twenty, almost twenty-one,” Gabriel reported. “But according to her father, she’s a wild one: parties, guys, alcohol, the works. She’s acting out since her mother’s death. He fears she’s on the verge of a nervous breakdown. He’s very concerned about her and worried about leaving her alone. She’s liable to hurt herself.”

“So what does he want us to do?” Samson asked.

“Watch her and keep her away from any bad influence. No parties, no boys, etc. Piece of cake. I’ve put Oliver on the dayshift. It’ll be an easy job for him to take on and get his feet wet.”

Samson nodded. “I suppose I can’t keep him as my personal assistant forever. He’s got lots of potential.” Oliver, a human, had worked as his daytime assistant for over three years, almost four.

“He’ll do well. His assignment starts at daybreak.”

“Aren’t you guys overlooking something important?” Amaury interrupted.

Samson gave him a questioning look. “Oliver is well-trained. You’ve seen him in action. He’s a great bodyguard. He’s protected Delilah many times, and you know I would never provide my wife with sub-standard safety.”

“Yes, but your wife is human. This charge is a hybrid. She’s stronger than Oliver.”

Samson nodded. “I’m fully aware of that. But we can’t put a vampire on the dayshift. You know that as well as I do. And unfortunately, we don’t have a hybrid on staff. They're still too rare. It’ll have to be a human.”

“And what if she outsmarts him and uses mind control to slip away?” Amaury challenged, not letting the subject rest.

Samson ran his hand through his hair, but was saved from answering when Thomas cleared his voice.

“Samson, do I have your permission to tell them?”

Samson met Thomas’ gaze. Vampires themselves weren’t subject to mind control, in fact, it would result in a mental fight to the death if two vampires unleashed mind control on each other. However, Thomas had recently figured something out. “Go ahead, Thomas.”

“This is still in its early stages of experimentation, but Oliver and I have been working together over the last few weeks.”

“What experimentation?” Gabriel asked tightly, clearly miffed that he had not been informed.

“I’m trying to teach him how to resist mind control.”

Gabriel gasped. Amaury seemed unaffected by the revelation.

“But how?” Gabriel wanted to know.

“As you all know, mind control is my specialty. So, I’ve been trying to examine the underlying physical properties to figure out whether there’s a way for a human to be able to recognize mind control at its onset, and then break the vampire’s concentration.”

“You can’t be serious!” Gabriel jumped up. “If this works, then …”

“I know what you’re thinking, Gabriel,” Thomas said calmly, “but this will not become public knowledge. Only our most trusted humans, only the inner core, will know about it. I had the idea when Amaury told me that Nina was immune to his mind control even before they bonded.”

Amaury nodded. “And what a pain in the butt that was.”

Thomas grinned. “As if you would have it any other way.”

“You knew about this?” Gabriel asked.

Amaury shrugged. “What Nina knows, I know.”

Joking aside, I’ve had long conversations with Nina to figure out what she felt when Amaury was trying to use his powers on her. And I’m making progress with Oliver. He’s very smart and strong willed. That helps.”

Other books

Nice Weekend for a Murder by Max Allan Collins
Hideaway Hospital Murders by Robert Burton Robinson
The Autograph Hound by John Lahr
The Third Evil by R.L. Stine