Read A Shade of Vampire 13: A Turn of Tides Online
Authors: Bella Forrest
A
lthough his words chilled me
, I wasn’t about to back down on my request. I had no choice. I had to return to the human realm, even if it meant returning with a fire-breathing dragon.
Charis questioned me further about the purpose of my visit there. I told him that I needed to find an old friend and help him out of a sticky situation. Charis disappeared for a while, leaving me alone in the cave as he went to discuss my request with Erisard. I was relieved when he returned and said that his king had agreed.
Next, I had to explain how exactly we were to return. We needed to travel through the gate in the realm of the ogres, because that led directly to the island where I’d left Caleb and Annora. Whether they were still on that island remained to be seen. I couldn’t imagine Caleb leaving without discovering what had happened to me, but Annora was devious and she could have played some tricks in order to convince him. Whatever the case, our first stop had to be the island. It was large, but with Charis roaring and myself shouting, Caleb’s ears shouldn’t have a problem picking up our noises.
The other possibility was that Caleb had left the island on the boat he’d been building. Even then I hoped he wouldn’t have travelled too far on that primitive thing. Hopefully, Charis and I could track him down in the ocean if we both made enough noise.
If Caleb hadn’t been a vampire, I would have been much more worried about finding him. But if we managed to make it back to the human realm, I was convinced that if we spent enough time searching for him we’d find him without too much difficulty.
I told the dragon I wanted to leave immediately, and Charis agreed. Climbing onto his back and holding tight to the scales behind his neck, I clenched my stomach as he launched into the air. I’d told him I wanted to get the job done as soon as possible and he was taking it to heart. His speed was breathtaking.
We had almost reached the beach when a cry caught my attention down below. It was a familiar voice.
“Wait,” I said, squeezing my legs against the dragon’s hide even though it was so rock hard, I was sure he couldn’t feel it.
He slowed down and I scanned the landscape for any clue as to the source of the noise. And then I saw it. A dragon in full transformation cornering an ogre at the entrance to a cave.
It was the ogress.
“I want that ogress,” I said. “I want to bring her with me.”
As Charis hesitated, I wondered whether I might have finally found out how far these creatures were willing to go to satisfy my demands. But then he dipped in the sky and hurtled full speed toward the entrance of the cave. Landing with a thud that seemed to shake the entire mountain, he moved in between Bella and the dragon who was about to pounce on her.
“Find yourself another one,” Charis muttered to the dragon as he nudged Bella toward him with his right hand.
“Bella,” I called down. Her sweaty face lit up as she saw me, the panic draining from her expression and giving way to relief. “Come.” I could see that she’d been injured already. Her right arm was soaked in blood.
The other dragon didn’t even have a chance to protest as Charis—albeit reluctantly—helped the ogress onto his back. As she plonked herself down next to me, I had to stand up as her huge form almost squeezed the life out of me. Once she was settled down properly, Charis launched into the sky once more.
As we left that bizarre realm and headed back toward the ogres’ beach, I just prayed that our arrival wouldn’t come too late.
C
aleb’s
thirst for me only seemed to be increasing—as could be expected. As a light rain drizzled over the boat, we both sat beneath the shelter. He had one arm around me as he sucked from my wrist. I brushed the hair away from his forehead with my free hand. He barely flinched. I noticed that as the hours passed, he seemed to recoil less when I touched him with affection. Hopefully another sign that he was slowly losing himself to me.
But I was beginning to grow impatient. I’d been starved of him for so long. I would have given anything for him to just look at me even once with affection. To hold me in his arms. Feel his lips against mine.
As he withdrew his fangs, I reached for a cloth and dabbed the blood away from his mouth. He leaned back in the seat, closing his eyes and groaning. Before he could protest, I lifted myself onto his lap and locked my arms around his neck. Pressing my cheek against his, I whispered into his ear. “We’re going to be okay, Caleb. We’ll find ourselves again. We just need time.”
He didn’t welcome my advance, but he didn’t immediately brush me away either, which I’d half expected him to do. I dared press my lips against his neck, and began to trail them across his skin up toward his cheek. He turned his head to face the other way. I raised my bleeding palm closer to his face. His eyes still closed, I dabbed some of my blood over my lips and leaned forward to catch his in mine.
He clenched his jaw, his whole body tensing up as though trying to resist my touch. But as I pressed my mouth harder against his, he began to respond—even if he was just sucking away the blood, it felt like he was caressing me. And at that moment, that was all that mattered.
His fangs caught my bottom lip, causing a cut. His lips crushed against mine as he drew more blood, my scent once again driving his senses into a frenzy. His grip around me tightened. I leaned backward, pulling him down with me onto the floor as I reached for my skirt. He was so absorbed in my taste, he barely seemed to notice as I bared myself. I wrapped my legs around his waist, pulling him closer to me.
Tears brimmed in my eyes as I thought about all the times I could have made him mine. All those years Rose Novak hadn’t been around. When it had been just him and me alone in that big castle, no interruptions. No distractions.
If only I had desired him then as much as I am burning for him now.
I wouldn’t be in this position, where I had to trick him into wanting me. He’d wanted me with all his heart.
Still, as much as I lamented over my actions, I couldn’t undo the past. I just had to make the best of the situation I now found myself in.
He loosened his grip on my lip to pause for a breath. I smiled faintly as his dark, hooded gaze met mine. He lowered himself again, this time digging into my neck.
I arched my spine, guiding his hands down to rest on the small of my back. “Let’s continue our story,” I said softly, brushing my lips against his earlobe.
I wasn’t sure if he was even conscious of the words I spoke through the haze he was in. But then he tensed suddenly. I hardly dared believe what was happening as he withdrew his fangs and placed a long, lingering kiss on the base of my throat. My heart soared. I barely knew how to contain the joy that one gesture had brought me.
Then he murmured something. But his voice was so muffled, I couldn’t make out what it was.
“What did you say, my love?” I asked breathlessly.
He repeated it again. A short, one-syllable word. Clearer this time, but not clear enough for me to be willing to believe what I thought I’d heard.
The third time it was unmistakable.
“Rose,” he whispered, his voice hoarse.
My whole body froze beneath his touch. My chest burned.
I gripped his hair, yanking his head upward. “No,” I hissed. “Annora.”
His eyes were shut tight. He wasn’t even looking at me now.
He dipped again and caught my lips this time, kissing them with passion and hunger I hadn’t experienced since the first time he’d ever kissed me. That kiss would have lit my body on fire, had he not finished it off with the same ugly, detested word. “Rose.”
“Stop saying her name,” I wheezed, tears beginning to spill down my cheeks. “Stop saying it. She’s dead.”
He shook his head as he brushed his thumbs against my face, his fingers reaching into the roots of my hair as he showered kisses over my face. As he was about to taste my lips again, he froze. His eyes shot open. To my shock, they were no longer black. It was as though the dark mist covering them was clearing before my very eyes and they were returning to their warm brown color. Wiping his mouth, he let go of me and staggered backward, a look of confusion on his face.
“Rose,” he said, no longer in a whisper. “I hear…” His voice trailed off as he climbed out from beneath the shelter and began staring up at the early-morning sky.
“What?” I hurried out after him. “Caleb, darling. She’s dead. You burned her body. You’re hallucina—”
Beyond the rain clouds, the sun hadn’t yet risen above the horizon. But the sky was light enough to see, even through the drizzle. My jaw dropped as I followed Caleb’s gaze. He was staring at what looked like a giant bird, flying toward us in the distance.
Now even I could hear a faint shouting across the waves. Suddenly, it was followed by a spine-tingling roar.
No.
It can’t be…
And yet it was.
As the bird drew nearer, it became clearer and clearer that it was no such creature. It was a dragon—a beast I’d only heard rumors about. The two figures atop the creature’s back became more visible with each beat of its wings. A large, thick form that looked much like an ogre, and next to it, a smaller, frailer figure with long dark hair.
Rose Novak.
My eyes shot toward Caleb. The look on his face as he stared up at her shattered my heart into a thousand pieces.
All my planning, all my efforts to make Caleb mine again had been a waste. I’d tried to kill Rose, yet here she was, as if returned from the dead.
I’d thought I’d come so close to reclaiming him, but at that moment, I knew that I’d been lying to myself. I knew the truth that I had been denying ever since he’d first abandoned me for her in the cave.
I’d lost him.
And there was no getting him back.
I could barely breathe as envy and grief consumed me.
As the dragon approached within a few dozen feet from us, I saw red.
If I can’t have Caleb, nobody will.
I
had
something better than bird crap to surprise Annora with this time.
Charis had flown around the circumference of the island, roaring as Bella and I shouted Caleb’s name. We’d flown close to the trees, so we would have heard his response had he been on the island. We could only conclude that he’d left in the boat—since it was no longer on the beach where he’d been building it.
I was right that Annora and Caleb hadn’t travelled too far in that primitive boat. The dragon’s speed made it easy to begin circling around the island, spiraling outward so that we could search in all directions. Still, it took us hours until we finally spotted them.
My stomach flipped as Charis began hurtling toward the boat.
Please be okay, Caleb.
I’d been hoping that he might have discarded Annora by now. So I couldn’t deny that panic gripped me as she rushed out onto the deck, naked and bleeding, a few seconds after Caleb. But even if I’d wanted to, I couldn’t fix my attention on Annora for long. I stared down at Caleb’s stunned face.
“Caleb!” I yelled.
He looked at me as though I was a ghost at first, but then relief washed over his face and he positively beamed at me. I wished that I was closer to him so I could have better seen his eyes light up.
My joy turned to horror as I glanced back at Annora. She’d swooped down and picked up what looked like a sharp metal spear. At first I thought she was about to aim it at me, but then she stepped behind Caleb and poised to drive it through his back, straight into his heart.
“No!” I screamed.
If Caleb had ducked even a split second later, her aim probably would have met its mark. Now directly above the boat, I was too impatient to wait for Charis to lower us down further. I leapt from his back and landed on the deck as Caleb knocked Annora to the ground with a swipe of his foot. Picking up the spear himself, he crawled over her and pressed it against her neck.
His eyes were filled with fury as he glowered down at her. “I should have done this much sooner,” he growled.
“I’m comin’, Miss Rose!”
My eyes shot up toward the ogress.
“No, Bella! Don’t jump!”
I didn’t know in what possible way the ogress thought that sending her weight crashing down on the small boat would help the situation, but it was too late. The moment her feet landed on the deck, all three of us—Caleb, Annora and myself—went flying off the boat and into the ocean.
Disappearing beneath the cold waters, I kicked and fought to reach the surface. I looked around, trying to see where Caleb had landed. As I was about to look behind me, hands gripped my head and forced me beneath the water again.
It didn’t take much guessing as to whose hands they were.
I dug my nails into Annora’s fingers until I could feel her flesh peeling away beneath them. She was forced to let go and I gasped for air on reaching the surface. Before I could grab hold of her again, she’d lifted herself back onto the boat. She grabbed the spear that had lodged itself in a net hanging off the side of the boat. I backed away as she leapt back into the water, brandishing the weapon.
Her face was contorted with rage as she lunged for me again. This time, she managed to catch hold of my arm and pull me toward her. I gasped as the spear’s tip pierced the skin above my abdomen.
I heard a loud squelch, and the slicing of flesh.
For a moment, I thought that Annora had finally ended me. But the spear she was holding fell away. Her grip on me loosened. Her eyes widened and began to roll in their sockets.
Blood spilled from her lips as they parted.
I looked up to see Charis hovering directly over us. The sharp tip of his tail was coated with blood. Annora’s blood.
The monster let out a deafening roar and his head shot downward. I could barely believe my eyes as his mouth closed around Annora’s limp body.
With one gulp, he swallowed her whole.
I stared at the bloody water where Annora had been just seconds before. Now gone. Just like that.
The bitch is dead.
My head began reeling. I clutched my abdomen. Everything had happened so fast, I’d barely felt the pain until now. I didn’t know how deep the wound was, but as the salty water washed against it, I doubled over.
“Rose!”
Caleb had appeared around the side of the boat and began swimming toward me. He looked relieved at first but as he reached me and saw the blood on my hands, his face dropped.
“What happened?” he urged.
“She cut me,” I managed.
I swallowed hard as he gathered me to him. He carried me back toward the boat and climbed onto it, placing me down on the deck. He slit his palm with his claws and tipped his blood down my throat before examining my wound.
“It’s not too deep,” he said, exhaling sharply. “Thank God.”
He cupped my face in his hands and lowered his head. As his mouth closed around mine, his tongue parting my lips, I forgot about the pain in my stomach. The ache in my chest overwhelmed it completely. I found myself sitting up and, leaning into him, I pushed him back against the side of the boat. I returned his kiss as though it was the antidote. He groaned softly, the muscles in his chest tensing beneath my hands as he pulled me flush against him and kissed me harder.
When we finally broke apart, I glanced down to see that my wound had healed.
“Rose,” Caleb breathed, still holding me in his strong arms. “You have no idea what I’ve… I thought I’d lost you.”
I found myself wondering exactly what had happened since I’d been gone, but as the dragon let out an impatient snort above us, now was clearly no time to ask. I could have stayed in that boat, lost in Caleb’s embrace for hours. But, clutching Caleb’s hand, I stood and pulled him up with me. Caleb’s eyes raised to the dragon.
“What on earth happened to you?” he asked.
Charis was too close to us for me to be able to explain anything meaningful to Caleb now. I shook my head.
“Well, I thought it was about time that I saved you for a change,” I muttered.
Caleb frowned and opened his mouth to press me further. Before he could, I quickly pulled his neck down and pressed my lips against his again, silencing him. Then I unlocked our lips and whispered into his ear, “I can’t explain everything now. You just need to trust me.” I cleared my throat and gestured up to the dragon. “This is Charis. He’ll be carrying us all away from here.”
“Where to now?” the dragon boomed down.
“To an island known as The Shade,” I replied, as calmly as I could. “Our last destination before I return to your realm, Charis.”
Caleb’s mouth dropped open. I held a finger to his lips. “You just need to trust me,” I repeated in a whisper.
Charis hovered closer to the boat. I climbed onto his back first and positioned myself at the front, while Caleb climbed up after me, his legs closing around either side of me as he wrapped his arms around me protectively. Bella followed next.
As we launched once again into the sky, the only thing I could do was pray that Mona would be able to help us fight off the dragon.