Read My Vampire and I Vol 3: Blood Resurrection Online
Authors: J. P. Bowie
Once, he hurt me badly, despite my protests and urging him to stop. Afterward, he was remorseful and apologised over and over for his coarse behaviour, and I was only too eager to forgive him—then. Of course, eventually I came to realise that what I felt for him was not real but was induced by the magical powers he had inherited from the Wizards. When we were apart, his allure lessened, and in those moments of clearer thought, I began to wonder why on earth I associated with the enemy of my most treasured friend.
My decision to leave him came after one evening when we hunted together for the first time. Vampires, by nature, prefer to hunt alone, unless they are partnered. Some are even territorial, threatening those who would encroach on what they perceive as their terrain. This particular night, though, found Darius and me leaving a club in Paris—Le Petit Mal—
“He’ll do,” he muttered. He moved so fast, the young man had no time in which to react. Using his supernatural speed and strength, Darius lifted him from the path and carried him into the bushes. I followed and was surprised to see the young man fending off Darius with some well-practised boxing jabs. Instead of subduing him quickly with his hypnotic powers as Marcus had taught me, Darius stood there laughing at the young man, dodging each punch with his vampire skill.
“Darius,” I murmured, wondering why he played this game.
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“Look, Bernard.” His voice had a grating, mocking tone that raised the hairs on the back of my neck. “He thinks he can best me. What should be the price of his arrogance, do you suppose?” Suddenly, he stepped forward, grabbed the young man’s wrists and forced him to his knees. His victim whimpered from the pain. I heard the bones crack, and he screamed out.
“Darius!” I lunged forward to stop him. “What are you doing?”
“Stand back, Bernard,” he hissed at me, his fangs extended. “This little man needs to be taught a lesson—”
“Stop it,” I cried, pulling at his arm. “You’ll have the gendarmes upon us.” He backhanded me, sending me staggering against a tree. Then before I could intervene again, he pulled the youth to his feet and tore out his throat with one vicious, rending bite. I stared, appalled, as he sucked the young man’s blood and chewed on the soft flesh of his throat. When he had done, he let the lifeless body slip from his grasp, then turned and smiled a macabre and bloody smile at me. I shuddered with horror and repugnance. Not at the sight of the blood or the shreds of flesh that clung to his teeth and lips—I am a vampire after all.
No, my spirit balked at the sheer unnecessary waste of life.
“Why?” I asked.
I did not.
* * * *
I sighed and shook my head. “Why would you say so petty a thing? Marcus and I have been friends for decades.”
“Familiarity can breed contempt, Bernard. Have you not ever wondered why he stays away for such a long time?”
I sighed again. “I know why he is gone for long periods of time, Darius. He is needed in many places by those who love him.”
“While he filled your head with his addlepated philosophy about being gentle with mortals,” Darius sneered. “About not hurting them when you feed.” “A philosophy many vampires have adopted as their own.”
“Bah!” He turned from me in rage, then as swiftly looked back at me, his face once again serene and composed. “Bernard…” His voice was silky smooth. “You know how much I care for you.” He reached out and drew me into his arms, kissing my lips gently. “Come with me, I beg you. We can have a marvellous life together. All will look to you as my second-in-command. You will be revered, envied—”
“A truce with Marcus,” I said. “An end to this hatred you have for him.”
“And will that then secure you by my side forever?”
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power to make me his willing slave, to bend my mind to his will, and be forever his, until he tired of me and cast me aside like he had done with so many others. Exerting every ounce of strength I had in my mind and body, I fought him. He growled with anger as he felt my resistance. His eyes burned all the brighter, searing my brain with their intensity, making my mind collapse into uselessness. His vampire power, honed over hundreds of years, enhanced by the magic the Wizards had given him, was too much for me overcome. I fell into his arms, an unresisting vessel with which he could do anything he wished.
“Now, Bernard,” he whispered against my ear. “Now you will be mine.” I don’t know where my ability to thwart him came from. Later, I would ask Marcus if he had somehow known of my plight and had entered my mind, giving me the strength to defy and challenge the spell Darius had cast over me. Marcus, of course, denied it, telling me it was all my own doing—but suddenly from deep inside myself I felt a power surge through my blood.
“No!” I roared, breaking free of his embrace and his thrall. “I will not join your band of renegades, Darius. My allegiance, and my love, will always be with Marcus!” Darius stared at me hard and long, his face first a mask of disbelief then one of intense contempt. “So be it,” he snapped. “You have chosen, and I will not ask again.” For a moment, I thought he intended to summon his magic to kill me in the most painful way possible. I knew he could, and I would be powerless to prevent it. He knew it too, for I saw his eyes flicker with the intent, then he turned from me with a dismissive wave of his hand.
“Go to your beloved friend then,” he rasped at me. “But know this, Bernard. I will never forget nor forgive what you have done here today. Should our paths ever cross again, I will not be so magnanimous. And when you do see Marcus again, tell him what you have cost him—a truce, perhaps a peace, with the Dark Forces. Tell him that, and see how he Blood Resurrection
regards you then!” And with that, as if to prove his powers were greater than any of ours, he disappeared from my sight in the blinking of an eye.
I stood immobile for several minutes, my mind in chaos. Had I, by rejecting his offer, ruined any chance of peace between Marcus and Darius? Could I have changed the course of our vampire history?
Only time will tell,
I thought, calming myself then, came the thoughts I longed to hear in my head, strong and clear.
Marcus.
Yes, Bernard. I was privy to your encounter with Darius. You chose wisely, my friend.
Forgive me, Marcus.
There is nothing to forgive. You must not reproach yourself for any of this. Darius used his magic to bewitch you. Your own strength sawyou through, and you must knowthat he would never have kept his part of the bargain. A truce with me? He would never countenance it. He was lying, and you sawthrough his pretence.
Where are you Marcus? I need you near me, now.
I am at our home in Toulon. Meet me there.
At once…
Darius, for all his evil ways, had an allure that was hard to resist, and the thought of his death, of his virile and vibrant life being cut off, was not something I could find pleasure in. I would not tell Joseph this, of course. He was understandably enraged by what Darius had tried to do—take his mortal lover from him by force. Nor did I mention my regret to Pietro.
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to New York while Marcus lived there many years before. So it was with some excitement that we accepted his invitation.
It was wonderful to see Roger looking so well and now so thoroughly at ease with his vampire life. Joseph and I had a joyous reunion, and it was a source of real pleasure to see his obvious happiness with his forever companion, Micah. It seemed Joseph had told Micah all about our adventures together, for he greeted me with great warmth, telling me how grateful he was that I had saved Joseph all those years before. He had been changed, but recently, and was still coming to terms with all that it entails, but it was heartening to see the love he and Joseph had for one another.
I was struck by just how close Micah and I became in such a short time. Was it the blood we shared? I wondered. But then, we had all shared Marcus’ blood in one way or another, especially Roger. And while I felt a fondness for him, I was moved to an almost brotherly love for Micah—a familial tie of some kind.
“Very well, I thought,” I replied, turning down the comforter on the bed.
“But it can’t be easy, knowing he’s the only mortal in the room.”
“They manage as best they can, Pietro. They are very much in love, as are Joseph and Micah.”
“Love conquers all, eh?” Pietro gave me a sly smile.
“As well you know.”
“Indeed,” he agreed, pulling me into his arms. “I’ve known it for over one hundred years.”
“And they said it wouldn’t last!”
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Laughing, we tumbled into bed then fell silent as our mouths had better things to do than talk.
* * * *
The following day, the news on the television and in the newspapers was astounding.
Pope Dies in His Sleep
, the banner headlines screamed.
Pontiff Laid Lowby Mystery Virus
.
“But he was Pope for such a short time. What do they mean by ‘mystery virus’, do you suppose?”
“Just that. He might have picked up something on his visit to Africa.” Marcus joined us in the dining room. “You’ve heard the news?” “Yes. We were just talking of it,” I said. “What do you think of this ‘mystery virus’
they’re giving as a reason for his death?”
“I don’t like it,” he muttered. “Something feels wrong about this.” He stared at Pietro.
“You look concerned, Pietro. What are your instincts telling you?”
“Anyone we should know of?” Marcus asked.
“No one springs to mind,” I replied. “Pietro?”
He shook his head. “Cardinal Firenze, perhaps, but it could be anyone, really.”