The Dark-Hunters (64 page)

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Authors: Sherrilyn Kenyon

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Romance, #Paranormal, #Vampires, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Paranormal & Urban

BOOK: The Dark-Hunters
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His ominous voice sent a chill down her spine. “Really?”

“Oh yeah. Some of these guys come from a long family history of Squirehood that goes back thousands of years.”

“Is it like slavery?” she asked.

“No. I can leave at any time I choose, I just can’t breach my Squire’s oath. Once taken, the oath is unbreakable and eternal. When I get married, my wife won’t ever know what Kyrian is, or what I do for him, not unless she’s a Squire, too. After my children reach adulthood, I can decide to let them in on it or not. If I choose to let them in, they have to go before Acheron and Artemis, who will review and hopefully approve their application.”

Now that was truly scary, because as he spoke those words, a horrible thought occurred to her. “What about me? Wouldn’t they think I pose a threat?”

His face turned deadly serious as he paused at a red light and turned to face her. “If you do, one of the Squires
will
kill you.”

She swallowed. “That’s not comforting.”

“It’s not meant to be. We take our duties very seriously. The Dark-Hunters are all that stand between the human race and slavery or extinction. Without them, the Apollites and Daimons would own us all.”

*   *   *

Kyrian lay in bed, trying his best to sleep, but over and over he felt Amanda inside him. She was at the remains of her house. He knew it. He felt her tears, her rage. Her despair.

And he ached for her.

How he wished he could be there with her right now. Comforting her. Never before had the loss of daylight freedom bothered him, but now it did. If he weren’t a Dark-Hunter, he would be able to stand by her side and offer her his strength. His support.

Closing his eyes, he breathed deeply, trying to stave off the pain. In a fit of anguished rage, he had chosen this course. Now, there was no way out. Artemis guarded her army zealously and had set the bar so high that in all this time, Kyrian had only known three Dark-Hunters to ever regain their souls.

All the others had died trying.

“What do I need with a soul, anyway?” he breathed as he opened his eyes to stare up at the brown and gold canopy over his bed. “All it does is make a man weak.”

His life had meaning. It had purpose.

Then why did something within him actually hurt in desperate need for Amanda?

It was a feeling he hadn’t experienced in centuries and it was a feeling that had once caused him to betray everyone who had loved him.

“I won’t be weak again,” he whispered. It wasn’t that he thought Amanda would hurt him intentionally. It was himself that he feared, for once he gave his heart or his loyalty, he never revoked it.

It came down to one basic fact. He was scared of himself and the lengths he would go to keep her safe.

*   *   *

After they visited the remains of Amanda’s house and her mother’s home, Nick drove into the heart of the French Quarter and parked on a side street so that they could walk over to Chartres. He led Amanda down the semicrowded retail area until they reached a small boutique called Dream Dolls and Accessories.

Amanda frowned. They were going to a doll store? How weird was that?

“What are we doing?” she asked as he opened the door for her.

“We’re going to see the dollmaker.”

Okay, ask a stupid question …

She looked skeptically at Nick. “You know, I don’t think they make life-sized Barbies.”

He snorted at her as she walked into the shop with Nick one step behind her. “I’m not looking for a Barbie and this trip isn’t for me. I’m here for Kyrian.”

Now she really was worried. “Why?”

Before he could answer, an elderly lady looked up from her workbench beside the door and caught Amanda’s full attention. She held a Barbie doll whose face she was repainting.

The woman wore a strange orange headpiece with a light and a bifocal eye shield. It covered her stark white hair, which was pulled back into a tight bun. Her old, brown eyes were bright and friendly.

“Little Nicky,” she said in a motherly tone. “What brings you here this afternoon and with such a beautiful guest? Why, I do believe this is the first time I’ve ever seen you with a woman.” She gestured at him with the tiny paintbrush in her hand. “One worth being seen with, anyway. Why, she’s plum nice-looking and I’m not talking about her looks, if you know what I mean.”

Nick raked a hand through his hair and shot Amanda an embarrassed glance.

“Liza, my love,” he said in a loud tone, flashing her a devilish, charming grin. “Do I really need a reason to come see your shining face?”

She laughed at that. “I may be old, Nicholas Gautier, but I ain’t stupid yet.” She tapped her head, making her headgear shake. “My old noodle is still up to snuff and it’s been more years than I care to remember since a man like you came by to see me for a social call. Now come whisper in my ear and tell me what you be needing.”

Nick went to whisper and it was then she realized Liza was a touch deaf. In fact, Nick ended up speaking so loudly, Amanda heard every word clearly.

Even when he ordered plastic explosives.

“Now, remember,” he said. “Kyrian wants one just like Talon’s.”

“I heard you, Nicky,” Liza said good-naturedly. “What, you think I’m deaf?” She winked at Amanda.

“When should I come back?” Nick asked.

Liza pursed her lips. “Give me a day or two. Can you?” She held up the doll in her hands. “Barbie waits for no Dark-Hunter.”

Nick laughed. “Sure, Liza, thanks.”

As they headed for the door, Liza stopped them. “You know,” she said to Amanda as she tottered up to her. The old woman barely cleared five feet. She patted Amanda on the arm. “You have a graceful look to you. Like a pretty little angel.”

Amanda smiled in gratitude. “Thank you.”

Liza tilted the lenses up on her headgear and walked to a shelf by the door. She stood up on her tiptoes and took a custom-crafted Barbie off the shelf. It was all white, with long, curly black hair, and it had faint, wispy angel wings and a beautiful white beadwork gown.

Never had Amanda seen anything more beautiful or delicate.

Liza handed it to her. “Her name is Starla. I painted her face like a lady I know who comes in here all the time.” She held the doll to her ear as if the doll were talking to her. She nodded, then handed the Barbie to Amanda. “She says she wants to go home with you.”

Amanda’s jaw dropped. Especially when she saw the four-hundred-dollar price tag on the doll. “Thank you, Liza, but I can’t take this,” she said, trying to give it back.

Liza waved her hand, refusing. “It’s yours, hon. You need an angel to watch over you.”

“But—”

“It’s all right,” Nick said, inclining his head to the door. Then in a low tone, he said, “Don’t hurt her feelings by refusing it. She loves to give them away.”

Amanda hugged the old woman. “Thank you, Liza. I will treasure her always.”

They were almost out the door when Liza stopped them again. She took the doll back. “I forgot something,” she said. “Starla is very special.” Liza put the doll’s legs together, then pressed her head down.

Two pencil-thin, three-inch blades shot out of her feet.

“It’s for Daimons,” Liza announced, pulling the head up until the blades retracted. “Beauty is sometimes best when it’s lethal.”

Okay, Amanda thought slowly. She wasn’t quite sure what to make of all this.

Liza handed her the doll and patted her arm again. “You two take care.”

“We will,” Nick said and this time they made it all the way to the street.

Amanda stared at the doll in her hands, not sure what to think.

Nick laughed at her the whole way to the car.

“Liza’s a Squire, isn’t she?” Amanda asked as she got into the Jag and placed Starla
very
carefully in her lap.

“She’s retired, but yes. She was a Squire and an Oracle for about thirty-five years until she turned Xander’s care over to Brynna.”

“Is Liza the one who makes the boots for Kyrian?”

He shook his head as he started the engine. “Another Dark-Hunter makes the big weapons. The swords, boots, and such. Liza makes the small weapons like the pendulums that carry plastique. She’s an accomplished artist who likes to make jewelry and other innocuous items lethal.”

Amanda let out a deep breath. “You guys are scary.”

He laughed at that, then checked his watch. “It’s almost three. We still have to go to Talon’s and I have to get you back before dark, so we need to rush.”

“Okay.”

They drove for a good forty minutes, out of the city and into the deep bayou.

Down at the end of a long, winding dirt road, they came to a large, old shed/houselike structure. If not for the new locks on it, she wouldn’t have believed anyone had used it in a hundred years. Well, that and the peculiar mailbox in front of it. It was black with what appeared to be giant silver spikes going through the box both diagonally and horizontally.

“Talon is weird,” Nick said as he caught her staring at it. “He thinks it’s funny that he staked his mailbox.”

Nick opened the garage door with the remote in his car. She gasped as they pulled inside and Nick parked the Jag.

Inside, the shed was tile and steel and housed a Viper, a collection of five Harley-Davidsons, and a small catamaran docked in the rear, over the swamp.

“Wow,” she breathed as she spotted one Harley that stood apart from the others. Sleek and black, it gleamed in the dim light. It was obviously a prized possession and she remembered Talon riding it last night.

Nick paid no attention to the car or motorcycles as he headed for the docked catamaran.

“Talon lives all the way out here?” she asked as she joined him on the crisp, clean dock and noticed that they had left enough room for another boat beside the first one.

He helped her into the catamaran, then moved to open the garage door that led out to the swamp. “Yeah, being an ancient Celt, he loves nature. Even when it’s gruesome.”

Amanda arched a brow. “Is he really an ancient Celt?”

“Oh yeah. From the fifth or sixth century. He was a chieftain. His father was a druid high priest and his mother the leader before him.”

“Really?”

He nodded as he untied the boat, then jumped inside it. Once she was seated, he started the whirring engine.

“How did he become a Dark-Hunter?” she shouted over the roar.

“His clan betrayed him,” Nick said, steering the boat out into the swamp. “They told him they needed to sacrifice someone of his blood. It was either him or his sister. He agreed, but as soon as they had him tied down, they killed his sister in front of him. He went nuts, but since he was tied down, there was nothing he could do. As they turned to kill him, he swore vengeance on all of them.”

Jeez, did
none
of them have a happy life?

“He killed his clan members?” she asked.

“I would imagine so.”

Amanda sat in silence while she thought about that. Poor Talon. She couldn’t imagine what it would be like to watch one of her beloved sisters die before her eyes. They might annoy her a large portion of the time, but they meant the world to her and she would kill anyone who hurt one of them.

The horror that man must have felt that day. It must still haunt him.

Nick navigated deep into the swamp until they came upon an incredibly small cabin. She doubted it was even eight hundred square feet. It looked even more rundown on the outside than the shed where they had left Nick’s car. The rough wood was a light, sun-faded gray and it looked as if it would crumble under the slightest breeze.

As they approached it, she saw a dock behind the cabin with two large generators and another catamaran.

“What does he do during hurricane season?” she asked as Nick turned off the boat.

“Nothing really. One of Talon’s powers is that he can control the weather so it’s not that big a danger. But there’s always the possibility the place could blow apart in the daylight while he’s sleeping and not aware of weather conditions. In which case, he’s toast.”

“They like to live dangerously, don’t they?”

He laughed. “It takes a certain breed to do what they do. Flirting with disaster is pretty much a basic requirement.”

Nick got out of the boat first with a warning for her to stay put. He carefully walked along a narrow, old walkway that led from the makeshift dock to the cabin door, then motioned for her to join him.

“Back off, Beth,” he snapped as an alligator approached her.

Amanda jumped back onto the boat.

“It’s okay,” Nick assured her. “They protect Talon in the daylight. As long as you’re with me, they’re harmless.”

“I don’t know about this,” she said, reluctantly leaving the boat again.

Four massively huge alligators kept a vicious eye on her and followed her all the way to the door. Amanda’s throat constricted in fear as the largest alligator climbed up on the porch behind them and swished its tail.

It hissed at them.

“Shut up, Beth,” Nick snapped. “Or I swear I’ll make luggage out of you.” Nick knocked on the faded old door.

“It’s not dark yet, Nick,” Talon’s thickly accented voice snapped from inside, making her wonder how he knew it was them. “What do you want?”

“I need your
srad
for Kyrian before it gets dark.”

Amanda heard rustling on the other side of the door. A few seconds later, the lock clicked and the door opened the tiniest of cracks. Nick opened it wider and let them in.

She tried to see in the darkness, but had no luck until Nick turned on a small desk lamp.

Amanda froze as soon as she saw the interior. The walls were painted black and the place looked like a military control room. There were computers and electronic equipment everywhere. Though the location and-outside of the cabin would deny it, the man was a techno-junkie.

When her gaze touched on Talon, her jaw dropped wide open. The man was
completely
naked.

And he looked really good.

She stared at his perfect body, which was covered with strange red and black Celtic tattoos over the left side of his torso, front and back, and all the way down his left arm. His large, dragon-headed torc gleamed in the dim light. And though the man was sinfully handsome, she was strangely unmoved by him.

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