Twilight Vendetta (40 page)

Read Twilight Vendetta Online

Authors: Maggie Shayne

BOOK: Twilight Vendetta
9.44Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

-The End-

Continue reading for an excerpt from the next installment of
Wings in the Night: Reborn,

The Rhiannon Chronicles.

The Rhiannon Chronicles: Entry 1

 

I
stood on the deck of the ship we’d stolen from the US government, the sea wind rinsing my hair with the scents of every creature she held in her briny womb. If they found us, they would, as my young friend Charlotte put it, “blow us out of the water.” And they wouldn’t care about destroying the seven hybrid children who were still onboard. That was her opinion, at least. I rather thought they would try to take those walking, talking little experiments alive. They were, after all, bred and trained to be weapons. Vampire killers.

I could only hold the glamour I’d cast for so long. I had to rest. And my attention was divided, to say the least, by the little ones that had been known as the Offspring.

One in particular.

Sooner or later, the government’s secret anti-vampire troops would find us. We had to get the children off this ship.

And yet right then, at that moment. We were safe. The night was beautiful. And I was in the arms of the man I loved beyond reason. My Roland.

“If it can’t be Egypt, my love, then it must be the rocky coast of Maine. I’ll have it no other way," I told him.

Roland crooked a dark brow at me as if I’d grown a second head. Momentarily, that distracted me from our dire situation. He was so incredibly beautiful, standing there with the silent night sky, glittering stars, and ancient rolling ocean as his backdrop. He had the strong jawline and proud nose of nobility, the cheekbones and full, sensual lips of a leading man, with a deeper than usual dip in the center of the top one. I had a hard time keeping my own mouth away from that sexy upper lip of his. Further, he had the body of a god and the piercing, hypnotic dark eyes of a vampire–for that’s exactly what he was. As was I.

He sensed the arousal in my blood, I knew he did, because he smiled very slightly, and his eyes sparked. Then, knowing he had me at a disadvantage, he tried his ever present logic on me.

“Rhiannon,” he said, “We are in the northern Pacific Ocean. Pacific. Not Atlantic.”

“The Pacific and I do not get along," I said. "She’s full of predators who make our kind seem mild by comparison, one of whom took your leg, lest you forget.”

“Not bloody likely to forget that,” he said with a resigned look down at the ingenious mechanical prosthetic the vampire Killian had made for him, all from items found aboard the
Anemone
.

I touched his arm, sorry to have brought it up. We still didn’t know if his leg would grow back. Our kind regenerate and heal during the day sleep. But I’d never known of a vampire with an injury this severe who survived long enough to make it to his bed. If Roland’s limb was going to grow back, we’d seen no sign of it yet.

I dragged my fingertips over his cheek, down his corded neck and across his chest to distract him from his pain. “I far prefer the rocky cliffs of the northeastern coast. There’s an entirely different energy to the Atlantic. She feels younger, friskier, lighter somehow. She has a restlessness about her, a vibrant, feisty eagerness.”

“Does she now?” I nodded, and he gazed at me with love in his eyes, amused, I thought, by my uncharacteristic whimsy. “And what personality do you attribute to the Pacific? Besides her children’s hunger for vampire limbs?”

That he could joke about his loss made me love him even more. I’d been finding reasons to love him more for century upon century. I used to think my love for this man would reach its maximum at some point. But I’d come to believe it was capable of growing infinitely. Every day, somehow, it was more.

He was awaiting my reply–not impatient, only eager–standing directly behind me, and I was enjoying our moment on the midnight sea. After all, they hadn’t found us yet.

I leaned on the ship’s rail and looked out across the massive swells, rising and falling like the lungs of a giant, slowly, with an ancient and timeless rhythm. “The Pacific is older, deeper, calmer, perhaps even wiser. But deadlier, too. She holds immense power, and secrets–unfathomable secrets.”

“She’s like you, then,” Roland said softly, his arm curling around my waist to pull me closer. “How can you not love her? How could anyone?”

I turned in his embrace to welcome his kiss, and thought again of the miracle that was our love.

As he lifted his head, his eyes as alight as the stars above us, he said, “Short of heading southward all the way to the Panama Canal, I don’t see how we can–”

I pushed at his chest, cutting him off as he stumbled a little. “You can’t sweet talk me out of this, Roland. I’m tired of being at sea. We are not safe on this stolen ship, and I’m not even certain that the
Glamourie
can hide us from our persecutors with their radar and sonar and whatever else they’re using to search for us. I want a safe place, a haven where we can...settle down.”

He blinked precisely twice, and then his entire being softened. “I never thought in all the centuries we’ve been together, I would hear you say you’d like to settle down.”

I lowered my head, embarrassed I suppose, at my own weakness. I didn’t have many. In fact, until recently, Roland had been the only one. “Not forever, of course. Just for a short while. A dozen years, perhaps fifteen. Just until Nikki is grown.” I looked past him, then, at the seven children playing on the deck. “She’s never had a home, Roland. Never had a family, nor any of the things children need in order to thrive. None of them have.”

He turned, looking at them as well. We’d found thirteen children in kennel-like cages below decks when we’d taken control of the so-called research vessel
Anemone
. According to the files we’d found, the Offspring had been produced in four batches. The oldest batch included just two– a girl and a boy, both seventeen years old–but they were no longer with us. The second batch were all eleven years of age, and there were four of those, two boys and two girls. Next, there were the seven-year-olds, two boys and a little girl who had stolen my heart after nearly killing me. I’d named her Nikki.

There had been four more, just two years of age, mere babes, but they too, were gone.

It had not escaped my notice that each group of children included equal numbers of males and females, likely siblings. Which meant my Nikki probably had a twin sister who had not survived. And that thought infuriated me.

When we’d taken this ship, we’d also found nearly a hundred vampires, half-starved and locked up in cells. They’d been captives, used to train the killer children. Most of them had left the ship by now. Every time we dared venture near enough to shore, another group would take to the water, to make their own way. Seth and Reaper, dear friends of mine, left to seek their mates, who had been captured as well, but taken to a different location. Devlin and his dwindling gang had headed out to a private island to take refuge and begin to build what Devlin referred to as “the resistance.” We were not at war with mankind, exactly. But there were elements among them who were determined to wipe us out of existence, and Devlin intended to fight back.

When he left, the two eldest of The Offspring had jumped into the sea after him. I’d had time to shout a mental warning, but we’d been spotted and had to flee. Dev said he would go back for the two. And it kills me that I don’t know whether he managed to save them or not.

Another group of vampires had taken the two-year-olds with them when they left, to find a safe haven in which to raise them. We couldn’t give them back to the mortals. The children were powerful. How powerful, we still didn’t know. But they’d been bred to be used as weapons against us. Mortals could not be trusted with such a powerful force, nor could they be counted on to raise the children as souls deserving of love and kindness, rather than as a pack of killer dogs.

For two weeks, we’d had control of the ship. I thought the remaining children were beginning to understand that we were their friends, here to care for them, to save them. Bribing them with chocolate from the galley helped, as did having a few mortals among us who insisted vampires were not evil or in need of killing, as the children had been taught.

Nikki was perched in the miniature crow’s nest Christian had built, while he stood nearby, attentive, arms outstretched below in case she fell. Dear Christian. Despite his lumbering size, he had the heart and soul of a child himself. He’d been experimented on by those animals who called themselves scientists, as well.

“Look how Pandora watches over them,” I said to Roland. My cat pretended not to like the little ones mauling her, but she was never far from the seven of them, always guarding, watchful, protective, as if they were her own cubs.

“The sight of a small child flung across the back of a black panther might be alarming to some,” Roland said, and I heard the smile in his voice.

“To me, it’s a sight that deserves to be the subject of a painting by a master.”

I sent Nikki a wave, and she smiled hugely and waved back, her sleek black hair falling into her eyes as she did. I wanted to shower that little girl in precious gems and swathe her in fabric spun of gold.

“Your eyes, when you look at her,” Roland whispered, “shine in a way I’ve never seen, Rhiannon.”

I shifted my gaze back to my mate. “I’ve never felt this way before, Roland. I want to give her a home. A childhood of magic and wonder, of luxury and delight.”

“You love her.”

I nodded, blinking down an uncharacteristic swell of emotion. “I guess I do. I never thought I’d have the chance to raise a child. This is a gift that might never come again.”

He pushed a hand through my hair in that way he so often did, lifting the long dark length of it and tucking it behind my ear. “I’ll make arrangements to get us to Maine.”

My smile was fast and bright. “Thank you, my love.” I kissed his cheek, but when I pulled away, his strong arms closed around me, tugging me hard against him.

“That sad little peck was hardly a thank you at all, my goddess.”

Oh, he knew how to get to me, my Roland did. I smiled slowly and leaning up, whispered into his ear. “Once we’re in the privacy of our cabin, I’ll thank you properly.” Then I nipped his earlobe and felt a rush of pleasure course through him.

Perhaps I was asking the impossible of him, but I knew my Roland. Even if I asked for us to go and live on the moon, he would make it happen. Besides, he was as smitten with Nikki as I.

I leaned into his chest, there on the deck, feeling blissful and even optimistic.

And then there was an ear splitting sound, the blast of a deep throated horn, repeating itself over and over. I spun to face Roland. “What–?”

“It’s the alarm. Something must be wrong.”

The hatch flew open, Charlotte and Killian burst through, wide eyed. “We intercepted a transmission,” Charlie shouted. “They’ve found us, Rhiannon. They’re heading this way. We have to get the children off this ship!”

“We’re miles from shore, and we haven’t got a single lifeboat,” I whispered. “For the love of the Gods, Roland, what are we going to do?”

 

Look for THE RHIANNON CHRONICLES in fall of 2015!

 

Wings in the Night: Reborn

Other books

Spring Collection by Judith Krantz
Balm by Dolen Perkins-Valdez
Trust by Francine Pascal
Cooking Well: Multiple Sclerosis by Marie-Annick Courtier
The White Earth by Andrew McGahan
Bending Tyme by Maria-Claire Payne
Defiant Rose by Quinn, Colleen
Payback Ain't Enough by Clark, Wahida