Disoriented,
he woke deep within the ground. The first sensation he felt was
one of hunger. It was no ordinary hunger, but one of gut-wrenching,
skin-crawling necessity. He was starving. Every cell in his body
demanded nourishment. He lay there in silence while the hunger
gnawed at him like a rat. It attacked not only his body, but also
his mind so that he feared for all others, humans and Carpathians
alike. Feared for himself. Feared for his soul. This time the
darkness was spreading fast and ferociously, the terrible call
of bloodlust and his soul was definitely in jeopardy.
What dared to disturb
his sleep? More importantly, had it disturbed Lucian's sleep?
Gabriel had locked Lucian into the earth, deep into the ancient
cemetery centuries ago, longer than he cared to think about. If
Lucian had awakened when he had, if he had been disturbed by the
same movements above ground, then there was every chance he would
rise before Gabriel could find the strength to stop him.
It was intensely
difficult to think with hunger gripping him and his body ravaged
and starved. How long had he been in the earth? Above him, he
sensed the sun setting. After all the long centuries, his internal
clock could still feel the setting of the sun and the beginning
of their time. Creatures of the night. The ground suddenly shifted. Gabriel
felt his heart slam hard in his chest. He had waited too long,
spent too much time trying to get his bearings, trying to clear
his clouded mind. Alarm spread fast. Lucian was rising. Lucian's
need for prey would be as great as his own and his appetite would
be voracious. There would be no way to stop him, not while Gabriel
was so weak himself.
Because he had
no choice, Gabriel burst through the layers of earth where he
had laid buried for so long, where he had deliberately slumbered,
choosing to lock himself into the ground as he locked Lucian to
himself. The fight in the Paris cemetery had been a long, horrendous
battle. Both Lucian and Gabriel had sustained grave wounds, wounds
that should have killed them. Lucian had gone to ground just outside
the sanctified burial ground while Gabriel had sought sanctuary
within it. Gabriel had been very tired of the long centuries of
bleak darkness. The black empty void of his existence. He did
not have the luxury of choosing to walk into the dawn as most
of his kind did. There was Lucian. His twin. Lucian was strong
and brilliant, always the one that led. There was no other skilled
enough, powerful enough to hunt and destroy Lucian. There was
only Gabriel. He had spent several lifetimes following where Lucian
led, hunting the vampire, the undead with him, relying on his
battle sense. There had been no other like Lucian, none as brilliant
at hunting the vampire, the scourge of their race. Lucian had
a gift. Yet Lucian had finally succumbed to the dark whisper of
power, the insidious call of bloodlust. Lucian had given up his
soul, choosing the way of the damned, turning into the very monster
he had pursued for centuries. The vampire.
Unexpectedly, Gabriel had to spend two
centuries hunting his beloved brother. It had been a shock he
still didn't quite believe. Finally after so many battles where
neither had been victorious he made the decision to lock his twin
in the earth for all time. They fought continually, Gabriel chasing
Lucian throughout Europe in the hopes of destroying that which
was now evil, yet he had never been able to best him. They both
suffered many terrible wounds, and time and again Lucian had led
Gabriel back to Paris, a city often rampant with vampires and
debauchery. Gabriel tried for so long, battle after battle, but
always Lucian got away. After the terrible war in the cemetery
where both of them suffered horrendous wounds and loss of blood,
he had waited until he had Lucian unsuspecting in the earth and
he bound his twin to him. They were not dead, yet it was the only
solution Gabriel could come up with to end the draw they seemed
to have in their battles. He was tired and alone and without comfort
of any kind. He wanted rest yet he could not seek the dawn until
Lucian was fully destroyed. It was a terrible decision, dead,
yet not dead, buried for all eternity, yet Gabriel could think
of no other. Nothing should have disturbed them, yet something
had been moving the earth above their heads.
Gabriel had no idea of how much time had passed while he had rested in the earth,
yet his body was starved for blood. His skin was gray and drawn
tight over his skeleton like that of an old man. At once, as he
burst into the air, he clothed himself, adding a long, hooded
cape to hide his appearance while he hunted throughout the city.
Just that small deed drained the energy from his wizened body.
He needed blood desperately. He was so weak he nearly fell from
the sky.
As he settled to the ground, he stared
in astonishment at the huge contraptions that had awakened him,
worse, had awakened Lucian. Those contraptions, so alien to him,
had disturbed a demon so deadly the world could never comprehend
its power. Those contraptions had unleashed it upon the modern
world. Gabriel took a deep breath, inhaled the night. At once
he was assaulted with so many smells his starving body could barely
assimilate them all.
Hunger ate at him unmercifully, relentlessly
and he realized with a sinking heart that he was so close to turning,
so starved that when he was forced to feed, the demon in him would
rise. Never-the-less he had no real choice in the matter. He had
to have sustenance to hunt. If he did not hunt Lucian, protect
humans and Carpathians alike, who was there to do so?
Gabriel drew the thick cloak closer around
his body as he staggered toward the graveyard adjacent to the
sanctified ground. He could see where the machines had disturbed
the earth. Apparently the gravesites were being dug up and removed.
He found where the soil had boiled up out of the earth as Lucian
had risen. For a moment he sank down on his knees to bury both
hands in the dirt. Lucian. His brother. His twin. He bowed his
head in sorrow. How often had they shared knowledge? Shared battles?
Blood? Nearly two thousand years they had been together, fought
for their people, hunted the undead and destroyed them. Now he
was alone. Lucian was the legendary warrior, the greatest of their
people, yet he had fallen as so many had before him. Gabriel would
have bet his life that his twin would never have succumbed to
the dark whisper of power.
Gabriel stood up slowly and began to walk
toward the street. The long years that had gone by had changed
the world. Everything was so different. He understood none of
it. He was very disoriented, even his sight was hazy. He stumbled
along, trying to stay away from the people crowding the streets.
They were everywhere and they avoided touching him. He touched
their minds briefly. They thought him an 'old homeless man' perhaps
a drunk or even insane. No one looked his way, no one wanted to
see him. He was shriveled, his skin gray. He drew the long cloak
even closer, hiding his withered body within its folds.
Hunger assailed his senses so that his
fangs exploded in his mouth and dripped with anticipation of a
feast. He needed nourishment desperately. Stumbling, almost blind,
he continued along the street. The city was so different, no longer
the Paris of old, but a huge sprawling complex of buildings and
paved streets. Lights were blazing from the interior of the massive
structures and from street lamps overhead. It was not the city
he remembered or with which he was comfortable.
He should have caught the nearest prey
and fed voraciously to bring him instant strength, but the dread
of being unable to stop himself was uppermost in his mind. He
had a sworn duty to his people, to the human race, but most importantly
to his beloved brother. Lucian had been his hero, the one he placed
above all others and deservedly so. They had taken a vow together
and he would honor it as Lucian would have done for him. No other
hunter would be allowed to destroy his brother, it was his task
alone.
The smell of blood was overpowering. It
beat at him with the same intensity as his hunger. The sound of
it rushing through veins, ebbing and flowing, burgeoning with
life, taunted him. In his present state of weakness he would be
unable to completely control his prey enough to keep them calm.
That would only add to the power of the demon rising.
"Sir, may I help you in some way?
Are you ill?" It was the most beautiful voice he had ever
heard. She spoke in flawless French, her accent perfect but he
was uncertain whether she was actually French. Shockingly her
words brought him a measure of comfort as if her voice alone could
soothe him.
Gabriel shuddered. The last thing he wanted
was to feast on an innocent woman. Without looking at her he shook
his head and continued walking. He was so weak he stumbled against
her. She was tall and slender and surprisingly strong. Immediately
she wrapped her arm around him ignoring his musty, dirty odor.
The moment she touched him he felt a sense of peace seeping into
his tortured soul. The unrelenting hunger lessened and as long
as she was touching him, he felt a semblance of control.
Deliberately he kept his face averted
from her, knowing his eyes would be reflecting the red haze of
the demon rising in him. Her close proximity should have triggered
his violent instincts instead of soothing him. She was definitely
the last person he wanted to chance using as prey. He sensed her
goodness, her resolve to help him, her complete selflessness.
Her compassion and goodness were the only reasons he had not attacked
and sank his fangs deep within her veins when every shrunken cell
and fiber of his being demanded he do so for his own self preservation.
She was urging him toward a sleek contraption
on the edge of the sidewalk. He knew by the hundreds of others
on the road he would be expected to ride in it. "Are you
injured, or just hungry? There's a homeless shelter right up the
street. They can give you a place to stay for the night and a
hot meal. Let me take you there. This is my car. Please get in
and let me help you."
Her voice seemed to whisper over him,
a seduction of the senses. He truly feared for her life, for his
own soul. He was far too weak to fight the obsession of her presence.
He allowed her to seat him in the car, but he huddled as far from
her as he was able. Now that there was no longer any physical
contact, he could hear the blood rushing in her veins, calling
to him. Whispering like the most tempting seductress. Hunger roared
through him so that he was shaking with the need to sink his teeth
deep into her vulnerable neck. He could hear her heart, the steady
beat that went on and on, threatening to drive him mad. He could
almost taste the blood, knowing it would pour into his mouth,
down his throat as he gorged himself.
"My name is Francesca Del Ponce,"
she told him gently. "Please tell me if you're hurt or in
need of medical attention. Don't worry about the cost. I have
friends at the hospital and they'll help you." She didn't
add she often brought in indigents and paid the bill herself.
Gabriel remained silent. It was all he
could do to shield his thoughts, an automatic protection Lucian
had drilled into him from the time they were mere fledglings.
The lure of blood was overpowering. It was only the goodness radiating
from her that prevented him from leaping upon her and feasting
as his shriveled cells cried out for him to do. He sank deeper
into the hooded cape, while the need for sustenance threatened
to overpower him.
Francesca glanced at the old man worriedly.
She hadn't caught a glimpse of his face, but he was gray with
hunger and shaking with fatigue. He looked starved. When she touched
him she had sensed a terrible conflict within him and his body
raged with hunger. It took control not to race through the streets
to the shelter. She wanted desperately to get him aid. Her small
white teeth worried at her bottom lip. She felt anxious, an emotion
Francesca could not remember feeling in a long while. She needed to give this man aid and comfort, not just wanted to do so. It
was so strong, the feeling was almost a compulsion and very confusing
to her.
"Don't worry, I can take care of
things for you. Just sit back and relax." Francesca drove
with her usual abandon through the streets. Most of the policeman
knew her car and would never do more than grin at her when she
broke all the laws. She was a healer. An exceptional healer. Her
one gift to the world. It had made a great many friends for her.
Those that didn't care about favors or healing cared about the
fact that she had a great deal of money and many friends in high
political positions.
She pulled up to the shelter and stopped
the car almost at the door. She didn't want the old man to have
to walk too far. He seemed ready to topple over at any moment.
The hood of his unusual cape concealed his hair from her, but
she had the impression it was long and thick and old-fashioned.
Rushing around the front of the car, she reached inside to help
him out.
Gabriel didn't want her to touch him again,
but he couldn't help himself. There was something very soothing
in her touch, almost healing. It helped him to hold the terrible
craving at bay for a little while longer. The contraption he was
riding in, rushing through the streets, made him sick and dizzy.
He needed to orient himself to the world he was in. Find out the
year. Study the new technology. Most of all he needed to find
the strength to feed without allowing the demon deep within him,
roaring and struggling for freedom, to reign supreme. He could
feel it in him, the red haze, animal instincts rising to overcome
the thin veneer of civility his species had.
"Francesca! Another one? We're so
full this evening." Marvin Challot glanced uneasily at the
elderly man she was helping toward the door. Something about the
man raised the hair on the back of his neck. He looked old and
gnarled, the fingernails too long and too sharp but he was so
weak Marvin felt guilty that he didn't want anything to do with
this stranger. He was ashamed of himself for the feeling of revulsion,
but he was actually repulsed by the old man. He could hardly refuse
Francesca. She contributed more money, more time and more effort
than anyone else. If it weren't for her, there would be no shelter.
Reluctantly Marvin reached out to take
the old man's arm. Gabriel inhaled sharply. The moment Francesca
released his arm, he nearly lost all control. Fangs exploded in
his mouth and the blood pumping through human veins was so loud
he could hear nothing else. Everything disappeared in a red haze.
Hunger. Starvation. He had to feed. Eyes glowing with red flames,
the demon within him lifted its head with a roar, wrestled him
for total control, wrestled to force the fangs his fangs to retract.
Marvin sensed he was in mortal danger.
The arm he had tried to seize seemed to contort, the bones popping
and crackling, fur rippled over the withered skin, a network of
sinewy muscle beneath. Marvin smelled a wild, pungent odor like
that of wolf. He found himself dropping the elderly man's arm,
in total terror. The head turned toward him slowly and he caught
a glimpse of death. Where there should have been eyes there were
two empty, pitiless holes. Marvin blinked and the eyes were there
again, red and flaming, much like a animal stalking its prey.
Merciless. Relentless. The eyes of a predator. Marvin didn't know
which impression was worse but he didn't want anything to do with
the old man, whatever he was. The eyes bored into him like the
slash of fangs.
Marvin cried out and jumped back. "No,
Francesca, I can't allow it. There's no room here tonight. I don't
want him here." His voice shook with terror.
Francesca almost protested but something
in Marvin's face stopped her. She nodded her acceptance of his
decision. "It's okay, Marvin. I can take care of him."
Very gently she slipped her arm around the old man's waist. "Come
with me." Her voice was very soft, soothing. She hid her
irritation of Marvin's reaction well, but it was there.
Gabriel's first inclination was to put
distance between them. He didn't want to kill her and he knew
he was far too close to turning. It took the space of a heartbeat
to realize she anchored him. She soothed him enough to leash the
savage beast for the moment. Gabriel leaned heavily against her
slender body. Her skin was warm where his was ice cold. He breathed
in her scent deeply, careful to keep his head turned away from
her and buried in the folds of the hooded cape. She could not
see him as he was, a demon, struggling with his own soul, struggling
desperately for humanity.
"Francesca," Marvin protested.
"I'll call someone to take him to the hospital. Perhaps a
policeman. Don't be alone with him. I think maybe he's insane."
As Gabriel entered the car he turned his
head to look back at the man standing on the sidewalk watching
them with fear in his eyes. He stared at the man's throat, his
hand closing into a tight fist. For one terrible moment he almost
cut off the man's windpipe just for warning her. With a soft ancient
oath he made himself forego the impulse. Hunching one shoulder,
he huddled deeper within the thick cloak. He wanted to stay close
to this beautiful woman and feel her light and compassion bathe
his tortured soul. He also wanted to run as far from her as possible
to keep her safe from the monster growing ever stronger within
him.
Francesca didn't seem in the least bit
nervous of him. If anything she was trying to reassure him. Despite
Marvin's warning she smiled at Gabriel. "It wouldn't hurt
to do a check up at the hospital. Really, it would only take a
minute."
Gabriel shook his head slowly in protest.
Her heart was beating so steadily, so strong, her blood rushing
through her body warm and inviting. She smelled good. Fresh. Clean.
He was too weak to even clean himself up. It embarrassed him that
she would see him in such a state. She was so beautiful, shining
from the inside out.
She parked in an area where it appeared
hundreds of the contraptions were sitting empty. "I'll be
right back, don't try to get out, it's a waste of your energy.
This will just take a minute." She touched his shoulder,
a small gesture meant to reassure. Immediately he felt the strange
lightening of his heavy burden.
The moment she was gone he was assailed
with hunger so that it clawed at his insides demanding he feed.
He could barely breathe with the powerful need on him. His heart
was beating very slow, one beat, a miss and another beat. His
body cried out for blood. For nourishment. Screamed for it. He
needed. That was all. So simple. He needed. Craved. Needed. It
blended together into one desire.
He smelled it. Fresh. Heard it. Yet he
smelled her too and it helped to overcome the roaring in his head.
His gut clenched, knotted. A male walked beside her. This one
was different from the last. This man was young and he was looking
at Francesca as if she were the sun, the moon, and the stars.
Every few steps the young man's body would brush Francesca's possessively.
Something wicked, something deep within him lifted its head and
snarled with unexpected dislike. His prey. No one had the right
to stand so close to her. She was his. He had marked her for himself.
The thought came unbidden and at once he was ashamed. Still, he
didn't like the male standing so close to her and it took every
ounce of his discipline to keep from leaping on the man and devouring
him there on the spot.
"Brice, I have to get home. This
gentleman needs help. I don't have time to talk right now. I just
stopped by for a few supplies."
Brice Renaldo put his hand on her arm
to stop her. "I need you to look at a patient, a little girl
for me, Francesca. It won't take that long."
"Not now, I'll come back later tonight."
Francesca's voice was soft but very firm.
Brice tightened his grip intending to
pull her back but as he did so, he felt something moving along
his skin. Looking down he saw several small spiders with rounded
shiny bottoms and vicious looking fangs running along his arm.
With an oath he let go of Francesca and shook his arm hard. The
spiders were gone as if they'd never been and Francesca was already
walking quickly to her side of the car. She was looking at him
as if he were a nut. He started to explain but when he couldn't
see any evidence of spiders, he decided it wasn't worth the trouble.
Brice hurried to the car, deliberately
taking her arm again, bending low to peer in the window at Gabriel.
His mouth immediately twisted in a disgusted grimace. "My
God, Francesca, where do you find these bums?"
"Brice!" Francesca pulled her
arm away from him with a small very feminine gesture of annoyance.
"You can be so callous sometimes." She lowered her voice,
but Gabriel with his superior hearing, heard the exchange quite
clearly. "Just because someone is old or has no money does
not make them useless or a murderer. That is the reason we never
quite make it, Brice. You have no compassion for people."
"What do you mean, no compassion,"
Brice protested. "There's a little girl who never did anyone
any harm suffering and I'm doing everything I can to help her."
Francesca moved around him when he would
have stopped her and slid behind the wheel of her car. "Later
this evening. I promise I'll look at the little girl tonight for
you." She started the car.
"You're not taking that old man home
with you, are you?" Brice demanded in spite of her admonishment.
"You'd better be taking him to the shelter. He's dirty and
probably covered with fleas. You don't know the first thing about
this man, he could be a criminal, a murderer. I mean it, Francesca,
don't you dare take him home with you."
Francesca gave him one haughty little
frown before she drove away without a backward glance. "Pay
no attention to Brice. He's a very good doctor, but he likes to
think he can tell me what to do." She glanced at her silent
companion. He was hunched very small in his side of the car. She
still had not gotten a good look at him. Not even his face. He
was hiding in the shadows, keeping his face firmly averted from
her. She wasn't even certain he understood she was trying to help
him. She had the impression of a great man, one used to wealth
and authority, probably greatly humiliated by his present circumstances.
It hadn't helped that Brice had been so snide. "It will be
just a few minutes and I'll get you somewhere warm and safe. There
will be plenty of food."
Her voice was so wonderful. It touched
him somewhere deep inside, calming him, holding the beast leashed
when he could never have done so alone. Perhaps if she was near
him when he fed he would be able to control the demon when it
rose. Gabriel buried his face in his hands. God help him, he didn't
want to kill her. His body shook with the effort to control its
need for hot blood pouring into shriveled, starving cells. This
was so dangerous. So incredibly dangerous.
The car took him a short distance from
the busy city streets along a narrow lane where trees and thick
shrubbery grew. The house was large and rambled here and there
with no particular style in mind. It was old-fashioned with a
wide verandah and long straight columns. Gabriel hesitated when
he opened the door of the contraption. Should he go with her or
should he stay? He was weak. He couldn't wait much longer. He
had to feed. He had no choice.
Francesca took his arm and helped him
as he staggered up the long stairway to the house. "I'm sorry,
I know there are quite a few stairs. You can lean on me if you
need to." She didn't know why it was so imperative she help
this stranger, but everything in her demanded she do so.
With a sinking heart, Gabriel allowed
the woman to help him up the numerous stairs to her dwelling.
He knew it was inevitable that he would kill her. He would join
the ranks of the undead and there would be no one to destroy Lucian.
No one to destroy either of them. No one capable of destroying
them. The world would have two monsters unequaled in evil. There
were too many hours to dawn. The need for blood would overcome
his good intentions. And this poor innocent woman with far too
much compassion in her would be the one to pay the ultimate price
for her kindness and mercy to one such as he.
"No!" The denial was a harsh
growl. Gabriel tore his arm from her grasp and jerked away from
the door. He staggered, lost his balance and fell.
At once Francesca was beside him. "What
are you afraid of? I won't hurt you." He was trembling beneath
her fingers, radiating a stark fear. His head was averted, deep
within the folds of the hood, one shoulder hunched as if to block
her out.
Gabriel got slowly to his feet. He didn't
have the strength to get away from this young woman with warmth
and compassion in her voice, with life bursting in her veins.
He bowed his head as he stepped through the doorway into her home.
He prayed for strength. He prayed for forgiveness. He prayed for
a miracle.
Francesca guided him through the large
rooms to the kitchen where she seated him at an intricately carved
dining table. "There's a small bathroom off to your right.
The towels are clean if you want to take a shower. You're welcome
to use it while I'm heating food."
Gabriel sighed and shook his head. He
rose slowly and moved across the floor to stand over her. Close.
So close he smelled her faint enticing fragrance through the haze
of his raw hunger. "I am sorry." He whispered the words
softly, meaning them. "I must feed, but that is not what
I need." Very gently he took the bowl from her hands and
set it on the counter.
For the first time Francesca sensed she
was in danger. She stood very still, her large black eyes studying
his cloaked figure. Then she nodded. "I see." There
was no fear in her voice, only a quiet acceptance. "Come
with me. I have something to show you. You'll need it later."
She took his hand, ignoring his long, sharp nails.
Gabriel was not using compulsion on her.
He was not using any mind merge at all to calm her and make her
accepting. She knew she was in deadly peril, he saw the knowledge
reflected in her eyes. Her hand closed over his and she tugged.
"Come with me. I can help you." She was almost tranquil,
radiating a peace to enfold him in.
He followed her because every physical
contact with her eased his suffering. He couldn't bear to think
of what he was going to do to her. Inside he felt like weeping.
A heavy stone seemed to be crushing his chest. Francesca opened
a door on the left side of the kitchen to reveal a narrow stairway.
At her urging he followed her down the stairs.
"This is the basement," she
told him, "but over here, just above this little outcropping
is another door. You can't see it, but if you place your fingertips
exactly here," she demonstrated and the rock swung inward
toward a dark cavern. She waved at the interior. "This leads
beneath the earth. You'll find it to your liking."
Gabriel inhaled the sweet welcoming scent
of the earth's richness beckoning to him. The coolness, the darkness
reached out to him with a semblance of peace.
Francesca swept her heavy fall of hair
from her neck and looked up at him with wide, gentle eyes. "I
feel the fear in you. I know what you need. I am a healer and
I can do no other than offer one such as you solace. I offer freely,
without reservation, I offer my life for yours as is my right."
The words were soft and gentle, so beautiful like the whisper
of velvet over his skin.
The actual words barely registered. Only
the sound. The seduction. The enticement. Her neck was warm satin
beneath his stroking fingers. Gabriel closed his eyes and savored
the exquisite feel of her. Where he had feared he would rend and
tear, he found the need to cradle her body close to his gently,
almost tenderly. He bent his head to feel her skin beneath his
lips. Heat and fire. His tongue stroked across her pulse and his
body tightened in anticipation. His arms drew her into the shelter
of his body, his heart. He murmured his apology and took her offering,
his teeth sinking deep into the vein of her slender neck.
At once the rush hit him like a fireball,
spreading through his starving shrunken cells. Power and strength
blossomed within him. He felt it then. White heat. Blue lightning.
His body tightened. She felt like hot silk in his arms, as if
she fit perfectly into his body. He became aware of how soft her
skin was. The taste of her was addicting. She had saved him with
her generosity. She had successfully kept the demon leashed and
unable to rise. Her blood was freely given. Freely given. That penetrated his feeding frenzy. He could feel. Guilt.
The weight in his chest following her down the basement stairs.
He had been feeling since the moment he had chanced upon her.
His body was a hard, urgent ache as he fed. Sensual. Erotic. Feeding
had never been in any way connected to sex. He should have been
incapable of sexual feelings, yet now his body was one hard unrelenting
urgent ache.
Beneath his hand her heart stuttered and
Gabriel immediately swept his tongue across the pinpricks at her
throat to close the wound with his healing saliva. He had drained
most of the blood from her slender body. He had to act fast. He
tore a wound in his wrist and pressed it over her mouth. He was
strong enough to take control of her mind. She was fading away,
her life-force simply waning. Francesca was making no attempt
to fight, rather she seemed to be quite calm and accepting almost
as if she embraced death. Gabriel forced the blood back into her.
She had known the ritual words to keep the demon leashed. She
had freely offered her life for his. What had she said? As was her right. How could it be?
Gabriel looked down at her face. She was
very pale, her long lashes were thick and luxurious, a deep black
to match the long silk of her hair. Her slender body was encased
in men's pants, a light blue. Colors. He was seeing in color.
He had not seen other than grays and blacks since he was a mere
fledging over two thousand years before. Why hadn't he recognized
her as his lifemate? Was he so far gone after all?
He stopped her from taking too much blood
from him. He would need to hunt this night and insure he took
enough for both of them, enough to bring back to her to keep them
safe. He carried her into the cavern and following her scent,
he found the dark chamber that would be safe from humans and the
undead alike. He lay her gently in the bed of soil and sent her
to sleep, reinforcing the command with a hard 'push' to ensure
she would not awaken until he could give her more blood. Her heart
and lungs were slow and steady, enabling her body to handle the
small amount of blood flowing through her veins and arteries,
the chambers of her heart.
Gabriel glided through the house, expending
as little energy as possible. He would have been more than happy
to take Brice's blood. The man spent far too much time trying
to convince Francesca of the danger to her. And he had been right.
The human must have sensed something, a rivalry for Francesca
or perhaps he really had an instinct for danger. Gabriel didn't
have the time to indulge his whims, he had to hunt prey and get
back to his savior. She had saved more than his life with her
generosity, she had saved his soul.
He was out of the house and into the darkness.
His world. He had lived in it for centuries, yet it was all new.
All different. Everything would be different for all time. He
found prey immediately. The population was amazing, the city teaming
with people. A virtual hunting ground. He picked three large men,
making certain none of them were using alcohol or drugs and that
the blood in their veins was not contaminated with any diseases.
Gabriel easily led them into the shelter of a doorway and bent
his head to drink his fill. He took enough to bring himself to
full strength without endangering his prey. The man swayed with
dizziness and Gabriel carefully closed the pinpricks and helped
him to sit on the ground. He fed from the second and third almost
greedily, his body craving the nourishment after so long without.
He needed enough blood for Francesca to insure her continued survival.
The moment he was finished he gave the
command to erase any memory and left the three of them sitting
comfortably inside the overhang of the doorway. Gabriel took three
running steps and took to the air, his body shifting shape so
that wings spread wide and lifted him. He flew in a straight line
back to her house. From the air he could see the estate for what
it was. Obviously old, the house was in beautiful shape, the grounds
meticulously cared for. Everywhere he looked were unfamiliar objects,
things of which he had no knowledge of. Life had continued while
he lay sleeping under the earth.
He found Francesca as he had left her,
her skin so white it was nearly translucent. She was tall and
slender with a wealth of ebony hair that framed her face and tumbled
around her body emphasizing her lush curves. He picked her up
with great gentleness, cradled her body close to his. It was impossible
that this woman could be his true lifemate. After the wars, females
had been scarce. Carpathian males searched the world over century
after century and often never found their true lifemate, other
half to their soul, to their heart. Light to their darkness. Women
of his species had become scarce by the twelve and thirteenth
centuries. What would the odds be of finding her just walking
down the street? Practically the first person he met after being
locked in the soil for so long. It didn't make sense to him. Nothing
that had happened had made sense. But the one fact was clear and
simple. Carpathian males could not see colors or feel emotion
unless they were in the close proximity to their true lifemate.
Gabriel could see all kinds of color. Brilliant colors. Vivid
colors. Colors he had long forgotten had ever existed. Feelings
he had never experienced. He inhaled, dragging her scent deep
into his lungs. He would be able to find her anywhere now. With
his ancient blood running in her veins he could call her to him
at will, talk to her mind to mind from any distance.
With his fingernail he opened his chest,
holding her head in the palm of his hand so that he could press
her mouth to his skin. He was powerful, in full strength once
more, and in her weakened condition, Francesca was completely
in his control. He took his time studying her. She puzzled and
intrigued him. She looked like a Carpathian woman. Tall. Slender.
Ebony hair. Beautiful eyes as black as night. She knew the ritual
words. She had known he had needed blood. She even had the chamber
beneath the earth prepared for one of his kind. Who was she? What
was she?
Gabriel searched her mind. She seemed
human. Her memories were those of a human and contained many things
he knew nothing about. The world had gained so much while he slept.
She seemed wholly human and yet her blood was not exactly the
same as humans. Her internal organs were not exactly the same.
She had memories of walking in the high point of the sun, something
his people could not do. It was a mystery he intended to solve.
This woman was far too important in his life, he was taking no
chances.
The volume of blood was replaced in Francesca's
body. Very gently Gabriel stopped her from feeding and placed
her in the healing soil without closing it over her head. He wanted
her to rest while he took the remainder of the night to study
the new world he would be living in. He found a treasure of books
in a library on the first floor. It was there that he learned
of television and computers and the history of the contraptions,
cars, they had been using to get around in. It was all amazing
to him and he soaked up the technology like a sponge. Without
thought he connected with Lucian. It just happened. For over two
thousand years they had shared information. Gabriel was so excited
he reached out to his twin and merged.
Lucian accepted the information and passed
what he had been observing and studying just as if the last few
centuries had never taken place. Lucian was at full strength and,
as always, gaining knowledge at a rapid rate. His mind had always
required new things to think about, to work on. The moment Gabriel
realized what he was doing, he broke the connection, furious with
himself. Lucian would be able to 'see' where Gabriel was just
as Gabriel could so easily find Lucian. Always Gabriel had been
the one to hunt his twin, tracking him to try to destroy him.
He had never worried before when he had mistakenly merged with
his vampire twin to share new information. Even if Lucian had
chosen to use his knowledge to find Gabriel it would have made
it easier to allow his brother to do the hunting. Now everything
was different. He couldn't afford to allow Lucian to know where
he was or whom he was with. Now he had to protect Francesca. Lucian
could not find out about her. Vampires thrived on other people's
pain. Francesca would be made to pay a terrible price for her
interference.
Gabriel indulged himself with a human
shower. He could simply be clean and fresh with a thought, yet
now he could feel. He could savor cleanliness. It was an amazing
feeling. Again he had to make a conscious effort to withhold the
feeling from his twin. Even after all this time he was used to
slipping in and out of his brother's mind. Over the centuries
he had used his ability to track his brother and even anticipate
his kills in order to try to reach the victim before Lucian did.
So far he had never been able to prevent Lucian's kill, but Gabriel
was confident it would work eventually.
After his shower, Gabriel went back to
reading. He covered several encyclopedias and almanacs and every
other book he could find. With his photographic memory it took
very little time. He read at a rapid rate so he could get through
the history and into the new technology. He wanted to read manuals
and find out exactly how everything worked. And he wanted to learn
everything the house could offer up about its owner.
He wandered around the vast rooms. She
liked space. Open spaces. She appreciated great art and soft colors.
She definitely loved the ocean and its inhabitants. There were
books about every species and prints and watercolors of crashing
waves. She was a meticulous housekeeper unless, of course, someone
came in to do the work. He found no evidence of it. She lived
like a human. The cupboards were full. She had beautiful China
in the kitchen and rare antiques in the bedrooms. There was a
room with a quilt in the making and he studied the quilt itself.
The pattern was very different. Soothing. Beautiful. It seemed
to draw him to it, but he couldn't figure out why. In another
room she made stained glass. The designs were much like those
on the quilt. Soothing and tranquil. Each one was intensely beautiful.
He could stare at them for hours. She was a very talented woman.
The draperies throughout the house were
unusually heavy, specifically made for the windows so that, if
the occupants desired, not one bit of light could enter the room.
That would fit with a Carpathian integrating into mainstream life.
Nothing in this house seemed to add up. It was a mixture of wealth
and fancy, of Carpathian and human, almost as if two different
people occupied the house. He looked for evidence of that. The
house even combined two different worlds, old-fashioned and modern.
In the study he found her personal papers,
records of payments and private little notes she wrote to herself.
There seemed to be quite a few notes, some of which were reminders
to eat certain soups. A Carpathian would never eat human food
unless they were in a position where it was imperative to do so
to keep others from finding out about their existence. While any
Carpathian at full strength could eat and rid their stomachs of
the contents later, it was uncomfortable to do so. Who was Francesca?
More importantly, what was she? Why wasn't her blood the match
for a human? How had she known the ritual words to keep him from
turning vampire in his weakest moment? Most importantly of all,
why was he seeing in color? Why did he feel emotion? Why had she
used the term 'as is my right'?
Gabriel sighed and replaced her things,
his fingers lingering for a moment to stroke a caress over her
small, neat hand-writing. She would have answers for him. And
if she didn't want to give them to him, he had ways of extracting
information. He was of ancient blood, of a lineage of greatness
and power. Few of his people had the knowledge and skills he had
obtained in his centuries of existence. She would never be able
to defy him or his questions.