Reading Online Novel

Roaring Shadows: Macey Book 2 (The Gardella Vampire Hunters 8)(39)



His heart skipped when he felt a different one turn. It wiggled a little on his pinkie finger, sending him bolting from the bed. Temple was long gone—he’d felt her slip away sometime during his sleep, for she was on a completely different schedule than he—and Sebastian was alone with the cautious hope that shuttled through him.

Two loose rings. Something was definitely happening.

And today…yes, today was the 25th of April, 1926.

On the 26th of April, 1821, Wayren had given Sebastian the ruby signet ring in a dream. This will help you get through this. It will give you strength.

That was the day he’d left Victoria for good and set out for the raw mountainside cave of Munții Fârâgaș.

That was the day he made the long promise—to himself and to Giulia.

One hundred and five years ago.

He flung the sheets away, washed, dressed, cleaned his teeth, and went from his private apartments to the pub. He saw a scrawled note from Temple on the desk in the back room, but before he got to it, he heard the door from the exterior stairs leading from the street open.

It was Macey.

She looked different somehow. Softer. A little blurry, perhaps. Blurry was a strange word, but—

“Sebastian…I’m back. May I…may I come in?”

“Macey!” Relief burst over him. “Of course. You’re back.”

She smiled with shyness and obvious regret, even a little bashfulness. “I wasn’t sure if you’d ever want to see me again,” she said, closing the door before she strode across the wood-planked floor to him. Her eyes were large and luminous in her face, and his heart creaked a little when he saw Giulia there yet again.

“I’ve missed you,” she said, still holding him with her gaze, as if afraid he’d banish her. “I shouldn’t have left.” Her voice trailed off. “Can you forgive me?”

“You’re here,” he said. “You’re here, cher, you’re here now.”

“Sebastian.” She looked as if she were about to cry. “I…”

He came around from behind the counter, hardly thinking about what he was doing. He gathered her into his arms, pulling her close in a fatherly—definitely fatherly—embrace. “Macey,” he whispered into her curls. “It’s all right.” His chin rested on top of her head; her hair smelled clean and fresh, and her body was warm against him—compact and lithe, just as Giulia’s had been.

He suddenly became aware of her…very aware.

Sebastian stilled, trembling a deep inside as he battled grief and curiosity. The memory of those dark, lascivious dreams rushed into the forefront of his mind, swamping his thoughts as he held her. He pushed them back, clearing away the temptation, banishing the tease filtering through his mind.

No.

Macey lifted her head from his shoulder and looked up at him. She was right there: her lovely face so very close, her eyes incredibly soft and beautiful…and there was something else there… Interest? Curiosity? Heat?

A warning bell rang in the back of his mind, and Sebastian began to push her away, but she gripped his arms.

“What is it?” she asked, and he was suddenly aware of her thighs pressing against his. A hip nestled into his leg. She licked her lips nervously and his mouth went dry, his attention focused there.

“You’re curious too, aren’t you, Sebastian?” she whispered. Her little tongue came out, darting along the seam of her lush pink mouth, sending a stab of lust down through his torso. “You want to know what it’s like to kiss me.”

“No,” he made himself say firmly. Her mouth was close. So close. He could feel the warmth of her lips. If he drew in a deep breath, they’d brush against his. “No,” he said again. “I’m not. I never have been.”

But his fangs were in the way, filling his mouth with their sharp, bold lengths. His breathing grew rougher, and desire blazed through him. She pressed against his body; surely she could feel his cock beginning to harden between his legs, the subtle tremors beneath his skin.

“Kiss me, Sebastian. I want to taste you.” She lifted her face, and her mouth brushed his—warm and soft and moist. Her tongue slipped out, sliding over his parted lips, leaving hot, adulterous tingles radiating through his body. Her eyes—Giulia’s eyes; always Giulia’s eyes—captured his, dark and heady and fathomless. “Please, Sebastian.”

With a groan of effort, he shoved her away, hard enough to break her grip—and to give him some much-needed space.

She caught herself from stumbling, and when she turned back around to look up at him, her soft, lovely face was melting…and it was no longer Macey’s.

And the back of his neck had gone abruptly cold.

With a tight curse, Sebastian leapt over the bar counter and grabbed a stake, but the creature—it had metamorphosed into some anonymous vampiress or demon who slightly resembled Macey, but was no longer her mirror image—bolted to the door through which she’d come.

He stared after her—it—whatever it was, chest heaving, ever so thankful he’d resisted, that he’d pushed her away and kept himself clean. He knew he should follow her—it—but he was still reeling, still incredibly grateful he’d been strong.

Hands trembling more than they should, considering what he’d lived through in more than 120 years, Sebastian pulled out his favorite liquor bottle—the dark glass one with the black prism-like stopper that fit in his palm. The one even Chas Woodmore didn’t know about.

He poured a generous bit of the special rosy-amber drink into a glass and swigged it down. The exuberance of the day was gone…and yet it had been replaced by something like determination. Relief.

What he’d always feared would happen—in a manner of speaking—had occurred, and he’d fought his way through it. He’d been strong.

“Is this the fulfillment of the long promise, then?” he demanded of the universe at large. Where the hell was Wayren? He could really use her about now… His hand covered the top of the pyramidal bottle stopper, gripping it tightly as he felt its heat and power seep into his skin.

The back of his neck went sharply cold again.

Much too cold.

Sebastian shoved the bottle under the counter and launched himself toward the door through which the faux Macey had just exited, but it burst open before he got there. The tempting vampiress stood there on the threshold, now with her own fangs gleaming and her eyes bold and burning. She wore a hot, knowing smile.

Sebastian had already somersaulted backward, snatching up a chair and a stake as the creature stepped aside to allow her companions to pour in.

Three, four, no, seven, no, ten… He lost count as the undead streamed into his pub, with glowing red or Guardian-pink eyes and all with fangs at the ready. There was no subtlety, no dancing around the situation—they were there, and they were there for him.

All thanks to the faux Macey, whom he’d invited in and who had, in turn, thus been liberated to invite her own crew inside…

And then, there in front of him, the faux Macey shimmered, lengthened, broadened in a sort of swirling metamorphosis…and became Nicholas Iscariot.

“Well, well. I had no idea you were so talented, Nicky,” Sebastian said coolly. He counted twelve undead, not including the Macey-turned-vampiress-turned-Iscariot. He eased along the counter, keeping his hands out of sight from the intruders. “What’s next on the agenda…Carole Lombard?”

“Sebastian Vioget. It’s a pleasure to finally meet you—although your reputation does precede you.”

The son of Judas Iscariot was tall, lean, and cold in his male beauty. His hair shone dark, and though slicked back on the sides and back, it rose like a high, smooth wave over his equally tall white forehead. He wore a well-cut suit, red tie, and white spats, with a crimson handkerchief bursting from the breast pocket of his jacket. Sebastian couldn’t fault the creature for his sense of style. Iscariot’s handsome face was smooth as white marble, with a square chin, hollow cheeks, protruding eyes, and strong brows…except for the diagonal cross marking his left cheek and jaw.

Sebastian’s own fangs were long and ready, and he felt the heat of his eyes burning with fury. And even then, as he faced the most powerful and fearsome of the world’s undead—along with a mob of his goons—he slipped his fingers beneath the cotton of his shirt to touch the vis bulla…and then to twist the ruby ring on his finger. Strength and comfort rushed through him.

Now. There. He was ready.

Ready to see this to the end.

Sebastian smiled coolly. “I see my Macey has left her mark, Scarface.”

Iscariot’s eyes flared wider and redder, and yet he lifted one slender white finger to keep his minions from surging forward. “I’m not particularly pleased with her, as you might imagine. But, of course, that’s why I’m here.” He bared his fangs in a polite smile. “Though that isn’t the only reason I’ve paid you a visit at last. As I’m certain you can surmise.”

“The Rings of Jubai. Of course.” Sebastian sounded bored as he extended the hand with the copper bands, pretending to admire his fingers. “How unoriginal of you, Nicky.”

“Well, one can only plan so many surprises. Speaking of which, I could tell you greatly enjoyed the one I cooked up for you a moment ago. It was very much worth the effort it cost me to mask myself, even for that short while…” Iscariot twirled his finger and spun into Macey once again, writhing his curvy body and parting his lips in a seductive manner. “To see you panting and lusting after me.”