Court of the Vampire Queen: Part 2 – Chapter 23
Court of the Vampire Queen: A spicy polyam MMMF romance
Iâm in the kitchen the next day when I feel it. A sense ofâ¦not exactly wrongness, but an intrusion. I nearly drop the bowl Iâm holding. âWhat is that?â
Instantly, Malachi is on alert. âWhat is what?â
âThereâs thisâ¦â I frown. âI donât know how to explain it. Itâs like an itch I canât scratch.â
He narrows his eyes. âWhere?â
Without looking, I point nearly behind me. âThere. I canât tell how far.â
He doesnât hesitate. âRylan.â Before the sound of the other vampireâs name is finishing echoing through the house, Malachi has me in his arms and heâs moving in that nearly-too-fast speed, flying through the rooms and out the front doorâon the opposite side of the house from where I felt the intrusion.
Rylan lands beside us, and I get the impression that he jumped from the second or third story. His dark hair is a little ruffled, but heâs back to wearing a suit and looks freshly pressed. âWhatâs going on?â
âShe felt something. Coming from the opposite direction.â
I expect Rylan to laugh it off. Why should he take this seriously when he barely bothers to listen to a single word that comes out of my mouth? But his gaze narrows the same way Malachiâs did. âGet to the safe house we agreed on. Iâll take a look and call Wolf to update him.â He pulls off his jacket, quickly followed by his shirt.
I tense. âWait. I like this house. Thereâs no reason to run ifââ
âRylan will take a look. If he gives the signal, weâll come back.â Malachi is already moving, rushing through the trees that surround the house at a pace I could never dream of matching. I have no choice but to cling to him. At this point, Iâm just grateful that, for once, I was actually wearing clothing. My shorts and oversized T-shirt are hardly appropriate for the briskness of the weather, but itâs better than being naked.
The cry of a giant bird reaches us, and I only need to see Malachiâs face to know that itâs not good news. âThey found us again?â
âLooks like it.â He picks up his pace, nearly flying across the uneven ground. âWeâll know more after we meet up with Rylan and Wolf.â
It took them less than a week to track us down this time. Theyâre closing the gap, and no one can figure out how. Hell, if seraphim and demons exist, maybe witches do, too. Maybe they have some sort of scrying spell. Iâll ask Malachi about it after we get out of danger. I donât think any of my fatherâs people can match him in size, speed, and strength, but I wouldnât have wagered on my father trapping Malachi behind a blood ward for decades on end.
I could keep peppering him with questions, but the truth is that until we regroup with the others, the only priority is to put as much distance between us and the other vampires as possible. We canât fight, not without risking one of us getting hurt. Thereâs no reasoning with them. Theyâre following orders, and only a direct order from my father will change their course.
This is a race, but I still donât know the parameters. I know our goals, but we have no idea what my father knows.
I lift my head and tug on Malachiâs shirt. âWe need one of them alive.â
He glances at me without breaking stride. âThatâs risky.â
âIâm aware. But we need to know if heâs pursuing us because he wants you back or if he knows what happened when we broke the blood ward.â If he knows I have seraph blood, that I awoke that power, that Iâm bonded with not one, but three Bloodline vampiresâ¦
That changes everything.
If he can get his hands on me, heâll hold the leash for three of the seven Bloodlines. I know all too well the lengths heâll go to get what he wants once weâre under his control. The men might be able to hold out indefinitely, but if I have to choose between keeping them alive or doing something really unforgivable, I already know what Iâll choose.
My father knows that, too.
âWe need to know,â I repeat.
Malachi nods. He doesnât turn back, but thatâs fine. Getting to a secondary location is the primary goal. We know where theyâre headed, and theyâll stay at the house for at least a short period of time to plumb it for any information they can. We just have to pick one of them off when they leave. It sounds easy, but I know better.
I lay my head against Malachiâs chest and let him carry me away.
Judging by the position of the sun in the sky, several hours have passed by the time he slows and sets me on my feet. I study the little farmhouse in the distance. Itâs surrounded by rolling fields and looks like something out of a painting. âIs that where weâre headed?â
âYes.â He rolls his shoulders. He doesnât look like heâs been sprinting at full speed while carrying another person, but he does look tired. âRylan will have gotten word to Wolf by now. Theyâll meet us here.â
âWe have toââ
âI know, little dhampir. But no one is going back there until youâre secured.â
As much as I want to argue, heâs right. We fall into an easy jog that eats up the distance at a pace slightly faster than an athletic human could maintain. My knee barely twinges. A month ago, I wouldnât be able to do this. Not after my father shattered my knee in punishment for an escape attempt. He wanted to make sure Iâd never be able to run again, and it was a reality Iâd made a tumultuous peace with. Until Malachi gave me his blood.
Bloodline vampires really are something special.
My father always set himself above the rest at the compound, and up until I met Malachi, I thought that was just narcissistic bullshit because my father has some magic. Now I realize how deeply the difference between normal vampires and Bloodline vampires go.
Malachi is the last of his line, those who carry the power to control fire. If he doesnât have children, his Bloodline will die with him. I glance in his direction. âDo Wolf and Rylan have family?â
He doesnât take his gaze from the farmhouse. âYou mean others that are part of their Bloodline? Yes. Not many, but yes.â
Not many.
Guilt claws at my throat. âShouldnât they be out procreating or something to ensure their Bloodlines keeps going? I understand why you didnât, but they werenât trapped behind a blood ward.â
âWe live very long lives, Mina. Thereâs no rush.â The words are right, but thereâs something off in his tone.
Once again, Wolfâs words, Malachiâs words come back to me. He wants me pregnant with his babies. Itâs still a little mind-blowing. A few months ago, pregnancy wasnât even on my radar, and now itâs my highest priority. Even that hardly seems real, though. My future is measured in goals right now.
Survive. Get pregnant. Become heir. Kill my father.
Every time I try to think of after, my brain bounces off the concept. Pregnancy is one thing. Children is something entirely different. But if I get pregnant, the goal is children.
âIâm going to be a terrible mother.â
Malachi stops. I donât notice for two steps, not until he reaches out and snags my wrist. âDonât say that.â
âItâs the truth.â I donât look back at him. âI donât know what your childhood was like. Maybe itâs been so long that you donât really remember. Iâm only twenty-four, Malachi. Those memories are still fresh and bloody in my head.â My violent, manipulative father. My ghost of a mother. How does someone come from such trauma without perpetuating the cycle?
âMina.â He tugs on my wrist. When I donât turn, he tugs again, harder this time. I know I could tell him to stop and he would, but I let him haul me back to stand before him. âLook at me.â
Reluctantly, I obey, lifting my gaze to his. He catches my chin, holding me in place. âDo you want children?â
The question makes me laugh. The sound comes out almost like a sob. âWhat does that matter? The path is set.â
âIt matters.â
No, it really doesnât. Not to me. I try to pull back, but he keeps me easily in place. âMalachi, please.â
âAnswer the question.â
Itâs a simple question. A vital one, even. Why does it make me want to cry? I close my eyes, hiding from him as much as Iâm trying to keep the burning internal. âI donât know. It was never a possibility, until it was a decision thrust upon me, first by my father and then by this situation.â All true, but not the full truth. My lower lip quivers despite my best efforts. If anyone else asked me this⦠But itâs not anyone else. Itâs Malachi. âMaybe part of me has always wanted kids, but it was never in the cards. And now that it isââ
âThis situation is hardly ideal in that respect.â
His understatement makes me open my eyes. âYou want kids.â
âOf course I want kids.â He shrugs as if this is a given. âI always have. Not simply to continue my line. Iâ¦â Malachi glances away and clenches his jaw. âI want a family.â
The way he says it. Like itâs a sin to be ashamed of. Maybe it is in our world, where marriages and children are political right down to their very core. There are no love matches in my fatherâs compound, no matter what some there would like to believe. âI see.â
âMaybe itâs foolish to want something that so few of our people have, but I want it all the same.â
I know what he means even without him explicitly saying it. âThere does seem to be a dearth of happy childhoods among vampires.â
âIt doesnât have to be that way.â
I try to picture what heâs saying. A happy childhood. Iâve seen it represented fictionally, but a part of me always believed it to be exactly thatâfiction. Even the humans manage to fuck up their kids in astronomical numbers, and most of them are attempting to marry and procreate because of love, rather than politics. The odds are not in our favor.
Theyâre especially not in our favor with this current situation.
I donât want to ask the question, but I need to know the answer. âWhat happens if I get pregnant and youâre not the father?â Even with Rylan attempting to stay out of the race to impregnate me, Wolf and I have sex nearly as often as Malachi and I do.
He shrugs. âIt doesnât matter to me. Iâve made my choice.â
As if itâs just that simple. âIf we broke the bond and one of them got me pregnant instead⦠Malachi, youâd be free. Free for the first time in decades. You should be focusing on that instead of tying yourself to a sinking ship.â
âMina.â
Gods, the way he says my name. It makes me shiver. âYes?â
âI respect your ability to make decisions for yourself enough to stand by while Wolf courts a demon, even though I donât agree with it. Give me the courtesy of returning the favor.â
I open my mouth to continue arguing, but I donât have a leg to stand on. Heâs right. No matter what I think, heâs more than capable of making his own choices. I swallow hard. âOkay. Sorry. I just donât want you to end up regrettingâ¦â
âRegretting you.â Malachi gives me a small sliver of a smile. âImpossible. Youâve crashed into my life with all the subtlety of a bomb detonating, but itâs been refreshing.â He turns us toward the farmhouse. âNow, letâs get inside and discuss next steps.â
And thatâs that.
Iâm completely unsurprised to step through the door and find that Wolf and Rylan both beat us here. Neither of them were weighed down with carrying me, or having that conversation out in the field before entering. That said⦠I glance at Wolf. âHow did you know we moved?â
âRylan caught me on the way back.â He hops onto the faded counter and rubs his hands together. âI should have news on the demon front within a day or two. Those bastards like to play hard to get.â
Malachi appears in the doorway. âEverything is secure.â
âI told you it was.â Rylan is staring out the window as if heâd rather be anywhere but here. I canât exactly blame him, but I wonât pretend that his attitude isnât grating on me. Obviously things arenât going to magically change between us just because of what happened last night, but would it kill the asshole to look at me?
Malachi moves to lean against the counter next to Wolf. âWe canât keep operating like this. The demon deal is a long shot, but even if we remove the bond, it wonât remove the threat Cornelius represents. We need to know what he knows.â
Finally, Rylan turns from the window. âYou want to take one of his men.â
âYes.â
âIt wonât be easy. Weâll have to kill the rest of the scouting party.â
âIâm aware.â
I look between them. âIf itâs too dangerousââ
âItâs not.â Rylan cuts a hand through the air. âMalachi and I are more than capable of dealing with a handful of Corneliusâs dogs. It will incite him to send more next time, but Malachiâs right. We need the information.â
Malachi crosses his arms over his large chest. âIt was Minaâs idea.â
âI see.â Rylan clenches his jaw and seems to make himself look at me. He might have an expression like heâs chewing on rocks, but even he canât mask the heat in his dark eyes.
An answering heat licks through me, but I shove down the sensation. Now isnât the time, and he wonât thank me for it. âThe sooner we do this, the better.â