Court of the Vampire Queen: Part 3 – Chapter 35
Court of the Vampire Queen: A spicy polyam MMMF romance
I try to eat, knowing I need the calories for the bloodletting that comes next, but I last all of twenty minutes before Iâm in the bathroom, losing my lunch. Hopelessness wells up inside me, deep and dark and all too willing to suck me under.
Iâve been in bad spots before. I was born into a bad spot, a powerless dhampir in the compound my father rules. Normally, dhampir childrenâthose who are half human and half vampireâinherit powers from their vampire parent, at least if said vampire parent is a bloodline vampire. Not me, though. Up until I met Malachi, Rylan, and Wolf, I thought I was defective.
Turns out, my mother wasnât all that human to begin with.
I brush my teeth, staring at my reflection in the dingy mirror. I look like shit. Dark circles stain the skin beneath my bloodshot eyes and my dark hair has gone greasy and lank. Iâve lost weight, too; weight I canât afford to lose. I was hardly at peak health when all this started, though the blood the vampires shared with me seemed to do just as much asâ¦
I stop brushing.
Surely thatâs not the answer. It would be far too ridiculous a solution. If I managed to drink blood, surely Iâll throw it up just like Iâm throwing up solid food. Iâm not some heroine in a vampire novel. Iâm not going from eating normal food and using blood for magic, pleasure, and healing, to being on a blood-only diet. Itâs not going to happen.
I duck out of the bathroom to find Grace gone again. I think she feels trapped in the hotel room. I donât blame her; Iâm practically climbing the walls at this point. Or I would be if I had any energy at all.
This is a mess. Worse than a mess. Itâs a fucking disaster.
I study the bed for a long moment. I still havenât entirely dealt with the fact that apparently I met Wolf in my dreams. I donât know what caused it, or what shoved him out of that space, but if I can reclaim itâ¦
I miss them. I miss them so fucking much I ache with it. I wish I could blame the bond for the heightened feeling, but I suspect itâs simply that Iâve gone and fallen for this vampire trio. I desperately want Malachi to wrap me up in his big arms and say it will all be okay. For Rylan to make some snarling, snarky comment about the situation. For Wolfâs wild laughter and chaos.
If I can find them in my dreamsâ¦
I run my hand over the scratchy bedspread. Iâm tired. Desperately tired. I should still be using this time to practice the magic as best I can.
Instead, I take a slow, careful breath, and lay down on the bed on my back. Itâs too easy to close my eyes. Iâve been sick and beaten to the point where Iâm not sure Iâll survive, and Iâve never felt tired like this. It would scare me if I had the energy to feel anything but exhaustion.
Maybe itâs the baby, but maybe thatâs not it at all. Maybe itâs the seraph bond responding to too many days and too much distance between me and my men. If theyâre suffering similarlyâ¦
Sleep sucks me under before I can finish the thought.
I open my eyes with a start. Disappointment sours my stomachâor maybe thatâs just the babyâwhen I see the hotel room exactly as I left it. The only difference is the light gone from the windows, replaced by the faded rays of the streetlamp outside.
Grace still isnât back yet, and if she was anyone else, I might be worried, but she can take care of herself. I saw how many weapons she packed away before she left. The woman is a walking armory, and she knows how to use them. Sheâll be fine.
I sit up and rub my hands over my face. Maybe the dream with Wolf was a fluke. Maybe there are a dozen conditions that need to be met before I can meet like that with any of the vampires. I just donât know enough. Iâm in the dark and attempting to feel my way. I donât even have Malachiâs support at my back while Iâm doing it.
âWhat the fuck am I even thinking?â I stagger to my feet and cross to the desk of Graceâs weapons. There are half a dozen knives in varying shapes and sizes, and I choose a small one that fits easily in my palm. âI am not helpless.â
Iâm also speaking to an empty room, which might make me certifiable, but itâs better than letting the silence tick out. There are too many things that can go wrong with what Iâm about to do. If I think too hard, Iâll talk myself right out of it. So I donât. I act instead.
I slice a thin line on my forearm and hold it out away from my body. It hurts, but compared to how everything hurts these days, itâs barely noticeable. I turn in a slow circle, leaving droplets of blood behind me, until Iâm once again facing the way I started.
My own blood smells savory, which is disconcerting in the extreme, and it only gets worse when I close my eyes and focus internally the way Malachi taught me. I can almost sense the magic there, lying in wait. It feels different than it did the last time I tried this, but I donât know enough to guess why.
âCome on, you fucker.â I reach for the power with metaphoricalâmetaphysical?âhands, but it slips through my palms like water. I grab for it again, with the same result. Again and again and again. Nothing. Fucking nothing.
I open my eyes as I sink to my knees. My head spins sickeningly, or maybe itâs the room spinning. I donât know whatâs real anymore. Certainly not this nebulous power inside me. I canât even access it without the men present. How pathetic. âDamn it!â I lift my voice, too loud, but Iâm past caring. âAzazel! Azazel! Azazel!â
âYou canât yell my name three times and expect me to arrive.â
I jolt, losing my balance and landing on my ass in the middle of the sad little blood circle I created. One completely devoid of power. And yet here Azazel is. I lean back and narrow my eyes, trying to pick him out of the shadows in the corner of the room. I should be terrified. Thereâs nothing protecting me from him, and the menace he seems to carry about him like a cloak is in full evidence right now.
He looks much the same as last time, a man with light brown skin, dark hair, and soulless dark eyes. Though no one with a brain in their head would look at him and think heâs something as mundane as a man. Heâs a predator in a way even vampires can never aspire to be.
The shadows lick at his legs as he steps around the bed and stares down at me. âYouâve called. Iâve answered. Have you reconsidered the breaking of your bond?â He glances about the room. âWhereâs Wolf and the others? Did you finally acquire some sense and flee them?â
âWhatâs with all the questions?â My voice comes out slightly slurred and I have to lean back against the other bed when the room shifts again. Damn it, what is wrong with me? I blink down at the red stain spreading across my jeans. For a horrifying moment, I think itâs the babyâ¦but no, itâs nothing as traumatic as that.
I cut my arm too deep.
Or, rather, I havenât had vampire blood in days. A cut that would have healed already a week ago is now leaking blood steadily down to my thigh where I rest it. A lot of blood. âDamn.â
âYou little fool.â He growls under his breath in a language Iâm certain isnât known in this realm and crouches down in front of me. Heâs no less terrifying up close. Once again, I get the impression that heâs somehow bigger than he appears, that horns paint shadows across the motel room behind him. A blink and itâs gone, but I canât quite convince myself Iâve imagined it.
He grabs my arm, moving too quickly for me to jerk away. âThis will hurt.â
âWaitââ Pain lances my forearm, so sharp and sudden, it draws a scream from my lips. Or it tries to. He covers my mouth with his other hand. Everything gets a little faded, but how in the godsâ names does his hand wrap around the entire bottom half of my face?
Something is not right with this demon.
âThere.â Even his voice has changed, deepening with something akin to irritation. âNow you wonât bleed out before you can accept my bargain.â
I stare blankly down at the scar now carved into my arm. The cut was a straight line. This thing isâ¦not. Itâs also red and black, twisted, and angry looking like a tree that attempted to uproot itself. âWhat did you do to me?â
âYou can thank me later.â He snaps his fingers in front of my face. âThe bargain.â
âIâ¦â I lick my lips, trying to focus. âI didnât call you here to accept your bargain.â
Again that hissing language that hurts my ears. He shoves to his feet. âTell Wolf to consider the healing a token of our friendship. I have places to be.â
âWait!â
He pauses, but impatience paints every line of his body. âYouâre wasting my time.â
âNo.â I canât stand. Iâll pass out. Iâm sure of it. Instead, I try to straighten a bit where I sit. âI want a new bargain.â
He exhales slowly and turns back to face me. âIâm listening.â
âMy father took Wolf and Malachi and Rylan. I want them back.â
Azazel considers me for a long moment, then his gaze goes distant. Finally, he shrugs. âVery well. Seven yearsâ service and Iâll save them.â
My jaw drops. âThat canât be anywhere as hard as breaking a seraph bond. Why is the cost the same?â Wolf had warned of exactly this, but part of me didnât believe him.
âI have my reasons.â
I open my mouth, but I donât have a good argument. Even if Iâm willing to do seven years of serviceâand I amâthe complications presented previously still apply. The men wonât like it. More, we donât know what will happen to the seraph bond if Iâm whisked away to another realm. Maybe it would be okay.
Or maybe it would kill us all.
He gives that sharp smile. âIâll be back tomorrow. Have your answer by then.â He casts a disdainful look at the blood-stained floor. âNext time, use my card.â It appears in the air above me, floating carefully down to rest on my thigh that isnât covered in blood.
And then heâs gone, melting into the shadows as if heâd never existed.
I lean my head back against the bed and sigh. No good options. No matter what I try, there are no good options. Azazel was a long shot, but I can hand the card off to Grace. Even if we canât save my men, at least sheâll get a chance to find some resolution about her mother. A small win, I suppose.
I close my eyes and concentrate on taking slow breaths. Itâs starting to look like I really only have one choice. If I canât stage an assault to save the men or sneak them out, thereâs only one path left, no matter how foolhardy it sounds.
I have to walk through the front gate and declare myself my fatherâs heir.