Court of the Vampire Queen: Part 3 – Chapter 49
Court of the Vampire Queen: A spicy polyam MMMF romance
When I was dragged from my fatherâs compound and tossed in a car to be delivered to Malachi, I never thought to return. I wasnât supposed to live this long. I can admit that now, crouched precariously high in a tree and looking down over the familiar walls and buildings.
He planned for me to die by Malachiâs hand. A convenient snack that got his powerless dhampir daughter out of his hair and kept the trapped bloodline vampire alive. Malachi and I were never supposed to get along, to fall in love. We were never supposed to join up with Wolf and Rylan and break the blood ward, awaken the powers no one thought I had, and come for my fatherâs head.
Itâs happening now.
Thereâs no going back.
âCan you make the shot, Lizzie?â Malachiâs hand is warm where itâs wrapped around my bicep. Iâm not in danger of falling, but heâs taking no risks. I donât move with the same supernatural grace as the vampires, but my balance is better than itâs ever been. A good thing, that. Iâm going to need every advantage I can come up with for the pending confrontation.
Lizzie is in the next tree over. Sheâs wearing high-end workout leggings, a long-sleeved shirt, and a puffy vest. Sheâs added a soft headband to her ponytail today. She looks like she should be jogging in some carefully curated parkâ¦except for the rifle slung across her back.
She narrows her eyes at the compound. âI can make the shot. This is well within my range.â
I blink. I know this is why we risked asking for her assistance, but the compound has to be a mile away. Maybe more. âEven for your powers?â
She smirks. âYes, little girl. Even for my powers. You get him where I can see him, and there wonât be much left of his throat when the hit lands.â
We estimated timeline based on the worst-case scenario. Even so, getting my father out into the courtyard is going to be a risk. Heâs going to compel me. Thatâs the one thing we havenât spoken about, that no oneâs addressed directly. To keep my father complacent enough for Lizzieâs attack to land, I have to lose. Thereâs no guarantee that his power will break when his concentration does, but Iâm not one of his followers, happy to follow his instructions and open to compulsion. I will be fighting it every step of the way.
It will break.
It has to.
And thatâs when Iâll strike.
âThen we move.â Malachi scoops me into his arms before I have a chance to tense and drops down to the forest floor. Rylan and Wolf land soundlessly on either side of him. Thereâs no need to speak. We went over the plan one last time before leaving the house. Theyâll deposit me just outside the sentry lines and Iâll wait ten minutes while they circle around to their respective locations.
At that point, I walk into the compound to surrender myself and seek an audience with my father. Then the fires start. That should draw the extra soldiers away from the courtyard. My father will suspect the truthâthat the three vampires are attackingâbut he still views me as a powerless dhampir. He wonât have reason to keep security around himself because heâs never needed help to deal with me before.
Iâll only have one chance.
The first faint hint of sunrise is fighting back the dark of the sky when Malachi sets me carefully on my feet. He hugs me tightly. âThis isnât goodbye.â
It might be. Itâs easier for things to go wrong with this plan than it is for them to go right. None of that matters now. Weâve come too far to turn back, which means this isnât the time or place for doubts. I pull him down for a quick kiss. âIâll see you soon.â
He steps back and then Wolf is there, whisking me into a dip and planting a kiss on my lips. âGive them hell, love.â
And then thereâs Rylan. He takes my hands and looks down at them for a long moment. âFear and pain can help motivate a change. Not panic, though. Itâs a fine line.â He squeezes my hands. âYou are never defenseless, Mina. Not with our powers flowing through your blood. Trust them and trust yourself.â He kisses me quickly. âStay alive.â
Thereâs a beat of hesitation, as if weâre all waiting for someone to speak up, to call the whole thing off. The temptation is thereâI wonât pretend it isnâtâbut I stay silent and so do the men. One by one, they turn and melt into the trees. I track the growing distances between us for a few moments and then turn toward the compound.
I breathe the cold mountain air and allow myself to feel all the conflicting emotions being back in this place brings. Anger and sorrow and a strange sort of bittersweet nostalgia. Things were more bad than good while growing up under my fatherâs tender care, but there were small spots of light in those first twenty-five years of my life.
My mother is a hazy, distant one. She died when I was still young, one of my fatherâs many mistresses to be felled by the very purpose he had them in the compound to serve: birthing another dhampir. My father is obsessed with his progeny, with his bloodlines.
Itâs why he took my failure to manifest powers personally. That and the fact I was determined to push back against his authority every chance I got. I smile a little, though it feels wrong on my face. Weâve been working toward this end game since I was born. Now that itâs time to act, my nerves ease and my path remains clear.
If I fail, I wonât be the only one to pay the price.
I press my hand to my stomach. So much has happened in the last few days, there were moments when I actually forgot I was pregnant. Itâs far too soon to see physical changes, and with Azazelâs temporary shield in place, most of the worst of the side effects have passed.
Should I get pregnant again, Iâll have to figure out how to shield on my own. I shake my head and check my watch. Iâll worry about the future tomorrow. Right now, I canât afford to be distracted. I take one last breath and start walking toward the compound.
I expect to be stopped. There arenât many sentries outside of the walls, but only a fool wouldnât post at least a few people in the forest surrounding the compound. Vampire senses only stretch so far, after all, and an early warning system can mean the difference between life and death in a confrontation. My father is many things, but a fool isnât one of them.
He must really see me as less than a threat. Itâs the only explanation why Iâm able to walk up the dirt road to the compound gates. Theyâre large enough to drive a truck throughâ¦and theyâre ajar.
âQuite the welcome,â I murmur. The urge rises to turn and flee. If we meant to set a trap, my father certainly intends the same.
I lift my chin and push open the gate. Inside, itâs exactly the same as I remember. Low square buildings, all in a uniform gray. Nearly indistinguishable from each other. Rationally, I know a year hasnât even passed, but it feels like several lifetimes since I last moved about in this place.
Since no one appears to stop me, I walk through the low buildings that serve as gatehouse and a place for the wall guards to rest between patrols, especially when the weather is intense. Both seem to be empty.
I see the smoke before I scent the burning; three large plumes stretching to the heavens. All three of my men have their shields locked up tight, so I only get the faintest impression of fighting as I step into the courtyard. I turn my focus from them. Nowâs not the time to be distracted. Not when I have my own part to play.
I stretch out my arms. âWhere are you, Father? Iâve come to negotiate.â
This all hinges on him coming to me. If he goes to fight one of the men first, weâre in trouble. He could compel them to fight the rest of our group. It would hamstring the other two men because of their desire not to hurt the compelled person. It would ruin any chances I have of succeeding because I am no match for any of them. No, I have to make sure he comes to me instead.
I turn a slow circle, arms still outstretched. âIâve come to take my place as your heir. You got your wish.â I raise my voice. âI carry a bloodline baby. Will you honor your terms, or will you take the cowardâs way out?â
I feel him before I see him. Heâs circled around behind me, which is exactly where I want him now that Iâm facing the front gates. I turn slowly as he walks out from between two buildings. For such a monstrous man, my father looks nearly as normal as Lizzie does. Silvering brown hair, vaguely attractive features that would be forgettable if not for the charisma he exudes wherever he goes. He weaponizes it now. It presses against me with a force that nearly sends me to my knees, getting stronger with each step he takes in my direction.
He smiles benignly. âCome now, Mina. You must know that you can never be heir. My people will never follow you.â
âLet me worry about that,â I grit out. Heâs not even compelling me, but itâs hard to speak. Each breath burns as his magic seems to seek a way inside. I hate that feeling, like each inhale gives him a little more power over me, like even now heâs worming his way into my brain. âWill you keep your word?â
He shakes his head and tsks. âHow am I to even know youâre my child? You have no bloodline powers to speak of. You look exactly like your mother. Whoâs to say she didnât betray me with some other man to beget you? None of my children are such a constant disappointment.â
How can his words still sting after everything heâs done? I drop my arms. âSo youâll break your word.â
My father moves closer. His expression remains benevolent, but his words only get uglier as he lowers his voice. âI donât know what game youâre playing at, you little bitch, but it wonât work. Losing the three bloodline vampires was a temporary setback, and now youâve returned them to me. If you truly are pregnant, then Iâll happily cut that baby out of you the moment it can survive on its own.â His smile drops. âYou, of course, will not survive the process.â
Over my dead body.
I glare. âYouâre making a mistake. Name me as heirââ
âKneel, slut.â His power slams into me, forcing me to my knees. âI donât know how you managed to find three of them, but I commend you on being so willing to open your legs to fulfill my aims. I suppose weâll find which is the father once the child is born.ââ He leans down a little, more power infusing his voice. âAre you actually pregnant? Be honest.â
âYes,â I bite out. I couldnât have lied if I wanted to. I hate this feeling. Like Iâm a puppet to his whim. Iâm screaming inside my head, but no sound leaves my lips except what he wills. It doesnât matter that heâs done this to me before; itâs not something Iâll ever get used to.
If our plan succeeds, Iâll never have to experience it again.
âThe fires. Your men are responsible?â
I clench my jaw and he drops the charming act, his brows drawing down. âAnswer me.â
âYes.â
âWhat is their plan?â
I was still a teenager when I learned the trick to dealing with his ability to use glamour to wrest answers from unwilling mouths. With most people, he seems to make them want to tell the truth so that they surrender their knowledge willingly, to please him. With me, heâs always used brute force. It hurts, but there is some room to maneuver, depending on how vague his questions. âStart fires.â
He stares down at me as if he wants to rip my head from my shoulders. âWhat is their plan? Be specific.â
I fight against the push of his power. To do anything else is out of the question. I donât know what Lizzie is waiting for, but I will buy as much time as I need to. I taste blood and grin up at my father. âTo start fires,â I repeat.
He clenches his hands into fists and releases them slowly. âAnd after they start fires?â He bites out each word like he wants to rip into me with more than power.
âFight.â
âI swear to the gods, I will kill you now, child or no, if you donât stop being so damned difficult.â When I donât answer, he throws up his hands. âWell?â
âThat wasnât a proper question.â A little bit of blood leaks from the corner of my mouth. Iâm not sure where it comes from when he does this. Thereâs no cut or obvious injury, but I always bleed when I fight him.
I sit back on my heels and look up. A wave of dizziness passes over me, but when it clears, I nearly sob with relief. A little red dot appears on his throat. âFather?â
âWhat?â
âI hope this hurts.â My hand goes to my boot, to the long knife in the sheath there, both courtesy of Graceâs bag.
âI changed my mind. You dieââ
His throat explodes.