“It will be as you command, General. But the soldiers must feed.”
Dominick snarled and backhanded the lieutenant. “Lieutenant Heff, never presume to tell me about my men!” He pointed to the group of humans in the distance. “We feed there.” He faced the milling, whispering horde. “Quietly. Quickly. Feed on the humans. Then we flee to the tunnels from where we will begin to search for our High Priestess.” And we will try to figure out where the hell we are, he added silently to himself. “Lieutenant, you watch our rear. If the rebels return, we have nothing but our teeth and hands to protect ourselves.”
“Our teeth and hands are stronger than theirs,” the lieutenant said.
Dominick backhanded him again. “But they are not stronger than arrows or swords. Do as I command or I will sever your head from your body myself.”
Lieutenant Heff cowered. “Yes, General.”
“Follow me!”
Dominick darted out of the concealment of the bridge and the deep shadows surrounding it, followed closely by those who had been pulled from their sleep and wrenched into this changed world with him. They were almost completely silent. The snow aided them in that, though stalking humans was a simple thing. They had ears, but they did not use them to hear. Just as they did not use their eyes to see into the night.
The red vampyres and fledglings attacked silently, too.
The humans were not silent, though their screams did not last long.
His men were so ravenous that they fell to the feeding, rending arms and legs from living bodies with their bare hands. They did not notice one of the humans had escaped. She actually made it to the van that waited beside Twenty-First Street.
“Do not let her leave!” Dominick growled as he tore hunks of flesh from a warm body.
Five of his men darted after the woman. She started the van. It lurched forward as the vampyres swarmed the roof. They broke the driver’s window and pulled her from behind the wheel as the van ran headfirst into a truck that had just come over the hill at the top of the street. Both vehicles burst into flame. The man behind the wheel of the truck exploded through the front window, which was lucky for Dominick’s men. It gave them someone else on which to feed.
Dominick stood and wiped the blood from his mouth.
Lights were already going on in the homes that bordered Woodward Park. In his world humans knew their place.
This was not his world.
He whistled again. Instantly his small army regrouped.
“Enough! We need to get to the tunnels. Now. We stay as a group as long as we’re not attacked. Should an attack come, scatter. Those of you who are strong enough will make it to the tunnels. Those of you who are not should not be in my army. Understood?”
His men hissed and nodded as they finished gulping down the last of the human flesh. Dominick searched the group and found the lieutenant.
“Heff, stay with me. But if we’re attacked, get as many men as you can to the tunnels. I name you my Second. If I fall it is up to you to complete this mission. Find the High Priestess. She called us here. As always, we live to serve her will.”
“We live to serve her will …” whispered the horde.
Lieutenant Heff nodded solemnly. “Yes, sir.”
“Cloak yourselves with shadow. We run!”
Heff
Kevin Heffer ran, though his mind was in tumult. He’d been asleep, as had the rest of the soldiers, and had awakened as he was wrenched from his bed and spewed in a bloody tide with his brother soldiers into this strange version of Woodward Park.
But that wasn’t why his mind was in tumult. That was just strange. It was the priestess. The one who had closed the circle. He’d recognized her. Of course he’d recognized her.
But how could it have been her? She’s dead!
“Lieutenant, wake the hell up and pay attention! One of the soldiers just took off after a woman in the alley. Get him back here!” The general barked, pointing down a dark side street.
“Yes, sir!” Heff did as he was told. He raced into the street to find one of the more feral of the soldiers bent over a well-dressed, middle-aged woman. He’d already taken a bite out of her shoulder and she was screaming hysterically. He grabbed the red vamp, and tossed him aside. “You heard the general! We get to the tunnels. Now. No stopping.”
The vampyre gnashed his teeth, but cringed when Heff raised his fist, threatening to beat him into submission. “Yesssss, ssir,” he hissed.
“Go!” Heff pointed at the rear of their group, and the soldier sprinted after them. Heff turned to the woman.
“No! Get away from me!” she screamed. She tried to stand and run from him, but she slipped on her own blood and fell heavily to the snowy street.
Heff met her gaze, locking it in his own. “No more screaming,” he commanded her. She instantly complied.
“No more screaming,” she repeated mechanically.
He considered feeding from her. He wouldn’t rip and tear, as the feral vampyre would have. Heff didn’t do that. He never did that. And she was under his mind control, so he could taste her, just a little, and she wouldn’t protest. He wouldn’t even hurt her much more than she’d already been hurt. He was still hungry. He was always hungry. But one glance at the disappearing column of soldiers had him racing away. There will be more feeding later. There will also be time to try to understand how my sister could be alive …
Zoey
CRACK! We automatically cringed as an enormous explosive sound echoed throughout the night.
“Oh, shit! Was that a transponder?” Shaunee said.
“Seems like it,” Shaylin said. “And it’s not even icy.”
“Dang, the snow was pretty. Now it’s super cray,” Stevie Rae said.
“Oklahoma weather,” Aphrodite grumbled. “It. Sucks.”
“Hurry, Stark,” I said, trying to peer through the SUV’s tinted window. The snow was falling so fast it had already covered the lines in the road. And now the wind had picked up, causing whiteout conditions.
“Doing my best,” Stark said without taking his eyes from the street.
“He’s a red fledgling! Why is he a red fledgling?” Damien was turned completely around, staring back at Jack, who was still unconscious, trussed like a roped goat, and seat belted between Darius and Rephaim in the rear of the school’s new Escalade. Aphrodite, Stevie Rae, and I were in the second seats. Stark was driving and Damien was in the passenger seat. Shaylin and Shaunee were smashed into the back like groceries.
“No clue,” I told Damien. “Can’t you go faster?” I asked Stark.
He gave me a look in the rearview mirror. “Have you noticed the snow? I’m doing my best, but Utica is already a mess.”
“Sorry,” I said. “I just can’t tell where we are. Um, because of the snow.”
“He’s still unconscious. What did you do to him?” Damien asked for the umpteenth time.
“I already told you. I tazed him,” Aphrodite said. “And it’s a good thing I did. He was either going to eat one of us or get dead. Again.”