Queen of Gods (Vampire Crown #1)

I brushed off my shoulders with a brutal rub, and at least two handfuls of dark dust fell from them to the floor. I was in need of a rinsing. Or a shower, as they now called it.

I cracked my neck and stepped over the bodies cluttering my crypt. Eventually, they would be nothing but bones—all before the next time I decided to Rest. Those bones I would shove into the back room, along with all the others. At some point, I would need to clean my crypt up. That back room was getting a bit cluttered with skulls and hip bones and such.

My dirty hands pressed against the crypt door, and I shoved.

It swung open with ease.

My two hundred years had been good to me. More power flexed within my muscles than I could remember. It was always like this upon awakening, reuniting oneself with one’s own body again.

I held up a quick hand to shade my eyes. I squinted, asking, “Adelie?”

A flash of curly red hair came into focus.

My friend now stood directly in front of me. “Here. Put these sunglasses on until your eyes adjust.”

“Sunglasses?”

“Yes. They go on your face.” Her words were gentle.

I held still, allowing her to put a pair of sunglasses over my eyes.

Instantly, I breathed a sigh of relief and dropped my hand from the glaring sun shining into the cave. I cracked my neck and rotated my shoulders. I bounced a few times in place.

My friend, who appeared all of sixteen years old with her innocent features, watched as I worked out my stiff muscles. Up and down, I jumped. Her eyes tracked every movement, a slow smile etching her lips. She muttered, “You’re coming around faster than last time.”

I grinned. “I feel damn good.”

She nodded, her brows lifting as I raced around her in a circle.

Just for the fun of it. A crypt can be cramped.

Jerking to a sudden stop in front of her, I probed, “Do I have this generation’s lingo down correct? Or do I sound like I’m from the past?”

She snorted. “I picked well for you, my friend. I made sure there was a social media guru in there. So you sound even more up to date than I do.”

I nudged her shoulder with mine, teasing, “So I’m still better than you.”

Adelie huffed a long-suffering sigh. “Once, Gwen. Only once did you beat me in chess. I don’t know why you must continue to bring that up.”

I flashed a little fang. “Because it’s so much fun.”

Another sigh. Added to a roll of her pretty, brown eyes. “I should have stuck a therapist in there, too. Dammit.”

My head tilted back, and my laughter filled the cave.

Adelie blinked ever so slowly, her gaze running over my features. “You know, you look straight from a horror flick right now. We should probably get you cleaned up before I take you out into civilization.”

I stuck out my bottom lip, joking, “I can’t scare the food?”

“Oh, you’d scare the humans all right. But you shouldn’t.” She pulled her backpack off her right shoulder and unzipped it. Rummaging through the contents, my friend mumbled hesitantly, “Aren’t you going to ask me why you woke up early?”

A pair of dark jeans, a black t-shirt, boots. Weapons. Bottles of water and rags.

All were dropped at my feet.

I started stripping down out of my Rest attire. “I know the overlords are behind it.”

“Are you curious why?” Adelie zipped her bag up and shoved the strap back over her shoulder. “I think you’ll like the reason, be less pissed.”

I wet a rag down, my head cocking as I eyed her in silent question.

“Lord John took his final breath six months ago. He decided he’d lived long enough and chose his death,” she explained. A small, pleased grin graced her features—an impish look. “King Pippin has elevated to the Council. He’s now Lord Pippin, an overlord.”

My breath caught in my throat, the cleansing rag in my hand halting against my cheek. “You mean I’m finally being called as a possible candidate for the new queen?”

Her red hair shook as she bobbed her head in excitement. “Yes! There are two women before you, from what I hear, but if they decline the offer, then you could be the candidate for the next queen!”

“Oh…my.” My blue gaze widened as all my dreams flashed before my eyes.

Adelie squealed, jumping up and down. She even clapped her hands together.

I blinked. “You can’t do that in front of them.”

She cleared her throat and held her hands behind her back. Attempting calm.

“That’s better.” I nodded and began scrubbing my face once more. “I can’t believe, after all this time, I’ll get a chance at the crown. I didn’t think any of those overlords were ever going to die.”

It took one of them dying for a king to ascend to overlord.

Only five at a time. And vampires lived forever.

She shrugged a delicate shoulder. “Lord John was ready for his Eternal Slumber.”

My brows rose, and I wet the rag again. “He was the youngest of them all.”

“Now Lord Pippin is,” my friend hummed. Pleased.

She was so pleased with this.

But I probably had her beat. My grin grew, pinching my cheeks. “When does the official meet happen? When do I have to be there?” Because I wanted to be there now, my gut churning and heating from the magical pull.

Adelie pulled out her cell phone. She nibbled on her bottom lip as she stared at the time and date on it, counting silently with her fingers. Her head nodded with her own internal thoughts, then her brown eyes pierced mine. “We have three days. With our travel, it’s cutting it down by half. But the overlords do have a private jet waiting for us.”

I sighed in relief. “Thank fuck I have you listed on my paperwork as an emergency contact with the Council. Otherwise, I wouldn’t know what the hell was happening, and I’d be killing left and right until I was sated.”

The killing I didn’t mind at all. Not being discreet would bother me.

Dead humans lying around normally tended to bring the nearby authorities.

From all accounts of the memories I had just stolen, that hadn’t changed in the past two hundred years. If a human was murdered, it was still considered bad.

Pity that.

It would be much easier if you could just dump their bodies in a landfill.

That was what the humans did with their garbage.

We should have the same rules. We were the predators.

I lifted my sunglasses, closing my eyes to clean my eyelids. “The humans still don’t know about us, right? I didn’t miss that clue with my feeding, did I?”

I had fed very fast, sating my thirst. And I was still thirsty.

Adelie snorted. “Not a chance. We’re still hidden.”

“Good. No wars have resulted then because of our nature.”

“Nope.” She popped her lips with the word.

I dropped the sunglasses back over my eyes. “The stronghold is still in the southwestern portion of South America?”

“They haven’t moved. There’s no reason to. The castle is still in Japri.”

“Excellent.” I grinned. “Anything else I need to know?”

My friend nibbled on her bottom lip. Finally, she shook her head. “No, I think that’s it. All your affairs are in order, like normal. You’re fully prepared to enter society again.”