Sharon Page

Blood Deep


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I won’t hurt you. In fact, it’s my need, pretty little lass, to do the opposite.” His husky, baritone voice spoke English in a sensual accent.

      He pulled her closer to him, squashing her breasts against his wide, hard chest. She’d never been so close to a man, except in her dream world. She’d never been held like this. A bit of cloud slid away from the sun and light slanted over his face.

      His cheek glowed as though it had caught fire. Smoke spiraled off his skin.

      She almost gagged on the smell of burning flesh.

      A man with fangs, one who burned in sunlight. A vampire.

      His full, seductive mouth curved into a grimace of pain, then the faint bit of light disappeared.

      “What are you?” she managed. But her traitorous body did not want to struggle in his arms. His scent made her…weak. Her skin felt warm, and her head felt too dizzy. But she had to break free, and she forced her legs to thrash wildly.

      “Stop. I am Zayan,” he growled by her ear. That rumble of sound was not like an animal, but like the way she’d heard her brother Simon growl to his new wife, Caroline. Lustful. Hot. Aroused.

      She should be afraid. But her nipples hardened, and her breasts lifted against the soft brush of her chemise. Between her thighs, she ached and got hot and sticky, the way she did when she had her dreams.

      She must be going mad. Or she was trapped in another dream. In the last dream, she’d been dying!

      She would break free of this nightmare. This was enough. Miranda lashed out. Her boot flailed wildly and made contact with his hip with a thud that she felt through her shin. She hammered her fists against his arms, writhed, and twisted against his grip.

      And nothing worked. He gazed down at her with amusement, those terrifying fangs exposed by his smile. His eyes were the dark silvery gray of the snowy sky. They held her like a hypnotist’s twirling silver watch.

      A thunderous roar exploded from the woods, and a brilliant red light exploded outward from inside it. The light scattered into winking stars and disappeared, but out of its core, another man appeared. As large as the one who still held her. His hair was as long and black but bore a brilliant silvery white streak within it. He, too, had fangs.

      “Bloody hell, it’s daylight.” This man’s hands were bare, and smoke plumed from the backs of them. “Your brilliant plan was to escape our prison into the bloody middle of the day?”

      Wake up. Wake up, Miranda! But she was awake.

      “I’ve cast darkness around the sun, but it will fade soon—” Zayan broke off and muttered a curse. A particularly coarse one.

      Clamped to his body, Miranda twisted to look.

      A mass of snowflakes swirled over the grass to the side, and they looked as red as blood. Then the fluttering flakes joined, forming a shape. It grew legs, a thick body, a long neck, and a giant head. A dragon.

      Impossible.

      Whatever it was, it ran toward her and the…the vampires.

      Stay.

      She heard Zayan’s voice in her head, and though she tried to force her limbs to move, they would not.

      The ground shook as the red dragon charged at them, and though she blinked a dozen times, the monster did not vanish. Wide blood-red wings seemed to hang in the air. Giant legs swallowed up the ground as it half-ran, half-flew at them. An enormous, serpent-like head leaned forward, leading the massive body.

      Flames tore out of the dragon’s mouth. Bracken caught fire, flared, and became instant ash. Miranda meant to scream, but it caught in her throat, choking her.

      The other vampire muttered, “Bloody Christ Jesus.” He stalked toward the beast and held up his hand. Flames launched from the slavering jaws and hit the vampire’s hand. Then disappeared.

      The dragon gave an unearthly shriek and it sounded like a cry of frustration. Calmly, wearing a glare of impatience, the vampire formed a ball of pale blue light between his hands.

      That was most definitely not possible. But Miranda was watching it happen.

      The vampire shot his whirling ball of blue light at the snowflake dragon. An explosion shook the ground and the dragon fell. The beast’s body disappeared as it hit the waving fronds of heather.

      It was gone.

      That, she heard Zayan say, proved far too easy.

      Too easy?

      We must return to your carriage. And with that, he released her.

      “How ridiculous.” Suddenly, her arms were free and she waved them in fury. For anger was better than giving in to shock and fainting dead away in the road. “I am not taking you within my carriage. And I cannot—it’s lying broken on the road and the horses are gone.”

      Intriguing. You are not begging for your life. You are not crying or quivering in fear.

      Could Zayan not hear the fevered beat of her heart? Aunt Eugenia said vampires could hear heartbeats. And could smell blood. “I doubt either would do me any good,” she exclaimed. “You’d laugh if I begged and hurt me even if I cried.”

      Zayan grinned at the other vampire. A courageous woman. I have met so few truly brave women. Most will fight for their lives with every weapon they possess. Then he looked her over in the most…lecherous, scandalous, audacious way.

      She did not want to hear his voice in her head. “Speak in words! Speak out loud! I do not even think you really exist. I’m dreaming!”

      Hold out your arm, Zayan commanded. Her arm, entirely against her will, extended at his wish. The other vampire cocked his head, as though laughing at her. Zayan bent over her wrist.

      He licked her.

      Flicked his tongue along her skin.

      He bit her.

      She wrenched her arm, fearing that his teeth would rip her skin open, but he let her go.

      Dreams might bite, angel, but that little jolt of pain would awaken a dreamer. Now, my dear, we need refuge or the sunlight will burn us to ash.

      “Then take the carriage, for all the good it will do you.” She pointed toward where her carriage was. She could see the wounds on her wrist. Two puncture marks showed just below her veins. A vampire’s bite, exactly as Eugenia had described.

      “And what do you intend to do, angel?” The other vampire asked.

      She wouldn’t answer that.

      “Ah, you plan to walk to the village.” Zayan tilted his head and the wind threw his hair behind him. Long, wavy, it looked like the style of the rakish and handsome Charles II. “I would not advise it. There are wolves out, and they are excited by the scent of magic in the air.”

      The scent of magic? But she shivered—he was correct. She smelled something in the air—an exotic richness, a breathtaking scent that was alluring and indescribable.

      The other vampire, the one with the streak of silver in his hair, strode forward. “You are to come with us, sweeting.”

      “I won’t.”

      “I can force you to come with me. I can control your mind, and you will obediently place one foot before the other and follow me.”

      “Then do that,” she snapped, “because I won’t go willingly.”

      “I am glad, fair lady, that yours is the first carriage we’ve encountered. But I have not the time to do battles with words.”

      This vampire also wore a cape, one of black velvet, trimmed in a thick, luxurious fur of gray and white. Wolf fur. A jeweled clasp held it.

      He tossed her over his shoulder, his hand clamped on her bottom to hold her in place. He squeezed her rump through her skirts.