Lenina Miller leaned against the bedroom door, gazing at her engagement ring. The diamond winked in the morning sunlight streaming through the window. It should have brought happy memories, pleasure and pride, but she longed for nothing more than the freedom to dive beneath her duvet and hide.

  She looked up. Though alone in the room she heard it clearly, a whisper in the deepest corner of her mind.

  ‘Leave me alone.’ She scratched her left cheek through a layer of medical gauze.

  The act of speaking to an empty room sent a chill down her spine. Suddenly the gentle sunlight offered no warmth, merely highlighted the loneliness of the space, filled with clothes and shoes belonging to someone else. Lenina longed for the comfort of her own things, the comfortable warmth of her dressing gown, the faint coconut scent of her hair brush. Even the dust bunnies in the corner of her bedroom seemed a sad omission from the space.

  But beggars couldn’t be choosers. She heard the old saying in her mother’s voice and silently agreed.

  A trill from the front doorbell followed.

  ‘How did you know?’

  Smug pride filled the voice.

  ‘I’ve been a vampire for two days. Give me a break.’

  the voice corrected.

  Lenina rolled her eyes.

  ‘Chuck, the police are here.’ This voice came from downstairs. Unlike the first, this belonged to a man Lenina knew and loved: her father.

  ‘Coming.’ She wiped her face. Sucked in a few more nerve-steadying breaths. Her heart continued to race in her chest, a rapid, patter-patter she felt sure everyone would hear. Hadn’t she finished with the police yesterday? What more could they possibly want? Did they know she’d lied?

  ‘And that’s exactly why I didn’t. You can’t just—’ she lowered her voice. The last thing she needed now was for her father to hear her talking to herself. As if he wasn’t worried enough.

  Lenina preferred not to question if he was strong enough. She was barely sure of herself.

  When certain she could do so safely, Lenina left the sanctuary of the bedroom and trudged down the stairs.

  Rattling the bars of his mental prison, the ancient creature living in her mind paced and peered through her eyes to assess the scene in the sitting room.

  Tense and straight-backed on the sofa, a short female PC narrowed her eyes when Lenina entered. Her hands twitched towards the speedcuffs she wore on her left hip. Beside her, wearing a watery smile, a male officer sat with his hands in his lap. Opposite them, her father, Raymond Miller, held out his arms. She accepted his hug. Through his clothes she heard the steady rhythm of his heartbeat. His skin smelled of Old Spice, soap and leather. Like childhood. Safety.

  ‘You don’t have to do this now, Chuck. They can’t make you.’

  She sighed. ‘They can.’

  ‘You’ve done nothing wrong.’

  The presence inside her agreed wholeheartedly. Saar, Egyptian soldier and two-thousand-year-old vampire, crooned to her like a worried parent.

  She pulled away from Ray and addressed the male officer. ‘Officer Jackson, isn’t it?’

  ‘Hello again, Miss Miller.’ Shawn Jackson looked much as he had the night before, though now his curious eyes studied her through narrow-framed glasses. Like last night, his dreadlocks were gathered at the nape of his neck, neat and unobtrusive. His gaze touched the bandage on her left cheek. The wince of sympathy seemed an unconscious reflex. ‘This is my colleague Officer Bristow.’ He gestured to the woman. ‘I’m sorry we have to bother you so soon after what happened. I hope you know we’re incredibly sorry for your loss.’

  Lenina cringed and swallowed over a sudden thickness in her throat. Guilt and misery crawled through her insides as she broke away from her father to lean next to a low cabinet filled with DVDs. ‘Thanks.’

  He nodded, adjusting his glasses across the bridge of his nose. ‘I want you to know, in light of what happened to Detectives Blake and Thorne, the Chief Inspector tasked an equally efficient and talented team to find the man you described.’

  Lenina bit her lip, twisting her ring around her finger. They would never find him; he’d died the night before. She watched it happen. After bleeding out from a stab to the heart, Jason’s body crumbled away into a soft pile of golden sand, packaged in filthy grey clothes. A god-touched death.

  Ray cleared his throat. ‘I hope these are somewhat more efficient and talented than the last pair.’

  PC Jackson narrowed his eyes. ‘Excuse me?’

  ‘One of them kidnapped my daughter and took advantage of her grief under the pretence of protecting her. He held her in his house then murdered his partner.’

  The younger man fiddled with the strap holding the radio in place on his right shoulder. ‘At this time I’m not at liberty to discuss matters relating to the case, but I—’

  ‘Officer,’ Ray loaded the title with skewer-sharp sarcasm. ‘You can’t tell me anything, but Lenina is right there. I know what happened. Tristen Blake is a murderer and a serial womaniser. Brad Thorne was incompetent. Neither of them had any chance of finding who killed Nick and I hope they weren’t the best you had.’

  ‘Daddy, please . . .’

  Ray’s lips snapped closed. An instant later his shoulders slumped. ‘Tea, anyone?’

  ‘Yes, thank you.’ Lenina had no intention of drinking anything, but the shaken police officer needed time to recover. ‘Two sugars.’

  Her father frowned. ‘I know how you take your tea, Chuck. Anyone else?’

  Bristow shook her head. After a pause, Jackson did the same. ‘Don’t let me trouble you, Mr Miller.’

  ‘If it was trouble, I wouldn’t offer.’

  ‘Daddy!’

  Muttering, Ray slouched into the kitchen and slammed the door.

  Lenina unfurled her fists and touched her flushed cheeks. ‘Sorry about that.’

  Jackson nodded. ‘I understand.’

  ‘No, you don’t.’ She glared at the officer until he lowered his head. The tiny pulse in the side of his throat quickened. She licked her lips as his nerves began to stain the air.

  ‘You’re right. I’m sorry. But I meant what I said, Miss Miller; I wish I could do more. But right now all we can do is follow up on last night with some questions before handing over to the new detectives.’

  Lenina ignored the voice in her head and shifted away from the officer.

  ‘I’ve already told Chief Hobb everything. I don’t know where Tristen is.’ Lenina’s voice trembled at the lie. She could feel her missing sire even in that moment, a constant presence in her mind she longed to block. ‘He killed Inspector Thorne and . . . took advantage of me.’

  PC Jackson softened. He wiped the sounds of his mouth with the tips of his fingers and glanced at his partner. PC Bristow said nothing, but her eyes screamed ‘liar’ so loudly it made no difference.

  Lenina hesitated, then allowed herself to slide to the floor, back pressed to the wall. When PC Jackson started forward, she hugged her knees to her chest.

  ‘Miss Miller?’ His scent changed. So did the pulse in the side of his throat.

  Lenina watched him from the corner of her eye and realised Saar was right. Much as she hated to admit it. She allowed her voice to quiver. ‘I don’t know what else to do—sorry—I want to help—what do you want me to say?’

  ‘Nothing, Miss Miller. I’m sorry to cause you distress. Maybe we could come back tomorrow . . .’

  Though his lips continued to move, Lenina no longer heard him speak. Instead she listened to the thud of his heart, the rush of blood in his veins. It seemed louder than usual, pulling her away from the conversation until all she could hear was the life in his body.

  She whimpered.

  Saar grunted.

  ‘I can’t—’ she began.

  Saar’s impatience flared, then died, replaced by a rush of wary concern. Then anger. Then excitement. His voice pounded through her brain like the echoes of a megaphone.

  ‘What?’

  Lenina
leapt to her feet, a smooth, boneless move. Her heart beat a furious triple step against her ribs. Every nerve in her body tingled with the sudden rush of nervous energy. ‘Where?’

  PC Jackson yelped at the sudden change, scrambling back towards his partner. ‘“Where,” what?’

  The doorbell rang.

  PC Bristow tensed on her seat. Her fingers tugged at the shaft of her asp baton. ‘Expecting anyone?’

  ‘Ramona should be back soon, but she has a key.’ Lenina shook her head as she crossed the sitting room. ‘I’ll get it.’

  Before she could reach the hallway, Ray strode from the kitchen. He clutched a steaming mug in one hand and a tea towel in the other. Shoving the former into Lenina’s hands, he scurried into the hallway. ‘I’ll get that. Stay with them.’

  ‘No!’ She darted after him, ignoring startled looks from the officers.

  ‘I’ve got this, Chuck, don’t worry.’ Ray reached the door. Tugged it open.

  The lock cleared the hatch. Sunlight streamed in. A savage impact jerked the door from his grip. Framed pictures shook and tumbled from their wall hooks.

  Two men stood on the step, one with long, greasy hair, the second flashing gold-capped teeth and a tongue piercing through a wolfish grin. ‘We’re looking for Lenina Miller,’ he said. ‘Is she home?’

  The prickle of otherworldly energy sizzling across her skin told Lenina more than Saar’s frantic cry ever could. She froze, the mug of tea searing her fingers.

  Ray glanced back at her. His shoulders stiffened. ‘And who are you?’

  Gold Teeth shared a look with his companion. ‘Call us . . . concerned citizens.’

  ‘Daddy,’ began Lenina.

  ‘I’d rather know exactly who you are.’ Ray folded his arms. ‘And how you knew to find my daughter here.’

  Spurred by the voice, by the terrible golden grin, by the terrified thudding of her own heart, Lenina flung the tea, mug and all. It cracked off Gold Teeth’s forehead and doused him in hot fluid, streaming down his face like sugary tears. While he screamed and cradled his scalded cheeks, Lenina kicked the door shut. Bolted it.

  ‘Chuck, what are you doing?’ Ray gave her wide eyes.

  Oh, God, what have I done?

  She clutched her chest. ‘I had to.’

  ‘Why?’

  Words caught in her throat. Even if able to speak Lenina had no idea what to say. She grabbed her father’s hand and dragged him into the living room.

  Bristow was already on her feet, asp in hand. She flicked it to extend the telescopic shafts. Her upper lip curled back. ‘What’s going on? Who’s screaming?’ She beckoned to her companion who stood, though with less caged violence in his motions.

  ‘We need to go.’ Lenina gave them each a desperate glance. ‘Hurry. Back door.’

  ‘Chuck, if you’ll just calm down—’

  ‘No!’ The very idea made her stomach clench. ‘We have to run.’

  A loud thump came from the hallway.

  Lenina stared at her father. The two officers. Her feet shuffled against the floor. Stopped.

  Where could she possibly go? They would find her. She was marked now.

  Her fingers traced the dressing on her left cheek. ‘I don’t know what to do.’

  A cold tingle raced down her arms, a dozen iced fork tines. Lenina yelped and shoved against it but the intrusion came too fast. Saar surged into her limbs and took rough control of her body.

  ‘Move!’ The voice was hers. The tone far from it.

  Ray gaped. Bristow swore. Jackson reached for her arm.

  ‘Miss Miller—’

  ‘Do not touch me, male!’ With Lenina’s hands, Saar grabbed PC Jackson and hurled him into the DVD cabinet. The officer hit it back first and slumped to the ground, groaning as DVDs rained around him.

  No, no, please. Not again!

  Saar picked up the sofa. He hefted it into the air like a feather and propped it against the sitting room door on its short edge.

  Sweat beaded on Lenina’s forehead, dribbled into her eyes. The sting of it made her blink, a temporary blindness that did nothing to hinder the force using her body.

  Please . . .

  Saar turned her body towards the kitchen door.

  ‘I don’t want to fight anybody.’ She lowered her voice. Pain lanced through her head as she pressed on Saar’s influence. Like pushing against a car set in neutral on a flat road; it would move, if only she pushed hard enough.

  The tingling itch spread to her toes. Her legs took two steps towards the kitchen.

  ‘Okay, Lenina, put your hands on her head and get down on your knees.’ Bristow pointed with the asp. ‘Obey at once or I will use physical force against you.’

  Saar laughed, a deep, rolling sound that compressed Lenina’s vocal cords to an unnatural limit.

  Ray twisted the tea towel. Pushed forward to stand between Lenina and the irate officer. ‘Please, wait—’

  From the other side of the barricaded door came the sounds of splintering wood.

  Lenina turned her focus inward. The ancient god-touched prowled there like a once-trapped beast, the remnants of the cage she imagined to keep him under control all broken and twisted. ‘Please.’ She turned her back on the startled looks thrown her way. ‘Don’t do this.’

  No time to ask what ‘moon puppies’ were. ‘I’ll be okay.’

  She hesitated. ‘I’ll run—I promise—they’ll never catch me.’

  Saar’s impatience trickled through her lips as a low, angry growl.

  ‘No!’ Lenina shoved against him, grunting as stars exploded across her vision. Her feet skidded beneath her. Saar’s pressure died. His furious cries echoed in her head and she spent precious seconds rebuilding his mental prison.

  More crashes from the hallway.

  Heavy footsteps.

  Voices.

  Hinges squealed in protest.

  The door burst open.

  Lenina scrambled aside to avoid the sofa as it shot back three feet and toppled over upside down.

  The strangers stalked through led by Gold Teeth.

  ‘That wasn’t very nice.’ He squeezed tea from the ends of his dark, shaggy hair. His energy crackled through the air, prickly on the skin like coarse fur.

  Pale and shaky, Ray raced forward and yanked Lenina to her feet. After looking briefly into her eyes, he pushed her behind him. His hands formed tight, white knuckled fists. ‘Get out.’ His voice trembled.

  Lenina experienced a fierce stab of pride for her father’s bravery. Then fear rolled in and swallowed it.

  ‘Shut up,’ she hissed.

  Gold Teeth scratched the piercing in his right eyebrow. ‘Not without what we came for. Guess that’s her.’ He inhaled noisily. ‘Must be.’

  The small hairs on the back of Lenina’s neck stood to rigid attention. Every limb, every scrap of skin tingled. The very air seemed to scrape her flesh with razor sharp edges. ‘Please, leave us alone.’

  ‘Can’t do that, girlie. I need you.’

  ‘Why?’

  Another smile. ‘Reasons.’

  PC Jackson rolled on to his back, with a muted groan. A second avalanche of DVDs slid from the broken shelves. Their clatter filled the silence. No one else moved.

  Gold Teeth stepped forward. ‘Kallisto, leader of England’s Red Fang chapter extends a personal invitation to you to join her in her home. I, Darryl Wulfsun, have come to escort you.’

  Saar’s power pulsed, a quick stab of nervous energy a finger’s breadth from panic.

  Ray stiffened and reached back with his arms, as if to protect her within the circle of his flesh. ‘She’s not going anywhere with you.’

  ‘Daddy . . .’ She grabbed his hand. The fingers were stiff and hard beneath hers. ‘Don’t.’

  The second man, all greasy, slicked back hair and shifty eyes, gave a sigh and tapped his watch.

  ‘I know, I know.’ Darryl shrugged. ‘But we’re not supposed to hurt anyone.’

  PC Bristow shov
ed her way to the middle of the standoff and stared up at the bigger man. The top of her head barely reached his chest. ‘You have five seconds to get down on your knees with your hands on your heads.’

  ‘Humans.’ Darryl snarled, a terrible ripple of sound like the grumbles of a wild beast. ‘I don’t take orders from humans.’ A pale yellow colour seeped across the whites of his eyes, blanking them out until nothing remained but the gleam of lupine gold and a perfectly round, black pupil.

  Lenina shrieked. Bristow paled.

  PC Bristow gave a wordless bellow and cracked her asp against Darryl’s shoulder. She followed with a punch, aimed at his face. He didn’t even flinch. Darryl caught her fist and jerked it to the side, one large, sweeping motion. Grinning, he drove an answering punch into her breastbone.

  The crack sent a wave of weakness through Lenina’s knees. She clutched her father and tried to hold back the scream bubbling up into her throat.

  Bristow’s fingers flexed on the asp. Released. Dry, wheezing coughs slipped from her mouth along with a dribble of blood. She fell, clutching her chest.

  Darryl Wulfsun stepped over her twitching body and placed his hands on his out-thrust hips. ‘So, girlie, about that invitation?’

  Also By Ileandra Young

  Dead And Alive, Season One

  A multi-season story arc following the dramas, passions, struggles and victories of three distinct characters.

  Diavian Hatara, young vampire yearning for the love of her estranged matriarch, Kailah Turner. After evading capture by a deadly group of hunters named the Assassins, Diavian turns her attention to finding Kailah, who has been missing for eighteen months.

  Michael Garran, grumpy, sour-faced mechanic who wants nothing more than to settle down with his girlfriend, Stephanie Riley. But when the night of his proposal spins wildly out of control, Michael is forced to confront the fact that the world is home to more than mere humans.

  Kailah Turner, vampire in hiding, surviving on the blood of animals while living the life of a human. She wants nothing more than to be left alone, to lick the wounds of battles long past and forget the pain that accompanies them.

  Three separate, yet inexorably linked souls searching for an answer to frustrating and inescapable question: 'What does it mean to be both dead and alive?'

  Episode One: Reunion

  Episode Two: Date Night

  Episode Three: Target Beta

  Episode Four: Resistance

  Episode Five: Answers

  Episode Six: Crossroads

  About Ileandra Young

  Ileandra Young is one face of the Da Shared Brain who also writes erotica and romance as Raven ShadowHawk. Ileandra enjoys writing fantasy (both urban and traditional) and aspires one day to write a piece so long (and therefore thick) that the book would form a good self-defence weapon in the hands of a fan (even been hit by War and Peace? It hurts!).

  Her interests include reading large books (see above), roller derby, and gently correcting people who believe that vampires should sparkle.

  Discover more about Ileandra on her blog or website

  Contact Ileandra via email

  Find Ileandra on Facebook

  Stalk Ileandra on Twitter

  Check out Ileandra’s Goodreads

  Join Ileandra’s mailing list

  Acknowledgements & Thanks

  This page could be a mile long but I’d prefer that it isn’t. There are so many people I need to thank I’m just going to rattle them all off.

  Here we go.

  David Soden, Mum, Dad, ‘Uncki’ Charlie, Gemma Ward, Celine Connolly, Sally Edmans, Ava (Jordanna East)terby, Karen Perkins, Dave Johnson, Louise Burke, Lisa French, David Gilchrist, the writers of Leicester’s Phoenix Writers Critique Group, Joseph Hitchman, Ian Fielding, Stephanie Fung, Victoria Plunkett and Rachel Phillips.

  All of you, in a way large or small, abstract or direct, have helped me get this work out into the open. It’s taken me years (I’m not kidding, I’m talking YEARS!) but we’re here. We’ve done it.

  Thank you all so very, very much. This is a dream finally pulled from my mind and made real. It’s your victory as much as mine.

  Thank you for your support, help, readings, critiques, firm shoulders, listening ears and all the rest in times past and recent. You’re all stars to me.

  Saar’s Legacy: Book One

  Silk Over Razor Blades

  Published in May 2015 by Little Vamp Press

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted by any means, electronic, mechanical, printing and subsequent photocopying or otherwise, it is intended for the use of the purchaser only.

  Basically, thank you and well done if you went out there and spent a few pennies to buy this fine example of modern literature. If you’ve come to this book through nefarious means then feel just a tiny bit guilty. Go on. You’re cutting into my chocolate fund.

  All characters and words the work of Ileandra Young.

  All characters, locations, names or incidents appearing in this work are fictitious and a product of the author’s overactive and slightly crazed imagination. Any resemblance to real persons, living, dead, vampire, ghost, zombie, lycanthrope, faerie or daemon is purely coincidental. Promise.

  The moral right of the author has been asserted.

  Copyright © Ileandra Young 2015

 
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