“Oh,” she breathed. The feeling of being torn in two sliced through her chest as she bit back an anguished scream.
“Tempest!” Pallas hissed from fifteen feet in front of her. “Tempest, come on.”
She glanced over her shoulder one more time. The wind whipped the fire higher into the air, fanning the flames until they’d become so intense they’d now traveled to the orphanage. Her head tipped back to take in the orange glow playing over the snow and the clouds choking the air.
Her hand slipped into her cloak and wrapped around the patch tucked securely into one of the pockets inside…
Promise me, he’d said to her with a fevered gleam in his blue eyes. I promise, she’d whispered. I’ll do everything I can to make sure word gets out and they know.
Now, with tears burning her eyes and her heart shattering within her chest, she shuffled through the entrance of the cave and fled toward Pallas. She had a promise to keep, and she was going to do everything she could to make sure word made it to the king and queen.
- CHAPTER 27 -
William kept his eyes on the growing circle of fire over his head, and his hand focused on picking the lock. Steady, easy, he told himself as he worked the pin in the lock. If he’d still been human, his heart would be racing so fast he’d have a heart attack. As a vampire, his hand remained unwavering and his heart still, but enough adrenaline coursed through his body to power him at a dead run to the top of the surrounding mountains right now.
“Hurry,” the strawberry-haired woman said to him. As if she really had to tell him that, he was the one directly beneath the growing hole, and the massive, flaming timber.
He shot Strawberry a thunderous look before turning his attention back to the roof and the lock. He felt something click within the lock. Almost there, he thought at the same time the hole in the ceiling became large enough for the beam to fall through. A shout escaped him; he jerked his hand away and jumped back to avoid any falling debris.
The vibrations from the impact vibrated the entire building and caused the bars surrounding him to rattle. His back slammed up against the bars separating the two cells. He pressed himself as flat against the bars as he could in an attempt to avoid the splintered pieces of flaming wood raining down from the timber that had crashed onto the bars over his head. The heat of the fire blistered his face as it roared above him. Sparks from the beam above landed on his cheeks and clothes, leaving burn marks and singed skin in their wake.
More sparks shot out around the crumbling timber, falling over him. A flame shot out from the sleeve of his shirt and his right pant leg. His skin bubbled almost instantly beneath the fire eating at his clothes. Shoving himself away from the bars, he threw himself to the floor. He rolled over repeatedly until the flames on his clothes smothered beneath his weight.
The smell of burnt hair and flesh filled the room, but instead of feeling the pain of the blisters running up and down his arms and across his cheeks, he felt a growing sense of urgency to get out of here. More sparks and flames fell down from the sagging ceiling. Fire spread out around them, catching on the wooden floor and eating away at the boards beneath his feet.
“Is there a basement to this building?” he demanded, hoping for another way out.
The pale and strained faces of those surrounding him were his answer even before Strawberry spoke, “No.”
His head tilted back to the ceiling and bars again; the roof was receding fast as the fire ate at the wood. The noise of the inferno became increasingly louder, drowning out the screams of those outside and the cries of those around him as it snapped and cracked. The fire became a living breathing monster as it greedily ate away at the building. Sweat poured down his face and stuck his clothes to his body; smoke burned his eyes, causing them to water. Few things killed a vampire; the hungry flames surrounding him tied with all of those things at the top of the list.
“Stomp on the flames!” he barked at the others, hoping to buy them some more time as he scrambled back over to the door of the cell.
He stretched his arm through the bars once more and reached down toward the key hole. He found the hole almost instantly, but his heart sank when his hand fell against only an empty slot. Pallas’s pin was no longer there. His hand slapped against the empty space; some of his composure finally slipped as he angrily jerked at the bars, a bellow of frustration building inside of him.
The heat of the fire beat against his back as he searched for the pin knocked free by the impact of the beam on the bars. Finally, through the cloying haze of smoke, he spotted it about four feet away. Lying on his stomach, he stretched his arm through the bars in search of the pin. His hand slapped against the floor; his fingers fell inches shy of the pin. So far, the fire hadn’t spread outside of the cell, but it was only a matter of time, and once it did, they were all as good as dead.
A shout escaped him as he pushed his shoulder more forcefully against the bars. The metal bit into his skin and tore the flesh of his shoulder away from his neck and collarbone. Clamping his teeth against the discomfort, he pushed through the bars until his cheek pressed flush against them. His skin pushed back against his eye socket and cheekbone.
Something in his shoulder cracked; his joint bent in an unnatural way. A low groan escaped him; the sweat rolling down his face wasn’t entirely due to the fire anymore. He fought against the pain as he sought to dislocate his shoulder further in order to get his hand on the pin again.
His joint popped out of place with a loud crack. The sound of it was drowned out beneath the growing crescendo of beams and wood being devoured by the greedy fire. Hell didn’t contain the heat this cell did now. He lurched forward; the steel of the pin brushed against the tips of his fingers, but he couldn’t grasp hold of it. A shout of frustration escaped him; he lunged again but only succeeded in grazing the metal once more.
For the first time, he began to realize he wouldn’t be making it out of this mess alive. His forehead fell against the floor; out of habit, he inhaled a smoke-choked breath that caused him to cough hoarsely against the burn in his throat and lungs.
Tempest, her name blazed through his mind causing sorrow to twist within his chest.
She’d gotten free of this town; he had to believe that. He had to believe she would continue and do what had to be done. She would find help, and when all of this was over, she would find happiness and security somewhere in this world. He wasn’t ready to lose her; he wanted more time with her, so much more time. He didn’t think an eternity would have been enough.
Drawing on her lingering scent on his body, and the vivid image of her in his head, he lifted his forehead off the floor. No matter what happened, he wouldn’t give up until he was dead. With a low groan, he pulled back and pushed himself forward one more time, but again his fingers just missed the pin. He pulled back again and lurched forward as the vampires around him continued to try and beat out the growing flames.
He pulled away from the bars to slap at the flames that caught at the bottom of his shirt and began to lick their way up toward his chest. Blisters formed on his palms but he continued to beat at the flames until they fanned out. He fell back against the bars as the heat burned against his body. Around him the vampires began to falter, they fell back against the walls, some collapsed onto the floor.
Grabbing hold of a bar with his one good hand, he pulled himself to his feet, placed his dislocated shoulder in between the bars and wrenched backward. He never heard the pop over the fire when his joint snapped into place again. His gaze went to the ceiling and the bars overhead, searching for some other way out, but though the bars were beginning to glow from the heat, they remained otherwise unaffected by the flames.
A fresh burst of air caused the fire around him to swirl higher. The flames became a mini tornado in the room that whipped around the walls before dying down again. The vampires in the cell next door fell back when the rush of air caused the flames to leap at them. William searched for the source of the clean air, but the flam
es and smoke made it impossible to see. His head lulled toward the front door.
“Tempest.” Her name left his mouth before he saw her. He’d know her soul anywhere, he realized.
Red rimmed her swollen eyes; smoke and ash streaked her face as she materialized through the haze of smoke and flames. Her lovely brown eyes were frantic when her hands wrapped around his on the bars.
“What are you doing here?” His throat, raw from the smoke and flames, made his voice sound as if he’d been eating glass.
“How do I get you out?” she inquired instead of answering him.
“You have to go. I told you to leave.”
Her eyes burned into his. “I created this mess; I’m not leaving you to it.”
“I created this mess. Get out of here; I won’t let you die because of me.”
“You’re not letting me do anything, I am doing this. Now stop wasting time by arguing with me, and tell me what to do to get you free.”
His hand turned over in hers. He opened his mouth to tell her to leave again, but the determined look in her eyes brooked no room for argument. “The pin is on the ground over there; it fell out of the lock when the beam came down.”
He released her hand when she turned away from him to search for the pin. Her hands fumbled through the smoke flowing across the floor before she grabbed hold of the pin and rushed back to him. Taking it from her, he slid it into the lock again and began to maneuver it around. His sweat slicked fingers made it difficult to keep his grip on the pin; the press of the vampires against his back did little to help him with the heat and his maneuverability of the pin.
Tempest turned away from him and hurried over to the desks. He lost sight of her in the thickening smoke. “Tempest!” he managed to shout out in a ragged voice.
“Here!” Her voice sounded like it came from a mile away, not merely feet.
“Go outside and wait for me!”
“Here!” she called back again instead.
He gritted his teeth together, for the first time understanding what it was Braith had to deal with when it came to his stubborn as a mule sister. Never again would he tease his brother-in-law. He felt another click, but when he leaned against the bars, the door remained securely in place.
Tempest emerged from the shadows, flying across the room with the surety of an arrow toward the bull’s eye. “I’ve got the key!” she gasped out, her hand clutching one of the cloaks the guards had left behind.
His hand fell away from the pin; she knocked it from the lock as she pulled free the key tucked into the pocket of the cloak. Tears from the caustic smoke streaked from her reddened eyes when she slid the key into the lock and turned it. The gate gave way beneath his weight. She jumped back as the door swung toward her. Before he could rush out, grab her, and drag her to safety, she spun to the other cell. He didn’t like the idea of leaving the other vamps behind, but he didn’t want her to spend one more second in this building.
Arriving at her side, he rested his hand on her waist with the intention of lifting her up and throwing her over his shoulder. The door to the cell swung open, and she jumped back. “Stay with us if you want to live!” she croaked at the vampires pouring free of their cages.
William grabbed hold of her hand, not looking back as he tucked her against his side and pulled her toward the door. They rushed down the stairs of the prison and into the crowded street. Four of the vampires in the stocks outside resembled deer cooked over a spit. Their reddened, hairless bodies still had smoke and flames eating at their bodies. Three of the others were screaming in agony as fire licked over them.
Tempest slowed, but William tightened his hold on her and propelled her onward. “We have to help them!” she protested.
“There is no helping them,” he replied. Maybe they could still release them, and maybe somehow they would heal from the burns, but she was his number one concern right now. “And I’m getting you out of here.”
He kept her snug against his side as they plunged into the horde of vampires running up and down the street. He stiff-armed anyone who came near them, knocking them back before they could hurt her in anyway. Sparks and flames began to shoot from the pointed roof of the hotel. Looking up and down the road, he searched for anyone who might be coming after him, but he seemed to have been forgotten in the chaos of the fires and everyone trying to flee. Either that or they believed him already dead.
Wind whipped down the street, fanning the flames and sending them higher into the sky. From behind him, the loud crash of the prison folding in on itself reverberated through the street. He didn’t look back, but he felt the hot wash of the flames against his back when they blew outward.
“The wind,” she whispered, her voice barely carrying over the crescendo of the fire. “I didn’t expect the wind to pick up.”
“Neither did I.”
“I destroyed it all.” Her eyes were haunted as she tilted her head back to look up at him.
His fingers stroked over her cheek. “It was destroyed the minute they entered this town.”
She nodded, but he could feel the guilt and anguish radiating from her. He ignored the sting in his blistered hand when he wrapped it around her head and pulled her closer to him protectively. The cold air blowing against the numerous burn holes in his clothes cooled his burnt and reddened skin, giving him some reprieve from the tenderness of his body.
“Where’s the queen?” he inquired in a raspy voice.
“I don’t know,” Tempest replied. “It took me coming back to town to realize it, but if you look closely, the villagers who didn’t join with the invaders are running that way.” She pointed down the road toward where the barricade of soldiers was still trying to keep the flow of fleeing vampires back. Bodies littered the ground around the structure, but the soldiers were starting to lose the battle as the panicked vamps pushed against them more insistently. “The others are going the opposite way, like bees toward their queen. They’re going for the mountain road, but it’s extremely difficult to traverse, especially in the snow.”
“What’s on the other side of that road?”
“An end of the mountain chain, lakes, valleys, and more towns.”
“More vampires for them to try and convert,” he murmured.
“Yes,” she confirmed. “Lots more. There’s better land and weather outside of these mountains.”
A sinking sensation filled the pit of his stomach, but it didn’t matter. They couldn’t stop them from fleeing, not now; all they could do now was escape with their lives, and the little information he’d managed to learn about the woman claiming to be queen.
“You!” someone shouted. “You!” His head turned toward a white robed figure pointing at him in the street. “You’re the one the queen wants.”
“Son of a bitch!” he spat.
The figure in white charged at them, young, reckless and looking to make a place for himself amongst the side he’d joined. William swung Tempest behind him and released her before turning to face the young man. He wasn’t in the mood for anyone’s crap, especially not this hothead. With no regard for his vulnerable areas or even his life, the vampire put his head down and charged at him.
A snarl curved William’s lip; his arm shot out. Bone crunched and splintered apart beneath his fist as it drove through the man’s chest. Gurgled blood exploded from his mouth when William wrapped his hand around his heart. He held the man’s brown eyes before jerking backward and tearing the heart from his chest.
The vampires that had escaped from the prison with them fell back as the man’s twitching body flopped onto the ground. They glanced between him and the dead vamp before pressing closer against him and Tempest.
“Fool.” William dropped the heart on the ground and wiped the blood from his hand in the snow. Turning toward Tempest, he grabbed hold of her hand again and pulled her forward. “Don’t ever do what he just did,” he told her.
She glanced back at the prone body in the snow. “Protect your chest,” she m
uttered.
“Always.”
He cradled Tempest’s head against his chest as they ran in between two burning buildings. Bits of debris and sparks rained down upon them. Demon hands of fire leapt toward them, seeking to use their bodies as more fuel for its hungry flames. A cry of pain escaped her; he hurriedly brushed aside the cinders falling on her cheek.
Bursting free of the crumbling buildings, he ran with her across the snow to the entrance of the cave they’d come here through. He didn’t look back as he followed her into the crevice.
- CHAPTER 28 -
Tempest led the way through the cave, running as fast as her legs would carry her. The damp, mildew scent of the rocks couldn’t drown out the aroma of the smoke and fire consuming her home. It wafted through the cave system and clung to their clothing, hair and skin. It would forever be burned into her nostrils, and she knew she would never forget the smell or erase the screams of the dying. Nor did she want to; she should always remember what she’d done.
She turned sideways and hurried through the rocks toward the exit of the cave. The coolness of the stones around her felt almost as good as cool water would have against her burned skin. Plunging into the lake right now sounded like a little bit of heaven, but so did getting out of here.
Ahead of her, William slowed as he approached the exit. If the rocks felt like heaven against her skin, she could only imagine what they felt like against the blisters and burns covering him. She wanted to grab hold of him and hug him close, to reassure herself he really was alive, but that would have to wait until they were free of these mountains. As soon as they were safe with his family, she intended to hold him for days on end.
William stuck his head out of the cave and looked both ways before stepping out. “Stay,” he whispered to her. She crept to the very edge and was about to walk out when he returned and took hold of her hand.
She stepped onto the ledge and moved over for the others to exit. Her gaze ran over William while she waited; she shuddered at the sight of him. His pants had been burned away nearly to his knees. Blisters were beginning to heal on his calves, but they were bright red and oozing still. One of his sleeves was completely gone, the other still intact. Blisters and burns marred his face, but like his legs, they were fading away. His broken nose had almost healed; only a large bruise across the bridge and a bump in the middle indicated it had been damaged. Two scratches on either side of his chin were still healing; she could see the muscle repairing itself.