A Kiss of Blood (Vamp City #2)(69)



The wagon sat twenty feet from the back of the kiln and was still half-filled with goods destined for another house or castle. There were places to hide. They would never get a better opportunity.

“You go first, Lily. I’ll follow.”

“Jaz . . .”

The girl turned on her, her mouth hard. “I said, go.”

“You’re not coming.” Lily could see it in her eyes.

Jazlyn’s toughness melted, her eyes filling with tears. “This is your chance to get away, not mine. I can’t climb into any wagon without spooking the horses, I can’t fit into any hidey-hole inside. They’ll see me the minute they look. And I know they’ll catch me, Lily. I know it. And my pounding heart is going to give us both away. You go.”

“Not without you.”

The toughness hardened her face, then melted again. “Yes without me. You’re a female ninja. You can disappear, and they’ll never find you, and I need you to do that.” The tears began to slip down her cheeks. “Don’t you see, Lily? Don’t you see? I can’t watch you stripped and beaten. I can’t watch you get killed like I did my sister. I can’t.” Her eyes flashed, her mouth turning mean even as tears glistened on her lashes. “I can take whatever those motherf*ckers throw at me, but not that. You got to escape for me.”

Tears burned in Lily’s eyes, and she threw her arms around Jazlyn’s neck, feeling strong arms circle her and squeeze her tight in return. She searched for words and found none. So she slipped out of Jazlyn’s grip and stole, silently, into the wagon, curling up behind one of the crates beneath a beat-up old tarp.

Only minutes later, she heard the sound of voices. The Traders’, most likely, and one vampire whose voice she recognized from his constant bellowing in the yards. Her pulse began to race, and she struggled to bring it back down. Because she knew that that particular vampire was absolutely a fear-feeder.

As she felt the wagon lurch with the weight of the returning Traders, the vampire made a sound of surprise that boded ill and made her stomach cramp with dread.

“I taste your fear, human.” The voice sounded so close, she knew he was peering into the wagon. “Show yourself at once, blood sack, or you’re going to feel my lash.”

Jazlyn’s squeal cut through the pounding in Lily’s ears. “I don’t want to go to the slave auction!” Jazlyn cried, her voice growing louder, closer. She was running right up to the vampire! “Don’t make me, please don’t make me. I’ll take your lash, or your fangs, or your cock. Just don’t send me to that auction!”

The girl sounded hysterical. But Lily knew better. She was covering for Lily, making the vampire think it was her fear he’d tasted instead of Lily’s.

“Go on!” the vampire called, and a moment later, the wagon began to move. Jazlyn cried out, this time in pain, this time for real.

Lily began to cry. As the distance between her and Castle Smithson grew, her tears fell in earnest, and she cried for Jazlyn, and for Zack, and for all the other girls she’d lived with these past weeks, many of whom were destined to suffer terribly. But not for herself. She refused to cry for herself. Because some way, somehow, she was going home.

When her tears were spent, she wiped her face and listened hard as the wagon rattled over rough ground.

With Jazlyn’s help, she’d escaped Castle Smithson, but this was only the first of many challenges, she suspected. If this were an old-time computer game, she’d have completed only the first level.

If the Traders found her in the back of their wagon, or saw her when she tried to escape, she’d either be returned to Smithson or sold directly to the slave auction.

And whatever Jazlyn had suffered helping Lily escape would have been for nothing.





Chapter Nineteen

Quinn clung to Arturo, pressing her cheek against his shoulder as she rode behind him on the horse. She was exhausted, worn-out by lack of sleep, by the bursts of power, and by the stress of keeping secrets and staying alive in an enemy stronghold. But she felt utterly exhilarated, too. Not only had they succeeded in finding Vintry and getting him to help as much as he could, but she was intrigued by his claim that she was the Healer, whatever that meant. And on a far more basic level, she was beginning to realize she enjoyed the rush of adrenaline. Escaping out from under the nose of a vampire master on a racing horse, with her goal accomplished and her secret intact, had been one of the most exciting things she’d ever done.

For the time being, the magic blasts seemed to have stopped. A couple of times, as they’d ridden, she’d pointed her palm or finger at a fallen branch and tried to make something happen—exactly what she wasn’t sure. Maybe fly, maybe burst into flame. Just a bit of a quiver would have been nice. She’d thought that with her magic exploding, she’d have some ability to wield it. And maybe she would, once she figured out how.

“Are you still awake back there?” Arturo asked.

“Barely. What are we going to do now?”

“Good question. Until we know what you can do, and can be certain you’re done blasting, we can’t risk the humans at Neo’s. Or the vampires, for that matter. The whole house could come down.”

“Is there somewhere else I can go?”

“Neo has safe houses scattered all over V.C.,” Micah said. “He’ll know of somewhere safe.”

Pamela Palmer's Books