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Blood Born Page 31
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“I know; you’ve told me again and again,” she said sharply. “But if I can’t keep my eyes open, how am I supposed to work? I’m so tired I can barely think.”
“Coffee? Red Bull? Any drug known to mankind and some not known? All you have to do is ask. You’re a powerful witch, Nevada. Create your own remedy.”
Sorin backed away from her and stood. With a grateful sigh, Nevada sat up and swung her legs over the side of the bed. “Maybe some coffee would be a good idea. I’m afraid to use any drugs; it might affect the spells. I’m just learning, you know; my magic is new, and more fragile than you can imagine.”
“Your little sister is also fragile,” Sorin responded, instinctively going for the threat that cut her the deepest. “Emily.” He allowed the name to roll off his tongue as if it tasted sweet.
Nevada shot to her feet, her eyes wide with fear and anger. “Leave her alone.”
“Do as you’re told, and I will.” Her reaction to his threat revealed her weakness; never let the enemy know what you fear, what you treasure. “If you don’t, she’ll be the first to die. You’ll watch. You’ll watch them all die, and I promise you they won’t have easy deaths.”
“You wouldn’t do that to me,” she whispered.
“Don’t test me.”
She paled, not an easy task for someone as fair as she was. Her delicate fingers twitched, then pushed back her fine red, sleep-mussed hair. He could see Nevada composing herself, reining in her fear for her family, perhaps because she herself recognized that her love was also her weakness.
“Do vampires have an afterlife?” she asked, a touch of sharpness in her tone. “Do you have a soul or are you a monster who doesn’t exist beyond the skin you wear and the blood you take?”
“I don’t know,” Sorin responded. Then he smiled, knowing his nonchalant attitude to that loaded question would speak volumes. “And I don’t care.”
Chloe and Luca checked out of the Willard early that morning, as soon as the sun was blazing in the summer sky. Luca didn’t tell her where they were going; she got the very clear sense that he was winging it, that some sixth sense would tell him his next move.
She wished she could just go home. If she lived in a vacuum, that would be perfect. No one could come in without an invitation, and evidently the vampires couldn’t set her house on fire or shoot her through a window because home was such a sanctuary it was damn near untouchable. But she didn’t live in a vacuum. Luca worried about her friends, neighbors, and apparently even about stray puppies. The incident with Valerie had convinced him she was vulnerable through the people she cared about, and she couldn’t deny it—like he would’ve done anything differently if it had been his friend being killed right in front of him.
“Any idea where we’re going?” she asked, just to verify her hunch that he was making things up as he went. He didn’t immediately respond. Maybe he really didn’t know, though he didn’t strike her as a man who ever didn’t know.
She almost wished he didn’t have anything in mind. Uncertainty would make him almost human, and he’d made it clear he wasn’t human, never had been. Looked at objectively, that kind of called her sanity into question, that after just a few days she’d placed her life in his hands. Who was she kidding? She’d been willing to put her life in his hands almost immediately.
Maybe, maybe … there were too many maybes. She had too many questions and not enough answers. There was one question, though, that struck her as supremely important. “I hate to bring this up, but aren’t you hungry?”
“Not yet. I’m old enough that I can go a few days without having to feed, unless I’m doing something that burns a lot of energy.” He slanted a quick look at her as he skillfully navigated the tangled D.C. traffic. He was wearing dark sunglasses to protect his eyes, but she felt his look like a touch. “What I took from you the night before last was enough.”
She went hot at the memory, the feel of his mouth pulling at her, the rush of sensation. Glancing over, she saw his hands tighten on the steering wheel. Okay, she needed to get her mind away from that, or, connected as they were, they might end up going at it the next time they were stopped at a traffic light. She cleared her throat. “You haven’t been burning a lot of energy?” she asked, then could have kicked herself, because that wasn’t exactly changing the subject.
“Not vampire energy.”
“That’s good. I think.” Several safer items occurred to her. “About this blood born business …”
“I knew you wouldn’t miss that.”
“Then why don’t you explain it? It isn’t anything bad, I could tell that from Alma’s tone. It was almost as if she were saying: ‘How could you, a prince, sully yourself with this lowly peasant.’”
“Vampires don’t have royalty,” he said. “There are no continuous blood lines, for one thing. Power is individual, can’t be transferred, can’t be inherited.”
“So you’re not a prince? Then what does blood born mean?”
“It means I wasn’t made vampire, I was born vampire. It doesn’t happen very often; I know of only six other blood borns alive today, and one of them is on the Council.”
“So … vampires can get pregnant?” The idea made her head spin.
“Very rarely. I haven’t made a study of it, but the odds are … maybe once every two centuries.”
“That fits my definition of rare,” she muttered.
“Blood borns are the most powerful vampires, because we inherit from two vampires rather than having just our own inherent powers when we’re turned.”
“You double down.”
“That’s one way of putting it. But none of us are exactly alike, any more than humans are.”
Different skill sets; he’d used that phrase before. One of his powers was that people didn’t remember him. She tried to imagine what that must be like, and couldn’t find anything good about it. That wasn’t a power, it was a curse, almost like not existing at all. She didn’t know why she was different, unless it was this conduit thing, but she would be grateful for the rest of her life that she had him in it, that she knew him and could touch him and hold his face in her memory.
Luca drummed his fingers on the steering wheel, his expression turning thoughtful. “I’ve spent my life fighting battles,” he said. “That’s what I enjoy, and what I’m good at. It’s hard to find a good battle now, so to keep myself occupied I’ve been a … kind of enforcer for the Council. Keeping our existence a secret is best for everyone, but sometimes a vampire goes rogue and has to be dealt with. I have a talent for locating vampires through their energy, but I’m not the only one who can do that.”
“Like Benedict.”
“Yes, like Benedict, only better. I think some other tracker must have developed the power to detect conduits, otherwise how could they know who’s a conduit and who isn’t?”
Chloe didn’t have to think about that very long. “So … no matter where I am, they’ll be able to find me.” She might as well have swallowed a GPS.
“We’ll have to keep moving. Knowing where you are isn’t the same as knowing where you’ll be five minutes from now, and we do have the advantage of being able to move during daylight, which limits the number of vampires who can come after us.”
He frowned. “I wish I knew which tracker can do this. There’s only a handful capable of it; they’re all much better than Benedict.”
“And he found us.”
“Yes. Until you can bring your Warrior over, they won’t let up.”
So it was up to her. The only thing was, she didn’t know what the hell she was supposed to do. While she was having the dream, tell the Warrior to come on down?
“Isn’t there any way I can speed things up?” she asked helplessly.
“You have to call her by name, tell her to come. That’s all.”
“But I don’t know her name! ‘Hey, you’ won’t work?”
His mouth quirked. “No, it has to be her name.”
“Indi-somethi