From somewhere behind me, a hand touches my arm. A voice whispers in my ear, “It’s me.”
Frey. Without turning, I pull him close. I can’t seem to draw my eyes away from the spectacle taking place in front of us.
Frey follows my gaze. “I guess Chael wasn’t bullshitting us after all. The sword—it’s a Turkish kilij. Reputed to have been Vlad Dracul’s weapon of choice.”
I don’t have to ask how he knows this. As Keeper of the Secrets, he has studied the history of the supernatural down through the ages.
“Do you know what is happening?” I ask.
“Not everything. But from what I gather, Vlad is not happy with Steffan’s power play.”
“I thought Steffan was their leader.” My voice sounds strained and incredulous.
“Evidently only serving at Vlad’s pleasure. And Vlad was not pleased at the idea of bringing about a revolution, no matter how carefully orchestrated.”
Vlad has raised his arms, calling for quiet. It takes less than a heartbeat for it to be achieved. He lowers his arms and starts to speak, pacing as he does.
Vlad pauses, as if appreciating how that must sound to a gathering of vampires. I listen transfixed, impressed by his intuitiveness. He
Vlad finds my eyes. He nods and I know it is to the latter that he will address his remarks. He begins to speak again.
His last words give me a jolt. He is quoting my speech before the Council. How could he know about it?
Vlad looks at me and smiles and sends the answer right into my head.
I smile back. Chael. Of course. I look around. Wonder where the sneaky little bugger is right now. For this at least, I owe him an apology.
Vlad continues to speak.
Throughout the room, heads bob, soft voices murmur an affirmation. Vlad recognizes them and continues.
A pause as those mesmerizing eyes sweep the crowd. I know it’s not possible that he is connecting individually with everyone in the ballroom and yet, when he raises the sword again and shouts, “Who is with me?” another murmur starts at the fringes of the crowd and crescendos. Shouts of “Vlad” and “Dracul” echo off the walls. He holds both arms high in acknowledgment.
He faces Steffan and a hush once again descends—complete and immediate, like the throwing of a switch. It’s as if Vlad is controlling the crowd with nothing but the power of suggestion.
Steffan, however, is feeling something quite different from the rest. Fear rolls off him in waves as visceral as smoke. He blanches and cringes back under Vlad’s gaze.
Vlad once more begins to speak.
Those closest to Steffan step back. Steffan sees the reaction and his eyes sweep the crowd. No one comes to Steffan’s defense, not a word is raised in protest of Vlad’s proclamation. The hush that descends on the crowd becomes even more intense but it is intermingled with a sense of relief—relief that it is only Steffan and the six who have been singled out for punishment.
Vlad reads the crowd, too, and I have the feeling he is taking stock of those who think they have escaped his notice.
Steffan’s body stiffens at the realization of all he has lost and a new emotion radiates from him. Anger.
But there isn’t time to reflect or react to what Steffan is feeling.
Faster than a heartbeat, Vlad swings his sword.
CHAPTER 23
A COLLECTIVE GASP GOES UP AS STEFFAN’S HEAD separates from his body. Blood geysers for the instant it takes the vampire’s body to die. The blood turns to red ash and falls like a gentle rain over those standing nearest to Vlad and Steffan.
I’ve never seen a vampire die like this. Steffan’s body bursts into flame, then crumbles into dust so quickly, there’s soon nothing left but a few remnants of fabric not caught in the maelstrom. I find myself clutching Frey’s arm, horrified but unable to look away.
But there’s another reason I stand transfixed. At the moment the sword touched Steffan’s flesh, there was a flash. A fleeting burst of energy. My skin crawls. Did anyone else . . . ? I grasp Frey’s hand as the implication hits me.
“What’s wrong?” he asks.
“Steffan.” My voice is barely a whisper. “I don’t think he’s gone.”
My eyes search the crowd. I don’t know what I’m looking for but I’m guessing Steffan has made the leap, just as Avery had when I staked him. Just before
A lot of ifs. Still, I search out the shifters standing transfixed to one side.
“Frey. Weren’t there five shifters when we came in?”
He nods, his gaze following mine.
“There are only four now. We need to talk to Vlad.”
I start for the staircase, Frey at my side.
Vlad has turned to the six coconspirators huddling like frightened rabbits between their captors. I have no idea who these vampires are or how long they have been on this earth, but it is clear from the fear on their faces that mortal or immortal, facing death in some brings out cowardice.
Except in my mother. Unbidden, the thought flashes through my mind. My mother is facing death