Raven’s mind began to clear and her stomach churned.
She lifted her eyes to William’s as he walked toward her.
He handed her the cane, picked her up, and approached the door, careful to face away from the threat.
Aoibhe continued. “It wasn’t your blood in her veins. You must have given her to someone else. Who?”
When William didn’t respond, she cocked her head to the side.
“Why would the Prince of Florence save a delicious but crippled human? Is it because she fancies herself in love with you?”
Raven expelled a breath in shock, still in William’s arms.
Aoibhe clucked her tongue. “Poor little pet. I’d keep her away from bell towers if I were you.”
William lunged in Aoibhe’s direction, growling and snapping his teeth.
Raven clung to his neck, terrified he was going to drop her.
Aoibhe backed away from the angry vampyre slowly, holding her hands up. “A thousand pardons, my prince. I’ll take my leave.”
She kept her back to the wall, inching toward the exit. As soon as her hand felt the door, she flung it open, disappearing into the alley.
William snarled at the closing door, his body trembling with anger. It took more than a moment for him to regain his composure.
When he stepped outside, Raven realized Marco and the car had not yet arrived.
And they were surrounded.
Chapter Forty-eight
Five men stood at one end of the alley, five men at the other. William, Raven, and Aoibhe were trapped.
The men were all large, muscular, and armed. One of the men on the left side held the leash of a massive German shepherd. The dog barked and reared, his master barely able to restrain him.
Aoibhe was huddled against the wall opposite Teatro. She lunged with bared teeth at the intruders, like a cornered animal.
The hunters, who’d been focusing their attention on her, immediately turned to William. A few murmurs lifted from the crowd as they realized the prize that stood a few feet away.
While the hunters were distracted, Aoibhe took that opportunity to begin climbing the wall to the roof.
The men reacted, shouting and moving forward. Two of them raised crossbows, releasing arrows. Sharp, whizzing sounds filled the air.
One of the archers missed his mark but the other was successful, his arrow slicing into the vampyre’s back.
She screamed and began to fall, her red hair billowing like a cloud, her blue velvet dress like a sail.
“Aoibhe, no!” William cried.
He placed Raven on her feet and sprang into the air.
His body was a blur of black as he caught Aoibhe in his arms. The archers began to shoot at both of them, arrows flying from two directions.
William seemed to avoid the arrows easily, twisting and turning even as he landed, cradling Aoibhe to his chest. Her brown eyes were wide, her mouth open, and she was gasping, as if for oxygen.
“Stop,” Raven croaked, leaning heavily on her cane.
The attention of the hunters turned momentarily to her.
She limped from where she’d been leaning against the door to the center of the alley.
“A feeder,” one of the hunters pronounced. He sounded American. “Look at her neck.”
Raven ignored the scorn in the hunter’s voice. “Stop. She’s hurt.”
The hunter grinned. “That’s the point, you stupid bitch.”
A roar could be heard from the crowd, and scattered laughter, as if the situation were funny.
Raven found no amusement in the scene. She searched the eyes of their attackers, hoping to find some sign of humanity. But the only sign she could find was in William, who bent over Aoibhe’s body, his face a mask of anguish.
While keeping careful watch on the hunters, who were still maintaining a cautious but aggressive distance, William sat Aoibhe up. He began digging into the wound in her back with his hand, black blood already staining her bright blue dress.
“They didn’t attack you.” Raven tried to reason with the men. “You don’t need to kill them.”
“She’s crazy.” A man armed with a crucifix and what looked like a small bottle of water pointed toward her.
“Of course she’s crazy!” another exploded. “They go crazy when they fuck them. They probably had her together and fed from her.”
“Shoot her.”
The command came from Raven’s left. A tall man, brandishing a garrote, jerked his chin at her. His eyes were hard, flat; his expression cool and detached. “We can’t have witnesses.”
“Raven, on the ground. Now!” William’s voice came to her in Italian.
As if in slow motion, she saw him pull the arrow from Aoibhe’s body and watched as her head lolled back, eyes wide and unfocused, body limp.
The archers took aim at Raven, just as William placed Aoibhe on the ground. He straightened from his crouch, holding the arrow in his right hand, Aoibhe’s blood covering his fingers.
“I’m already a witness!” Raven shouted. “You’re a death squad. You came here to kill beings who haven’t done anything to you just so you can sell their blood.”
“Shoot her,” the leader repeated. “Before the neighbors hear.”
Raven held her arms out, lifting her voice in Italian. “Look at me. I’m defenseless. You’re going to kill a defenseless woman in cold blood.”
“Raven, down!”
She ignored William’s command, taking no thought for her safety, arms held wide.
She could think only about protecting William and the body of the vampyre who had just died in his arms.
“You’re all murderers!” she shouted.
Something moved in her periphery.
William threw himself to her left, plucking an arrow out of the air, inches from her body. With a flick of his wrist and an overhand motion, he hurled the arrow back at the archer, where it caught him in the chest.
The archer fell to the ground, dead.
Spinning to the other side of Raven, William took the arrow he’d pulled from Aoibhe’s body and flung it at one of the other archer’s chests.
The crossbow fell from the archer’s hand, clattering on the ground. He crashed down beside it.
William pushed Raven toward the door.
“Get down!”
She tumbled, scraping hands and knees as she landed on all fours.
At that moment, the dog broke free from his leash and began running toward them.
William whirled around.
The dog growled and snapped, lunging to bite William’s leg.
He quickly grabbed the animal by its muzzle, slamming its mouth shut. Without effort, he lifted the dog and tossed it to the far end of the alley, where it crashed into a hunter, knocking him over.
The dog came to its feet, whimpering, and dragged its tail as it ran from the alley.
“Kill him,” the leader ordered, pointing at William.
Three men ran forward, throwing what looked like water and holding out crosses.
> William cursed as the liquid caught him in the face, stopping him in his tracks.
He shut his eyes, lifting a hand in the direction of the crosses, as if to shield himself from them.
Raven saw pain on his features. His face bloomed a bright red, as if it had been burned. She wondered if the hunters had thrown acid on his face.
“Stop!” she screamed. “Stop it!”
The hunters inched forward. The leader was among them, holding the garrote.
William’s eyes were still closed as he groped with his hands blindly.
The leader threw the garrote at William’s head.
The vampyre brushed the water from his face with his shirtsleeve, his eyes opening.
He batted the garrote aside and leapt forward, grabbing the leader by the shirt. He knocked the hunter’s head against another. Both men dropped to the ground, eyes suddenly closed.
Raven couldn’t tell if they were dead.
William sprang forward, avoiding the crosses and empty containers of water held toward him, repeating his attack on two other men.
At the sight of a vampyre who would not be deterred by holy water or relics, three of the hunters hopped on motorcycles and took off.
William walked toward the remaining one slowly.
The hunter took what looked like salt and threw it on the ground around his feet, making a small circle.
He stared in horror as William, undeterred by the salt, placed a hand on either side of the hunter’s face and, with a sickening sound, broke his neck.
William tossed the body aside with contempt.
He surveyed the scene calmly, wiping his reddened face again with his shirtsleeve. Bodies were strewn across the alley, blood pooling on the ground.
His eyes moved to Aoibhe, who was lying motionless.
He cursed in Old English.
William’s gaze flickered to where the motorcyclists had been, then back to Raven, who was cringing by the door.
“You tried to save me.” His voice was filled with wonder. “You risked your life, tempting them to shoot you.”
She felt her eyes welling up. “I couldn’t watch them kill you.”
His expression grew furious. “Never do that again. My death is the least of your worries. Do you understand?”
When she didn’t answer, he strode toward her. He placed his hands on her shoulders, smearing Aoibhe’s blood on her skin and dress.