The Darkest Kiss (Riley Jenson Guardian 6)
Page 46
I raised an eyebrow, though given his living arrangements, I guess it wasn't such a bad idea. Personally, I'd be keeping a few handy stakes within reaching distance, too.
I found several large hunting knives in the bedside table, along with several smaller throwing knives. I picked the biggest and headed back out.
To find we were no longer alone.
"Fuck," Ben said, his expression both shocked and angry as he stopped just inside the doorway. "I didn't expect this."
"No," I agreed. I waved the knife in the direction of his friend. "You want to support his weight while I cut him down?"
He moved forward quickly, his big arms going around the waist of his smaller friend and taking the weight off Ivan's torn and bloody wrists.
Ivan groaned, though I wasn't sure whether it was in relief or pain. I dragged a kitchen chair up to them both and climbed up.
"There's an ambulance coming. It should only be a few minutes.">Footsteps whispered across the night, the sounds so soft regular hearing wouldn't have caught it. They were pacing me, watching. Worse still, the raw taste of their excitement and blood hunger tainted the air.
Young vamps, I thought. Great. I dug out my badge, holding it toward the building as I kept on walking.
"Directorate, folks. Mind your own business, or there's going to be a heap of trouble."
I didn't bother raising my voice. They were close enough that they'd hear me, even though I couldn't see them through normal vision. And I didn't want to see them through infrared. Just knowing how many there were might get a little scary.
The blood hunger abated a little, but I had to wonder what had them so worked up. If they were old enough to control their hunger, then why had the sight of me caused it to rise so sharply?
I could think of only one thing that would cause such a reaction - blood. The scent of fresh blood was a call few vampires could ignore, and with the young it stirred the blood hunger to life, making them react hungrily to even the slightest beat of life.
And yet the night seemed free of that scent. Or was the aroma of vampire overwhelming everything else?
I didn't know, but I had a suspicion I'd soon find out. And if Ben's friend was a wolf and living with this lot, then he was a braver soul than me.
The vamps were still following me, and my skin crawled with the sensation. I breathed through my mouth and pretended to ignore them. Though, being vamps, they'd hear my accelerated pulse rate. I was just hoping they'd take it as readiness for action, not for any sort of fear.
Of course, if they decided to attack en masse, I was one dead puppy no matter what. I might have a vampire's strength and speed, but I'd still be one against dozens. Not great odds, in anyone's book.
I loped up the steps and through the smashed glass front doors. The yellow light of a solitary bulb broke across the darkness, making the corner shadows seem even deeper. Thankfully, there were no vamps in those shadows. Not yet.
The building had two elevators, but neither of them seemed to be working - one was sitting on the fifth floor with the floor light flashing, and the other had no numbers lit at all. I hesitated, switching to infrared before looking down the left, then the right, corridors. As I suspected, it was pretty scary. There had to be at least twenty vamps crowded against the walls, their eyes glinting brightly and their sharp canines prominently exposed.
I still couldn't smell blood, but a vampire's sense for life's nectar was far sharper than mine. And it was obviously still calling to them.
This would not be a pleasant place to be if things got out of control.
I flicked the small stud in my ear, turning on the two-way com-link - which had been inserted when I'd been going into a madman's lair, but was now standard equipment for all guardians. Jack didn't like losing his people, and the com-links also doubled as trackers.
The vamps melted back into the deeper shadows as I headed for the stairs, so hopefully that was a sign they didn't want any trouble.
But I wasn't about to take a chance on that.
"Hello, anyone listening?" I said softly.
"What now, wolf girl?" Sal's tone seemed even sharper than normal, coming though the tinny confines of the com-link.
"What, are you pulling a double shift or something?"
I ran up the stairs as I spoke, heading for the fourth floor. Thankfully, the vamps didn't follow, though the scent of them didn't lessen any. Meaning there were plenty more ahead.
"Yes," Sal snapped. "I am. Now what do you want?"
I used to get awfully bitchy when I had to sit double shifts, too. Combine that with hunger, and it definitely explained her attitude. "I'm investigating a possible vampire attack at my current location. We got anyone in the area, in case I need backup?"