Chapter 4
Chapter
Slow down, Tomas advised his dragon. We are dealing with a master. I believe he may be an ancient.
We are dealing with scum, Kinta informed him. His voice, in Tomas’ mind, sounded filled with contempt. It matters little what else he is.
Tomas shook his head. His dragon had always had very strong opinions and had no trouble expressing them.
Knowing who he is can be important to the way we approach the battle, he reminded.
Kinta, like Tomas’ brother Lojos, believed in the direct method. His tactic was to press an attack and keep pressure on the enemy until he was slain. The dragon cared little about injuries. When in battle, his only thought, only purpose other than protecting his rider, was to slay the enemy.
Tomas studied the ground and the surrounding trees.
Ancients were very adept at hiding themselves, even as vampires.
This didn’t feel like Justice. Not once in tracking the ancient Carpathian had he felt they were close to him, not that he knew exactly what Justice would feel like.
He was probably the most powerful ancient in their world.
He knew an ancient such as Justice would be able to fly under the radar of hunters.
He would be low-key, so much so that no one would be able to feel his presence.
But when they did, he would be overwhelmingly powerful. Dangerous.
Just as you are, Kinta said. You have those same traits.
Tomas didn’t want to think too closely about that. When a Carpathian lived too long, becoming vampire wasn’t the worst he could do.
No one on this earth is as powerful or as knowledgeable as Justice, he cautioned his dragon.
He has been imprisoned hundreds of years. You have not, Kinta reminded placidly.
That was so like his dragon. Kinta was certain Tomas could do anything.
Right now, the most important thing he could do was hunt down the master vampire and rid the world of evil.
He studied the forest, not the ground. The rainforest was a living entity.
A vampire was undead and therefore an abomination against nature.
No matter how clever the vampire was, no matter how powerful, nature would retreat from the vile creature.
Tomas inhaled, taking in the scents of the woods, brush and flowers.
The abundance of vegetation on the forest floor had its own smell.
He noted that the thick debris was crawling with insects—far too many of them, as if they had been disturbed.
When he urged Kinta to fly as low as possible so he could sweep along the ground to find definitive traces of the master vampire’s passing, the dragon did so with reluctance.
He preferred fighting from the air. Flying low meant both rider and dragon were within reach of an inventive vampire’s attack.
Just ahead, the trees shivered slightly. There was no wind moving across the forest floor, yet the roots of the trees trembled.
Kinta, there is a trap just ahead. Keep moving but don’t continue forward. His piercing gaze quartered the area as his dragon made a circle just in front of the group of trees.
The trees they were weaving in and out of were closer together than many of the others, the branches intertwined. It would be easy enough for a shifter to race along those branches.
Why is Justice going through the rainforest at a snail’s pace, using the ground and trees rather than taking to the sky and covering ground much faster?
He posed the question to his dragon and his brothers.
If he has a destination in mind, he certainly isn’t going the quickest route available to him.
His brothers were used to communicating back and forth even during a battle. It was Mataias who answered first. Perhaps he is merely reacquainting himself with freedom.
He knows he is hunted, Lojos ventured. He could be playing a game of cat and mouse.
Tomas thought that over. Honing his skills? Finding the undead, leading us to them and setting a trap. Is it possible he can persuade the undead to do his bidding? Benedek could use his voice to compel the undead.
He knows we travel together, Mataias said. Having the undead take on our appearance could be a tactic to throw us off.
Tomas shook his head. I doubt that. He knows we are ancients, riding the edge as he was many centuries before he was forced to sacrifice himself. He had to have gone mad being alone so long in the depths of hell.
But he wasn’t alone, Lojos reminded. Lilith stole a Carpathian child centuries ago, and it was confirmed she was taken below. She grew up with Justice protecting her. They spoke Carpathian together. Several have heard them.
But she is not his lifemate, Mataias pointed out. There is no saving us without a lifemate, no matter how strong we are.
Tomas knew that was the truth. They could only keep their honor for so long.
The longer they lived, the more they evolved into something else.
He thought of it as if they were becoming a beast—one living for the joy of battle.
A vampire felt a rush when they killed while feeding.
Vampires got high from the fear they induced in their victims. The crueler they were, the more depraved, the more of a rush they got from tormenting those they preyed on.
Tomas knew there was scarring on his soul, not just tears and holes a lifemate could repair when they bonded together.
This thick scarring was different, and nothing removed it or the results of living far beyond their time.
He had gone from not feeling emotions, not seeing in color and hearing whispers of temptation for hundreds of years, to sudden silence.
Not even the whispers were there to plague him, and he found the silence far worse.
That lasted several centuries. And then came the need for battle.
The rush and joy he experienced engaging in a fight to the death with the undead. Did that make him a monster?
With those newer feelings, and he’d had them for the last couple of centuries, he worried about his ability to be a decent lifemate, especially if his woman was born outside the Carpathian species.
What was he offering her? She would be forced to give up her identity, her very humanness; she would have to die to be reborn Carpathian.
It wasn’t a pleasant process. He’d witnessed it more than once, and it was extremely disturbing to him.
All the time he was contemplating why Justice might associate with vampires instead of slaying them, he was assessing the trees and terrain around him.
Allow me to get to the ground, and you appear to fly away, Tomas said. You know what to do. Kinta was very adept at fading away, becoming like a soft violet smoke or fog drifting through the trees, impossible to see despite his bulk.
The ground is a trap, the dragon reminded Tomas. As are the trees ahead. You said so yourself. Kinta believed in an all-out war. He didn’t want Tomas on the ground when he could better protect him from his back.
I intend to get information from the master vampire. It’s imperative to understand why he chose to use our likenesses when they confronted us.
Truthfully, the eagerness for battle was on him, just as it was on Kinta.
Not just eagerness, it was a need—an actual need.
Just feeling that emotion, having a need versus his duty, was nearly euphoric.
He felt emotion when he fought his enemies.
It mattered little what he felt, just that he could. That he did.
His brothers were like him. They slipped in and out of one another’s minds without thinking about it; they’d been doing it for centuries.
That ensured they shared all information.
He liked that they all had different points of view.
That meant more knowledge and more ways to think about everything from battles to conservation.
Tomas appeared to be walking on the ground, but in fact, he was gliding above it, an easy trick he’d used a thousand times over the centuries.
Nearly every vampire had fallen for it, even master vampires, who had been around nearly as many years as he had.
Each footstep appeared to sink into the thick vegetation on the forest floor.
There was the rustle of leaves and even a slight echo through the ground, a deliberate attempt to lure any creature, or the master vampire himself, into attacking.
He appeared confused as he looked around him, as if he thought the vampire was close but had no real direction for him. Sometimes the same battle played out hundreds of times. Having lived so long, Tomas had seen it all.
Just as he knew would happen, the ground around him erupted into many small geysers as thorny vines burst through the forest floor, all reaching for him like six aggressive snakes.
Each attempted to wrap around his arms and legs to prevent movement.
Simultaneously, the vampire erupted from the ground directly in front of Tomas, his fist punching forward toward Tomas’ chest.
Tomas dissolved into thousands of molecules, streaking behind the undead so he appeared to vanish.
The master vampire turned in a circle, muttering spells, his hands in the air as he did so.
Tomas recognized the ancient spell compelling the vampire’s enemies to show themselves.
The vampire wasn’t especially strong at compulsion toward a hunter, but Tomas felt a slight tug.
He materialized in front of the creature, with only a small distance between them.
He nodded his head. “Gustov, I am rarely surprised by anything, but I hadn’t heard you had chosen the way of the undead.
You were always strong.” He allowed a tinge of admiration to creep into his voice, admiration and questioning shock.