“Wait, Elias,” the other said. “”We’ll need as much blood as we can get for later, right?”
“True,” Elias replied, grinning. “I guess he can stay after all, Brecht.”
The one called Brecht turned his body around to face Ramah and bared his teeth. “Don’t worry,” he said. “This won’t hurt much.”
Ramah almost laughed. This was going to be fun.
Taras and his new ally dragged Theron through the tavern district. They held him up between them, making him look like a drunk being helped home by his friends. They needn’t have bothered with the ruse, the streets of Londinium were all but deserted, with only the moon to keep them company.
“How much farther?” Taras asked, wanting to get this over with. Despite his desire to kill Theron, the woman made him nervous.
“Right over there,” Lannis said, pointing. “In that alley.”
Taras looked. About thirty yards away was a narrow opening between two ramshackle taverns. Just beyond it, on the city’s skyline, he could see the faint lightening of the horizon that signaled the upcoming dawn. He hoped Lannis had a place to wait out the daylight hours.
Before they reached the alley they heard a shout of pain, immediately followed by a severed head bouncing out of the darkness and into the street. Taras froze, noting the sharp fangs in the dead, rolling face. Another vampire?
He turned to Lannis, but her expression showed just as much confusion as he felt. She blinked, then said, “Brecht?”
The head rolled by without responding, of course, and her face soon changed from confused to angry. She dropped Theron’s shoulder, sending half his torso into the dirt. The claws on her hands extended outward. She snarled and took a step toward the alley.
Just then a body flew out in a splatter of crimson and flesh. The smell of blood hit Taras’s nostrils like a hurricane, nearly bowling him over. The body landed hard in the street, and Taras noted that despite the many rips and tears, this one’s head was still attached. When one of the arms moved, and the victim tried to pull himself away from the alley, Taras guessed he probably wished he wasn’t living, after all.
“Elias!” Lannis yelled. “What is happening here? I left you-”
Her voice trailed off as a figure stepped from the alley entrance. Taras stared in awe. He’d seen this vampire once before, in Jerusalem. He didn’t know much about the elder vampire except that Theron had seemed terrified of him. Lannis, too, had stopped in her tracks.
“Ramah,” she whispered.
Ramah. Another Council Member. Good. He would see Taras helping Lannis to bring Theron to justice. That could only expedite things for him.
At the sound of his name, Ramah turned to face them. Taras steeled himself against the dark visage. Ramah stood drenched in the blood of two vampires that Taras could only assume were renegades like himself. Maybe they’d attacked Ramah while he waited in the alley. Judging by the results, it was very poor judgment on their part.
When Ramah’s eyes settled on him, Taras felt a shiver crawl up his spine. The smile on that bloody face didn’t look friendly at all.
“You,” Ramah said. “Taras, isn’t it?”
Taras nodded.
Ramah chuckled. “Is that Theron with you?”
Taras nodded again. “I’ve been working with Councilor Lannis to bring him to justice.” Taras motioned to his right, where Lannis had been standing when Ramah stepped out of the shadows.
But she wasn’t there.
Ramah chuckled. “Really? Where is she, Taras?”
Taras let go of Theron’s wrist and backed away a few steps. “She was right here. Didn’t she tell you about our deal?”
“Deal?” Ramah’s voice sounded light. Amused.
Shit. He could tell by Ramah’s bemused smirk that the Councilor thought he was lying. Where the hell was Lannis? She should be helping him, not disappearing. Now he was in real danger. He made ready to run, not wanting any part of another fight with Ramah. The last time he’d fought the elder vampire, only the interference of the people near Jerusalem’s Damascus Gate had saved him. This time the streets were empty, and he had no doubt who would prove the victor. He turned and sprinted for a side street.
Before he’d gone ten paces Ramah stood in front of him, materializing as if from the very air itself. Taras couldn’t stop, so he ducked his head and charged, hoping to surprise Ramah and bowl his way past.
It felt like he ran into a stone wall. He bounced off Ramah’s torso in a fit of stars and pain, and for a moment the whole world disappeared. The next thing he knew, he was lying in the street, dizzy and confused, while a shadow crossed his face. He looked up just in time to see Ramah’s clawed hand skewer his throat. The pain flared through his body like fire, and as Ramah lifted Taras off the ground by his ripped and bleeding neck, he smiled.
“Not this time, Taras.” Ramah said. “You will not escape me again.”
Taras coughed and choked on the blood pooling in his throat. He knew he would not live to see the moon again.
Ramah reached back with his other hand and punched forward, sending his second set of claws into Taras’s gut. Taras screamed at the searing pain in his belly, but no sound came out. The entire street had gone deathly silent. He knew what that meant. Ramah had cast a psalm to keep from waking the city’s inhabitants.
Taras reached out with a trembling hand and tried to swat at Ramah’s arm, but it did no good. Ramah batted his hand away as though he were a fly. Then Ramah brought his face to Taras’s neck and tore into his flesh. The pain was intense, but mercifully short. Soon Taras felt nothing at all other than a heavy tiredness that he’d never experienced before. He saw the lightening glow on the horizon and wondered if Ramah would manage to kill him before the sun peeked over the rooftops. Then there was nothing.
In a large but drafty tent many miles from Londinium, Boudica’s youngest daughter, Lannosea, watched her mother sleep. The Queen’s twin braids spread out on the pillow around her head. Lannosea sighed. Even in repose her mother’s face looked angry and violent, as though she could wake at any moment and sever an enemy’s head with a single swing. Before her father’s death, her mother was regarded as one of the most beautiful women in the Iceni lands and beyond. It was hard to reconcile that once lovely face with the constant frown the queen now wore even in her dreams.
Lannosea twisted her hair in her hands. She had the striking pale yellow hair of the Iceni, and like her mother, she wore it long. Lannie’s hair reached to her waist. But unlike Boudica, her hair cascaded down her back freely rather than in braids. She grabbed a handful of it, remembering the feel of the thick braids down her back. Those days were gone for her. Braids like her mother’s were meant for battle. Lannosea’s hair would never be braided again. She wished she could say the same for her mother and sister, but these days both of them wore their braids constantly, even sleeping in them most nights.
The Trinovante were of little help. Their lust for blood was nearly as great as Boudica’s own. Ditto her sister. They all called to her, tried to tell her how wonderful things would be once the Romans were defeated and driven from Iceni lands. They all seemed to think their lives would return to normal.
Lannosea closed her mother’s bed curtain and walked out of the royal tent, heading for her own less spacious accommodations. Tears fell from her sky blue eyes as she walked. Unlike her companions, she didn’t believe in their righteous desire to avenge the wrongs done to her people. They could talk all they want about returning to normal, but Lannosea knew the truth. No matter the outcome of tomorrow’s battle, or the one after that, or even the one after that, “normal” was forever a thing of the past.
She rubbed her belly, glad for the loose fitting gown that hid her shame from her mother’s ever angry eyes. Four months. Soon she would no longer be able to hide the truth. What would her mother say, then? Would she cast her out? Have her executed? Both seemed possible with the way Boudica’s temper had turned.