Keepers of the Flame (Trilogy Bundle)

chapter Eight



Suddenly I was free and just as they had appeared, the vampires all disappeared. I looked around for Lord Morrison and even he was gone. In wonder, I shifted my gaze to Dylan's.

“What happened?” I asked, my voice shaking with reaction. “Where did they go?”

“Your guess is as good as mine,” he replied, panting.

That was when I noticed that he had a very nasty cut running from his left eye to his neck. It looked like it was made by a knife. My blood went cold at the sight.

“What happened to you?”

“It's nothing serious,” he replied holding onto my arm. “We need to head for your home right now before they come back.”

“Don't patronize me!” I yanked my arm from his hand. “That's a knife wound and the knife was probably covered in platinum.” Just as the silver bullet was used on our ancestors, we had evolved past that and the one substance the Born vampires were vulnerable to was platinum.

“Thank you for stating the obvious, Luanne.”

Even though his words were steeped in sarcasm, it was the first time he'd used my name and it had a funny effect on me. I felt my tummy flip at the way my name had sounded on his tongue and I momentarily forgot that we were in grave danger. I suddenly felt the need to comfort him and offer healing. Almost unconsciously, I raised my hand and cupped the injured cheek.

“I wish I could make it better,” I said softly.

He looked into my eyes and for one brief moment, I saw into his soul. He closed his eyes then and sighed.

“We can't afford to remain here,” he said, opening his eyes.

“I know.” I was about to lift my hand when the most amazing thing happened.

The heat around my chest area began to travel down my arm. I gazed in amazement as flame-colored light moved from my shoulders to my elbow and down my wrists, onto my palm, which was still on Dylan's cheek. His eyes widened in surprise as he watched then his body relaxed and he closed his eyes again on a sigh.

The flame engulfed his body, from his head to his feet. And as suddenly as it came, it was gone. The entire thing had probably lasted less than a minute or so, but it had felt like we'd been suspended in time.

I brought down my hand then and gasped.

“What?” He immediately became alert.

“The gash is gone,” I said in wonder.

He raised his hand to his cheek wonderingly. “I don't feel any pain.”

“I don't know what just happened.” I shook my head and looked down at my palm.

He looked at me and what I saw in his gaze made me tremble slightly. He slowly leaned toward me and I knew, I just knew, that he was going to kiss me. I held my breath and waited as he drew nearer, but at the last minute, he took my hand and placed a quick kiss on it.

“Thanks,” he said simply. “But we need to get out of here, now!” With that he squeezed my palm.

I swallowed the aching disappointment even as I felt like I was being sucked into a very small hole and my entire being was made of liquid. I closed my eyes but just as I closed them, the feeling went. I opened my eyes in confusion and realized we were in Katrina's living room.

“What the hell was that?” I yelled, freaking out.

“Watch your language, girl!”

I turned to see Katrina standing in one side of the room and every inch of her was tense.

“I'm sorry, I didn't see you.”

She frowned as though that was beside the point and turned to Dylan instead. “I've got our stuff packed. We can be out of here in five. But first I want to know how the hell that happened.”

I'd never heard Katrina that snappish before. I help my breath and waited for Dylan to speak.

“We were ambushed,” he said quietly.

“I know you were ambushed. But how did they escape your surveillance? Whoever is behind this is beyond extraordinary.”

“It's Lord Morrison.”

I watched as right before my eyes, Katrina deflated. “I see,” she said quietly as she sank onto the nearest chair. “That changes things considerably.”

I looked from Katrina to Dylan. He shifted his gaze to avoid mine and I became angry.

“Can someone please tell me what's going on? Who's this Lord Morrison anyway?”

“Don't worry about it, Luanne. We need to get you to safety now.”

I gazed at Dylan in faint hurt and annoyance. Was he serious?

“This is my life! I'm the one they want and unless someone tells me what on earth is going on, I'm going to summon them and hand myself over to them!”

I was just bluffing of course; there was no way I could summon anyone. But I watched as horror registered on my grandmother's face. I looked in confusion to Dylan's but his face was passive, without expression.

“Grandma?”

I could hear the fear and confusion in my voice and apparently, my grandmother also heard it because she sighed and got up.

“Luanne is right,” she said, surprising me. “She needs to know how all this affects her and if it is Lord Morrison that's behind this, there's no use going anywhere. We'll face him on our own turf.”

Dylan nodded. “I'll call for backup.”

Katrina nodded and they both watched him stride out. She looked at the empty spot where Dylan had been standing and I could see she was pensive. Finally, she turned to me.

“Sit down, Lu.” Her voice was really grave. She waited for me to sit on the armchair across from where she was standing, then she sat on the sofa. “I'm not going to sugarcoat this for you. A lot of this is going to shock you, but you need to hear it and I believe you're old enough to hear it straight.”

I could feel my heart banging against my ribcage. I wanted to speak but my throat felt too dry, so I settled for nodding instead. Just before she began, Dylan came back into the room. He stood leaning against the wall and somehow I knew he was already in on what I was about to hear. I don't know how I knew, I just did.

“That stone you're wearing is no ordinary stone,” she began.

I put my hands above my heart, just where the stone rested beneath my t-shirt. It still retained some of the earlier heat, which had never happened before. Then again, this had been a very strange day.

“That stone is the source of the power of all Pereneans,” she went on. “Whoever has the stone controls the powers we all have.”

I waited a beat, expecting them to both burst out laughing and say they were just pulling my leg. But when I saw the grave expression on Dylan's face, I knew that wasn't going to happen.

“You mean those vampires are after this stone?” I asked in disbelief, focusing on my grandmother.

She nodded slowly.

I clutched the stone tightly. It meant so much to me. I had woken up to the stone on my pillow on the day I turned thirteen and had thought it was a present from my parents, even though they'd denied it. Still, it was practically all I had of them.

“Okay. I'm trying to understand this. So you're saying if I hand the stone over to the Council this is all going to stop?”

“I'm afraid it's not as easy as that, dear. If I tried to hold the stone, I would be turned into cinders.”

I felt my eyes open wide in shock. This was mind-boggling. “You mean...” I couldn't say it. But I didn't need to, Katrina was already nodding.

“You are the only one who can hold the stone. It chose you as its keeper when it came to you on the day you turned thirteen.”

“Can't we find another keeper then?” I felt the stone reach out and zap me then. “Ouch!” I cried quickly taking my hands off my chest. “It burned me.” I looked down in accusation.

Katrina smiled slightly. “It's alive and you probably hurt its feelings.”

Okay, time out! This was getting ridiculous. “I hurt its feelings? It's a stone, for goodness sake!” It zapped me again and I winced. Okay, I was getting the message.

“To answer your question, the last known keeper died five hundred years ago.”

This was worse than I thought. I was actually trapped with the stone. Although to be quite honest, I wasn't interested in giving it up to anyone, for anything.

“What of Lord Morrison?” I asked and saw Katrina wilt for a few seconds before she drew herself up.

“He's your grandfather.”

“My grand...!” This was too much to take in sitting down. So I got up and began to pace. I sneaked a look at Dylan and could tell he had known nothing about this. It eased my resentment a little.

“Okay.” I came to a halt in front of my grandma. “So why does he want me? How come you're both on opposite sides?”

“We weren't at first. He was the head of the protectors for so long, but somehow he got corrupted and left the protectors. We haven't been together since before your father was born.”

I had just decided that I'd had enough when the door burst open and we were invaded by said Lord Morrison.