The first snippet I'm sharing came from Anne Marie
Andrus on February 7. Yes, only four fridays ago... I'm catching up.
A link to her books is below!
Cathedral Rock
At the peak of a
rocky red outcropping, Draven paced, sat, leapt up to wander again and shouted
into the empty darkness. “I should have saved you.” He stumbled, grabbed
fistfuls of his blond hair and threw his head back to shout at the night sky.
“I accept that I’m a failure.”
The only answer
was the desert wind’s drone.
“Tonight, was my
last. I’m done. I’m ready.” He spun to face the brightening horizon and
stripped off his shirt. “I’m coming to join you, my beloved Gwynevere.”
Dawn’s light
lingered below the jagged crests, slicing through the landscape one ray at a
time. Pinholes of smoke erupted across Draven’s skin like a spray of bullets.
Gritting his
teeth to muffle a scream, he stared at the patch of ground a few feet away,
already bathed in killer sun. After a long exhale, he took two strides toward
instant death. The final step was cut short by a missile dressed in a royal
guard’s uniform. Two vampires tumbled down the back side of the butte into the
cold safety of shadow.
“What the bloody
hell?” Draven clawed his way back up the red rock, only to be yanked into a
cliffside cave. He narrowed his eyes to focus in the pitch black. “Ronald?”
“Your highness.”
Ronald bowed.
Draven lunged for
the cave’s mouth and was knocked down again. “Have you gone insane?”
“Have you?”
Ronald rolled a boulder across the opening. “On second thought, don’t answer
that. When did you last feed?”
“What concern is
that of yours?” Draven turned up his nose at the flask Ronald offered.
“It’s my job to
keep you safe.”
“Then, you’re
fired.”
“Unacceptable.”
Ronald plunked a silver flask on the stone floor in between them.
“This is not how
it works.” Draven charged toward Ronald and landed flat on his back. “I’m a
damn prince!”
“Tackling you
now, and on top of that rock,” Ronald dusted off his palms and held out a hand,
“was easier than knocking a child down on the playground.”
“Blood would be
wasted on me.” Draven swatted him away. “Doesn’t matter where I’m going.”
“And, your
highness, where is that?”
“Not sure,
exactly.” Draven puffed his cheeks and exhaled. “To find my beloved Gwyn.”
“I’m so very
sorry for your loss.” Ronald rested his hands on his knees. “But burning
yourself up in the desert isn’t going to bring her back.”
“I hate myself
and I’m broken beyond repair.” Draven wrapped his arms around his chest. “How
did you find me out here, anyway? I covered my tracks.”
“We’re blood.”
Ronald dug through a canvas bag and tossed him a wrinkled shirt. “Can’t hide
from me. To your credit, the search did take weeks.”
“I never really
thought about that…your direct lineage, I mean.”
“If I remember
correctly, you turned me vampire as a stunt to impress Sorcha.”
“I was rather
taken with her back then. But the reason doesn’t matter.” Draven pulled on the
shirt and buttoned it without looking down. “As my sole heir, when I’m gone,
you’re next in line for my father’s throne. Should it ever come to that.”
“Well.” Ronald
swallowed hard. “There’s extra incentive to keep you alive—”
“If you dare call
me Daddy, I’ll rip your face off.”
“It will only
grow back.” Ronald held out the flask again. “Sire.”
“I never believed
in hell, but I’ve been there every night since Gwyn died.” Draven grabbed the
flask and gulped. “Every damned night. Can’t you see that?”
“Yes, and I don’t
pretend to know the pain of losing a fiancĂ©e.” Ronald settled down with his
back against the cave wall.
“I remember
saying something very similar once.” Draven sat down across from him, leaned
his head back and closed his eyes. “To Raimond, after his Emily was murdered.
He certainly handled it better than I have.”
Ronald rubbed his
neck. “About Raimond—”
“I left my guards
in Louisiana to watch over his house full of fools.” Draven looked up when
Ronald didn’t answer. “What?”
“At first, I
tried to find you…unsuccessfully. When I returned, it was too late.”
“I don’t
understand.”
“After you left,
there was an attack.” Ronald stared at his hands. “They burned it.”
“Who?” Draven
tilted forward. “Who burned what?”
“The Victoires
and others, foreign soldiers, witches. An army of mercenaries.” Ronald lifted
his eyes to meet Draven’s. “Your royal guards are dead. Normandie Hall is
ashes.”
“You must be
mistaken.” Draven shook his head violently. “They were all upstairs—”
“After Sorcha and
Vir crashed through the window, the entire house imploded.” Ronald bit the
inside of his cheek. “Rumor has it that Steven Banitierre survived. I do know
that Miss Rayna is on your island. I’ve spoken with her.”
“Julia?” Draven
rubbed his face with both hands. “Lily?”
“Both dead.” Ronald
frowned. “We should go back to New Orleans.”
“Raimond will be
furious with me.”
“Your
highness...”
“Never mind the
house, though he did restore it from a ruin into a fortress.”
“Prince Norman—”
“But, his family
is his whole life. Those girls—”
“Draven!”
Draven froze in
Ronald’s vacant gaze.
“I’m sorry, sire,
about Raimond—”
“No.” Draven’s
jaw dropped and his body convulsed. “No, no!” He stared at the flask in his
hand and hurled it with enough force to cause a shower of rock dust to fall.
“Not Raimond. He would have escaped the fire.”
“Not if he was
murdered.”
Draven’s eyes
flew open and he flashed in front of Ronald. “By whom?”
“Nicholas
Victoire.” Ronald grabbed Draven’s quaking shoulders. “That criminal has seized
power in New Orleans. We need to go back.”
“Sorcha will
never forgive me. Never. She’ll try to kill me.” Draven staggered again.
“Raimond. Are you sure? He’s the strongest…my best—”
“Sorcha won’t try
to kill you in New Orleans.”
“She should!”
Draven shivered and landed on his knees. “I left her and the whole…all of
Raimond’s family to die?”
“Sorcha and Vir
escaped, and haven’t been seen since. Rayna said they had help from locals,
Crescent magic.” Ronald reached out but pulled his hands back. “Normandie Hall
was an ambush. You couldn’t have known.”
“Murder, murder.”
Draven slammed his head on the stone floor. “Failure, failure.”
“Sire?”
“I want to die!”
Draven flew into the jagged rock wall, fell and leapt up to do it again. “Why
can’t I die?” He spun to Ronald with black blood streaming down his face.”
“You don’t look
right, sire. A little rest, maybe?”
“Such a good
man.” Draven patted Ronald’s cheek. “My blood…my son.”
“Whoa.” Ronald
flinched. “Take it easy with the crazy eyes.”
Draven grabbed
Ronald’s gold dagger and scampered back into the shadows.
“All right.”
Ronald reached for the gold and fell back at Draven’s maniacal howl. “Enough of
this nonsense. Hand it over.”
“I told you I was
done.” Draven’s body shrunk. “It’s over. Put me out of my misery or I’ll do it
myself. I swear on the souls of all the deaths I’ve caused.” He collapsed into
a writhing heap with the dagger pointed at his own heart.
“I’ll help you, I
promise. Just put it down.”
“Make it quick.”
Draven nodded, squeezed the blade to his throat hard enough to draw blood, and
handed it over. “I’m a coward.”
“You’re no such
thing.”
“Don’t tell my
father.”
Ronald spun the
blade in his fingers.
“Though, we
really should tell—"
“Save that thought for later.” He snapped
Draven’s neck with military precision. “I’m sure you’ll be a royal pain in my
ass when you wake up.” Ronald tucked a blanket around the limp body and drew a
ragged breath. “Heal quickly, my prince. Raimond’s family desperately needs
you.”
~~
Thanks Anne Marie for sharing!
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