Home > High Society (The High Stakes Saga #3)(20)

High Society (The High Stakes Saga #3)(20)
Author: Casey Bond

“What?” I asked, exasperated. “Don’t you want us to leave?”

“No, it’s not that.”

“Well, what is it?”

“I heard something. Stay here.”

He was sitting in front of me one minute and gone with a whisper the next. The front door wobbled on its hinges. I ran to the door, surprised to see Titus jogging down the main staircase to meet me, groggy, but with a stake clenched in his hand. “What is it?”

“I don’t know,” I answered warily.

A dusty trail was approaching and I zeroed in on the rider whose horse was making it. “Captain Asa!” a woman screamed. “They’re firing our houses one by one! They’ve already burned five. Enoch’s was the last. They’ll come for you next!”

“Who?” Asa demanded as Mary slowed her horse and he lifted her from the saddle. “Who, Mary?”

“Redcoats.”

“We’ve fought them before,” he scoffed. “Just drain them and be done with it.”

“Can’t,” she panted. “They’re vampires.”

 

 

Chapter Eight

 

 

Abram

 

The soldiers I’d sired were thirsty for much more than blood. They craved revenge for their fallen compatriots, for the years of their lives they’d forfeited to come here and fight, only to be met by cowards who refused to fight like gentlemen.

Therefore, they were more than pleased to bring the fight, and the fire, to their enemies’ doorstep. We made our way through the countryside, dressed in common clothes. We carried no muskets, brandished no swords or knives. Our bodies were God’s weapons.

The farm was quiet, for the most part. A few still toiled in the fields and in the kitchens behind the house. The house was made of brick, but the inside was filled with furniture and trinkets, things that loved to burn. However, before we lit anything, we needed to find Eve and Enoch.

I wanted to grip Eve’s hair and drag her kicking and screaming from the house. I wanted my men to hold Enoch by the arms while I drove a stake through his heart as she watched, powerless to help, and then I wanted to drive the same stake through hers.

And Titus? If he was with them? He would die, too.

Why should I leave him to crawl home and bask in the glory that was rightfully mine? All Titus and Eve had ever done was lie and deceive. They would pay for those indiscretions, and then I would go home and collect my due.

“Surround the house,” I commanded. “Bring anyone who is inside, out to me. Set fire to it as you go. I believe Asa’s home is nearby. Perhaps we should pay him a visit next.” Once I gave the orders, my men fanned out. Before long, fire billowed from the tall windows, scorching the brick and turning the serene home into a fiery hell. A scream tore from a woman near the kitchens. More came from men in the field. But I never heard a sound resembling Enoch’s voice, or Eve’s. Everyone brought forth was human. A horse tore from the barn stall and galloped to the earthen road, a single rider on its back. The scent wasn’t a familiar one.

“Should I go after the rider, sir?” one of my men asked.

“You. Only you. Go after him.” I turned to the humans. “I’m looking for someone.” They were quiet. “I’d be happy to make an example out of anyone who refuses to assist me.”

“Who…?” a man grunted out. One of my soldiers held his arms behind his back painfully. “Who are you looking for? We’ll tell you anything you want to know,” he vowed, his voice trembling.

“I know you will,” I replied with a placating smile. “This is Enoch’s plantation, is it not?”

“It is,” the man confirmed. His hair was as thin and gray as his linen shirt. His face and hands were the same dirt-brown color of his pants. His face was red and splotchy. I wasn’t sure if the sun had burned him, or if he always looked that way.

“And where might Enoch be?” I asked.

The man shook his head. “He ain’t here. He left for his brother’s place and hasn’t been here in days.”

“Have you seen a dark-haired woman with him? Her name is Eve.”

The man shook his head. “Ain’t seen nobody like that. We ain’t had no visitors in a long time, save Enoch’s brother on occasion.”

“Is Asa close by?” I asked.

The man nodded. “Oh, yes. His plantation is the next one over, though it’s several miles away. Just head that way,” he pointed north, “and you’ll run right into it. It’s a tall, white house with big pillars in the front.”

Throughout our exchange, the rest of the humans kept quiet, except for tiny sobs and sniffles. “Kill them,” I commanded.

My soldiers did as I instructed, feeding until full and snapping the necks of those who remained. There was a mess of blood and bodies for Enoch to find when he returned, not to mention the destruction of his home.

I stayed and watched until the roof collapsed with a crash. The rest of the house groaned as the fire roared and crackled, consuming everything in its path.

 

 

Maru

It was almost dawn, and the military shifts would be changing within the hour. Night soldiers would return to the Compound to be replaced by those on day shift. I wondered what had become of the clandestine meeting General Ticher had ordered at four A.M. Waiting by the apartment window, I watched for any signs of human life.

The street was empty, other than a few rusty motor vehicle shells that littered either side of the road. They were stripped of parts years ago. The only sign of life was a black and white cat that padded across the street on muffled paws. It was quiet, too quiet. Or maybe I was just paranoid. If I planned to make my move today, it either had to be now or at dusk, and I wasn’t thrilled about the prospect of running into vamps. Just then, the sleek black device Enoch gave me began to vibrate against my thigh. I plucked it from my pocket to find a message from Yarrow.

Are you safe?

For now, I think so, I replied.

Are you sitting down? she typed. Without waiting for my reply, a video began to play. From the point of view the film provided, I could tell the camera was mounted in the corner in a meeting room, where a large table flanked by twenty chairs only hosted two men.

“Is she dead?” Victor asked.

Kael swallowed. “I’ll admit the tech isn’t perfect, but it should register basic vital signs. I haven’t seen anything more than a flicker in three days.”

Victor challenged, “Would it flicker if she were dead? What if the tech is simply damaged? What about Titus and Abram? Do you show vitals on them?”

Kael pinched his screen and scrolled over a cache of data. “Both are alive,” he answered tentatively.

“There’s no way to tell what shape they’re in, though?” Victor pressed.

“I’m afraid not.”

Victor cursed, and then he stood and began to pace. “Are you sure they landed? Because we know by now that they sure as hell didn’t land at the gala as planned. Footage from that night has conveniently disappeared, but my eyes on the venue say that none of our Assets landed where you assured me they would.”

“I know, sir –” Kael blubbered.

Hot Books
» House of Earth and Blood (Crescent City #1)
» A Kingdom of Flesh and Fire
» From Blood and Ash (Blood And Ash #1)
» A Million Kisses in Your Lifetime
» Deviant King (Royal Elite #1)
» Den of Vipers
» House of Sky and Breath (Crescent City #2)
» The Queen of Nothing (The Folk of the Air #
» Sweet Temptation
» The Sweetest Oblivion (Made #1)
» Chasing Cassandra (The Ravenels #6)
» Wreck & Ruin
» Steel Princess (Royal Elite #2)
» Twisted Hate (Twisted #3)
» The Play (Briar U Book 3)