(part two) by Faye Locke
She had thought of a wonderful homecoming. She had dreamed of
her own room furnished with every luxury. She had worried over the
eventual meeting with Lucard. What Serina Savore found upon her return
was anything but what she expected. Sitting in a waiting lounge, she
silently fumed about the cold reception she had received. I sent a
letter ahead, she thought angrily, months ago, but still... The
secretary, an irritating, pert blonde, had coldly informed her that
Lucard only met with people by appointment.
"Lucard is expecting me," Serina had told the woman.
"Do you have an appointment?" the woman repeated.
"No, but—"
"Then you will have to wait," the secretary cut in. "He might find time
for you later today." She then ushered Serina to a cold, unfriendly
room.
While she waited, she thought over the situation. When she had arrived
in town, she had found herself immediately at a loss where to go. She
had asked for directions to Lucard Industries. The directions had
brought her to this business building, rather than the castle she had
stayed in six years ago. The place seemed new; it still had the feeling of
a new appliance. The room she was in was well furnished, yet it lacked
a warm feeling. It seemed to have been designed to make the waiting
individual feel intimidated by the power and wealth of Lucard
Industries. Serina was not impressed.
I've been here for three hours. Where is he? As if in answer to her
thoughts, the door to the room opened. However, it was not Lucard who
stepped through. It was the secretary.
"Mr. Lucard would like me to inform you that he will see you,"
the secretary said smiling, "when he has the time." Serina smiled coldly
back at the woman. When he has time? Does he even remember me? Did
he even get the letter? "Oh, and there is a car waiting for you
outside the lobby." Her duty finished, the blonde turned to leave.
"Take me where?" Serina asked the retreating woman's back. The
secretary continued walking. Serina touched the power inside of her and
touched the woman's mind, making her stumble for no apparent reason.
Petty, she chided herself, but worth it. Worth it because she
enjoyed watching the secretary looking around, seeing if anyone had seen
her nearly fall flat on her face. Smiling in her small victory, Serina
picked up her one bag and headed down for the lobby.
She had had little to take when she left what had been her home
for the past several years. A few changes of clothes, a few small
sentimental items, and a book given to her upon her departure. It was
the book Serina treasured the most, for it contained the lessons she had
struggled to learn and much more. With it, she could continue her
learning on her own for the rest of her life.
Reaching to lobby, she spotted the car that was intended to take
her home. It appeared to be some sort of late model BMW or Mercedes. A
man, she presumed to be the driver, was leaning on the car with his arms
over his chest. His thickly muscled chest. A human? she wondered.
I wonder if Lucard stopped using undead assistants? And why, if he
did? She shrugged and walked to the car. The driver took her bag and
opened the door for her. The seats were soft leather, and much more
comfortable than the waiting room chair she had been sitting in.
As they drove, Serina reflected on what she had learned about
her ability the past few years. She now knew that her ability came not
from gypsy, but something very different. Something as mythical as the
creature Lucard was. She carried in her blood the magic of the faerie
folk, though not the teacup variety. There existed faeries who closely
resembled humans in size, and appearance. Serina did have an exact
description of them, but they were said to be beautiful, bronze-skinned
creatures that could live for ages without the years touching them.
Sometimes, these creatures grew bored of dallying with their own kind.
When they did, they sought human attentions. The offspring of such
attentions were often stillborn, but those that lived did not resemble
their mythical parents in any form. The magic of the faerie would lie
dormant for many generations, then would manifest itself in one single
descendent. Serina just happened to be that one lucky descendent.
Lucky, ha! I have been cultivated by a vampire.
Finding out the true nature of her supposed benefactor had come
as a shock for Serina. She had not believed for months until her
teacher had brought a vampire before her unbelieving student. The
magic's reaction had been nearly identical to what had happened to her
with Lucard. Immense pain, and a terrible feeling of danger and evil.
Serina had still not wanted to believe that the reaction was to vampires.
Really, she did not want to believe that such creatures existed. If she
did, then it meant the monster in the closet that her mother had told
her was nothing might really be something. But then the nice vampire
had smiled widely, showing fangs, and asked if she needed more physical
proof that he was really a vampire. She had not.
So Lucard is a vampire, she thought, this means what? Why I
am so afraid to meet him again? The magic was tugging at her, the way
it did when it thought it saw something she did not. Wish it could
just tell me. Serina referred to the power inside of her as a separate
entity, but, in reality, it had no real cognitive abilities. It was
just an extension of her intuition. A very noisy extension.
The car came to a stop. Serina looked out the window to see the
same brooding towers she had seen six years ago. Oh, goody, maybe I
get to stay in the same room, she mused irritably. However, she was
not led to the same room. To her surprise, the new room was very
agreeable, even plush. The driver left her suitcase on the bed and left
without a word. Serina looked around the room carefully, looking for
hidden cameras. After a quick visual scan, she closed her eyes and
scanned the room again with her magic. She found nothing.
Looking in the bathroom, she found to her delight that there was
a shower and a bathtub. The queen-sized bed was softer than anything
she had slept on in years. Serina quickly showered and changed into
something to sleep in. She had been awake for nearly twenty hours, and
sleep was threatening to take her before she was under the covers.
Wringing out her hair, she wondered if she should take out her mother's
cross. Her mother had gotten her the cross when Serina turned 16,
making a big deal at the time to get the thing blessed. It was a
beautiful piece of work, thin twines of silver wrought around each other
to give the impression of a vine. She had had the cross re-blessed on
her return journey.
Serina decided she would take the cross out, but she would not
wear it. Somehow, it seemed rude for a guest to wear a blessed cross in
the house of a vampire. Instead, she placed it under her pillow.
Just in case. Sleep took her before she could wonder about what "in
case" could be.
Lucard returned late from the office, which was not unusual for
him recently. It seemed like something was always coming between him
and rest. He had thought that after vanquishing Helsing he would have
more time on his hands. However, five years later that extra time was
still hiding from him.
But his business was expanding at an incredible rate. A few more lives,
and he should be in control of the entire world economy. He had not
decided yet what he would do with that kind of power. But, he was sure
he would think of many fun ventures by then.
Turning his thoughts to the present, Lucard realized that he had not
completed his business for the day. He still had to deal with one Miss
Serina Savore. Her letter had come as a surprise to him. Months after
receiving it, he could still recall it word for word.
Mr. A.Lucard,Simple, to the point, and completely useless to him. Given no specific time, he had been unable to plan for her arrival. He had nearly given up when he noticed the memo his secretary had left for him on his way out of the office for a lunch meeting with his executives. "Ms. Savore came by," she had written neatly. After mentally cursing the secretary, he had left her a note with instructions to find Ms. Savore and have her taken to his castle. It wasn't until after he had returned from the meeting that he found Serina had still been in the office when he had left. The secretary had been fired exactly one minute after he learned this information. The woman had a tendency to make up things he said to clients anyhow. Lucard had wanted to keep Serina as close to him as he could after she entered the city. She needed to be kept a secret until he knew the extent of her abilities. Of course, he also needed her under his control as soon as possible, which meant making her a vampire tonight a priority.I have finished the training you instructed for me to acquire. Expect me soon.
Serina Savore
Serina was aware of Lucard's entry of the room. She had barely
controlled her breathing and heart when she woke. Not really wanting to
face him yet, she lay still, hoping that he had just come to look in on
her. A few moments later, she knew his intentions were not benign. Her
hand already was under the pillow, inches away from the cross.
Carefully, she moved her hand toward it, hoping he would not notice the
slight movement. She let a mental sigh of relief as her hand closed
around the cool metal. When she sensed he was beside her, she sat up,
holding the cross in his direction. Lucard reacted immediately by
slapping her across her face with the back of his hand. Hand still
grasping the cross, Serina was thrown across the bed by his attack. He
was on her before she could move, grasping her offending wrist and
holding it tightly over the edge of the bed.
Serina's eyes met his, now golden in his vampiric state. She
could tell that he was furious. His hand tightened on her wrist,
crushing the tiny bones together ruthlessly. Serina tried to hold onto
the cross, but she gave it up with a cry of pain when several of her
wrist bones cracked under the pressure of his hold. Having eliminated
the threat, Lucard let go of her wrist and brought his hand to her face,
gently brushing away a tear that slid down her cheek. The anger was
erased from his features, replaced by hunger and need.
His hand slipped behind her head, wrapping in her hair tightly.
He leaned down and pressed his lips against hers in a hard kiss.
Serina did not respond to him. She closed her eyes tightly as his lips
slid down her jaw to her neck. He traced the jugular with his mouth, as
if he was trying to taste it through her skin. A hard brush of teeth,
then a sharp pain as his fangs pierced her neck. She did not fight the
fatigue that came over her, willing it to take her quickly.
I won't be a vampire, was her last lucid thought.
Lucard woke with a hangover. Which would not have been really unique
except that he had not had a hangover since he became a vampire.
Vampires simply did not get hangovers. Yet, he was definitely suffering
from one. Dimly, he could recall the symptoms he often experienced as a
mortal after a night of heavy drinking, and yes, those matched what he
felt now. Examining his surroundings, he took a moment to gain his
bearings. He had not retired to his usual, secret coffin. Instead, he
was in the library, where apparently he had slept on the couch.
Frowning with distaste over his wrinkled clothes, Lucard looked at the
book sitting on the table before him. It was the same tome he had perused
when Serina had arrived years ago. He had not remembered getting it
out, yet clearly, someone had been reading it, for it was opened. Still,
he was interested in what someone had been reading.
The blood of the faerie folk is intoxicating to vampires. Vampires should beware of taking too much from a faerie, for the intoxication is incapacitating. However, faerie blood taken in small amounts can fully restore a vampire.Why had he not read this before? He remembered reading the book when he had first met Serina... then he remembered that, at the time, he had attributed her abilities to a gypsy condition, and had researched gypsy power, not faerie. He read on:
There are no known cases of a faerie being brought over as a vampire. Every vampire that has attempted to change one has woken several days later only to find the faerie gone, along with the link associated with new vampires to their masters. It has been decided that either the faerie cannot exist as vampires, or that they deal with their own when one is made.This book was only talking of pure faeries, not a half-breed. Perhaps the same rules did not apply? If so, and he had managed to change Serina, she would be an even more rare item than he had originally anticipated. Yet, he did not feel the bond he was used to with new vampires. Perhaps her condition as a faerie half-breed negated the effect. He had to go find her before she woke.
Concluded in Part Three.