Blood Curse Read online

Page 14


  She slowly made her way down the narrow corridor, her only illumination coming from the flashlight Christian had given her. He kept lamps in the big rooms but allowed no light in the narrow tunnels, just in case someone ever did discover how to enter his dwelling. If that happened, the darkness would work in his favor. He'd explained that his keen eyes needed no light to see.

  Light pooled into the tunnel as Aria neared one of the rooms. She caught the sound of voices, one with the trace of a Spanish accent, as she closed in. Rialto and Seta were back. Maybe now she could go home and rest in her own bed.

  But something in her gut warned her she might not be leaving so soon. Aria flicked off the flashlight as she reached the opening to the room. Christian and Seta stood in the center, speaking to one another in worried tones, Seta's beautiful face was marred with a deep frown. When she sensed Aria's presence, her eyes turned dark and cold. Aria gulped, wondering if it was just her imagination that Seta was glaring at her.

  "Where's Rialto?” she asked, noting that he didn't stand with them. She caught the look of pity Christian sent her way before she looked around the room and found Rialto lying supine on a chaise in the corner, his hands folded over his abdomen. It looked as if he was resting peacefully, but it was exactly the same way Aria's mother had looked in her casket.

  "Rialto!” Aria ran across the room and dropped to her knees beside the chaise, placing her hand over his heart. She felt the slight beat beneath her fingers and let out a breath she hadn't been aware of holding. He was still alive, even if his heartbeat wasn't as steady and strong as it should be and his skin was much too pale, completely devoid of its normally golden glow. “Is he all right?"

  "No, thanks to you,” Seta snapped, her dark eyes boring into Aria's so accusingly she had to blink, unable to withstand the weight of Seta's punishing glare.

  "It's not her fault, Seta.” Christian admonished the vampire witch with a quelling glare of his own. “Rialto is fighting against fate."

  "I can't just let him die, Christian. He was barely weaned when he was taken from me the first time. Twenty-eight years I had to wait for the truth to come out, for him to know who his real mother was! Then I almost lost him again because of that demon Antonia!"

  "Demon?"

  Aria wasn't aware she had spoken until Seta's head whipped around, her eyes full of fury. The vampiress lunged for her but Christian's arm shot out and sent her flying across the room, her back hitting the far wall.

  "Don't make me hurt you, Seta.” The warning look Christian sent the woman was a silent promise that he would. “I have too much respect for you to do it, and you know how I hate to resort to violence. Be respectful of the fact that you are a guest in my home, and while you're at it, you can stop blaming Aria. It's not her fault she was chosen to be Rialto's mate."

  "What are you talking about?” Aria directed the question at Christian, no longer sure she could trust Seta. The woman looked as though she wanted to kill her.

  "Explain it to her, Seta.” Christian crossed over to a set of cabinets built into the wall and pulled out a tall glass, following it with a bag of blood from a small refrigerator. “Care for some?"

  "You know I prefer mine fresh,” Seta answered, looking at the bag with distaste as she rose from the floor.

  Christian shook his head and punctured the bag with his thumbnail. He poured the contents into the glass. “Rialto is too weak to stop you from speaking now. Explain to her what is happening, and what must happen.” He turned to face Seta, taking a sip from his glass. “The Dream Teller has already visited her, just a few hours ago."

  Seta's head whipped around. “The Dream Teller? What did she show you?"

  Aria gulped as the vampire-witch crossed the room to stand over her. “She showed me the night Rialto changed over Antonia."

  Seta's eyes smoldered. “Did she show you what happened when Antonia awakened?"

  "No, but she said she went mad."

  "She was a demon.” Seta practically spat out the statement, her fists clenching at her sides. “Something went wrong during the transformation. When you are changed over, you drink from your sire, sleep through the day, awaken at night and feed. The cycle is then complete. The sire wakes before you, but Antonia was already gone when Rialto opened his eyes that night. It was the screaming that woke him."

  "Whose screaming?"

  "The villagers.” Seta perched on the arm of a nearby lounge chair, encircling her arms around her narrow waist, her tanned skin an unusual pale color that sharply contrasted with her dark hair and clothing. “When we feed it is for survival. The blood and day sleep are our sources of strength. The blood empowers us, and the day sleep heals and revitalizes. Antonia wasn't just feeding for strength, as she should have been. She was slaughtering for sport."

  "Her attackers,” Aria murmured, recalling the pain and humiliation Antonia had endured at the hands of the raiders. She'd wanted revenge more than she'd wanted to live.

  "No,” Seta said, shaking her head. “She woke up evil. She raced through the night to the nearest village and sank her teeth into every human she saw. It was a massacre."

  "She killed innocent people for no reason at all?” Aria looked at Christian for confirmation that Seta was telling the truth. The sorrow she saw in his eyes told her she was. “Why would she do that?"

  "She was a demon, touched by the hand of Satan."

  "How?"

  Seta shrugged. “We don't fully understand our own origins, Aria. Antonia is still a great mystery to us. All we can figure is she was never meant to be one of us. It happens sometimes."

  "What happened to her?"

  "She was destroyed."

  "By you?"

  "I wish.” Seta gazed at her son for a long moment before she continued. “Rialto couldn't sense her when he awakened, which was odd seeing as how a sire and fledgling share a special bond that enables them to sense each other's whereabouts. He ran toward the screaming and found her laughing and dancing around a bonfire, dead bodies lying all around her, their insides ripped out. She was wearing the dress of one of her victims, not seeming to care that it was covered in the woman's blood."

  As Seta continued telling the story, Aria felt herself being pulled away from her body until she stood in the village, watching as Antonia pranced around the fire, the white skirts of her bloodstained dress swirling around her. Her eyes were bright and wide, gleaming with a dark power that chilled Aria to her core. The woman's lips were stained with blood, and when she pulled them into a smile, Aria saw blood caked between her teeth like a red plaque.

  "Antonia? What have you done?” Rialto looked at the carnage around him, horrified. There were bodies of old men and women, younger adults, and two children. A woman, barely hanging onto life, crawled toward a baby carriage. The infant's cries were the only sound other than the roaring of the fire. If there were any survivors inside the nearby buildings, they weren't advertising the fact.

  "I have feasted, my love.” Antonia answered with a wicked gleam in her eyes that would mystify the devil. Her voice was no longer sweet and soft. It had turned hard, deep, more like a man's. “Now that you have finally arrived you can join me."

  "No, Antonia. This is not right."

  Her eyes flared with anger. “This is what you made me, Rialto. Do you not remember the gift you spoke so highly of? I am now yours forever."

  "You are not my Antonia!” Anger rose in Rialto's voice, but in his eyes Aria saw what he was really feeling. Guilt. He had created a monster.

  Antonia laughed. “Of course I am. You made me, remember? Now, come. I have saved dessert for you."

  Rialto watched as Antonia slinked toward the woman and the carriage, no longer poised with grace and sophistication, but instead moving like a jungle cat. A predator.

  "Antonia, don't do it.” Rialto's eyes widened in fear as Antonia kicked the young mother aside and reached into the baby carriage. “Antonia, don't! Please!"

  "Not my baby!” The woman looked at Ri
alto, her eyes pleading as Antonia raised the screaming infant into the air.

  "Antonia, leave the baby alone!"

  Antonia turned her head and stared Rialto in the eye, her own eyes dark with a relentless hunger that refused to go unsated. She laughed at Rialto and opened her mouth, baring her fangs.

  Before she could sink them into the baby's soft flesh, Rialto was before her. He ripped the baby from her hands, knocking her out of the way with one arm while he gently placed the infant back into the carriage with the other.

  By the time he turned, Antonia was lunging for him, her shriek piercing the still night air. He caught her effortlessly with one hand and held her away from his body.

  "La colpa e la vostra” The guilt is yours. She hissed the words as her gaze bored into his.

  "I'm sorry,” he whispered, carrying her toward the bonfire with tears in his eyes. Antonia looked into the flames, her eyes widening with sudden realization. Knowing what he was going to do, she shrieked and clawed at him, trying desperately to get out of his grasp, but with a quickness only an immortal could possess, he threw her into the fire and rammed a long stick through her chest, pinning her to the ground.

  His tears fell like rain while she screamed and thrashed on the ground, the flames charring her skin. She managed to tear the stick from her body and stand just before the flames swallowed her whole, long enough to give him one last message. Even though it was spoken in Italian, Aria understood clearly.

  "I hate you for what you are and what you've made me!"

  Those were the words that wounded Rialto because they were spoken in the soft, feminine voice of the woman he had loved. He'd destroyed the demon he'd created, and along with it, he had destroyed Antonia.

  She had parted from him with nearly the same words Aria had said to him earlier tonight. The guilt of knowing how badly those poorly chosen words must have hurt him snapped Aria back into the present. She gasped, opening her eyes to see Seta and Christian kneeling before her.

  "Are you all right?” Christian asked, helping her to sit up. She rubbed the side of her head as it began to throb.

  "What happened?"

  "You tell us,” Seta answered. “I was telling you about Antonia, and you just fell over. Did the Dream Teller come back?"

  "No. She wasn't there."

  "She wasn't where?"

  Aria shook her aching head, trying to clear it. “I was at the village. I saw what Antonia did, and I saw what Rialto had to do.” And she'd felt him, felt every trace of guilt and suffering which surged through him. He didn't even stop to acknowledge that he had saved a baby's life. All he knew was he'd killed Antonia and she'd hated him for it. The words she'd spoken upon her death might as well have been daggers, they'd cut him so deeply. Why had Aria used those same words?

  She gazed at Rialto where he lay on the chaise, looking at peace while he rested. But she knew peace was the last thing he felt. He believed he had turned someone he cared about into an evil being, and then he'd killed her. He'd lived with that for hundreds of years, and now he was dying because he refused to follow his fate, a fate that somehow involved her.

  "What were you talking about earlier when you said Rialto was fighting his fate? What's wrong with him?"

  Seta and Christian helped her into a chair before Seta knelt on the floor in front of her. “First, Aria, I want to say I'm not really angry with you. I'm just . . . angry.” Christian nodded his approval before crossing over to the sofa, watching them while he drank from his glass of blood. “If I ever lost my son . . .” Seta's voice trailed off as she gazed mournfully where Rialto lay.

  "I understand, Seta.” The vampiress may have looked like a teenager, but her eyes, when cast upon her son, were old and heart-wrenchingly sad. She was a mother, and from what Aria could tell, a very loving, protective one. “You said he was stolen from you?"

  "Yes.” Seta's eyes closed briefly and she let out a sigh. “His father was Count Roberto Garibaldi, a very sophisticated, rich Italian nobleman. I was just a stupid servant girl, too taken with fairy tales and daydreams to see that he was using me. My grandmother tried to warn me and later . . . the old hag came to me in my dreams."

  "The Dream Teller?"

  "Yes, but I didn't listen to her or my grandmother. I thought Roberto loved me and, blindly, I allowed him to use me. All he wanted from me was what his wife could not give him—a son. Once Rialto was weaned, he stole him from me, and when I tried to fight for him, Roberto beat me and threw me off the cliff in front of his castle."

  Aria gasped in horror. “How did you survive?"

  "I went over the cliff and landed in the arms of a vampire who was sent for me. The Dream Teller, one of the oldest witches known, had told him to be there and to give me the option of living or dying."

  "He changed you over?"

  "Yes. I was so severely beaten I would have died before morning had he not, and I couldn't accept death then. I had to make sure my son was all right."

  "But you didn't take him from the castle."

  "No. He was a mortal child and needed to be raised by mortals. I couldn't go out in the sun, and during the day sleep there are periods where vampires can't move as our bodies heal and replenish themselves. I couldn't raise a mortal child. And my mortal family were all servants to Roberto's family. They couldn't raise him, and I couldn't risk them knowing I was alive. They would have thought I traded my soul to the devil."

  "You never left him though, did you?"

  "No. I watched over him for twenty-eight years, only speaking with him on rare occasions when I knew we wouldn't be bothered. I didn't tell him who I was until the right time presented itself."

  Aria smiled to herself, knowing her mother would have done the same, putting her child's needs before her own and at her own emotional expense. A sharp stab of sorrow sliced through her chest. With all the confusion and excitement of the past few days, she had managed to step away from the constant mourning she'd been drowning in, but with just one simple thought of her mother, the pain came back tenfold. Before she could blink it back a tear fell from her eye.

  "Aria, child, what is it?” Seta's eyes were full of concern as she wiped the errant tear away with her fingers. Aria couldn't help laughing, however weak the sound was.

  "I'm sorry. It's kind of weird hearing you call me child when you look so much younger than me."

  "You'll get used to it as you meet more of our kind,” Seta said with a compassionate smile. “It just takes a little adjusting."

  "More of you are coming?"

  "You'll meet more after you're . . .” Seta trailed off, looking at Christian, silently conferring, before turning back to look at Aria with a seriousness that wiped away any trace of a smile. “What Christian and I were talking about earlier, Rialto's fate, involves you."

  "The Dream Teller said he was dying. Can I prevent that?” Aria searched Seta's eyes for the answer she craved. She nearly cried out in elation when Seta nodded. “What's wrong with him now? Why is he so weak and pale?"

  "He tasted your blood and now he is addicted to it. He has tried to feed from other mortals since he tasted you, but their blood was sour. In desperation, we even tried giving him the blood of his sire.” Seta looked at her wrist, rubbing a thumb over the pulse point. “He can't even stomach my blood, which is virtually the same as his own."

  "So that's why we were both sick. But I'm better now. Why?"

  "The mortal blood in you cured your ailment. Rialto doesn't have that advantage. He will steadily grow weaker and weaker until he is utterly defenseless. Just tonight he passed out and I had to carry him here. The day sleep will replenish some of his energy, but as far as his strength, it will wane through the next night and the next night and so on. I don't know how long he can survive if he keeps losing his strength so rapidly."

  "But if he drinks my blood he'll be fine, right?"

  "It's not that simple. He will become more dependent on your blood the more he tastes it, unless he does what fate intends.
"

  "Which is?"

  "You were meant to be one of us, Aria. Rialto was meant to be your partner and your sire."

  Aria gulped, despite the fact her throat was bone dry. “You mean he has to change me over like he did Antonia?"

  "No!” Seta rose from the floor, her eyes wide. “It won't be like that!"

  "Aria, you are not Antonia,” Christian interjected as he placed his glass on the coffee table before him and leaned forward, his elbows resting on his knees. “There are certain signs that can't be ignored, signs coming from you. Seta is a powerful witch, and there are things she sees that no one else can see."

  "Like what?"

  "Your auras.” Seta bent down and took Aria's hands in her own. “When we first met at the hotel, I barged right in because I didn't know anyone else was in the room with Rialto. All I could feel was him. When I walked in, I saw the two of you entwined in the exact same aura. That doesn't happen, Aria, not unless you are two halves of the same soul."

  "Two halves of the same . . .” Aria shook her head. A dull throb pounded in the center of her forehead. This was too much.

  "I know of the dreams, Aria. Rialto had visions of you as a baby. Fate was telling him his soul mate had arrived. Fate led him to you."

  "Fate killed my mother?"

  "No, not exactly. We are helping you find her killer, but that isn't what brought Rialto to you. The dreams did; the passion he felt in them."

  Aria could feel her skin heating up, imagined it reddening, as she averted her eyes, focusing on the wooden boards beneath her feet.

  "It's all right, Aria. There is no need to be embarrassed. The dreams are only natural, seeing as how you two were meant to be joined."

  "You mean like married?"

  "Well . . . not exactly.” Seta turned to Christian for help.

  "Aria, Seta is trying to explain that the two of you were predestined to become one in blood and soul. There is a story older than she and I put together about vampires fated to mate and produce children. Under normal circumstances, children are not born to our kind, but these vampires fated to be together are special, chosen. Their children will grow to be great warriors, defenders of mankind. And one of them will save the world from eternal darkness."