- Home
- Tracy St. John
The Font
The Font Read online
THE FONT
A Vampire Erotic Romance
By
Tracy St. John
Smashwords Edition
© copyright May 2012, Tracy St. John
Cover art by Erin Dameron-Hill, © copyright May 2012
This is a work of fiction. All characters, events, and places are of the author’s
imagination and not to be confused with fact. Any resemblance to living persons or
events is merely coincidence.
This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Sneak Peek at Netherworld III: Once Bitten Twice Dead
Chapter 1
Elisha Midyet slipped through the throng in the vampire king’s hall. He nodded at the gathered, saying a word of greeting in response to hails and trying to make himself as inconspicuous as possible. He carefully controlled his thoughts, lest Heriolf read them and learn of tonight’s plans.
Still, he couldn’t quite suppress an inward sneer at the situation. Everything about tonight, about the last seven years, brought loathing to the fore. King. Hall. Swearing of fealty to the self-styled Lord of Southeast Georgia. Grandiose words for a grandiose ego. Elisha could only pray Heriolf’s high estimation of himself would be his ultimate undoing.
The ‘hall’ was actually once nothing more than a dining room. Large, yes, that must be admitted; big enough to serve great feasts like tonight’s. It had been built with an eye towards entertaining large parties. Elisha himself remembered hearing how the now extinct Seward family had entertained the most illustrious people of Savannah here. Their parties were legend two hundred and fifty years ago when Elisha had still breathed.
Once the Seward mansion had been grand and gorgeous. Now, had some intrepid soul braved the spindly pine woods smothered in shrouds of kudzu to reach it, they would discover a seemingly decaying wreck, though its outer face did retain a measure of its earlier glory.
Where a shipping magnate’s family had once dwelled beneath the sweltering light of the Georgia sun, now the vampires reigned. Elisha wondered what the Sewards would have thought of tonight’s menu, his watchful gaze glancing to the feast set up along one long wall. He looked away before hunger could cloud his purpose.
As for the king – Elisha’s lip curled at that title before he could stop himself – well, Heriolf was more a dictator, a vicious tyrant that no one could depose. Yet.
Despite telling himself not to be a fool, Elisha couldn’t help but glance at Heriolf seated at the head of the room. The intricately carved chair he squatted upon indeed resembled a throne. Despise him as he might, Elisha had to admit the 1300-year old vampire was an intimidating sight. Heriolf might have inspired legends of the Viking gods that he once prayed to. Well over six feet tall, the vampire lord was massive with muscle. He showed off his impressively chiseled chest and bulging arms by not wearing a shirt beneath a red cape, which closed at his throat with a gold clasp. A beast of a man, he commanded fear if not respect.
Crystalline blue eyes swept those who had gathered at his order. The forward part of his thick gray hair had been twined into thick braids to frame his craggy face; the rest hung loose down his back. A matching gray mustache and beard, also braided, made his fierce face even more bestial. Old by the standards of his day, Heriolf had still been hale and hearty when he’d been made vampire at the age of forty-eight.
Elisha felt bile rise in his throat and turned his eyes away.
His gaze found Mariel looking at him, her dark eyes warning him. Her black hair caught the red tints of firelight, making it almost seem as if it would burst into flame. Elisha took a breath and nodded. He noticed how her skin looked almost ruddy in the flickering light of the blaze in the mammoth fireplace and smaller flares of the sconces. There was no electricity fed to the house. At least Heriolf had shown that small bit of sense to stay off the humans’ power grid. It was one of the very few things he’d done right.
I must stop thinking of these things. If he looks at me, reads my thoughts…
Well, that would be calamitous. Not just for Elisha but for all the conspirators, and ultimately every vampire under Heriolf’s sway.
A brief lull in the hushed conversations of the gathered vampires alerted Elisha. He looked once more towards where the self-described king sat. A human woman had come into the room to stand at Heriolf’s side.
Her name was Naya Woods. Out of Heriolf’s hearing, many referred to her as the Font, the suggestion being that she was the source of Heriolf’s powers. Powers he possessed beyond those of any other vampire. Powers that had allowed Heriolf to seize sole rulership over the once democratically controlled southeast Georgia sect. This suspicion that her blood had special properties had been borne out by a captured member of the king’s inner circle. Other than the fact that feeding on her had gifted Heriolf incalculable physical strength and the ability to read minds, nothing of note was known about her.
Taken piece by piece, she was not a beauty. Her pale blond hair, reaching to her waist, was too flyaway and untamed. Her eyes, as green as the ubiquitous pine needles of Georgia, were too large and too round to balance her tiny chin. Her nose was long and straight, and her lips, while well-formed, were thin slashes of pink. Her body was so willowy as to make her appear taller than she actually was; especially in the sweeping gown she wore tonight, its green skirt that matched her eyes reaching the marble floor. There was an aloof restraint in her demeanor that suggested she was above the pettiness of the world around her, but gazing at her for only a few seconds told the observer this regal bearing was but a mask she wore. Beneath it, there was a nervous fluttering of fingers, a jerkiness of the darting eyes that took in everything, and a tension in her stance that spoke of a willingness to take flight. She was at her heart a wild thing, as untamed as the floating froth of hair that moved with its own life around her torso.
In parts, Naya was not quite pretty. But put together she was striking, lovely even, a pale will o’ the wisp that pleased the eye even as it confounded it. That such a dainty ethereal being gave Heriolf his power over all other vampires made her even more compelling.
“So she has emerged,” a quiet voice said in Elisha’s ear.
He turned his head slightly to look into Sebastian’s brown eyes. The other man’s dark skin glowed warmly in the firelight. Though Elisha was Sebastian’s sire, having brought his lifelong friend over to the ranks of the undead, there was no hint of rank between the two men. Not even Elisha’s father’s will that granted ownership of all the property and slaves had made him a master over Sebastian in more than name. Their friendship had been kept carefully hidden in the pre-Civil War South, to protect both. They had grown up together, white and black, side by side with no concern for their difference in color. Elisha had always considered Sebastian his equal. His brother.
“She is guarded as well as ever,” he now said to his friend. Two of Heriolf’s musclebound guards, their fangs showing to intimidate, had entered the room with Naya and stood near her.
Two vampires Elisha had been waiting for entered the
room from the direction of the mansion’s foyer. They flashed quick looks towards him and Sebastian and then melded seamlessly into the growing crowd.
Sebastian’s deep tones were a pleasing rumble in Elisha’s ear. “She will be ours, and many wrongs will be avenged.”
“Watch your thoughts, Sebastian. It will take but one slip and all our hopes will die.”
“Along with us. I know.” With that, the other man slipped away.
Elisha resumed roaming through the crowd, surreptitiously keeping Naya within his peripheral vision. He never let her out of his sight.
* * * *
As always, Naya carefully schooled her expression to remain expressionless. She despised these gatherings for many different reasons, but uppermost was the apprehension. She was sure the other vampires knew of the extra strength Heriolf took from her blood, of the added advantage it gave him over his enemies, many of whom posed as supplicants. She felt it in the covetous glances they darted her way when her guardian wasn’t looking.
She tried to feel safe. After all, Heriolf had provided her with his most trusted guards, big, dreadful men who had physical strength and fearlessness. And there was Heriolf himself, buttressed by the power of drinking her blood. He could read any mind but hers, and he could hold off a dozen other vampires. The amazing strength she gave him added to his warrior expertise, honed by centuries of battle. She was well protected.
Naya didn’t feel secure though. The dry leaf smell of vampire permeated the room, reminding her of how many owed Heriolf fealty. The others desperately wanted what she gave the vampire king. He had warned her time and again he was all that stood between her and death – or worse – at their fangs. They desired his position as ruler of their kind, and somehow they knew it was she who kept them in their place. Even now, she saw the calculating stare of a handsome vampire in the back of the group. Their eyes met, and he quickly turned away. She studied him, making a mental note of his appearance, just in case he should prove a problem later.
He looked of the colonial era, with his reddish-brown hair caught back in a ponytail that reached the bottom of his neck. He had an old-fashioned sense to him despite wearing a modern tan button-down shirt and jeans that outlined a powerful body. She couldn’t tell the color of his eyes, not at this distance, but their briefly exchanged look had assured her of their piercing quality. His perfectly chiseled features were marred only by a slight bump on the bridge of his nose, as if he’d broken it at some point in his life. Most injuries suffered after one became a vampire completely healed.
The handsome man smiled a little as he nodded to his fellow vampires, but there was a distrustful air that made the corners of his eyes tight. And underneath all of that was a sad world-weariness that she felt even from across the room. It was as if he retained the humanity long cast aside by other vampires. Heriolf in particular retained barely anything of human civilization in his personality.
Naya was startled to discover she compared the other man to the vampire lord and chastised herself for it. Heriolf was her guardian, her friend, the one person she could count on. He’d been good to her since the death of her parents, and she wished she could love him as she thought she should. He hadn’t spoken of it yet, but she knew he intended to make her his bride. He would soon give her his blood, making them eternal companions forever. If he was often brutal to vampire and human alike, well, she could understand his motivations. Vampires were a calculating and ambitious lot. For the peace of his kingdom, Heriolf was sometimes forced into doing what on the surface looked like despicable acts. And the human victims … well, that was harder to accept. But their blood was needed for vampire survival. It wasn’t necessary to kill them for that blood or to include the rapes that so often accompanied the devouring, but to keep his empire stable Heriolf had confided he must allow such predations. Must sometimes even indulge in those monstrous activities himself for appearances sake.
Naya couldn’t help but look towards the celebratory feast. Laid out in a long line were naked and bound humans, their cries muffled behind the gags stuffed into their mouths. Their wide, frightened eyes stared at the vampires milling about the hall.
The soon to be devoured were killers. Child rapists. People who cheated the elderly and sick. Heriolf had assured her the victims weren’t victims at all, but human monsters best culled from society in order to protect the innocent. Still it raised her gorge, knowing what they soon faced. The smell of old blood competed with that of vampire, a testament to many such feasts over the past years. Feasts usually presided over by Heriolf himself.
I will not find fault with him. He is my guardian. He took pity on me, an orphan with no money and nothing to offer, at least not that he knew of at the time. He loves me. I owe him everything, and I will not question my loyalty.
Her resolve bolstered, Naya moved closer to place her small hand on his where it rested on the chair’s arms. Heriolf’s wrist turned so that he could lace his fingers with hers. He smiled. “Quite the gathering tonight, isn’t it my dear?” His brilliant blue eyes swept over her, and she knew she did not imagine the heat in them. “You look lovely, as always.”
Naya forced a smile for Heriolf. She thought of him as a protective uncle. Knowing his thoughts were far more intimate made her insides churn. Just the feeling of his mouth at her throat as he took a few swallows of her blood each night made her squeamish. When he made her his bride, there would be much more than his fangs inside her, and she felt guilty over the curl of disgust in her guts at the thought.
She said, “Thank you.” Then, because she couldn’t help it, she confided, “I hate these things.”
His brows drew together a little, but his tone was indulgent. “No one will touch you. They all know they will die if they do.”
“May I retire as soon as the ceremony is over? Before the feast begins in earnest?”
He chuckled, seemingly a doting father with his cranky child. “Of course. I know how sentimental you are for the fodder, but I promise you they are little more than animals.”
Naya kept her eyes on his face, where she couldn’t see the frightened expressions of the naked humans waiting to be used to appease vampire hungers. Not looking at them made it easier to remember these were criminals, meeting a deserved justice. “Of course. It is for the best.”
She kept her gaze from the group of victims, feeling the stretch of every slowly passing second until she could leave the hall.
* * * *
Heriolf looked over his subjects, feeling Naya’s warmth so very close. She smelled of wooded paths, of autumn leaves, of wilderness. She’d been exploring the forest that surrounded the mansion again, and it worried him. She was vulnerable to the human slaves of his enemies, of which he was sure he had many. But keeping one of Naya’s kind indoors all of the time was an impossibility if he wanted her to remain sane. And he did like her with her faculties intact, wanted to keep her that way for as long as possible. Perhaps one day it would be necessary to imprison her, visiting only to take the blood that made him invincible. Should that day come he would lock her away without a speck of conscience, though he might have a moment of remorse. Willing fonts were so much better than those that fought him.
Still, the thought his enemies might target Naya nagged at Heriolf. That he had enemies, he was positive. Randalf’s disappearance was proof of that. His dedicated aide had been gone over a month now, and Heriolf felt sure he had been visited by his final death. But which of these who attended him now had been behind it? His ability to read minds had not uncovered the traitor in the vampires’ midst. Even now, as he listened to their thoughts one at a time hoping for a clue, there was no indication of who had taken Randalf.
Instead there were only thoughts of blood and of sex, the inane wanderings of insignificant minds. So bendable, so easy to terrorize and cajole were the other vampires. As long as the animal hungers were met, his subjects were as much sheep as the humans they’d once been. Heriolf’s takeover had been met with barely
an outcry, even when he’d destroyed the council members that had once ruled southeast Georgia. Not when he’d bribed so many into complacency. And those who had fought against him? He’d easily overpowered them, Naya’s blood giving him the strength and prior knowledge of those who would defy him. His rise to supremacy had been almost laughably easy.
But now Randalf was gone, an overt challenge to Heriolf’s rule. Well, the greed of his subjects remained one of Heriolf’s greatest tools, and he knew well how to use it.
He stood and the room fell silent at once. Without preamble he announced, “Many of you know my trusted aide Randalf. He has been missing for over a month now. I am eager to discover his whereabouts, so if any have heard anything, even just rumors, I am prepared to make it worth your while for sharing information with me.”
He gestured to the whimpering feast, enough for his subjects to glut themselves on. And they would tonight, drinking and fucking themselves into a thrall. It wouldn’t end until every last human on the buffet had been raped and sucked dry. “You will feed at my table for a year, if the information you share makes it so Randalf can be found.”
Excited murmurs rose in the room at this announcement. Heriolf never lacked for blood, his hunting done by others. To not have to chance human discovery, to not have to prowl all night long for sustenance at the edges of civilization would indeed be a luxury for most.
Then Heriolf offered what he knew would ultimately out the traitor. He nodded to Naya. “And a taste of the sweetest blood of all if someone brings him to me, or those who may have been foolish enough to take him away.”
Louder conversation, excitement lighting many a face. Despite his attempts to keep Naya’s true importance quiet, rumors had spread. For the Font’s part, she looked at Heriolf with shocked horror.