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Darkness Unleashed




  DARKNESS UNLEASHED

  “Regan, you are certain?” Jagr demanded.

  Certain? No. She didn’t have a clue what was about to happen. Well, nothing beyond a great deal of pain when those huge fangs sank into her flesh.

  Thankfully, she was no coward, and if Jagr needed blood to get him up and moving, then by God, he was going to get blood.

  “Do you need an engraved invitation?” she taunted, not at all surprised when his mouth widened and his fangs slid smoothly into her wrist. Jagr was not a vampire to back down from a direct challenge. Regrettably, her plan had neglected one small detail.

  She was braced for pain. She was even braced for the necessity of ripping him forcibly from her flesh if he lost his head and tried to take more than she was willing to offer.

  What she wasn’t prepared for was the realization that far from painful, the sensation that jolted through her was one of intense, relentless pleasure.

  “Oh…” Her eyes drifted shut as she felt him suck deeply of her blood, every pull tightening the coiling bliss that was lodged in the pit of her stomach. Her entire body trembled, the same excitement that had set her on fire when he’d kissed her blazing through her body. Only this time it was more powerful, more driving, more…explosive. She was drowning, lost in the dark, intoxicating desire…

  Books by Alexandra Ivy

  WHEN DARKNESS COMES

  EMBRACE THE DARKNESS

  DARKNESS EVERLASTING

  DARKNESS REVEALED

  DARKNESS UNLEASHED

  Published by Zebra Books

  Darkness Unleashed

  ALEXANDRA IVY

  ZEBRA BOOKS

  KENSINGTON PUBLISHING CORP.

  http://www.kensingtonbooks.com

  Contents

  Prologue

  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

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Prologue

  Jagr knew he was creating panic in Viper’s exclusive nightclub. The elegant establishment with its crystal chandeliers and red velvet upholstery catered to the more civilized members of the demon-world. Jagr was anything but civilized.

  He was a six-foot-three vampire who had once been a Visigoth chief. But it wasn’t his braided, pale gold hair that fell nearly to his waist, or the ice-blue eyes that missed nothing and sent creatures with any claim to intelligence scurrying from his path. It wasn’t even the leather duster that flared about his hard body.

  No, it was the cold perfection of his stark features, and the hint of feral fury that smoldered about him.

  Three hundred years of relentless torture had stripped away any hint of civility.

  Ignoring the assorted demons who tumbled over chairs and tables in an effort to avoid his long strides, Jagr concentrated on the two Ravens guarding the door to the back office. The hushed air of sophistication was giving him a rash.

  He was a vampire who preferred the solitude of his lair hidden beneath the streets of Chicago, surrounded by his vast library, secure in the knowledge that not a human, beast, or demon possessed the ability to enter.

  Not that he was the total recluse that his vampire brothers assumed.

  No matter how powerful or skilled or intelligent he might be, he understood that his survival depended on understanding the ever changing technology of the modern world. And beyond that was the necessity of being able to blend in with current society.

  Even a recluse had to feed.

  Tucked in the very back of his lair was a plasma TV with every channel known to humankind, and the sort of nondescript clothing that allowed him to cruise through the seedier neighborhoods without causing a riot.

  The most lethal hunters knew how to camouflage themselves while on the prowl.

  But this place…

  He’d rather be staked than mince and prance around like a jackass.

  Damn Styx. The ancient vampire had known that only a royal command could force him to enter a crowded nightclub. Jagr made no secret of his disdain for the companionship of others.

  Which begged the question of why the Anasso would choose such a setting to meet.

  In a mood foul enough to fill the vast club with an icy chill, Jagr ignored the two Ravens who stood on sentry duty near the back office, and lifting his hand, allowed his power to blow the heavy oak door off its hinges.

  The looming Ravens growled in warning, dropping their heavy capes, which hid the numerous swords, daggers, and guns attached to various parts of their bodies.

  Jagr’s step never faltered. Styx wouldn’t let his pet vampires hurt an invited guest. At least not until he had what he needed from Jagr.

  And even if Styx didn’t call off the guards…well, hell, he’d been waiting centuries to be taken out in battle. It was a warrior’s destiny.

  There was a low murmur from inside the room, and the two Ravens grudgingly allowed him to pass with nothing more painful than a heated glare.

  Stepping over the shattered door, Jagr paused to cast a wary glance about the pale blue and ivory room. As expected, Styx, a towering Aztec who was the current king of vampires, was consuming more than his fair share of space behind a heavy walnut desk, his bronzed features unreadable. Viper, clan chief of Chicago, who, with his silver hair and dark eyes looked more like an angel than lethal warrior, stood by his shoulder.

  “Jagr.” Styx leaned back in the leather chair, his fingers steepled beneath his chin. “Thank you for coming so promptly.”

  Jagr narrowed his frigid gaze. “Did I have a choice?”

  “Careful, Jagr,” Viper warned. “This is your Anasso.”

  Jagr curled his lips, but he was wise enough to keep his angry words to himself. Even presuming he could match Styx’s renowned power, he would be dead before ever leaving the club if he challenged the Anasso.

  “What do you want?” he growled.

  “I have a task for you.”

  Jagr clenched his teeth. For the past century he’d managed to keep away from the clan who called him brother, never bothering others and expecting the same in return. Since he’d been foolish enough to allow Cezar to enter his lair, it seemed he couldn’t get rid of the damn vampires.

  “What sort of task?” he demanded, his tone making it clear he didn’t appreciate playing the role of toady.

  Styx smiled as he waved a slender hand toward a nearby sofa. It was a smile that sent a chill of alarm down Jagr’s spine.

  “Have a seat, my friend,” the Anasso drawled. “This might take a while.”

  For an insane moment, Jagr considered refusing the order. Before being turned into a vampire, he had been a leader of thousands. While he had no memory of those days, he had retained all his arrogance. Not to mention his issue with authority.

  Thankfully, he had also kept the larger portion of his intelligence.

  “Very well, Anasso, I have rushed to obey your royal command.” He lowered his hard bulk onto a delicate brocade sofa, inwardly swearing to kill the designer if it broke. “What do you demand of your dutiful subject?”

  Viper growled deep in his throat, the air tingling with his power. Jagr never blinked, although his muscles coiled in preparation.

  “Perhaps you should see to your guests, Viper,” Styx smoothly commanded. “
Jagr’s…dramatic entrance has disrupted your charming entertainment, and attracted more attention than I desire.”

  “I will not be far.” Viper flashed Jagr a warning glare before disappearing through the busted door.

  “Is he auditioning for a place among your Ravens?” Jagr mocked.

  Pinpricks of pain bit into his skin as Styx released a small thread of his power.

  “So long as you remain in Chicago, Viper is your clan chief. Do not make the mistake of forgetting his position.”

  Jagr shrugged. He wasn’t indifferent to the debt and loyalty owed to Viper. The truth was he was in a pissy mood, and being stuck in the chichi nightclub where there wasn’t a damned thing to kill beyond a bunch of dew fairies wasn’t helping.

  “I can hardly forget when I am forever being commanded to involve myself in affairs that do not concern me, and more importantly, do not interest me.”

  “What does interest you, Jagr?” He held Styx’s searching gaze with a flat stare. At last the king grimaced. “Like it or not, you offered your sword when Viper accepted you into his clan.”

  He didn’t like it, but he couldn’t argue. Being taken into a clan was the only means of survival among the vampires.

  “What would you have of me?”

  Styx rose to his feet to round the desk, perching on a corner. The wood groaned beneath the considerable weight, but didn’t crack. Jagr could only assume Viper had had all the furniture reinforced.

  Smart vampire.

  “What do you know of my mate?” Styx abruptly demanded.

  Jagr stilled. “Is this a trap?”

  A wry smile touched the Anasso’s mouth. “I’m not a subtle vampire, Jagr. Unlike the previous Anasso, I have no talent for manipulating and deceiving others. If there comes a day when I feel the need to challenge you, it will be done face-to-face.”

  “Then why are you asking me about your mate?”

  “When I first met Darcy, she knew nothing of her heritage. She had been fostered by humans from the time she was a babe, and it wasn’t until Salvatore Giuliani, the current king of the Weres, arrived in Chicago that we discovered she was a pureblood who had been genetically altered.”

  Jagr flicked a brow upward. That was a little tidbit that the king had kept secret.

  “Genetically altered?”

  “The Weres are increasingly desperate to produce healthy offspring. The pureblood females have lost their ability to control their shifts during the full moon, which makes it all but impossible to carry a litter to full term. The Weres altered Darcy and her sisters so they would be incapable of shifting.”

  Jagr folded his arms over his chest. He didn’t give a damn about the worthless dogs.

  “I presume you will tell me why you have summoned me, before the sun rises?”

  Styx narrowed his golden eyes. “That depends entirely on your cooperation, my brother. I can make this meeting last as long as I desire.”

  Jagr’s lips twitched. The one thing he respected was power. “Please continue.”

  “Darcy’s mother gave birth to a litter of four daughters, all genetically altered, and all stolen from the Weres shortly after their births.”

  “Why were they stolen?”

  “That remains a mystery Salvatore has never fully explained.” There was an edge in the Anasso’s voice that warned he wasn’t pleased by the lack of information. “What we do know is that one of Darcy’s sisters was discovered in St. Louis, being held captive by an imp named Culligan.”

  “He’s fortunate that she’s incapable of shifting. A pureblood could rip out the throat of an imp.”

  “From what Salvatore could discover, the imp managed to get his hands on Regan when she was just a child, and kept her locked in a cage coated with silver. That is when he wasn’t torturing her for a quick buck.”

  Torture.

  The Dutch masterpieces hanging on the walls crashed to the floor at Jagr’s flare of fury.

  “Do you wish the Were rescued?”

  Styx grimaced. “Salvatore already freed her from Culligan, although the damned imp managed to slip away before Salvatore could eat him for dinner.”

  Jagr’s brief flare of hope that the night wasn’t a total waste was brought to a sharp end. Slaughtering bastards who tormented the weak was one of his few pleasures.

  “If the woman was rescued, why do you need me?”

  Styx straightened, his bulk consuming a considerable amount of the office space.

  “Salvatore’s only interest in Regan was installing her as his queen and primary breeder. He is determined to secure his power base by providing a mate who is capable of restoring the purebloods’ dwindling population. Unfortunately, once he freed Regan, he discovered she was infertile.”

  “So she was of no use.”

  “Precisely.” The towering Aztec was careful to keep his composure, but even an idiot could sense he wouldn’t mind making a snack of the Were king. “That is why he contacted Darcy. He intended to send Regan to Chicago so she could be under my protection until he established her in the St. Louis Were pack.”

  “And?”

  “And she managed to escape while he was conferring with the local pack master.”

  Jagr grunted in disgust. “This Salvatore is pathetically inefficient. First he allows the imp to escape, and then the woman. It’s little wonder the Weres are declining in number.”

  “Let us hope you are more efficient.”

  Jagr rose to his feet, his expression cold. “Me?”

  “Darcy is concerned for her sister. I want her found and brought to Chicago.”

  “The woman has made it fairly obvious she doesn’t want to come.”

  “Then it will be your job to convince her.”

  Jagr narrowed his gaze. He wasn’t a damned Mary Poppins. Hell, he would eat Mary Poppins for breakfast.

  “Why me?”

  “I’ve already sent several of my best trackers to St. Louis, but you’re my finest warrior. If Regan has managed to run into trouble, you will be needed to help rescue her.”

  There were no doubt worse things than chasing after a genetically altered Were who clearly didn’t want to be found, but he couldn’t think of one off the top of his head.

  In the outer room, the sounds of a string quartet resumed, along with soft “ohhs” and “ahhs” from the audience as the dew fairies continued their delicate dance. Jagr could suddenly think of one thing worse than chasing after the Were.

  Remaining trapped in this hellhole.

  “Why should I do this?” he rasped.

  “Because what makes Darcy happy makes me happy.” Styx moved until they were nose to nose, his power digging into Jagr’s flesh. “Clear enough?”

  “Painfully clear.”

  “Good.” Styx stepped back and released his power. Slipping his hand beneath his leather coat, he pulled out a cell phone and tossed it to Jagr. “Here. The phone has the numbers of the brothers who are searching for Regan, as well as contacts in St. Louis. It also has my private line. Contact me when you find Regan.”

  Jagr pocketed the phone and headed for the door. There was no point in arguing. Styx was struggling to force the vampires out of their barbaric past, but it wasn’t a freaking democracy.

  Not even close.

  “I will leave within the hour.”

  “Jagr.”

  Halting at the door, Jagr turned with a searing fury. “What?”

  Styx didn’t so much as flinch. “Do not forget for one moment that Regan is precious cargo. If I discover you have left so much as a bruise on her pretty skin, you won’t be pleased with the consequences.”

  “So I’m to track down a rabid Were who doesn’t want to be found, and haul her to Chicago without leaving a mark?”

  “Obviously the rumors of your extraordinary intelligence were not exaggerated, my brother.”

  With a hiss, Jagr turned and stormed through the shattered opening. “I’m not your brother.”

  Viper monitored Jagr’s
furious exit with a wary gaze.

  Actually it hadn’t gone as bad as he had feared. No death or mutilation. Not even a maiming.

  Always a plus.

  Still, he knew Jagr too well. Of all his clansmen, he had always known that the ancient Visigoth was the most feral. Understandable after what he’d endured, but no less dangerous. He was beginning to regret having brought the tortured vampire to Styx’s attention.

  Slipping past the seated demons who were once again enthralled with the dew fairies, Viper returned to the office, finding Styx staring out the window.

  “I have a bad feeling about this,” he muttered, his gaze taking in his priceless paintings, lying shattered on the floor.

  Styx turned, his arms folded over his chest. “A premonition? Shall I contact the Commission and inform them they have a potential Oracle?”

  Viper arched a warning brow. “Only if you want me to lock you in a cell with Levet for the next century.”

  Styx gave a sharp bark of laughter. “A nice bluff, but Levet has decided that he is the only one capable of tracking Darcy’s missing sister. He left for St. Louis as soon as Salvatore informed me that Regan had slipped from his grasp.”

  “Perfect, now we have two loose cannons charging about Missouri. I’m not sure the natives will survive.”

  “You believe Jagr is a loose cannon?”

  Viper grimaced, recalling the night that Jagr had appeared at his lair requesting asylum. He had encountered any number of lethal demons, most of whom wanted nothing more than to kill him. He’d never, however, until that night, looked into the eyes of another and seen only death.

  “I think beneath all that grim control, he’s a step from slipping into madness.”

  “And yet you allowed him to become a clansman.”

  Viper shrugged. “When he petitioned, my first inclination was to refuse. I could sense he was not only dangerously close to the edge, but that he was powerful and aggressive enough to challenge me as clan chief. He’s a leader by nature, not a follower.”