At the same time, her father’s roar of anguish filled the air.
Moving almost quicker than Kaitlyn’s eyes could follow, Zack ripped the throat from one vampire, the heart from the other, and then he was kneeling at her side, across from her father.
“Elena!” Drake called her name, his voice thick with unshed tears. “Elena.”
Her eyelids flickered open, her gaze unfocused. “Drake?”
“I am here.” He clutched her hand in his. “You will be all right. I will take you to the hospital. . . .”
“I’m dying. . . .”
“No! Do not leave me!” He bit into his wrist, then held it to her lips. “Drink.”
But it was too late. Her eyelids fluttered down and her head fell back against Kaitlyn’s arm.
“Elena!” Eyes filled with torment, Drake looked at Zack. “I cannot turn her, but you can.”
“Would she want that?” Liliana asked, coming to stand behind Drake.
“I do not care,” Drake said. “I cannot lose her.”
“We discussed it,” Zack said. “She and I.”
“What?” Drake stared at him. “When?”
“A while back. She asked me if I’d ever turned anyone. Said she was just curious.”
“Do it,” Drake said. “We do not have time to discuss it. She is dying.”
Zack glanced up at Scherry, who was standing to his left. “I’ve only done it once before.”
“If you fail, she will be no worse off than she is now,” Drake said, his voice tinged with desperation. “I will do anything you ask of me, give you anything you desire, if you will do this for me.”
With a sigh of resignation, Zack took Elena into his arms. He hesitated a moment, suddenly torn by uncertainty. He had turned Scherry and it had been hit and miss. It was one thing to drink from healthy prey, another to drink from the sick, the dying. If he took too much, and that was a risk with those who were sick, it could be fatal. Completely drained, they lacked the strength to fight their way back. Could he live with himself if he caused Elena’s death? Could he live with himself if there was a chance he could save her and he didn’t take it? She didn’t seem to be breathing. Her heartbeat was faint, erratic.
Kaitlyn placed her hand on his arm. “Please, Zack.”
Murmuring, “Forgive me,” he bent his head to Elena’s neck and drank.
Kaitlyn held her breath as what little color was left drained from her mother’s face. Was Zack taking too much? Even with her preternatural hearing, she could barely detect her mother’s heartbeat.
Looking up, she met her father’s gaze. She had never seen him look so distraught, knew it would kill him as surely as a stake through the heart if her mother died.
After what seemed like forever but was only a few minutes, Zack lifted his head. Kaitlyn watched, unblinking, as he bit his wrist, then held the bleeding wound to her mother’s lips.
“Drink,” he said, stroking her throat. “Elena Sherrad, if you want to live, you must drink.”
Kaitlyn leaned forward, her whole being focused on her mother’s face, willing her to drink.
“Elena!” Drake took her hand in his. “Elena! Come back to me!”
Tears burned Kaitlyn’s eyes when she looked at Zack.
Zack shook his head. “The rest is up to her.” He stroked her throat again. “Elena, drink.” It was not a request this time, but a command.
“She isn’t moving,” Kaitlyn said. Had they waited too long? Had Zack taken too much?
“Dammit, Elena,” Drake said, his voice thick with unshed tears. “I forbid you to leave me!”
At the sound of Drake’s voice, Elena slowly licked the blood from her lips. And then she grabbed Zack’s arm.
Drake blew out a sigh of relief.
“You did it!” Kaitlyn exclaimed. She threw her arms around Zack and kissed his cheek. “Thank you!”
“Yes,” Drake said, never taking his gaze from his wife’s face. “Thank you.”
Zack nodded. Would Drake still be grateful, he wondered, if he knew that his wife and Zack now shared a bond of blood that could not be broken?
Chapter 41
“What happens now?” Drake asked, lifting Elena into his arms. After feeding, she had closed her eyes, seemingly unconscious.
“She’ll sleep the rest of the night,” Zack replied. “When she wakes tomorrow night, she’ll be a vampire, with a new vampire’s thirst.”
Drake nodded.
“You’ll need to watch her closely when she feeds the first few times. It’s not always easy for fledglings to feed without draining their prey. Maybe you already know that.”
“Indeed.”
“Take her back to the hotel. I’ll clean up the mess here.”
“I will help you,” Stefan said.
“I thought you were dead,” Zack remarked, grinning.
“Not quite.” Stefan glanced around the church. “We can dispose of the bodies, but I do not know how we will remove the blood from the floor.”
“Yeah, that might be a problem,” Zack agreed.
“I’ll take care of the mess on the floor,” Scherry said.
“How’s your arm?” Zack asked.
She stretched it out and rotated it back and forth. “Good enough to clean up the blood,” she said, grinning.
“I will help you, if you like,” Liliana offered.
“Great.”
“We’d best get busy,” Zack suggested. “We’ve got a lot of work to do.”
“What are we going to do with the bodies?” Kaitlyn asked.
“We’ll take them up in the mountains,” Zack said, “and leave them there for the sun to find.”
Kaitlyn looked at her father. “Who were they?”
“Three of them were Nadiya’s sons. I did not recognize the others.”
Kaitlyn shook her head. What a waste. Nadiya was dead, and all her sons with her. Had Nadiya survived, Kaitlyn wondered if the woman would have considered the blood of all her sons well spent.
“Revenge is a terrible thing,” Stefan remarked, hoisting one of the bodies over his shoulder. “The worst of it is, Florin brought his death on himself with his treachery against our father. There was nothing to avenge.”
It took several trips to transport all of the bodies to a place where they wouldn’t be found before sunrise. Standing between Zack and Stefan, Kaitlyn felt a moment of remorse for those who had needlessly died, but it was quickly swept away when she recalled how close she had come to losing her mother.