Read the
prologue and first two chapters of THE VAMPIRE BRACELET!
The
Vampire Bracelet is the second story in the Blood Genies series, erotic romance
novellas featuring vampire hybrids (genies/vampires) living inside antique
jewelry and granting wishes for the exchange of blood.
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Prologue
“Tell me more about them,”
eight-year-old Marie North said. She
loved hearing about gen-vamps. She’d
been taught that all sorts of “mythical” beings were real, either existing in
other realms or living undetected among humans.
But gen-vamps were her favorite because Uncle Darrin actually owned a
handful of them.
“I have six in total,” he said.
“And all of them live inside of
antique jewelry and grant wishes for the exchange of blood?” She knew they were sometimes called blood
genies because of their feeding habits.
“That’s right, Baby Girl,” he
replied, using the nickname he’d given her.
“I have three who grant wishes to women and three who offer their magic
to men. But the wishes are only
temporary. They only last for two
weeks.”
“How come?”
“ Gen-vamps aren’t strong
enough to grant lifelong wishes.”
“Because they’re hybrids?” she
asked. Uncle Darrin had mentioned it the
last time he’d told her a gen-vamp story.
Not only that, but he trusted her to keep all of this a secret. She’d vowed to never, ever tell anyone. And she wasn’t going to, either.
“Yes,” he confirmed. “Because they’re hybrids. But they used to be human, like us.”
She spouted off her
knowledge. “Then they got turned into
vampires. And after that, they got made
into gen-vamps and their hearts started beating again. But they still don’t have a pulse.” She considered them only sort of dead,
whereas vamps were full-on corpses. She
angled her head. “Who made them into
gen-vamps, Uncle?”
“ A big bad genie king named
Mathieu. He’s the most powerful ruler in
his realm. He has thousands of gen-vamps
under his control, and their energy is what makes him so powerful.”
She pictured Mathieu with a
gnarled face, deep-sunken eyes, and pointy fingernails. She also imagined him living in a dark and
scary castle surrounded by ghostly trees and gray clouds. She gave a little shiver. “I don’t like him.”
“ Most of the gen-vamps in my
care don’t like him, either. Especially
Simone.”
“What kind of jewelry does she
live in?”
“A diamond ring.”
“Does she grant wishes to men
or women?”
“Women.”
“Is she nice?”
“Truthfully? She’s rather fierce. She liked being a vampire, so being turned
into a gen-vamp made her angry.”
“Is she pretty?”
“She’s gorgeous. But she has a temper. Mostly it’s directed at Mathieu. He’s the source of her contempt.”
“Marie didn’t blame Simone for
hating that horrible genie king. “Who
else grants wishes to women?”
“Anthony and Nicholas. They’re brothers. Anthony lives in a ruby pendant and Nicholas
inhabits an emerald bracelet. They
weren’t vampires for very long. In fact,
it was Simone who made them into vampires.”
“Really? When?”
“In 1950. By then, Simone had been a vampire
for centuries. She’s much, much older
than they are. But none of that matters
now. A few months after she turned them
into vampires, Mathieu made all three of them into gen-vamps.”
“What do Anthony and Nicholas
look like?”
“They’re dashing. You’d think they were twins, but they’re
not. Anthony is older.”
She pictured them like fairy
tale princes, only with fangs. She also
imagined them in ruffled shirts, velvet-trimmed trousers, and sashes tied
around their waists. Maybe around their
heads, too. “Are they angry like
Simone?”
“No. Anthony is strong and helpful. And Nicholas is charming and clever. He gives me the most trouble, even more than
Simone.”
“How come?”
“Because he flirts with the
women he grants wishes to. He plays
practical jokes on me, too, when he can get away with it. He can be a regular pain in the butt.” He smacked the side of his rump to make his
point. “But Nicholas makes me laugh,
too.” Even now, he was chuckling.
Marie laughed, as well. “Which one do you think I’d like
better?” She leaned forward, eager to
hear his response. “Anthony or Nicholas?”
“Either one.”
She decided that she liked
Anthony better because he sounded more like a prince. Fairy tale heroes, especially real ones,
weren’t supposed to be pains in the butt, even if they drank people’s blood. “They can’t kill anyone, can they? Or turn someone into what they are?” She already knew the answer was no, but she
liked being reassured.
“No, Baby Girl. Hybrids can’t do those things.”
“Can they guzzle someone’s
blood and make that person weak?”
Sometimes she guzzled grape juice.
She never pretended it was blood, though. That would be gross.
“Yes, they can do that. But they aren’t supposed to.”
She doubted that Simone or
Nicholas would follow the rules. Anthony
was different. She trusted him. “Have you ever let any of the gen-vamps drink
from you?”
“Only when they haven’t fed
for a while. I don’t make a habit of
it.”
She touched the side of her
neck, poking around to find her vein.
“Does it hurt?”
“A little. But mostly it makes you woozy. Like when adults get drunk or take more
medication than they should.”
She didn’t know anything about
that stuff. But she figured it was
similar to when she spun herself around on the grass and toppled over. That was one of her favorite games. But one time she cut herself on a sprinkler
and that wasn’t the least bit fun. The
sight of her own blood had made her feel sick.
When they stopped talking,
Marie wondered what type of wish was important enough to let a gen-vamp make
you bleed on purpose. None, she
decided. She would never want anything
that badly.
Not even when she was grown
up.
Chapter One
Marie entered the Chakra
Circle, the magic shop Uncle Darrin owned.
She was so nervous she could barely think straight. But she slapped a smile on her face. Desperate times called for desperate
measures. She just hoped Darrin understood.
“Hey, Baby Girl.” He came around the front counter, greeting
her the way he always did.
She embraced him with a loving
hug. He was pushing seventy, but he was
as striking as ever, with sharp-boned features, longish white hair, and bronzed
skin.
She stepped back and lifted
the takeout bag she carried. “As
promised, I brought lunch. Chicken
enchiladas for you. Vegetarian tacos for
me. Sides of rice and beans for both of
us.” She rattled the bag. “Chips and salsa, too.”
“Great. I’m starving.” He closed the shop, putting a clock sign in
the window that said it would reopen in an hour.
They went to the tiny break
room and sat across from each other at a cramped table. She set up the food, and he dived in with
gusto. She ate cautiously, so as not to
give herself a belly ache. When she got
anxious, her stomach acted up.
“Uncle?”
“Hmm?”
“I have a favor to ask.”
“Sure. What is it?”
A deep breath. A quick burst of words. “May I borrow a gen-vamp?”
He made a worried
expression. “Are you in some sort of
trouble? You know I only loan them to
people who are truly in need of their magic.”
“I’m not in trouble. But my life isn’t going as planned. I want to get married and start a family.”
“That’s what this is
about? You and your boyfriend?”
“I’m certain that Keith would
make a great husband. He just needs a
push in the right direction.”
“The wishes only last for two
weeks,” he reminded her.
“I know.”
“Then tell me, what exactly
are you trying to accomplish?”
“My wish would be to have
Keith propose within those two weeks and let the rest of it happen
naturally.”
“The rest of it? You mean the wedding itself?” He sat back in his chair. “A legitimate marriage with a magic-induced
engagement? Something isn’t right with
that picture.”
“Please, Uncle. I’m almost forty. My biological clock is ready to bust.”
“You’re thirty-five. You’ve got plenty of time.”
“Not to have babies. It gets tougher the older you get.”
He sighed. “I’d be thrilled for you to have a family.
But as much I hate to say this, I’m not convinced that Keith is the right man
for you.”
She frowned. “Why not?”
“Because if he wanted to marry
you, he would have proposed by now.”
“I told you, he just needs a
nudge. A lot of men do.”
“Yes, but are you sure he’s
the one? Love should be wild and
consuming. You and Keith seem more like
friends than claw-each-other-to-death lovers.”
Claw? Death?
Was he serious? Her uncle wasn’t
qualified to dole out romantic advice.
He’d never even gotten close to walking down the aisle. “There’s plenty of spark in our
relationship. And there’s nothing wrong
with marrying your best friend.”
“If he wants to marry you.”
She didn’t reply and during
the quiet, he continued to eat. Still
concerned about her nerves, she did little more than pick at her meal. She hated being single. Everyone in her social circle was married and
had kids. With each year that passed,
she felt more and more like a spinster, especially when her friends went on
family outings together.
Finally she said, “I love
Keith, and he loves me.” Their
relationship wasn’t wild and consuming, but it was solid and true. “We’re right for each other.”
Darrin didn’t look
convinced.
She tried a different
approach. “Give me a chance to prove you
wrong. Loan me a gen-vamp and let me
make my wish.” Cradling her arms, she
made a rocking-baby motion. “I’ll name
my first-born son after you.”
He smiled, laughed a
little. “That’s quite a bargain.”
She released the imaginary
infant. Funny how she’d changed. How many times during her youth had she
claimed that nothing would ever push her in the direction of a blood genie
wish? “I want to have a family more than
I’ve ever wanted anything.”
“I know you do.”
Marie perked up. She could tell that he was considering
it. She could see the concentration in
his eyes, the melting resolve.
“All right,” he said.
She grinned. This was like Christmas, only better. She’d never received a holiday gift of this
magnitude. “Thank you, Uncle.”
He finished his food. “You can borrow Nicholas.”
Nicholas? “Why can’t I have Anthony?” Her childhood favorite. The one she trusted.
“Anthony isn’t a gen-vamp
anymore. He’s mortal now.”
“Oh, my goodness, how did he
manage that?”
“There was a spell on the ruby
pendant that freed him. It was enacted a long time ago, but none of us knew
about it until it recently. The spell
was contingent on him finding true love, which he did.”
Well, then. That explained why Darrin was being so
opinionated about matters of the heart.
“I’m glad Anthony is free and that he found someone.” It made him seem even more like the prince
she’d imagined, only now he was living happily-ever-after with his princess.
Darrin said, “The same spell
was placed on the ring and the bracelet, too.
Luckily there isn’t anything Mathieu can do about it. He’s pissed, of course, but the spell is
beyond his control. ”
“How does Nicholas feel about
the spell?”
“He’s eager to become
mortal. I think he would take whoever
came along if it meant getting out of the emerald bracelet for good. I warned him that true love can’t be
rushed. But he thinks he knows it all.”
Marie frowned. “He better not look my way. I don’t need a supernatural creature trying
to romance me.”
“Nicholas isn’t a fool. He isn’t going to pursue a woman who wants to
marry another man. He’ll flirt with
you. He’ll probably drive you nuts with it. But it won’t mean anything.”
“I’d still rather not deal
with him.” She contemplated her
options. “What about Simone?” The fierce female. That wasn’t appealing, either. But at least Simone wouldn’t make a pest of
herself.
“Simone is on loan to someone
else.”
“Then I guess I have no choice
but to take Nicholas. I want to make my
wish. Today, if possible.”
“Are you sure?”
“Yes.”
He stood up. “Then wait here.”
He left the room, and she
cleared the table, keeping busy. She’d
never met any of the gen-vamps. She’d
never even seen their jewelry. This
would be a first for her, all the way around.
A short while later, Darrin
returned with the bracelet. The elegant
design shimmered with diamond-encrusted emeralds, and the center stone, the
brightest of the emeralds, was adorned with a white-gold cross.
He said, “I explained the
situation to Nicholas. I told him that
you were my niece and I relayed your wish about the proposal to him. He’ll appear to you after you put the bracelet
on.”
“You spoke to him through
it?” That was something she’d never
considered. “Can he hear us right
now? And see us?”
Her uncle nodded, and she
tried to keep from being self-conscious.
The sudden knowledge that a gen-vamp was watching and listening made her
feel strange.
“Do you want me to go over the
rules before he appears?” Darrin asked.
Marie shook her head. She was too anxious to keep chattering. Besides, she knew the gist of it. She would have to wear the bracelet for the
next two weeks. She couldn’t remove it,
not even to bathe. She would also have to let Nicholas feed from her each
night. That was going to be the tough
part. The idea of allowing him to drink
her blood roiled her already sensitive stomach. But at least he couldn’t turn her into what he
was. Or attempt to kill her.
She fastened the bracelet to
her wrist, and a sparkling green mist floated out of the center stone and
manifested into a man.
Nicholas, in the flesh,
staring straight at her.
Chapter Two
Marie’s heart punched her
chest. Although Nicholas was immortal,
he looked about her age, with tousled dark hair, hazel eyes, a bad-boy smile,
and a hot-as-sin body clothed in a black shirt and slim-fitting jeans. No scarves, no headdress, no genie attire from
her childhood imaginings.
A gap of sexy silence passed
between them. Or that was how it felt to
her. But maybe she was reading more into
it because he was so gorgeous. She’d
expected handsome, but not the holy-fucking-hell kind.
“Hello, Marie.” His voice was as devilish as the rest of
him. “It’s nice to meet you.”
She could little more than
reply, “You, too.”
He gave a slight bow. “I’m at your service.”
She was glad he hadn’t offered
to shake her hand. She didn’t want him
to touch her, not until it was absolutely necessary. Already the main artery in her neck was
pulsing, from fear, no doubt. It
certainly wasn’t from a latent fantasy to be fed upon. Blood still grossed her out.
Didn’t it? Yes, absolutely. His hotness hadn’t changed that.
He said, “So you want your
boyfriend to propose. Keith, isn’t it?”
She nodded, and another stream
of silence sizzled by. She didn’t like
the effect he had on her. She wanted him
to stop staring. But no such luck. His gaze remained riveted to hers.
He said, “You’re going to have
to give me verbal permission to feed.”
She answered quickly, her tone
jumpier than it should have been. “You
have my permission.”
“Then we’re all set, aren’t
we?”
“Yes, I suppose we are.” She shuffled her feet. He didn’t seem the slightest bit anxious. But
why would he? Taking blood in exchange
for wishes was his job. Besides, with
his supposed pain-in-the-butt personality, he was probably enjoying her
discomfort.
“I’ll come to your house
later.” He glanced at a clock on the
wall. “Let’s say, around nine?”
“That’s fine.” She didn’t need to provide her address
because he would be monitoring her from his connection to the bracelet, aware
of where she was at all times. And now
that they were face to face, the notion of being tracked by him heightened her
nerves. Was this how criminals felt when
they were under house arrest?
He angled his head. “You’re a pretty little thing. Your boyfriend is a lucky guy.”
She barely managed a polite,
“Thank you,” before he added, “I’ll bet you’re going to be a tasty treat,
too. Lip-smacking good.”
Damn him. She took a deliberate step back. There went his “gotcha” side.
Her uncle came to the
rescue. “Don’t act smart, Nicholas. Especially with my niece.”
“Sorry.” The smarty in question shrugged one shoulder
at a time. “I was just playing around.”
“I know,” Darrin replied. “Like you always do.” He turned to Marie. “Don’t let him intimidate you, Baby
Girl. He’s harmless.”
The gen-vamp grinned and
leaned against the wall. “My wisecracks
are worse than my bite.”
She suspected that his bite
was going to sting something awful.
Worse yet, he winked at her when Darrin wasn’t looking. Harmless, her foot. Already he was turning into a heap of
trouble, and she’d only known him for a few minutes.
She lifted her chin,
attempting to put him in his place. “I
would have preferred Simone over you.
But she was already on loan.”
Nicholas tapped a hand against
his heart. “You wound me, woman.”
“Yes, I can see how broken up
you are.”
“I am.” He flashed his lazy grin. “I’m dying inside. Oh, no, wait.
I’m already dead. And for the
record, you’re better off with me.
Simone has a raging temper.”
“So
I’ve heard.”
“I’ve dealt with it for
decades, sometimes in the most intimate of ways. Did you know that Simone and I are lovers?”
Marie started. She had no idea that they were bedmates. But it wasn’t the sort of thing Darrin would
have been compelled to tell her when she was a child, and now that she was older,
he probably hadn’t seen the point.
She said to Nicholas, “Your
sex life is none of my concern.”
“I don’t mind telling you
about it. You can tell me about yours,
too.”
Good Lord. “I’m not discussing something like that with
you.”
“But I want to talk, like
regular peeps.”
“Sorry to burst your bubble,
but you’re not a regular peep.”
“I will be.” The grin resurfaced. “Once I find the love of my life.”
“I can’t imagine anyone
falling for your baloney.”
“Someone will. I’m a great catch.”
Marie rolled her eyes. He was still slouched against the wall, like
a vampy James Dean, a rebel bloodsucker without a cause. She tossed his conceit back at him. “Gee, and so modest.”
“If you’ve got it, flaunt
it.” He stopped smiling. “So what’s this Keith fellow like?”
She wasn’t going to provide
information he could poke fun at. Of
course with his devious sense of humor, who knew what would strike him as
fodder? “He’s a musician.”
“Really? Well, what do you know?” He tunneled his fingers through his
already-messy hair. “So am I.”
As if she was going to believe
a convenient story like that. “You are not.”
“I am so”
“You are not,” she argued
again.
“Am, too.”
Darrin jumped into the
conversation. “Knock it off, both of
you.”
Nicholas wouldn’t drop
it. “Tell her I’m a musician.”
“Fine. He’s a musician.”
She turned to face her
uncle. “Is he really?”
“Yes, he is. And a damn good one.”
She backed down, easing the
bickering. Only it didn’t work.
Nicholas arrogantly said, “I
could play your boyfriend under the table.
I could play anyone under the table.”
Bicker back on. “You wish.”
“No, you wish,” he mimicked,
then laughed. “
You wish. Get it?”
Yes, she got it. But her wish didn’t have anything to do with
a play-off between the man she wanted to marry and the supernatural smartass
who was going to turn the next two weeks into a game or a duel or
whatever. “You’re annoying.”
“Likewise, Baby Cakes.” Before anyone could reprimand him for mocking
her nickname, he morphed into mist and circled the room.
Darrin shook his head. “I hope he does find love someday. I’ll be glad to be rid of him.”
Just then, Nicholas shaped
himself into a heart.
With a smiley face inside it.
Her uncle went ahead and
chuckled. Marie almost laughed, too, but
she caught herself, refusing to give the bloodsucker more attention than he
deserved.
She said goodbye to Darrin,
promising to keep in touch, and with the bracelet secured to her wrist, she
left the magic shop, dreading her next encounter with Nicholas.
# # #
Nicholas stood on Marie’s
doorstep. She lived in a suburban
neighborhood in Buena Park, California, just a hop, skip, and jump from where
the Movieland Wax Museum used to be. He
thought touristy-type places were cool, especially the Wax Museum, and he was
disappointed that it no longer existed.
Old Hollywood was part of his youth.
He’d grown up around the film industry.
He had good and bad memories of it.
But at least he’d been human then.
Nicholas didn’t like being immortal.
It was tedious and boring. He
would rather be part of a fast paced, live-and-die world.
He’d been thrilled to discover
that he could become a real person again.
So, by damn, he was on a quest to find “true” love, whatever the hell
that meant.
He frowned into the dark. Wasn’t
it just his luck that he couldn’t court Marie and force a love connection
between them? That the first assignment
he’d been given since learning about the spell was with a woman whose wish was
to become engaged to someone else?
This bites, he thought, no pun
intended.
He rang Marie’s doorbell,
making it chime longer than necessary.
At least he could have a little fun, making a nuisance of himself,
considering how easily she became riled.
She flung open the door and
the first thing out of her mouth was, “You’re late. You said nine, and it’s nine fifteen.”
“You need to chill, Baby
Cakes.”
“Stop calling me that.”
“I considered bringing you a
baloney sandwich.”
“To prove that I’m going to
have to put up with your baloney during the duration of my wish? Just so you know, I’m a vegetarian.”
“Lucky for me, I always liked
my meat rare. Bloody,” he added,
reminding her of his purpose. He flashed
his fangs, too, for the hell of it.
“Oh, my God. Don’t do that out here. Somebody might see you.” She grabbed his arm and pulled him into her
house. But she released him just as
quickly.
Not that it made a
difference. Her touch had gone straight
to his cock, shocking him senseless.
Nicholas flirted with mortals for the fun of it, not because they
stirred his desire. Gen-vamps weren’t prone to sexual yearnings
toward humans. Of course, his brother
had had a raging affair with the woman whose love had made him mortal. Was that a sign that Nicholas was supposed to
have an affair with Marie? That she was
the one?
Given the circumstances, he didn’t see how that was possible.
“Can we hurry, please?” she
asked.
“Hurry?”
“Get the feeding over
with.”
“I want to talk first.” Besides, he didn’t want to be quick about
it. He suspected that drinking from her
was going to be damned fine, and he would rather savor her blood than gulp it
down.
He glanced around and noticed
that she’d decorated with a western flair.
She collected American Indian artifacts, too, bows and arrows and the
like. Strong, powerful stuff. Nicholas was secretly impressed. But it fit her, he supposed, since she was
part Cherokee, like her uncle.
Of course she was a heck of a
lot prettier. He made a deliberate show
of checking her out: long dark hair, almond-shaped eyes, and pinup girl
curves. He’d always been a sucker for
shapely brunettes. In his day, Jane
Russell had been his ideal.
“Stop doing that,” she said.
“Doing what? Looking at you as if you’re my next
meal? Relax, we’ll get there.”
“The waiting is making me
phobic. I have a right to be impatient.”
“What about trying to rush
your boyfriend into marriage? Do you
have a right to be impatient about that, too?”
“Rush him? We’ve been together for five years.”
“Then he’s a wuss.”
“Excuse me?”
“A wuss. It’s slang for—”
“I know what it means. But you shouldn’t be calling him that.”
“It’s not my fault if that’s
what he is.” Curious to see the rest of
her house, he wandered down the hallway, peering into rooms.
She followed him. “Were you ever married when you were mortal?”
“No. But I didn’t string anyone along for five
years, either. Besides, I’m willing to
get married now.”
“Only so you can become mortal
again. Your sudden interest in love is
unethical.”
“If you were spending most of
your time inside of a bracelet, you’d be anxious, too.”
“Darrin would release you if
he could.”
“I know. But he can’t.” Jewelry owners didn’t have that kind of
power. “If I don’t find love, I’ll never
get out of that damned thing.”
She glanced at the bracelet,
but she didn’t say anything.
He continued down the hall and
entered her bedroom. She’d combined
woodsy furniture with feminine accents: mosquito netting draped around the bed
and a delicate array of perfume bottles displayed on the dresser.
With further interest, he
opened her walk-in closet and went inside.
Mostly what he saw were jeans, but she had some pretty dresses,
too. And cowboy boots galore, lined up
on a shelf.
“Do you ride?” he asked. “Or are these just a fashion statement?”
“I have a horse that I keep in
boarding.”
“I ride, too. English and western.”
“Have you ridden
recently? Or are you talking about when
you were mortal?”
“Fairly recently. Whenever I’m on a wish assignment and am free
from the bracelet, I try to use my time wisely and get my hobbies in.” Curious to touch her belongings, he picked up
a boot and pretended to sniff the leather.
“Lucky for you I don’t have a foot fetish.”
She shooed him out of her
closet. “Knock it off.”
“Spoilsport.” Keeping the momentum going, he strode over to
her bed. Then he took the liberty of
sliding the netting out of the way and turning down the quilt.
Her voice leaped out of her
throat. “What are you doing?”
“Seeing what type of sheets
you have. Oh, yeah, these are
nice.” He smoothed his hand across the
fabric. “Silk.”
“They’re satin.”
“Whatever. Let’s feed here.”
“In bed?” She gave him an incredulous look.
“When I drink your blood,
you’re going to feel as if you’re stoned or drunk or both.”
“I know what to expect.”
“Then wouldn’t you rather be
stretched out in bed when that happens?”
“I guess.” She clutched her blouse, as if the buttons
were threatening to pop, even though they were tightly fastened. “But you better behave.”
“I’m not going to try to
seduce you.” In spite of how deeply she
aroused him, he added, “I’m not interested in a woman who has her heart set on
another man.”
“Darrin said that you wouldn’t
waste your time on me.”
“And Darrin was right.” He lowered the top sheet. “Go on. Get comfy.”
She climbed in bed and lay
there as stiff as a scared-shitless board.
If he wasn’t so attracted to her, he would have laughed. But at the moment, he was all out of jokes. Heaven help him, but he wanted to seduce
her. He imagined fucking her lovely
little brains out.
As hard as he could.
2 comments:
HOLY MOLEY but I want this book!!! AM off to find it... ;)
Stacy Wilson
dragn_lady at yahoo dot com
Hope you enjoy it, Stacy! :)
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