Dark Obsession Read online

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  So ugly, these bipedal creatures.

  Hairless in places they should have hair, and hairy in places that didn’t make sense.

  Why didn’t their creator spread their fur more proportionately over their body instead of clustering it on their heads, under their arms and between their legs? What was the point of that?

  Surely, this was why humanoids wore clothing—to cover their ugly naked flesh and ridiculous patches of hair. That, and to protect their fragile hides from the elements.

  Simca had seen a naked mole-rat once in East Africa, when she’d traveled there on one of her many journeys across almost two millennia with her warrior. It was the ugliest thing she’d ever seen, all pink and wrinkled and alien looking. Humanoids weren’t a whole lot more pleasing to the eye in Simca’s view.

  But her warrior was different. He was slightly less ugly than most.

  She appreciated his prowess in battle, the power and strength coiled in his long, lean limbs. There was not an ounce of softness in him, his muscles and sinews sharply defined under the thin layer of his skin. Veins raised visibly on his rock hard biceps, his steely forearms, meandering like tree roots over the backs of his large, long-fingered hands.

  She liked his hands. They gave her the most heavenly pleasure when he stroked them through her fur and smoothed them over her face.

  She’d seen him kill with them countless times. They were as effective at subduing prey as her claws.

  But they were always gentle with her. He knew just where to touch and tickle her to make her purr like a helpless kitten.

  Simca licked her chops with a hint of greediness.

  She was a carnivore. She was a predator. The sight of veins and succulent flesh always fired up her animal instincts, her bloodthirst and hunger.

  She’d had seven pounds of raw, bloody ribeye steaks for a light supper, but the sight of her warrior made her hungry again.

  It was strange, because she’d never wanted to take a bite out of any of the other humanoids she’d come across, other than to eliminate targets. But she’d always been tempted to sink her teeth into Maximus, naked mole-rat notwithstanding.

  So caught up in her bemusement, Simca didn’t notice when Maximus threw his towel viciously across the room, the dampness from his hair adding weight to the material to increase its velocity as it landed with a smack on her face.

  She yowled in surprise and swatted the towel off with a massive paw, then looked peevishly at her warrior and narrowed her eyes.

  Not cool, vampire.

  “Sorry,” Maximus bit out reflexively. “I wasn’t aiming at you.”

  Hands on hips, he continued to fume, his massive chest heaving with pent-up frustration, his mind obviously churning through who knew what.

  Humanoids were so complicated, Simca thought.

  Their gigantic brains came up with all sorts of things—they built things, cooked things, invented things, wrote things. They plotted and schemed and struggled for supremacy.

  She didn’t understand most of it. She didn’t want to. In her opinion, they made life more difficult with their complications and intrigues.

  Now she, on the other hand, liked to keep things simple:

  Eat. Sleep. Pee. Shit. Hunt. Run. Play. Rut.

  That’s all it took to be happy. What more could anyone ask for?

  Well, with the exception of that last bit.

  She hadn’t had a good rutting since Dark Goddess knew how long ago. It wasn’t as if her Kind ran around the streets of New York City in droves.

  That didn’t stop her from having her feline cycles, however. Which was extremely strange, because panthers were induced ovulators. If there wasn’t a viable male in the vicinity, she shouldn’t be able to go into heat.

  Unfortunately for Simca, she was regularly in heat, as if a viable feline male was always in her vicinity.

  Well, where the hell was he?!

  When the desperate need to scratch her itch was particularly bad, she’d escape the Cove, the base of the New England vampire hive, to race to the Bronx zoo.

  But the caged beasts there held no appeal for her. They were tamed, pitiful creatures. Lazy, fat and dull. The males, even the larger cats like the tigers and lions, cowered in her presence.

  For she was a real predator. She was danger and death incarnate.

  No rutting then.

  If she’d allowed any of those weakling males to mount her, she’d probably end up killing them with a bite to the throat or a vicious swipe of her paw for their fumbling attempts.

  She focused her attention back on the one and only male she cared about.

  Maximus.

  Whatever was bothering him was radiating from his heated skin in waves of anger and frustration. Exhaustion too. He was using his brain too much. He needed to relax and focus on the more tangible things in life. The physical things.

  The simple things.

  Simca attempted to distract him from his black mood by rolling playfully onto her back, upside down on his bed so that her head dangled off the foot of the massive platform as she blinked at him with her adoring golden-green eyes.

  Don’t be mad, my warrior, she silently communicated. Come play with me instead. I could use a good scrubbing on my belly.

  She wiggled back and forth to make her point.

  Reluctantly, a corner of Maximus’s mouth quirked, and he strode over to do her bidding, sitting beside her on the bed and stroking his fingers into the wiry softness of her fur.

  She luxuriated in his touch and purred loudly for a good long while before attempting to catch his hand and arm with her paws in a mock skirmish.

  He chuckled softly and wrestled with her, man and beast in perfect harmony.

  At last he lay flat on his back with his hands stacked behind his head, the tension and stress that had overloaded him earlier chased away by her playfulness, as she’d intended.

  Simca lay mostly on his torso, as she was wont to do, her paws on his chest, her tail flicking and curling happily to and fro.

  There were many aspects, besides his muscles and veins and hands, that she appreciated about her warrior.

  She loved his body heat.

  A vampire’s body heat was higher than that of humans, which was in turn slightly higher than that of Pure Ones. A feline predator’s body heat was still a bit higher than that of vampires.

  But Maximus’ big body radiated enough heat to rival a seven hundred pound Siberian tiger. It took less than five seconds for his skin to dry the droplets of water from his recent shower.

  When she lay on top of him like this, she felt like she was lying on desert dunes baked by a blazing sun, blanketed by smooth, soft skin stretched taut over the rolling hills and valleys of his body.

  She closed her eyes and purred to her heart’s content. If felt soooo good. She wanted to take a nap.

  The other thing she loved about him was his scent.

  Humanoids were generally too odiferous for her taste, what with the artificial scents they wore to disguise their natural foul odors. She didn’t know what was worse, the acrid smells of their perfumes, deodorants, shampoos and gels, or the stench of their sweat and musk.

  Maximus was different.

  He never wore scents to disguise his own. He used an almost scentless bar of soap when he washed. When he was clean, as he was now, he smelled like sunshine and desert heat and male.

  Truthfully, he smelled like her next meal.

  She even liked his smell when he exerted himself. His natural musk grew stronger then, darker, more potent. Then, he was the thrilling darkness of the jungle, dangerous and wild.

  Gloriously male.

  He made her want to mark him.

  He was hers.

  Bipedal or not, she owned him, and she took every opportunity to remind him as well as others. Whenever females of his species came around, she always made sure they knew to whom he belonged.

  She dipped her head down to bathe his face and neck with her sandpaper tongue, nu
zzling his face and jaw and throat with the scent glands on her cheeks and head.

  There. With her scent mingling with his, he smelled even more delicious.

  She licked her chops again and purred more loudly with both hunger and affection.

  He rubbed his wonderful hands up and down her back and head and sides, making her practically pant with pleasure.

  “What would I do without you, love?” he murmured as he scratched her behind each ear and under her chin.

  She rubbed her nose and jaw against his face and neck and purred so loudly the whole bed seemed to vibrate.

  Hope you never have to find out, she silently replied and bathed him with a long swipe of her tongue from his chin to his brow.

  He sighed and closed his eyes, falling asleep within seconds.

  Simca remained awake, stretched out on top of the warrior’s body, her long, thick tail curling at the tip and undulating back and forth as she mulled over the complicated knot of thoughts in her head.

  Animals felt only basic emotions. They felt attachment, like the sort between a mother and her cub; a feline and her mate, for the brief periods that they hunted and slept together to satisfy her urges. But they didn’t feel the emotions humanoids felt.

  Simca, however, was not purely animal. She was an eternal familiar.

  She was something other.

  She lived mostly with her partner in his world, in cities and skyscrapers these days rather than the deserts of her African homeland in the wild. They’d been together since a time beyond the reach of her memories. Verily, she didn’t have memories of when she hadn’t known Maximus.

  She was mostly animal, but she was also more.

  She loved her male.

  Perhaps it was not the love humanoids felt for each other, but it was love nonetheless, and it was every bit as intense and all-consuming.

  She wouldn’t be able to describe how she felt, even though she understood the language her warrior spoke by now. Because what she felt was beyond description.

  She just knew that she wanted to be with her warrior forever. If she were ever to lose him, she’d lose herself as well.

  She was possessive of her male.

  She hated with a vengeance the rare occasions that he left the Cove without her for a late night rendezvous, and returned to his room, to their bed with another female’s scent all over his body. The stench of rutting.

  It made Simca want to follow that scent to its owner and tear out the bitch’s throat. It made her want to tear into Maximus too, just to show him who his rightful owner was.

  Even as she was bewildered by these tumultuous emotions, she never questioned them. She simply followed her instincts.

  Her instincts told her that she needed to be even closer to her warrior. She needed to find a way to bind him to her forever.

  Before he found a Mate.

  Simca couldn’t bear it if he tied himself to another female for eternity.

  If any female were to share his life, that female was going to be her.

  *** *** *** ***

  Present Day.

  Maximus checked the coordinates on his wrist device.

  Right on point, and on time.

  This was where he’s supposed to meet the female FBI agent he’d been tracking and stonewalling for the past year or so.

  In the middle of an unloading dock in Port Newark overlooking the Newark Bay.

  Giant metal containers were stacked to fifty feet high in long rows and columns, creating a maze that he’d already mapped out in his mind. He knew exactly where all the entry and exit points were located.

  Grace Darling, the New England vampire hive’s de facto cyber guru, had helped him intercept the agent’s communications to others in her secret branch of the humans’ federal investigation unit, allowing Maximus to impersonate one of the higher-ups for this particular rendezvous.

  The special agent, Ariel Kyles (middle name Pain-In-His-Ass), was supposed to hand him critical information she’d gathered thus far on the fight clubs and their mysterious patrons.

  There was more, she’d indicated cryptically, not giving any hints as to what else she found, but that it had to do with Project Evergreen, a top secret government genetic engineering program to create super soldiers.

  In other words, Agent Kyles held information that could expose the Dark Ones to the human world.

  Maximus glanced at his wrist.

  She was one minute late. Something didn’t feel right.

  He looked up and homed in on Simca prowling stealthily on top of the crates a couple of yards away, her sleek black coat blending into the moonless night.

  Human eyes wouldn’t be able to track her unless they knew she was there. But Maximus saw her perfectly with his vampire vision.

  Besides, he always knew where she was, the link between familiar and vampire extremely strong, as if she were an extension of his body.

  Simca stopped abruptly and crouched low, her long, thick tail extended like a whip behind her.

  She must have picked up on a foreign scent or movement.

  They were up wind right now, and the odors permeating the dock, along with the sounds of water churning in the Bay, masked subtle disturbances. But not enough to fool Simca’s senses and instincts.

  Proceed with extreme caution, her posture said.

  Another minute ticked by. Maxmius was getting twitchy.

  The hairs on the back of his neck stood on end, and his fangs descended from his gums as adrenaline kicked in.

  “It’s a trap! Run!”

  Maximus crouched reflexively as a woman’s voice bounced off the stacks of metal surrounding him, echoing eerily in the night.

  Followed immediately by the staccato firing of a barrage of bullets, a hail of sparks and explosion of sound in the silent darkness.

  It seemed as if an armory’s worth of automatic weapons were unloading at once, half of them aimed within five feet of Maximus’ position, the other half aimed at a location about a hundred yards away.

  He couldn’t tell where exactly the female agent was located, if indeed it was she who gave the shout, given that the sound of her voice was pinged every which way by the metal containers. The nonstop shooting only added to the distortion.

  And then Simca’s vision flicked through his own eyes.

  Nine o’clock.

  He moved swiftly along one row, so close to the stacks he was almost a shadow sliding along the crates. A right turn at the end and he’d be close to the harbor. There, he could easily dive into the Bay and swim to safety. Bullets, even vampire-killers that were specifically designed to seek out a vampire’s body heat and explode his head and heart, would lose their efficacy when shot into water.

  At least, he hoped so.

  But instead of turning right, he turned left, in the direction that his instincts told him to go. Where the female agent was.

  Even though he was here to intercept her mission, it wasn’t in Maximus to abandon a lone female to what looked to be a massacre in the making. Besides, he needed to find out who was behind this ambush, and why they were targeted.

  Efficiently, he unsheathed the short sword from his back holster and the long dagger at his hip.

  Two shooters behind a crate to the right, Simca’s feline eyes saw and funneled the vision into his own.

  He turned sharply, crouching low, and slashed through the back of one man’s knees while impaling the other through the foot, bringing both to the ground and dealing killing blows before they could utter a sound.

  Meanwhile, Simca pounced on a shooter lying on top of one of the crates, ripping out his jugular with her sharp teeth in one lethal bite.

  The shooting continued unabated. A series of automatic firing mixed with a few longer-paced shots from a handgun.

  The agent must be shooting back.

  With Simca prowling on top of the crates ahead of him, Maximus could see the ground situation through her eyes.

  At least a dozen shooters still spread out a
long the stacks of crates, advancing steadily on the lone human female Simca could not see, somewhere hidden in the shadows before the last towering pile of containers.

  She was surrounded. Cornered. Nothing but crates on three sides of her. The only way out was to expose herself to the shooters who were closing in on her position.

  Maximus quickly did the mental math.

  There was no scenario in which he could eliminate all of the shooters before someone finally got to the agent, either physically or through a deadly bullet. Continuing to engage was suicide.

  But before Maximus could decide, Simca took the initiative herself, without waiting for his directive.

  With a few long leaps, the panther squashed one shooter under foot and swiped a massive paw across the throat of another.

  Immediately, the shooting that had been focused on Maximus’ last location redirected to Simca, but she’d already pivoted on her hind paws to bound in the opposite direction.

  “Fuck,” Maximus gritted out beneath his breath as he took off in a mad dash after his familiar, uncaring at the firepower he drew to himself.

  This was the first time Simca had engaged without his command. He could hardly believe her disobedience!

  But now was not the time to dwell on it. He had to focus all of his energy on saving her miserable feline hide.

  While suppressing the fear for her safety that was all but paralyzing him.

  He let his fury fuel him, making him move faster, his muscles pump harder, his eyesight focus sharper.

  He was gaining on the feline now, and protected her rear by killing a shooter aiming at her head with a deadly knife throw. He took out another with his bare hands, snapping the assassin’s neck with a pull and a twist.

  A couple of bullets managed to find their mark in his shoulder and thigh, but he didn’t slow down. His only thought was to get to his kamikaze familiar before she got herself killed.

  At least they still shared their visual connection. He could see that Simca was almost upon the female agent, could even see from the panther’s vantage point that the female was crouched behind a metal crate reloading her gun.

  A flash of black hair and pale skin. That was all.

  Before blinding pain literally exploded in Maximus’ side.