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Vampire Babylon - Break Of Dawn Part 1

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Break of Dawn.

by Chris Marie Green.

To Sheree Whitefeather and Judy Duarte- stars who watch over Babylon Thank you to Ginjer Buchanan, Cameron Dufty, and the Ace staff, for all their hard work; to Wally Lind and the crime- scenewriter web loop, for their guidance (by the way, any and all errors in this book are my own); and to the Knight Agency, for their support.

ONE.

LIGHTS . . . CAMERA . . .



CHARITY Flynn had sold her soul to experience another moment like this.

The doors of Grauman's Chinese Theatre burst open to the night, showering the actress with camera flashes, pinpoints that flared like exploding stars. She posed, summoning her brightest, s.e.xiest smile, knowing which angles would make her s.h.i.+ne. She pouted her lips ever so slightly, tilted her head, then allowed her Allure . . . just a touch . . . to reach out to every man, every woman out there.

Another flash went supernova, wors.h.i.+p in motion.

For a hushed instant, the late-summer air went still, the crowd silent in the presence of such magic. It was as if Charity-their Charity-had reached into their chests and stolen their breath away.

Their adoration filled her, fed her.

But this superstar wasn't reckless. She hid her Allure, trained to know when enough was enough during decades of practice. Time spent Underground, time spent waiting for this second comeback to glory.

Such a long, long wait away from the screen. . . .

The cameras came back alive. A paparazzo shouted to her over the blinding lights as she stepped out of the theater's lobby, where the special late-night premiere after-party was in full swing. Her diamond-studded pumps met the red carpet.

"Charity," the photog yelled, raising his monstrous camera above the heads of the others. "How do you think it'll feel to be queen of the box office?"

She swayed to a stop, allowing more flashes to devour her. "It already feels like a million bucks." Her smile grew, and the crowd smiled right back. "Several million, as a matter of fact."

They all laughed at her sly nod to the salary Charity Flynn would be commanding after such a big response to her first inevitable blockbuster.

Before she could move on, another voice piped up. "You really look like a million tonight, Charity!"

"Vintage Chanel." She spread her arms, showcasing the long creamy white silk sheath that flowed over her curves, a sparkling brooch clasping the material together at her cleavage. "It used to belong to"-another smile, this time a very knowing one that 001toyed with their expectations-"her."

Her.

The press had been calling Charity "the new Amanda Grace" ever since she had arrived on the Hollywood scene a few months ago. They had also referenced a second name, "Delia Wright," to describe whatever Charity had that the camera loved. But Charity didn't hear this other name as often since "Delia" wasn't the original. The template.

Platinum-blond Charity-and Delia-with her cherry lips and just-had-s.e.x smiles, evoked the legendary, carnally inclined, tragically dead Amanda Grace from the late fifties. She reflected her in manner, in style, in . . .

In everything.

And it wasn't just a coincidence.

Charity winked at the cameras and continued to her limo, where she climbed inside to be enveloped by dark grandeur: plush velvet seats and mahogany detailing. Her veins fizzed as if shot through with champagne and, now that she was sequestered, her mouth began to sting with thirst.

Just a taste, she thought. Something to keep me high until the end of the month when the Master infuses me with his own blood again.

Charity shuddered, leaning back against the seat while the vehicle took off, away from the pulsing camera lights. But a voice from across the large sitting area jarred her.

"Amanda."

Her heightened sight cut through the darkness, settling on a shadow. In return, he leaned forward, catching some light from the pa.s.sing streetlamps. Based on his delightful scent, she determined he was human. A Servant, as a matter of fact-one who did much of the Underground's footwork here Above. His face, punctuated by a cleft in his chin and piercing, pale eyes, was something out of a thug's casting call. But upon second look, the casual way he moved in his long leather coat, his jeans and boots, made him more approachable.

"Mr. Lonigan," she said, "I'm 'Charity' now. Charity Flynn. Remember?"

The private investigator made a conciliatory gesture. "Sorry. Charity . . . Delia . . . I like your first name more than the other two you've used."

She didn't know him well, so her curiosity almost overwhelmed her surprise at seeing him in her limo. Almost.

"Probably wondering why I hitched a ride?" he asked.

"It crossed my mind." She used her smile on him. "Is it too much to hope you're here for a little . . . fun?"

Charity rubbed a hand over her neck, her nails scratching her jugular.

Matt Lonigan calmly stared out the window, a subtle rejection, even if she'd seen interest in his eyes before he'd turned away. But she could sense a deeper purpose to his visit, even without having to reach into his mind. Not that going into someone's head was ever a good idea-especially while Above. Here, it could lead to detection from the "others" the Master had always warned them about.

She followed the Servant's gaze out the window. They weren't traveling to the Regent Beverly Wils.h.i.+re, where the after-after-party would be held. No, she knew where they were headed: near one of the abandoned quarry entrances of the Underground, where the rare hiker wandered and where no production units had ever set foot.

Unease stole over her, because she had an idea about what was going on, about why the Master's Servant was here with her. She'd all but tuned out the disturbing rumors from Below lately because her attention had been anch.o.r.ed Above, on the resurrected career she deserved.

"What's going on?" she asked.

"The Master is gathering every one of you. I was a.s.signed to see you came back instead of partying your big night away. The Master wanted you to understand the seriousness of this call home."

A gathering. It iced her spine. She'd given everything for this third chance at superstardom.

Well. Amanda Grace wasn't going to tolerate any threats to what she'd worked her a.s.s off for, to what she'd invested so much in.

Suddenly she couldn't bring herself to care about the after-after-party she'd be missing.

Soon, the limo disappeared down into the black of a ma.s.sive cave. Once stopped, surrounded by rock, they alighted. Charity walked ahead of Matt, never looking back at the Servant, even as they pa.s.sed the wailing echoes of the removed Guard chambers.

She pretended to be unaffected, even as she pictured the lower-level vampires and their red eyes, their barbed tails, their freakish way of moving, like stuttering heartbeats in transit. Guards were their first line of defense, monsters manufactured to protect the Underground.

The d.a.m.ned, she thought, hurrying her steps, hearing the click of her heels against the cold walls.

She slowed only at the entrance to the emporium. There, Matt opened the door, allowing her to antic.i.p.ate the usual splendid cacophony, the exotic incense, the vivid laughter, the tang of blood.

But . . . there was merely a hint of that normally free-flowing blood tonight as she entered, and no more.

This had to be serious.

Pulse tapping in growing concern, Charity greeted a contingent of Groupies, silver-eyed vampires who had entertained her for so many hours Underground while she'd waited for her comebacks. Now, as they sat cross-legged on the marble floor, holding hands, they weren't the lively, erotic creatures she'd always treasured; they weren't sidling up to her, playfully biting her skin, or stroking her to pleasure.

Tonight they merely watched her return to them, their eyes wide as Charity made her way past the waterfalls, the pools, the blanked grand television screens, and to the amphitheater.

Levels of stone seating held her brothers and sisters-other high-ranked Elites who had been just as wors.h.i.+pped Above as Amanda Grace. When they heard her, they turned their heads as one, every face a beautiful mask of waiting terror, every pair of eyes swirling in preternatural worry.

A hollowness seized Charity, and she placed a hand over her breastbone. She felt empty there. But when she thought of the crowds tonight, the cameras, the utter joy of being loved, she knew her sacrifice had been worth it.

She would do anything to preserve it.

She sat next to Jesse Shane, one of the world's biggest action stars who'd "died" in blood-soaked mystery eleven years ago. Next to him was the Underground's newest Elite, Tamsin Greene, who had "expired" just as tragically as Amanda Grace, once upon a time.

Charity sat straight, attempting to seem unruffled. She was one of the oldest Elites, and the young ones were looking to her for serene guidance.

"Is everyone here?" she asked Jesse. He spoke in that carefree cowboy voice that'd made him millions. "Every single one. You know what happened?"

At Charity's raised eyebrow, he continued.

"We've officially been exposed Above."

Horrified, the actress held a hand to her stunning face.

To the eternally youthful visage she'd paid for with the currency of her soul.

TWO.

ABOVE.

Hours Later EVEN while priming a lethal weapon, Dawn Madison struggled to keep her eyes open.

Made sense, because she hadn't gotten any sleep after what'd happened last night. And when the sun had risen and things around the Limpet house had calmed down, burning daylight by grabbing a snooze had seemed a colossal waste of time because there was so much to take care of.

Besides, there was the little matter of her being filled with rage, terror, impatience-all of which pretty much put the kibosh on lying back against a soft pillow to let her mind and body chill. h.e.l.l, wasn't there even an old saying that went, "There's no rest for the wicked"?

Problem was, Dawn couldn't help wondering who "wicked" applied to, now that she didn't know who . . . or what . . . to trust.

And that included herself.

Currently, she was putting all her strength into winding a crank. In turn, it coiled a wire that was attached to a bladed disk in a modified crossbow. Nearby, the hum of a ma.s.sive fridge competed with the clang of an old-fas.h.i.+oned clock on a nightstand in a sublevel lab. The timepiece was striking the twilight hour, every beat a countdown to what waited for Dawn and the rest of her team outside these walls.

Vampires. The past resurrected, when it should've just stayed buried.

Her muscles-honed from a life of athletic habit, stunt work, and hunting-strained as she stabilized the crank. Then, attempting to be as smooth as death's whisper, she hefted the saw-bow upward, propping it against her shoulder, aiming. Pulling the trigger.

In a shower of sparks, the weapon spit out the circled blade. Swick! across the room, where it bit into one of the wooden poles Dawn had propped against the far lab wall.

Lowering the bow, she inspected her target. d.a.m.n, too low of a hit to count as a decapitation. How'd Breisi been so good at using this thing on the vamps?

Dawn stalked toward the poles, intent on retrieving the blade and getting it right, even though every inch of her was screaming with discomfort. Last night's battle royale with their enemies was tw.a.n.ging every muscle and joint.

But the scent of jasmine interrupted Dawn, enveloping her. A voice sounded in her ear-or maybe it was in her head. Either way she hadn't gotten used to it yet.

"Just picture your target, and you'll be fine." It was Breisi in her new spirit form, coaching Dawn about her old saw-bow-a favorite weapon back when she'd been alive and hunting by Dawn's side.

"I'm trying, Breez."

Overcome by the jasmine, by everything that went with the scent of the new Breisi, Dawn leaned the bladed crossbow against the nearby stone wall, slumping her own frame against its coolness, too. Absently, she locked eyes on her friend's worktable in the middle of the room, a table that mostly held Breisi's lab equipment and projects. Then she scanned left, past the collection of computers, taking in her coworker's bed and the nightstand with a shattered-gla.s.s picture of young Breisi and her grandma.

Dawn's suddenly blurry gaze returned to the table, where the remnants of a different bladed crossbow lay deserted, half-finished, a metal carca.s.s. Before dying last night, Breisi had been building this second weapon for Dawn but, with the turn of events, Breisi had ended up giving her protegee her old saw-bow instead only a few hours ago. She couldn't manipulate it in the spirit world.

"Dawn . . . ?" the Friend whispered, her tone troubled now.

Dawn felt Breisi-her good friend Breisi-hush over her skin, then rest on her shoulder like a comforting hand. Mental agony lanced her at the touch. Last night Dawn had seen Breisi choking on her own blood. Murdered. Yet- A sense of joy twisted into the strands of her pain. Dawn swallowed, trying to contain it.

Yet here Breisi was again, one of the guardian Friend spirits who helped the Limpet and a.s.sociates team in their quest to find the vampire Underground that haunted Los Angeles.

"I'll get back to practicing with the bow soon," Dawn said, reclining her head against the wall and regulating her breathing. It was the only way she could control her emotions right now. But at least she was able to force a grin, mainly for Breisi's sake. "You watch-I'll be better than you ever were with that snaggle-toothed contraption. Vamps are gonna s.h.i.+ver in their boots when they know I'm coming."

Her bravado sounded empty in the face of reality, because soon, there really would be a fight. Jonah Limpet, the boss of this operation, had promised that much, and based on last night, the dogs of war had been unleashed. It was only a matter of who would be attacking whom, and when.

In simpatico, Breisi's essence sank against the wall next to Dawn. She had no words of wisdom this time.

Why? Hadn't Dawn's book-smart Friend learned the ropes of the spirit world yet? Or did it take a lot longer to acquire all the answers Breisi's new state of being required?

The question beat against Dawn's temples. New state of being. Dead. Murdered. Breisi . . .

As tight emotion welled in Dawn's chest, traveling upward until it choked her, Breisi's voice soothed.

"Lo siento. . . . I'm so sorry this had to happen, Dawn."

"What, it's not your fault you went and died." She'd tried so hard to be more open to what she was feeling, but it was too hard.

Hurt too much. "If Ca.s.sie Tomlinson were still alive, I'd kill her myself."

Last night's horrors had been waiting for this kind of invocation. They attacked Dawn again with slas.h.i.+ng memories of the Vampire Killer. Limpet and a.s.sociates had sought the culprit because Jonah had believed that the serial killer might lead to the Underground. So the team had investigated, never knowing that one of their interviewees, the sister of an already-jailed suspect, was their quarry. When they'd discovered the murderer's ident.i.ty, it was too late, because Ca.s.sie Tomlinson had already captured Breisi, taking her to a remote camper in the woods, intending to publicly broadcast the murder and make herself a celebrity in the process. To make matters worse, Ca.s.sie had been in cahoots with the Underground, working with their red-eyed Guards.

Before Dawn and her father, Frank, had stormed the killer's hideaway to get Breisi back, someone had tipped them off about the unholy alliance. The same informant had also detailed how the murders fit into the Master's plans, G.o.dd.a.m.n him. And that someone had been Eva Claremont, Dawn's vampire mother.

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