This is Sharon Hamilton. I've always told people that I'm a Christian with a bent antennae, and I have to say that pretty much sums up my life. As a toddler, I used to make faces at the church audience by standing up in the pew between my parents, staring behind them, making faces and making the other churchgoers snicker and laugh. I also threw up in the choir loft during the Christmas performance, and I forgot my lines at the annual Christmas Candlelight vigil, while I tried to recite the Christmas Story. I slipped in the Baptistry when I got baptised and nearly pulled down the minister.
Some would say, I haven't exactly been charmed, even though I was the granddaughter of a very famous evangelist who held tent meetings for thousands. He was just my grandpa.
I got the message, dear readers, just skewed. Bent.
So of course at this time of year, I'd come out with a Vampire book, right? It does begin at Christmas, and my hero, a dark coven vamp, thinks about the Christmas story and all that it means for humans, because he isn't one.
I think it's a little way to break up your Holidays. Something to sink your teeth into, and yes, it comes out tomorrow! AND it's only .99.
Here's an excerpt. Enjoy my twisted introduction to the Holiday Season. Be sure to endulge to excess--the only way to truly live!
Here's a portion of the first chapter from Christmas Bite:
Lionel Jett had always thought
Christmastime was more about angels, than celebrating vampires and their
vampire society. But the emotional responses within his soul ticked like a
timebomb. On the one hand, the beautiful candlelit services, held at night so
he could attend, were striking and revived in him his higher calling to protect
the innocent and all things good and pure. To eliminate evil.
Christmas celebrated the birth of
an innocent, after all—a birth that would forever change humanity. Mortals
believed that a woman conceived a child without having sex. Well, Lionel had
seen many things in his three hundred years of life, and he couldn’t rule out
that this legend was actually fact. For if that occurred, then the possibility
of redemption for himself, existed, as well as the chance for peace amongst the
two vampire species.
His thick
frame was forced to hunch a bit, his shoulders rounded so he could fit into the
pews made for much smaller beings, mostly mortal. The wooden, hand-carved benches
weren’t constructed for huge, dark coven vampires, unless they were designed to
say, “you are not welcome.”
The
Gregorian chants reverberated throughout the halls of the chapel where Marcus
had first met his fated mate, Ann. Lionel watched a woman and her children light
tiny, red votive candles in the alcove at the side. The light made their faces
glow with that effect only mortals had. It was as if the goodness in them
showed through their transparent skin, laced with the life-giving blood of
their species, an elixir to some, and the highly prized substance others would
die to protect.
Of all their traits, mortals’ best gift
to the world was that of love and innocence. Though some of their race claimed
to be warriors, they would never be matches for the evil likes of the strongest
dark covens.
But their God had told mortals they
could achieve anything if they had faith. They had the gift of belief because
their lives were so short. Of course, they believed in miracles. Unfortunately,
they’d never live long enough to see true miracles or the way the world really
was.
He could sign on to safeguard those
ideas. It was something that spoke to him as a true warrior. He’d be able to defend
those who had no clue they needed protecting. And he might die doing so,
without any observance on their part.
Mortals were a strange combination
of emotions and traits. They scared easily. They sometimes maintained bravado,
like the David and Goliath story from their bible. They were underdogs, but
like in the beloved story, they never stopped fighting though the odds were
against them. They sometimes allowed anger to interrupt their lifeline or
justified its benefits when it really never helped them.
But their most stunning quality was
that of compassion. On that, they could teach the world. They had the gift of
living a life untainted, if they so choose. Trusting in their God when, in
actuality, their unseen vampire brethren were responsible for much of their
safety. They believed in the laws of nature more than the laws of vampire.
Lionel found this humorous.
The delicate children’s choir made
their way down the center aisle, each child holding an inverted paper cup with
a white candle stuck into the base, so their little hands would be protected
from any dripping wax. Their voices were soothing. He could make out every one
of them, and it left him gentled, like listening to a babbling brook with water
flowing over pebbles beneath the current. Each child had a distinctive series
of tones, sometimes with thoughts laced in there, if the mind read was strong
with them.
He remembered the night they said
mass for Maria Monteleone, the only woman in Lionel’s life he ever loved. He’d
gladly foregone any chance at having a sexual relationship with her just to be
in her presence and had begged her to live on after the death of her mortal
husband, to take the turning late in her life. It was always a difficult
decision for every Golden, all born as mortal children, and given the option to
take the turning ceremony beyond after puberty. Most chose to live a life of
immortality. But she, like her predeceased husband before her, refused, smiled,
touched his cheek with her dainty lavender scented palm, and shared a tear with
him.
“Lionel, my trusted protector, I
know what’s in your heart. I am given life enough with the knowledge that it’s
there. No need for us to speak of it or demonstrate it to anyone but ourselves.
Our eternal secret.”
He’d wanted to take her in his
arms, but he would never shatter what they had. He was the only one she would
take on as a protector, and the family knew Lionel would die doing so, if
necessary. It was beautiful Maria who had saved his life by asking he and his
two brothers be made vampire when she found all them left for dead after an
attack by a dark coven lord who had obliterated their family.
The elder Monteleones had decided a
trusted dark would do the turning, so that there would always be distance
between Maria and her dear Lionel. He always wondered if she’d argued for
another choice for him. Had she desired he be made in her own image or
requested she be his maker? That question haunted Lionel for centuries.
He was there when she married
Marcus and Paolo’s father, was there as she bore him the dozen children, and as
she continually turned down her husband’s request to turn together. As a
faithful husband, he dutifully remained at her side, mortal, sharing their
short love and family.
Lionel was with her as her mortal
life left her, on a starlit evening when the real stars were in her eyes, until
they became fixed on him and then floated away. Like a piece of tissue paper,
her spirit was gone, to become one with her God of Humans and her Mother
Nature.
The hole in his heart was still the
largest pain in his life. There wasn’t a day that went by when he didn’t wonder
what would have happened if he’d chosen to take a more active role in that
relationship with her or could have fought stronger for what he knew was something
like an inter-species fating that never could be consummated.
He looked up at the bleeding figure
of Christ nailed to a wooden cross, and he understood the man’s pain, the
regrets he might have had, his need to protect and love his flock, and to die
for them. The miracle had been sent, only to have the evil factions of the
mortal crowd kill him off. He walked amongst his people understanding this, all
the while he remained on earth.
Lionel hoped that he still lived
somewhere they called Heaven. For he and his vampire brothers and sisters,
death was usually just the end of a long, long life. There was no Heaven. There
was no happily ever after in the clouds that sent rain and wind and sometimes
covered the sun and the moon. It was just death, with nothing beyond.
And yet, as he listened to the
beautiful chanting and allowed the scents of mortals to envelop him, he felt
the heat of their bodies, and some of their thoughts and worries. He’d like to
pretend he believed in a time that would last, where everything would be
perfect and not end. Where love, like the love he had for Maria, would reign
eternal.
He was hopeful. It was a silly
thought, but it was something that warmed him from the inside, as if he was a
mortal again, as if he still held that innocent light inside.
The wedding feast had begun. It was
humorous that the Monteleones made a great show of eating to excess, though
Lionel knew they’d be sick as dogs afterward. But they were stubborn about
their secrecy, and as long as it was a mixed crowd of both trusted mortals and
vampires of both species, the ruse would be continued. He stood with his arm
around young Lucius while they watched his father, the handsome Paolo, and his
new bride, Carabella, dance to the alluring viola music around a huge firepit
stoked with logs the size of most humans. Paolo’s face was filled with the mirth
Lionel had always envied.
Out of the blue, Lucius asked his
question. “Do you miss your brother?”
Jeb had traced the dark coven lord,
Dag, to a desert somewhere on the other side of the globe, to end him, saving
the Lucius’ father’s life at the cost of his own.
“Of course, young prince. But his
time had come. He’d had a wonderful and exciting life, keeping all you lot safe
so your family can save the world. Don’t you know that?”
Lucius thought about that for a
short time. His six years was not commensurate with his knowledge of the ways
of the world. He’d seen a lot in his brief time as son to one brother, only to
find out he belonged to the other.
“Can I tell you something I’ve
never told anyone?”
“Careful, young Lucius. I am bound
to tell the truth, always.”
“I know it. But I want to tell you
anyway.”
The boy’s eyes followed his new
stepmom and his father across the ampetheater. Lionel remembered days when
there were dark coven sacrifices held in this space. He remembered the blood
rituals of those difficult times, shortly before Maria’s boys were grown.
Although he was not sure, some of his relatives might have lost their lives in
this very place. He shook off the vision and answered the boy. “You can
certainly trust in my confidence.”
“I don’t miss my mother. I like
that Cara is going to be my new mother. I think she’ll bring me a little
brother or sister.”
Lionel was struck with this
thought. Cara had been made, and the turning had taken place, which wasn’t
always successful, just before her mortal death. Paolo had given her his own
blood. Even so, he wasn’t sure Cara and Paolo could have offspring.
Lucius looked up at him. “Am I evil
for saying this?”
Lionel knelt, placing his
plate-sized hands on Lucius’ forearms and elbows, his face eye-level with the
boy. “You are very lucky, young princeling. Your mortal aunt was forgiven for
your mother’s demise because she protected all of you in that action. Maya
would have not been the kind of mother you deserve. You deserve—”
He saw a group of young Goldens arrive,
all of them in their teens and early twenties. Some had taken the turning, but
several were clearly still mortal. He understood them to be friends since
childhood.
As the group parted, some took to
the dance floor. A tall dark-haired beauty swayed to the music, engaging the
troupe of fiddlers who enjoyed her sultry dance moves. She was a curiously
carefree mortal woman and Lionel couldn’t take his eyes off her. She threw her
head back, swung her hips from side to side and sent her light, peach-colored,
mortal arms reaching out to the sky. She pulled up her long curls, holding them
atop her head as she swiveled her hips and turned in his direction.
When their eyes met, her mouth
dropped open and she became motionless, though the lively music continued
behind her.
Lionel’s heart leapt from his
chest. Grateful she was not yet turned, he did not have to make some excuse if
she heard the kettledrum in his chest that pumped his life force into overdrive.
He resisted the urge to run to her, pick her up and carry her away, where he
could satisfy all his questions.
Was this woman Maria, come back to
life after three hundred years? The Maria he first knew before her marriage,
her family, and her death?
The woman who stood across the
bonfire from him looked identical to Maria.
Lucius wiggled free as Lionel had
gripped his arms and gave gave his young charge welts.
“I’m sorry, son. I just thought I
saw something. Forgive me if I hurt you.”
Lucius remained two steps away from
him, watching, as Lionel rose to full height, slowly uncoiling his enormous
body. His mouth dry, his fangs aching, his mind reeled from the erotic thoughts
that came at him like a firehose.
All too suddenly, she was gone.
She’d pulled a brightly colored shawl over her head and neck and ran into the heavy
foliage at the edge of the clearing.
Lucius turned to see what he was
focusing on.
“The young woman who was dancing
over there, she should not have gone into the forest alone. I fear for her
life,” he told his charge.
Lucius nodded. “Then go get her.
Protect her, Lionel—or—” he peered up at him with a question on his face— “don’t
you want to?”
“It isn’t that, but I’m to stay and
protect you.”
This part was true. He caught the
attention of his younger brother, Hugh—“huge” as he was known to the ladies he bedded—and
angled his head towards the woods. Hugh had a lapse in judgment and traced,
instead of running like a mortal. Lionel scanned the crowd, and no one seemed
to have noticed.
What am I looking for, brother? Hugh
asked telepathically from behind the wooded surround.
“The
spitting image of Maria Monteleone. Tell me it isn’t so, brother. I pray to god
she’s safe, but I also pray it isn’t her,” he whispered.
“What?”
asked Lucius.
“Sorry,
I was giving instructions to Hugh.”
Seconds
later, a group of the young Goldens came screaming from the woods, followed by
a dark vamp dressed in black rags. He stopped at the site of the campfire. His
flesh peeled, and part of his face had been scratched off. His tongue hung
limply, dripping bloody saliva.
The fiddle music
stopped as several males from the partygoers came within feet of his disgusting
frame. Several in the crowd began to moan, and there were a few suppressed
screams. Precious seconds passed while the dark vamp and his would-be attackers
held the standoff. Lionel scanned the young Goldens and didn’t see any sign of
the young Maria look-alike.
The dark vamp
began to grin, his chest heaving. He fingered something around his neck Lionel
had missed. It was the colorful shawl the young Golden had been wearing just
moments before.
Lionel didn’t have
time to look for his brother. He traced to the creature, hoisting him high up
into the sky and tearing his head from his body out of eyesight of the crowd
below. He threw the remnants of the vamp’s torso into another bonfire he found
several miles away, at a distant farm. Before he let the body loose, he removed
the shawl and stuffed it into his shirt.
Damages, brother? Are you there?
All is well, Lionel. She is alive, and safe.
He was a rogue no coven to back him up. But it has us all shook.
He won’t be back, Lionel told his
brother.
He traced to the
edge of the celebration, then walked through dense foliage toward the circle of
fire. They had brought the young Golden toward the heat, and a group of elder men
surrounded her, so he could not see her fate. As he pressed himself towards the
center, he could see the ugly, bloody bite on her neck and the rivulets of dark
ooze descending down her chest, meeting between her breasts. Her eyes were dazed
as she rolled her head back and cried.
Paolo was there,
giving her first aid. Lionel sat next to her mother, who brought warm
compresses and was whispering questions.
“Will she be
infected, Paolo? She is still mortal and a virgin. Will this affect—?”
“No, Freya. She’s
intact. He didn’t do a blood rape. She’s intact.”
“Oh, thank God,”
the woman sighed, leaning into Lionel’s chest. Paolo gave him a frown.
“I have Lucius,”
said Hugh from the back of the crowd.
Freya’s daughter
stubbornly righted herself and accepted the salve that was applied to her neck
taken from the kit Paolo carried with him 24/7. Her eyes swung around, perusing
the crowd until she saw Lionel again, and their stares locked.
Her gaze lowered
slightly, looking at something on Lionel’s chest.
“He’s gone, Madame,”
he told her. “He will no longer trouble you, or any of us.”
But she was still peering
at his chest. Looking down, he saw the remnants of her flowered shawl sticking
out from the buttons on his white shirt. He drew it out, damp from the mixture
of sweat and bloody detritus. He extended his arm and handed it to her.
She didn’t look at
the shawl. As she grabbed the cloth, her eyes were fixed on Lionel like he was
her lifeline, her future.
He was instantly
hit with the cold facts of their state. She would most likely be not his
lifeline, but a straight ticket to Hell itself.
Love the dog touch. What a great idea. thanks for the post and for sharing.
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