Untouchable by
Kresley
Cole
“They say I’m as fickle as winter, as shy as frost,
and
as indifferent as a blizzard. It’s rumored my body is
pure
as driven snow. Nobody imagines that I might be full of
fire.”
—Daniela the Ice Maiden, Valkyrie and
rightful
queen of the Icere, the fey of the frozen north
“Women are like bottles of liquor. They should be
sampled,
savored, then discarded. Matrimony is for men who can’t
handle their liquor.”
—Murdoch Wroth, eighteenth-century warlord, modern
vampire
soldier
1
The French Quarter, New Orleans
Present day
“She’s . . . near.”
At his brother’s weak and broken words, Murdoch Wroth’s
eyes
narrowed in anger toward the one who’d brought the proud
Nikolai so low.
Myst the Coveted, a female immortal with a vicious heart.
And Nikolai’s fated Bride.
“How can you tell?” Murdoch asked.
“Because I can feel her,” Nikolai said.
Murdoch adjusted Nikolai’s arm, which he’d slung across
his
shoulders to help his brother walk as they searched. The
humans milling all around them merely assumed Nikolai was
another drunk.
Proud Nikolai. He was exhausted from consuming too
little blood, his body racked with never-ending need for
a
mad Valkyrie who delighted in his pain. Nikolai had lost
weight, his face turning gaunt, his muscles flagging.
“Murdoch, when I find her . . . I want you to trace from
here.”
He shook his head. “I’ll stay until you’ve secured her—”
“No. Don’t want you to . . . see me.” Nikolai’s weary
gaze
darted away from Murdoch’s. “I will lose control.”
Which would shame his stalwart older brother as little
else
could.
Murdoch couldn’t imagine how Nikolai would react when he
found Myst. Five years ago, she had blooded
Nikolai,
as only a Bride could, bringing to life his dead
vampire’s
body. She’d made him breathe, made his heart beat, and
stoked his newly reawakened lust with no intention of
slaking it.
That same night, another Valkyrie had shot him through
with
arrows and still another had mocked his desires. Myst had
fled with the two, dooming Nikolai.
A blooded vampire could only take release for the first
time
while touching his Bride in some way. If she wasn’t
available, then he would remain in a state of constant
sexual readiness, aching indefinitely.
Which she well knew.
“Promise me you’ll leave,” Nikolai grated.
At length, Murdoch said, “I will.” If Myst was indeed
here
tonight, it would make sense that there’d be more
Valkyrie
out on these very streets. More of their deceiving,
manipulative, violent kind. “But only to find another
one,”
he added.
He could capture one and interrogate her about the Lore,
the
world of not-so-mythical beings he and his brother were
now
a part of.
Murdoch’s knowledge of the Lore was as limited as that of
any of the vampires in their warrior order of Forbearers.
Their army consisted mostly of turned humans, and the
Lore
creatures kept their secrets well guarded from them.
“Don’t underestimate the Valkyrie as I did,” Nikolai
rasped.
“Else suffer as I have.”
He suffered because fate had forced this blooding on
Nikolai. As if Nikolai needed another burden.
The blooding process was what Murdoch detested most about
being a vampire, even more than never seeing the sun
again.
Though he’d once been a rake, bedding a new woman each
night, Murdoch hoped it never happened to him. To be
mystically tied to a single woman sounded hellish,
especially to a woman he didn’t choose, and one who could
spurn him, as Myst had Nikolai.
The pain had rendered his brother nearly mindless in his
pursuit of her. Nikolai wanted retribution, but Murdoch
suspected he also simply wanted her. Even after
all
that she’d done to him.
“Where will you take her this night?” Murdoch asked. “The
mill?” They’d secured an old renovated sugar mill outside
the city, staying there instead of the Forbearer castle
while they’d scoured these streets.
Nikolai shook his head.
“Then back to the castle?”
When Nikolai didn’t answer, Murdoch said, “You wouldn’t
take
her to Blachmount?” The ancient Wroth estate—where
most of their family had died in a single night of
sickness
and murder. “Why?”
“Because that’s where my Bride belongs.”
Before Murdoch could question his meaning, Nikolai went
still, his eyes briefly sliding shut. Then his head swung
up
toward a rooftop. “It’s her.”
Above them, a redhead stood frozen, her lips parting in
shock.
Murdoch had only briefly seen her all those years before,
and now he studied the details of her Valkyrie
appearance.
She had delicate fey features—pointed ears and high
cheekbones—but he also spied the tell-tale claws and
small
fangs.
At the sight of her, Nikolai stood fully, no longer
needing
Murdoch’s aid. “My Myst.”
Her face paled, no doubt at the sight of Nikolai, who now
looked like the monster she’d sought to make him. His
irises
had turned completely black, his fangs descending in his
mouth, dripping from thirst.
Her horrified expression almost made Murdoch pity her,
but
she deserved no mercy. Which was good, because Nikolai
would
show her none this night.
Their pursuit of half a decade was . . . over. At
last.
Just as Nikolai tensed to trace to her, Murdoch slapped
him
on the back, then teleported away as he’d promised,
disappearing so quickly he went unnoticed in the morass
of
drunken tourists. Even if they had seen him vanish, the
humans would think they’d imagined it.
Murdoch materialized in a back alley several blocks away,
then walked to the Quarter’s main thoroughfare, Bourbon
Street. As he moved among the crowds, a warm breeze
tripped
down the street, dissipating the swampy haze and the
fumes
from food vendor stands.
Warm. In February. Good hunting weather.
Yes, Nikolai would be merciless tonight, as would
Murdoch.
Now all he needed was to find his prey.
The hunt is on.
* * *
I’m being followed.
Daniela the Ice Maiden furtively glanced over her
shoulder
once more. Again she spied nothing out of the
ordinary—tourists milling, witches catcalling to human
males—but Danii couldn’t shake the feeling that she was
being stalked.
Which begged the question: what creature would be stupid
enough to court a Valkyrie’s wrath?
Maybe she was just spooked by Nïx’s cryptic remarks
tonight.
Nucking Futs Nïx, her half sister and the Valkyrie
soothsayer, often made off-the-wall predictions. But this
one continued to replay in Danii’s mind.
“Sad, sad Daniela, the broken doll who wants to be
fixed.
Tonight she might.”
Because of Danii’s pale, freezing skin—she was part
Icere—she was often likened to a porcelain doll. Well,
because of her icy skin and because of what would happen
to
her if she grew overheated. . . .
But a broken doll? What did that mean? And fixed—
for
good, for bad? What precisely would be fixed?
She’d told Nïx, “I can’t imagine what you’re talking
about.
I’m not broken”—my lonely existence makes me want to
tear
my hair out—“and I don’t know how I could be
‘fixed.’”
Perhaps by being able to finally touch another? To
feel a man’s skin against her own without being burned,
instead of constantly fantasizing about it?
I would give anything.
Yet the only males on earth who could touch her were the
Icere. Regrettably, they also happened to want her dead.
Which meant the closest she’d ever get to having sex
would
be reading about it in the many tomes of erotica she kept
hidden in her room or by indulging in her rich fantasy
life.
Which also meant she was probably the world’s oldest
virgin.
Merely awaiting confirmation from Guinness.
And people wonder why I prefer fantasy to reality.
Her ears twitched with awareness. No, she wasn’t simply
spooked; something was happening. Her senses were
alert.
Hastening her pace, she carefully wound around the people
on
the street, negotiating the ninety-eight-point-six degree
gauntlet. Even the briefest contact with another’s skin
would burn her. A conundrum, because she kept cool by
baring
lots of hers.
When her frosty breath fogged in the warm night air, she
just stifled the urge to scream, and peeked over her
shoulder once more.
This time she spotted a towering male, far behind her. He
was striking, looked to be mid-thirties. But there was
something unusual about him.
Was he even human? New Orleans was chock-full of Lore
beings. He could be an immortal, maybe even the one
trailing
her.
At that moment, he wasn’t looking in her direction, so
she
took the opportunity to duck into an alley beside a
hotel.
Leaping up four stories to the hotel’s flat roof, she
crossed to a low ledge wall overlooking the street, then
crouched between two flags—one had a fleur-de-lis
covered in beads, and the other said Pardi Gras!
Tilting her head, she studied the male below. He had
longish
dark brown hair, cut negligently, with a lock falling
over
his forehead. His face was fantasy-worthy, with a strong,
masculine jaw and chin.
He wore tasteful clothes, a black button-down and jeans
with
a jacket that made her feel warm just looking at it. She
herself was wearing the thinnest backless dress she could
find.
He strode with an air of confidence. The male was
gorgeous—and he knew it. How could he not, with the women
gaping at him? Then she frowned. He seemed oblivious to
the
prancing coeds in low-cut tops angling for his attention.
His body was big, muscular in a way that hinted at
immortal,
but what he was exactly eluded her. Considering his size,
he
was probably a demon, or even a Lykae—those animals had
begun prowling the Valkyries’ turf as bold as they
pleased.
Or could he be . . . a vampire?
She trained her gaze on his chest, watching for the rise
and
fall of breaths. Seconds passed. Historically, the
vampires
had shunned Louisiana. Yet on this night her Valkyrie
coven
had heard that members of both warring vampire armies,
the
Horde and the Forbearers, could be out in the Quarter.
What they didn’t know was why.
His chest is still. Bingo. Vamp.
Since his eyes were a normal gray and clear—not crazed
and
red with bloodlust—that meant he was a Forbearer, one of
an
army who didn’t drink blood straight from the flesh.
Vampires who didn’t kill. At least, that was their
mission
statement.
The Lore was still waiting to see how that worked out for
them.
Though Danii knew she needed to report back on this
sighting, she couldn’t take her gaze off him. What was it
about this vampire? She was aware of only two Valkyrie
who’d
ever been with his kind. One still lived. Danii knew the
danger; so why this attraction?
Yes, he was breathtakingly cocky, with his leading-man
face
and broad shoulders, but she’d never been so absorbed by
a
male. Not a real one, anyway.
Broken-doll Daniela . . . wanted. Him. A vampire.
When he was almost directly below her, she noticed that
he
seemed burdened, preoccupied even. Hardly the expression
of
someone who’d been stalking her.
But if he hadn’t been, then who—
The unmistakable twang of bow-strings sounded behind her.
She dove for cover, and a swarm of arrows sliced the air
where she’d been standing. A second volley skittered
against
the brick where her head had just been, ricocheting off
the
low ledge wall.
She recognized the creosote-like scent of the arrowheads.
Poison on the tips, fire poison. Which could only
kill ice creatures like her. Oh, gods.
Without looking back, she vaulted over the side of the
roof.
When she landed in the alley below, she tore off at a
sprint.
The bows, the poisoned arrow-heads—this wasn’t a Lykae
threat. Not a vampire attacking.
Icere assassins were hunting her. My mother’s people.
How had they found her?
No choice but to flee, knew she couldn’t remain to fight.
These assassins traveled in bands, and the number of
arrows
indicated at least half a dozen men.
Even as she raced directly toward the mortal gauntlet,
her
mind rebelled. She hadn’t seen another of her kind in
centuries. I thought I’d be safe from them here.
Her only hope was to outrun them, yet she knew how fast
they
would be. Like her, they were born of the fey—
She dashed right in front of the vampire, nearly knocking
him over.
2
Murdoch had just rubbed the back of his neck, then peered
upward, convinced he was being watched.
He’d spied nothing, started on his way again . . . and
almost ran over a small blonde in a skimpy backless
dress.
With lightning speed, she darted in front of him, sparing
him the briefest glance. He caught a glimpse of high
cheekbones and alarmed silvery eyes before she sped
across
the main thoroughfare toward another alley. A pointed ear
had peeked out through the wild spill of her long fair
hair.
Pointed ears, silver irises, running too fast to be a
human.
An immortal—possibly one of them.
That glimpse of her was all it took, and the chase was
on.
He hurriedly followed her into the alley, then traced,
vanishing and materializing ever closer to her.
Though small, she was swift as she navigated through a
maze
of shadowy blocks, heading toward the river. He was
barely
gaining on her.
What kind of being could run as fast as a vampire could
trace?
As he neared, he made out finer details of her
appearance.
Her legs were taut and shapely under her short dress. Her
bared back and arms were slim. She wore silver bands
above
her elbows, and elaborate braids threaded her long hair.
She seemed foreign, unusual. Like women from faraway
lands
in olden times. I can’t wait to get a better look from
the front.
That thought threw him. Since the night he’d been turned
into a vampire three hundred years ago, he’d had no
interest
in women, no need for them, just as he never reacted to
the
scent or sight of food.
Why would I give a damn about what her front looks
like?
He would wrest information from her. He could do
little
else.
His body was deadened. And he preferred it that way.
Just then, she glanced over her shoulder as she ran, and
he
caught sight of her elven face once again.
Those pointed ears . . . several factions in the
Lore
had them, at least that he knew of. Valkyrie were among
them. He was becoming more and more convinced he’d found
his
quarry.
But she seemed to have lost sight of him altogether,
focusing in another direction.
With each minute that passed, they traveled deeper into a
decaying labyrinth of abandoned warehouses and stacks of
railcars.
Finally she was slowing. She stumbled in a puddle, then
tripped on the corner of a shipping pallet.
He stopped tracing and began running toward her. He was
close enough to hear her heart drumming, her gasping
breaths.
The Valkyrie his brother had encountered had known no
fear
of vampires. Maybe in the last five years they’d learned
they had reason to flee from one. The thought made him
pursue her with even more excitement. His vampire
instincts
rushed to the fore. The thrill of the chase overwhelmed
him,
and Murdoch played with her, letting her lope until she
tired.
Just as he decided to end this, he turned a corner after
her, running into a four-way crossing.
There was no sign of her.
Only silence.
* * *
Danii crouched on the second floor of a storm-ravaged
warehouse, struggling to catch her breath and shuddering
from heat.
She still couldn’t believe the Icere were here. She’d
thought she was safe living in such a warm climate,
believing they’d never look for her this close to the
equator.
Like the Icere, Danii didn’t sweat. Unlike them, she
could
go into thermal shock if she grew overheated. But she was
more accustomed to the temperature here than they were.
And
she knew every twist and turn of these downtown streets.
As
long as she didn’t catch a fire arrow, she could handle
the
Icere.
The vampire was another matter entirely. When she’d seen
him
tracing after her, she’d gaped in disbelief that yet
another
pursuer had joined the chase.
A clear-eyed vampire, a true Forbearer.
Though hidden, she could still see him from this vantage.
With a narrowed gaze, he turned in circles below,
determining her direction.
Any superficial and misguided attraction she’d felt for
him
was drowned out by annoyance. If this male would just
move
on, the Icere likely wouldn’t find her here.
Otherwise, he was going to get her killed.
The assassins would separate to trap her, driving her
with
the threat of those poisoned arrows. They wouldn’t lob
their
notorious ice grenades at her—they’d lose valuable cold
and
she’d simply take the impact with a smile on her face as
she
soaked the chill into herself.
But those arrows . . .
Tipped with a poison that ravaged through an ice being’s
veins like liquid fire.
I would know. This wasn’t the first time a faraway
Icere king had dispatched killers after Danii, the
rightful
Icere queen. . . .
Instead of leaving, the vampire called out in a deep
voice,
“I know you’re here.” His words were thickly accented.
Russian? Perhaps Estonian. “You’re a Valkyrie, are you
not?”
He stilled, listening for her. “If so, you’ll want to
know
that my brother just captured Myst the Coveted.”
Myst. Danii loved all her half sisters equally,
but
she owed Myst.
Wait . . . a Forbearer’s brother had taken her?
There
was one Forbearer—an Estonian— who wanted Myst above all
others: Nikolai Wroth, the Overlord. He’d done Myst
wrong,
but then she had definitely retaliated.
And the Overlord had brothers.
Danii had to find out what had happened to her sister. If
Nikolai alone had her, then Myst probably wouldn’t be in
danger, since she was his Bride. But if Nikolai had
surrendered her to the Forbearer king . . .
I have to know. Danii could trap the male below in
a
cocoon of crushing ice, then question him, but how much
more
cold—and time—could she stand to lose?
“Why do you cower?” Anger blazed off him. “A true
Valkyrie
would face me.”
True Valkyrie? His taunt struck home, like a jab at an
exposed nerve. She wanted nothing more than to be like
her
half sisters. To enjoy all the things they took for
granted.
Broken doll . . . She rose unsteadily, crossed to
a
gap in the wall, then stepped out.
At once, his gaze locked on her, following her down. His
lips parted, revealing barely visible fangs, but he made
no
move to close the thirty or so feet between them.
Had she truly thought the gray of his eyes was normal?
Recognition seemed to flare in them. Recognition?
But
how? She’d never seen him before—she’d definitely have
remembered.
His gaze was focused . . . predatory. Then his
irises
turned black. Black in a vampire meant intense emotion.
Yet
his earlier fury seemed to be fading.
As they stared at each other, all other sounds—the eerie
thrum of barges churning the river, the distant screech
of
streetcars—were drowned out.
“My brother warned me that your kind are vicious.” His
voice
went even lower as he frowned. “I cannot see you as so.”
“Where is my sister, vampire?”
“I can take you to her, Valkyrie.”
I’ll bet. Yes, the male before her was a
Forbearer,
which meant that he was clueless among the Lore.
He’d have no idea how dangerous Danii in particular could
be.
3
A living, breathing Valkyrie stood before him. And she
was
so stunningly beautiful. . . .
Murdoch’s view of her front had proved far more rewarding
than he’d imagined.
He shook himself. Was she one of those who’d shot
Nikolai?
Had she been there to laugh at the idea of his brother’s
agony?
For some reason, he couldn’t imagine her like that. He
knew
she was an enemy—one among an army of females who sought
the
annihilation of all vampires—and Nikolai had just warned
him
not to underestimate them. But this one looked even more
fragile than Myst.
Though her features and lithe body were perfection, her
blond locks were tangled around her pointed ears, and
dust
smudged her cheeks. Her face was feverishly red, and she
was
subtly swaying on her feet. She looked sad and miserable.
And spooked.
Chasing a female who feared him sat ill. Nikolai had
sworn
they were taunting, sadistic warriors. Yet this creature
had
hidden from him—after fleeing as if her life depended on
it.
“Listen, Valkyrie, I don’t want to hurt you. I just have
some questions for you to answer.”
She raised her hand, but lifted no weapon. Instead, she
flattened her palm just below her lips as if to blow a
kiss
good-bye. The breath that left her mouth looked like a
cloud
of frost, surging forward, surrounding him.
Ice flash-froze around his boots. He couldn’t move his
legs.
Couldn’t break free. “What the hell is this?” Her
breath continued to surround him, ice growing up past his
knees, climbing to his thighs.
Then she coughed, bending over and rocking on her feet.
The
buildup stopped, leaving him fettered by this bizarre
binding.
He strained against the ice, which seemed stronger than
any
he’d ever known, but he was unable to break free or trace
from it. “Take—this—away.”
She stalked closer. “Who has Myst now? Nikolai or the
Forbearer king?”
“How do you know my brother’s name?”
“Nikolai or the king?”
He spied the points of her ears twitching, and her gaze
darted past him. Just as she hissed at something
behind him, he heard movement and twisted his upper body
around.
There stood half a dozen men, large Viking-looking
warriors,
with swords at their sides and arrows already nocked to
the
strings of their raised bows.
Their breaths smoked in the warm night air and their ears
were pointed.
She hasn’t been fleeing from me—
Arrows darkened the air around him, whizzing past his
head.
They’d aimed for her.
But somehow she was twisting to dodge the onslaught.
Whirling around in the air, she turned to dart into
another
alley, her speed incomprehensible.
Then she was gone.
His hands shot down to claw his legs free, his fingers
swiftly going numb. Just as the males behind him ran
after
her, Murdoch heard more fighting.
There are two groups. They’re organized, flushing her
out. Can’t get this fucking ice off me.
Suddenly, her small body came flying out of the
intersecting
alley before him.
Thrown. She’d been thrown.
The force of her landing sent her skidding across the
pavement. As she stabbed her claws against the bricks to
right herself, a cloud of arrows followed her. The
momentum
took her out of his field of vision.
Then an unfamiliar scent swept him up. Though his
instinct
told him it was blood, his mind rebelled.
Never had it smelled so exquisite. So irresistible.
At last Murdoch broke free, tracing to intercept her.
When
he reappeared, his every muscle tensed in an instant.
The scent had been blood—hers. She was kneeling in
a
pool of it, her chest full of arrows. One of the males
was
holding her up by her hair, speaking in some foreign
tongue.
In his other hand, he held a glowing red blade.
She gazed up at Murdoch as crimson streams snaked from
her
wounds to the dirty street.
They’d done this to her?
What had you been about to do to her? His vampire
nature warred with memories of the man he’d been. . . .
—I would never have hurt her.
—She was my prey. They stole her from me. My
prize.
Just . . . mine.
At the thought of those men loosing their arrows at her,
the
idea of her pain and fear, rage erupted in him. The need
to
protect her, to destroy those who sought to harm her,
burned
within him.
Mine.
Two realizations struck him.
This strange female belonged to him alone. And these
killers
would die before they relinquished her.
Her gaze held Murdoch’s, and she weakly extended her
small
hand. With tears running from her silvery eyes, she
spoke, a
whisper directed to him, loud above all sounds.
“Mercy.”