Published June 30th, 2013
Description:
How far was Tamara willing to go for the sake of revenge? And who would pay the price? She didn’t know as she tipped the bottle of vampire blood up to her lips but she was about to find out.
Stepping off the ferry in Sitka, Alaska was bittersweet for Tamara Semenov. A decade earlier she had abandoned her mother and high school sweetheart, Peter, to marry a man she hardly knew only to find herself in an abusive relationship. Now ten years later, she had escaped with her life but at what cost. Her mother was dead.
Although the police had ruled her mother’s death an accident, Tamara was convinced her estranged husband was to blame and to make matters worse, she knows she is his next target.
While putting her mother’s affairs in order, Tamara finds the blood of a vampire named Adrik, who as a human was falsely accused of raping a wealthy Russian heiress and excommunicated from the Church. For the sake of revenge, he willing condemned himself to vampirism.
Learning that the blood could tie the living to the undead, Tamara seeks out a connection with the long buried vampire in hopes of striking a deal, his freedom for her revenge. Will he be the edge she needs to out maneuver her estranged husband or will she become entangled in a two century old web of revenge?
EXCERPT
With my heart
racing, I unfolded the paper, expecting to see Joel’s neat, even handwriting.
Even his penmanship was perfectly controlled, but instead, the note was
scrawled in a large friendly script that I immediately recognized even though
it had been more than eight years since I’d seen it.
His lips
brushed mine in a soft whisper of a kiss before I escaped into the blur of the
rain, grateful that he could not distinguish the tears that began to course
down my cheeks.
Eight years
instead of ten because Peter had written often when I first moved to Seattle.
His letters followed me until I finally began returning them to the post
office. I didn’t want to send them back, but I was scared for Peter’s safety.
If Joel had checked the mail before me, things would have gone poorly for the
both of us, and so when we picked up our bags and moved the next time, I didn’t
bother filling out a change of address.
The note I
held in my hand today smelled of Peter, just as those letters had eight years
ago, and then, as now, the scent brought a warm feeling to my insides and a
soothing reminder that Peter had loved me once. I hadn’t deserved his love, of
course, but he’d loved me nonetheless, and I’d come to the realization over
those first two years apart that I’d loved him more than I’d realized.
Immaturity kept me from discerning it from the lust and excitement I felt with
Joel, but my love for Peter was the feeling that lasted long after the
excitement of Joel had worn away.
The only
thing I could give Peter back was his safety, and so I’d burned his letters in
the kitchen sink, washed them down the drain and resolutely forced him from my
mind all those years ago.
I inhaled
deeply of the note I held in my hand once more before I read it. ‘Dinner at my
place? Seven? Or whenever, I’ll be waiting for you. Hope you enjoyed your
hike.’
My heart sunk
into my belly at his words. I wanted to go. My soul ached to see him but how
could I after what I had done to him? And knowing that Joel was here, somewhere
waiting for me made Peter as much a target as myself. In fairness, I had to protect
him from my drama. He was a minister now and didn’t need my reputation for
disaster and mayhem affecting him or his position in the church. People in
Sitka have a long memory and no know had forgotten what I had put Mom or Peter
through.
I started towards
home, determined to put Peter’s safety before my craving to be with him, but as
my driveway approached, I couldn’t force myself to turn in. Surely one dinner
wasn’t the end of the world and not going would be an insult, I convinced
myself as I drove on into town towards Peter’s house. On the way, I picked up a
bottle of Pinot Grigio, a tip from the liquor store owner as I shopped for
something suitable to take to his house.
Peter’s
driveway was partially obscured in a clump of azaleas, but I’d turned in so
many times as a teenager when Mom would give me the truck for the day that I
had no problems finding it. His family home was nestled a couple of miles off
of the main road in the protective arms of a mountain that rose precipitously
from his backyard. His people had lived at this address for years. Not
necessarily in the same house, as houses come and go, but this location had
been his family’s home base for at least as many generations as my family. No
matter where in the world the Solinovs ended up, they always came back here to
be born, married, and buried.
The house
hadn’t changed much since I’d been gone except that it now blended even more
into the landscape. The rock chimney, the focal point of the home both inside
and out, was covered with a deep green moss that had once only dotted its
surface. Ferns had overtaken the bases of the trees his mother had planted when
we were teenagers, and those same trees had spread branches that now cocooned
the sidewalk. The wood siding on the house had faded to a steel gray color that
matched the slate mountains in the backdrop. In the far left backyard, I could
see the remnants of the tree house Peter and I had played in as children.
It was fairly
large and sprawling by Sitka standards, but you wouldn’t know it from standing
outside where the trees and shrubbery were arranged to conceal its size. But
from the inside, hallways branched in nearly every direction leading to the
several bedrooms that had housed his brother and four sisters.
Just seeing
the house made me a bit nervous. The last time I’d walked through these doors,
I’d told Peter I was leaving for Seattle. It was in front of the fireplace that
he’d pleaded with me to listen to reason. I had promised I would then later I’d
hastily shoved a note telling him good-bye into his mailbox. I felt guilty just
standing in the yard. I shouldn’t be here, I told myself, and I turned to go. I
didn’t make it more than a few feet before I heard the door open swiftly behind
me.
“Hey, you
can’t leave. You just got here,” Peter yelled across the expanse of the front
yard. I jumped at the sound of his voice, nearly dropping the wine bottle I
carried in my hand.
He was
leaning around the door, and I could only see him from the neck up. “Wow. You
really are jumpy. I thought you were just joking last night when you were
hiding in the bushes,” he teased. “How’s your head by the way?”
Taking a
steadying breath, I turned back towards him even as I was thinking of some good
excuse to get out of the evening. “I just realized I’ve got to…” I started to
lie, but I couldn’t think of a good excuse quickly enough. “A bad case of
nerves is all,” I finally said as I walked back towards the front door. “And my
head is still sore. Thanks for that,” I snipped.
“Well, you’re
not letting a case of nerves ruin dinner. Come on in,” he said, stepping back
from the doorway so I could pass.
“Oh,” I said
as I walked through the front door and realized he was shirtless, his chest
shining with sweat. “I can come back. Clearly, I’m early. It’s just that you
said ‘any time,’ and so I came straight over, but I can come back later. Or I
can come another day. Or we could forget it all together if you want.” I was
getting more flustered with every passing moment, and my mouth just wouldn’t
stop moving.
“Tam, it’s
okay. Relax. It’s my fault. I was working out in the garage and lost track of
time. Let me just get a quick shower. There are some glasses set out in the
kitchen and some snacks. The salmon could marinate awhile longer anyways so
it’s all good.”
I nodded my
head, avoiding looking in his direction at all. Instead, I was studying the
entryway as if I’d never seen one before in my entire life.
“Do you want
me to take that?” Peter asked as I stared fixedly at the chandelier hanging
from the vaulted ceiling.
“Oh, I almost
forgot. Yeah, it’s a bottle of Pinot,” I said as I handed it to him. The skin
of his thumb brushed my hand, and I couldn’t stop my eyes from moving to his.
I’d forgotten how green they were against the honey color of his skin, but I’d
never forgotten how I enjoyed looking at them.
“Make
yourself at home, Tam. The fire’s going in the living room, and I’ll be back in
a few.”
With his back
safely to me now, I watched him walk away, admiring the columns of muscles that
framed his spine as he strode from the room.
Peter had
always been handsome. Tall, at least three inches over six feet, he’d towered
over every guy in our high school. In middle school, he’d filled out early, and
by the time he was eighteen, every woman in town, no matter their age, had a
hard time keeping their eyes off him. His body was hard-muscled from
woodworking with his father and the continual climbing his family did in the
mountains. His thick hair was a golden brown, and he always had a light five
o’clock shadow, the good kind, which was just a shade darker than his actual
hair color. Looking at him certainly did not make you think Christian thoughts.
But if his
body was beautiful, his heart was divine. He was one of the few men who could
pull off humility and kindness without looking weak and walked on. Why had I
ever broken up with him? I questioned myself again.
Oh, yeah.
Excitement. Escaping the familiar. The usual reasons women throw away good men.
After
discarding my shoes and coat, I walked to the living room, anxious to warm my
hands in front of the fire. It had always been my favorite room in Peter’s
house. In the corner, the native rock chimney dominated the wall. The stones
had been carved out and placed meticulously by some past relative of Peter’s,
and it truly was a work of art. The walls were hand-hewn logs from the
surrounding forests and stained a natural color that was both warm and
inviting.
Comfortable
leather furniture had replaced the country blue fabric his mom had preferred,
and the bookcases were lined with rows of seminary books, woodworking manuals,
a few classics and Peter’s all-time favorites—westerns. The air smelled of
cedar, leather, and men’s cologne and whispered of days filled with hard work
and quiet nights spent reading in front of the fire.
I thumbed
through a couple of photo albums that were lying on the coffee table, smiling
at the memories the faded pictures brought back. There were several of my
family at church functions and a few of Peter and I at school events. Our
senior prom pictures were displayed proudly followed by our graduation
pictures. The second album was filled with pictures taken after I’d left and
looking at them brought tears to my eyes. I wiped them away quickly when I
heard Peter’s bedroom door open. Carefully, I placed the albums back where I’d
gotten them.
“How was the
hike?” Peter asked from behind me. He held two glasses of wine, one of which he
slipped into my hand as he lowered himself down onto the stone hearth to sit
beside me.
“The cold air
was good. Cleared my head a little and I feel better,” I said as I took a drink
of wine. I lied, forcing myself to sound happier than I actually felt, but I
had no intentions of ruining Peter’s evening with the details of Mom’s case. He
knew I suspected foul play, since I’d mentioned it to him the night I called
and asked him to check on her, but we hadn’t discussed it since.
“Pinot Grigio
is my favorite,” he said. “How’d you know?”
“Yeah, I got
a little tip from the owner of the liquor store,” I said sheepishly. “I didn’t
mean to tell anyone I was coming over here. He just kind of figured it out. It
seems he remembered us. Or me. Probably me mainly.”
“Everyone
remembers you,” Peter answered.
I let my
breath out in a huff. “That’s what I’m afraid of and I don’t want to ruin your
reputation, Father.” I smiled sarcastically but I wasn’t joking.
“It’s okay. I
don’t care if anyone knows you’re here. I’m not ashamed. Everyone knows one of
the benefits of being Orthodox is not having to be celibate your entire life.”
Our eyes met and I felt my cheeks flame.
“So what were
you working on when I drove up?” I asked in an attempt to change the subject
away from celibacy.
“Let me show
you,” he said, standing up and offering his hand. I let him pull me to my feet
against my better judgment. His hands were warm, strong and slightly calloused.
He didn’t let go of mine immediately but instead led me in the direction of his
workshop for a few steps before our hands slipped apart.
His workshop
was connected to the house through a series of hallways. His father used to
work out there for hours, and he’d taught Peter everything he knew. The smell
of fresh cedar drifted through the hallways as we got closer until I would have
sworn I was standing on the side of a mountain.
As we walked
into the workshop, I gasped in awe. Spread across braces was the partially
finished hull of a boat carved from a giant red cedar tree trunk. At least ten
feet in length and three feet wide, the canoe would carry five or six people
easily when it was completed, which could take years. Hand carving a canoe is
no easy feat.
“Peter, oh my
gosh, it’s beautiful! How long have you been working on this?” I questioned as
I ran my finger carefully down the sides. It was still rough-hewn and splinters
would be abundant.
“About a
year. I spend some time on it whenever I get a chance, which sometimes is every
day and then sometimes I can’t touch it for a week or two.”
“Well, it
proves you’re a dedicated man, and why you don’t have the hands of a minister,”
I teased.
“I guess
we’ll know for sure when I get it done, and it’s not necessary for ministers to
have soft hands, by the way, so long as we have soft hearts.”
“You’ve
always had a soft heart. That’s what made you such a good friend,” I said.
“As I
remember it,” Peter answered, his eyes holding mine, “we were more than
friends.”
The room had
suddenly gotten much smaller, and the air seemed to have lost some of its
oxygen. I became very aware of Peter’s proximity, the outline of his chest and
the fullness of his lips.
“I need some
water,” I said, breaking our gaze as I turned and walked back to the kitchen.
Behind me, I heard him let out a sigh of frustration.
In the
kitchen, I grabbed a bottle of water from off the counter and sat down at the
bar while Peter put the salmon steaks on to cook.
“So how are
your parents? I should have asked earlier,” I said, hoping for a neutral topic
as I reached for some bread arranged on a tray on the counter.
“Mom died a
couple of years back, heart disease, and Dad retired to the lower forty-eight.
He just couldn’t face living here without her. You know, seeing their friends
all the time. It was just too much. The land has been in the family for
generations of course, so he just turned it over to me when I came back here.”
“I’m sorry to
hear about your mom.”
He nodded a
thanks as he flipped the salmon over, basting it with a traditional marinade.
It smelled delicious, and I was beginning to get an appetite.
“So what’s it
like being back here? You miss the big city?” he questioned.
“It’s
different. But it’s nice,” I said. “I miss the Fish Market and the music that
was a constant in Seattle. And I miss the crowds, which is strange, I know, but
Sitka feels kind of lonely now after living there. But it’s good to be back and
see the mountains again, and there’s just nothing like the Sitka air. I haven’t
smelled anything this clean in a really long time.”
We made small
talk awhile longer about the whereabouts of some old classmates and family
friends while Peter plated the salmon and fresh grilled vegetables and placed
our plates at the massive wooden table in the attached dining room. The table
was situated in front of a large picture window. The rain had returned, and the
water zigzagged randomly down the window in long streaks. I tried to guess
which direction the stream would go, but I missed it every time, and the water
would streak in the opposite direction to what I expected. Visibility was low
with the mists sweeping in from the sound, and I couldn’t see more than a few
feet away from the windows, but rather than closing us in, the fog only added
to the privacy that surrounded us tonight.
The evening
was perfect. Dinner was delicious. The salmon was cooked to absolute
perfection. Of course, it didn’t hurt that he’d caught the fish himself just a
few days back. The conversation was pleasant, sticking to easy subjects like
Seattle and our old times together. I stopped at one glass of wine, since I had
to drive home, but Peter was finishing his third glass by the time we were done
eating.
I insisted on
helping him clean up despite his protests and forced him to talk about himself
for a while. I was anxious to know what he’d been up to for the last ten years.
As I wiped down
the table and dried the dishes, Peter described how he’d traveled for a year or
two overseas before going to seminary, and in between semesters, he’d done
missionary work in the outskirt villages of far northern Alaska. He’d dated a
little, had a couple of serious relationships, but in the end, he hadn’t been
able to commit, and then he’d returned home and stepped into the role the men
in his family had filled for generations in Sitka.
When we were
finished and the kitchen was spotless, I insisted I had to get home. It was
getting quite late, and I was already dreading returning to my house at this
hour. Peter walked me to the entryway, and while I put on my shoes and coat, he
went outside and started my truck to take the chill off.
“Thanks for
dinner and for starting my truck. Especially for starting my truck,” I said
when he came back in the front door. His honey skin was spattered with
raindrops and a few had collected on his eyelashes framing the green of his
eyes. I couldn’t look anywhere but at his face. He seemed to be having the same
problem and for several seconds the only sounds were the hum of the gentle rain
and our quiet breathing.
Peter finally
broke the silence. “I’m surprised you came, Tam,” he said. “To be honest, I
thought I might be sitting here waiting for you all night.”
“Well, if
we’re being honest, Peter, I almost didn’t come.”
He sucked in
his breath harshly and started to say something before I cut him off. “But you
need to know why before you judge me, okay?”
Nodding his
head, he took a deep breath as if he were steadying himself for my answer.
“The only
reason I considered not coming was for your safety. It’s not that I don’t want
to be with you. I do. But I don’t deserve you. Parts of me are broken, Peter
and those same parts want something that you wouldn’t understand because you’re
too good. And I’m also dangerous because Joel is out there somewhere, Peter. I
don’t know where or when he’s going to pop up, but he is out there. I spent a
long time with him. Too long, I realize, but if I know one thing about him,
it’s that he will not give up. So you see, it was very selfish of me to come
here tonight, but I so badly wanted to see you. I just hope I haven’t made a
terrible mistake.”
“I can take
care of myself, Tam,” he responded quickly. “I’m not afraid of him.”
“You should
be,” I said. “But you’re too good to understand how evil someone like him can
be. Please don’t under estimate him.”
Pulling my
coat on, I reached up and kissed him goodnight on the cheek. “Talk to you
soon,” I promised.
I was halfway
out the door when he caught my arm in his hand pulling me towards him.
“I can take
care of you too, Tam.”
About the author:
My name is DL Atha. I'm a wound care and internal medicine physician who craves to write full time.
I'm originally from Arkansas and live there still with my three kids and wonderful husband.
We live on a farm with too many animals and way too many chores.
I would say my life is very ordinary until the sun goes down and the kids go to bed. That's when the writer in me comes out and all the crazy stories that I daydream of during the day finally get to make an appearance.
My co- workers at the hospital think I'm insane for writing vampire novels and ask all the time why do I not write medical dramas. I say why would I EVER do that! I'm around it all day and I would much prefer to escape into another world rather than spend more time in the same world where I work.
My first novel was a vampire medical thriller named Blood Reaction. The story centered around a young woman whose home was invaded by a very ruthless vampire. She struck a bargain for her life in exchange for her child’s. Blood Reaction did well and I had so much fun writing it. I plan to serialize it and am working on the sequel currently. It was released in May 2011.
My newest novel, For the Sake of Revenge, was a two year project and was inspired by an old cemetery in Sitka, Alaska. It's a beautiful place where the mists roll in from the ocean like you see in the movies. Everything is dripping in the greenest moss you will ever see and even the ground seems alive. I felt as if I was in a foreign land because of the Russian heritage of southeast Alaska which is alive and well there. It seemed a perfect place to set a vampire story. I started doing some research on Russian vampire lore and found it so different from what I'm used. Enough so that then I had no choice but to start writing.
Sitka has a tragic side as well, I found, as I dug deeper into the historical documents and it played in well with the story of revenge and betrayal that I had envisioned. A great deal of For the Sake of Revenge is historically accurate. Except the vampires of course! But after you read some of the Russian lore, you'll at least have to pause for thought!
Also by D.L.Atha:
Also by D.L.Atha:
Annalice, a single mother and physician, is ready to immerse herself in the mundane chores of her farm as a diversion from her hectic professional life. But she becomes the victim of a home invasion, the supernatural kind. Vindictive and cruel, Asa, a century old vampire, takes brutal control of her life and home. Forcing her to strike a bargain in exchange for her daughter's life, Annalice must not only accept his presence but also bow to his depravity. Facing threats to her only child, she relies on her skills as a physician to unravel the clues to the vampire's existence attempting to beat him at his own game. Caught in a race against a genetic timeline, Annalice struggles to survive the Blood Reaction.
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