A Hunger Like No Other Read online




  PRAISE FOR

  IF YOU DARE

  "Filled with heated passion and wonderful repartee from one of romance's fastest rising stars!"

  --Romantic Times Magazine (Top Pick)

  "A classic romantic adventure that will leave you breathless!"

  --New York Times bestselling author Julia Quinn "Kresley Cole's voice is powerful and gripping, and If You Dare is her steamiest yet!"

  --New York Times bestselling author Linda Lael Miller "If You Dare is a tale that sizzles, generating heat that will scorch the reader. Kresley Cole has a definite talent for creating exciting stories and characters who will keep you on the edge of your seat."

  --readertoreader.com

  PRAISE FOR

  THE CAPTAIN OF ALL PLEASURES

  "Kresley Cole captures the danger and passion of the high seas in this electrifying debut."

  --New York Times bestselling author Joan Johnston

  "In her truly winning debut novel, the very talented Kresley Cole takes readers on the adventures of a lifetime . . . ."

  --New York Times bestselling author Susan Wiggs

  "The Captain of All Pleasures is an exciting, sensuous story that will thrill you at every turn of the page."

  --readertoreader.com

  "Fast-paced action, heady sexual tension, steamy passion . . . . Exhilarating energy emanates from the pages of this very smart and sassy debut."

  --Romantic Times Magazine (Reviewers' Choice Award Winner)

  "In The Captain of All Pleasures, author Kresley Cole has created a spitfire for a heroine and a hero who is a temperamental, passionate hunk . . . . There are many steamy scenes for those who enjoy passion in their read, and those who hunt for a book that mixes action and sensuality will not go away unhappy."

  --America Online

  ACCLAIM FOR

  THE PRICE OF PLEASURE

  "A splendid read! The sexual tension grips you from beginning to end."

  --New York Times bestselling author Virginia Henley "Sexy and original! Sensual island heat that is not to be missed."

  --New York Times bestselling author Heather Graham "Savor this marvelous, unforgettable, highly romantic novel by a fresh voice in the genre."

  --Romantic Times Magazine (Top Pick)

  "What a fabulous read! Ms. Cole has created a cast of characters that are fun and believable, and the plot to complement them. For a steamy read on the beach, I highly recommend this book."

  --Scribes World (Reviewers' Choice Award Winner)

  Thank you for downloading this Pocket Star Books eBook.

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  Contents

  Acknowledgments

  Prologue

  Epigraph

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  From the Book of Lore

  No Rest for the Wicked Excerpt

  For Richard, my real, live Viking.

  Acknowledgments

  Many, many thanks to Beth Kendrick, who rightfully dubbed us primal scream buddies. Without you and a telephone, there would be no word count. Thank you to the wonderful Sally Fairchild for all her much appreciated continued support. And my heartfelt thanks to Pocket Books own Megan McKeever, who is, at this very moment, most likely plucking me out of some book-related crisis.

  Prologue

  Sometimes the fire that licks the skin from his bones dies down.

  It is his fire. In a recess of his mind still capable of rational thought, he believes this. His fire because he's fed it for centuries with his destroyed body and decaying mind.

  Long ago--and who knows how much time has toiled past--the Vampire Horde trapped him in these catacombs deep beneath Paris. He stands chained against a rock, pinned at two places on each limb and once around his neck. Before him--an opening into hell that spews fire.

  Here he waits and suffers, offered to a column of fire that may weaken but is never-ending--never-ending, just like his life. His existence is to burn to death repeatedly, only to have his dogged immortality revive him again.

  Detailed fantasies of retribution have gotten him this far; nursing the rage in his heart is all he has.

  Until her.

  Over the centuries, he has sometimes heard uncanny new things in the streets above, occasionally smelled Paris changing seasons. But now he has scented her, his mate, the one woman made for him alone.

  The one woman he'd searched for without cease for a thousand years--up until the day of his capture.

  The flames have ebbed. At this moment, she lingers somewhere above. It is enough. One arm strains against its bonds until the thick metal cuts into his skin. Blood drips, then pours. Every muscle in his weakened body works in concert, striving to do what he's never been able to for an eternity before. For her, he can do this. He must . . . . His yell turns to a choking cough as he rips two bonds free.

  He doesn't have time to disbelieve what he's accomplished. She is so close, he can almost feel her. Need her. Another arm wrenches free.

  With both hands he clenches the metal biting into his neck, vaguely remembering the day the thick, long pin was hammered into place. He knows its two ends are embedded at least three feet down. His strength is waning, but nothing will stop him when she's so close. In a rush of rock and dust, the metal comes loose, the recoil making him fling it across the cavernous space.

  He yanks at the bond wrapped tight around his thigh. He wrests it and the one at his ankle free, then begins on the last two holding his other leg. Already envisioning his escape, not even glancing down, he pulls. Nothing. Brows drawn in confusion, he tries again. Straining, groaning with desperation. Nothing.

  Her scent is fading--there is no time. He pitilessly regards his trapped leg. Imagining how he can bury himself in her and forget the pain, he reaches above his knee with shaking hands. Yearning for that oblivion within her, he attempts to crack the bone. His weakness ensures that this takes half a dozen tries.

  His claws slice his skin and muscle, but the nerve running the length of his femur is taut as a piano wire. When he even nears it, unimaginable pain stabs up its length and explodes in his upper body, making his vision go black.

  Too weak. Bleeding too freely. The fire will build again soon. The vampires return periodically. Will he lose her just when he's found her?

  "Never," he grates. He surrenders himself to the beast inside him, the beast that will take its freedom with its teeth, drink water from the gutters, and scavenge refuse to survive. He sees the frenzied amputation as though watching a misery from a distance.

  Crawling from his torture, abandoning
his leg, he pulls himself through the shadows of the dank catacombs until he spies a passageway. Ever watchful for his enemies, he creeps through the bones littering the floor to reach it. He has no idea how far it is to escape, but he finds his way--and the strength--by following her scent. He regrets the pain he will give her. She will be so connected to him, she'll feel his suffering and horror as her own.

  It can't be helped. He is escaping. Doing his part. Can she save him from his memories when his skin still burns?

  He finally inches his way to the surface, then into a darkened alley. But her scent has faltered.

  Fate has given her to him when he needs her most, and God help him--and this city--if he can't find her. His brutality had been legendary, and he will unleash it without measure for her.

  He fights to sit up against a wall. Clawing tracks into the brick street, he struggles to calm his ragged breaths so he can scent her once more.

  Need her. Bury myself in her. Waited so long . . . .

  Her scent is gone.

  His eyes go wet and he shudders violently at the loss. An anguished roar makes the city tremble.

  In all of us, even in good men, there is a lawless wild-beast nature, which peers out in sleep.

  --Socrates (469-399 BCE)

  1

  One week later . . .

  On an island in the Seine, against the nighttime backdrop of an ageless cathedral, the denizens of Paris came out to play. Emmaline Troy wound around fire-eaters, pickpockets, and chanteurs de rue. She meandered through the tribes of black-clad Goths who swarmed Notre Dame like it was the Gothic mother ship calling them home. And still she attracted attention.

  The human males she passed turned their heads slowly to regard her, frowns in place, sensing something, but unsure. Probably some genetic memory from long ago that signaled her as their wildest fantasy or their darkest nightmare.

  Emma was neither.

  She was a co-ed--a recent Tulane grad--alone in Paris and hungry. Weary from another failed search for blood, she sank onto a rustic bench beneath a chestnut tree, eyes riveted to a waitress drawing espresso at a cafe. If only blood poured so easily, Emma thought. Yes, if it came warm and rich from a bottomless tap, then her stomach wouldn't be clenched in hunger at the mere idea.

  Starving in Paris. And friendless. Was there ever such a predicament?

  Couples strolling hand in hand along the gravel walk seemed to mock her loneliness. Was it just her, or did lovers look more adoringly at each other in this city? Especially in the springtime. Die, bastards.

  She sighed. It wasn't their fault that they were bastards who should die.

  She'd been spurred to enter this fray by the prospect of her echoing hotel room and the idea that she might find another blood pusher in the City of Light. Her former hookup had gone south--literally--fleeing Paris for Ibiza. He'd given little explanation for abandoning his job, saying only that with the "arrival of the risen king," some "serious epic shit" was brewing in "gay Paree." Whatever that meant.

  As a vampire, she was a member of the Lore, that stratum of beings who'd convinced humans they existed only in imagination. Yet though the Lore was thick here, Emma had been unable to replace her pusher. Any creatures she could scout out to ask fled her solely because she was a vampire. They scurried without knowing that she wasn't even a full-blooded one, nor that Emma was a wuss who'd never bitten another living being. As her fierce adoptive aunts loved to tell everyone, "Emma cries her pink tears if she dusts a moth's wings."

  Emma had accomplished nothing during this trip that she'd insisted on taking. Her quest to uncover information about her deceased parents--her Valkyrie mother and her unknown vampire father--was a failure. A failure that would culminate in a call to her aunts to get them to retrieve her. Because she couldn't feed herself. Pitiful. She sighed. She'd be razzed about this for another seventy years--

  She heard a crash, and before she even had time to feel bad for the waitress getting docked, another crash and then another followed. She tilted her head in curiosity--just as a table umbrella across the walk shot fifteen feet up to be batted high in the sky, fluttering all the way to the Seine. A cruise boat honked and Gallic curses erupted.

  Half-lit by the walk's torchlights, a towering man turned over cafe tables, artists' easels, and book stands selling century-old pornography. Tourists screamed and fled in the wake of destruction. Emma shot to her feet with a gasp, looping her satchel over her shoulder.

  He was cutting a path directly to her, his black trench coat trailing behind him. His size and his unnaturally fluid movements made her wonder if he could possibly be human. His hair was thick and long, concealing half his face, and several days' growth of beard shadowed his jaw.

  He pointed a shaking hand at her. "You," he growled.

  She jerked glances over both of her shoulders looking for the unfortunate you he was addressing. Her. Holy shite, this madman had settled on her.

  He turned his palm up and beckoned her to come to him--as if he was confident she would.

  "Uh, I-I don't know you," she squeaked, trying to back up, but her legs immediately met the bench.

  He continued stalking her, ignoring the tables between them, tossing them aside like toys instead of varying his direct pursuit of her. Furious intent burned in his pale blue eyes. She could sense his rage more sharply as he neared, unsettling her, because her kind were considered the predators in the night--never the prey. And because, at heart, she was a coward.

  "Come." He bit out the word as though with difficulty and motioned for her again.

  Eyes wide, she shook her head, then leapt backward over the bench, twisting in the air. She landed facing away from him and began speeding down the quay. She was weak, more than two days without blood, but terror made her quick as she crossed the Archeveche Bridge to exit the island.

  Three . . . four blocks covered. She chanced a look behind her. Didn't see him. Had she lost him--? Sudden glaring music from her purse made her cry out.

  Who in the hell had programmed the Crazy Frog ring tone into her cell phone? Her eyes narrowed. Aunt Regin. The world's most immature immortal, who looked like a siren and behaved like a frat pledge.

  Cell phones in their coven were for dire emergency only. Ringers would disturb their hunting in the back alleys of New Orleans, and even a vibration would be enough to trigger a twitching ear in a low creature.

  She flipped it open. Speak of the devil: Regin the Radiant.

  "Little busy right now," Emma snapped, taking another peek over her shoulder.

  "Drop your things. Don't take time to pack. Annika wants you at the executive airport immediately. You're in danger."

  "Duh."

  Click. That wasn't a warning--that was narration.

  She'd ask the details once she was on the plane. As if she'd needed a reason to return home. Just the mention of danger and she would scamper back to her coven, to her Valkyrie aunts who would kill anything that threatened her and keep malice at bay.

  As she tried to remember her way to the airport where she'd landed, the rain started to fall, warm and light at first--April lovers still laughing as they ran under awnings--but swiftly turning to pounding cold. She came to a crowded avenue, feeling safer as she wound through traffic. She dodged cars with their wipers and horns going full-force. She didn't see her pursuer.

  With only the satchel slung around her neck, she traveled quickly, miles passing beneath her feet before she spied an open park and then the airfield just beyond it. She could see the diffused air around the jet engines as they warmed, could see the shades on every window already drawn tight. Almost there.

  Emma convinced herself she'd lost him, because she was fast. She was also adept at convincing herself of things that might not be--good at pretending. She could pretend she took classes at night by choice, and that blushing didn't make her thirsty--

  A vicious growl sounded. Her eyes widened, but she didn't turn back, just sprinted across the field. She felt claws sink
into her ankle a second before she was dragged to the muddy ground and thrown onto her back. A hand covered her mouth, though she'd been trained not to scream.

  "Never run from one such as me." Her attacker didn't sound human. "You will no' get away. And we like it." His voice was guttural like a beast's, breaking, yet his accent was . . . Scottish?

  As she peered up at him through the rain, he examined her with eyes that were golden in color one moment, then flickering that eerie blue the next. No, not human.

  Up close, she could see his features were even, masculine. A strong chin and jaw complemented the chiseled planes. He was beautiful, so much so that she thought he had to be a fallen angel. Possible. How could she rule out anything?

  The hand that had been covering her mouth roughly grasped her chin. He narrowed his eyes, focusing on her lips--on her barely noticeable fangs. "No," he choked out. "No' possible . . . ." He yanked her head side to side, running his face down her neck, smelling her, then growled in fury, "Goddamn you."

  When his eyes turned blue sharply, she cried out, her breath seeming to leave her body.

  "Can you trace?" he grated as though speech was difficult. "Answer me!"

  She shook her head, uncomprehending. Tracing was how vampires teleported, disappearing and reappearing in thin air. Then he knows I'm a vampire?

  "Can you?"

  "N-no." She'd never been strong or skilled enough. "Please." She blinked against the rain, pleading with her eyes. "You have the wrong woman."

  "Think I'd know you. Make sure, if you insist." He raised a hand--to touch her? Strike her? She fought, hissing desperately.

  A callused palm grasped the back of her neck, his other hand clenching her wrists as he bent down to her neck. Her body jerked from the feel of his tongue against her skin. His mouth was hot in the chill, wet air, making her shudder until her muscles knotted. He groaned while kissing her, his hand squeezing her wrists hard. Below her skirt, drops of rain tracked down her thighs, shocking her with cold.

  "Don't do this! Please . . ." When her last word ended with a whimper, he seemed to come out of a trance, his brows drawing together as his eyes met hers, but he didn't release her hands.

  He flicked his claw down her blouse and sliced it and the flimsy bra beneath open, then slowly brushed the halves past her breasts. She struggled, but it was useless against his strength. He studied her with a greedy gaze as rain splattered down, stinging her naked breasts. She was shivering uncontrollably.