Dark Whisper – Dark Carpathians Read Online Christine Feehan

Categories Genre: Dark, Fantasy/Sci-fi, Magic, Paranormal, Vampires Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 158
Estimated words: 145341 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 727(@200wpm)___ 581(@250wpm)___ 484(@300wpm)
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She felt a burst of dark, almost sadistic joy hastily cut off. I will be with you shortly.

Vasilisa had the impression of an intense battle taking place on the ground. Afanasiv was no longer in the sky, and there was more than one opponent. He was experiencing an almost euphoric rush of brutal excitement as he fought the master vampire and his servants. She hadn’t expected that of him, and for a moment, she was thrown by the knowledge that he was completely different than she had thought him. That tiny glimpse of him showed an animalistic side that savored viciousness.

The demons came within fifteen feet of them and abruptly halted. As if they were in a synchronized ballet, they all stood straight and tall, easy to see now against the white backdrop. They were strange mutations of mountain hare. They looked human, standing tall, nearly all men, but with their bodies covered in thick bluish-white fur. Their ears were long like the rabbits’, white and tipped black. They had the faces of human males, but the noses were those of rabbits. They wiggled them often, which Vasilisa found a little distracting.

The demon facing Garald didn’t deign to acknowledge Vasilisa. None of them did. They stared only at him. “We have brought you a gift.” The one talking had sharp serrated teeth in his mouth. She presumed the others had those same sharp teeth. “Would you like to see it?”

“Don’t answer him yet, Garald,” Vasilisa whispered. “Do you see that they don’t seem to notice me? I don’t think they even realize I’m here. These demons are programmed by someone we don’t yet see, and they don’t really see us that well. They see what they expect, which is only you. It would be interesting to see what he says if you don’t answer him.”

Silence hung in the air. The wind blew through the trees, and snow fell from the branches when they shook and trembled, showering them with a blend of snow and ice.

“Vasi.” Garald’s voice shuddered nearly as much as the branches. “That’s Taisiya. I recognize her hair. Her hair always reminded me of a mink, that deep rich brown.”

“She’s alive, Garald,” she pointed out again. “Right now, that’s all that matters. We’re going to take her back from them and heal her. She’s Lycan. She’s strong. You keep their attention on you. They haven’t seen me. I’ll move around them and try to find who is actually orchestrating everything. Don’t touch her or allow her to touch you. Something happened with Andros and Grigor. I don’t have time to go into that now, but we can’t afford for the demons to trap you as well.”

“Hurry, Vasi,” Garald pleaded.

Vasilisa put her sword away and instantly shimmered into transparency and then completely disappeared. She circled around her brother, making certain to stay above the ground. She moved slowly enough that she didn’t displace any snow. It was very difficult not to look at the young Lycan woman lying trussed up like a game hen with small, deliberate cuts all over her body. Signs of suffering and strain were on her face, seen at just a quick glance. She had her head tucked down and was trying to avoid Garald’s gaze, but the demon closest to her prodded her with the sharp nails on his enormous paws.

Vasilisa studied each of the demons. It stood to reason that one of them might be the driving force behind all the rest, although she thought that the demon would have noticed her. She took her time, not wanting to miss anything important. None of them seemed different from the other. They stood straight and tall, acting in that strange synchronized motion as if they had been trained to perform on a stage.

It is possible they have been. Or they are being directed by someone who has been a performer. Someone close to your family. Someone who knows your brothers and you.

That voice was calm and steady. Even soothing. But the moment he spoke, anger exploded in her. The emotion was unexpected, but it was profound. Harsh. Beyond her capacity to feel. She realized she had tapped into her brothers—all of them. It was common for the siblings to share intense emotions, but she hadn’t thought they could hear her lifemate when he was trying to help her sort through possible answers. Not only was that wrong of her, but it was dangerous. She closed her mind to her brothers.

I’m sorry, Afanasiv. I had no idea I was sharing with my brothers.

You are worried for them. It is only natural. Afanasiv excused her.

But two of them are compromised. Whatever is said between us might possibly be heard by our enemy.

Was he getting closer? She had never had trouble solving problems or working alone, but she knew this journey wasn’t hers alone. She had read the tarot cards handed down for hundreds of years from mother to daughter that very evening, and she knew she would never be alone again. There was unexpected relief in knowing that. She understood her brothers’ anger and fear. They didn’t want to be alone.


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