A Darker Crimson Read online




  A Darker Crimson

  by

  Carolyn Jewel

  Copyright

  Copyright © 2005, 2011 by Carolyn Jewel

  This book is a work of fiction. The names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the writer’s imagination or have been used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to persons, living or dead, actual events, locales or organizations is entirely coincidental.

  All Rights Are Reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission from the author.

  Cover Design by BookBeautiful.com

  Cover Image copyright Jenn LeBlanc, Smexy Studios

  ISBN: 978-0-9833826-6-9

  All rights reserved. Where such permission is sufficient, the author grants the right to strip any DRM which may be applied to this work.

  About A Darker Crimson

  Never get between a cop and her daughter. Even if you’re an all-powerful demon.

  “A DARKER CRIMSON is a fast-paced, attention-grabbing, action-packed hell of a ride into the unknown demon world.”

  (Romance Reviews Today)

  Officer Claudia Donovan doesn’t blink at the two latest corpses. They aren’t the first paranormal kills she’s seen by far. Even the notorious vampire criminal kingpin Tiberiu Korzha doesn’t phase her anymore. When demons kidnap her and her daughter, however, she’s out of her league. A dark-magic ritual leaves her bonded to a demon and clamoring for Korzha’s help.

  Tiberiu Korzha doesn’t care for humans, though Claudia Donovan is more tempting than most. When he’s trapped in the demon world with Donovan, Korzha must put a private deal with the demons on the line to help rescue the cop’s daughter. If they can’t return home in time, they know plenty of dangerous demons who’ll do anything to take their place in Crimson City.

  A Darker Crimson is the fourth book in the Crimson City saga, a series of sizzling paranormal romance novels. If you like strong female characters, steamy love scenes, and edge-of-your-seat action, you’ll love Carolyn Jewel’s world of vampires, demons, humans, and werewolves.

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  Table of Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright

  About A Darker Crimson

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  Chapter Thirty

  Chapter Thirty-One

  Chapter Thirty-Two

  Chapter Thirty-Three

  Chapter Thirty-Four

  Chapter Thirty-Five

  Chapter Thirty-Six

  You Might Enjoy

  About Carolyn Jewel

  Books by Carolyn

  Excerpts from the Crimson City Series Novels

  Excerpt from Crimson City by Liz Maverick

  Excerpt from Through a Crimson Veil by Patti O’Shea

  Excerpt from Seduced by Crimson by Jade Lee

  Excerpt from Crimson Rogue by Liz Maverick

  Excerpt from Crimson & Steam by Liz Maverick

  Change Log

  Chapter One

  Claudia Donovan crouched down to get a closer look at the bodies, the smell telling her it was bad, a damp smell, tangy with blood and bile. The moon hung low and pale in the sky, and darkness shrouded the freshly graded dirt. Two bodies sprawled in the shadow of a bulldozer. At one end of the lot a dumpster overflowed with construction debris, broken sheetrock, tattered insulation and twisted re-bar. She switched on her Mag-light. The beam illuminated the sheen of viscera.

  Los Angeles, the City of Angels. It was earning its other nickname all over again: Crimson City. The war—oh, right, the “conflict”—between the species was spreading. This time, two adult males. The smaller one looked peaceful. Close-cropped afro, square-chinned face, ebony skin, big brown eyes and a deep gash across his throat. The other one, John Doe Number Two, didn’t look so peaceful. Both men looked dead.

  Claudia reached for her police-issue pack and took out a pair of latex gloves. After a hesitation, she slipped them on. No sense not checking things out while she waited for the detectives and the M.E. to arrive. Considering she’d notified the L.A.P.D. fifteen minutes before she’d called the buttheads from Internal Operations, she felt confident the detectives would arrive first. They’d better. Internal Operations, unofficially Battlefield Operations or B-Ops, the city government Intelligence division, was nothing but a pain in the ass. No one in the L.A.P.D. liked them, least of all her. But in this case, damn it, she didn’t have a choice. She had to notify B-Ops because of Korzha.

  She glanced at the vampire just to make sure he was still there. He was. Now there was a real piece of work. Tiberiu Korzha. He was the reputed head of the vampire Family Korzha with an army of lawyers who had so far made every prosecuting attorney in the city look like a chump. The creature stood just within sight, though much of his face remained in shadow. Mostly the P.D. dealt with rogue vamps, vampires who went outside the law and the treaty between the species or who just went flat out insane; but Korzha had Strata +1 written all over him: He was part of their society and was as suave, rich and debonair as they came. Right now, he stood still as a statue. She hoped he had control of himself. There was blood all over, including a crimson splatter on the side of the bulldozer. Spilled blood tended to make an edgy vamp edgier.

  “You have anything to do with this, Korzha, or you just get lucky?” she asked.

  “Lucky,” he replied. But not like he meant it.

  The L.A.P.D. didn’t have jurisdiction to arrest him for any of the crimes of which he was suspected: racketeering, drug-trafficking, assault, forced conversion, fraud, and aiding-and-abetting all of the above—but everybody knew Tiberiu Korzha was a killer. Anyone needed a vamp taken down, Korzha was reputedly the guy to make the hit. He was an interesting vamp. B-Ops insisted paranormal investigations belonged to them, but Claudia didn’t give a rat’s ass about that. There wasn’t any law against the P.D. asking a vamp questions. Not yet.

  Even in the dark, she took care not to meet Korzha’s eyes. He’d been at her precinct for a friendly interview more than once. He liked to voodoo the ladies, give them that come-hither-for-a-mind-blowing-orgasm stare. He’d tried it once or twice with her. Damn near worked. Good-looking vamp. Weren’t they all? She went back to examining the bodies. She decided Korzha must have fed on at least one of the dead guys, and that’s why he wasn’t twitchy.

  “Lucky accident? Or lucky you got them both?” she asked, still crouched beside the bodies. The new P.D. uniforms, dark blue and body hugging, tended to fit poorly in the crotch. She had long legs and her uniform pants kept riding up.

  “Well,” the vamp said in his smooth voice. “You know what they say about luck.”

  “Yeah, right. If it weren’t for bad luck…Vamps don’t have bad luck.” How much bad luck could you have if you
lived in the Upper, were rolling in money and didn’t die without a lot of help? Not much. Now, her? She had all kinds of luck, none good lately. Way too much overtime. All the cops were pulling extra shifts just to keep up. Her precinct had a pool going on total body count by end of month. She had one of the highest numbers. Halfway through the month and they were almost there. Her pick looked pretty good.

  “This guy—” She pointed to the larger body. “He had some bad luck, I’d say.” She glanced up again, kind of a sideways look so as to avoid meeting his eyes. A vamp hanging out in this neighborhood just didn’t compute, not without throwing in a criminal motive or two or three. “Dollars to donuts he was looking to get made. You know anything about that?”

  Korzha’s teeth flashed in the dim light. “I haven’t made a vampire in…quite a long time.”

  “Right.”

  “The last thing this city needs is more post-human wrecks running amok.”

  She reached into the last of the smaller corpse’s pockets. Surprise, surprise. He had no ID. “Something’s rotten in the State of Denmark, wouldn’t you say?” John Doe One looked to be the younger as well as the smaller of the two bodies. Adult human male, well developed. Good nutrition. She touched his neck and found the wounds she expected. His skin was cool with a faint sheen of something on the surface. There were two puncture wounds, and about a centimeter and a half below that a scatter line of petechiae from lower teeth pressing up and two telltale bruises from lower canines.

  Korzha hunkered down beside her, watching curiously.

  “Got hungry, did you?” she asked.

  She pretended she didn’t notice his shoulder practically touching hers. The problem with vamps like Korzha, besides the sharp teeth and insatiable lust for human blood, was the combination of physical and supernatural charisma. Supposedly, the man had been good-looking when he was human and becoming a vamp must have tripled the effect. When the subject came up, which it did whenever he got hauled to the precinct for a little polite interrogation, most every woman agreed Korzha was a fine-looking man. Yummy was the adjective most often applied. Rumor was a lot of other vamps imitated his looks. Some things, of course, couldn’t be duplicated: his six-foot frame, muscled without being overdone, and a face that, when you caught him in a moment of repose, was handsome but not pretty. The Armani suits, leather shoes, French shirts, the close shave and the perfect hair cut with a hint of sideburn trimmed to a point, razored off his neck—that look, a lot of male vamps adopted. If Korzha raked his fingers through his hair, every espresso-colored lock sprang back into place. A bit chilly, it always seemed to her, that kind of perfection. But, he had a smile that could heat a person up pretty quick.

  Korzha shook his head like he had a bad taste in his mouth. Somewhere in the distance a dog barked. A real dog, not a werewolf. “It wasn’t me.”

  Claudia shrugged. “It’s not like I’m a vegetarian myself. But did you have to kill him?”

  “I didn’t.”

  “Right.” She shook her head. “I swear, I don’t know why I bother asking. I could have caught you with your teeth in the guy’s throat and you’d be, ‘Officer, I’m innocent.’” She risked a look at the vamp. His face was expressionless, but she saw his tongue come out to wet his lower lip. She hated it when anyone—fang, dog or human—thought she was stupid. “You’re one of the most notorious vamps in the whole of Crimson City, Korzha. A known hit-man—”

  “Prove it.”

  “I find you standing over two dead guys, and you didn’t kill anybody?”

  “Officially, of course—” Korzha gave her an odd smile “—until the coroner calls it, they aren’t dead.”

  “Stow it, fang.”

  Korzha laughed. “Even if I did—how would you put it?—take care of these two gentlemen, Officer Donovan, you’re outside your jurisdiction.” Every now and then, Korzha talked like he came from someplace else. Someplace far away from the good old U.S. of A. Really, really Upper. Stood to reason. Most vampires and all the vamps from the Korzha family came from the Upper. They all of them lived in Strata +1. It was in the nature of vamps to like the finer things. They looked it, lived it, talked it. They wouldn’t interact with humans at all if they didn’t need blood.

  “Yeah, well. B-Ops isn’t here yet.” Resentment put an edge on her words. B-Ops demanded they handle all paranormal incidents; like that sort of crime could only be handled by college boys and jarheads. B-Ops thought the L.A.P.D. was incompetent. From what she’d seen in her time on the force, they worked hard to compete. Nobody in the P.D. liked B-Ops; it was kind of a mutual-hatred society. Just like the rest of the city. Another serving of antipathy, please.

  “Well, then.” Korzha’s aristocratic tone lingered in the air.

  “I’m the officer on the scene.” Vamps. Snobs, all of them. Thought they were better than everyone. “There are dead humans here. Gotta take a look. Ask a few questions. It’d be a dereliction of duty if I didn’t.”

  “Only one of them is human.” Korzha nodded at the bodies.

  He sounded serious, and Claudia thought that was a pretty interesting change of tactic. Vamps hardly ever shared information with cops. “Yeah? Which one isn’t?”

  “The larger.”

  She studied the second body for a moment. It made a far less pleasant sight than the first which wasn’t remotely pretty. Number Two’s chest was torn open. Not cut; torn. It looked like someone had stuck his bare hand into the guy’s rib cage, made a fist and pulled hard. A heart balanced in the corpse’s left hand and, judging from the mess in his torso, she presumed it was his. She checked her comm readout, figured she had enough time, and dug a HemoStrip out of her backpack. “He’s not a vamp or he’d be turning to dust by now, and I doubt he’s a werewolf.”

  “Why?” asked Korzha.

  “Why do I think he’s not a dog?” Sheesh. Vamps could be so ignorant. Korzha ought to know, considering the neighborhood he chose to hang out in. Lotsa wolves around here. “Easy.” She glanced at the corpses. “No sign of re-transformation. Besides, if he was a dog, his packmates would be all over this place.”

  The vampire didn’t move. Eerie, the way his kind could be so motionless.

  “Lucky us.” She wiggled the HemoStrip at him. “Plenty of blood for a field sample.” She collected a drop of glistening gore from the center of the chest cavity, less chance of contamination, then dropped the strip in the vial and broke the chem-release seal. “So, not a dog, not a vamp. Not a human. What the hell is he then? A ghost?”

  “A demon.”

  Claudia fell backward onto her butt. Something went squish under her, followed by the odor of something rotting from the inside out. “Oh, crud. This is just gross. Korzha, you made me drop the HemoStrip.” The vampire plucked something from the ground and handed it to her. Damn preternatural vision. B-Ops got night vision contacts, but not the P.D., oh no. God forbid the first line of defense in a city about to ignite should be prepared. Not that she could blame Korzha for that. She took the HemoStrip from him. “Thanks.”

  “My pleasure.”

  She dropped the vial into a pocket to free up her hands for brushing off her backside. Thank God she still had on the gloves. Yuck. Her eyes fixed on Korzha’s ear. He was a tall creature, which meant her head tipped back. She could peripherally see the line of his just-shaved cheek. She caught a whiff of sandalwood from him. Nice. “Let’s pretend a minute there’s any such thing as demons.”

  “Cut the crap, Officer.” There was that voice again. Very…Upper. “You know damn well there are.”

  “How can you tell?” She stripped off her gloves and shoved them in an outside pocket of her pants. “To me, these look like two regular humans who didn’t deserve to die.”

  Korzha picked something off the seat of her pants and flung it away. “Experience.”

  She gave him a look. Had he, or had he not, let his hand linger on her butt? Somewhere in the back of the lot, a tomcat yowled. “Gonna explain that?” she asked. She
lifted her eyebrows when he didn’t, and pointed at the body. “If you’re so experienced, what kind of demon is it?”

  “A dead one,” Korzha said.

  “Everyone’s a goddamned comedian.”

  “He’s Mahsei.”

  “Isn’t that a kind of tuna fish?” She gave him a fake grin. “I got that for lunch today. Tuna salad with celery and stuff in it. Made it myself.”

  The vampire indicated the second body. “Considered a lesser demon. Although,” he added, “I believe Mahsei are underestimated in their world.”

  “Har, har.” Claudia turned back to the bodies. There were no demons in Crimson City. She knew that because if there were, all the humans would be dead or worse. She gave John Doe Two a closer glance. Looked human to her. She really, really hated being condescended to. “Jerk,” she muttered.

  “I heard that.”

  “Oh, gee.” Korzha could be in the Upper right now, relaxing amid the best that money could buy. Instead he was out here with the freaks and losers of L.A. Slumming. Feeling superior. She lifted a hand. “Sorry, Korzha. I forgot about the supernatural hearing and all that. I’ll be more careful next time.”

  “You do that.”

  Claudia studied the bodies. The thing was, rumors about demons had been cropping up on the streets for some time now. Lots of dead vamps and dogs these days, too. Lots of unrest. She frowned. She wasn’t about to tell Korzha that this second body bothered her. The clothes for instance; unusual fabric, and not a style she’d ever seen in Crimson City. There were no buttons on the pants, and no zipper either. Instead, they laced in front. She touched the corpse’s chin, pulling his face around. His eyes were open. For a moment she thought he’d been blind, but it was just that his irises were so pale they looked nearly white. “No rigor yet.” She covered her surprise. The pale eyes weren’t so unusual. She knew at least one other human with freakily pale irises.

  Korzha coughed, but she ignored him. Her mind clicked along. She didn’t give a crap about contaminating the scene. B-Ops wouldn’t notice, and if they did, hey, what did they expect? The P.D. was incompetent. They should-a got to the scene sooner. “This guy…” She pointed to the gaping chest. “Classic rogue kill.”