“Where is Tristol?” Tavis asked.

“Outside where Anna was taken,” Brodie said. “He’s trying to pick up her trail, see if Voltar took her by car or on foot. I guess a vampire’s sense of smell is even better than ours. And he says she smells mighty fine.”

“Bastard. I’ll kill him yet,” Tavis said.

“Get in line,” Ronan said. In addition to daggers and those fancy swords, he had a bow slung over his shoulder. “A bloody vampire on clan grounds.”

“Someone needs to keep an eye on him,” Tavis said. “I don’t fully trust him.”

“Sorcha, you take the first watch,” Duncan said.

“You take it, cousin. I want to fight,” she said.

“They’re cousins?” Tavis whispered to Faelan.

“Not really, or so distant it doesn’t count.”

“You’ll get to fight,” Duncan said. “I’ll take the second watch.”

“Are you going to try to suspend him?” Ronan asked.

“I’m undecided,” Tavis said. “But either way, we need to make sure Tristol doesn’t see. The last thing we need him knowing is how talismans and time vaults work.”

“He probably knows already,” Brodie said.

They left several warriors to take the wedding guests back to the castle. Two other clans had been called for reinforcement, one from Maine and one from Pennsylvania. They were flying in and would arrive within two hours.

Tavis led the way to where Tristol waited. He put aside his hatred and focused on Anna, on what Tristol could do to help. “Did you pick up her scent?”

“Too easily. He wants you to follow.”

“Where is she?” Tavis asked. “His penthouse?”

“No. It’s not there anymore. It burned down. He’s holding her in a cave. I’m sure he would have already killed her, but he’s hoping to lure Tavis.”

“Let’s go then,” Tavis said. “And everyone stay away from Voltar. You too, Tristol.” He didn’t want Tristol figuring out all their secrets.

“Be warned,” Tristol said. “He’s set traps. There are demons hiding in trees and underground.”

“Can you point them out?” Ronan asked tightly. “I’ll use my bow.”

Tristol agreed, and they started off. Faelan and Cody stayed near Tavis. If he needed help with Voltar, warriors who had destroyed ancient demons were less likely to be fatally injured.

“We’re close,” Tristol said. “There, up in that tree. He’s the lookout.” He hadn’t spotted them yet. A demon’s eyesight wasn’t usually as good as a warrior’s.

“I got him. We don’t want to alert Voltar with gunshots.” Ronan slipped his bow off his shoulder and nocked an arrow. He lifted the bow, held the arrow against his nose, and then let go. The demon fell from the tree and hit the leaves below. “One down.”

“The next one is hiding behind that outcropping of rock,” Tristol said. “He’s strong. I’m not sure an arrow will bring him down.”

“Can’t you just zoom up there and rip out his throat?” Niall asked.

“I’d rather not,” Tristol said.

“But you could,” Brodie said.

“I could.”

Brodie stepped back from Tristol. The vampire demon smiled, and something about his expression unleashed a memory from Tavis’s past. “Shite. You’re the one who told Ian and me where to find Druan’s sorcerer,” Tavis said.

“I’d hoped you wouldn’t remember,” Tristol said. “But you’ll realize now that I’ve helped your clan more than you knew.”

“You’re saying Tristol helped save our lives even then?” Faelan said.

Tavis was disturbed by the memory. He wanted to hate Tristol for what he’d done to him and Anna. “I’m sure it suited his purpose.”

Ronan frowned at Tristol. “I remember something too.”

“Doesn’t look pleasant,” Tristol said, studying Ronan silently.

“It isn’t.”

“The cave is there.” Tristol pointed to an area where the trees grew thicker. “He’ll have lots of demons guarding her.”

The warriors split up so they could approach the cave from different angles. Faelan and Tavis went with Ronan, Lachlan, and Shane. Tristol went ahead doing his mist thing.

“That’s the damnedest thing I’ve ever seen,” Lachlan said, watching the black mist vanish in the sky.

Instead of killing the demon waiting behind the rock, Ronan shot him with his bow, wounding him, so they could question him. “Where is Anna?” Tavis asked, holding a dagger to the demon’s throat.

“She’s with Voltar.”

“Where?” Faelan asked. “What’s he planning?”

“A sacrifice,” the demon said.

“What kind of sacrifice?” Lachlan asked.

“He’s going to sacrifice his own daughter to get me,” Tavis said.

“Daughter?” The demon laughed. “Voltar doesn’t have a daughter. He hates females.”

“I hope you’re right,” Tavis said, before he drove the dagger Faelan had given him into the demon’s chest.

They spaced themselves out and continued their advance. A minute later, Tavis heard a bird call. Faelan stopped. “That’s Ronan.” They looked across and spotted him motioning up ahead. He held up four fingers. Tavis and Faelan worked toward Ronan. He pointed out four demons waiting on the ground near the trees. The warriors attacked as quietly as possible. Ronan took out one with his bow, and then the warriors crept up on the other three.

They were just outside the cave now. “Guess he’s living in a cave until he gets another penthouse,” Ronan said.

They surrounded the cave. “Where’d Tristol go?” Brodie asked. “He’s the vampire. Don’t they turn into bats?”

“On the count of three, we go in,” Tavis said. Armed with modern weapons they hadn’t had in his time, they entered the cave. It was dark and damp and ugly.

“It’s not going to make National Geographic,” Brodie said. “This is the ugliest cave I’ve seen.”

They crept through the dark tunnels, looking for signs of where Voltar might be holding Anna. Tavis heard a deep growl, and Voltar appeared in his natural hideous form. He was flanked by eight demons, equally ugly. Each had thick gray skin and eyes that were yellow slits in a too-large head.

Tavis looked at Voltar’s long arms, tipped with sharp claws, and disgust and doubt crept into his head. This was Anna’s father? But he wouldn’t let it take hold. Anna was pure. She was good and strong. She was beautiful. Nothing like this creature.

“Where is Anna?” he asked.

“She’s close by.”

“I’ll trade you, me for her.”

“No,” Faelan said.

Tavis moved closer to Voltar. “Me for her,” he repeated.

“I will take that deal. Bring Anna to me,” Voltar said to his demons.

“Don’t do this, Tavis,” Faelan said. “We can save her. Ronan, Shane, and I will take out the others, you get Voltar.”

“I have to get her to safety first.”

“Bloody fool.”

“You’d do the same if it were Bree,” Tavis said.

Faelan grunted but didn’t disagree.

“Tavis!”

“That was Anna,” he said. But he couldn’t see her. “Anna? Where are you?”

“Don’t come here,” she yelled from deeper within the cave. “It’s a trap. Kill Voltar.” Tavis stared at the demon, wondering whether to attack him or go after Anna. He was the only one who could destroy Voltar.

“We’ll go for Anna,” Shane said. “You take Voltar.”

But Voltar turned and ran, surrounded by his demons. The warriors went after them, following as Voltar wove his way through the cave. Lights strapped onto the warriors’ weapons lit the way. They reached a narrow section, and suddenly the walls came alive with screams as demons leapt at the warriors. In close confines, they had to resort to swords. Tavis preferred swords anyway.

Anna called out again, and Tavis ran toward her voice. Four demons held her, one on each arm, one on each leg. If she struggled, Tavis knew they would rip her apart. He was planning his attack when Tristol streaked in. The four demons dropped like flies.

There was an angry roar and Voltar rushed out of the shadows toward them. Tristol grabbed Anna, and they vanished as Voltar lunged at them.

“Anna? Where are you taking her?” Tavis yelled. With the other warriors out of the way, Tavis grabbed his talisman so he could destroy Voltar. Something slammed him from behind, and he landed hard. He looked up and saw three demons coming at him. These were powerful. They didn’t need swords or fancy guns. Claws and sharp teeth would do the job.

He jumped up and drove his sword into the closest one, so hard it went to the hilt before the demon disappeared. He had just enough time to kill the second one. The third was two feet away, yellow teeth gnashing, when Tavis heard a roar and a sword tip broke through the demon’s chest. It vanished, and Tavis saw Faelan, sword still extended.

“Just in time,” Tavis said.

“Where’s Anna?” Faelan asked.

“Tristol took her. Voltar ran after them.”

“We’ll hold them off. You go after Anna.”

But a dozen more demons swarmed toward them, and these were even stronger than the others. Voltar had saved his best for last. Tavis was killing them as fast as he could swing his sword, as he made his way out of the cave. He was nearing exhaustion when Niall, Duncan, and the others arrived. Niall tossed one demon to the side, slamming it into the wall. When it staggered to its feet, Shane took off its head.

It was a hard fight, but finally they had killed all the demons in the cave and they took off after Voltar. Tavis ran out of the cave and almost hit Voltar. He yelled for the others to get back and cover their eyes. He reached for his talisman, but Voltar was too close. Tavis drove his sword into Voltar’s thigh, pulled the weapon free, and rolled clear. He attacked again, striking at Voltar’s chest, but hit his shoulder instead. He needed a deadly blow to kill a demon as powerful as Voltar. If he could get some space, he could use the talisman.