miles beneath the peaks. He felt like a marionette being jerked
around by a drunken puppet master. He sensed the dragon’s impatience and realized
that being without emotions was a double-edged sword. Carpathian males lived for so
long that not feeling was a terrible burden, yet with that came an advantage when
hunting.
The dragon was eager for the chase, believing Mitro to be no more than an irritation.
He wanted to slumber, didn’t want to remain awakened, and once Mitro was disposed
of, he planned on doing just that. Dax’s body jerked again, his foot lifting awkwardly
and then setting down a large stride away, nearly throwing him off balance.
Exasperated, he scowled. Just give me direction. Don’t try to control the movements of my body.
How was he going to fight Mitro when he could barely take a step without falling?
The dragon hadn’t had a body in centuries and Dax’s body was far too small for him
to comprehend how to move it around.
The dragon gave a snort of derision. It is no wonder this great evil has prevailed. You are a puny one, Carpathian.
Perhaps that is so, Dax soothed. After all, in relation to size, it was true. But I can maneuver this body much more easily than you. If we fight one another how
will we succeed in our mission? If pandering to the dragon’s ego would result in destroying Mitro, Dax could manage
it with no problem.
Power pulsed deep inside, pushing against the restraints of his physical frame. His
entire body vibrated, his brain crashing hard against his skull. His body hit the
side of the tube hard, this time flinging him to the floor. He couldn’t imagine how
frustrating it had to be for a massive dragon to find himself confined in a human
frame, but Dax was finished reasoning.
And I was told your kind was so intelligent.
Fiercely he pushed back, slamming a wave of massive force straight at the Old One’s
soul. The internal explosion sent his body reeling. For a moment his head felt as
if every bone in his body would shatter. He set his jaw and accepted the pain.
We can do this all night, or work together to destroy the vampire.
Amusement filled his mind. The dragon had a rusty sense of humor. For a puny lizard, you have a hard punch. How do we do this? I cannot work this strange
body.
If you can find him, point me in the direction. I’m Carpathian. I know you are aware
of the things we can do. I’ll shift into whatever we need to hunt him. If we need
your form, you take over, otherwise we work as a unit, with you guiding me where we
go and me getting us there. Is that acceptable?
There was a long moment of silence. So be it.
Dax didn’t give the Old One time to change his mind. He moved into the lava tube at
the dragon’s urging. As Dax shifted into mist and sped away through the vents and
fissures in the black volcanic rock, the dragon was there with him, part of him, a
separate soul and consciousness sharing his body, his gifts. Together, yet still separate.
More powerful together than either had been apart. Neither of them would ever be alone
again. And both of them streaked through the volcano with one purpose foremost in
their minds: to stop Mitro Daratrazanoff or die trying.
The tube was miles long, an old subterranean flow that had long since shifted, leaving
a wide tunnel extending under the mountain. Dax had been in it often, following Mitro,
knowing the vampire was up to something within the tube, but he’d never managed to
catch him at anything. As mist, he could travel without giving away his presence if
Mitro had set a trap for him, which he did habitually.
Wait. Here. He has not gone beyond this point.
Dax stopped moving instantly, the mist stretching out along with his senses, trying
to reason out where Mitro could have gone. The stench of the undead permeated the
tube, and he couldn’t feel or smell a difference, but he trusted the dragon’s instincts.
The creature was a