Ashes (Page 54)

“No. Annabelle never became a monster.”

“I don’t understand,” she whispered, confusion swirling through her eyes.

“I didn’t either,” he admitted. “I thought that once we were changed, that was it, we were all monsters. I thought that the demon took over; I thought that we had no choice but to destroy life, to toy with humans before killing them. I never knew how wrong I was. Yes, Annabelle awoke with the same intense hunger that all new vampires awake with, but she didn’t go for humans.

“Somehow, she managed to keep enough reason through her transition, and enough restraint, to control her hunger. Something that even I, at my advanced age, had never done. I just took and killed, and took some more. But that night Annabelle did not kill, at least not humans anyway. I found her in a field of cows, half the herd had been slaughtered before her hunger was finally satisfied. Animals are enough to keep us going, and strong, but it takes more of their blood to fully sate us.”

Cassie nodded as she licked her lips nervously. Her hands were clenching her arms so tightly that she was leaving bruises upon her fair skin. A fact he was certain that she was unaware of. Though he wanted to go to her, to stop her from hurting herself, he remained where he was. She would flee from him now. He knew that.

“I was mortified, and so unbelievably stunned to find her there among those cows, crying.”

Cassie glanced at him, an eyebrow lifted sharply in surprise. “Why was she crying?” she asked softly.

Devon closed his eyes. The image of Annabelle, sitting in that field, surrounded by dead cattle with tears running down her blood streaked face was seared permanently into his brain. Annabelle’s delicate shoulders had shook; her hair had been caked with dirt and blood. He had been so conflicted, and so confused as to what she was doing. He had not been able to understand why she would choose such pitiful fare when there were so many humans out there to enjoy. He had especially wanted her to go for Liam, thinking how wonderful it would be to watch her destroy the person she thought she loved so much. It would have been the crowning achievement in his destruction of everything good in the world.

“She was crying because she had killed the cows,” he choked out, his voice hoarse as the tidal wave of memories threatened to consume him. He tried not to think about the person he had been back then, what he had done. Especially, what he had done to Annabelle. What he had wanted to be his crowning achievement had ended up becoming his ultimate downfall. At least his downfall from the world of drudgery and murder.

“I didn’t know how to react to that. I mean, who would cry over dead cows? And why was she feeding from damn cows when there were thousands of humans to destroy? I simply stood there, watching her, listening to her lament about the fact that she had killed them, and that the farmer would not have enough milk and meat for his children now.

“She confounded me, but I found myself utterly fascinated by her. I had seen many many things in my long life, but I had never seen a vampire cry over their kill. And I sure as hell hadn’t ever seen a vampire show regret for their actions. We didn’t know what regret was, or at least that’s what I had believed.

“When she calmed down enough to actually speak, she looked up at me, not with accusation and hatred, but with a wealth of sadness and compassion. I had done this to her, and she was sad for me!” Devon began to pace restlessly again; his skin crawled with the memories assaulting him. He hated the person he had been, hated the things that he had done. Annabelle had been the worst thing he had ever done, but without her, he wouldn’t be the person he was now. Without Annabelle he would still be a monster, preying on the innocent, and he wouldn’t have Cassie.

If he still did have her.

“I sat down beside her, unable to move, the realization of what she was now was earth shattering to me. For although I had inflicted her with the demon, her goodness had been so pure, so true, that she was able to fight against the monster. Even when she had been out of her head with her need for blood, she still had enough control of herself not to murder, not to kill. I had never met anyone like her, never met anyone with such a pure heart. Until you.”

Cassie’s gaze blazed into his, tears wavered in her eyes. She blinked them back, as a mask of hardness settled over her refined features. “I hated myself for what I had done to her. And I suddenly began to rethink my entire existence. I had never been a good man when I was alive. I had been rich, spoiled. I had taken what I wanted even then. As a vampire, I was the epitome of a monster, and I had reveled in it. Until that moment.

“We sat silently in that field, her grieving the loss of her life, me grieving everything that I had done. Grieving for all of the souls that I had extinguished, and there were so very many of them. More than I ever want to think about again. I’ve been trying to do right since that night, but I can never truly wash the blood from my hands, from my soul.”

He grew silent, pacing over to the window. The moon was beginning to set; the night was quiet except for a small fox creeping across Chris’s front lawn. “What became of her?” Cassie asked softly.

“She taught me how to control my hunger, showed me that there was goodness in the world, a fact that I had never wanted to believe. It was easier to justify my actions if I believed that everyone was just as evil as I was, whether they were human or vampire. I began to feed on animals, determined to try and change who I was. I had always loved a challenge, and this was the biggest one I had ever accepted.”

“And did she grow to love you?”

He laughed shortly, turning away from the window. “No, Annabelle never loved me in that way, it was always Liam. And as I began to change, I realized that I did not love her. I never had. I was incapable of love at that point in my life. All I was capable of was cruelty. If I had loved her, I never would have done that to her. The more I got to know her, the more I realized this. What she felt for Liam was love. It was real, and it was true.”

A single tear slid down Cassie’s face, her voice was filled with pain as the mask wavered. “And she lost him.”

Devon managed a wry smile as he shook his head, running his hand through his hair again. “No, I did do one good thing back then. I convinced her to go to him, to approach him slowly so as not to scare him. He had never thought that she had just abandoned him and her family; he had always thought her dead. It took a couple years of coaxing, but eventually she went to him. I think, in the end, she went to him because of the pain that Liam was in over losing her. He had never moved on, never found someone else. Liam was only a hollow shell of the man that he had once been.