Chapter 18: Pacari
Southern Peru
1526
From her perch on the mountain ledge, Rebekah Mikaelson peered down into the lush valley. An early morning fog brushed against the treetops lightly as the various animals of the rainforest hummed with activity. The vampire heaved in a deep breath and soaked in her environs. The air was clearer here than anywhere else in the world and it made her senses sharper than ever. She could hear snakes coiling themselves around branches, their skin softly rubbing against the bark. She could smell flowers on the forest floor unfurling in the first light. She could see beyond the fog and onto the horizon, where the great mountain range guarded over the land. She could feel the vibrations from a volcano miles and miles away. This place was pure paradise.
In 1492, she had left her brothers in England and followed an Italian called Christopher Columbus on his voyage to the New World, and ever since, she had been on many expeditions, back and forth across the Atlantic. A couple years ago, she had snuck aboard the ship of a Spaniard named Pizarro and followed him all the way from Spain to Panama to his second expedition to the mainland. When they had landed, Rebekah decided to separate from the men and traveled south on her own. For her entire existence, Rebekah had lived in the shadows of her brothers until she met Caroline. Discovering this adventurous side of herself had been extremely satisfying, especially since it had been all her own doing.
Rebekah focused her gaze on a speck in the distance. It looked like it might be a human. She had come across some humans in the weeks she had been traveling on her own, but she never stayed with them long. She learned their language, asked a few questions about the land, and moved on. Solitude was suiting her just fine. Apparently, there was a great city nearby, filled with great riches and culture. She hadn't made up her mind about visiting it, yet.
The braying of a llama echoed across the valley, followed shortly by the pained cry of a human male. It was the speck. She focused her sharp eyes and waited. Had he fallen down?
With more curiosity than heroism prompting her, Rebekah jumped off the ledge and into the tangled, emerald abyss. She lightly weaved her way through the branches, flashing past sleeping jaguars, jumping frogs, climbing sloths, crawling spiders, and nesting birds. She popped up onto the canopy minutes later to find her bearings. He was close.
She snaked down to the forest floor and flashed to a riverbed. The llama was on the ground, writhing and thrashing, its eyes rolling into the back of its head and foam curdling in its gaping mouth. Rebekah snapped the creature's neck and it collapsed with a final cry.
The man was on the ground next to it clutching his forearm. He was pinching the skin together and sucking onto a wound. As he spat out whatever poison was in his blood, he spotted Rebekah. His eyes grew wide.
"Watch! It's still near!" he warned her in his language.
The vampire turned her head and saw the threat: a thick, tan snake with a black pattern was feet away, snapping and hissing. Rebekah lunged forward, grabbed it, and threw it deep into the forest. She looked back at the man. He was getting very pale.
She crouched down in front of him and wrenched his arm away from his chest to examine the wound. He gazed at her with glassy eyes. She put her lips on the wound and sucked. The poison had already spread far so she had to drink deeply before she tasted his blood return to normal. It was delicious, but she knew he didn't have much life left in him and pulled away. His eyes had closed, and his breath was shallow as she bit into her wrist and held it to his mouth.
"Drink," she insisted in Quechuan, holding his head up.
He opened his eyes tiredly to gaze at her in confusion.
"Drink, you silly human!" Rebekah demanded in English.
It worked. He took several long draughts and his color immediately returned. Rebekah extracted her wrist gently and helped him lay back down.
"What goddess are you?" he whispered hoarsely before passing out.
The vampire swept her gaze over him to make sure he wasn't injured anywhere else. He was undoubtably the most exotic and breathtaking human the pale blond had ever seen. He was clearly a warrior, his russet body was lean, but bursting with sinewy muscle – she knew because his clothing left little to the imagination. The llama had been carrying weapons and victuals, so he must have been on his way to war. Making a decision, Rebekah gathered up her patient's belongings, pulled him into her arms, and flashed into the forest.
Pacari blinked his eyes tiredly as he came to hours later. He had definitely been given a vision from the gods after the viper had bit him. Was he dead? He blinked again as he registered the fire blazing before him. He raised himself up on his elbows and looked at his surroundings warily.
He was on a cliffside. There was a cave behind him, a fire in front of him, and a woman sitting on a rock next to him, staring at him. Her cloak was pulled tightly around her, but he knew her hair was as pale as the full moon in the sky. Her soft features gave nothing away as she gazed at him unabashedly.
"Is this real?" Pacari asked before falling into a coughing fit. Suddenly, the woman was in front of him, handing him a flask of water. When he calmed down, he caressed her face with his fingertips, and she pulled away.
"I mean no offense. I just…wanted to see if you were real," he explained weakly.
The woman lowered her hood very slowly to reveal her long, gleaming hair and titled her head to the side, looking him up and down.
"Where were you going?" she asked softly in Quechuan.
Taken aback that she could speak his language, his brain had a hard time keeping up.
"Sorry?" he said confusedly.
A smile flashed across her face. "When the snake attacked, where were you going? Were you going to war?" she elaborated.
"I'm joining a squadron on the other side of the valley that protects the area from thieves and rebels intent on harming the emperor," Pacari answered in bewilderment.
"Where are you from?" his savior demanded.
"Far from here. My mother was a high priestess and my father a great nobleman and warrior, but they died years ago during a conquest. I have been on my own for many years, wandering the empire."
The woman or goddess raised her eyebrows in surprise.
"What?" Pacari questioned.
"You give much away. I'm used to a society where people don't reveal so much of themselves to strangers," she explained.
"You asked and I told you. Ama llulla. My people do not lie; it is law. Besides, what have I to hide?"
The woman nodded her head with fascination.
"Will you return the favor? Where are you from?"
She smiled widely and it was glorious. "Very far from here."
"And are you a goddess, then?" he asked without a trace of irony.
A strange look passed over her lovely face. She looked torn. "I do not consider myself one, but I believe your people will. I have special abilities," she said slowly.
Pacari stared at her. "Yes, I know."
She rose to her feet and gestured towards the cave. "You must get more rest; you've had a trying day. I will stay out here and keep watch. I don't need much sleep."
Pacari rose to his feet as well. "Why did you save me? How did you save me?"
The goddess bit her lip and crossed her arms over her chest, turning her gaze towards the fire. "I saved you by sucking the venom out of your bloodstream and then giving you my blood," she said flatly.
"Thank you," he replied easily.
"You don't think it's strange I gave you my blood?"
"Of course not; you are a goddess."
Her lips quirked with amusement.
"But why?" Pacari pushed.
"I don't know. I guess I didn't want you to die. You are too beautiful, and life is too precious, as I sometimes forget," she answered haltingly.
He took a step towards her. "You think I'm beautiful?"
She locked eyes with him. "Very."
"You're the most beautiful person I've ever seen. And I find you intriguing," Pacari told her.
She blushed and tore her gaze away. "You should rest," she said quietly.
Pacari took another step towards her.
"I am Pacari," he told her, ignoring her dismissal.
"That's nice."
"Do you have a name, or are you simply called 'Goddess'? Or 'Savior'?"
"My name is Rebekah," she said.
"That's lovely. Rebekah," he let the name roll off his tongue. Her eyes slid over his bare chest.
"May I show you my gratitude?" Pacari asked.
Rebekah nodded slowly.
He went over to where she had put his effects, found what he needed, and turned towards her again with his mother's gold bangle in his hand.
"I wish to give you this so you may always remember your noble deed," he said formally, stepping close to her.
She held out her pale, delicate wrist, and he pushed the bangle over her hand until it decorated her forearm. He let his hand linger on hers before removing it.
"I would say you should not be the one to keep watch, but I understand you are more powerful and wise than I, so I will obediently go into the cave now," he murmured.
Her breathing was heavy and uneven as he turned away and made for the mouth of the cave.
"Wait!" she called.
He turned around eagerly. "Yes?"
"Would you mind if I joined you?" she asked in a low voice.
"Did you need rest as well? I will watch the camp," he said decorously.
Suddenly, she was right in front of him. She moved too fast for his eyes to register the movement.
"I don't need rest. I want to spend the night with you."
Pacari's jaw dropped. "I – I'm sorry. I. You. I'm. Are you sure?"
She leaned up and laid a soft, wet kiss just under his ear.
"Quite," she whispered.
Pacari swallowed. "But I am a virgin."
She smiled at him sweetly. "That's okay."
He shook his head to get his thoughts in order. "No, it's not. My parents would need to ask your parents and-," he babbled out.
"I thought you said your parents are dead? Mine are," Rebekah said coyly.
"I mean, to wed," he started to say and she pulled away from him.
"Oh. Right. I wouldn't want to ruin that for you," she said shortly. "I'm sorry – I forgot myself. We're not in my culture."
"Ruin what?" he asked.
She sat down on a boulder and smiled at him without humor. "Your wedding. You should save yourself for your wife, of course. I understand."
He nodded at her even though he didn't understand. He wasn't sure they were on the same page. He turned towards the cave again and just as he reached the entrance, a thought came to him and he stopped.
"But what if you were my wife?" he asked lowly.
Her head snapped up. "Say again?"
He gestured towards the cave. "Neither of us have to ask parents for permission. The only bargain we make is between ourselves. We don't know each other, but we are very attracted to each other. We could learn as we go," he suggested. Pacari knew what he was proposing was crazy, but something about her was making him brave – or reckless. Maybe whatever magic she had was affecting him. He wanted to know everything about her.
Rebekah slowly got to her feet and stared at him blankly. "Are you asking me to marry you? Right here, right now?"
Pacari held himself straight and looked her in the eye. "Yes, I am," he simply said.
She looked up into the stars as if searching for an answer in the sky. A passing breeze whipped her hair around her face.
"I told myself I would enjoy my solitude," she muttered.
"I won't bother you much; my days will be busy," Pacari offered.
Rebekah was so startled, she burst into laughter. Pacari suddenly realized how absurd the whole situation was and joined her. They laughed together for several minutes before settling down.
"I apologize for being so forward; I got caught up in the moment," Pacari said.
Rebekah did not respond, but she approached him again.
"My answer is yes," she said casually once she was in front of him.
He blinked at her. "Yes?" he repeated.
She nodded shyly before pecking him on the lips softly.
"Pacari, you shall be mine and I shall be yours until death do us part," she vowed.
"Until death do us part, Rebekah," he repeated.
She took his hand and guided him into the cave. A blanket was laid out on the floor. Before she could do anything else, he ran outside. He came back a few seconds later holding a leather shoe. She raised her eyebrows at him in silent question.
"It is my way of showing you I will serve you for the rest of my life," he declared, getting down on one knee.
He took her left foot and rubbed his thumbs into her sole. She moaned in pleasure. He then slid the shoe on the foot and looked up at her. Their eyes locked and both of their worlds changed forever. What had seemed childish and thoughtless a moment ago was now very real. Pacari kissed his wife's ankle. Rebekah gently pulled her leg away so she could stand on both feet. She untied her cloak and let it rustle to the floor of the cave. He watched patiently from below. She slowly lifted up her dress and tossed it over her head.
Pacari rose to his feet to drink in his wife's pale, slim figure. He brushed a finger over a nipple. She shuddered. Experimentally, he pinched it and marveled at how her pupils began to dilate as he caressed her. His other hand slid down her side and rested on her backside. She placed her lips on his gently, but they both quickly gave in to baser instincts. He bit down on her lower lip and she responded by pushing her tongue onto his mouth. A few moments later, she pulled away to rip his pants off hungrily. A loud tearing sound rent through the cave. She stroked his member.
Pacari moaned and threw his head back in ecstasy. Without warning, she pushed him into the wall with inhuman speed and continued her ministrations. Pacari lifted his left hand towards the opening of the cave and summoned. Two flames separated from the fire outside and hung in the air, casting the lovers in a dim glow. Rebekah paused when she noticed.
"You're a witch?" she asked in astonishment.
"Yes? Is that a problem, goddess?" he teased.
"Not at all. As long as this isn't," she said. Her face transformed. Her eyes blackened and a web of blue-black veins spread around them. Two long fangs slid over her lower lip. Pacari held out a shaky hand and touched the veins. He saw the fear in her eyes. His other hand wandered down to the apex of her thighs. He stroked her silky wet folds and the veins grew wider.
"Never," he whispered. "Do you want to bite me?"
"Yes," she confessed, stroking him harder.
"Then do it," he dared.
Her teeth sank into his neck, just under his ear. Pacari grabbed her arms and twisted her around, pressing her into the wall. He entered her slowly, reveling in her tight warmth. His rocking rhythm sped up and she removed her mouth from his neck. One hand trawled down his body and grabbed his hip.
"If you add this movement at the end," she guided him and they both moaned loudly. "We'll have an even better time."
He did as she instructed until they fell to the floor. Rebekah climbed on top of him and rode him with demanding, circling motions. Pacari was a virgin in his early twenties - he was not going to last long. He looked at the beads of sweat rolling down his wife's neck, his own dried blood on her lips, and her breasts jiggling as she rode him. He lost all sense of time and sense. He forgot his own name. All he saw was white and all he thought was one word, which he mumbled as his body seized.
"Rebekah, Rebekah, Rebekah."
Five blissful years passed, and husband and wife lived in a house they built high in the mountains, close to the emperor's city, but not too close. Pacari became a highly regarded warrior due to his powers and joined several campaigns to protect and conquest. Rebekah usually went with him and watched the battles from afar, making sure he stayed safe. Sometimes she joined him, but that required so much compulsion, it was almost never worth it. From both fear of Mikael and a desire to not disrupt Pacari's culture, Rebekah did not want to draw too much attention to herself, so she didn't go to the city often. When she did, Pacari cast a spell to darken her hair. She was content with exploring the forests and mountains, farming, tending the home, and protecting her husband. Her life was quiet, private, and contemplative. She told Pacari everything about herself – her past, the family, Caroline, Mikael, her expeditions with Columbus and Pizarro, her ex-lovers. Pacari listened to all her stories and asked many questions with fascination. He in turn told her about the deaths of his parents when he was a teenager, training with other young men in combat, and going off on his own to explore the empire. Rebekah was an amazing wife, in Pacari's opinion. She kept him on his toes with her high expectations, protected him, challenged him, and encouraged him. Her only flaw was a tendency to keep her feelings too close to the chest. She only sometimes told him when something was bothering her, causing her to lash out at the smallest provocations. As they fell deeply in love with each other, the shadow hanging over their marriage made its presence known. There had been an unspoken agreement between them to never discuss Rebekah's immortality ever since she had first revealed it to him.
One morning, Pacari woke up and decided this game could go on no longer. He found his wife outside, humming to herself as she tended the crops.
"Rebekah, I'm in love with you," he declared with his usual blunt delivery.
It was not the first time he had told her his feelings. She had also told him she loved him. But neither of them was overly affectionate nor verbose. Such declarations were usually only uttered during lovemaking, or right after. Rebekah looked up from her work in surprise and smiled at him widely.
"I'm in love with you," she said, a question in her eyes.
"Do you ever plan on turning me?" he asked.
The smile slipped from her pale face.
"Do you want to be turned?" she countered.
"Is your plan to watch me die?" Pacari demanded.
She glared at him. "Never."
"Then what is your plan?"
She stood up, wiped her hands on her apron, and crossed her arms. "There is no plan until you tell me whether or not you want to be turned. I hope I've made clear over the years what being a vampire means. No children, no aging, no sun. You'd have to give up your witch abilities and connection to nature. My father is always hunting my family; we'd be on the run a lot."
Pacari opened his mouth to respond, but she held up a hand.
"At least let me make my case. Though we are frozen in time, my family members have carved out an interesting and exciting lives for themselves. We try to, anyway. There are periods of great boredom, but they are fewer now that the world is changing so rapidly. I always thought I could never change, but these past few years with you have proven me wrong. And on a personal note, an eternal existence without you will be very hard to face," she finished sadly.
Pacari walked to his wife and held her tightly. "I refuse to leave this world without you, Rebekah."
She let out a gasping breath. "I can't die."
"Then I won't either," he promised.
"Are you sure? I want you to be very sure about this, Pacari," she said seriously, pulling away from him to look in his eyes.
"I have known you were my path since I first saw you, if that wasn't already abundantly obvious," he teased.
She gave him a fleeting smile, but looked past him into the mountains.
"What is bothering you?" he prodded.
She looked back at him with tears in her eyes. "What if you don't feel the same after I've turned you?"
"Feel the same about what?"
"About me," she whispered.
Pacari tugged a strand of her golden hair and frowned at her. "That could never happen."
"But," she started. He placed a finger over her lips.
"It could never happen. Besides, hasn't our entire relationship been built on jumping over the precipice and seeing what comes next? I think our method has worked very well for us," he assured her.
She laughed and pressed her forehead into his. "Alright, I'll turn you."
"Right now?" he asked.
"Whenever you want," she agreed. "I never said anything about it partially because I thought you should be older if and when I did it. Appearing to be so young can have its downfalls."
Pacari considered it. There were many things to consider. "Let me think about it. It's safe to say not right this moment. But soon. I'm already nearly ten years older physically."
"Eight," Rebekah corrected.
He rolled his eyes at her. "Soon," he said sternly.
"Soon," she promised.
It was only a week later when everything fell into chaos. It started with a visitor.
One afternoon, Pacari was stalking a bear in the forest, waiting for it to fall into his trap. He had been hunting the animal for days. The great beast had proven to be very elusive, to his frustration. A macaw burst into song in the canopy, distracting the animal. Pacari took the opportunity to shoot a dart into its fur. It roared with fury and thrashed around.
"Just a few more steps," he muttered under his breath.
The beast began to run out of the clearing. It reached the hidden pit. Pacari smiled grimly as it fell through his carefully laden trap and roared again.
Hours later, he emerged from the forest, dragging the beast behind him. When he looked up at his house, he dropped the ropes in shock.
His wife was standing in front of the house with a woman he had never seen before. This newcomer was slightly taller than his wife, but she had the same pale skin and long, golden hair. Her willowy figure was clothed in dark pants, a tunic, and knee-high boots, making her contrast starkly with Rebekah in her cream-colored dress. They were deep in conversation, but Rebekah looked up at him when he dropped the ropes.
"Someone from far away has found us," she called to him.
He strode across the clearing and stood in front of the two women. Up close, he could see differences in their features. Rebekah had a small, slightly upturned nose, large blue eyes, full cheeks, and thick lips. The other blond had narrower features, higher cheekbones, a stronger nose, and her almond-shaped eyes were more green than blue. Eyes which were staring at him with unabashed curiosity.
"Are you Caroline?" he questioned. Who else could she be, but Rebekah's beloved progeny?
The vampire raised her eyebrows in surprise. "I am. May I ask who you are?"
"Pacari," he answered.
"He's my husband," Rebekah added.
Her sister-in-law's jaw dropped. "Husband?" she repeated. "For how long?"
"Five years," Rebekah said casually.
Caroline closed her mouth and hugged her maker. "Congratulations, Rebekah! I'm so happy for you!"
Rebekah's features softened and she hugged her progeny fiercely. "I never thought I could be this happy," she whispered.
"You deserve this, Bekah," Caroline replied before pulling away and facing Pacari.
"I would threaten you to take care of her, but I guess it's the other way around," she grinned before wrapping her arms around him. "Welcome to the family!"
Pacari, unused to such a hands-on display of affection, patted her back awkwardly and sent his wife a pleading look over Caroline's shoulder.
"Come on, Caroline. Let's go inside and leave Pacari to skin his hunt," Rebekah instructed.
Caroline looped her arm with Rebekah's. "Yes, you can tell me all about your courtship and wedding!"
Rebekah and Pacari locked eyes in terror for a brief moment before Rebekah let herself be led into the house.
"Caroline, I'm sure you have lots of questions," she started once they were inside, but her progeny waved her off.
"Rebekah, Pizarro is coming back. He was just granted permission from the queen to conquer the entire Inca Empire," the younger vampire said bluntly.
Rebekah froze. "They're coming here?"
Caroline nodded.
"But the Incas don't stand a chance! Their weapons are not nearly as advanced as the Europeans," Rebekah cried. "When will he get here?"
"He already started up north. I sailed across with his party and separated as soon as we landed. I was only trying to find you, but now I see there are complications."
"Pacari is not a complication."
"That's not what I meant. I thought you'd be running around the rainforest and draining whatever crossed your path. And here you are, married, settled down, and engrained in this society. I didn't really care what Pizarro was doing, but if we need to protect these people, then let me know. I'm ready for a fight."
Rebekah rolled her eyes. "You sound like one of my brothers. Let us see what happens; the land can be very unforgiving for those who do not know it. And I have to turn Pacari."
"You're turning him?" Caroline asked in surprise.
Her sire glared at her.
"Is there a problem with that?"
"Of course not! It's just... so much has changed in the past few years."
"I know. Last time I was on the other side of the world, I heard you caught up with Kol," Rebekah said meaningfully.
Caroline smiled triumphantly. "It was one of the best moments of my existence."
"And you and Nik have been killing everything in sight ever since?"
Caroline only looked slightly abashed. "Not everything. We've just been trying to give Katerina a little scare. And the rest of the vampire world."
Rebekah gave her an unimpressed look. "If Pizarro is coming, we need to warn the emperor. Pacari will go to the city tomorrow."
The following day, Rebekah and Pacari said their good-byes.
"I want you to turn me when I get back," he told her quietly. "If this Spaniard really is coming, I need to be stronger to defend my land and people."
"Consider it done," she promised, and they shared a deep, lingering kiss.
She pulled away and ran into the forest. She was going to the nearby temples and villages to warn people. Pacari adjusted the bag on his shoulder and started for the road. Caroline startled him by flashing into his path.
"Pacari, I have a very uneasy feeling in my heart," she told him.
He blinked at the bewildering vampire. They had gotten to know each other a little the previous evening. He liked her; she was very charismatic and told lots of exciting stories – but he could tell she was also dangerous and manipulative.
"I'm sorry?"
"Did Rebekah explain I'm not just a vampire, but a hybrid?" she asked.
Pacari nodded. "You are Fae."
"Yes. My powers are similar to a witch's. I can sense danger and sometimes get premonitions."
"And you sense danger now?"
"I do not foresee you surviving your journey," she affirmed. "I know I cannot convince you to not go, but I implore you to take this."
She held out a small vial filled with a dark red liquid.
"Just in case. Drink it if you are in peril, and if you are killed, you'll wake up as a vampire. As long as you drink blood within the first day, your transition will be complete," she instructed urgently. "There's no way Pizarro is anywhere near here yet, but I know something is going to happen."
"Is that your blood?" Pacari asked.
"Yes."
"Rebekah is turning me when I get back," he declined.
Caroline grimaced. "I do not see you coming back."
"I want her blood to turn me," he said stubbornly.
The vampire nodded sympathetically. "I understand that; truly. It's beautiful. However…"
Pacari narrowed his eyes at her. "However?"
"If you are turned with my blood, you will become a vampire hybrid. You will still be a witch."
He was silent.
"Why are you offering to do this?" he finally asked warily.
"Rebekah is my best friend and sister. I would do anything to protect her. I want her to be happy."
Pacari shook his head. "But then why didn't you say something before she left?"
The vampire hesitated and Pacari's suspicions grew.
"I know what it feels like to lose your powers. It happened to me when Rebekah turned me. I felt empty," Caroline said, remembering. "And because I haven't turned anyone since I have become a hybrid. I never cared to before. You are a witch, you're married to my maker, and I like you," Caroline confessed.
He could see it was hard for her to admit the truth, but it was definitely the truth. He stared at the vial in her hand.
"I'll keep my powers?" he asked abruptly.
She nodded. "And gain so many more."
He frowned. Rebekah wouldn't like it, but there was no way of catching up with her. He needed to go to the emperor. Apprehensively, he made a quick, but fateful decision. He snatched the vial from Caroline's grasp.
"Just in case," he said gruffly, setting down the road towards the city.
"Good luck, Pacari," she called after him.
It was over a day's journey to the city, so Pacari had to set up camp that night. As he laid out his blanket, the earth rumbled violently under his feet. He looked up into the mountains and froze with fear. It seemed Pizarro would be the least of his concerns.
Rebekah's journey took her deep into the forest miles and miles from home. She wanted to warn as many as possible. The first night she was away, she stayed in a temple filled with Chosen Ones – virgins kept hidden away and trained to become concubines or nobleman's wives. The ones not picked for those roles were often sacrificed. She was dining with the high priestess of the temple when the first rumble occurred.
"Earthquake," the priestess muttered, but then it continued. A loud blast wrenched through the air and the women ran outside.
Miles away, one of the great volcanoes had erupted.
Caroline watched in shock and awe as poisonous gas hissed out of the distant peak. Molten lava flowed over the sides. She knew Pacari had been heading in that direction. Never had she thought something of this magnitude would happen. Surely the gas alone would kill Pacari. Would he even be able to wake as a vampire? Could a vampire survive a volcano? She'd never heard of anyone trying.
Rebekah will be so devastated if he dies. With that terrible thought weighing on her mind, Caroline flashed into the forest and followed the road into the night. When she made an estimated guess about how far Pacari had gone, she stopped and took in her surroundings. Ash was falling down from above and clogging her vision. She stumbled around, weakened by the poisonous air.
"Pacari!" she shouted. "Pacari!"
She tried to fly into the air to see better, but her lungs filled with soot and she heaved over.
She did not see the lava until it was crashing into her.
"Caroline!"
Rebekah dug her hand deep into the hardened lava and grabbed her friend's arm. She used her other hand to break up the rock around her body and heaved. With a great thrust, the charred corpse emerged. Rebekah ripped her wrist open and poured blood into Caroline's mouth.
It took a few minutes, but Caroline's body slowly healed. Her skin and hair regrew, and her bones and muscle snapped back together with sickening pace.
"I was trying to get to Pacari," she said hoarsely. "Did you find him?"
Rebekah looked away from her friend. Caroline could see the tension rolling off her in waves.
"No," she said shortly. "Your scent was the only one I caught."
"How long was I under?" Caroline asked slowly, dread spreading through her. "Three days," her sire answered.
Caroline processed this. She would have sensed Pacari if he had turned, which meant he either was unable to drink her blood before he died, or he had taken it and been destroyed by the lava. There was a very slim chance he, too, was being preserved in lava - but surely she only survived because she was so strong.
"We should keep looking," she said helplessly.
Rebekah snapped her head around. Her eyes were blazing with anger. "We will do no such thing. My heart can only take so much. I do not want to see his burnt corpse, if there's even a corpse to find. He's dead."
Caroline held her friend's hand and fought off the impulse to gag. This was not supposed to happen and telling Rebekah what she had done would only break her heart further, or worse, fill her with false hope.
"It's over," Rebekah said softly. "We're leaving. I want to be with my brothers now."
Caroline nodded and they rose to their feet. With one last look at the charred landscape, Rebekah pulled a gold ring off her hand and set it down on the hardened lava. His mother's bangle blinked up at her in the sunlight. She couldn't part with that, too. She grabbed Caroline's hand again.
"It's over. Let's go."
A second later, they were gone.
Northern India
1533
Elijah found his sister sitting on the roof of the palace. She had a scroll in her hand, but she wasn't reading it. Her hair was pulled back into a tight plait and she was wearing her customary uniform of black robes, as she had worn every day since she had arrived with Caroline a few months previously. Elijah sat a few feet away from her and waited several minutes before breaking the silence.
"I'm not sure you were aware, but we've been aiding an army led by an incredible warrior for the past couple of weeks. The warrior, an Italian woman named Emmeline, was shot down last night. She had Caroline's blood in her," he informed her.
Rebekah did not respond right away, and Elijah gave her time, watching the sunset.
"Caroline turned her first hybrid?" she said lowly.
"Yes. She's having a bit of a hard time accepting it. Niklaus is with her now."
Rebekah frowned. "What is the issue?"
Elijah sighed. "She has a husband and children."
Rebekah eyes widened. She'd never known another vampire who had children. The sun disappeared on the horizon and down below, a woman with reddish hair ran out of the palace and into the garden.
"She should consider herself lucky. Now she can watch over them forever," she said softly, her eyes focused on the newborn hybrid.
Elijah nodded hesitantly. "That's right, sister,"
Two loud voices rose up from the east wing.
"You shouldn't have done it! She's being faced with a terrible choice here!" she could hear her brother Niklaus yell.
"I've given her the gift of life! She'll thank me for this one day," came Caroline's muffled response.
"We don't turn people with kids, Caroline. What parent wants to bury their child?"
"That is a fact of life," her progeny said coldly. Rebekah could not disagree with her – it was a fact of life. This Emmeline would grow to appreciate what she had.
Caroline and Nik continued fighting, but Rebekah tuned them out. Maybe she would come down and meet the new addition to their entourage. Tomorrow, though. Not today.
In the shadow of Mount Sabancaya, the earth rumbled. A crack slowly spread in the field of hardened lava at the foot of the volcano. A corpse shuddered and awoke as the rock crumbled around him. Disoriented, Pacari crawled and climbed until he ascended from the darkness and into the light. The sun burned him as soon as he emerged and he cried out in pain, stumbling towards the protection of the forest. His arm caught fire right as he entered the thicket. He rolled around in the dirt to smother it, cursing loudly and causing a flock of birds to fly out of the canopy above him. When the fire died, he lay on his back and stared into the leaves. His mind was on overload and he let all the new sensations wash over him. How long have I been in there? Did Rebekah survive? Is she close?
"Mida, mida!" a voice yelled from the thicket. "Es un monstruo!"
Pacari turned his head and squinted.
A group of pale-faced men carrying silver lances and wearing strange clothing were staring at him in horror. He did not recognize the language they spoke, but he got the gist of what they were saying. He must look a sight, for sure.
They had to be Pizarro's men, which meant he had been in the lava for far too long.
As long as you drink blood within the first day, your transition will be complete, a voice reminded him. He came to his feet and faced the men. A few ran away at the sight of him, but some of the braver ones stood their ground and raised their swords. Pacari licked his lips and felt the hunger inside him.
"Come on, then," he whispered.
"What would you have me do, Nik, turn back time?" Caroline snarled at her husband.
Niklaus sighed. "Of course not, Caroline. What if she decides to turn her kids? Think of the mess we'd be in if she did that!"
Before she could respond, a trickling sensation cast over Caroline. It was so powerful she had to sit down.
"Caroline?" Klaus asked in alarm. He flashed across the room and kneeled before her. "What's the matter?"
She could feel Pacari's presence – it was stronger than Emmeline's, and she was less than fifty feet away. He had survived. Her first true hybrid must have just woken up. In Peru. She looked at Nik and tried to find an answer in his deep blue eyes.
"Nothing," she said finally. "I just hate when we fight. I know you're right, anyway. I should have given it more thought."
He kissed her forehead and brushed a hand through her hair. "I'm not right; Emmeline will be fine. I was just shocked."
Caroline laid her head against his chest and breathed in his comforting scent.
"I think we should leave, my love," he said softly. "Elijah and I have been here for a few years, and we never want to stay anywhere for too long. Emmeline needs distance from her family. My sister is reminded too much of Peru in this environment."
"Alright," Caroline agreed softly.
She pulled away from him. "I'm going to go check on Rebekah."
Rebekah had left the roof and was turning down her bed when Caroline entered her chamber.
"I hear congratulations are in order," she told her progeny.
Caroline grimaced. "Today has been a little bit too exciting, honestly. I shouldn't have done it."
"Why not?" Rebekah asked carelessly. "You've given her a great gift."
"I suppose," Caroline frowned.
"Don't listen to Nik; he's just jealous you can create a hybrid army and he can't," the older vampire said flatly.
Caroline raised her eyebrows but said nothing. She sat down on the bed.
"What is it?" asked Rebekah.
Caroline took a deep breath. "It's about Pacari," she started.
"No," Rebekah interrupted.
"But, Bekah, I need to," Caroline continued.
"That name is forbidden; do you hear me? Forbidden!" Rebekah hissed furiously. "I need to heal, Caroline."
"Bekah, I," her progeny tried again.
"Whatever it is, it does not matter! If I were able to be compelled, I would have the memory of him erased from my mind. I was foolish and naïve to think he could be mine forever," Rebekah ground out. "Actually, I wonder if you could compel me. Do you think it would work?"
"I need you to listen! Pacari," yelled Caroline.
Rebekah slapped her across the face. "I said never utter that name again. Are you willing to erase him from my mind?"
Caroline pressed her lips together and shook her head.
"I thought not. Then get out. If I hear you speak of him one more time, I will go off on my own."
The younger vampire flashed out of the room, leaving her sire alone and miserable. Rebekah turned to her empty bed and fell into it, sobbing so hard she couldn't breathe.
