For William, the world hadn’t just rolled over on its axis until it came to a jarring stop: it had caught fire.
The entire front half of the van was engulfed by a roaring monster of red and orange that rushed and devoured him before he could even undo his seatbelt. If humans were saplings, green in the middle and difficult to burn, then vampires were brittle dry kindling. In a matter of seconds, his exposed skin — his face, neck, and hands — went from pale white to red and raw, then blackened and charred, splitting and oozing blood thicker than a human’s. He bellowed, but only the once. When he inhaled again, superheated air seared his mouth, throat, and lungs, rendering him mute.
His conscious mind shut down. Time was irrelevant. He reached a cusp, a point where he might be absorbed by the darkness, but his instincts and sense of self-preservation took over. The moment he next became aware, he was on the ground outside of the van, rolling, trying to snuff the fire — except this fire had been whipped into a frenzy by a fearful, moon-fueled fire nymph. No matter how much he rolled, it didn’t go out. The only thing that could stop it was distracting the nymph, which Mick handled beautifully as he wrapped his fingers around Felicia’s neck, crushing her windpipe with brutal pressure that threatened to snap her spine and caused the flames to retreat back to the van.
William was left sprawled on the asphalt, an overcooked steak crackling and smoking on the grill. It would’ve been easiest to let her go the way of the earth nymph, but William rocked onto his side and pushed himself to his feet with a grimace. They’d have to get another one if she died and at this rate, he wasn’t sure he’d survive another nymph.
He shuffled step by torturous step to the rear of the van, saving his strength for the moment he ripped the door off its hinges and reached in, taking Mick by the collar of his leather jacket like a pup by the scruff of his neck so he could lift him off the girl. The human had a surprisingly good grip on her, though, and she came with him. William growled and dragged them close enough to pry Mick’s fingers off her, then took her by the broken arm — coming to an abrupt halt and hissing through his fangs when her pain mingled with his, becoming a white flash of impossibly hot fire.
Like the majority of his body, his mind had been burnt and left raw. He could no more block her than he could command her to be silent when he resumed dragging them out of the van and over to the safety of the shoulder.
Cars came to a stop around them. More were slowing. Humans were calling out, asking if they needed help. A primal need for blood that he hadn’t experienced since he’d first been fledged overcame him and with his last reserves of power, he shoved both Mick and Felicia away from him and focused on a pot-bellied man nearby with a phone in his hand
He’d called 911, he said. Police were on the way.
Don't kill her, William said mentally to Mick as he forced himself to move again. He did his best to ignore the constant pain. One foot. Then the other. When he reached the stranger, William didn't wait for him to finish voicing his concern for all of his burns. He grabbed a handful of brown hair, jerked his head back, and began to feed with the greedy neediness of a vampire a fraction of his age.