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Blue Twilight_[11] Page 3
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“Yeah?”
Storm nodded, then pointed ahead. “There’s the diner. Lou’s pulling around back.”
“Probably more room to park that tank back there. We’ll pull around, too.” She drove Stormy’s car into the parking lot.
Subject successfully changed, Stormy thought slowly. She wanted to rub her head—it didn’t hurt, exactly, just felt tender. Sensitive, or something. But she didn’t dare. If she gave Max any sign she was in less-than-perfect health, Max would hover like a first-time mother.
“I really am starved,” she said. Max always saw an appetite as a sign of good health.
“Me, too.” Max pulled Stormy’s car to a stop next to the van.
“How’s the ride going?” Stormy asked. “Any progress with Lou?”
“Hell, no. He put the radio on some country music channel to limit opportunities for conversation.”
“You sure you don’t want to ride the rest of the way with me?” She tapped her CD collection. “I have Disturbed.”
“You are disturbed,” Max told her with a wink. Then she frowned as she looked at Stormy again. “Despite that, I think I will ride with you for a while. Give you a break from driving for the next couple of hours.”
“I was kidding, Max. You need to ride with Lou. Maybe he’ll hit a bump and you’ll wind up in his lap. You can’t miss an opportunity like that.”
“Hell, I’ll have plenty of opportunities once we get him installed in the mansion.”
“But I thought he wasn’t staying,” Stormy said.
“So does he,” Max replied. “But I stashed his bag in your car, just in case.”
Stormy looked behind her seat and saw the black leather satchel that she hadn’t put there or even noticed up until now. “How observant am I?” she asked. “Could have been a serial killer squatting back there for all I noticed.”
“No room for a whole serial killer,” Max observed.
“Hey!” Lou tapped on the roof of the little car. “You two getting out or what?”
Grinning, Max opened her door and got out of the car.
Stormy did, too, but her legs felt oddly weak and her muscles, shaky. As if she’d worked out to the point of muscle fatigue. Only she hadn’t.
When it had happened before, the weakness had soon passed. But it had never been this clear or this powerful before, nor had it ever left her this shaken. She’d asked her doctor about it after the first attack, but though he had run a battery of tests, nothing abnormal had shown up.
Whatever it was, Stormy was convinced it wasn’t physical. It didn’t feel physical. She couldn’t describe why, exactly, or what it did feel like.
They walked into the diner, Max watching her every move.
3
“Here they are, my lord.”
He stepped through the open doors into his parlor. It had been weeks since he’d fed. He’d learned to do without for long periods, and Fieldner had been whining that no woman had passed through Endover in all that time.
But tonight, tonight, he would feed his body and, more important, his soul with the memory of his beloved.
He looked at the female Fieldner had brought to him. Mocha skin, brown eyes, hair like mink that curled to her shoulders. Beautiful. She stood trembling and wide-eyed at his approach. “You needn’t be afraid,” he said, staring deeply into her eyes, working to ease her mind with the power of his own.
He frowned and moved closer, and when she backed away, he said two words. “Be still.” And he waved his hand to direct his power more fully.
She didn’t move again. Just stood there, still afraid. He could hear her heart fluttering as madly as the wings of a trapped dove.
No matter. He would calm her soon enough. He moved nearer, and when he was right in front of her, he touched her chin with one hand and studied her face.
Anger flooded him, though he was careful to keep his voice gentle. “How old are you, child?”
“S-s-seventeen.”
He lowered his hand and turned away from her, disappointment washing through him as his hunger stabbed more deeply. Free from the hold of his mind, the girl stumbled backward as if suddenly released from a powerful grip.
“A child?” His eyes sought out those of his servant. Fieldner stood in the shadows, cowering now. “You’ve brought me a child, Fieldner?”
The man cringed into himself but didn’t back away. “Seventeen is hardly a child. And I brought two of them, master.”
“Two?” He turned again, noticing the second girl. Caucasian, blond and apparently unconscious on the chaise. He moved to her side, bending over her, touching her, his long fingers sending messages to his keen mind. Then he shot another look at Fieldner. “You’ve drugged her?”
“B-both of us,” the other girl said.
He shot her a look, turned to face the girl again. “What is your name, child?”
“D-Delia. Delia Beck. She’s Janie.” Her lip trembled. “Is she going to be all right?”
“Yes, I promise you she’s fine. Don’t be afraid, Delia Beck. You have nothing to fear from me.” He took a moment to ease her mind, reaching out to it with his own until she relaxed visibly. “Sit there with your friend,” he told her. “While I deal with this.”
She went to the chaise and sat upon it, taking her friend’s hand in her own, speaking softly to her.
He walked across the room to Fieldner, who started babbling at his approach. “I—I had to drug them. I did! There are two of them, and they would have fought me. I didn’t want to have to hurt one of them. You got angry the last time I hurt one of them.”
“And what good did you think it would do to bring me tainted blood, you idiot?” He looked back at the girls.
The one called Delia was staring at him as if she couldn’t look away, her heart still racing, though she wasn’t as afraid as she had been. She was mesmerized and terrified all at once. The other one, Janie, moaned, shifting restlessly on the chaise.
“I cannot feed on tainted blood,” he said to Fieldner. “And I will not feed on children.”
“I’m sorry, master.”
“The damage is done. There’s nothing for it but to keep it from getting worse. They will be missed, surely.”
“No! They were traveling alone.”
That, at least, was a point in his favor. “Good. I’ll command them to forget and send them on their way. But I need sustenance, Fieldner. And I won’t take it from them.”
“The emergency stores, sir?”
“I don’t think so.”
Bowing his head, the drone—who was also the police chief of Endover—moved across the room to the hardwood bar, a modern contrivance but one he liked. Fieldner removed a velvet case and set it on top. Opening the lid, he extracted a beautiful cut-crystal wineglass and then a jeweled, razor-sharp dagger.
“I apologize for the girls, sir. But there is something else. Something you should know before I proceed.”
“You wouldn’t be trying to stall, would you, Fieldner?”
“No, master.” He held his wrist over the wineglass and, clasping the dagger in his other hand, laid the blade against his own skin. He would do as commanded. But his blood would be gamey. Male blood always was. And the blood of a man as weak-minded as Fieldner would lack spark and power.
The vampire sighed. “Go on, then. Tell me what it is I should know.”
“That one. The dark one,” the chief said with a nod of his head toward Delia. “She managed to make a call on her cell phone.”
He lifted his brows. “And how did she manage that?” he asked.
“Cowering in the back of my car. I didn’t realize what she was doing.” He swallowed, his Adam’s apple swelling and receding like a wave. “Her brother is in town.”
The girl gasped. “Jason?”
Fieldner sent her a quelling look. “You shouldn’t ought to have made that phone call, girl. What happens to him now will be on your shoulders.”
The vampire felt her panic returning, and glanced again at
the child. “No harm will befall your brother, Delia. Trust me.”
“But what about him?” she cried. She pointed a finger at Fieldner. “He kept us locked up in the bottom of some lighthouse for hours! It was dark and we—”
“Calm,” the vampire said. He drew the word out, aiming more power at the girl. Teenagers—God, but their minds were so much more difficult to control than those of adults. “Relax, child. Everything is fine.”
She gulped back a sob and sat on the chaise once more.
Turning to Fieldner again, he said, “Perhaps you’d better begin at the beginning.”
The other man nodded. “The two girls were passing through town. Stopped at the old visitor center. While they were looking for rest rooms, I pulled a couple of the plug wires, so their car wouldn’t start. Then I offered them a ride to the nearest diner, where they could wait for a tow truck to arrive. They trusted me.”
Of course they had, he thought. Fieldner was a policeman. He wore a uniform and drove a marked cruiser. Any woman would trust him.
“That was this morning. I couldn’t very well bring them out here then, so I locked them up in the lighthouse. But on the way there, that one caught on that something wasn’t right and called her brother. I don’t know how she even got through, with the reception being as bad as it is. There must be a hot spot on the highway somewhere.”
“And why didn’t you hear the phone call?”
“By then they were making a fuss, demanding I stop the car, let them out. I…I put on the radio to drown out the noise.”
Disgusted, the vampire rolled his eyes.
“So she told her brother where she was.”
Fieldner nodded. “He was in my office not an hour ago, asking if I had seen her.”
“Her car?”
“I’d already hidden it.”
The vampire nodded slowly. “That makes one smart move you’ve made this week,” he told Fieldner. “Where is he now?”
“He’s staying at the North Star. I think he suspects something.”
“Of course he suspects something, if he’s less than a complete moron.” The vampire heaved a deep sigh. Complications. God, how he hated them. He’d created an idyllic life for himself here, one where he was in complete control. Anytime unexpected complications crept in, they put his entire lifestyle at risk.
He would have to deal with this as quickly and cleanly as possible. “I’ll speak with these children, and then you may return them and their car. Leave them far from the shores of Endover. They will remember nothing, of course. This brother of hers will not find them here, and he’ll go on his way to discover them safe and sound.” He nodded at the man’s wrist. “Proceed.”
“There’s more.”
Closing his eyes slowly, the vampire sighed. “What more?”
“This,” Fieldner said. He took a paper from his pocket, unfolded it and handed it over.
He took it, skimming the glossy flyer, which advertised some sort of detective agency. But then he went as still as if he’d suddenly turned to stone. His eyes were riveted to the photographs of the women on the front. One of the women, to be more precise. It was impossible. Impossible.
“What is the meaning of this?” he asked, and his voice was no more than a whisper.
“The resemblance is amazing, isn’t it, master? I thought the same.”
As he said it, the police chief looked up. So did the vampire. He looked up at the portrait of the woman with the delicate facial features of a porcelain doll and beautiful blond hair flowing over her shoulders. She wore a gown from an era long, long ago, and her wide, expressive eyes were as black as the night.
He kept looking from the face on the flyer to the face on the wall. “Tell me what you know of these two women,” he whispered.
“The girl’s brother—Jason Beck—he had this flyer in his wallet. It fell out when he took out his sister’s photo to show it to me. As to the women, I know only what’s on the flyer, sir. Their names are Maxine Stuart and Tempest Jones. They’re some kind of investigators for hire, who work, apparently, out of an office in Maine. When I asked who they were, Beck said they were old friends of his.”
Another good move on the chief’s part. One that might keep him alive a little bit longer, the vampire thought. He paced closer, removed the blade from the police chief’s hand and returned it to the case. “I’ll need you at full strength, Fieldner.”
“I await your command, my lord.”
He drew a deep breath, moving back to the girls. The second girl, Janie, was sitting up now, watching the men with unfocused eyes. She was confused and frightened.
“I’m afraid you two will have to be my guests for a short while.”
The blonde found both her voice and her courage. “Don’t put us back in that cell. Please. We haven’t done anything to you.”
He pursed his lips, shook his head. “No, no cells for you. My servant has treated you grievously, but I will make up for that. You are my guests, my cherished and honored guests. No harm will come to you in my care. You have my promise.”
They seemed to absorb the mental commands he was sending. Delia had already relaxed to a great degree, and Janie’s fear began to ease, as well. He leaned closer to Fieldner, spoke softly. “Take them up to the guest rooms. Lock them in.” Then he turned to the girls again. “My man here knows now that he was mistaken in his treatment of you. You have no more to fear from him, I promise. And if all goes well, you’ll be home with your families in a day. Two, at most.”
He nodded to Fieldner, again lowering his voice. “Photograph them, and then hurry back here, Fieldner. There is work to be done.”
4
Maxie couldn’t hide her excitement from Lou—he thought there wasn’t a hell of a lot she could hide from him—when she jumped out of Stormy’s car in the curving, white gravel driveway and stared at the beautiful house. He didn’t blame her. The place was a freaking dream house, a pristine white mansion resting on the rugged coast of Easton, Maine. She was racing up the white flagstone walk to the front door with its tall, oval stained-glass inset even as he parked the van. He smiled as she used her new key to let herself in.
Then he shut the van off and sent a look back at Stormy. She was fiddling with some things in the trunk of her car, obviously not as eager as Max was to rush inside. Preoccupied, perhaps. Maybe Max’s worry about her wasn’t as overblown as Lou wanted to think.
He climbed out of the van and joined Max in the house. She stood in the great room, taking it in. The chandelier in the domed ceiling above. The gleaming hardwood floors and the rugged, almost Norse-looking furniture. The way the stairs widened at the bottom so that they seemed to spill down from above, like a waterfall flowing into the room. She loved this place—it practically glowed from her eyes. Mostly, Lou thought, she loved it because it was her sister’s. It seemed filled with Morgan’s presence, her touches, even when she wasn’t here.
“Aren’t Morgan and Dante here to greet you?” Lou asked.
“No. They’re traveling. A delayed honeymoon, I guess.” She smiled up at him. That smile hit him in the solar plexus every time she flashed it, and this time was no different. “Besides, I think Morgan wanted to make sure I understood the place was really mine now. Give me time to settle in, get comfortable here. You know?”
He nodded, looking around. “So where’s the office going to be?”
“Oh, we already started setting up—took a drive up here last weekend. It’s the room Morgan used for her writing when she was here. I think it was originally a den.” She walked as she spoke, glancing over her shoulder once. “Stormy…?”
“She’s going through some stuff in her car,” he said. He saw the way Max’s eyes clouded with worry. “Was she okay the rest of the way here?”
“Seemed to be.”
“But you’re still worried.”
She sighed. “You think I’m being dumb.”
“I think it’s great the way you worry about her, Max. You’re the
most loyal person I know.”
“Yeah?” She smiled again. “That’s sweet, coming from a guy who’s as miserly with compliments as you are.”
“Am I?”
“You’d think they were an endangered species.” She looked toward the door again. “Lou, something’s wrong with Stormy.”
He frowned, a little shiver tingling up the back of his neck. “She said she fell asleep.”
“She lied.” Max shook her head and paced back to the entryway to stare out at Stormy, who was still picking through the luggage in her trunk. “I think she’s been keeping something from me for a while now. Since the coma.”
“Any idea what it’s about?”
Max shook her head. “Back there, when she went off the road, I could have sworn for just a second that her eyes were jet-black.”
Lou frowned at her. “What color are they usually?”
“Blue,” she said. “You telling me you never noticed the color of Stormy’s eyes?”
“It’s not the kind of thing I notice. So shoot me.”
“You’re a cop. You notice everything.”
“Ex-cop,” he corrected.
Max flattened a palm over her eyes. “What color are mine?”
They were green, he thought. Huge, sparkling green eyes like a pair of emeralds in the sunlight. Aloud, he said, “I haven’t got a clue.”
She lowered her hand, looking partly hurt and partly skeptical.
“So you’re saying Storm’s eyes changed color?”
“It was more than just the color, Lou. It was like—like they weren’t even her eyes.” She rubbed her outer arms as if she were suddenly cold.
“You wanna know what I think?”
“Of course I do.”
He nodded. “Good, because I was going to tell you, anyway. I think you’re overly worried about her. And you’re overwhelmed with this move, the new business, the new house.”
“In a good way, though.”
“Doesn’t matter. Max, it was only a few months ago you found out your birth mother was a reformed prostitute and that you had a twin sister. You located Morgan, only to learn she was terminally ill and apparently being stalked—by a freakin’ vampire, of all things. Then you found out the vamp was the good guy, after damn near getting him killed.”