Chapter 12
“Home at last,” Raymond said, stopping next to a
small white rental car and taking a deep breath of dirt, diesel,
and smog-scented Los Angeles air. “The sights, the sounds, the
scents of the city—ah, how I’ve missed it.”
“I haven’t,” Magda said with a sigh, dropping her
suitcase next to the trunk of the car. “I could have happily spent
the rest of my life in the Blue Lagoon.”
“Oh, don’t get me wrong. I liked Iceland a lot,
especially the second time around,” Raymond said hurriedly.
“Without the . . . you know . . . murder and business with the
police and everything. But I have to say that it’s good to be home.
Or near home, in my case.”
“I really feel bad about using up all your vacation
time running around chasing vamps and whatnot,” I said as I leaned
against the car, quickly leaping away when the hot metal scorched
through the thin material of my blouse. “The offer still stands,
you know. You guys can stay in my house while Kristoff and I deal
with all this. It’s not fair to ask you to help with a problem that
isn’t of your making, and that way you’d have at least a little fun
time before you had to go back to work.”
“And miss all the good stuff?” Magda snorted. “Not
on your life. We’re in it for the long haul, aren’t we,
pookie?”
“Absolutely,” Raymond said, nodding eagerly. “We’re
one hundred percent behind you, Pia. This is the most exciting time
I’ve ever had, even including the tour to Europe. I never thought
I’d become a vampire hunter! I can’t wait to blog about
this!”
“Er . . . yeah,” I said noncommittally.
“Welcome to the City of Angels,” Magda said,
blowing out a long breath. “And to think I could be soaking in a
hot spring at this moment.”
“There’s Kristoff,” I said, sighing with relief as
a familiar figure emerged from the elevator. He wore his jacket and
hat against the sun, but didn’t stick to the shadows, as he had in
the past. “Everything OK?” I asked as he hit a button to unlock the
car doors.
“I’m not sure,” he said, looking thoughtful.
I watched him closely as Raymond loaded the
suitcases in the car’s trunk. Magda took the keys from Kristoff,
murmuring something about knowing her way around LA better than he
did.
What’s wrong? I asked. Was it the phone
call you had at the rental car place?
“The phone call was from one of my associates in
Paris.”
“Uh-oh. That look doesn’t bode well. Did your buddy
find out something?” I asked, a bad feeling beginning to form in my
stomach.
“No. That’s the problem. When we left Iceland two
months ago, Alec told me he was going to follow up on the rumor of
a new group of reapers around Marseilles, and then he’d return to
his home. And yet my friend confirmed that Alec never arrived in
Paris.”
“So where did he go?” Magda asked as Raymond
slammed shut the trunk and took the front passenger seat.
Kristoff opened the back door for me. “That’s a
good question. I’m working on the assumption that he would have
gone home if he decided suddenly not to track down the French
reapers, but thus far, my contacts haven’t found proof he’s been
here, either.”
“Hotel first, then reaper headquarters?” Magda
asked.
Kristoff got in after me, immediately pulling me up
next to him. I gave myself a moment to enjoy the subconscious move
on his part, my heart simultaneously mourning what it couldn’t have
and enjoying what he could give me. “Neither. We will need to be
prepared when we visit the reapers. Alec’s house is within an hour
from here. We will go there first, and then gather our forces and
prepare for the onslaught.”
Oh, Boo, I said, filled with gratitude.
You’re doing that for me, aren’t you?
“Aye-aye, Captain,” Magda said, saluting.
I know how worried you are about your
spirit.
You are the sweetest man I know, I said,
leaning over to kiss him. Thank you.
“Onslaught,” Ray whispered to her, patting his
jacket for the bulge that was his camera. “Exciting stuff! I’ve
never been part of an onslaught before. I wonder if I have enough
film for it.”
I agree that Alec is being made to look like he
is the Ilargi. I believe we can kill two birds with one stone by
searching his house for information on both fronts.
Magda punched the address Kristoff gave her into
the car’s GPS, making a little face at the results. “With the
traffic, it’s going to take us a while to get there. Maybe we
should go to the hotel first, then visit the house, then prepare
for the onslaught?”
“Alec’s house first,” Kristoff said
stubbornly.
“House it is.”
It took exactly two hours and twenty minutes to get
there, but as I gazed in awe at the building, I decided it was
worth it.
“Et voilà. Casa Alec. Ooh. And it is a
very nice casa.” Magda pulled up outside of an arched gate
that spanned a drive that curled around to the back of a pale
yellow chiffon-colored house.
“That’s one heck of a house,” Raymond said as we
all got out of the car. He took a few quick photos. “Not at all
what I expected a vampire to live in.”
“Gothic castle with bats circling a bell tower?” I
asked, smiling.
He flashed a grin. “Well, maybe. But this one . . .
hoo. Must have set him back at least a mill. Maybe two. Do you
think it has a view of the valley below?”
“Shall I ring?” Magda asked, poised to ring the
visitor’s bell.
“Won’t do any good. There’s clearly no one home,”
Raymond answered from where he was peering through the brown metal
fence to the house. “Looks deserted. Maybe we should come
back.”
“Not after all we’ve been through,” Magda answered,
pressing the bell. “Let’s see if anyone answers.”
We waited a few minutes, but when it became clear
that no one was either home to answer the ring or willing to do so,
we decided we would have to rely on our own resources.
“Boost me over the fence, and I’ll see if there’s a
way to open it from the other side,” I told Kristoff.
“No,” he answered, just as I figured he
would.
“You know, I’m not sure that that’s not technically
breaking and entering,” Raymond answered, his voice filled with
reluctance. “It might be better if we waited until we can get hold
of someone who can legally give us permission to go in the
house.”
“Don’t be so straitlaced,” Magda told him with a
grin. “A little light breaking and entering is good for you.
Besides, I want to see inside. I’m dying to see how a vampire
really lives.”
“I assure you, we live just as a mortal does,”
Kristoff said dryly.
“No coffins?” Raymond asked, his curiosity clearly
getting the better of him. “No odd servants undertaking mysterious
tasks late at night? No mirrors draped in black to hide the fact
that you don’t have a reflection?”
“He has a reflection,” I said, coming to Kristoff’s
defense. “How do you think he shaves without being able to see
himself?”
Raymond’s mouth opened and closed a couple of
times, like a confused fish. “Well, I . . . I . . . I guess I never
thought about it. I just assumed that vampires didn’t need to
shave. No one on Angel ever shaved.”
“You mortals watch entirely too much television,”
Kristoff said as he approached the gate.
Raymond murmured a vague excuse while Magda
giggled.
“I just hope the fence isn’t electrified or
anything like that,” I said, standing next to him, eyeing the large
brown metal gate. “I assume you want to go first. Just be careful
in case Alec has booby-trapped it somehow.”
“I don’t need to climb the fence; I know the code,”
Kristoff answered with a long-suffering look at me.
Don’t even think of lightening your eyes,
Boo.
I don’t have the slightest idea what you’re
talking about, he answered.
Oh, don’t you try to tell me you aren’t aware
vampires can change their eye color.
Some can, perhaps. I wasn’t aware I shared that
trait.
You do. It’s like a barometer for your temper.
Light is pissy, and dark is . . .
I stopped and waited.
Dark is what? Happy? he asked.
Aroused. Allow me to demonstrate. I sent him
a few memories of our time spent in the Blue Lagoon. His eyes
darkened from their normally flawless teal to a deep navy. See?
Your eyes are dark now. You’re aroused.
A fact that will become evident to others if you
continue along that particular memory. And that one.
I smiled.
That one, my little temptress, is likely to get
you bent over my lap.
Promises, promises, I purred, suddenly
standing up straight when Kristoff spent a few moments indulging in
just how I was going to be punished.
Luckily, Magda’s impatience distracted us before
Kristoff’s pants grew too tight and I started squirming in
earnest.
“Let’s go. What are we waiting for? It will be
getting dark in another hour.” She poked Kristoff in the arm.
Kristoff punched in some numbers on the recessed
panel, and the gate slid open with a nearly silent hiss.
“Take the car or leave it?” Magda asked, poised to
do either.
“Leave it,” Kristoff said.
“It would be safer inside the gate,” Raymond said,
looking pointedly up and down the street. “This might be an
affluent neighborhood, but you never know. Someone might try to
steal it, and I’d hate to have to explain that to the rental
company. You’d lose your insurance deposit.”
“Stop being such an accountant,” Magda said with a
fond squeeze of his arm.
“Not that I suspect it’s likely to be stolen here,
but if we leave it where it is, anyone who comes by will see that
someone is here,” I pointed out.
“It’s easier to get away with the car on the road,”
Kristoff said with a grim note to his voice.
“Fast getaway,” Magda said, nodding her head
sagely. “Makes sense. I could always move it down the road a
smidgen. There was a spot I could pull off the street, where it
wouldn’t be quite so obvious it was this house we were at.”
Kristoff agreed that would be smart, and
accordingly, Magda and Ray moved the car down the road half a block
or so.
“I can’t believe we’re doing this. I can’t believe
I’m here with a vampire and a sparkling-light lady, and we’re
breaking and entering a house so expensive, we could go to jail for
at least fourteen years,” Raymond said as we all trooped up the
drive to the house. “This is something straight out of The
A-Team.”
“Sweetie, your middle age is showing,” Magda
said.
Alec’s house, I had to admit, was impressive. It
was of modern design, shaped like several square blocks had been
stacked one upon another, with bits of it jutting out in an odd but
pleasing formation.
“What are we going to do about the lo—”
Before I could finish asking, Kristoff opened the
door and gestured for us to go in.
I frowned at him. “How did you know it would be
unlocked?”
“I made sure it was.”
“Huh?” For one moment I had a vision of some
strange, magical long-distance locksmith abilities known only to
vampires.
Now that is so far-fetched, it isn’t even in the
realm of television.
Then how . . . ?
“The associate who was in California checking on
Alec’s movements opened the house up for me. And no, I don’t know
how—I didn’t ask him. Does it matter?” he asked.
“Why are we here if you’ve already had someone
search the house?” Magda asked as she and Raymond walked slowly
down a couple of slate steps into a vast living room.
Kristoff evidently knew Alec’s house security code
as well, since the alarm never sounded after he tapped in a few
numbers. “He didn’t search the house for anything but Alec. It’s
our job to see if there is anything here that can tell us whether
or not Alec is involved with the reapers.”
“Well. All I can say is, viva las vampires,” Magda
said as she turned slowly in a circle to take in the sights.
I had to agree with her assessment. The house had
an open, breezy layout, and I found myself just as curious as Magda
and Raymond as to how a vampire lived.
OK, I admit it. I’m surprised, I told
Kristoff as I wandered around the large open room, stopping to
admire a huge stone fireplace. Beige suede furnishings and
cream-colored accents just weren’t what I pictured his house
looking like.
“Green marble in the kitchen,” Magda said, emerging
from that room. “Ooh, Jacuzzi on the deck.”
“OK, MacGyver, now what?” I asked Kristoff.
He frowned. “My surname is von Hannelore, not
MacGyver.”
“It was a TV reference, and yes, I’m aware we watch
too much of it. Moving on, what now?”
“Now we search.”
“Search for what?” Magda asked, coming in from the
deck with Raymond. “I’m ready and willing to be put to work.”
“Look for anything that has to do with reapers,”
Kristoff told her as he picked up the phone, punching in two
numbers. “Or any travel documents. Anything that could give a hint
as to where Alec was last. You two do the ground floor. Pia and I
will do upstairs. We’ll meet back here to search this floor
together.”
Magda saluted. She and Raymond headed to the lower
floor while I watched Kristoff.
“Anything?”
He listened for a moment, then hung up the phone,
shaking his head. “Nothing useful. The last call he made from here
was to the Moravian Council, assumedly before we went to
Iceland.”
“He still has his cell phone, yes?”
“Yes.” He held out his hand for me.
I took it, allowing the little skitter of happiness
that never failed to follow such a gesture to fill me with warmth.
“Now that Raymond and Magda are out of the way, what is it you
really hope to find here?”
He shot me a faux-irritated glance. “I should have
known better than to try to deceive you.”
“Amen. What do you think we’ll find?”
“I am hoping that he left behind his reaper
journal. Normally, he did not take it with him when he
traveled.”
“What’s in it?” We paused outside of a room. Night
was starting to settle in, so Kristoff switched on a penlight and
flicked it around the room. It was an unused bedroom. He moved on
to the next.
“His notes on reapers. If he has betrayed us to
them, there might be some evidence in the journal. Likewise, if
not, there may be evidence to that effect, as well. This is his
study.”
The light was so dim that I couldn’t see much of
the room.
“And if he’s acting as a double agent, pretending
to work with Frederic in order to ingratiate himself?”
Kristoff crossed the room to close the blinds on
three windows, followed by some heavy gold-and-cream drapes. “There
may be some indication of that, too, although he has never
mentioned anything like that to me. We should be safe to turn on
the light now.”
I flipped on the light and breathed in the air rich
with masculinity, an intriguing blend of leather, furniture polish,
and a faint, lingering citrusy note that I remembered as something
inherently Alec.
“You take the desk,” Kristoff said, gesturing
toward it. “I’ll see if there is anything helpful on his
computer.”
He moved over to sit at a small computer table that
butted up against one window.
I touched the corner of the large mahogany desk
that dominated the room, running my fingers along its satiny top.
It was an antique desk, not terribly old, probably made around the
turn of the twentieth century, but meant to impress with its size
and ornate decorations. I could easily see some railroad magnate or
lumber baron seated behind it, barking out orders with a cigar
clenched between his teeth.
“My grandfather used to have a desk like this. I
loved curling up underneath it, pretending it was a castle. When he
was in a good mood, he’d let me sit at it and cut up papers. I’d
arrange books along one side, and have my brother check out books.
I loved that desk,” I said meditatively, memories swamping
me.
“I will buy you one like it later, but you must
search now,” Kristoff answered, his attention wholly on the
computer screen in front of him as his hands flew over the
keyboard.
I sat slowly in the chair behind the desk, my
fingers caressing the rolled wood that edged the desk, wondering
why I felt so oddly reluctant to open the drawers.
“I do not like prying any more than you do,”
Kristoff said, addressing my unspoken thoughts. “But if he is in
danger, there might be something here that will permit us to rescue
him. And if not . . .”
He stopped speaking, but his thoughts were readily
apparent.
“If not, we’ll find that, too. I know.” I tried my
best to release my feeling of guilt at invading Alec’s privacy as I
opened the first drawer.
Kristoff swore. “He’s password-protected most of
the documents. I can’t get into them.”
“Rats. You don’t know his password?”
He shook his head, turning off the computer. “No,
and it’s useless to try to break the encryption. It would take far
too long.” He thought for a moment or two. “You keep searching the
desk. I will go through his bedroom and the other rooms.”
“There’re only the three floors?” I asked, a
handful of bank and credit card statements in my hands. I glanced
through them quickly, but didn’t see anything that was out of the
ordinary.
“There’s an attic, but it’s not used. There is a
small guesthouse, however. I’ll check that when I’m through with
his bedroom. It, too, should be empty, but it is better to check.
Go through his papers carefully, Pia. There could be something in
there that will give us a hint as to his state of mind or
plans.”
The ticking of the thin marble clock hanging on the
wall opposite kept me company for the next forty minutes. Kristoff
popped in briefly to say he’d searched all the rooms on this floor,
and was going to check the guesthouse before starting on the main
floor.
Magda arrived not long after that.
“I’ll say this for Alec,” she said from where she
stood in the doorway, watching me sort through several file
folders. “The man has a damned fine wine cellar. I’m afraid we gave
in to temptation and opened a bottle of Gaja Costa Russi that’s
absolute heaven. We saved you guys some.”
I looked up from a stock portfolio statement,
somewhat surprised by the figures it detailed. Kristoff might
disclaim having any wealth, but Alec certainly couldn’t deny that
he had holdings worth a significant amount of money, even by
today’s standards. “Thanks, but I don’t think Kristoff drinks, and
I’m not a big fan of red wines. Did you find anything else?”
She hiccuped and came into the room to plop down in
the chair next to the computer. “Nothing that said what happened to
him. Everything is shipshape, as far as we could tell. Nothing out
of place, no giant map of the world with a big arrow pointing to
his destination, nothing but a home theater, pool table, video
arcade machines, and the wine cellar. Whatcha got there?”
I tidied the papers and put them back in their file
folder, tucking it back in the appropriate drawer. “Just financial
stuff. Nothing interesting, unless you want to be amazed at Alec’s
financial genius, which I have to admit is pretty darned
awesome.”
“Loaded, is he?” she asked, looking around the
room.
“Very. That’s the last drawer.” I closed it and sat
looking at the desk, my hands stroking the polished, cool
surface.
“So the trip here has been for nothing.” Her voice
reflected her unhappy expression.
“Probably.” I was oddly reluctant to leave the
dusty hallways of my memory. “I was telling Kristoff earlier about
how I used to play at a similar desk my grandfather had.”
“Oh, really?” She sat up. “Ooh! Don’t tell me your
grandpa’s desk had a hidden drawer!”
“No,” I said, frowning down at my hands on the
desk. “I used to beg him to show me the hidden drawer, but he said
it didn’t have one.”
“Damn.” She thought for a moment, brightening up to
add, “That doesn’t mean this one can’t have one.”
“You’re welcome to look. I already did, but two
pairs of eyes are better than one, and all that.”
Magda hurried over to the desk and, one by one,
pulled out the drawers. We checked them for false bottoms and false
backs, looked underneath for anything taped to the underside, and
more or less gutted the desk. By the time the marble clock chimed
the hour, I realized we’d been searching for more than twenty
minutes.
“I think we’re going to have to face the fact that
there’s no hidden anything in the desk,” I said, rubbing my fingers
absently along its rolled edge.
“I’m afraid you’re right,” Magda said, crawling out
from where she’d been on her back underneath the desk, examining
the underside. She sat on her heels, her eyes narrowed on my hand.
“Why do you keep doing that?”
“Keep doing what?” I looked down at the desk.
“Rubbing the edge? I don’t know. The carving on it is pretty, don’t
you think?”
She leaned to the side, peering over the desk.
“Yeah, but the desk has that edge all the way around it, and you
keep touching just that one spot.”
I shrugged. “Coincidence. I suppose we should go
report in to Kristoff that we haven’t found anything.”
I started to get up, but Magda held up a hand.
“Hang on a sec. I think there’s more to it than coincidence. You
had to scoot your chair over a foot so you could touch that spot.
It’s not something you can reach when you sit square at the
desk.”
“So? It’s just a weird quirk. I like wood. I like
to touch it.”
“Only that one spot?” she asked.
I frowned at the desk. “Now, that is odd. I guess I
have been drawn to this one edge. . . . Oh, Magda, you don’t mean
to say—”
“Stranger things, my dear, stranger things.”
I rolled my eyes.
“Look at it this way.” She crawled over to where my
hand had been resting, examining that edge of the desk closely.
“You’re a Zorya. You’re not normal anymore.”
“Thanks.”
She brushed away my grimace. “You know what I mean.
You’re Pia-plus, and no, I’m not talking about your size. Maybe
there’s something here that you’re subconsciously picking up on.
Hand me that letter opener, will you?”
I shook my head but did as she asked, giving her
the thin knife that Alec obviously used as a letter opener. She
poked at the edge for a few minutes, making me flinch a couple of
times as the blade marred the wood.
“Oh, let me do it,” I said, nudging her aside.
“You’re just going to scratch up the lovely finish. Not that I
think there’s anything to what you’re . . . Well, I’ll be
damned.”
I don’t know if it was Magda’s prodding with the
knife that did it, or if I triggered some sensitive spot, but a
piece of the molding about seven inches long came off in my hand. I
thought for a moment that I’d broken it, but a glance at the minute
dovetail work of the desk and molding told me it was intended to
come off.
“Look. Is that an opening?” Magda asked, peering
closely at the desk. “It is. I think there’s something in there.
You got a pair of tweezers on you?”
“Do my eyebrows look like I’m the sort of person
who has tweezers?” I asked, getting on my knees so I, too, could
peer into a thin, narrow slit that had evidently been carved into
the thick top of the desk. Like Magda, I could see the faint
outline of an object deep in the recess. I used the paper knife,
gently guiding the object out. “I think . . . Ah, there it is. Yes,
I have it.”
“What is it?” she asked, peering over my shoulders
at the slim book I held. “Something important?”
“I can’t imagine stuffing something trivial in
there,” I answered, carefully unwrapping a saffron yellow animal
skin that had been carefully folded into a bundle. Inside it was
what appeared to be a hand-stitched goatskin journal. It was small,
about the size of a PDA, the outer cover brown and stained with
age. The pages inside, about ten total, appeared to be made of
vellum, also mottled and stained with the effects of time. I rubbed
my fingers along the pages, not seeing, for a moment, the thick
black handwriting, but admiring the profound sense of age that
wrapped around the book.
“Can you read it?” Magda asked, her lips moving as
she tried to decipher the handwriting.
“Let’s take it to the light.” We scooted two chairs
over to the table lamp, angling it so the light shone down on the
mottled pages.
“It’s definitely old,” Magda said, hunching over it
next to me.
“I think it’s a diary of some sort. That’s a date,
isn’t it?” I asked, pointing to the upper corner.
“Looks like it. April? August? Something with an A.
From 1642. Wow. Seriously old. I can’t make out what the writing
says, though. Can you?”
I concentrated on the thick black writing. It
appeared to be in a language that I didn’t recognize. I ran my
finger along the lines of handwriting, trying to pick out words
that made some sense.
My finger stopped; my heart contracted. “That . . .
that’s Kristoff’s name.”
“What? Where?” She craned to see.
I tapped the word. “Right there. That says,
‘Hannelor Kristof,’ which has to be a reference to my
Kristoff.”
“Hmm. Maybe it’s when he first met Kristoff.”
“Could be. I wonder if this is the reaper journal
Kristoff mentioned.” I continued searching the diary. There were
several more instances of his name, but nothing struck me as
recognizable.
“Maybe Kristoff can read it,” Magda suggested as I
finished running my finger along the lines of text on the last
page. Something niggled at the back of my mind, something that I
had just seen that was important.
Magda sat back, a look of disappointment on her
face.
“Maybe.” I looked at the book again, going back to
the beginning, where Kristoff’s name was first mentioned. My finger
traced the centuries-old text, following along until I came to a
spot near the bottom of the first page. “Magda.”
“Hmm?”
“This, right here. Does that look like ‘in tua
luce videmus lucem’?”
“What is that, Latin?”
“Yes.”
Her dark head leaned over the book. “Yeah, it does.
Why, what does it mean?”
“‘In thy light we see light.’”
“Sounds like a university motto.”
I stared down at the page. “It well could be. It
also happens to be something that the Brotherhood people say as
part of their rituals.”
Her eyes widened. “What do you think it
means?”
“I’m not sure. Look, does this say ‘Lodi’?”I tapped
a word on the following page.
“Um . . . maybe. It could be. Then again, it might
be ‘loom.’ Or even ‘look.’ The writing is too hard to decipher for
sure.”
“I think it’s Lodi,” I said slowly, trying to
remember what Rick Mycowski had told us about the origins of the
war against the vampires. My fingers slid across the thin vellum
until they rested beneath the date noted alongside the entry in
question. “It says 1643. That sounds about right for the Lodi
Congress.”
“The what?”
I explained what I knew of the history of the
Brotherhood.
“Gotcha. So this is, like, a mention of the war
starting. If so, it’s seriously old, and has to be valuable. I
wonder why Alec doesn’t have this in some sort of archival
protective storage rather than shoved into the hidey-hole of a
desk?”
I flipped back a page, looking at the dated entry
containing Kristoff’s name. Why, if the Lodi Congress started the
year following that, was the Brotherhood mentioned in the earlier
entry? Had Kristoff been one of the first vamps to go after the
reapers? I made a mental note to ask him when things were less
hectic and he’d be more inclined to chat.
“Regardless, it’s valuable enough to warrant having
Kristoff translate it,” I said, gently rubbing my thumb across the
goatskin covering. “If it turns out to be nothing, we’ll return it
to Alec. Assuming he comes home, that is.”
“I guess we’re finished here, then,” Magda said,
glancing around the room.
“We’ve looked everywhere. We can move on to the
floor below us.” A thought occurred to me: Kristoff hadn’t been in
contact with me for over half an hour. While that wasn’t in any way
remarkable, I would have thought he’d be interested to know of our
progress, or lack thereof. Boo, I’m ready to go on to the main
floor. You about finished in the guesthouse?
Silence was my only answer.
Kristoff? Everything OK?
I stood up as the profound silence filled my head.
“Something’s wrong,” I said, trying to open up my senses to locate
Kristoff.
She paused at the door. “What?”
“Kristoff isn’t answering me.”
She glanced at the phone for a moment before her
eyebrows arched. “Oh, the mind thing? Maybe he’s busy. Or out of
range.”
I shook my head, suddenly filled with the strongest
portent of danger. “I don’t think so. Something has happened to
cause him to close his mind to mine, and that can only be one
thing.”
“Reapers?” she asked, her face losing some of its
animation.
I nodded. “Or worse.”
She froze for a moment. “Come to think of it, Ray
should have been upstairs by now. Even if he had been drinking that
lovely Costa Russi, he should have. . . . I’m going to go check on
him.”
She dashed out of the room without waiting for a
response.
Possessed by a sudden sense of urgency, I hurriedly
wrapped up the journal, shoved the bit of trim back onto the desk,
and without an alternate choice, stuffed the journal under my
dress, into the band of my underwear.
I snatched up the penlight that Kristoff had left
me, flipping off the room’s light before carefully closing the
door. The house was dark now that the sun was setting, but the
penlight allowed me to pick out the way to the stairs that led down
to the main floor. It, too, was in the dark, and for a moment I
hesitated, the primitive part of my mind refusing to march blindly
into what felt like certain danger.
My foot had just hit the first stair when a noise
behind me startled me, causing me to simultaneously gasp and spin
around, one hand clutching the penlight, the other groping the
journal as it pressed against my skin.
A face loomed suddenly out of the darkness. My skin
crawled in horror for a moment, my body giving in to the flight
instinct. I stepped backward and plummeted down the staircase into
the inky blackness below.