Hunting Daylight (9781101619032) (21 page)

BOOK: Hunting Daylight (9781101619032)
5.18Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Raphael was referring to my father’s father, Etienne Grimaldi of Limoux, France. Their castle was one of the few that hadn’t been sacked during the crusade. Most of the clan, including my grandfather, had died later, during the Inquisition. They’d also had precognitive dreams.

I rubbed the washcloth over my fingers. “You’re wrong.
Vivi isn’t telepathic. She can’t read minds. Wouldn’t she need to hear a thought before she could bend it?”

“This isn’t about telepathy. It’s another type of energy, and it’s about control. Her will becomes her victim’s will.”

I quit scrubbing my hands and looked up. “Victim? You’re scaring me.”

“You need to be scared.”

“Of my own child?”

His gaze dropped to the front of my sweater, then moved up to my face. “She would never hurt you intentionally. But Induction and hemakinesis are weapons.”

“You’re saying she inherited this from me?”

“You’re a Grimaldi.”

“I can’t bend thoughts. I’ve never been able to read anyone’s thoughts but yours. And I can’t make people bleed.”

“Vampire genetics isn’t my forte.”

But Jude had understood it. I squeezed the washcloth. It felt just as cold as the air between me and Raphael. “Why would Vivi suddenly develop this…what’s it called?”

“Induction.” He paused. “She’s almost fourteen. Her body is starting to produce hormones.”

I frowned. He was talking about her cycle. I didn’t know about hormone production in humans, but I knew how it worked in hybrids.

“Don’t look so worried,
mia cara
. I know a psychiatrist who can help her.”

My stomach did a little flip. “Vivi needs a shrink?”

“Dr. Sabine d’Aigreville is an expert in vampire telepathy and telekinesis. She lives in Paris. If Vivi is an Inducer,
Sabine can help her develop and master these raw abilities.”

“Is this why Keats was killed? Because someone thinks Vivi has a peculiar talent?”

“You’re her mother and
you
didn’t know.” A muscle worked in his cheek, and he looked away.

“You’re holding back,” I said.

He sighed. “I don’t want to add to your worries. But I spoke with the detective who’s handling the murder investigation at Innisfair. Keats’s hands were mutilated, except for one finger. On that finger was a gold ring. The police assumed it was his wedding band.”

“I never saw Mr. Keats wear a ring. He wouldn’t let Vivi wear jewelry when she went riding. He said it was just one more thing to get snagged in a bridle or reins.”

“It wasn’t his ring,
mia cara
.” Raphael paused. “It was Jude’s.”

Something fell inside my chest. I dropped to my knees, and the washcloth hit the floor. “It was on his finger when he went to Gabon. It was too tight. He never took it off.”

“The inscription says
To J love the Lass
.”

“You’re telling me the ring made it out of the rain forest, and
he
didn’t?”

Raphael looked away.

I clawed the neck of my sweater. It felt too tight. I couldn’t breathe. What were the odds that Jude’s wedding band would turn up ten years later on the hand of a murder victim? Was the killer taunting me, hoping I’d think Jude had suffered? Or had Jude lost the ring in the bush?

Raphael turned back to me. “Are you sure he was wearing it,
mia cara
?”

“Yes.” I swallowed. “I guess it’s possible that someone found his body and took the ring. Maybe they sold it.”

“How would a random buyer make the connection that
J
stands for Jude? Or that you are the Lass?”

“I don’t know. Maybe the ring was sold again and again. Someone figured it out. Someone who’d known Jude.”

I looked up into Raphael’s eyes, trying to feel his thoughts. Pain sliced through the left side of my chest. “You believe that someone on the expedition team stole the ring? And that same person killed Keats?”

Raphael was blocking me, but the sudden flash in his eyes told me that I’d guessed his thoughts. “Or maybe Jude is still alive,” he said.

“Come on, Raphael. You don’t believe that. If Jude had survived, he would have found a way back to me and Vivi.”

“We need to know if he was wearing his ring the day he disappeared.”

“How?”

Raphael hunkered beside me and took my hand. “The moment I found out about Keats, I called my friend in Interpol. He’s been researching the team members on Jude’s expedition.”

“But all of them died.” I remembered how I’d badgered the Al-Dîn Corporation after Jude went missing. They’d insisted the team had perished in a fire. I hadn’t believed them, and I’d hired an American firm to look into it. Raphael had contacted Interpol. They’d all reached the same conclusion: No one on that expedition had survived.

“A British virologist made it out of Gabon. Dr. Emmett Walpole.”

“And it took Interpol ten years to figure this out?”

“Apparently Walpole dropped off the grid. He’s been moving around. Now he’s living in Zermatt.”

“I don’t see how Interpol found him.”

“Two months ago he flew into Berlin. He acted paranoid. Bought a one-way ticket. A custom’s agent questioned the authenticity of the passport. The authorities let him go, but he ended up on an Interpol Red Notice. His passport cleared Zürich a few weeks ago. From there, he was simple to trace.”

“Has he been traveling under his real name all this time?”

“I don’t know. But I’m going to find out.”

I had to concentrate on what Raphael was really saying. Was he leaving Longyearbyen? Was he going to fly to Switzerland and talk to this virologist? Zermatt seemed like an unlikely place for a vampire. They didn’t like high altitudes.

“I’m going tomorrow,” Raphael said.

He’d heard my thoughts? I tugged my hand out of his grasp.

“Can’t you phone this man? Or e-mail?”

“He might run.”

“Why? Because of the passport incident?”

“Or maybe he saw something in Gabon that he wasn’t meant to see.”

I exhaled. “Will you be safe?”

“Zermatt is a good place to hide from vampires.”

“And a bad place to be trapped,” I said. “They don’t
allow cars. You can’t drive away if things get hairy. You’ll have to take the train.”

“I’ve been to Zermatt many times.” He smiled. “You and Vivi need to come with me.”

“But we’re safe in Longyearbyen.”

“Inge takes Coumadin. She could hemorrhage if Vivi tried to Induce her.”

“That’s a big leap, Raphael. We don’t know for sure if she has this…skill. Maybe my nose bled because I’ve been on too many airplanes.”

“That’s not why.”

“You don’t know. You’re not a doctor.”

His hand grazed the side of my face. “I’m not taking chances.”

I leaned back. “What happens when we leave this island? Whoever is chasing us will know the second your jet leaves.”

“We’re not flying. I chartered a boat to Amsterdam.”

“You’re speaking as if this is a fait accompli.”

“Our new passports will arrive this afternoon,” he said.

“That was fast. Hope they’re not flagged.”

“Inge’s sons know the right people.”

“And so do you.” I paused. “What happens after you talk to Dr. Walpole?”

“We’ll go to Paris. Sabine can help Vivi.”

“And you trust this doctor?”

“Yes.”

“What about Gillian? Is she coming, too?”

He nodded. “We’ll need a decoy when we leave Zermatt. She can go to Villa Primaverina, and we’ll go to Paris.”

“Why can’t we go to Paris first?”

“Dr. Walpole moves around. I don’t want to lose this chance to see him.”

“If Vivi’s going with us, she’ll need to tone down her hair.”

A floorboard creaked in the hall. The bedroom door swung open, and Vivi glared at me. “Good luck with that, Momster.”

Gillian walked to town and returned with hair dye and bland clothing. She lured Vivi into the kitchen, then made a big show of kicking me out. Gillian and I had planned the makeover ahead of time. I knew Vivi wouldn’t let me tamper with her style, but she might listen to Gillian.

An hour later, I heard a scream. Vivi ran into the living room, tears beaded in her eyelashes. Her hair had been dyed auburn, and Gillian had given her a short, androgynous trim.

“I could pass for a boy,” Vivi wailed. The razor-blade earrings had been replaced with discreet pearl studs, one in each lobe. She wore jeans and a gray flannel hoodie.

“You look adorable,” I said. And she did, even if she seemed much younger than thirteen.

Gillian came out of the kitchen. “Relax, your hair will grow.”

Vivi wheeled around. “Give me the scissors. Let’s see how you like a crew cut.”

“Lose the attitude,” Gillian said.

“Attitude is all I’ve got.”

As Gillian left the room, I put my hands on Vivi’s shoulders. “Will you please calm down? We need to pull together as a family. When this is over, you can dye your hair green, and I won’t say a word.”

“You really think this trouble will end? Because I don’t.” Her face crumpled. “This is Raphael’s fault. He’s in some kind of mess. He’s put us in danger, and it’s not fair!”

“It’s the other way around, Vivi. We’ve put
him
in danger.”

Her chin trembled. “It’s because of me, isn’t it? Because I’ve got that thing inside me. That Induction thing.”

A humming sound began in my ears. “Who told you about Induction?”

“I heard you talking to the Prince of Darkness.” She wiped her eyes. “I know what I am. A freak.”

“You are not. You’re smart and brave and beautiful.”

“If you believe that, you’re whacked.”

“Gillian’s right. You need an attitude adjustment.”

“That won’t help. I’ve got a nest of vampires in my family tree.”

“So do I.”

“But you don’t give people hematomas.”

“You can learn how to control it.”

“What if I can’t?”

“You will. And you know why? Because you’re like your father.” Tears pricked my eyes, but I kept going. “When Jude was a young man—a human—he was doing research that almost got him killed. Vampires cut the tendons in his heels and set his lab on fire.”

She swallowed, then wiped her eyes.

“Your dad lost everything,” I said. “He was forced to leave his home and his family. He taught himself to walk again. Then he met me. And we made you.”

“Big mistake.” Her eyes filled again.

I took her face in my hands. “You have the strength of the Barretts inside you. It’s greater than the messed-up genes you inherited from me. You will get through this, because you are Jude’s daughter. He loved you. And he would have been so proud.”

“Oh, Mom.” She pushed her face against my neck. “I’m sorry. I don’t mean to be a brat. I’m just scared.”

“I know, Meep.” I pulled her close, but I couldn’t shake the feeling that she was moving away from me, and no force on this earth could make it stop.

CHAPTER 16

 

AL-DÎN COMPOUND

SUTHERLAND, SOUTH AFRICA

JULY 8

Half a world away, in a windowless compound, a six-hundred-year-old vampire contemplated his mortality. Mustafa Al-Dîn leaned back in the leather infusion chair, taking care not to dislodge the intravenous tubing in his right arm. Stem cell leukemia had made him vulnerable to the faintest of light, and a red glow illuminated the treatment room, blurring the tiled walls.

A sable ferret climbed onto the chair, its nails scratching over the leather, and it perched on Mustafa’s leg. The vampire laughed, then reached in his pocket, pulled out a plastic bag, and removed a glistening cube of raw meat.

“Bram, come closer,” Mustafa said.

The ferret’s long body seemed to glide over Mustafa’s
silk pajamas, and then the animal tilted his head and bit into the meat.

“I wasn’t always like this,” Mustafa told the ferret. “Once, I dined with Sultan Mehmed II. I commanded the
sipahis
. Do you know what an honor that was—to lead an entire cavalry division? To be a hero in the Ottoman army?”

The ferret crept closer. Mustafa pulled another chunk from the bag. He smiled as Bram sank his fangs into the meat.

“Oh, you should have been there the day I rode out on my white stallion,” Mustafa said. “I crossed the Danube to kill the infidels. I was feared by thousands. Now I am dying.”

Other books

Breath of Love by Ophelia Bell
Nights of Villjamur by Mark Charan Newton
Out of Such Darkness by Robert Ronsson
Close to the Heel by Norah McClintock
Paige Torn by Erynn Mangum
Dreaming of Atmosphere by Jim C. Wilson
Blue Angel by Donald Spoto
Fried Chicken by John T. Edge