Undying (18 page)

Read Undying Online

Authors: V.K. Forrest

BOOK: Undying
8.22Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

I hate witches,
he telepathed.

Hush, Mousie,
Fia shot back. She made eye contact with the closest hag. “Gullveig, long time no see.”

“We’re closed,” the blonde shrieked, catching the door with bony fingers to slam it shut.

“I’m not looking for a love potion.” Fia slipped her foot in the doorway before it banged shut. “Want to see my badge or my fangs, ladies?”

The one sister looked at the other and then back at Fia. Her white-eyed gaze would have been unnerving to most, but not to Fia. As far as she was concerned, it was their gimmick and a good one at that. “We got out of the business last year. Nothing but potions for sale here.”

“That mean a raid on your house would be a waste of the FBI’s time, Gullveig?” She looked to the other sister. “Heid?”

The second sister gave a squeak and stepped back, eyeing Arlan, who had moved up to stand beside Fia.

“Damn strays,” Fia remarked, giving Arlan a push with her knee. “You girls ought to call the dog catcher.”

Arlan whined and stepped back.
Bitch,
he telepathed.

Pussy,
Fia shot back. She looked at the two women in the doorway. “I’m looking for a guy named Regan. He might be in a little trouble. You hear anything about a vampire being in some trouble?”

The sisters looked at each other. Gullveig tried to close the door again.

Fia slammed the heel of her hand into the door and the women fell back. Fia crossed the threshold. Arlan followed her to the door, but remained outside, growling low in his throat. The kind of mood he was in tonight, it wouldn’t take much to send him flying at one of the stringy throats. Or making salad of the gray tabby with the green eyes staring at him from the upstairs window.

He hated witches.

“That a yes?” Fia snarled, baring her fangs. “You have heard something.”

It was funny how most people didn’t notice the Kahill’s fangs until they were bared. Filed down by a Kahill dentist, Kahill fangs looked almost normal, but drawn, they frightened humans and witches alike, apparently.

“I don’t know nuthin’,” Gullveig shrieked, raising her hands as if she could shield herself from Fia’s anger. “Just gossip.”

“What gossip?”

“Somebody stole some drugs. Ripped them off. A vampire. Nice-looking fellow. Young. A Kahill, I heard.”

“You must have heard wrong. Kahills don’t mess with that crap.”

“I must have heard wrong,” Gullveig echoed, her voice high-pitched with terror.

Arlan took a step closer.
Fee,
he telepathed.

She ignored him.

“Stole drugs from who?” she demanded.

“Rousseau brothers, who else?” the witch cackled.

Arlan growled and took another step closer, resting his front paws on the doorsill. Every sinewy muscle in his seventy-pound canine body ached to coil and leap. He wondered what the witches’ blood would taste like. Gin and cigarettes? It would probably be so foul he would have to spit it out. He would like to have ripped their throats out, just the same.

The witches yipped in fear as Arlan crept toward them.

Fia shot him a glance. “Get out of here, mutt. Go on.”

Arlan acquiesced and stepped back into the street.

“Have they got him? The Rousseaus, do they have the vampire?”

The hags cowered. “Maybe,” Gullveig offered when Fia bared her fangs again.

“Where?”

“Could be anywhere in the city.”

Arlan growled.

Gullveig eyed the dog in the doorway. “St. Louis, Number One. Corner of St. Louis and Basin.”

“I know where it is,” Fia snapped. She walked out of the shop, into the dark. “Come on, Fido,” she whispered to Arlan, tapping her thigh with her hand. Her anger was gone in a second; now she was just a scared big sister. “Let’s go to the cemetery and fetch my brother.”

Chapter 19

M
acy pressed her back to the brick wall, staying behind a broken drainpipe, and watched Fia disappear down the alley. A dog trotted beside her. Macy watched the animal apprehensively. She wondered where Arlan had gotten to and exactly why Fia was so friendly with the stray. Fia was talking to the mongrel as she walked away.

Macy glanced back at the potion shop. The two ugly women had slammed the door, but she knew they were watching from the darkened window. She could feel their silvery, cataract-eyed gazes.

Despite the trickle of sweat that ran down Macy’s spine, she shivered. The alley smelled strongly of something akin to sulfur. New Orleans had always seemed like a perfectly nice city before. Macy liked the French Quarter. She liked the anonymity it provided, and it was always easy to pick up hot guys on Bourbon Street. But the New Orleans Macy was seeing tonight was different. Weird different. Weird like—she stopped herself before the words popped into her head. Arlan was right, she really
did
need a new simile.

Arlan.
Everything went back to Arlan these days, didn’t it? He and Fia had left the hotel together. Macy had followed them to Café Du Monde, where they had gone around to the back of the building and spoken to a creepy thin man in a greasy apron. She had last seen Arlan one street over from the potion shop. She’d been trying not to follow too closely; after all Fia
was
FBI, maybe Arlan, too. You didn’t tail the FBI too closely without getting caught.

Which logically brought one to the question, why was she tailing the FBI at all?

Macy wasn’t sure. All she knew was that she wanted to find out what Fia and Arlan were doing in New Orleans. Once again, on some level beyond her understanding, she
needed
to know.

So one minute it seemed as if Arlan had been there and the next he had not. Then the dog had shown up, that weird dog….

Macy waited until Fia turned left at the end of the alley and then she hurried after her. As she walked away from the cover of her drainpipe, she looked back over her shoulder. The women were still watching and Macy self-consciously shrugged her shoulders as if she could shake their sour gazes from her back.

She followed Fia and the dog all the way to a cemetery on the north end of Basin Street, at the corner of St. Louis. She couldn’t for the life of her figure out what Fia would be doing in a cemetery. Even sunburned tourists knew the cemeteries weren’t safe after dark. Not alone.

Macy halted in the iron gateway that led into the cemetery. She still couldn’t believe Fia would go into the cemetery at night, bad ass FBI agent or not. Macy knew enough about the city to steer clear of a dangerous place like this. There were thieves beyond these stone walls, people who would mug you for your Fossil wallet. Druggies who might kill you to get a diamond ring.

Macy glanced up and down the street, lit by golden globes of lamplight. There were a few pedestrians on the sidewalk, but the old graveyard was beyond the boundaries of the French Quarter and foot traffic was light.

She stopped to look at the marker on the gate:
ST
.
LOUIS CEMETERY
# 1, it read.
THE OLDEST EXTANT CEMETERY IN NEW ORLEANS
.

Macy peered into the dark space beyond the gate. She could see shapes in the gloom, tombs, mausoleums. Her mouth went dry. She looked back over her shoulder, then into the cemetery again. Why was Fia here? FBI business? What was wrong with Arlan that he would let her come here alone?

She stepped through the gate and looked behind her again. The street was quiet. She gazed into the shadowed darkness ahead. If she was going in, she needed to go now before Fia got too far ahead of her.

Macy shrugged off her uneasiness and started down the main path, listening for sounds of anyone approaching from behind, or from the stone tombs that towered on both sides of her. As she walked deeper into the cemetery, the mausoleums seemed to close in around her. The quiet made her uneasy. She heard none of the typical night sounds. No car horns. No insect song. Just quiet.
Dead
quiet.

“Christ,” Macy muttered under her breath. She was spooking herself.

Gradually, her eyes became accustomed to the dark. The forms that had been shapeless at a distance now transformed into stone people. Angels. All of them weeping.

She thought about where her family was buried. Greenview Memorial Park. It was pretty there, sunny, green. The old-fashioned cemetery sat on a grassy knoll with a white clapboard church in the distance. Pretty idyllic…as graveyards went. She hadn’t been there in years, but right after her parents were murdered, she had gone often. In her teenage years, she’d huddled against the large pink granite tombstone and wait for the tears. Eventually she gave up on the tears, and the idea that in order to mourn the loss of her family, she had to go to the place where their bodies were buried.

Macy came to a standstill in the middle of the gravel path and raised her hands to her head, pressing her palms to her ears. What was she doing here? Why did she care what Fia was doing? She knew she ought to be on Bourbon Street right now, drinking a hurricane in a foot-tall plastic cup, checking out the jazz joints, checking out the guys.

Macy was just turning on her heels to head back the way she had come when she heard a voice…. She froze and listened. Someone was talking. A woman and a man. Their voices carried on the humid night air, but she was unable to pinpoint the direction. Macy couldn’t tell if they were in front of her or behind. She turned slowly in place, the loose gravel crunching under her sneakers. She listened.

She knew the voices. It was Fia and Arlan. How the hell did Arlan get inside without Macy seeing him? Obviously there was another entrance. Was Fia meeting Arlan in the cemetery? Was that why she was here? That theory made more sense than anything else, although Macy still couldn’t see where the dog fit in.

She started to walk again, deeper into the cemetery. She now suspected that the voices were coming from her right. She turned off the main path she had followed in, taking a narrower one. Here, the mausoleums were even closer. She smelled the thick, sweet scent of flowers, rotting vegetation and…what could only be described as death.

Macy wanted to turn around, but something made her keep going.

“You hear that?” she heard Arlan say.

“Hear what?” Fia said in a loud whisper.

Macy spotted their silhouettes ahead and she ducked left, hoping to hide herself in the shadow of a tomb.

“That,” Arlan said.

They halted in the middle of the path. Arlan appeared to be gazing off to his left. There, a giant mausoleum, probably holding multiple family members, loomed.

“I don’t hear anything,” Fia said impatiently.

Macy couldn’t hear a thing either.

Fia suddenly turned around, facing where Macy had been standing a moment before. “Someone’s here,” she said, her voice quieter.

“Yeah, I think someone’s been following us.” Arlan’s head snapped around. “Regan!” He bolted for the mausoleum.

“Be careful,” Fia warned, darting after him. “It could be a trap.”

Macy crept forward, crouching low. Regan was the missing brother. Neither Fia nor Arlan had said anything about him, but Eva had told Macy that he had been on a business trip somewhere in Europe and had not returned when he was expected to. Macy knew that Arlan and Fia had been worried about him. But what did the missing brother have to do with this cemetery?

Macy rested her hand on a headstone that jutted out of the uneven ground, trying to get closer. She was scared, but not scared enough to run.

In front of the massive mausoleum, Arlan struggled with something upright directly in front of the entrance. She heard stone scrape stone. Was he moving a pillar of marble? This was getting stranger by the second. The thing had to have weighed a thousand pounds, a few hundred at the very least.

“Regan! Regan, we’re coming,” Arlan called. “Just hang on, buddy.”

Macy rose, too shocked to bother to hide any longer, and watched Arlan move aside the massive stone pillar and yank open the mausoleum door.

“Regan!”

“Regan!” Fia echoed.

“Oh my God,” Macy breathed, not quite believing what she was seeing. “He’s inside?” she whispered.

A figure stumbled out of the open door, into Arlan’s arms.

“’Bout damned time you got here,” the young man said. “You know it’s dark in a tomb. And there’re spiders. You know I hate spiders.”

“Sweet Mary and Joseph, you’re all right. Why didn’t you just teleport out?” Fia said.

“Marble was too thick and the pissants knew it,” he answered. “Anyone got a fag? This nicotine withdrawal’s fierce.”

“You’re not supposed to be smoking.” Fia cuffed her brother on the back of the head, but Macy could clearly hear the relief in Fia’s voice. “Let’s get the hell out of here.”

Macy’d seen enough. She took a step back. She didn’t hear anything, but maybe a leaf crackled on the ground or she dislodged a tiny stone underfoot. The three Kahills turned and looked at her.

“Macy?” Fia demanded. “Mary, Mother of God!”

“Ah, Macy, no,” Arlan said quietly.

“I’m sorry.” Macy held both hands up as if under arrest. No need to run now, she was caught. “I didn’t mean—”

An inhuman shriek ripped through the humid night air and the four turned. Three black-caped figures flew out from behind the mausoleum, screeching inhumanly. Macy blinked, wondering if this was all a dream. Was she really back at the hotel, asleep on the bed?

The pale-faced figures flipped and somersaulted, flying through the air as they closed in on Fia, Arlan, and Regan. It was like
Night of the Living Dead
meets
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon.

This
couldn’t
be happening.

Arlan, Fia, and Regan spun around, turning their backs to each other, so quickly, so effortlessly, that Macy knew without a doubt they had done it before. Fia and her brother took a fighting stance, martial arts style, hands raised.

Macy wasn’t entirely certain what happened next. One moment her dark, handsome Arlan was standing beside Fia, the next moment there was a white Bengal tiger in his place.

A white tiger.

In a New Orleans cemetery.

No one else in the crazy scenario seemed to think the appearance of the tiger or the disappearance of Arlan was odd.

No way,
Macy thought. This was even too insane for a dream. Maybe her dinner cocktail was to blame. Had someone slipped her a hallucinogenic drug?

Whatever was going on, Macy’s sense of self-preservation told her she shouldn’t be there.

The white tiger crouched, lowering its head and snarling so viciously that she
felt
its fury, and her knees weakened.

Somewhere in the dark recesses of Macy’s mind, she realized she had heard that growl before. Not so loud. Not so ferocious, but she
had
heard it. The other day in Eva’s backyard. She had heard Arlan growl.

As Macy stumbled backward, unable to take her eyes off the bizarre scene unfolding in front of her, she told herself she was mistaken. She told herself the enormous white tiger was not her lover.

One of the caped men launched himself toward Regan and the young man spun around to face him head-on. Macy cringed in anticipation of the impending impact. But then he was gone. Regan had vanished…only to appear six feet away, his feet planted firmly on an above ground burial vault. Dressed in a tattered sports jacket and dirty, torn jeans, he threw his head back and laughed as if a young schoolmate had just missed him in a game of tag.

The white tiger pounced, claws and teeth bared, and collided in midair with another of the black-cloaked figures. The noise was suddenly unbearable: the shrieks of the men, the growl of the tiger, the renting of fabric, the crunch of bone, Regan’s laughter. There were voices, too, human voices, only no one was speaking a language she understood. She heard bursts of thick French Cajun and what sounded to her untrained ear like Gaelic. Fia met the third figure head to head, hand to hand, an equal match to her male adversary.

Still backing away, Macy covered her mouth with both hands to keep from making any sound. Fia and her opponent circled each other, ducking and striking in a dangerous dance. The tiger and his challenger rolled on the ground beside the open door of the mausoleum, the man grunting with exertion, the big cat growling and snarling. Off to one side Regan’s adversary scrambled to reach him. Then a fourth cloaked figure appeared out of the darkness, joining the melee. He leaped onto Fia’s back and she spun completely around, off-balance, taking a blow to her chin from her first opponent.

The tiger knocked Fia’s attacker off her back with one swipe of his massive paw, claws bared. Fia never hesitated, but flung herself forward, attacking the first man. They locked arm in arm and Fia bit him in the neck. Blood spewed as he howled with what seemed like a mixture of pain and glee and he fell to his knees, clutching his torn flesh.

Other books

Change of Life by Anne Stormont
Honeytrap: Part 2 by Kray, Roberta
Gamblers Don't Win by W. T. Ballard
The Moment by Douglas Kennedy
Ravensborough by Christine Murray