Urban Fantasy Collection - Vampires (105 page)

BOOK: Urban Fantasy Collection - Vampires
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“For about a week.” His thumb curves around the corner of the box. “Before she turned.”

“You must have meant something to her if she kept it.” I sit beside him. “I think she'd want you to have it.”

He takes the ring out of the box and holds it up to the light, which sparks like fire off the diamond and rubies. “What would I do with it?”

“I could get you a good deal at Dean's.”

He looks at me as if I've drowned the cat. “You want me to pawn her engagement ring?”

“Be practical. You could be out of a job.” I hold up the documents. “Elizabeth's going to help the station from beyond the grave. Let her help you, too.”

David examines the ring in his palm. “I haven't been able to afford a vacation in years. Even just to Florida to
see my mom would be nice.” He shakes his head hard. “What am I saying? If Elizabeth wanted me to have the ring, she would've given it to me.” David puts it back in the box, which he tosses in the safe. He slams the door shut and turns the lock, then stalks out.

Shane carefully sets the safe back in the closet and arranges the row of skirts to hide it.

I follow him in and point to the graph paper in his hand. “What's all that mean?”

He unfolds the paper. “It's complicated, but each number of the combination corresponds to a wheel in the mechanism. This one has three. After finding the contact points—”

“By listening?”

“Right, like in the movies.” He explains the process, showing me the click points on the graph paper. I don't catch most of it, but I notice the three numbers: 12, 43, and 61. He's crossed out the first two permutations, leaving four others.

“Fascinating. You'll have to teach me more some time, and I'll show you how to do a pigeon drop.” I sift through the closet. “They'll never believe I'm Elizabeth in my Kmart cast-offs.” I pull out an ice-blue suit and hold it up in front of me. “Flattering?”

“Very.” He nods approvingly at the short hemline of the skirt. “You're going to steal it, aren't you?”

“I'm borrowing it for the meeting. First I have to try it on.”

“I'm not talking about the suit.” He holds up the graph paper. “I could just tell you the combination, or I could open it for you if you want the ring that bad.”

Foiled
. I give him an indignant glare. “Why would I steal the ring? I'm not a thief.”

He brushes his hand against my arm. “I get it, okay? Running a con makes you feel more alive than anything. You feel powerful, smart, superior.”

“That's not—”

“If you want to go back to grifting, I won't stand in your way.” He steps back. “But don't ever lie to me, Ciara. Don't play me.”

He leaves the closet and shuts the door behind him.

I mull his words as I whip off my clothes. I can run a con and still be a good person, right? I'm pulling this scam
because
I'm a good person. How dare Shane get all judgmental when it's his ass I'm trying to save. He needs a home, he needs his music, he needs a purpose in life.

And David needs a vacation, I tell myself as I open the safe.

After I'm dressed—minus the shoes, tragically—I find the men in Elizabeth's office examining a wall map of the United States.

Shane looks at me. “And you thought
I
was weird.”

Each state has a silver coin taped to it. “So she collected state quarters. Lots of people do that.” I feel sad that she only made it to Idaho before getting staked.

David hands me a Polaroid photo. It's a nighttime flash shot of a U-Haul truck. On the side of the truck is a picture of racehorses under the word “Kentucky.” Scribbled underneath in neat Magic Marker are the date and location of the sighting.

I look up to see rows of U-Haul state design photos pinned to the wall next to the map.

“Okay, that's weird.”

The doorbell rings. We all gape at each other for a long second, flatlining from panic. The cat leaps out of David's arms and scampers down the hall.

“The weapons.” I dash for the dining room in my bare feet. The jingle of keys comes from the other side of the door. I grab the duffel bag from the table just as the knob turns.

The door swings open to reveal a tall, well-built bald guy in a black uniform. He looks unsurprised to find me here. “Evening, ma'am.” He turns and nods to someone behind him in the hallway.

Through the door steps the white-haired man from Gideon's complex. He gives me a wide smile.

“There you are, Pumpkin.”

My vision clouds, and I feel my face crumple. My throat, tight as a fist, can squeak only one word.

“Daddy?”

26
Crucify

He holds his hands toward me, palm up. “Look at you, all grown up. In a suit, no less.”

All I can do is clutch the straps of David's heavy duffel bag. Instinct tells me to keep the table between myself and this—impersonator.

As if reading my mind, he says, “It's really me. The prodigal father.”

I back up, still holding the bag. When it slides off the table, its weight tears it out of my hands and sends it crashing to the floor, wood and metal clattering.

I rub the pulled muscle in my forearm. “Dad, what are you doing here?”

“It's a long story. Can I get a hug first?”

David and Shane come up next to me, one on each side.

“Major Lanham?” David says to the first man, the one who's not
my freaking father
.

“It's Lieutenant Colonel now,” the man replies, pointing
to something silver on his shoulder. “Good to see you, Fetter.”

I turn to David. “You knew about this?”

“No.” He holds up his hands. “Okay, I knew we had to hire you as a favor to someone in the Control. I didn't know who or why.”

“Ciara.”

At the sound of my father's voice, I turn to him.

“Is that all you have to say after eight years?” He opens his arms. “I missed you, Angel.”

My throat clogs up. I don't want to move toward him, but I can't help it. His red-gold hair has faded to a shocking white, but the glint in his wide blue eyes is the same one he always had, reading me a bedtime story or gazing at my mom across a crowded revival tent.

He meets me halfway and takes me in his arms. His cozy plumpness is gone, and I can feel his collarbone and shoulder blades through his soft cotton shirt.

I start to sob. None of the questions or accusations matter right now. They feel like they might never matter again.

He passes soothing strokes over my back. “It's all right,” he says, “we're here now. No one's going to send me away this time.”

I cling to him even after his arms slacken to signal the hug's impending conclusion. Finally he draws me away and wipes the tears from my cheeks with his thumbs. “Don't cry, honey. Everything's going to be okay.”

“But—but, why?”

Colonel Lanham gestures to the living room. “Perhaps we should all sit down.”

On numb legs I walk to the center of the couch. After
I sit, my father joins me on my right. To my relief, Shane sits on my other side. He extends his hand across me.

“Shane McAllister.” His tone is cordial but chilly.

“Ronan O'Riley.” Dad shakes his hand and beams at him. “You're a vampire, aren't you? I haven't seen many as young as you. You pass very well.”

Shane gives him a nod of acknowledgment. When he sets his hand on the cushion beside me, I place mine over it. Just so things are clear from the start.

The touch of his skin returns my equilibrium. I shift away from my father, ostensibly so that I can see him better. “Start from the beginning.”

He opens his mouth, but Colonel Lanham speaks instead.

“Your father has been working undercover with the Control at Gideon's compound for two years.” He sits on the edge of the recliner, ramrod straight, as if balancing plates on his head. “We offered him parole from federal prison in exchange for information and his help in this project.”

“It was either that or the Witness Protection Program.” Dad nudges me with his elbow and winks. “This seemed like more fun, no?”

“What information?” I ask him.

His smile fades, and he lets out a heavy sigh. “I never told you much about my family. That was for your protection. You've heard of the Travellers?”

“Aren't they like gypsies or something?”

He shakes his head emphatically. “They hate that word, ‘gypsy.' They're Irish itinerants, folk who travel from place to place in the South and Midwest, selling their wares.”

“They're crooks, aren't they?”

“Most of them, no. But my family was one of the best.” He looks at Lanham, who frowns. “One of the worst, I mean. I left them when I met your mother. But I kept in touch with them over the years, sent money when they needed it, on the condition that they leave you and your mom alone, which they were happy to do, since you were outsiders—'country folk,' as they'd say.”

As he speaks, I notice the wrinkles in the corners of his eyes and mouth, and the way his hands quaver as they illustrate a point. More than his hair has changed in eight years. But not his inherent swagger.

“Anyway,” he continues, “I knew enough about my family's activities and whereabouts to help the feds win a racketeering case against them.”

Colonel Lanham clears his throat. “We thought this opportunity would appeal to your father, since it gave him a chance to be near you and the possibility of contacting you in the course of the operation.”

“And here I am.” Dad spreads his hands in one of his trademark expansive gestures, flicking his fingertips upward as if he's conjured himself out of nothing.

“What about Mom?” I ask him.

“What about her?”

“She's still in prison, right?”

“Of course. I always shielded her from any knowledge of my family, so she had no information to offer the FBI.”

“But why couldn't you bring her with you?”

A corner of his eye twitches, and he glances at Lanham. “We'll talk about that later.”

“Hmm.” David is leaning against the wall, arms crossed over his chest. “Mister O'Riley, how—”

“Please, call me Ronan.”

“Ronan. How did you escape Gideon's compound?”

“We extracted him,” says Colonel Lanham. “Earlier today.”

A rush of heat runs up the sides of my neck. “If you could get him out, why not me? I almost died.”

Without moving his head, Lanham gives the impression of a nod. “Your father's extraction was a coordinated, covert operation planned in advance. In a cult situation such as Gideon's, a surprise raid to rescue you could have triggered a mass murder or suicide. We didn't want another Waco on our hands.”

I consider this, wondering what would happen to Gideon's guests—especially the children—if the Control stormed the compound.

“We can explain more later.” Colonel Lanham rises with a sharp exhalation. “Once we get you to the safe house.”

“What?” I think of all I have to do for Friday's meeting. “I can't go to a safe house. I have to work.”

“Just for a couple nights, Sweet Pea.” Dad squeezes my hand. “They'll take you to the station in the morning, make sure it's safe. Besides, this way we can catch up in private.”

The flood of questions comes surging back. “First I need to talk to David and Shane.” Without looking at my father, I get to my feet and head for the bedroom. Shane walks with me.

Behind me I hear David say to Lanham, “Watch this one. He's new.”

In response, Travis mumbles, “No respect.”

David joins us in the bedroom. He shoves his hands
in his pockets and gives me a rueful look. “I swear I didn't know your father was involved.”

He doesn't seem to be lying. “But this Lanham guy, can I trust him?”

Shane scoffs. “I wouldn't. He's Control.”

“He won't hurt you,” David says, “but don't think for a minute he has your interests in mind. Everything's a means to an end with these people.”

“Then my dad's found kindred spirits.”

David frowns, then touches my shoulder. “You've been given a second chance with your father. Don't waste it.” He leaves and shuts the door.

I turn to Shane. “So that's my dad.”

“The guy who last night you called a ‘fucking asshole creep pig-weasel,' if I remember correctly.”

“Because I thought he'd abandoned us.”

“And now?”

“He looks so old.” I stare at the floor. “I did that to him.”

“He just seems old because you haven't seen him in so long. Humans age.”

“Not like that. Not unless they're in prison, or a vampire farm.” I rub my face. “If they've drunk him every two weeks for two years, that's fifty-two times. No wonder he's so thin. You think he's sick?”

“He doesn't smell sick.”

“You can smell it?”

“Of course, just like an animal can. It used to help vampires find easy prey. Anymore, we use it to avoid fatal bites.” He reaches for my hands, but I pull away. “What?”

“Nothing, it's just—now would be a nice time for you to be normal.” I wince as soon as I hear my words. “Sorry.”

Shane puts his hands on my shoulders and turns me to face him. “I'm not one for giving advice, but here I'll make an exception.” His eyes are cold blue and serious. “Just because someone gives you life doesn't mean you have to give it back.”

I nod, wondering if he learned that from his own parents, or Regina, or both.

We head back down the hall. David is in the kitchen, gathering cat supplies. My dad stands in the dining room, examining the tag on the collar Shane left on the table. The white beast rubs against his ankles. Dad looks down and smiles.

“Hey there, Antoine. How's a kitty?”

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