She plucked a spider crawling across the fruit of a gooseberry plant to feed to a nearby praying mantis but dropped it when Rachel stepped outside. Ivory trailed her to the market, where Rachel perused the courtyard as she picked nuts off a muffin top. Not at all on accident, Ivory bumped into her and sent a loaf of bread tumbling from Rachel’s basket to the ground.
“How clumsy of me,” Ivory said. “Please, allow me to buy you a fresh loaf.”
Rachel’s eyes narrowed ever-so-slightly. Finally, she said, “If you’re certain it won’t be any inconvenience?”
Ivory, with sallow skin and trapped in the frame of a young woman from the 17th century, must have looked as though she might not be able to afford to replace Rachel’s bread. She smiled. “My pleasure, Miss. Wait here.”
Ivory returned with a loaf wrapped in a new cloth and a small block of cheese.
Rachel released a breath. “Would you care to join me for lunch? I fear I’ve bought too much food for one day.”
Ivory had been counting on such a kindness. “I’ve had about all I can eat for one day, but I’d enjoy the company.”
Over the years, the two became close friends. Rachel shared her darkest secrets, but there was one Ivory knew she did not share. Perhaps Rachel’s family had warned her not to speak of the voices—warned her of the hurt and betrayal that comes with divulging such an affliction.
Years passed without Ivory aging, and, though Rachel never mentioned it, Ivory feared what others might think. For this reason, Ivory only ever visited Rachel in secret. Shortly after Rachel’s forty-fifth year, she fell ill. Ivory did not need to sneak to meet with her then, for no one wanted to expose themselves to her ailments.
Late one afternoon, when the sun had lowered in the sky to a more forgiving light, Ivory stopped by for another visit.
“You shouldn’t have come,” Rachel scolded as always, her voice too weak to carry any authority.
She held a cloth to her mouth and coughed, a spray of blood spattering on the small bit of fabric. Ivory kneeled at her side and tried to soothe her until the coughing fit subsided.
Rachel set her rag down and waved toward her bedroom door. “Back away before you become ill.”
“You have kept a long life,” Ivory said. “But you see me. I have not aged.”
Rachel closed her eyes, and Ivory swept loose tendrils of hair away from a face that had once belonged to Elizabeth. Rachel’s feverish, sweat-soaked skin burned beneath Ivory’s cool hands, but her graying hair was still soft.
“Come with me,” Ivory said, trying to use her influence. “I’ve known your family for centuries, and you can know them with me.”
Rachel’s mind pushed back against Ivory’s influence, shutting down the attempt completely. “Please now, go away. Your words confuse me.”
Ivory softened her voice and tried a second time to influence Rachel. “Please, listen—”
Grasping her moth-eaten quilt between her hands, Rachel shook her head. Ivory was running out of time. Her heart ached more with each glance at Rachel’s withering body, and she clenched her hands at her sides.
“I can give you eternity,” Ivory said. “Give us eternity.”
Rachel whispered, “Please let me die quietly, Lenore. It’s—” Her hands softened, releasing the blanket.
“Please don’t leave.” Ivory repeated the silent prayer over and again as she ran to lock the door. Quickly, she returned to the bedside, extended her fangs, and sank them into Rachel’s neck, releasing the poison that would revive her.
The life returned to Rachel’s eyes. She sputtered another cough and grasped Ivory’s wrists. “No,” she rasped. “Lenore—don’t.”
Rachel’s heart stopped. Her body went lifeless on the cot. Ivory’s efforts had been too late to sustain the change.
At that moment, Ivory came to hate the name her sire had given her. Lenore. This name was the name of her darkness, the name that put a world between her and her lover’s family. The name should have died on Rachel’s lips, but would instead follow Ivory forever.
Ivory stormed out of the house. In the cold night air, she cursed the Universe. She tore chunks of soil from the earth and pounded her fists on the ground and cried blood tears against the dirt and grass until she could cry no more.
Keota, Colorado, 1942
THIS WAS THE HUNT OF MAN. A useless man, more precisely, because the only men of any use to Ivory were the Parsons men, for they were the only ones who might bring forth a Parsons woman and rekindle Ivory’s hope for redemption.
But Theodore Anderson was not a Parsons man.
No, Theodore Anderson was a man who had married a woman Ivory had never met but felt she had known for hundreds of years: Abigail Parsons.
After Rachel’s death, Ivory had sought out Rachel’s brothers and waited several generations for another girl to be born into the Parsons lineage. The year had been 1920. The current generation of Parsons men died in the war, one of them leaving his son to be cared for by his Aunt Abigail, now Abigail Anderson.
Ivory feared the little boy, Abigail’s nephew, might be the last to carry the Parsons name. People were beginning to have fewer children, sometimes none at all. And, if that were the case, Abigail might be Ivory’s last chance.
Theodore Anderson could not be allowed to stand in her way.
Spying him from where she crouched in a nearby ditch, Ivory knew her only hope lay in him not returning home. If she killed him now, he’d be an assumed victim of war. Waiting until after the war was not an option; these days, one could not kill a man so easily without drawing attention.
After the murder, Ivory raced back to Keota, needing to reach town before word of Theodore’s death. She made it, much to the misfortune of one of the Army’s messengers, whose body now slumped against the crumbling stone of an old well behind her.
Ivory stood in the prairie and stared out over the town. A coyote stalked behind her and growled.
“Oh, come on, you’re all right with me.” She turned to him, smiling at the eerie glow in his cloudy, pale-blue eyes. “You’re one of them? Poor, filthy thing.”
The coyote stepped tentatively forward, a light breeze carrying his honeysuckle aroma ever quicker to Ivory. Only the Strigoi smelled and tasted as sweet as humans.
“Come ‘ere, boy,” she said, drawing him closer with her gentle lilt. He sidled beside her thigh, and she hummed to him. “That a’boy.” She stroked his dusty grey and white fur. The pollen coating his fur left a chalk-like residue on her hand, and she wiped the grit on her skirts and looked to the Methodist church across the way. “She’ll be out soon and heading home.”
She grabbed the coyote’s snout and gave it a playful shake. The coyote tensed and growled again.
“I am not your enemy. Am I not here, in the sun?” She let out a wistful sigh and turned her gaze back toward the town. “I will return tonight with food and clothes. Yours surely ripped while shifting. But you tell others like you to stay away, understand?”
After a long stare, the coyote took off across the dips and patches of the prairie. Tonight, Ivory would feed.
Abigail, hand wrapped around that of a small boy’s, left the church, and Ivory timed enough distance to follow their scent without being seen.
Things had changed over the last couple of centuries. Dirt roads had given way to pavement. The automobile had grown in popularity.
Straight past the cemetery Ivory strode, past women in black dresses, past the general store and post office, and nearer to the heavy shadow of a water tower. She continued until she reached a lonesome house on a large lot of land. Abigail’s scent stopped here.
For nearly an hour, Ivory paced down the road from the house, trying to build up the nerve to approach. Finally, she headed up the walkway and knocked on the flimsy wooden door. When no one answered, she knocked again, louder this time, the door giving way under each distinct tap.
A few moments later, the door opened a crack, and a pair of honey-colored eyes pe
ered through.
“Mrs. Anderson?” Ivory asked, already preparing to use her influence. Keeping Abigail calm would be a necessity.
Abigail opened the door the rest of the way and wiped her hands on her apron. “Yes?”
Straightening her skirts, Ivory felt suddenly outdated at the sight of Abigail in slacks. “My name is Lenore Kinsbury. I’ve brought news from overseas.”
“News?” A crease formed between Abigail’s eyes, and Ivory got lost in the lines of Abigail’s features—features that so closely mirrored the way Ivory remembered Elizabeth. It took her a moment to return to the conversation.
“Your husband,” Ivory replied.
“That can’t be,” Abigail said. “They would send an official.”
Ivory retrieved a document from her purse. “I know this is unusual, but these are unusual times, are they not?” She handed the letter to Abigail, who slowly scanned the page.
Abigail’s trembling hand covered her mouth, and she stepped back. “No,” she whispered. “No, no, no.”
Ivory entered the house and gently clicked the door shut. “My deepest sympathies for your loss.” She helped Abigail to the couch.
Abigail didn’t say anything. She only sat on the very edge of her seat, grief rolling off her like a thick fog. Ivory’s stomach twisted, ill over the pain Abigail was suffering, though not at all regretful for Theodore’s death.
“Let me put on some tea,” Ivory said. “Don’t worry about the child. I’ll tend to him when he wakes from his nap.”
“The child?”
“I … saw the baby shoes. By the door.”
Abigail sniffed and wiped her eyes. “Forgive me, please. I’m a mess. Of course. The shoes.” She took a deep breath. “He’s my nephew. My brother passed away.”
“My condolences,” Ivory said softly. She sensed Abigail on the verge of breakdown. “Tea, then?”
Without waiting for a response, Ivory continued into the kitchen. She wasn’t yet used to the smells of a human house. The aroma of recently sautéed onions and the char of an extinguished candle made her stomach lurch.
“Do you have any other family?” Ivory asked, using her influence to send waves of comfort toward Abigail.
“I had only my brother and husband.”
“I see,” Ivory said.
Steam piped from the kettle on the stove; Abigail must have already been preparing tea. Ivory poured and sweetened the tea, the spoon clinking in the ceramic cups as she stirred, then brought the tea into the living room.
“Perhaps you ought to hire some help.”
Abigail chewed at her lip. “I’d never be able to afford it without Theodore. I don’t know what I’ll do with him gone.”
Maintaining Abigail’s calm took much of Ivory’s mental energy, but she kept the influence flowing as she spoke. “Well”—Ivory handed her the tea, choosing her words cautiously—“I could use a place to stay. I would be of help. That is, if you wouldn’t mind?”
Abigail nodded slowly and sipped her tea. Ivory smiled that her effort to influence Abigail had gone even smoother than she’d hoped. Abigail didn’t have the same block Rachel had exhibited.
Abigail swept her arm to indicate Ivory should sit, but in the same instant, a vase on the mantle across the room tipped and shattered on the ground.
“Oh,” Abigail said, jumping to her feet. “You best leave. Please, go now.”
Ivory froze.
“Go!” Picture frames fell from the walls and the front door rattled fiercely.
Ivory ran to Abigail, placed her hands on her shoulders, and used her influence to send her peace of mind. “It’s okay, Mrs. Anderson. It’s okay.”
They sank down into the couch and Ivory held her as she cried.
“I won’t tell a soul,” Ivory promised.
* * *
WITH IVORY’S HELP, Abigail learned to harness her energy. Unlike her ancestors before her, Abigail experienced only noise in place of the whispering voices.
As the years passed, Abigail and her nephew aged, their family still without answers. Ivory waited for just the right moment to reveal the source of Abigail’s gift, while Abigail’s nephew tried to find a cure.
That moment never came.
One day, as they were sitting down for dinner, Abigail spoke the words Ivory had always dreaded she might hear.
“There is something wrong with you. You haven’t aged.”
“Strange, I suppose,” was Ivory’s reply, her posture straight and her hands tucked into her lap as she watched Abigail eat. “Such a strange world.”
Abigail paused, lowering a bite of food back to her plate. “And I don’t believe I’ve seen you eat a single morsel of food in all the time I’ve known you.”
Ivory couldn’t tell her the truth, not with how Abigail felt about her own curse. “You know how I like to bring meals on my hikes.”
“Eat with us tonight,” Abigail said firmly. She pushed her own dish across the table, her gaze cutting toward Ivory. “I’ll make myself another plate.”
“Really,” Ivory said. “I couldn’t. Perhaps another time.”
Abigail rubbed her temples. Ivory reached toward her, but dropped her hand back to her lap when Abigail flinched.
From then on, Abigail looked at Ivory only from lowered lids and with wary sighs. Abigail believed herself to be insane. Ivory longed to free her of her false suspicions, but her explanations would not be accepted and, without them, Ivory wouldn’t be welcome to stay.
Not even a fortnight passed before Ivory packed her things and returned to confront her sire. She confessed to him of where she’d been spending her time over the years.
“I want to turn Abigail,” Ivory told him. “I want to separate from you and go out on my own.”
“Lenore,” he began gently.
“Don’t bother trying to talk me out of it. I’ve tried once before, and if it hadn’t been too late, I’d have succeeded. This may be my last chance, and you will not stand in my way.”
“Why would you want to do this? Isn’t the life I’ve provided you enough?”
“Abigail is so like Elizabeth,” Ivory said fiercely. She thought of their same delicate wrists, the way they swept their hair away from their neck in the same fashion, and the way they both stepped lightly, while still giving a sense of being grounded. Ivory stared into the fire, watching the flames steal away the bark of the wood. “I think they are connected—Elizabeth and her female descendants.”
“You believe Abigail is a forever girl?” he asked, leaning back and raising his thick, dark eyebrows.
“A forever girl?”
“Reincarnation,” he said. “That is what you are asking?”
“Such a thing is possible, then?” Ivory breathed, her eyes widening and her chest filling with hope.
“They say the spirit elementals—oft thought to be women—would be reincarnated if their life was taken prematurely. They were to contain the unfiltered magic of the elements. They were the only ones who would never die an ultimate death, so long as their efforts in life remained pure and their lineage continued.”
“Do you mean that Abigail might be Elizabeth? That Mary and Rachel were as well?”
“No,” he said solemnly. “This was all hearsay. Myths. Fantasies created by those who grieved the losses of their not-quite-human loved ones.” His eyes, dark as gray coals that had burned out long ago, fell on hers. “It was all hope. Nothing more.”
But Ivory’s sire had confirmed what her heart already knew. These women were Elizabeth.
Ivory stopped by one last time to see Abigail. Watched her through the window of her home. Elizabeth was there. It was in Abigail’s eyes, in the tears she cried, in the smallest nuances of expression that could belong only to one person.
Three nights later, Ivory decapitated her sire in his slumber, for he refused to release her, and for the first time in as long as she could remember, Ivory felt free. In the years to come, she integrated with the general population.
She introduced herself as Ivory, glad to be rid of her sire’s name for her just as she’d be glad to purge herself of the name Sarah. She would start fresh. No more Sarah. No more Lenore.
Next time, she would not fail her lover. She would find her young, bind her in friendship, and convince her life would be safer if she didn’t carry the vulnerabilities of a human.
Ivory kept vigil for two more generations—watched the nephew, the last Parsons boy, as he grew to have sons of his own, and his sons grew to have sons as well, until, one day, another girl was born into the lineage.
Sophia.
But, to Ivory’s heart and eyes, the girl was still Elizabeth.
{chapter twenty-four}
I’D COMPLETELY MISREAD every moment I’d ever spent with my once-friend. That day Ivory had dropped me off back at home, after I’d been attacked at Club Flesh—she hadn’t been angry with me. She’d been torn.
When she’d told me she knew someone who’d heard voices, the hate in her expression hadn’t been a hatred she felt toward me. It’d been her hatred of herself, of her situation, and of the people who had killed my ancestor. Killed me. She couldn’t tell me, though. Not like that.
She’d sped off down the road not because she wanted to get away from me, but because she wanted to escape the hurt she felt sitting beside me, unable to tell me that I was my ancestor—unable to tell me that I had once been her lover and that she’d followed me all these years. She needed me to want to be turned first—to become a Cruor as well—but it was at that moment she realized her plan for this lifetime had failed.
When the images bled into the darkness, the air grew still. The fire had borrowed Ivory’s memories and, since I did not return them, they died along with the fire’s embers, lost forever. I wished for someone to steal them from me next.
I dissolved the magic of my circle and dropped my face into my hands and wept. Now I understood why I’d been afraid to open up to Charles about the whispering voices. Now I understood there were deeper parts of me—pieces of my soul—trying to protect me from the possibility of betrayal or death. But through Ivory, I’d still found a way to invite those things into my life. It’d been my soul that resisted Charles but my heart that led me to trust him.
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