I could not discern what the caller said, but I saw Daisy's lovely, impudent face go white with fear and fury. I watched and listened helplessly as she slammed the receiver back into its cradle and then sagged against the wall, trembling.
I wanted to will myself to her side, to draw her into my arms and offer her what comfort I could, but better judgment prevailed. The vignette I'd seen was not occurring at that moment; it was a colorful shadow of the future. If I went to Daisy then, I might find her in the shower, driving her car, doing any one of the millions of wonderful mundane things mortals do. It would be neither kind nor wise to reveal my unique powers to her in such an abrupt way.
Yet I feared for her in those moments as I had never feared for another living being. My unknown foe had shown me all these visions, but most especially the last, to taunt me with the fact that it was stalking Daisy, that it meant to murder her as it had already murdered poor Jillie and Susan.
I closed my eyes. What was this thing?
There was no answer, of course—not then. The television screen went dark and returned to its nesting place in the ceiling with a low, electronic buzz.
I was instantly possessed of a brutal weariness, as abject as if my immortality had suddenly proved an illusion or a jest, as if my vampiric powers had been wrested from me and I had been reduced to a fragile, human state. To ask such pitiful flesh and bone to bear the weight of some six hundred years of adventurous living would be like expecting a spider's web to support a cathedral.
With some effort, I collected myself, faced down the consuming panic that threatened me, and centered my thoughts on the one immortal I truly trusted, the only vampire I dared depend upon for help and advice.
I sought Maeve Tremayne, once my fledgling and now my friend and my queen—she who knew our species to be ungovernable, and governed it nonetheless. She who protected us from our foes, be they angels, warlocks, or rogue vampires, and meted out punishment for our crimes.
I found her in the uppermost chamber of her London house. She shared the residence with her mate, Holbrook, who had been a brilliant physician and surgeon in his mortal life. Their remarkable child, Kristina, was grown and far away.
Maeve was at her weaving when I arrived, and alone, as I would have preferred. Calder and I are not particularly friendly; I find him too absorbed in his incessant experiments, and he dislikes me, I suspect, for my superior mind.
Maeve feigned a little sigh when she saw me and said, "Ah, Valerian. What now?"
Daisy
Las Vegas, 1995
Susan Cantrell had died in the same way Jillie Fairfield had, except for a few small details. Her slender dancer's body had been virtually bloodless and unmarked except for the two small puncture wounds at the base of her throat.
The differences were minimal—Jillie was murdered in her living room, and she'd been partially clothed.
Susan's body was found naked, and in a ludicrously modest pose, lying in her bathtub.
Two full days after the killing, late in the afternoon, Daisy left the city morgue in a daze. She'd seen corpses before—a lot of them in far worse condition than Miss Cantrell's—but there was something chillingly different about these cases. Even O'Halloran was subdued, and he wasn't given to sensitive contemplation of the deeper mysteries.
"You gonna be okay, Chandler?" he asked when he and Daisy stood between their cars in the parking lot.
She thought of the calls she'd been getting, and a shiver of pure paranoia trickled down her spine and formed a chilly pool in her stomach.
"Yeah," Daisy answered. "As soon as we nail this pervert, I'll be fine."
O'Halloran nodded, opened his car door, and pushed a crumpled potato chip bag off the seat before getting behind the wheel. "You watch out for yourself," he said. "You get any hotshot ideas, you call me. Don't go running off on your own. You hear me?"
Daisy sighed and saluted.
O'Halloran slammed his door and rolled down the window. "And eat a decent dinner for once in your life, will you? Something besides them frozen things with more calories in the carton than in the food."
She smiled. "A nutrition lecture from you?" she said. "I must be in a bad way."
"Get outta here," O'Halloran said. "I'm tired of looking at you." With that, he started up his car and backed out with a screech, narrowly missing Daisy's left foot and a UPS truck.
Daisy got into her car and locked both doors with a flick of a button on her armrest. Ironic as it was, she suspected O'Halloran was right about her eating habits. She hadn't had real, unrefined food in days, and she felt like an old beater in need of an oil change.
She went back to her office for an hour, going over reports and statements on the Fairfield and Cantrell cases, looking for something—anything—she might have missed.
Later, on the way home, she stopped at a supermarket in her neighborhood, arriving just after dark, and started wheeling a cart down the aisles. A well-nourished, healthy cop, she reasoned, is a smart and insightful cop. She bought fresh vegetables and fruit, chicken and fish, bread and cereal, and some skim milk. She was standing in the checkout line, reading a tabloid article about space aliens having affairs with members of Congress, when her personal reality splintered.
Suddenly she wasn't Daisy anymore, and at the same time she was, and she was no longer standing in a busy supermarket in one of Las Vegas's more ordinary neighborhoods.
Her name was Elisabeth Saxon, the year was 1457, and she was serving ale-in a tavern with the picturesque name of the Horse and Horn. Everything around her seemed real, although she knew it was an illusion, that she was finally cracking—everything from the spit-slickened board floors to the impossibly grubby men seated at tables all around her. They were singing bawdy songs, in a version of English she could barely understand, and swilling ale between choruses.
One of them reached out and pinched her hard on the backside, and she was still Daisy enough to be outraged. She spun around on the heel of her soft leather shoe and clouted the culprit over the head with a pewter trencher.
A trencher? She thought frantically, looking down at the weapon in her hands even as her victim swayed beneath the blow. Since when did she refer to platters as "trenchers"?
A raucous cheer rose from the crowd of unwashed revelers, and Daisy—that was her real name, wasn't it?—glanced wildly about for an escape route. There was a door open to a starry night, and she dashed toward it, her customers grabbing at her apron and her skirts as she passed.
She collided with a hard form in the doorway, felt strong hands close over her shoulders.
"It's all right," a familiar voice told her gently, and she looked up into the dark blue eyes of the magician, Valerian. "You're safe. I'll take you home."
His clothes were strange—he wore a tabard, belted at the waist, and his silk shirt was puffed at the shoulders and then fitted to his wrists. Woven hose accentuated his muscular legs, and high boots, with cuffs folded down from the top, covered his feet.
All the same, this was the man she knew from her dreams—and from the Venetian Hotel in that faraway world she was already starting to forget.
She fainted, and he caught her up in his arms. When Daisy came around, she was back in the supermarket, and Valerian, incredibly, was there, too. He was holding her.
Daisy stared at him and saw understanding in his eyes, along with sorrow. She was struck in that instant with the dizzying realization that he knew exactly what had just happened to her, that he had indeed shared the experience.
"Put me down," she said, embarrassed by the gathered crowd and the revolving lights in the parking lot. Obviously the paramedics had been called. "I'm fine, damn it."
Valerian set her on her feet without a word, but there was a wry twist to his mouth. .She stole a sidelong glance at him, half expecting to see that he was wearing a tabard and boots, but his clothes, though obviously expensive, were quite ordinary, quite suited to the twentieth century. Black slacks, a gray silk skirt, Italian s
hoes.
The paramedics burst through the doors, and Daisy's embarrassment intensified. She knew the majority of these people—worked with them practically every day of her life. The very last thing she needed was for them to think she was losing her grip.
"What happened?" Charlie Cook, the senior EMT, asked Daisy, looking around for the patient.
"Nothing," Daisy said without looking at Valerian, pushing her hair back from her forehead as she spoke.
"Nothing?" demanded a middle-aged checkout clerk with the name Marvella stitched onto her red smock. "This young woman fainted dead away, right here in my line. Went down like a ton of bricks. And look at her—she's pale as milk."
Charlie looked stern, and his co-worker, a rookie Daisy wasn't acquainted with, studied her with a critical eye.
"We'd better check you over, Chandler. After all, it isn't normal to pass out in the supermarket when they haven't even rang up your total yet."
Daisy grinned, though she felt shaky and sick and wanted nothing so much as to be alone with Valerian, so she could ask him what the hell had just happened to her. She was certain that he knew. "Okay," she said, pushing back her hair again. "But just let me pay for this stuff first. I don't want to lose my place in line."
"Funny," Charlie said, and then he glanced at Valerian.
The magician nodded and spoke for the first time. "I'll look after her," he said.
Charlie was apparently satisfied; he cocked a thumb toward the parking lot and told Daisy, "We'll be waiting outside. Follow the flashing red lights."
Daisy paid for her purchases, Valerian standing silently beside her the whole time, and then started to push the cart out of the store. He edged her aside and took over the small task.
"Did you cast some kind of spell over me back there?" she whispered. "Or am I losing my mind?"
"Neither," he answered, with that half smile that tugged at something deep inside her. ''What happened to you is called spontaneous regression. You just visited one of your past lives."
"Oh, right," Daisy retorted. She had a headache—stress-related, to be sure.
"Your name was Elisabeth Saxon," Valerian said. "You lived in the mid-fifteenth century. You were a serving wench, and something of a lightskirt, at the Horse and Horn, a tavern on the London road."
Daisy stared up at him as the supermarket doors swished open and they went outside into the dry warmth of the night. "How did you—?"
"I was there, remember?"
He had been.
"I'm having a nervous breakdown," Daisy announced.
Valerian raised one majestic eyebrow. In the glow of stars, streetlights, and the not-too-distant Strip, his skin had a translucent quality. "Are you?" he countered, pushing the cart toward her car without being told which one it was. "If that's the case, then how do you explain my presence there? I was on the threshold of that inn, Daisy, when you hurtled into my chest like a rabbit fleeing a pack of foxes."
Daisy murmured an exclamation. "What is this? Some kind of hypnosis?"
"I'll explain it later," he said, glancing down at the trunk of her car. It sprung open, though neither he nor Daisy had touched the latch, and Valerian began putting the grocery bags inside, that curious little smile playing on his mouth again. "You'd better let your friend listen to your heart, test your reflexes, and look into your ears." he added, nodding toward the ambulance parked only a few spaces away. "He'll follow you home if you don't."
"You'll wait?" Daisy asked. She should have been afraid of this man, she supposed, but she wasn't. Instead she was full of questions she knew only he could answer.
"I'll be right here," he said.
Daisy started to turn away, men frowned down at the trunk of her car, now tightly closed again. "How did you open that without a key?"
Valerian shrugged. "I'm a magician, remember?"
Daisy left him, shaking her head.
She endured the exam, which was perfunctory, knowing all the while that Charlie probably thought she'd fainted because she was pregnant. By this time tomorrow, she figured, the word would be out that Detective Chandler had passed out in the supermarket with a cheap tabloid in her hands. She'd be called into the chief's office, no doubt, and probably taken off the Fairfield/Cantrell case if she didn't talk fast. Her boss was more likely to attribute the fainting spell to stress than pregnancy, and to decide that Daisy needed a break from homicide.
Maybe she did. God knew, she didn't love it.
Valerian waited, as he'd promised, and he insisted on taking the wheel.
Daisy looked around the lot. "Where's your car?"
"I don't own one," he said and offered no further explanation.
Daisy gave him the keys because on that one night she needed to lean on somebody. The fact that he was a stranger, for all practical intents and purposes, and up to his eyeballs in murdered chorus girls, didn't seem to make a difference.
"Where do you live?" he asked, once they were inside the car, though Daisy guessed from his tone that he already knew her address. For some reason, he was going through the motions.
"Are you the nutcase who's been calling me?" she inquired after rattling off directions to her apartment complex.
"No," he said, starting the engine and driving with an easy confidence that made Daisy wonder why he didn't have a car of his own. It wasn't that he couldn't afford one, that was for sure—headliners like him brought home the big bucks.
Maybe he'd lost his license, she speculated to avoid scarier concerns for a little while longer.
"I didn't have a license to lose," he said, as if Daisy had spoken aloud. "And I don't own a car because I have no need for one. Furthermore, the phrase big bucks, tacky as it is, doesn't begin to describe my salary. Now, could we talk about the real issue here?"
Daisy sagged back in the passenger seat, knocked breathless by his words. "I wish you'd teach me that trick," she said after a few moments of tumultuous silence, her voice squeaky with bravado. "Mind reading would come in handy when I'm interrogating suspects."
He gave her a sidelong look, then turned his attention back to the road. "Come back in a thousand years or so. By that time the ability will have evolved to the point where ordinary mortals can use it."
The term ordinary mortals nettled Daisy, and, besides, it sounded weird, as if Valerian considered himself to be outside the category. "Gee, thanks," she snapped, to hide the fact that she was seriously spooked. "Of course, most of my cases will probably be solved by then, though God knows the paperwork won't be caught up. On the other hand—what will I care? I'll be somebody else."
"You don't believe me?"
"Why should I?"
He smiled. "Why, indeed?" he replied, signaling to turn onto the side street that ran behind her building. "Perhaps our little talk will change your mind—if the incident in the supermarket truly wasn't enough."
"I want to ask you some questions while we're chatting," Daisy said as he brought the car to a stop in her assigned space. Which, of course, was unmarked. She got out of the car and closed the door with a bang. "Like how come the women in your act are being murdered?"
"I don't know," he answered with a weariness on a scale with Daisy's own and perhaps even greater. "Maybe you and I can figure that out together, after you know the truth." He handed her the keys and then opened the trunk, again with no outward motion, and took out both grocery bags.
Daisy led the way up the outside stairs to her apartment.
Inside, Valerian carried the bags to the kitchen and set them on the counter. "Sit down," he said when Daisy started putting things away. "You're still in shock."
With that, he took a head of lettuce and a bag of tomatoes from Daisy's hands and proceeded to put them in the refrigerator. Daisy sat on one of the two stools at the breakfast bar and cupped her chin in one hand.
"Evidently," she said, "your wish is my command."
He grinned at her, and again she felt a wrenching, so far within herself, so far back in her memory, tha
t momentary tears burned behind her eyes. He took a half-eaten entree, still in its box, and carried it disdainfully from the refrigerator to the trash bin. "Wretched stuff," he muttered.
Daisy was defensive. "I suppose you eat nothing but gourmet fare?"
He laughed and returned to the task of emptying the grocery bags. "Au contraire," he said. "I subsist on a very simple liquid diet. It's the secret of my great longevity, along with a certain talent for evading the consequences of my own actions."
Daisy ran her eyes over Valerian's magnificent physique and discounted most of what he'd just said. Nobody looked like that living on fruit juice or vitamin shakes. "I believe that last part—about your evading the consequences of your own actions, I mean," she conceded. "But I'm warning you right now—if you killed those women, I'll get you."
"I believe you would," he answered thoughtfully, having finished putting the food away. "You're very good at what you do, I think."
"So are you," Daisy said, remembering his magic act at the Venetian Hotel, the way he'd opened the trunk of her car, that knack he had of appearing in her dreams. That night he'd even managed to be a part of a psychotic episode.
Impressive.
He brewed tea for her—her favorite English brand, purchased in London in the food stalls at Harrod's by a friend who worked for an airline. Not surprisingly, he didn't ask where it was, where the cups were, or if she wanted tea at all. He simply made it and set it in front of her.
She took a sip, and some of her strength returned. "Am I going crazy?" she asked, addressing herself as much as Valerian.
He leaned against the breakfast bar from the other side, arms folded on the countertop. "No," he said easily, "but there is much I must tell you. You have, to paraphrase one of your better poets, 'miles to go before you sleep.'"
"Talk," Daisy said.
Time Without End Page 11