by Hendee, Barb
“You simply have to focus upon a landmark in Seattle that you already know,” he said. “From there, I think you’ll be able to sense her.”
“Someplace like the Seattle Center?”
“Yes.”
“Okay . . . I know where that is. And if I do what you say, you won’t send me back? When I’m done, I can just go home?”
If it were possible, he would have smiled. She might be trash, but she would serve him.
Three nights later, Eleisha stood between Wade and Philip in northwest Portland as they all gazed upward.
“You’ve got to be joking,” Wade said in disbelief. “A church? Can you step inside?”
Philip didn’t say anything.
Surprised that Wade would even entertain such old superstitions or trepidation about holy ground, Eleisha glanced over at him. “Of course we can. Don’t be ridiculous.”
Although both men had tried to pry hints from her, she’d refused to say a word about their destination, and after leaving the airport, she’d simply handed the taxi driver an address. She had seen this building only in photos, but standing in the churchyard, with the night-blooming roses winding up the tall, wrought-iron fence, she knew they had come to the right place.
The church was two stories high, constructed of red brick.
It looked like a haven.
She pulled the gate shut behind them and latched it. Then she fished a set of keys from her bag. “Let’s look inside. It’s been empty for a long time.”
Wade’s astonishment grew. “You’ve got the keys? Why isn’t the real estate agent meeting us here?”
“I talked her into . . . Just come inside. I’ll tell you everything.”
“Eleisha,” he insisted. “Agents don’t give potential buyers the keys.”
She ignored him and hurried up the steps to unlock the front doors, which were newer additions made from thick metal.
Philip stopped briefly to examine the doors. She looked back at him, and he nodded.
She turned on the overhead lights. “The deacons’ committee decided to leave the power on so any buyers could see that all the wiring works.”
They stepped into what had once been the main sanctuary, but now the altar was bare and all the pews had been ripped out, leaving only a large room with spiderwebs and a musty red and tan carpet. Half-oval stained-glass window lined the walls, and Eleisha turned in a circle to see each one, soothed by the greens, blues, and yellows in the depictions.
“This was built in 1902, and it’s been on the market for over two years,” she said. “The congregation outgrew it, and they commissioned a new church.” She looked at Philip again. “The walls are two feet thick, and there are only two doorways on the ground floor to the outside: this front one we just came in and a single back door.”
He still hadn’t spoken, but again he nodded and began studying the structure of the high-set windows.
Wade came in only a few steps. “You aren’t seriously thinking of buying this place? Of living here?”
“Just leave your suitcases and come this way,” she said, dropping her bag and moving behind the altar to a side door. The door led into a hallway where she faced two other doors, a stairway to the left leading down, and another stairway at the end of the hall leading up. Eleisha had studied the floor plan for hours and knew the layout by heart. She turned on the hallway lights.
“These two rooms are offices,” she said, opening the closest door.
Wade peered inside at a pleasant room with hardwood floors and cream walls.
“There’s a three-bedroom apartment in the basement, along with an industrial-sized kitchen on the other side,” she added.
For first time since walking through the gate, Wade turned and seemed to be seriously listening to her. “A three-bedroom apartment?”
“Yes, the place was designed so the pastor and his family could live inside the church. But come upstairs with me first.”
Without waiting for a response, she walked down the hall and up the stairs, emerging into another hallway, this one with a red-and-tan carpet like the sanctuary’s. Three doors lined each wall, and she flicked on the light and moved onward, opening doors as she went.
“Most of these were Sunday school or meeting rooms, but they’re empty now. We could turn one of them into a room for Rose.”
The moment those words left her mouth, she regretted them. Both Philip and Wade had agreed to come to Portland and see this mysterious “place” she had in mind, but so far, neither of them had expressed sharing her determination to find this woman who’d written asking for their help. And although she’d meant her outburst back at Maggie’s, that she’d find Rose alone if need be . . . the truth was she wanted Philip and Wade to be part of all this.
Finding a proper safe house was the first step. But she needed to pull them in one step at a time.
Wade and Philip walked the floor, looking inside all six of the bare rooms. Neither one responded to her mention of Rose.
Finally Philip said, “Too many exterior windows. We’ll have to seal most of them up.”
Wade stared at him. “You’re standing outside a Sunday school room, and that’s all you can say? ‘Too many windows’? Have you missed the irony here?”
Philip shrugged and put his hand against the wall. “Old buildings are best. This is an église solide.”
Eleisha had picked up enough French from him to know he’d called the place a sturdy church. Excitement began building inside her. He was clearly considering the idea. Regarding this part of her plan, though, she hadn’t worried too much about convincing Philip. Spending four weeks at Maggie’s was probably the longest stretch he’d stayed in one place in decades. Before becoming entangled with Eleisha, Philip had not been a cautious hunter—leaving bodies wherever he dropped them. And he’d hunted more often then he needed to, so he was constantly on the move. No, he would feel no hesitation to leave Maggie’s. He didn’t care where he lived as long as Eleisha and Wade lived with him.
Wade was a different story. He didn’t like making decisions, and he was a big fan of “thinking things through”—which she viewed as a euphemism for sitting on the fence.
She nearly ran back to the stairs. “Come on. Let’s see the basement.”
Not waiting for them, she jumped off the bottom step into the hallway and jogged to the stairs leading down, emerging into a sitting room. Overhead lighting down here was more sparse, as the place must have contained lamps before. She moved to the apartment’s small kitchen and switched on a light. Then she walked back into the sitting room.
Even dimly lit, the sitting room was lovely, with soft yellow walls and white molding around the floors and ceiling.
When she turned around, Wade and Philip were standing quietly behind her. “It only has one bathroom, but the bedrooms are over there,” she said, pointing through an old-fashioned archway. “And there is a small family kitchen that way. The big congregation kitchen is on the far side of the building.”
Wade cooked sometimes—when he didn’t order pizza—and Eleisha and Philip sometimes made tea. They could not eat or digest food, but their kind could absorb tea and even small amounts of wine.
She stood tense, unable to read either of her companions. From the moment she had seen the photos, something about this place had called to her . . . as if calling her home. She felt safe here. Welcome. Wanted. Like the building had been abandoned for too long, and it needed them.
“What do you think?” she asked Philip.
“It’s good,” he said simply.
“Wade?”
He shook his head in frustration. “This is too big a decision to make right now. Shouldn’t we look at other places? Shouldn’t we take more time to consider?”
Was he trying to convince himself or her? If she chose to, she could allow a little of her gift to seep out, to seduce him, to make him see she felt safe here so that he would do anything for her. But she wouldn’t do that. She wanted his true agreement.
>
“I don’t want to go back to Seattle,” she confessed, deciding to try honesty. “I don’t want to go back to Maggie’s. I don’t want to look at any other places. This is the one, Wade.”
He stepped closer, his white-blond hair falling forward into his eyes.
“Eleisha . . . ?”
“Don’t you miss Portland?” she asked. “Don’t you miss it here?”
Why she should love Portland and not Seattle was nonsensical, and she knew it, but for weeks now, the pull to come back to Oregon had grown stronger. The wish to leave Maggie’s house had grown unbearable. That house held too many reminders. Maggie had existed there, decorated the place, made it her own. And William . . . he had died in that house. Eleisha tried, but she couldn’t live there.
Philip walked across the sitting room and dropped down near the outlet of what appeared to be a cable hookup. The empty apartment still looked like something from 1902, but it had been updated.
“If we aren’t going back,” he said, studying the hookup, “we’ll have to buy a new TV and DVD player. Wade, you can set the player up for me.”
Wade blinked. “Not going back? Not ever? What about our stuff ?”
Philip looked back at him. “What stuff? We brought most of our clothes along, and everything else was Maggie’s.”
That was true, and Eleisha had been banking on at least one of them reasoning this. She mentally searched for an opening to drop the next bomb.
Wade provided it.
“Well, it’s not far to dawn,” he said, sighing. “We should at least call for a cab and find a hotel. Even if we decide to buy this place, it’s not like everything is going to happen overnight. We’ll have to negotiate an offer, get the church inspected, get it appraised, and set up a closing date to sign papers. Do you both want to live in a hotel for a month?”
“No,” Eleisha answered quietly.
His forehead wrinkled as he looked at her.
She held up the keys. “I leased the building for thirty days.”
“What?”
“The deacons’ committee is so motivated to sell that they agreed to some unusual requests . . . and I paid them four thousand dollars to let us have the place for a month. I told them we’d need to see if it suited us, but that was a lie. I knew once when I got here, I wouldn’t want to leave.”
Philip stood up, and even he appeared surprised by this announcement.
“Come and look,” she said, letting Wade walk ahead of her through the archway toward the bedrooms. She showed him each room in turn. They were charming, with more white molding and slanted ceilings. All three of them contained new beds made up with new sheets, blankets, and pillows.
“I’m using the same real estate agent who’s representing the deacons,” she said. “That means if she sells to us, she gets to keep both commission fees. So . . . she was willing to go slightly beyond the call of duty. We don’t need to go to a hotel.”
Philip was waiting in the hallway. He glanced through a door at the nearest bed. “I’ll get our suitcases from upstairs. Wade will want his deodorant and toothpaste.”
He turned around and left.
Eleisha watched him go, waiting until he was up the stairs—keeping her back to Wade. “I’ll handle the negotiations,” she said. “We don’t need a loan. I can sell some stock and buy the place with cash.”
She couldn’t bring herself to look at Wade.
“Please,” she whispered. “Please say we’re home.”
He was quiet for a little while, and then he said, “Okay.”
For the last few nights, Julian had felt almost . . . calm.
Mary had managed to locate Eleisha within twenty-four hours and returned to report that Eleisha was living in a house on Queen Anne Hill with a “hot vampire” and a “skinny blond guy.” Julian mulled over this information carefully, knowing that the house had belonged to Maggie. It surprised him that Philip would ever consent to staying in one place that long, as he had a tendency to leave bodies lying around. Julian knew almost nothing of the blond man Eleisha had referred to as “Wade,” but the very thought of her and Philip existing in the same house with a mortal was baffling.
Even Eleisha had never exhibited behavior quite that bizarre.
Regardless of these mysteries, only one fact mattered. Mary had confirmed that Eleisha was still in Seattle. So, neither Philip nor Eleisha seemed to be coming after him, and they were both safely across the ocean on another continent.
That was all he cared about for now: that they stayed away from him.
So, although having to listen to Mary grated on his nerves, she had managed to bring him some peace—even though she’d whined like a child when he ordered her back to Seattle.
It infuriated him that he couldn’t just banish her back to the other lost souls.
But he’d neglected to mention that her servitude might be required for a long time, as it was possible he’d need to keep permanent tabs on Eleisha. He thought it best not to give Mary such information yet; better to control her with a mix of fear and the hint of promises.
In the end, at least she’d obeyed him and gone to keep watch. As he had not seen her in several nights, he assumed all was status quo.
Tonight, he was feeling so liberated, he even left the study and wandered into the dining hall, looking at the massive walnut table, surprised at himself for suddenly thinking of the old days when the manor was alive with people and servants and banquets and hunting parties.
Such events had lost their glitter for him after he was turned. He’d tried coming home several times back then, but he could feel only contempt for the petty mortals at the table—even the nobles.
Yet he had never lost his connection to this place, to Cliffbracken. Legalities had been somewhat tenuous after his mother died in 1842, while his father was still considered “missing.” Julian hired a lawyer to go through proper channels to have his father declared dead, but this took seven years.
Then everything came to him, the entire estate, and later, in 1881, he used a law firm to help him pretend to sell the estate to a historical society . . . which in truth was made up only of himself.
But this way, the manor did not appear to have only one owner for an unreasonable amount of time. No one ever came here except for a few servants, and he changed them every ten years or so.
The dining hall was silent, and he walked through to the other side and down a stone corridor leading to the mudroom, where piles of boots had once been stacked and wriggling spaniels had run through on wet paws.
Julian had not been in here for years.
Why would he come here?
I’m hungry.
How long since he had fed? Too long. His subconscious must be telling him that it was time to leave the manor for a few hours, drive a proper distance, and go hunting.
Yes, with Eleisha well accounted for and safely ensconced in Maggie’s old house, there was no reason he shouldn’t expose himself and get out for a while. He needed blood, and a fresh kill would do him good. Perhaps he could find a small blond girl and make her suffer.
Feeling even better, he was about to leave the mudroom and go upstairs to change his clothes, when the air shimmered before him, and Mary appeared with a panicked expression on her transparent face, magenta hair sticking out in several directions.
“They’re gone!” she cried. “Don’t be mad at me!”
All the relief of the past few nights drained away. “What?”
“They were gone last night, but I thought . . . I thought they’d come back. Today I got so scared I went inside their house. Their clothes are gone and the heat’s turned off, and I don’t know where they are.”
“Stop!” he ordered. She wasn’t making any sense. “You have been watching them. How could they leave without you knowing?”
She appeared to be biting the inside of her mouth—which was impossible and provided an offensive image—and she reached up to twirl a strand of her short hair. “Don’t be mad,”
she repeated. “I just left for a little while. I just wanted to see some . . . other things, and when I got back they were gone, but I didn’t worry till tonight.” She paused. “I thought I should tell you now and not wait till you called me.”
Anger and fear began growing in the pit of his stomach. He stepped forward, wanting to strike her, to knock her off her feet.
He couldn’t.
But he could send this stupid bit of trash back where he found her.
Her eyes widened. “I’ll find them!” she cried. “Don’t send me back. I’m getting good at moving from place to place. I swear I can find them.”
He forced himself to calm down, to think. He did not trust himself to speak for a moment, and then he said tightly, “Just where would you begin to look?”
“Well . . . aren’t you scared they might come here? Show me the closest airport on a map. I found out I can wish myself places by looking at maps.”
“And how did you realize that?”
She fidgeted. “Practice,” she answered evasively. “So I can help you better. But if I can’t find them around the airport, you’ll have to tell me where to go next. If Eleisha’s not here, where would she go?”
Julian’s thoughts turned inward. Where would she go? She’d lived in New York with Edward Claymore for over seventy years upon arriving in America, but then she had gone to Portland. For some reason, she preferred it there and she’d stayed.
“I’ll get some maps from the study,” he said slowly. “Try sensing anywhere near the manor first, and then Cardiff International Airport, and if you can’t find her, go back to America and try Portland, Oregon.”
Relief passed across Mary’s face as she realized he wasn’t going to banish her. “I’ll find her.”
chapter 3
By two nights later, several things had happened in Eleisha’s world.
First, through Rose’s address being absorbed into her consciousness, Eleisha had named their new home, and she spoke the name so often that Wade was also referring to the church as “the underground.” He joked it was rather like Tara from Gone With the Wind. But Eleisha compared it more to terms like “head-quarters,” in old spy movies.