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The Survivors Book IV: Spring

Page 30

by V. L. Dreyer


  Email: info@vldreyer.com

  Amazon: http://amazon.com/author/vldreyer

  Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/VictoriaLDreyer

  Twitter: @VL_Dreyer

  Patreon: http://www.patreon.com/vldreyer

  It has been my pleasure and my honour to write this series for all of you, and I thank each and every one of you for joining me on this journey.

  Where will the future take us? I don't know yet, but like Sandy said, I can't wait to find out!

  V. L. Dreyer

  The Cast

  THE NARRATOR

  Sandrine "Sandy" McDermott

  THE OHAUPO GROUP

  Michael Chan

  Doctor Stewart Cross

  Madeline "Maddy" Cross

  Ryan Knowles

  Skylar "Skye" McDermott

  Priyanka

  Tigger the Kitten

  Alfred the Sheepdog

  THE PARATA TRIBE OF LAKE RUATUNA

  Anahera Parata

  Hemi Parata

  Ropata Parata

  Iorangi Parata

  Tane Parata

  Richard Parata

  Petera "Peter" Parata

  Wiremu "Will" Parata

  Nikora "Nick" Parata

  THE ARAPUNI GROUP:

  Jim Merrit

  Rebecca Merrit

  THE YOUSEFI FAMILY:

  Zain Yousefi

  Elira "Elly" Yousefi

  Mathias "Matt" Yousefi

  Javed Yousefi

  Baraz "Barry" Yousefi

  Omid "Ommie" Yousefi

  THE TOKOROA GROUP:

  Gavin Church

  Lily & Jasmine

  Melody

  Solomon

  MISCELLANEOUS:

  Erica Bryce

  Simon Wentworth

  DECEASED:

  Sophie Chan, niece of Michael.

  Dog, member of the Ohaupo group.

  Kylie McDermott, mother of Skye & Sandy

  Roger McDermott, father of Skye & Sandy

  Henry Barrett, the Pukeatua bandit.

  Everyone else in the whole world.

  May they rest in peace.

  Kiwiana Language Guide

  Aotearoa

  Maori, New Zealand. Literally "The Land Of The Long White Cloud".

  Arapuni

  Location; a town in the central Waikato, home to the Arapuni Power Station.

  Bush

  Specifically, "native bush". This term refers to an area of native forest, which is characterised by a particularly thick shrub layer dominated by indigenous ferns and bushes – hence the colloquialism. Native bush is often very thick and dark, and can be very difficult to travel through as a result.

  Central Plateau, The

  Colloquial, the Tongariro National Park. It is an area of major cultural significance to the various peoples of New Zealand, and contains numerous Maori sacred sites. Above ground, it is a massive rock desert that covers approximately 795.98 kilometres and is home to the volcanic cones Tongariro, Ruapehu, and Ngauruhoe. Below ground, it is the centre of a massive geothermal field that spreads across most of the North Island. It is one of the few areas in the North Island that regularly sees snowfall.

  G'day

  Colloquial, "Good day".

  Hamilton

  Location; A medium-sized city in the Waikato

  Horizons Region

  The Horizons Region is an agricultural region in the lower half of the North Island. The official name of the area is the Manawatu-Wanganui region.

  Hutt Valley

  An area in the Greater Wellington Region that contains the cities of Upper and Lower Hutt, and the fertile Hutt River.

  Kia Ora

  Maori, "Hello".

  Maori

  Relating to the original peoples of New Zealand. May be used to refer to their cultural traits (e.g. "she tried to live by the traditional Maori ways."), language (e.g. "he spoke Maori.") or ethnicity (e.g. "my grandmother was Maori"). The Maori culture evolved from Polynesian migrants who arrived in New Zealand around 1,000 years ago.

  Mate

  Colloquial, a contextually sensitive word that is usually used in place of the word "friend". Can be used sarcastically or in threat just as readily as being used in a friendly fashion, e.g. "You're going to regret that, mate."

  Ngauruhoe

  Geography; the central volcano in Tongariro National Park. Ngauruhoe is an active stratovolcano.

  Ohaupo

  Location; a small town in the Waikato region, approximately 17 kilometres south of Hamilton.

  Porirua

  A coastal city in the Wellington Region.

  Ruapehu

  Geography; the southernmost volcano in Tongariro National Park. Ruapehu is one of the most active stratovolcanoes in the world.

  Tā Moko

  Maori Culture; traditional Maori face and body tattoos.

  Te Awamutu

  Location; a medium-sized township in the central Waikato. In the Survivors world, this town was razed by a large earthquake several years after the plague.

  Tokaanu

  Location; a small township on the southern shore of Lake Taupo.

  Tokoroa

  Location; a medium-sized town located in the central Waikato, half way between Hamilton and Taupo.

  Tumanako

  Maori, “Hope”.

  Waikato

  A large agricultural region in the central North Island.

  Waiouru

  Location; a small town in the Manawatu-Wanganui region, located approximately 25 kilometres south of Mount Ruapehu. It is home to the Waiouru Army Camp and Airfield.

  Wellington

  Location; capital of New Zealand, and southernmost city in the North Island.

  The Immortality Clause

  CLAUDIA BELL #1, THE IMMORTELLE SERIES

  Claudia Bell stared at her reflection in the mirror, and decided that whoever thought elevators should have mirrored walls must have been a genius. The trip up felt like it was taking forever, but at least the mirror gave her something to do besides try to smother her nerves. At least when she was busy touching up her makeup, she wasn't wasting time on pointless worrying.

  She was an attractive young woman, and she knew it, because she spent hours perfecting what nature had given her. Practicing law was still a man's game and her looks gave her power, because they were a means to make people instinctively underestimate her. Her looks were a weapon in her arsenal, nothing more. The hours that she spent with hair straighteners or at the nail salon were no different to a knight who spent his evenings sharpening his sword.

  When her opponents looked at her, all they saw was a pretty young thing with immaculately-coiffed blonde hair and flawless makeup, dressed to the nines in the latest business fashions. Most of them dismissed her without a second thought. What they didn't see was the razor wit that lay behind her deliberately-machinated insipid smile. People tended to relax when they saw her and assume she was nothing more than a blonde bimbo that somehow managed to muddle, or sleep her way through a law degree. Even other women. No, especially other women.

  While her foes were busy curling their lip and rolling their eyes, Claudia was watching them, assessing them, divining their weaknesses from the tiniest hints of body language and establishing the best strategy to use those weaknesses against them. Her enemies rarely realised just how intelligent she was until she dove for the metaphorical kill - and by then it was too late.

  That was what made her so good at her job.

  After what felt like an eon, the elevator reached its destination, and the doors popped open with a soft, pleasant chime. Claudia straightened her shoulders, adjusted her purse over her shoulder and settled her favourite vague, girlish smile onto her lips. This time there was no need. The man that greeted her had already seen what lay beneath her disguise, and felt the cut of her intellect. He'd fallen for her wiles in her first interview, and come out the other side feeling like less of a man. Which was exactly why he'
d hired her.

  "Ms Bell," he greeted her amiably, and offered her a hand to shake. She took it without hesitation, silently pleased by the gesture. Few people offered her the simple courtesy of a handshake until they considered her an equal. Most people greeted her as an inferior without even realising that they were doing it, treating her with broad gestures, bland smiles, and a hand on the small of the back.

  "Mr Logan," she replied. "I'm flattered that you came to meet me personally."

  "After that interview, how could I not?" he said. William Logan was a tall, older gentleman with grey hair and a neatly-trimmed beard. His lips curled into an amused smile, then he swiftly changed the subject and gestured towards the younger man at his side. "May I introduce you to Lucio Cavenelli? You'll be serving as his aide while you learn the ropes around here."

  "Please, call me Luke," he said, offering his hand to her. "It's a pleasure to meet you."

  She was well-versed in the art of reading body language, and she could see, written in his poise, that he was both curious about her and respectful of her. That also amused her, because it meant this man had been warned in advance not to underestimate her.

  Now, that was a feeling she really liked.

  "Likewise. I look forward to working with you." She shook his hand and used the moment to study the young man with an impartial eye. He was a little older than she was, perhaps a few years past thirty, but his appearance was youthful. His hair was jet black, slicked back from a face that was handsome and angular. Much like herself, he was dressed impeccably in a well-tailored business suit, his face was clean-shaven, and his hands were well-groomed.

  The thing that interested her most was his eyes, though. In stark contrast to his dark hair and olive skin, his eyes were a particularly vivid shade of blue. In spite of herself, she found herself momentarily fascinated by them, until he spoke again and disrupted her thoughts.

  "After what William's told me about your interview, I'm a little frightened to be working with you," he said, his words laced with pleasant humour to break the ice, a social grace that she appreciated.

  "Oh, no need for that," she said with a chuckle and a playfully-wicked smile. "I only use my powers for good, never for evil."

  The men both laughed at her joke, since they knew full well that was not the case. They were lawyers, after all. Manipulating people was what they excelled at. To be where she was – a graduate that held multiple degrees, and had interned at one of the most powerful law firms in Australasia for several years – she had to be just as wicked as they were.

  "Luke, why don't you give Ms Bell the tour, and then show her to her office?" William Logan said, glancing at the younger man.

  Another illusion: the illusion of choice. They may be friendly and bantering now, but Mr Logan was the head of the Legal Department and it was his whims to which they both danced. Luke was diplomatic enough not to point that out, of course. He just nodded and smiled, and beckoned for Claudia to follow him. She said a brief, polite farewell to her new employer and then followed the young man away from the elevator.

  "I'm sure I don't need to tell you that this is the lobby," Luke said, gesturing around them. "If you need anything done, feel free to ask one of the receptionists. They're here to help."

  "Of course." Claudia glanced at the trio of unsmiling women behind the reception desk and gave them a nod of greeting. Two of them were busy speaking into their wireless headsets and didn't seem to notice her at all, but the third looked up and returned the nod. Above them, the company logo was emblazoned on the marble wall: Cornelius Pharmaceuticals.

  What a pretentious name, she thought snidely, and not for the first time. However, the pay was excellent, and part of her contract with her mother required her to spend some time working overseas, before she could earn her partnership in the family firm.

  Her mother had found out about the opening at Cornelius through her connections in the industry, and she'd made all the arrangements for the interview. The company was located in the central business district of Auckland, New Zealand, just three hours from Brisbane by plane. At first, Claudia had been dubious about leaving her home and moving to such a small, isolated country, but she had always longed to travel and see the world. New Zealand was exotic enough to interest her, but similar enough to home to feel familiar. She'd flown over for the interview and found herself intrigued by the vast, open green spaces and the quirky people. When William Logan called to offer her the job, she'd accepted without hesitation.

  Luke led her onwards, past the luxuriant leather couches and expensive art that hung around the waiting area, familiar to her after her interview two weeks before. Her stiletto heels clicked ominously on the hard tiles, and she relished the sound. The shoes might be impractical but they made her feel powerful, and she loved the way that people watched her when she wore them.

  Like right now, in fact. Luke held open the door for her and she could feel his eyes on her as she passed through it, admiring her curves. Her jacket was carefully tailored to fit her physique, and the skirt was cut just short enough to show a generous portion of her long, shapely legs without being risqué.

  At just the right moment, she shot a look back over her shoulder to catch him in the act. His head jerked up in surprise and his gaze snapped to her face. She raised a brow pointedly. He glanced away, with a faint smile dancing across his lips.

  To her surprise, the moment left her vaguely uncomfortable, though she usually enjoyed catching people out when they least expected it. This time, it felt different. His smile said he knew something that she didn't. That was a feeling she did not care for at all.

  ***

  Luke Cavenelli suddenly found himself fighting down the urge to laugh. She'd caught him with such an obvious ploy in spite of all his experience with women, and the advance warning from his elder. At nearly a century of age, he really should have known better.

  And yet, she has no idea, he thought to himself as his gaze flicked away, amusement playing across his lips despite his best efforts to restrain it. No idea who or what I am, no idea why she's really here.

  He felt a little guilty taking advantage of her ignorance, since he'd found the young lawyer to be interesting so far. She was so vivacious and full of life. He didn't much care for the plan that his elders had concocted, but at least she was entertaining to deal with. Despite his age, he was one of the youngest of his clan. Eternity and arrogance had not robbed him of his humanity just yet.

  But, whether he liked her or not, there was politics to be considered. There was always politics.

  "Through there is the cafeteria," he said absently, gesturing down one of the corridors. "But, the legal team generally go out for lunch. There's a diverse selection of restaurants and cafes in this area."

  "So I noticed," she said. The young woman's voice was a crisp hybrid of British and Australian accents, which he knew was courtesy of the tutors her mother had insisted on hiring for her. Luke watched her while she wasn't looking, admiring the way her clothing was cut to accentuate her sensual curves rather than hide them. Long legs flowed into wickedly sharp heels, yet despite that she moved with a grace that was almost predatory. Her hair shone, coifed into shoulder length white-blonde curls in a style that reminded him poignantly of Maria.

  Maria. The woman who had almost become his wife. He rarely thought of her these days; the Cabal seemed to consume his every waking thought. Again, he pushed the thoughts of his lost love back into the recesses of his memory, as he had done every time for the last seventy-five years. She was no longer a part of his reality.

  This woman, though. This woman he found interesting, even fascinating. She was so unlike the immortal women that generally surrounded him. As the years rolled by, they tended to grow either depressed or arrogant. The depressed ones usually retreated within themselves, until finally the longing for death became overwhelming. The arrogant ones, on the other hand, regarded him as an undisciplined young stallion. They had no use for him unless they wan
ted to take him for a ride. Although most men in his position would have been perfectly happy with that arrangement, Luke was an old-fashioned kind of guy and hated being used for his body. He'd grown up in an era where you married young, and you stayed married. Divorce was simply not an option. If something broke, you fixed it. That ethos still lingered in him, even when he had started to reach the age where the decades began to blur together.

  Although he'd only met her a few minutes before, Luke had read Claudia's file extensively and thought that he knew her well. She was a very different person to what he'd expected, but it seemed to him that she would provide them with exactly what they needed most – new blood to revitalize his clan.

  "Is there a problem?"

  The young woman's voice suddenly interrupted his reverie. Luke blinked owlishly, and realised that he'd been caught staring again – twice in the span of as many minutes.

  "Hardly." Suddenly embarrassed, he dragged his gaze away. "I was just thinking that it'll be nice to not be the youngest person in the office anymore."

  Even though it was true, her expression said that she didn't believe him. She raised one sculpted brow and regarded him coolly, then cut right to the heart of the matter with a single stroke. "Really? Is that why you're ogling me like a randy young choir boy?"

  Oh, but she was bold! Luke muffled a snort of laughter behind a cough and tried hard to hide his amusement. Certainly, the ladies of the Immortelle were bold as well, but not in the same way. They tended to be acidic and vicious, and used their wit to burn and belittle. This girl, though - he could feel the sense of humour behind her words even when she was poking fun at him. To his surprise, he found he wasn't offended by it, but actually rather enjoyed it.

 

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