Forever and the Night (The Black Rose Chronicles)

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Forever and the Night (The Black Rose Chronicles) Page 11

by Miller, Linda Lael


  “There’s still some sweet and sour pork left….”

  He smiled. “Vampires don’t eat, Neely. Not in the same way humans do.”

  She rolled her eyes, accepting the folded cotton garment he held out to her. “Please,” she said. “You’re no ordinary guy, I’ll grant you that, but you can’t really be a vampire. Can you?”

  Aidan’s laugh seemed to burst from his throat, rich and sensual and warm.

  Neely slid out of the window seat and went to stand behind a high-back leather chair, her imagination running wild all of a sudden. “You don’t actually drink blood?” Again she saw that peculiar, fathomless look of mourning in his eyes. “Yes,” he said miserably. “I despise it—I hate everything about being a vampire—but without blood I would die, and I am not quite prepared to do that.”

  She felt conflicting desires—to take him into her arms and to run away, as far and as fast as she could. She squinted, a habit she’d acquired in college, when she was trying to work out something that both intrigued and puzzled her. “Show me your coffin,” she challenged.

  Aidan arched one dark eyebrow. “I beg your pardon?” he replied, looking and sounding genuinely bewildered.

  “If you’re a vampire,” Neely said, trying to make reason of the unreasonable, “you have to sleep in a coffin.”

  He sighed, and his expression shifted to exasperation. “I most certainly do not sleep in a casket,” he said, plainly insulted. “This is not the second feature of a drive-in movie we’re talking about here, it’s reality. I drink blood, I sleep during the day, and I can indeed be killed by having a stake thrust through my heart. And that, my darling, is the extent of my resemblance to a Hollywood vampire!”

  She frowned, trying to remember if she’d ever encountered Aidan before sunset and failing to recollect a single instance. “Calm down,” she said. She ran her tongue over her lips in a gesture of distraction rather than nervousness. “If you hate being a—a vampire so much, then why did you become one? Assuming, of course, that you really are a supernatural creature.”

  Aidan sagged into the chair behind his worktable with a great sigh, and that was when Neely noticed that he looked gaunt. There were faint smudges under his eyes, like bruises, and his skin was pale as marble. “You are impossible!” he muttered.

  Neely smiled. ‘True,” she claimed and promptly determined to show more appreciation. After all, no matter what Aidan was, or claimed to be, he had saved her from crooks who had almost certainly been ordered to assassinate her. And she still needed a place to hide.

  Thinking it was a good time to take her leave, at least temporarily, she slipped out of the study. In the downstairs bathroom she exchanged the borrowed shirt for the graceful blue caftan Aidan had found for her. When she returned, he was standing at one of the windows, staring out at the dark, snowy forest edging the yard.

  He turned to face her as she stood uncertainly in the arched doorway.

  “I must go out for a while,” he said solemnly. “Do not admit anyone to the house before I return.” While Neely stared at him, trying to assimilate the news that he meant to abandon her, he lifted a fragile necklace over his head and placed it around her neck. A delicately shaped golden rosebud dangled from the chain.

  “What is this?”

  Aidan chuckled grimly. “Not the equivalent of a silver bullet or a crucifix, if that’s what you’re thinking. My sister and the others know it belongs to me, and that you would not have it in your possession except by my favor.”

  Curiouser and curiouser, Neely thought. She should be glad Aidan was leaving, she supposed, but instead she had to fight an urge to drop to her knees and fling her arms around his legs to make him stay. “What—what if those men come after me again? The ones who tried to break into my motel room.”

  Aidan made a gentle move in her direction, then drew himself back with a sharp, alarming motion. “They won’t,” he said. Raising his hands over his head, he slipped into a

  comer of the room and dissolved into the shadows.

  Neely just stood there for a few seconds after he disappeared, staring, immobilized with shock. Then she broke her paralysis and hurtled across the room to the place where Aidan had been only a heartbeat before.

  There was no trace of him, nor was there a door or a window near enough to accommodate such a dramatic exit. Murmuring, Neely knelt and felt the wainscotting with both hands, searching for a secret panel.

  Nothing.

  With a shiver Neely got to her feet. She was going to have to ask Aidan to show her how to do that particular trick—it might come in handy if those hired thugs ever caught up to her again.

  Her glance strayed to the telephone on Aidan’s table. She wanted to call Ben and let him know that she was all right, but she didn’t dare. Dallas Hargrove’s drug-dealing associates might have her brother’s line tapped, and if they traced a call to this house, she was as good as dead.

  With a groan Neely raised moist palms to her temples and rubbed. It would have been a relief to tell someone all that was happening to her, but who’d believe it?

  Restless, Neely made a fire on the hearth and began examining Aidan’s vast collection of books. A set of thick volumes, bound in Moroccan leather, drew her attention, and she reached for the first one on the left.

  The thing was huge, and heavy, and Neely dropped into Aidan’s desk chair before lifting the cover.

  The paper was fine parchment, substantial and smooth, and the first few pages were blank. Neely flipped carefully through them until she came to one that bore an inscription in fading black ink. This being the Record and Journal of Aidan Tremayne, Vampyre. Begun March 5, 1793.

  Neely felt something tickle the inside of her spine. She stared at the writing for a long time, then moved on to the next page. Here she found a pen-and-ink drawing that practically stopped her heart; Aidan’s laughing, handsome face looked back at her from the parchment, while a beautiful young woman, his female counterpart, peered smiling over his broad shoulder. Both subjects wore clothing typical of the eighteenth century.

  For a while Neely just sat there, stunned.

  Surely the man in the drawing could not be Aidan—the sketches had obviously been done generations before—no, it had to be one of his ancestors. Still, the image reached out to her somehow, and the laughing eyes pleaded with her to believe.

  Just believe.

  Shaken, she turned her attention to the woman, one of the loveliest creatures she had ever seen. The resemblance between the two was so strong that Neely knew they were brother and sister, or perhaps cousins….

  Neely swayed and closed her eyes. Some primal instinct insisted that this laughing young man in the drawing was indeed Aidan Tremayne—her Aidan.

  Impossible.

  Believe.

  Neely took a deep breath and held it for a moment. Then, with a shaking hand, she turned another page and began to decipher the neatly written but quaint script, with its antique spellings and randomly capitalized words. “I, Aidan Tremayne,” she translated, “set Down this Tale for the Sake of my own Sanity, and as a Warning to all those who come after….”

  Soon Neely was so absorbed that she was unaware of the passage of time. She devoured page after page, spellbound by the young Irishman’s account of his meeting with Lisette, the mysterious woman who had stopped for him in a carriage one evening, along a muddy road, and quickly captured his soul. Even though this other, earlier Aidan— he could not be the one she’d held, the one she loved, could he?—was a shameless hedonist, mostly concerned with sex, music, and good ale, Neely felt pangs of despair and, yes, jealousy, as she read. She did not want another female to figure into the story at all.

  When she came to the part where Lisette pounced on young Aidan and sank her fangs deep into his throat to virtually inhale his blood, Neely felt her own face go white and cold as window glass in winter. It was fiction, of course, a brilliantly conceived and quite horrible fantasy, but it seemed so real, the action so immediat
e and vital, that Neely almost became a part of the scenes herself.

  The account only became more incredible. The boy Aidan had died in the bed of a flea-ridden eighteenth-century inn above a tavern, and yet he had not died. The innkeeper, his son, and a local priest had declared him dead, and he’d tried desperately to communicate somehow that he was alive, but to no avail. The men had taken the body, never dreaming that a spirit still occupied it, to the undertaker’s establishment. He’d been abandoned there in that dreadful place, and forgotten.

  Tears blurred Neely’s vision as she read of Lisette’s return, and how she had raised Aidan up as a monster, a vampire, by tapping into his jugular vein again, this time giving blood instead of taking it.

  While she was fascinated and curious to a morbid degree, Neely found that she could not go on from there, not yet. She was deeply shaken, as if she’d witnessed the occurrences personally, in every gruesome detail. She felt true and abiding hatred for the heartless Lisette, along with an unholy resentment that the woman had lain with Aidan, had given him pleasure, and taken the same from him.

  For a long interval she just sat, dazed by the intensity and variety of her emotions, staring into the fire but seeing instead the nightmare images so carefully outlined in the journal. How could anyone, even a vampire, do such a terrible thing to another, to condemn him, as Lisette had condemned Aidan, to an eternal nightmare?

  “Neely?”

  She started and guiltily slammed the volume closed.

  Aidan was standing only a few feet away—she hadn’t heard him come in—and he carried her suitcase, the one she’d been forced to leave behind at the motel the night before.

  She felt such overwhelming love, just looking at him, that she could not get her breath to speak.

  “I thought you might like to have some of your own clothes,” he said innocently, sounding almost shy. His gaze dropped to the heavy book in her lap, and she saw both resignation and relief in his bearing. “You’ve found my histories, I see.”

  Looking up, Neely noticed that his skin, deathly pale before, was now healthy in color. A wild suspicion played in her mind; she chased it out and dropped her gaze to the suitcase in his hand. “Where did that come from? I thought we left it.”

  “We did. I went back.”

  Neely’s eyes shot back to his face. “You couldn’t have. It’s too far.”

  Instead of replying, Aidan simply raised one of his aristocratic eyebrows.

  She bolted out of the chair and grabbed for the case. “I have to let my brother know I’m all right,” she blurted, desperate for any distraction from the threatening truth, the reality that was becoming too complex and too pervasive to be ignored or denied. “When the police visit that room and find no sign of yours truly, Ben will hear about it on the

  news. He’ll be frantic. He might even think I’m dead.”

  Aidan folded his arms. “If you telephone Ben, we may soon have more of the senator’s friends to deal with. That’s all well and good, provided I’m here when they arrive, but what if you’re alone, Neely? What if I’m hunting, or asleep?”

  A chill, colder than the center of a snowman’s heart, touched her stomach and seeped into her soul. “ ‘Hunting or asleep’? For God’s sake, Aidan—you’re really scaring me now. This vampire game has gone far enough!”

  He took the book gently from her hands, laid it aside. “I was hoping I wouldn’t have to resort to parlor tricks to convince you,” he said in a quiet and damnably reasonable tone. “That’s my story you were reading, Neely. The image in the drawing is mine, the girl is my twin sister, Maeve—”

  “No!” She put her hands over her ears.

  Aidan grasped her wrists, lowered them, pressed them to her sides. “You will listen,” he said in a desperate whisper. “You know it’s true—somewhere inside, you know it’s true.”

  Neely uttered a sudden, wailing sob, because he was right. As incomprehensible as it all was, as much as she wanted to turn away from the evidence, she could no longer do that. It was no dream, and no one had given her drugs or induced any kind of hypnotic trance. All the strange things that had happened since she first met Aidan had actually, truly happened.

  Aidan touched her elbows and then her shoulders, tentatively. After that, though, instead of taking her into his arms as she yearned for him to do, he retreated a few steps. “I’m sorry, Neely,” he said gruffly. “I should have left you alone—”

  “But you didn’t!” she cried. She looked up at him, wiping angrily at her wet cheeks. “I’m fascinated, I’m entranced,

  God help me, I think I’m in love—with someone who isn’t even human! Tell me, Aidan—where do I go from here? What do I do now?”

  He flinched, as if she’d hurled bricks at his broad back instead of words. He did not face her as he replied raggedly, “I could walk away, and you would get over what you’re feeling now. But that wouldn’t change the fact that there are more of those cretins out there, waiting for a chance to cut your throat!”

  Neely moved to face Aidan and glared up into his face. She was wild with confusion, shock, and pain, and she spoke without thinking. “You could make me into a vampire, like you.”

  Aidan seemed to loom over her, taller for his fury. “Don’t ever say that!” he cried. “You’re asking to be damned, to be a fiend who feeds on the blood of living creatures! You’re asking God Himself to turn against you, and for all eternity!” His anguish lay naked and vivid in the words, and Neely’s first real comprehension of its extent took her breath away.

  She approached him, laying her hands gently on his face. “Aidan—” she whispered, longing to comfort him, knowing there was no way to do that.

  He wrenched free of her and moved away. “Didn’t you hear me, Neely?” he growled, reminding her of a wolf that had just chewed off its own paw in a desperate effort to save itself from the metal teeth of a trap. “I am cursed for all time, and to care for me is to blaspheme against Creation itself!”

  She was shaking her head again. “No, Aidan—no.” It couldn’t be a sin to love, could it? But, yes. The act of adoring something evil did not transform it into good, but instead poisoned what was holy.

  They both stood still, the silence ringing around them like the deafening toll of some horrid death bell, for the longest time. Then, unable to bear it, Neely muttered, “My brother—”

  Aidan moved to his desk, keeping his back to her. “Write him a letter, then, and explain as best you can. Just remember that he will have to live with your words until the end of his days.”

  Neely nodded distractedly, well aware of Aidan’s meaning. She could tell Ben only that she was in hiding—it would be an outright lie to say she was safe, and there was no plausible way to describe the terrible truth.

  She went upstairs to the room where she had awakened hours before, switched on a lamp, and sat down at a small desk to stare, unseeing, at a blank piece of paper.

  Aidan paced his study, too restless to work on his journals, not daring to follow Neely upstairs and continue their conversation. He had fed sparsely that night, and he had yet to look in on the still-ailing Valerian, who was his only hope of finding redemption and, with it, peace. Maeve, adore her though he did, was embroiled as usual in adventures of her own and could not be depended upon to look after wounded ones.

  He rubbed his temples with a thumb and forefinger, slouched back against the edge of his desk, and sighed. Then, with the utmost reluctance, he took himself to the dungeon of Havermail Castle.

  Valerian still lay prone and ill, his long frame covering the length of a trestle table. In the flickering lights of the candles Aidan saw a small, snarling creature spring out of the shadows and attach itself to Valerian’s throat.

  Horror rocked Aidan as he realized that this abomination, this greedy fiend, wore the person of a child. He plunged forward and tore the small, wiry body away from Valerian’s neck as though it were a leech. The little girl—this had to be Canaan, Benecia’s sister—twist
ed in Aidan’s grasp, baring her lethal fangs and making a vicious sound low in her throat, like a starved she-wolf.

  Valerian moaned and rolled onto his side. “Stop,” he pleaded. “Please—stop”

  Remarkably, the hellion went still, but when she raised her sherry-colored gaze to Aidan’s face, he saw the most abject hatred there that he had ever encountered. Coming from a being who looked for all the world like a sweet and warm-blooded five-year-old, the experience was particularly chilling.

  “She was merely trying to help me,” Valerian said gently.

  “Shall I leave you alone with this one, Valerian?” the fiend-child inquired, in a voice as delicate as the chimes of an exquisite little clock. “I do not favor him, you know.” Valerian gestured affectionately toward the door. “I am quite safe with Aidan,” he insisted. “Go now, please, and tell your mama and papa that we have a guest.”

  Aidan’s gaze sliced to his friend’s face. He had no real desire to socialize with the elder Havermails; they were innately horrible creatures, like their daughters. When Canaan had swept from the room, he bit out, “Honestly, Valerian, I can’t think what you and Maeve see in this family of monsters!”

  “We see ourselves,” Valerian answered quietly.

  The words left Aidan stricken, for no weapon could wound as deeply and as savagely as the truth.

  “This is what we are, Aidan,” the elder vampire insisted in an urgent whisper.

  “No,” Aidan rasped, shaking his head, trying to pull free of Valerian’s grasp. ‘No! You went back, almost to Atlantis—so will 1.1 will find the antidote for this curse or die seeking it!”

  Incredibly, Valerian smiled. “What a passionate specimen you are. Come with me, my friend, and let me show you other realities.” He paused, patting Aidan’s hand fondly. “You might have been a stage actor, with your flair for the dramatic. Together we could write plays that would outshine the words of the Bard himself. We could—” “Damn it, Valerian, you’re dreaming!” Aidan broke in sharply. He hadn’t meant his tone to be harsh, but it was, cruelly so, and the momentum carried him farther. “I want nothing from you, do you hear me, nothing, except for the secret that would restore the life that was stolen from me!”

 

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