by Jackie Ivie
She whimpered slightly, parting her lips and giving him an idea. Drastic, but it might work. Quickly. Rafaele stabbed a tooth into his wrist, opening a cut. He rejoined her on the bed, denting the mattress as he lifted her mouth to the wound, whispering all the time of his love and adoration and need for her. Only her. He trembled as she finally took a taste, shuddered, and then sucked at him, taking the only thing he could think to save her.
She was breathing easier when she’d finished, a smile gracing lips he longed to latch onto and plunder. Rafaele had to force himself back from her again. He went to his feet. Backed to the wall. Watched her. Felt his heart actually assume a beat to match hers. Stronger now. Rhythmic.
Giving her the infusion looked to have worked, but he couldn’t stay and find out. He didn’t dare. Time was wasting. He had to be back in his berth before daybreak. He could take her with him. He should. Years of plundering and pillaging should dictate that. Everyone would expect it…but right then, he knew he couldn’t. He’d been enough of the barbarian. She deserved so much more! When he pursued his one true mate it would be with sweet words and honeyed kisses, not force.
And why did he have to get so noble all of a sudden?
She turned onto her side, facing him, and sighed. Rafaele knelt to watch. Yes. She was breathing deeply and easily now, the undead platelets overcoming whatever mortal issue she suffered. He should go…but how could he leave the most precious thing in his world now? Unprotected? And unguarded?
The busted door silently chastised him as he approached, fit it back into position, and then watched it sway back open every time he moved his hand away.
“Hello there! Miss Hendershott? You okay?”
Rafaele slammed the door back into place with more violence than he intended. A rain of dust and wood slivers gave the move away. He grabbed the refrigerator beside the door and pulled it down onto its side, securing the door with another loud boom of noise.
Look at this. He was worse than a barbarian. He was a clumsy one.
“Miss Hendershott? You okay? It’s me. Your neighbor, Missus Gibbons. From 1210. Should I call the police? Lenna?”
Rafaele cleared his throat and tried for a soprano range. “I’m fine. Just tired.”
“I heard some loud noises, and I thought—.”
“Oh…that. I stumbled.”
“All right then, dear. If you need anything, you know where I am.”
Rafaele glared at the door. It didn’t match the sweet falsetto of his answer. “Thank you.”
“You do too much. And you shouldn’t be out so late. It’s not safe on these streets at night, regardless of your defense training. But I’ll check in the morning.”
Rafaele was through the back window and onto the little ledge containing a flower box before the woman finished speaking. One quick stop at the elevator and he’d be gone. But he’d be back. Miss Lenna Hendershott could count on that.
o0o
“Tell us again what happened.”
Lenna would’ve looked up at the policewoman, Missus Gibbons sitting beside her, and the officer standing just inside her broken door, but the weak winter daylight was giving her trouble. She’d already asked them to shut off all the electric lights because she couldn’t seem to see clearly through what felt like searing sunshine. That was odd. She loved sunlight. It wasn’t the only odd thing. The weirdness started the moment her neighbor had knocked on her door this morning. Lenna’s eyes had popped open, she’d lifted her head, looked over her rumpled street clothes, a still-made bed, both shoes still firmly attached to her feet, and tried to focus around the shaft of light coming through her bedroom door. Why hadn’t she undressed? And how had she gotten here? And why was her neighbor pounding at her door?
Nothing was clear. Only snippets of time. She’d needed insulin. She’d taken the elevator. It was faster. But it stuck. She’d forced herself to relax. She’d read an e-book on her phone. She’d checked other things. She’d called for help. She’d panicked and gone crazy. The vaguest image came to her. She’d been rescued by a shadow man who’d lifted the elevator with one hand, brought her here…and then what? Just left her atop her bed?
No. That wasn’t right. Something more had happened…something at the edge of her consciousness. If she just had a moment, she’d remember. She opened her mouth to answer, but only a whisper of sound came out, and it had hurt her throat.
“Miss Hendershott? Lenna!”
Missus Gibbons had called out again while Lenna arched her back and stretched. Wow. She’d never felt so wonderful in her entire life. The knocking had gotten louder, along with her neighbor’s voice.
“Lenna? You awake? Lenna!”
Oh, my…yes. She was definitely awake. That was improbable. She should be dead, or, at the very least, in a hospital. She shouldn’t be able to leap to her feet and stand there working every muscle group without one bit of effort. Right then, she’d felt awesome! Healthy. Energetic. Ready for whatever life handed her. Like she could do sit-ups without end, laps without losing speed, and forget riding a Metro Transit bus. She was ready to race it.
What a shame it hadn’t lasted.
In fact, by the time she’d reached her door, she was feeling almost normal. Or what had been normal back before she’d been diagnosed. The right side of her neck ached, and she’d rubbed at it absently. She must have screamed herself hoarse. No…that wasn’t right. A quick slash of memory came to her. A pinprick of pain. Ecstasy. Rapture. Had that shadow guy…bitten her?
Oh…geez. She was dreaming of vampires now? She really needed a life.
“I’m fine, Missus Gibbons!”
“Lenna? I’m really starting to get worried!”
Lenna’s whispered answer had gone unheard, there wasn’t much way to open the door because her own refrigerator was on its side, barring it, and she really had to handle her injection. She probably should’ve knocked or somehow alerted her neighbor before checking her blood sugar, though, because once that had happened, it didn’t matter what noise Missus Gibbons made.
The little screen on her glucose indicator read 101.
Lenna had gaped. It wasn’t possible. It wasn’t even likely. She tested it three more times and got the same reading every single time, although the numbers went all over the spectrum before settling on 101 again. Every single time.
“I’m calling the police!”
Lenna barely heard Missus Gibbons. She’d stood just inside her bathroom in semi-shock, before it turned to sobs. That had metamorphosed into little hops in circles, while she enjoyed every bit of the elation. She hadn’t cared who Missus Gibbons called or what she told them. Lenna had bigger, broader, more fantastic things to consider. She was cured! She’d have to get it medically verified…but she could swear she didn’t have one symptom or sign of the disease that had haunted her life for seven years now. Seven years.
“Miss Hendershott?”
Oops. Back to earth, Lenna. She’d celebrated her sugar reading over two hours ago, and right now she had to deal with the fall-out. She had two police officers, Missus Gibbons, and it looked like even the building superintendent had joined in from out in the hall. Lenna didn’t know who else might be with him. She didn’t have a door to bar anyone, and the light was too bright to check.
“Yes?”
“Last night?”
The policewoman sat facing Lenna while her male partner stood over in the doorway. It was the same set-up used when she’d reported Chet. Lenna didn’t trust them. They might act empathetic, but it was an act. Nobody would believe her, just like last time. Back then, they’d written their little notes, and then they’d gone and reported it right to her parents, turning her into a pariah in the only home she knew. And since that was followed by what they termed a suicide attempt, she’d received a nice stay in the psychiatric section of the hospital. She’d spent the last half of her seventeenth year in that little wing of the hospital with no handles on the insides of the doors, no phones, no outside contact. She wasn’t going there a
gain.
She didn’t trust anyone. Period. Heck, they’d probably already received and read her history, despite it being sealed.
Lenna focused on the little span of linoleum that designated her kitchen. She altered that. She focused on what she could see in front of the seventeen cubic foot refrigerator/freezer on its side atop the faded pattern of linoleum flooring.
“Let’s start with the elevator. What happened when it got stuck again?”
Lenna pulled in a large breath. She felt and heard it as if wind was blowing through the tissues of her own body. Another oddity. She swallowed, sending a weird sensation through her throat. It really was too bad she didn’t trust them.
“I told you,” she replied finally. “I called 911.”
“There’s no record of a call. We already went over it.”
“Check my cell phone. I called somebody, because…”
Her voice dribbled off. Somebody came, all right. The shadow man got more definition, and holy smokes! If her recollection was correct…wow! He’d been amazingly handsome. Dark hair. Dark eyes. Looking a bit like that science guy who designed the first power plant at Niagara Falls. She couldn’t place his name at the moment, but she remembered his picture. No. Bad call, Lenna. The guy who’d rescued her was a lot hotter. There wasn’t anyone she could use for comparison. She debated telling them about him, before discarding it. They’d never believe her. She didn’t even believe it. She’d never been imaginative…but she’d also been a Type One Diabetic, too. Type One. The childhood diabetes. The toughest challenge. Tossing her for a loop when she was most vulnerable – like she received the punishment for what Chet did, not him.
“We don’t have your cell phone, Miss Hendershott.”
“Oh. It’s in my gym bag. No. Wait. I dropped it. Uh…somewhere in the elevator. After I panicked.” She felt the flush of embarrassment.
“It wasn’t there, Miss.”
“It has to be.”
“Take a look. Here’s everything we got from the elevator.”
She narrowed her eyes to visually check the belongings on the small folding table she used. They’d stacked everything in neat little rows. Her backpack. Water bottle. Her sports bra. Tank top. Shorts. Her track shoes.
“You didn’t find my cell?” she asked. “But who would take it? And why?” She had her client list in there. Good thing she’d sent the backup last night from the bus. Lenna smiled to herself.
“That’s what we’re trying to find out.”
“I’m sorry. I really can’t remember.”
“After you called 911? You can’t remember?”
“No.” The flush deepened. She’d always fancied herself level-headed. Able to cope with any emergency. Nope. She’d gone completely crazy.
“You don’t remember getting out of the elevator? Breaking your door?”
The policeman spoke from the door. He sounded like he was trying hard not to laugh. Lenna shook her head.
“Well…I really don’t think we have anything here, folks. We’re just wasting time.”
Lenna listened as the woman officer closed her pocket-pad and stood. She didn’t have to look to verify anything. Her hearing seemed at a hyper-sensitive level, too.
“Now, wait just a minute. I’ve got an elevator with bowed doors. We can’t even get them to close properly. It’s like some unseen force yanked then open like a tinned can. A-a-and look! Just look! This door’s going to need a new frame!”
There was a momentary silence as the building superintendent finished. Lenna had never heard him stutter before. That was almost enough to make her laugh.
“I’d suggest you get busy, then. I don’t see much of a crime here to follow up on. I see a young woman who got frightened, and with a surge of adrenaline managed to free herself, reach her own apartment, break in…and then she even managed to secure it.”
“By dropping her own fridge on its side? Are you seriously going to put that in the report?”
“Adrenaline can make people do amazing things, Sir.”
“Adrenaline? Looks more like PCP.”
“Your tenant is a diabetic. Not an addict. Isn’t that right, Miss Hendershott?”
Lenna nodded. She’d been right. They had her entire history downloaded on their pocket-pads.
“I still want her charged.”
“With what?”
“Vandalism.”
“Vandalism? Miss Hendershott was terrified and acted accordingly. Now that I think of it, I believe I’m going to list faulty maintenance as an underlying issue to this complaint. What do you think, Officer Lindle?”
“I agree. Make it easier for litigation and liability issues. Should Miss Hendershott wish to proceed with charges.” The male officer answered her.
“What?”
The superintendent wasn’t blustering anymore. He sounded a bit unsure for a change. Lenna almost snorted the amusement, but swallowed the bubble of it down. As if she’d sue anyone for anything. She just wanted this little episode over so she could get her results verified. Because if what she suspected were true…
Wow. She’d been spontaneously cured. It just didn’t get any better.
“Do you have anyone you can stay with until your apartment is secure again, Miss?”
“What?”
“She can stay with me. Just don’t you worry, Lenna. I’ll take care of you.”
Missus Gibbons? No way. She’d rather camp out at the gym. Just get these people out of here so she could schedule an appointment with her doctor. No. Wait. A doctor visit would cost too much. She’d get her glucose checked at the clinic, and if it was still in the normal range, she’d hit the library to access client files, reschedule everybody, and then…maybe, just maybe she’d think about a real celebration. And then she turned her mind to wondering if there was anyone who cared enough to join her.
She heard the officers leave, taking the superintendent with them, Missus Gibbons trailing after. Lenna could always party with her nosy neighbor if she got desperate. Is that what her life had become? Being self-supportive and confident was a good thing, wasn’t it? She was alone a lot, but not lonely. Most of the time.
This sure wasn’t one of them.
Lenna sighed and started gathering her stuff off the table.
CHAPTER FOUR
“VAL. Private line. Who’s calling, please?”
“Rafaele.”
“Full name?”
“You know my—”
The link went dead before he finished. Rafaele looked at it for a moment and then plugged in the next number up in the sequence. A moment later Sir Tristan answered and Rafaele repaid his lack of manners.
“VAL. Private line. Who’s call—?”
“Rafaele de Jesus y Santiago. Read my electrical code this time.”
“Oh. Hi, Rafe.”
Rafaele swallowed the instant retort. He hated that nickname. And the knight knew it. “Listen, Invaris. I’m sending you SIM card data. I need you to run it.”
“No can do, Sir.”
“What? It’ll be easy. Check your monitor.”
“One moment, please.”
“Wait! Bastardo!”
Rafaele really needed to find another word to vent frustration. He knew exactly where he was being directed, too: The boss. He had to portray his usual laissez faire attitude before the connection resumed, so he leaned back in his chair and watched the link shrink to a pin dot of white in a screen full of black while nondescript music violated his speakers. He had his fingers linked behind his head as the view changed to a darkened alcove and a desk. Nothing more. As usual.
“Good evening, Rafaele. Fancy hearing from you.”
“I was speaking with the Crusader.”
“Asking him a favor, were you?”
“Perhaps.”
“Well, he’s on a short leash for a bit. No favors without my knowledge.”
“Sounds serious.”
“It is. You still aboard that black yacht owned by Dane…what i
s it this time, Monroe?”
“Morgan. It was Monroe last go-around.”
“Oh. I know his name. I just like making conversation.”
“Why?”
“You’ll see.”
“Can I just tell you what I need?” Rafaele asked.
“I already know. Patience, Santiago. That’s what you need. A little more patience and a lot less Spanish machismo, although I understand it still drives the women wild.”
“You have a point to this?”
“You ever speak with your landlord?”
“What landlord? I’m a sailor aboard a ship. Nothing more. Nothing less.”
“Sure you are. And the illegal slaver that disappeared from radar last summer off the coast of Africa had absolutely nothing to do with you and that big black yacht, My Office. Right?”
“I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
“Of course not. But I have a message along with a hefty reward for you, nonetheless. Seems one of those beautiful young maidens you freed comes from a family of some substance…and a rich husband-to-be. You’d think kidnapping and trafficking in women was a thing of the past, wouldn’t you?”
“I wouldn’t know.”
“If you have to go sinking ships and rescuing maidens and doing the pillaging and plunder stuff, you might try wearing a mask next time. It’ll cut down on trouble.”
“What trouble?”
“I hear they’ve got an issue with the ladies now. They saw you. It ruins them for any other man…including said fiancé. Or so, I’ve been told.”
Rafaele sucked in his cheeks and regarded the screen for several long moments while he waited.
“No answer?”
“Is there a purpose to this conversation, Akron? I really need some information. That’s the only reason I called.”
“Oh. I know. Don’t worry. I just enjoy conversing with you. Always. Have any issues reaching us tonight?”
“Not really.”
“Why don’t we just skip to where I ask you what happened last night, shall we?”
“I handled the hit. Without help, I might add.”
“Impressive. And rare. I had 4-D Team Yellow on call for you.”