De Roché’s rage simmered just beneath the surface as he stared Doug down. Doug sensed that hiding inside the man’s refined demeanor lived a dangerous and desperate predator.
“I’ll take her away from you,” Doug said, staring directly into De Roché’s handsome, hateful eyes with defiance. She’ll forget about you. You’ll no longer know your daughter, and you’ll never know your grandchildren. Is that what you want?”
“Come now, Douglas,” De Roché patronized. “Do you actually believe that you and Annie can have a life that’s free of my influence? If you do, you’re a bigger fool than I take you for. When and if you two decide to have a child, and you will, I have ways of finding these things out. Make no mistake.”
“Why are you doing this?” Doug asked, totally frustrated by this terrible man and his terrible perversions. “Why in God’s name do you want Annie’s child?”
“Let me tell you something, Douglas,” De Roché said in that same colorless and patronizing way he always spoke to Doug. “Painful as it might be to you, Annie is too good for you, she always has been, and she always will be. You don’t understand who she is or where she came from. Our family is a very old one, and very special. It goes back to the dim recesses of the human race. There’s royalty and . . . immortality in our blood, and something else you can never understand . . .”
De Roché hesitated as if there was something in this confession that pained him. Doug waited, his rage still simmering, but a little intrigued at the idea that De Roché might actually be attempting to fabricate some sort of fiction in hopes of further degrading Doug’s status and elevating Annie’s worthiness. The man had uttered the word immortality. There could be no mistake. What the hell was that supposed to mean? Could De Roché think Doug stupid enough to believe such an absurdity? Or worse, did he himself believe it? Was the man that delusional?
Doug did not have to be reminded that Annie was too good for him. He’d known it from the day they’d met. In the real world a beautiful heiress with a name like Antoinette De Roché would never have given the likes of him a second glance. Whatever stars had been in alignment on the day they’d met might never again align. Doug was no fool. Annie was a goddess, and he was a mere mortal. But goddess or not, Annie belonged to him now, and she would remain his until she, and only she decided differently.
“Never mind,” De Roché said, flapping his hand in contempt. “You wouldn’t believe it if I told you, and even if you did believe, you certainly wouldn’t understand. Suffice it to say, promises must be kept. Deals are made, and when the collector calls, bills must be paid.”
“Bills?” Doug said, as if the word tasted foul on his tongue. “This is about paying bills?”
De Roché’s handsome blue eyes narrowed to seething pinpricks. There was something in them that made Doug’s blood run cold, some unspoken mystery or terrible knowledge. Suddenly Doug was quite certain that De Roché did have a secret, something sacred, perhaps evil, and in his moment of frustration, was on the verge of revealing it. Down deep Doug was hoping the man would keep his secret forever, for he suspected the knowledge might alter him in some incontrovertible way. It was not the first time he’d suspected there was something more to the De Roché dynasty than met the eye, something more than power or influence or money. In the first year or so of his acquaintance with the family, before he had taken Annie away from them, he’d glimpsed things that had disturbed him, overheard nuances that had baffled him. Nothing concrete, nothing he could lay his finger on exactly, but enough strangeness to make him happy to be away from their influence.
“There are things in this life that defy common logic, Douglas,” De Roché said, dashing Doug’s hopes. “Things that you do not and never will have the capacity to grasp.” De Roché’s eyes fell unfocused, as though he’d suddenly heard a distant voice. “There are worlds beyond ours,” De Roché said. “Worlds you would not believe. Vast and complex and teaming with strange intelligence. I’ve glimpsed some of these places, and the possibilities, oh the possibilities. One only needs the key to tap into them. The key is now within my grasp and I will not rest until it is mine. But you’ll never understand, will you? You’re too compliant, too deferential, too . . . ordinary to see beyond your shallow little existence. The universe contains wonders and horrors you could never hope to fathom. The days ahead will bear this out and then you will surely see what I have known from the beginning.”
Doug stared at the man not knowing how to react to his strange rhetoric, but being suddenly sure of one thing: De Roché was insane.
“And besides,” De Roché said dismissively, “this is between Annie and me and her firstborn. This is not about you. As it is I have to deal with the fact that she has chosen the likes of you to be its father.”
That’s when Doug had done the thing he would always regret. Not for his sake but for Annie’s. Rage had replaced all semblance of rationality and the fist was at De Roché’s face before the man saw it coming. Although in that moment Doug believed De Roché deserved what he got, it was the wrong thing to do under any circumstance.
De Roché recovered nobly from the blow, however, picking himself up off the floor and wiping the blood from his mouth. He opened the liquor cabinet, poured himself a shot of some expensive amber liquor and downed it in a single swallow, his sharp, canny eyes never leaving Doug’s. Doug stood like a statue, fists clenched at his sides. He could not even bring himself to feel pity for De Roché, just more rage and frustration that such an unfeeling creature could be possessed with such maddening influence.
“By the way, Douglas,” De Roché said unflinching. “Annie’s not to know of our little . . . deal.”
“Deal?” Doug said with incredulity. “I’ve made no deals, you sick bastard, and I never will. Especially when it comes to my children.”
“I thought I’d made it clear that this is not about you, Douglas. Annie will bear a child. This is not debatable. And it does not matter with whom. You are only a minor player in this little drama that exists between Annie and her father. Just remember, if Annie learns of our conversation today, I will kill you. Regardless of Annie’s feelings, I will squash you like a bug. Annie’s playing the part now with her newfound freedom, abandoning her privileged life here, being the rebel and all, the tortured artist. I tolerate her behavior, although I don’t understand it. But make no mistake. Annie is my girl. She always has been and she always will be. She has a responsibility to this family that she’s too blinded to see right now, but she will eventually, trust me, she will, they always do. I believe this thing she has for you and the bohemian lifestyle you two have chosen is just a temporary distraction, and if it turns out that it’s not, that I’m wrong, well, the world is not large enough for you to hide her from me. I will find you and I can promise you, when I do, you’ll beg for mercy before you die.”
That’s when Doug had taken Annie away from De Roché, away from all the money and privilege. Away from the sickness that infected De Roché and all that he surveyed. And Doug had remained defiant right up until the final moment. His defiance, however, could not drive away the fact that Annie was De Roché’s daughter and that he would always have to deal with the reality of it. De Roché was not a man to be fooled with, Doug knew. He might be power mad, he might even be insane, but it was of little consequence, for the man had the clout to accomplish nearly any task. Doug was maddeningly sure of that simple fact.
Nonetheless Doug had heeded De Roché’s admonition; he had never told Annie of the conversation he’d had with her father concerning their future child. It wasn’t because he was afraid of De Roché. He wasn’t, despite the fact that De Roché had threatened his life. He was more concerned with Annie’s stability. How in the world would she have been able to handle such knowledge? Although Annie possessed great intelligence, enormous strength of character and undeniable talent, there was something hidden inside her complexities that baffled him, even frightened him. Sometimes he saw things in her eyes; a dark and fluttering pr
esence that in a very real sense mirrored Doug’s own inner demons. Coincidence or something else? He never wanted to think about that. When Annie was up and on an even keel her strength could lift the earth but when she was down she brought the world down with her. Doug suspected that her emotional highs and lows had everything to do with her former life as Édouard De Roché’s only child. Now he was afraid he’d waited too long, and that disclosing her father’s desire to possess her firstborn might destroy her. But the true heart of Doug’s fear was that his years of silence would bear evidence to some sort of complicity between him and her father. But isn’t that what De Roché had been banking on all along? The man might be insane. He was by no means stupid.
After marrying Doug, Annie had been ready and willing to leave De Roché’s lair for good. She was eager to be free of her father and his influence. Or so she’d said. The old man had gone nearly mad with grief on the day his daughter had left his fold as the wife of Douglas McArthur, jockeying and positioning, trying everything within his enormous power spectrum to win her back. And Doug had taken a perverse kind of pleasure in seeing it; ever aware that his world could come tumbling down at any moment and the last laugh might very well be at his expense. Annie had been adamant, however, repeatedly insisting that nothing her father could do or say would change her mind; she was, after all, in love with Douglas McArthur and that was a place she was quite happy to be in.
“But he’s a carpenter!” De Roché railed with equal amounts of fury and loathing. “And you’re going to live in the woods in a half completed wood-frame house!” Doug had been working on the house prior to their marriage and that’s where he and Annie intended to settle down, at least for the time being.
“Jesus was a carpenter,” Annie reminded her father. “It’s a noble profession. Besides, I like it in the woods. Doug and I will be happy there.”
“Happy?” De Roché said as if the word tasted foul on his tongue. “Living like common trailer park trash? What makes you think that happiness is an inalienable right? You’ll change your tune,” he admonished his daughter. “You’ll come crawling back when you realize you have nothing, when you need a fix of what only daddy can provide.”
But Annie hadn’t changed her tune. It had been almost ten years since that terrible day and Doug was as amazed as De Roché that he and Annie were still together and vital. There was some part of Doug that had always expected Annie would some day come to her senses and go back to her sheltered and privileged life. And now, it had taken the death of her mother to accomplish the deed. Poor Rachael, she’s the one who’d suffered because of her husband’s perversions, hadn’t she?
Loyal wife, keeper of terrible secrets.
Now she was dead and De Roché was calling in all his debts.
Annie was being forced back into De Roché’s sick world. And Doug knew why, and he was almost crazy with grief over it. As he’d said would happen, De Roché had somehow found out about Annie’s pregnancy and he’d sent those assholes to root them out, to frighten them into going back. Doug was trying to convince himself that at least Annie would be safe behind the walls of De Roché Manor. No harm would come to her until after the baby came. He was reasonably sure of that. He wasn’t quite so sure, however, about his own chances for survival. What he should do is deliver Annie, then get away as quickly as possible, disappear, begin looking into De Roché’s life, his past, find out everything he could about the man and his associations. From where he stood right now, there didn’t seem to be any other choice. He should have been doing it all along instead of blissfully loving Annie and ignoring De Roché’s admonitions. Now he was sorry he’d become so complacent. Annie was an heiress to one of the largest financial dynasties in the history of the United States. How did he think that their lives could ever be normal? The years had almost made him forget De Roché’s threats. Big mistake. Now Doug needed to remember if he was going to survive. If he got moving now perhaps there would be time enough before the baby came to figure out what the hell was going on and rectify the problem.
Chapter 3
In a room beneath an ancient cathedral, a telephone rang. The Jesuit priest in the simple black robe and Roman collar turned away from the altar at which he had been praying and stared at the ringing telephone as if it were something not of this world. Carefully he tucked the object which he had been clutching tightly in his praying fists into the side pocket of his robe. This was only the third time in as many years that this particular phone had rung. The telephone number was unpublished and there were only a dozen people in the world who knew it. After the third ring, the monk got to his feet and picked it up.
“Yes?” he asked.
“I apologize for breaking protocol,” the voice on the line said, “but we have an emergency situation and I thought it important that I speak to you directly.” The caller was female and she sounded winded and overwrought.
The monk hesitated for a long moment before replying. “What is the code?” he asked. He would never acknowledge his identity unless the code was repeated exactly as he knew it; exactly as they all knew it. To do so would be to violate the most sacred of all oaths.
The woman on the line recited a seven digit code. It was merely a series of numbers, like those on a lottery ticket. There was no deep or hidden significance to the sequence. The odds were one hundred and thirty-five million to one that the number could be randomly selected. Although the monk did not recognize the voice, he was not surprised. For security purposes, the Order met infrequently, usually only if there was an emergency, and their meetings were always held in the greatest secrecy and in the most remote places. As priests swear oaths of celibacy, so these members had sworn a long ago pledge against amity, understanding that any collusion, however casual, could mean the Order’s destruction. It had been more than a year since the monk had spoken to another member of the organization.
Finally he said, “Yes, the number is correct. To whom am I speaking?”
“Lucy,” the voice replied. The name was a pseudonym, of course. All members of the Order used pseudonyms.
“Ah, yes, Lucy,” the monk said. “Tell me, what is this emergency situation you spoke of a moment ago? What is so important that you needed to break security protocol?”
“The chosen ones are in danger.”
The monk’s heart began to race. “Tell me exactly what you mean by this? Be very specific.”
“This morning their home was destroyed. They were driven out and pursued by men with guns.”
“I want to know how this could have happened—”
“Sir, I believe the attack was organized from within the Order. The attackers had information that could only have come from protected sources.”
“These are very serious allegations, young woman.”
“Several of the attackers were killed. The police presence was so strong that we could not get close enough to identify them without raising suspicion. Their bodies were taken to the city morgue. But a source has informed me that the bodies have already been removed by federal agents. It is likely that they were hired professionals and most likely unidentifiable.”
There was a long silence on the line before the monk spoke again. His hand on the telephone was slick with sweat and trembling slightly. “Federal agents?” he said. “I do not understand why federal agents are involved.”
“We need to talk, sir. Face to face.”
“Dear God, we cannot afford to lose control of this situation. Are you aware of the traitor’s identity?”
“I have an idea, but I think we should meet privately to discuss details.”
“Yes, of course, you will arrange a flight for this very afternoon.”
“It has already been taken care of.”
“Have you talked to anyone else?”
“No.”
“It is vital that you do not.”
“I understand. But there is something else.”
“Yes?”
“The Collector has resurfaced.�
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There was a long silence on the line before the monk replied. “Dear God.”
“Last night a family in coastal New Hampshire died in a very mysterious way,” Lucy explained. “Again federal agents were heavily involved and details are sketchy. No statements have been issued. But my sources are reliable.”
“You are certain of the Collector’s presence?”
“There is no mistake. He left his calling card.”
“Written in the ancient language?”
“Yes.”
“Was there anyone . . .?”
“Taken? Yes. A six-year old girl.”
The monk was suddenly speechless. His heart began to race and his tongue seemed to swell in his mouth. “What was her name?”
“Ariel.”
“Lion of God.” The monk expelled the words like a breath. “Could this be the one we have been waiting for?”
“Perhaps this next bit of information will lend a clue,” Lucy said.
“Yes, please go on.”
“Along with his signature he left the image of a symbol.”
“A symbol?”
“Burned onto the wall beneath the words.”
“Dear God, it’s true.” The priest did not have to ask what the symbol was. He put his hand in the pocket of his robe and felt the object there. It was vibrating, and although the sensation was slightly uncomfortable he did not remove his hand. “The prophecy is coming to pass,” he said. “This is the beginning.”
“Yes, father. I believe it is.”
The priest heaved a heavy sigh. “Things will move quickly from here on out. Understand me, we must not let the chosen ones fall into the wrong hands. It could be the end of . . . everything. The time of darkness has never been closer.”
“Action has already been taken,” Lucy said. “Their progress is being monitored as we speak.”
Soul Thief (Blue Light Series) Page 3