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Legacy: The Niteclif Evolutions, Book 1

Page 22

by Denise Tompkins


  “Listen, Maddy. He’s still back at the house rowing with Brylanna and Da. Ma’s taken his side, saying that Da and Brylanna were awful to yeh and this after hearing Bahlin loves yeh, so yeh’ve divided the family whether yeh want to or no. The least yeh can do is afford me a moment of yehr time, right?”

  Cheeky little brat had his brother’s habit of speaking in a heavier brogue when he was upset. One thing Brylanna hadn’t touched on in her let’s-make-Maddy-look-like-a-chump speech was how well guilt worked on me.

  “You’ve got ninety seconds, junior. Starting now.” I stuck my numb hands in my pants pockets and refused to admit to either of us how much I’d rather have had this conversation in his car with the heater on full blast.

  Calming visibly now that he had my attention, Aiden said, “Bahlin is crazy about you, Maddy. He might not have gone about this the right way, but he’s a good man. He’s bucked the Council for you. He admitted he’s taken you to his lair, which is nearly as serious as the wedding vows between dragons, and he’s said he’ll take your side in the case of some murder you’ve committed. And have I mentioned he seriously loves you?” the teen said. “Can you not cut him a little slack for where he is and not hold it against him how he got there?”

  Cheeky. Brat. I glared at him, my eyelid twitching again. I slapped my hand over my eye. Great poker face, Niteclif. Why don’t you just take out a billboard that says “Hello, I’m frustrated.” Geeze. But all the internal dialogue in the world couldn’t change what Aiden said. How did a young guy get so smart? It irked me that he had some valid points. Unfortunately my pride was as wounded as my heart, and I wasn’t going to roll over on this. I’d already tried the rolling over, under and around with Bahlin, and it had gotten me nothing but screwed in every sense of the word.

  “Look, Aiden, I know you’re trying to look out for Bahlin, and I respect that sense of loyalty. I do,” I said when he just looked at me blandly. “And you don’t know me so you’ll have to trust that what I’m about to tell you is the truth. Bahlin has pulled some serious offenses in my book. I’ve ended long-term relationships for far less than what he’s done to me in a week. He had the opportunity to be honest from the outset, and he chose not to. He chose, Aiden,” I said, taking a step closer to him, eye-level with his chin. The kid was going to be as big as his brother.

  Aiden’s eyes flashed to light blue, and he slammed his eyelids closed trying to mask his emotion. But it was too late. I’d seen the switch. It dawned on me that I didn’t know him well enough to know whether or not he’d cause me harm. After all, dragons were monsters and Aiden was a dragon, ergo he was a monster. Loose logic, but there you have it. Right now I had zero faith in the monsters.

  “Look, just leave me alone, okay?” I said, stepping around him cautiously. I walked down the road, looking back over my shoulder every few paces.

  He leaned back on the hood of his little car and stared at me. “So you won’t forgive him?” he called after me. His voice suddenly sounded so young and unsure, like whatever answer I gave now would help him develop his view of one part of the world. I didn’t want that kind of responsibility. My burdens were heavy enough without it.

  I slowed, hating myself a little more, and turned back toward him. I wasn’t going to lie to him. If I’d learned anything in all of this it was that honesty sucks but it was better to just get it out and over with, and that being soft will get you taken advantage of because it was often considered being weak. Being a truthful hard-ass would bruise him now but it would hurt him less in the long run.

  “Will I forgive Bahlin? Not yet,” I said softly, “and maybe not ever.”

  Another set of headlights topped the hill, and I stepped to the edge of the road and held out a hand. An older woman pulled up next to me and, thankfully, she was a complete stranger.

  “Going to town?” she asked cheerfully, taking in the sight of me and Aiden and probably drawing the wrong conclusions. I didn’t care. If she’d get me out of here, she could think whatever she wanted about me.

  “I’m going as far as you’ll take me,” I said, conscious not to give my final destination directly within earshot of Aiden. With one last look at Bahlin’s brother I got into the woman’s truck and yanked the door shut. I buckled my seatbelt and stuck my hands in my jacket pockets. My right hand bumped into a heavy object. Wrapping my fingers around the smooth edges, I drew my hand slowly out of the pocket. The gold doubloon glinted merrily in the light from the dashboard.

  The woman was going to Uxbridge on the outer West End of London. I rode along in silence, answering her questions early in the ride and feigning sleep later. She clucked over my disheveled state, skillfully asking what had happened without asking what had happened. When I finally said I was exhausted she let the conversation drift, turning on the radio for company and allowing me to rest. She roused me from my false slumber when we reached the center of the borough. I thanked her for her kindness, and she dismissed my thanks with a heartfelt wish for good fortune to me. Thinking on this, I asked her if she would trade me a few pounds for the gold doubloon and she nearly fell out of the truck in her haste to take me up on my offer. I took her money and left the coin without a second thought. After all, no amount of money was worth the painful reminder.

  I caught the train into the West End of London and switched routes three times to get back to the Pemberton. I knew I’d have to check out of the hotel or face Bahlin, so checking out it was. I made my way into the hotel with a large group of tourists and hoped that I’d maintained my anonymity. I reached Room 2210 and keyed myself in, grateful I’d managed to snag the key card from the messenger bag as I’d packed up in the cave. Foresight or dumb damn luck? Who cared? I moved quickly about the room, deciding to forgo taking my clothes since everything could be replaced when I got home. I grabbed my purse out of the room safe and headed back down to the front of the hotel. I knew the front desk staff saw me when the three of them gathered together to watch me leave the lobby and one of them snatched the phone up, dialing madly. Tattle tales.

  The doorman hailed a cab for me and it had hardly stopped when I crawled in and sat back, content to rest and enjoy the ride to Heathrow. If I could just get out of this forsaken country…

  The cabby shook me awake and said, “That’ll be eighteen quid even, miss.”

  Disoriented, I dug through my wallet and gave him the fare plus a healthy tip and rushed into the airport. The next flight leaving for New York was in forty-five minutes, so I dashed to the counter, bought the ticket by leaving an arm, a leg and my credit card number, and I ran for the gate. I made it onto the plane with only moments to spare. I walked to my seat, equally grateful and heartbroken. Chaos can reign for all I care. I just need to get back home and start over. I’ll pretend this never happened, repeated through my mind. I was so tired I had a hard time keeping my eyes open for take-off and once we were in the air. I vaguely remember hearing the pilot welcome everyone aboard before sleep took me under with no apologies.

  Chapter Fifteen

  The attendant shook me and asked me to return my chair to its upright position and I complied, feeling the plane begin its descent. Disoriented due to the heavy, dreamless sleep of the last eight hours I rubbed my eyes and reached over to raise the window shade. Dawn had long ago broken over the horizon, and the sky was bright but overcast.

  The pilot’s voice came over the intercom and said, “Thank you for flying with us today, ladies and gentlemen. We’re beginning our final descent into London’s Heathrow airport now. Local time is 10:53 a.m. and the temperature—”

  I didn’t hear anything else after that. I reached up and punched the attendants’ button frantically, looking over the seat-tops for the woman who had told me to raise my seat back. She came down the aisle with brisk, teetering steps, frustrated at my repeated buzzing.

  “Yes?” she asked in her best professional tone, reaching across me and firmly turning the call button off.

  “Why are we landing at Heathrow
?” I demanded, my voice pitched high and slightly crazed. “Why? I bought a ticket to New York!”

  “Ma’am, calm down. This is the flight from New York to London. Seems you slept harder than you thought.” She smiled brightly, no doubt placating the loon.

  “No. No, no, no. I left Heathrow last night,” I insisted, leaning toward her.

  “Is there a problem, Kay?” asked another attendant, this one male. He did his best to look threateningly over Kay’s shoulder, but it was difficult in his little blue vest and jaunty red necktie.

  “No. This young lady just slept harder than she thought and got confused about her destination.”

  I shut up, trying to figure out what to do. I knew I’d left London last night. I knew I had. Wait. What if I’d been dreaming? What if this whole thing was a nightmare? No, I’d fallen for that when I’d met Bahlin, thinking he wasn’t real. I wasn’t going to do this again. I waited until we’d landed and taxied to the gate before I jumped up and opened the overhead bin. If I’d only been dreaming and this was my first trip to London, I’d have carry-on luggage because my first trip had been luggage-heavy. If I hadn’t been dreaming, there would be nothing there. I opened the cover and looked inside. My heart fell: the bin was empty. I sat back down, watching passengers disembark.

  When the plane was empty Kay approached me again, a concerned look on her face. “Do you need help, miss?”

  Yes, I needed help, but it wasn’t the kind she could provide. Regardless of her intent, her chipper kindness made me feel violent, and I knew I needed to get off the plane without any trouble. I shook my head, grabbed my purse and got up, walking slowly up the aisle to the gangway and out through the airport. Reaching Heathrow’s cab queue, I grabbed a taxi and asked the driver to take me to any mid-range hotel, his choice. He looked at me like I’d lost my mind, and I knew he was only about five minutes away from the truth. I was about to lose it. The cabbie tried to make conversation for the first few minutes of the trip and then gave up when he realized I was nearly catatonic. Instead he turned the radio up and sang along to some type of Indie music with a grating beat.

  Twenty minutes later I was standing in the quiet and graceful lobby of the Hardley, though I couldn’t have cared less what it looked like. Checking into a single room, I moved like an automaton and the clerk watched me from the corner of her eye. I suspected I looked frightening but, again, didn’t give a crap.

  I made it to my room and walked in, glancing around woodenly. The room was nice but sterile, with none of the charm and elegance of the Pemberton. I turned the air conditioner down to its lowest setting and stripped off my clothes. The bed was sufficient and that was all I cared about as I folded the covers back and slid under. I huddled with my head under the comforter, my breath heating up the small, enclosed space quickly so it became humid and stifling. Still I was cold. Rolling onto my side, I curled into the fetal position. So this is what rock bottom feels like. I’m much more lucid than I’d hoped for. Oh well. Sleep claimed me without apology, and I slid into its dark embrace with a sense of giddy relief.

  “You’ve really bunged this up, child,” said a deep voice.

  I suspected I was dreaming when I sat up in bed and found a strange man in my room. I looked around and saw the owner of the voice was of medium height with a pipe and a British accent.

  “Who are you?” I asked, rubbing my eyes and yawning. “My dreams—hell, my realities—haven’t had much normalcy to them lately, so you’re a pleasant surprise. Unless… You’re not anything supernatural, are you?”

  The man chuckled and pushed up from the chair he was occupying at the small two-seater Formica table. The sweet scent of his tobacco wafted over me and I inhaled, thinking of my father. He’d smoked a pipe similar to the one the stranger held between his teeth. The man wore a charming three-pieced suit sans jacket, with shirtsleeves rolled up his forearms and the top button of his shirt undone. His shoes were well made but worn. His face was gently lined from laughter, his hair graying slightly at the temples.

  “I’m not familiar to you? I took this form simply to try to be recognizable but it appears I’ve failed. What do you see when you look at me?”

  I hesitated. What the hell. It’s a dream. So I told him what I saw.

  “Very good, though superficial. Now tell me what you see.” He stood very still, almost as if posing for a painting.

  “Your hair is well-cut but in need of a trim, so you haven’t had time to see a barber. You shave yourself because there’s a small knick on your chin that indicates a horizontal swipe of the razor; barbers go top to bottom. Your facial hair is as dark as your head hair and graying in too random a pattern to be died, so I know it’s your natural color.” I took a deep breath and looked even closer. “Your nails are trim, clean and buffed, so you don’t do heavy work with your hands though you’re lean and lightly muscled, so you’re not totally idle, either. Your clothes are well tailored, so you have some form of funds. The pipe you’re gripping between your teeth is well worn, and you speak clearly around it so it’s familiar enough that I believe you smoke it without apology. Your shoes are clean of mud and dirt, so you’re not from the country nor have you walked far in London. Finally, you’ve got the look of a scholar that’s only further enhanced by the wire-rimmed glasses poking out of your vest pocket.” Crap. The Niteclif legacy was alive and well.

  He smiled, puffing away. “Sound familiar?”

  I just stared at him. “If you’re telling me you’re Aloysius, you can just jump right out that window, mister. A three floor drop will hurt but you can’t die twice. I don’t need to be haunted on top of everything else.”

  “But it’s still a long way to the ground and, as you indicated, it could hurt.” He smiled more widely, his eyes twinkling with mischief. “Besides, how’s that for a way to greet your great-granddad, Maddy?”

  If I hadn’t been sleeping I would have pulled a repeat fainting performance, but since I was already out cold, I had nowhere else to go. So I got mad. Throwing the covers off I stalked around the room like a caged lion, staying just out of reach of the man himself. “What the hell? Are you serious? If it’s true and you’re really him, why haven’t you manifested or whatever before now? I could seriously have used you before now, you know. I have been beaten, shot, poisoned, stalked, forced to commit murder, ridden a dragon and had my heart broken in less than a week! You suck as a granddad, Aloysius.”

  My visitor sighed and sat back down in the same chair. His eyes dulled a bit, and he looked tired. “There were lessons you had to learn that were best learned the hard way.” He looked away and whispered, “Except for the heart… For that, I’m sorry.”

  “You saw all of that? Please tell me you and Brylanna are the only peeping Tom’s out there. I can’t take much more of people looking in on my love life, Pops,” I said sarcastically. I threw myself down on the bed and gasped, rolling myself up in the cover. I was still nude. “You sick bastard. Why didn’t you remind me I was naked,” I shrieked.

  “Maddy, I’m only taking the form of Aloysius because it was supposed to be familiar—”

  “Then who in the sweet hell are you?” I yelled, my anger boiling over into rage.

  His form shifted and shimmered and a giant of a man, easily taller than Tarrek, stood in front of me. He wore a thigh-length forest green tunic with rough black pants underneath and a wide leather belt around his waist. His hair was white-blond and shoulder length with a slight wave to it. Over his shoulder he wore a back scabbard in which a sword large enough to be considered a claymore was sheathed. “I’m the first Niteclif, my dear. You may call me Tyr.”

  “As in the Norse god of wisdom, war and justice?” I asked. Why did I know who the hell he was?

  “One and the same,” he said, looking pleased. “I was the first Niteclif, and I am thus charged with helping new Niteclifs transition into their roles with as little heartache as possible.”

  “Yeah, well, you freaking suck at your job.” I huddled
in the comforter and stared at him. I wasn’t sure how much more I could take before I completely lost my tenuous grip on what was left of reality.

  Ignoring my snark, he said, “As you are the first female Niteclif, we’ll learn together how best to suit each other’s individualities. Agreed?”

  “Whatever. I’m tired.” I flopped back on the bed, fully intent on ignoring the crazy apparition in my dream.

  “Do not mock me, Niteclif!” he boomed in an earthquake-inducing voice.

  I jumped and, holding the comforter, stood. “Fine. Then I need your actual help. No more hanging out to see what happens. No more letting the Fates have their way with me, regardless of their Greek affiliations. No more neglect. Your tender mercies are as humane as Bahlin’s.” I shoved a finger in his face. “And let me tell you, I don’t need any more of that shit.”

  “Sit you down, girl,” he growled. Involuntarily my body complied. “Here are the things you’ll need to know at this point. One, I can only come to you in sleep or deep meditation. With your temper I wish you the best of luck with the latter. Two, you will inherit certain gifts from your lineage—language skills, enhanced self-defense, weaponry knowledge, superior logic skills and natural immunity to the sway of the supernatural. You will need a tutor for self-defense and weaponry. Use Bahlin.” I blanched, but he didn’t even pause. “Other skills may develop, but I will not discuss those until they manifest. This way you’re not disappointed or misled in any way. Three, I will help you through the beginning of your tenure and will be available to you at any time during your service as Niteclif. It is my lot. Four, I will not answer questions for you regarding the creation or end of the world, love, investment tips or the manner of your pre-determined death. Period.” He stared at me hard, and I nodded. A Norse god was the icing on Hell’s cake as far as I was concerned, but my impertinence didn’t slow him down. “Five, I may answer other questions for you but never, under any circumstance, will I do your job for you. It’s against the rules, and Odin looks unfavorably on that. Six, I needed you to learn that you have a lot to learn. The path you’ve just navigated was the most circumspect. Are we clear, child?” His voice softened at the last and he looked me over, head to toe.

 

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