Dark Angel (14 page)

Read Dark Angel Online

Authors: Eden Maguire

‘Hey, Oliver. I guess you’re looking for Cristal?’ Daniel asked in passing.

The kid was shorter and slighter than him, preppy looking in white button-down shirt and loafers and seeming kind of lost and out of place here on the ranch. He didn’t answer, as if his mind were on other things.

‘She’s in the studio,’ Daniel told him and walked on with the dogs.

‘So where’s Grace?’ I asked, hurrying to keep pace. The kiss had stayed on my lips, stolen my breath, made me shake all over. My question about my friend was meant to steady me so that I could focus on something else.

‘In the house. I’ll take you.’

Considering he was the one who’d just landed the kiss, Daniel had suddenly turned a whole lot cooler. But then we were entering between the sliding doors of the main block and Zoran was in the hallway, stooping to greet the nameless dogs, their images multiplied in the angled, floor-to-ceiling mirrors. I guessed this meant that Daniel was back on duty.

‘Tania, good to see you!’ Zoran made up for the change in Daniel with the broadest of smiles, the warmest of greetings. He was dressed down in a black T-shirt and jeans, with the lower half of the angel tattoo on display. ‘I was hoping you could be persuaded to visit us again.’

‘Hi.’ Here he was, the iconic figure from over two decades of rock music, the face from album covers, posters and magazines, meeting me for the third time and treating me like an old friend.

‘Don’t worry, I’m not giving any Aztec lectures today,’ he grinned as he handed the dogs over to Daniel and we walked into the elevator. ‘You don’t have to fake an interest.’

‘Oh, I wasn’t faking,’ I protested, pulling myself together. ‘I mean, how many people do I know who own priceless pieces of ethnic art?’

‘Ha!’ He seemed pleased. ‘You came on a good day. We’re having another party – a celebration.’

‘I know. Daniel told me.’

‘This time I only invited my staff and their close friends.’ Zoran paused to study the two gold charms hanging from a slim chain around my neck. One was in the shape of a heart (a birthday gift from Orlando), the other a crucifix studded with blood-red garnets which had belonged to my dad’s grandmother back in Romania. ‘Pretty,’ he said dismissively as we exited the lift and walked along the familiar main corridor. ‘Are you wearing a swimsuit? No, of course not – how would you know to bring one when you left the house this morning?’

He’d no sooner thought of it than Cristal was emerging from a side room and Zoran was ordering her to find me a costume before he went on towards his private cinema.

‘Actually, I’m looking for Grace,’ I hurriedly got in before Cristal put her arm around my waist and waltzed me off through another side door.

‘Swimsuit first,’ she insisted. She was wearing a short azure chiffon robe over her own two-piece. The neckline was studded with square turquoise stones set in silver that looked expensive. When she caught me looking at them, she smiled modestly and said, ‘Not genuine.’

‘I didn’t think they were,’ I said, again too quickly to sound natural. I told myself that those stones were one hundred per cent the real deal.

The small room we’d entered was lined with closets and full-length mirrors.

Opening one of the doors, Cristal invited me to take my pick among a rack of swimsuits and poolside robes.

‘White could be your colour,’ she suggested.

‘Or silver. You have wonderful dark hair and dark skin tones. You’re like a glossy, elegant bird – did anyone tell you? Anyway, take a good look. I’ll come back in ten minutes, OK?’

In spite of the feeling that events were sweeping me along in a direction I hadn’t expected, I found myself acting like a child in a candy store, wide-eyed and greedy. I mean, these outfits were to die for, especially the shoes that I found lined up on a rack inside the closet – Grecian-style sandals in white, gold and silver, soft kid-skin ballet pumps in aquamarine, crimson and yellow. I chose the shoes first – silver Grecian ones that laced high up my calves – then a sea-green bikini held together at the hip and neck with metal clasps in the shape of intertwined dolphins, and last of all a shimmering silver robe, also with a Grecian styling. I was wearing them all and experimenting with twisting my hair on to the top of my head when Cristal glided silently back into the room, together with Grace.

I saw Grace’s reflection in the mirror and swung quickly round. ‘Finally!’ I cried. ‘I’ve been calling you all day. Where were you?’

‘Here,’ she said, the smallest of frowns creasing her brow. ‘What are you doing, Tania? Why are you here?’

‘I came to see you. Daniel brought me.’

‘Oh, Daniel – cool.’ The frown stayed, the kind that suggested she’d lost something and wasn’t sure where to search. It seemed she was ready for the party, dressed in a short robe patterned with big white daisies on a green and yellow background over a plain white one-piece costume. Her feet were bare, her toenails painted shell pink. ‘Actually, I was looking for Ezra,’ she said.

Cristal the fixer stepped forward to soothe her. ‘Why, honey, he’s working – remember?’

‘Working,’ Grace echoed. ‘I want him to be with me for my big celebration.’

‘He’ll be here soon,’ Cristal promised before leaving Grace and me to chat.

The door slid smoothly behind her and we were alone.

Straight away I took both of Grace’s trembling hands in mine. ‘Grace, I’ve been out of my mind worrying about you. How long have you been here? Did you stay the night?’

‘Take it easy, Tania.’ Twisting her hands free, she began to pace petulantly around the windowless room. ‘I need to see Ezra.’

‘Sure, I know you do. Grace, listen to me. What about your parents? You can’t just tell them a big fat lie about Tarsha’s place and come up here instead, not after the kind of week you just put them through.’

‘Leave me alone. I know what I’m doing,’ she mumbled, shaking her head as she tried to find a catch or a handle that would open the door.

‘That’s the point – it’s not safe to leave you alone!’ I cried. ‘That’s why I’m here. I came to tell you, you should come home with me, try to sort out this mess.’

Grace took no notice whatsoever. ‘What did Cristal mean Ezra’s working?’

‘He has a job, I guess. They all work for Zoran, don’t they?’

‘He never mentioned a job.’ Finally discovering that there was no catch or door handle, Grace made a fist and thumped the glass. ‘What am I supposed to do while he’s working?’

‘What are any of us supposed to do when we visit here?’ I asked. I began to feel it was like trying to catch the attention of a very small, tired child. ‘We sit around and wait for the entertainment – the party, the gig or whatever – to begin. Anyway, what’s this about a celebration?’

‘It’s a big day for me,’ she said vaguely, hovering by the door as if she still expected Ezra to walk in.

‘Grace, we need to talk. Do you hear me? Am I getting through?’

She swung away from the door and drifted over to the closet, where she ran her fingers along the hangers which clicked together and swayed. When she turned back it was with a new, unexpected expression – one of high, childish enjoyment that lit up those grey eyes and brought a flush to her cheeks. ‘Oh, Tania, isn’t it just so cool here? There’s an infinity pool and a cinema room—’

‘I know – I saw that, remember.’

‘Last night Ezra took me up to a telescope on the roof of the studio. We sat for hours and looked at the sky.’

‘Cool. Did the shooting stars put on another display especially for you?’

Obviously Grace missed my sarcasm. ‘He helped me understand the movement of the planets.’

‘Will you stop talking to me about planets! Focus on what’s actually happening here. Grace, I don’t even recognize you any more – it’s like suddenly you’re a different person.’

‘Ezra taught me about Mars and Neptune. And afterwards, we swam naked in the pool, just the two of us. It was so dark and silent under the stars. Then we walked up the mountain and Ezra made love to me – the most perfect, magical love-making …’

I put my hands to my ears. ‘Grace, don’t tell me. I don’t want to hear.’

‘Why not? You’re my friend. Why shouldn’t I share with you the most wonderful thing that ever happened to me?’

‘Because … Jude!’ I reminded her helplessly.

As I said his name the door slid open and Ezra came in. His dark hair fell forward across one eye, he wore a couple of days’ beard, a crumpled T-shirt, frayed jeans and bare feet, yet still he managed to look totally hot. Grace ran to him and flung her arms around his neck.

He kissed her then extricated himself, holding her tightly by the hand while he greeted me. ‘Hey, Tania. The other guests are here,’ he told me. ‘It’s time to party.’

Zoran’s infinity pool was hidden away from the main complex, built on a ledge overlooking the high peaks of the Bitterroot Range. The pool was as luxurious as you would expect, with a large hot tub bubbling on one side, but it was the panoramic view that took your breath away.

Black Eagle Lodge stood at around 8,000 feet. From here we looked out at snow-capped mountains reaching 14,000 feet, where the ice never melts and the clouds meet the land in luminous banks that take your eye higher still, above even the misty violet mountains into an intense blue canopy. Beneath it, the jagged peaks roll on, layer after layer, growing fainter, as far as you can see.

‘Awesome, huh?’ Daniel sought me out and joined me on the terrace beside the pool.

‘But not good for someone with vertigo,’ I told him. If I moved any closer to the edge, my head would start to spin and my knees go weak for sure.

He took up a protective position between me and the sheer drop down the mountain. ‘I’d forgotten that about you. But don’t worry, I won’t let you fall.’

I never discussed my fear of falling with you in the first place, I thought. Why does this keep on happening with you people?

Daniel’s smile was serene. ‘Actually, this is my favourite place. I sit here evenings and watch the sun go down.’

‘It’s a big, big space,’ I murmured. Totally awesome was what it was. With my back to the party guests and with guitar music playing low in the background, there was a moment of perfect, immense silence before a short yelp and a splash behind me broke it. When I turned, I saw that someone had plunged into the pool and was swimming underwater, his body pale and fluid. A second guest came to the pool edge, ready to dive, then a third and a fourth. Soon a dozen people were swimming, laughing and fooling in the deep-blue water. Tanned bodies plunged and vanished, dripping heads and shoulders soon emerging out of the depths, plunging again and kicking up spray in the faces of people standing nearby.

‘You want to swim?’ Daniel asked amid the lighthearted cries of protest.

I shook my head. ‘Thanks, I like what I’m looking at right now.’

‘The sun sets over Carlsbad Mountain, which is the highest peak in the range,’ Daniel explained, coming behind me to get into my line of vision. He wrapped one arm around my waist to keep me safe then pointed with the other hand. The close contact brought the same shiver down my spine as the earlier kiss. But I picked out the mountain he meant. It had a conical peak and glaciers running in thin white stripes from the summit. ‘On a clear day you see Carlsbad turn fiery red. The sun hits the peak and sinks behind it like a stone.’

‘You’re so busy with the mustangs and whatever else you do out here for Zoran, I’m surprised you find time to watch the sun set.’ Take it back to boring, bland, everyday stuff; don’t get lost in Daniel’s word picture, his soft voice, his hand resting now on your shoulder.

‘That’s the thing about Black Eagle Lodge – there’s always time.’

‘To party?’ I forced myself to step away, turning to two guys playing guitar under an awning at the far side of the pool and recognizing them as the guitarists from the Heavenly Bodies gig. They were both in their thirties with dark hair curling over the collars, giving them an artistic, perhaps Romany look, which figured considering Zoran’s background.

Today, for this intimate gathering, there were no electric guitars and big sound system, only acoustic instruments, which sounded mellow, the notes floating up into a clear blue sky. Guests sat drinking and chatting at nearby tables – I noticed Lewis sitting at one of them with Cristal and Aaron’s preppy, fair-haired replacement, Oliver. As yet there was no sign of Grace and Ezra, I noticed.

The host was absent too, though this didn’t surprise me. From past experience, I knew that Zoran favoured a big entrance after everyone had gathered.

‘If you won’t swim, how about something to eat?’ It was Daniel again, determined to take care of me and be a good host among strangers. He took my hand and led me down steps to a lower wooden deck where there was already a full-blown barbecue, steaks sizzling and big bowls of fruit punch being served from a bar built into the rock. ‘No?’ he asked as he felt me hesitate.

‘No, thanks.’

‘Then back to the music,’ he suggested, retracing our steps up to the pool.

And now here was Grace, with Ezra at her side. She had a drink in her hand and still the scary expression of hyper-delight on her face, deep in conversation with Cristal, with Lewis, with everyone who would pay her any attention as she swayed to the music and tilted and spilled her drink until Ezra took it from her. Spotting me across the pool, she threw her arms wide and cried, ‘Hey, Tania, let’s dance!’

‘Later,’ I told her.

‘Now!’ she insisted, still raising her voice across the water and attracting attention. ‘Loosen up, dance with me.’

Ezra put down the drink and wrapped his arm around her waist, partly to steady her, partly – it seemed to me – to take control. He spoke into her ear and right away she dropped the manic behaviour, turning her back and forgetting me completely.

I watched from a distance, wondering how come Grace was drunk so early in the evening and should I step in to help her sober up?

‘She’s OK,’ Daniel assured me. ‘Ezra will take care of her.’

I wasn’t convinced, but I was distracted by more diving and splashing and then by Cristal’s new guy, who stood up suddenly and walked to the sheer drop at the edge of the terrace, seeming to stretch his arms as if he meant to dive into space. Teetering on the brink, he bent his knees and crouched forward until suddenly Cristal appeared at his side, said something and the blond boy straightened up. Without a word he walked back to the table, sat down and stared straight ahead.

Other books

The One That Got Away by Bethany Chase
Life or Death by Michael Robotham
The Seek by Ros Baxter
Songs of Love and War by Santa Montefiore
Just Friends by Sam Crescent
Dark Sky (Keiko) by Mike Brooks
Kingmaker: Broken Faith by Clements, Toby