Dead Radiance (10 page)

Read Dead Radiance Online

Authors: T. G. Ayer

A gasp of surprise escaped my lips. I froze. The sound was way too loud. My eyes flicked to the locked door and I tensed, holding my breath as I waited. Minutes later I expelled a stale breath, at last certain that no one had heard me. I turned back to my discovery: a writing tablet filled with translations tucked in with the rest of the odd collection.

The tablet gripped my attention and curiosity, promising unlimited help in learning the strange script. I'd never had the patience to learn languages, always scraping by with a C or D, but this language came so easily to me. The words held a magnetism not unlike the beautiful and mysterious face of the Valkyrie Brunhilde.

The more I read, the more I understood the script. Before long, I found myself correcting Aidan's scribbled translations, uncovering the story of the Valkyries who served the All-Father Odin in Valhalla. I yawned and rubbed my eyes as the ancient words blended together in a blur. As much as I wished I could continue through the night, I had to get to bed. I barely got much sleep these days anyway and I had to admit I needed some rest.

But the pile of papers still beckoned.

Skimming through just one last time, I dislodged an old newspaper article, which fluttered to the table. I handled it with tender care, and when it crinkled and crackled, I ground to a halt, deathly afraid it would crumble into a pile of dust within my fingers. Searching through my desk drawer, I withdrew a plastic sleeve and slid the article inside. Protected by the plastic, it was less fragile now, less chance that I would destroy it. I lifted it to the light and tried to read the fading type.

Dated eighteen years previously, it stated:

The historic town of Hovgårten, Sweden, was a hive of activity this week with what can only be described as the most incredible discovery in Norwegian and Swedish Archaeological history. On revealing its contents the graveside drew the attention of the international press as well as eminent archaeologists from around the world. Although initially suspected to be the remains of a "real" Valkyrie, it has been verified that the skeleton belonged to a warrior princess whose burial was befitting that of the ancient mythological Valkyries.

Dr. Elisabeth Wayne, the overseeing archaeologist for the dig site was quoted as saying: "Although we are disappointed that the remains do not actually belong to a real Valkyrie, we are left with a beautiful specimen and with ancient relics which will enrich the Norwegian and Swedish Archaeological Society."

When asked to confirm the origin of the wings which were also found within the burial site, Dr. Wayne stated that eminent genetic scientist Dr. Geoffrey Halbrook, on loan to NWAS for the duration of this dig, has confirmed the DNA tests have been unable to verify the exact avian species it belongs to. Dr. Wayne believes they most likely belong to some form of ancient and extinct condor.

All items unearthed from the site will be sent to the British Museum for cataloging and preservation. Dr. Wayne and her team are preparing for a large public unveiling of the remains of the warrior princess once all necessary testing and cataloging has been completed.

Blood thrummed in my ears and I forced myself to read the article again, this time slower, going over the words and the name over and over again in case I'd misunderstood it, or was hallucinating, or going crazy.

At last, certain I'd read right, I sat back with a whole new set of questions.

Because eminent genetic scientist Dr. Geoffrey Halbrook was my father.

***

A sheaf of papers accompanied the article, fastened together with a rusted bulldog clip. The large-typed heading proclaimed the document as a "DNA Analysis Report." The pages were filled with scientific code and references, little of which I could understand except what was typed or written in plain English. These margins too were filled with writing. Notes made by three separate writers.

The first set of notes said:

Full DNA testing performed, partial match to human genetic code with minor anomalies. Possibility: Valkyrie DNA present. DNA is viable for further testing and ??

A second stated:

Genetic anomalies confirmed as Valkyrie—no match to any known registered DNA within the international database, across and within all living species. The request forms and receipt-logs confirm Halbrook requested additional samples to be provided.

Question: What was Halbrook's intention for the use of the additional DNA?

Then:

Confirmation from database—Mrs. Irene Halbrook admitted for private IVF procedure. Attended by Dr Halbrook. Suspicious? Could Dr. Halbrook have used the DNA to create a clone or a mutated embryo and implanted it into his wife? Further information required:

Mother's progress during pregnancy and birth, including all blood analysis.

Infant's blood analysis.

Find infant for further testing.

The last set of writing belonged to Aidan.

Halbrook killed in car accident. Not suspicious but unable to confirm. Daughter found through Social Services records. Remained in the United States under state care. Current foster—Custer, Town of Craven. Daughter's name = Brynhildr. Unusual? Risky for Halbrook. Signs of abnormality—none. Dementia—none, although records show regular psychiatric care provided from age 5.

Then a break in the notes. And finally:

Recommendation to terminate—Negative.

***

My lungs struggled for air; my body for breath and sanity. I wound a scarf around my neck, grabbed a thick coat and fled down the stairs and outside into the fresh, biting air. I breathed and it hurt. Blinked and it stung. Tears singed my eyes as tepid liquid hit frigid cold air.

My sneakers whacked the sidewalk. I moved, unsure, uncaring where my feet led me.

A million agonizing thoughts haunted me. My head burned with treachery and betrayal and lies which had lain in my past, gathering the dust of my ignorance. I was a product of IVF? It didn't make sense. If my parents had gone to such an extent just to conceive a child, why would my mother have abandoned me so quickly? Just because I saw glowing people? I didn't think so. What mother would run from her child just because they were seeing a psychiatrist?

Could Aidan have left the book as a warning? Had he known I'd search his room? Did it even matter right now? Nothing could make the lies easier to accept. Or make me hate him any less.

The article swam before my eyes, though even the memory of it blurred behind the veil of tears. My father's involvement in archeology had been a surprise. Archeology unmistakably connected to the name of a certain warrior maiden turned Valkyrie.

I might have appreciated the name more had I been aware of its origins. Aware of its true meaning. Ugh! Who was I kidding? I still disliked my name. Still wouldn't allow the general public to know it. It brought to mind images of plump women, horned helmets, and braids of bright red hair splayed across generous bosoms.

No. I still hated my name.

But my name was the least of my concerns right now. What had my father been up to, tampering with DNA from an ancient skeleton?

The handwritten notes on the DNA reports, filled with vague facts and wild innuendo, raised questions. My father's notes aside, whoever had written before Aidan had fanned a fire of suspicion. Who was the person who viewed my father's activities with such mistrust?

Aside from my father and the mysterious note-maker, it was Aidan's part in this whole fiasco which crawled deep into my heart and festered as I walked. Was his intention to come to Craven to befriend me? To find me and study me? If so, it meant he'd lied from day one with those sexy smiles and hot kisses. The hurt deepened as I recalled the startled expression in Aidan's eyes when he'd first kissed me. Why take our relationship to a personal level when I was no more than a genetic monstrosity?

Anger blinded me. He'd had control of his emotions. He'd damn well known what he'd gotten into. I'd been the total fool, manipulated from the moment he arrived, who'd fallen for his quirky smile, his knee-melting charm and his cool biker-dude personality.

But they were all lies. Beautiful, torturous lies.

Who was Aidan Lee then? And why the hell would he expect to "terminate" me? I wasn't dangerous, for heaven's sake—not that I knew of anyway. Judging by my inability to help the people I knew were dying, I didn't seem much use to anyone either.

I could have stewed all night, but the high-pitched keen of whistling broke into the depths of my thoughts. Up ahead, a bunch of jocks horsed around. One of them sneered at me and pointed, his shoulders stiff and straight. His friends turned their heads in my direction and stared. Just my luck to run into a bunch of North Wood jerks with far too much time on their hands after school. On the prowl for something to do and they'd found me.

I recognized the park around me, where I'd sat on the swings watching the boys at play in happier days. Where I'd first seen Brody glow.

The little green patch, dotted with kids' play equipment, nestled within a stand of russet black gums and river birches whose leaves had begun to carpet the ground at their trunks. The trees lined a paved pathway, little signboards announcing the names of each variety of tree.

The pebbled pathway led to a small bubbling stream and was a popular walking spot. But on a grey afternoon at dusk the path was empty of laughter and barking and safety.

The boys spread out and paced toward me, the gathering shadows hiding their eyes, hiding their intentions. A quick glance behind me confirmed I was alone with no one close, no one who could help. Not even the failing light could hide the stark reality.

I was surrounded.

 

Chapter 12

 

They circled, eyes gleaming, cruel. They didn't resemble boys. The feral expressions on their faces said it all: I was meat and they were hungry.

I rocked on the balls of my feet, waiting, unsure what would happen if I ran. They were fast. Running track at school had blessed me with stamina, and I was strong too. But no match for these beefy linebackers who bulked up in the gym every day.

Three to one. Those could have been good odds if I were a trained martial artist, but I was never much of a contact fighter. Too afraid I'd get hit, I'd close my eyes during sparring and get hit anyway every time.

My luck pretty much sucked for the self-defense tricks we'd been taught too. No keys with which to jab at eyes. No heels to grind into insteps. No mace to spray.

I retreated, a few steps at a time.

By the time I'd figured out what they were up to it was too late. They'd forced me down the path into the shadowy cover of the trees.

"All alone with no biker-boy to protect you? Big mistake," one of them snarled, his voice dripping revulsion.

Pete. My memory came up empty for a surname. Who really cared, when jocks were jocks anyway?

"Hey guys, how about some freak meat?" He grinned at his friends, short dreadlocks quivering like spitting vipers.

The others grunted, a rabid pack of wolves, just following the leader. Man reduced to mere animal by his basest need: desire for dominance. Or perhaps it was just plain boredom, nothing deeper, from boys who always got their way because they were popular and sporty. Boys adored by all the girls at North Wood. All the girls besides the freak, that is.

I turned my head and fear dug jagged nails into my gut. One of the boys, the red-headed, freckle-faced Chuckie, caught my eye. He smiled. Reassuring me, as if this were just a game, and they'd soon get bored and run off to clean up for dinner. Not likely.

The third guy smashed the last bit of his Snickers bar into his mouth, flicking the paper into the trees. He wiped his mouth off, hands quivering, eyes searching the path, sweat dotting his forehead.

"Nice girls don't take walks in the park alone, do they, freak?" asked Pete, a predatory glint in his eye. "Hey boys, the freak's not a nice girl. What say we have a little fun with her?"

Laughter rang out, cruel laughter, dangerous laughter. My heart thudded in my chest as fear flooded my veins; my muscles threatened to tighten up on me.

The blow came out of nowhere; granite knuckles slammed into my cheek, bone glancing off bone in the breath of a moment. Distracted by Snickers, I'd missed when Pete closed the distance enough to land the punch. I hit dirt, too shocked to do much else besides throw my hands out to soften my landing. I moaned; lightning streaks of pain forked through my arms and side.

The encounter with the ground also jarred my cheek. My eyes watered and for a few seconds Pete was a smudgy yellow and red blur. I blinked rapidly to clear them of the watery haze, to clear my head of the fury. Anger wouldn't help me at all. Consciousness, awareness were my tools.

I struggled to rise but Pete landed a kick to my gut that crushed the breath out of my lungs. Had I eaten lunch like a normal person, the meal would have been spewed across the leaves by now. My breath rasped and twisted, anticipating smashed ribs, or diabolical internal pain. But the mild ache of Pete's sucker punch was all that remained.

 I was aware of Pete's teeth, impossibly white; he could have been in a toothpaste commercial.

Laughter echoed around me. These were regular guys who would someday have families and respectable jobs. Yet they assaulted innocent girls. Beat them up like they were sacks of grain. From their confidence, this wasn't their first attack. Were they seasoned bullies who beat their victims to a pulp? Or seasoned rapists?

Other books

Hunting of the Last Dragon by Sherryl Jordan
Broken Build by Rachelle Ayala
The Notorious Nobleman by Nancy Lawrence
Charnel House by Graham Masterton
Blood at Bear Lake by Gary Franklin
Birdcage Walk by Kate Riordan
Crystal Rebellion by Doug J. Cooper