Authors: Juliet Dark
You’ve come back to us!
They cried in unison.
You’ve come to let us in!
But already they were fading, just as they had faded in my dream. I reached out to touch one—a young girl with a heart-shaped face and skin mottled like a fawn’s—and my hand went right through her. Another face took her place, emerging out of the dark like a skull bobbing up out of black water.
“How did you do that?” With the man’s voice, the illusion faded. The lights resolved into candles held by my colleagues; the painting was a bucolic landscape framed by two panels painted to look like trees, their branches meeting over the center of the middle panel. The pale, skeletal man was Anton Volkov, his thin, angular face and ash blond hair turned to white by the candle he held.
“I don’t know,” I said, stepping closer to the now lifeless painting—and away from the daunting presence of the Russian studies professor. “I think I may have said an opening spell.”
“A spell alone couldn’t open the door.” He lowered his voice to a whisper and stepped closer so only I would hear him. It was like standing next to a block of ice. Waves of cold emanated from him. “But neither could a doorkeeper open a door where there was no door. This triptych is only a symbol of the real door and yet you were able to open the door to Faerie right here. It was only open for a moment, but I suspect that the real door, the one in the forest, is open now and will remain so until New Year’s Eve. You seem to”—he inclined his head toward my neck and sniffed delicately—“combine the qualities of fairy and witch.”
“I don’t know about that.” I glanced around the room to see if anyone was watching us. What had the rest of the party made of that momentary opening of the door? But if anyone else had seen what Anton Volkov and I had, they weren’t letting on. Most people had been drawn to the buffet, where food and more champagne had been put out. I saw Frank Delmarco talking to Soheila and Liz, Brock and Dory, who were among several townspeople included in the gathering, standing side by side eating mini quiches and gazing at the painting, and, finally, Liam still standing in front of the darkening window talking to a tall woman.
“I’ve been wanting to speak to you,” Professor Volkov said. “I heard you came by my office but left without leaving any message.”
“You weren’t there,” I said, wondering who could have told him I’d been there. The building had seemed deserted. “And I know how busy everyone is during finals week. But yes, I did want to talk to you about Nicky Ballard. Dean Book told me you’ve identified two witches who might have been responsible for the curse. Have you been able to locate their descendants?”
“No, I haven’t had a chance to check the registry in the city. This type of research must be conducted with great sensitivity. If any of their descendants thought their ancestors were being accused of misconduct they could become … angry.”
“But Nicky will turn eighteen in May.”
Although he was already standing too close he edged an inch closer and reached his hand toward mine. “Ah, your passion is …
invigorating!
It makes you glow.”
I snorted and made to step back, but his fingertips had come to rest on my hand. It was the lightest of touches, but it released an icy current that swept through my body. Frozen to the spot, my gaze locked on Anton Volkov’s blue eyes. They were really a beautiful hue—the color of glacial ice.
“Don’t be afraid. I wouldn’t dream of injuring a doorkeeper. I do want to help you with Miss Ballard’s predicament. I could give you the name of the two witches … and I’m sure that someday you would return the favor.”
I moved my lips and found that I could talk, although the sound that came out of my numb lips was as faint as ice settling in a water glass. “Return the favor? How?”
“We needn’t decide right now.” He inhaled deeply, his long patrician nose practically quivering as if I were a glass of very expensive wine. “I wouldn’t ask anything that would go against your … desires.”
I swallowed with difficulty, my throat constricting. Was he asking me to let him drink my blood? “What if this favor … is something I don’t want to do?”
“If you truly don’t want to give what I ask, I won’t insist. I trust you.”
“Why? You’ve only just met me.”
“You’re a doorkeeper. Doorkeepers are always honorable.”
I thought about that for a second. It was true I’d never cheated—on an exam or on a man, unless you considered having sex with an incubus cheating, which I didn’t because I hadn’t realized he was real at the time. And it was also true that I had been “lusting in my heart” after Liam Doyle while nearly engaged to Paul. Liam—where was he anyway? Why hadn’t he come to rescue me from this vampire? I turned my eyes—they were all I could move—toward the window and found him still talking to a tall woman, who, I saw now, was Fiona Eldritch. He was completely focused on her. That’s why he hadn’t come to rescue me.
“You promise that if it’s something I don’t want to do you won’t … force me.”
“I would never force a lady.”
“You won’t
glamour
me?” I asked, recalling the phrase from a recent vampire book I’d read.
He laughed. “I
do
love that expression! But no, I promise, as a gentleman, no
glamouring
. That wouldn’t be sporting.”
I remembered that Liz Book had said that he was a gentleman. On the face of it, it seemed like a win-win situation. I got the information I needed to help Nicky and I didn’t have to do anything that I didn’t
desire
. What could go wrong?
“Okay, it’s a deal. I would shake on it, but you seem to have put some immobility spell on me. I can’t move.”
I was released so suddenly I stumbled into Anton’s arms. He grasped my hand in his hand and squeezed, bowing his head to whisper in my ear two names: Hiram Scudder and Abigail Fisk. Then he was gone, vanished in a frigid gust that fanned my face. I looked around to see if anyone had noticed his precipitous exit, but no one was even looking in my direction. Liam and Fiona were no longer standing by the window—or anywhere else in the room.
I didn’t feel much in a party mood anymore. I made for the door, dodging past cheerful colleagues bent on wishing me a happy holiday and a good winter break. In the lobby I ran straight into Diana Hart, who was standing awkwardly in front of the coatroom, hugging her arms around her thin frame. She started to say something to me, but I cut her off.
“Merry Christmas to you, too, Diana, and a Happy New Year, too.”
I put my hand on the coatroom door and she shrieked, “Don’t go in there! It’s … locked.”
The door did appear to be locked. But, hell, I’d just opened the door to Faerie. What was a coatroom door in comparison? I turned the handle and pressed my shoulder to the door, muttering,
“Ianuam sprengja!”
It opened so suddenly that I fell into the dimly lit room, straight onto a pile of fur … which moved.
I leapt back, remembering the fierce clawed creature I’d glimpsed on my front porch. The fur billowed and leapt … then fell harmlessly to the side. Beneath it lay Fiona and Liam, clothes askew and limbs entangled.
I opened my mouth, but found I had nothing to say. Liam’s eyes, full of guilt, met mine, but before he could say anything I grabbed my coat and fled.
I was halfway across the quad before I realized I’d forgotten my boots. I could feel the snow soaking though the thin soles of my delicate party shoes, but I’d rather have ruined all the shoes in my closet than gone back to Briggs to face Liam Doyle.
Not that I had any right to be angry at him, I reminded myself. I had no claim on him. I
had
a boyfriend—one who was winging his way across the country right now, possibly with a diamond ring in his pocket. I wasn’t angry with Liam, I told myself as I reached the path to the southeast gate, I was angry with myself.
The path was less well shoveled than the ones on the quad—and darker because of the trees overshadowing it. There should have been a security light at the bottom by the gate, but either the timers hadn’t been adjusted to the early twilight yet or it was broken. At least the gate was still open. I could see my street beyond it and even the faint glow of my own porch light. I hurried toward it, wanting nothing more than to be in my own house to nurse my wounds in private. “What an idiot!” I muttered as I strode down the hill. Not only had I let myself develop a schoolgirl crush on Liam Doyle, I’d made a rather vague deal with a vampire! And all for two names that I could have gotten eventually from Dean Book.
A noise behind me cut short my thoughts. It was the same noise I’d heard coming out of Bates Hall: the sound of wings. Could it be Anton Volkov, changed into a bat, come to collect on our deal? I sprang for the gates. Could iron stop a vampire? Or was it fairies who didn’t like iron? Whatever … I was running, spurred on by the beat of wings at my back, trying to remember the spell for averting an attack from above. Was it
Vox Faca naddel nem?
Or
Va fadir nox nim?
“Oh hell,” I shouted within a yard from the gate,
“faca vadum negg!”
Immediately the ground beneath me lurched and I fell into a pothole that hadn’t been there a moment before. My knees and hands slammed onto the broken icy pavement. Something heavy and feathery struck my head. I crouched and tried to cover my face. Claws dug into my skin … then a hand grasped mine. I looked up and found Liam Doyle crouched beside me. The bird—a giant black crow even bigger than the shape I’d seen outside of Bates Hall—beat at his face once and then soared out through the gate, cawing harshly as it disappeared.
“Callie, are you all right?” Liam’s hands were all over me, looking for wounds. There was only one cut on my hand. He tore the sleeve of his shirt—he wasn’t wearing a coat—and wrapped it around my hand
“I’m okay,” I said—but I wasn’t. I was shaking uncontrollably. Liam pulled me to him and wrapped his arms around me. I was shaking too hard to resist. I burrowed into his arms like an animal burrows into its nest. Around us the woods were dark and cold. Who knew what other horrifying creatures they held? I looked up at Liam and saw that his cheek was streaked with blood. I touched the scratch that had missed his eye by the merest centimeter.
“It could have taken your eye out!”
“I couldn’t let it hurt you,” he said fiercely. Then he leaned down and pressed his lips on mine. They were so warm—with the cold and dark creeping closer around us they were like a candle burning in the vast dark forest. I leaned into that heat, hungry for it. His lips opened mine and I felt his heat pouring into me, flooding me, opening something deep inside me, as if his lips had turned a key at the base of my spine and unlocked a door I hadn’t known was locked.
But just as I felt that opening I remembered pushing open the door to the coatroom and finding him with Fiona Eldritch.
I pushed him away.
“Cal—”
“No, don’t.” I got painfully to my feet, my scraped knees stinging in the cold. When I swayed he reached out for me, but I grabbed the gate and he stopped. “Please, you don’t owe me an explanation. I’m practically engaged … and I have to go.”
I backed away from him, still holding on to the gate. I wasn’t sure I could stand without it. I backed through the gate but let it go when I was on the other side. Liam was looking at me, his eyes burning, but he didn’t come any closer, didn’t try to stop me. Seeing that gave me the strength to stand up on my own. I turned around and started walking toward my house. I listened for the sound of footsteps—or wings—following but all I heard was the iron clang of the gate closing behind me.
TWENTY-FIVE
I
had been planning to leave in the morning to avoid driving at night, but I decided to leave right away.
“Sorry, fella,” I told Ralph as I was getting packed. “If I take you to New York you might get eaten by a rat.”
He sat up in his teacup and wiggled his nose. “Don’t worry,” I said, going to add warmer boots to my suitcase. “Brock knows all about you and who better to take care of you than the guy who made you?”
When I turned back to the desk Ralph was no longer in the teacup. He wasn’t in his basket or in my sheepskin slippers or any of his other favorite places either. He must be sulking that I wasn’t taking him with me. Who knew magical doormice were so moody?
I turned off all the lights downstairs, turned the heat down to 65, and wrote a quick note to Brock telling him to give Ralph the rest of the brie in the refrigerator. Then I locked the door of Honeysuckle House behind me and left it to its own devices.
Navigating the dark country roads to the state highway took all my concentration for a while, mercifully giving me no opportunity to dwell on my recent behavior. But when I reached Interstate 17, scenes from the party and afterward began replaying in my head. What had possessed me to make a deal with Anton Volkov? I didn’t even know if the names he’d given me would do me any good. I’d never heard of Abigail Fisk, but I recognized Hiram Scudder’s name as Ballard’s business partner, whose wife had committed suicide after the Great Train Crash of ’93 and its resulting shame and bankruptcy. Good enough reason to curse someone, I imagined, but if Scudder’s descendants were easy to find then someone at Fairwick would have done it by now. Even if I could find the descendants of Abigail Fisk or Hiram Scudder, what was the likelihood that I could convince them to take the curse off Nicky? So I’d compromised myself for basically useless information—and that wasn’t the only way I’d compromised myself. Why had I gotten so upset at finding Liam and Fiona in the coatroom? It was none of my business if they wanted to hook up—they really were perfect for each other … both irresistible to the opposite sex …
But then why had Liam kissed me by the gate?
At the memory of the kiss my limbs loosened … and I nearly swerved into the left lane in front of a tractor trailer. Shaken, I gripped the wheel tighter and glued my eyes to the white lines. The kiss meant nothing, I told myself. Certainly it meant nothing to him. He’d told me a whole long sad story about why he never fell in love, but he hadn’t said anything about the occasional dalliance. Clearly Fiona was the Moira-type. And what was I? I didn’t really fit the Moira or Jeannie profile. I had suggested to him the possibility of finding someone who wasn’t either a Moira or a Jeannie—had he thought I meant myself? Is that why he kissed me? But
had
he really kissed me? Twice I’d thought he’d been about to and I’d been wrong. Maybe
I
had kissed
him
.
The thought was so mortifying that I nearly swerved again. What had come over me lately? First I’d had sex with an incubus—well, I hadn’t had much choice about that … or had I? There had to be some reason that the incubus had been able to seduce me. After all, Matilda Lindquist had lived in Honeysuckle House for decades without having sex with the incubus. Maybe there was something about me that drew him. Something that was
unsatisfied
.
Well,
duh
, my boyfriend lived three thousand miles away and I only saw him a handful of times a year. No wonder I was unsatisfied. No wonder I was going around seducing incubi and sexy Irish poets and vampires. I was becoming “a woman of loose moral standards,” as my grandmother Adelaide, who would never use a common word like
slut
even when it was perfectly clear that’s what she meant, would say. You’re not satisfied, she would probably add, because of all those foolish fairy tales your parents read to you. And she’d be right. I was still waiting for my fairytale prince to come and sweep me off my feet. That’s why I hadn’t made a firmer commitment to Paul. That’s why we were still living on opposite sides of the country.
Well, it was time for me to stop waiting. If Paul really did have a job in New York and he did want to marry me, I couldn’t keep up this long-distance nonsense. I had to move back to the city even if it meant taking adjunct jobs until I found something full time. I’d put Honeysuckle House up for sale and use the rest of my trust fund to buy a decent apartment in Brooklyn—or Queens, or Westchester, or even New Jersey—with Paul. By the time I’d reached the George Washington Bridge I’d made up my mind and was confident I was making the right choice. I couldn’t wait to tell Paul.
Navigating the West Side Highway down to Battery Park and finding the Ritz-Carlton took up all my brainpower for the rest of the trip. By the time I surrendered my car to the black-coated, fur-hatted valet (he looked like one of the guards of the Wicked Witch of the West), I was exhausted. I nearly wept with gratitude when the bellhop showed me to my club level deluxe room on the eleventh floor with a spectacular view of New York Harbor. As soon as I was alone I ran hot water in the capacious tub, adding the lemon-scented bath gel that came with the room, shucked off my clothes, and sank into the hot, soapy water. I gently sponged the grit from my scraped knees. Perversely, the pain brought back the memory of Liam’s kiss, the heat of his mouth on mine …
No, no, no! I told myself, dunking my head under the hot water. I held my breath until the image dissipated, then washed my hair and scrubbed myself with the complimentary loofah and lemon shower gel until I’d banished the image of Liam’s face from my head. Then I wrapped myself up in the big lush hotel robe and called the airline to see if Paul’s plane had landed on time. It had landed ten minutes ago, so I figured he’d arrive in about an hour.
The plan had been for him to come to the hotel and get some sleep, and for me to arrive in the morning. I hoped that finding me in bed would be a welcome surprise. I called room service and ordered a bottle of champagne (wincing a bit when I saw the price). There was already a complimentary fruit basket and cheese plate, so I didn’t order any food. I dried my hair and changed into a pink silk nightgown that Paul had given me for Valentine’s Day last year. I didn’t usually wear pink, but I knew Paul liked it on me.
I looked at the clock and saw that I still had at least half an hour until Paul arrived. I tried to arrange myself artfully on the bed, but that just made me feel silly … and cold. All those glass windows facing the harbor made the room chilly. I got up to pull the drapes, but then stood instead at the window looking out at the lights of boats flickering on the black water. I sank down into a chair in front of the window, wrapping myself in the terry robe I’d left there, and stared out at the harbor lights. They reminded me of something … will-o’-the-wisps floating through a dark wood, candles in a vast hall, snowflakes falling out of a black sky … I felt myself drifting with the ebb and flow of the bay’s tide …
I was standing in a dark wood, the same woods I’d found myself in after I’d opened the triptych in Briggs Hall, but instead of being surrounded by diaphanous creatures only one figure stood before me. It was
him
, the incubus, my demon lover. He glowed as if lit by moonlight, though there was no moon here, nor sun—there was no time at all.
“Only one eternal night,” he said stepping toward me, “for us to make love in.”
“I sent you away,” I said as he raised his hand to my cheek. His flesh was cold but I leaned into the cup of his palm as if leaning toward a warm fire. My skin tingled from head to toe as if a deliciously cool waterfall streamed over me. The hand on my cheek stroked my throat, my breasts … My nipples grew hard and I felt a corresponding tug between my legs. He cupped my buttocks with his other hand and pressed me against the cool length of his erection. I wrapped my arms and legs around him, wanting to mold my body to his, to merge with him … and that’s what was happening. As he entered me I felt cold white light pouring into me. He was filling me up with liquid moonlight … and I was vanishing into him …
I startled awake, flailing my hands out to grasp something solid and found myself grasping someone’s arm.
“Cal, it’s me, Paul.”
I looked up at Paul’s face and thought, No, that’s not him. Then I shook myself fully awake. “I must have fallen asleep,” I said. “I was waiting …”
“I see that.” He sat down in the chair opposite mine. “I thought you were coming tomorrow.”
I sat up and wrapped the robe around myself, trying to shake off the bone-chilling cold—a cold I had wanted to draw
inside
of me—and concentrate. “I decided to come down tonight.”
“I thought you hated driving in the dark.”
“I do, but I wanted to see you …” I looked harder at Paul. He was wearing a suit.
That
was weird. He usually flew in jeans and a sweatshirt. Why would he wear a suit on a night flight? He’d cut his hair recently, too, shorter than he usually wore it. He looked thinner; the bit of baby fat that used to fill out his face and around his stomach was gone. He looked good—older, a little edgier, but good. But he wasn’t looking at me. He was looking around the room and out the window, but whenever his gaze crossed mine his eyes slid away.
“What’s wrong?” I asked, cinching the belt of the robe tighter. “Was your flight okay? It must be scary to fly after—”
“It was fine. It’s just … I thought we’d talk in the morning …” His eyes skittered past me again—to the bottle of champagne cooling in an ice bucket, to the fruit and cheese—then he wrenched them back to me. Not to my face, but to the robe and my bare legs and the bit of pink silk peeking out. For a horrified moment I was afraid he could sense my arousal from the dream.
“Talk about what?” I asked, my stomach clenching.
He leaned forward and covered his face with his hands. “Callie … I … there’s something I have to tell you and it isn’t easy. For some time I’ve wondered if things were really right between us. You’ve seemed distracted this fall …”
“I’ve been getting used to a new job,” I began defensively, but then I stopped. I could see the anguish on Paul’s face. He looked as if he were in real physical pain. Oh my God, I thought, he’s not here to propose to me, he’s here to break up with me.
“There’s someone else, isn’t there?” I asked, immediately hating how timeworn the question felt.
He winced. Swallowed. Ran his hands through his hair as if he meant to pull it out by the roots. “Yes. Rita, the woman I met on the plane last month …” It all spilled out then, how they’d held each other’s hands when their plane almost crashed, how they’d spent the weekend at her parents’ house in Binghamton (“Oh,” I said woodenly, “I thought
she
lived in Binghamton.” “No, she lives here in the city,” Paul replied.), and how she had told him he ought to work in finance instead of just studying it (Rita turned out to be an investment analyst at a major Wall Street firm), and they started talking and emailing and texting and she had arranged an interview out in L.A. for him, and then this interview in New York, which was really only a formality because he’d already been offered the job at the big Wall Street firm, and he and Rita had already talked about him moving into her Tribeca loft.
“So I guess I’m the only detail you had to attend to,” I said when he finished.
“Don’t make it sound like that, Cal. I didn’t want to do this on the phone. And I couldn’t make you come out to California and
then
tell you. I thought it would be easier if you were in the city around friends and family …”
I laughed. “Family? Did you forget my grandmother lives in Santa Fe now? Not that I’d be likely to cry on her shoulder anyway.”
“I meant Annie,” he said. “I didn’t know if you were close to anyone up there yet, although I have wondered …”
“If I’m sleeping with anyone? I guess that would be easier on you if I were. No, I’m sorry to disappoint you. I’m not sleeping with anyone.” I knew what I was saying was technically true and that if I tried to explain about the incubus Paul would have thought I was crazy. Still, I felt a little twinge of guilt at the half lie.
“Actually, that’s kind of a relief—I know, I know,” he said as I spluttered. “I have no right to say that; it’s just I’ve had this feeling that there is something you haven’t been telling me.”
Although it was painful to realize how serious Paul was about Rita, I couldn’t really blame him for feeling I hadn’t been entirely honest with him when I’d been hiding a slew of supernatural occurrences—and one very natural kiss. I sighed. “I suppose I might have a crush on the new writing teacher.”
“I knew it! That Liam fellow. I Googled him and thought he looked just your type.”
“Really? I didn’t think so … and I don’t think it’ll go anywhere. We haven’t … Well, it’s not serious.”
“Oh,” Paul said, looking plainly relieved.
“So you Googled him?” I asked.
“Yeah.” He smiled sheepishly. “And looked at his Facebook page. Geez, the guy’s like an action hero—teaching inner-city kids, working for Amnesty International, and his poetry’s not half bad.”
The fact that Paul had actually read Liam’s poetry touched me oddly. I looked at him carefully. He’d relaxed enough to sit back in his chair. His hair was ruffled from the strenuous raking he’d been giving it. He looked younger again, like the Paul I’d met in college. I suddenly knew that if I made an effort here I could probably wrest him away from Rita. He’d wanted to talk in the morning because he didn’t trust himself not to sleep with me—and if he slept with me he’d feel obliged to tell Rita and they’d fight … It wouldn’t really be that hard. I could tell Paul my plans for quitting my job at Fairwick and moving back to the city. With his new job on Wall Street we could probably afford an apartment in Manhattan. And I had to admit that Paul would be happier working on Wall Street than he’d been teaching demanding undergraduates. And a happier Paul might be easier to be with … as long as I was really happy, too.