Blood Truth, page 16
“I always thought that humans smoking cigarettes behind their parents’ backs was like us with sneaking out to see the sun.”
“Exactly.” Helania shook her head. “I didn’t stay long. It was July when I did it and . . . yes, that’s what the color of this light reminds me of. It was right at sunset when I went out. My parents were making First Meal, and Isobel distracted them in the kitchen. I’ll never forget the feel of the warmth on my face.”
Boone thought back to when he and his cousins would duck out and watch the sun set and rise. They had done it so many times. Right up until their transitions. After that, everything had been different. No more sun.
“Isobel was so proud of me. She hugged me and told me I had to do it again and again. But that was her. I never went out another time.”
“You miss her.”
“Every night.” Helania glanced at him. “You must feel the same way about your father.”
Boone shrugged. “I have certainly noticed his absence, that’s for sure.”
They started walking again, heading for the formal entrance with its bank of glass doors and silver and brass flourishes. Hanging above it all, there was the American flag as well as the ones for the State of New York, the United Kingdom, and Spain.
“Welcome to the Remington,” a uniformed doorman said with a brief bow.
“Thank you,” Boone answered as the human gave the revolving door a shove and Helania went through first.
Inside, the cavernous lobby was all black marble, gold and silver carpeting, and burnished metal fixtures. Seating areas clustered around the bases of broad square columns were like presents under human Christmas trees, and discreetly dressed staff whispered by as they attended to the hotel’s guests.
“Oh . . . wow.” Helania slowed again, her eyes lighting up. “It’s a palace.”
“This way.” As he took her hand, he felt the network of scars and wished he could have helped her bury her dead. “Remi’s is down here.”
Over in the far corner, there was a theater-worthy heavy velvet curtain with gold tassels, and as he drew her behind it, the first strains of jazz could be heard faintly. The staircase that was revealed was cramped, the marble steps worn in places where a century’s worth of feet had trod. On the glossy black walls, hundreds of framed, vintage photographs of flappers and dandies from the twenties and thirties were hung so closely together, they formed a mosaic of black and white tiles.
Down at the bottom, the mellow music was louder, and at the maître d’ stand, Boone slipped the gentleman a hundred-dollar bill and was rewarded with one of the best tables in the house, right in front of the small stage. He sat with his back to the trio who were playing so Helania could have the better view.
As she stared up in wonder at the piano player, the clarinetist, the guy on the bass, he felt something warm bloom in the center of his chest.
There was nowhere else on the planet he wanted to be. And the happiness he felt, the sense of connection and communion, was a shock that illuminated how lonely he had been.
For such a very long time.
* * *
Helania felt like she was under a heat lamp. And not in a bad way.
As she took off her parka and sat across from Boone, the sensual music wrapped them in an embrace, bringing them closer together than they actually were. The dim lighting and thoughtful staff offered little to no interruption, and even the small table, as well as the chairs that were tilted in, seemed to encourage the intimacy.
Before she knew it, plates of cheese with fruit appeared, and then heartier fare, a stew with meat and vegetables, which quite possibly could have been the best thing she’d ever eaten. Or maybe the company was the spice that turned a humble dish into a gourmet masterpiece: In spite of the fact that she often felt tongue-tied with other people, that was not the case with Boone. There seemed to be an endless array of topics for discussion, everything from favorite books and music, to current affairs, to happy childhood memories, shared along with the common bread basket.
It was all quite remarkable. And then even the dishes of dessert had been cleared, and they were still talking.
Running her fingertips over the belly of her wineglass, she stared into the chardonnay she’d been nursing . . . and wondered how the night was going to end.
“What are you thinking about?” Boone murmured.
Shaking her head, she was curious if he’d guessed that she’d been with a male before—and whether or not that was going to be a problem. He was obviously from the aristocracy, and there were a lot of rules for them. Well, there were rules for civilians, too. But Isobel had urged her to break out of her shell and get herself a male, and so she had done that about a decade ago. The relationship had lasted about a year and then fizzled, a social experiment that had failed in the lab.
“Talk to me,” he murmured. “Whatever it is, just talk to me.”
It was a shock to realize she actually wanted to tell him everything. But she couldn’t exactly find the right words.
Deliberately, she pictured Isobel’s face, and took a deep breath.
“I was born hearing-impaired.” She touched one of her ears. “I wasn’t completely deaf, but I couldn’t hear much more than low sounds. Speech was difficult for me, and that was why communicating with other people was so hard. I learned sign language back in the sixties, and I’m still very good at reading lips, but you know . . . things were different back then. Physical problems in young were not as well accepted. So it was hard for me. Hard for my whole family.”
She glanced up at him and was relieved to find that he hadn’t recoiled with disgust—which was not only something that people had done to her in the past, but the kind of thing the aristocracy was known for.
Boone, contrary to his station, was leaning in even closer, his expression open . . . accepting.
Taking another long inhale, she said, “Other young were downright cruel, but Isobel was there for me. I can remember the first fistfight she got into over my disability.” Helania had to smile. “She pounded the crap out of this little boy who had been making fun of me. I was too busy trying to get along in the world to worry about what people thought of my deafness, but she cared and she was fierce about it.”
“Is that why you think you can’t get along with people?”
“It’s a hangover from all those years, you know?” She touched her ear again. “Anyway, I had been told that there was a possibility that my transition would fix the problem with my ear canals, but I never believed it. When I came through the change, I was shocked to hear everything so clearly. I hated it at first. Everything was so loud, especially the high notes of things like hinges on doors, phones ringing, whistling. It was a difficult adjustment.”
“It must have been a different world to you,” he said.
“Totally different. I mean, I had kept to myself before then. After my hearing worked? I shut down for about a year. That was when Isobel insisted that we move out and start living on our own. She seemed to understand that I needed space to myself, and my parents were—they were very concerned and very well intended. But they were relentless in trying to draw me out, and all that pushing was having the opposite effect. Things got better after Isobel and I began living together. Movies were what saved me. While Isobel was out with her friends, I played them on the TV. First with those record-like discs, remember the ones that came like big albums in those plastic sleeves?”
Boone laughed. “Yes, God . . . I haven’t thought of them in years.”
“Right? Then Beta and VHS. Then DVDs. Now we have Netflix and Hulu.” She took a sip of her wine. “So when Isobel was out in the world, I would sit alone and watch movies, first with the sound turned way down and then gradually . . .” She shrugged. “I got used to it. Now, I can even be in crowds and not get overwhelmed by the all the layers of sound. But it took years. I read an article once that said the adjustment to a sense was all about neuropathways being developed. My brain has had to rewire itself, in other words.”
“But you’re still not completely at ease with people.”
“No, I’m not. Is it nature in the form of innate introversion? Or nurture from those two and a half decades of being deaf and getting ridiculed by kids my own age as well as some of their parents? I’m not sure. And I suppose it doesn’t matter. I am what I am.”
There was a note of apology in her tone, but then she had long felt that she had things to make up for, damages to explain, limitations to excuse—
Boone reached across the table and took her hand, the one with the scars on the palm. “I wouldn’t change a thing about you.”
“Well, that’s lucky for me,” she whispered, “as I’ve not had a lot of luck being anything different.”
As the jazz trio’s tempo changed, his thumb stroked over her flesh. “Dance with me?”
A spike of warmth flared in the center of her chest, right where her heart was. The glow was a surprise, and akin to a fire being lit in a cold, drafty room: A shocking, very pleasant change.
Isobel would approve of this, she thought abruptly. All of it.
Boone. The jazz music. The cozy pub-like atmosphere. Helania . . . taking a chance on someone.
And in this moment, it felt like the dice she was rolling were not so much on Boone, but . . . on herself.
“Yes,” she said with a slow smile. “I would like that.”
They got to their feet at the same time, and given that their table was right in front by the stage, it was just two steps over and she was up against his body.
Dearest Virgin Scribe, he was big. Her head only came up to his pecs and his arms seemed enormous as they wrapped around her. But he held her gently, letting her decide how close to get, and what do you know . . .
She wanted close.
It was a tough goal to accomplish, however. He had never taken his leather jacket off, and it wasn’t until she snuck a hand underneath it and ran into a holstered gun that she realized why.
“Sorry,” he said tightly.
“It’s okay.” She looked up into his eyes. “At least I know I’m safe.”
His face got deadly serious. “Always. I’m never going to let anything happen to you.”
As tears pricked the corners of her eyes, she laid her head on his leather-covered chest. She didn’t want to ruin the mood, but the truth was, that vow was hard to hear.
Too much like the past. Too much like Isobel.
Dragging herself back to the present, she concentrated on the way he moved, the subtle swaying of all that muscle, the promise of things left as yet unexplored.
Naked things. Pleasurable things.
God, he smelled good. Leather, a slight whiff of gunmetal . . . but mostly the clean male underneath.
Helania thought once again that she had no idea where this was going or what exactly was happening between them. But she wanted things to end up in a bed.
Soon—
One of Boone’s hands stroked over her shoulder and down her back, following the contours of her curves. The warmth, the subtle pressure of the caress, the span of his large palm and deft fingers . . . all of it reverberated throughout her whole body, making her feel like she was a tuning fork calibrated for him and him alone. Tilting her head, she looked up at him again.
His face was a stark mask of hunger and his eyes burned as he stared down at her.
Except she didn’t need to see his tight expression to know how badly he wanted her.
She could feel his arousal.
“No, I’m going to do it.”
The dead tone cut through the anxious talk in the clinic’s private meeting room, a bomb blowing a hole in the conversational landscape. In the silent aftermath, Butch focused on the female who had spoken up through the tense gathering. Sitting in a chair off to the side, she was well into middle age, which for a vampire didn’t mean much in terms of physical changes—as per the species’ typical lifespan, she still looked like the twenty-five-year-old she had been after she’d gone through her change three hundred or so years before.
But the centuries she had been through showed in those eyes of hers.
And that tone.
Clearly, she had seen many bad things over the course of her life. This, however . . . this coming to see if a dead body was that of her daughter was undoubtedly the very worst. And these males around her, the hellren, the son, the uncle and the grandfather? They all fell quiet and dropped their stares to the floor in deference to her.
No doubt part of it was because no one could argue her right, but more than that? Butch had the sense that nobody except her had the strength for the grim task.
And he was not surprised that the mahmen was the one who’d woman’d up. After however many years in homicide, he had learned about the differences between the sexes. Men were physically stronger, true. But the women? They were the warriors. As much as those males who had come with her would have run into a burning building to save her, not one of them was strong enough to take her place for this heartbreaking duty.
Because they couldn’t handle it.
“All right,” Butch said. “Let me know when you’re—”
The female got to her feet. “I am ready now.”
The private meeting room they were in was next to the morgue’s viewing suite, and as Butch held the door open for her, she didn’t look back at her family. She walked out into the hall with her head up and both hands on her purse. She still had her coat on, the brown wool three-quarter simply cut and simply made.
He had a thought that he should suggest she take it off. But she didn’t look like the type who was going to faint.
No, she was steady as bedrock even though he could feel the fear boiling out of her very pores.
Butch held another door open for her, and they stepped inside a small tiled room that had three chairs off to one side and a watercooler. Across the way, a horizontal, six-foot-by-four-foot glass pane was displaying the pulled curtain on its other side.
“No,” she said as she eyed the window. “Not like this.”
“It will be easier for you to—”
“If that is my daughter, I’m not going to identify her body through a piece of glass.”
Butch could only nod. “Give me a second.”
Going over to the narrow door by the window, he knocked once. When Havers opened up, Butch kept his voice low.
“We’re coming in.”
“But that is not the way—”
“That is absolutely the way we’re going to do this,” Butch whispered. “At her request.”
Havers glanced over Butch’s shoulder and then bowed. “Of course. We will accommodate her wishes.”
As the race’s physician stood to the side, Butch looked at the female. “We’re ready when you are.”
The female took several deep breaths, and that purse she had a death grip on started to shake.
“Ma’am,” he said, “I’m going to suggest you take your coat off and leave your purse here.”
She looked over at where he pointed as if she had never seen a chair before. Then she went across and set her bag down. Removing her coat, she was careful as she folded the wool up and placed it on the seat, and when she straightened, she tucked her blouse into her slacks. Her clothes were not fancy, but neither were they casual; they were the kind of thing an executive assistant would wear to work.
And he totally understood her need to prepare herself. Sometimes, composure on the surface was all a person could ask for.
When she came over to him, he offered her his hand. He just wanted her to know she wasn’t alone. “I’m going in with you.”
The female stared at what he held out to her. “It’s not your family.”
“She became my family the moment I took this case on.”
“You’ve done this before?”
“A hundred times.”
After a moment, she nodded. And then she put her palm against his own, her cold, clammy skin making him incalculably sad.
“What’s that smell?” she said before she stepped through the jambs.
“It’s the disinfectant they use to clean the rooms.”
“Okay.”
As Butch drew her inside, her eyes flashed to the body that was lying face-up on the gurney. A white sheet covered the remains from head to toe, the ends hanging freely on all four sides.
The female blanched and weaved on her feet. When Butch caught her, Havers seemed to recognize that his presence was extraneous and the healer had the good sense to step all the way back against the wall.
“Help me over there,” the female said softly. “I can’t seem to walk.”
“Lean on me.” Butch tightened his hold on her waist. “I won’t let you fall.”
“Thank you.”
Escorting her over to the head, he could feel the pressure on his arm where she was relying on him, and he pictured his Marissa in her place, standing over a slab, on the verge of seeing if their dead daughter was in front of them.
“Take your time,” he choked out as they stopped together.
The female took a deep breath, but then grimaced and rubbed her nose as if she didn’t like the astringent smell in the room.
He’d been mostly truthful about the disinfectant. It was used to clean, yes. But also, no one wanted the family to smell any blood or any decomposition, and in the case of these particular remains, though they had been kept in cold storage for the majority of the time, there had been stretches when they had not been exposed to the required temperature.
“Okay,” she said roughly. “Let me see.”
Butch reached out with his free hand and drew the sheet back from the face, folding it down high on the neck so that none of the wounds showed.
The female clamped a hand on her mouth as all the color drained out of her face.
Butch closed his eyes briefly and cursed. “I’m so sorry. But I have to ask you. Is this your—”
“Yes, this is my daughter,” the female said hoarsely. “She is . . . ours.”



