been inside the church as well. There was a primitive spray-painted outline of a dragon on what had once been an ornately decorated marble altar.
Now it was completely ruined. However much the congregation had raised for their renovation, they would need that much more to have the altar sandblasted.
Lucien shook his head. So much needless destruction. So much disregard for beauty.
Behind him, he heard something and whirled, his lightning-fast reflexes a fraction slower than usual from all the energy he’d had to exert during the encounter outside the church.
But fortunately it was only a dove, fluttering up from between the riotously disturbed pews, that interrupted Lucien’s solitude now. The Dracul had all gone, no doubt frustrated by their ineffectual attempt to assassinate him.
Relieved he would not be called again to defend himself so soon, he let his shoulders sag a little. It had taken every ounce of power he’d had left after the attack to heal himself from the wounds he’d received from the Dracul. It wouldn’t have been right to have allowed the girl to see the gouging his face and body had undergone, and so he’d taken care to repair himself even as the wounds were being inflicted. There were those humans who could take in stride the sight of a man’s face shredded by an attack of flesh-eating bats….
And then there were those who could not.
The dog walker had definitely fallen into the category of not . She had seemed like a good sort of person—or someone who strived to do the right thing, anyway. Though her thoughts, for some reason, had been as difficult to penetrate as a rain forest.
Some humans were like that. Some had minds as dry and arid as a desert, and just as easily navigated. Others had psyches more like the dog walker’s, only accessible with a machete.
It was strange that such a pretty, vivacious girl would have so much emotional baggage. He trusted, however, that whatever dark secrets she was harboring, they wouldn’t get in the way of the memory wipe he’d conducted upon on her, which would guarantee that she’d remember none of the incident and go happily about her business as if the attack had never happened.
He wished he could be as fortunate.
Lucien stood in the ruins of the cathedral, contemplating his next move. The sun would be coming up soon. He needed to go to ground, then have a few words with his half brother, Dimitri.
And of course make out a generous check to the St. George’s Cathedral Renovation Fund.
Chapter Eighteen
8:45 A.M . EST, Wednesday, April 14
The Tennessean Hotel
Chattanooga, TN
A laric, just back from his morning swim, stared down at the message on his computer screen. It seemed entirely too good to be true.
Y OU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED ….
W HAT : A fancy dinner at our place, 910 Park Avenue, Apt. 11A
W HEN : Thursday, April 15, at 7:30 P.M .
W HY : Emil’s cousin, the prince, is in town!
“Where did you get this?” he asked Martin over his mobile phone.
“The IT department found it during their routine scanning and thought it might be something.”
The Vatican had gone high-tech some time ago and now employed an entire fleet of full-time computer programmers and analysts for the Palatine, taking their battle against the forces of evil to the cyber as well as street level.
“And what makes them think,” Alaric asked in Italian, “that this has anything to do with our prince?”
Martin sounded annoyed. And no wonder. It was nap time in Rome, at least for Martin’s daughter, Simone. And probably for Martin,too. He’d been sleeping a lot while recovering from his wounds, thanks to all the painkillers he’d been prescribed by the Vatican surgeons.
“They’re checking the passenger manifests of every incoming flight, private as well as commercial, to New York City, and there was a Lucien Antonescu, professor of ancient Romanian history, on a flight from Bucharest last night. First-class seat.”
“So?” Alaric was bored
Maureen Johnson
Carla Cassidy
T S Paul
Don Winston
Barb Hendee
sam cheever
Mary-Ann Constantine
Michael E. Rose
Jason Luke, Jade West
Jane Beaufort