Hunting Memories - By Barb Hendee Page 0,3
Yun-Fat—and he tended to play one after the other when he was bored.
And if he wasn’t hunting, he was always bored.
A creak on the front porch sounded, and Wade turned to look hopefully at the door. Were they home already?
No one came in. The house must just be settling.
With that thought, he suddenly realized that none of them ever referred to this place as “home.” All three of them still referred to it as “the house.”
But that was probably due to the fact that they’d been living here only a month, and before that, the place had belonged to another vampire named Maggie Latour . . . who was dead now, turned to dust.
So none of them had roots or memories in this house.
He dropped into a chair near the fireplace, trying not to feel sorry for himself. He knew Eleisha and Philip were both working to come to terms with the chain of events that had brought them here, too.
Wade let his mind roll back. When had it started?
Last March? When a vampire named Edward Claymore had committed suicide by jumping off his own front porch in broad daylight, bursting into flames?
Or when the police investigation had dropped Wade right into Eleisha’s path, and he discovered someone just as telepathic as he was?
Or maybe it really began when he had quit his job in Portland to follow her here?
No, it began long before that, in Wales, in 1839 when a vampire named Julian Ashton had turned her undead and then cut her loose, sending her to America with no information and no real idea what she was, forcing her to figure things out on her own.
No . . . it started even before that, in France, in 1825, when Eleisha’s maker, Julian, had realized that unlike most vampires, he was incapable of developing psychic powers, and he fell into an obsession of fear and began killing his own kind. He’d spared any vampires who had not expressed telepathic abilities—and this included Eleisha and Philip.
But Wade had changed all that. He’d woken Eleisha’s and Philip’s latent abilities and, in doing so, turned them into targets.
And then Julian had come hunting them.
Somehow—and Wade still didn’t know exactly how—on the night Julian found them, Eleisha had forced her thoughts inside Julian’s mind and shown him something terrifying that caused him to freeze up . . . after which Philip kicked him out a twelfth-story window. Eleisha firmly believed that she had permanently driven him away, and they were all safe from him.
Philip didn’t seem so sure.
But four weeks had passed since that night, and Julian had not come after them, and now the three of them seemed to be existing in a state of limbo, waiting for something, but none of them knew what. Eleisha had suggested that Wade find a new job here in Seattle. He agreed. She had suggested he might feel better if he found an apartment of his own. He partially agreed. She had suggested that they might clear out all of Maggie’s things, buy new furniture, and make the house their own. He agreed.
But he’d taken no action to accomplish any of these things.
How long could he continue like this?
Voices coming from outside caught his attention. The front door swung inward as Eleisha walked inside with Philip on her heels.
“Wade, tomorrow will you see the new Rambo movie with me?” Philip asked before the door closed behind him. “Eleisha won’t go.”
Wade blinked. “There’s a new Rambo movie? Who’s playing Rambo?”
“Stallone.”
“Stallone? That can’t be right. The guy’s sixty years old.”
Philip turned to Eleisha. “Tell him I’m right. You saw the preview with me last week.”
“What?” Eleisha was pulling off her jacket with a distracted expression, as if she hadn’t been listening. “Oh, yes, Philip’s right.”
Looking at her face, Wade forgot all about Rambo. He could tell when something was bothering her.
The three of them had been together such a short time, but they knew each better than most people who’d coexisted for a lifetime. They had looked into each other’s minds and down the paths of time and personal experiences, seen fears and loves and private corners.
“What’s wrong?” he asked.
Glancing back at him, she dropped her jacket on a chair, opened her mouth halfway, and then closed it again. For once, Philip seemed to forget about his own desire for entertainment, and he walked closer to her, his head towering over hers.
“Eleisha?” he asked.
Just when Wade thought he’d grown accustomed to their physical appearance, he’d look at them