guests.”
The creature snarled again but moved to the side, half turning to expose what looked like a mass of round white burn scars across his shoulders. Robert cautiously drew Jessenia past him. They followed Angelo to the library, where Robert slammed the door.
“How could you?” Jessenia whispered. “Angelo, how could you? Demetrio says there is another one . . . who has no telepathic ability at all.”
Angelo sat in a large wooden chair by a table. An open book lay upon the table near a bottle of ink and a wet quill.
“Yes,” he said, “that is Julian, but I am working to help him develop his abilities. I believe it is only a matter of time. Philip improves each week. At first he could not even speak, and he now understands language quite well.”
“Why?” Robert exploded, sick of this calm response from Angelo. “Why would you do this?” He paced along the length of the study. “They have to be destroyed. Both of them!”
“I will decide what is best,” Angelo said slowly. “And I will take responsibility for my own actions.”
Jessenia was watching him with sad eyes, and her countenance seemed to affect him much more than Robert’s anger. Tonight, she wore a rich green skirt with a white blouse and silver hoops in her ears. Her beautiful face was a picture of sorrow. Robert felt sick.
Angelo walked over to her. “I wanted the company of men, as in days long past. One was not enough. I wanted sons again.”
“It doesn’t work that way,” she whispered. “You know it doesn’t. Why couldn’t you have been happy with your young Scot?”
“I am happy with him. But he wasn’t enough.” He paused, touching her face with his slender fingers. “I will no longer follow laws I don’t believe in, and I swear I will make this right. I just need time.”
“How are they feeding?” Robert demanded.
Angelo did not answer.
“What are their names again?” Robert asked, “Julian and Philip? Have either of them shown any tendencies for mental power?”
“Not Julian. Not yet, but in all other respects, he is whole, and his gift is strong. I believe Philip’s telepathy will surface quickly once I begin his training. But he has no memories of his previous life, and it is too soon to press him.”
“Then keep him on a leash!”
“He is my son!” Angelo roared back.
“Angelo,” Jessenia said, looking more composed. “If you won’t train Philip now, right now, then he must be destroyed, and so must Julian if he does not develop telepathy. You know this.”
“Leave me,” Angelo answered. “Go back to your travels. I will deal with my own family.”
There was nothing they could do. Vampires did not fight among each other.
Jessenia started for the door. “I cannot believe that you, you of all among us, chose to break the law. You endanger us all.”
With nothing left to say, Robert followed her out.
Although deeply shaken, they could only hope that Angelo would adhere to his word. It was Angelo’s place to destroy his sons if need be—which was already the case in Robert’s opinion—so they had to believe he would do the right thing.
Needing some sort of comfort, some sense of familiarity, they decided to go back to England for a few years, and they crossed the Channel again, later taking rooms in London. Jessenia wrote to let Cristina and Adalrik know where they were staying, and yet she remained sad, a shadow of herself, for several months. Robert worried about her.
But London proved a lively place in 1821, with many sights and distractions, and soon she joined with him again in their bed, running her hands up his chest, filling his mind with the promise of tomorrow.
They heard nothing worrisome from their friends. Perhaps Angelo had lived up to his word?
Then, in 1824, Jessenia received a letter from Adalrik with news he’d only recently learned. Apparently as far back as 1816, Angelo’s first son, John McCrugger, had turned his own serving man, Edward Claymore, into a vampire, and later, Philip, the feral one, had turned his mortal lover, Margaritte Latour, as well . . . long before the hundred-year mark. Law upon law was being broken due to Angelo’s breach.
Robert was uncertain what to do, and Jessenia was frightened.
About a year after this, strange psychic onslaughts began to hit them without warning. Most were weak, as if coming from a great distance, but some were strong and painful. In the same moment, they would both see images and memories of other