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Authors: Crystal Collier

BOOK: Moonless
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9

Vigil

             
 

Kiren unlatched the balcony door with a thin metal hook and slipped inside. He refastened the catch, gut twisting at the moonless sky beyond the glass. How long would his luck hold?

Alexia lay on her back, one arm lost beneath her dark hair, the other tucked across her chest. A foot dangled off the edge of the mattress, tempting him to slip it back beneath her blanket.

He grinned, envying her carefree abandon. Her latest read lay on the bed beside an extinguished candle. He lifted it. Fanciful words danced back at him. They too made him smile. She wanted adventure. He could supply that.

His eyes landed on the card he’d given her father and his smirk died. It had been shredded and reconstructed. His chest tightened. “Oh Alexia . . .”

10

Thrown

             
 

A stormy night raged. Wheels rattled as a carriage pulled away from an enormous estate. A whip came down. The horses bolted. The driver reeled drunkenly as the conveyance wobbled. It weaved dangerously across the drive.

Lightning.

The carriage flipped and the driver launched upward . . .

Alexia shot awake, heart racing.

Another dream. They came with growing frequency, and she dreaded every one. Would this one come true, or did her subconscious merely weave another story? Surely her mind had begun fabricating fantasies to keep her away from the terrors she’d experienced.

She reached for her candle, fingers landing atop
his
card.

A cool breeze swept across her hand. The balcony door hung unlatched,
again
. Father needed to have that thing fixed.

11

More Death

 

The chime rang.

Rain spattered the windows, wind whistling at the panes as Charles reviewed receipts in the study. The door creaked inward and he looked up as the butler poked his head in to announce a caller.

A lawyer bustled past the servant and handed over his card. “I represent Earl Henry von Faber and his wife, Sarah, your sister.”

Charles scowled. “I know who the Earl is, sir.” Though he hadn’t heard from his sister since her wedding day.

The man pulled back his hand and cleared his throat. “It was the fate of your near-kinsman, on the twenty-seventh of last month, to pass out of this world.”

A gasp rang from the hall. Alexia. Of course.

“Dead?” Charles lifted a brow. “You must be mistaken—”

“No mistake. I have here your invitation for the funeral which will proceed one week hence.”

He rose and took it from the messenger. An undertaker’s seal verified the story. “What was the cause?”

“Carriage accident.”

Charles reached for his desk, tipped, and steadied himself, unwilling to ponder the implications. It could be a coincidence. It
must
be a coincidence!

That dreadful day seventeen years ago resurfaced in his mind: the letter announcing his parent’s death by carriage accident as it shook in his new bride’s hand. Sarah had survived, an orphan and only four. She needed her brother. Rosalind had agreed to raise the child, and they’d left for his home.

The lawyer tugged at his collar. “At my parting, your sister requested that a young lady by the name of Alexia might be sent to comfort her?”

“My daughter?” Charles asked.

“Yes, that would seem right.”

He closed his eyes. Of course Sarah would call for Alexia—they had been all but sisters, only five years difference in age. The question was whether Sarah would welcome her estranged brother into her home. He was, after all, the one who arranged her match, and she had not so much as written him since.

“The butler will see you out.” He escaped the room and nearly ran into Alexia. “Your uncle is dead.”

She feigned shock.

“Well?”

Her battle to keep the enthusiasm from her twitching lips brought a smile to his. “Yes, Father?”

“Do you wish to see Sarah, or not?”

“I should be delighted to go to her.”

“I thought as much. You depart for Liverpool in the morning.”

12

Liverpool 

 

Liverpool was the opposite direction of Wilhamshire, but the prospect of seeing Sarah filled Alexia with giddy anticipation. She could not wait! What was more, her aunt might know something of the mysterious caller or her unexpected change.

Her parents stayed behind to make further preparations. She and two escorts rode for three days in a carriage hired by her aunt. The summer Alexia turned twelve, Sarah had been unhappily married to a man three times her age. They had corresponded through letters the past five years, but a great deal went unsaid.

Stinging salty air hit Alexia’s nose as the carriage came to a halt. Silhouetted by the sunset, at least fifty lit windows beamed above a vast open yard, sheltered by multiple jutting chimneys and three floors of sprawling, stylish brick. Alexia had had absolutely no idea what kind of wealth Sarah married into—until now—yet something about the panorama bothered her. Had she seen it before?

Impossible. Maybe a similar house, a comparable yard, a likeness in a painting?

Taking one last look about the grounds, she stepped into the house, unable to dismiss the odd twist of her stomach.

A vast chasm of a room met her. Checkerboard crème and tan tile reflected light from a giant chandelier at the chamber’s apex
, which illuminated an upper balcony and rail.

“No, I will not have it!” A moan echoed from the upper floor, balkanizing the room. “You will throw it all out or be removed yourself!”

Alexia’s jaw dropped as her raven-haired aunt appeared. The vibrant hue of skin, the olive sparkle in her eyes, the way she’d thinned in the face . . . Had she been so
dazzling
when they parted?

The clatter of amassing baggage turned Sarah’s head.

“Lexy!” She leapt down the stairs four at a time, sliding to a halt before her near-sister and straightening up formally. She cleared her throat. “Welcome to my home.”

“You are older.” Alexia didn’t mean to be blunt.

“I am older? Look at you!” She scowled, nose crinkling. “You are not my baby sister. I cannot go to court with you for fear of being outshone!”

Some things about Sarah would never change. Alexia stuck out her tongue. Sarah mimicked her. They burst into laughter and embraced.

“Oh, Lexy, you have become a woman and I a widow. Is it not a strange world we live in?”

Alexia let her go. “Father sends his regards. He will arrive shortly.”

Sarah’s face straightened matter-of-factly. “So long as he does not miss his brother-in-law’s funeral, good riddance!”

Where had this sardonic Sarah come from?

“But you must be weary! We shall have so much time for reacquainting that I shan’t keep you from your bed. Come, enjoy all the hospitality my home may offer.” She hugged her near-sister again, shivering with delight. “No, I changed my mind. Come eat, talk to me—tell me everything! We will sleep tomorrow.”

Once seated in the dining room, she quizzed Alexia about the changes in their home and parents. Alexia battered her in return with just as many questions, holding the one back that wanted to escape. She would wait to ask her aunt about the physical changes and intruder until properly settled and rested.

“But what I do not understand,” Sarah’s head shook, “is how you can be so stunning and remain aloof.”

“Stunning?” Alexia blinked. “Next to you I am a scullery maid!”

Sarah laughed. “You have had interest. Why then? No boys that meet your approval? Or is it Charles?”

Alexia flinched at the reference to Father. Sarah had always addressed him as her own parent, having never truly known another.

“You know I was not much older than you when I . . .” Her aunt sat back, brows lowering.

“When you what? What is it, Sarah?”

Her elbows touched the table, fists supporting her chin. “You know your father promised me to Henry when I turned seventeen.”

Alexia nodded. It was not common to marry before twenty-one as the law dictated, but with parental consent it did happen, and it had.

“I have often wondered why, but I believe he saw what the others did—that my husband would soon outlive himself, being so fond of the drink, and leave me an immense fortune.” Her gaze darkened. “Apparently he was right.”

Alexia studied her hands, wishing they would reveal the words to comfort her aunt.

Sarah sighed. “Very soon my cousin will throw me out of this house, I am sure, but I have been guaranteed the Wilhamshire property to live out my days and an annual allowance of ungodly proportions.”

Alexia perked up. Wilhamshire? She tucked the excitement down forced herself pursue regular conversation. “Is it worth it?”

“The money?” She scoffed. “Not in the least, but clearly you have always been Father’s favorite.”

“As you are Mother’s!”

“Ripe lot of good that did me when it came time for marriage!”

Alexia flinched and looked away, hugging herself.
 

Her aunt exhaled. “He is afraid, Lex. He does not want to face what he’s done. I think he hates me.”

“Sarah, no.” She reached out.

Her aunt turned away. “Or perhaps one scoundrel is as good as the next.”

“Do not say tha—”

“It is true.” Her head snapped back around, eyes ablaze. “They are all villains. Power corrupts, and money corrupts worse. How I wish it were not so—for your sake, for mine.”

Alexia returned to the scrutiny of her hands.

Sarah brightened. “But not to worry. You have me watching over you. I will make sure you end up with a decent match, even if I have to throttle Charles into it!”

***

A private breakfast roused Alexia from bed. She studied her aunt as they ate in the sunny chamber, admiring the unnatural luster permeating Sarah’s skin. It reminded her of a terrifying girl in a midnight cellar and the luminescence of her blue-eyed mystery.

. . .
another of our kind
. . .

She shuddered.

“What is it, dearest?” Sarah’s head tilted.

Her mouth opened before she could stop it, ready to utter a hundred questions, ask what Sarah knew—if anything—about being different, about the changes in her physical appearance before she’d been promised to the Earl, if she’d ever met anyone else as strangely beautiful as them. Mostly she ached to ask about the man who haunted her dreams. Would she react as Father had?

“I have missed you,” Alexia said instead.

“Oh, Lex!” Sarah sided up next to her, and placing an arm around her shoulders. “Not nearly so badly as I have missed you.”

Alexia hugged her aunt back. Some part of her had been torn away when Sarah left, a hole no person or book could fill, although she’d tried.

A knock sounded. Sarah got to her feet. “I have a surprise for you.”

The door furled inward admitting an entourage of servants. They carried gigantic mirrors, carefully wrapped packages and tiers of ribbon.

“What is this?” Alexia braced herself on the bed.

Her aunt crossed her arms. “We are having a funeral, darling, in which I fully expect royalty to appear. You are not attending in country rags.”

All day they inhabited the warm chamber. Servants moved in and out, needles bobbing, new threads surfacing, voices clattering in a deluge of muddling confusion. Night had long since settled and they’d been bid to dinner thrice, but Sarah wouldn’t have it until the costume had been completed. At last Alexia stood before the mirror modeling the newly-fitted white and violet funeral vesture in the candlelight.

“Excellent.” Sarah applauded. “And I think the only other alteration is tightening at the sleeves.”

Pins appeared and started piercing every which way.

Alexia had grown accustomed to venturing into the city with Mother where they sat in a parlor and examined varying styles, making an order to be retrieved and altered weeks later. Sarah must be spending a fortune for this convenience. Alexia shifted uncomfortably.

“Is it awful?” she asked to distract herself.

“Is what awful?”

“The way he died?”

Sarah’s lips snapped shut. She waited until the servants had finished and dismissed them. “Not in front of the help,” she advised warmly. “I find their ears are too keen.”

Alexia nodded.

“But . . . oh, Lexy, do you know what unfathomable injustices I have endured?”

She settled on the bed next to Sarah.

“He was leaving.” Her aunt heaved a great sigh and leaned tiredly against her. “He had a girl—probably less than that, waiting for him in Dublin.”

Alexia’s heart shrank.

“I fumed and fought, but it did not matter. He was going.” She smiled apologetically and rose to help Alexia out of her gown.

“Sarah . . .”

“It was not the first time.” She returned to the memory behind her eyelids. “So I threatened him with divorce. He became incensed. He sped away on his pretentious carriage, and I watched with glee as it overturned at the gate.”

Alexia’s jaw dropped.
A stormy night, wheels rattling, whip lashing, carriage flipping, driver launched upward . . .

“Wh-what?”

“He was impaled on the outer gatepost.”

“Impaled?” A cold sweat broke out on her forehead.

Sarah sighed. “I meant to keep the details from you. They are not precisely agreeable, but you have more a stomach for these things than I.”


Impaled?
” Alexia asked again, hugging herself. Another dream fulfilled.

“Some say it is intervention of a just deity,” Sarah’s brows lowered, “but I do not believe it.” Sinister light burned in her eyes.

“What do you believe?”

“It was not God.” Her lips pulled back, exposing clamped teeth.

Alexia shifted, uneasy from the expression on her aunt’s face. “Dearest Sarah—”

“I cannot explain it.” She picked at her skirt, a wicked grin sneaking up one cheek. “I wanted the thing to crash, and it did. Right when I asked it to. That could not be coincidence.”

Alexia shivered. “The answer to a prayer?”

Her aunt’s lips twitched. “It is odd. That’s all.” She straightened, eyes gleaming viciously. “You remember my parents died the same way?”

Alexia hesitated and nodded.

“What if we—not all of us, but some of us have . . .”

“Have what?” Alexia leaned forward.

Sarah smirked, an eerie smile, then resumed a pleasant grin. “Do not let me ruin your evening. It is nothing I am sure. Coincidence.”

“Sarah, surely it is not—”

“I wanted him dead, Lex.” The darkness of her tone drowned out her niece’s protest. A vicious sneer turned her upper lip back. The action bothered Alexia, so uncharacteristic of her beloved sister, so characteristic of someone else. “I wanted him to suffer for dragging me through hell. I hated him . . . and I loved him.”

Alexia gasped. She knew where she’d seen that expression before.

Sarah’s eyes turned on her innocently, as though the previous statement had been made by an entirely different being. “You look faint. Perhaps you do need to eat after all.”

“Please,” Alexia stopped her. She turned away, swallowing the shock. She didn’t want to see it, didn’t want to believe. She couldn’t face Sarah when Bellezza might surface any moment.

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