Read The Blood In the Beginning Online
Authors: Kim Falconer
Hardly the issue!
Rossi said.
Really? Did you know she was Mar, for sure?
Salila asked.
Half-Mar,
I corrected.
Whatever.
Salila was not impressed.
Miguel, you couldn't have been certain until she hit the deep.
I'd planned to test her in a swimming pool,
Rossi said, as if I wasn't right under his nose.
Test?
I tried to turn around and punch him, but couldn't budge. This must be how babies felt when their parents strapped them to their chests in those carrybags.
Ava, it's not how it sounds. I'll explain in a minute.
I can't wait to hear that.
Salila couldn't have sounded more taunting.
Face it, Miguel, Teern's not interested in your little discovery.
He'll change his mind, when he understands.
Really? Is that before or after he orders her put down?
What's that supposed to mean?
My anger was rising, and so was Rossi's.
It's not going to happen, Salila. She's our most valuable member.
Teern doesn't see it that way.
I'm not finished with him yet,
Rossi yelled.
But he's finished with you.
Salila was clever. She'd managed to take the focus off her own ass and put it on a much bigger worry: Teern.
You're not going to let her get away with this, are you?
I wanted him to pound her into the sand, at least.
She tried to drown me, don't forget.
Salila turned to me.
No, baby sweetcakes, I just wanted to see if it was true.
You dragged me miles into the deep.
Because you couldn't scare off a few puny sharks.
Puny? They were fifteen foot and about to rip my insides out.
Girls, stop it.
We both turned to Rossi. Well, Salila turned and I tried to look over my shoulder, saying at the same time,
Girls!
Women.
He shook his head.
Listen, Salila, you can help. Meet me tomorrow under the Sunset Shoal. I have to get Ava out of the water.
I could come with you now.
No!
This time it was Rossi and me speaking in unison. I'm not sure what his reasons were, but I felt Salila and New LA would not be a healthy mix.
Rossi swam for the boat, me in tow. Salila disappeared. As we neared the surface, the water turned rose red. Beams of light from the setting sun created rippling curtains of purple, gold and crimson. I wanted Rossi to slow down, let me bask in it, but he kept going. The moment my head broke the surface, clarity vanished into a dull wash of green and navy. I tried to suck in a lungful of air and started choking. Rossi leapt onto the boat, me over his shoulder in a fireman's carry. I pulled away when we hit the deck and promptly threw up.
* * *
âI'm so sorry, Ava.'
I couldn't make out Rossi's face, but the words sounded sincere. He was sailing back to the coast, leaving the sun to set behind us. Hopefully he could make out a lot more of the topography than me. It wouldn't take much. My contacts were gone, and out of the water, the myopia was back in force. I missed the superwoman vision, but I guess that was the least of my concerns.
âReally sorry.'
âYou keep saying that, Rossi, but it doesn't explain anything.'
âI'm hoping it will sink in.'
âIs that a pun?'
âIt's a lot to cope with, I know.'
âYou mean once upon a time that fishwoman threw you into the water, or maybe slipped you some acid and dragged you into the deep?'
âThat's not what I meant.'
âDidn't think so.'
Rossi was not on my âtop friends' list right now. The only thing keeping me from running a mile was the fact that we were still on the boat, in the water. At sea. The reality struck. I may not have been comfortable down there, but I didn't drown, or breathe, in the normal sense anyway.
I'm Mar. A half-blood.
That was going to take some major processing. Had CHI Tech known? Is this Rossi's connection with them? It put a whole new light on the experiments they'd done.
âIt's not what I expected, Ava. Teern's reaction, and Salila showing up like that. I thought she was in the Gulf.' He made it sound like the bitch siren had interrupted an afternoon tea party, not thrown me overboard into shark-infested waters, and dragged me to a cave where the alpha of all Mar dwelled.
âDitto with the unexpected.'
âAre you warm enough?'
âI'm fine.' I huddled under a blanket, shivering. It wasn't all from the cold, but I didn't want Rossi to know it. I was utterly spent, ping-ponging between wanting to chew him a new one and wishing there was a hole I could crawl into and perish. On top of it all, I caught this intermittent feeling of elation. It washed over me every few minutes, like a wave of warm energy that flashed on and off. I'd been under the freaking sea, and it was amazing.
I'm Mar, and I belong to a people.
It could mean I had a place, a clan, and it,
they
, were beautiful and dangerous, and powerful. I exhaled long and slow.
Only hitch was, my place, my people, didn't want me. Back to perishing in the hole.
Teern doesn't see the potential, the gift that you are. He'll come around.
Right. My thoughts weren't my own. I'd forgotten. âStay the hell out of my head, Rossi!'
Everything's going to work out.
I glared at him.
âSorry.' He coughed. âIt's hard not to speak naturally.'
âTry!'
It was the first time I saw him at a loss. âHow can I make this better?' He actually pleaded.
âYou can't.' I closed my eyes. The shakes were getting worse. âI just want to go home.'
âYou're not going home like this.'
We were moored in the berth, finally, and I wasn't planning to hang around. But without contacts, vision was a non-event. Anything more than one foot away from me was a wash. I tried to relax into it. Hell, I'd survived Salila, sharks in feeding frenzy and other monsters of the deep, i.e. Teern, so talking to Rossi, who looked like a tall shadow looming over me, was easy.
Ha.
Okay, not so easy. Worse, he had a point.
âYou're hypothermic, disoriented and soaked to the bone.'
âWhose fault is that?'
âMine, so let me help.'
He reached for my arm and I jerked it back. âI'll call the cab myself.' My hand went to my back pocket. Empty. âWhere's my damn phone?' I knew the answer. It had gone overboard, like me, only it never resurfaced.
âI've got a burner you can have, but first, take a hot shower. I'll find you some dry clothes.'
My teeth chattered so hard I couldn't keep arguing with his logic. And, I knew most ER doctors used burner phones when they didn't want to give out their private numbers. I wasn't surprised he had a stack of them. âFine. Point the way, and while you're at it, can you give the okay sign so my tail doesn't come storming the place?'
He did what I asked and led me to the bathroom. âHot's on the left and â'
âI can figure it out.'
He started to help with my clothes and I shoved him out the door and locked it. It wasn't easy to peel out of my wet skintight jeans, but I managed. Once under the shower, I stopped shivering until a different kind of convulsion began. Both the experience with my mother, her fear and disgust, and the nullifying voice of Teern, who was the same kind of creature as my father, hit home. If that wasn't enough to bring down my core sense of self, the answer to the lifelong question,
Who am I
, did the trick.
Mar and Lander.
A half-blood, an outcast, one foot in each world, belonging to neither. By the time I turned off the water, my skin was hot to the touch, and so were the tears.
I fumbled for a towel and buried my face in it. How would I ever explain this to Cate? To Rourke? Tom? What would happen to me now? A sudden knock on the door spun me around.
âI found some clothes that will fit.'
I wrapped myself in the towel and opened the door a crack. Rossi extended his arm, not pushing in. I took the bundle and closed the door again. When I emerged, I was in a small tee-shirt, a way too big hoodie, and black drawstring pants, towel over my shoulders.
âFeel better?'
I gave a curt nod and switched on the burner, about to search for a cab.
âPlease. I can take you home.'
* * *
Rossi drove me to Cate's, and walked me to the door. âWhy's my sight worse?' It scared me how little I could see.
âSame reason you need glasses. It's a side effect of your mixed blood. But now that your eyes have done what they are designed to do, they'll adjust back, as soon as you have your contacts in.'
I was almost afraid to ask. âDesigned how?'
âTo alter shape. Did you notice the telescopic vision? The macro?'
âI saw the redshift too.' I waited for him to explain that.
âInfrared. We all see it underwater. Glad you inherited that trait.'
From my father
. I stiffened at the thought.
âTwo steps. Here's the door.'
âI know the way.'
They had the music on inside, cranked up. I rang the bell and turned to squint at the street. âAre there many cars?'
âThe street's lined, both sides.'
âGreat.'
âParty people?'
âUnderstatement.' I made a decision. âI'm not staying here.'
The door swung open before Rossi could respond. âAva! Ava! Ava!' Cate sputtered my name, undulating the sounds as if her vocal cords were on a roller coaster ride. âYou here! So so so so glad. I've news! You'll. Be â¦' She managed to punctuate her sentences in really weird places. Talk about fragmented thoughts. It completely distorted the meaning.
âCate. What have you been doing?'
Joey joined her. He wasn't a lot better, and in total alpha male mood to boot, judging by the swearing and swaggering. âAva. You again.' Not quite as warm as Cate's greeting.
âOnly for a minute.' I turned to Rossi. âCan you wait in the car for me? This won't take long.' I focussed on getting inside and picking up my gear before the neighbours called the cops. I felt my way down the hall, pushing past people lining the walls. Cate stumbled after me. âI'll help.'
âSweetie, you're wasted. You need to sleep it off.'
âShe'd better be more than drunk, with what they shell out.' Joey slurred his words.
âWho's shelling out, Joey?'
âVIP.' Cate giggled. âWe're given a stash, start of each shift.'
âTerrific.' I kept my voice cool, which was an effort because I wanted to stomp Joey's ass on the spot.
Steady, Sykes. Think of the priorities
. Number one was getting Cate's tongue out of my ear.
She turned to me, all smiles. âPrimo “e”. Ava. It's.' She stopped dead mid-sentence and twitched. Something fascinating had caught her attention. It appeared to be in a different reality. I headed for the spare room, but Cate pulled me back, her voice taking on a conspiratorial tone as she whispered at the top of her lungs. âI'm promoted.'
âCate?' I had a hand on both sides of her face, mostly so I could keep her in focus. âAre you really working the VIP floor?'
She held up her pointer finger. âIsn't it great?' she slurred. âYour eyes are so pretty.' Cate tilted to one side.
Oh, hell.
I couldn't fix this right now. âCate, go to bed. I'm getting my gear and heading home.'
Cate started tugging me through a crowd of people toward Joey's bedroom. âMore pills?'
âNo thanks, Cate.' I grabbed my things, popped in fresh contacts and left.
Rossi had the car running when I emerged with my pack. We rode without speaking a word for the ten minute drive to my apartment.
He broke the silence when we were a block away. âAre you sure you want to stay here, alone?'
âPositive.' After what I'd been through, the copycat killer would have to wait for my attention. He was no longer top of my worry list.
âI can check it out first.'
âNot necessary.' Part of me wanted to find someone hiding in my closet so I could beat the crap out of them. Not the most generous vibe, but it was honest.
Rossi touched my arm lightly. âAva, I'm here for you.'
âYeah, about that. I think I've had all the help from you I can take for a while.' I reached around the back, grabbed the Techno Inc bag and said goodbye. I was out of the car and up the steps before he could reply, verbally that is.
It's disorienting, being in the sea and using your Mar blood to pull oxygen from the water.
No shit?
Sleep is best. I'll call you tomorrow.
He didn't leave.
The green Subaru's here.
Nifty. You can go now.
When I'd done a sweep, he said goodnight and drove away. I switched on the burner and called Rourke. Seemed fair to let him, and my tail, know I was staying here again, though with the Subaru in sight, they already did. He would chew me out for sailing off with Rossi, which was expected. He didn't know the half of it. I left a brief message and hung up. My cupboards were close to bare, but I made a mug of hot cocoa before curling up in bed. For the first time in twelve years, I cried myself to sleep.
My eyes flew open when someone buzzed my intercom. I really hated being awakened this way. I hitched up the drawstring pants Rossi had lent me and padded out to press the com. âWho's there?'
âDaniel Bane.'
Hell no.
âJust a sec.' I scooted to the bathroom and splashed water on my face, giving me time to think. Should I let him in? Could he give me more answers? I went to the door, buzzed him in and slid back the deadbolt. In a moment, Daniel Bane stood in front of me.