Page 41
A car approached the white mansion.
Lucienne watched as the handsome boy strolled under a jungle of crimson maple foliage, toward the mansion’s door. He wore a black tuxedo. His usually disheveled mane was coiffed like an underwear model in Esquire . Lucienne smiled. Vladimir could easily pull off a style both classic and modern.
She darted away from the edge of the roof.
“Music,” she commanded, and classical violin drifted over the rooftop.
She scurried in her stilettos toward the other side of the roof, where her state-of-the-art telescope was situated.
Underneath was the cliff, and far below, ocean waves made noisy love to the ancient rocks.
Lucienne often found herself on the roof watching the stars in the wee hours. Tonight, she wouldn’t be alone, and the stars may be even closer. Eterne might be one step away if she could just feel its pulse for a split second.
The front door opened and closed. Vladimir must have passed her fortress’ first line of defense. The biometric scanner outside her door was programmed to admit Kian, Vladimir, Aida, and Ziyi. The armed ceiling sensors were also designed to recognize them and not unleash deadly offensive weapons.
Lucienne could picture Vladimir striding through the maze of corridors.
At the end he would find a spiral staircase.
If he stopped to look down from the third floor stairs, he would glimpse a partial view of her library filled with manuscripts and books.
She treasured her multilingual collection of ancient mythologies—the legends surrounding antediluvian knowledge and wars between gods, demigods, and long-ago heroes, as well as the tales of the origin of the human race long forgotten by the modern world.
They were merely collections. Her prized possessions were stored secretly in her temperature-controlled cellar, impenetrable to satellite and guarded by the most advanced laser weapons.
Lucienne was the only one who had access to the chamber.
After all, the Siren was the keeper of powerful secrets within secrets.
And there he was—emerging onto the roof, sauntering toward her with a breathtaking smile. The stars were behind his shoulders. “Lucia.” He took in the sight of her with appreciation.
Lucienne wore a one-shoulder silk evening gown of a spring blue, with a daringly low-cut back and curve-hugging mermaid skirt. Her hair was pinned up, a few tendrils playing seductively with her dangling ruby earrings.
She tilted her head toward the redwood table between them.
On it were two sets of China plates accompanied by ornate silver utensils.
Violet napkins were folded into flowers.
Positioned around their plates were a variety of Asian sauces.
At the center of the table a pot of soup stock simmered. The aroma lingered between them.
“We’re going to have Wild Mandarin Duck huǒ guō tonight,” Lucienne said.
Wild Mandarin Duck Hot Pot wasn’t the most romantic dish, but it was fun. Lucienne saw approval in Vladimir’s hazel eyes as they swept over the table. Then his gaze pulled back to her, over every inch of her, caressing her without a touch.
A sudden shadow of doubt breezed into her mind.
What was she doing? And what would this lead to after tonight?
They couldn’t really have an intimate relationship.
Stubbornly, she pushed reason to the fringe of her mind.
She and Vladimir hadn’t been together since their second kiss.
They hadn’t allowed themselves to enjoy each other’s company for a very long time. She’d have this night, as would he.
Lucienne took the bottle of wine from the ice basket, pouring one for Vladimir and one for herself into the crystal glasses.
“We’re underage, milá?ek.”
“So?”
“Shouldn’t we check with the adults about drinking?”
“Call your uncle,” Lucienne said.
“You’re still the queen of irony.” Vladimir laughed. “And you take my breath away.”
Their tall glasses clinked to a toast. Lucienne sipped her wine, savoring its clean bite, and gazed at Vladimir through the crystal brim. Vladimir put his wineglass down, and then slowly took Lucienne’s and set it down.
“A dance, m’ lady?” Before she gave her permission, his hand was already posed on her bare back.
His other hand curved around hers. It was warm, solid, and tender.
She felt wonderful to be in Vladimir’s strong arms, but for a second, her mind drifted to Ashburn and his hypnotic touch.
She forced her thoughts back to her current partner and threw her arms around Vladimir’s neck.
They moved to the flowing rhythm of the music with matching grace. Vladimir pulled Lucienne closer, his face pressing against the side of hers, her curls dancing between them. Lucienne could feel the rough shave of his chin, and then the small of her back stiffened.
“Relax, milá?ek,” Vladimir coaxed in her ear. “It’s just a dance. Let’s enjoy it.”
“Someone’s here!” Lucienne hissed. “An invader.”
A figure in a hooded black coat blurred past them and whooshed into the night sky, leaving a trail of light. The candle lights on the rooftop snuffed out with the sound of a sigh.
Pulling away from Vladimir, Lucienne sprang to the telescope, training its lens toward the fading flash of light. The telescope caught the mysterious visitor before the spark completely zoomed out of the focus of the lens.
Riding on a transparent motorcycle-like machine that seemed made of light, Ashburn looked over his shoulder.
Lucienne stepped back with a gasp. The farm boy had followed her back to Sphinxes and crashed her date. He had warned her to stay away from him, but why wasn’t he keeping his distance from her? Was he taunting her, or was he unable to stay away from her?
And what flier was that? It was faster than BL7!
Then Vladimir spotted Ashburn in the telescope’s adjusted lens.
“What the—?” Furiously, Vladimir pulled out his encrypted Eidolon and dialed Kian’s number.
“There’s an intruder in the Sphinxes air space.
” After he warned Kian, he dialed Ziyi’s lab in the castle.
“What is going on up there?!” he shouted into the phone.
“You’re allowing a trespasser to fly in and out!
” Black fire lit in his eyes. “Who’s on guard tonight?
” He slammed his Eidolon shut and turned to Lucienne.
“Let’s go to the castle. I’ll shoot him down! ”
“Calm down, Vlad,” Lucienne said, face paling. When she looked into the telescope again, Ashburn was gone.
~
Vladimir screeched his Audi to a stop at the gate. He jumped out of the car and hurtled into the castle. Lucienne tried to keep up in her sky high stilettos. When they reached the north wing, Vladimir headed toward the defense room.
Lucienne wrapped her arms around his waist, half dragging and half coaxing him toward Laboratory SX1. “Vlad, I have a better idea.”
Seemingly distracted by Lucienne’s touch, Vladimir followed her. Then, just as quickly, he refocused his attention back on Ashburn and was indignant. “He sabotaged our date!”
“We’ll resume our date right where we left off. Now come with me. ”
Vladimir in his tuxedo and Lucienne in her gown hurried into Laboratory SX1.
The lab personnel and Ziyi were at their posts, frantically entering codes, rewriting programs, and testing equipment. No one seemed to notice that Vladimir and Lucienne were overdressed. The system had been compromised. It was more than a slap in everyone’s face.
“I’m so sorry, Lucia. We failed to trace the invader,” Ziyi said with gritted teeth and a beet-red face, her fingers flying across the control panel.
“It’s Ashburn Fury,” Lucienne said.
“He blocked Dragonfly again! And none of our tracers can function.”
The door chimed open. Orlando stomped into the lab. “The weapon system is off line. Kian’s in the field with the technicians, checking servers and cable lines.”
Ashburn is making my people look like fools.
Lucienne shut her eyes for a moment to collect her thoughts.
When she fluttered them open again, she turned to the lab personnel.
“Unplug all the computers, save one beta and one quantum. And turn off all other devices, except for the dark-matter detector.”
Her staff turned to her with a confused look.
“Now!” Lucienne said.
The crew obeyed. Two of the technicians efficiently engaged a tracing program on dark matters on the beta computer.
Lucienne opened the charm locket on her necklace and released the pin. The net clip that held the Eye of Time separated it from the Twilight Water. She placed the Eye on a sensor that linked to the beta.
Orlando and two commandos stood by with fire extinguishers, looking tense.
The sensor that monitored the Eye of Time blinked once, twice, and then a string of numbers burst alive inside the Eye’s lens.
“Dragonfly’s back on line,” Ziyi called from the lab .
My enemy’s enemy is my friend. A gleam flashed in Lucienne’s eyes. Soon I’ll know the connection between the Eye of Time and Ashburn.
“Dark matter is flaring!” a technician called. He read off the coordinates.
“Dragonfly on the coordinates!” Vladimir ordered.
An image of Ashburn astride a transparent motorcycle whisked across the center monitor. Someone in the lab whistled. “What’s that?”
“I’d kill to have a ride like that,” someone else said.
The rider and his machine plummeted toward the snow-capped mountains.
A collective gasp rose in the lab.
Clasping her mouth to muffle a cry, Lucienne stole a look at the Eye. Its color was transforming into a shining crimson, as if sucking blood—Ashburn’s blood.
The Eye of Time must be hunting Ashburn!
Table of Contents
- Page 1
- Page 2
- Page 3
- Page 4
- Page 5
- Page 6
- Page 7
- Page 8
- Page 9
- Page 10
- Page 11
- Page 12
- Page 13
- Page 14
- Page 15
- Page 16
- Page 17
- Page 18
- Page 19
- Page 20
- Page 21
- Page 22
- Page 23
- Page 24
- Page 25
- Page 26
- Page 27
- Page 28
- Page 29
- Page 30
- Page 31
- Page 32
- Page 33
- Page 34
- Page 35
- Page 36
- Page 37
- Page 38
- Page 39
- Page 40
- Page 41 (Reading here)
- Page 42
- Page 43
- Page 44
- Page 45
- Page 46
- Page 47
- Page 48
- Page 49
- Page 50
- Page 51
- Page 52
- Page 53
- Page 54
- Page 55
- Page 56