Knight's Blood (2 page)

Read Knight's Blood Online

Authors: Julianne Lee

Tags: #Kidnapping, #Science Fiction, #Fantasy fiction, #Married people, #Scotland, #General, #Fantasy, #Children - Crimes against, #Fighter pilots, #Fiction, #Time travel

BOOK: Knight's Blood
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The patched-through call was not a good connection, and an annoying delay caused them to interrupt each other with false starts, but Lindsay’s gentle voice calmed Alex’s soul. Still wearing his zoombag and sidearm, looking like a well-used rag and feeling the motion of the ride from which he’d just returned, he leaned his forehead against the bulkhead and pressed himself to the phone as if he could hug his wife through it. He wished he were in London.
 
“Is he—”
 
“Where are—”
 
Alex tried again, and this time was able to get out an entire sentence. “Is he healthy?”
 
There was a pause, and he let it ride for the delay to pass. Then came, with a slight echo that emphasized the distance between them, “He’s perfect.” Even with the crappy connection Alex could hear the joy in her voice. “I didn’t get a very good look at him, and was fairly drugged up at the time, but he’s absolutely beautiful.” She still sounded a little drugged up, speaking slowly, almost haltingly. But her joy made him grin wider.
 
His heart swelled, and he glanced around to see if anyone in the wardroom could tell his throat was closing up. He tried to stifle the smile stuck to his face, but it was impossible. A table of lieutenants across the room were snickering into their coffee. Jake, Alex’s Naval Flight Officer, was there with them, but he wasn’t laughing.
 
Lately Jake had become distant, though they’d been good friends before Alex’s two-year hiatus into the past. Gave him weird looks just short of the hairy eyeball whenever he lapsed into Middle English. Alex had tried to pass off his misspeaking as humor, but Jake never seemed to buy that. Neither did he seem to accept Alex’s claim that new scars that looked like old scars were actually old scars Jake had not noticed before. There were too many of them. Alex could see he wasn’t fooling his Guy In Back.
 
Alex turned back to the wall and murmured, “I can’t wait to see him.”
 
“Where are—” She went silent again, having been interrupted, and he waited. Then she repeated, “Where are you?”
 
“You know I can’t tell you that. But I’m going to take some leave. I’m coming to see you and the baby.”
 
There was a sigh that sounded like relief. Lindsay had never been one to cling to him, or anyone, but the final months of her pregnancy had been tense. He had a sense she resented the way he’d been able to regain his old life, where she hadn’t. She’d had to take maternity leave from her job as a reporter for the
London Times
, and wasn’t sure she’d be able to go back to it later on. Travel would be difficult with the baby, not to mention the chances of a conflict of interest between her job and his were high. Alex knew she feared her career was over. Or at least it would be stunted and at odds with his own. Even so, all she said now was, “It will be good to see you.”
 
“I miss—”
 
“I’m afraid—”
 
“—you, too.”
 
And then she said something that was swallowed up with static, but he guessed she said, “It’s terribly hairy.”
 
“What’s hairy? He’s got hair? He’s not bald, then?”
 
There was a silence, then, “What was that?”
 
“What did you say?”
 
The silence fell again, then she said, more clearly, “Yes, he’s got hair. It’s dark, like mine.”
 
Alex nodded though she couldn’t see him. “Good. I like that. What color are his eyes?” He hoped for green, for that was the color of his own eyes.
 
“Blue.” He felt a twinge of disappointment, but then Lindsay added, “All babies have blue eyes. We can’t know what color they will be for a while yet.”
 
“Oh.” Good.
 
The static returned, and worsened so that Alex knew they were about to be cut off. “Listen, hon, I’m going to lose you. Give him a kiss for me, and I’ll see you both in a couple of days.”
 
“Right. Love you.”
 
“Love you back.” He slipped the receiver from his ear to the phone hook and stood motionless against the wall, thinking about the enormity of what had just happened. In the twenty-first century he routinely flew thousands of feet above the earth, at speeds faster than sound. During the fourteenth century he’d been in battle, wielding at various times both sword and dagger. He’d been knighted by Robert the Bruce, for a year had been laird of an entire island off the coast of Scotland, and had once enjoyed the prospect of eventual elevation to the Scottish peerage. But today his world had been rocked by a child.
 
Alex pulled himself together and turned around, threw a grin at the cluster of fellow officers, then hurried away to request his leave.
 
Like everything else in the military, Alex’s trip to London was a hurry-up-and-wait. It was three days later that he arrived at Lindsay’s flat, which had become his also when they’d married again three months ago. A plain place and there was no lift, and like everything else in London it cost more than Alex thought it should, but the building at least was clean. The landings on the stairwell were papered in green plaid that made him goggle and blink every time he saw it, the halls being so narrow and the walls so close. Tacky, he thought, but once he was inside the flat he wouldn’t have to look at it.
 
He climbed the three flights to their floor, shifted his bag to his left hand, and turned the doorknob, but the door was locked. She wasn’t home.
 
Huh. Lindsay should be there by now. Perhaps she was out. Groceries or something. Dang, he wanted to see the baby right away. With a sigh, he reached into his jeans pocket for his keys.
 
The door to the next flat opened, and its tenant emerged. James, Alex remembered from his last time here. Fortyish, he wore a slightly rumpled black trench coat and collarless white shirt that gave him a Eurotrashy sort of look. He held a cigarette between two fingers, which he put in his mouth to lock his door, then dragged on it. He turned and noticed Alex, and said, “Oh . . . hello, MacNeil.”
 
Alex knew James to be an utterly pleasant fellow, contrary to appearance. But today there was an odd note in his voice that caught Alex’s attention, and instead of going on his way, James stepped toward him. Alex’s hand paused before his key reached the door. “Hi.”
 
“I’m terribly sorry for your loss.”
 
All Alex had in response to that was a blank look. He had to swallow a “Huh?”
 
“The baby.”
 
Thundering terror nearly knocked Alex sideways. Struggling not to show how stricken he was, he gripped his key-chain hard so the key blades bit his palm. “Excuse me?” Anger rose that lately he seemed to be the last to know anything.
 
Now it was James’ turn to look stricken. “Oh, I’m deeply sorry. I thought you knew.”
 
“Knew what? What happened?” And how did James know and himself not?
 
James was turning red and looking around as if he wished he could run away down the stairs, but he faced up to his responsibility for what he’d said, and replied. “Your wife spoke to me as she was leaving.”
 
“Leaving?”
 
“Yes. Just this morning. She told me the baby has been abducted. I’m terribly sorry.”
 
Somehow that was a relief, and Alex let out in a sigh the air he’d been holding in. Not dead. The baby could still be alive and well, and so was Lindsay.
 
But then the words sank in, and he realized the child was missing. And so was Lindsay. “Where did she go? Did she say when she’d be back?” Soon, he hoped. Then they could figure out what to do.
 
James’ discomfort seemed to grow. Now he sidled toward the stairs as if readying to dash down them. “She didn’t say. She had a bag with her.” He blinked as if just remembering something, then reached into a pocket. He fished around and came up with a single key. “She asked me to hold the key to your flat.”
 
Now nothing made sense. Bag? Key? Where on God’s earth could she have gone? Alex blinked at James, at a loss for what to say.
 
“Here.” James held out the key. Alex took it and stared at it stupidly.
 
“Why? What’s going on?”
 
James pressed his lips together and for a moment looked as if he were going to clam up. But instead he said, “I don’t know what this means. You understand she was quite upset at the time. But she blurted something about ears. And she said she was going to get someone. It was almost as if she knew where the baby had been taken and was going there to retrieve him. Don’t know how, but she seemed determined.”
 
Alex knew Lindsay was always very determined. If she knew where her child had been taken, it was a lead-pipe cinch she would go there and get him. That gave Alex hope. He said, “Ears?”
 
James drew on his cigarette and shrugged, struggling now to regain his well-cultivated insouciant air. “I’ve no idea what it means.”
 
“What, exactly, did she say?”
 
“I don’t remember. Not exactly. As I said, she was quite upset and, well, not terribly coherent. I reckon she’d been crying for hours. Seemed in pretty bad shape, I’m afraid.”
 
Lindsay crying. That didn’t happen often.
 
Alex wished for more information, but James seemed tapped out. He stared at the key in his hand. “Thanks. Have the police been notified?”
 
“I don’t know. I’ve told you everything she said. She ran out of here awfully fast.”
 
Alex nodded. “All right. Thank you.”
 
James headed for the stairs, then paused and said, “I hope you find your son.”
 
“Wait!” James waited. Alex continued. “Did she say anything about a name? We haven’t named him yet.” For months Lindsay had changed her mind on a daily basis, and Alex couldn’t remember most of the ones she’d picked and discarded.
 
“I’m sorry. I couldn’t say. There wasn’t a lot that made sense in what she told me.”
 
“I see. Well, thanks.”
 
James nodded and hurried down the stairs, leaving Alex breathless. It was with fumbling fingers he slipped the key on his chain into the door lock and turned it. He entered the flat, let his bag slip to the floor, and looked around.
 
The place was a wreck. Not large to begin with, and the furniture crowded it a bit, but also clothes lay scattered about and breakfast dishes on the dinette table gave the place the close, dank smell of a Dumpster. This was very much not like Lindsay.
 
In the bedroom he found the bed rumpled and the closet spilling over with clothes torn from hangers and dropped to the floor. A new, white, spindled crib stood against the wall by the window. It was covered with dust. Not dust settled over time, but a thick coat of it splattered all over as if a vacuum cleaner bag had exploded. Alex felt it, and it was gritty like fine sand. His heart lurched and his stomach turned. This was too weird, in a way that gave him the sort of creeps he hadn’t experienced since . . . well, since the fourteenth century.
 
In search of answers—or even a clue—he picked up the phone and called Lindsay’s mother. But on hearing the old lady’s cheerful voice full of congratulations, he knew she hadn’t been told any more than he had. He wasn’t about to say anything, not with the paltry information he had, and so he let her go on in a chirpy, excited voice and plummy syllables until he could get her off the phone.
 
When he hung up, he stood in the living room, alone and struggling to know what to do. Or even how to feel. Lindsay hadn’t told James where she was going. Hadn’t told her mother anything at all. Hadn’t even waited until he would be off the ship and on the ground before tearing off to God knew where in search of the baby, and that astonished him more than anything. Why would she do that? He looked around the room, wishing something informative would leap out at him, but it didn’t. Desperate for something constructive to do, he went to the table and cleared the dishes to the kitchen. They went into the sink with some hot water and soap, and he went to the window to crack it open and perhaps let some fresh air into the flat. It was a relative thing, but the noise and fumes from the street below were an improvement over stale food.
 
There on the kitchen counter was a photo, one of those routinely taken of newborns. Alex snatched it up and held it to the light from the window for a good look. His son. It had to be. It was a pink-faced baby with a fuzz of dark hair, eyes squinted shut and tiny fist closed near one ear.
 
The ear was pointed at the top.
 

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