How had Tuan known to be there at all?
Adin began walking at a ground-eating stride and eventually
he came to the end of the trolley line and turned, not toward
the wharves and the food but in the other direction, heading for
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181
Aquatic Park on the San Francisco Bay trail, toward the beach
and maybe Golden Gate Bridge if his feet held out, and he didn’t
need to stop for food.
His mind was reeling.
By the time he got to the Palace of Fine Arts buildings, the
sun had come up and the fog was dissipating. The seabirds could
be seen wheeling overhead, looking for food. The city was waking
up and so was Adin. He checked the time on his watches. Six-
fifteen a.m. that meant three-fifteen in the afternoon in Paris. He
hesitated before taking out his cell phone. While he was making
up his mind whether to try Donte again, or to phone Boaz or get
a cab, it rang in his hands.
“Tredeger.”
“Are you
sightseeing
?” Boaz’s voice held undisguised contempt.
Adin closed his eyes. “Thinking,” he answered.
“It’s about fucking time.”
“I’m at the Palace of Fine Arts and I need—in no particular
order—a ride home, breakfast, and to visit Bran at Edward and
Tuan’s.”
“Anything else?”
“I’d like a pedal powered airplane,” Adin told him. “Or a
zeppelin.”
“
Adin
,” Boaz growled.
“Oh, all right. I’m sorry, Boaz. You were right and I was wrong
and I’m so very, very sorry.” Adin swallowed. “I presumed a great
deal. Maybe I don’t have
relationship skills
. I only hope I’m able to
say that to Donte in person sooner rather than later, and to make
up for allowing him to wonder whether he comes first with me.”
Boaz hesitated. “In that, you may be in luck.”
“
What
?”
“It’s possible that he might be on his way.”
“Don’t be cryptic. When?”
182 Z.A. Maxfield
“I’m not being cryptic, it’s just something Santos told me, that
Donte might be well enough to be on the move again. I have no
idea if it’s even true.”
“Does he know where we are?”
“Yes.”
“Then why hasn’t he called, damn him?”
“We’ll have to ask him when we see him.” Boaz hung up.
Edward ushered Adin and Boaz into the kitchen where Tuan
was already sitting with his coffee, reading the paper. He looked
up, owlish in his glasses, and grinned over a vase of freshly cut
Irises. “Morning.”
“Good morning.” Adin dropped into a chair, still pathetically
grateful to sit after his long walk.
Thank heaven he hadn’t had to walk
back to the hotel.
“Boaz and I brought donuts and I’m ravenous.”
Boaz handed a bag to Edward, who opened it and exclaimed
“
Zeppole
! I love these.”
Adin sighed dramatically. “I asked for a zeppel
in
.”
“Technically, you asked for a ride, breakfast, to come here and
see Bran, a pedal powered aircraft,
and
a zeppelin.” Boaz seemed
in a much better mood.
Adin took one of the still-warm, eggy fritters. “These are
delicious.”
“How’s Bran?” Boaz asked.
Edward grinned. “He’s brilliant. A terrific kid. Asleep like a
stone still this morning.”
Tuan rolled his eyes. “Edward is already scouting private
tutors to get him up to speed for school, and I’m going to have
to fabricate a number of documents for him. His current identity
is already proving to be far too pedestrian for Edward.”
Adin peered at Tuan as if his earlier conjecture might be
discernable on his face. Did Tuan and Donte know one another
before Adin introduced them? “Is that going to be a problem?
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183
Will it conflict with your job?”
Tuan hesitated. “Actually, documentation of otherworldly
immigrants seeking asylum is part of the job. There are restrictions
on travel and special requirements for foreign entities. Someone
like Bran will be easy to document, and he’ll sail through the
restrictions because he’s a minor, an orphan, and he has a family
here to sponsor him.”
“Namely, us.” Edward grinned.
“Dear heavens.” Adin raised his eyebrows.
“We talked about it last night,” Tuan said. “Well, I listened
mostly.”
Edward cuffed Tuan lightly on the arm.
“Have you thought this through?” Adin asked.
Boaz coughed, and it sounded a lot like
look who’s talking
.
“As much as we can in such a brief time,” Edward answered.
“I can’t think of anyone better suited to care for someone like
Bran, but have you really considered what it will mean to foster
a teenage boy?”
“We don’t plan to foster him, we plan to adopt him,” Edward
explained. “He needs a
family
.”
Adin couldn’t stop himself from asking, “Tuan? Is that what
you want?”
“I like him,” Tuan said carefully. “I’ve always wanted to have
a family, but I’m not as confident as Edward is that we’re Bran’s
best choice.”
Boaz spoke. “This doesn’t have to be settled right away.
What’s important is that we keep him safe. Adin and Edward are
both impulsive, and now isn’t the time to allow that to dictate our
thinking.”
“Do you know something I don’t?” Tuan frowned.
“Not for a fact.” Boaz returned Tuan’s grim expression. “But
from what little Adin has told me, I doubt Harwiche will go
gently into that good night. Nor will the men who sold Bran to
184 Z.A. Maxfield
him, if they realize where Bran has gone.”
“Adin, when you saw him, what exactly did Harwiche say?”
Adin tried to explain that Harwiche set out to locate a
changeling whose process had been interrupted and whose
contract went unfulfilled, and how he believed the boy could
somehow be a universal donor for bone marrow and organs that
wouldn’t be rejected by his body. “I got the feeling he meant to
keep him prisoner and harvest—”
Edward blanched. “He’s a lunatic.”
Tuan seemed puzzled. “How did he know where to look for
someone like that? An orphan on both sides.”
Adin blanched. “I believe Harwiche hired someone to… help
that along.”
“
No.
” Bran’s voice cracked like a whip from the doorway
where he stood, his sleep-rumpled figure standing frozen with
shock. Everyone fell silent.
Bran swayed on his feet. “My
entire family
was killed so they
could sell me to—”
Edward leaped up, his chair skittling backward over the wood
floor. He caught Bran’s arm before he could fall. “
Bran
.”
Tuan put his paper down and yanked his jacket off the back
of the chair. “If it’s true that Harwiche has further plans, I need
to find out exactly where he is if I can.”
Adin agreed wholeheartedly. “He said he was done coming
after Bran, but I don’t trust him. Then there are the men who
sold him to me. They might come after me because Boaz took
the money back.”
Bran sat. “I’m glad you got your money back, Adin. I don’t
want those people to have your money, even if that means they
kill me.”
Tuan laid a hand on Bran’s shoulder. “It won’t come to that, I
promise. Edward, I’m heading out. I’ll look into those men and
get the paperwork started. Set the alarms, and use the damned
panic room if you need to.”
“You have a panic room?” Adin asked. “How cool is that?
Well. I guess you might need one, in your line of work.”
“We needed the security system because of Edward’s art
collection.” Tuan nodded and smiled at Edward. “But I had the
panic room added because when I’m working I need to know
that Edward is safe. Otherwise, it’s hard to focus.”
Edward offered Tuan one of his sweetest smiles. “Now we
can keep Bran safe as well.”
“See to it.” Tuan leaned in and kissed Edward, and everyone
politely looked elsewhere until they were finished. “I’m going to
learn what I can. Boaz, maybe you can stay in touch with Santos
in case he hears something?”
186 Z.A. Maxfield
“I planned to take Adin to the house Donte uses while he’s in
this area,” said Boaz. “Unless you have a better idea?”
“That’s fine. Stay on your toes, Adin.”
“I’ll try.”
“I have some tricks up my sleeve, Tuan,” Boaz told him. “And
I’m charged with Adin’s safety.”
Adin glanced at Boaz but his impersonal mask was firmly
back in place.
Tuan left first, then Adin hugged Bran and Edward tightly.
He and Boaz left as Edward extolled the virtues of his safe room
as though he and Bran were going to live in a tree house like the
Swiss Family Robinson. It sounded very enticing, Adin imagined,
especially to someone so young. Adin doubted the reality would
live up to the promise, and he hoped to hell they didn’t have to
use it.
Adin avoided any comparison between his current stay at
Donte’s borrowed estate in Marin County with the last time he’d
been there. Then, he’d been injured in a bar, attacked by a group
of vampires determined to pull on Donte’s figurative cape and
piss him off. When Boaz had driven him up the private, tree lined
drive and the large attractive Tuscan inspired home had come
into view, Donte had swept from it like the hero of a Bronte
novel and carried him inside.
This time since it was spring, the trees were flowering
optimistically, the air was redolent with the scent of newly mown
grass, and there was no brooding master to be seen. It was simply
a big house that looked as empty as Adin felt.
Boaz didn’t speak but helped him carry the things they’d
retrieved from the hotel up the stairs to the room he’d shared
previously with Donte.
“It’s nearly time for lunch, I’m going to see what’s in the
pantry, but I’ll probably have to shop for provisions.”
“I didn’t sleep well,” Adin told him. “If it’s all right I’ll just lie
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187
down for a while.”
“I’ll leave you to it then.” Boaz started to back out of the
door.
“Wait.”
“Sir?” Boaz waited politely.
“About that. About last night. You were right, and I’m sorry.”
Adin turned to look out the window, held his good hand behind
his back to keep from fidgeting while he made his apologies.
“I was overtired, Dr. Tredeger, and therefore my tongue ran
faster than my brain.”
“Stop it,” Adin ordered. “Just stop pretending you care what
I think. I heard you loud and clear.”
Boaz frowned thoughtfully and repeated, “I was exhausted
last night and I said things in anger that I didn’t necessarily mean.
I crossed a line and I regret it.”
“It’s fine.” Adin waved him away. “You have a right to your
opinion. We’re stuck in this situation together. Feel free to share
your thoughts with me anytime, even if they aren’t…even if it
might not be something I want to hear.”
The tension seemed to leave Boaz’s small frame, but not
so much that he wasn’t still entirely formal. “I do like you, Dr.
Tredeger. That’s never been an issue.”
Adin’s spirits rose a little. “In that case, please—for heaven’s
sake—no more eggs.”
“Yes, sir, Dr. Tredeger.” Boaz bowed out of the room. “I’ll
give that all the consideration it deserves.”
Adin shook his head. He heard the sharp
snap
of the door
when Boaz shut it and prepared himself for a quiche maybe,
or another omelet at supper. He rummaged through his bags
for a while, hanging up his clothes, putting others aside for the
cleaners. One thing about travelling light, it was easy to unpack
and shove the pilot case under the bed, or into the back of a
closet. He found a split of champagne from the airline in his
carryon and used it to wash down his pain reliever. His sister, the
188 Z.A. Maxfield
chemist, seemed to sit on the shoulder of his good arm saying
no
, while his arm on the other side said,
yes, yes
as soon as the pain
began to diminish.
Within minutes, Adin was so tired he could barely hold his
head up. He peeled off his clothes and dropped them at the foot
of the bed, then slipped between the welcoming sheets. He was
aware of Boaz asking him if he wanted lunch, but he answered
that the thing he wanted most was sleep, which wasn’t entirely
true. What he wanted most was
Donte
.
Donte might be on the move again. That sounded so…
ominous. As though Donte were a malevolent spirit or a
marauding army. If he were
on the move
, Adin could only pray that
at some point he’d look for Boaz, or call him to find out where
they were now, and come to him.
Adin’s yearning was so powerful he could almost see Donte
fidgeting on an airplane, looking at his watch and gauging the
position of the sun when he arrived. If he arrived after dawn,
it would require that he wait in the airport for evening before