back into the sea.”
“Thanks for that,” his father said. “It’s what I wanted.”
“Would you do anything differently?” Adin asked. “If you knew?”
“Maybe.” Keene shrugged. “I might have waited twenty years before I
bought the boat.”
Adin nodded. “I thought you’d say something like that.”
“What about you?”
“What do you mean?”
“You heard me, what would you do? Differently, I mean. If you had a
second chance?”
Adin gasped and reached out blindly, striking his broken arm
against the metal frame of the bed. He braced himself for the
intense physical pain he knew would follow, but it never came.
His arm should have hurt a lot. It should have hurt like
hell
. He
opened his eyes and found Tuan sitting in the chair beside his
bed. He wore a worried expression on his face, even as he got up
and said, “Shh, Adin. Everything’s going to be all right.”
“What’s going on?”
“I don’t know if—”
“Was what Bran said true? Am I…?”
Tuan’s expression tightened. “Yes.”
Adin closed his eyes. “Who?”
“Adin—”
“I asked you who did this to me.” Adin ground his teeth
together against a wave of nausea.
Tuan lifted his hands, palms up. “We don’t know for certain.
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219
We’re still trying to get answers…”
“
Tuan
.”
“All right.
Yes
. Based on the information we have so far, and
given that none but a handful of people know you’re here? We
have to assume Donte did it.”
Adin shut his eyes, unable to think. How did he feel about
that? How was he supposed to feel about that? His entire body
felt cold suddenly—as if he’d been bathed in ice—and he began
to tremble. Shaking like he was in shock. Maybe he was.
“Tuan?”
“Don’t panic, Adin. This is…” He stood and gripped Adin’s
hand. “This is just the beginning. But you have to know we’ll do
everything we can. Everything we know how to do to help you
through this.”
“Can you stop it?” Adin said through clenched teeth.
Tuan shook his head.
“
So cold
.” Adin shivered as he looked around. “Where’s
Edward?”
“He’s with Bran.”
“
Fuck
.” Adin held his body rigid, trying to keep it from shaking
apart but it was no use. “Bran. Wh-what ab-bout B-bran?”
“Edward will take care of him. You’ll be here for a while,
Adin. I’m not going to lie to you. This isn’t going to be easy, and
it’s not always successful. There’s a chance you won’t survive it.”
Adin considered this. “W-where is D-d-donte?”
Tuan shook his head sadly. “I’m sorry. I don’t know.”
The days and nights that followed took on a dizzying,
disorienting sameness for Adin. His dreams, which were already
vivid and unpredictable since he’d met Bran, took on a nightmare
quality as he changed, imbuing him with new senses, dark cravings
and a dreadful and utterly insistent set of phobias. The most
potent was a terror of the sun that caused such vividly realistic
220 Z.A. Maxfield
panic attacks—all unnecessary because he’d been locked away
early on in a room that had no windows, deep in the basement
where they handled cases like his—that he struggled against the
restraints until his flesh burned and his screams could be heard
throughout the hospital’s long corridors. Ultimately, someone
would then come to subdue and sedate him leaving him weak
and powerless, until the next time it happened.
He had no way to gage the passage of time. It was dark and
quiet, sealed off from the outside world to prevent the stimulation
of his new and possibly uncontrollable vampire behavior. He
could hear nothing from the outside, see nothing, and sense
nothing unless someone opened the sliding door and entered his
room. Bran’s calming presence no longer found its way into his
dreams. Consequently, he faced them alone, unprepared for the
sinister new longings he felt.
The hospital staff made their way into and out of his room
in the faint glow of the poorest light, meeting his needs for the
most part, offering palliative care, as if he were a hospice patient,
waiting for the inevitable. He wanted, in his lucid moments, to be
cured, to be with family or friends, to be free of the room and
the dark IV and all its implications. He wanted to be Dr. Adin
Tredeger again.
When anyone entered, Adin watched them constantly,
breathing in the richness of the blood that rushed through their
veins. Even though he needed no sustenance, his eyes tracked
their slightest movements. He watched the barely perceptible
throbbing of the pulse in their necks, imagining the taste of their
flesh.
As men and women worked around him, he discovered new
talents. A simple push of his thoughts could cause hearts to race.
The monster that was growing inside Adin triumphed to hear
it. He could sense the release of sweet adrenaline as breathing
quickened as the objects of his experimentation fought the urge
to flee.
Rationally, they had to be aware that he was harmless. He was
restrained, sedated, and helpless. But a gentle press of thought
Vigil
221
made fear grip them all over again, it was instinct too old to
identify, too palpable—too visceral—to ignore. He could feel the
terror that infused them. He could taste it on the air around him.
The new thing inside him, cruel and predatory, caused saliva to
run in his mouth as his canines ripped through his tender gums
pressing aside his incisors, elongating, throbbing and ready to
sink into human flesh until everyone left him once again, alone
in the dark.
In those quickening heartbeats, there was only the hunt, the
desire, the need for a clean kill and—above all—the urge to
appease his new, insatiable appetite for blood.
There were moments, too, when he was Adin Tredeger
again, aware, appalled, and fully conscious of the thing he could
become. When despair and revulsion vied for the top spot on
his emotional hit parade, and he cried out for Donte, who never
came.
Yet Adin
sensed
him. Donte’s presence—while not physical—
seemed to color the atmosphere around Adin, hanging there
sweetly like the vague scent of a subtle perfume. Every now and
again, when Adin woke, he’d find a gift. Something new and
different, placed on the table next to his bed or even clutched
in his hand. Something simple that gave him pleasure, a faceted
crystal orb with a tea light in it that threw rainbows across
the sheet covering his nakedness. A perfect conch shell, sleek
and smooth on the inside, ridged and tactile on the outside. It
smelled like salt and wind and sun to Adin, as though it had been
dipped into the ocean then allowed to dry outdoors. Blue glass
and an ostrich feather. A golden lump of resin Adin knew to
be Frankincense, released its heady aroma into the room. The
symbol, sometimes used to signify transition, new spiritual life,
wasn’t lost on him during what he’d begun to think of as his “Adin
moments”. The animal within him, the newly awakened beast
was content to breathe in its sweet earthy scent. All of Donte’s
gifts, thoughtfully procured, slyly offered, held the perfect appeal
for each facet of the man who was once Adin Tredeger.
Sometimes they made him smile.
222 Z.A. Maxfield
Sometimes they made him cry.
“Adin.” Tuan’s voice.
The predator leaped within him, angry at its captors. Especially
Tuan, because Adin wasn’t fooled by the patient accountant
anymore. He sensed…something feral and predatory under
Tuan’s skin. “It’s about fucking time someone showed their face.
Come here and release me before I rip myself apart and come
after you.”
“I understand your frustration.” Tuan moved to the wall and
toggled a switch that caused light to flare in the small room. Tuan
and Christobel Santos stood inside his room, side by side, solemn
and wary. “The process is painful and frightening. We attempt to
make it easier to bear with sedation and environmental control,
but there’s no cure and no guarantee that anything we can do will
help.”
Adin tried to get control over his roiling thoughts. “I
sometimes think I must be imagining everything, but then the
hunger comes…”
Santos’s dark eyes regarded Adin with pity. “Eventually you
will learn to control that, but it will never go away.”
“Did you do this?” Adin asked Santos directly.
“I did
not
.” Santos stepped forward. Adin watched his face
carefully for clues that he might be lying, but found none.
“I need to get out of here.”
“It’s not safe unless you have someone to mentor you,” Tuan
told him quietly.
“Donte—”
“No one knows where Donte is.” Tuan’s face tightened in
what Adin assumed was contempt, “He sends you little gifts
when he should be—”
Santos spoke. “Since Fedeltà has chosen to abdicate his
responsibility, I volunteered.”
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223
Adin laughed weakly. “How you must be enjoying this.”
“The chance to take Donte’s prize? Yes. But unfortunately
I find I am unwilling to take pleasure in your suffering. Even at
Donte’s expense.”
“Have you suddenly found scruples?”
Santos picked a minuscule piece of lint off the sleeve of his
immaculate suit coat and growled, “Sadly, it seems I have.”
“Take heart, they probably won’t last.” Adin tugged at the
restraints that bound him. Impatient. Angry. The monster inside
him was ready to feed. “Who do I have to fuck to leave this
dump?”
Out of nowhere, Adin heard Edward’s voice. “There’s
someone here to see you.”
For a brief and awful moment Adin thought it might be his
sister Deana. It was far, far too soon to face his only remaining
family member with the sordid truth of his new existence...
“
Adin
.” Bran’s voice.
“Hello, Bran. It seems you were right. I’m afraid I didn’t
dream—”
“It’s going to be all right, Adin.” Bran tried to console him
and it made his heart feel like lead in his chest.
He
should have
been taking care of Bran. Not the other way around.
“Bran, I’m so sorry I let you down.”
“You never let me down. It’s just…I don’t know. It’s the way
of the world...”
“Where are you?” For the first time, Adin was aware of a
fixture in the ceiling that resembled half of a Victorian gazing
ball.
Camera
. Shit. Had someone been monitoring him this whole
time?
“We can see you, and there’s an intercom,” Edward told him.
“We haven’t been allowed in until now.”
“How long has it been?”
“Nearly four weeks.” Edward’s voice wavered. “Bran started
224 Z.A. Maxfield
school.”
Adin closed his eyes.
Four weeks
.
Santos spoke. “If it makes you feel any better, when I was
turned it was nearly two years before I could be around anyone.
I spent that time in an iron cage like an animal, tearing my flesh
from my bones in my rage, only to have it repair itself while I
slept. Things have changed since the sixteenth century.”
Adin met Santos’s dark eyes. “Next you’re going to tell me
that in order to kill someone you had to walk uphill both ways in
the snow.”
Santos stepped forward and flicked a finger painfully at Adin’s
forehead. “You’re a pain in the ass, Adin. There will be no end to
the satisfaction of the man who will eventually beat that out of
you. Thank heavens I have only to teach you how to survive your
new existence, and the best way to feed,
without
killing.”
Adin noticed he no longer had a cast on his arm when Tuan
stepped forward to remove Adin’s restraints. Santos stepped
around the hospital bed and worked on his other side. Together,
they lifted Adin’s naked body from the bed and helped him clothe
himself. He was not physically weak, far from it. He simply found
himself unable to coordinate the movement of his limbs into
some semblance of normal activity, as if his mind and his body
no longer communicated.
“What the hell?” He balked at sitting in the wheelchair that
Tuan provided.
“You’ll be relearning balance and coordination, but for now
it’s best if you take it slow.”
Adin scrubbed at his face with the heels of his hands. “Just
get me the fuck out of here.” He eyed Tuan and Santos until they
opened that sliding door and wheeled him out. In the hallway,
Boaz waited.
“I’ll be packing the things from your room, Dr. Tredeger.”
Adin glanced behind him, thinking about the trinkets Donte
left for him. It didn’t matter how he’d gotten them in there,