Barb Hendee
Hunting Memories
For my editor, Susan, and my daughter, Jaclyn, who both put an amazing amount of thought, time, and work into helping me with this novel.
Prologue
SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA: Spring 2008
Rose de Spenser sat at an antique desk with her pen poised above a sheet of pristine stationery. Night lights from Chinatown glinted through her bedroom window as she stared outside. town glinted through her bedroom window as she stared
She knew what she had to do, but fear and uncertainty kept her pen in midair.
"Don't do it." A voice came from behind her. "You'll give us away."
"I have to," she whispered. "We cannot go on like this." Then she turned partway in her chair, facing inside the room.
Her nephew stood in the doorway. His form was transparent as always, so she could see out into the living room behind him. Though long dead, he looked eternally seventeen years old, his brown hair hanging to his shoulders. He wore the same blue-and-yellow Scottish plaid draped across his shoulder and held by a belt over the black breeches he had died in. The knife sheath at his hip was empty. After all these years with her in America, he'd never lost his accent.
"The world has shifted, Seamus," she said, "and if we do not act now, we'll lose our chance."
He looked at the wall and did not respond. But he must have known she was right.
What choice did they have? To continue rotting away in this apartment for another hundred years? To leave all the others, the lost ones in hiding, to rot away for another hundred years?
No.
Her attempt to convince him somehow strengthened her own resolution, and she turned back to the desk, this time lowering her pen to the sheet of paper. She wrote:
You are not alone. There are others like you. Respond to the Elizabeth Bathory Underground. P.O. Box 27750, San Francisco, CA 94973.
She folded the sheet and placed it inside an ivory envelope, addressing it carefully:
ELEISHA CLEVON
1412 QUEEN ANNE DRIVE
SEATTLE, WA 98102
She stood up and walked to the door. Seamus didn't move, but she had never once walked through him.
"Where are you going?" he asked.
"Downstairs. To mail it."
She could see the pain on his face, the worry for her, but she just stood there quietly, waiting. After a long moment, he stepped aside.
Chapter 1
SEATTLE, WASHINGTON: Four Weeks Later
"If you want to see the new Rambo movie, you'll have to take Wade or go by yourself," Eleisha told Philip. "There's no way I'm sitting through that." She looked down the dark street into Pike Place Market. "Now focus. You need to practice so you can do this by yourself."
Philip was so tall that she realized she was standing under his chin, so she stepped away to see his face. He frowned, but she couldn't tell if his bad mood was due to her refusal to see Rambo or her insistence that he focus on the task at hand. Philip was hard to read, and they'd promised not to use telepathy on each other without permission.
"Your gift is better than mine for hunting like this," he said in his thick French accent, not bothering to look down at her.
"No, it isn't."
A month ago, Eleisha had discovered that she could feed without killingWell, more important, a few weeks before that, she had learned that most vampires were latent telepaths who simply required another telepath to help their abilities surface. Not long after developing her own psychic powers, she had fed upon a mortal, left him alive, and then altered his memories so that he never remembered meeting her.
To her, this was a revelation. She had always hated killing to exist, and now she didn't need to.
She'd expected Philip to be equally pleased and relieved.
But to Philip, this new method of hunting felt more like a bridle-something to hold him back. He was a killer by nature, and Eleisha knew this. But he wasn't stupid, and he understood the freedom of feeding without having to worry about hiding or dumping bodies.
He also cared what she thought of him. He wanted her approval. She didn't like using this against him, but she would if she had to.
"Your gift is good for any kind of hunting," she said.
And it was.
Of the few other vampires she'd met, Philip's gift made hunting look the most effortless.
Within a few nights of becoming undead, a specific element of their previous personality developed into an overwhelming aura-which could be turned on and off at will. Eleisha's gift was the illusion of helplessness. She was perceived as a helpless teenage waif who needed assistance. The fact that she was small with wheat gold hair contributed to the strength of her gift. Her victims longed either to take care of her or to take advantage of her-and she used to feed only upon the latter.
Philip's gift was sexual attraction.
She glanced up at him again, and this time he looked down, tilting his pale, perfect face. He was slender and muscular at the same time, wearing Levi's and a long-sleeved Hugo Boss T-shirt. Thick red-brown hair hung halfway down his back.
Eleisha wasn't affected by his handsome appearance, but she understood its purpose.
And when he used it in combination with his gift, victims practically fell into his lap.
"Come on," she said, walking away, knowing he would follow.
Western Avenue grew less crowded as she moved away from the market, toward the parking garage.
By now, Philip knew the drill, and although he'd already complained a few times about the monotony, he agreed with the sensible nature of Eleisha's preference to get somebody inside of a parked car-as long as the car was in the shadows.
They paced the lowest level together, not speaking, just keeping an eye out until they'd reached the darkest sector, and Philip stopped.
A young woman wearing a Market Spice apron walked alone toward a Ford Taurus positioned behind a column. She looked tired, probably just getting off work.
Philip didn't hesitate. He'd been undead since 1819, and he knew how to pick someone.
"Pardon," he said, approaching her.
The woman turned at the sound of his voice in partial annoyance and partial alarm. She hit the unlock beeper on her keychain instantly. What was she doing down here by herself anyway? Stupid.
But then she froze at the sight of Philip, and he let his gift flow outward, surrounding and permeating her.
Eleisha fought to block it. She wasn't immune to his gift, and he wasn't immune to hers, so they had to be careful when hunting together. But she could still see Philip as this woman did: beautiful, strong, and passionate, like a hero from some cheesy book cover on the romance shelf at Barnes amp; Noble.
Yet even as Eleisha had this last thought, she could feel the pull of his gift, and she regretted every nasty comment she'd ever made about his taste in films and music.
He was perfect.
She shook her head hard, trying to clear it.
Focus, she told herself.
The woman stood there, watching as Philip walked up to her. She had brown-black hair in a ponytail. She wore a stylish leather messenger bag over one shoulder and large gold hoops in her ears.
"My sister and I have car trouble," he said, letting his French accent mesh the words together. "Can you help?"
"Do you need my phone?" she asked, taking shallow breaths, her eyes locked on his face.
"No, we are late for a family dinner on Capitol Hill. Can you take us?"
Letting strangers into her car was probably not something this woman did every day, but if he'd asked for her Visa card, she would have given it to him.
Eleisha decided not to talk-as he'd introduced her as his sister, and she couldn't fake a French accent.