Realm of Shadows (Alliance Vampires #4)
Page 6The St. Michel now standing in the little village just outside Paris dated back to the sixteenth century; the crypt in the old ruins they now worked so laboriously to probe and restore predated the new church by three or four hundred years. The work was treacherous, but they had shored up the area enough to allow tourists to pay extra francs to come and view the dig in process. Now, to add to the aggravation of the professor leaning over their shoulders, directing the tedious and back-breaking labor, there were the curious stopping to ask questions every other minute. The Americans were easy to ignore; he pretended he spoke no English. The French were more annoying because the professor would pause to speak with them, then shout at his laborers again that they were working far too roughly; they might damage coffins that had survived for centuries.
Jean-Luc stared over at Brent and rolled his eyes as a young woman began a conversation with the professor. Not just a young woman. A beautiful one, with a smooth cultured voice and a knowledge of the area, and the church. American. Her accent was definitely American. And though her words were curious and knowledgeable, there was also a friendly charm to the very sound of her voice. It was not lost on the professor. The old man was not without a lascivious nature; he would hold the young woman to balance her over the opening so that she could see better, and so that he could get his bony hands on her young flesh.
Brent didn’t seem to catch Jean-Luc’s look. He was distracted, not noting the young woman talking to the professor, either. He was studying the area in which they worked, which connected to the underbelly of the new church through a maze of vaults and corridors, many of which had housed the bones of the noble dead. This area, some distance from the new foundations, was different in its style and decor.
Typical Gothic arches created both support and architectural features, but the walls and crypts were decorated with a strange combination of the customary and bizarre. Large crosses, in various metals, surrounded the grave sites, but were joined by myriad demons and gargoyles.
In the pit where they now dug, they had just come to an obstruction. He knew it, and the American knew it. As the professor chatted with the young woman in French, Brent at last gave Jean-Luc his undivided attention. He gave a little shake of his head, indicating that they should not tell the professor just what point they had reached.
Jean-Luc grinned. The American was smart. The corpse they were about to exhume might be laden with precious jewels and adorned in gold. Let the professor have his accolades. They would take the riches.
But the American frowned, and Jean-Luc frowned as well. What was Brent planning?
The young woman was lingering, speaking with the professor, but watching the American as he worked in the crypt. Why not? Jean-Luc thought with a shrug. The woman was young. Tall, sleek, elegantly, sensually built with full curves and a slim waist. She had long, sandy hair, and wickedly long legs. Large, luminous eyes, and a perfectly fashioned face. Smooth flesh. Professor Dubois was as wrinkled as a prune and as wild looking as an electrocuted Pekinese. The American worker was a tall man, wiry and powerful with an easy grace of movement and finely honed muscles that seemed to swell and tighten each time he used a tool. His features marked him as somewhere between twenty-five and thirty-five, while his eyes were that strange green-gold color and his hair, neatly long, almost to his shoulders, frequently tied, was a dark sable. Rich, probably tempting to a young woman. The world didn’t change. Women might marry a man with intelligence and riches, but when it came to a man with whom to find pleasure, they tended to hunt out a man with physical power. Animal instinct. The American, however, still wasn’t giving the electric beauty of his countrywoman much notice. He was pretending to dig deeper now, but making no real moves to disclose whatever treasure they might have come upon.
Jean-Luc had simply paused; now he wondered if it was the American, or the grave, to which the young lady was giving her sharp attention while casually making conversation with the professor.
“Professor,” Brent said suddenly and impatiently, interrupting the conversation and leaning on his shovel.
“What is it?” Dubois demanded.
The American looked at his watch. “It’s late. We have to begin again in the morning.”
“Not so late. We shouldn’t stop. I have studied the old records. We must be nearly upon the grave.”
We must get this young lady out, and shut down for the evening.”
“Oh, I have overstayed!” the young woman exclaimed. “I simply find it all so fascinating. Forgive me.”
“Forgive you? Not at all, my dear,” Dubois said, draw-ingJean-Luc’s greater attention to the woman.
She wore jeans and a sweater and handsome black loafers, now covered with the dust from this realm of the dead. Simple clothing, but worn very well, hugging the form that had so drawn the professor’s interest. Her hair was a sandy blond, long, but drawn back in a smooth, sleek ponytail that heightened the fine sculpture of her features. Her eyes, deepened by the murky light and shadow, appeared to be almost turquoise, the color of the sea off the French coast. They were never going to get the professor to let this morsel go.. .Jean-Luc could almost understand the old man’s desire to hold on to something so simple as conversation, just as long as he could.
“Shall I see our guest out?” Brent asked bluntly. He stared coolly at the woman. “She needs to be out”
“Yes, of course, she must be seen safely out, but you must finish up. I will see the young lady out,” Dubois said. “My dear, if you will?”
“Oh, please, don’t worry, I can make my way,” she said pleasantly. “I am simply so intrigued. I’ll be back, if I may?”
“Please, you are so very welcome, Miss ...” Dubois said.
“Marceau. Genevieve Marceau, Professor. And thank you, you’ve been so kind.”
“A French name. But you’re an American.”
“Of French descent. And I’m familiar with such vaults—”
“But still! Alors! You must not go alone. The flooring is tricky. And despite the lights ... well, it gets late, and though we are underground, it seems even darker once the night has come.”
“I am absolutely fine. I will see you then, Professor. Thank you so very much.” She shook the professor’s hand. The professor was loath to let go of her hand. She managed to retrieve her fingers, and repeated, “I’m fine. Please!” She started out then, quickly, determined to exit on her own. The professor looked after her for a long while. When she was gone at last he stared with narrowed eyes at the American. “Make sure that the tomb is secured when you leave. Totally secured.”
The professor glanced at this watch. “You’re right. I must make calls ... find the right people. And you!
Jean-Luc! Keep your heavy hand off the work from now on. You hack away as if you were plowing weed-strewn fields. This is great work going on here.“
Without another word, the professor turned and started from the tomb.
Brent looked at Jean-Luc. “I have to open this tomb tonight,” he said quietly.
“Yes, yes, of course. We have done the work. The professor will take everything; we are nothing to him but muscle. He is like a slave driver. But what will we do? If we rob the tomb, he will know. The government will be called in.”
“No, no, pay attention to me,” Brent said impatiently. “We will open it carefully, and reseal it.”
“And rob it first, of course.”
“No.”
“But—”
“There will be a trinket, something you can take. But we are not robbing the tomb.”
“Then .. .”
“There will be a reward for you, and Dubois will never know. All right? Help me with the last of the dirt.
Quickly.”
“We will never shift this,” Jean-Luc muttered.
“Take the side.”
Jean-Luc hefted his huge frame against the slab, grunting and groaning, sweat immediately popping out on his brow. The American set to the task with him. The stone shifted and Brent shouted that they must be careful; they didn’t want it crashing to the floor and breaking. The stone settled. They could see the coffin itself.
It was black. Crosses abounded over and around it. Brent immediately set to work removing them.
Jean-Luc joined in. “There is strange writing on the coffin. Look, how odd, I cannot make it out completely, but the words speak of the devil while the coffin is covered in signs of the Lord! Sacrebleu!
How very strange!”
Brent had picked up a crowbar.
“I don’t think it will work. It appears as if the coffin has somehow been sealed with some kind of adherent ... like a soldering.”
“I will open it.”
Brent shoved the crowbar against the coffin. The creaking sound it gave out caused even such a man as Jean-Luc to feel a prickle of fear at his nape. The silence that followed the creaking was deep and complete.
So deep, in fact, that they were both startled to hear a sound ... a furtive, rustling sound, coming from the exit to the vault. One of the portable lamps suddenly burned to an end; in the wall sconce at their side, there was a popping sound, and the area went dark. And still, they could hear something . . . footsteps, stealthy, careful, coming from the exit to the vault.
“It’s the woman, surely,” Brent said, and swore impatiently. “I’ll get rid of her. Touch nothing, nothing, do you hear me, nothing, while I am gone, Jean-Luc, on pain of death. I mean it.”
“Of course! Never. I swear that I will not,” Jean-Luc said, and crossed himself. But as he watched the American silently disappear into shadows that seemed to close around him, he felt the birth of resentment in his soul. The American wanted to rob the tomb without getting caught. Good, sane concept. But the American wanted the finest riches in the coffin to be for himself.