• Home
  • Aderyn Wood
  • The Viscount's Son (The Viscount's Son Trilogy Book 1) Page 6

The Viscount's Son (The Viscount's Son Trilogy Book 1) Read online

Page 6


  “Two English people working in this tiny office in the middle of Paris.”

  John laughed. “We got on, Emma and me, once she put me in my place.” He winked.

  “So you’re ‘Jack’ in the blog. She also talks of Philippe and Amelie.” Michael opened his tablet to the case notes.

  “By Philippe she meant Pascal, our gaffer. He’s a hard taskmaster and misses little, but we both consider him a bit of a prat. Full of himself. Amelie is Anais. She works here and was good friends with Emma. They spent time together on weekends, shopping and all that girly crap. I’ll call her, just a tick.” John picked up the phone and dialled, speaking swiftly in French. It was almost like another voice, so different from his northern accent.

  “She’ll be here in a min.”

  Michael opened a new page of notes and typed the date ‘19th November’ and John’s name. “So according to Emma’s blog, you came across the diary first?”

  “Ah, that bloody thing. It was found after a fire, just like she wrote in the blog.” “You’ve read the blog?”

  “The whole of bloody France read it, mate! The media had a bloody field day with it. Juicy story like that.”

  “I see.”

  “Poor Em. Old world stuff really grabbed her. You read some weird shite in our job. People in history were fucked up. ‘Scuse the language.”

  “Please, not on my account.”

  John looked out the small window at two pigeons circling the concrete. “That diary … Pascal asked me to do a quick assessment. We were already bogged down by a shitload of other artefacts out of a dig up Normandy way. He wanted to know if it was worth our time. Emma was right. I was too quick in my assessment. All I did was scan the pages to read some crazy shite in it.” He ran a hand through his beard. “I’ve been in this business for longer than Em and I’ve seen a few fakes in my time. This one smacked of it. The whole thing was a bloody joke. I decided it wasn’t a priority and put it aside. But Em …” He shook his head. “She had her heart set on it. Her big bloody eyes were all over it. Ah! I shouldn’t have let her have it.”

  The door opened and a young woman stepped into the office. Her blond hair had a streak of pink and was tied up in a loose bun atop her head. She wore red, thick-framed glasses with lipstick to match and her tight-fitting dress was an explosion of colour.

  “Bonjour.”

  “Bonjour.” John stood and kissed her cheeks either side in the French fashion. “Anais, this is Michael D’Angelo.”

  Anais shook his hand and smiled. Michael could see she wasn’t as young as he had originally thought; a woman in her thirties, perhaps. “Enchanté,” Michael replied, softly.

  Anais giggled, pushed a pile of files off the corner of John’s desk, and parked her bottom. “So, you are an investigateur of the paranormal, non?” Her eyes gleamed. Her English held a faint American accent, no doubt a result of her time working in San Francisco. Michael had read that in the case notes.

  He patted down the cowlick at the back of his hair. “Ah, well …”

  “I’ve googled you, monsieur! And you were a priest. How exciting!” She clapped her hands together.

  “Really? A priest? Shite, sorry about the swearing, Father.” John looked genuinely regretful.

  Michael raised his hand and shook his head. “Please.”

  “So you think he really is a vampire? This mysterious Nathaniel? That’s what the blog suggests.” She leaned forward, seeming to wait with bated breath for his reply.

  Michael adjusted his glasses. “Well, I am only just beginning my investigation—”

  “You do!” Her mascara-lined eyes burned through her lenses into his very mind, it seemed. “You do think he’s a vampire! I knew it.” She jumped up and clapped again.

  “Well, I might ask you a few questions about him?” He wondered if she had some power to read people’s subconsciousness. Did he believe this idea of vampires after all? What was that thing he couldn’t remember? Could she tell him that, too? He cleared his throat. “About Nathaniel. I understand you were the only other person in Emma’s life who saw him.”

  Anais’s shoulders slouched and she sat down on the corner of the desk again, her excitement suddenly gone.

  “Oui, that is correct.” She took her glasses off and patted the corners of each eye.

  “I am sorry.” Michael’s voice retained the softness of the confessional, a skill he was thankful for at times like this.

  “It is all right.” Anais sniffed, putting her glasses back on. “I am happy to answer your questions, Père.”

  “Please call me Michael. I am no longer a priest.”

  Anais’s eyes seemed to turn a deal sadder. “Of course, Michael.”

  Michael knew the question that lingered in the forefront of her mind and he wanted to divert the conversation away from that quickly. “Did you have the opportunity to talk with this Nathaniel?”

  Anais shook her head. “I did not meet him. I only saw him the night Emma first came across him at the Gypsy Bar. He was very handsome, dark shiny hair.”

  “All the handsome ones have dark hair.” John winked and Anais ruffled his crop of dark waves.

  “Of course they do, John.” She smiled. “He had smouldering looks, and he was tall and strong-looking. The type of dark handsome stranger us girls fantasise about.”

  Michael shifted on his seat and adjusted his glasses again.

  “You’ll have to excuse her frankness, Michael,” John said. “French women are more free with their fantasies than their British sisters.”

  “Ah, of course.” Michael cleared his throat again. “Did you hear him speak at all? Did you catch anything of his conversation with Emma that night?”

  “No,” Anais replied. “I had found my own company by that stage.”

  Michael nodded and added a note to his tablet.

  “I only glanced their way now and then. I am sorry. I’m probably not very much help. I wish I could help more. I miss Em.”

  “It’s all right,” Michael said, his voice soft again. “Perhaps there is something you observed that you have not considered as important. Some small detail that you noted that night that blended with everything else?”

  Anais frowned. “What do you mean?”

  “Perhaps if you closed your eyes?” “Close my eyes?”

  Michael nodded. “Sometimes it helps to concentrate, to allow your mind to focus on the memory of him. You could describe him again – how he looks and maybe some small detail lodged in your memory will reveal itself.”

  Anais looked at John, who winked. “Don’t worry. I’ll make sure the priest doesn’t have his way with you.”

  Anais gave him a light smack on his head. “Don’t be cheeky!”

  Michael finished a note on his tablet and squirmed in his seat again. Flirts made him uncomfortable.

  “Okay.” Anais nodded. “I will close my eyes if you think it will help.”

  Michael stood and put the tablet on his chair. “Would you mind if I put my palm on your forehead?”

  Anais smiled. “I don’t mind. But why?”

  “It’s hard to explain. It can help people to focus sometimes.”

  She shrugged. “Sure.” And she closed her eyes.

  Michael reached out and put his hand on her forehead and the other rested on her shoulder. He closed his own eyes and took a deep breath. It was time to access his gift, that secret part of his mind that would allow him to see what others could not. “Now, go back to that memory, that night at the club. When you first saw him, what were you doing?” His voice grew stronger, deeper. It always morphed a little when he did this.

  Anais took a deep breath, too. “I waited at the bar. I turned around to smile at Em. He stood a small distance behind her. Then he approached our table.”

  “Catch that moment.” The images were blurry, but with effort he could make them clearer. Michael pressed his hand more firmly to her forehead and concentrated. “Tell me what you see.”

  “He
is tall. It is dark and gloomy, but I can see he is very handsome. His hair is groomed and slick. He’s wearing a black jacket, even though it is quite warm in the bar. He wears a black silk shirt underneath.”

  An image of Nathaniel formed like a reflection in a pool of water. Michael shivered. “Where is he looking?”

  Anais tried to turn her head but Michael gripped her forehead more firmly, his hand growing hotter still. “There’s a man, oh!” She gasped. “It’s the man who I met! Nathaniel was looking at him.”

  “Where is the man?”

  “He’s at the end of the bar. I can see his reflection in the mirror. He is ordering drinks.”

  “Good. You’re doing very well, Anais. Now, play the memory again, slowly. What happens next?”

  Anais’s forehead warmed, but Michael maintained his hold. Just a little longer, he thought.

  “The bartender, she gives me a drink, and tells me it is from the man at the end of the bar. I look at him and he smiles at me. I smile back and lift the drink to him. He walks over to me and asks my name. I tell him it is Anais and he tells me my eyes are like emeralds.”

  Michael frowned. The compliment bore similarity to those Nathaniel himself had paid Emma during their courtship, as documented in the blog. “Keep playing the memory, slowly. What else do you notice about him?”

  Anais frowned under his hand. “He has light hair, blue eyes, very handsome. He’s young. Much younger than I thought at the time, but his words sound very old. Too old for such a boy. He smiles at me – a lot. I look back at Emma then.”

  “What do you see?” Michael tightened his grip even further, his palm was burning now.

  “Him, Nathaniel. He is with her, at our table. They are talking. I turn back and the man who bought me a drink, he is looking at them. Oh, my!” Anais took a sharp gasp and stood away, her eyes opened and her forehead was red as though she had been standing in the sun for too long. Her eyes wide with fear, mouth open.

  “Anais? You all right?” John stood and reached for her. “Michael? What’s going on?”

  Michael shook the heat from his hand and caught his own breath. Her memory had been strong and its visioning had taken a lot of energy; he would need to rest soon. “She will be all right. I’m sorry. Sometimes this process is physically tiring.”

  Anais’ hands shook as they went to her cheeks, and she whispered, “Mon Dieu!

  Mon Dieu!”

  “What’s wrong? Michael? What’s happening here?” John looked at him with a frown.

  “Anais.” Michael’s voice had reverted to the soft tone of the confessional. “Now breathe easily and tell us what you saw. What has made you so upset?”

  She inhaled slowly and closed her eyes. Michael sensed her calm. She opened her eyes again. “The man, the one who bought me a drink?”

  “Yes?” Michael encouraged.

  “He had a small wound on his neck. Very faint, almost healed but I saw it clearly.”

  Michael frowned. “Go on.”

  “There were two small pricks. Just like she said in her blog. Two small red puncture wounds on the side of his neck.”

  * * *

  Visit Amazon now to continue reading.

  Get a free book

  If you enjoy Aderyn Wood’s stories, you may like to read more of her work and also be informed of when the sequel to The Earl’s Daughter will be available. Sign up to Aderyn’s monthly newsletter today and you will receive a book of your choice for free.

  Click here to sign up and choose a free book by Aderyn Wood.

  Also by Aderyn Wood

  The Earl’s Daughter

  Michael D'Angelo doesn't normally investigate murder, but since they never found Emma's body, she's technically just a missing person. But he doesn't investigate those either.

  After the Earl of Wolston reads the translation of a sinister and ancient text published on his daughter's blog, in the days leading up to her disappearance, he reaches out to Mr D'Angelo, convinced that evil forces are at work: something beyond the ordinary, something not of this world, something unholy.

  Fortunately for Michael, Paranormal Investigations are his specialty.

  But as Michael unravels Emma's last days, and the secrets inscribed on her blog, he begins to question whether such knowledge is too dangerous to pursue.

  * * *

  The Raven – The Secret Chronicles of Lost Magic

  When a foreign tribe attacks the peaceful Onan people, a lonely outcast is forced to reveal her secret Gift – but will such power bring acceptance?

  It is the darkest time in winter, when suns, moons, and stars all wane from the sky. In the Wolf clan, a baby is born with a powerful Gift, but dangerous omens brand her an Outcast, and the Elders name her Iluna.

  Iluna struggles to find her place in the proud and distrustful Wolf clan, and as her powers bloom, she discovers a mysterious friend.

  Dark magic, war, and treachery soon jeopardize the life of every clan member; many suspect Iluna and her Gift.

  Is this Outcast girl to blame, or is she salvation?

  'The Secret Chronicles of Lost Magic' is a collection of histories that will take readers on a journey into a rich new fantasy world. Enjoy stepping into the dark days of time in this sweeping prehistoric fantasy. The Raven is the first Chronicle in a collection set in a vibrant new world by Aderyn Wood.

  * * *

  The Borderlands Trilogy

  Dale has never felt a sense of belonging. She despises the bullies and snobs at school, and her family are difficult to like, let alone love. Rhys, a new boy at school seems to take an interest in her. But can she trust him? When the only friend she has ever had, Old Man Gareth, is murdered before her eyes, she is set on a frantic journey and a lonely adventure; the Borderlands beckon. But what are the Borderlands? Will she make it to them? And if she gets there, will she belong?

  The Borderlands: Journey is a magical fantasy adventure that fantasy fiction fans, particularly older teens and the young at heart, will enjoy. It is the first book in the Contemporary Fantasy series 'The Borderlands'.

  * * *

  About the Author

  From high fantasy to paranormal, Aderyn's stories cover the broad spectrum of Fantasy. Inspired from childhood by the wonder and mystique of Susan Cooper's The Dark is Rising and the adventures in Tolkien's The Hobbit, her love of the Fantasy genre has been life long. As a writer, Aderyn brings characters and places to life in stories filled with magic, mystery, and a good dollop of mayhem.

  Aderyn studied Literature, History and Creative Writing at university, travelled the world, and taught English before becoming a full-time writer. She is also a part-time farmer passionate about self-sufficiency and poultry. She lives in a cosy cottage on a small farm in Victoria, Australia with partner Peter, their dog, cat, and a little duck called Snow.

  If you’d like to be informed of the next installment in the The Viscount’s Son trilogy consider subscribing to Aderyn’s newsletter.

  @AderynWood

  www.aderynwood.com