Curse of Soulmate--The Complete Series

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Curse of Soulmate--The Complete Series Page 9

by D. N. Leo


  “I’m very sorry for your loss, Mrs. Chandler.”

  Laurent smiled. “Laurent, it is! Would you like a cup of tea?”

  Laurent led them to the room at the back of the house. The room was warm with candlelight. The winter sun didn’t shed much light into the room, particularly on a grim day like this. Robert’s coffin lay in the middle, and his picture stood quietly on a stand next to it. Robert Chandler was a sturdy looking man in his early forties. He looked formidable with a strong face, brown hair, and honest eyes. Ciaran stood still, looking at the picture. Beneath his calm expression was the unspeakable pain that Madeline understood.

  Laurent came into the room with the baby in her arms. She gave her to Ciaran. He held the baby gently, kissing her forehead as if she would break like crystal. Then he gave the baby back to Laurent.

  “Were you comfortable with Lindsay’s arrangements?” Ciaran asked.

  Laurent looked at Ciaran. Her eyes were dry now and filled with the affection of a sister. “That was all Robert would have wished for. He’d be pleased. Doctor Thomas put through an official record of accidental death. Everything was handled smoothly. Thank you.”

  “You thank me for this?”

  “Yes. And Robert would thank you for what you’ve done for us.”

  “I’ll find the answer, Laurent. I will find the answer for all of this.”

  “Please don’t mix it with vengeance, Ciaran. Robert’s death was part of the job he took on with you.”

  “He had no such duty, Laurent. There is no money in the world that could give his girl back her father, give you back your husband . . . and me . . . back my friend. Had I known . . .”

  “You didn’t know, Ciaran. You didn’t know, and let’s keep it at that.”

  Laurent looked at Madeline. Madeline couldn’t understand how a newly grieving widow could have had such warmth in her eyes. If she knew it was me who had caused Ciaran to go to Fosse Way—and hence the death of her husband—would she still have that warmth in her eyes right now?

  “Ciaran,” Laurent continued, “Robert would have been happy to see you open up for a new life. Ten years is enough to forgive.”

  “But not enough to forget, Laurent. Never enough,” Ciaran growled and sounded as if he didn’t care the conversation to go further in that direction.

  Just before Ciaran and Madeline left, she saw the blue dots hovering in the air. She wasn’t sure whether they hovered around her, Ciaran, Laurent, or the coffin.

  She hadn’t told Ciaran about her psychic ability. Why were the blue dots hovering here? Madeline shook her head, trying to will the thought out of her head.

  “What’s the matter, Madeline?”

  “Huh?” she asked and realized they had left the house and now were standing in front of Ciaran’s car. She didn’t know where to begin to tell Ciaran about the blue dots.

  Whenever she saw the blue dots, something unfortunate would happen.

  Just let it slide for now, she thought, shook her head, and got into the car.

  Chapter 25

  The street was just the same as it was when Madeline had last seen it. Ciaran parked a block away from Mrs. Hanson’s cottage. Madeline knew he could park right at the front, but she had trained herself not to ask questions.

  As soon as they entered the front yard of the cottage, Mrs. Hanson appeared mysteriously on the doorstep. Had she known they were coming?

  “It’s good to see you again, Ciaran. What did this old woman do to deserve a visit?”

  She stepped down from the steps to the lawn. Her weird earrings jingled, making an unpleasant sound with her every step. Madeline wished it would stop as it made her head ring.

  The woman looked at Madeline. “I’m glad to see you again, too!”

  “You know why we’re here, Mrs. Hanson. I know you’re disappointed to see her alive.”

  “I don’t know what you’re talking about, Ciaran. This young lady was just here asking for directions a couple of days ago. She must have found what she wanted, given my instructions. Aren’t you grateful for my help, Madeline?”

  “How do you know my name? I didn’t introduce myself.”

  Madeline remembered the jingle of Mrs. Hanson’s earrings now. She had heard that sound when she’d hallucinated about the Roman soldiers. They were the sounds that made her head ring, her eyes droop, and ended up with her driving into the walls.

  Madeline grabbed Ciaran’s arm, pulling him backward. “Her earrings, the sound of her earrings is what caused my hallucination at the walls. Don’t listen to it.”

  Mrs. Hanson grinned widely, showing her black and rotting teeth.

  “They contacted you, didn’t they Mrs. Hanson? They’ve made an appearance.” Ciaran advanced on the woman.

  Mrs. Hanson grunted out her words. “Greedy people are supposed to die!”

  “You don’t care about those greedy people. I know what you want. You’re as greedy as they are. They killed my friend. Tell me where they are.”

  The woman laughed. “If I don’t tell you, what will you do? Kill this old woman? So much for the gentlemen I used to know? And all that because of this bitch?”

  “Don’t call her names!” Ciaran growled. “Tell me where they are, and I’ll leave you in peace.”

  Mrs. Hanson laughed—a crooked laugh that pulled at the muscles on her face and made it look as if she was in pain. “You think you can blackmail me?”

  “I don’t think it. I do it. I know where you get the supplies to make your evil drugs. I can stop it right now. With one phone call.”

  “Don’t you dare!” The woman flew at Ciaran and shoved him backward. Madeline darted in front of him and shoved the woman away.

  She gave the old woman a stern stare. “He wouldn’t hit a woman, but I wouldn’t mind a cat fight.”

  “Try me!” she screamed, but the scream came out more like a croak. She swung her head so that her earrings jingled loudly. Madeline grabbed her ears and stepped back.

  Mrs. Hanson shook her arms so that the bells dangling on her beaded wristbands sang as well. The sound from the earrings was the worst, though. Mrs. Hanson looked as if she was dancing.

  Ciaran stepped in front of Madeline. “Go to the car and wait for me there,” he directed.

  “No.”

  “Go, Madeline!”

  Mrs. Hanson swung her earrings more violently. Madeline thought her nose and ears would bleed. She heard Mrs. Hanson laughing. Her laugh was loud now, and the ringing noise pierced her brain like a well-sharpened knife. Thousands of knives. Madeline heard Ciaran calling to her, asking her to leave. She could feel him grabbing her, pulling her away.

  The noise was pounding in her head.

  No, she wouldn’t run. Not from an old woman with weird earrings. The old woman had killed Robert. His blood was on her hands, as well as on Madeline’s. In her mind, Madeline saw Robert’s widow and his orphan. She remembered now what happened at Fosse Way. What she had seen were not Roman soldiers. They were men with rifles wearing masks. They had bells on their rifles, and clothes that made the same sound.

  Madeline shrugged off Ciaran’s grip and rushed toward the old woman. She grabbed her dangling earrings and pulled hard. The sound stopped. The woman screamed in pain as blood poured out of her torn ear lobes. Then the old woman grunted, and the sound coming out of her mouth was deep and demonic.

  She pulled a knife from beneath her clothing and ran back toward Madeline.

  Seeing the flash of the knife, Madeline stepped back, and Ciaran darted toward her from behind. Madeline tripped on a small stone, tumbled, and fell on her back. The old woman growled and jumped on top of Madeline, arcing the knife up in the air and preparing to stab downward.

  Ciaran grabbed the old woman’s hand. The old woman looked at him as if she had been waiting for just that moment. She didn’t jerk her hand out of Ciaran’s. It happened in front of Madeline’s eyes as if it were a slow-motion movie. The old woman turned the knife and pulled it toward herself, al
ong with Ciaran’s hand.

  She stabbed the knife deep into her chest.

  From the back, Shaun, the gardener, walked out and saw Ciaran’s hand still on the hilt of the knife which had been plunged into Mrs. Hanson’s body.

  “Oh, God! Oh, my God! Mrs. Hanson!” He stumbled backward, fell, and then stood up and ran.

  Madeline rolled away. Mrs. Hanson lay on the ground, grinning ghoulishly back at Madeline and Ciaran. She reached her hand up, grabbed Ciaran’s shirt, and pulled him down.

  “Blood on your hands. Blood in your soul. I curse you, Ciaran . . . for the young soul that died for you . . . It’s time. The enemies are coming . . .”

  The old woman stared into nothing. Dead eyes.

  Ciaran yanked himself free of the woman’s grip. Then he just stood there, looking incredulously at the blood on his hands.

  Chapter 26

  “Are you okay?” Ciaran held Madeline’s shoulders and looked into her eyes while they waited for the elevator in the foyer of One Hyde Park. “You were very quiet on the way back.”

  She could give him a white lie to get this over and done with, but he had figured out she was lousy in that regard. And those intense gray eyes were so filled with genuine concern and emotion that she would feel like a bitch lying to him.

  “Well, it’s not every day that I see someone die in front of me. You were shakier than me, though. I pulled you from the scene, remember?” She sighed. I lied to him anyway, she thought.

  He lifted her chin. “On the contrary, you were too steady for the situation. And that’s what I’m concerned about.”

  “Hey!” She pushed his hand away. “You think I eat people for breakfast?” She put her hands defensively on her hips. Damn, should have known he would see that.

  “One day, you’ll have to tell me about what happened to you, Madeline.”

  “Who the hell do you think you are?”

  He shrugged.

  “My personal life is none of your business.” She jabbed a finger at his shoulder.

  Ciaran nodded. “Someone is using you to get to me. That’s my business, and I’m entitled to know what’s relevant. If you don’t want me to know about your past, I won’t ask again.”

  She nodded and looked away.

  “Lindsay will have a car picking us up in ten minutes. We’re going to the police station to give information as witnesses.”

  “These police, are they yours?”

  Ciaran chuckled. “If you mean do they live in our pocket, no. Detective Adamson is a good friend of Lindsay’s. We don’t bribe, Madeline.”

  “Why did Mrs. Hanson kill herself? Just for a chance to frame us?”

  “It’s not her we talked to. Remember how I threatened to cut her supplies with a phone call?”

  Madeline nodded.

  “I did that to her ten years ago. She no longer makes medicines that require those supplies. So what’s running in her head now is like an old tape recorder of behaviour and thought patterns.”

  Madeline’s eyes widened. “You knew it back there? You were testing her?”

  “That used to be a woman. But it’s not anymore, I’m afraid.”

  “What? She was abducted by aliens, and they replaced her human brain with a robotic one?”

  Ciaran chuckled and shook his head.

  “She was possessed by a demon of her past?”

  Ciaran grinned. “You have a very unusual thought process, Madeline.”

  “So tell me!”

  “You don’t want me to know your stories, so you don’t get to know mine.”

  Damn, Madeline cursed silently.

  The elevator opened. At the same time, Madeline’s phone buzzed. She glanced at the screen. Unknown ID.

  Ciaran nodded. She picked up, and Zen’s voice oozed out from the other end of the line, “Hello, old friend. Remember me?”

  Ciaran shook his head.

  “Look, Zen, I’m in the middle of something right now. Call me back later, okay?” She hung up. Then she saw the look on Ciaran’s face. “What?”

  “You’re quite good dealing with criminal minds.” He smiled. “I’m impressed.”

  “It comes with the job,” she muttered. They walked into the elevator and ignored the buzzing phone.

  Madeline and Ciaran entered the grand hallway of the apartment to find a man standing there with his back to Madeline and Ciaran. He was looking out the window, down to the city.

  “I thought you were in Australia,” Ciaran said.

  The man turned around. He was maybe an inch or so shorter than Ciaran, but they shared so many similarities that it didn’t take much thought for Madeline to guess they were brothers.

  “I was. I’m sorry, I didn’t bring home any kangaroos or boomerangs as souvenirs. Plus, I went back to Spain last week, and then to Rome, and so forth . . .”

  “I must have lost track of your extensive travel.”

  The man winked at Madeline. “So as I’ve heard, this must be the lady, Madeline Roux!”

  “I’m no lady, but you’ve got the name right. You’re Ciaran’s brother?”

  “I hope he’s said nice things about me.”

  “If you assume nothing is a nice thing,” Ciaran responded. “This is Tadgh, my brother. I’m sure you could tell. Apart from some physical similarities, I don’t believe we have much in common.”

  “Oh, come on, Ciaran. We share our parents. Isn’t that enough?”

  Tadgh came forward, took Madeline’s hand in his, and kissed her knuckles before she could react. Then he rushed forward quickly and gave Ciaran a bear hug that took him totally by surprise.

  Apparently embarrassed, Ciaran shoved Tadgh aside, saying, “Grow up.”

  Tadgh turned to Madeline. “I took off without saying goodbye to him, so he’s a bit testy at the moment.”

  Madeline merely smiled.

  “Mother would be very pleased to see you,” Ciaran said.

  “I’m sure of it. I’m her favorite. But I’d like to flop on the couch here for a couple of days before I head to Dublin. That is, if it’s okay with you?”

  “Don’t even ask,” Ciaran responded sarcastically. “Tadgh, Madeline and I have to run. But before we do, what do you want, really, apart from my couch?”

  Tadgh looked at Madeline.

  Ciaran said, “She’s in. So you can spill it. What is it that you want?”

  “In? How far in?” Tadgh asked.

  “All the way in,” Madeline responded. Too fast, damn it, she thought, judging by Ciaran’s reaction—or lack thereof.

  Tadgh looked at Ciaran for a confirmation, but nothing came from him. “I’ve heard about Robert.”

  “If that’s your main concern, you know where they live. Pay them a visit.”

  “I saw a record of an entry at Mon Ciel lab.” Tadgh stared at Ciaran.

  “It was me. Since when do you read security reports?”

  “You haven’t used it for years. What could you possibly do in that rusty old lab except dig up your dead and buried problems?”

  “You have no say in this. Get back to your travel extravaganza and leave the family business to those who are responsible,” Ciaran snarled.

  Tadgh laughed and spoke to Madeline, “You see how lucky I am to have this big brother to take care of everything!”

  “Then leave if you have a problem,” Ciaran growled. His migraine was coming back in waves.

  Tadgh flopped onto the couch and stretched his arms out. “The thing is, Madeline, he’s only good ninety-nine percent of the time. When it’s time for the other one percent to take charge, he’s hopeless.”

  Ciaran snatched Tadgh off the couch and threw him to the wall. A framed painting nearby dropped on the floor, and glass shattered everywhere.

  “The computer said, ‘It’s time,’” Madeline said.

  “Madeline!” Ciaran growled.

  Tadgh narrowed his eyes. “Say again, Madeline?”

  “Madeline . . .” Ciaran objected, but his vision blurr
ed with the headache. He strode toward the medicine cabinet to take his painkillers.

  Seizing the opportunity, Madeline spilled, “The computer in Ciaran’s office turned itself on and said, ‘It’s time, Ciaran. Enemies are nearby.’ Ciaran said Mrs. Hanson was replaying information in her dialogue that was ten years old—without even knowing it. And she stabbed herself to frame us.”

  Ciaran had his eyes closed and was bracing his hands on the bench, waiting for the medication to take effect. Beads of sweat ran down his forehead. He said nothing.

  “You’re going back to Mon Ceil, Ciaran,” Tadgh growled.

  Ciaran opened his eyes. “I don’t need you to tell me what to do.”

  “I don’t know what and where Mon Ciel is, but I have a problem here. Before my friend is safe and sound, I can’t go anywhere” Madeline said.

  “They kidnapped her friend and used her to get to me,” Ciaran said.

  “Oh, I see, they’ve gotten smarter!” Tadgh said.

  “You’re saying my friend’s kidnapping was just a manipulation to get to you? You knew the whole time? And my friend’s life is just a pawn for someone to get in touch with your family?” Madeline waved her arms in the air, frustrated. “For what? I don’t care how important your family is. Jo is everything to me. I’m done with this.” Madeline turned on her heel and strode toward the door.

  Ciaran darted toward her and grabbed her arm. “I didn’t know at the beginning, Madeline. You have to trust me.”

  “You don’t trust anyone. Why should I trust you?”

  “My family has a lot at stake here. I understand your friend is important and I don’t take her kidnapping lightly. But I do think that there is a connection between that and our family business. If you stay with me, we can work things out.”

  Madeline hesitated.

  “You don’t have anything to give Zen, and he’ll be calling back any minute!”

  “You’re not lying to me?”

  “No. And we have to go to the police station now.”

  Madeline nodded. Ciaran pulled Madeline into his arms and embraced her. In the background, Tadgh rolled his eyes.

 

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