Winds of Nightsong. V. J. Banis
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Название: Winds of Nightsong

Автор: V. J. Banis

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Историческая литература

Серия:

isbn: 9781479409976

isbn:

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      “You’re crazy,” Susan said with a laugh.

      “Just getting in on the ground floor. Now don’t get all riled. I’m only going to check things out, have a look around. I want to see what kind of money they’re bringing in before I invest a penny.”

      “Moving pictures,” Susan said, more to herself than to him. The idea was simply unthinkable. However, Sean had always had a very good eye for profitable business investments.

      Susan said, “Take my advice, darling, and don’t mention this to Lorrie. The next thing we know she’ll be wanting to become one of those moving-picture sirens.”

      “Fat chance,” Sean laughed. “Our Lorrie is too intent upon becoming Queen of England.”

      CHAPTER SIX

      In Paris, Marcus Nightsong sat in a quiet little cafe just off the Rue de la Paix, sipping his morning coffee. Things had become so confused in his mind since he’d gone to San Francisco and learned the truth about his real parents. He’d been happy to hear that Lydia was his mother and Peter MacNair his father. Marcus had never liked his supposed mother, April, and had never really known his supposed father, Raymond Andrieux.

      “You’re twenty-one now, Marcus,” Lydia had told him. “I think you’re entitled to know the truth about yourself.” And then she’d explained the circumstances of his birth.

      Raymond Andrieux was dead now, murdered by Marcus’s real father, Peter MacNair. Peter was dead now, too, and Marcus regretted never having known his own father. In fact, he now felt he didn’t even know himself any longer. Who am I? he wondered.

      “A vagabond,” he said to himself. “A nomad who’s been living in Paris and dreaming about racing automobiles.”

      He didn’t want to be a vagabond forever, though. He wanted to marry Amelia Wilson, and she wanted to marry him. But Marcus couldn’t stop thinking of racing motorcars. He wondered at times if he cared more for the fast machines than he did for Amelia. He knew no one, including Lydia, approved of his love for fast motorcars.

      “They’re far too dangerous, Marcus,” Lydia had warned.

      “Racing cars don’t kill people, Mother. It’s only the drivers who kill other drivers. I’m a good, careful driver. Nothing will happen to me.”

      She didn’t believe him. No one did. Amelia sympathized with him, but he often thought she too was set against his getting behind the wheel of any racing machine.

      He had no idea where his sister was but he and Caroline had never been very close. He could understand that now. She wasn’t really his sister, not even his half-sister. They were from different parents entirely. Such a mixed-up family, Marcus thought as he finished his coffee. No wonder he felt so mixed up himself.

      Marcus looked very much like his father: the same thick sandy hair that spilled carelessly over his forehead, the same dark brown eyes that turned black when he was angry; and he had his father’s square, stern chin, along with the ruddy complexion of a true Scotsman, flawless and manly.

      Marcus rather liked the idea of being Peter MacNair’s son; he doubly liked being his grandmother’s son...Lydia’s son. It had been easy, strangely enough, to call her “Mother.” The transition was quick and natural. Almost immediately he stopped thinking of April as his mother. That, he told himself, was because she had never really been much of a mother to him.

      Now that he was of age and free to be the man he chose to be, he was glad to disassociate himself from that half-crazed woman who’d been the first to gloatingly tell him the truth about his birth. He was equally content to have no father to deal with, only a very concerned mother who loved him because he was her son by Peter MacNair.

      Yet, now that he was so free and unencumbered, he was anxious to get on with the rest of his life. He wanted to marry Amelia and yet he didn’t—not right now at least. He knew it was her sexuality that made him want her. He was more eager to become her lover than her husband. There was too much excitement going on in the world for him to start thinking of settling down and raising a family.

      He was terribly in love with Amelia. There wasn’t a single doubt of that. And he would marry her, just not for a while. First he had to satisfy all his dreams of speed and adventure. Amelia would understand that, because she was the only girl he’d ever met who truly understood him. She would wait for him, and he would never marry anyone else but her. This solemn promise he made to himself as he paid for his coffee and left the little cafe on the Rue de la Paix.

      It would be a sweltering day, Marcus decided as he felt the heat of the late morning sun on his way back to his pension. He hadn’t wanted to stay in a hotel, as his mother had insisted he do. He wanted to feel Paris, the real Paris with real Parisians. His French had improved to the point where he could now converse with any of the locals, could ask the most difficult questions and receive complicated answers, could understand and be understood.

      When he reached his pension on Rue Voltaire he decided not to go up to his small suite of rooms. Instead, he’d taxi over to Madame Clair’s and see if Denise was free for the afternoon. Denise was the whore, crude and crass, whom he’d met on the train the night he first arrived in France. She’d initiated him into the mysteries of sex in his private compartment, and since then he’d been unable to get enough of what she so willingly and expensively offered him.

      As he turned from the door of the pension, it opened and the concierge beamed at him. “Good morning, Monsieur Nightsong,” she said. “There is a cable for you on the hall table. It came just after you went out.”

      Marcus looked surprised and a bit upset. He wasn’t expecting to hear from anyone, and a cable always meant bad news.

      “It is from America,” the old woman said as she held the door for him to enter and motioned to the marble table that sat along the wall of the large foyer.

      Marcus tore open the flap and read the cablegram:

      ARRIVING SOUTHAMPTON ON FRIDAY ABOARD THE LUSITANIA. CAN YOU MEET MY BOAT? AMELIA.

      “Good news?” the concierge asked as Marcus folded the cable and put it in his pocket.

      “Yes. My fiancée is coming to England. I’ll meet her in Southampton.”

      The old woman kissed her fingertips and threw the kiss into the air. “Ah, l’amour. It is what makes life pleasurable. You must bring your young lady here so that I can meet her. I will fix up rooms for her.”

      “I don’t know how long she intends staying, Madame Tourmet. I don’t even know why she’s coming.”

      “She is coming because she is in love with my handsome Marcus. Why else?”

      “I think it’s more than that. Something must be wrong.”

      “Nothing is wrong when two young people are in love. A young lady would never travel across the ocean just to bring bad news. When does she arrive?”

      “Friday. We’ll stay in London, I suppose. If she can come here, I’ll send you word.”

      Marcus was worried. It wasn’t like Amelia to do anything without a lot of planning. The cable, he’d noticed, had been sent from aboard ship. This was Wednesday, which meant she’d waited until she was almost in Southampton СКАЧАТЬ