Field of Blood Wilson, Eric (easy to read books for adults list txt) đ
Book online «Field of Blood Wilson, Eric (easy to read books for adults list txt) đ». Author Wilson, Eric
âHe couldâve gone up into the hills,â the big man said. âOr down to the river. If youâd like, I can switch hosts and take a look from above. Or . . . I donât know. Maybe he hitched a ride from a passing motorcar. What should I do?â
Megiste, as priestess, felt sorry for the henchman. For so long he had followed orders that he was listless without them. Clear objectives would have to be set down to keep him on course until Aristonâs return.
Or, perhaps . . .
Her conniving nature coiled into position, hissing of plots and machinations, preparing to strike a deal for the benefit of her household.
As things now stood, Aristonâs foundations of strength were compromised. He was without a known successor; his wives and family members were weak-spined creatures, trained by his dominant nature to recede into subservience; and Barabbas alone showed earnest, if not half-witted, faithfulness to the pudgy chieftain.
âWhat are we going to do?â she asked of the bearded oaf before her. âThe House of Eros is leaderless, and who are we but a handful of women? How ever will we survive on our own?â
âAriston willââ
âOh, Barabbas, donât speak of him now. He can be so . . . controlling. Itâs just you and me here, together.â
âBut heâll be back soon.â
âHours from now, if at all.â She lifted her peasant blouse over her head, revealing alabaster skin. âCome here, you clumsy brute. Look at you, all messy from a hard nightâs work.â She took his hand, used the blouse to rub away the grime and viscera of his feeding. âYou really ought to wash beneath your nails, dear Barabbas.â
âEach morning, Iââ
âAll in good fun, doll. Oh, look here. A spot on your mouth.â
They had both supped already. They were both warm and sated. This need that overtook them was earthier than that, and Barabbas grunted in approval of her nibbling lips on his. His fervor grew. With one hand, he plucked the bodies from the cart; with the other, he pushed her back onto the straw.
âI like it when you take the lead,â she said.
He groaned.
âMy dear Barabbas, come away with me. Why, you can watch over our household.â
âIâm not sure Iââ
âDonât talk,â she whispered. âPlease, wonât you give me time to convince you?â
A few minutes was all it took.
CHAPTER
THIRTY-NINE
Chattanooga
âOh.â Gina crossed her arms over her stomach, and glared across the picnic table at Cal. âRight. So, what youâre saying is that my baby is . . . Listen, this is crazy talk. And since when does any of this make me immortal? I mean, are the Nistarim even immortal?â
âNot all of them.â
âThat sure clarifies things. Isnât it just legend anyway, a way of giving good Jewish families something to shoot for? Howâd the whole story start getting passed around?â
âHeard of Sodom and Gomorrah?â
âBeen years since Iâve read a Bible, but thatâs pretty basic knowledge. Sodomâs there by the Dead Sea, isnât it? The Salt Sea?â
âA lotta history around the place. Some of it recent, and not pretty.â
âOkay,â Gina said. âBack to the legend.â
Cal glanced at his watch. âYouâve got six minutes left.â
âYou say my childâs in danger? The job can wait. Keep talking.â
âIâll make it quick. You shouldnât break the routine, though. Act normal.â
âCan you just get to the point?â
A butterfly flitted into view, landed on a drop of spilled Sprite, then flew off.
âSure. The story goes that Abraham, he begs God not to destroy the wicked cities, and so he starts wheeling and dealing: âGod, if there are fifty righteous people, will you save the place? What if thereâs forty-five? Forty?â And so on. âYes, yes, yes,â God says. All the way down to ten.â
âMustâve been one bad place. They still got the brimstone, didnât they?â
Calâs eyes turned mournful at her flippancy. âThe story,â he said, âshows that the Almighty was willing to protect many for the sake of a few righteous ones. Which leads to the Nistarim, the Lamed Vov.â
âThirty-six of them, right? Guess that should be more than enough.â
âGrace beyond measure,â he agreed.
âTalk to Nikki about grace, and she starts sharpening the knives.â
âShe needs it more than most.â
âWhatâd she do that was so awful?â Gina shooed flies from her plate of fries.
âIâll leave that for her to tell. Sheâs sworn me to secrecy.â
âConvenient.â
âActually, a real pain in the butt. Thereâs so much I wanna say.â
âStart with the whole immortal thing. Youâve already spilled the beans on that one. How can you even know? About me, I mean?â
âI was there, Gina.â
âWhere?â
âLast year. That morning, outside Rembrandtâs.â
âYou . . . you were there?â Ginaâs heart wedged in her throat, her thoughts churning in reverse to that specific day in Chattanooga, in the Bluff View Art District. âYou were across the road.â
âHeading up High Street,â he confirmed. âIâve checked in on you over the years, but that day proved to me what I already suspected. Death by natural means wonât be your biggest concern.â
âIs there any other way?â
âYou could have your very soul sapped from your veins.â
âAs in, the whole Collector-slash-vampire thing?â
âSomething like that.â Cal tapped his watch. âTwo minutes and counting.â
âOkay. But who says I shouldâve died? Other people survive things like that.â
âAnd just walk away? You had a broken back, a cracked skullââ
âThereâs no proof any of that happened.â
âYou know what happened.â
Before her eyes, images swarmed from that horrendous collision between flesh and metal. She could still feel the cartilage and bone shifting back into place, still recall the sensations of heat, light, and moisture on her tongue.
âDid you . . . ?â She faltered. âGive me something to drink?â
âJust a little bit.â
âIt was blood.â
âYes.â
âWhose?â
âSomeone who cares about you deeply.â
âYours?â
âIf it woulda helped, I woulda given it. But, no.â
Ginaâs mind reeled with these continued questions and revelations. She remembered a shadow standing over her,
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