Midnight Redeemer
By NANCY GIDEON
3.5/5
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About this ebook
Will his dream . . .
Centuries-old vampire Louis Redman is desperate to believe an inquisitive researcher's claim that she's close to finding a cure for his age-old curse. Determined to become human again, he must trust the lovely geneticist who has pushed her way into his guarded life . . . and heart . . . not to betray him to the government agency that wants to uncover his secrets for their own purposes.
. . . be the death of her?
Scientist Stacy Kimball discovers potential fame and the answer to immortality in a murder victim's blood sample. But as she gets closer to the truth, danger stalks her from the shadows. Who wants to silence her from making the breakthrough of a lifetime? Is it the agency that funds her work? The killer who's terrorizing Seattle's night scene?
Or the mysterious Louis Redman, whose kisses seduce her beyond caring . . . ?
"A rare treat . . . this exciting thriller will keep you up all night as Ms. Gideon weaves her spell." --Romantic Times
"Nancy Gideon is one of the best supernatural writers on the market today!"--Midwest Book Review/BookWire
"Gideon's stories transcend the genre with action, adventure, mystery, horror, AND romance. Comparable in style to Dean Koontz."--Midnight Scribe Reviews
Nancy Gideon is the award-winning author of over fifty-five novels ranging from historical and contemporary suspense to paranormal, including her Touched by Midnight vampire romance series, with a couple of horror screenplays thrown into the mix. When not at the keyboard or working full time as a legal assistant, she can be found feeding her addictions for Netflix and all things fur, feather, and fin in Southwestern Michigan. For more on Nancy visit nancygideon.com and nancygideon.blogspot.com
NANCY GIDEON
With over 58 sales to her credit since her first publication in 1987, Portage, Michigan author Nancy Gideon's writing career is as versatile as the romance market, itself. Her books encompass genres from historicals and regencies to contemporary suspense and the paranormal. Her works have been published overseas in Romanian, Italian, Russian, Portuguese, Danish, German, Icelandic and Chinese, among other languages. Also listed on the Internet Movie Database (IMDB), she collaborated on the indie horror films In the Woods and Savage with screenwriting and ADR script credits, and even played the character "Bar Extra." A national speaker on writing in general and romance in particular, Gideon is a Western Michigan University honors grad with a major in journalism and minors in history and communications. She's a member of Novelist, Inc., Savvy Authors and the Mid-Michigan, PAN, PASIC and FF&P chapters of Romance Writers of America, and is former vice-president, published author co-liaison and award-winning newsletter editor for MMRWA. The mother of two grown sons, one married and proud producer of her grandson and the other shanghaied into being her assistant, she also works full time for the law firm, Redmond, Streed & Yokom.
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Midnight Redeemer - NANCY GIDEON
Other Books by Nancy Gideon
from ImaJinn Books
Midnight Kiss
Midnight Temptation
Midnight Surrender
Midnight Enchantment
Midnight Gamble
Midnight Redeemer
Midnight Shadows
Midnight Masquerade
Midnight Crusader
Midnight Redeemer
by
Nancy Gideon
ImaJinn Books
Copyright
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons (living or dead), events or locations is entirely coincidental.
ImaJinn Books
PO BOX 300921
Memphis, TN 38130
Ebook ISBN: 978-1-61026-063-3
Print ISBN: 978-1-893896-17-8
ImaJinn Books is an Imprint of BelleBooks, Inc.
Copyright © 2000 by Nancy Gideon
Published in the United States of America.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer, who may quote brief passages in a review.
ImaJinn Books was founded by Linda Kichline.
We at ImaJinn Books enjoy hearing from readers. Visit our websites
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10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Cover design: Deborah Smith
Interior design: Hank Smith
Photo/Art credits:
Man © Viorel Sima | Dreamstime.com
Seattle night view © Suprijono Suharjoto | Dreamstime.com
Rose (manipulated) © 2011 Susan Justice | Renderosity.com
:Ermk:01:
One
WHAT WAS THERE to live for?
She leaned over the rail, letting the cold bay breeze scour the tears from her cheeks. She’d cried enough of them over the past few days. Useless, self-deluding tears. Now it was time to take action, to strike back at the man who had broken her heart with his careless and, she had just discovered, meaningless promises.
She’d show him.
She’d make him sorry.
On an evening as depressing as her mood—gray, bleak and endlessly uninviting—she had the pier to herself. An increase in the wind swept away the fog and drizzle, leaving a night as cold and unsentimental as her lover’s heart. The clarity of sight made carrying out her plan more difficult. The Sound’s angry, early-spring surf seethed about the pilings below, nearly frightening her from her resolve as she dashed the moisture from her eyes. So far down. She silently cursed the nearly full moon for illuminating the restless waters, just as she’d cursed the confrontation that woke her to her true situation.
She could come back . . .
A jagged laugh spilled out. Oh, sure. Come back later when the conditions are more favorable for suicide. She hiccupped, on the edge of hysteria. It had taken her all afternoon in a smoky bar to find the courage to come this far.
She couldn’t back down now. Such cowardice would make her deserving of her former lover’s scorn even within her own broken heart. There was no going back.
To fortify herself, she recalled words that brought her to this fateful brink of self-destruction.
I never had any intention of leaving my wife. Where would you get such an idea? What we had was . . . recreation. Vacation’s over. Time to get back to the real world, and that’s my family. I never meant to hurt or mislead you . . .
So much for good intentions. Sobs threatened to overwhelm her again.
Fool, fool, fool.
She stretched out her arms and opened cramped fingers, releasing a spill of crumpled cash. Hush money. An indifferent wind snatched it from her palms. She watched with a sense of woeful satisfaction as the small fortune whirled crazily on the air currents, spiraling to the water below, in a path she would follow soon. How much had her hopes, her dreams—her love—been worth? She’d never counted, but they couldn’t be silenced by a finite stack of guilty payoff stuffed into her purse as he’d hurried her out the door and out of his life.
She didn’t want his cash. She wanted him to ache inside with remorse. She wanted him to weep when he heard the news. She wanted him to regret, as she did, the lack of integrity that had him hiding a wife and three kids from her until her emotions were too deeply ensnared to separate decency from desire.
She didn’t want it to be easy for him to forget her.
She slipped one leg over the rail, then the other, struggling for a toehold on slick cement. She hadn’t counted on the pull of wind being so strong. Instinctively, she clung to the rail to keep from being plucked off the narrow ledge. Then she laughed, the sound disappearing into the thinning mists. Wasn’t that the idea?
Contrarily, she couldn’t get her hands to let go.
What the hell was she doing?
Sanity slipped briefly through the haze of whiskey sours and self-pity.
Was she ready to die for that weasely bastard who had lied to her then cheerfully went on about his suburban life? Sobs and indecision shook through her.
But what did she have to go back to? She’d boasted of her impending marriage. She’d introduced her lover to her family, to her friends. By now, everyone knew of her humiliation. Working in the same office complex, she would be forced to see him every single day as he left the building on his way home to his unsuspecting wife and kiddies. Many had known all along that he was married and only out for some ‘recreation,’ but not a one of them had said a word when a word would have saved her from damnation.
How they must have laughed in the coffee room over her naivete. She choked on her mortification. Had he laughed the hardest and the loudest? No more. No more laughter at her expense.
The last laugh would be hers.
On the seat of her car she’d left a note—a wonderfully descriptive note of farewell.
Let him share the shame burning inside her. Let him squirm with the inconvenience of answering their questions when the police came to his nice suburban front door. Let him explain his involvement to his family, his friends. Let him endure their looks, their suspicions, their blame.
Let him try to go to sleep every night with her blood on his hands.
Let the conscience he didn’t know he had writhe with the knowledge that he had killed her.
What a sweet revenge.
She freed one hand while closing her eyes and breathing deep to release her fears. Just then, a strong gust swept along the pier, hitting her like a propelling shove to the chest. Her feet slipped. First one arm, then both pinwheeled wildly. And she was falling.
No . . . !
Help me!
I don’t want to die—
Suddenly, she found herself carried up from the salty spray of the Sound just as it reached to embrace her. Her arms, though shaking with shock, wound about her rescuer’s neck as he stole her from the promise of a cold, unforgiving grave. Her nails dug deep into solid flesh.
It wasn’t a dream.
How . . . ?
How had she been snatched up just shy of the last few feet in her twenty foot plunge? Her drink-soaked mind was too cloudy to grasp at the impossibility. Did it matter now that her wobbly legs were safely planted on the proper side of the rail once again?
She was alive!
Life is too precious to waste, little one. A moment of folly leads to an eternity of regret. No fleeting pain is worth that endless agony.
Had those gently chiding words been spoken aloud or only within her mind?
Confused and frightened, she looked up and was lost within a gaze of star-like brilliance. The light pulled her in until nothing else existed except a sense of amazing awe and serenity. All her anguish fell away as unimportant. Her tears dried, forgotten, upon her uplifted face.
It was a mistake,
she murmured softly, needing to assure him that her impulsive act was not to be repeated. Pleasing him filled her with vital purpose, and the thought of his disappointment led to unbearable despair.
I’m sure it was.
His eyes dazzled, drawing her deeper into what could only be a dream. But what a wonderful, all-absorbing fantasy.
You will not remember whatever misery brought you to this low point. Nor will you recall coming here to do the unthinkable. You will awake in the morning a new being, filled with hope and happiness.
Yes,
she whispered as her hands moved, independent of her command, to unwind her scarf and open the top buttons of her blouse. A soft smile shaped her lips as she tipped her head back, offering her bared throat as payment for her future. Her lashes fluttered at the brief sting that followed, but a sense of euphoria quickly overwhelmed any pain of body or spirit. She drifted on a pleasant tide that all too soon left her alone upon the shore of her uncertain tomorrows. But she wasn’t afraid. Not anymore. Her hands clutched at his coat.
Will I see you again?
She felt rather than saw his smile. You no longer need me.
And he was gone.
Glancing about the wind-washed pier, she wondered why she had come to such a desolate place on such a wretched night. If she wasn’t careful, she could catch her death in the clammy mists of near midnight. She remembered leaving her car and walking but nothing more. How silly . . .
Trying to shake the fogginess from her brain, she started to turn.
Strong hands gripped her waist.
Before she could utter a startled cry, she was over the rail, plummeting like an extinguished star across the heavens, into the choppy surf below. She never heard the mocking tones of her attacker.
Really, my dear, you should never commit without following through. It shows weakness of character.
SQUINTING AGAINST the harsh antiseptic light, Stacy Kimball pushed her way through double doors marked No Exit
into Pill Hill
hospital’s basement morgue on First Hill.
This better be good, Charlie. I left the blu-ray and my date on pause.
Good to see you, too, Stace,
replied Charlie Sisson. Wouldn’t have interrupted your intimate evening plans with your latest in a long line of barely legal boy-toys, but this one had your name all over it. Take a look and ask yourself, ‘Who loves ya, baby?’
Her irritation was forgotten along with the last name of her distraction-of-the-moment. She’d abandoned him at his apartment with scarcely a word, and now she banished him just as easily from memory.
What do you have?
She’d spent almost a year working next to Charlie, listening to his ribald jokes and learning how to develop the rhinoceros hide necessary to do the job no matter what mess came in each night. He was nearly as thin as one of the corner skeletons he enjoyed dressing in honor of the seasons, the way suburban housewives garbed their cement porch geese. His sense of humor was often more stomach turning than the work they did, but that seemed to make the latter easier to handle. Not surprisingly, he was twice divorced, a man of bad taste and worse luck, a lonely soul who lived for the night shift. In that, they were alike. Perhaps that’s why they’d developed their odd bond of kinship that remained even after they went their separate ways.
He was fond of saying that he was always dead serious when it came to his profession. Despite the bad pun, she found that to be true. So when he called, she came without question.
What goodies had he found for her this time?
Curiosity piqued, Stacy approached the drawer he pulled out from the floor-to-ceiling bank of stainless steel vaults. She leaned in close as Charlie placed his half-eaten tuna sandwich atop the covering sheet in order to peel the drape back from the top. Stacy examined the gray and bloated features of what once had been an attractive blonde woman and gave a sound of dismay.
What a smell!
She glanced at the offending sandwich. How can you eat that?
Such is the lonely state of my life. You want a bite?
Ugh. No thank you.
She took the Latex gloves he extended, blew into the cuffs to inflate them slightly so she could slip her hands inside without sticking. You pulled me away from Bruce Willis to look at a jumper?
Charlie’s smug and secretive smile was the only reason she didn’t turn and walk righteously away. "Not a simple jumper. That’s what I thought at first. Especially when they found a ‘good-bye cruel world’ lover’s lament in her abandoned car.
But that was before I saw the marks on her throat.
Marks?
Intrigued, Stacy leaned in again.
Yeah, right there at the jugular. Not self-inflicted and not from the fall. I’d guess it was some kind of bite right before she bit the big one.
Stacy glanced up. The cause of death?
No. That was definitely the 50-degree water I drew out of her. She drowned.
So?
she asked him, straightening and peeling off the gloves. What does the one have to do with the other?
It just changes my conclusions from suicide to murder. She was attacked before she went over. There were the marks on her neck, and I found traces of blood under her nails. She didn’t go of her own free will.
Stacy sighed. Okay, this is all very interesting, but—
What makes it better than Bruce Willis?
He grinned at her, letting the suspense build.
Come on, Charlie, spill it. You can be such a pain in the butt, which is why we don’t go out any more.
We don’t go out any more because I’m not a steroid-popping teenager who goes all night like the Energizer bunny.
She made a kissy noise. You never were, doll. You were saying . . .?
Charlie Sisson restored the sheet, covering the young woman’s unseeing eyes that had trapped the image of her killer within them, then he gestured toward a tabletop crowded with lab equipment. It’s not the girl, it’s the sample I took.
The blood sample?
Now, Stacy was all ears. Show me.
Take a gander, and tell me that’s not the freakiest thing you’ve ever seen.
She bent to peer through the microscope eye piece, studying the smear he’d made. After blinking and rubbing at her eyes in disbelief, she looked again, adjusting the focus and light, then finally just staring in amazement.
Didn’t I tell you?
her former partner crowed. Is that going to get me a yes answer when I ask you out again?
Charlie, who else knows about this?
Alerted by the sudden hush of her tone, he was all serious business. No one, Stace. You were the first one I called in. There’s more.
Tell me.
Our chart for the lady’s blood type is B+. But that’s not what the current test shows. There’s been a change in her typing. Those same strange cell patterns that are under the nails are in her own blood chemistry.
He waited for Stacy’s reaction. When there wasn’t one, he prompted, Is it something important?
It’s something, all right,
she whispered. This is between you and me for right now, okay? Until I can run some more sophisticated tests.
It was all she could do to lift away from the fascinating slide. She’d never felt such a fire of excitement and intensity.
Well, I haven’t finished a complete autopsy yet. They’ll ask for one once they get the word she’s not a simple splasher. I can keep it under my hat until then.
You are a stud, Charlie.
He grinned. Picking up his sandwich, he took a bite and mused thoughtfully, So tell me, what do you think we’ve got? A Nobel Prize?
He was kidding. He didn’t realize.
Her hands shaking, her insides quaking in seismic tremors of anticipation, Stacy smiled with a fierce, ambitious pleasure. If what I think proves to be true, what we’ve got here is the secret of life.
He stopped mid-chew to give her a blank stare.
Charlie,
she explained breathlessly, I think we’re about to unlock the door to immortality.
He laughed nervously. Right.
More than right. Righteous. No one, Charlie, no one sees this slide.
Her mind whirling like a centrifuge trying to separate the data, she tried to slow down her galloping thought process to grasp the next logical step. Who is she?
The jumper?
He checked his chart. Wanda Cummings. It wasn’t a robbery. She had her ID, credit cards and about thirty in cash on her when they fished her out this morning. It wasn’t the married boyfriend. He was chaperoning his eight-year-old son’s birthday party.
He made a disgruntled face. Though a double divorcé, he had strong opinions about the sanctity of wedlock. Unfortunately, his two wives hadn’t shared those opinions.
Anything special about her?
Other than the fact that she’s dead?
Why is she dead? Does it have something to do with where she worked, who she knew, the place it happened—what?
That’s what the police are asking. It’s what they get paid to do. Rhetorical questions aren’t in my job description. I deal with the plain and simple.
Okay, here’s plain and simple: Where was she found?
Realizing how far in over his head he was getting, Charlie began to hedge. I don’t know, Stace. This is an ongoing investigation—
Cut the crap, Charlie. I can get the same info from Burke in Homicide. Would you rather I go out with him?
That took care of his career-minded scruples. He handed her a slightly soiled sheet of paper, a copy of a copy of the police report that had come in pinned to the young woman’s body bag.
You didn’t get that from me.
The warning wasn’t necessary. Stacy had already forgotten about him as her gaze swept over the significant details that told her maddeningly little.
This tells me exactly jack.
Still, she folded it carefully and slipped it into the huge, ugly shoulder bag she carried as if she were a hobo with a train to catch. I need something more to go on, Charlie. Whose blood is under her nails? I need that someone.
Charlie glanced about uneasily as if he feared one of his overnight guests might be eavesdropping. I probably shouldn’t say anything, but one of the cops that brought her down, some kid who doesn’t know enough to keep his mouth shut, he told me our Ms. Cummings isn’t the first they’ve seen with those odd marks on her neck.
And?
And that’s more than I should tell you.
Except the kid’s name.
When she saw his conscience bob annoyingly to the surface once more, she moved quickly to push it under again. Scruples were for the unambitious.
Charlie had taught her that, too, so he had only himself to blame.
I’ve got tickets to see the Mariners’ home opener next Wednesday. With perks. Any idea on who I could give them to?
Wednesday’s good for me. Ken Fitzhugh, fresh-faced, right out of the Academy.
He scowled sourly. Just your type. Those tickets have my name on them.
"And this case has got my name on it. No one else’s, Charlie. Right?"
Right.
She unclipped the slide, and after protecting the evidence, it, too, found its way into her purse. Could you get me samples from around that neck wound and of the victim’s blood?
Charlie threw up his hands. Sure. Hell, they can only fire me once, right?
Stacy grinned. Right. Who loves ya?
You’d better,
he grumbled. After passing over the samples, he made a shooing gesture. Now, get outta here and make mischief elsewhere, so I can do my job.
Call me if you get anything else of interest.
Yeah, yeah.
But he smiled on the receiving end of her quick kiss. Next Wednesday night,
he reminded her. You and me?
If I’m not swamped with work, you got it.
But what exactly did she have tucked away in her bag? Stacy wondered as she hurried out of the building. The possibilities were thrilling. And dangerous. Very dangerous if word leaked out to the wrong parties.
To her thinking, there were certain parties who should never be trusted with the safety and security of the America people. The government was on the top of her list.
She didn’t draw a deep breath until her apartment door was deadbolted behind her. Then the shaking set in—deep, bone rattling, teeth chattering tremors of delayed shock and adrenaline overload.
Feeling suddenly as if she were one of the Rosenberg’s with a bag full of atomic secrets, she wobbled across the dark room to collapse upon her favorite rocker/recliner. Kicking up the footrest, she lay back, ugly purse clutched to her chest. Long moments passed as she stared up at the shadowed ceiling in frantic uncertainty.
If even a sliver of what she supposed was true, think of the possibilities.
She was thinking, hadn’t been able to stop thinking since that smear had come into focus. Slowly, everything else tuned in with equal clarity.
She was wasting time.
Slamming the footrest down, she snapped on the pole lamp beside her chair and fished in her bag for the report and the samples. With both on the coffee table before her, she began to narrow that focus into a feasible plan.
The shrill of the phone had her clearing the chair cushion by a good four inches. When her heart left her throat, she picked up the receiver. The petulant demand from the other end left her mind in a total blank.
What the hell are you doing home?
Who is this?
Lance.
Lance?
The word might have well been Swahili for all the connections it made.
I had my hand up your shirt an hour ago, and you’ve forgotten me already?
Oh, that Lance.
"I thought you were coming right back," he grumbled.
Returning to the studio apartment with its stale smell of athletic socks and raging hormones held the appeal of a root canal. Suddenly, she couldn’t recall what the appeal had been in the first place. Tousled blond hair, one-hundred-watt grin, washboard abs . . . Oh, yeah. Now she remembered.
But, too bad for Lance, the hot-blooded attraction had been replaced by a cold-blooded slide.
I had an emergency at work. I’m sorry I didn’t call.
She added that last to be kind. She wasn’t sorry, not really.
An emergency? For God’s sake, you’re a geneticist. What kind of emergency could you people possibly have? A new chromosome split, or something equally earth-shattering?
How unattractive he was in his nasty ignorance. Funny, she couldn’t remember why Lance had ever remotely interested her.
Nothing a single-celled organism could be expected to understand.
Her tone burned like dry ice.
Frustrated, but too vain to get the big picture, Lance tried to pour on the silky charm. I deserved that, I know. Let’s forget about it and get back to you and me.
I’ve got a better idea, Lance. Let’s just forget about you and me.
She replaced the receiver gently on the cradle.
When the phone rang again, the sound angry in the silence, she didn’t pick it up. Instead, she held up the first sample, studying the blotch ineffectually with the naked eye, her naked anticipation surging like the tide that had gotten the best of the unfortunate Wanda Cummings.
What secrets are you hiding, my friend? Don’t be shy. You can tell me.
The stain gleamed bright and beckoning as she turned it before the light.
She pursed her lips thoughtfully, then murmured, You’ll tell me everything . . . eventually. Including where you came from. Especially where you came from.
Two
OFFICER KEN FITZHUGH stared across the busy waterfront café, unable to believe his luck. Stacy Kimball. Her name sighed through him in shy, boyish reverie. In person, she was more stunning than rumor led him to hope.
In person, she made it hard for a man to breathe.
Kimball was legend around the station house—the Goddess of Gore, the Queen of Cadavers, the Mistress of the Morgue, Elvira of the Eleven-to-Seven Shift. She’d done her interning in forensic medicine before his time, but the mark she’d made upon the wet dreams of the precinct house