I awoke the following morning with a dull headache that would not cease. Abandoning Salem in the warm, comfortable bed, I retreated to the shower. The water was hot and relaxing as it beat against the back of my head, easing the pain almost instantly. There was a fresh clean towel hanging on the bar outside the shower, and I quickly draped it around my body as I climbed out onto the plush rug. Water dripped carelessly from my drenched hair, and I twirled a smaller towel around my head to stop the moisture from falling.
After dressing in jeans and a black V-neck shirt with a silver heart on the front, I slid on some plain white socks and quietly exited the bathroom. Everyone was still sound asleep. My eyes scanned through the room until I spotted the alarm clock—it was nearing ten in the morning. We were going to be late for our tour!
“Salem! Dad! Mel! Wake up!” I shouted as loudly as I could and watched each of them groggily look at me in alarm. “The tour is in less than an hour.”
“Oh, crap!” Desmond quickly leapt out of bed and went to change into something more appropriate than boxers and a T-shirt.
Salem was next out of bed, and Melissa decided she was going to stay behind. She’d already seen the castle during a trip a few years before, and she claimed to be too tired still.
Salem and I held hands as we followed alongside Desmond, behind our tour guide—Emilian. He was definitely a native Romanian, you could easily tell from his speech. There were a few English words that he had more than a little trouble pronouncing, and my foster father was kind enough to assist him. He let us know this was only his second time guiding a tour as he had just gotten the job a week ago, but he seemed confident, especially with Desmond’s guidance.
“While it is often believed that Bram Stoker wrote his stories based in this castle, he was, in fact, writing of a location elsewhere in Transylvania that wound up being an empty mountain top. Despite this, people are still fascinated by the castle and intrigued by the idea that a vampire could have lived here—however, we all know that those are all myths and legends, and Stoker’s story is completely fictional.”
Salem and I both side-glanced at each other after Emilian’s initial speech.
“Bran Castle has been transformed into a museum displaying art and furnishings collected by Queen Marie—for all of you hoping for paranormal discoveries; I am sorry to disappoint you.”
I listened intently to the muffled voices from a crowd of people behind us.
“What are we looking for here?” a man asked in a hushed tone. I fought the urge to glance back at him.
“Anything that might aid us in our attack on Malik,” a woman spoke.
My hand slipped from between Salem’s fingers, and I tensed up at the sound of the name. There had to be more than one Malik in all of Transylvania, it had to be a coincidence! I swore under my breath as I once again recalled the saying Salem repeated to me more than once during our first encounter.
“But you heard the man; this is nothing but a castle of legend—there’s nothing vampire-related here.”
I cringed and pulled Salem away from Desmond and Emilian. He looked bewildered at the sudden stop, having been immersed in whatever tale the tour guide was babbling on about.
“What’s wrong, Alex?” he asked, his eyes still focused ahead at the tour guide.
“The people behind us…they’re talking about Malik.”
He peered quickly behind us and then looked at me. “They may just be talking about someone else.”
“I thought the same until they mentioned vampires.”
Salem sighed and stepped casually backward, guiding me with his hand, acting as though we were leaving. Desmond didn’t seem to notice our absence. We followed silently behind the crowd—there were seven people among them, each of them speaking quietly.
“We should leave, there is nothing here for us,” a different male spoke than before.
“We can’t just give up, Mikael,” the woman said. “Malik has been here far too long, working his way through people just like us, claiming them as his own…there’s no telling how few of us still remain, and how many have become slaves!”
“Excuse me,” I said unexpectedly and Salem squeezed my hand tightly. “I don’t mean to interrupt but…are you speaking of ‘Lord Malik’, by chance?”
The group turned as a whole and stared us down.
“What of him do you know?” Mikael asked, scrutinizing us both.
“I have only heard rumors,” I explained. “Are you…vampire enthusiasts or hunters or something?”
Mikael exchanged glances with the female, and they both seemed to silently agree on something. “We are hunters. Who are you?”
“I am Alexis Waldron,” I replied proudly, though technically my last name had changed.
“Waldron?” one of the men gasped. “The raven line…”
“We cannot speak here, lass,” Mikael said and glanced toward the guide. “Take this card and find us, maybe you can be of service to us.”
Before I could agree or object, they rushed out of the line and vanished from sight. It was hard to believe I had stumbled upon something like this. I was beyond lucky that they had been speaking English. Had they been conversing in Romanian, I would have never known the group in our tour were hunters.
Salem looked at me warily but didn’t speak as we approached my foster father and Emilian. We trudged along behind them, faking interest in whatever the guide had to say. All I knew was that the building contained a lot of floors and a lot of furniture and artwork that didn’t appeal to me in the least. I was beyond grateful to be out of there when we were finished.
Desmond and Salem discussed some of the things they saw and learned during the tour while we were taxied back to the hotel. I blocked out the majority of it as I contemplated the hunters we met. Cautiously, I slid the card out of my pocket and examined it closely. All it said was the word ‘Vanatori’ in an elegant script and an address that I wouldn’t be able to locate without a GPS. I put it back in my pocket and gazed out the window until we arrived at the hotel once again.
Melissa was absent when we entered the room. My foster father informed us that she was visiting a nearby café to do some writing. He also explained to us that Mel records everything from their trips with the intent of someday writing a book. I had never even considered that she might actually do something; it seemed like she was just always along for the ride.
“Is she a journalist?” I asked, thinking of my aunt Kim who worked as a journalist for the newspaper back home.
“She’s a freelance writer. That’s sort of how we met, actually. One can typically find her cozied up in a café booth with a laptop and cappuccino, typing away until her hands cramp. I bumped into her—literally—at a café in Paris and knocked her laptop right out of her hands as she was on her way to sit down! Needless to say, I was embarrassed beyond belief and felt awful, but I offered to buy her a drink and replace her computer if it was damaged.”
I pictured his story vividly in my mind and stifled a chuckle. “Was her computer broken?”
“It wasn’t bad enough that she needed a new one, fortunately. We stayed in touch after the incident, and she still teases me about it. Eventually, we met up again in Rome and things took off from there.”
“Wow,” I said quietly. “I never really thought of there being a story behind the two of you…but, I spent a lot of time avoiding thinking about either of you.”
Desmond frowned and patted me on the back. “I understand, Alex. I thought of you a lot, and talked about you enough that Mel knows almost all there is to know about young Alexis.”
I smiled fondly at my foster father. “Hopefully she’ll get to know more about older Alex now that we’re together again.”
“I’m sure she will. I’m going to take a shower and then start packing for the trip to China!”
Almost as soon as Desmond left for the restroom, my phone began to ring. The front displayed an unknown number, and I hesitated before answering.
“Hello?”
“Alexis?” The voice at the opposite end of the phone shocked me. “This is Cassius Arith. I apologize for the other day. Do you have a moment to talk?”
My heart was racing. “Sure…of course.”
“To begin with—you are far more magnificent than I ever imagined,” he said, and I felt my cheeks growing warm. “Your talent is musical brilliance!”
“I-wow…I don’t even know what to say,” I fumbled with my words. “Thank you so much…”
“My only question is, how is it you were never offered an opportunity in music before?”
“I kind of stopped playing, for the most part, after…after something happened when I was young…very few people have heard me play since I was a kid.”
“I consider myself very lucky then, my dear. Please, do me the honor of working for me…I will beg if necessary.” A soft chuckle escaped his lips.
Before answering, I gazed at Salem, who, although was frowning, gave me a nod of approval. But who could blame him for being wary? He went through so much trouble getting us the beautiful house in Willowshire, the house of my dreams…but this, too, was my dream. I had given him his dream of mortality, was this his way of paying me back? I grinned broadly and twirled in a circle.
“I can’t believe this!” I shrieked at the top of my lungs. “Me? A musician?”
“You’ve earned it, after all you have been through,” Salem muttered with a frown. I hugged him tightly and let my head linger against his chest for a moment as I listened to the rhythm of his heartbeat. “What was it you said about housing?”
“Straight to it, I see.” The man laughed lightly and requested that we meet him in the morning to discuss things further.
I hung up the phone and looked directly into Salem’s violet-tinted eyes. “Are you disappointed?”
“Of course not,” he replied and shook his head, causing strands of black hair to fall across his face. “I suppose China will have to wait, however.”
“What’s this about China waiting?” Desmond asked as he came out of the bathroom.
“Cassius just called…he wants to offer me a job here,” I could barely conceal my excitement.
“That’s great!” Desmond exclaimed. “Do you want me to stay here for a while? I can put the trip to China off for a while, it’s no problem.”
I considered the idea for a moment—there were so many years I had missed with my foster father that could be made up for now, but it was a little too late. My own selfish needs shouldn’t postpone his dreams.
“Go ahead and go to China, dad…I’m sure Mel has to be getting sick of Romania by now. There is only so much to write about here, right? Just make sure you keep in touch, send me pictures when you can.”
“Are you sure?” He stared at me tenderly, and I knew it was tearing him apart to leave me again.
“I’m sure. It’s not like you can’t come back any time you want to.”
“You’re right…I guess it’s settled then; I'll cancel your tickets.”
I hugged him tightly and thought back to when I was barely tall enough to reach his waistline—before he left me seemingly for good. There wasn’t a single part of me that wasn’t happy to have him in my life again.
“Cassius wants us to meet him in the morning to look into housing, and then I guess I’ll find out where I’ll be working…”
“You sound uneasy.”
“I’m anxious! This is a big step.”
“It is, but you can handle it. Salem will be there to help you, you know.”
“And if by some chance things don’t go quite as planned, we have a home waiting for us in Willowshire,” Salem noted.
“Dad...” it still felt odd referring to him by that again, “I don’t mean to be nosy but…where did you get all your money from?” It was a valid question, despite the bluntness of it. I was certain he had been a high school English teacher, and there was no way that had paid for his adventured.
“Do you remember what I did for a living when you were little?”
“Of course…you taught English, right?”
“Right, but I didn’t only teach English. You know how small Willowshire high school is. I also taught two periods of economics. Anyway, very shortly after your mom and I…separated…my dad passed away. I don’t know if you remember him, Alex. Your grandparents had me pretty late in life and were very old when you were a baby. They lived up in Boulder. My dad didn’t do all that well after your grandma died. You were only three then, so I doubt you remember. We even went up there and stayed with him for a little while. Well, I was their only child, and they left me a whole lot of money. I am grateful for that, but I would still give it all away to have those two back. They would have loved who you have grown into, Alex.”
“They left you enough to live off of and do all this traveling? And to buy us that house? That is crazy!”
“Not exactly. It was a lot of money, but not that much. As soon as I got it, I took well over half and put what I had been teaching about economics to work. Stocks. I know the market inside and out. It has paid off big time, and I am able to easily live off the profits with some to spare.”
“Ah, I see.” It was somewhat confusing. I had never been that incredible of a student and my weakest subjects by far had been math and economics. “Isn’t that kind of dangerous though?”
“It can be, but I don’t put all my eggs in one basket. Besides, Mel is pretty well off on her own…so if everything did fall through, we would still be okay.”
Desmond unexpectedly stepped over to me and gave me another tight hug. “We should all get some sleep. We both have big long days tomorrow.”
“Right.”