Read The Maestro's Maker Online
Authors: Rhonda Leigh Jones
five years old and slightly built, he carried himself powerfully, as a much older, much
larger man would. He had Claude-Michel’s prominent nose and bottomless black eyes.
His skin was much darker, however, an olive tone, his lips full and sensual. His head was
ringed by a mass of long, black curls reaching just below his shoulders.
He did not stand on ceremony, but burst into the house.
I shifted my gaze back to the window to see Claude-Michel stand.
“Lucio,” the old woman said gently. “This is—”
“Claudio du Fresne,” Claude-Michel finished. “I’m—”
“My father?” Lucio said, removing his hat. “Yes, I can see that is probably true. Did
you know you are the one person besides Mama who can ruin my reputation by telling
the world I’m half Gypsy?” He sauntered over to Claude-Michel and looked him over. “I
would kill you on the spot if I gave a damn about anything,” he said, and turned on his
heel toward the servant-girl, who had suddenly blanched. “Esperanza,” he said, “where
is my Chartreuse, eh?”
“I’m sorry,
Signore
,” the girl said, and fled the room.
“I told you what would happen the next time you forgot!” he called after her, then
spun back on his toe with a devilish grin. “Poor thing, she’s frightened to death of me, but
I haven’t the slightest idea why.” To Claude-Michel, he said, “I did very well for myself,
don’t you think? It is very lucky for you I didn’t grow up in squalor.” He moved with a
dangerous, playful energy.
Even from so far away, I could see Claude-Michel blinking rapidly, as he did when he
was caught off-guard. “I didn’t know about you,” he said. “When I discovered you had
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been born, I came immediately.”
“News travels very slowly,” Lucio said as Esperanza hurried back with a tray
containing a bottle of light green liquid and a small glass, which she filled and handed to
Lucio. “Ah,” he said. “Very nice.” He raised the glass to Claude-Michel. “Chartreuse. It’s
the French in me, I suppose,” he said, and drank. “What is my legacy then? No one ever
told me your position in the world. I imagine you failed to mention that to my mother, as
a precaution so that she would not be able to find you. I imagine you married well.”
“Yes,” Claude-Michel said quietly, and glanced briefly at the marchesa, but she was
looking at her son.
“Good,” Lucio said. “Let’s all drink to my stepmother, Mrs. du Fresne—”
Anger flashed across Claude-Michel’s face. “She’s dead,” he said in a low warning
tone. “I loved her very much. You also had a brother named Gabriel, and a sister, Camille.
Also dead. Both of them.”
Lucio stopped in his tracks and the two men regarded each other—father looking
darkly upon son, son regarding father with a look of sobering realization. “I have a
daughter,” he offered. “I married well also. Perhaps in time I will love my wife.”
“A daughter...” Claude-Michel said. “I have a granddaughter?”
“Francesca Katarina. My wife thinks Katarina is a long-lost favorite aunt of Mama’s.
They are staying with her relatives in the country.”
“She’s a beautiful child,” the marchesa said. “I know you will think so.”
Lucio approached Claude-Michel with a grin. “You owe me wine,” he said. “A glass
for each year you waited to find me, eh?” He drank the rest of the Chartreuse and set the
glass on the table, meeting Esperanza’s gaze as he did so. “Expect a visit from me later,”
he said to her. Then he headed for the door with a flourish of his hand. “Come with me to
my favorite tavern. We will decide if we want to be father and son.”
“But of course,” Claude-Michel said. “My man is waiting outside. We will take my
carriage.”
I hurried back through the forest as quickly and quietly as I could.
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“Quickly!” I shouted from the forest, then looked Victoire in the eye before I could
get the rest out. He recoiled against the carriage and looked around, as if some answer
were in the trees. The boy who drove him looked on with wide, curious eyes. “They are
going to Lucio Di’Angelo’s favorite tavern.”
“
La Piuma Nera,
” he said.
“We have to go,” I said. He nodded and came to his senses, climbing into the carriage
and ordering his boy to the tavern.
Once we were traveling, however, he looked at me strangely. “What are you?” he
asked, a lot more matter-of-factly than I would have expected.
“Things have happened,” I said. “There are things you don’t know about your brother,
and about this man who is looking for him. That man’s name is Gunnar, and he is a pirate.
I was his captive for many months. He was going to kill Claude-Michel. I couldn’t let
him do that.”
“So you just…escaped?”
“I am stronger than I look,” I said.
“I think you will owe me an explanation when we are with him.”
“I think you should ask your brother. I don’t owe you anything. I have never seen you
before.”
At the door to
La Piuma Nera,
I held Victoire back. Of course, he was not happy
about being ordered around by a woman, but he was still curious and wary enough to
listen for the moment. “Shh!” I whispered. “I want to listen.”
“Does your young wife know yet of your trysts?” Claudio asked the boy as I slipped
inside and hid myself in nearby shadows. Claudio looked around but did not see me. The
young man soon recaptured his attention. My attention was so captured by the two of
them, I was not able to place the sharp animal tang of sweat that I mistook for the general
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smell of the bar.
Lucio shrugged. Then he smiled wickedly. “Once, she was furious with me for
returning home with my clothes reeking of the whorehouse. She threw a sachet at me.”
He slapped a hand against his chest and spoke in mock indignation.
“Wives do shocking things,” Claude-Michel said with a sly grin I was learning to
love and hate at the same time.
“She was the one shocked. I don’t think she had ever been spanked before that day,
but her bottom was a nice rosy color when I’d finished. I made such love to her afterward.
I find it an effective way to keep her from making demands. A pink bottom will make a
woman forget her jealousies quickly.”
Claude-Michel laughed. It was the first real laugh I had heard him utter. “There is no
doubt about it,” he said, and clapped the boy on the back. “You are my son.”
“Of course,” Lucio said. “And I am very glad to know who bears the blame for this,”
he said, running a finger down the length of his nose. Then he banged on the bar. “Oy!”
He called. “Niko!”
A smiling older man appeared from a back room.
“The devil has returned!” the man said in a Greek accent, coming around the bar to
give Lucio a crushing hug. His gaze fell then on Claudio, and his eyes grew large as he
looked from one to the other. “An older brother?”
“A father,” Lucio said. Lucio square his shoulders with pride as he spoke.
“Raised from the dead!”
Lucio tapped his lips with a finger. “It depends on which story I’ve told you.”
“I’ve known you too long,” Niko said, waddling back around the bar and waving
Lucio away. “I’ve heard all of your stories, even the ones that are true.” He leaned on the
bar toward Claudio. “When he was a little boy, he caused me all kinds of trouble. Such
a little demon.” He shrugged. “But he is good for business. Everyone comes to see what
the devil-boy is up to today—friends, enemies. And now,” he said, pulling down a bottle
of amber-colored liquor and three glasses. “Something on the house. Today, we celebrate
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a reunion between father and son.”
From deeper within the tavern, someone spoke in a voice that was aging, yet resonant,
in an accent dead for many, many generations. “Today...we celebrate many reunions.”
Then Gunnar was in front of Claudio, holding firmly to the blade of his rapier. Behind
me, Victoire lumbered in awkwardly, also with a rapier in hand. I put myself between
Claudio’s brother and the man I had hoped never to see again.
Gunnar’s white eyes stared deeply into Claudio’s black ones as thick rivulets of blood
ran down his arm. “You can’t kill me,” Gunnar said, narrowing his eyes. “But, yes...I can
see you would like to very much.”
He pawed the blade to the side. Claude-Michel went for his heart and found himself
rushing only air as Gunnar stood to the side, laughing.
“What demon is this?” Niko asked, crossing himself. Lucio stood with his hand on the
hilt of his sword, looking around wildly, his wide eyes settling on Claudio’s face. Claudio
stood breathing through his open mouth, paying no attention to the fangs growing past
the concealment of his upper lip.
“What
are
you?” Lucio demanded, as Victoire had demanded of me not half an hour
before.
Gunnar laughed loudly, showing his fangs, bellowing, “He is what I am. A defiler of
all that is pure. But…you haven’t told your long-lost son of your adventures on board my
ship, and how a young French beauty turned you into what you are today.”
I heard Victoire gasp behind me and wondered if he was about to run me through with
his weapon.
Gunnar clicked his tongue. “It isn’t good to have such secrets between father and son.
Especially when you’ve been away for so long.” Then he spoke to me without turning
around. “I know you’re there, Chloe. I know everything that happens around me.”
I couldn’t keep myself from responding. “I should have cut off your head and fed it
to the sharks, as I dreamed of doing every night.”
“What have you done?” Victoire whispered behind me, but to this day I don’t know
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who he was talking to. Himself, perhaps.
In spite of what was happening around him, Claudio looked calm, yet coiled. I knew
even then he was a man accustomed to conflict. The boy, on the other hand, seemed wild
in comparison, though he had managed to slip a dagger from his boot. We all waited to
see what would happen next, watching this terrible white-maned man who seemed so
much more than human—so much more, even, than vampire.
“Oh, yes,” Gunnar said, turning so that his back was no longer to me and Victoire.
“I know about you as well, Claude-Michel. I know all about you. More than you can
imagine. And I know about your friend François, and your children.”
“You don’t know about me,” Lucio spat. Gunnar turned toward him with an arrogant
grin, meeting the flying dagger blade with his eye. He froze, and the confident look fled
his face. His remaining eye went wild as thick, dark bands of blood ran down his cheek.
I could do nothing except watch in shocked horror. With a scream of rage, he groped
blindly at his face, then went down on his knees. He tried to rise, and then slid to a
sitting position, gasped, and fell backward. As he lay twitching, he turned his face toward
Claudio.
“You can’t...kill...me...” he rasped. With a cry of rage, Claudio drove his rapier
into Gunnar’s remaining eye, careful to avoid the spurt of blood. Gunnar screamed and
grabbed the blade, tearing his fingers to ribbons, spraying droplets. Finally, he stopped
moving, and Claudio bent over him.
“Don’t ever underestimate me,” Claudio hissed between his teeth. Then he braced
against Gunnar’s chest with his boot to reclaim his weapon and Lucio’s, wiping the
blades on the fallen man’s breeches as Gunnar moved his hands aimlessly. Lucio gingerly
accepted his dagger, but gave Claudio a suspicious look.
Claudio had already headed for the door by the time Niko started screaming, “Get
out! Get out of here!”
“Come on!” Claudio shouted, without stopping to see if anyone obeyed. Outside,
Lucio challenged him. “That man,” he said. “That man...what was he?”
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“Yes, Diable, who was he?” Victoire echoed.
Claudio looked at both of us darkly. “Vampire,” he said.
“Vampire?” Lucio whispered. “But..it isn’t possible.”
“It is,” Claudio said.
“And you?” Lucio said, leaning in close.
“No,” Claude-Michel said, smiling carefully. “Men say things when they are upset.
Monsters do even more.”
It gave me such a strange feeling to hear him say that, but I blamed it on the
circumstance, assumed he planned to explain everything to his son when emotions were
no longer so violent.
Without warning, Lucio lashed out. Claudio caught his wrists before the boy’s hands
could come in contact with his face, and had him pinned against his carriage. Jean watched
from his driver’s perch, clearly wanting to come down and defend his master.
“Show me,” Lucio demanded. “Show me your teeth.”
Claudio relaxed. His fangs had just started to recede from his encounter with Gunnar.
Now they were long again, ready if need be to sink into Lucio’s flesh.
“Show me!” Lucio shouted.
“No,” Claude-Michel said. The sharp tips revealed themselves even as he spoke.
Lucio tried to struggle away. “It’s true!” he said, terror and rage at war on his face.
Claudio let him go and stood scowling at the boy.
“Is this why you came to see me?” Lucio demanded, eyes and hair wild. “You want