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The Seventh Night
The Seventh Night
The Seventh Night
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The Seventh Night

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Compelled to visit the island of Columbe by a strange missive from her father, Christine Greggory found herself in a different world.

Vodoun drums were everywhere, beating out a blood-pulsing rhythm that blurred all rational thought. Arcane rituals, practiced openly, both fascinated and repelled her. But when she discovered that her father was missing, the exotic paradise she'd entered turned sinister...

Desperately she turned to Reid St. Pierre, her father's business partner and the only man who could help her. But Reid seemed deeply enmeshed in the native customs at the core of her father's disappearance. Worse yet, the burning passion in his gaze that called to Christine's deepest fears...and long-hidden desires.

Trusting Reid would be dangerous ...to her heart, as well as her life.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateNov 1, 2014
ISBN9781488790065
The Seventh Night
Author

Amanda Stevens

Amanda Stevens is an award-winning author of over fifty novels. Born and raised in the rural south, she now resides in Houston, Texas.

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    The Seventh Night - Amanda Stevens

    PROLOGUE

    …Of death, contagion, and unnatual sleep. A greater power than we can contradict Hath thwarted our intents. Come, come away.

    Romeo and Juliet, Act V, Scene iii

    "I had the dream again last night."

    Was it exactly the same?

    The question was no more than analytically curious, a mild query from doctor to patient, but I sensed a strange undercurrent of tension in Dr. Layton’s tone. Or perhaps it was a manifestation of my own anxiety. In other words, my imagination.

    Rubbing my arms against a sudden chill, I stared out the window. From my lofty view, I watched a score of colorful sailboats glide across the glassy waters of Lake Michigan, coming home to berth at day’s end. Lights in the surrounding office buildings began to twinkle on, anticipating the Chicago twilight. I could feel Dr. Layton’s eyes on me, waiting for my response. Still I remained silent.

    Why don’t you tell me about it, Christine? he prompted softly.

    I hardly know where to start, I murmured, watching a piece of paper swirl upward past the window. Trapped in a tiny whirlwind, it fluttered and spun and dove out of control, symbolic of my own chaotic emotions.

    I turned and faced Dr. Layton, taking a small measure of comfort in his kindly demeanor. I’d known him for years. He’d helped me through one of the most difficult times of my life several years ago, when my young husband, Danny, had been killed by a drunk driver. I’d experienced a mixture of helplessness and guilt then. It was the same out-of-control feeling I had now.

    That was why I’d come back to see him. I trusted him as much as I allowed myself to trust anyone, and God knows I desperately needed to talk to someone.

    It was like the other dreams, except more vivid this time. More…urgent somehow.

    Start at the beginning.

    But that’s part of the problem, I protested. I never know when reality leaves off and the dream begins. I never know if I’m asleep or awake. Sometimes I think I must be sleepwalking again, and I wonder if there are parts of the dream that I don’t remember. It’s scary, Dr. Layton. Terrifying. I feel so…out of control— I broke off, unable to give voice to my real suspicions, my true fears.

    In other words, Dr. Layton continued calmly, you don’t consciously remember falling asleep?

    No.

    That’s hardly unusual, Christine.

    I know, but this is different. I can’t explain it without sounding totally…insane. There, I’d said it. I’d spoken aloud my deepest fears. With the tip of my finger, I traced the smooth, cold reflection of my face in the window. You see, it’s more like a vision than a dream. It seems almost like a…like a message of some sort. Do you believe in ESP, doctor? In premonitions?

    I don’t discount them. Is that what you think you’ve been having?

    I shook my head, my eyes still focused on the cool, gray waters of Lake Michigan. But in my mind’s eye, I saw the shimmering, turquoise waters of the Caribbean, could almost feel the sea breeze against my face. It wasn’t a memory, though, because I’d never been to the islands, had never even seen the ocean. But when I closed my eyes, I could feel it, taste it, smell it. The image was so powerful I could only have experienced it firsthand—and yet I hadn’t. Only in my dreams.

    I don’t know what I’m having, I confessed in a desperate whisper.

    Why don’t you tell me everything you remember?

    Behind me his chair squeaked in protest as he settled in.

    I was watching TV last night, one of the late-night talk shows. I remember everything about it—the guests, the jokes, the music. I went into the kitchen to get something to drink, and suddenly, in the space of a heartbeat, everything changed. Just like the times before, I was surrounded by fog, so dense I couldn’t see through it, but I could feel the mist on my skin.

    Were you still in your apartment?

    No, I was outside. I could hear the ocean somewhere in the distance—below me, I think. I remember distinctly the scent of exotic blossoms and spices, and I could hear drums beating…a strange, primitive-sounding beat that drew me deeper and deeper into the mist. There was someone in that fog calling to me, Dr. Layton. Summoning me. But I don’t know why.

    Don’t you?

    No!

    Again the leather chair groaned as he shifted his weight. When did you get the first call from your father, Christine?

    I gave him a slightly reproachful glance. You know very well it was a week ago. I told you—it was the first time I’d talked to him in years.

    When did you have your first dream…or vision, whatever you’d like to call it?

    A day or two after my father called from Columbé.

    And when did he last call?

    A telling sigh slipped through my lips. Yesterday. He had me called out of class.

    What did he say? How did he sound?

    He asked me to come to the island again. He sounded…urgent. I closed my eyes briefly, hearing his exact words thrumming through my brain.

    Please come, Christine. I want to see you again. I want to get to know you.

    And then, more desperately it seemed, I need you, Christine. You’re the only real family I have left. You’re the only one I can—

    The telephone connection had been broken at that point because of bad weather in the islands, but I could have sworn what my father had meant to say was trust. I was the only one he could trust.

    But why should he feel that way about a daughter he hadn’t seen in nearly a decade? Why should he feel that way about a child he’d abandoned twenty years ago? My father had another family, one he’d left my mother and myself for. Why should I be the only one he could trust?

    Dr. Layton’s calm voice broke into my thoughts. Would you say his phone call conveyed the same sense of urgency as your dream?

    I know what you’re getting at, and yes, even I can see the parallel. But that still doesn’t tell me what to do to stop the dreams.

    I think you know how to stop the dreams, Christine.

    I lifted my gaze to his. I have to go to Columbé. I have to face my father.

    I wanted to believe more than anything that my father was offering us a new beginning, a chance to put all the past hurts and betrayal behind us. I wanted to believe that he was offering me something I’d always wanted—a family, a home, a sense of belonging. I wanted to believe it, but my fears held me back.

    Don’t you want to go, Christine?

    Yes, I whispered, putting my fingers to my lips in an effort to control the sudden rise of emotion. I’ve always wanted to go.

    Then what’s stopping you?

    I have school, I said vaguely. Obligations. My students count on me. Besides, Columbé is not the safest place to travel.

    Spring break starts in a week, doesn’t it? Dr. Layton stared at me thoughtfully with his cool, gray eyes. What are you really afraid of, Christine? Are you afraid of seeing your father…or someone else perhaps? Your stepbrother?

    No! That’s a ridiculous notion, Dr. Layton. Reid St. Pierre means nothing to me. I never think about him anymore.

    The gray brows lifted. Never?

    I’m not afraid of him, I said bravely.

    Then there’s nothing stopping you from going to Columbé, is there?

    I suppose not, I admitted, gazing down at my hands.

    Nothing but my dreams. Dr. Layton leaned forward, his tone firm. You’re twenty-eight years old, Christine, a very accomplished teacher. You’re no longer the confused teenager you were at eighteen.

    I knew what he was saying. It was time to face my insecurities and fears and put them behind me.

    It’s time to face the bogeyman, Christine.

    I shivered violently as the last light from the dying sun filtered across my face and the streets far below fell into shadow. In spite of the fact that I hadn’t seen him in ten years, Reid St. Pierre’s image had never been more deeply ingrained in my mind than it was at that exact moment. And no matter how much I might want to deny it, I realized I was afraid of seeing him again.

    Deathly afraid.

    Because I’d had other dreams in the past. Erotic, fanciful dreams about him. Dreams that—in their way—were every bit as frightening as the nightmares I’d been having recently.

    I knew Dr. Layton was right, though. There was only one way to stop the dreams. I would have to go to Columbé. And soon.

    CHAPTER ONE

    The First Night

    From the sky, the island of Columbé sparkled like a jewel, all golden and emerald and aquamarine. The sunset dazzled the crystal horizon with opaline fire, and the Caribbean shimmered endlessly, like yards and yards of turquoise satin.

    With one’s feet planted firmly on the ground, however, the tarnish was all too apparent. The crowded, primitive little terminal wore a disturbing air of chaos. Soldiers with automatic rifles slung over their shoulders were posted at each entrance. Their dark eyes were casually alert as they scanned the disembarking passengers.

    If I’d had any doubt that I was a long way from Chicago, this alone would have reminded me.

    But in spite of the primitive setting, in spite of the flaws and the general sense of unease, I could hardly contain my excitement.

    It was still difficult to believe, but I was here at last, in Columbé, a place I had dreamed about for nearly twenty years. A place I had alternately loved and hated for most of my life. A place that, in many ways, seemed more surreal than real, an island still imbued with the ancient mysteries of voodoo, black magic and midnight ritual. A place that pulsed with the primitive rhythm of drums echoing through the darkness….

    Home.

    The sudden sensation overwhelmed me, but whether an actual feeling or merely wishful thinking, I had no idea. And didn’t care. I was here, and that was all that counted. Any minute now I would see my father again after nearly a decade. The years and years of our estrangement seemed hardly to matter now in the face of my intense anticipation. Clasping my hands together, I scanned the terminal with a nervous eye.

    Where in the world was he? Now that I was here, even this small delay became unbearable. Every time the doors swung open, my heart pumped a little faster. Every time a man strode through, my breath caught in my throat, only to be expelled in another rush of disappointment. I scrutinized each new arrival, not knowing how much or how little my father might have changed since the last time I’d seen him.

    Would Reid St. Pierre be with him this time?

    Excitement turned to dread. What would he be like now? Still maddeningly arrogant? Still mysteriously aloof? Still devastatingly handsome?

    I cursed myself for even entertaining such dangerous thoughts, but already my traitorous heart was thumping against my chest with the memory of a man I’d met a decade ago, a man who had shown no more than a slightly amused interest in a shy, inexperienced eighteen-year-old. A man who, no doubt, didn’t remember me at all.

    At the age of twenty-four, Reid St. Pierre had been the epitome of every girl’s dream—tall, dark and handsome, with an easy charm that could melt the coldest of hearts. To a lonely young girl who had never had anything but dreams, he’d been completely overwhelming.

    And I’d hated him with a passion that bordered on obsession.

    Automatically I moved forward in the customs line, but my thoughts tumbled backward through time and space to land on that cold, distant Chicago twilight ten years ago. I recalled the first time I’d laid eyes on Reid St. Pierre as though it had been yesterday.

    We were in the lobby of my college dorm, and all around us young girls were gazing in rapture at the striking man standing beside me. I could almost feel my lowly status soaring.

    Christine, I’d like you to meet Reid, your stepbrother, my father had said. It’s about time you two get to know each other. After all, you’re family and have been for years now.

    Seemingly oblivious to the stares, Reid had smiled down at me, his perfect white teeth flashing against the bronze of his skin. The deep blue eyes contained just the barest hint of amusement as his gaze swept over me, making me aware of my plain white blouse and my dark, conservative skirt. Before I had time to react, he lifted my hand to his mouth, and his full lips grazed my skin.

    His breath was hot against my hand, and the feel of his mouth stirred a storm of unfamiliar sensations inside me. My stomach quivered with an excitement I didn’t understand as our gazes collided, and I forgot about everyone else in the room.

    Shocked out of my senses, I jerked my hand away and Reid laughed softly, a deep, masculine sound that vibrated through my entire body. I’d barely even dated boys my own age; I was completely inexperienced, a virgin in every sense of the word. But I knew enough—or sensed it—to realize that Reid St. Pierre could be a dangerous, dangerous man.

    I don’t think Christine’s too happy with the prospect of having a brother, Reid said.

    Nonsense, my father scoffed. Every teenaged girl needs a big brother.

    Reid smiled again, secretively, I thought, as he took my coat and held it for me. My last thought as we walked out of the dorm was that, whoever or whatever he might be, Reid St. Pierre would never be my brother….

    The memory spun away like mist in the morning sunlight, leaving me shivering in the oppressive heat of the crowded terminal. I wondered with a tiny fracture of fear somewhere deep inside me what my reaction to Reid St. Pierre would be now.

    The line shuffled forward once more, and the lady behind me bumped her suitcase into mine. Taking the hint, I inched my bag along as the touristy chatter buzzed around me like the drone of a thousand bees. Trying to keep my mind out of the past, I idly listened to bits and pieces of a dozen different conversations flowing around me until a feminine voice behind me caught my attention.

    Do you believe in zombies?

    The question was softly spoken, almost furtively, but it had the effect of splashing cold water on my face and bringing me very much into the present. I threw a quick, cautious glance over my shoulder and was immediately relieved to realize the strange query had not been addressed to me.

    Two nondescript women in plain, dark dresses stood behind me, gripping their purses to their sides as they spoke in low voices to one another. I thought I recognized them. They were part of a larger group that had been on the plane with me from Chicago.

    Missionaries of some sort, I concluded, noticing the identical gold crosses adorning their simple clothing. Just a day or two ago, I’d read somewhere that several churches in the United States had stepped up their missionary work in Columbé when the old regime had toppled recently. A resurgence of the voodoo religion had set the Christian soldiers on the march once again. But judging by the surly, almost hostile attitude of some of the islanders working at the airport, these modern-day crusaders had their work cut out for them here.

    The young woman who had spoken caught my glance. I smiled awkwardly, having been caught eavesdropping, then turned back to face the front of the line. I tried to close my ears to the ensuing conversation, but, like it or not, the bizarre topic had captured my full attention.

    Now, Patsy, Father Ingram said we mustn’t let our imaginations run away with us, the older woman admonished her companion. We’ve come here to Columbé to combat such superstitious nonsense.

    I know, but Mary Alice was here for three months last year and she said…she said… The quiet voice faltered, and I found myself mentally prodding her. What? What did Mary Alice say?

    She said zombies really exist. By using poisons and black magic and…evil spirits, some people here have the power to capture another living human’s soul. That’s what makes a zombie—someone alive, but without a soul. A body without a will. Mary Alice said you have to be very careful about traveling the back roads and that you must never, under any circumstances, leave your car after dark. Patsy’s voice lowered dramatically. They move by night.

    A hand touched my arm, and I jumped violently. The customs official looked at me without smiling as he bent and lifted my suitcase, heaving it onto the sturdy table. In spite of the sweltering heat in the terminal, goose flesh prickled the hair at the back of my neck as the man flipped the locks and raised the lid.

    Will you be staying in Columbé long? the official asked in the lilting cadence of the islands. The dark look he gave me was in direct contradiction to the lyrical sound of his voice.

    I met his gaze and threw him what I hoped was an engaging smile. A few days. A couple of weeks at the most. I’m not sure yet.

    You have a return airline ticket?

    Yes, but the date’s open. Is there some problem with that?

    He answered my question with another. Where will you be staying?

    Something in his expression made me stare at him for a moment. I’m…not sure.

    A definite look of suspicion crept into his eyes as his gaze flickered over me, taking in my conservative navy suit, my low-heeled pumps. All in all, my nondescript appearance probably looked very much like that of the missionary ladies behind me, and the thought crossed my mind that perhaps that was the reason for the man’s wariness.

    Foreigners, particularly those peddling their own ideals, were not always welcome in Columbé, I’d read.

    My father lives here, I rushed to inform him. What I meant was that I’m not sure whether I’ll be staying at his home or at the hotel. He owns the St. Pierre in Port Royale.

    A shadow passed across the man’s face, so swiftly I couldn’t be sure I’d seen it at all. Then his gaze lowered as he continued to rummage through my things. It seemed to me he was taking an inordinate amount of time, and I suddenly remembered a movie of the week I’d seen recently where a customs official had planted cocaine in a woman’s suitcase. For what reason I couldn’t remember, but nervously, I stood on tiptoes and peered over the lid.

    Is there a problem? I asked again.

    Without removing his gaze from mine, he closed my suitcase and snapped the locks, then thrust the case across the table toward me. Light sparked the gold of his ring and drew my gaze to his hands. The metal had been molded into the shape of a snake, and as I stared at it, I suddenly had the strangest sensation of déjà vu.

    And then I knew why, as a new memory stirred to life.

    We were sitting in the restaurant that first night of father’s and Reid’s visit in Chicago and my father had just made a toast.

    Reid lifted the crystal flute to his lips, and I watched in fascination as the millions of bubbles spiraled upward to the top of his glass. Like flame to a moth, the motion of his large hand captured my gaze, held me in thrall.

    He stared back at me, his smile knowing. I see you’re admiring my ring.

    He set the glass back on the table, and I noticed for the first time the heavy gold ring he wore on his right hand. An S was carved into the metal and entwined with the image of a snake. My father gave it to me years ago, he said, twisting his hand to stare down at the ring. The emblem is supposed to have magical properties for those who believe. Do you believe, Christine? he asked softly.

    I lifted my gaze to meet his. In magic? Of course not.

    There’s magic…and there’s magic, he murmured, raising his glass once again. "Damballah Wedo, the most revered loa in the vodun religion, assumes the form of a snake. When the spirit mounts the body, the experience can be…powerful."

    Stop teasing her with that nonsense, Reid, my father said in annoyance. I’d like Christine to come to Columbé someday. Don’t scare her off before she ever gets there.

    Christine doesn’t appear to me to be the type who frightens easily. Am I right?

    I’m certainly not afraid of voodoo. Sounds to me like Columbé is still living in the Dark Ages, I replied primly, sipping my club soda with an air of what I hoped was disdain.

    In many ways we’re still very primitive, Reid agreed darkly, gazing down at his ring once more as he stroked the metal with the

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