"We're done!" Lewis hissed. "Where is my son?"
"As I said," Reese said patiently, "he is safe but I still need you."
"That wasn't the agreement! I did what you wanted..."
"Yes you did," Reese agreed, "and you did very well. As a reward I will allow you to talk to your son. I know that you will ask him where he is-he will not be able to tell you. Neither will you be able to trace the call. When you are through talking with him and are convinced that he is well; we will arrange a time to meet. Let me remind you of the rules. You are to tell no one about me. If you do, Edgar will pay the price and then I will come for Jean. I want you to destroy the phone than you are now using and get another one."
"I already have one," Lewis said. "If you wait I'll give you the number."
"You are prepared, I like that," Reese said. "Keep doing what you are doing and all will be well."
"What about Paolo?" Lewis asked. "He'll come after me."
"You need not concern yourself with him," Reese replied. "He is in the afterlife."
"He's dead?" Lewis asked flabbergasted.
"Yes he is dead," Reese replied. "Get the phone number. I will wait."
Lewis turned to see Jean looking at him. He could see the questioning look on her face but didn't take the time to address it. Reese was waiting and he had no desire to test the vampire's patience.
"Not now Jean," he said as he hurried past her.
"Lewis? What's going on and who are you talking to?" she demanded following him.
"You may tell her," Reese said, "but remember the rules. If she talks to anyone, Edgar pays and I come for her or someone else in your family."
"I understand... when can I speak to Edgar?"
"Soon-do you have that number?"
Lewis went to his office to get the phone glad that he had thought to charge it up and activate it. He gave Reese the number and jumped when he heard the soft click of a disconnection.
"Hello? Hello!!" he shouted into the phone.
"Lewis! What's happening?" Jean asked.
He had no choice but to tell her the whole truth.
"I thought that he would release Edgar and you would be none the wiser. Now he wants me to help him again."
"How do you know this vampire?" Jean asked.
"I don't know him, but he knows me. The bottom line is this... Paolo is dead. I took him to that party. If he killed Paolo then he will have no problem with killing Edgar or us for that matter."
"I'll call my father," Jean said. "He'll know what to do."
"Didn't you hear what I said?" Lewis asked his tone sharp. "If we call anyone, he'll know. He'll kill Edgar and come after someone else and that someone else will be you."
"How would he know?" Jean countered. "We can grab him when you meet with him and make him tell us where Edgar is."
Just then the prepaid phone rang. Lewis stared at it as it rang a second and then a third time. Finally he answered it.
"From now on you will answer when you hear the first ring. Is that clear?"
"Yes," Lewis whispered.
"Good- I suppose you told your wife?"
"I told her."
"Does she understand the rules?"
"I explained them," Lewis replied.
"That isn't what I asked," Reese said. "Does she understand what will happen if she talks to anyone?"
"I was in the process of explaining that to her when you called..."
"Put her on the phone."
"I'll make sure that she..."
"Put her on the phone-now," Reese said.
Lewis handed the phone to Jean who slowly took it and put it against her ear.
"Do not talk, just listen," Reese said. "I have your son Edgar. He still lives because your mate has done as I have asked. He will continue to live as long as he and now you continue to do as I ask. If you don't, whatever happens to Edgar is on your hands. If I have to kill him, I will replace him with someone else from your family. Now, put your mate back on the phone."
Jean numbly handed the phone back to Lewis. Lewis, she realized; was right. The vampire on the phone wouldn't hesitate to kill Edgar or anyone else who got in his way.
"I believe that she understands," Reese said. "You may now speak with your son."
****
Edgar lay on the small bed wondering what was happening at the party. With nothing else to do-he had tired of working on his gifts, he decided to see if there really was no way out. He started with the most obvious place-the door. He stood before it knowing that it was locked, but was it warded? He suspected that it was. Reese had struck him as too meticulous to not only have the door warded but the entire house. The one thing that he did remember from his classes was that wards were nearly impossible to break. Those who could break them were very much in the minority as were those who could make them.
With nothing to lose, he reached out and touched the door knob surprised that he could actually touch it. He wrapped his hand around it and tried to turn the knob. It simply vanished from his hand and reappeared somewhere else on the door. He spent several minutes trying to touch it again before giving up and actually touching the door which vanished and appeared on the ceiling.
"Damn it!" Edgar swore and abandoned the door which was now in its original place. There were no windows that he could see, but for all he knew they were there; but invisible to him. He did the one thing that he was good at-levitation and rose off the floor for a better look. He cursed again when he saw nothing that indicated that there was a window and then he laughed.
"Edgar you idiot, you're in a panic room; there won't be any windows!"