Undercover Nightingale. Wendy Rosnau
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“I’ve never visited Brussels.”
The Chameleon glanced at Barinski. “She really can’t remember?”
“I’ve left her childhood recall intact, but the past six years are gone.”
“Very good, Barinski.”
Like a puppy whose head had just been patted, Barinski turned warm and fuzzy, his goofy grin making him look even more ridiculous.
“By the end of the week I’ll start entering your data. If you want her to remember Munich, or a portion of what she’s lost, she will. If not, she won’t.”
The Chameleon turned back to the two-way mirror and searched her eyes for the fire he remembered. It wasn’t there. She was a blank canvas, and he was suddenly disappointed in that.
“You’re sure once the procedure is complete that she’ll function as before?” He turned to Barinski. “I don’t want her ending up a damn freak.”
There was a moment of silence. Obviously Dr. Frankenstein was touchy around the word “freak.”
Barinski cleared his throat, and it sounded as if he was flushing a toilet. “She’ll have the same advanced skills as before. I’ve been keeping her physical workouts short but intense, and she’s on a special diet. A month to integrate her skills with your data and she’ll be as dangerous as when she was captured. Only she’ll be working for you.”
The Chameleon left Barinski to his work and climbed the stone steps to the tower. It was perhaps the most invisible place on earth—this abandoned mosque tucked into a craggy hillside on Despotiko. The Greeks called it “The Goat Island,” a barren islet surrounded by a jagged coastline with a goat population that outnumbered the islanders.
Although he owned a number of hideouts, lately the Chameleon had been spending a lot of time at Minare—the name he’d given the mosque because of its tall slender tower that jutted high above the abandoned ruins.
When he walked out into the warm island air, he was surprised to see that Melita was already there. Usually she made him wait when he sent for her.
She was gazing out over the water, her long black hair glistening in the sunlight. Like her mother, she had an angel’s face and soft vulnerable eyes.
Fiora. He hadn’t thought about Melita’s mother in years.
“Thinking about jumping to your death?”
She turned, and the pain in her eyes told him she still suffered. That after a year she still hated him for his part in her torment.
“I used to think about it every day when I was first brought here. But no longer. Hello, Father.”
“You’re looking well. Barinski tells me you’ve been helping him in the lab. That you have a quick mind and have become useful to him.”
“At least I’m useful to someone.”
“You could choose to be useful to me. If you agreed to a few simple requests, you could also be free to come and go without—”
“Guards on my heels?”
“They’re here to protect you.”
“From what, a handful of islanders and their goats?”
As if the goats had been summoned the Chameleon heard their annoying bleating, and he walked to the railing to see a half-dozen shaggy beasts picking the scrubby vegetation along a rocky path that led into the island’s treeless interior.
“I grow tired of your constant rebellion, Melita. This misplaced saccharine soul of yours is boring.”
“How could Lucifer give birth to anything but evil?”
“You’ve misinterpreted my motives.”
“Then murder and mayhem isn’t your passion?”
He faced her. “I prefer to call it revenge.”
“Your enemies are not mine.”
“They should be. We are more alike than you know. My blood is your blood.”
“I’m nothing like you. It’s one of the few comforts in my life. How is Simon?”
“Your brother is…resting comfortably.”
“Send him my love.”
“Of course. Choices, Melita. We all make choices, and must live with the consequences. Simon made his, and you made yours. You may think your punishment has been too harsh, but I demand loyalty and honesty. A year ago you failed at both.”
“A price must be paid for our sins. We are in agreement on that, Father. It’s what keeps me in constant prayer these days.”
“You pray for forgiveness?”
“I pray for justice. That’s why I have no intentions of slitting my wrists again, or jumping to my death.”
“And this justice you seek… What do you pray for exactly?”
“You killed the only man I will ever love.”
“You killed him, Melita. Your betrayal to me killed him.”
“The sin you committed that day damned you, as my choice to love Nemo destroyed him and has imprisoned me. What I pray for, Father, is your Armageddon. That it will be swift and final.”
Her words should have angered him, but there was fire in her eyes just now, and conviction in her voice. It was the first time he’d heard such determination, and it pleased him beyond words.
Perhaps she was more like him than she knew.
Justice was just another word for revenge. And on that score he understood her passion. The good news was, she no longer wanted to curl up and die.
He would use her craving for justice to bring her back to him. And if that didn’t work, then perhaps Barinski would have another guinea pig for his regeneration machine, and he would gain her loyalty without her ever knowing it had been lost.
“I think you deserve a holiday. I’m going home for a few days. I know Callia would love to see you. If you promise to follow the rules, I’ll let you come.”
“Leave the island?”
“For a few days. Follow the rules and enjoy a taste of freedom.”
She hesitated, knowing what that required. He waited, looked past the goats to the coastline while she contemplated the price.
“All right. I’ll follow the rules.”
The Chameleon refocused on his little Joan of Arc. “Of course you will, Melita, or another poor fool will end up dead, damning your sweet soul to eternal hell. I doubt that you could live through