Master of the Opera Read online




  Also by Jeffe Kennedy

  The Twelve Kingdoms:

  The Mark of the Tala

  The Twelve Kingdoms:

  The Tears of the Rose

  The Twelve Kingdoms:

  The Talon of the Hawk

  Published by Kensington Publishing Corp.

  MASTER OF THE OPERA

  jeffe kennedy

  LYRICAL PRESS

  Kensington Publishing Corp.

  www.kensingtonbooks.com

  All copyrighted material within is Attributor Protected.

  Table of Contents

  Also by

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  ACT 1 - Passionate Overture

  1

  2

  3

  4

  5

  6

  7

  ACT 2 - Ghost Aria

  1

  2

  3

  4

  5

  6

  7

  ACT 3 - Phantom Serenade

  1

  2

  3

  4

  5

  6

  7

  ACT 4 - Dark Interlude

  1

  2

  3

  4

  5

  6

  7

  ACT 5 - A Haunting Duet

  1

  2

  3

  4

  5

  6

  7

  ACT 6 - Crescenda

  1

  2

  3

  4

  5

  6

  7

  To the extent that the image or images on the cover of this book depict a person or persons, such person or persons are merely models, and are not intended to portray any character or characters featured in the book.

  LYRICAL PRESS BOOKS are published by

  Kensington Publishing Corp.

  119 West 40th Street

  New York, NY 10018

  Copyright © 2014 by Jeffe Kennedy

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the prior written consent of the Publisher, excepting brief quotes used in reviews.

  LYRICAL PRESS and the Lyrical Press logo are trademarks of Kensington Publishing Corp.

  ISBN: 978-1-6165-0948-4

  First paperback edition: August 2015

  eISBN-13: 978-1-5161-1013-1

  eISBN-10: 1-5161-1013-7

  ACT 1

  Passionate Overture

  1

  Anything could happen. Anything.

  The sky soared impossibly blue, studded with cotton clouds worthy of a Georgia O’Keeffe painting. Driving with the convertible’s top down, Christy soaked up the Southwestern sunshine as she planned to do with absolutely everything.

  The wind blew her hair, the short ends whipping around her face, stinging her skin with the perfect thrill of being alive and the mistress of her own destiny. No more classes, no more books, she thought to herself with a grin. No more East Coast gloom and city pressure. Free to be her own person, she zoomed down the highway and into her brand-new life.

  The Santa Fe Opera House came into view, the elegant, arching lines of it an extension of the red rock cliff it perched on. Like a raptor of copper and steel, it gazed over the vast basin, a temple to pure sound, a place for the worship of ancestral theater.

  Following the signs, she found the backstage area and parked. Grabbing purse, cell phone, and tablet, she swung her legs out of the car. They looked damn decent, thanks to the time she’d put in at the gym. The new stiletto heels she’d squandered some of her graduation money on helped enormously. She strode toward the building and around to the back apron, ready for her first day on the job.

  The vaulting ceilings of the open-air theater, designed to look like swathes of fabric but made of steel, cast a deep shadow that made her shiver from the abrupt chill. Pushing her sunglasses onto her head, which also served to hold back her wind-ruffled hair, she opened the back door and peered into the gloom of below stage.

  No one seemed to be about, though the door had been unlocked. Her heels clicked on the poured concrete floor, echoing in the perfect acoustics of even this dark working space. Here and there, shrouded stage pieces loomed with dusty magnificence. Where a cover had been shrugged off, a shoulder of gold filigree gleamed. In the deeper shadows, a mirrored sapphire elephant raised its trunk, forever frozen.

  “Can I help you?”

  Choking back a startled shriek, she whirled on the man who seemed to have crept up behind her. She threw an accusing look at his soft sneaker treads and he gave her a rueful smile.

  “Sorry about that. Charles Donovan—Charlie—general manager of the opera. And you’re Christine Davis?”

  “Everyone calls me Christy.” She shook the hand he offered. “Sorry—I wasn’t sure which way to go to find your office.”

  “Some days even I don’t know.” He flashed her a comfortable grin and tucked his thumbs in the loops of his faded Levi’s. “For all that this theater isn’t as old as the European opera houses, somehow it ended up with labyrinths below stage. This way.”

  She followed as he wound back in the other direction. “At least there aren’t catacombs or ancient sewers to get lost in.”

  He chuckled, arriving at the door to a tiny office, bright with fluorescent light, and gestured her inside. “No. But to hear the New Agers talk, there’s plenty of Native American burial sites, hidden tunnels, subterranean dwellings, and so forth.”

  “Here?”

  Charlie shrugged and wedged himself behind the tiny metal desk, piled high with paperwork. Sticky notes covered every surface, including the glowing screen of an apparently ancient laptop perched precariously on one corner.

  “You’ll find there’s every kind here, Ms. Davis. Hang around long enough and you’ll find someone who believes in it. Sacred spirals, peyote, reincarnation. You name it. And then there’s the talent.”

  “Theater people tend to be superstitious, my dad always says. The smart manager learns to work with that.”

  “You have no idea. Ah well, we’re here to keep ’em happy, if only for the season.”

  “Mr. Donovan, I—” She’d rehearsed this speech and it came out in a rush. “I want you to know that I’m here to work hard. My dad might have arranged for me to take this apprenticeship at the last minute, but that was just the right opportunity. I want this and I’ll do what it takes.”

  “Don’t worry about that. Apprentices are slave labor. You’ll put in your sweat and blood.” He extracted a file folder with surprising efficiency from one teetering pile. “You already have the show schedule. Here’s a preliminary list of prop and set items for each opera. And . . .” Charlie spun his chair around to the sagging industrial bookcase behind him and yanked out an enormous three-ring binder, dropping it on the desk in front of her with a bang and a poof of dust, “. . . our inventory.”

  She stared at the binder in dismay. “On paper?”

  Charlie grinned and poked a finger at the laptop, which was making an ominous grinding noise. “I’ve been meaning to get to it. And Tara—well, she was only a few days into it before . . .” He trailed off, scratching his scalp. “Most of the staff starts arriving next week—you ought to have a chunk of it done by then. I have Tara’s notes. They might help.”

  With a sigh, Christy propped the tome on her lap and flipped through the yellowing pages. “The letters and numbers indicate location?”

  “Yeah, in theory. That’s where you come in. The L number is the level. The other codes indicate the exact storage room. Here, let me grab you a map.” Charlie spun back around t
o frown at the shelves.

  “Am I interrupting?”

  “Roman!” Christy grinned at her old friend. “I was wondering when I’d get to see you.”

  Handsome as ever, Roman leaned in the doorway. He looked to be doing well, from the expensive cut of his chestnut brown hair to the sleek shoes peeking out from under his impeccably tailored suit. He returned Christy’s smile with familiar charm. “I had to stop by, see my sweet girl. But I see that I’m interrupting.”

  “Not at all, Mr. Sanclaro!” Charlie popped up from his chair, dusting his hands off on his jeans and leaning over to offer one in welcome. “You know you and your family can stop in anytime. How’s your father?”

  “Busy as ever,” Roman replied easily, then turned to Christy. “How about a hug—or are you too grown up for that now?”

  “Don’t be silly.” She returned the light embrace, accepting his polite kiss on her cheek—something her ten-year-old self would have sighed over and embroidered into fantasies for weeks. “It’s so good to see you again.”

  “I knew the Davises and Sanclaros have long jointly owned the property,” Charlie commented, “but I didn’t realize the families are close.”

  Roman rolled his brown eyes. “When Christy and I were growing up, our fathers used to joke about our betrothal—that it would at last resolve the logistics of the Davises owning the actual opera house and mineral rights, while the Sanclaros own all the surrounding property.”

  “It wasn’t funny,” Christy put in. That was putting it mildly. Any time Domingo Sanclaro and his son visited them in New York City, she’d been torn between a frenzy of anticipation at seeing her lifelong crush and dread at the older men’s teasing. They were two of a kind, Carlton Davis and the elder Sanclaro, living for the business deal. It never occurred to them that needling an adolescent girl who imagined herself in love with the dashing college boy family friend was so cruel. Roman had always been so patient, however, treating her like a little sister. His sweet girl.

  With a rush of warmth, Christy realized she had a hand on Roman’s arm. She let go and grabbed ahold of the unnaturally blue plastic binder.

  “Have you seen much of Santa Fe yet?”

  “No—I’ve barely just arrived. I’m surprised you even knew I was here.”

  He winked. “Your dad told my dad—I’m to look after you.”

  “I’m not twelve anymore,” she replied with a bit of irritation. Which immediately melted when Roman’s grin shaded to sexy and he swept her with an appraising look.

  “No. You’ve definitely grown up. Let me at least take you to dinner tonight. We have more five-star restaurants per capita than any other city in the U.S, you know.”

  “I didn’t know.” Roman Sanclaro was flirting with her. Her adolescent self would never forgive her if she didn’t go. “Yes—I’d love to.”

  “Excellent. At least we can appease the fathers. Shall I pick you up around eight, then?”

  “Perfect. I’m at the El Rey on Cerillos until I find a place.”

  Roman raised an eyebrow at Charlie. “Nothing but the best for our new staff?”

  Charlie shook his head. “Not much of a budget for apprentices.”

  “Surely your dad can spring for better than that place? I’m surprised he’d let you stay there.”

  She maintained the easy smile on her face. She’d kept the car because that was practical, but the rest she was determined to do on her own. Daddy’s girl. One only needed to hear that so many times in a lifetime. “It’s nice. Clean. I like it. Eight o’clock, then?”

  “I’m looking forward to it. And I’ll get out of the way now.” But he hesitated.

  “Did you need something else, Mr. Sanclaro?” Charlie had his thumbs tucked in his belt loops, all courtesy for the son of the opera’s patron.

  Roman glanced at her. Back at Charlie. “My father is wondering if there is further word about . . . our little problem?”

  “No. The police have no leads. Tara’s family is pushing to have the lower levels searched again, but Detective Sanchez thinks she took off. Official stance is no evidence of foul play, there’s nothing more they can do.”

  Roman cleared his throat and Charlie raised his eyebrows. “I’m sure Ms. Davis is perfectly well aware of what became of her predecessor.”

  “I don’t want you to worry.” Roman turned to her, his brown eyes warm. “All the fuss will die down. Tara was a bit flighty. Probably thought she fell in love and took off for Acapulco, eh, Charlie?”

  Charlie nodded in slow agreement, a line between his bushy gray brows. He seemed about to say something but stopped himself. It hadn’t occurred to Christy to be concerned. Her father had made it sound as if Tara, the previous apprentice, had simply run off, much as Roman described.

  “Is there reason to be concerned?”

  “Would Carlton Davis send his daughter here if there was?” Roman waved his hands as if encompassing the greater world, then sobered, giving her a very serious look. “Besides, I’ll protect you. From the theater ghost.”

  Christy laughed and Charlie shook his head. Every theater had some kind of ghost or legend. It was as necessary as lighting and curtains.

  “They say,” Roman’s voice dropped an octave and he flicked his eyes dramatically at the floor, “that he lurks below, scarred, deformed even. At night, after the audiences have left and the stage crew is cleaning, they can hear him sobbing, calling out the name of his love, who had drowned in the underground lake. “Christine,” he keened the name. “Christeeen.”

  The hair stood up on the back of her neck, a shiver passing over her.

  “Was that her name?” she whispered.

  Roman grinned at her. “Gotcha.”

  “Oh!” Christy clutched the notebook to her chest, hating that she’d been so gullible. She tried to smile.

  “New girl initiation—don’t be mad.”

  “I’m not,” she assured him. Silly. He’d always been able to sucker her into his jokes. Apparently she hadn’t grown up that much.

  “I’ll see you tonight.” With a jaunty wink and a wave, Roman left. “Sorry about that.” She turned to Charlie, hoping she hadn’t seemed unprofessional. “I really had no idea he’d stop by.”

  He shrugged. “We’re pretty low key around here. And I’m not going to argue about anything that keeps the Sanclaros happy.”

  * * *

  Christy took the map and the inventory book and gave herself the tour. Right after Roman left, the phone had rung and Charlie had rolled his eyes, shrugged his helplessness, and waved her on her way. Her dad always said managing a theater was 95 percent soothing ruffled feathers and it seemed that was what Charlie did.

  The enormous freight elevator looked like standard institutional issue. She stabbed at the cracked down arrow and waited. The gears cranked more ominously than Charlie’s laptop, accompanied by the screech of a tormented belt. When the doors shuddered open—the floor of the elevator a good hand’s length above the one she stood on—revealing the garage-like interior, which smelled as if feral cats had pissed inside, she decided to save using it for transporting heavy stuff. And only when there would be a lot of people around to hear her if she got trapped in it.

  Instead, she found the central spiral staircase and descended into the dimly lit lower levels, deciding to start at the bottom and work her way back up. The hollow clanking of her heels echoed through the silent rooms. In another week the space would teem with people and noise. Bursting with energy and excitement.

  She couldn’t wait.

  Until then, silence and peace reigned, which was why she took advantage of the time. Tomorrow she’d be back in jeans and tennies—and geez, maybe a sweater—ready to dig into the deep and dusty layers. Today was for orienting, despite the ultimately unnecessary interview outfit, which now felt way too skimpy in the chilly bowels of the opera house.

  She flicked on another set of lights, the fluorescents taking a moment to catch, then flickering on with an insectil
e buzz. Beyond it, she caught another sound, a whisper of movement. A draft of colder air brushed past her, making the small hairs on her arms stand up and her scalp prickle.

  Mice or rats, most likely. Or pack rats, in this area. The woman who ran the hotel had warned her about the pack rats.

  Still, for a moment, she thought she’d heard music.

  An echo, perhaps. The expectation of the space, the perfect acoustics. She fancied that the building absorbed all the music and played it back to itself when everyone was gone, the timbers saturated with it.

  Soon, real music would crash through—out of tune, cadence, and context. The same phrases repeated in cacophonous opposition to someone else’s practice run. Chaos and tumult.

  There it was again. A whisper of song. A honeyed tenor.

  Curious, compelled, she followed it down the corridor, passing the various storage rooms, holding their eclectic treasures in darkness. The hallway ended abruptly in a dead end, a good thirty feet past the last lightbulb. Christy consulted her map in the dim light. If this was the right level, the hall should keep going to another set of storage rooms.

  It didn’t.

  She retraced her steps, frowning at the map, then at the end of the hall again. The featureless wall hadn’t changed. Had the door been covered over or sealed? She set the map and inventory notebook down and walked back to the end of the hall, ran her hands over it. Not drywall, but solid plaster, cool and damp to the touch. If it had been closed off, it didn’t seem to be recent.

  Her fingertips caught on a small flaw in the smooth surface and she bent to see it better in the shadowy green light. A circle cut into the plaster, with what appeared to be a set of links dangling from it, like a collar and chain. It was crossed by a whip, the braided design painstakingly worked in.