I woke up the following night with lingering memories of Wade carrying me into a hotel room as the sun came up. What happened? Bits and pieces of memory floated back like a chill wind. William’s death, Dominick’s threats, Julian’s inevitable arrival. Black world.
Wade had become more than a simple asset. My behavior the previous night embarrassed me beyond words. He’d taken over and protected me, dragged me out of Maggie’s house, and checked us into a hotel.
Now I was lying in a large bed. I sat up and looked around. The room had decent decor—not that I normally cared about such things—in soft blues and grays, with a cedar wardrobe closet. Someone had covered the windows with thick blankets. Wade was sleeping in a chair a few feet away from me, his head lolling back, blond hair in a mess, the Beretta in his lap. He still wore his jeans and the faded Colorado State sweatshirt.
His eyes clicked open. “Yeah?”
We’d taken a taxi to a twenty-four-hour Hertz office, and then Wade rented a Toyota Prius. I didn’t like the idea of using a credit card—in case Dom found a way to track us—but Wade assured me that his partner no longer had any form of police access. And we didn’t have a choice. I can remember not too many years ago being able to pay for almost anything in cash . . . but not anymore.
By the time he got us to the hotel, I was falling dormant and no longer cared how he paid for the room.
Now he just sat staring into empty space.
“This is a nice room,” I said.
“I should get out of here. When Julian finds us, he’ll kill you.”
“What?” His expression turned incredulous. “You’re just going to leave? After last night, after everything that’s happened, you’re going to say ‘thanks’ and take off?”
“What do you want? If you stay with me, you’ll die. If Dominick doesn’t kill you, Julian will. No matter what you’ve seen of me so far, I’m faster than you, I’m probably stronger, and I know how to disappear. I also know how to make people help me.”
“How?” He got up, grasping the gun, his voice bordering on hysteria. “How am I different? You aren’t using me?”
His feelings actually mattered to me. “Last night when I saw you sitting on the steps at Maggie’s, bringing you over to my side seemed like a good idea. I did use my gift a bit, but not much, and not anymore. If you help me now, it’s because you want to.”
He calmed slightly. “What are these gifts you keep talking about?”
“When we’re turned, a strong personality trait grows into a hypnotic aura, impossible for mortals to resist. Maggie’s was sexual attraction. Julian’s is fear.”
“Helplessness. People perceive me as small and frightened. Some feel a need to hurt or take advantage. Some feel an overwhelming urge to protect.”
His gaze fell to the carpet. “Do you need to take a shower?”
The sudden change of topic relieved me. I was glad to talk about anything else. My T-shirt was still clean but wrinkled. “Yes, but I don’t have any other clothes.”
“Me either. All my stuff is with Dominick.”
“Oh, that’s right. Sorry.”
I walked into a surprisingly large bathroom and stood under steaming water for ten full minutes. It felt good, comforting. Small bottles of hotel shampoo and conditioner sat on the tub. I washed my hair and face slowly, not thinking about reality or Maggie or William . . . or Wade. I got dressed in the same set of clothes I’d slept in.
Wade was lying quietly on the bed, watching television, when I came back out. His gun lay on the nightstand.
“You should probably order some food,” I said.
He nodded. “What about you?”
“No, I’m okay. I fed last . . . Don’t worry.”
Something new passed behind his eyes. Something unreadable. “If we get stuck hiding, and you can’t get out, could you feed on my blood without killing me?”
The thought frightened me. “Don’t talk like that. You’re my—”
“I’m your what?” he pressed, his brown eyes intense.
“Just don’t say that. How can you think it?”
Slipping inside his head for half a second before he pushed me out, a startling desire flashed through—and I’m not easily startled. He wanted me to. The thought of my mouth on his neck excited him.
“It isn’t like that,” I said. “It’s ugly and painful. Your throat wouldn’t heal completely for weeks, maybe months.”
Humiliation colored his face. He’d been casually reading everyone else’s thoughts, needs, and drives since childhood. Fair turnabout shamed him. I felt bad for causing him embarrassment.
Everybody has weird thoughts sometimes. I didn’t know what to say to make him feel better, so I crawled up onto the bed and laid my wet head on his stomach. A moment later, he reached out to stroke my hair.
“I love you,” he said quietly.
No matter how abrupt or out of place this declaration might be, it didn’t surprise me.
“No, you don’t,” I answered. “You feel close to me because we’ve shared private memories . . . because we’re caught in the same trap. You don’t even know me.”
I’m sure my blunt dismissal must have hurt him, but it was for the best. He was quiet for a long time, and then he asked, “Have you ever loved anyone besides William?”
“Edward, but not like you think. I didn’t live a mortal life long enough to learn much about human relationships.”
“Charm. And besides Julian’s terror, it’s the strongest pull I’ve ever felt. Everyone adored Edward, like Laurence Olivier and Peter Pan rolled into one.”
“How many others are there . . . like you?”
“Only Philip and Julian as far as I know. They might have made others by now. But I don’t think so. Julian hates most other vampires.”
The word “vampires” caused him to wince. “It seems odd there are so few you know about. Did Julian turn Edward?”
“No, that’s a long story.” I paused. “Do you want to see it?”
Wade truly was unusual; the prospect of another trip down undead memory lane perked him up. “Yeah, can you start where you left off?”
Without answering, I sat up, grasped his hand, and let my focus flow back.
Back to Edward.
chapter 16
Edward
Eleisha felt only confusion when the heavy merchant ship stopped moving. The tiny hold space she and William shared reeked of rotting rat corpses. Sailors had long since ceased to check on the hold’s two passengers.
“We’ve stopped, William,” she whispered through cracked lips. “Perhaps we’re in port.”
“Time for lunch, then. Yes, yes, must be time for lunch.”
Too weak to argue or answer, Eleisha left him and crawled up the cargo hold stairs. Their good fortune that the ship had reached dock at night suddenly occurred to her. What would have happened had they docked during the day, while she and William slept? Would the sailors have begun to unload wooden boxes around them?
“William,” she called quietly, “we have to get off right now.”
No answer.
She hurried back to find him crouched over. “What’s wrong?”
“Can’t leave. Haven’t had tea. Haven’t had lunch. Wait for Julian.”
“Come on.” She pulled his arm over her shoulder. “We have to get off now.”
They also had to hide from the crew. Even without a mirror, she knew what a skeletal sight she must be. She only had to look at William to imagine her own condition. They both smelled of filth and dried blood. But she understood his fear. What sort of land was America? What sort of people lived in this place?
Peering up on deck, Eleisha saw a busy crew. No one paid attention to the hatch door. A wide plank extended to the dock. It was surprisingly easy for Eleisha and William to slip past the sailors, off the ship, and run toward some faded wooden shacks on the shore.
They hid in the mud by a decaying wall, William panting in wordless panic. Eleisha looked around. Now what? Not since Julian pulled her from the bedroom closet had she felt so out of control.
“Well, I must say.” A smooth voice flowed through the night. “This is hardly what I expected. Two fugitives in rags?”
She leapt up, casting about for a stick or a rock. “Who’s there?”
“Oh, calm yourself.”
A man of medium height stepped into view. He wore the most outlandish costume she’d ever seen. His short, dark hair was topped by an absurdly wide-brimmed hat, and a black cape with purple silk lining billowed out over a too-large white shirt. “What do you think?” he said, smiling. “I thought to look the part. Julian has no imagination, you know.” He stepped close enough to see Eleisha clearly. “Oh, dear.”
Positioning her body in front of William’s, she asked, “Who are you?”
“This is Lord William Ashton, is it not?” The man’s foppish manner faded by the second.
Hope, or the barest hint of it, made her cautious. “How do you know that?” She stumbled from weakness and then caught herself.
“Julian sent me a letter by clipper ship. It arrived a week ago. He asked me to meet you here. I owe him a favor.”
“Can you help us?” she whispered.
For an answer, he reached out and caught her as she collapsed.
“What have you been feeding on?” His tone sounded hard now, completely serious.
“Rats.”
“My God.” He grasped William’s wrist. “Come, I have a carriage.”
Eleisha didn’t remember how he managed to get them both to the carriage. But her coherence returned as he led them into a building with red velvet wallpaper and a sign that read “Croissant House Hotel.”
“I have guests,” he snapped at the desk clerk. “Have fresh towels sent up at once.”
“Yes, Mr. Claymore.”
He led them into a room of braided rugs, velvet couches, curved wooden tables, and fringed, floor-length drapes.
“Are you a lord?” Eleisha asked.
“Moi? Hardly.” Some of his earlier joviality returned. “No one cares a whit for such things here. The only thing that counts here is money. If the Prince of Wales showed up tomorrow without a dime to his name, they’d ignore him completely. I am simply Edward Claymore.”
“What’s a dime?”
“Oh, dear.”
He helped William over to a couch. “Would you like to rest, Lord William?”
“Time for tea. Yes, it’s time.”
Edward looked at Eleisha. “Is he delirious?”
“No, he’s always like that. It’s an illness.”
“That’s impossible. We can’t become ill.”
She sank to the floor. Nothing this man said made any sense. He seemed nearly as much at a loss himself. Her physical appearance stirred him into action again, and he hurried into a second room. She heard the sound of splashing water.
“I’m running you a bath,” he said. “Go ahead and climb in. You’ll feel better when you’re clean. Then we must talk. I promised to meet you, not play nursemaid.”
Eleisha walked in and beheld a porcelain tub with a metal spigot on one end. Steaming water poured from the spigot directly into the tub. She stared in amazement, then took off her clothes and stepped in. When the depth reached a dangerously high level, she called, “Mr. Claymore, how do you make the water stop?”
Her amazement grew when he walked in without even knocking. Startled for an instant, she leaned over to cover herself.
“Oh, please,” he said. “I should think you’d be past that by now.”
He turned some tiny levers, and the water ceased flowing. Then he looked up at her thin, pale body and dull hair. “How long has it been since you’ve really fed?”
She knew she should be burning with shame, sitting there naked . . . but somehow, she wasn’t.
“What do you mean?”
“Since you’ve hunted?”
The warm bathwater felt soothing, but she stared at Edward in confusion, wanting to understand him, wanting to communicate.
“When did Julian turn you?” he asked.
“Turn me? The night we left, I think. He opened his wrist and put it in my mouth. Then he put us on the ship.”
“Without telling you anything?”
“He told me to take care of William and stay in the darkness.”
Edward fell silent. Small drops of water dripped from the spigot into the overfull tub. What was he thinking? Eleisha could tell that she and William were somehow a great deal more trouble than Julian had led this man to believe. Finally he picked up the soap.
“Lean back. Your hair is filthy.”
“Shouldn’t someone stay with William? He won’t remember where he is.”
“I put a blanket over him. He’s lying by the fire.”
“Thank you.”
In a world turned upside down, Eleisha sat quietly in the water, letting Edward wash her hair and face and neck. Back in Wales, during her infrequent baths, she was so modest that she kept her shift on in front of Marion. But she somehow felt connected to this man standing beside the tub, as if his ministrations were commonplace. He was gentle and thorough, making her rinse twice. She tried to reach for a towel afterward, but he stopped her.
“No, don’t get out yet.” Indecision weighed heavily on his face. “I can’t believe I’m doing this.” Putting his own wrist to his teeth, he ripped pale skin down to open veins. “Open your mouth.”
She didn’t argue or question or even wonder at her own lack of character for obeying him like a child. The blood in his arm didn’t taste like anything. Her consciousness barely registered the physical action of sucking or drawing at all. But heat and energy pushed through her with a tingling satisfaction unlike anything in her memory. Strength and speed and desire to live seemed tangible, attainable again. William must be cared for, protected . . .
“That’s enough.”
Edward’s voice broke through as he disengaged her tightly clutching fingers from his wrist. Realization of what had just taken place sent her spinning into the void again.
“What am I?” she asked.
With an expression close to—but not quite—pity, her newfound caretaker dampened a cloth and wiped her mouth. “Julian should be disemboweled for this. An old man and a child. But I feel your gift . . . I think. We’ll stay here a few nights, and you’ll understand.”
She watched him wrap a cloth around his wrist and then let him dry her with a thick purple towel. Neither one spoke.
Sitting by the fire the next night, she felt safe and clean for the first time in weeks. Their hotel room delighted her senses with its reds and purples and velvet textures—nothing like Cliffbracken. Edward had somehow arranged for a black silk evening gown to be delivered, fit for Lady Katherine. Eleisha found it pretentious and a needless waste of fabric, but it brought coos of approval from Edward and words such as “marvelous.” She wanted to please him. No matter what hidden emotions motivated him, his actions were kind.
While he might have been unwilling to answer many of her personal questions, he proved to be a wealth of information about their location.
“You landed in Southampton, one of the oldest cities this country boasts—still young by decent standards. Actually, I live on the lower west side of Manhattan. Wonderful place, teeming with life. The whole city keeps burning down, and they just build it right back again. Marvelous. We’ll begin traveling back later this week.”
He chatted on while boiling her a cup of mint tea. “Here, now,” he said, “try a sip of this. It’s one of the few mortal pleasures we can still enjoy—in weak doses. Something about the mint gives me a sense of comfort.”
She sipped from a bone china teacup. “It’s good.”
“Wonderful stuff. But that’s about the extent of what you can consume, except perhaps dark, very fruity red wine. Julian did tell you not to eat any food, didn’t he? Our bodies can’t pass waste anymore, so alien substances just sit and rot. I’ve heard terrible stories. But a few liquids in small doses seem to agree and dissipate.”
“It’s nice to drink tea again.”
“Quite. Try to get Lord William to take a little. He’s weak. I tried feeding him from my wrist last night. He wouldn’t swallow, just spat and choked.”
“That happened the night we left Wales, too. But on the ship, he seemed to draw more energy from the rats than I could.”
Edward’s dark eyebrows knitted. Tonight he wore well-tailored black trousers, a pressed white shirt, and a dinner jacket. She liked the way he combed his hair straight back so his pale forehead was bare.
“Can you tell me what happened before all that?” he asked.
Talking over tiny sips of tea, Eleisha started with Lord William’s first signs of illness and worked her way to the nightmare journey to New York, watching Edward’s face shift from wonder to disgust and back again. She left nothing out.
“Well, that explains my part in this,” he said finally.
“What do you mean?”
“I’m a selfish bastard and Julian knows it. He’s probably trying to absolve his own conscience without really helping you. He sent me a message to meet you, knowing I can’t stand filth or imperfection. I should have cut and run, leaving—pardon my bluntness—an ignorant child to care for the old coot. You would have failed and probably been beheaded by some Irish immigrant from the old country. That great fear-emanating pig could comfortably blame everyone but himself.”
Eleisha glared at him. “You’re being unfair. Julian loves his father. He never wanted this. You didn’t hear the things Lady Katherine said to him.”
“It’s quite rude to be loyal to someone I’m criticizing. Please don’t do it again.” He took her empty cup. “But we’ll just disappoint him. I think you and Lord William might remain safe a bit longer.”
She smiled up at him, thinking how vain and shallow the man behind this charming facade must be.
Not understanding him at all.
When she woke up on the third evening, Edward’s bed lay empty. She searched the hotel room without finding him. A physical emptiness like hunger agitated her, and his absence brought her close to panic. William slept heavily on the couch, as though too weak to move.
Where had Edward gone?
This absolute dependence upon him bothered her, but nothing could be done about it now. To strike out with William on her own would be stupid, probably suicidal.
She was on the brink of walking down to the lobby and asking for messages when Edward swept in, carrying a struggling, yowling burlap sack, his handsome face etched in anger.
“For God’s sake, help me.”
“What is it?” Eleisha asked.
“An alley cat. Lord William has to feed on something. This is madness. If he can’t hunt, he should be put out of his misery.”
“No.”
“Then you feed him! I’ve got claw marks up both arms.”
“A cat? We have to kill a cat?”
“Have you a better idea?”
“Why do we feed on blood anyway? That’s the madness, not William’s age.”
“It isn’t blood; it’s life force.” Edward grew calmer. “And we ought to feed him so we can go hunting ourselves. I just hope this works. No one sells a handbook for the care and nursing of wrinkled-up undeads, you know.”
He appeared so frustrated, Eleisha took the bag.
“William,” she whispered. “Wake up.”
His lids fluttered. Without thinking, she reached in, caught the cat with both hands, and snapped its back, not caring that it raked her hand. Weeks ago, the thought of breaking an animal in such a fashion would have sickened her. Now the act seemed merely an unfortunate reality. Biting into the cat’s throat, she tore fur open to expose veins and white, daisy-chained vertebrae.
William’s eyes snapped open.
“Here,” she said, putting it to his mouth.
He bit down greedily, as though starved, red liquid spilling down both sides of his chin. Eleisha kept expecting to feel guilt or nausea but didn’t. Edward left the room.
He came back a moment later with her black gown. “Get dressed. It’s our turn.”
“For what?”
“To hunt.”
“Couldn’t you have brought something back for us?”
“Oh, capital idea. Just waltz them past the desk clerk and dump their bodies out the window, I suppose?”
“Whose bodies?”
As those two words escaped her lips, Edward started in surprise. Some form of realization flickered in his eyes. “Get dressed, Eleisha,” he ordered. “And do something with your hair.”
Twenty minutes later, they were walking down a Southampton street, her hand inside his arm, striking the sharp image of a wealthy couple. But something felt wrong. She sensed it in his silence, in an intimate tension so thick she had to hold on to him to keep from running.
“Where are we going?” she whispered.
He didn’t answer.
An enormous number of strangers passed them. How could so many people live in one place? How could there possibly be enough food and water? And they were all dressed in such various forms. Edward sported a tailored brown suit tonight. Similarly dressed gentlemen tipped their hats to him, and factory workers in rags moved out of his way.
“It’s so crowded,” she said.
“Wait till you see Manhattan.” Her companion finally spoke. “There are sixty-four thousand Irish immigrants alone.”
“Sixty-four thousand?”
“That’s why I live there. No one is ever missed.”
She pulled her hand away. “Why are you acting like this?”
“Because I don’t know what else to do.” He ran a hand across his face and suddenly motioned to an alley. “In here.”
Pushing her up against a brick wall with his chest, his face moved closer until she could see tiny swollen blood vessels behind green irises.
“Can you read, Eleisha?”
“Let go of me.”
“Can you read?”
“A little.”
His grip reminded her vaguely of Julian’s strength—only Edward moved more like a tree, flexible and solid at the same time. Unable to disengage him physically, she fingered the fabric of his jacket and dropped her gaze.
“You’re hurting me,” she murmured.
His hands jerked back as though she were on fire; a mask of fear flickered across his face. “Don’t you ever try using that on me again!” he spat. “I’ll drop you in the East River.”
Her actions had been instinctive, without thought. “What did I do?”
Stomping his feet on the ground while walking in a small circle to regain control of himself, he muttered, “Should’ve thrown myself in the river when that clipper ship hit dock.”
“Why did you bring me out here?” she asked.
“To hunt! You really don’t understand, do you? I’ve never seen any vampire who could seep power like you before she’d even made a kill. God knows what you’ll be like in a few months.”
“What are you talking about?”
“How can you be so dense? Don’t you have the slightest clue? We are dead, Eleisha. And we aren’t dead. We’ll never get any older, but have to draw life from those we kill. I fed you from my own arm. Where do you think that blood came from? A cat?”
She stared at him. “You killed someone?”
“I’ve been killing for the past twenty-six years,” he hissed softly. “That’s what we are. It’s what we do. And I can’t believe that I’m actually standing here, explaining this to you.”
“I won’t murder other people.”
“Then you’ll starve. Life force from animals won’t give you enough energy. After a while, you’ll grow too weak to move at all and live forever in a state of frozen, emaciated agony. No one will take care of Lord William, and the same thing will happen to him. Isn’t that a pretty scene?”
For the first time in her life, Eleisha experienced hatred, not for Julian who had done this to her, but for Edward who told the truth. Rational or not, she hated him for forcing the reality of existence on her and for leaving her no control and no way out.
“Follow me,” he whispered. “Don’t ask questions, and just follow me.”
With no other choice, she walked behind him out of the alley and into a small pub. The smoke and human smells and crush of bodies caught her senses. Wooden tables, pints of beer, men playing cards, brightly dressed women in tight corsets . . .
What a different place. So busy and unaware of itself. Everyone so intent on individual activities.
Then she noticed Edward’s face. All traces of stress and pain had vanished, leaving only foppish, cynical humor. “Gregory, old man,” he called to the bartender, “marvelous apron tonight. Did you wash it?”
Several heads turned in pleasure at the sound of Edward’s voice. Eleisha observed the cheerful effect he had.
“Black heart,” one of the barmaids said, smiling. “Matilda’s nearly wasted away just waitin’ for you to come back in.”
“How many times have you been here?” Eleisha asked softly.
“Once. Last week.”
The extent of Edward’s popularity kept everyone’s attention on him as he flirted with barmaids, teased the bartender, and joked with customers. But his eyes never strayed far from the door. No one besides Eleisha noticed a lone sailor who paid his tab and left.
“I’ve kept you all from serious drinking long enough,” Edward said a moment later. “Off to a late supper now.”
Laughing over loud protests, he handed Eleisha her cape, and they stepped outside. What happened in the next few moments took place so fast she almost couldn’t follow the order of events. They caught up with the sailor outside another alley, and Edward suddenly jingled a change purse.
“Excuse me,” he said. “I think you dropped your pouch.”
When the sailor turned to see who had hailed him, a relaxed smile curved his lips. “Oh, hello. Don’t think that’s mine. Someone else might have dropped it.”
“Are you sure? It struck the ground right behind you.”
Holding it out like an offering, Edward waited until the sailor leaned over to inspect the purse. Before the actual movement registered, both men disappeared inside the alley, and Eleisha heard bones cracking.
Just like the cat.
Her companion had chosen a good time and place. No one else passed by to hear the struggle. Not that it was much of a struggle. She moved into the dark alley mouth only seconds later to see Edward leaning over a slumped form.
“It’s time,” he said.
“I can’t.”
But as she looked at the open throat, exposed veins, red fluid running down onto the ground, a hunger—and not a hunger—sent her memory into a wavering haze. Had this source ever talked and moved and danced? Or was it just a source? A wellspring?
“This pulls at you,” Edward whispered. “Don’t let yourself think.”
He reached out and gently took her wrist. No pulling back. No fighting. She let him draw her forward, and then knelt down on her own.
The experience was similar to feeding on Edward’s arm but more intense. The warm liquid was sweet. Heat raced through her while pictures of ocean waves and fistfights and a brown-haired woman etched themselves into her brain. After the initial physical connection, she was no longer conscious of her mouth on the sailor’s throat, only the strength and pleasure and energy his life force brought.
Just as she could take no more, she felt his heartbeat stop. When she lifted her head, she saw torn-edged flesh and two dead eyes staring up into empty space.
Euphoria faded.
Edward’s hand touched her hair. Turning, she hid her face in his chest, forgetting she might get blood on his jacket, not hating him anymore.
On the fourth night, they began traveling to Manhattan in Edward’s carriage.
“The trip should take three days or so if we don’t dally,” he said, falling into his charming fop routine. Perhaps he played it so often the personality had become part of him. “I know a delicious little dress shop on Market Field Street. It’s divine. We’ll buy you something low-cut in red taffeta.”
A handsome pair of bay horses trotted ahead of the carriage, pulling it away from the Croissant House Hotel. Eleisha felt sorry to be leaving. The hotel room had grown comfortably safe.
“Once more into the breach, dear friends,” Edward called, snapping his whip in the air.
Despite the fact that he seemed genuinely glad to be heading for home, he was also avoiding any serious conversation. Not that she blamed him. What could they say? Last night had been brutal and emotionally exhausting. She didn’t want to think about it, much less discuss it. And getting William into the carriage had been a nightmare. Although stronger from feeding on the cat, he was also more aware of his surroundings and terrified that Edward might be taking him back to the ship. Eleisha’s coaxing and comforting did little to help. In the end, Edward lost his patience, slapped William hard enough to daze him, and then carried him outside like a sack of potatoes past the openmouthed desk clerk.
All in all, it hadn’t been an easy night. Edward’s empty chatter soothed Eleisha while she rocked William back and forth, assuring him there was no ship in sight.
She felt surprisingly safe beginning a new journey so soon after finishing the last one. But her trust in Edward was profound. He may not have been an overwhelming force like Julian, but he was strong and careful, no matter how frivolous he might pretend to be.
“Do you live in a house?” she asked.
“No, a hotel suite. You’ll like it.” He glanced over at William. “Can you put him to sleep?”
“Maybe. Why?”
“Because we’ll have to cross W-A-T-E-R in a short while, and he’s going to throw a fit.”
“Can’t you go another way?”
“No. Haven’t I shown you a map of New York yet? We’re on Long Island. Southampton’s cut off by a small bit of the Peconic Bay. Just a sliver, but we need to take a ferry.”
“How much farther?”
“About ten miles.”
She hated to talk in front of William as if he weren’t there, but Edward made sense. She continued rocking the old lord until he drifted off. Ten miles later, the carriage moved right up onto the ferry without stopping. William slept through the entire process.
“Capital,” Edward sighed when they had safely crossed. “I was afraid I’d have to hit him again.”
“You need to be more patient.”
“If I’d resorted to patience, we’d still be sitting in the hotel.”
His tone waxed humorous, though, good-natured. She smiled up at him, pretending they were a brother and sister escorting their grandfather on holiday, playing Edward’s foppish game and forgetting reality if only for a little while.
Here, Wade became aware of himself briefly as the clear images of Eleisha’s story switched to flashes and impressions rapidly shifting past him like the pages of a book.
Yet he still felt what she had once experienced.
Upon arriving at Edward’s “home,” she was delighted with his lavish hotel suite, and the new world that he showed her. But no longer a servant, she’d had trouble at first adjusting to the hotel staff waiting upon her, laundering her clothes, lighting the fire, cleaning the rooms . . . changing her bedding.
Images raced by as time flowed on.
The next seventy years passed in a flash of scenes. Edward moved his little family to a new hotel suite about once a year, and Eleisha was glad to let him handle their living arrangements, their money, ordering their clothes . . . their entire existence. She always hunted with Edward. Otherwise, her only concern was to care for William, and she was content to let Edward take care of everything else.
Still half lost in her mind, Wade could not truly pinpoint when the change began.
But one night, she wanted to order a gown to her own taste—something simple. Then sometime later, she wondered why she did not have her own bank accounts for the money Julian sent.
She said nothing of this to Edward.
But their world was changing.
She started hunting alone.
The scene crystallized again, and Wade forgot himself.
Eleisha ripped the bastard’s throat out and watched him fall back with a soundless scream. Pig. A nearly black Manhattan alley hid his flailing arms from the outside world, not that anyone cared. With one hand, she pulled up the torn shoulder of her red taffeta dress, and with the other, grasped the back of his head.
This time the blood tasted good through her teeth, over her tongue, dripping in warm rivulets down her bare shoulder. She saw pictures of rape and whiskey, a red-haired girl being beaten, the hanging of an Irish steelworker, no beauty, no music.
She finished feeding and dropped him, feeling less remorse than usual.
Wiping her face carefully, she slipped back out onto the street. A white-bearded gentleman in his early fifties stopped at the sight of her torn but expensive gown.
“Are you hurt, my dear?”
Human nature still escaped her. This man possessed kind eyes, his concern genuine. But had her face been painted and her dress cheap dyed cotton, he wouldn’t have stopped to nudge her dead body. She didn’t really want his gallant services, but walking around with ripped clothing would attract attention.
“No, sir. Thank you. I walked past an exposed nail.” She glanced about in pretended distress. “Could you please hail me a cab?”
Pleased to be of assistance, he stepped toward the street, found her appropriate transportation, and lifted her inside the cab as though she were a kitten.
“You are most kind, sir.”
“Not at all,” he said, bowing slightly like a knight standing over a slain dragon.
The cabbie pulled out and followed her directions to Bridge Street, to Edward’s hotel suite. She’d never stopped viewing any of their various residences as Edward’s.
Apparently the aging Sir Galahad must have paid for her trip, because once she stepped down, the cabbie pulled away without a word.
Eleisha turned and headed up the stairs of the Green Gem Hotel to find Edward sitting on a velvet couch reading the newspaper.
“Hello, angel,” he said over a cup of tea.
She smiled absently, noticing how comfortable he always appeared inside a lavish hotel suite they would simply abandon in another few months. Didn’t he ever wish to stay in one place and make it a home?
William tottered out of his bedroom, messy silver hair hanging in his face. “Eleisha,” he said, smiling in a moment of coherence. “Time for supper?”
He and Edward had begun avoiding each other of late. Instead of becoming accustomed to William’s condition, Edward was growing more repulsed with each passing year. This bothered Eleisha.
“Yes, time for supper,” she said. “Just let me change, and I’ll get you a rabbit.”
She’d arranged for a local butcher shop to bring in live rabbits—for a substantial fee. Money meant nothing. From what she understood, Julian sent them enough money to support ten people in style. Edward believed he was doing her a service by managing their finances. He supplied her with spending money, and he always told her, “You only have to ask.”
But for some reason, lately, she didn’t like having to ask.
“Why are you changing clothes?” Edward lowered his paper and looked up over the top of his teacup. He was especially dashing tonight in a brown silk waistcoat.
“A thief on the pier tried to rob me,” she answered.
“Is he still with us?”
“No.”
“Good girl.”
He could still make her smile.
Two years later, Eleisha stood staring out yet another hotel window.
She didn’t hear him approach, but wasn’t surprised when Edward peered over her shoulder.
“See anything you like?” he asked.
She didn’t answer.
“Shall we go to Delmonico’s?” he asked in a bright but forced tone. “Have something upscale for supper?”
She tilted her head back to look up at him. His green eyes were sad.
Neither he nor she seemed able to speak of anything beyond the moment. They rarely hunted together anymore—or rather she rarely wished to hunt with him.
“Of course,” she said, feeling guilty. “I’ll get my cloak.”
He nodded in relief, but his eyes were still sad.
Summer was approaching.
William was sitting on the velvet couch one night, carving a new set of checkers and talking quietly to himself. It troubled Eleisha that he only ventured out into the main sitting room now when Edward wasn’t home . . . No, it more than troubled her.
Tonight, she wore a comfortable muslin dress—that she’d purchased herself—and was walking around the hotel room in bare feet.
“Are you tired of carving, William?” she asked. “Would you like to play chess?”
“No, no. I’ll stoke up the fire,” he said.
“All right.”
She knew this was his answer for when he was content with his current activity. So she looked about the suite, wondering what to do with herself, trying not to let herself think. Lately, all she could do was think—to mull doubts and questions over and over again.
She had longed to ask Edward for the answers for years now, but at the same time, she resisted having to accept anything from him, to need him, to depend on him.
And so a few weeks ago, she’d gone to a library to do research on the undead. The wealth of material astounded her. She was bursting to know . . .
Turning her head, she heard Edward’s light footsteps on the stairwell, and a moment later, he swept in through the front door with a “Tallyho” and a bottle of red wine.
“Hello, darlings,” he called. “Daddy’s home. Look what I’ve found. A bottle of 1865 cabernet sauvignon. We should celebrate.”
“Celebrate what?” she asked.
“Oh, I don’t know. Think of something. You’re the clever one.” He frowned, staring at her. “Good God, what are you wearing?”
William stood up and quickly shuffled toward his room.
Suddenly, the whole facade of their existence came crashing down around Eleisha. She wanted to scream but did not know how. She whirled to face Edward, and his cheerful expression shifted to caution.
Her feeling of hysteria faded, replaced by a cold sense of calm.
“Edward, how many of us are there?”
He put the wine down on a polished table. “Well, there were three of us the last time I counted. Has someone come to visit?”
“That isn’t what I meant.”
“I know what you meant. Why on earth would you ask me that now?”
“Because there should be more. Because we had to come from somewhere. Who made Julian?”
This conversation was difficult for both of them. But she had to know.
He looked older somehow, almost defeated, just standing there, locked in her eyes. Finally he moved over to the fire and sat down in a mahogany chair. “I thought you might ask me where I came from . . . a long time ago. But you didn’t. Did you never wonder who made me?”
“Julian did.”
“No.”
Eleisha froze, still staring at him.
“Don’t look at me like that,” he snapped.
She didn’t speak, and he glanced away.
“Where do you want me to start?” he asked.
“The beginning.” Her voice sounded cold to her own ears.
“I don’t know anything about that.” He ran a hand through his slicked-back hair. “I only know of a Norman duke from the twelfth century who was turned. Nobody knows who made him, but in the early nineteenth century, he made three sons: Julian, Philip Branté, and a young Scottish lord named John McCrugger.”
Now that he was actually speaking of these things . . . of things that mattered, she didn’t want him to stop. She walked over and sat on the floor beside his chair.
“Which one made you?”
“McCrugger.” The tight tension faded from his face, as if he too suddenly wanted to talk of the past. “I was just an ignorant young man looking for work—and failing. He came to London on business, and I tried to pick his pocket. He took me back to Scotland and gave me a job as his manservant. Later I took over the house accounts, and finally, he turned me out of convenience.”
“What?” she gasped.
“Sounds coldhearted now, doesn’t it? I don’t know. Maybe he just wanted to experiment with his power, but he said that he’d trained me well and never wished to go through such training again.”
“What happened to him?”
“Julian hunted him down and killed him . . . and I think he killed the old Norman lord as well. I don’t know why. To the best of my knowledge, neither one had wronged him. He seemed to be going on some sort of murder spree, but he never went after Philip or Maggie.”
“Maggie?”
“Margaritte Latour? Philip’s whore? Did you never meet her?”
The memory of Maggie remained vivid. “Yes, once. She’s not someone you’d forget.”
“She’s the final player. There are only six of us left as far as I know.”
“As far as you . . .” She trailed off as something he’d said struck her. “Why did you say ‘murder spree’ if he only killed two other vampires?”
Edward paused for a long moment, as if deciding how much to share. “Because later, Maggie and I corresponded out of . . . concern for ourselves, trying to figure a few things out. She hinted there were others.”
“What others?” Eleisha asked in fascination, moving closer.
“I don’t know!” He closed his eyes briefly and opened them again, trying to calm himself. “Remember I was only a servant. Except for Maggie, the others were noble. I was certainly not in the loop.”
“You said Julian left them alone, but he left you alone, too?”
His face grew pained. “Yes. My master had gone to Harfleur that winter, and I was managing his French villa in Amiens . . . He owned homes in several countries. He showed up one night with no warning and told me to pack, that we were going back to Scotland. We went down together to give instructions to our grooms . . . and Julian came out of the shadows by the stable. I watched him cut McCrugger’s head off and then he just turned around and said, ‘Go,’ like some homicidal, self-important god. I ran like a coward for America and never looked back.”
Eleisha’s mind raced.
“But I’ve read . . . Edward, don’t be angry with me, but I’ve been reading at the library. Some of the accounts suggest larger numbers of us across Europe.”
His green eyes widened. “You’ve been . . . ?” He leaned back and looked up at the ceiling. “I know those old stories, too. All myth and folklore. We each feed at least once a week. What if there were even twenty vampires living in Manhattan? Twenty deaths a week? We’d depopulate the area too quickly for secrecy.”
He was right, of course, but the picture still didn’t make sense. Those written accounts couldn’t all be fictitious, could they? Mass hysteria?
“What if—”
“Enough!” he snapped, and then his expression softened. “Enough for one night.” He looked down at her simple dress and bare feet in disapproval. “What are you wearing?”
“It’s comfortable.” She paused. “And I would like to buy a few more—just for evenings at home.” Her jaw clenched. “I’ll need some money.”
“You only have to ask.”
She looked over to note that William had not come out of his room.
Less than a year later, Edward came home to find her standing by the window again.
She was holding an envelope in her hand, the address written in a familiar black script of blocky letters and numbers.
“A love letter from Julian?” Edward asked flippantly. “What does the old boy have to say?”
Then he saw her face, and he stopped walking. “What’s wrong?”
“Nothing.” She held up the envelope. “He’s agreed to begin sending our stipend to me directly . . . in Oregon.”
Edward blinked, as if she were speaking a foreign language.
“I’m taking William, and we’re leaving,” she said.
His mouth fell open in shock. He dropped into a chair, his dark eyes shifting back and forth.
“William’s grown afraid of you,” she rushed on. “Admit it, Edward, the sight of him makes you ill. I’ve arranged to buy a house in Portland, Oregon. We need to start over . . . someplace new.”
“You can’t be serious,” he choked. “You’re just doing this to frighten me, to make me treat the old nutter more kindly. If that’s what you want, you could have just said so.”
“I am serious. We leave next week. I’ve booked a private car on a westbound train.”
Edward stood up stiffly, slowly, and walked past her, even closer to the window. He was composed now, unable to express himself, trapped by his own facade. They were both quiet for a moment, and then he said, “I’m keeping the painting.”
In the early 1870s, he’d befriended a visiting French Impressionist named Gustave Caillebotte. They shared several weeks of intense conversation—typical of Edward—and in the process, Caillebotte made a portrait of Eleisha sitting on a green velvet couch. She found it vain. Edward adored it.
Moving up beside him, she wanted to comfort him, but didn’t. Neither one spoke. They had nothing more to say.
chapter 17
This time I broke off first.
“Don’t stop,” Wade said, grabbing my hand.
“No more. When you’re inside my head, I see his face like he’s in the room.”
Visions of Edward hurt far more than I’d imagined they would. He’d been so alive, so original.
But Wade’s questions kept coming. “So, you went to Portland?”
“Yeah,” I managed to answer. “Edward followed two years later. He stayed in different hotels until 1937, then bought a house. He’d just grown too used to company.”
“You lived with him in New York for seventy-three years?”
“I’d almost forgotten. Seems like another lifetime.”
I needed to stop talking about this, and I noticed Wade’s eyelids flutter. How long had it been since he’d really slept? The previous night he’d been up playing Superman, and then he probably stood guard over me all day.
“Maybe you should rest.”
I thought he might argue—still burning with curiosity—but he pointed to the door. “Not yet. There’s another whole room out there.”
“What . . . You rented a suite?”
“Seemed appropriate.”
Walking out into the living room of a modern hotel suite surprised me, as if Wade had been kidding and I’d find myself in a hallway. The decor was sterile, predictable: a gray sleeper couch, dried blue flowers in a vase from Tiffany’s, two assembly-line paintings of seascapes. But this probably cost six hundred dollars a night. Why would Wade spend that kind of money? To impress me? Maybe he just thought I was used to places like this? What a guy.
My mind needed a break. How long had it been since Edward jumped off his porch? Only six weeks. Couldn’t be. The memories shook me more than I wanted to admit. That’s why I pushed Wade out of my head. What if the three of us had simply stayed in New York? Would Edward still have lost it? He’d never liked Portland, but his attachment to me kept him from being happy alone in Manhattan. Was it love? Maybe. He could have cut and run that first night in Southampton, left us to die in ignorance, but he didn’t. How much did we owe him? I didn’t even have a photo, not even a photo.
And my William . . .
Stop it.
I wasn’t ready to deal with his death. I wasn’t prepared to mourn. Trying to mull over that loss and figure out my next move would only bring hysteria. What was my purpose now? Even if I did escape Julian and manage to live—which was doubtful—what was I supposed to do?
“We need to go out for a little while,” Wade said from behind me.
“Aren’t we supposed to be hiding out?”
“We’re in Kirkland—miles from Seattle, and we’ll go on foot. It’ll be okay.”
“I think you need some sleep. What’s so important?”
“You’ll see. First I want to go someplace and get a hamburger.”
“Really? You always sort of struck me as the health-food type.”
He smiled slightly. “Used to be. Back at the institute they served whole grain and greens three meals a day. Dominick got me hooked on beer, pizza, and burgers.”
The mention of Dominick sent my mood into the shadows again. Wade turned away. “Sorry, I just don’t have any other friends. Kind of sad, huh?”
“No, I don’t have many friends either.”
Getting out of the hotel turned out to be a good idea. The night was clear and cool. We walked in comfortable silence to a small diner called Ernie’s and slid into a cushy booth where a matronly waitress who bore an astonishing resemblance to Alice on The Brady Bunch took our order.
“I feel like a kid on my first date,” Wade said, holding his cheese-burger in one hand.
“Really? Maybe I should giggle a lot?”
He threw a French fry across the table. “Hey, is the room okay?”
“Room? The suite? Of course, it’s fine.” Why would he worry about something like that? “Listen, you should let me pay you back for all this. The hotel. The rental car. Everything.”
“You don’t need to. Anyway, where would you get that kind of money?”
“Me? Jesus, Wade, I thought you’d have figured that out by now. I’m . . . pretty well off: three rotating CD accounts in Portland, an account in Zurich, stock in Coca-Cola, Starbucks, Hewlett-Packard . . . Boeing.”
He stopped eating. “How did you manage all that?”
“Accountants and stockbrokers. Money is the only thing that matters here. Julian has joint control of my Portland accounts, though. He doesn’t care how much I spend, but if I’d pulled out four hundred thousand to buy a new house, he’d want to know why.”
“Your accountants work with you at night?”
“Sure. If you’re poor and strange, people call you mad. If you’re rich and strange, they call you eccentric.”
He finished his dinner without another word and paid the check. Somehow, our exchange seemed to have upset him. We walked down the street awhile in silence. “You think you’ve got us all figured out, don’t you?” he said finally.
“No.”
“Yes, you do. You take mortals at face value and then put them into neat little categories so you won’t have to deal with anyone.”
“Where are we going?” I ignored his statement, which struck me as pointless anyway since our relationship went far beyond face value, and I was certainly dealing with him. We turned into a park with green grass, slides, and a large swing set.
“Why are we here?” I asked.
“You’ll see.” His momentary annoyance faded, and he led me through the park until we found a patch of forest near the back. “Here, this is a good place.”
“For what?”
Kneeling down, he lifted his shirt and pulled a thin box from the back of his jeans. “We’re going to bury William.”
My skin went cold. “What?”
“Don’t look so surprised. When I was a kid, I had only one pet, an orange cat named Meesha. She got hit by a car, and I couldn’t deal with it. My dad got disgusted, but my mom put her body in a box and took me for a long walk. She said, ‘You can’t put this behind you or go on with tomorrow until Meesha’s safe in the ground, and you know where to visit should you need to.’ That’s the only thing my mother ever did for me that mattered.”
“What’s in that box?”
“Some of William’s ashes. I got them while you were changing upstairs last night.”
He began digging in the dirt with his hands. My knees sank down of their own accord, and I reached out to help him. Night wind blew through the leaves above us, and it seemed right to forget who we were, what we were caught in the middle of, and instead pretend to be just two people laying a ghost to rest.
“Do you believe in heaven, Wade?”
“I don’t know.”
The box fit neatly in its hole, and we gently patted the loose dirt back in place.
“We can’t leave a marker,” he said.
“It’s all right.”
For a long time we sat together, gathering our thoughts, thinking of the past, blanking out the future. Though still unable to mourn, I felt different now that perhaps William had found rest or even lived in a better place than this world.
“Thank you,” I said, the words sounding inadequate.
Instead of answering, Wade stood up to leave. Our work here was done, and he wanted understanding, not thanks. The dirt beneath our feet changed swiftly into grass as we emerged from the forest patch into the park, walking in solemn silence like people leaving a funeral.
It was over halfway through April, and sweet scents of summer blossoms drifted on the air. Western Washington is a rainy place, often cloudy and wet, but the few clear spring nights Mother Nature doles out are a paradise of green leaves and bursting flowers.
My mind was almost at peace, drifting in several different directions, when I heard the first whimper. Wade stopped, listening. His expression went blank for a moment, and then twisted slightly.
“What is it?” I asked.
“Here, over here.” He ducked away and pushed aside a shrub to our right. To my surprise, a small boy practically boiled out from underneath and darted in a beeline for the trees.
“Leisha, help me get him.”
Gliding into instant motion, I flew past Wade, whose long strides were actually quite fast, and I focused on the spot the boy had disappeared into. Once inside the forested area, I was running blind and stopped to listen. Wade’s voice blew past me.
“It’s all right, Raymond. If you come out we’ll get you something warm to eat.”
Raymond?
How had he managed to pick so much out of a fleeing target’s mind? Perhaps children are more open than adults.
“We should leave this place,” I called. “When he gets tired, he’ll go home.”
“No, he can’t go home. Go to your left. He’s right ahead of you.”
Children are an alien species. Hunting them for life force wasn’t my style, and I couldn’t remember ever having spoken to one. But Wade seemed dead set on catching this boy. Small shuffling sounds in the bushes ahead caught my attention, and I sprang forward, the tips of my fingers grasping a small arm. I struggled for a better grip.
He bit me. The little shit sank his teeth into my hand, hard enough to break skin. It didn’t really hurt. Lifting his kicking feet off the ground, I whispered, “You wouldn’t like it if I bit you back.”
Wade bounded up beside me, his nearly white hair glowing like a beacon. “Here,” I said. “You take him.”
My companion’s arms were more adept at holding children than mine. “It’s all right, Raymond. No one’s going to hurt you.”
The boy stilled as Wade kept whispering soft words in his ear. The poor kid was a mess. About five or six years old, with dirty clothes and long, filthy hair. His eyes were wild, and low grunting sounds escaped his mouth. He seemed incapable of speech.
His short legs wrapped around Wade’s waist. Wade put one arm around the child’s back and the other beneath his bottom for support. Somehow the sight of Wade holding him moved me. Edward used to say it takes all kinds of people to make a world.
“What now?” I asked.
“He’s been neglected. We need to get our car from the hotel and drive him to the authorities.”
“Are you crazy? You’re talking about cops, right? Cops?”
“It’s eleven o’clock at night. Social Health and Welfare closed down hours ago. We don’t have a choice.”
“Sure we do. I’m not going near a police station.”
“You have to! Dominick may be able to block his thoughts from me, but I can still feel him coming. This won’t take long. We’re just going to feed him and then find someone else to take over.”
What was he thinking? We could now be linked to three bizarre deaths, and he wanted to walk right into a Seattle precinct to turn in a lost child? No way.
“You aren’t listening to me!” Wade spat at Sergeant Ben Cordova of Precinct Seventeen in west Seattle. “He hasn’t been beaten. He lives with his father and his father’s girlfriend. They leave him alone for days at a time, with no food in the house. No one’s ever changed his bedsheets as far back as he can remember. He hasn’t attended any school. They don’t wash his clothes.”
Sergeant Cordova looked back with the eyes of a dead fish. “Are there any physical marks of abuse?”
“How about malnutrition, you stupid fuck?”
Oh, great, there it went. I’d been standing in the back of a crowded police office, watching Wade argue with this dispassionate sergeant for nearly twenty minutes. The more intensely bored Cordova appeared, the higher Wade’s voice rose. And now he was swearing.
“There’s no need for that, sir. This falls between social services and the boy’s father.”
“No, you can’t send him back home for a few days. Not for five minutes.”
I moved up behind them. “Leave the boy here. They’ll know what to do.”
“They don’t. That’s the point. The minute we walk out that door, this joker’s going to call his father.” He whirled back to Cordova. “Get your captain out here.”
“He’s not available, sir.”
“Get him out here, now!”
“Is there a problem?” a deep voice asked from behind me. I turned to see an enormous man wearing a suit and tie.
“Yes, there’s a problem,” Wade snapped. “Your sergeant has his head up his ass.”
“I’m Captain Baker. Can I help you?”
“No, you can help this boy. He needs a clean place to sleep.”
“And you are?”
Until that point, my angry friend had avoided discussing himself, even though Cordova had asked for ID three times. “My name is Dr. Wade Sheffield. I’ve been the staff psychologist at Captain Joseph McNickel’s Eighth Precinct in Portland, Oregon, for the past four years. If you like, we can call him at home and wake him up for verification.”
That sounded dangerous to me since Wade had resigned under such odd circumstances, but maybe McNickel would back him up.
Captain Baker crouched down and smiled at Raymond, who pulled deeper into Wade’s chest. “And how much do you know about this little guy?”
“Not much. His name is Raymond Olson. His father’s name is Robert Olson. They live somewhere in Kirkland at an apartment complex called Greenwich Village—at least that’s what the sign out front says. He’s been starved and neglected . . . He can’t even talk.”
“How did you become involved?”
“I found him in the park a few hours ago.”
The captain’s brow wrinkled. “So how did you learn this much information if he can’t speak?”
Wonderful. This kept getting better by the moment. Not only was Wade irrational, but he’d just backed himself into a corner. “Please, just check my story without sending him home. If you have any pity at all.”
The room fell quiet for a moment. Then Baker said, “A friend of mine—well, my wife—works for social services. Let me go call her and have her come down.”
Wade looked into the man’s eyes for a few seconds, and then he relaxed. Turning to me, he nodded and said, “It’s okay. He’s not lying.”
I’d never seen him like this, not quite this worked up. In all other aspects of his own self-image, he was sometimes unsure, often timid. But when it came to trusting his psychic ability, he exuded a confidence that made other people listen. Was he even aware how angry, how aggressive, he sounded?
We waited quietly together on a bench for nearly an hour—Wade still holding Raymond in his lap—until a middle-aged woman who looked overworked, underpaid, and slightly frazzled walked in. I didn’t have to be psychic to figure out she was Baker’s wife.
She spotted us in a hurry and flashed a tired smile. Wade’s tight muscles unclenched. Even with her hair flying all over, this woman had kind eyes and a tough expression. Good combination.
I pulled back to let her speak alone with Wade. He took her phone number, said a few words to Raymond, and then handed him to Mrs. Baker. There was a moment of panic on the boy’s part, but it passed. He was probably so lost by then that up from down didn’t matter.
As we walked back outside to our car, Wade still didn’t look happy. “I feel bad leaving him there.”
“There’s nothing else you can do. He’s got even less chance with us right now than with his own family.”
“That doesn’t make me feel any better.”
“You can’t save the world. It’s already lost.”
What an unexpected chain of events. How selfish I’d been. The boy, of course, meant nothing. Children have been starving since the inception of time. Raymond was as common as dirt.
But Wade had offered his help, his services, to me so easily it seemed he almost wanted to be caught up in this horror. Not true. Had he wanted to spend half the night fighting with tired cops in a police station? No, but some part of his mental makeup drove him on. He could do something no one else could, and that responsibility pushed him past his own physical limits. That’s why he had worked night and day for the Portland police. That’s why he continued helping me. Was it pride, or some unfulfilled need?
In silence, we drove back to the hotel, parked the car, and went up to our suite. Blue and gray decor greeted us with its sterile cheerful-ness, and Wade switched on the lamp.
“Do you miss your job?” I blurted out.
The question didn’t surprise him. Perhaps he’d been thinking about it himself. “Sometimes. I need to be . . . useful. Pathetic really.”
“No, it isn’t. At least you contribute.”
With William gone, what would my contribution be now?
“Maybe.” He sighed. “I’m tired, but I don’t want to sleep.”
“What should we do?”
He picked up the TV Guide. “Captain Blood is just starting on HBO. Do you like Errol Flynn?”
“Sure, he’s my hero.”
“I thought I was your hero?”
“Fat chance.”
He cracked a grin and looked around for the television remote. Two minutes later we were sacked out on the couch, watching pirates swashbuckle in shades of black and white.
chapter 18
I woke up in the bed alone.
We’d watched television until nearly dawn when my eyelids grew heavy. But we’d been out on the couch. I didn’t remember coming in here.
Long, heavy blankets covered the draped windows to block out any light from the sun. Of course darkness had settled by now. Where was Wade?
Hopping up, I walked out into the suite’s living room and found it empty. Didn’t this guy ever sleep? He was definitely an original. I suddenly considered slipping out the door and disappearing before he came back. Somehow, his life seemed to be worth more than my undead existence. Leaving him here would cut him deeply, but staying could mean his death. And even more than that, what if he actually lived through this? Could he go back to being Dr. Wade Sheffield? Mortals often identify their self-worth with their occupation, as if what they do is an integral part of what they are.
But sooner or later, for better or worse—probably worse—a final-act curtain would drop down on this macabre play. Whoever was left in one piece would have to go on to the future. Did Wade remember that?
I heard movement outside the door, and then he walked in with an armload of shopping bags.
“Where were you?” I asked.
He dropped the bags. “Take a wild guess.”
“Oooh, you’re too funny.” I walked over to see what he’d been up to. “Shopping?”
“Yeah, come look. We both needed some new clothes.” He pulled out a pair of Levi’s and a brown T-shirt with long sleeves. “Size four, right?”
“You bought me clothes?” He never ceased to astound me. “How did you know my size?”
“Lucky guess. Sorry this stuff’s so basic. But we’re going to be running a lot.”
This was getting out of hand, and he’d seen way too many movies. I was about to give him our survival chances when he yawned. “Did you sleep at all today?” I asked.
“A little this morning,” he said.
“You won’t be good to anyone like that. Come on. Lie down for a while, and I’ll stand guard over your prone, helpless body, okay?”
Hiding my concern behind humor had always worked well for me. He didn’t even argue. While he got ready for bed, I went into the bathroom and changed clothes. He even bought me new underwear and socks.
“Do they fit?” he called.
I walked out to find him under the blankets, eyes about half closed. “Yeah, you did a good job. Thanks, Wade.”
My approval pleased him. “Wake me in a few hours.”
“Sure, I’ll be in the living room.”
He was already breathing softly. I closed the door and went to make a cup of tea. We were going to have a long talk when he woke up. What did he think tomorrow would bring? Endless running and living in fancy hotels with me? He had absorbed my memories in detail. Didn’t he realize what we were up against?
The room suddenly felt cold. Where was the thermostat? Glancing around, I saw movement by the curtains. A shadow.
“Didn’t think you’d ever notice me,” a soft voice whispered. “Lost in thought?”
Three facts registered instantly. Masculine. French. No available weapons.
I drew back against the wall. “Philip?”
Only once. I’d seen him only once before. How shortsighted. Julian felt William die. The possible threat of Philip had hit me the night Maggie died, but a great deal had happened since then. Concentrating so completely on Julian, I had forgotten about Philip. How did he get in here? Had Wade left the door unlocked?
“You have some stories to tell, little one,” he whispered in a heavy accent. “What happened to my Maggie?”
He stepped out of the shadows, and I looked at him, wordless. He didn’t look like Maggie . . . but he was so much like her. His beauty must have blinded hundreds, thousands. He was tall—slender and muscular at the same time. Thick, red-brown hair hung halfway down his back, and amber eyes stared out of a narrow, ivory face. He and Maggie shared the same gift. But this time, the pull affected me.
It felt as if I were staring into the sun at noon.
Gifts.
He was a killer without thought. Snuffing out my existence and Wade’s meant less than nothing. I was not immune to his gift, indeed probably more susceptible since it was new to me. But then again, he wasn’t immune to mine either. I crossed my arms in fear and looked at the floor.
“Philip, don’t hurt me.”
Concentrate. Emanate. Get him on his knees.
“You’re finally here,” I said. “I kept hoping. I didn’t know what to do.”
His expression flickered. Could he feel it? Did he know what I was doing, or was he lost in some overinflated sense of forgotten manhood? He was so perfect. I’d never seen anything like him in my life—except Maggie.
A humorless smile curved the corners of his mouth. “We seem to be at a standoff, little one. Unexpected. Maggie tried to warn me, but her words were often exaggerated. Yet right now I feel an overwhelming urge to throw my body in front of a moving train to rescue your handkerchief.”
A lie, and a stupid play. Showing that he already knew the score gave me an advantage. He liked to show off.
“How did you find me?”
“Followed you from Maggie’s.” He motioned with his head toward the bedroom. “Who’s your pet?”
“No one. He’s been helping me. If you sit down, I’ll tell you everything.”
I didn’t tell him to sit down; that’s the key to handling men like Philip. You can’t tell them to do anything. You either ask them or make it seem like their own idea.
He crossed to a chair, expression guarded. I felt torn for a moment. Sitting by his feet would give me the best psychological advantage, but getting that close to him was dangerous.
“If I had come to kill you, you would be dead,” he said in a voice that sounded more sad than angry. Sorrow was no mystery to me, at least not anymore.
Moving to the floor by his knee, I focused on his black Hugo Boss pant legs and not his face.
Don’t look at his face.
“Odd little thing,” he said. “More than I expected.”
“Do you remember the first night I saw you?”
“No, have you seen me?”
My words pleased him. He might have had some depth hidden away, but he thrived on attention.
“Yes, at Cliffbracken. You came in with Julian and Maggie late one night, but that was a long time ago.”
“A long time ago,” he echoed. “What happened to my Maggie?”
“How much do you know? She said she called you once.”
“Only that Edward Claymore destroyed himself and mortal men chased you to Seattle.”
Part of me wanted to say anything that would make him leave. I wanted him to go away. Wade slept helpless in the next room, and I knew no way to protect him. But another part of me understood Philip’s confusion, his pain. Maggie had been a deadly work of art, and she’d barely outlasted two lifetimes. She should have gone far into the future. And now it was as though she’d never been.
“A policeman killed her,” I said quietly, “named Dominick Vasundara.”
Starting with the first night at Edward’s, I gave him my version of the past six weeks, letting him know the kind of hunter Maggie truly had been, so competent and skilled—and still graceful. No matter how sick it sounds, that was my comfort for his loss. Perhaps that’s another gift I’d developed, instinctive recognition of what others needed to hear. I left out Wade’s psychic ability, though, and played up Dominick’s psychometry.
“You cared for her?” he asked.
“She was good to me . . . and to William.”
“I was close to the house when he died.”
His words startled me, leaving no response. For the first time since watching him step away from the curtain, I looked into his eyes. Reckless or not, it felt like the right thing to do. He was searching for words, like a computer accessing memory banks for a correct response and finding none. No residual trace of humanity remained in Philip.
“It’s all right,” I told him. “You don’t need to say anything.”
“Julian would think us mad, no? Like two old ladies sad for things past.”
I didn’t know how to answer that, so I just sat there, looking at him.
“Maggie’s voice changed the last time she telephoned,” he said abruptly. “You gave her something I could not.”
“What?”
“You tell me.”
“Maybe she was just tired of being alone.”
“Our kind lives alone, hunts alone. It’s the way.”
If he really believed that, he was as cracked as Julian. But Philip’s expression reminded me of faces I hadn’t seen since going to church as a child. Religion? Did we have a religion? If so, Edward certainly hadn’t mentioned it.
“Why are we supposed to be alone?” I asked.
“Your maker once said we are the despised of God’s children. We live in darkness and deserve no comfort.”
“That’s ridiculous. We used to be mortal ourselves. If that’s true, where did the first vampires come from?”
“Spirits. Before the world was made, a mass of black clouds existed in its place. When God made the world, spirits rebelled and entered the bodies of dead mortals.”
What? Did Julian believe any of this? Maybe Edward had been some sort of heathen or atheist, because he had never talked like this—not that I was buying into it either. But does it make any less sense than other religions? Does it sound any less plausible than four billion years of evolution being condensed into six days?
“So why did you make Maggie? Didn’t you want her to stay with you?” I pitched my tone to suggest deference, childlike innocence. Challenging him would have been a mistake.
The question threw him anyway. “A crime . . . but letting her beauty fade seemed a sin. Not before, not since, has anyone matched my Maggie.” He smiled weakly. “Julian would think us mad.”
That was it. Possibly not even in life had Philip experienced true loss, mourning. Emotion confused him, and this kind of pain was new.
“Why did you come here, Philip?”
“For you. I came for you.”
The ambiguity of his answer brought fear rushing back. I rolled over and up, gauging the distance to Wade’s door.
“Worried about your pet?”
“He’s not a pet.”
“You should silence him, little one. He knows what you are, doesn’t he?”
I wanted to smash his face with a brass lamp, but I’d lose, and Wade would die. “No, please. He doesn’t know much—just some guy I seduced for help. Don’t hurt him.”
That was a bad play, and Philip knew it. Vampires don’t worry about each other, much less about one insignificant mortal.
“You are a curious thing,” he said. “But when Julian comes, your pet will die anyway. Come with me, and he might live.”
“Why would you want that?”
“Maggie helped you. Edward helped you. At the beginning, they were on the brink of despair. Oh, don’t look so shocked. I know more of Edward than you think. He’d have jumped off a porch a hundred years sooner were it not for you.” His handsome face grew intense. “What did you give them?” he demanded.
“Nothing.”
“Come, tell me. I am more than Edward was.”
Bastard. He was taking me whether I wanted to go or not. Defeat ebbed my power, faded my gift, brought anger to the surface. “You’re nothing compared to Edward. Would you take in an orphan and a half-mad undead? Bathe them? Feed them from your arm? Don’t compare yourself to him.”
I might as well have slapped him. Perhaps no one ever spoke to him like that. He took a step toward me and stopped. “Odd thing. Cold without your gift.”
“As you.”
Gazing down, his eyes reminded me of Maggie’s again. Did he have any of her fire for living? For hunting? Compassion for old cripples like William? Or was he empty?
And then it occurred to me that everyone else was really gone—except Julian, who didn’t count. If I wanted companionship from my own kind, Philip was the last boy in town. Sorry thought.
“Come with me,” he said. “Your little friend will live.”
Wade deserved to live, more than the rest of us. But what would he think upon waking? That I’d deserted him? It didn’t matter. Maybe he’d go back home and be safe.
Stopping only to pick up Maggie’s wool coat, I got up and followed Philip.
chapter 19
Do you have a car?” I asked as we stepped outside the hotel.
Instead of answering, he looked up and down the street, then walked to an early-eighties, dirty-blue Camaro and climbed in the driver’s side.
He couldn’t possibly have rented this. What a piece of junk. Hardly his style.
“You should lock your doors down here anyway,” I said. “Somebody too drunk to see might steal it.”
His answering laugh made me nervous. The interior looked even worse. Marlboro boxes, Hershey bar wrappers, and Big Gulp cups covered the backseat and floor. As I slammed my door, Philip reached up with both hands and jerked the steering column five inches out of the dash, exposing red, black, and green wires.
“What are you doing?”
“Rewiring the ignition,” he answered casually, as if we were talking about fall fashions.
Later I felt ashamed of my own reaction. “You can’t do that. It’s illegal.”
Laughing again as the engine roared, he squealed the tires while pulling into traffic. “You are too tame. Or is this your gift again, eh?”
“Philip, stop the car. If the police catch you, they’ll lock you in a cell.”
Doing seventy-five as we hit the southbound on-ramp for Seattle, he glanced at me warily. “What are police to us? They are too slow to catch us. Bullets don’t hurt us.”
“So what do you do when you get pulled over?”
“I don’t pull over unless I’m hungry.”
He started weaving through traffic, the needle peaking ninety. Steering with one hand, he fished around on the dashboard, found a crusty Black Sabbath tape, and slammed it in. Ozzy’s voice screamed out two rear-window speakers. Whoever owned this car really needed to be told what year it was. I hadn’t seen a cassette player in years.
“Where are we going?” I asked.
“Seattle Center. This city is new to me, but Maggie said hunting in the center was good.”
“You want to hunt now?”
“Don’t you? We just woke up.” His accent seemed to be getting worse instead of better, making me wish I spoke French.
“No, I fed last night.”
“So don’t feed.” He shrugged. “Just hunt.”
Maybe Maggie had been right about me. Maybe I hadn’t seen enough in my one hundred and eighty-six years. “You just want to kill someone?”
He took his eyes completely off the road and stared at me. “Is this for real or are you playing? What do you do all night if not hunt?”
“Take care of William, read books, settle the bank accounts, talk to my investment broker. I don’t know, just things.”
“No?” Amused, almost pleased, he pushed the needle up higher. “William is gone. You are immortal, with no need for books and investment brokers.”
That’s the first time the word “immortal” sounded absurd to me. Webster’s unabridged defines it as “not mortal; deathless; living forever.” I know. I looked it up once. What a crock. We may not get any older, but the body count hit three last night. Sounded pretty mortal to me. Maybe Philip wasn’t keeping score.
Watching him drive—his long hair flying out the window, his head bobbing to the music, his face sporting an adolescent grin—made me try to see beyond his gift. What was he besides beautiful and careless? His black Hugo Boss pants and Calvin Klein shirt suggested his taste was not only good, but up-to-date. Edward always bought Savile Row and Christian Dior, which worked on him but was sort of “older crowd”—sort of.
Philip also cared what Julian thought. Why? Why would Julian’s opinion matter?
“Turn down the Mercer/Fairview exit,” I said.
Downtown Seattle is a mass of one-way streets, confusing signs, and heavy traffic, but my too-happy companion drove as if he were on a backwoods dirt road.
“Where’d you learn to drive?”
“Paris,” he answered. That figured. He found a pay-by-the-hour parking lot near the Space Needle and jumped out. “We ditch this car now.”
“Whatever you say.” Instinct screamed that it was time to ditch golden boy. But I didn’t. Maybe he was the only true vampire among us—cold and fast and wild. Maybe Edward and I struggled too hard to hoard little bits of humanity and somehow never quite fit into either world. Philip didn’t feed just on blood. He seemed to feed off the world, draining life and power and material wealth from anything unlucky enough to cross his path. And he did it without thought or remorse or pity—a purist in the true sense. Fascinating. Frightening.
“Look, a roller coaster,” he said, smiling. Canned carnival music and bright lights flooded the scene. He bolted toward the bumper cars, and then stopped, looking back for me. “You like rides?”
“No . . . I don’t know.”
He jumped the few steps back to me, looking confused, as if he wanted to grab my arm but didn’t know how. Again, his expression reminded me of a computer accessing data it couldn’t find. Perhaps he’d forgotten how to touch someone he wasn’t murdering.
“Come, Eleisha. Come on.”
“How long has it been since you’ve hunted with someone else?”
His eyebrows knitted. “What year is it?”
What year? How could he be so up on fashion and not even know the year? “Don’t you read the newspaper?”
That annoyed him. “Newspaper? For sheep and puppets. You start to believe your own gift.”
“And you don’t?”
The night lights and black corners pulled at him. I could see it in his eyes, and in spite of myself, it called to me as well.
“Too much talk,” he said. “Come.”
Changing his mind abruptly, he steered away from the carnival and headed down toward the fountain. I followed about a half step behind him, watching a wide variety of people pass us. Philip ignored all of them like an overfed cat turned loose in a science lab. We reached the huge round fountain in Seattle Center’s heart. Four teenage kids sat on the lawn, smoking and talking. Philip headed straight for them.
A tall boy, about sixteen with a shaved head and two pewter skulls hanging in the same ear, took a long drag and noticed us. Apparently he didn’t want extra company, because his lips tightened angrily at our approach, and then Philip smiled. All four of them smiled back. Too weird.
“Bum a smoke?” my partner asked, pointing to the cigarette.
“Here.” Pewter Skulls held out the pack. “Where’re you from?”
“France, but I like your city.”
Philip’s communication skills with the kid actually surprised me. I don’t know what I expected. But the sight of him sitting on the grass smoking and making small talk didn’t fit my mental image. Pewter Skulls introduced himself as Culker. The rest of the group included a boy named Scott with a green mohawk, a blond girl named Becky with small eyes and a blue leather miniskirt, and an African American girl named Jet in a pink, tie-dyed dress under a loose jean jacket. They were all about the same age. I thought the mohawk was passé. Becky seemed to have about four working brain cells, but Jet’s face caught my attention, clean and straightforward. Part of me actually wanted to talk to her, but that wasn’t my place here, not my gift. Philip had them eating from his hand.
He leaned back on his elbows. A mass of silky red-brown hair hung to the ground.
“Who’s that with you?” Culker finally asked him.
I’d been sitting quietly behind Philip, hiding in his overwhelming shadow. A safe place, almost pleasant.
“Eleisha, say hello to our new friends.”
I fell into my routine and focused on the ground. “Hi.”
Scott turned to Philip. “Hey, if we give you the money, will you buy us some beer?”
“Where did you plan to drink it?”
“At Becky’s. Her folks are gone. You want to come?”
This was too easy. Although if we trotted down to the nearest 7-Eleven, picked up a case of cheap beer, and then headed to Becky’s, how would Philip manage to get someone off alone?
As we fell into step toward a store, I noticed Jet walking beside me and gave her an honest smile.
“How old are you?” she asked.
“Seventeen.”
“How old is he?”
“Twenty-nine.”
She wasn’t dumb. Due to our unnatural skin tone, our ages are often difficult to place. But Jet’s questions struck a little deeper. Why would an incredibly beautiful, well-dressed, adult Frenchman want to hang with them when he had a pretty, seventeen-year-old girlfriend for company? It didn’t make sense.
“You going out with Culker?” I asked to change the subject.
“Culker? No way. These guys are just my friends. I like your coat.”
“Oh, thanks . . . Did you dye that dress yourself?”
“Yeah.” She seemed pleased. “I do all kinds of stuff. Sell clothes at the Folklife Festival.”
“What’s that?”
“You don’t know ’bout the festival? Where’re you from?”
I smiled. “Portland.”
She smiled back, and we talked all the way to a run-down mini-mart. Philip glanced back at me once. He went inside and came out with a case of Henry Weinhard’s Ale that must have cost twice what Culker gave him. Didn’t this situation seem unusual to any of them?
“Awesome,” Scott said. “My car’s two blocks south.”
Becky kept moving closer to Philip. I’m sure he noticed.
We all piled into a rusted Buick Skylark with cigarette butts falling out of its ashtray. We ended up driving to Capitol Hill, but Scott spent twenty minutes trying to find a place to park.
Piles of dirt and garbage had been plowed to the sides of the road. One decrepit apartment building melted right into the next one. Every available parking space seemed filled with a dented Volkswagen Golf. Babies cried through open windows, and some guy down the block kept yelling, “You bitch!” over and over again.
I wanted to go home, but we didn’t have one.
Scott finally managed to squeeze the Skylark between two cars, and everybody climbed out. I’d figured out by then that Becky’s parents didn’t live in a house.
“We can’t be too loud,” she said. “The guys below us are crack dealers. One of them gets mad easy.”
Charming.
Something about her apartment’s interior touched more sorrow than its outside. Small arrangements of dried flowers sat on paint-splattered tables. An old mattress was covered by a hand-stitched quilt. Cheap lace curtains blew out from chipped windowpanes. Someone cared about this place enough to try to make it a home.
Culker broke open a Henry’s. “We should’ve bought some chips or M&M’s.”
“Order a pizza,” Philip said. “Isn’t that what you Americans do?”
“Can’t, I’m almost broke.”
“I’ll pay.”
Could they possibly be this blind? Jet sat alone. What was she thinking? It’s funny how Wade had given me a different perspective of mortals. On impulse, I reached out and touched her mind—as I would have with Wade—not expecting to get through. Psychic pictures come to us only when feeding or when another vampire dies. But to my surprise, her immediate thoughts flowed into me as though she were speaking.
Philip was the most perfect thing she’d ever seen, and she usually didn’t go for white guys. But what was he into? Why was he here? If he was looking for some kind of threesome, he’d pick Becky. That was obvious. Not that Jet cared. Her baby boy was with a sitter, and she ought to get back soon, anyway. His ears were bothering him, and she’d need to take him to the doctor tomorrow.
I pulled out, reeling internally. How long had that taken? Had she felt me? Only seconds seemed to have passed, and she continued watching Philip with the same cautious curiosity. She had a little boy? I wanted to know more but didn’t know how to deal with the moment’s revelation.
Was I more like Wade than I realized?
Philip caught my attention suddenly by sitting down next to Becky and touching her bare thigh. I hadn’t seen him touch anyone yet, and the movement of his hand was slow, light, gentle. That’s why he hadn’t grabbed my hand in the carnival. Touching was only for victims.
The room fell silent as he leaned down and kissed her. Everyone—including me—watched the gradual movement of his open mouth as he licked her lips and face. His pale hand moved up her side, feather touch, like a concerned lover. Nobody else moved.
What was he doing? This didn’t make sense. If he wanted to lure her away from her friends, he should have just asked. She’d have followed him off a cliff.
The red polyester couch they sat on showed huge gaping holes of foam rubber. Becky’s breathing quickened when he moved to her neck. Completely lost in his gift, she tried to put her fingertips on his face. The scene changed.
Click.
He ripped out a chunk of her throat before I could blink—right in front of her friends. Instead of falling into a hazy state of slow motion, the world rushed to a hundred miles an hour. Scott started screaming as blood shot out of her jugular and covered his T-shirt. Philip jumped over the back of the couch and landed on top of him.
“No way, man,” Culker kept repeating from the center of the room. “No way.”
Philip stopped Scott’s screaming by flipping him onto his stomach and breaking his neck with a loud crack. Then he smiled up at Culker.
Until that point, I’d been too off guard to move. What was he doing? He wasn’t even feeding, just ripping and breaking bones. But they’d seen us. Both Jet and Culker could describe us right down to “any distinguishing features.”
“You son of a bitch,” I said in despair.
He turned his head toward me, laughing savagely. Jet bolted for the door. I caught her by whipping my left arm around her stomach and pulling her back into my chest. She was nearly a head taller than me. Her mouth formed a scream. Hating myself, hating Philip more, I grasped her entire chin with my right hand and jerked. Her body hit the floor before the scream ever escaped.
Culker began crying.
“Do it fast,” I hissed to Philip.
It sounds cliché to compare Philip to an animal, but that’s what he reminded me of. I mean it. He couldn’t even talk. Culker seemed to know running was a waste of time and backed up against the wall.
Please don’t let him start begging.
Philip was on him in a flash, tearing at his neck, but this time I heard sucking sounds. Often frightened by my own kind, sometimes confused, that was the first time I ever felt ashamed.
“We gotta go,” I whispered. There was no way we could clean this mess up. Better just to leave it.
Philip dropped Culker’s body and stared at me as if he didn’t know who I was. His eyes made me step back.
“No,” he said, finding his voice, red liquid dripping down onto his black shirt and vanishing against the darker color. “Not yet.”
I’d thought the worst was over, but it wasn’t. Putting his own wrist to his teeth, he tore it down to open veins and held it out. “Here, like with Edward.”
For a minute I didn’t get it. Then what he wanted came crashing down, followed by revulsion. “Stay away from me.”
“Like Edward.”
“Philip, don’t.”
Jet’s dead body lay between me and the door. But in the time it took me to glance down at her, Philip had his hand around the back of my head, gripping my hair.
“You know nothing,” he breathed in my ear. “You need me.”
Survival instincts told me to do whatever he wanted and get away as soon as possible—please him and run. But I didn’t. Something snapped. Grabbing his shoulder for support, I rammed my knee into his stomach hard enough to make him spit out a mouthful of Culker’s blood.
“I don’t need your arm.” My own voice sounded unfamiliar. “I don’t want you touching me. You’re sick. You weren’t even hungry, were you?”
He gasped once, eyes glazing over. He didn’t hit me. “But I thought . . .” He looked confused. “You hunt with me now, like with Maggie or Edward.”
“This isn’t how we hunted! Any of us. Maggie left bodies sometimes, but at least she made sure they were drifters or dealers. She always took their ID, and she never killed anybody for any reason but to drain life force. Is this what you do in France?”
“We do as we want,” he whispered. “We are not sheep, Julian and I. And how many have you killed in just this past hundred years? How many?”
“I’m not like you.”
“You are. This moral piety will not comfort the dead.”
His words hurt and left me wanting cool air. I ran into the hall and down to the street, not caring who saw me. The dirt and garbage still sat in large, ugly piles. The baby upstairs still cried.
“I don’t want to hurt you,” Philip said into my ear. He must have followed me down, swift and quiet.
“What do you want?”
“For you to be happy, like with Maggie or Edward.”
Was that really his game? He’d been taught by someone that we have to live out our existence alone. Now was he questioning that? He and Julian had once thought me insane or weak for living close to other members of our kind. Did Philip want an instant family? He knew nothing of humans, and even less of vampires.
“You can’t have everything you want,” I said.
“Yes, I can.” He smiled and threw his arms in the air. “We live forever. This is our heaven.”
Before I could respond, he glanced around and spotted an old Firebird among the Volkswagens. “This way.”
Not wanting to follow him, I looked down at my watch. Four o’clock. We’d been inside that apartment for over two hours? Felt like minutes. “All right, but we need to find a hotel. It’ll be dawn soon.”
He didn’t answer but scowled at finding the car locked. Using his right elbow, he smashed the driver’s window and opened the door, then unlocked my side. “Get in.”
“Promise to take me to a hotel?”
“Wherever you want.”
While he worked on starting the engine, I climbed in and watched him. “Why do you always take old muscle cars?”
“These are fast, solid, and they almost never have alarms.”
“I thought you didn’t care about police or getting caught.”
He flashed me a dirty look and whipped out onto the street. My manner with him in the past half hour had been leaning toward foolish. If I wanted any control at all, I’d need to turn the manipulation beacon back on. He just made my skin crawl.
I was normally asleep by five or so. My eyelids felt heavy. “Have you ever been inside Maggie’s place?” I asked.
“No.”
“It’s wonderful. I wish we could go there.”
The passing minutes didn’t bother me too much. Philip was doing ninety by the time we hit northbound I-5. I was actually beginning to relax when the first siren roared from behind us.
“Jesus, Philip, don’t pull over.”
“I hadn’t planned to.”
“Can you outrun him?”
For an answer, he laughed out the shattered window. “Now we are having fun, no?”
“No.”
This was all we needed. A cop chasing us down in a stolen car with Philip’s wrist torn open and his shirt soaked in blood.
“You’d better lose him. He’ll be calling for backup.”
“Too many movies,” Philip answered, and then he glanced over at me. “Put on your seat belt. I’m not used to passengers.”
Obeying him instantly, wondering how he could talk and drive so fast at the same time, I looked back to see the police car falling behind. A second siren wailed from our left.
Philip might have gotten me into this, but somehow I believed he would get me out. He wasn’t scared or worried or putting on some macho show for my benefit—as a mortal would. His expression was focused but calm, every fiber, every muscle and reflex moving in rapid sequence.
Whipping to the right with no warning, he threw me off-balance, and I grabbed the dashboard.
“Hold on,” he said.
We flew off I-5 onto the Bothell exit. Philip never took his eyes off the rearview mirror. Sirens still screamed, but no lights were visible. He turned behind the office building of an old wrecking yard and braked the Firebird so hard I jerked forward against my belt.
“Get out,” he said, shoving his own door open.
We ran among rusty cars, trucks, motorcycles, and army jeeps as the sky slowly turned from black to dark gray. Our speed felt good, too quick for most mortals to keep up.
Philip slowed down next to an abandoned barn. The changing sky bothered him a lot more than the cops had. Me, too.
“We better get another car and find a hotel room,” I said.
“There’s no time.”
Tearing the barn door open, he slipped inside. The building must once have been part of the wrecking yard. Hubcaps, blackened socket wrenches, and even an aged engine lay scattered in the grass. I followed Philip to find him on his knees, ripping up floorboards.
“What are you doing?”
He didn’t answer, but my question had been pointless. I knew what he was doing—making a hole under the barn for us to sleep in.
“Here,” he said, “get under here.”
“We can’t stay in this place. What if somebody comes? What if somebody finds us?”
“You would rather take chances outside? No one has been here in years. We’ll be all right.”
My eyelids felt even heavier than my arms, and what choice did I have? He was right. We had no chance outside. The sun would be up in a few moments. Walking over, I slid down into the crawl space between the ground and the barn floor. Philip’s body dropped down next to mine. Lying on his back, he put all the boards back in place over us.
Part of me wanted to thank him, but if not for his reckless behavior, we wouldn’t be here in the first place.
“Sleep now,” he whispered. “We talk tonight.”
“I’ve never slept on the ground before.”
“Never?”
“No.”
His next words were a jumble, and his hard body relaxed slightly in dormancy. I don’t remember anything else.
chapter 20
Upon waking that night, three different lines of thought pushed to the front of my brain. The first was Jet—not only my regret over her unnecessary death, but the experience of reading her mind. How was it possible? Could she have been special like Wade? If so, why didn’t she sense my intrusion?
The second thought, of course, was Wade himself. By now he figured I’d ditched him and run off to save myself. The hurt feelings of one mortal meant nothing—especially in trade for his life—but I wanted to talk to him, explain Philip’s unannounced presence. Ridiculous really. And irrational. Wade’s good health depended on my absence, not my words.
The third struggling thought was a memory from long ago of a dog named Thorne. One of Lord William’s female wolfhounds disappeared during a hunt, and then turned up three weeks later, running with a wild mastiff. Months later, she gave birth to a single puppy. I must have been about ten when he was born. I can still see his broad, swaggering little chest and hear him growling at everything that moved. He grew up useless for anything men consider important. Independent, vicious, refusing to be touched or petted, he received no one’s favor but mine. I couldn’t scratch behind his ears any more than William could, but that didn’t matter. I saved him kitchen meat scraps and cheese and gravy that the cooks threw out. He eventually stopped snarling at me and even met me by the back door in winters when live game grew scarce. I didn’t love him but respected his independence.
Two days after my sixteenth birthday, he attacked a small boy—one of the groom’s sons—and inflicted permanent scars. The boy admitted to having thrown a stick at the dog, but no one listened. The groom shot Thorne an hour later. I heard his gun from my room. It wasn’t as though I’d lost a pet who was dear to me. He just somehow seemed more important than the boy. Why should anything so strong and fierce have to die like that? I’d put my cloak on, left William in Marion’s care, found a shovel, and had Mr. Shevonshire lift the dog’s dead body into an old wooden cart for me. Pushing the cart into the woods, I buried Thorne by the pond so he could hear flocks of geese coming home in the spring. I shed tears for him. His loss affected me in a way I can’t explain. He was not a loss to me personally, simply a needless loss. He’d been magnificent in life, more worthwhile than most people could claim to be.
And why would Thorne push to the front of my brain after so many years? Perhaps I was lying next to his kindred spirit. This Philip. This purist who saw no contrasting shades in the world.
He stirred beside me and pushed up at the boards. “Eleisha, are you awake?”
“Yes.”
“Come.”
After climbing back up into the barn, we walked outside, night air breezing across cool skin, making me feel alive. Half expecting Philip to start looking for a car, I was surprised when he sat down on the grass.
“Sit,” he said. “Answer questions.”
I stayed on my feet. “You need a new shirt.”
“That doesn’t matter. Tell me things.”
“What things?”
“You were afraid of being caught by mortals last night, no? Not a game. Not your gift.”
His face and hair glowed like a candle in the dark, emanating his gift, but I didn’t care.
“Why did Maggie leave you?” I asked.
That caught him off guard, and he stood back up. “She . . . we were different before. I can’t remember how, but we were different. She cried for lost walks through vineyards in the morning, the sun on my face at dusk, the warmth of our hands. None of that mattered to me. Useless, human trappings of a world long past. There is nothing but hunting.”
“Did you miss her?”
His jaw twitched. “I thought she had gone to Wales at first, so I searched for Julian. But she wasn’t with him. He said that my chasing after an undead whore was insane. He said I must have been mad for turning her in the first place.”
“You had a better reason for making her than he had for making me.”
Walking over, I stood beside him, my head barely reaching his chest. He gazed down at me uncertainly. “Your voice is soft tonight. You don’t hate me anymore.”
His amber eyes searched my face when I didn’t answer.
“You spat angry words at me,” he said. “You called me ‘sick.’”
We all have hang-ups. Philip seemed overly concerned about what others thought of him. An unexpected weakness. But that could work to my advantage, give me a little control, keep him from killing unless we found safe conditions to hide bodies.
“You just surprised me,” I said. “You’re so careless.”
“And you’ve been keeping William safe forever.”
“Forever.”
That may have been the heart of my fear, of my shock at Philip’s inhumanity. The prospect of a future without William meant either death at the hands of Julian or existence in isolation. Which would be worse? Philip presented a third option. But did I want his company? Did the seeds of friendship—or more likely respect—keep me here, or merely reluctance to be alone?
“We could leave the country,” I whispered. “Go to Sweden or maybe Finland.”
My words struck a chord, and his eyes widened. “Would you do that? Leave with me?” Then he smiled. “Julian will think us insane.”
“Probably. We could get on a plane tonight. Be far away before morning.”
“Tonight?” He frowned. “No, tonight we go to Maggie’s.”
“Maggie’s?” I stepped back. “We can’t go there. Dominick’s been watching the house, waiting for me.”
“You should have killed him nights ago, ripped his throat and watched him bleed. Maggie cared for you, little coward.”
William never spoke to me except in garbled sentences about chess games and rabbits. Philip’s use of “coward” sliced like a thin blade. Thinking myself above it all, above him, above pain, the shame made me choke.
Only because he was right.
“He knows what we are,” I said. “How to really end us, not like a peasant with stakes. He used a shovel to cut off William’s head.”
“You and Maggie shared a weakness, having grown too dependent on your gifts. Not lions anymore, but snakes, waiting only for the right time to strike. William was no challenge, old and weak. I am still a lion, and I am not weak.”
His words weren’t a hollow boast to impress me. Philip wielded the truth like a weapon. But he barely mentioned Maggie’s name after leaving the hotel last night. I thought his mourning must either be internal or past. Now he wanted revenge. What good would it do? We couldn’t get Maggie back.
“Can’t we just go, Philip? Just run? There’s nothing left here. Killing Dominick won’t change anything.”
“Are you coming, or do I go alone?”
The thought of staying here by myself, wondering, waiting, frightened me more than Dominick did. “I’m coming. But promise you won’t play with him. He’s dangerous. Promise we’ll just do it and go.”
“Whatever you want.” He seemed pleased, like a little boy with a new puppy. He glanced around the old junkyard. “These cars don’t work. We have to find others.”
“Couldn’t we just call a cab?”
A little over an hour later, we pulled up to Maggie’s in a ’79 Chevy pickup with Styx’s “Pieces of Eight” flooding from the speakers—Philip had actually wanted to put in Boston. I was going to have a serious talk with him about music when we had time.
“Didn’t you ever watch MTV?”
“What’s that?”
“Forget it.”
Somebody else must be buying his clothes.
The house looked dark.
Stepping from the car, I cast around with my mind for Wade. He wasn’t here. That would be just like him, though, to come back here instead of running for Portland.
Philip walked out the front gate and came back a moment later. “There’s a dark-haired man two blocks down the street in a silver Mustang.”
“That’s him.” Fear crawled up the back of my neck.
“Good, then he saw us drive up. Do you have a key?”
“A key?” I tried to smile, but my teeth kept clicking. “Mr. Break-and-Enter wants a key?”
“If I know Maggie, this place will be locked like a fortress.”
“Dominick broke in the night he killed William.”
“Then somebody got careless—left a window open maybe.”
Did we? I didn’t think so. But that would be too much to bear. Guilt from William’s death weighed heavily enough.
I had a set of keys, but getting past the multiple locks on the front door still took a few minutes. Philip had been right about that. There was also a dead bolt that someone would normally have to slide back from the inside, but Wade and I left in a hurry the night before last, out the back.
“Okay, we’re in,” I said.
“Leave the door cracked. I want him to waltz right inside.”
“He isn’t that careless.”
“We’ll see.”
“Do you want another shirt? That one’s all stiff.”
We went upstairs to Maggie’s room. I took my coat off and laid it on the bed, but then I watched Philip’s face as he walked in. He disappointed me a little. Instead of gasping in awe at her wondrous creation, he stepped to the window and lifted up yards of satin drapes to expose a blacked-out window laced with steel bars. He stomped his foot once against the floor.
“Good,” he said. “Hardwood floors beneath the carpet, Sheetrock walls. We can sleep in here if we have to. What’s the door reinforced with?”
I’d never even noticed the bars before. Philip must have known Maggie far better than I had. This room made me happy because of its beauty. But we definitely weren’t sleeping here—too high off the ground. So, instead of answering his question, I went to the walk-in closet and found an oversized plaid flannel shirt . . . maybe from Maggie’s baseball player?
“Here, this will fit.”
He wrinkled his nose. “I am not wearing that.”
Was he serious?
“Philip, no one cares how you’re dressed right now. This is soft, and it will fit loose if you don’t tuck it in. You’ll be able to move.” How could anyone with his fashion sense listen to Boston?
With an annoyed look, he began unbuttoning the stiff fabric of his shirt. Curious, I stood watching him undress. I wasn’t disappointed, only surprised. The proportions of his arms, chest, and flat stomach were perfect, like his face. However, four ugly burn marks stood out on his left shoulder, marring the image.
“What happened to you?”
“Eh?”
“Your shoulder.”
“Oh, that. Old scars from when I lived as a mortal. Since we keep whatever form we were turned with, they didn’t heal.”
“You were burned? How?”
“My father, I think. With cigars. That is what Julian told me.”
My stomach clenched. “Your father did that?”
“I think. Almost everything from before being turned is lost, hard to remember.”
“Not for me.”
He nodded. “Or for Julian. He remembers everything.”
I looked at his burns. It was possible he’d blocked his past out if his father abused him. We all think we’re so cool, so above it all. But Edward cashed his own ticket, and Philip existed in a state of self-induced memory loss.
Casting around for Wade again, almost sure he’d come back here, my knees buckled when overwhelming emotions of hate and triumph hit me.
Dominick.
“He’s in the house.”
Philip whirled without putting the flannel shirt on. “How do you know? I don’t hear anything.”
“He’s here.”
“Where?”
Trying to locate him, I met with a mental wall and remembered how completely he could block Wade. “I can’t tell. Downstairs somewhere.”
Philip’s expression stopped me. His eyes were anxious, almost repulsed. “How do you know this?”
“He’s psychic,” I answered in half-truth. “His presence can be felt, like images when you’re feeding.”
“Telepathic?”
“Psychometric. I told you that last night.”
Partial relief crossed his face. What was he afraid of? Before I could push the matter, he slipped out and called down the stairs.
“Dominick, I know you are there. Come and play with me.”
His voice sounded eerie, almost musical. Murdering those teenagers last night had been his idea of a good time. He’d felt no malice, no sense of anger toward them. What would he do to someone he hated? I moved up behind him.
“Are you afraid?” he called. “Used to fighting little girls and old men. Come try your shovel on me.”
No one answered.
Philip’s strength and speed made him arrogant; at least I thought so. Dominick fought with more than guns and shovels. He knew about us. He had touched and absorbed all the antiques and personal possessions at Edward’s, their secrets spilled on the floor like aged wine. What we feared. How we died. He knew these things.
“Philip, come away from the banister,” I begged.
Before he could answer me, Dom’s first shot rang out. Long and loud, like dynamite. The entire left side of Philip’s throat exploded, spraying near-black blood across the hallway. The next shot sounded almost instantaneously. It missed.
“You like games?” a deep voice echoed up. “How was that?”
Philip collapsed on the carpet, awake but stunned, his perfect mouth twisting in surprise. Running footsteps pounded up the stairs. Dominick’s shadow grew large on the wall.
I panicked.
More through instinct than intent, I tried pushing my thoughts inside his mind, and I emanated pictures of Culker’s death, Maggie drinking from the drifter near Blue Jack’s, the tattoo artist sinking into Union Bay. I tried to force every ugly, violent image I could summon straight into Dominick’s head, past his wall, past his mental block, into his consciousness. And I got through.
He screamed.
I fired out with memories of ripped throats and dead bodies with staring eyes . . . and I could feel that my forced invasion hurt him. I tried to hurt him more.
I still couldn’t see him, but listened to him scream while I imagined my fingernails clawing, scratching, tearing at his brain . . . all my attention focused on his sound until it softened to a whimper.
Then I let him go and came back to myself—but only because I was certain he was down, and because I had to help Philip.
Turning quickly, I stumbled at the sight of an empty carpet. Philip had disappeared.
“Philip?”
“Don’t move.”
Dominick’s sweating, gasping form stood at the top of the stairs. I was stunned to see him on his feet after what I’d just done to him. He looked dirty and smelled of stale perspiration. Greasy, outgrown black hair hung around his glazed eyes. He pointed a .357 revolver at me. Without waiting for him to fire, I bolted for the bedroom and paused just inside. He blurred across the threshold, his arm stick-straight, pointing the gun rapidly to the right, then the left. I slammed the door behind us and bolted it.
Focusing hard, I sent my impressions of this room—all the treasures in this small piece of the world—flooding into him. These mental attacks were exhausting me, but this was all I had. Images of lace fans, silver combs, perfume bottles, and cream satin soaked into his brain like water through sand. I was hoping to lose him in the images of Maggie’s soft possessions, blinding him to everything else, so even if he gained coherence he might not know what was true or created.
He only had four bullets left in the gun.
“Aren’t you tired?” I whispered. “Why don’t you sleep?”
He fired twice more, the gun wavering in his hands. Maybe I could overwhelm him enough to make him drop it. His legs trembled.
“Close your eyes, Dom. Look at yourself in the darkness. You’re alone. You have no one, not even Wade anymore.” I dropped my voice even lower and whispered, “And you’re so tired. Just close your eyes.”
It was difficult to invade his mind, speak to him, and try to gauge the distance between us at the same time.
With a strength of will greater than my own, he gathered his thoughts and tried to force me out. Rage replaced his confusion, and he pointed the gun right at me. I saw my shoulder explode before hearing the shot or even realizing what had happened. It didn’t hurt much, not like real pain, but the floor rushed up anyway.
His hand buried itself in the back of my hair, lifting me. Through the haze I tried to focus psychically again, but he smashed the gun handle into my jaw.
“You do that again and I’ll end this right here,” he whispered.
Rancid breath drifted into my nostrils. Why didn’t he, then? Holding me by the neck with one hand, he opened the door and dragged me back into the hallway, to the banister.
“Call out to your friend,” he said.
“No.”
“Do it now!”
“I don’t care what you do.”
Jerking me back, he shoved the gun in his jeans and pulled a machete from a sheath under his jacket.
“Get out here now,” he yelled to Philip. “Or her head flies down the stairs by itself.”
My gift was useless, as Maggie’s had been. Dominick’s vision of reality had shifted so far from sanity that he viewed us as all the world’s evil. If he could just erase us, everything else would fall neatly into place. Poor thing.
Looking up at his unshaven face, I said, “No matter what you do to me, he’s never going to let you out of here.”
“Shut up. You’re the center of all this.”
“I’m nothing.”
“That’s bullshit. Who’s the guy with you?”
“His shirt’s lying on Maggie’s bed. Why don’t you go in and touch it?”
That twisted his mouth into anger, and he let go of my hair long enough to slap me. Fool. I hit the floor, and my foot shot out to crack his kneecap. The pop reminded me of the sound from an overshaken champagne bottle.
He grunted and buckled. My left shoulder didn’t work at all, but I kicked out again at his cheekbone and then tried to scramble away.
An iron grip clasped my ankle, and then somehow he was up over the top of me, snarling and using his weight. Steel glinted off ceiling lights. The blade was coming down.
Just like Maggie.
But it never connected. As though he could fly, his body floated upward. For a moment I thought I was already dead or hallucinating. Then Philip’s bare arms shifted into view as he finished raising Dominick and threw him against the hallway wall.
Relief flooded my brain until I got a good look at Philip. The recently opened veins of his throat had closed off, but his chest and shoulders were covered in blood. Our regenerative powers work quickly, but how much life force had he lost first?
Dominick bounced off the wall and landed with a gasp. Dropping the machete, he grabbed the gun again.
“Shoot me,” Philip hissed.
The dark ex-cop aimed for his neck and fired again, but Philip jumped up to catch the bullet square in the chest. “You’re empty. I’ve been counting.”
Anybody—anybody but Dom—would have slobbered and groveled and begged. Maybe he knew we possessed no mercy. Maybe he was just more like us than I cared to admit. But he grasped the machete again and said, “Then come and get me.”
His right leg wouldn’t hold him. I must have shattered his kneecap. The whole scene reminded me of this T-shirt Edward once gave me, depicting a hawk swooping down on a cartoon mouse with its tiny middle finger up. The caption read, “Last Great Act of Defiance.”
Dominick wasn’t a mouse—far from it. But he was already dead, and I’m sure he knew it.
Philip moved so fast nobody even got cut. He slapped the machete out of Dominick’s hand and then grabbed him, lifting him into the air. Stepping forward, Philip threw his heavy burden over the banister.
“Just kill him,” I whispered. “You promised you wouldn’t do this.”
A dull thud sounded from below as Dominick hit the floor. Philip hopped over the banister himself, and I moved up to see him land in a comfortable crouch. Dominick tried crawling on one elbow toward the front door.
Something in my voice must have gotten through to Philip. He could have kept this horror show going another hour, but he didn’t. After breaking a leg off one of the living room chairs, he walked over and rammed it through Dominick’s broad back, into his heart, as a peasant would stake a wounded vampire. The broken, crawling form on the floor didn’t even cry out. It just stopped moving.
I turned away from the railing and went downstairs, feeling no relief now, no sense of triumph, only a dim ache that hadn’t quite registered yet. My handsome, blood-covered friend stumbled about the room, staring at his mangled victim. Maybe no mortal had ever fought back like that before.
“I did try to warn you, Philip, to tell you.”
He looked up at me with liquid eyes—no pleasure, no triumph either. For some reason that pleased me. Perhaps Philip might have wept over Thorne’s grave, too. Perhaps he was beginning to understand the sorrow of needless waste.
Instead of answering me, he just kept weaving back and forth like a jack-in-the-box.
“What’s wrong?”
Then I noticed patches of flesh peeking through the blood on his chest. It wasn’t just pale anymore, but nearly white. Reaching out, I caught him before he fell.
“Try to get your arm around my neck,” I said.
The basement bedroom wasn’t far, but I couldn’t carry him. He shouldn’t have jumped off the banister. It was a waste of energy. It seemed to take hours to drag him downstairs through the cellar, his head bobbing up and down with weakness. Would this ever be over? Would we ever get on a plane and just leave this nightmare behind? Was he dying?
No, I pushed that thought away while finally laying him on the mattress in Maggie’s basement. He couldn’t die. We weren’t destroyed by mere wounds.
“Can you talk? Tell me what to do?”
“Blood,” he mumbled.
Long ago Edward told me that vampires who refused or were unable to hunt fell into agonized paralysis, forever immortal, forever starving. Half of Philip’s throat had been blown away. That he could speak at all amazed me. Maybe he’d simply lost too much life force.
“What do I do?”
“Like Edward.”
My own shoulder wound had sealed itself and was regenerating slowly. But I’d been bleeding, too. “Don’t go to sleep. Keep your eyes open.”
I ran up the stairs and down the hall. Dominick’s body was in the same broken position as before—like a filthy G. I. Joe. After pulling the stake from his back, I turned him over. Dead eyes stared up into nothing.
Would this even work? I’d never fed on a corpse, but he’d only been dead a few moments. Maybe I could still draw residual life force.
I drove my teeth into his neck. No pictures or visions or scenes from his life touched me. Nothing. But I felt something, some strength flowing from his blood . . . though it was fading fast.
After a few minutes I couldn’t take any more and left him lying there.
His empty gun was still upstairs, and his ID was in his pocket. I didn’t bother taking either one. Maggie was missing, and he’d recently gone rogue. It could be a while before anyone even found him, and then the police would be lost attempting to unravel what happened. Philip and I would be long gone by then.
Even in death, Dominic had lost. And who would mourn him? Would Wade?
Hurrying back to the cellar took only seconds this time. Philip’s eyelids fluttered. He looked so pale lying there. I moved to the mattress and crawled over beside him. Opening my wrist savagely, I put it in his mouth.
“Bite down.”
Having long since put aside the feeling of Julian’s lips burning and crisping my neck, pain stunned me blind when Philip drew down. It hurt far worse than being shot. After about thirty seconds, he suddenly lashed out with his right hand and grabbed the back of my head, pulling me down beside him, still sucking hard on my wrist. His amber eyes were wide . . . wild. I didn’t struggle. I knew he was just hungry and desperate. Then slowly, the fire evened out and grew bearable. Had my body still been human, I might have stroked his cheek and comforted him. Those memories lingered, but not the ability to enact them.
Instead, I whispered in his ear, “Like Edward.”
chapter 21
The next night, my eyes opened to the sight of Philip’s red flaked chest. Where were we? Peeling my hair off his body, I felt brittle and light, like Chinese paper. Maggie’s cellar surrounded us.
I must have passed out on Philip’s shoulder. He was a mess.
Dominick lay dead upstairs.
“Philip?”
Amber eyes flickered faintly. “Where . . . ?”
“The basement. Your throat looks better.” I smiled weakly. “It’s really over.”
He pushed himself up off the mattress, lost and disoriented. “Are you hurt? Your skin is too white.”
“No, I’m okay. The bullet went through my shoulder. I just couldn’t get you to stop feeding once you’d started.”
“Once I . . . ?”
Recent events must have flooded back because he suddenly grew embarrassed and turned away. “We should get cleaned up.”
Nodding, I tried to follow. My bones made hollow cracking sounds.
“I’m going to need to hunt pretty soon,” I said.
“Can you walk?” he asked, turning back.
“Maybe. Give me a sec.”
Struggling up, I limped after him for the stairs. We both ignored Dominick’s cold body and headed for the nearest bathroom.
“We don’t have to look perfect,” Philip said. “Just good enough to get around in public.”
“You’re the vain one, baby, not me.”
“Get in the shower.”
Pulling my shirt over my head seemed an effort. “Could you go to Maggie’s room and find me something to wear? I’m not up to climbing more stairs.”
“Yeah, be right back.”
I finished undressing and stood beneath a steaming spray of water. Once all the dried blood had been washed away, my shoulder sported only an inch-wide hole. Our bodies hold together well. A bullet from a .357 Magnum should have taken my shoulder off. The wound had been much larger last night, though. I was regenerating quickly, my undead condition striving to resume the form it had been turned in—a blessing and a curse. We never change.
Philip came back in and started messing around with Maggie’s bottles and hand mirrors. I could hear him outside the shower curtain. Maybe he was making a place to lay my clothes, but he was still being far less talkative than usual. He’d never been shot before—that was pretty clear—never seriously injured by a mortal. He thought himself a lion, indestructible, and I had fed him from my wrist. Not that it really mattered anymore. We were free from Dominick. Perhaps Philip would listen to me a little better in the future. I stepped out of the shower.
“Your turn.”
He handed me a towel. “I brought you a dress. Will that do?”
I would have preferred a clean pair of jeans, but the dress was simple enough, black and sleeveless.
“Designer?” I joked.
“Yves Saint Laurent.”
“You’re serious? You actually looked at the label?”
“Don’t you?”
Teasing him made the soreness in my arms less noticeable. I hadn’t felt this weak since getting off that ship at Southampton. Philip stepped past me into the shower, his expression troubled.
“Eleisha?”
“Mmmmm?”
I got dressed, noticing he’d laid out his own pants and the flannel shirt I’d given him the night before. Maybe he couldn’t find anything else that fit.
Behind the curtain, he stayed silent, not finishing his question, probably searching for words long forgotten.
“It’s all right,” I said. “You don’t have to say anything. Let’s just finish up and book a flight.”
“Not yet. Not tonight.”
I went cold. “What?”
“Julian’s in the country by now, probably in this city. We can’t leave, or he’ll think we’re running.”
“We are running! Is that a news flash to you? No way. There’s no way I’m facing down Julian. And look at you. You couldn’t take out a cat like that.”
“There won’t be a fight if we face him. We don’t have to go anywhere, except maybe find a hotel room. I know his cell phone number. He’ll come to us. Honor demands he look into this. But if not for Katherine, William would have died years ago. Julian may be pleased his abomination is gone.”
“William wasn’t an abomination.”
“We just tell Julian I need to help you for a while,” Philip said. “He’ll believe that. He already thinks of you as crippled, that you can’t function alone. But he sees you as no threat.”
Could it be that simple? Could Philip convince Julian to leave me in peace?
“What if he wants me dead anyway?”
Sensing victory, Philip smiled slightly and shrugged. “I don’t know. We could use Dominick’s big gun. Another inch to the right, and I might have flown off to hell.”
“That isn’t funny.”
Two hours later, we checked into the Bellevue Red Lion and settled into an attractive suite of soft tans and yellows—but too many windows with thin drapes. I ordered extra blankets and hung them carefully over the curtain rods.
Philip might have been shaken by his near-death experience, but he considered the event a fluke. I had been hoping he’d let me rent a car and drive fifty-five to the hotel. No dice. He ripped off an old Charger right in front of Maggie’s house and ran two stop signs in the first mile. When a policeman flashed his siren, Philip stopped, knocked the officer unconscious, pulled his body inside the car, and told me to feed as if we were at a McDonald’s drive-through window. This all took place on a busy downtown street. The really weird part was that nobody else stopped or even noticed.
My companion’s disturbing nature seemed a small thing tonight, though.
Now that we’d checked into the hotel, there was only one thing left to do.
Philip made a quiet—very short—phone call to Julian. He spoke in French, but I picked up a few words . . . like the name of our hotel.
Torn between true freedom and fear of how it might be achieved, I tried not to listen while I paced about the hotel suite, fussing over the drapes.
“Is he coming?” I asked once Philip hung up.
“Soon.”
I glanced away, not sure whether to be frightened or relieved.
“You know,” Philip said suddenly, “once we settle this matter with Julian, we don’t have to go up north. We could go to France.”
“Even Paris?”
“Anywhere.”
I’d never been to Paris. The thought calmed me, made me smile. “What’s it like?”
“Good hunting. Few rules.” He seemed about to go on when something unreadable shifted his expression.
“What’s wrong?”
He turned pale, his features twisted, and he stumbled on an ottoman. Before I could move to help, Wade pushed inside my head.
Where are you, Leisha?
Stay away! I’m not alone.
Philip regained composure and snarled, then bolted for the door. I darted in front of it, blocking his exit. “Wait. Just listen to me.”
“That’s your little pet, isn’t it? You’ve been lying! He’s completely psychic, isn’t he?”
“Not like it seems.”
“That black-haired cop was psychometric, eh? And I believed you. You’ve been telling this little friend of yours all about us, haven’t you?”
“No, and I didn’t lie. But if you had known Wade could read minds, you would have killed him that first night.”
“Of course! As you should have!”
“He helped me. Just meet him. Just talk to him.”
“You aren’t serious.”
“Please don’t hurt him. He aimed a gun at his partner for me.”
“Well, isn’t that what you do? Get weak-minded men to slay dragons for you?”
Cold, cruel, and inhuman, Philip’s eyes flashed rage at me. He possessed so many different sides. Could I ever keep up? This was a worst-case scenario, defending one person who mattered from another person who mattered.
Someone knocked.
My legs froze. “Wade, is that you?”
“Open the door.”
Philip brushed past me, jerked the door open, and grasped Wade’s throat. This was too much.
“Philip, I fed you last night!”
He stopped, hand now up in Wade’s white-blond hair.
“Don’t do it,” I said. “Just let him in. For me.”
He stepped back slowly, as though with great effort. I knew the only thing holding him back was his strange desire that I remain in his company. The room felt small with all three of us standing in it.
A wave of anger swept through me. What did Wade think he was doing?
“You ditched me without a word,” he spat.
Incredible. With a blood-crazed six-foot vampire standing right next to him, he wanted to argue about forgotten good-byes?
“Is that what you’re here for?” I asked. “An explanation?”
“To start, yes.”
“After everything I’ve done to try and save you? Who was stupid enough to give you a PhD?”
Our familiarity disconcerted Philip. Unlike Maggie, he’d probably never spent more than a few hours with any one mortal. “Your partner’s dead,” he snapped. “Staked through the heart. Quite poetic.”
Wade didn’t even flinch. “I know. I just buried him.”
“Where?” Philip asked.
“In Maggie’s backyard, behind the trees. I buried his gun, too, and I washed the living room floor. Then I moved his car four miles away.”
“What possible reason could you have?”
“Eleisha.”
I flinched. I had no response to Wade’s actions. My instinct had been to leave the body on Maggie’s floor and let the police try to figure out what happened after we left the country. Maybe Wade was right to bury the evidence? It also occurred to me that Wade himself would certainly be picked up for questioning . . . and I had not thought of that before. So was he working to save himself or me?
Looking up at his face . . . I believed he was protecting me.
But no one asked for his help. No one asked him to hang around and clean up my mess. And it must have hurt to see Dominick like that. Nevertheless, he’d done it, and now he was standing up to Philip—not an easy feat.
“If you’ve been at the house burying Dominick all this time,” I asked, “how did you find us just now?”
He hesitated. “How much does golden boy know?”
That struck me as half humorous, half dangerous. “His name is Philip, and I wish he knew you a lot better than he does.”
Philip’s eyes softened, some of the cruelty fading. “This won’t work, little one. He has to die. You know that.”
“No, he doesn’t. Just sit down on the couch, both of you.” I was desperate. “Wade, let him read your past, what Dom used to be like. Show him how, like you showed me.”
Both of them jumped slightly, stunned speechless. I looked to Wade. “Burying Dominick means nothing. No one asked you to do that. But do this for me. Please, do this thing for me.”
Without a word, he walked to the couch. I almost sagged in relief.
But instead, I whirled back around. “Philip, it’s easy. You don’t have to touch him. Just sit down and look inside his head.”
“No,” he said harshly. “You kill him, or I will.”
“Just look at his thoughts!”
“Why?”
“Because if you do, I won’t care what happens next. If you do this for me, I’ll let you tear his throat out and not blame or hate you.”
He tensed, staring down at me uncertainly. I’d just offered him the one thing he wanted.
This was a bet, a gambit on my part. If some higher power had let me choose any two companions in the world, I must admit my choices would have been Edward and Maggie. But they were gone. Mourning or missing them didn’t help. Somehow I thought if Philip became psychically involved with Wade—and vice versa—the two of them might be okay together, not friends exactly, but not enemies.
Besides, Philip needed a glimpse of humanity. He had long since stopped thinking of mortals as sentient beings, viewing them as little more than toys in his personal playground.
“You ask too much,” he said quietly, “more than you know.”
“I won’t enter your thoughts,” Wade said. “And if your ability works like Eleisha’s, you’ll be able to block me after the first second or two anyway.”
“Don’t speak to me until asked.” Philip wouldn’t even look at him. “You should have been dead five minutes ago.”
This was getting us nowhere. What was Philip so afraid of? I’d known him only three days—an intense three days. He didn’t strike me as the type to back away from something new. Last night I’d actually used my psychic ability as a weapon against Dominick. Until experimenting with Wade, a mental attack would never have occurred to me. This new gift could be useful. But for some reason, instinctive perhaps, I hadn’t told Philip the extent of my growing telepathy, or even mentioned it to him. Why?
“Do this one thing for me,” I repeated. “Please.”
“Afterward, when I kill him, you won’t hate me? Once we see Julian, you’ll forget all this and come to France?”
“Yes.”
How did Wade feel, hearing his life discussed as a bargaining chip? His face was unreadable.
Philip walked slowly to the couch and sat down, looking disgusted and uncomfortable. “What do I do?”
“Look at me,” Wade answered. “Imagine your eyes are fingers pushing inside my head, searching for pictures.”
They stopped speaking. With rapt interest, I watched Philip’s face. Could he do it?
Expecting both their expressions to go blank, I was stunned when Wade began crying. Philip, of course, had no tear ducts, but a sobbing choke escaped his mouth. Is this what Wade and I had done while lost down histories past? Did we feel each experience in our forgotten bodies?
Their faces both shifted into faint smiles. What were they seeing now? Perhaps I was wrong to observe this private exchange. Wade had unselfishly given up the core of his most hidden self simply because I asked him to.
Telling myself every few moments to get up and leave them alone, I stood there for over an hour, gauging every flicker, every twitch, wondering what memory had passed by.
A Japanese vase overflowing with freshly cut red and yellow flowers sat on the table behind them. Wade’s near-white hair contrasted sharply against the bright tones, and Philip’s blended perfectly. Bizarre pair, these two men. One ruled by unrealistic concepts of right and wrong, the other by incomprehensible physical drives. Maggie would have laughed at them.
Without warning, Wade grabbed Philip’s wrist and looked away.
“No more. It hurts.”
Instead of jerking his hand back, Philip sat with chattering teeth. I went over and crouched by his leg. “Do you see now? You won’t hurt him?”
“Such an existence,” he whispered. “Spending every day in the same building. Typing on computers . . . walking in the sunlight. I’d forgotten what the sun looks like.”
“That felt different than melding with Eleisha,” Wade said, still trying to get his breath. “I kept showing you darker emotions, uglier scenes.”
Philip carefully drew his wrist away. “A sad life. Alone, like us.” He gazed down at me. “But we have to run now. No more truce with Julian.”
I blinked, confused. “You said he’d let me go.”
“Not now,” Philip answered. “If he finds us now, we are all lost . . . and your pet.”
Too much. Too fast. I thought to solve Philip’s fear, his hatred. How could things be worse? “What are you saying?”
“A nightmare from the past, something long over. When I sought you out, wondered about the company of my own kind again, I had doubts. Would my gift affect you? Would you even want me? Could I hunt with someone else? But not this, never this.”
“Never what?”
He looked so sad, defeated. I hated it. Philip feared no one, not even Dominick. Why was he doing this?
“Can you see inside of me?” he said. “Read my thoughts?”
“I don’t know. Can’t you just tell me what’s wrong?”
He turned to Wade, almost politely. “I have to show Eleisha something private. Will you go into the bedroom for a while?”
Wade opened his mouth as if to argue and then closed it. Keeping secrets from him seemed pointless. He knew so much already. But his manner with Philip had changed drastically since an hour ago. Finally, he nodded. “Call out when you’re finished.”
“Yes.”
I remember noticing that Wade was wearing a thick canvas jacket—probably something he’d bought on his shopping excursion— and he hadn’t taken it off. Since the room was warm, I thought this odd, but events were moving so quickly, I never bothered asking about it.
The bedroom door clicked shut behind him.
Philip pulled me up to the couch, and I turned all my attention to him. Not waiting for words, I slipped inside his eyes, finding access almost too easy.
chapter 22
Philip
I can’t! Why can’t I do it?”
Julian’s anguished voice echoed off cold library walls. The winter of 1825 proved harsh, although Philip seldom worried about things like weather. He didn’t need fire or warmth, only blood. At first the idea of spending December in Harfleur with his master, Angelo, and his undead brothers pleased Philip. But Julian’s growing discontent dampened this visit, making him wish he’d remained in Gascony with Maggie.
“Why do you bother?” he asked, growing bored. “It’s only a candlestick.”
Julian often sat for hours at a time at their aged oak table, trying to move various items with his mind. “Because John developed his psychic powers within months of being turned,” he answered, “by receiving thoughts from Master Angelo. That is how our mental powers develop, through contact with our makers and with other vampires . . . but I have nothing. Angelo has tried with me, but even after all this time, I have no power.”
“Ridiculous,” Philip answered, shaking his head. “Your gift is strong.”
“Against mortals, not against other vampires.”
This made no sense to Philip. Why would any of them need a defense against each other? Julian’s gift for inducing fear was overwhelming. Philip thought it much more useful than telepathy.
“I never developed psychic powers either,” he said.
“You’re different. You cannot even remember your mortal life.”
“I don’t care.”
“You don’t care, Philip? Not a bit of psychic power in you, and you truly don’t care?”
“Why should I? I’m pleased with my gift.”
“Only because you’re vain, shallow, and conceited. Get out and leave me alone.”
Philip knew they all thought him simple because he was the youngest and had no passion for their histories or studies or dusty old books. Blood mattered. And Julian entertained the greatest gift of them all. Why should he pine so pitifully over this psychic ability of John’s? Fear was a better weapon than telepathy or telekinesis—at least for hunting.
Master Angelo had chosen the three of them because they were so different from each other. “My sons,” he called them. “Feed and explore and live forever.”
Wasn’t that enough? Shouldn’t that be enough for anyone?
This library was on the main floor of Angelo’s stone fortress. An empty hearth stood in the back wall, but shelves of faded, leather- or clothbound books lined the other three. A large oak table stood near the hearth, surrounded by four chairs. Philip never sat in his chair, as he’d never liked this room and he hated sitting for more than a few moments.
Julian focused his brooding gaze on the candle again, so Philip turned and walked away.
He moved up the corridor, slipped through a narrow doorway, and went downstairs to find John reading a book in the wine cellar. Three fat candles illuminated the casks and bottles stretching back into darkness beyond their light’s reach.
“Isn’t anyone going hunting tonight?” Philip said. “It’s snowing. We should be outside chasing carolers.”
John looked up through a lock of uncombed, sandy-blond hair. He was a large man with dark blue eyes and ever-present stubble on his strong jaw. “Why don’t you take Julian? He’s not been out for a week.”
“He’s still staring at that candlestick. Can’t you talk to him?”
“Master Angelo tried last night. Don’t worry. It’s just a phase. If you had half a brain in that pretty head, you’d want more power, too.”
“Well, thank God I don’t,” Philip said. “Tell me what I’m thinking right now.”
John concentrated briefly and then threw the book at him. “You’re thinking I’m a stuffy old porcupine for sitting in this chair reading when I should be outside running in the snow with you.”
“Too right.”
Since he had no memories of mortal life, Philip didn’t understand concepts like social tension between the French, Welsh, and Scottish. John McCrugger had simply always been there, a permanent fixture, good-natured, oversized, and unwashed.
“You’re so simple, Philip,” he said. “Such a purist. No wonder Angelo loves you.”
“Love is for mortals and sheep, not Angelo. Get off that chair and come outside.”
Philip tried to duck right, but John caught the back of his neck and shoved his body against the ground, pushing his face into the cold, crisp snow. Philip was faster on his feet, but once John got a grip, the game was over.
“Give up. You’re done for,” the Scotsman said, laughing. “Or I’ll grind that pretty face blue.”
Philip arched his back and tried unsuccessfully to break away. “All right, I give.”
“You won’t kick me?”
“No.”
After one last shove, John took his hand away. Philip, of course, twisted around instantly and kicked up hard enough to snap his companion’s jaw. “Can’t you tell when I’m lying?”
John roared and lunged for him again, but he was off and running for the nearest tree. These were good times. It seemed strange that both his brothers and his master tended to change once they were alone with him, dropping all that intellectual nonsense and living like real hunters, wild and strong. John most of all . . . Julian least of all.
“Climb up and get me!” Philip called from a low branch, knowing John was no climber.
“You can’t stay up there forever. Might as well come down now and let me break that foot.”
“I think not.” Philip’s mind switched focus so quickly he often frustrated people. “Let’s go into town. I’m hungry.”
“How could you possibly be hungry? You fed last night.”
Philip dropped to the ground. “I’ll race you.”
“No, if you really want to go that far, we should saddle the horses.”
“All right, but my horse is faster than yours.”
Wrestling match forgotten, they were soon flying through the icy air down the road toward Harfleur proper. Angelo’s winter home stood four miles away from the city, giving him easy access without being too close. The muscles of Philip’s horse felt solid yet fluid beneath his knees. He liked his bay mare, Kayli. The trip from Gascony would have been lonely without her. He didn’t function well without company.
“Slow down,” John called.
Reining Kayli down to a walk, Philip swiveled his head back. “What’s wrong?”
“Nothing, it’s still early and a crisp night. I thought we might talk awhile.”
“Talk?”
Their horses fell into step along the snow-packed road. “I was just watching you ride,” John said. “Strange how you remember things like riding and where to grow the best grapes, how to speak both French and English, yet you don’t recall anything of your mortal life.”
Philip shifted in his saddle, bored already. “That’s old hat.”
“You couldn’t even speak at first, not at all. Frightened Angelo pale. You were like a newborn babe. Did you know I met you once, before he turned you?”
“You did?” Philip was suddenly interested. “What was I like?”
“Different than you are now. Almost timid. The idea of filling your father’s shoes as marquis seemed a death sentence. When Angelo offered you a way out, you jumped on it.”
“Angelo asked me?”
“Of course he did. It was Julian’s idea. Angelo wanted three sons, you know.”
Philip did know. In fact, he knew more than his brothers suspected. Not that they would have minded; they simply viewed him as mentally deficient. John had been turned in 1801, Julian in 1818, both emerging into the undead world exactly as Angelo wanted them.
But Philip woke up in darkness, unable to communicate, yet terrified to be alone for fear that without someone else in the room to prove his existence, he might disappear. Then Angelo showed him how to hunt, and he found purpose. Language came back to him slowly, and the memory of a face, ivory with brown eyes and chocolate hair.
“Why did you turn Edward?” Philip asked suddenly.
“To see if I could,” John answered. “And because he’s the right type.”
“Did Angelo mind?”
“No.”
“Then why was he so angry when I turned Maggie?”
“Because you were too young and incapable of teaching her. And you might have damaged yourself. You aren’t like the rest of us, you know.” John’s broad face clouded slightly. “Promise not to laugh if I tell you something?”
“I’d never laugh, just kick you in the face.”
“No . . . listen. I’ve been having dreams lately.”
“Dreams? Have you told Angelo?”
“No, but they might not be dreams, more like premonitions. Something dark hides on the edge of my vision. I can almost see it, but not quite.”
The switch in topics disturbed Philip. John shouldn’t be discussing this with him. He knew nothing of dreams or visions. And anyway, this psychic nonsense bored him beyond words. They ought to race again.
“Something is coming,” John said with his eyes fixed on empty space. “I don’t know what, and I can’t stop it. But it is coming.”
Too much. Philip kneed Kayli into motion. She leapt forward, kicking up small clods of loose snow. A second later, he heard John coming up behind, and he smiled into the wind.
At the Wayside Inn, Philip reveled in the scent of pipe smoke along with the pleasant aroma of warmth and life. A human smorgasbord to choose from. After they had stabled their horses, John’s dark mood passed away, leaving his usual good-natured self in its wake.
Indoor hunting was best for winter nights. Inns like the Wayside teemed with customers who sought out company, wine, and hot food. Round barmaids with reddened cheeks maneuvered trays of cups and tin plates among sweat-scented bodies and laughing faces.
“This is a fine tavern,” John commented. “See the woodwork on that door?” He leaned back in contentment. “I like the scents and the wine and the way everyone tolerates each other because there’s nowhere else to go in this weather.”
Philip nodded. “Good hunting.”
“Oh, will you look around?” John said. “Listen with your mind. Most of these people haven’t two francs to their name, and everyone’s still excited about Christmas.”
“What is that?”
“You don’t remember?”
“No.”
“It’s a celebration, a religious holiday. Perhaps your family didn’t practice such things. I wouldn’t be surprised. Your father is the coldest man I’ve ever met.”
“My father?”
“He’s a bastard. I saw your shoulder once. Those burns. You panicked a few nights after being turned. I tried to hold you down and your shirt ripped. Angelo thinks you’re such a mystery, but I told him to use his mind. You don’t remember anything because it’s too black.”
“Do you think I care? None of that matters. Let us hunt now. We have forever to talk.”
“Can you feel anything? Anything at all?”
The din around them grew louder. Philip leaned forward. “I feel like hunting.”
A bit of light left John’s eyes. He nodded with a sad smile. “Of course. Who have you picked out this time?”
“Those two whores by the bar. See them? I want the one in the green dress. She’s been staring at me.”
“How strange,” John whispered in a cynical tone, “that she should be staring at you. I’ve often wondered how someone with your face can think only of blood.”
“What would you do if you had my face?”
“Do you really want to know?”
“Yes.”
“Well, for one, I wouldn’t have joined with Angelo. I’d have lived on as a mortal searching the world for that one perfect love, who adored me for myself, yet thought herself lucky that my soul and mind were housed in such a form.”
“Sickening. You would not.”
“Oh, yes, I would.”
“I’m sorry I asked you.”
Philip used his beauty at every opportunity, and then despised those who succumbed to it. Fools. If women were taken in by long, red-brown hair, a tall form, and ivory skin, that was their weakness—part of the game.
“Here they come,” he said.
The woman in green looked about twenty-four, with dull brown hair and too much rouge. Her companion was a dark blonde in cheap blue velvet. Philip knew a lot about prostitutes. Many of them were alcoholics. Most of them had several children they couldn’t afford to feed, and nearly all of them hated men no matter how much they smiled. He liked them because they were easy to draw off alone.
“Buy us a drink?” the blonde asked.
“Depends,” John answered. “How much will it cost me?”
“No need to worry about that yet.” She flashed him an almost genuine smile and sat down. John wasn’t handsome, but Philip always marveled at the number of women who fell into comfortable conversation with the oversized Scotsman. This was John’s gift. In his presence, all worries faded and vanished. He put everyone’s mind at ease.
Philip, on the other hand, was no master with words, and used his foot to push a chair out for the woman in green.
“You asking me to sit down?” she said.
“If you like.”
She had eyes like glass and a false laugh, but not many wrinkles from wear and no visible scars. “What’s a fine gentleman like you doing here?”
“Getting out of the cold. Our horses were tired, so we decided to stop.”
“Travelers?”
“Yes, on our way to Nantes.”
“Staying the night?”
“Looks like we’ll have to.”
This was an old game, one she’d played a thousand times. “I have a warm place where you can sleep. Won’t cost you much.”
“Will you wait outside for a moment?” He pushed a small pouch into her hand. “I need to speak with my friend.”
Surprised at her own good fortune, landing a generous young man so easily, she nodded and stepped out the door. Philip waited a bit, then went out after her. Being seen leaving with her might cause him problems later. Her companion wasn’t a concern since she’d be dead within the hour as well. He had been ordered to play by Angelo’s rules when it came to hunting.
“My name is Camille,” the woman said when he came out.
“Where do you live?”
She led him down ice-covered streets, past dingy buildings to the oldest part of Harfleur. “I have only one room,” she said. “But there’s a stove and coal.”
Her home was small, on the ground floor, but Philip cared nothing for aesthetics. She lit a candle and the dark room came alive with flickering shadows across dirty walls. “Do you want a drink, sir?”
“No.”
“What’s in Nantes?”
“Business.”
He didn’t want to talk. Words were pointless. She took off her cloak and dropped it on a chair. Walking past the candle, he grasped her neck with one hand and jerked open the front of her dress with the other.
“Careful,” she whispered, not startled by his actions. “Don’t rip it.”
Her mouth moved up to his, and he kissed her. Although never admitting the fact to John or Julian, he liked affection from some of his victims. It felt good to put his lips against warm flesh and let the hunger build, feel the blood with his tongue just below their skin’s surface, knowing he had only to take it.
Her hands pulled off his cloak and tugged at his clothes, while she made small, gasping sounds. Candlelight danced across his cheek. He stopped long enough to take his shirt off and pin her down onto the bed, pushing the dress below her shoulders to expose large, white breasts that tasted good in his mouth.
Sometimes he took them quickly, killing swiftly before they even knew death had arrived. Sometimes he took longer, letting them flail and beg in a useless attempt to invoke his pity. How they died changed the pictures that flowed into him along with their blood. It all depended on his mood.
Events from tonight had driven his mind into forced motion. Julian’s growing dissatisfaction and John’s visions filled his thoughts with unease. He wanted to forget.
Camille writhed beneath him, trying to raise her heavy skirts. He moved up, crushing her breasts with his chest, to kiss her mouth again. Slowly, inch by inch, his lips brushed down her cheek with feather breaths to her jawline, to her throat. He bit down gently on the top layers, not puncturing deeply, just enough to taste. She stiffened slightly.
“Sir, don’t do that. I know you paid me well, but—”
He struck hard, like lightning, not for the jugular, but slashing a wound big enough to drink through. She screamed, pushing at his chest. Oblivious, he ignored her voice. Women screamed in the night all the time. Nobody cared.
Images of lying beneath many men entered his head.
“Don’t.” She was sobbing now. “Please.”
He felt nothing beyond the need to forget, and so he bit deep enough to absorb her life force completely. Pictures of inns and wine and flushed faces passed by him. A kind man named Pierre who was already married. A pale girl named Katrina who came from the east, but who shared clothes and food and remembered how to laugh. The birth of a child who died. Being beaten with a riding crop. Smothering an old man who slept and taking his purse.
Camille’s arms ceased flailing. Her heart stopped beating. Philip raised his head to look at her, flesh torn and shredded, black-red liquid seeping down her collarbone, eyes locked on the filthy ceiling. She had helped him to forget, at least for a little while.
Getting up, he used her chipped washbasin to rinse himself clean, and then put his shirt back on. Would John be finished by now? Perhaps not. He always spent more time wining and dining his victims than Philip could even comprehend. Whatever did they talk about?
Leaving Camille’s body on the bed where it lay, he picked up his cloak and stepped outside into the sharp air. The temperature had dropped, but Philip knew it would keep going down until dawn, part of their inverted world. Mortals felt the temperature rise all day. Undeads felt it drop all night. Master Angelo taught him that as a defense mechanism. “Never forget the passing time, my son. Watch your sky and feel your air.” Good advice. Angelo knew many things.
Philip quickly moved down the empty streets, back to the Wayside Inn. Although the hour neared two o’clock, a mass of people still milled around inside, eating, drinking, talking—a few playing at cards. No sign of John. Philip moved around the back of the building, looking for too-large footprints in the snow. Then he changed his mind abruptly. No sense disturbing his brother’s kill. He was just about to turn and go back inside the inn to wait when a slight shuffling sound caught his attention. A small, faded toolshed sat directly behind the Wayside’s back door. Someone was in there.
Boredom and mild curiosity rather than any real interest drove him to walk over and peer inside. What he saw caught him by surprise.
Heat from the inn leaked inside, keeping the temperature above freezing. John’s enormous hands were gently resting the dark-blond prostitute on a tattered blanket. In a deep sleep, her chest rose and fell lightly. Her neck was undamaged, but two small red punctures glowed out against her white shoulder. John drew a dagger and connected the punctures, making the wound appear as a jagged cut. Then he covered her with the wool cloak she’d been wearing earlier.
“What are you doing?” Philip asked.
John’s head whipped up, all traces of joviality or good nature absent. “Get out.”
“But she’s still—”
“Get out!”
Philip stumbled back out in the snow, bewildered. This didn’t make sense. Why was John shouting at him? He stood in the snow for ten minutes, until the shed door opened and his brother ducked beneath the arch to step through.
“Is she dead?”
“Yes.” The anger had left John’s voice. “Let’s get the horses.”
“Can I see her?”
“No, it’s growing late. We have to get back.”
For an answer, Philip moved quickly around him and made a grab for the latch. His feet left the ground as John picked him up and threw him backward.
“Philip, I’m not playing with you! You get up and get your horse, now.”
“We can’t leave her alive. She saw both of us. We’ll never be able to come to this part of the city again.”
“Trust me now,” John said in what looked like despair. “Let us go home.”
Neither one spoke for the first half of their ride back through the trees. Doubts swirled in Philip’s mind. He hated them. What could he call these unwanted thoughts? Concern. Yes, that’s it. He was concerned.
“Why did you leave that woman alive?” he asked finally, breaking the tense silence. “She will remember us.”
“No, she won’t.”
“Of course she will.”
“Angelo warned me about hunting with you,” John said quietly. “Try to remember that you aren’t like me. Master wants you to grow and develop at your own pace with no preconceptions of what you should be. Do you understand?”
“No.”
“I can do things you can’t. Believe me, that woman won’t know us if we go back to town. She won’t remember anything.”
Philip pulled up his horse. “Oh, it’s a trick? One of your little psychic tricks? You made her forget?”
“Yes.”
“Well, why didn’t you tell me?” Relief and annoyance replaced concern. “You’ve ruined the whole ride home for nothing. We could have raced or chased down some peasants.”
John laughed and kicked his horse into motion. “Still plenty of room for that,” he called. “I let you win last time.”
Unpleasant thoughts forgotten, Philip urged Kayli to bolt, leaping forward across the snow.
“Julian?”
A few nights later, Philip searched the upper west tower for companionship. Master Angelo had gone out on business, and John was cloistered with a book again. This tower hadn’t been cleaned in years, and he felt uncomfortable here in this dead, cheerless place filled with ancient ghosts. Not that ghosts bothered him, but the outdoors beckoned, fresh air and wind rushing through the trees.
Dust flew up into his mouth as he called out. Julian’s company didn’t appeal to him any more than this tower did, but talking to someone else, anyone else, was preferable to being alone. Loneliness hurt more than hunger, and he was no good at entertaining himself. Angelo tried to teach him a game of solitary cards once, but he couldn’t sit still or focus long enough to learn.
“Julian?”
“Who’s there?” a dull voice called from somewhere ahead.
“It’s me. Where are you?”
“Philip?”
“Yes, of course. Which room are you in?”
A tall form dressed in black stepped into view down the hallway. “Down here. Are you alone?”
“Quite alone. I’m so bored even you sound like good company right now.”
“Come ahead then.”
He followed Julian into a small, alcove-styled room with an open window that faced Harfleur. Lights and smoke from city fires glowed in the distance. Julian looked terrible—and he smelled stale. His skin was sallow with dark circles under his eyes. His hair was lank and uncombed, and he was wearing a cloak that had not been brushed out for weeks.
“Shouldn’t we light a candle?” Philip asked.
“No,” Julian said. “You’re a vampire. You can see in the dark.”
“I suppose.”
“Why did you come here?”
“Looking for you. Come out hunting?”
“Not tonight.”
Philip rolled his eyes and dropped into a dusty wooden chair.
“What’s a bastard?” he asked after a few moments.
“Someone without a legitimate father.” Julian was looking out the window, but his profile was clear, and his expression lost its melancholy cast. He sounded mildly interested. “Why would you ask me that?”
“John said my father is a bastard, but he must have meant something else then.”
“Oh.” The corner of Julian’s mouth curved up. “It can also be used to call someone heartless or cruel. Your father did treat you badly, but only because you disappointed him. He wanted you to be strong. Take his place.”
“Is your father a bastard?”
“Mine? No. Mine is . . . an unusual man. I wish your memory hadn’t erased him. He taught you to ride when you were six.”
“Truly?”
“Yes, you were afraid of horses, and my father understands fear. We probably should have switched places. You loved it at Cliffbracken, and I always felt stifled.”
“I can’t imagine being afraid of horses.”
“No, you’ve changed. Tragic, really. Your father would worship you now.” He paused and frowned. “You’re certainly full of words tonight. I haven’t seen you this coherent since before Angelo turned you.”
“I have things on my mind.”
“What mind?” Julian snorted coldly.
“John and I rode into town a few nights ago, and he . . .”
Julian turned away from the window. “He what?”
“He used one of his mind tricks to make a whore forget him, forget he had fed upon her, and he left her alive.”
Julian fell still, gazing at Philip through the darkness. “Has he or Angelo ever done that to you? Tried to enter your mind? Tried to make you obey ? Or tried to make you forget something?”
“What?” This turn in the conversation startled Philip. “No. Of course not.”
“How would you know,” Julian whispered, his dark eyes glittering, “if they’d already made you forget?” He stepped closer. “We have no defense at all. Do you understand what that means? They could make us think anything, do anything . . . and even make us forget . . . and as we have no such power, we could do nothing to stop them.”
Philip fidgeted in his chair. “What is wrong with you these past nights?”
“We have no defense against them . . . against any of them.”
“Stop saying that!” Philip snapped.
Julian fell silent, turning back and staring out the window into space.
“Oh, please, Julian,” Philip begged. “Can’t we do something, anything—riding, hunting? We could even practice fencing if you like. One more moment in this house and I’ll die.”
“No,” his undead brother whispered. “You won’t die.”
A few nights later, Julian vanished, and Philip had no idea where he’d gone.
Several weeks passed, and then one night, Philip came home an hour before dawn to find his master and John in the library, deep in whispered conference.
“Telling secrets?” Philip asked, smiling. “About me?”
Angelo Travare, Earl of Scurloc, rested in a stone chair. He was a slender Norman creature who told stories of crusades and knights with swords, his flesh long since grown so preternaturally pale he scarcely passed as human. Dim candlelight exposed deep lines of strain now marring his milky forehead.
Two thick pieces of parchment lay on the oak table before him.
“Sit down, son,” Angelo said.
“What’s wrong?” Philip asked.
“Our time this winter is over. You must return to Gascony.”
“But it’s not even January yet. We have months to go.”
“How many vampires do you know?”
“How many? You, John, Julian, Maggie, and John’s servant, Edward. What does it matter?”
“Do you ever wonder if there are others like yourself, beyond your circle?”
“No.”
“There are, Philip. Nearly thirty others in Europe alone.”
“Like us?”
“Just like us,” Angelo said. “But tonight, we’ve learned that three of them are dead.” He pointed down to the parchment letters.
“Dead?” Philip repeated. “We can’t die. We’re immortal.”
“Of course we can. I’ve explained this. ‘Undead’ does not mean your body can’t be destroyed. Fire, sunlight, and decapitation will end your existence. Now, listen to me carefully. Do you know why Maggie has no psychic powers?”
Philip frowned without answering.
“Because you were not able to teach her,” Angelo said.
John leaned forward in his chair, nodding, dark blond hair falling across his eyes. “And neither does my Edward because I chose not to teach him yet, and he has no contact with others of our kind.”
Their manner annoyed Philip, speaking to him in short, slowly spoken words. “I’m not simple! I’m not a half-wit, but I don’t care about psychic powers.” He motioned to the parchments. “And what does any of that have to do with us? A few vampires we’ve never met have flown off to the great beyond. Why do you care?”
“Because they were murdered,” Angelo said flatly. “Decapitated by Julian.”
“By Jul- . . . some kind of fight?”
Angelo always had seemed ancient to him, but tonight was the first time his master looked old and fragile.
“No, Philip, not a fight. Julian has left us. He has become an enemy to his own kind and is destroying vampires who possess psychic power.”
“What? Who told you that?”
“It is the truth. His gift has turned back in upon itself, and he now fears what he does not possess . . . to a degree that has sickened his mind.” Angelo paused as if gauging his next words. “Psychic ability isn’t truly a gift like the one great power we each use against mortals. It is learned, developed. And as John did with his Edward, I have chosen to postpone your training until you have existed longer, learned more of yourself and our world. But I cannot explain Julian’s lack of ability. I have sometimes thought his gift to be so strong it has kept him from developing other powers.”
“Have you told him that?”
“Of course.” Angelo almost smiled. “Long ago.”
“And he still fears you?”
Angelo did not answer.
Rubbing his hands, John peered up at Philip through tired eyes. “It’s important that you don’t become involved in this. I don’t think you’re simple or a half-wit, but you could be hurt if you stay. Go home to Gascony and wait with Maggie until this thing is over.”
“What will you do?”
“I leave tonight. I’ll go to Amiens and get Edward first. He and I will go back to Edinburgh. Master Angelo has a few affairs to tie up here, and then he’ll leave in a week or so for his summer home in Venice.”
“Why are you splitting up? Wouldn’t we all be stronger as a group?”
“No,” Master Angelo said. “I am hopeful that Julian may come to his senses, and giving him so much ground to cover makes his current task more difficult, if he means us harm at all. Killing strangers is one thing. Killing those in our circle is another.”
“How many of the other vampires are psychic?”
John’s gaze dropped. “All of them besides you, Julian, Maggie, and my Edward.”
“All of them?” Philip’s eyes widened. “Then what does he possibly hope to gain?”
“Nothing. He is simply afraid . . . to the point of madness.”
This made no sense. Philip experienced a moment of intense unhappiness and hated the emotion. “All right, John. You go. I’ll stay here with Master until he’s ready to leave for Venice.”
Angelo leaned back in his chair. “I have no need of protection, my son. My hands can snap Julian like a matchstick.”
“No matter. I’m staying anyway, until you’re ready to leave.”
With no more words to say, John moved for the stairs, looking back at them once.
Eight nights later, Philip and Angelo packed a few scant belongings and prepared for their separate journeys. The short time they had spent alone together pleased them both. The old master forgot his books and cerebral conversation, preferring to spend spare time outside hunting with Philip. But the house had now been secured, carriage horses stabled inside Harfleur, and bank accounts transferred to Venice.
It was time to leave.
Philip jogged with snow-covered boots into the library. “Horses are saddled. You ready?”
Angelo gazed around. “Yes, but I will miss this place . . . and you.”
“Don’t be so maudlin. Julian will forget this by summer, and we’ll all meet in London, or maybe Paris.”
They walked outside into the night air. Dark trees lined the path to the barn, allowing bits of light from the moon to glimmer through. Philip seldom formed attachments to places, but this path had always held a certain charm with its hidden black spaces—but still so wide that he could drive Kayli into full gallop two steps out of the stable door. Wanting to lock this night in his memory, he stared at each tree they walked past. Because of this, he stopped short when movement caught his eye.
“Angelo, there’s something—”
Before he could finish speaking, a shadow stepped out from the base of a tree, and moonlight glinted in his eyes. He heard the sweeping arc rather than seeing anything. Then Angelo’s body toppled to the ground, his separated head landing with a soft thud in the snow. The whole picture took a few seconds to sink in.
Then the pain hit.
Searing, scorching, hysterical faces exploded inside his eyes. Turks, ragged peasants, pale children, sobbing women, all danced and clawed at his brain while he writhed helplessly, scratching at his own temples to get them out—men with long surcoats, crosses in one hand and swords in the other, crying fanatical words while rushing to battle, horses and fire and a lady called Elizabeth who always waited, a dark-skinned vampire with no name biting his shoulder, hating him, making him pay for all eternity by stealing his dream of heaven. The visions and agony went on and on, a parade of lost souls seeking retribution. Finally the waves began fading. The sounds hushed.
“You’re all right. It’s over.” Julian knelt beside him, a sword in one hand, blood smeared all over the other.
Twisting up to all fours, Philip stared at his master’s body as it began to turn gray and crack. This couldn’t be happening. “You killed him.”
“I had to,” Julian rasped. “Don’t you see? We are meant to be alone, not to live in twisted families like mortals. Our kind has become diseased, feeding upon each other’s powers until some of us began to throw off the balance . . . growing stronger than others, creating a threat. I’m putting the balance back. Soon we will be pure again, equal . . . safe.”
The words sounded far away, at the end of a long corridor. Philip climbed to his feet in shock, not understanding or absorbing Julian’s words. “What will John say? This will make him sad!”
“No, it won’t. He’s already dead.” Still kneeling, Julian pressed the sword into the snow and leaned on the hilt with his hands. “Angelo must have known. He must have felt it.”
“What?”
“Four nights ago, I took his head right in front of his servant.”
“Edward? Where is he now?”
“Long gone. He’s not one of them.”
This was a night of new emotions. Acute pain and sorrow faded as something infinitely worse crept up Philip’s spine. Julian’s black eyes bored into him, emanating fear, making him back away.
“You may not remember,” Julian whispered, “but we’ve been friends since childhood. That existence is over. You are an immortal hunter, forever alone. Do you understand? Alone.”
“No. Maggie’s mine.”
“You stay away from her, or I will send her after. I’m not being cruel, only strong. You will thank me later. And it’s not so harsh as it sounds. We can speak to each other, sometimes even hunt together. But never can we live together, never feed off each other’s gifts. If even one of us gets this disease, the whole nightmare might begin again. Purity is what matters now—your first priority, more than me, more than Maggie, more than hunting. Do you understand?”
Terror filled Philip until fear was all he could see. What would he do? Existing by himself was worse than death. Perhaps this was a vision, the dream on the edge of John’s sleep that he never quite saw, the bad thing he saw coming and couldn’t stop. Julian’s voice echoed through the darkness.
“Alone. Do you understand? Alone . . .”
chapter 23
Alone.”
I pulled out to see him mouthing the word almost silently, amber eyes lost in a fog of memories.
“Philip, wake up.”
He blinked and looked down at me. Without thinking, I laid my face against his knee in a gesture of comfort, like a mortal, like a woman.
“It’s all right,” I said. “Long past now.”
Julian had hurt him, filled his world with lies.
“I think he went on killing . . . all of them, Leisha,” he whispered, “all but Edward, Maggie, and me.”
“Did you send Maggie away?”
“No, I just didn’t go home. Julian never had to chase her off. Then she left for America on her own in 1841, about two years after you.”
“So she waited sixteen years for you to come back to Gascony?”
“We saw each other . . . sometimes. Like that first night you saw me at Cliffbracken, we’d all been out hunting together. I was happy. But after a few nights together, Julian broke us up.”
How many had Julian murdered? Angelo said, “Nearly thirty in Europe alone.” But how? Julian had been turned less than a year before Philip. If we grow more powerful with age, then how could he destroy such ancient beings?
I flashed the question mentally at Philip. He didn’t seem to realize no words had been spoken and nodded at me.
“I wondered that, too. He told me later that they couldn’t feel him coming. Maybe because he doesn’t have psychic powers? But the same technique worked every time. He’d track his target down, hide behind a tree—like with Angelo—or a door or a building and just wait. Nobody ever felt him, and nobody ever saw him coming.”
I stood up, trying to get my head around all this. “But I lived with Edward for seventy years.”
“Yes, and Julian didn’t know what to do at first. He feared what might happen.”
“He never said anything.”
“How could he? To stop the situation by force meant traveling to New York. That meant seeing his father. And if he wrote to order you away and Edward refused, this would be . . . The shame was not worth risking for Julian.”
“We didn’t even know psychic ability was possible.”
Philip’s brows knitted. “That’s true. Perhaps he didn’t want you to know. He kept watch on you for years, waiting to see what would happen. But nothing ever did, and in the end, you left on your own, proving Julian’s point that we were all meant to live alone . . . He didn’t consider William a true vampire.”
“You’re missing the point. Edward and I developed no psychic powers from living together. It never even occurred to us.”
“I know. Angelo said such power must be taught . . . like Wade has done for you. Perhaps we all have the power buried, waiting to wake.”
“All except Julian.”
Yes, all except Julian. That was the crux. He feared what he did not possess, enough to murder his own kind.
Philip stood up, towering over me. “Leisha?”
“Mmmmm?” He pulled me out of concentration.
“Do you remember a few weeks ago, when Maggie called me and told me you were living with her?”
“Yes, I remember.”
“It hurt, and I hadn’t felt anything for a long time.”
“You missed her?”
“No, it wasn’t that. But she spoke of fireplaces and the three of you talking together. It didn’t seem fair when I had to stay by myself. It made me think of John and Angelo—things pushed to the back of my head for so many years.”
“And you like having company now?”
“Yes, but look at us! Julian was right. Only a few nights together, and it’s started.”
I turned to him angrily. “Listen to yourself! He’s been rationalizing his own fear, his own weakness, for so long you’ve started believing it. Telepathy isn’t a disease. It’s more like a muscle. The more you use it, the stronger it grows. If not for Wade . . . Oh, he’s still in the bedroom.”
“Oh.”
Philip jumped up and crossed the room. “I am sorry, Wade. We’re finished.” He spoke like someone who’d known Wade for years.
When they came back to the couch together, I noticed similar lines of sadness below their eyes, on their foreheads. What a team the three of us made. Almost everyone we’d ever cared about was dead or gone, taken away in this unstoppable conflict, which started with the single action of Edward Claymore jumping off his own front porch.
Why couldn’t we mourn? Wade had tear ducts. Why didn’t he cry for Dominick? Philip rarely mentioned Maggie unless he had to. And me? I couldn’t think about William, couldn’t let the image of his face enter my consciousness or I might dry up and crumble. What a team.
A fruit basket sat cheerfully on an oak writing desk against the wall. I picked it up and peeled back the plastic cover. “Wade, you should eat some of this. Do you like apples? Maybe these grapes?”
He nodded tiredly, and I flashed inside his mind, I’m sorry about Dominick.
No answer came, but he took some grapes and a banana from me.
“We should go,” Philip said. “I called Julian hours ago, but he did not tell me his location.”
“Couldn’t we just keep all this a secret?” I asked. “Why does he have to know?”
“He’ll know,” Philip answered softly.
I wasn’t so sure, but those stories of Julian stepping out from nowhere frightened me enough. I kept fantasizing his dark visage popping up behind the couch, a broadsword arcing in his grasp.
Wade’s hands were shaking, maybe delayed shock from everything he’d gone through tonight. Helping him peel the banana, I asked, “Do you still have the Prius?”
“Yes.”
“Good, we’ll let Philip drive. One ride with him and nothing will ever scare you again.”
We all laughed briefly, but the laughter was forced. Taking the fruit basket seemed a good idea. It would be easy for me to forget that mortals had to eat every day. Wade seldom spoke up about things like hunger or sleep.
He’d have to come with us, at least for now, at least until we figured something else out. He was just so vulnerable, so unprepared for what lay ahead. Even his growing tolerance, perhaps acceptance, of Philip might fade away after witnessing the first hunt. Running all night, sleeping all day. What kind of life was that for a man like Wade?
But nothing could be done about it now.
“Help me take those blankets off the windows,” Philip said. “We won’t need them anymore, and the maids might wonder why we put them up.”
“Okay,” I answered uncertainly.
How could he worry about things like blankets over hotel windows and then kill cops on busy streets? Sometimes he was too weird—even for me.
The next few seconds caught me completely off guard. Thinking about Philip’s inconsistencies took my mind from our immediate problems. I reached out for the hanging blanket nearest the west wall, and a pale hand snaked from behind it, grasping my wrist like a vice.
“Having a party?” a voice as cold as ocean depths echoed from behind the drape. “Without me?”
Julian.
I almost screamed, but didn’t. He stepped out, still holding me—dressed in black, looking identical to the image imprinted on my memory: broad, pale features set off by cold eyes. All I could feel was fear. Uncontrollable, sickening waves of fear washed down my throat, making my teeth click rapidly together.
From the corner of my eye, I saw Philip turn and stop. “Did you climb all the way up the side of this building just to impress me?” His voice was light and flippant. He had good control.
“Of course not,” my maker answered. “I took the stairs to the roof and climbed down one floor. Did I impress you?”
“As always. It’s good to see you.”
Even through my haze of fear, I could hear that their casual banter was wrong—it didn’t fit. And from the corner of my eye, I could see Philip’s face, guarded but terrified, no matter how calm he sounded.
His gift didn’t work against Julian. Strange how the one person Philip feared in this world had been the reason for my existence, always there, but distant, hiding in the shadows, the one person William truly remembered.
Had Julian ever felt my gift? Did he know what his pretty creation could do?
Reaching up with my free hand, I touched his fingers softly. “Master, your grip is too tight.”
I focused on emanating an image of myself—small, fragile, hardly worth the bother of a creature like Julian, far beneath him in every respect. A peasant, and yet somehow one of his own. How could he think of hurting me? Harmless and defenseless, I needed protection and the strength of someone like him.
His susceptibility to suggestion surprised me. Philip had played along when we first met, even allowed himself to be affected, but he always knew the game. He always knew exactly what I was.
But Julian let go instantly, actually steadying me to make sure I wouldn’t fall.
“My father is dead?” he asked, his words sounding more like a statement than a question.
Some of my terror began to fade, and I bowed my head for a moment, as if not worthy of looking him in the face. Then carefully, I raised my eyes.
“Yes, my lord.”
“And where is his murderer?”
“Dead. Philip killed him.”
A flicker of relief passed across his pale features. His work here was done. The senile abortion he called father no longer haunted him. Revenge had been exacted, and Philip and I were no threat because we had been beaten into states of eternal fear. Things must have looked quite rosy.
He didn’t seem to sense or suspect a thing about our growing telepathy. Maybe Philip gave him too much credit?
My hope began to rise.
Maybe if we just behaved correctly, fed his ego, and walked three steps behind him, we’d get out of this without a fight. I had no pride left, not when it came to Julian.
But then he turned to Wade, who’d been standing silently in the corner, just watching, breathing quickly. Even wearing his canvas jacket, he looked so slender, almost fragile, his white-blond hair hanging forward over his eyes. After that first intense scan of my memories a few nights ago, Wade knew my maker well.
My heart sank again.
“Who is this?” Julian asked. “Did Philip bring dinner?”
I wanted to scream, to claw his eyes out. What had I been thinking? Hoping we could flatter our way out of this? Julian would never let Wade out of the building.
Of all the ways I thought to die, defending a mortal wasn’t one of them. Then again . . . I did possess one weapon, and I still might be able to use it here.
But it was difficult not to think of days long past. The sight of Julian brought back memories long forgotten, interfering with my gift. I remembered serving my first banquet at Cliffbracken, when he sat at the lavish dining table . . . back when the house was still alive. He had seemed so large, and I had felt so small.
Not anymore.
Not unless I wanted him to see me that way.
I pushed the memories away . . . pushed my fear away, and then moved between him and Wade, focusing hard on emanating my gift.
Concentrate. Get him on his knees.
“Master, please.” I reached out again and used the tips of my fingers to touch the back of his hand. “He is not worthy of you. Come. Let me find you a lovely woman.” I took a step toward the door, pitching my voice to an even softer tone. “I’ve dreamed of hunting with you, of learning from you. Let Philip have this one.” I took another step toward the door.
Julian’s mouth opened slightly as he stepped after me. His eyes seemed puzzled and pleased at the same time as I could see him mulling over the sweet portrait my words painted of him as the teacher, me as his grateful student, working to please him, to find him better prey.
Philip hadn’t moved in several moments, and he was watching silently, allowing me to take over.
“Come into the city with me,” I whispered to Julian.
He took another step.
Then, suddenly, he glanced over at Wade, and his eyes changed. He shook his head as if to clear it and looked back at me in shock . . . and then rage. His large hand flashed out and gripped my wrist, jerking me up against him.
“What are you doing?” he snarled. “You would try that on me?”
He whipped his free hand back to hit me, and I braced myself.
“Julian, don’t!” Philip shouted.
The blow never landed—but not because of Philip’s angry shout. Instead, the room exploded in a deafening sound, and I fell back against the floor, looking around wildly to see what happened.
Another explosion sounded, hurting my ears.
Julian’s chest was bleeding from two gaping holes as he stumbled backward. Wade was holding his Beretta out in both hands, beads of sweat trickling down his narrow face.
He fired again, catching Julian in the shoulder.
I’d forgotten about the Beretta.
“His throat!” Philip yelled. “Aim for his throat!”
I twisted over to sit in a crouch, uncertain what to do. Wade fired again, but Julian dropped low, and the bullet missed him completely.
But his pale face was so shocked I wondered how he had the presence of mind to even act.
Philip bolted across the room, his loose flannel shirt billowing behind him. He grabbed Julian by the shoulder and leg, lifting him into the air and throwing him at the window. Julian’s body crashed against the drapes.
Glass snapped and crackled.
Let him fall through. Please, let him fall through.
Dropping twelve floors to the pavement might not destroy his body, but he’d be out of working order for a while.
But in despair, I saw his hand catch the drape. He managed to steady himself, pain and confusion twisting his features as he stared back in shock—as if unable to believe Philip would attack him to defend me.
Philip actually snarled at him.
I realized this was a new situation for Julian. Fearing a psychic combat he could not win, he’d always hidden himself away, striking only unaware victims. Physical battles with an equal were almost unknown . . . and he was wounded, bleeding.
But Philip was strong. He charged forward again and swung hard with his right fist, catching Julian across the jaw. The crack echoed as Julian’s head snapped back.
Wade moved past me, looking for a clear shot.
“Don’t!” I called. “You might hit Philip.”
We needed Philip whole.
“Stay behind me,” Wade spat back, still holding the gun with both hands.
Philip reached down to try and get another grip, but this time, Julian swept out with his leg, knocking Philip off his feet. Julian lunged up to stand behind the couch, his face a mask of hatred, and then his eyes grew more focused, emanating his gift.
The fear hit me like a wall.
I started gagging.
Wade didn’t even get off one shot. He fell to his knees, dropping the gun. His mouth was open in terror but no sounds came.
Philip cried out from fear, and he tried struggling up to crawl. Julian kicked him in the chest so hard his body flew against a wooden chair, smashing it to pieces. When he hit the floor, his shoulder popped out of its socket and his arm lay at an odd angle.
Julian ignored him and strode directly to Wade. The waves of fear washed over and over me, but despair flooded in as well when Julian grabbed Wade’s hair with one hand and the Beretta with the other. He smashed the butt of the gun against Wade’s cheekbone.
“You like this gun?” Julian asked. His chest and shoulder were still bleeding, soaking his black shirt. He pressed the barrel to Wade’s temple. “Do you like it now?”
He wasn’t even going to feed. He was just going to shoot Wade in the head.
And Philip was down, his body broken, his mind lost in fear.
“Master, no,” I started begging. I hated begging.
I had to do something.
In desperation, more from instinct than intent, I pushed my own thoughts into his mind with all the force I had once used on Dominick. Only this time, I didn’t fire ugly images.
Stop!
He froze, his dark eyes wild.
Let go of him!
He dropped Wade first, then the gun, and his mouth formed a horrified O shape. He half turned and staggered toward me. I felt him trying to force me out of his mind. He focused his gift on me at the same time, trying to bury me in terror.
I gasped aloud, fighting for my hold, feeling him push me out, knowing if he did, we were all dead.
I closed my eyes, blocking out the sight of him, but this time, I sent images . . . memories I’d seen inside of Philip.
Angelo’s face. His smile. The sword arcing, slicing off his head.
All Julian’s resistance failed as he cried out. I could feel what he felt in this moment, and he had never felt anything like it. I kept my eyes closed and pushed harder inside of his mind.
Show me.
I was inside his memories, inside his existence, and he could not keep me out, nor could he stop the flow I had started by forcing him to see Angelo. He began to remember it all. I saw so many faces, so many of my kind as Julian butchered them . . . a red-haired vampire turning in surprise as the blade swept in . . . a dark-skinned girl, little more than a child. I wanted to weep, but could not.
Instead, I gripped his thoughts more tightly with my own. I altered them, warped them, creating images of the ghosts of his victims. I built a nightmare in his mind as they crept toward him with bloody lines across their throats. He could not escape as they clutched at him . . . grabbing him, nailing him to a cross, and raising it.
Angelo picked up a torch and set the cross on fire.
Julian screamed and fell to the carpet.
I crawled over to him, with my mouth to his ear.
“Is this what you fear, Master? One of us taking over your thoughts, your body?” I pressed my mouth closer, tasting the stale flesh of his temple. “Then fear me. I could make this much worse, and I could make you relive it over and over again.” I paused, watching his face twitch in horror, ashamed how much I enjoyed the sight.
“We want to be left alone,” I whispered. “That’s all. But if you ever come near me or Philip or Wade again, I will trap you in your own hell. Do you understand?”
I released some of my control, letting him have partial function of his body again. He did not respond, but turned his head to stare at me. I was a stranger to him—as if he could not believe his little servant girl could conjure images ugly enough to make him writhe and force them into his brain. He didn’t know me. His mouth was still locked in the O shape.
“I will let you up if you swear to leave, if you swear to never come near us again,” I said.
The fear and disbelief in his eyes grew.
“Do you swear?” I demanded.
“Yes,” he finally hissed, finding his voice.
“Remember what I can do!”
But then the sound of crashing glass broke the last of my connection, my hold on him. Wind swept through the room, and I looked up to see Philip standing over us with a chair leg in his right hand. His left shoulder was still dislocated. The hotel window behind him had been smashed.
He’d broken the window?
He dropped the chair leg. Then he grabbed Julian, pulled him up and threw him backward. Julian was still dazed from the horror show I had sent into his head and from the shock of having lost control of himself. He nearly fell through the broken window, but managed to grab one side, cutting his hand, as he fought wildly to pull himself back inside. Philip strode toward him with a savage expression I never wanted to see again.
“Philip, no!” I called. “You don’t need to—”
But Philip didn’t even hear me. He kicked Julian square in the chest, and I watched as my maker’s arms flailed and his eyes widened in his pale face before he fell from view . . . twelve stories down toward the pavement.
Then he was gone.
“Why did you do that?” I shouted at Philip. “I had him! You didn’t need to . . .” I trailed off as Philip turned, anger draining from his face.
He came back quickly and dropped to his knees, grabbing my hands, examining my fingers and arms. “Did he hurt you?”
I didn’t know how to answer.
Wade moaned and sirens blared outside. It had only been moments since the first shots exploded in the room, but hotel security must be on its way up—and someone had called the police.
“We have to go now,” Philip said, walking to Wade and leaning over to pick him up.
“I can walk,” Wade mumbled. His cheek was cut and turning purple.
They both started for the door, but I couldn’t help running to the window first and looking down.
The pavement below was empty.
chapter 24
Five nights later I was on the streets by myself. I wanted to be out alone, away from Philip and Wade.
I’d thought recovering from our shared horror of fighting Julian would be difficult ... but so far, we’d barely even talked about it.
Wade had snapped Philip’s shoulder back into its socket, and that was the last time any of us mentioned what happened that night.
Without even examining our options, the three of us moved into Maggie’s. Simple, mechanical, civilized, unspeakably calm, we set about putting our immediate environment into neat order. I quickly pulled all of my money from Portland and put it into a private account.
Philip took over Maggie’s room, but he didn’t alter the feminine decor even though he didn’t like it.
Wade settled into the stark upstairs second bedroom—sleeping on blankets on the floor. But he’d only bought two new changes of clothes.
I slept in the cellar because it felt safe.
Philip did not arrange for new bank accounts in America, nor would he mention moving back to Paris. Wade avoided the topic or his job or Dominick’s death or any future plans beyond the next five minutes. They both seemed to be waiting for me. But what did I want?
Neither of them had asked me what I did to Julian . . . but I had a feeling Philip figured out I’d attacked him telepathically.
Of course none of us knew what happened to him after he fell.
Philip kept looking over his shoulder, as if waiting to see a sword arcing out of the darkness. But I didn’t. I believed I’d ended this conflict forever. I could hit Julian with the one thing he truly feared, yet I would leave him alone if he left me alone.
He’d stay away.
But . . . where did that leave me?
Every aspect of my undead existence revolved around William or Julian in one form or another. Now, sweet William was gone. I accepted that reality with mixed emotions.
I was free.
But free to do what?
To go on killing and feeding and plying my gift in one long, endless stretch of time? Is that all there was? Perhaps Edward had been the only sane one after all.
Certain doubts—concepts—had been plaguing me for several nights. I couldn’t stop thinking about the memories Philip had shown me.
Nearly thirty vampires in Europe alone.
Did that mean there were other vampires in places like Asia, Australia, or South America? If so, had Julian hunted them down, too? Philip didn’t know, and the topic upset him. He’d spent most of that time of terror in hiding.
But even if all the vampires had lived in Europe, how did they manage to hide and feed without depopulating entire areas? The best-case scenario meant fifteen hundred and sixty deaths a year if each vampire made only one kill a week. That’s nearly sixteen thousand deaths over a ten-year period and didn’t take hunters like Philip into account. How could this be?
An idea, a possibility, began forming in my mind over the past few nights. I don’t how it occurred to me, or when it began, but I needed to be alone to try it. So I hit the streets without Philip and headed down to Pike Place Market.
Even after closing, the market teemed with life. Hookers, bums, guys playing guitars on street corners, their cases left open for donations, and teenage kids looking for something to do all milled around in a kaleidoscope of colors and scents.
Wearing a white cotton dress, my hair in a French braid, I looked clean and bright, like a girl from a Bloomingdale’s hatbox. Maggie had taught me more than she’d realized, but I could never rely on a gift like hers. My own was too deeply ingrained.
Falling into character, I left the busy area and stood outside an alley, arms crossed, back to the wall. Ten minutes later, a tall man in his mid-thirties walked by. Obviously in a hurry, he still stopped when I made eye contact.
“You all right?” he asked.
People in Seattle rarely speak to strangers on the street, at least not without a good reason.
“I got on the wrong bus,” I answered. “It took me here.”
“Where are you supposed to be?”
“Greenwood.”
My voice pitched high but soft, as if I didn’t want to talk to him but didn’t know what else to do. Casting out tentatively, I felt no malice or violence, only haste. He sighed in frustration, wishing he’d taken a different route and left my pretty, frightened plight for somebody else to handle.
“I’ve got to be in Lake Forest Park in an hour,” he said, “but I can take a detour and drop you. Who lives in Greenwood?”
“My sister.”
“Come on, then.”
Not moving, I stared out in indecision. Jumping in right away with him would have looked unusual. But his frustration mounted.
“Look, there won’t be another bus this time of night. You either stay here or come on.”
Obviously the prospect of staying in an alley wouldn’t appeal to any young mortal girl. I stepped out and followed him, half jogging to keep up. Three blocks away, he unlocked the passenger door of a newer Ford pickup and reached out for my hand.
“Watch your dress getting in.”
His manner affected me somehow. On a normal hunt I’d never have chosen a victim like this. Though slightly condescending, he had no motives besides taking me somewhere safe. Even in a rush, he’d stopped to help one person in this crowded city.
He hopped in and slammed the driver’s door. The street was fairly dark and quiet. Reaching out, I stopped his hand from sliding a key into the ignition, and I focused my thoughts, touching the edge of his own.
“Wait, not yet.”
He turned at my words, seeing me through a downy white mist. I pressed a suggestion into his mind.
You’re so tired. You need sleep.
“What are you . . . ?” he mumbled.
Sleep.
His eyelids grew heavy, and his head lolled back against the seat. His body went limp except for his chest, which continued to rise and fall.
I scooted across the seat and moved up for his throat.
He looked so peaceful, so helpless, that I stopped.
Changing my mind, I lifted his wrist instead. No tearing or ripping this time. Using my eyeteeth, I punctured the large blue vein above the callused curve of his palm. Carefully, keeping the holes as small as possible, I drew down on his wrist, drinking blood and absorbing life force while his heart beat quickly. My mind filled with visions of a farm in Nebraska and a hard-faced mother who never laughed, a soft-eyed sister who dreamed of being a dancer, and a stocky chestnut horse named Buck . . . his memories, his past treasures.
Once I had taken enough, I pulled out and used my fingernail to connect the little holes on his wrist, making the wound into a jagged cut—messy, but he was not bleeding badly.
My focus turned to his thoughts again, taking him back to the moment he’d rounded the corner and seen me up against the wall. I erased the memory.
No frightened girl had waited for him, only an empty street. But in his haste he’d stumbled and cut his wrist on a broken bottle. The pain didn’t bother him at first, but then it grew worse. He got in the truck and felt dizzy. He must have passed out.
Opening the passenger door and pressing the lock button down, I let go of his altered memories and hopped down into the street, leaving him to sleep peacefully a little longer.
Numb shock faded as I ran through the night. Then euphoria began to rise inside of me. This was it. Their secret.
I didn’t mourn for all the lives needlessly lost in my ignorant past, but instead, I rejoiced for those saved in my future. I didn’t have to kill. I never had to kill.
This was the way of the vampires who existed before my generation. They were not murderers, not slavering hunters who wiped out whole villages, merely survivors who used what gifts they had, like everyone else.
Where had they come from? Where did I come from? Perhaps Philip was right and we came from black spirits who roamed the void before some great god created the earth. Perhaps not. There was no one left to teach me. Perhaps I’d find out one day.
None of that mattered. I didn’t have to kill anymore. We were a new breed, Philip and I, like our predecessors. Would Philip care? Would he evolve? I couldn’t wait to bring him outside and show him what I’d discovered.
I waved down a taxi. This state of limbo had to end. The undeclared war was over. Nobody really won, but it was over just the same, and it was time to go on. I kept mulling over the same thought all the way home.
We don’t have to kill.
After tipping the driver, I jumped out of the cab and was about to run toward Maggie’s house when I noticed the small door on the mailbox was half ajar. We hadn’t paid any bills since moving in, and even though I was desperate to get inside and talk to Philip about tonight’s revelation, I also didn’t want the water or power shut off, so I jogged over to get the mail.
But inside, I found an ivory envelope . . . and to my shock, it was addressed to me, here, at Maggie’s. I studied it for a few seconds. The blue script was lovely, nothing like Julian’s blocky handwriting. Seeing no return address, I ripped the envelope open and pulled out a small note on matching ivory paper. It read:
You are not alone. There are others like you. Respond to the Elizabeth Bathory Underground. P.O. Box 27750, San Francisco, CA 94973.
I just stood there, frozen, for a long time. What did it mean? The Elizabeth Bathory Underground? Was it some sort of trick? Was Julian trying to lure me off alone somehow?
No, Julian was a blunt instrument. This wasn’t his style. I shook my head and closed my eyes briefly.
You are not alone.
After all my questions, all of my burning need to learn more about my own kind, I didn’t even want to look at this note. In this moment, it was an unwanted intrusion.
And it was too much, too much to deal with right now.
Deliberately, I put the note back inside the envelope and folded it into thirds. Then I slipped it into the pocket of my dress. I wasn’t going to show this to either Philip or Wade tonight—maybe tomorrow.
Tonight, we had other things to discuss.
I went up the steps to Maggie’s front door and walked in to find Wade and Philip sitting on the living room floor by the fire facing each other in telepathic connection.
Lost in my own private dilemma these past few nights, I may have been blind to their growing relationship. Originally, simple tolerance would have pleased me. But thinking about it, they had both been starved for companionship, for long talks with friends who actually listened. Attaching themselves to me had probably been easier for them at first. But my distance lately might have driven them closer to each other, both surprised to find a willing ear or mind.
I was well aware that before anything else, the three of us had to make some decisions about the future. We could not put it off any longer.
I walked over and sat on the carpet beside them. Warmth from the fire soaked into my skin. I reached out and touched Wade’s hand with the tips of my fingers.
“Wade?”
He instantly dropped mental communication and looked at me. This too was becoming easier for them, to slip in and out of psychic contact without losing themselves in the memories.
“Yes?” he asked.
Philip turned his head and frowned when he saw my white dress. “Have you been hunting without me?”
Wade’s narrow expression grew expectant, even impatient, as if he preferred to go on practicing mental interaction with Philip . . . or maybe he just didn’t want to talk yet.
“What is it?” he asked.
They both sat there, looking at me, but now that I had their attention, my courage began to fail. Open confrontation was not one of my strengths.
But I couldn’t walk away.
“What . . . what do you plan to do now?”
He blinked and shook his head in puzzlement, but his brown eyes were anxious, even frightened.
“I mean tomorrow,” I rushed on, “and the tomorrow after that? Do you just go on like this . . . your job lost, your degree wasted, sitting around in this house we haven’t actually moved into?”
Philip flinched. He looked away, into the flames.
“Eleisha, don’t,” he said.
I ignored him, and kept talking to Wade. “You buried your best friend, and you didn’t even report him missing. Or have you forgotten?”
“No, I haven’t forgotten,” he whispered.
“Maybe you want to become one of us? Forget the past and get lost in a safe little world feeding off the living? Is that what you want?” I held out my thin, white arm. “Like this forever?”
He turned away. “No, not that, but—”
“I don’t want him to go away,” Philip broke in. “Leisha, don’t make him go away.”
“Should he stay here in some shadowed half-life with us?”
He flattened his hands on the floor, and his eyes narrowed. “If you try to make him leave, I’ll turn him.”
“That worked well with Maggie, didn’t it?” I said harshly.
They both stared at me, and I could feel the tension building.
“There’s nothing left for me to go home to!” Wade suddenly shouted. “Can’t you see that?”
“I don’t want you to go home!” I shouted back. “I just want you to live! Get a job here. Get an apartment. Make some friends. Use your gift . . . like with that child in Kirkland. You can be a part of us and live with your own kind, too.” I paused and lowered my voice, moving closer to him. “That’s what you really want anyway. Otherwise you would have bought more clothes . . . maybe a bed for your room here.”
He froze, just sitting there for a moment, and then dropped his head. I’m not certain, but he may have been silently crying. I knew he was torn between our world and his own. He’d be wasted as one of us, and miserable, probably jumping to his own death before the century turned.
“It’s all right,” I whispered. “As long we all keep trying to move forward, we’ll be okay.”
Philip’s panicked eyes clicked back and forth between us.
“Can you lend me some money to get started?” Wade whispered. “I don’t think I have enough left in savings.”
“Anything you want,” I answered.
Maybe he really would be okay.
Philip kept his hands flattened on the floor. “I don’t understand . . . Is he leaving?”
I turned my attention from Wade and looked at Philip. His red-brown hair hung forward over his shoulders.
“Yes, but not far,” I said.
“What about us?” he asked, almost like a child. “What do we do?”
I didn’t know how to answer.
Bringing Wade out of limbo might be difficult, but Philip was worse. I needed a future, a plan . . . and he’d spent an existence from one hunt to the next.
I knew I didn’t want to go to France anymore, or Finland. Maybe he didn’t either.
“If we stay here, Philip, we have to make this place ours. All of Maggie’s things go into boxes and get stored in the attic.”
He pulled back, poised on his knees, and I could see his mind rolling over my words as if they’d never occurred to him. “Would you want that?” he asked. “To make a home here . . . in this house?”
“It’s a start.”
I knew he was terrified of being alone again. After so many years in isolation, he didn’t want to go back. After so many years of being wrapped up in William, I didn’t want to live alone. We were weak, perhaps, but this was the truth.
“We’ll get boxes tomorrow night,” he said, nodding. “And then go shopping for furniture at IKEA.”
Relief flooded through me. This was a small step for both of us, but it was something. Then I remembered the reason I’d come running home to get him. Another element of our world had shifted tonight. We didn’t have to kill anymore . . . and I needed to show him how.
“We have to go out,” I said.
“Now? You just got back.”
“Yes.” I turned to Wade. “Can you order a pizza and hang here for a while?”
He frowned, probably thinking we were going hunting—which was half true. But what could he say? He knew what we were. I’d tell him everything I’d discovered tonight later.
“All right,” he answered.
So Wade stayed behind while Philip and I ran down the front steps and headed two miles away from the house.
“Steal us a car,” I said.
“You want me to?”
“Yeah, some old, heavy thing with great big tires and a cassette player.”
My mood infectious, he glanced around and spotted a ’71 Ranchero sporting a chipped paint job. “That one.”
Moments later, as we roared down the street, I plugged in a Blue Oyster Cult tape and watched him smile.
“How come we need to go hunting right now?” he asked.
“Because there’s something . . . I want to show you.”
Maybe we’d all be okay.
Barb Hendee grew up just north of Seattle, Washington. She completed a master’s degree in composition theory at the University of Idaho and then taught college English for ten years in Colorado. She and her husband, J.C., are coauthors of the bestselling Noble Dead Saga. They live in a quirky little town near Portland, Oregon, with two geriatric and quite demanding cats. Visit Barb’s Web site at
www.barbhendee.com.
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