DUTTON CHILDREN’S BOOKS
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Published by the Penguin Group
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This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are
either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and
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Copyright © 2010 by Heather Brewer
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To Jackie Kessler, the best friend and critique partner in the world
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Many thanks to my keen and amazing editor, Maureen Sullivan, for her incredible
input and divine patience; and to my brilliant and incredible agent, Michael
Bourret, who always has excellent advice and never fails to talk me down off
the ledge. Huge thanks to Team Vlad at Penguin Young Readers: Don Weisberg,
Lauri Hornik, Felicia Frazier, Andrea Mai, Scottie Bowditch, Erin Dempsey,
Jennifer Haller, Maureen Sullivan, Andrew Harwell, Shanta Newlin, Christian
Fuenfhausen, Emily Romero, Courtney Wood, and Allison Verost—you are the makers
of dreams and I owe you big time.
I’d also like to thank my sister, Dawn Vanniman, for supporting me at every
turn, no matter what. And MTB, for keeping me (relatively) sane.
This list wouldn’t be complete if I forgot to thank my three favorite people on
the planet. Paul, Jacob, and
1
A SLAYER’S RESOLVE
THE VAMPIRE SPUN AROUND, a wild, unhinged look in his eye. He lunged
forward but the slayer skillfully dodged his blow, delivering a hard roundhouse
kick to the creature’s throat. The vampire fell to the ground, coughing,
choking on its own blood. The slayer could have killed the beast a half hour
ago. But this wasn’t just about ridding the world of another abomination
(though that was definitely the end goal). It was about a slayer needing to
release some pent-up hostility and cleanse himself of all of his clouded
thoughts.
Thoughts that were now perfectly clear.
These bloodsucking things could not be trusted. Not even when they
donned the mask of a relatively normal teenager. Not even when they claimed to
be your friend. Especially when they used their insidious powers to gain your
trust and get you to reveal secrets that even those closest to you didn’t know.
Especially when their name was Vladimir Tod.
Joss was done playing games. With Vlad’s face planted firmly in the forefront
of his imagination, he slipped the silver-tipped wooden stake from his backpack
and approached the vampire on the ground with an eager step. He whispered, “For
you, Cecile,” and thrust the stake forward, before the beast could draw a
single breath. Blood—hot. slick, so deep red that it seemed black in the light
of the moon—poured out over his hands. The nameless vampire fell still.
Joss straightened his shoulders, triumphant.
From his backpack, he withdrew a cell phone and hit number two on speed dial.
When the voice at the other end answered, he said, “This is Joss. I need a
cleanup on the ocean side of
When the voice on the other end answered in the affirmative, Joss hung up the
phone. There was no need to continue the conversation. Small talk didn’t
matter.
All that mattered was that he was going back to Bathory.
And this time, he would walk away with no regrets.
2
ABSENT FRIENDS
VLAD TWISTED HIS WRIST, pinching his fingers together, spinning the
bronze coin on the table. When it fell, he picked it up and did it again,
counting. Thirty-six times it had fallen Slayer Society up. Twenty-two times it
was down. He spun the coin again, but before it had a chance to fall a hand
came down on it from across the table. Henry looked at his best friend, his
eyebrows drawn together in concern. Vlad sat back, a dark cloud hanging over
him. “When?”
Henry plucked the coin up in his hand and turned it over, frowning. “Next week.”
Vlad watched the coin, rereading the inscription on one side: FOR THE GOOD OF
MANKIND. “How long have you known?”
“As soon as my mom told me I came straight over to tell you.” Henry dropped the
coin and ran a hand through his hair, groaning. “What are we going to do?”
The coin rolled across the table and off the edge. Vlad’s hand moved so quickly
that Henry couldn’t even see it. He returned the coin to the table and once
again spun it on the table’s surface, returning to his former silence.
“We have to do something, Vlad. You can’t just sit here spinning that stupid
coin and waiting for Joss to come finish the job. Now that your invincibility
is gone ...”
Vlad spun the coin again, harder this time. Henry was right. They had to do
something. Henry’s cousin Joss was moving back to Bathory, this time with his
family, and Vlad bet that it wasn’t due to coincidence or the fact that Henry’s
family lived here. Joss was coming to kill him. And ever since D’Ablo’s stupid
ritual last year, he was very much in danger of dying.
But Vlad couldn’t think about a solution. All he’d been able to think about
since the Freedom Fest was Meredith, and how much he wished they could be
together. But they couldn’t. He was too much of a danger to her. So he’d broken
her heart and, in turn, shattered his own to pieces. He was empty. He was
alone.
And now he was in danger of dying at the hand of a slayer, his former friend.
He spun the coin again. Henry picked it up and threw it across the room. It
clattered on the floor behind Vlad. “Do something!”
Vlad looked at him somberly. “Like what?”
“Anything. You act like Joss coming back to town is no big deal. I know you’re
still all torn up about Meredith...” Vlad shot him a warning glance, but Henry
wasn’t about to back down. “What? You’ve been like this all summer, but you did
what you had to do. Now you act like you don’t care if Joss comes back here and
sticks another stake through your heart.” Henry’s eyes shined in frustration. “But
I do.”
His words hung in the air between them, weakening Vlad’s resolve.
Henry turned and walked to the other side of the kitchen, reaching up to wipe
his eyes on his sleeve, trying to keep it hidden from his friend. “Look, man, I
don’t want to get all chick-flick on you or anything, but you’re my best friend
and I almost lost you last time. I can’t go through that again. I won’t”
Vlad sighed, saying everything with his eyes that he couldn’t bear to with his
voice. He couldn’t do anything. Short of killing Joss—Henry’s cousin, Vlad’s
former friend—he couldn’t do anything at all. “You’re right. I just don’t see
how I can stop him without... ” He didn’t have to say it, and neither of them
wanted him to. He couldn’t kill Joss. That just wasn’t an option.
“What about mind control?”
Vlad frowned. “I can’t control him for the rest of his life, Henry. Besides,
sooner or later, my concentration would break.”
“There has to be something... ” Henry returned to his seat, a look of
desperation washing over his features. “What about Otis? He’s like a million
years old.”
“Three hundred and two”
“Whatever, he’s old. He’s dealt with slayers his whole life, I bet. You should
ask him what to do.”
After a moment, Vlad nodded thoughtfully. If anyone would know what to do, his
uncle would.
Henry nodded too, looking somewhat relieved that Vlad was actually going to
take action. “Anyway, I’d better get back. My mom is on a cleaning rampage
because of our extended family moving to town. If I’m not there, who knows what
she’ll throw out! The woman has no respect for the treasures of an adolescent
male.”
Henry stood and glanced at Vlad, a worrisome expression on his face. “You sure
you’re okay?”
“Yeah. I’m fine” Vlad forced a smile, and Henry walked out the front door,
closing it behind him.
As soon as the latch clicked, Vlad reached down and retrieved the coin. A deep
line creased his forehead as he read the inscription over again. He focused on
Otis and spoke with his thoughts. “Otis? I need to talk to you. I could use
some advice.”
“Just let me finish up my meeting with Principal Snelgrove and I’ll be home
shortly,
Vlad turned the coin over in his hand. An image flashed in his mind. A
small point of silver at the center of his chest. And blood. Lots of blood.
Vlad shook his head, willing the memory away “No. But it can wait until you
get home. Just... hurry, okay?”
Otis grew quiet for a moment, then said, “I’ll be there shortly.”
Vlad gripped the coin in his hand and leaned forward, pressing his forehead to
the tabletop. He fought, but the memories burst through his dam of resistance.
Joss’s eyes narrowing at the sight of Vlad’s glowing mark. The bitter
accusations of betrayal. A whisper: “For you, Cecile.” The feeling of
being punched in the back. Looking down and seeing the silver tip of the wooden
stake. He’d coughed, and the pain had dragged him under.
Afterward, when Joss had visited him in the hospital, Vlad had been almost
certain he’d apologize. But he didn’t. Instead, he told Vlad that he was
leaving. Their friendship, it seemed, was over. No longer friends, they were
more than enemies. They were natural foes—vampire and slayer.
And Vlad still wasn’t sure how he felt about it.
The staking incident had been horrific to endure. And recovering from it had
been no picnic. But the worst part of it was that he missed Joss, missed his
company, his insight, his impossibly dorky way of looking at the world. When
Joss had slammed that hunk of wood through Vlad’s chest, Vlad had survived ...
but their friendship had not. And he was still mourning it, still grieving over
the loss of a very good friend.
Not to mention the reason Joss was returning.
He didn’t need to hear it from Joss’s lips. The note he’d left on Vlad’s locker
before he skipped town freshman year had said it all: Friendship over.
And if it really was over, then Vlad was going to have to formulate a plan
pretty quickly on how to face Joss the slayer, rather than Joss the friend.
He sat up, gripping the coin tightly, and watched the door for Otis’s return.
After many minutes, the door swung open, and his uncle entered.
Otis immediately met his eyes. “What’s wrong?”
Vlad sat the coin on the table in plain view. “How’d the interview go?”
Otis furrowed his brow with a questioning in his eyes. “It went well. I’ll be
teaching mythology full time at the high school.” He paused for a moment and
wet his lips. “Is everything all right?”
“Congrats on the job. A lot of students have missed you since eighth grade—they’ll
be happy to have you back. Me too.” Vlad dropped his attention to the slayer
coin and released a tense sigh. “I have a problem, Otis. Joss is moving back to
Bathory.”
Otis closed his eyes for a moment and sighed, visibly relaxing. He took a seat
opposite Vlad with a small smile affixed to his lips. “You had me worried for a
second.”
Vlad’s eyebrows drew together in confusion. Clearly Otis had lost his mind. “You’re
not worried anymore?”
Otis shook his head. The bemused expression on his face irritated Vlad, though
he wasn’t sure why. “
“Dispatched?” Vlad blinked, dropping his gaze momentarily to the coin on the
table between them. “I don’t want to kill him.”
Otis seemed perplexed by this. He grew quiet, obviously mulling over something
in his mind. Finally, he nodded and said, “If you’re more comfortable with it,
I’d be happy to—”
“You’re missing the point” Vlad’s jaw tightened defensively. “I don’t want
anything to happen to Joss. I don’t want you to touch him or hurt him in any
way. He’s ... my friend.”
For a long time Otis didn’t speak. Neither did Vlad. He was too busy trying to
figure out how the conversation had gone so quickly from asking for advice to
killing his friend.
After a while, Otis leaned forward, tension and disbelief ebbing from him. “We
are speaking of the same boy who drove a stake through your chest from behind,
in the most cowardly way possible, yes? And you want to, what, give him an
opportunity to finish the job?”
“No.”
“Then the matter must be dealt with”
“But he’s my friend, or at least he was. I don’t think he’ll try anything like
that again.” It surprised Vlad how easily the lie slipped from his lips. Maybe
it shouldn’t have. He’d been doing a lot of it lately. Pushing the image of
Snow from his mind, he met Otis’s gaze.
Otis furrowed his brow. “Fine. If Joss keeps his distance, I’ll leave him be.
But so help him if he threatens or harms you again.”
Vlad shook his head. “Then I’ll deal with him. I don’t want him hurt.”
The corner of Otis’s mouth twitched slightly. “You’ve made that abundantly
clear. So what do you want?”
The thing was that he had no real idea of what he wanted. The only thing he
could think of was for time to spin backward, for Joss to have never become a
slayer in the first place. And that wasn’t exactly an option.
Vlad sighed. “Your advice. I want to know how to make a slayer back off without
killing him.”
Otis sat back, shaking his head. “To tell you the truth, I don’t know if anyone’s
ever tried. As far as I’ve seen, you can’t. Once a slayer has his mark, he will
stop at nothing until the task has been completed. It’s always just been easier
to take them out of the picture altogether.”
His voice took on a disgusted tone and rose as he continued. “They call it that—a
task. Did your friend mention that? I suppose it must make taking the
life of a person easier to refer to the act as a task instead of murder.”
He threw his arms up, disgusted and angry and acting very much like Vlad wasn’t
on his side. “Just as referring to vampires as things and monsters
must make it easier to stomach the idea of killing people who happen to
have fangs.”
Vlad watched him, wide-eyed, slumping back in his seat. “Why do you sound so
angry?”
Otis stood suddenly, and slapped his palms on the table, his eyes fierce. “Because
I am! How can you defend him, Vladimir? How can you spare his life when he
nearly took yours? He’s nothing, just a slayer, a foolish assassin armed with a
wooden stake. They are the ones who declared war on us, and we have every right
to defend ourselves when we know an attack is about to happen. That’s all Joss
is, Vlad, another casualty of war. He just doesn’t know it yet.”
Otis sat down in the chair opposite Vlad, his eyes seething. “If you ask me,
the world would be a better place without him and his kind walking around, free
to do as they please.”
Vlad shook his head wordlessly. When he spoke, it was in near-whispers. “Listen
to yourself, Otis. You’re grouping them all together and plotting their
extinction. You sound just like they do. Maybe you’re not all that different.”
Otis clenched his jaw and pointed a stern finger at his nephew. He stood
abruptly, pushing the chair sharply back from the table. Vlad instantly knew
that he had gone too far, but he didn’t care. He braced himself for the words
that were soon to come flying out of his uncle’s mouth. Hateful words. Words
filled with venom and justification.
But the words didn’t come. Otis turned and walked out of the kitchen. When the
front door slammed, Vlad winced, but only slightly.
The coin lay on the tabletop where he’d left it. Plucking it up in his hand, he
spun it once more, and wondered if Joss had noticed its absence, or if he had
any idea where it might be now. It had to be his, after all. There were no
other slayers in Bathory. It had to be Joss’s coin. Maybe that’s why Vlad had
kept it. Maybe that’s why he couldn’t stop looking at it.
3
UNTOLD TRUTHS
THIS ISN’T HEALTHY.”
Vlad blinked up at Nelly from his seat at the kitchen table. He hadn’t been
listening but assumed she was referring to whatever it was she was stirring in
the saucepan on the stove.
Nelly frowned and sat the wooden spoon on the counter. Yellow goo pooled around
the end of it. “You’ve been moping around the house ever since Freedom Fest,
Vladimir. It’s not good for you to stay indoors and sulk for so long.”
Vlad dropped his attention to the tabletop. There was little sense explaining
how he felt. It seemed that each day was worse than the one before it. First,
the situation with Meredith, then he learns that Joss is moving back to town,
presumably to finish what he started over a year ago. And to top it all off he
and Otis hadn’t been on speaking terms for almost a week, not since Vlad had
turned to his uncle for his counsel and compared him to what Otis considered to
be the enemy.
Nelly sighed and pulled a couple of twenties out of her purse, dropping them on
the table in front of him. “Why don’t you call Henry and go see a movie or
something? One last huzzah before school starts tomorrow?”
Tomorrow. Vlad had almost forgotten he’d be starting his junior year in less
than sixteen hours. Meredith would be there. He hadn’t seen her all summer.
Joss would probably be there too. As if it wasn’t bad enough having to face one
of them alone.
Deciding that maybe Nelly was right, maybe he should go out with Henry, Vlad
decided to give his drudge a call after dinner. Plus, it couldn’t hurt to ask
if his cousin had finished moving in, or maybe changed his mind and decided to
move to
He closed his hand over the money and met Nelly’s concerned gaze. “Nelly, do
you think I did the right thing by breaking up with Meredith?”
Nelly wiped her hands on a towel and sighed. “I think that’s a question that
only you can answer,
Vlad thought back to the Freedom Fest. Meredith’s face flitted through his
mind, shocked, then saddened. He’d hurt her with his words, and then he’d
shoved her. She’d fallen to the ground, sobbing, and all he could do was walk
away. He wet his lips and looked at Nelly. “It was the only way I could protect
her.”
Nelly sighed, then gave his shoulder a squeeze. “Does your father’s journal say
anything at all about how he resisted feeding from your mother?”
Vlad shook his head. Tomas had always told his son that he only fed from blood
bags, but lately Vlad was finding that enormously difficult to believe.
Personal experience in the form of monthly feeding sessions with Snow had
taught him that once a vampire has fed from the source, blood bags were like
trading in that brand-new Harley-Davidson for an old scooter. So the question
remained, where had Tomas been getting his blood from? The idea that he’d fed
from Mellina, Vlad’s mom, sickened Vlad to no end. It had to have sickened his
dad too, so it had to be someone else. But who?
Vlad flicked his eyes to Nelly.
No. Nelly would have said something.
She patted his hand. “Well, I’m sure everything will be okay. You just need
some time to get over the breakup.”
Groaning, he said, “Yeah, and there’s plenty of fish in the sea too, right?”
Nelly offered a reassuring smile. “Believe it or not, heart-ache doesn’t last
forever.”
Maybe not. But it certainly sucked for as long as it decided to hang around.
Vlad’s thoughts turned to Otis. He had looked rather haggard lately, so Vlad
had no doubts that he was sticking to their agreement that Otis wouldn’t feed
from humans while he was staying in Bathory. But how was he managing it? How
was he nuzzling Nelly’s neck without taking a bite? His resolve must have been
made of steel. Vlad rightfully felt like such a hypocrite, keeping Otis bound
to an act that he himself couldn’t keep to.
Nelly said, “Why don’t you give Henry a call? I’m sure Melissa wouldn’t mind
giving him up for one night while you two have some fun.”
Vlad opened his mouth to say he thought that was probably a good idea—even
though he didn’t, not really—but then Otis walked in the front door and Vlad
snapped his mouth shut again.
He wasn’t mad at Otis; he never had been. But Otis was very upset with him, and
Vlad knew why. Otis despised the slayers. Vlad was sure he had his reasons for
it, but Joss wasn’t like the rest of them. At least Vlad hoped he wasn’t.
Really. Joss was the only slayer that he knew, so he had no real basis for
comparison. He only knew that he had hurt his uncle by what he had said, and he
felt bad for saying it. But he and Otis both knew that he was right, and that
felt worse.
Having his uncle reside in the same town had turned out to be a learning
experience in many ways. Initially, they’d been inseparable. Otis had recounted
stories about him and Tomas and their adventures together. But ever since the
construction on Vlad’s old house had been completed, when Otis moved out of
Nelly’s home to stay there, things had been dif ferent. And Vlad wasn’t exactly
sure why. They were at odds over the littlest things, and Otis seemed troubled
by something that he would not give voice to.
Otis brushed his lips against Nelly’s cheek, whispering his hello in her ear.
Nelly blushed and smiled and eventually went back to cooking.
Vlad stood, money in one hand, Joss’s coin in the other, and left the room. His
foot had just touched the bottom step on his way to his bedroom, when Otis
said, “The silence between us is intolerable,
Vlad paused and glanced over his shoulder at his uncle. “I’m not the one who
started it.”
Otis’s eyes shined with hurt. “True enough. Can we talk?”
Vlad shrugged casually, but inside, his muscles had already lost much of their
tension in relief. “Sure.”
Then, inside Vlad’s mind, Otis’s voice, warm and welcoming—something Vlad
missed more than he would ever admit to. “Not here. I was thinking of your
house. You haven’t been by to see it since the renovations were completed. I
have things I’d like to show you, things I’d like to discuss with you.”
Vlad’s initial reaction was to jump at the offer—after all, he missed Otis’s
company, and very much longed for the opportunity to sit down and chat. But
there was their last conversation to be considered. “First promise me that
you’ll leave Joss alone, that you won’t harm him in any way.”
Otis’s jaw tightened. “You know I can’t promise that.”
He met Vlad’s eyes, pleading aloud. “Please,
Vlad winced. Maybe he had been moping more than was sensible lately. “Okay But
it can’t take long. Henry and I are going to the movies.”
Not that Henry had any inkling at all that they were hanging out. But Henry had
proven to be enormously supportive ever since he’d come to the conclusion that
being Vlad’s human slave was pretty cool. He had no idea that Vlad had another
drudge in Snow, since Vlad had insisted that he’d released the goth girl. It
was a lie, but one Vlad had needed to tell. He didn’t want anyone knowing about
his continued feeding from a human’s veins.
The problem was ... sometimes he got the idea that Snow wanted to be much more
than his drudge.
Vlad shook his head. The last thing he needed to be doing was thinking about
Snow when Otis was lurking around in his head. He didn’t block Otis, but
definitely changed gears in his thought process, instead mulling over Joss and
the ever-looming first day of school.
The walk to his old house was long and quiet. Occasionally, Otis would give him
a sidelong glance, but neither spoke. Once they turned down Lugosi Trail, Vlad
smiled. His house had been given a fresh coat of paint, and brand-new windows
had been installed. Even the shrubs alongside the porch looked brighter,
happier now that someone was calling his house home. He’d never asked where
Otis got the money to fix the house. It didn’t matter. What mattered was that
it was being given new life.
It made looking at it easier to recall the memories he had of his life there,
before the fire, before his parents’ deaths, before everything he knew had
disappeared in a whiff of ash and soot.
Otis’s voice buzzed pleasantly in his brain. “It’s so good to see you smile.
You haven’t in some time.”
Vlad slowed his steps some, thinking, then he spoke to Otis with his mind. “I
haven’t had much of a reason to.”
Otis took on a hopeful tone. “And now?”
They crossed the street, and Vlad cleared his throat. “The house looks nice.
Mom would like the color you chose.”
Otis raised his eyes to the house. The siding was a pale yellow—a warm tone
compared to the gray that it had been. “Nelly picked it. She said that it was
Mellina’s favorite color.”
An image flashed in Vlad’s mind, an unexpected memory from years ago. His mom
in a flowered skirt, a pale yellow sweater tied about her shoulders. She was
laughing, running across the yard away from Tomas, away from Vlad. Something
about them being out to get her, but Vlad couldn’t recall it clearly enough.
And just like that, it was gone.
He shook his head, smiling at the memory, and stepped forward onto the porch,
following Otis’s lead. Otis turned the knob and opened the door, gesturing with
a small nod for Vlad to head inside. With a strangely light feeling of
excitement in his chest, Vlad stepped into the house.
On some level, he’d expected that acrid, horrible scent of smoke and ash to assault
his nostrils, but it didn’t. Instead, it smelled like Otis had been baking
cookies. A glimpse into the new living room revealed the source of the smell—scented
candles had been placed on a new mahogany coffee table. The walls were in
golden tones, warm, homey. And as Vlad moved from room to room, he marveled
that this was his house—the same house he’d been born in, the same house he’d
lived in for so long. It looked different. Way different. The furniture, the
cabinets, the paint on the walls had all been changed. It looked like an
entirely new place.
Vlad wasn’t sure how he felt about that.
On the one hand, he’d assured Otis that a change was definitely needed, that
maybe a new look would ease the pain of visiting his once-happy home. On the
other, he felt somewhat intruded upon, as though Otis had tried to erase the
memories of his parents by redoing the house—a stupid thought, but there it
was. He flicked his eyes to his uncle, who was watching him carefully. “Is ...
is everything different?”
Otis continued to watch him for a moment, as if trying to gauge his reaction to
the changes. Finally, seeming to accept that there was no way he could ease any
concerns in Vlad’s mind, he took a breath and said, “Not everything. Come
upstairs.”
Otis led the way through the kitchen to the back stairs, then up. Vlad
followed, taking in every inch of his renewed former home. The wood floors had
been sanded and stained, and the distinct lack of that smoky scent continued
throughout the house. It was a missing link in the experience—a bad thing that
had been there for years and was suddenly gone. Vlad didn’t miss it, but felt a
wave of guilt at its absence, as if by not whiffing that scent, he were somehow
trying to forget that awful day, the day he lost his parents forever.
Otis paused on the top step and peered over his shoulder at his nephew. The
look in his eyes said he’d picked up on Vlad’s tension, but he couldn’t
identify the source, wouldn’t without reading Vlad’s thoughts—something Otis
had promised he would only do if Vlad granted him permission. He wet his lips
as if to speak, to offer some sort of comfort, but turned his head at the last
moment and continued his trek up the stairs and down the hall to the door of
Tomas’s office.
Vlad halted on the stairs, wishing for a moment that Otis would read his mind
so he wouldn’t have to say the things he was thinking out loud. After
exchanging troubled glances with Otis, he followed, hesitant to see what now
lay behind the door to his dad’s sanctuary.
“This room was the most difficult to renovate.” Otis waited, gesturing with his
eyes to the doorknob.
With a deep, hesitant, hurting breath, Vlad reached out and turned the knob,
opening the door.
Inside, the walls were exactly the same as they had been, down to the scrape
where Tomas’s chair had rubbed the paint away. His dad’s desk remained, though
the chair was new. Everything looked exactly the same as it had been before the
fire. Only cleaner.
He turned to Otis with a questioning look.
Otis smiled, his eyes shining. “It was so difficult, in fact, that I left it as
it was. Gave it a good scrubbing, of course.”
Vlad ran the tips of his fingers across his dad’s desk, looking around, taking
it all in. Finally, he spoke. “Thank you, Otis. This means a lot to me.”
“There’s one more room that I left untouched.” Otis’s eyes moved to the
hallway, to the door of Tomas and Mellina’s bedroom. From his pocket he pulled
a silver key and placed it in Vlad’s palm. “The room is exactly as it was that
day. I merely had workers seal it off to prevent the scent of smoke from
pervading the rest of the house.”
Vlad turned the key over in his hand. When he spoke, his voice was raspy, his
chest full of gratitude. “Why?”
Otis’s voice was kind and warm. “Because it’s not up to me to decide when it’s
time to leave that moment behind,
Vlad couldn’t help but notice that Otis had used the word when, not if. When
it was time. As if there was no question that that time would come.
And he was right. Sooner or later, Vlad was going to have to let go of his
guilt and say goodbye to the haunting memories of that day.
But not today.
Vlad nodded and slipped the key into his front pocket. “The house looks
amazing, Otis. You’ve done a great job.”
Otis was looking at him, a troubled expression on his face. “You ooze sorrow,
Vlad tried to ignore his uncle’s words, but couldn’t. “I really like the
floors. Dad always loved mahogany.”
“Talk to me. Tell me what’s troubling you so deeply. Is it Joss? Is it
Meredith? You’ve been so distant since I moved to Bathory. Is it me?”
Vlad swallowed hard. “It’s ... nothing.”
It wasn’t a lie. Not exactly, anyway. The fact of the matter was that it was a
combination of all of those things, and more. So much more than he could ever
tell Otis.
Images of Snow flitted through his mind, of their monthly sessions in the alley
behind The Crypt. Vlad had kept those moments secret, so secret that Henry was
convinced that Vlad had a crush on Snow, and that was why he needed to frequent
the goth club. He couldn’t have been more wrong. The Crypt was an absolute
blast to hang out at, and the only feelings Vlad had for Snow were reminiscent
of how a human might feel about a Big Mac.
A really sweet, amazingly understanding, pretty Big Mac. A Big Mac that got
what he was saying before he even said it. A Big Mac that listened in ways that
Meredith never would have been capable of.
Otis furrowed his brow. “I will not lay a hand on the slayer unless he presents
a threat. While I don’t understand your feelings, I will respect them,
Vladimir. If that is what it takes to heal whatever is broken between us, then
so be it.”
Vlad shook his head. “Thank you for that. But it’s not you, Otis. I’m just
dealing with a lot of unexpected stress.”
“I’m not surprised. You haven’t been eating right.” Otis’s voice softened, as
did the expression in his eyes. “Nelly says you only manage four or five blood
bags a day anymore—significantly less than you were eating.”
Vlad’s entire body tensed. “Yeah, well ... I haven’t been hungry lately.”
“She’s also commented that you have a new group of friends—”
“Your point?” Vlad snapped. He hadn’t meant to, but he did. He was trying to
stay calm. Otis knew. He knew about Snow. He knew Vlad had been feeding on a
human. But how? Vlad had been so careful to hide his feeding sessions. Even
Henry didn’t have a clue. And Otis wouldn’t dare break his trust by reading his
thoughts unwanted.
Otis’s tone was calm and somewhat pleading. “I just want you to know that you
can always talk to me, Vladimir, about anything. I will never judge you.”
Vlad’s heart raced along with his thoughts. Otis couldn’t know. There was no
way. Vlad had guarded his secret too carefully for his uncle to find him out.
Hadn’t he? “Well, there’s nothing to judge, is there? I haven’t done anything
wrong.”
Otis grew silent. After a moment, he gave Vlad’s shoulder a squeeze. “I know
you didn’t do anything wrong, Vlad.”
He turned and headed down the hall, pausing at the top of the stairs. Without
looking back, he said, “I know.”
Vlad froze at his uncle’s words. No truer words had ever been spoken—Otis knew.
Somehow, he knew all about Vlad’s late night trips to The Crypt. He knew about
Snow. He knew that while Vlad might be strong enough to stand up to D’Ablo and
fight to the near death with a vampire slayer, he didn’t have the strength to
admit when he was wrong.
He stood there for a long time, listening to his heart pounding in his ears.
After a while, he slowly made his way down the stairs to the kitchen. Otis was
sitting on a stool next to the large island, a coffee mug of blood in his hand.
He didn’t bother to offer any to Vlad, almost as though he assumed that Vlad’s
hunger had been recently satisfied.
It had. Just a week before.
Vlad tightened his jaw and let another lie escape his lips. “I have to meet
Henry now.”
As Vlad hurried out the door, slamming it behind him, Otis called out, “See you
at dinner tonight.”
Great. Just what he needed.
4
MEANINGFUL CONVERSATIONS
NELLY, THIS STEAK IS DELECTABLE!”
Nelly smiled her gratitude across the table at Otis. Vlad poked his steak with
his fork. It was good. Nice and raw, warm enough to encourage the blood to pool
on his plate.
But it wasn’t human—a fact that was making it increasingly difficult for Vlad
to finish his meal.
Otis met his eyes momentarily before engaging Nelly in some inane conversation
that Vlad completely tuned out of. After several minutes of their chatter,
Nelly cleared her throat, eliciting his attention. “You seem distracted
tonight,
Plenty of stuff, Vlad thought.
Otis raised an eyebrow, but didn’t speak. Vlad flashed him a look. “Lurking
around in my mind, Uncle Otis?”
Vlad turned his outward attention back to his aunt, balancing the two
conversations—verbal and telepathic—with ease. “Nothing’s going on. Just not
hungry, I guess.”
Otis took another bite of steak, chewing thoughtfully. “Lurking, but not
poking around. What’s stuff, anyway?”
“What time is Henry picking you up?”
“Around six. Movie starts at eight, so we’ll probably wander the mall for a
while. I might be back late though. I promised Snow I’d stop by The Crypt and
bring her my copy of Dracula.” Simultaneously, he spoke to Otis with his
mind. “It’s ... nothing, like I said this afternoon.”
“Just try to be back by ten. I don’t like these late-night stays in Stokerton.
Big cities are dangerous places at night.”
Otis frowned slightly. “Nothing ... which is to say, nothing that is
my business to know?”
“You catch on quick, Otis.” Vlad shook his head. “You worry too much,
Nelly.”
Nelly stood and cleared the dishes away, waving off Otis’s efforts to help.
When she disappeared into the kitchen, Otis met Vlad’s gaze again. “There is
something I need to ask you. You walked out earlier and stole my opportunity
away.”
Vlad shook his head sharply. “Don’t. Please.”
Otis furrowed his brow. “I admit I’m a bit perplexed by your
reaction,
Vlad looked his uncle directly in the eye, defying him to ask about his dining
habits again. He wouldn’t admit to it. He couldn’t admit to it, not after all
the preaching he’d done to Otis about how humans were people, not food. “I
know what you’re going to ask and the answer is no.”
Otis sat back, stunned. It looked as if his heart had been ripped out. His
words were merely shocked whispers in Vlad’s mind. “Just like that? No? Won’t
you at least give the matter some thought?”
“What’s there to think about? You obviously already know how I feel about
it, and you have no right to ask me to change that. It’s not your place and you
know it.”
“I am truly sorry. I thought you would be happy. I had hoped that you would
give me your blessing.”
It was Vlad’s turn to act surprised. “Wait, , , my blessing? For
what, exactly?”
“Vlad, it’s likely that I won’t make it out of this trial alive, but I want
you to know that if I do, I intend to ask for Nelly’s hand in marriage, and I
would like to know that I would have your blessing if I did It’s no secret that
I hold Nelly in the highest regard. I ... I love her,
Vlad stared, unable to speak for a moment. Otis wanted to marry Nelly? He wasn’t
cornering Vlad about feeding on Snow? He took a deep breath, letting that sink
in for a while. It wasn’t that Otis was saying anything that he didn’t already
know, but the fact that Otis had finally admitted to it really blew his mind. Vampires,
after all, didn’t love humans. And if they did, they definitely wouldn’t tell
anyone, and they certainly wouldn’t marry them. “What about Elysia?”
“What about it?” Nelly returned for more plates, and Otis smiled and watched
her as she moved back to the kitchen. “I’m already a criminal. And there’s
no use fighting it anymore. I love her. And I want a chance at happiness with
her. But ... I won’t marry her without your blessing.”
Vlad thought for a moment before speaking. It wasn’t like he disapproved of his
uncle marrying his guardian. But he had to watch out for her. “What about
your trial? You told me that there’s a huge chance you’ll be put to death for
betraying the Stokerton council and hiding me from them—I believe your exact
words were ‘I do not know of a vampire who has survived an Elysian trial of
this magnitude. You can’t widow her on your honeymoon, Otis. It’s not fair to
her.”
“I planned to wait until after the trial to propose. Call it a lucky
charm.” He smiled sadly, as if all of his hopes of surviving his trial in
Elysia were resting on the notion that he might one day call Nelly his wife. “Maybe
it will be enough to get me through the charges against me.”
“There are a lot of them, Otis. I mean, we were lucky they never called me
to trial, after all, but you ...” Vlad met his gaze. “I don’t want to
see her get hurt, Otis.”
“I want nothing more than her happiness,
Vlad smiled. “Then you have my blessing.”
He stood to leave the table and met his uncle’s eyes once more. “Oh and one
more thing. You look terrible. You should step out for a bite later.”
Reluctantly, hope crept into Otis’s tone, as if he were worried Vlad might be
pulling a fast one on him. “Meaning ... ?”
Vlad shrugged. “You know what I mean. Find yourself a hobo and chow down.”
Otis exhaled a sigh, his body visibly relaxing. “Thank you. These past few
months have been excruciating.”
“Just no one from Bathory, okay?”
“Fair enough.”
A smile danced on Otis’s lips. Vlad could tell his uncle was already
daydreaming about rivers of blood pouring down his throat. “I’ve missed our
talks. Is there ... anything else you’d like to talk about before heading into
Stokerton?”
Vlad stiffened before turning away. “No. Not at the moment, anyway.”
He shouted a goodbye to Nelly. Luckily, Henry was just pulling into the
driveway in his early birthday present, a gloss black Dodge Charger, as Vlad
closed the door. Vlad would be lucky if he got Otis’s piece of hand-me-down
crap someday. It must be nice to be a McMillan.
In a few quick steps, Vlad was at the car. He opened the door and slid onto the
soft leather seat with a sigh. “You have no idea how good your timing is.”
Henry flashed him a questioning glance, but Vlad waved it away. Then Henry
backed out of the driveway and slammed the transmission into drive, gunning the
engine until they were barreling their way out of town.
After they’d passed the edge of farmland that counted as part of town, Vlad
cleared his throat. “So ...”
Henry glanced at him. “You’re wondering about Joss, right?”
Vlad nodded. Dutifully, Henry spilled all the details: The enormous U-Haul,
helping his aunt and uncle with a million and one boxes, avoiding eye contact
with his cousin until the truck had been emptied. Henry hesitated for a moment,
and Vlad said, “Anything else?”
It was only then that he noticed the puffy, purple bruise under Henry’s right
eye. “Dude, did you get in a fight with Joss?”
Henry grinned. “Busted his lip.”
Vlad raised an eyebrow, suppressing a small smile. “Why?”
His hands tensed on the steering wheel. “Nobody calls my best friend a
mosquito. Especially somebody too chicken to say it in anything but a muttered
whisper.”
Vlad allowed his smile to come through. “Thanks, Henry.”
“Hey, man. I got your back.”
The sky outside had faded from a soft blue to a mix of oranges and reds. Henry
cranked up the stereo. Vlad watched out the window and wondered where Joss was
now, what he was doing. Would he unpack before beginning his hunt for Vlad? Or
would he be waiting in the shadows near Nelly’s front porch when Vlad returned
home tonight?
Joss’s presence in Bathory was unsettling to say the least.
Henry turned the radio down again. “I forgot to ask you something. Melissa
wants to know if you wanna go on a double date with her cousin Sara.”
Vlad shook his head. “I don’t feel like dating anyone, Henry.”
“It’s not a date. Not really. But it would do you some good to get out with
other girls. Y’know?”
Vlad slumped down in his seat. The scene at last year’s Freedom Fest played
over and over in his imagination. The words he’d spoken to Meredith ripped
apart his insides even now. “I don’t love you. I never did. Now just ...
just get away from me.”
He cast a quick glance at Henry. “Girls other than Meredith, you mean.”
Henry sighed. “Dude, what’s the big deal about Meredith? She’s just a girl.
There’s probably a couple hundred at Bathory High alone.”
“She’s not just a girl. She’s ... Meredith.”
“You hardly know her, Vlad. I mean, it’s just like with everybody else—you keep
your distance.”
Vlad balked. “I know her.”
Henry said, “Okay, so what’s her favorite color?”
“Pink.”
“Anybody with eyes can see that. What’s her dog’s name?”
Vlad blinked. Meredith had a dog? “I don’t ... know.”
“Beeper. Why did her family move to Bathory?”
“Well ... I ...”
“Her grandmother was sick and they needed to take care of her; they live in her
old house.”
Vlad’s heart sank. The truth was he didn’t know Meredith. Not really. “Okay.”
“What does she want to do after graduation?”
“I said okay. You’ve made your point.”
“Have I?” Suddenly Henry sounded enormously frustrated. “Because my point is
that you may spend a lot of time fantasizing about who you think Meredith is,
but you’ve never really made the effort to know who she is outside of your
day-dreams. And you’ve certainly never given her a chance to know who you
really are.”
Vlad shook his head. “That’s not as easy as it sounds, Henry.”
“So you can’t tell her the vampire stuff. Fine. Don’t. But dude...” The car
slowed, pausing at a four-way stop, and Henry met his eyes. “Does she even know
your favorite color?”
Vlad swallowed hard. He really hadn’t noticed that he and Meredith were
virtually strangers. He just knew that he loved her, and that her absence had
left a huge, gaping hole at the center of his being.
Henry sighed as he pulled the car forward through the intersection. “She’s just
a girl, Vlad. They all are, until you take the time to get to know them.”
Vlad rolled his eyes at the window, returning his attention to the sky. It was
really annoying how Mr. Kiss Every Girl with a Pulse had morphed into Dr. Phil
ever since he and Melissa had gotten serious. Clearly, a monthlong relationship
was enough to fill Henry with an abundance of romantic wisdom. Riiiiight.
Vlad reached over and turned the volume knob on the stereo up, before Henry
felt like sharing any more of his incredible insight on the opposite sex ... or
before he threw up. Whichever came first.
5
THE TROUBLE WITH DRUDGES
HENRY PULLED INTO A PARKING SPACE at the edge of the parking lot, as far
away from The Crypt as he possibly could, as if the distance made it easier to
deny that he’d been to the goth club at all. He threw Vlad a glance. “Don’t
take all night, okay? I told Melissa I’d call her after we got back from the
movies, and her dad freaks out if I call after ten.”
Vlad resisted rolling his eyes, and then Henry cut the engine. “Son of
Psycho Slasher Chainsaw Guy starts in about a half hour, so I figure you’ve
got about twenty minutes before we bolt.”
Vlad flashed him an irritated look and snorted. “So... what? You’re not coming
in?”
Henry softened some. “I kinda thought I’d wait out here.”
“Come on, Henry. I put up with you being at Melissa’s beck and call
twenty-four/seven, the least you can do is put up with my friends wearing black
eyeliner.” He cast Henry a pleading glance. “They won’t bite. Well ... most of
them, anyway. I’m almost certain.”
Henry seemed to mull it over for a moment, and Vlad saw his in. Vlad smirked and
said, “Y’know, you were much more adventurous before you entered the bonds of
holy matrimony.”
Henry slugged him in the arm and opened the car door, stepping out into the
night.
They crossed the parking lot and Vlad opened the door to the club, leading
Henry down the ramp until they entered the heart of The Crypt. It was a place
that Vlad had come to know quite well over the summer. He felt at home here,
nonjudged, accepted for who he was—or who they thought he was, anyway. Across
the room, lounging on the velvet couches, were October, Sprat, Andrew, and
Kristoff. Vlad offered a wave and scanned the room for Snow. He’d just fed two
weeks before, but the tension between him and Otis was making him hungrier than
he’d been in a long time. Besides ... he rather enjoyed the sensation of
feeding.
Not that he’d ever admit that to anyone. Least of all, Otis.
Plus, he enjoyed Snow’s company immensely.
Not that he’d ever admit that to Henry.
Vlad turned his head and spied her, sipping a red syrupy drink from a plastic
goblet at the bar. He smiled, willing her to notice him. She blinked, looking
up, meeting his eyes, and smiled too. It was kind of cool, knowing that he
could summon a girl by will alone. It made him feel kind of like Fonzie from
that old Happy Days show that Nelly liked watching on Nick at Nite. Not
that he was going to try the trick with the jukebox anytime soon. Come to think
of it, when was the last time anyone had seen a jukebox?
He glanced at Henry, who was shifting awkwardly from one foot to the other,
clearly uncomfortable with his surroundings. A girl in a tight, black corset
walked by and Henry relaxed some, raising an eyebrow at Vlad as if to say, “Who
knew goth chicks were so hot?”
It was nice to see that some things never changed. Now if only he’d stop being
Melissa’s lapdog.
“I’ll be right back, Henry. I’ve gotta talk to Snow in private.” He moved
through the crowd, toward the back door, not bothering to meet Snow’s eyes
again. She would follow. He didn’t need to look at her again to know that. On
his way, he swore he heard Henry shout, “Is ‘talk to’ code for ‘make out with’?”
He’d just touched the door when October grabbed him by the arm. “Hey, stranger!”
Vlad smiled, casually noticing Snow’s approach. His heart picked up at the sight
of her. “What’s up, October?”
“Not much. Are you here for a while or just a quick in-and-out?”
“Just stopping by. Why? Miss me?”
“Not as much as Snow has,” she chuckled. “So ... why’s Henry McMillan here? He
looks lost.”
Vlad shook his head. “Not lost, just waiting on me. Why don’t you ask him to
dance? He could use a babysitter while I talk to Snow.”
“Talk. Riiiight .. October laughed, and walked off toward Henry, leaving Vlad
standing by the back door. He opened it and Snow walked silently outside before
he followed, licking his lips.
Snow had barely breathed a hello before Vlad’s eyes were on her porcelain neck.
She leaned back against the brick wall of the adjacent building and met his
hungry gaze, smiling. Her lips were painted a deep red, her eyes lined heavy
with black. “It hasn’t been a month yet, has it?”
Vlad was focusing so intently on his hunger that it was dif ficult to hear her
words over the sound of blood rushing through her veins. “Not yet. But I was
hungry. You don’t mind, do you?”
“Not at all” As he leaned in, she brushed her hair from her neck. Her eyes
widened. “Wow, your eyes are purple. Cool ...”
His fangs almost shot from his gums, and he closed his mouth over her flesh,
biting down. She shivered at first and Vlad forced himself to slow down. He
didn’t want to hurt her. Nor did he want this to be over with quickly. He
couldn’t lie to himself anymore—it wasn’t just the blood that had called him
here tonight. It was the act of feeding that he had longed for. It comforted
him. It made him feel complete.
After Snow relaxed, Vlad bit down harder, opening the artery. Delicious crimson
splashed over his tongue to the beat of her racing heart, and Vlad slipped his
arms around her, drinking deep, feeling her entire being shake with excitement
... and fear. She tensed again and he clamped his mouth down, barely resisting
the temptation to tear through her flesh completely, enjoying the taste of her
blood, the sensation of her terror as he continued to feed. He heard her
whisper his name, followed by the subtle breathy word, “stop,” but even then,
he continued to feed. Her heartbeats began to slow, but Vlad couldn’t stop,
wouldn’t stop. It was his nature. It was his need. His need to kill.
No.
He pulled back hard, and stumbled backward, keeping his distance, gathering
himself. Snow crumbled to the ground, dazed. He watched her, wondering if she
had any idea how close she’d been to dying, and a wave of guilty nausea washed
over him. He almost gagged, but took slow, deep breaths, calming his stomach,
collecting his thoughts. What was wrong with him, anyway? He’d promised Snow,
promised himself, that he would only feed when he physically needed to. He
shook his head, feeling the nausea settle some. He had to get a grip, or he was
going to become something that he couldn’t stand to be. A monster. Just like
Joss had said.
Snow stirred, rubbing her neck absently, and smiled over at Vlad. “Wow, hungry
much?”
Vlad breathed. “I’m sorry.”
“Don’t be. You need it.”
Not that time. Vlad hadn’t been more than a little snacky. But Snow had no way
of knowing that. And he’d almost killed her, almost took her life without her
even knowing. His veins filled with horror, his heart raced. He was an
almost-murderer. A bloodthirsty maniac. A near-killer.
She struggled to stand, and Vlad moved across the alley and helped her, the
beast within him contained once more. He dared a glance at her neck, which had
healed already. “Are you all right?”
But she wasn’t all right. She was still in the presence of the boy who’d
selfishly taken her life-giving blood just to satisfy some stupid craving. She
was like a cookie to him now, not a person.
What the hell was he becoming that he could treat her that way?
Snow nodded, her arms draped over his shoulders, her body still wobbly. “I’m
fine. Just a little dizzy. I always feel weird after you feed. Like I’m
floating through a haze.”
“I’m sorry.” He said it again, had to say it again. He was sorry. For hurting
her. For changing her life. For needing not to stop.
A small smile turned up the corners of her lips. “There’s nothing to be sorry
for, Vlad. I actually enjoy it. It makes me feel close to you.”
Vlad allowed himself a small smile. “I feel close to you too.”
She tilted her head for a moment, eyeing him with uncertainty. “Something
wrong? You seem kinda stressed tonight.”
Sighing, Vlad said, “It’s a lot of stuff. That slayer I told you about is back,
Henry’s acting way too noble for my tastes, and earlier I got the weirdest
feeling that Otis knew about our meetings.”
“Is that a bad thing?”
He ran his fingers through his hair, brushing his bangs from his eyes. “Bad?
No. More like horrible. Because if Otis realizes that I’ve been lying to him
...”
“Why are you lying to him, anyway?”
Vlad sighed, his heart heavy. “Sometimes I don’t know.”
“It’s okay, Vlad. I understand.” She met his eyes and Vlad’s tension melted
away. She did understand. At last, he had a friend who he didn’t have to hold
back with. She really, truly understood.
Without warning, Snow leaned forward and pressed her lips to his. He was
surprised—she’d never done it before—but he didn’t stop her, not at first. Her
lips were warm and sweet. She was a great kisser, soft and giving, but not ...
not Meredith.
He pulled away—it was more difficult than he thought—and blinked at Snow, his
terror over nearly killing her settling, replaced by confusion. “What are you
doing?”
She rolled her eyes slightly. “Duh. Kissing you.”
Suddenly Vlad was very aware of how close she was standing. Still, he didn’t
back away. Not yet. “But... why?”
Snow smiled. “Because I like you, Vlad. Why else? I don’t go around kissing
just anyone, y’know.”
He didn’t say anything, didn’t move. And his inaction made him feel terribly
guilty. What would Meredith think of him making out with Snow after he’d broken
her heart in front of the entire population of Bathory? She’d be heartbroken.
She’d be furious.
Snow leaned in again, her lips tempting him. Vlad pushed her back—a little more
forcefully than he had intended—and growled. “Stop. Just stop. Just ... let me
think.”
She immediately relaxed back against the wall, following a direct order from
her vampire master.
Vlad stepped back, pacing some in the dark alleyway. “I think you’re confused,
Snow. This ... this isn’t a ... a ...”
“Relationship?” she offered.
Vlad nodded. “You’re my drudge, my food source. You shouldn’t be kissing me.
You don’t really like me; you’re just confused.”
She shook her head, serious. Hurt lurked in her dark eyes. “I knew and liked
you for a whole hour before I became your drudge, Vlad. If you don’t want me to
kiss you, why not just order me not to?”
But that was the problem. Vlad didn’t know what he wanted. Not exactly.
On one hand, it felt really nice to kiss Snow. But on the other ... there was
Meredith to be considered, and whether or not he was ready to be with another
girl so soon. Not to mention that probably the only girl he’d feel safe being
so close to right now would be Snow. She didn’t seem to mind his urge to feed.
But Meredith might. And he missed her. Missed seeing her, missed kissing her,
missed holding her hand.
Plus, he wasn’t entirely certain that he deserved to kiss any girl after the
pain he’d put Meredith through at the Freedom Fest. He deserved little more
than to be kicked in the face with baseball cleats.
He looked at Snow—pretty, small, sweet, understanding Snow—and shook his head. “I’d
appreciate it if you didn’t do that again, okay? Not ... not yet. I’m just ...
I’m not ready.”
Snow nodded slowly, thankfully not pointing out the obvious—that he hadn’t
ordered her not to kiss him ever again. She looked a little hurt, but Vlad
turned away before he could examine her expression further. He yanked the door
open and was enveloped by the sounds of the club. To his immense surprise, Henry
was sitting on the edge of one of the velvet sofas, talking to Kristoff.
With a raised eyebrow, Vlad crossed the room, slugging Henry in the arm
lightly. “What’s going on?”
Henry’s eyes widened at him. “Dude, who busted your lip?”
Oh no. Snow’s blood.
Vlad kept his cool on the outside, casually rubbing at his lip with the back of
his hand and mumbling something about tripping, but Henry didn’t seem to be
buying it, so he shrugged and said, “Lipstick.”
At this, he earned a glare from Kristoff, who didn’t approve of the idea of
Vlad making out with anyone in their little circle. In fact, Vlad was pretty
sure Kristoff didn’t want Vlad in their little circle at all. Henry shook his
head with a look of disapproval. Vlad shrugged. After all, who was Henry to
judge what girls he kissed. “Are you ready? I don’t wanna be late for the
movie.”
Henry muttered, “Are you kidding? I was ready to leave before we walked in the
door.”
October left the dance floor, nearly breathless. “Where’s Snow?”
Vlad shrugged with one shoulder, fighting back the enormous guilt that was
creeping up his spine. “She’s ... around.”
Then, before anyone could speak, Vlad tugged Henry off the couch and through
the crowd, up the ramp, and out the door. After they were in the car and driving
down the road to the mall’s movie theater, Vlad asked, “So what were you and
Kristoff talking about?”
Henry furrowed his brow for a moment, confused. “Oh, you mean David? We were
just talking about some of the stuff that happened when he lived next door to
me in the second grade.”
Vlad blinked. How could he and Henry have known each other their entire lives
and he had no idea that Kristoff, once David, had ever lived next door to
Henry? Shaking off the surprise, he looked out at the night, at the streetlights
and taxicabs. It briefly crossed his mind that they were merely three or four
blocks from the Stokerton council, but he didn’t worry. Otis had assured him
that D’Ablo and the rest of the council were busy with preparations for the
coming trial—Otis’s trial. Even though it wasn’t scheduled until the spring.
Vlad’s trial, it turned out, had never been scheduled. Call it a miracle. Vlad
certainly did.
As they pulled into a spot in the mall parking lot, Henry cleared his throat. “So
it looks like you’re over Meredith, huh? That was fast.”
Vlad raised an irritated eyebrow. “For your information, Snow kissed me. Not
the other way around. And what’s with the attitude? Weren’t you just saying I
needed to see other girls?”
“I was thinking someone less ... scary.”
That was it. Vlad raised his voice in protective defense. “Snow is sweet,
smart, and pretty, Henry. The only thing scary about her are her military
boots, and that’s only because she could put a grown man down with a single
kick.”
Henry snorted. “Whatever. You’ve been acting so weird since you started hanging
with the Halloween brigade.”
“Kinda like how you’ve been acting weird ever since you became Melissa’s pet?”
As Henry opened his mouth again, Vlad shot him a glare. “I’ve changed my mind about
the movie. Take me home, Henry. And don’t say a word until we get there.”
The drive home was quiet, and Henry didn’t so much as glance at him, but Vlad
couldn’t care less. Henry was acting like a prime-time jerk.
By the time the car had pulled into the driveway, Henry looked as if he was
ready to explode. Vlad opened the door and got out, but not before Henry
muttered something rather unpleasant in his general direction. Vlad ignored it.
After all, Henry had called him out, and then he had called Henry out in
return. They were pretty even, and saying anything back to his grumble as Vlad
had exited would’ve only continued the tense moment between them.
As for directly ordering Henry to take him home and keep his mouth shut ...
well, it didn’t make Vlad feel good to boss his drudge around, but he wasn’t
about to sit there while Henry insulted his friends. So what that they wore
black? So what that they liked hanging out in cemeteries and lighting candles?
They were nice. And perfectly normal, as far as Vlad was concerned.
He made his way up the porch steps and opened the front door, only then
realizing that the lights were all off inside and a note was taped to the front
door.
It is of the utmost importance that you come to your parents’ house the
moment that you read this note. I will explain later why I did not contact you
in the usual manner. Please make haste.
Yours in Eternity, Otis
Vlad read the note over again, focusing intently on “in the usual manner.” Otis
hadn’t wanted to contact him through telepathy, but why? His words had sounded
shaky, nervous, frightened. Vlad could only imagine what kinds of things could
manage to scare his uncle.
With a deep breath, Vlad turned from the door and made his way down the stairs,
hoping that Joss hadn’t had time to unpack his stake while he and Henry were
arguing over Henry’s really stupid prejudices. As he stepped from the porch,
the scent of something carried by the breeze caught his attention. It was dark
and ancient and made Vlad shiver, despite the warmth of the evening.
Vampires. There were vampires in Bathory.
6
THE VAMPIRE DORIAN
VLAD MADE IT ACROSS TOWN without incident. He’d been tempted to walk by
the house that Joss now called home, just to see for himself that the slayer
was now an official resident of Bathory, but his good sense won out over his
curiosity. He found his way quietly to the back door of his old house. He
knocked—which felt very weird to do, but something about his uncle living here
made him feel that knocking was warranted—and when there was no reply from
within, he pulled open the door and stepped inside.
Muffled voices were coming from the front of the house. He hesitated, then
strode forward, making his way to the living room, where the voices were coming
from. At the arched entryway to the living room, Vlad paused. The large room
was host to a dozen or so vampires.
A few glanced at him, but otherwise, the conversation continued as if he hadn’t
entered the room at all. Vlad scanned the room and found Otis perched on the
arm of the couch. He met Vlad’s eyes and gestured to an empty seat near the
entryway to the kitchen. With more than a few questions on his tongue, Vlad sat
and spoke to Otis with his thoughts. “Otis, who are all these pe—”
But Otis cut him off abruptly.
Vlad looked at him, but Otis merely shook his head and returned to listening to
one vampire in particular, who was speaking in Elysian code—something that Vlad
still didn’t quite understand. As if remembering this, Otis cleared his throat.
“Please, Cratus, speak English so that we can all understand.”
The vampire he’d addressed didn’t miss a beat, picking up where he was in
English. “The changes to the Stokerton council are greatly disturbing. Under D’Ablo’s
continued leadership—”
“A crime in its own right.” A familiar voice sent Vlad’s head around and his
eyes searching for the speaker. When he found him sitting in an easy chair in
the far corner of the room, Vlad couldn’t help but smile. Vikas. It was good to
see him again.
“—it seems that the Stokerton council is becoming less a system of government
and more a religious sect. The vampires there follow D‘Ablo blindly, as if he
were a prophet whose wisdom were not based on fairy tales and hidden agendas.
And it gets worse.” Cratus swallowed hard, raking a trembling hand through his
wavy, dirty blond tresses. “D’Ablo has somehow managed to weasel his way onto
the Council of Elders.”
The room erupted in shouts of disdain. Several vampires stood, making loud
threats on DAblo’s life. Through the chaos, Vlad met Vikas’s gaze, which
shifted from troubled to pleasant, as if Vikas was happy to see him. Vlad
nodded, of fering a smile, and turned to look at Otis, who had stood. “Please,
my brethren. We must remain calm.”
His voice was just that—calm, almost serene, but Vlad could sense the disquiet
beneath Otis’s cool exterior.
It took a minute, but eventually, they all returned to sitting and listening as
Cratus continued. “His presence on the Council of Elders has upset more than a
few Elysian councils, and yet, he remains, having taken Mortimer’s place as the
youngest vampire in the group. Vikas will speak further on this, I’m sure.”
Vikas stood and an air of awe fell over the group. Clearly, Vikas was a highly
respected vampire, someone whom they all trusted inherently. “Some background
for those not so familiar with the Council of Elders.”
Vlad shrank back in his seat. He was pretty sure he was the only one here who
had no idea what they were talking about, so even though Vikas was doing him
the favor of not pointing him out directly, it still made him squirm.
“The Council of Elders has been convening on rare occasions—that is to say,
whenever a matter cannot be resolved by a single council—for centuries. We are,
normally, the nine oldest vampires in existence. And as D’Ablo is but a tuneyadec—
” Vikas caught his abrupt shift into Russian and flicked an apologetic glance
to Vlad. “Pardon me. I meant to call the dog a parasite.”
The room erupted in laughter. Despite the tension in his bones, Vlad chuckled.
Clearly, there was at least one thing they could all agree on—D’Ablo was a
jerk.
Vikas continued. “D’Ablo has no place on the council. He is not among the nine
oldest vampires, and his so-called wisdom has been questioned several times by
those of us who do have a right to sit on the council. With rumors that Em, the
oldest of our kind, has fallen in with his cultlike following, there is no
question of how he managed to get his name to be listed among ours.”
“Cultlike following?” Vlad hadn’t meant to speak out loud, but when he did, all
eyes turned on him, many with sympathy.
Cratus shook his head at Otis. “Enough coddling the boy, Otis. Tell him the
truth. Tell him what’s waiting for him in Elysia. Tell him about D’Ablo’s
twisted belief system.”
Vlad glanced at Otis, but before Otis could speak, Vikas spoke for him. “Indeed,
it is time that
Of course Vlad knew the story. He’d heard it from Vikas’s own lips on a cold
night in
Otis, Cratus, and Vikas exchanged glances. It was Otis who spoke. “It’s recently
been discovered that D’Ablo ... is the leader of this cult.”
Vlad furrowed his brow. If that were true, wouldn’t D’Ablo be trying to protect
Vlad and raise him up as the Pravus, maybe suck up a little and get on his good
side?
Otis nodded, as if he knew what Vlad was thinking without the use of telepathy.
“Apparently for years, he was in full support of locating the person they
deemed the Pravus and protecting him at all cost. But something changed—we don’t
know what, but whatever it was, it made DAblo rethink his plans and strive to
take the so-called Pravus’s place. Thus his little ritual last year.”
Vlad shook his head. To think, if whatever it was that happened hadn’t
happened, D’Ablo might be kissing up to him all the time instead of trying to
kill him. “Just how big is this cult, anyway?”
Otis looked to Cratus, who said, “Intelligence suggests the following has grown
substantially over the years.”
Vlad shifted his eyes between the two of them. “By how much?”
When it seemed no one was going to answer, Vikas spoke up. “We suspect roughly
a third of Elysia follows this thinking, but there’s no way to be certain. The
followers are incredibly secretive.”
“So what does it mean?”
Otis sighed heavily. “It means that you can trust virtually no one, Vlad. It
also means that D’Ablo’s presence on the Council of Elders most assuredly has
something to do with you, as he’s convinced that you are this ... this Pravus.”
“I am the Pravus.” Vlad tightened his jaw and locked eyes pointedly with
his uncle. “I am. But just because I am doesn’t mean I’m going to become some
psychopath.”
He looked around the room at the other vampires. Some looked fearful. Most
looked doubtful. “I’m not like the rest of you. You know that. A few of you
have seen it firsthand. So call me what you will—Pravus. freak of nature—I’m
different. Now what are we going to do about D’Ablo?”
After a long and poignant silence, Cratus sighed. “We wait. And we watch.”
Vikas shook his head. “It is troubling, my friends, that D’Ablo should hold the
thread of Otis’s life in his treacherous hands.”
The realization hit Vlad hard. The trial—they were talking about Otis’s trial.
The one that would decide if Otis lived or died, the one that would determine
whether or not his uncle was a vampire of honor or a criminal doomed to death.
And D’Ablo was one of the people who was going to make that decision.
He bit his bottom lip, dropping his eyes to the carpet.
Vikas’s voice, deep and strong, continued to speak. “What’s more, Otis’s
pretrial comes fast on the heels of D’Ablo’s lust for vengeance.”
Otis spoke, his voice gruff. “When?”
Vikas held Otis’s gaze, his expression grim. “D’Ablo insisted that it be held
this All Hallows Eve.”
All eyes were on Vikas, whose mouth slowly curled into a smile. “But I insisted
that it take place at the end of the year. And as he is but a babe and I am an
old man, it seems the council is more apt to side with me. Otis has been
granted a stay of execution, so to speak, until December twenty-sixth.”
Everyone seemed to exhale at once.
Apparently, the pretrial was something you wanted to put off as long as
possible.
“There is more,” Vikas said in his thick Russian accent. “D’Ablo had planned
for the pretrial to take place in Stokerton, but the other members of the
Council of Elders and myself have determined that the pretrial—like the trial—must
be held in the only city without a governing council.”
Otis spoke, his voice just that of a whisper. “
Vikas nodded. Several vampires looked uncomfortable, but most just looked
relieved.
Vlad watched them with intrigue. He’d had no idea that there was a town that
wasn’t governed by a council. He thought all cities were governed by the
nearest council. Clearly,
To Vlad’s left, two vampires were telling what he thought were dirty jokes in
French. To his right, one vampire recounted his last meal to another in plain
English. Across the room from Vlad, a young, handsome vampire with
copper-colored hair was staring intently, silently at him. Vlad shifted in his
seat and was about to call Vikas over when the vampire stood and pointed a
long, pale finger at Vlad. The other vampires fell silent. “You. The child of a
vampire and a human, if the stories are to be believed. Tell me your name.”
Vlad swallowed. The air in the room chilled. “Vlad. And they’re not just
stories.”
Vikas spoke under his breath from his spot in the corner. “Tread carefully,
Mahlyenki Dyavol. Dorian is . . .”
But he didn’t finish his sentence, leaving Vlad to wonder just what Dorian was.
Otis looked guarded.
Dorian stepped closer, sniffing the air. He was handsome and young-looking,
having made the change in his mid-twenties, with dark brown eyes and a pale
bronze to his skin. He looked like an old friend that you just couldn’t place,
like anyone that you might have once known. Remarkable, yet completely
forgettable. The perfect vampire.
Dorian moved slowly, smoothly, in a way that struck Vlad as feline. Vlad got
the distinct impression that if he moved, Dorian would be on him like a cat. “Ah,
yes. I can smell it in your veins. So ... unique. Tantalizing.”
Otis’s jaw tightened. “Dorian.”
Dorian ignored Otis, edging ever closer to Vlad. His tone was soothing and
kind, and if Otis and Vikas weren’t looking so concerned about his proximity to
Vlad, he might not find the vampire alarming at all. “I bet you carry tasty
delicacies in your veins.”
Vlad blinked, suddenly realizing why everyone in the room was watching in
fascination. Dorian wanted blood. Vlad’s blood. Vlad sputtered, “But I’m a
vampire. I thought that wasn’t allowed. Feeding on your own kind.”
Dorian shrugged slightly, smelling the air again. Then he smiled. “But you are
also half human, and that makes you prey to my predator.”
Vlad gulped.
Vikas took a bold step forward, “How forgetful I am. I brought with me several
cases of bloodwine, and the bottles are just waiting to be uncorked.
Before Vlad knew it, he was being ushered quickly into the kitchen. Dorian’s
eyes followed him the whole time—a curious smile on his lips. After a moment,
Otis joined Vlad and Vikas in the kitchen, looking more than a little troubled.
Vikas spoke first. “That was close.”
Otis nodded, “Too close. I hadn’t thought of the repercussions. It’s so easy to
forget Vlad’s human heritage.”
Vlad looked at Otis. “Are you going to fill me in on what we’re all doing here,
and maybe explain why that Dorian guy wants to take a bite outta me?”
Otis grabbed several bottles of bloodwine and uncorked them, speaking to Vikas.
“This may be a problem for us. Please, do what you can to keep the peace.”
He looked at Vlad then, an oddly frustrated look on his face, and barked, “And
you—stay away from Dorian.” Then he disappeared back into the living room.
Vlad furrowed his brow. It wasn’t like it was his fault Dorian thought he
smelled tasty. He looked back at Vikas, who was smiling. “Your uncle is
troubled. Pay him no mind,
Vlad’s stomach shriveled up in realization. “Oh. So if he wants to feed from me
and you say no, then he leaves and Otis ... Otis ...”
“Otis will face the justice of Elysia.” Vikas gave Vlad’s shoulder a squeeze. “It
would be wise to keep your distance from Dorian. It is rumored that he has a
taste for rare and sometimes even vampiric blood. I am certain the mixture of
vampire and human in your veins appeals to his palate. It makes yours the most
rare blood type in the world.”
Vlad’s throat suddenly resembled a desert. He tried to swallow, but couldn’t.
Vikas, calm and cool, said, “Dorian is a vampire used to getting what he wants,
and we cannot disappoint him. So let’s make certain that what he wants is not
you.”
A worried crease settled on Vlad’s forehead. “Should I go home?”
“I think the safest place that you could be tonight is under this roof,
Mahlyenki Dyavol. After all, what’s to stop Dorian from sniffing his way into
your bedroom while you are alone and indulging in every last drop of your
blood? At least here you will be watched after. You should remain here until
the vampires depart, which will be in a few hours. If you grow weary, I will
have Tristian watch over you. If he sees anything to be alarmed by, I will know
it.”
Vlad nodded, utterly freaked out that someone would want to bite him and drink
his blood. He couldn’t help but wonder if Snow ever felt this way. The thought
sent a guilty shiver up his spine. “Why isn’t anyone using telepathy?”
Vikas popped open a bottle of bloodwine and drank deeply, then met Vlad’s eyes
with a weary glance. “As I said, Dorian is skilled beyond any of us. If our
minds remain open, there is no telling what he might dredge up ... or do. Be on
guard. But be polite. Dorian is our guest, and an important figure in Elysia.
He deserves both our respect and our fear. But ... do not let his presence
taint the celebration for you, Vladimir. Besides, you should be celebrating,
yourself. If Elysia has not yet called you to trial, you are likely free of the
possibility. Enjoy your freedom.”
He turned and made his way back into the living room with an armful of open
bloodwine bottles.
Vlad uncorked a bottle that was sitting on the counter and took a swig. It was
as delicious, tangy, and spicy as he recalled it to be. After another swig, he
followed Vikas back into the crowded room.
He wasn’t exactly sure what Vikas had meant by it being a celebration, so when
he made it across the room to Otis, he said, “Vikas called this a celebration.”
“He’s right.”
“What exactly are we celebrating, Otis?”
Otis blanched, growing silent for a moment. When he spoke, his voice was
gravelly. “We are celebrating my life, as it were.”
Vlad frowned, his heart suddenly very heavy. “Otis ... you still have a chance.
The Council of Elders might—”
He was going to say “find you innocent,” but Otis shook his head and walked
away, the threat of tears in his eyes, before Vlad could utter another word.
Vlad stared after him, dumbfounded.
A heavy hand clasped his shoulder, and Vlad turned to see Vikas, who was
watching after Otis with a troubled expression. “As I said, he is troubled,
your uncle. It would do little good to attempt to cheer a dying man.”
Vlad’s heart felt heavy and shriveled. “But, Vikas, you’re on the Council of
Elders. Isn’t there anything you can do?”
“Something you will soon learn about Elysia, Mahlyenki Dyavol, is that trials
are but a formality.” Vikas squeezed his shoulder once, lowering his voice.
What he said next broke Vlad’s heart in two. “You should enjoy your time with
your uncle, Vladimir. It grows short despite my efforts to lengthen it.”
Another vampire said something in Elysian code to Vikas, and he laughed openly
before leading the vampire to the kitchen. When Vlad turned around, Dorian was
there, waiting, wearing that same kind, expectant smile on his lips, that same
harmless demeanor. “You will offer your blood to me.”
At once, every eye in the room turned to Vlad. After a minuscule pause, several
vampires, including Otis and Vikas, began to speak, to argue with Dorian over
what he had just said to Vlad, or to plead with him not to do whatever it was
that he was about to do. Vikas offered Dorian Tristian’s blood—AB negative, as
much as he’d like—in exchange for what he wanted of Vlad. Bemused, but
insistent, Dorian whispered, “Hush now.”
At his spoken words, the crowd fell utterly silent.
Vlad looked them over—none could move, none could speak, but by their blinks
and the look in Otis’s eyes, they were well aware what was happening. Vlad,
however, had no idea what was going on. He only knew that Dorian had stopped
their every action, their every sound, with a whisper. It made the tiny hairs
on the back of his neck stand up in confused fear. He looked at Dorian but didn’t
speak.
Dorian stepped closer, a dark, hungry look in his eye. “You will offer your
blood to me now.”
Before Vlad realized what he was doing, he’d reached up with his hand and
pulled the collar of his T-shirt back. He bent his head to the side, exposing
his neck, and all the while, he had no control over his actions. It wasn’t mind
control—this was something else, something worse, something more powerful than
Vlad had ever dared imagine could exist.
And he couldn’t resist it.
Dorian looked at Otis and nodded. His demeanor was very apologetic. “Your
pleading and absolute refusal makes this moment that much more enticing, I’m
afraid. I really don’t understand what the fuss is about. Vlad will likely
survive. And if he doesn’t ... well, then, I am deeply sorry. But I must have
the boy, you understand.”
Vlad’s insides turned to mush. Dorian was going to drain him of blood. And
there was nothing anybody could do about it.
Except Vlad.
Panicking, he struggled with all his might to move, to let go of his collar and
straighten his head, but the more he attempted to struggle, the more cooperative
his movements became. Against his will, he stepped forward, coaxing Dorian to
drink.
Dorian’s eyes brimmed with apologies. “I am sorry, Vlad. But I must have your
blood. It calls to me, and I shall heed that call no matter the cost.”
Dorian stepped closer, ready to bite. He was poised over Vlad’s neck when the
answer came.
Otis couldn’t move, couldn’t speak, but only because Dorian had stopped him—not
because Dorian was controlling him. Quickly, Vlad slipped into Otis’s thoughts
and, with an apology, took control over his uncle’s actions. With his control,
Otis stepped forward, shoving Dorian from Vlad. Dorian stumbled back, blinking
in confusion.
His spell over the crowd broke, and angry voices erupted.
Vlad’s heart raced, and he shot Otis an apologetic glance for having used mind
control, but Otis shook it off in gratitude. Then Otis turned to Dorian. “You
will leave my home and keep your distance from my nephew.”
Vikas placed a hand on Otis’s shoulder, but something about the way he looked
told Vlad he was positioning himself to pull Otis back if a fight erupted.
Dorian’s fangs slowly shrank back into his gums. He kept his eyes on Vlad, a
strange blend of curiosity and confusion filling them. After a moment, he
nodded and moved through the kitchen and toward the back door.
Otis shook Vikas off and stepped away. He was calmer now that he’d had his say,
but Vlad couldn’t help but wonder about the tension that seemed to ebb from his
uncle in response to Dorian’s actions. He also couldn’t help but wonder why a
vampire as powerful as Dorian would leave without even so much as an argument.
Otis turned back to Vikas. He looked worried, and equally as surprised as
Dorian had. “I’ve never seen Dorian back down like that. I can’t help but
wonder why.”
Vikas shook his head slowly, dropping his voice to just above a whisper. “The
answer, my old friend, is simple. Dorian has never backed down before. Perhaps
he is ... conflicted.”
As Dorian reached the back door, he called out to Otis, his tone shaken. “When
you want my help—and you will, Otis—you know where to find me.”
He opened the door, pausing long enough to meet Vlad’s eyes. With a single nod,
he stepped out into the night.
Two hours later, Vlad had tired of the vampire crowd and felt safe enough to be
alone, but not quite safe enough to head home. He retired upstairs to his old
room, where Tristian stood watch from the hall—but not before Otis stopped him
to make certain he wouldn’t leave without an escort. “Just stay here until our
guests depart. Then Vikas or I will walk you home, all right?”
Vlad moved into his old room and before he closed the door, he replied, “I don’t
need a babysitter, Otis.”
And he didn’t. He was the Pravus, for crying out loud. But ... he was really
glad he didn’t have to worry about Dorian, Joss, or anyone else who might be
out for his blood on his walk home tonight. He didn’t need a babysitter. But he
certainly appreciated the company.
The room was painted in the same soft blue as it had been in his childhood. He
wagered Otis had wanted to preserve those younger years for him in some way. As
if color could do such a thing.
Vlad lay back on the bed, his eyes quickly fluttering closed. Drifting in that
place between wakefulness and sleep, he thought about his mother and how she
would sometimes enter his room at night, just to press her lips to his
forehead. She’d whisper, “I love you, Vlad.” And Vlad would pretend to sleep,
cuddled all warm and snug and safe under his blue blankets, which matched the
color of his walls.
Maybe there was something to this color thing after all.
He drifted off and was on the verge of deep sleep when he thought he felt a
presence, warm and wonderful, in his room. But when he opened his eyes, his
mother was nowhere to be found.
What a stupid thing to hope for. After all, just because he missed her, just
because this was the first night he had slept in his house since that horrible
day when he’d lost his parents ... that didn’t mean his mom would be here,
watching over him from beyond death.
Did it?
Vlad looked around the room, at the shadowed blue walls, at the new carpeting,
the new light fixture, at everything that wasn’t his past and was his present.
No. She was gone. Gone forever. To someplace much happier, much brighter, and
full of goodness, full of light. She had to be.
He curled up on his side, and as he gave in to the call of sleep he thought of
his mother and all the wonderful moments that they had shared. For the first
time since her death, he didn’t think of smoke and ash and that horrible moment
when he’d lost her forever. He thought only of happy times and the warmth of
his mother’s embrace.
A hand—warm. gentle—brushed the hair from Vlad’s still-closed eyes. Following
its light touch was Otis’s voice, equally as caring. “
Vlad rolled over, content to sleep, and mumbled, “Five more minutes, Dad.”
After a pause, Otis’s only reply was to cover Vlad with a soft blanket. As his
footsteps faded out the door and down the hall, Vlad snuggled into his blanket
and slipped back into a deep and restful slumber.
7
A RUDE AWAKENING
VLAD SAT UP, STARTLED OUT OF SLEEP by the realization that his first day
of school was today—his backpack, the clothes he wanted to wear, even his
schedule was back at Nelly’s house, and he was still at his house, resting
peacefully, dreaming of his mother. Rubbing the remainder of sleep from his
eyes, he dragged himself out of bed and through the still-dark room, stumbled
down the hallway and stairs, and yawned several hundred times before checking
the time (4:36 A.M.). He scribbled Otis a note that said he’d see him at school
later and ducked out the back door.
It didn’t take long for him to wind his way back to Nelly’s place, and he’d
just stepped up onto the porch when he realized that he hadn’t given Joss a
single thought on his walk. That slowed his steps a bit. He’d better learn to
be a bit more careful, what with a slayer on the loose ... one who knew his
address, Vlad thought with a shiver. He made his way inside and upstairs, took
a quick shower, ran through his morning routine, and dressed. By the time he
sat down to breakfast, the clock on the wall said that it was 5:44 A.M. For
once in his life, Vlad was on time and not rushing to get out the door.
Actually, he was early and not exactly sure what to do to kill time. He wasn’t
hungry in the least. He thought about playing some video games or watching
television, but neither sounded very appealing in the wee hours of morning. So
instead, he pulled out his journal and began jotting down all of his feelings
about the impending day. He was feeling conflicted about Joss, apprehensive
about Meredith, but mostly ... he was feeling lost. His life had changed
dramatically over the past few years, ever since Otis had revealed himself to
be not only a fellow vampire, but his uncle. Every moment since then had been
full of surprises—not all of them good. And Vlad wasn’t sure he could take much
more.
The very thought of everything he’d faced in his life was enough to make even
the strongest man weep. Vlad thought he’d handled his troubles with as much
strength as he could, given the immense pain he’d experienced—both physical and
emotional. Losing his parents at a young age, being picked on and bullied by
his peers, suffering broken bones and bruises, getting terrified out of his
mind, hunted by both a slayer and vampires, technically killed, betrayed more
than once, and brokenhearted. His life had sucked. But it was his, and nobody
who mattered would judge him for shedding a few tears.
Glancing at the clock again, Vlad slipped his backpack over his shoulder and
headed out the front door. Like clockwork, Henry pulled up in his new car, and
Vlad slid into the front seat with a groan of envy. “I thought you were driving
Melissa to school.”
Henry snapped, “I don’t have to be with her every second of every day.”
Vlad took a breath and made sure that anything that could possibly fuel Henry’s
temper was absent from his voice. “What happened?”
Henry sighed, and his anger seemed to ebb out of him. “Girls, man. Just ...
girls.”
Vlad nodded, as if he had any idea what Henry was talking about. He didn’t, but
he thought it was important for Henry to feel like he could relate. “Hey, why
are we driving anyway? The school is like four blocks away.”
The corner of Henry’s mouth rose in a smirk. “Dude. When you’ve got a car like
this, you don’t walk anywhere.”
“Ohmigod!”
Joss grinned. There was a blur of pink and then Meredith was hugging him,
hugging him so tight and close and happily around the neck that Joss’s head,
along with his heart, almost burst. If he’d known what her reaction would have
been to seeing him again, he would have dropped by the night he and his parents
had pulled into town. He squeezed her and spun her around a little, chuckling.
When he sat her back down on the ground, he was sorry to let her go. “Miss me
much?”
Meredith beamed. “Only tons!”
“Wanna walk together?”
She looked down the street for a moment, and Joss knew just who she was looking
for, so he put on his best smile and said, “Or should I get outta here before
your boyfriend shows up?”
She shook her head, her chocolate curls bouncing this way and that, and
adjusted her backpack on her shoulders. There was a look in her eyes that Joss
couldn’t place, but he knew it wasn’t a good one. “Trust me, that’s not gonna
be a problem.”
They started down the sidewalk together, walking side by side, heading toward
the high school on their first day of their junior year. After a minute or two,
Joss cleared his throat. Nudging her playfully, he tried to keep his tone
light. “So why’d you stop e-mailing me, anyway? The last I heard, you were
going to Freedom Fest last year and then ... nothing.”
Meredith shrugged, her mood slightly somber. “I’m sorry, Joss. I’ve just been
in a really weird place lately. Ever since Vlad dumped me, I just—”
“Vlad dumped you?” There was a hopeful, pleased tone in his voice, one he tried
desperately to counter with a sympathetic glance. “That’s awful. What happened?”
“Nothing.”
“C’mon, you can tell me.”
Meredith sighed, slowing her steps. “No, that’s just it. Nothing
happened. One minute we were laughing and holding hands, the next he was
pushing me away and telling me it was over.”
Joss’s thoughts raced. He knew, from the so-called friendship with Vlad two
years before, that there was no way that he would break up with Meredith unless
something had made him. Joss needed to find out what that was.
On the outside, he tried to appear cool and calm. On the inside, however, he
was overjoyed. Not only because now he might have a real chance with Meredith,
but because now he didn’t have to worry so much that she would end up as the
next meal of a monster. “So it’s over between the two of you?”
Part of him was elated that there was no longer anyone standing in his way, but
part of him—the part that had been sent by the Slayer Society—was intrigued by
the bits of information he was gathering about his prey. This one wasn’t like
most vampires. In fact, Vlad was unlike any vampire that Joss had ever
encountered. Past experience had taught him that. This one was crafty, how else
could he have broken through Joss’s defenses and gotten so close to him. This
one would have to be dealt with carefully.
“Yeah. I guess.” The look in her eyes was one of immense sadness, something
that sent Joss’s blood boiling. He wanted to ask if she knew what kind of
monster Vlad was, or if she’d ever been bitten and infected as one of his human
slaves, but he couldn’t. Not yet. Not without breaking protocol. And after a
year of reconditioning, of being reminded of what he was, and what the monsters
he was hunting were, Joss was all about following protocol.
He cleared his throat and said, “If you ever want to talk—about anything—I’m
here for you, okay?”
She smiled and said, “You’re sweet, Joss. I’m glad you’re back in town.”
They backed down the driveway and Henry began a slow, leisurely drive to the
high school. Vlad neglected to comment that they’d have gotten there faster if
they’d walked.
As they approached the school, Vlad spotted a pink-clad figure making her way
up the sidewalk. Meredith. He watched her, wondering if she hated him,
wondering what she’d say when they inevitably ran into each other in the hall.
He’d almost become lost in his wonderment when he noticed the person walking
next to her.
Time slowed to a crawl, the music on the radio suddenly sounded warped and
distorted. As the car pulled into the parking lot, the pace of everyone outside
was like that of a snail; even the birds seemed to be flying in slow motion.
Vlad instantly knew the familiar face, the lean frame, the backpack ... which
was undoubtedly holding the tools necessary to kill him.
A car passed on the road and as Joss glanced at the passenger, time slowed to a
crawl. Joss would have known that black hair, those pale features, the dark
eyes anywhere.
Vladimir Tod.
Just one of the vampires he’d been sent here to kill.
He narrowed his eyes, taking in the pale skin, the thin frame, obvious clues to
what Vlad really was. He should have known. He should have recognized the beast
for what it was and taken action immediately last year, but he was blinded
then, blinded by the want of friendship.
He wasn’t blind now. Every ounce of his being was seeing 20/20.
Vladimir Tod was going to pay.
Like the villain in an old movie, Joss glanced back, meeting Vlad’s eyes. And
in that moment, that microsecond, Vlad’s question was answered. They were no
longer friends. Joss was here to finish what he had started their freshman
year. And what’s more, the guy code was only upheld between friends. There was
no longer reason for him to stay away from Meredith.
Time picked up again, and the car passed Joss and Meredith by. As Henry pulled
into a parking space, he said, “Sorry about that. I didn’t know Joss was
walking her to school or I’d have said something. I didn’t even know he’d
talked to her yet. Man, that guy moves fast.”
Vlad reached up with his hand, touching it lightly to his chest, remembering
that glint of silver in the light of the moon. “Yeah ... he does.”
8
A LESSON LEARNED
VLAD FOLLOWED HENRY’S LEAD, opening the door and getting out of the car,
even though what he really wanted to do was to sink down in his seat and wait
for the first day of school to be over. Henry and his fabulous car were
immediately surrounded by curious students, so Vlad walked across the parking
lot to the school’s front doors alone. Every step seemed to take an hour, but
finally, Vlad pulled open the front door to Bathory High and stepped inside to
the usual chaos of the first day of school. Several new freshmen were wandering
the halls, looking lost and scared. He slipped around them and into the gym
long enough to grab his locker number and combination, then ducked back into
the front hall to locker 133. He’d just opened it and dropped his backpack
inside when he heard a familiar giggle to his left.
Swallowing the lump in his throat, Vlad turned his head. About ten lockers down
stood Meredith. Joss was whispering something in her ear. Something that made
her cheeks flush pink. Something that set Vlad’s face on fire with jealousy.
Joss paused long enough to smile at Vlad over Meredith’s shoulder, then went
back to whispering.
Vlad slammed his locker door shut and was two steps on his way to shoving Joss
into next week when Henry grabbed him by the sleeve. “Chill, Vlad. Don’t give
him what he wants.”
Vlad pulled away, his furious eyes on Joss. “He’s going to come after me
anyway. At least right now I’m ready for a fight.”
Henry sighed and stepped into Vlad’s view. “You’re angry and jealous and in the
mood to do some forceful dentistry. So you may be ready to fight, but you’re
not ready to win. Not against Joss. You need a cool head for that, and you know
it.”
Vlad glanced over at Meredith, who was chatting friendlily now with his mortal
enemy (well, kinda mortal—Vlad was a vampire, after all ... well,
half-vampire, anyway), and tried to let Henry’s words sink in. His friend was
right, no matter how much he wanted to beat that smirk off Joss’s face. So
instead, he slipped quietly inside Joss’s mind and made Joss bite his tongue
hard. He slipped back out again. Maybe next time he’d make him walk into his
locker door or something. With a deep breath, he turned away and followed Henry
down the hall to first period.
Once he could no longer see Joss’s face—or that hint of smugness in his eyes—Vlad
immediately felt better. Maybe it would be a good idea to keep his distance
from Joss. After all, that kind of negativity couldn’t be good for Vlad’s
already frayed nerves.
Then again, neither could trigonometry first thing in the morning. But at least
he had Henry to keep him company.
Mr. Evans was already scribbling things on the board when he and Henry walked
in. He paused long enough to offer them a polite smile, but then went right
back to jotting equations down—equations containing so many numbers and letters
on either side of the equal sign that they made Vlad’s stomach flip over with
unease. He and Henry found seats near the back and sat down as the rest of the
class filed in. Thankfully, Melissa Hart was nowhere in sight. Vlad didn’t
think he could stomach watching Henry make moon-eyes at her every day, all year
long. Unfortunately, Eddie Poe was there instead, happily cradling his camera
and staring at Vlad with an intensity that made him squirm.
Then, as if it were any other day, just a run-of-the-mill class day, the first
hour of his first day as a junior commenced. And Vlad was immediately bored out
of his skull.
The rest of the day flew by, and he hardly saw Joss at all. Even lunch was
blissfully Joss- and Meredith-free, though it was tainted by the occasional
annoying click from Eddie’s camera. It was starting to look like a pretty great
day, and Vlad’s last class was taught by his favorite teacher—probably favorite
person—on the planet. Otis Otis, ultracool uncle and vampire extraordinaire.
Nothing could stain the day now.
Vlad had just dropped his books in his locker and grabbed a notebook and pen,
ready for a good dose of mythology, when he felt a nudge in his mind. Not a
word, so much as a familiar prickle that told him Otis wanted his attention. He
turned and saw his uncle standing at his open classroom door. Students greeted
him and walked inside, but standing in the hall, having a quiet discussion with
Vlad’s uncle, was Joss. Neither of them looked particularly happy about it, and
Vlad wondered why Otis had wanted him to notice. With a casual pace, he made
his way down the hall to Otis’s door.
Otis seized the opportunity, acting surprised to see him. “
Vlad couldn’t help but notice that Otis had said “I” instead of “we,” meaning
there was no way he planned on returning to class with Joss in tow. He didn’t
make eye contact with his former friend, but faked a pleasant smile to Otis. “No
problem.”
With his thoughts, he said, “What are you worried about? It’s not like he
can stake either of us between quizzes, Otis.”
“I know reconnaissance when I see it,
He stepped inside Otis’s new classroom and there she was, looking every bit as
pretty as she had the night he broke her heart. She was looking right at him.
Vlad released a tense breath and said, “Hi, Meredith.”
Good. Keep it casual. The last thing Vlad wanted was deep questioning about why
he’d called their relationship quits. There just wasn’t any charming way to say
that you couldn’t shake viewing your girlfriend as a cheeseburger. Vlad knew.
He’d spent all summer thinking about just that.
Even now, the scent of her blood was almost too much to bear.
She bit her bottom lip, as if contemplating what to say to him. She settled on “Hi.”
He wet his lips, and kept his eyes on anything but hers. “So ... you’re taking
mythology, huh?”
With any luck, he could fend off her questions with polite chitchat until Otis
got back. So far, so good. But her blood—that delicious taunting of B positive
that lurked within her veins ... it called out to Vlad’s thirst. It was all he
could do to force his fangs not to answer its siren song.
“So that’s it then? You don’t have anything more to say to me?” She sounded
mad.
Vlad dared a look into her brown eyes. Yep. She was definitely angry. But he
still didn’t know what he was supposed to say to improve the situation. So
instead, he blinked and pretended that he had no idea what she was talking
about, even though he knew exactly what she was talking about, which was, of
course, him turning into a giant jerk and breaking up with her for what seemed
like no good reason. Even though he had two very good, very sharp reasons
threatening to poke out from his gums at just the sight of her. He shrugged
slightly. “What should I say?”
Meredith’s eyes shined with the threat of angry tears. She wasn’t buying Vlad’s
act at all, which told him two things: 1) He shouldn’t think about trying out
for the school play anytime soon, and 2) Girls were a lot smarter than boys
gave them credit for. After a moment, Meredith said, “You could start with ‘I’m
sorry.’”
And she was right. He could. But I’m sorry was usually followed by an
explanation of sorts. And that he couldn’t give her. So he blinked again
and wondered how much longer Otis would be, hoping like crazy that something—anything—would
distract Meredith from the conversation and get her across the room from him,
where she might be a bit safer from his appetite.
“You owe me an explanation, Vlad.” She shook her head, lowering her voice to
just above a whisper. “You owe me at least that.”
With a look of pained disgust, Meredith shook her head and took her seat at the
front of the class, near the windows. Vlad watched her and frowned. There would
be no fixing this, no apologies, no making anything right between them again.
Behind him, Otis said, “Let’s find our seats, shall we?”
Vlad wandered to the back, the aisle nearest the door, to one of the only empty
desks left, and took his seat. A moment later, Joss passed and took the seat
behind him. Vlad stiffened and thought to Otis, “What’s he doing here?”
“Learning all that he can about us, I’d wager. ” Otis
turned his attention to the class, introducing himself and running down a list
of things they could expect this year. Vlad couldn’t help but smile. Otis used
almost the exact same words that he had used the first time Vlad had seen him
in eighth grade, telling the class that they could call him by either his first
or last name, so long as the obligatory “Mr.” proceeds their choice.
“I thought he wasn’t on your roster. ”
Otis passed papers out to the kids in the front row, who began the
well-rehearsed routine of passing them back. “As did I. But according to
Principal Snelgrove, he is— no doubt some maneuvering on behalf of the
Slayer Society. It’s not as if they haven’t hacked a computer or two in their
time. ”
Vlad shook his head, overwhelmed by stress at Joss’s close proximity. The last
time Joss was this close to Vlad’s back, Vlad ended up in the hospital. He
breathed out, “So what now?” then caught himself and thought those same words
to Otis, who had a stark eyebrow raised.
“We do as he’s doing. We wait. And we watch.”
It was a sound plan.
Only one problem. Vlad had a feeling he and Otis weren’t the only ones Joss was
watching.
Across the room, Meredith smiled in Vlad’s general direction, but Vlad would
have bet his life that she wasn’t smiling at him.
He slumped in his seat and prepared himself for the longest school year yet.
The hour crawled by, but at the end, he’d relaxed some with the knowledge that
Joss wouldn’t stake him in school—if anything, he had to worry about his
nightly visits to the belfry.
Once class finally ended, Otis bid them all goodbye, and Vlad ducked out the
door. He was just opening his locker when Joss walked by. Joss muttered under
his breath, “Don’t you just love the color pink in the late summer sun, Vlad?”
Vlad whipped around, knowing Joss was making a snide observation about
Meredith, but before he could do or say anything, Henry had picked Joss up by
the collar and slammed him against the lockers. Joss merely smiled.
Mr. Hunjo ripped the boys apart. His voice boomed out into the hallway. “McMillan!
And ... McMillan! Office! Now!”
Joss blew a kiss at Henry, taunting him. Henry’s fist flew through the air, but
Joss ducked it effortlessly. Mr. Hunjo grabbed them each by the collar and
dragged them down the hall, barking that he had had just about enough out of
the both of them.
To be honest, so had Vlad. He was already tired of Joss’s presence, and Henry
had been absurdly overprotective lately. After all, if anybody deserved to take
a swing at Joss, Vlad did, but Henry was trying to beat him to the punch,
literally. Actually, he had once already.
Shutting his locker door, Vlad headed out the front doors. After a glance
around for Eddie Poe and his all too present camera, he hurried to the side of
the building. Several kids were walking by, so he had to stand there and look
casual until the coast was clear. Once it was, Vlad did something he’d never
done before—he floated up to the belfry in broad daylight. When he reached the
window, he landed lightly on the balls of his feet and stepped inside.
The room was just as he’d left it. His father’s leather chair was placed
against the wall to his left, a small table covered with half-melted candles
nestled beside it. Two large book-cases had been painstakingly lifted in pieces
to Vlad’s sanctuary and reassembled. The books that had once graced the room in
high stacks were now lining the shelves neatly, but for one or two that Vlad
had shoved haphazardly on top of the others on his way out after a long night
of reading. Beside the bookcase Vlad had hung the framed picture of his father.
He could see Tomas’s face no matter where he stood in the room, and he rather
liked that. He smiled briefly at the picture as he dropped his backpack to the
floor. “Hi, Dad.”
He pulled his journal from his backpack—pausing only briefly to remember the
night Meredith had given it to him—and a pen. After plopping down in his dad’s
chair and rereading every entry he could find about Joss, he flipped to an
empty page and began formulating the best way to take a slayer peacefully out
of commission.
After an hour of staring at the blank page, Vlad gave up and closed the book.
9
SAME DOG, NEW TRICKS
VLAD CLOSED HIS LOCKER after anatomy and physiology and released a very
deep breath. So far, he’d managed to avoid both Joss and Meredith all day long,
and he was nearing the home stretch, quite literally—one more class and he’d be
home. Two days of high school down. Only about five million to go.
Beside him, Melissa and Henry were mashed together in a make-out session that
wasn’t quite hidden by Henry’s open locker door. Two teachers had passed by and
said nothing to the slobbering couple. Vlad frowned, hoping they’d get caught.
It wasn’t that he wanted Henry to get in trouble, but it seemed at least a
little unfair that he and Meredith had gotten caught and subsequently punished
after innocently kissing in a broom closet last year, but Henry and Melissa
were practically swallowing each other in public and nobody seemed to care.
Just one of the perks of being popular, Vlad surmised. Still, it was annoying.
A girl that Vlad didn’t recognize walked by, raising an eyebrow at the attached
couple. Vlad smirked and jabbed a thumb at them. “Zombies. Can’t you tell?”
The girl laughed and walked away, and Vlad’s shoulders straightened just a
little.
Finally, likely because they remembered they needed to breathe, Melissa and
Henry parted. It sounded a bit like two suction cups being pulled apart.
Henry breathlessly whispered, “About tonight . . .”
Melissa pulled a small compact mirror from her purse and slathered on some lip
gloss, shaking her head. “Sorry. Gotta cancel. But maybe Friday. I don’t know.”
Vlad watched Henry’s ego visibly deflate. It was all he could do to bite his
tongue.
As Melissa wandered off to join her friends—Meredith included, Vlad couldn’t
help but notice—Henry muttered, “So, Friday then.”
After debating whether or not he should let him spend the rest of the day like
this, Vlad decided that he couldn’t stomach the barrage of high fives that
would inevitably accompany Henry all the way to class, so he said, “You’ve got
lip gloss on your cheek, dude, and Passion Pink is not your color.”
Henry’s mood clouded as he rubbed the pink shiny stuff away with the heel of
his hand. To Vlad’s immense surprise, he said, “I’m thinking of breaking up
with Melissa.”
Vlad just stared at him, hoping that it wasn’t some kind of sick joke. “Really?
Why?”
Henry retrieved his English book and shut his locker door. “I feel like she’s
using me. All she wants to do is make out when we’re together, which is great
and all, but that’s it. Nothing else. No talking. No spending time getting
close. Just ... kissing.”
Vlad snapped his mouth shut. Far be it for him to point out the irony to Mr.
Make-out-with-any-girl-who’s-willing-and-then-dump-them-right-after. When Henry
looked at him, seeking his opinion, Vlad just nodded supportively.
Henry wasn’t buying it. He wrinkled his brow in suspicion. “What is it?”
Vlad shook his head. “Nothing. I didn’t say anything.”
“You didn’t have to say anything for me to know something’s up. I may not be a
mind reader like some people, Vlad, but I know when you’re hiding something.
What gives? You think I should reconsider?”
“No!” Vlad backtracked in an attempt to hide his joy at Henry’s decision to
break it off with Melissa, which wasn’t easy. “I mean, no, that’s not it at
all. I just ... well ... Henry ... haven’t you noticed that you tend to treat
girls exactly how Melissa is treating you now?”
Henry stared at him blankly.
Vlad ran a frustrated hand through his hair, brushing his bangs from his eyes. “You’ve
probably kissed three-quarters of the girls here at Bathory High, Henry, but
have only really dated one. Do you see what I mean?”
Henry nodded with confidence. “I’m a good kisser.”
“No.”
“Trust me, I am.”
“That’s not what I mean, Henry.” He took a deep breath and restrained the urge
to strangle his best friend. “I’m just saying that ... look, does it hurt when
Melissa wants to kiss you but not spend time getting to know you, even though
you want to get to know her and just be with her?”
“Well, yeah.” Henry used the same tone he always used to say “Well, duh.”
Vlad waited for Henry to piece together the logic in his mind. When he didn’t,
Vlad said, “Did it ever occur to you how many girls you’ve made feel the same
way you’re feeling now?”
Henry stood there for a moment, blinking. Then his shoulders sank, and all the
puzzle pieces slowly fit together for him. “Oh.”
Vlad slapped him on the back. “Chew on that awhile, Romeo. I’m late for
mythology. We’ll have to explore this new revelation in our next session.”
He made his way down the hall and moved inside Otis’s classroom casually, not
letting anyone who might be watching see his growing tension at what awaited
him there. It wasn’t paranoia. He knew he was being waited for, and when he
glanced at Joss on the way to his desk, he could see that he was right. Joss
was smiling that cool, superior smile that he’d added to his armory ever since
his return. Vlad felt himself brace, felt himself ready a glare, but stopped
and just looked at Joss, at this boy who had been his friend. For a moment, he
forgave Joss for staking him, for threatening him, and for flirting openly with
Meredith. For a moment, he just looked at Joss and tried to let him know with
his eyes just how badly he wanted things to go back to the way they were.
Joss’s smile slipped, and all the anger and resentment melted away for a
microsecond, replaced by regret. Then Joss looked away.
Maybe there was hope. Maybe somehow, through all the hatred and threats and
betrayal, maybe their friendship could survive. Maybe Joss—the real Joss, the
Joss he knew—could be saved from the Slayer Society somehow.
Or maybe Vlad was just stubbornly clinging to a ridiculous, unfounded sense of
hope. He wasn’t sure. But one thing he did know: even though he positively
loathed Joss the slayer ... he missed Joss the friend.
Vlad took his seat, fighting the urge to turn around, to talk this all out with
Joss and make everything okay again. Sure, he was still furious that Joss had
tried to take his life a year and a half before. Sure, he still suffered the
occasional nightmare, always accompanied by that fateful whisper: “For you,
Cecile.” But what it boiled down to was that Joss had been told all sorts of
horrible lies about vampires, and maybe, if Vlad tried hard enough, he could
get Joss to see the truth. It was possible, wasn’t it? No matter how unlikely,
it was possible. People had been saved from cultlike groups before. Couldn’t
Joss be saved too? Couldn’t Vlad save him?
He looked up as Otis hurriedly entered the room. After a second, the door
closed behind Otis, who paused and closed his eyes for a moment, as if berating
himself. Vlad thought back to the last day of school his eighth grade year,
when the door had mysteriously closed just when it seemed Otis had wanted it
to. He mulled over the two moments, so similar-looking, and wondered if Otis
had a skill he’d not yet shared with Vlad. Flipping open his mythology book to
where they’d left off yesterday, he decided to ask his uncle after class if the
ability to move objects with but a thought were possible. But he didn’t know if
Otis would own up to it, even if his theory was correct.
He was mulling this over when he felt a distinct, familiar poke in his back.
Sharp. Wood. A stake. Joss had a stake.
Without thinking, without considering any other possibility at all, Vlad stood
and whipped around, yanking what Joss held in his hand away and shoving him
over, sending his desk tumbling onto its side. It was only then that Vlad
realized that Joss had been poking him with a pencil. He dropped it on the
floor and glanced at Otis. “Sorry. I ... sorry.”
Otis pursed his lips. “Office. Both of you.”
The word had barely formed in his mind before Joss stood and spoke it aloud. “What?”
Otis barked, “OFFICE!”
Not daring to question, Vlad huffed down the hall, keeping Joss in his peripheral
vision the entire time. He hated that he wanted to fix the friendship they’d
had, hated that he wanted very much to rescue Joss from the twisted web of the
Slayer Society, and completely loathed the idea of trying to reason with Joss
when he was acting like a lunatic. He tried to ignore it, but there it was,
burning a hole through his chest—what Vlad wanted more than anything, but
couldn’t have: for him and Joss to be buds again. What’s more, he wanted to
beat some sense into Joss, and that wasn’t a wise idea either. Especially since
they’d probably just earned at least one afternoon of detention.
Principal Snelgrove met them in the outer office. “I don’t care what happened.
I don’t want excuses. I don’t want blame games. You’ll both have in-school suspension
tomorrow. I will not tolerate fighting! Is that understood?”
Vlad nodded. Snelgrove growled at Joss, “I said is that understood, Mr.
McMillan?”
Finally, Joss nodded too. “Yes, sir.”
The rest of the day was a blur. Suspension? It didn’t matter if it was in
school or not, Nelly was going to kill him. And Otis ... what was he thinking,
sending them to the office? He had to know it was Joss’s fault.
One thing was for sure. Vlad was done tiptoeing around something he’d wanted to
ask Otis for years now.
Once the final bell had rung, Vlad grabbed his backpack from his locker and
headed to Otis’s classroom, where he perched on the edge of his uncle’s desk,
watching Otis tuck things neatly into his old leather doctor’s bag. Making sure
to speak quietly, calmly, Vlad said, “Otis, how do you close doors without
touching them?”
Otis snapped his eyes to Vlad, looking very much caught. He didn’t say anything
for a long time. Finally, as if coming to the conclusion that his nephew
deserved an answer, he said, “It’s something that I realized I could do only
about six years ago ... after I’d fed on vampire blood.”
Vlad felt like he’d been punched in the chest. He mulled over a few theories,
then settled on the obvious choice. “Dorian’s idea?”
Otis breathed out a sigh and ran a trembling hand through his hair. “After
Tomas left Elysia, I was lost. Dorian took me under his wing, tried to show me
what more life had to offer. It was foolish of me—I knew the kind of man Dorian
was ... is—but I went along with him to a party full of vampires and humans. We
killed the humans, drank them dry. And in my drunken state of bloodlust, I
relented to Dorian’s will and fed on a vampire as well. Dorian finished him
off.”
Vlad gasped, and not just at Otis’s actions. “He killed a vampire?”
Otis closed his bag and met Vlad’s eyes. “Yes, but the Council of Elders won’t
touch him. No law can. Dorian is ... protected.”
Vlad mulled this over for a bit. He couldn’t imagine Otis feeding on a roomful
of people. But then, he couldn’t imagine Otis feeding on anyone. He’d only ever
seen his uncle feed on one person, on Henry and that was out of necessity not
greed. “What was it like, feeding on a vampire?”
“It was wrong. And wonderful. Nothing compares. It was powerful ... like pure
light inside my veins.” Otis’s eyes went wide, then horrified at the memory of
however that blood had made him feel. “Dorian’s palate disgusts me, but I
understand his tastes.”
“And the telekinesis?”
“It started the next day. I try not to use it in front of other vampires, for
fear they’ll learn that I’ve fed from one of our own. I don’t know if it’s a
common side effect or not.” Otis wet his lips. “Have you experienced anything
like that since I gave you my blood after Joss staked you?”
Vlad thought it over for a moment, but nothing unusual came to mind. “As far as
I can tell, I haven’t changed at all.”
Otis nodded thoughtfully. “Perhaps it was Dorian’s blood—the vampire we drank
from was his creation, his son, after all.”
Vlad gawked. “He killed his son just for a snack? That’s seriously twisted.”
Otis squeezed Vlad’s shoulder and steered him toward the door. “Stay away from
him, Vlad. Dorian is brilliant and cunning. He’s also extremely dangerous, and
he’s taken a liking to you.”
They entered the hallway, and Vlad watched as Otis locked his classroom door.
He couldn’t help but ask, “In the same way he took a liking to you?”
Otis turned, leading him down the hall, toward the front doors of the school. “No.
In the same way he took a liking to his son.”
Vlad gulped and decided that staying away from Dorian would be top priority,
right alongside steering clear of Joss when he was in a staking mood. Which was
probably always. Maybe it was better if Vlad just wasn’t alone again ... ever.
As they made their way down the steps, waving to the janitor on their way by,
Otis said, “I won’t be dropping you off at home today, Vlad. Vikas is expecting
you.”
“Expecting me?” Vlad racked his brains but couldn’t recall having arranged
anything with Vikas.
Otis nodded, unlocking the rusty door of his crappy car. As he slid into the
driver’s seat and Vlad slid in next to him, he said, “You’ll be training for
two hours every afternoon. Vikas wants to get you sharp. Especially with a
slayer in town.”
Vlad frowned at his heavy backpack. “I suppose you expect me to do homework
too.”
Otis laughed. “Of course.”
The car turned this way and that, until it found its way down Lugosi Trail and
Otis brought it to a stop in front of Vlad’s former home. Once inside, Otis
excused himself upstairs to grade papers. Vikas was waiting in the kitchen with
a stern expression on his face. Vlad immediately wondered if he was in trouble.
“Today, Mahlyenki Dyavol, I will teach you what I know about the Slayer
Society. Then we will practice how to effectively dispatch a slayer.”
There was no question in Vikas’s tone, no possibility that Vlad might not want
to know these things. He had to know them, and Vikas was determined to teach
him. Just in case. Vlad nodded slowly, and dropped his backpack to the floor.
Vikas pointed to the chair across from him. “Sit.”
Vlad sat, feeling all the while like he was in trouble, like he was being
punished. When he spoke, his voice was gruff. “What if I don’t need today’s
lesson, Vikas? What if Joss changes his mind?”
Vikas’s brow furrowed, as if what he was about to say was enormously difficult
for him. “I have seen his thoughts,
When. Not if.
Vlad stood, his heart racing. “No matter what he did in the past, Joss is my
friend. I’m not going to—”
Then suddenly, he felt Vikas in his mind. As Vikas spoke, he nudged Vlad,
forcing him to follow his simple, firm instruction. “Sit.”
Vlad sat, but not of his own free will.
“This is vital knowledge that you must have if you are to survive another
encounter with this slayer. I have promised your uncle that I would ensure your
safety and I shall. Though it would bring me great pleasure to dispatch this
slayer myself, I have been told that I cannot unless he first breaks the peace
between us. Therefore, that task falls to the first of us to be attacked.
Should that be you, Mahlyenki Dyavol, you will need what I will teach you
today. I will teach you and you will learn, even if I have to hold you here
with my mind the entire time.”
Vlad swallowed hard, vowing never to mention to Vikas or his uncle that Joss
had already made the first move. Or that he was determined to find a way to
free Joss from the Society’s clutches.
Vikas released his hold on Vlad’s mind and began his lesson, despite Vlad’s
protests. “The Slayer Society is a relatively small group of humans—all but a
few male, all but a few middle-aged—who are bent on the destruction of
vampirekind. We have no one to blame but ourselves, of course, as it was a
vampire who created the slayers.”
Vlad raised his eyebrows in surprise, but remained silent, very much irritated
at Vikas’s use of mind control.
“As you know, there are laws. The highest law being that no vampire should dare
take the life of a fellow vampire. However, that is not to say that there are
not certain vampires that deserve death, or that there are not those who would
use the death of another to increase their own standing in Elysia.” A puzzled
look crossed Vlad’s face. Vikas answered the question that Vlad had not yet
asked, “Politics are the same in all cultures, it matters not what type of
government they follow. To work around this law, which brings with it the
absolute punishment of death—”
Vlad’s heart all but stopped. Otis had killed Ignatius last year. He could only
imagine what that meant for his uncle.
“—a vengeful vampire by the name of Terryn took it upon himself to inform a
small group of humans that vampires existed, with the explicit purpose of
training them how to take down his vampire enemies. Revealing the truth of
Elysia is a high crime, yes, but with his new group of assassins behind him, no
one on the council dared to defy him. So Terryn lived several happy years after
organizing his group of slayers, until they killed him.”
Vlad, intrigued by the history lesson, finally found his voice. “But why wouldn’t
Terryn have just turned the slayers into his drudges and command them to obey
him?”
“You’re quite astute, Mahlyenki Dyavol, for that is exactly what he did, and he
blinded them to the fact that he was a vampire.” Vikas smiled to see that Vlad
had decided to turn this into a discussion rather than a lecture. Vlad could
feel Vikas’s control release. He trusted Vlad to stay put. “However, that too
is a violation of Elysian law. You see, a vampire is only allowed to bind
himself to two humans. Any more than that and our connection with them becomes
too diminished to maintain control over all of them at once. Terryn’s original
group consisted of thirty-four. And he trained them so well to recognize a
vampire’s characteristics that they eventually saw through his control and
realized his true nature. He became a victim of his own creation.”
Vikas had barely moved since he started talking. He was still sitting at the
kitchen table with his hands clasped in front of him. Vlad noticed that the
expression on his face had softened, but only just. “You knew him, didn’t you?”
“Yes. There was a time that I had called Terryn my friend. But that was before
he lost touch with Elysia. Before he decided to lift himself to a position of
power that he knew was not meant for him.” A hint of remorse flashed in his
eyes. “Even so, I was sad to hear of his death.”
“So, then what happened?”
Vikas finally shifted in his seat and regained his composure. “Ever since that
day in 1835, there has always been a Slayer Society, though their beliefs have
warped and twisted over time to the point where their goal—the destruction of
vampirekind—borders on religion. They believe that new slayers are not chosen,
but that the small piece of Terryn which was put into each of the original
members shows itself in a member of their own family. The society members that
exist now are all direct descendants of the original slayers. They believe that
vampires are evil monsters, who drink babies’ blood and sleep in coffins. They
are persistent, resilient, and will stop at nothing to do us in. They are our
enemies. And as we created them, it is our right, our duty, to rid the world of
them.”
Vlad chewed his bottom lip for a moment before saying, “I understand your
concerns, Vikas, but why are you telling me all of this?”
Vikas met his gaze. “Because you’ve made it quite clear that you do not
understand the severity of the slayer’s presence. To your uncle or me,
dispatching the boy would be a fairly easy task. But to you, you who are still
committed to a nonexistent friendship with him, it won’t be quite so simple.”
Shaking his head, Vlad stood at last. “Joss isn’t going to try to kill me.”
“It is your denial that will end your life, just as sure as his stake.” Vikas
stood and crossed the kitchen to the window. As he stared out at the backyard,
his fingers traced the lines on his forehead. After a moment of quiet
contemplation, he turned back to face Vlad. “Prepare yourself for what will
come, Vladimir, or you will die, and neither Otis nor I will be able to prevent
it.”
Vlad was looking at the man who had been his friend and mentor for two years
now—one of the very few people on the planet who knew his secrets (well, most
of them anyway) and who he knew he could trust, and had, trusted with his life.
Even though he stared directly into Vikas’s eyes, they both knew that Vlad was
somewhere else, lost in his own thoughts.
Vikas was right. No matter how much Vlad hoped and wished that he wasn’t, he
was right. The Joss he knew from his past was muted by the Joss he’d become,
and clinging to the memory of the boy he knew two years ago was putting Vlad
and those he cared about in danger. He would never hunt Joss, nor would he
allow anyone else to. He would cling to the hope that a new friendship could be
built between them, and that Joss may yet be saved from the cultlike ways of the
Slayer Society. He would cling to the tense peace that existed between them.
But if Joss should break that peace, Vlad needed to be prepared.
And he would be.
Reluctantly, he sighed. “Okay. Tell me what I need to know.”
10
MONSTERS
IN-SCHOOL SUSPENSION was clearly invented by someone who really, really
despised the idea of kids doing anything but homework and who thought that
staring blankly at the wall without speaking was just about the most
entertaining thing in the world to do. They were obviously evil to the core,
and Vlad was cursing their unknown name during his entire trek down the hall
and over to the old wooden door at the end of the hall, just past the
cafeteria.
The door was scraped up and ugly—fitting, considering it opened up to a fate
worse than most prisons. And lucky Vlad, he wasn’t serving this sentence alone.
Bad enough he’d be spending the day doing schoolwork in a forced silence that
many monks would envy, but he had to do it all in the company of the one boy
who’d already come close to killing him once and probably would try again.
With a deep, depressed breath, Vlad turned the knob and opened the door.
He’d never seen the inside of the ISS room, so he really had no idea what to
expect. Immediately, there were three small steps to climb and once his feet
hit the wooden floor, he recognized what the room had once been. He’d heard
that many years ago there had once been a stage attached to what now served as
the cafeteria, but that it had been walled off and turned into storage.
Apparently, that storage room was also home to ISS. Boxes and various odds and
ends lined three of the walls. Five desks sat facing an empty one. Two were
occupied by boys that looked like bad news. Vlad took his seat nearest the
door.
A moment later, the door opened again. Joss took a quick look around and
approached the desks. After a glance at their rather scary-looking company, he
begrudgingly took the seat next to Vlad.
Vlad chewed the inside of his cheek absently. He very much wanted to say
something to Joss, something that would break the tension, but nothing came to
mind.
The ugly door opened and Mr. Hunjo wedged his immense shoulders inside. He went
straight to the small desk at the front of the room and barked, “What are you
staring at? Get to work!”
Vlad finished up his schoolwork relatively quickly, and af terward, sat
quietly, waiting for the day to come to an end. The room’s silence was only
broken by the soft snoring of Mr. Hunjo, who’d succumbed to boredom and had
decided that his best defense was a good nap. Vlad looked over at Joss and
dared to whisper, “Why are you in Otis’s class? What do you want?”
Joss shrugged halfheartedly. “What else, but to learn mythology? You know ...
unicorns, trolls ... vampires.”
He met Vlad’s eyes then, and Vlad resisted the urge to read his thoughts. He
didn’t really want to understand how a slayer thinks, what a slayer feels. He
just wanted to be left alone.
Remembering they weren’t the only ones in the room, Vlad said, “So you have an
interest in the make-believe, eh?”
Joss leaned closer and, after they both jumped at a particularly loud snort
from the sleeping gym teacher, he responded, “I believe in truth and justice
and the good of mankind. No matter how much bloodshed it takes to protect those
things.”
Joss’s eyes were full of an eagerness that sent a terrified chill through Vlad.
He shook his head in shock. “You’re a monster.”
Joss was quiet for a while. Then he sat back and returned to his schoolwork,
but not before uttering, “It takes one to know one, Vlad.”
11
A SNAP
SPRAT BOUNDED FROM THE CAR to the door of The Crypt, dragging October
along behind him. Kristoff was already inside and Andrew was following at a
leisurely pace. Vlad was bent over, tying his shoe near the car.
He was relieved to be back at The Crypt for a night, as the past month of
classes with Joss were already seriously stressing him out and he needed to
blow off some steam. Plus, it had become a regular thing to do with his goth
friends.
Friends. Vlad had friends. He shook his head, smiling.
As the door to the club closed behind Andrew, Vlad stood and moved toward it,
ready to feel the thumping of bass in his chest and smell the adrenaline in the
dancers’ veins.
“It does smell delicious, doesn’t it?”
Vlad clamped down on his thoughts and turned. He knew that voice. His eyes
scanned the shadows until he noticed something dark moving within them. His
chest tightened—partly from fear, partly from surprise. “What do you want?”
D’Ablo stepped into the street-lamp light. He was dressed in black from head to
toe, complete with black leather gloves. Gloves. Plural. Which meant that D’Ablo
had somehow sprouted a new hand. Vlad slanted his eyes, examining the hand. The
fingers didn’t move. The muscles didn’t flex. When realization hit him, he
said, “You’re wearing a false hand. How does the council feel about that? After
all, vampires aren’t big fans of weaknesses and scars, are they, D’Ablo? It’s a
wonder they haven’t removed you from office.”
D’Ablo pursed his lips. “They’re happy enough in their ignorance.”
Vlad tilted his head in disbelief, thinking about the gathered group of angry
vampires at his old house just five weeks ago. “I know several people who aren’t
so happy that a disfigured vampire is still president.”
The corner of D’Ablo’s mouth rose slightly in a small smile. “I assure you that
none of those people matter.”
Vlad’s eyes traced D’Ablo’s face for any sign of scars. When he saw him last,
flames had all but melted his face away, but now the skin was smooth, flawless,
as if that maniacal moment in the sun had never occurred. “The sunlight ... it
didn’t damage or scar you at all?”
“With enough blood, healing is possible, even from the likes of the sun. But
you ... you didn’t burn at all. Did you, Master Pravus?” His eyebrows went up.
It was as if he were defying Vlad to once again insist that he wasn’t the child
the prophecy had spoken of.
Vlad set his jaw. “No.”
“So you’ve finally accepted that you are the Pravus?”
“Yes.” What did D’Ablo want, anyway? It wasn’t like they were friends or
anything. “I’m assuming you didn’t come here to chat, so what is it you want, D’Ablo?”
D’Ablo chuckled under his breath. “You know what I want. My ritual is not yet
complete.”
Vlad froze. The ritual. D’Ablo had said that the last part of the ritual
required Vlad’s sacrifice. He darted his eyes to the front door of The Crypt
and silently wondered if he could outrun D’Ablo, or if D’Ablo would chase after
him if he did. “So you’re here to kill me?”
D’Ablo sighed, somewhat troubled. “Unfortunately, no. It seems I’ve misplaced
my dagger. In order for the ritual to be completed correctly, the dagger is
required. But never fear, Master Pravus. I am here to offer you a truce.”
Before Vlad could bite his tongue, he snapped, “In your dreams, D’Ablo. That is
never going to happen.”
D’Ablo raised an eyebrow. “I am no threat to you without the dagger, and if I
cannot be the Pravus I can at least assist him.”
Vlad shook his head, filled with loathing. “You’ve ‘assisted’ me enough. Almost
into an early grave.”
D’Ablo held his palms out, pleading. “Hear me out.”
Vlad turned back to the club, tossing bitter words over his shoulder as he
left. “Bite me.”
He’d barely taken a breath before D’Ablo was beside him, wrapping his hand
tightly around Vlad’s throat. Vlad tried to inhale, but couldn’t. D’Ablo lifted
him slowly off the ground and growled into his ear. “Of course, there’s always
the appeal of killing you just to silence that mouth. All it would take is a
snap.”
He squeezed tighter before letting Vlad go. A warning.
Vlad coughed, rubbing at his sore neck. In a hoarse, raspy voice, he called
after D’Ablo, who was once again disappearing into the shadows, “You’ll never
be the Pravus, D’Ablo. I don’t care what any ritual says. And a truce? You’re
out of your mind.”
“A snap, Master Pravus.” He chuckled again, causing Vlad to shiver. “A snap.”
12
NOBODY
A SOUND TO VLAD’S RIGHT, SHARP AND FAMILIAR. Vlad turned his head toward
it, as did D’Ablo. Dorian was standing there, an expectant smirk on his face,
his hand held up as if he’d just snapped his fingers. “Nothing? I did snap,
after all.”
At the sight of him, Vlad’s chest grew tight. Fear. Intense fear. He was now
standing in the presence of the two most dangerous vampires he’d ever encountered,
both of whom wanted his blood for one reason or another. He swallowed the lump
in his throat and fought back the urge to run.
D’Ablo’s jaw tightened. “Dorian. I wasn’t expecting you.”
“So I presumed. If you were, you likely wouldn’t have been threatening this
boy. This boy, in particular, now would you?”
Dorian tilted his head, his eyes slanting. It was as if D’Ablo had been caught
playing with one of his toys. Vlad shrank back, revolted. Is that what he was
to vampirekind? Just an object to argue over, just a freak who might fulfill
their needs?
D’Ablo flicked his gaze to Vlad with a warning. “I assure you, it was no mere
threat.”
No surprise there. D’Ablo hadn’t exactly been shy about trying to kill Vlad in
the past.
“You’re telling me.” Dorian took what seemed like a casual step closer to D’Ablo,
then another, and another. With each, D’Ablo appeared a bit more on edge. It
was nice to see him afraid, for once. “You’re actually telling me that you
would kill Tomas’s son? You, who once preached that Tomas was deserving of a
seat on the Council of Elders?”
D’Ablo said nothing in reply.
Dorian clucked his tongue, quieting his voice as if they shared a secret. “I
think we both understand why that would be a poor choice.”
Vlad had been ready to back away and break into a run, but now he furrowed his
brow in slight confusion, the thought of running suddenly evaporating in the
cool night air. “What about my dad? What are you hinting at?”
Dorian and D’Ablo looked back at Vlad, looking like they’d only just remembered
his presence. Dorian moved his eyes back to D’Ablo and nodded toward Vlad. “Tell
him.”
D’Ablo scowled. He wasn’t about to tell Vlad anything.
But then Dorian’s expression grew serious. He repeated, “Tell him.”
Immediately, D’Ablo turned to Vlad and spoke. “If I took your life, everyone
who ever loved your father would not stop until I was tortured and killed. A
life for a life. I would lose my position as president, my belongings would
become the belongings of your loved ones, and my name would be mocked for
centuries to come. Your father was a very powerful and influential man. If I
were to murder his son, I would regret it.”
Once the final word passed over his lips, he seemed to regain control of
himself. His face reddened in anger and hatred, and if his eyes could have shot
lasers, they would have burned a hole right through Dorian.
Dorian merely smiled, obviously enjoying his control over D’Ablo. “That wasn’t
so bad, was it? It’s fun to tell the truth. Is there any other truth you’d like
to share with Vlad?”
A curt reply, one filled with venom. “No.”
Dorian raised a sharp eyebrow, as if defying D’Ablo to speak. “Nothing about
his father? Nothing about your plans?”
Vlad shot a look between the two older vampires. Plans? How did any of D’Ablo’s
plans have anything to do with Vlad’s dad?
D’Ablo’s scowl deepened, hatred spewing from every pore in his body. “No.”
“Very well, then.” Dorian turned back to Vlad, then glanced over his shoulder
at D’Ablo in an afterthought. “You may go now.”
D’Ablo stalked off without another word, dismissed, like a household servant.
Dorian sighed, shaking his head at Vlad like they were old friends. “I have
never liked that guy.”
Now Vlad was alone with Dorian. Immediately, Vlad’s heart picked up its pace.
As if listening to a symphony, Dorian closed his eyes, his head swimming with
the sound of Vlad’s heartbeat. In an effort to snap him out of his day-dream,
Vlad said, “Nobody likes D’Ablo. At least, nobody I know.”
“You’ll be surprised.”
Vlad furrowed his brow. You’ll not you’d. As if Dorian knew
something he wasn’t telling Vlad.
“Less people like me than our friend D’Ablo, I’m afraid.”
“Something tells me you’re never afraid. Of anything.” In an afterthought, Vlad
took a step back.
A strange smile lit up Dorian’s face and he shrugged casually, almost
sheepishly.
Several seconds passed before Vlad said, “So ... what do you want?”
“I’ve come to proposition you. It is within my power to save your uncle’s life,
but he is too stubborn to agree to a trade. So I implore you. Give me your
blood and I will help your uncle survive his trial.” He spoke so
matter-of-factly that it sounded as if he’d rehearsed his speech all the way
here, as if he’d practiced it over and over again, perhaps out loud, until it
sounded perfect, until his demand seemed sane and rational, everything that
Dorian most certainly was not. His eyes told Vlad that he was completely
serious, but his eager nod seemed almost childlike. He waited, and when Vlad
failed to give him a thumbs-up on the idea, he sighed, troubled. “If I have to
take your blood by force, Otis will die. I’m sorry, Vlad, but I cannot control
this urge. I must have your blood, at any cost.”
Vlad’s heart rammed against his ribs. As if it wasn’t bad enough that Dorian
wanted his blood, now he was left to choose between his life and Otis’s. He
swallowed hard, wondering how both Dorian and D’Ablo had chosen this exact
night to get on his case, and if they were somehow working together. After all,
they both seemed to be after the same thing. “Why ask? Why not force me right
now?”
After a moment, it hit him. Vlad took in a shaky breath. “You’re afraid you’ll
fail again. I beat you before, and that scared you. Because no one beats you,
do they, Dorian?”
Dorian’s mouth settled slowly into a frown, as if he were uncomfortable with
the idea of anyone knowing his secrets. The irony did not escape Vlad. An
all-powerful vampire, afraid of anyone finding out his deepest fears? That was
one for the books. Dorian cleared his throat before speaking. “That’s not all.
I ... derive pleasure from the idea that the boy who would be Pravus would bend
to my will.”
Vlad’s stomach turned. “Not just hungry for blood, but power too, eh? You’re
just like some spoiled kid, used to getting his way.”
Dorian grew quiet for some time, finally breaking it to whisper, “You might say
that.”
Vlad shook his head. “The answer is no. You can’t have my blood. Not one drop.
I’ve had enough excitement for the night, thanks.”
As Vlad turned to walk away, he felt his body stiffen. Before he knew what was
happening, he turned to face Dorian again ... but not of his own free will.
Dorian nodded apologetically. “I am sorry, but you do force my hand.”
Against his will, Vlad moved closer, bending his head to the side, beckoning
Dorian to drain his veins dry. Dorian’s fangs slipped from his gums, ready,
eager to partake, his eyes locked on the throbbing blue vein on Vlad’s neck.
Inside Vlad’s skull, Vlad ranted, raved, screamed, but there was nothing he
could do to stop this moment from happening.
To his left, there was the familiar squeak of the club door, followed by
October’s voice. “What’s taking you so long?”
Without a word, Dorian released his mental grip and stepped back. Strangely, he
looked almost as relieved as Vlad felt. He moved down the street, disappearing
into the night, but not before his voice echoed in Vlad’s mind. “That girl
just saved you. She saved us both.”
Vlad’s hands were shaking. That was close. Too close. And what had Dorian
meant, saved them both? He wasn’t the one in danger of being drained here.
He turned back to October, who had a sharp eyebrow raised. “Who was that?”
Vlad rubbed absently at his neck, wondering silently what the look in Dorian’s
eyes, what the words in Vlad’s mind, had meant. “Nobody. It was nobody.”
13
OUTSPOKEN ENEMIES
VLAD CHEWED A BITE of his peanut butter, jelly, and blood-capsule
sandwich and swallowed, but it didn’t go down easy. He couldn’t stop watching
the exchange that was happening two tables over and wishing like crazy that he
had some kind of supersensitive hearing. Unfortunately, vampires were nothing
at all like superheroes. So Vlad watched, trying to learn on the spot how to
read lips and failing miserably.
He kept fighting back yawns, completely exhausted by his recent training
sessions with Vikas, who had promised him that they would only get more
difficult. Not to mention how much sleep he’d been losing since his encounter
with both D’Ablo and Dorian two weeks before.
After a few more seconds of squinting at Joss’s moving lips, he almost smacked
himself in the forehead, wondering how exactly a vampire momentarily forgets
about that whole mind-reading thing. He laid his head on the table and closed
his eyes, slipping stealthily into Joss’s head, content to linger long enough
to learn what Joss and Eddie were discussing.
Joss’s head hurt. He was tense and anxious, but not uncertain in the least. He
was doing the right thing ... for the good of mankind.
Vlad rolled his eyes. Whatever you gotta tell yourself to sleep through the
night, Joss.
Eddie’s voice came out in a breath. “I can’t believe it. I mean, I can. I knew
he was a vampire, but I had no idea you knew. Who else knows?”
A picture of Henry popped into Joss’s thoughts, but he couldn’t out his cousin,
couldn’t endanger Henry’s life because he was being stupid and reckless ... and
was likely under Vlad’s control. “Just us. And we have to keep it that way.”
“So what do we do? I mean, he has to be stopped. And ... I want proof to show
people.”
Joss raised an eyebrow. “You don’t believe me?”
Eddie leaned forward, excitement in his tone. “No, I believe you. But I want
the newspapers to believe me. I want the television programs to believe me.”
“You want to be famous for proving to the world that vampires exist?”
“Yes.”
Joss tightened his jaw, disgusted. If Eddie weren’t proving to be useful, he’d
walk away from this conversation and deny it had ever taken place. But he did
seem to be of use, which is why Joss had confided in him in the first place.
Joss wet his lips and a lie escaped his mouth. “Give me time, and I’ll make you
more famous than you have ever dreamed.”
Eddie sat back, looking more than a little pleased. He shook his head and
chuckled. “I’m glad nobody’s listening to us talk. They’d think we were both
crazy whack-jobs.”
Vlad pulled out of Joss’s thoughts, sat up, and chuckled. At the same time,
Joss looked at him and pursed his lips. The look in his eyes said he knew Vlad
had been listening, even if he wasn’t entirely sure how. Vlad smiled pleasantly
and waved.
It wasn’t that he was happy about what he’d overheard, but at some point, his
sanity was bound to break at the ridiculousness that was his life. Why not now?
“Why are you smiling?” October had a thin black eyebrow raised and was looking
at Vlad in the way that said she was pretty sure he’d lost his mind, and she
was totally cool with that.
Vlad shook his head. “The voices in my head said something funny. So what are
you up to tonight?”
“Hanging at The Crypt with the guys ... and Snow.” She pursed her
purple-painted lips as if her next words were delicate ones. “She likes you,
you know. And I think you like her. So why aren’t you two dating?”
Deep inside Vlad’s chest, something twitched. He was pretty sure it was part of
his heart—probably the part that had really liked the way it felt when Snow
kissed him. He shrugged slightly. “What makes you think she likes me?”
“Because when you’re not around, you’re all she talks about. And when you are
around, her eyes light up and she looks genuinely happy. I know that look in
Snow’s eyes, because it’s something rare to see.” She snatched a cookie from
his hand and took a bite, chewing thoughtfully. “You’ve met her father, Vlad.
You’ve gotta know Snow’s home life is nothing to smile about. Her school life
is stressed, and until you came along, our nights at The Crypt were just about
the only thing Snow had to smile about.”
Vlad pulled his collar away from his neck. Was it hot in here? He glanced
around nervously, desperately looking for a change in conversation.
October pointed the half-eaten cookie at him. “I know she likes you, because
she’s my best friend. I don’t have to hear her say it—just like I don’t have to
see you two kiss to know you’ve done it.”
With every word she said, Vlad sank down in his seat just a little bit. If she
kept talking, he was going to wind up on the floor, feeling like a jerk for
having let Snow kiss him.
Finally, October sighed. “So ... why aren’t you dating?”
“Because ...” Vlad tried to resist, but his eyes flicked to Meredith as she
passed their table.
October shook her head. A subtle anger burned on the edges of her frown. “Oh, I
see. She’s good enough to make out with, but she’s not Meredith Brookstone?”
“This has nothing to do with Meredith. I like Snow, but we’re friends. Just
friends.” But even as he spoke the words, he wasn’t confident that he believed
them. Admitting that to October, however, wasn’t going to help things at all.
“I swear, Vlad. I know that Henry McMillan is your best friend, but I really
didn’t think that you were that much alike.”
Vlad winced at the thought of sharing Henry’s reputation. Was he that bad? Was
it so obvious to the world that he was allowing his inner monster to use Snow,
and treating her like less of a person than she actually was? Guilt gnawed at
his insides. Eddie and Joss were right. He was an inhuman beast. He had to be
stopped.
October picked up her tray in one hand and gathered her books into her free
arm. “You’d better tell Snow that you’ve got her stuck firmly in the Friend
Zone, Vlad. Because she’s falling hard for you, and I don’t want her to get
hurt.”
Vlad gulped. He was pretty sure he was more afraid of October’s fury than D’Ablo’s
ritual and Dorian’s cravings combined. “I will.”
Before she walked away, she leaned down and hissed into his ear, “And if you
think I buy that ‘this has nothing to do with Meredith’ crap, you’re dreaming.”
Vlad laid his head back on the table. October was right. Something had to be
done about Snow, and not just because she had a huge crush on Vlad. Ever since
she’d kissed him, Vlad found himself lingering for hours in the alley after
feeding sessions. He found himself spending more time around her, which wasn’t
a bad thing. But he also couldn’t shake Meredith from his thoughts, which was
completely unfair to Snow. He couldn’t date one girl knowing he still loved
another. And he did love Meredith.
Didn’t he?
He liked her, cared deeply for her, couldn’t stop thinking about all the
hand-holding they did, all the meaningful kisses they exchanged. He missed her.
But did he love her still?
Vlad looked over at Meredith, who was giggling at something Joss said and
twirling a lock of her hair around one finger.
Yes, he decided. Yes, he did still love Meredith. And probably always would.
And that meant he needed to take a step back from Snow. Maybe a lot of steps.
The rest of Vlad’s day crawled by in a clouded mist of contemplation. He barely
paid attention to his teachers. And surprisingly, he didn’t think much about his
feelings for Meredith. He thought about Snow, and which was more important to
him, her blood or her feelings. He liked Snow and really enjoyed their long
conversations about anything and everything—her rotten home life, his struggles
with Elysia—but she confused him in ways that no girl ever had. They were
friends. But something more than friendship was starting to burn around the
edges and it scared Vlad.
He couldn’t be with Snow the way he’d been with Meredith. He still loved
Meredith. And Snow ... she deserved better.
Besides, she was just his food source ... wasn’t she?
No. She was a person. A person who deserved better than a monster like Vlad.
When the last bell rang, Vlad grabbed his backpack and headed out the front
doors, but he didn’t get far.
Two sets of hands picked him up, one by his arms and one by his legs, and
carried him around to the back of the school, to the grassy area surrounded by
shrubs, where a few teachers went to smoke during lunch. It wasn’t until those
hands threw him down on the ground that Vlad could confirm they belonged to
Bill and Tom, the resident bullies who had been a constant thorn in Vlad’s side
since before kindergarten. He wasn’t surprised in the least.
But when they wordlessly duct-taped him to the small maple tree ... that gave
him cause to raise an eyebrow. He didn’t bother protesting—he’d just tap into
his vampire strength and snap free once they’d gone. It was just an annoyance,
a minor setback to his afternoon plans.
Eddie stepped into the clearing, and Vlad’s eyes darted to Bill and Tom. After
a moment of awkward silence, Bill said, “Where’s our twenty bucks, Poe?”
Eddie held up a bill and Tom snatched it. “Man, you got ripped off. We’d have
done it for free.”
The bullies guffawed and made their way back to the front of the school. Eddie’s
small face wore a smirk as he crouched in front of Vlad, a superior, knowing
look in his little weasel eyes. “Comfy?”
Vlad glared. The last thing he wanted to do was spend even a moment in the
presence of Eddie Poe, vampire paparazzo extraordinaire. He pulled his hands
forward, ready to tear through the tape that held him in place, and was hit by
a wave of nausea that ripped away his strength required to break the bonds. He
looked at Eddie, narrowing his eyes, and put some real effort into it, yanking
at the tape, but still he couldn’t break it. Confused, he tried again, but
failed. A terrible ache was settling into his stomach, and Vlad knew that if he
didn’t lie down soon, he was going to throw up all over Eddie’s camera.
With a smug smile, Eddie unzipped his backpack and pulled out a string of
garlic. He held it up for Vlad to see. “Does this answer any questions for you?”
Vlad shrank away as much as he could, but there was no escape. So that was why
he suddenly felt so sick, that was why he was feeling so weak. He made a mental
note to give Eddie a permanent wedgie the moment he escaped. “Eddie, what are
you doing?”
Eddie tied the end of the string, making a loop, and despite Vlad’s struggling,
placed it over Vlad’s head and around his neck.
It was the most dangerous necklace that Vlad had ever worn.
Unless the garlic got into a wound or Vlad swallowed it, he’d be fine—Otis had
assured him of that. But the real danger was that Eddie knew the garlic would
subdue him long enough to ... to ... to do whatever it was Eddie planned to do.
The scent of the garlic was choking him, but Vlad managed to repeat his words. “What
are you doing?”
He’d meant for them to come out threatening, but they sounded more like a
whimper.
Eddie fiddled with his lens, occasionally pointing his camera at Vlad and
adjusting something. “I’m just making sure you stick around long enough for me
to take a few pictures.”
Vlad tried to push into Eddie’s mind, but no matter how hard he pushed, he couldn’t
get inside—the garlic must have weakened that too. His voice shook, but he
tried to remain calm. “You should know I’m really allergic to garlic, Eddie. We’ve
been going to school together since kindergarten.”
“It’s a good cover, Vlad, and not entirely a lie. Aren’t all vampires allergic
to garlic?” Eddie smiled a strange, sadistic smile. He pulled a pocketknife
from his back pocket and opened it, revealing a small, sharp blade. His actions
were so casual that Vlad found himself frightened—frightened! Of Eddie Poe. He
never saw that coming.
Despite his fears, despite his nausea, Vlad shook his head and tried hard to
act cool and casual. “You still think that? Man, Eddie, you should see a
shrink. Seriously. Vampires aren’t re—”
He was going to say “real,” but then Eddie drew the blade across his palm,
splitting his pale skin open. Bright red blood blossomed from the cut, and Vlad’s
eyes locked on Eddie’s self-inflicted wound. Vlad’s stomach, despite the
queasiness-inducing garlic, rumbled with need.
Eddie poked at his cut with his finger, enticing it to open, to bleed freely.
Blood drew a lazy line down his palm, and with prodding the line thickened. He
waved his bleeding hand in front of Vlad’s face and smirked. “Not real, huh? So
why do you look so hungry all of a sudden?”
Vlad forced his eyes away. He had to get a grip, or the garlic wasn’t going to
be enough to keep him down. He was going to tear through Eddie Poe’s little
neck and devour every drop of his blood. And even Eddie didn’t deserve that ...
no matter how much Vlad wanted to do it.
Eddie snapped a few pictures of Vlad, then sat down just a few feet in front of
him and said, “I can wait all day. Sooner or later you’re gonna have to show me
fangs.”
The smell of Eddie’s btood—oh man, it was AB negative—filled Vlad’s nostrils.
He could feel his will breaking. He was going to bite Eddie and get a taste. He
had to. Eddie had practically invited him to dine. Fueled by hunger, Vlad
pulled on his restraints and felt the duct tape stretch and begin to break. The
garlic wasn’t enough to keep him away from the taste of the rubies hidden
within Eddie’s small veins. Vlad needed it. Just a taste. Just a small taste.
A familiar voice entered the clearing. “Eddie, are you crazy? What are you
doing?”
Eddie was snapping tons of pictures, but the voice was enough to distract Vlad
from his momentary weakness. Barely, but enough. He looked up and saw Joss
dropping his messenger bag on the ground beside Eddie. Joss looked at Vlad,
tilting his head curiously. “Your eyes are purple. Why do they do that?”
Vlad blinked, collecting himself. “I ... I don’t know.”
Joss spied Eddie’s hand and clucked his tongue. “Is that what’s causing all the
commotion?”
As Joss took Eddie’s hand and examined the cut, Eddie yanked it away. “It’s the
only way to get proof.”
“By sacrificing yourself?”
Eddie wilted, but Joss patted him on the back. “The garlic was a good idea, but
not enough, I think. Vlad isn’t like other vampires.”
Joss glanced back at Vlad and said, “Are you, Vlad? You’re something else.
Something ... special.”
Vlad pulled at the tape again, but it refused to break. Every cell in his body
felt ill.
Joss crouched down and smiled, withdrawing his stake from the bag—the same
stake that had been buried in Vlad’s chest a year and a half before. His words
were but a whisper. “So let’s find out what.”
Joss ripped the garlic away and flung it over the shrub. As he did so he jumped
back, but not fast enough. Vlad snapped through the duct tape like it was
tissue paper and moved so fast that Eddie had barely taken two quick breaths
before Vlad crushed his camera with one hand and turned to face Joss, fully at
the ready.
If they wanted a fight, they were going to get one.
Eddie looked scared; Joss looked mildly concerned. Joss’s voice was smooth and
calm as he spoke, but tinged with surprise. “You move faster now. Something
your uncle taught you?”
Vlad growled, ready to rip Joss’s limbs from his body. “No. Something my
enemies taught me.”
A small smile tugged at the corner of Joss’s mouth. “What else have you
learned?”
Vlad’s fangs shot from his gums. The smell of Eddie’s blood was making him
crazy but Joss’s presence, his taunts, were worse. He snapped his teeth at
Joss, only barely hearing a tiny whimper from Eddie, and said, “Why don’t you
come find out?”
“Vlad! Don’t!” Henry stumbled into the clearing, breathless.
Vlad whipped around, completely on edge. He could smell Joss’s blood now too—A
positive, tangy. If he didn’t feed soon, he’d go mad. “Henry, just get out of
here. I’m handling this.”
But Henry didn’t leave. Instead, he moved to the most dangerous spot in the
clearing—directly between Vlad and Joss. He looked from his best friend to his
cousin and back. “Not like this. If you two want to kill each other, fine. But
not out in the open, in the middle of the day, where anybody could see. You owe
me that much. You both do.”
Joss kept a firm hold on his stake, staring Vlad down. He wasn’t about to quit,
no matter what he owed Henry.
And the blood ... oh man, Vlad needed that blood.
Vlad looked at Henry, who was pleading with his eyes, and his fangs shrank back
into his gums. As his sanity slowly returned, he realized that Henry was right.
He did owe him that much. Never mind the fact that he’d been ready to do just
that, to extinguish their lives completely. Self-loathing wormed its way into
his chest and settled there, festering. Though his famished hunger remained, he
shook his head and tugged Henry’s sleeve. “Come on. Let’s get outta here before
I drain Eddie dry.”
As they passed Eddie, Vlad noticed that he had paled in terror. He also noticed
that there was a new scent on the air. Eddie had wet himself.
For some reason that made Vlad smile.
14
A FRIEND’S BETRAYAL
VLAD FLEW ACROSS THE BASEMENT AND TURNED, his vampire speed making him a
blur in the dim light. He threw a roundhouse kick to knock the stake from Vikas’s
hand. Vikas stepped back, just as fast, and Vlad missed. Vikas smiled, allowing
Vlad a moment to catch his breath. “Much better today, Mahlyenki Dyavol. You’re
no longer holding back.”
Vlad slipped his sweat-drenched T-shirt over his head and tossed it on the
basement stairs. “Let’s go again.”
Vikas shook his head. “That is enough training for today. Now tell me what
clouds your mind; what has brought this fury to your attacks?”
Vlad didn’t want to talk about it, but he knew Vikas wasn’t about to drop the
subject. He sat on the steps and ran a frustrated hand through his slick hair. “You
were right, okay? Joss isn’t going to walk away from Bathory without killing
me.”
Vikas sighed and dropped the makeshift stake to the floor. He walked over to
where Vlad sat, squeezed his shoulder, and took a seat beside him. “Do you
recall our conversation in the hospital after you were staked?”
Vlad nodded. “You said you’d been betrayed by a friend too.”
Vikas was quiet for a while, then, in a gruff voice, he said, “I believe the
time has come that I share with you my story of friendship and betrayal.”
He stood and moved up the steps. A heartbeat later, Vlad followed.
Vikas barked at Tristian, who was standing quietly in the kitchen. “Blood,
Tristian. Warm. Then leave us.”
Tristian hurried to the freezer and collected bloodbags, and as he was pouring
them into mugs, Vikas looked at Vlad, who stood there watching Vikas order his
drudge around as though he was nothing. Vlad frowned and a glimpse of guilt
crossed Vikas’s eyes. As Tristian sat the now-steaming mugs in front of them,
Vikas spoke again, his voice much softer. “Bol’shoe spasibo, Tristian.”
Vlad took his seat across from Vikas and blew the steam from his mug before
taking a sip. Vikas didn’t touch his, but the moment Tristian was out of the
room, he said, “I have held many friendships over the centuries that I have
lived, Mahlyenki Dyavol, and I have been betrayed by those friends more times
than I can count. But few truly ripped at my soul. In truth, only one instance
pained me in that way. I did not believe that I would ever forgive my friend. I
did not believe I would let my friend live should I see him again. But time, as
they say, heals all wounds, and my wounds mended long ago.”
Vikas took a deep breath and released it slowly. He met Vlad’s eyes, his irises
a cool ice blue, and after a long, silent moment, said, “It was Otis, your
uncle, that betrayed me in the worst way possible.”
Vlad almost choked on a mouthful of blood. He coughed, trying to keep it
contained. Vikas handed him a towel and nodded. “Shocking, I know, to think
that Otis, my dearest living friend, would be the cause of great pain. I almost
killed him. I would have, but . . .”
Vlad dried his mouth and said, “But?”
He almost couldn’t believe that Otis had betrayed Vikas at one point. Vikas was
the one man Otis knew he could count on. Their friendship seemed unbreakable.
Vikas looked away, staring into the contents of his mug. “But I didn’t.”
“What happened?”
“Your father was not the first vampire to love a human. Roughly two centuries
ago, in Paris of all places, I met and fell deeply in love with a woman named
Nadya. She was a good, Russian woman. Fair hair, hazel eyes. She was lovely,
striking for a human, with a figure that—” Vikas’s lips spread into a smile and
Vikas shook his head, realizing he was getting into the TMI area. “We shared an
instant attraction for each other and, despite the laws, planned to marry the
spring after she came into my life. But Otis discovered our love affair and
reported my treachery to the nearest council president. It was decided that
either Nadya would die and I would be punished, or she would have to be turned,
reborn as a vampire. I wanted neither for her, as Nadya had made it clear that
while she loved me with all my vampiric charms, she did not wish to undergo the
change herself. So I refused to change her.”
Vikas paused to take a drink of his blood. His eyes found a window, and they
lingered there for several moments.
Vlad’s voice finally broke the silence. “And?”
“With barely a breath, thinking that he was saving my life, Otis volunteered to
turn Nadya. The council guards held me back as I screamed my protests. He left
the room, returning only moments later with her blood on his lips to proclaim
the deed had been done.”
Vlad gasped. Otis had the best interest of his friend in mind, but he never
even considered his feelings.
“I demanded to see my Nadya, to beg her forgiveness. Otis led me to her—her
wounds had not yet healed, so new to the vampire world was she. When I saw her,
I fell to my knees and begged her to forgive me, promising that she would have
a life unlike any other, one that I would give everything to fill with love,
laughter, and joy.” Vikas’s eyes shined with the threat of tears at the memory.
“But Nadya ... she was furious and thought that I had betrayed her. She threw
bitter words at me like daggers and ran from the room. Dawn was too close. I
chased after her, but she ran into the light as it spilled over the city. I
reached the end of the building, reaching out to pull her back, but my arm
caught fire. Tomas and Otis pulled me from the sun, saving my life, though I was
determined to extinguish it. Once we were inside, safe among the shadows, I
turned on Otis, but Tomas stopped me from taking his life. Your father saved
Otis’s life that day, and I did not speak to Otis for fifty-three years.”
“That’s ... horrible. What made you forgive him?”
“Two words. Two words that it took him fifty-three years to say and me
fifty-three years to hear.” He stood and collected the empty cups from the
table. “He said ‘I’m sorry.’”
Vlad raised an eyebrow. It couldn’t be that simple. “That’s it?”
“No.” Vikas swallowed hard and met Vlad’s eyes. “He meant it.”
Vikas moved across the kitchen and rinsed the mugs in the sink. Vlad was quiet,
lost in his own thoughts. Vikas had cleaned the mugs, dried them, put them away
in the cupboard, and returned to the table before Vlad spoke, his voice hushed,
his thoughts troubled. “Joss is so different now. It’s like he’s not even the
same person I was friends with two years ago.”
“That does not surprise me, Mahlyenki Dyavol. Your friend has undergone
purification by the Slayer Society.”
That gave Vlad pause. “Purification?”
Vikas nodded. “In order to remind Joss what it is that he is fighting against,
to recondition him, the Society has purified your friend with a month’s long
barrage of their customs and laws ... and pain.”
Vlad winced. He could only imagine what twisted things Joss had undergone. Of
course, that explained the shift in his personality.
Vikas went on, as if to make sure that Vlad understood. “Intense and frequent
pain so the things he is told will not easily be forgotten. It’s a practice
that they learned from early vampires, though we found it to be far too
barbaric and abandoned the practice several centuries ago.”
So that was it. Joss had been brainwashed by the Society, and their friendship
was likely gone forever. Vlad wouldn’t apologize for being what he was; that
was ridiculous. He was good enough to be Joss’s friend when Joss thought he was
human; it shouldn’t matter that he was a vampire. If anyone owed anyone an
apology it was Joss, and Vlad was starting to think that it would be at least
fifty-three years before that would happen.
If it ever did.
But ... if Joss had been brainwashed, there was always the chance he could be unbrainwashed.
Vlad just had to figure out how.
15
A SLAYER’S DUTY
THE WHITE FEDEX TRUCK BACKED OUT of the driveway and turned onto the
road, then shifted gears and sped off down the street. Joss stood in the
doorway, clutching a plain white shipping envelope. It was here, at long last.
No more waiting. No more reconnaissance. He could move forward with his
assigned plan of action.
“Is that the new calendar I ordered?”
He turned his head to his mom, who was peering over his shoulder at the
envelope. She was smiting—something she hadn’t done on a regular basis in a
long time, not since Cecile was murdered. The move to Bathory had been good for
her; being around family had really lifted her spirits. If he could rid the
town of vampires, it could be good for all of them. “Nope. Just something from
Uncle Abraham. I asked him for help with that research paper in history. Guess
he sent some stuff to help me out.”
She nodded, so trusting, at his lie. Joss was good at lying. He had to be. His
parents knew nothing about the Slayer Society. His dad’s job was a clever cover
set up by the Society, but they really had no clue that Joss was the one doing
the real work ... the necessary, honorable work. “Well, Abraham would be the
one to ask, wouldn’t he? College professor, world traveler. I’m glad to see you
taking your education seriously and working so hard on your grades, Joss.
School is important.”
Joss offered her a reassuring smile. Clutching the envelope to his chest, he
slipped by her and headed down the hall and into his bedroom, closing the door
behind him.
He pulled the tab, tearing open the envelope, and slid his hand inside. When
his fingers brushed against the familiar feeling of parchment, he closed his
hand over the letter and pulled it out, dropping the shipping envelope to the
floor. In his hands he held a small parchment envelope, held closed by a red
wax seal which bore the Society’s crest. He ran his fingertip over the seal and
turned back to the door, locking it. Then, sitting on the edge of his bed, Joss
turned the envelope over in his hand and pulled the back flap, breaking the
seal. He withdrew the letter, unfolded it, and read over the words with eager
eyes.
His growing smile dropped. The Society wanted more information about the
vampires he’d come here to kill.
So much reconnaissance for such a minor infestation. But it was the oldest one,
the one called Vikas, that they needed to know more about, and the youngest ...
Vlad. Once Joss had his answers, once he’d satisfied the Society’s curiosity,
he’d be free to rid the world of each and every one of them.
The photograph on his dresser, enclosed in a small silver frame, caught his
attention. A pretty girl, only five years old when the photo was taken. Her
blonde curls framing her cherubic face, her green eyes huge, her smile
dazzling. Joss had loved her from the moment he’d touched his mother’s stomach
and the baby had kicked at his hand. His little sister, his reason for fighting
so hard against the bloodthirsty creatures of the night. Cecile. Every vampire
he’d killed, every pain he’d had to endure ... it was all for her. It was all
worth it. Just to know that he was, in some small way, avenging her wrongful
death. He’d do anything for her.
Even if it meant killing the boy he’d once called friend.
16
OUT FOR A BITE
VLAD BUTTONED HIS JACKET and braced himself against the chilly autumn
breeze as he moved down the sidewalk toward home. He’d just spent the last two
hours in the belfry reading everything he could find about the Pravus in the
Compendium, but discovered nothing that really pointed to anything definite on
what the prophecy really said. It all seemed like a bunch of hearsay, with
quotes from one vampire’s theories and quotes from another vampire agreeing
with those theories. Sadly, even though Otis removed the glyph that had
prevented Vlad from reading the Pravus passages, Vlad was left just about where
he’d begun—having no idea exactly what the prophecy said and even less of an
idea of where he might find it.
“I know where the prophecy is. ”
Vlad’s steps came to an immediate halt. His thoughts had been closed to anyone
who might try to read them—some thing Otis had urged him to practice—but the
intruder on his nightly trek had seemingly read them without any effort at all.
He turned slowly and looked into Dorian’s eyes.
Dorian shrugged slightly. A small smile touched his lips. Bemusement, or
something sinister, Vlad couldn’t tell. “Call it a talent, one of many. I can
read anyone’s thoughts, no matter how they might resist.”
The center of Vlad’s chest tightened as he tried to force all of his secrets
from his mind in a blind panic.
The smile slipped from Dorian’s lips and he shook his head, almost
apologetically “But I’m a man of principle, Vlad. I never share the secrets I
collect.”
Vlad shook his head defensively, wondering just what Dorian was doing in
Bathory. He didn’t have to wonder for long, though. The answer was obvious: he
wanted Vlad’s blood at any cost. “Not everyone has secrets.”
“I assure you, everyone has at least one thing that they would like to hide from
the world. Even me.”
Vlad wet his lips. He couldn’t help but wonder if Dorian was bluffing. After
all, there were people in the world who were trained to profile people, to
guess what it was that made them tick. Maybe Dorian was just a good guesser. “What
about me?”
“Where to start?” His smile returned as he seemed to tick through a list of
Vlad’s greatest secrets. He tapped his lips with his pointer finger as he
thought. Then finally, he seemed to settle on one. “Ah, yes ... you feed on a
human girl named Snow and lie to everyone—including your uncle—about it. What’s
more, you think you might have strong feelings for the girl, but can’t bear to
fathom loving anyone but Meredith. Of course, she’s with Joss now. The slayer
boy. That does complicate things, doesn’t it?”
Vlad’s jaw hit the ground. He sputtered and stumbled over his words, but all
that managed to leave his lips was something that sounded vaguely like a
choking noise.
Dorian shook his head again and smiled. “Don’t worry, Vlad. As I said, I never
share the secrets I collect. Your sins are safe with me. Of course, your sins
are not why I’ve come.”
Vlad believed every word he said. But he didn’t trust that belief, remembering
what Otis and Vikas had told him about Dorian’s immense skills. He looked
around them, at the dark windows of houses lining the street, and wondered if
Dorian would try to take his blood where someone might see, and if he did
whether Vlad could stop him again. With a nervous jitter, he said, “Why have
you come?”
Dorian licked his lips, sending a frightened shiver down Vlad’s spine. Then he
offered an apologetic smile. “Our first encounter was rather rudely
interrupted, and our second too short, don’t you think?”
“Otis and Vikas seem to think you’ll hurt me if we spend time together. I think
they’re right.” Vlad tried to appear strong and confident, though he knew that
Dorian could sense his fear.
Dorian smiled again, and this time it was definitely out of bemusement. “As it
happens, I don’t wish to harm you in any way. I merely want to drink from you.
No death will come of my actions, I swear.”
“Did you promise your son that same thing before you killed him?”
Vlad expected Dorian to react out of fury and insult, but instead, Dorian’s
face dropped in sorrow. “Touché, my young friend. No, I did not promise my son
anything that fateful night, and I miss him more than I can bear. Otis ... he
told you about feeding from my son. He told you of the power he now possesses.
As terrible as it seems, some good has come of Aidan’s death. And so, if you
died, if I were unable to control my appetite and took your life in the midst
of feeding, I imagine some good would come of yours.”
Aidan. Why did that name seem so familiar to Vlad?
Pursing his lips, Vlad said, “I won’t let you feed from me.”
“The trouble is that I find your blood irresistible. I’m afraid you will give
me your blood or I will be forced to take it from you. I cannot stop this
hunger, Vlad.” His eyes dropped to Vlad’s throat, causing Vlad to gulp. Dorian’s
chilling words rang out into the night. “I can only barely control it.”
Vlad instinctively took two steps back, but Dorian did not follow. He wondered
if the distance would help Dorian control his thirst.
Dorian smiled. “Unlikely, but it’s good of you to try.”
“You said you know where the prophecy is.”
“That I do. In fact,” he said with an air of burden, “I possess it.”
Vlad suppressed a gasp. He eyed Dorian for a moment, wondering if it were
possible that Dorian was trying to trick him.
Dorian put his palms up, shaking his head. “No tricks. I swear.”
He set his jaw, eyeing the unassuming vampire with distrust. “What do you want
from me?”
Dorian wet his lips, as if the thought of Vlad’s blood was making him parched.
When he spoke, his voice sounded gruff. “Why ask questions to which you already
know the answers?”
Ignoring his quip, Vlad hurried to stay on subject, to keep Dorian distracted
from his veins. “Can I see it?”
Dorian paused for a moment, that hungry light leaving his eyes. It didn’t look
as if he was considering Vlad’s request, but rather pondering whether or not
such a simple request was actually possible. After several seconds, he said, “No.
You cannot.”
Vlad ran a frustrated hand through his hair. “Then, what exactly was the point
in telling me you have the prophecy if you weren’t planning to share it?”
Dorian shook his head. “I never said that.”
Vlad raised an eyebrow. He thought for sure Dorian had implied just that, but
okay. “Then at least tell me where it is.”
“I don’t suppose you’d consider a trade?” Dorian grinned. In any other light,
it might have seemed charming.
“No trade.”
“I am torn, my young friend. Torn between duty and an insatiable appetite.”
Dorian glanced at Vlad’s neck and the bizarre combination of horror and hunger
flooded his expression. “I’m afraid my appetite seems to be winning, and my
patience is waning. Please don’t make me force you. I may not be able to stop
this time.”
Vlad shook his head slowly, setting his jaw. Clearly, this was all some kind of
sick game for Dorian, some cruel way of getting what he really wanted. He
probably had no idea where the prophecy was. “I resisted you once. I’ll do it
again.”
“You give me no choice.” Dorian lunged forward with a speed and ferocity that
Vlad had never before encountered. In a panic, Vlad did all that he knew to do,
he shoved his way into Dorian’s mind.
It didn’t stop Dorian, but it did make him hesitate long enough for Vlad to
book it out of there. To his relief, and immense surprise, Dorian did not
follow.
17
HALLOWEEN
ARE YOU GONNA BE MAD IF I GO?”
Vlad shook his head. Henry was already dressed as a zombie, with chunks of
rotting flesh hanging off of his face. Where else could he go dressed like
that, but Matthew’s annual Halloween party? “Nah, I won’t get mad. You go
ahead. I just don’t feel like watching Joss and Meredith’s first official date
unfold before my eyes, y’know?”
Henry nodded, but looked pretty bummed out. Vlad wondered if he was thinking
about how he’d ditched Vlad for last year’s party. “So are you just staying in
tonight?”
Vlad shrugged with one shoulder. He knew his answer wouldn’t make Henry the
happiest guy in the world, but that was just how things were. “October’s
picking me up. We’re going to The Crypt for a while. They’re having a vampire
bash.”
Henry grew quiet, and Vlad couldn’t help but wonder if Henry thought he was
choosing the goths over him. That would never happen. Henry wasn’t just his
drudge, he was his best friend. But still, he worried Henry might think so.
After a moment, Henry nodded. “Fitting. Bet you win for best costume.”
“I’m not dressing up.”
A smile cracked Henry’s expression. “Still.”
Vlad knew it couldn’t have been easy to be around him since he broke it off
with Meredith. He’d been grouchy and withdrawn, for sure. Henry deserved better
from his best friend, but Vlad just couldn’t face Joss and Meredith tonight. He
shifted in his seat on the couch and silently vowed to make his absence from
the party up to Henry. “Where’s Melissa?”
“We’re over. I dumped her on my way here.” Henry shrugged, as if it were no big
deal.
Vlad mulled this over for a moment before he said, “Tell me you didn’t break up
with her in a text.”
“Yeah, why?” Henry shrugged again, casually though the sting of the fresh
breakup lurked in his eyes.
“Dude, that’s brutal.”
“But necessary. If you dump them in person either they get all weepy or mad.
Either way, it’s a bad situation. And I couldn’t risk smearing my face paint
with tears ... or blood, whichever happened to be flying around.” Henry smacked
Vlad playfully on the back with his rotting, pus-oozing hand. “Anyway, I’d
better bolt.”
“See ya, man.”
“Have fun sucking face with Snow.”
Vlad rolled his eyes. There was no use arguing. No matter what he said, Henry
and October were convinced that he and Snow were making out in the alley behind
The Crypt. But it wasn’t her face that he was looking forward to sucking—it was
her blood. Though it was something he still wasn’t really comfortable admitting
to.
The phone rang, so Vlad snapped it up in his hand. “Hello?”
Silence on the other end, and then, “Hi, Vlad. It’s Meredith.”
Vlad’s stomach shriveled into a tiny, hard ball.
“I know you’re wondering why I’m calling, so I’ll just get right to it. Any
minute now, Joss is going to show up at my door to take me to Matthew’s party.”
Great. Rub it in. That’s helpful. The hard ball that had been his stomach
quivered a little inside of him.
“So the reason I’m calling is to ask you ... to ask you if there’s any reason
that I shouldn’t go with Joss tonight.”
A thousand reasons raced through Vlad’s mind, but two remained at the top of
the list: 1) Joss was a killer, and 2) Vlad still had feelings for her. But
Vlad spoke neither aloud. Instead, he said in a raspy voice, “Nothing comes to
mind.”
She was quiet for a long time before uttering “Okay” and hanging up on her end.
Vlad stared at the phone in his hand for a full minute, kicking himself for not
saying what he’d really wanted to—that Joss was a manipulative jerk and she
should stay far, far away from him at all costs—before returning the phone to
its cradle. He couldn’t tell her that, because what came next? Ditch Matthew’s
party and come hang out with me at The Crypt tonight? I can introduce you to
Snow, who happens to be my enormously hot drudge? No way. Not happening.
Besides, Meredith was safer not being around him. She was safer with Joss.
October pulled up and honked her horn, and suddenly it felt like everyone in
the world but Vlad had their own car. Shouting a quick goodbye to Nelly, Vlad
bolted out the door. He piled into the back with Sprat and Andrew, and with a
jerk, October managed to get the car into gear and drove them all into
Stokerton, music blaring on the radio, dashboard lights making Kristoff’s
silver hair glow slightly blue. By the time they pulled up in front of The
Crypt, Vlad was feeling much better about missing out on Matthew’s party. Once
they stepped inside and descended into the club, he’d forgotten that Matthew
was even holding a party.
The entire room was decorated in red and black, with hundreds of tiny, fuzzy
bats hanging from the ceiling. The normally empty picture frames on the wall
held artwork depicting famous vampires: Dracula, Count Chocula, the Count from
Sesame Street, and more. And everyone—everyone but Vlad, that is—was dressed as
stereotypical vampires. Some wore capes, some dressed in Victorian finery, but
every single one of them had a pair of fangs. Vlad smiled and let his own fangs
slip from their hiding place behind his gums. No wonder he loved it here.
Standing by the bar was Snow, dressed in a slinky black dress, with a small
silver bat hanging from a chain around her pale neck—pater than usual, which
Vlad attributed to rice powder. Her black hair was pinned up, with several
loose curls hanging down, brushing lightly against her skin. She smiled at him
and he smiled back.
October tapped him on the shoulder and said, “Tell her, Vlad. If you’re not
interested, tell her tonight ... or I will.”
After debating just what to say for several minutes, Vlad walked over to Snow
and said, “Having fun?”
Snow could barely contain a grin. “Good music, my favorite night of the year,
room full of vampires ... I’m having a blast.”
“Can we talk?” Vlad swallowed a lump in his throat. “Outside?”
Snow nodded, taking Vlad’s hand in hers, leading him to the back door. When she
touched him, he secretly reveled in her warmth. He could get used to this
feeling, Snow’s skin against his. But didn’t Snow deserve better than a beast
who only wanted her for what she could give him? That wasn’t a relationship.
That was a tragedy waiting to happen. He slipped his hand from hers and avoided
her questioning glance.
No. He couldn’t get used to it, to any of it. He was getting too close to Snow
for her own good.
As they passed October, she handed Snow her jacket and shot Vlad a look that
said she meant business. It turned out while guys would not only stand by and
watch as their friend volunteered to help out the lion tamer, and hand him a
steak as he was entering the cage, girls were fiercely protective of their
friends. Vlad couldn’t ever imagine threatening a girl’s life for making out
with Henry. Besides, that would be a lot of girls, and Vlad wasn’t sure
he could even remember all their names, let alone threaten them with bodily
harm for making Henry grin like an idiot. As far as he was concerned, Henry
could make out with anybody he wanted. Except for Meredith. And maybe Snow.
They stepped outside and Vlad’s fangs throbbed within his mouth, as if they’d
become accustomed to feeding in the cold. It wasn’t why he’d come here, but his
body, that monster that lurked within him, known only as thirst, reacted
immediately.
She smiled at Vlad once the door closed, sealing them off from the club. “You’ve
been really hungry lately.”
“It’s not that. I mean, it is, but we need to talk.” His eyes found her neck
and that delicious blue vein. At once he was seized by hunger, all sense and
reason gone, lost in his blood-thirst. “Maybe it’s better if I feed first.”
“Why? Worried whatever you have to say to me will make feeding awkward?”
Vlad blinked, tearing his gaze away from her neck. It would make it easier to
focus on the conversation at hand. A little, anyway. Her tone sounded hurt, as
if she already knew what he was going to say, that they should just be friends,
that the feeding sessions didn’t mean he had any real feelings for her. Her
cheeks flushed, and Vlad couldn’t tell if it was out of anger or embarrassment.
“Snow . . . we’re friends, right? I mean, you’re my drudge, but that’s it, right?
Just my drudge? Just my friend? You don’t think we’re . . .” But the look in
her eyes said it all—she didn’t view him as just a friend. October was right.
Snow had a crush on him. A big-time crush. And what’s worse, Vlad wasn’t
entirely sure she was the only one with attachment issues.
She shrugged, trying to keep it casual, but he could tell she was hurting ...
and lying through her teeth. “Of course. Just friends. Why?”
Vlad wet his lips, his hunger drowned out by his concern for Snow’s feelings. Quietly,
he brushed a stray curl from her cheek and said, “Do you like me as more than a
friend? Tell the truth.”
She glared at him then and held it for a long time, as if she didn’t like
feeling weak or vulnerable. Just as Vlad was about to ask again, she said, “Yes.
I like you. As more than a friend. But you don’t feel the same way, so why does
it matter?”
The last thing he wanted to do was to placate her, to give her false hope, but
he didn’t want to lie either. The truth was, he really enjoyed their stolen
moments together. But those moments were always tainted by guilt—guilt for
feeding on her, guilt for spending intimately close time together with a girl
that was not Meredith.
Always Meredith. She was haunting him in ways he’d never realized she would.
A strange battle was going on inside of him, between his vampire side and his
human side. Part of him wanted to cease his prattle and sink his fangs deep
into Snow’s vein. Part of him retched at the thought. She was a person, after
all. She was his friend. And since when did the vampire side of him start
making sense? He tore his gaze from her neck and took a deep breath, trying to
block out the scent of her blood on the air. “Snow, you’re one of the prettiest
girls I’ve ever seen. You’re funny, smart, and really cool to hang out with.
But—”
“But?”
Vlad gulped. It was his turn to feel vulnerable. “There’s . . . this girl.”
“There usually is. What’s her name?” Her tone grew bitter, jealous. It kind of
amused Vlad a little. A girl, as sweet and caring as Snow, jealous over a guy
like Vlad? That was one for the record books.
He breathed out her name in a whisper, as if uttering its purity here in the
place where he fed in secrecy were a sin. “Meredith.”
“Do you love her?”
Vlad barely let the question slip from her mouth before he answered. “Yes.”
Snow blinked, looking a little surprised at Vlad’s quick reply. “Does she love
you?”
Vlad pictured Meredith in his mind and recalled the way her smile lifted his
spirits, the way her very presence made his heart expand. He nodded slowly. “I
think so. I mean, maybe. I think she did once, and there’s always the hope that
she will again someday.”
Snow’s eyes dropped to the ground. Her shoulders sagged some. She looked
defeated. All Vlad wanted to do was to make her eyes light up again. Her voice
was calm, but hushed. “Does she know that you’re a vampire?”
He shook his head. “No. I haven’t told her. I just don’t know if she could
handle it.”
They stood there, so close, for so long that it seemed that time had actually
disappeared and the world had completely forgotten them.
“Maybe you need to find that out, Vlad. If you love her, you’ve got to give her
a chance to know you. And if she loves you, she’ll love everything about you.”
Snow’s voice was soft, but full of meaning. She took a breath and whispered, “The
way I do.”
Then she leaned forward and her lips found Vlad’s. This time, he welcomed it.
This time, he kissed back with abandon. Her kiss was sweet, her lips tasted
like peppermint lip balm, and for the first time in a long while, Vlad didn’t
once think about Meredith or Joss or Otis’s impending trial. He didn’t think
about D’Ablo or Dorian or anything else.
He only thought of the pretty girl named Snow and her peppermint kisses.
18
A BAD DAY
VLAD TURNED THE CORNER ONTO LUGOSI TRAIL with heavy steps. It wasn’t
that he wasn’t looking forward to his training session with Vikas—in fact, he’d
been enjoying them immensely over the past few weeks—but school had been
particularly grueling today. All he was really in the mood to do was go home,
camp out in front of the TV, and maybe kill a few dozen people on Vampires
Attack!, the Xbox 360 game Henry had bought him for his birthday last year.
But that, much to Vlad’s chagrin, wasn’t going to happen.
As he crossed the street, he took a glance around, wondering to himself what
exactly it was that had sent Eddie off his trail recently. It was nice not
being followed home every day, but Vlad didn’t trust why Eddie had stopped.
Maybe Joss had warned him about the unpredictable temperament of vampires. Or
maybe Eddie hadn’t really, truly believed that Vlad was a bloodsucking monster
until Joss confirmed his theory. Or maybe he had just run out of clean pants.
Either way, it was kind of nice to be alone again, though he couldn’t help but
wonder if he truly was alone or if Joss was his new constant shadow.
But then, it was only a matter of time before Eddie would return to his old
habits. After all, even for vampires, there was no stopping the media.
Stealing around to the back of the house, Vlad pulled open the door and stepped
inside. Immediately, something felt very wrong.
“Vikas? You home?” He reached out with his blood, the way that Otis had taught
him last year, and felt his teacher’s presence upstairs. Something felt ...
wrong. Vikas’s blood felt off, somehow. Different. As he climbed the steps, his
pace hurried, and with worry, he opened the door to the guest bedroom.
Vikas was lying on the bed. The dark circles under his eyes and his sunken
cheeks made his face look like a skull. He was always pale, but now he looked
like a sickening combination of gray and green. His eyes were closed, and if
Vlad didn’t know any better he would have thought that Vikas might be dead.
Tristian was standing over him, dabbing his forehead with a cool, moist cloth.
Vlad’s face darkened to see his actions. They only confirmed his fears that
Vikas must be terribly ill. Vlad stepped inside the room, careful to keep his
footfalls hushed. He exchanged glances with Tristian, who looked so worried
that it made Vlad’s heart skip a beat. “What happened?”
Tristian parted his lips to speak, but Vikas opened his eyes and spoke in a
gruff, stubborn voice. “I’m fine, Mahlyenki Dyavol. Just a bit under the
weather.”
Ignoring Vikas’s grumblings, Vlad sat on the side of the bed and met Tristian’s
gaze.
In a hushed, timid voice, Tristian said, “I brought him a glass of bloodwine
from the open bottle on the counter, like I do every afternoon. He gets peckish
around three, you know.” A worried crease had taken up permanent residence on
Tristian’s forehead. He looked down at his master, whose eyes were closed
again. “Even if he eats a late lunch, he’s always hungry around three. So I
brought him a glass. He took a sip and just ... just crumbled to the ground.”
Worried tears filled Tristian’s eyes. “All I could think was that something was
wrong with the wine. So I put my finger down his throat to make him throw it
up. He vomited and retched up every drop of bloodwine, so I gave him as much of
my blood as I could and put him in bed.” Tristian took the cloth from Vikas’s
head and dropped it into a bowl of water on the bedside table. “I tried to call
Otis, but he told me not to.”
“Stubborn old man.” Vlad shook his head. Vikas opened his eyes and gave Vlad
the best ‘I heard that’ look that he could muster. It was like Vikas to be the
strong one, even when his life was on the line. Vlad squeezed Tristian’s
shoulder and offered him a comforting smile. “You did everything right,
Tristian. I can see why Vikas values you so much as his drudge. Could you
please go get me the bottle so I can take a look at it?”
After Tristian left the room, Vikas clutched Vlad’s arm and pulled him closer,
his voice raspy. “He poisoned me.”
Vlad’s eyes widened and his heart thumped hard inside his chest. “Who?
Tristian?”
“No. The boy. The slayer.” Vikas fell back on the bed, barely able to open his
eyes. He looked so weak, and in so much pain. He swallowed hard, as if it were
a challenge to call a slayer by his given name.
“Joss.” Vlad almost hissed the word. He should have known. But why use poison?
Why not a stake? It seemed like a cowardly way to take down one of the oldest
vampires known. One would think that such a task would give the slayer who
accomplished it bragging rights among his psycho slayer friends. “How do you
know it was Joss?”
“Who else would wish the death of me in this town and take such a cowardly
approach to achieving that end but a slayer? I should have smelled it, but I
never thought the bloodwine could be tainted. It seemed like one of the
neighbors was cooking something foul. One of the downfalls of living among
humans, it seems.” Vikas coughed and then caught his breath. “I took a sip.
Just one sip. Luckily, I vomited it all up, or you and I might not be having
this conversation. Tristian ... he saved my life.”
As if on cue, Tristian returned to the room, bottle in hand. Vikas moaned at
the sight of it, and Vlad nearly gagged at the scent. Garlic juice. Probably so
little that Tristian couldn’t pick up on its faint scent with his human senses.
But to Vlad and Vikas, the nauseating stench was overwhelming. As if realizing
this, Tristian ran the bottle back downstairs. Vlad heard the back door open,
so it was likely he was throwing it in the trash. Smart guy.
Turning back to Vikas, Vlad said, “If Joss did this ...”
He didn’t have to finish his sentence, and really, there was no “if” about it.
Vikas could be right. Joss could’ve somehow slipped inside unnoticed and
poisoned Vikas’s drink. The very idea both enraged and sickened him.
Vikas chuckled. It sounded strange coming from someone who looked to be lying
on his deathbed. “If this is all the boy has, if this is his best weapon
against us, then let him have his moment, Mahlyenki Dyavol. In three days, I will
be well and on my way to living forever. In just eighty years, he will be dead.
If someone doesn’t kill him first.”
Vlad couldn’t be sure if that last sentence was meant as a suggestion or not,
especially with the way Vikas raised a single eyebrow at him. In an effort to
squash the same old conversation before it started, Vlad smiled. “So no
training session today huh?”
Though it seemed to pain him to do so, Vikas laughed heartily. “No. Not today
my friend.”
There were hurried steps on the stairs and, just as Vlad had begun to doubt
they belonged to Tristian, Otis burst into the room. “You are a damned fool,
old man! You should have allowed Tristian to contact me. What if the garlic had
gotten into your system before you could throw it up, or had entered a cut in
your mouth? You could have died.”
Vikas made a sound that sounded like “bah” and waved Otis away, but Otis wasn’t
going anywhere. He checked Vikas’s pulse and frowned when he placed his palm
against Vikas’s glistening forehead. “You’ll live. This time. But you’re rather
lucky I don’t kill you myself for being so stubborn.”
Otis smiled at Vlad. “Tristian is a good drudge. Much like your Henry. If he
hadn’t been here ... well, needless to say, I’d be on the hunt right now for
whoever did this. Any thoughts to who that might be?”
Otis and Vikas exchanged looks that said they shared the opinion that it had
been Joss. No reply to Otis’s question was required.
As much as the idea of Otis hunting Joss repulsed Vlad, he totally understood
the urge at the moment. After all, Vikas was incredibly important to him. Not
to mention how important he was to Otis and Tristian. Joss would have to be
dealt with.
Vlad just wasn’t sure exactly how to deal with him.
Vikas looked at Vlad. “What is to be done about your friend, Vladimir? It’s
only a matter of time before he turns his attention on you.”
“You’re worried about me? Vikas, he just tried to kill you.”
“Perhaps. But I think he was merely trying to distract us all. The question is
... from what?”
Vlad chewed his bottom lip for a moment. “What else is there that he could want
here in Bathory? He just wants to get rid of the vampires.”
Otis watched them both for a moment before speaking. “If Joss were sent here to
kill us, he wouldn’t be taking so long to try something. As I said before, I
know reconnaissance when I see it. Joss is looking for something. Something
that the slayers yearn for.”
Vlad furrowed his brow. “What’s that?”
In unison, Otis and Vikas replied. “Information.”
A spark lit in Vlad’s mind and his chest grew heavy. Picking up his backpack
and throwing it over one shoulder, Vlad hurried out the door. Otis called after
him, but Vlad didn’t answer. He had to hurry. He had to confirm that Joss hadn’t
invaded the one place in town that nobody knew about but him.
As he rushed out the back door and around the house, Otis’s voice invaded his
thoughts. “What’s your hurry, Vladimir? Is something wrong?”
“I just have to check something.” With that, he clamped down on his
thoughts. Where he was going, he wanted to be completely alone.
It took him only minutes to cross town to the school and after a quick glance
around, only seconds for him to float up to the ledge of the belfry and step
inside. But then time slowed. Sound slowed as well, and what might have been
his heart drumming in his ears in a panic sounded much more like the slow,
steady beat of a bass drum. Heavy. Loud.
Someone had violated his sanctuary.
Someone had been here.
Someone knew about his secret place and had ransacked every inch of it.
Vlad would have bet that that somebody was either Eddie Poe or Joss McMillan.
And his money was on Joss.
His father’s chair was sliced open, the off-white stuffing inside puffing out
of the cut. Books were thrown from his book-cases, revealing bare shelves.
Candleholders were tossed across the room. In the corner, something shimmered
in the moonlight. Vlad didn’t have to move any closer to know that the picture
of his father had been smashed.
He took it all in, trying to be angry but feeling more violated than anything.
When he spoke, his whispered words were a gray, breathy puff in the chilly air.
“What were you looking for, Joss?”
Only one thing in the room appeared untouched. Vlad carefully stepped over
books and debris and opened the drawer of the small table that sat next to his
dad’s chair.
It was empty.
Joss had stolen the most important thing to Vlad in the belfry. His father’s
journal.
Slowly, Vlad slid the drawer shut. Then he picked up the table and threw it
across the room with a scream. Furious, he stepped from the belfry and jumped
to the nearest treetop, hopping between trees all the way home.
He slammed the front door closed behind him, and Nelly snapped her eyes to his
face. “What’s wrong?”
“Nothing.” Nothing that kicking Joss’s butt couldn’t cure, that was.
The look in her eyes said she didn’t believe him in the least, but she wasn’t
about to push the issue.
Vlad sighed, brushing his bangs from his eyes. “I’m just glad we have a long
weekend. I could use a break from school and all the drama.”
And Joss, but he wasn’t about to bring that up.
“Speaking of Thanksgiving weekend ...”
Vlad’s eyes went wide. He knew that tone. “Nelly, what did you do?”
“Nothing. Nothing, really.” But her eyes gave her away completely. Whatever it
was, she knew Vlad wasn’t going to be happy about it. “Matilda and I were
talking earlier, and she invited us over for Thanksgiving dinner tomorrow.
Actually, she insisted that we come.”
Vlad blinked. “We’re having dinner at Henry’s? That’s all?”
“Yes, that’s all” She gave him an awkward smile, “Basically.”
“Basically? What does that mea—oh no.” His eyes widened. Vlad moved to the
closest chair and sat down, his head falling into his hands. When he spoke
again the sound was muffled. “Please tell me Joss isn’t going to be there.”
He raised his head to look at her. “Please tell me you didn’t agree to have
dinner with the only vampire slayer in town!”
Vlad had stood up from the chair, and his voice had risen to a shout. He knew,
but didn’t care. “I can’t believe you!”
He all but flew up to his room and barely had time to register that Nelly was
saying that she’d had no idea until she’d already agreed and that it wouldn’t
be all that bad before he slammed his door shut so hard that he splintered the
wood.
So much for the slayer’s search for information. Joss had his father’s journal.
And somehow, Vlad had to get it back.
19
A WAKING NIGHTMARE
VLAD WOKE FROM A SOUND SLEEP, but he didn’t open his eyes right away. He
wasn’t exactly sure what had woken him, and he didn’t exactly feel like getting
out of bed at oh-my-glob-o’clock, so he laid there in the darkness, somewhere
between awake and asleep, and tried to stop thinking about whatever it was that
had shaken him from his dreams.
As if coaxing him further from sleep, Vlad’s throat went dry, urging him to
slip from his comfy bed into the bathroom for a sip of water. Reluctantly, Vlad
opened his eyes.
Above him, seemingly suspended in midair, was a dagger. A familiar dagger, one
that Vlad instantly recognized from the dark, bloody room that invaded his
dreams every night, one filled with memories of a terrible ritual. Its blade
gleamed some in the moonlight as it came down hard, aiming for Vlad’s chest. He
dove out of bed, hitting the floor hard. As he did, his eyes adjusted to the
darkness and he could see his ever-present nightmare standing beside his
disheveled bed.
Vlad gasped, “D’Ablo.”
D’Ablo, holding the ritual dagger tightly in his good hand, merely smiled. “The
time has come, Master Pravus. Or should I say your time has come.”
He swung forward with the dagger again, and this time the blade caught Vlad’s
sleeve before he could move. Once Vlad was across the room, he spoke quickly. “I
let you live!”
D’Ablo wasn’t coming after him again—not yet—so Vlad seized the opportunity to
explain. “Last year in Stokerton. I had the Lucis in my hand. I could’ve killed
you. Otis urged me to kill you, but I didn’t. And then, when we were outside in
the sunlight, you were on fire. I warned you that you were dying so you’d hurry
into the shadows. I could’ve blown you away or let you burn, but I didn’t. Have
you ever asked yourself why?”
For a moment, D’Ablo lowered the blade. But he did not speak.
Vlad’s heart rate settled some, but just barely. “You knew my dad. You were
close to him, you said it yourself. In a twisted kind of way, we have something
in common. Wouldn’t you say?”
A low chuckle, full of superiority. “Master Pravus, you presume too much.”
“About what? About you?”
D’Ablo sighed impatiently “Yes, about me. About your father, our relationship,
your role in this world. It is your presumption that makes you weak. I despise
weakness.”
Vlad wasn’t about to bring up the fact that D’Ablo had been weakened by the
lack of a hand. He knew he could run out the door and speed his way to the
safety of Otis and Vikas, but this wasn’t something they’d understand. Whatever
it was between him and D’Ablo was between him and D’Ablo. They had to settle
this on their own. Like men. Like vampires. “So set me straight. What am I
presuming?”
D’Ablo sighed again. His tone was that of a weary adult explaining something to
a young child. “The pieces are in place, Master Pravus, but this game is far
from finished.”
Vlad shook his head. “You sound like Dorian. He never makes much sense either.”
D’Ablo shot Vlad a look that said that he very much disliked Dorian. With a
raised eyebrow, he frowned. “Perhaps you’re not the only one guilty of making
presumptions.”
Vlad kept a keen eye on the dagger, but lightened his tone. He had no doubts
that at any second, D’Ablo would attempt to finish his ritual. “Why do you want
to be the Pravus, anyway? Believe me, it won’t exactly solve all your problems.”
“To be the Pravus is to be godlike. It is a gift unlike any other. Many have searched
for a way to claim that status. All have failed. But for me.” He looked at Vlad
then, his expression softening some. “Surely you’ve studied the elements of the
prophecy well enough by now to understand that a time will come, Master Pravus,
when you will be forced to rule over the very humans you love. This is not
something you wish to do. After all, you are just a boy. But I ... I would take
great pleasure in this act. Step aside. Allow me to rule.”
Vlad set his jaw. “As tempting as your offer is to give up and die, to let you
enslave my family and friends and do who knows what to Elysia ... I’m afraid my
answer is no.”
Silence hung in the air for a moment. Then D’Ablo sighed. “Very well then.”
For a while, neither of them moved. Then, just as Vlad was beginning to wonder
what D’Ablo was thinking, D’Ablo lunged at him with the dagger raised high, a
terrible growl emitting from his throat. Instinctively Vlad ducked to the side,
barely escaping the blade. When he looked back at D’Ablo, he couldn’t resist
quipping, “It’s nice to know you’re no longer getting your cronies to do your
dirty work for you.”
D’Ablo whipped around faster than Vlad anticipated. The blade sunk into Vlad’s
shoulder, buried deep into his flesh. He screamed and fell to the floor, Nelly’s
presence in the house an afterthought.
D’Ablo pulled the weapon out, sending a spurt of Vlad’s blood to the floor.
With a smug smile, he slowly wiped the bloodied blade on his pant leg. “I
wouldn’t deny myself the pleasure of killing you, boy.”
Vlad cupped his wounded shoulder with his palm. Strangely the burning, the
stinging, the pain of it disappeared. Normally it would’ve taken three days for
a cut like that to go away, but this time ... it had taken only moments.
He flicked his eyes to D’Ablo, who didn’t seem to have any clue at all that
Vlad wasn’t wounded anymore. D’Ablo shook his head and crouched in front of
him. “What does it feel like to know that you’ve lost, Master Pravus? What does
it feel like to know that you’ve lost to a better vampire?”
Vlad took a deep breath and slanted his eyes. “You tell me.”
Before D’Ablo realized what was happening, Vlad kicked the dagger from his
hand, sending it flying to the other side of his bedroom. It clattered against
the wall and fell with a thump near the secret door to the attic.
Infuriated, D’Ablo howled and reached for Vlad, but Vlad dove over him, past
him, reaching for the dagger. Once he had it, he stood and gripped it tightly
in his trembling hand.
D’Ablo stood as well, that air of smug superiority never leaving him. He
approached Vlad slowly, but confidently, and chuckled. “What good will it do
you? It’s not a stake. My life is intact. Wound me? Yes. But I will always
return to claim what is rightfully mine.”
D’Ablo spun around with vampire speed, but it was just what Vlad had been
hoping for. He spun too and plunged the dagger deep into D’Ablo’s shoulder.
Through muscle, tendon, bone. The point of the blade stuck out of D’Ablo’s
back. D’Ablo hissed, but didn’t scream.
Vlad gripped the hilt tightly and growled, then pulled the dagger upward in one
clean jerk. His hand was covered in D’Ablo’s blood and still gripping the
handle ... but the blade had broken off and was buried in D’Ablo’s flesh and
bone.
D’Ablo cried out and fell to his knees. When he looked up at Vlad’s hand and
realized that his ritual dagger—the one thing that might steal Vlad’s status as
the Pravus for him—had been destroyed, his eyes filled with a venomous evil
that Vlad had never witnessed before. Slowly, he stood again, and, digging into
his wound before it could begin the healing process, he gripped the blade with
his fingers and ripped it from the sinewy tissues of his shoulder.
The sound it made sent a shiver up Vlad’s spine. But Vlad managed to keep his
voice both even and strong. “Get out. Now.”
To his utter shock, D’Ablo left without another word.
It took Vlad an hour to clean up all the blood. And Nelly didn’t make as much
as a peep the entire time.
20
GIVING THANKS
THE CAR WAS COMPLETELY SILENT on the drive over to Henry’s house. The
only one who seemed remotely relaxed was Nelly, but even she wasn’t talking.
Maybe she knew if she did, Otis and Vlad would snap at her for agreeing to drag
her vampire boyfriend and half-vampire ward to a Thanksgiving feast with the
one person in town who they knew wanted blood more than they did. Otis was
usually incredibly giving when it came to Nelly, but even he looked irritated
beyond belief. Vlad folded his arms in front of him, slumping as far down in
the backseat as he could. He had no idea what Nelly had been thinking when she
told Henry’s mom, Matilda, that they’d love to come. Granted, this was all
Matilda’s idea. But still.
Maybe Matilda thought that if she could get Joss and Vlad together over the
holidays, they’d get along just dandy once again. For some reason, Matilda was
just crazy enough to think that some pumpkin pie and cranberries were enough to
heal a rift as big as the one between them. But she was wrong. There was no way
Vlad was forgiving anything that Joss had done—not after he’d invaded Vlad’s
sanctuary and stole the most precious thing Vlad owned. Maybe once that would
have been possible, but after the attack on Vikas, and the conniving thievery,
Vlad had come to realize that there could never be a peace between them. And by
the look on Otis’s face, Vlad would have bet he felt the same way.
Vlad sighed and decided he’d be the first to break the silence. “What am I
supposed to eat for nourishment while we’re there, Nelly?”
“I told Matilda you were fighting a stomach bug, so you wouldn’t feel much like
eating. She’s just happy you’re feeling up to joining us.”
“I think I’m coming down with a bug too.” The corner of Otis’s mouth rose in a
smirk as Nelly shot him a glance. “It’s a vampire bug. You wouldn’t have heard
of it.”
“Would you two stop whining? It’s not going to kill you to sit through dinner
with Joss.” She grew quiet for a moment, as if contemplating the possibility
that her sentence might contain at least a smidgeon of irony. Then she shook
her head. “Really. It’s not.”
Vlad shook his head, amazed by her innocence of the severity of the situation,
her unfailing belief that good really lurked inside the hearts of everyone. “She
really doesn’t get it, does she?”
“What human does?” Otis smiled. By the look on Nelly’s face, she knew a
conversation was going on that she couldn’t be a part of. He reached over and
squeezed her hand reassuringly. “She just wants everyone to get along. No
matter how impossible that might seem.”
Vlad folded his arms in front of him and sank down in his seat. “I’m not
sitting by Joss. She can’t make me forgive him for all he’s done. Why would she
even want that?”
“I don’t think that’s what she’s trying to accomplish, Vladimir. I believe
she’s merely looking for a sense of family around the holiday season. And we
. . . not to mention the McMillans . . . are her family. No matter how
dysfunctional that idea might be to you, Joss, or me. Blood doesn’t make a
family, Vladimir. Love does.”
“So what do we do?”
“We do what all families do. Grin, bear it, and pass the mashed potatoes.”
Otis turned the wheel, pulling his car into Henry’s driveway. Vlad had pulled
into this driveway countless times before in the seat of many different cars.
Only this time, it felt different. This time it felt less like Vlad was
arriving at his second home and more like he was about to enter the Temple of
Doom. Holding his breath, Vlad opened the door and stepped out into the chilly
November air.
It took Otis and Nelly a few seconds to exit the car. Vlad would have bet that
Nelly was taking a moment to tell Otis that it meant a lot to her that he was
joining them for Thanksgiving, and that Otis was reassuring Nelly that he’d be
on his best behavior. Vlad, however, wasn’t about to make that promise. He’d
keep his distance from Joss, but so help him if his former friend whipped out a
sharp hunk of wood ...
It wasn’t that he hated Joss—he didn’t. And it wasn’t that he felt that
vampires were better than slayers—they weren’t. It was the fact that he and
Joss were being forced together by their own aunts, the two people in the world
who should’ve wanted them to stay as far apart as possible. After all, Nelly
knew what Joss had done—she’d seen the bandaged wound, had wept at his bedside
as he healed, still flinched whenever Vlad talked about his time in the
hospital. She’d listened to Vlad when he’d needed to talk about his friend’s
brutal betrayal, and she’d spoken words of comfort when Vlad needed to hear
them. Most importantly, she backed off when he needed to be alone with his
thoughts, understanding that no one else on the planet could make things a
hundred percent okay for Vlad ... not even her. So it hurt that Nelly had
agreed to dinner with the McMillans, knowing that Joss would be there. In a weird
way, it felt like she was choosing Joss over Vlad. That bugged him ... and he
wasn’t sure why, exactly, except for the fact that she was his guardian. She
was the one who was supposed to have his best interest at heart. Why she would
want him to spend the day with the person who had tried to kill him? But deep
down, Vlad knew that she would never put him in harm’s way. He couldn’t put his
finger on exactly why today bothered him so much. Maybe it was because Joss had
claimed Bathory as his hometown, the McMillans as his family, and Meredith as
his girl. He couldn’t have Nelly. She was all Vlad had left, apart from Otis,
and Vlad was pretty sure that Joss didn’t want him.
Otis and Nelly joined him and the three made their way up the steps to the
front door. Otis stood protectively with his hand in the small of Nelly’s back.
Vlad rang the doorbell, but only for a microsecond, because Matilda had whipped
open the door and rushed them all inside, greeting them each with warm hugs and
holiday wishes.
It was impossible not to smile with Henry’s mom in the room.
In moments, their coats were off and Nelly and Matilda were chattering about a
new stuffing recipe that Matilda was trying out this year. Henry was nowhere to
be seen, so Vlad excused himself, slipped his shoes off, and headed upstairs to
look for his best friend. When he reached Henry’s bedroom door, he paused at
the raised voices within.
“You’re family, Henry. I care about what happens to you.”
“Joss, if you give me that crap one more time, I’m gonna punch you so hard your
toes are gonna bleed. You’re not doing any of this because of some ridiculous
need to protect your family. You’re doing it because you have a screwed up
perception of what vampires are and Vlad got in under your radar, proving that
perception wrong. It’s spite and you know it.”
“You only say those things because he has you confused. That’s what they do,
Henry. They mess with people’s minds and get them to act in ways they normally
wouldn’t. You’re better than this, Henry. You’re better than his mindless
drone. And I’m going to set you free, one way or another.”
Vlad heard Henry step twice and then he exited the bedroom, his face flushed,
his entire being seething with anger. When he saw Vlad, he calmed down a bit. “Let’s
go eat turkey before I beat the crap out of my cousin.”
The way he said it, Vlad wasn’t sure if Henry wanted to eat instead of
beating Joss to a pulp, or if he just didn’t want to do it on an empty stomach.
Once downstairs, they were met with the scent of a succulent Thanksgiving
dinner. Henry’s dad, who everyone called Big Mike, and Otis were in the living
room, exchanging opinions about human politics with a good-looking tan man who
looked like a thirty-seven or thirty-eight-year-old version of Joss. It could
only be Joss’s dad. Nelly and Matilda were chattering away in the kitchen,
finishing up last minute preparations. A rail thin, pale woman, her cheeks
somewhat hollow, the expression in her eyes haunted, placed warm rolls in a
basket. She flinched as Vlad and Henry entered the room, knocking a butter
knife to the floor. Vlad bent and retrieved it, giving her a smile as he
dropped it in the sink. When he met her eyes, he realized that Joss didn’t just
look like his dad. Her eyes mirrored her son’s. Vlad took a seat on the stool
next to her, but slowly. Any faster and he was afraid she’d bolt. She seemed so
tormented, so on edge. He felt bad for her. “You must be Joss’s mom. I’m Vlad.”
Immediately, her eyes brightened, but only for a moment. “Vladimir Tod. Joss has
told me about you.”
Vlad debated that sentence for a moment, before she patted him on the hand and
said, “You know, Joss never has had many friends. Just his cousin, Henry,
really. Losing his sister really left him ... broken.”
That haunted look returned to her eyes. Vlad forced a smile. “Joss is a nice
guy. He’s been a good—” He swallowed hard and forced the word out. “—friend
to me. I’m glad I finally got a chance to meet you.”
It took her a second, as if she were remembering how, but finally she smiled.
When Vlad glanced over at Nelly, she was smiling too. For a moment, the venom
that he had for Joss lessened a little bit.
He looked up and met Joss’s eyes as he walked into the kitchen. His slow steps
and the look on his face said it all. Get away from my mom, you bloodsucking
freak.
But Vlad didn’t move.
As if relenting, Joss came over to where Vlad and his mom were sitting and
said, “You okay, Mom? Can I get you a drink or something?”
By “a drink,” Vlad was almost certain Joss meant “a wooden stake to jab Vlad
with,” but he kept his mouth shut.
His mom shook her head and stood. “No, but you and Vladimir could get the
veggie tray ready while I go wash up.”
Vlad looked around for Henry, but he had disappeared to who knows where. Nelly
and Matilda grabbed a couple of platters and disappeared into the dining room,
leaving Joss and Vlad completely alone. Vlad wished that he could talk to Henry’s
mind the way he did with Otis. He would tell him that he needed to get back to
the kitchen, now. Right now. Before his cousin did something stupid.
Joss picked up a sharp knife and stabbed it into the cutting board in front of
Vlad. Instinctively, Vlad flinched. Joss glared at him and muttered, “To cut
the vegetables with.”
Feeling more than a little stupid for having shown a sense of fear to a slayer,
Vlad silently berated himself and reached for a carrot. After slicing four of
them, as Joss worked on the celery, Vlad decided to break the silence. “Your
mom is really nice.”
Joss tensed and growled, “Don’t talk to me.”
“I wish I could do just that, Joss, but there’s the matter of my father’s
journal to discuss. I know you took it, and I want it back.”
Joss was quiet for a long time, and finally barked, “I have no idea what you’re
talking about.”
Only one problem: Joss was lying. He had to be.
Returning to silence, they chopped the rest of the veggies and laid them out on
a round glass tray, surrounding a small bowl of ranch dip. Then Joss picked the
tray up and headed into the dining room without another word. Joss had changed,
that much was for certain. Vlad washed his hands, torn between the conflict of
missing the old Joss and utterly despising the new one.
The dining room was about as picturesque as it could be, with a cornucopia at
the center of the table and small candles in amber-colored glass holders placed
here and there all over the table and room. The place settings were in various
autumn colors, burgundy, bronze, gold, and pumpkin. Food sat in beautiful bowls
and atop gorgeous platters. The turkey, a perfect golden brown, commanded the
feast near the head of the table. It looked like a scene out of a movie, and it
smelled a million times better than anything Nelly had ever prepared. So much
so that Vlad found himself actually mulling over the idea of eating some human
food, sans blood.
Big Mike was sitting at the head of the table, with Matilda to his right. Next
to her were Joss’s mom and dad, then Joss. At the other end of the table sat
Henry’s older brother, Greg, and to his right Henry, then an empty chair, then
Nelly and Otis. Vlad went to the empty chair, but just as he’d begun to pull it
out, Joss stood. “Don’t sit there!”
Joss’s dad said, “Joss, it’s fine.”
“No, it’s not, Harold.” His mom looked even paler than before.
Vlad froze. He knew he’d been about to do something wrong but wasn’t sure what.
Joss, still glaring at Vlad, snapped, “Sit somewhere else. That’s Cecile’s
seat. We always leave an open seat for Cecile.”
Matilda clapped her hands together. “Oh, that’s what we’re forgetting! Henry,
there’s an extra chair in the kitchen. Why don’t you grab it for Cecile? Her
place can be between Greg and Joss.”
At Matilda’s nod, Vlad took his seat. Once everyone was seated and a spot was
reserved for the spirit of Joss’s dead sister, Henry’s dad said, “It’s
tradition in the McMillan house that we go around the table by age, oldest to
youngest, and say what we’re thankful for. As I’m fairly sure I’m the oldest
here—”
Vlad could barely contain a smile. He glanced over at his uncle who seemed to
have the same problem. Otis won that prize for sure, but neither of them were
about to argue the point.
“—I’ll go first. This year, I’m thankful first and foremost for the health and
happiness of my family and good friends, as I’m certain you all are as well. I’m
also thankful for my new position at the Bathory Gazette as
editor-in-chief and for Greg making it home from college for the holidays.”
Vlad shifted in his seat. He wasn’t sure what he was thankful for, but after
hearing Mr. McMillan’s speech, he knew it had to be for something far more
meaningful than chocolate chip cookies.
Joss’s dad spoke, then Otis did. After him, Matilda talked about how grateful
she was that everyone had joined them today and what a blessing it was that
Joss’s family had moved to Bathory.
Vlad knew it was stupid, but he was starting to feel all kinds of pressure to
figure out something that he was thankful for. The truth was, other than
surviving Joss’s stake and dodging every death blow D’Ablo could throw him,
Vlad couldn’t think of anything unique to be thankful for.
Nelly paused for a moment and everyone waited for her to speak. Finally, she
smiled and said, “I’m grateful that Vlad survived that horrible accident a year
and a half ago and that his health is sure and strong now, despite the fact
that we almost lost him. I’m so thankful that he has all of you, his friends,
because without that kind of love and support, he might not have made it. I’m
thankful that Joss is back in his life, and I’m certain that their friendship
will find a way through whatever darkness envelops it.”
Vlad glanced at Otis, who wore the same surprised expression that he did. Huh.
Maybe Nelly wasn’t so blind to the lingering danger that Joss brought with him.
She was looking at Joss, and he was looking back. More meaning crossed that
table in their eyes than Otis and Vlad could have ever managed with telepathy.
Nelly had forgiven Joss for almost killing Vlad. And now she was asking Joss to
forgive himself.
Joss blinked away what looked like the threat of tears and Nelly smiled
reassuringly. Beside her, Otis’s expression was blank. Vlad was guessing that
Otis wasn’t brimming with forgiveness for Joss just yet.
After a short pause, Greg gave his reasons for being thankful—Vlad wasn’t
really listening, but it sounded like something having to do with his college
baseball team. Henry only out-aged Joss by about a month, so he went first,
mumbling that he was thankful that we were almost done giving thanks and could
eat soon. Matilda berated him, while Big Mike just laughed. Then it was Joss’s
turn.
Joss, like Nelly, was quiet for a moment. When he spoke, his tone was hurting
and full of venom. Vlad knew instantly that it was a message meant for him and
him alone. “I’m thankful for the safety of my family, and if anyone dares to
cause any one of them harm, I’m going to hunt them down and teach them what it
is to feel pain.”
Mouths fell agape around the table, all but Vlad, Otis, and Henry. Then Henry
mumbled something foul that ended with “you, Joss” and Matilda sent him to his
room without dinner, grounding him from video games for two weeks. Once silence
and order had been restored, Matilda said, “It’s your turn, Vlad. What are you
thankful for?”
Vlad thought about it for a minute and then it came to him. This was it. This
was how he was going to reach Joss, how he was going to cut through the
distorted web of the Slayer Society and make him see the error of his ways. He
made sure to meet Joss’s eyes as he spoke. “I’m thankful for you, Joss, and ...
for Cecile.”
Joss clenched his jaw. It looked like he was doing everything he could not to
leap over the table and stab Vlad with a carving knife.
Vlad held his gaze, meaning every word, hoping something would break through
Joss’s cold exterior. Even if it backfired, at least Joss would know how he
felt. “Seeing the way you talk about her makes me realize how much I missed out
on not having any siblings. Luckily, I’ve found a brother in Henry ... and in
you. Thank you.”
The rest of dinner passed with casual conversation. The only two who didn’t
speak were Joss and Vlad.
After dinner, Joss disappeared into the guest room. Everyone else retired to
the family room for after-dinner drinks and conversations about whatever it is
that adults talk about when kids aren’t around. With permission from Nelly,
Vlad said goodbye to everyone, making sure to stop upstairs and thank Henry for
having his back and sneak him a piece of pumpkin pie from the kitchen. He
hurried back downstairs and out the door, thankful for the solitary walk home.
The air was brisk, so Vlad pulled the collar of his coat up around his ears and
moved down the sidewalk, stopping only to gaze up at the clear sky and the
bright, twinkling stars. He was so entranced by the beauty of the night that he
didn’t hear the familiar footsteps on the frosty ground. Nor did he hear the
shuffling steps as Joss moved into a roundhouse kick. His chest exploded with
pain and Vlad stumbled back, his tone surprised as he forced air back into his
lungs. “Joss!”
“I can’t kill you yet but that doesn’t mean I can’t kick your ass.” His eyes
were red, as if he’d recently been crying. He hissed, “How dare you say her
name.”
Vlad stumbled for words, but before he could find them, a large hand closed
over Joss’s throat. Joss stiffened and Vikas smiled at Vlad over Joss’s
shoulder. “You would do well to treat this boy kindly, slayer. He saved your
life, after all. If not for him, my friends and I would have feasted on your
marrow months ago. Now find your way home.”
Joss swallowed and Vikas tightened his hand. “This creature and I have business
to attend to. Release me.”
Vikas whispered in his ear, “Or you’ll what?”
For a moment, Vikas tightened his grip, as if to give Joss a taste of what
awaited him should he refuse to leave. He opened his hand and Joss fell to the
ground. “Go home, little one. Spend time with your family. Forget about
Vladimir and enjoy your holiday weekend.”
Joss’s eyes had remained fierce throughout the encounter, though Vlad could see
fear hidden in them. He stood up, brushing the dirt from his jeans. Relief took
the place of fear in Joss’s eyes, and he started to back down the sidewalk
toward Henry’s house. He called out to Vlad. “Do yourself a favor, Vlad. Don’t
you ever say her name again. Your body-guard won’t always be there.”
Then Joss turned and broke into a run.
Vikas shook his head. “That boy is a fool.”
Vlad shook his head too, but for different reasons. “That boy is my friend ...
or was, anyway. He’s been through a lot. He and his whole family have had their
lives ripped apart by a vampire. No wonder he hates me. No wonder he is the way
he is.”
After a moment, he looked back to Vikas. “Shouldn’t you be eating Thanksgiving
dinner about now?”
Vikas smiled, and for the first time Vlad noticed the small trail of blood on
the corner of his mouth. “I just finished, actually. Suffice it to say, Bathory
no longer has a homeless problem.”
Vlad groaned and tugged Vikas’s sleeve, guiding him toward home. “Yeah, about
your appetite while you’re here in Bathory ... we’ve got to talk.”
21
NOT-SO-DISTANT MEMORIES
VLAD RAN HIS FINGER THOUGHTFULLY ALONG the thin, silver chain around his
neck until he reached the key that Otis had given him. He’d been wearing it
ever since that day, always tucking it into his shirt so nobody would question
what it opened.
But Vlad knew. And today, for some reason, the thought of opening the door to
his parents’ bedroom was consuming him.
He’d argued with himself all through first and second period about how stupid
it would be to go wander around a room that really held no clues at all to how
the fire had started, but the closer it got to the bell ringing at the end of
third period, the less his internal arguments made sense. By the time the big
hand on the clock ticked toward the number twelve and the bell rang out through
the halls of Bathory High, Vlad had decided to sneak out and see if there was
anything there, anything at all that might help him determine exactly how his
parents had died and who, if anyone, was responsible.
It didn’t take him long to exit the front doors or to get across town. As he
opened the back door, he thought of Vikas, who was likely resting peacefully
upstairs. It was weird to think of someone being there in his moment of
possible discovery, but it wasn’t like he could shake Vikas awake and ask him
to step out for a moment while he strolled down memory lane with the ghosts of
his mom and dad. He moved inside quietly. It sounded like the TV was on in the
living room, which he immediately attributed to Tristian. Without making a
sound, Vlad made his way upstairs and, as he moved past Vikas’s door, pulled
the chain over his head, holding the warm key in his palm.
He stood at his parents’ door for several minutes.
He might have been gathering courage; he might have been mentally preparing
himself. But mostly, Vlad was fighting to keep the memory of that day—the
morning he found them—from the forefront of his mind.
It was a losing battle.
He closed his hand over the small, silver knob. At the same moment, in his mind’s
eye, he saw his hand, his ten-year-old hand, closing over the same knob.
Together, both hands swung the door open. Both hearts beat out of control at
the smell of ash and soot.
Shaking his head, trying hard to remain in the present, Vlad stepped over the
threshold. His younger self stepped inside too, and turned as he did to face
the bed.
“Mom! Dad! NO!”
Vlad closed his eyes, blocking out his younger self’s voice.
No, Vlad. Don’t go down that path. Stay in the present.
But when he opened his eyes again, all he could see was his younger self’s
point of view. It was strange, as if he was watching a movie. Occasionally the
real world, the present world, would leak in and he’d see what he was really
faced with, but mostly, he relived that day, moment for moment.
Instead of dust and cobwebs lying atop the soot and ashes, the ashes were
fresh, some embers still glowing brightly. Instead of the quiet of a haunted,
forgotten place, the sounds of sirens and voices filled his head. The room was
filled with smoke, still overwhelmed by a heat that Vlad could barely stand to
be near, but he had to see, he had to know. His chest rose and fell both from
the run from school and from what he was seeing.
On the bed were two figures. Figures that had once been people. Figures that
had just kissed him good night not ten hours before. All that remained were
black, sooty shapes. All that Vlad could identify was an arm and what might
have been an open mouth. He reached out, his fingers making contact...
Vlad jerked out of the memory, streams of tears coating his cheeks. He didn’t
want to remember, didn’t need to remember. He’d come here looking for evidence,
not pain. That he had an abundance of.
He looked around the room, his eyes searching for something, anything that
might offer a clue as to what had happened. But when his eyes fell on the bed
again ...
He reached out, his fingers making contact with the ashen form closest to him.
It was his mother. It had to be. That was exactly where she’d been lying when
he’d turned off her alarm. As his fingers brushed against her, her body—her
burned, fragile remains—crumbled into a pile. Vlad screamed.
He closed his eyes again, willing away that memory with deep, shaking breaths.
The tears were coming too easily now. He brushed them away with his arm, but
his efforts were useless. Determined, he opened his eyes again and focused on
the present.
At first, he saw only dirt and dust over more dirt and dust. Then his eyes
settled on a spot on the wall, near his father’s nightstand. There the soot was
smudged, as if someone had wiped it away. Vlad moved around the bed to get a
closer look. He knelt and leaned forward, taking a good, long look at the glyph
on the small panel there.
He’d never noticed it before. But then, he’d never spent much time in this room
since the fire.
He reached up slowly, the glyph glowing at his close proximity, and touched it.
The panel opened inward. When he peered inside, he saw nothing.
Another dead end.
Vlad cursed under his breath, but then bit his bottom lip and placed his hand
inside the compartment. He felt all along each wall, then reached up and felt
carefully along the top.
Nothing. The compartment was completely empty.
Vlad’s shoulders sank.
As he pulled his hand out, his finger stung. He yanked it back, fearing a
spider bite. Blood bubbled from the tip of his finger. A paper cut. Vlad sucked
the blood away and reached back in with his other hand. Carefully, he moved it
across the top of the compartment. With the tips of his fingers, he touched the
corner of a slip of paper, wedged into a seam. It took him several tries, but
finally, he withdrew the paper and sat back on his heels, holding it curiously
in his palm.
He unfolded it and there, in his father’s handwriting, was “Aidan” and a phone
number.
It was probably nothing, probably meaningless, but Vlad tucked it carefully
into his pocket and stood, looking around the room some more.
As he was going over the bureau’s top drawers—or rather, what remained of them—Vikas’s
voice broke in from behind him. “What are you looking for, Mahlyenki Dyavol?”
He didn’t miss a beat. “Answers. I want to know what happened to them. I want
to know who did it. And I want to know why.”
Vikas stepped closer, placing a caring hand on Vlad’s shoulder. “What answers
can you possibly find in the cold ashes, Vladimir? The men who did this must
have had their reasons for doing so, but they’ve left nothing behind. Only bad
memories.”
Turning to face him, Vlad said, “Vikas? What makes you think it was more than
one man?”
Vikas grew quiet for a bit, then gave his shoulder a squeeze before turning to
leave the room. “Just a feeling I have, Mahlyenki Dvayol. It most likely means
nothing at all.”
Vlad took no comfort in his words, but his tears at last ceased.
22
A TAINTED EVENING
VLAD BUTTONED THE LAST BUTTON on his pewter-colored shirt and sighed. He
didn’t much feel like dressing up, and he certainly didn’t feel like going to a
dance tonight, least of all this dance, Bathory High’s annual Snow Ball.
He slipped on his black vest and smiled at the tiny skull buttons. If nothing
else, at least he looked sharp.
Still, he really, really didn’t want to go. Joss and Meredith would be there as
a—Vlad gulped—couple. He didn’t need any more reason to avoid the school at all
cost. The very idea of those two dancing closely and ignoring the fact that he
was once a big part of both of their lives sent a wave of nausea over him. But
then ... maybe he hadn’t been a big part of their lives. Maybe they’d just been
a big part of his.
Vlad shook his head. He couldn’t start down that path of thinking, or the
evening would be a total loss.
With one more glance at his reflection, Vlad walked out of his bedroom and down
the stairs to where Nelly was waiting. At the sight of him, she smiled. “You
look very handsome. So who’s the lucky girl?”
“Her name is Snow.”
Nelly’s voice took on a tone of mock irritation. “And how come I haven’t heard
of her before?”
Vlad did his best to match her inflection with a sarcastic quip. “Because, she
lives in Stokerton and I haven’t mentioned her to you.”
“So, when do I get to meet her?” Much to Vlad’s annoyance, Nelly had that
I-told-you-you’d-get-over-Meredith look on her face.
“Not tonight”
Nelly’s jaw dropped; she let out a playful gasp. “You are so grounded to your
coffin.”
A smile fought its way onto Vlad’s face. It didn’t matter how hard he tried to
avoid it or how much he wanted to wallow in his self-induced pit of despair,
Nelly could always make him smile.
“I’m meeting her at the dance. October’s giving her a ride.” Vlad opened the
front closet and grabbed his coat and shoes.
“Do you want me to drive you? Or would you like to take the car?”
“I’m not ready to drive in the snow yet.” Vlad shuddered. “I’m not sure our
neighbor’s mailbox is ready either. Besides ...”
Outside, Henry’s horn honked, so Vlad opened the door and waved. As he slid on
his jacket, he smiled at Nelly. “... Henry’s driving me. I’ll be back by
midnight, okay?”
She nodded and Vlad walked out the door, closing it behind him. Once he was
inside Henry’s car and moving down the road, he grumbled, “I don’t understand
how you and October think it’s okay to pressure me into taking Snow to this
dance.”
Henry was busy checking his mirrors, speedometer, and blind spot. It was
obvious that he was avoiding Vlad’s protests.
Vlad glared. “Dude, you know I’m trying to keep my distance from her and
neither one of you are bringing dates.”
Henry chuckled. “Quit whining. We’re doing you a favor. You should’ve seen Snow
when I dropped them off at the school.”
“Wait, you drove them? I thought October was picking her up.”
“Yeah, that was the original plan.”
“So, what happened?”
Henry shrugged. “Plans changed.”
“Thank you for explaining that so clearly. So, why didn’t you just bring them
over to Nelly’s?”
“Because when a girl looks as hot as Snow looks tonight, you don’t want your
parental figure to see.”
Vlad didn’t argue, because for once in his young life, Henry sounded full of
wisdom.
The car came to a stop just across the street from the school and, thanks to
the chill of late December, it didn’t take long for the boys to make their way
inside. The hall was decorated in a thousand different snowflakes. Some dangled
from the high arched ceiling; some were pasted onto lockers and walls; some
littered the floor. A silver, white, and soft blue path led their way to the
gym, at the doors of which stood a girl. A girl Vlad couldn’t take his eyes
off.
He thought he heard Henry say something about having fun as he moved down the
hall and into the gym, but he couldn’t remember how to speak, so his reply was
merely silence.
She was dressed in black from head to toe. The top of her luxurious silk gown
was strapless, baring her flawless, pale shoulders, and corseted, revealing
just a hint of something that made Vlad’s face flush bright red. The skirt of
her gown was layered and full. Her hair was pinned up in messy curls, tiny bats
dotting the barrettes, matching the tiny, glittery bats on her nails. Vlad took
a step closer and breathed her name. “Snow ...”
Her nervous smile relaxed. Vlad couldn’t help but wonder what it was she had to
be nervous about. He was the one who felt like a stuttering idiot. He walked
down the hall in what felt like slow motion, and when he reached her, her smile
faltered. “Listen, Vlad. I know I’m only here because October forced you to
take me. So we don’t have to pretend we’re dating or anything. We can just be
here as friends.”
Vlad shook his head, a smile fixed on his lips, unwilling to let reality spoil
the already magical evening. “You look amazing.”
Relaxing her shoulders, Snow beamed. “You look pretty hot yourself, mister.”
He held out his elbow and she looped her arm in his, then they walked arm in
arm through the open gym doors into a winter paradise. Wide, wondering eyes
turned toward them, and though Vlad was certain most of them were questioning
who exactly was the beauty on his arm, he was happy to speculate that maybe a
few of the gathered crowd had no idea who he was. He felt like a different
person, oddly confident, ready to shine, and very, very aware of the feel of
Snow’s arm on his own.
One couple in particular caught his eye. A good-looking guy in deep blue and a
pretty girl in white and pink. Joss and Meredith. And for once, Vlad didn’t
care about what Meredith might be thinking. He was too wrapped up in the
shocked expressions that had greeted them.
But there it was, on the cusp of the other kids’ thoughts. Meredith’s words in
his head. “Is that why he broke up with me? To be with her?”
Vlad pushed her thoughts away and with them, his anguish at seeing the
heartbreak in her eyes.
Though the rest of the goth kids were nowhere to be seen, Henry was standing by
the punch bowl with October; Vlad steered Snow toward them, smiling the entire
time. October grinned. “You’re the perfect couple”
Henry nodded. “Our work here is done.”
He and October clinked their plastic cups together and smiled. Vlad was happy
to see his two friends getting along and working together toward a common goal.
Even if he was the reason that they had to work so hard.
The evening proceeded with much more grace than Vlad thought was possible. He
and Snow danced to almost every song, when they weren’t hanging out with Henry
and October, who seemed to have developed a sort of friendship when Vlad hadn’t
been looking. The music was incredible—a perfect selection of songs. The food
was amazing. Even luck seemed to be on his side, as he didn’t see much of Joss
or Meredith at all. Halfway through the night, a slow song came on, and Snow
tugged him onto the dance floor with a gleam in her dark eyes.
As they danced, Snow stepped in closer and Vlad let her. They swayed side to
side, so close and warm, and Vlad’s heart fluttered happily. Then, without
warning, his gums throbbed and his fangs elongated. Tensing, he snapped his
mouth shut.
Not here. Not now. Not when he was trying so desperately to quit drinking from
Snow.
Snow looked at him, concern filling her eyes. It took her a second, but when
she realized what the problem was, that Vlad needed to feed and he needed to
feed now, she tugged him out into the hall. Henry emitted a howl from
across the room, which made Snow roll her eyes right along with Vlad. Once in
the hall, Snow pulled him into a semidark corner, bent her neck to the side,
and whispered, “Hurry. Before someone sees.”
Vlad nodded, unable to speak, unable to refuse, only capable at the moment of
hungering for what lay within Snow’s delectable veins. He pulled her closer,
trying to be gentle, and bit firmly into her jugular. The sweet taste of warm
blood splashed across his tongue, and Vlad almost moaned with pleasure. Out of
the corner of his eye, he saw a flash—Eddie, probably, and his stupid camera—but
he didn’t care. The hunger had him now. He drank deeply, filling himself with
her essence, feeling his body growing stronger as hers grew weaker. For a brief
moment, he opened his eyes, and over Snow’s shoulder he saw a face that he knew
very well.
Meredith’s brown eyes were wide, but not terrified. She muttered, “I’m sorry. I
didn’t mean to interrupt,” and turned to walk away, her eyes shimmering.
He’d hurt her. Again, he’d hurt her.
Vlad pulled back, withdrawing his fangs. They shrank into his gums immediately.
He wiped the blood from his mouth with his palm. “Meredith, wait...”
Snow crumpled to the ground, weak from his feast. Vlad crouched down, his eyes
full of concern. He’d done it again, despite his determination not to. He’d fed
from Snow. He’d treated her like nothing more than a cheeseburger. He’d hurt
Meredith again and once more, he was hurting Snow. He couldn’t get anything
right.
He didn’t deserve either one of them.
He met her eyes and she mouthed, “Go after her.”
After a pause, a long pause, filled with doubt that seemed to stretch on
forever, he bolted down the hall, back to the gym. Meredith was hurrying across
the room, heading straight for Joss. Vlad reached out and grabbed her by the
arm. “Wait. Would you just wait?”
She stopped suddenly but didn’t look at him.
“That wasn’t what it looked like.”
“So you weren’t just making out with that ... that ... that girl?” She flung an
arm in the general direction of where they’d left Snow, her eyes furious, alive
with jealousy.
“No. I—wait, what does it matter to you if I was? You’re with Joss now,
remember?” His voice had risen in anger and resentment. He didn’t mean for it
to.
Meredith’s cheeks flushed—mostly out of anger, but also because Vlad was right.
It was no business of hers who Vlad made out with.
Vlad blinked, uncertain what else to say. Part of him wanted to let Meredith
run off, to be done with worrying about what she thought, to dance with Snow
and feed when he needed and kiss her ... yes, kiss her. The other part of him
wanted—needed—Meredith to know the truth, to know if she loved him no matter
what fiendish beast lurked inside of him, to hold her close and transport them
back in time, to when things were easier between them. He took a deep breath
and spoke before he could stop himself. “I wasn’t kissing her. I was feeding
from her. I’m ... I’m a vampire.”
At first, Meredith didn’t do or say anything at all. He wasn’t even certain she’d
heard him. Then she looked Vlad in the eye and slapped him hard across the
face.
The sting shocked Vlad, and he turned his eyes back to her with a questioning
look.
Her own eyes brimmed with tears, as if he’d just insulted her in the worst way,
as if he’d invented an outrageous story just to hurt her feelings and demean
her intelligence. Her voice wavered as she spoke, but he couldn’t tell if it
was out of fury or sorrow ... or maybe a bit of both. “Do me a favor, Vlad. Do
us both a favor. Never speak to me again.”
Vlad’s fingers touched his burning cheek lightly as she turned and found her
way into Joss’s arms. She didn’t believe him. He’d told her the truth, his most
guarded secret, and she thought he was lying.
Before he could blink, October was in front of him, looking more than a little
irritated. “What are you doing with Meredith? Where’s Snow?”
“She’s ...” Vlad lost himself in thought mid-sentence. Meredith didn’t believe
him. He’d only ever told Henry he was a vampire, only one other person in the
world. Snow had learned with a bite; Joss had learned with a fight, and Nelly
had known his entire life. But only Henry had been told. And Henry had accepted
him without question. Meredith had shunned him, labeling his reality as nothing
more than a cruel joke. As if he were no more than an insensitive jerk who’d
broken her heart so he could be with Snow. Snow ... “She’s in the hall.”
October turned with a huff to go retrieve Snow, but Vlad grabbed her gruffly by
the arm. “No. I’ll get her.”
He crossed the room, still stunned that he’d uttered those fateful words to
Meredith and more stunned that she’d reacted the way she did. He found his way
to the hall, where Snow was struggling to stand. He helped her up, then acted
as a brace for her until her strength returned. When she spoke, her voice
sounded broken, distant, sad. “What did you tell her?”
Standing at the end of the hall was Eddie Poe, looking more than a little
interested in their conversation. Vlad tensed and wondered aloud, “What does he
want?”
“The same thing he wants when he visits The Crypt. Answers. Answers I refuse to
give him. Y’know, even if you hadn’t ordered me not to talk to him, I wouldn’t.
That guy is such a weasel.”
Vlad almost managed to swallow his esophagus. “He comes to The Crypt? When? For
how long now? What does he do?”
Snow held up a hand, stopping his ramble. She waited for Eddie to disappear
back into the gym before saying, “I didn’t tell you, because I didn’t want you
stressing out over nothing. Mostly, he just stands in the corner and gawks at
me. This last time, he asked me questions about you. It took him a while to
work up to the vampire question, but he got there with some determination. But
stop worrying about Eddie Poe. I have him under control. Now ... what did you
tell Meredith?”
Barely able to tear his eyes from the door Eddie had walked through, Vlad’s
words fell into disbelieving whispers. “I told her I’m a vampire.”
Snow’s eyes widened. “Seriously? What did she think about that?”
He shook his head, trying to erase the memory of Meredith’s face when he’d
finally told her the truth. She didn’t believe him. She thought it was just a
ploy to get between her and Joss. “It doesn’t matter. None of it matters. All
that matters is that I’m sorry I left you to chase after her, Snow. Are you
okay?”
“I’m fine. Just a little dizzy.” Snow shrugged and smiled up at him, looking
more than a little relieved that Meredith had rejected him. “I missed you
feeding from me.”
Vlad raised an eyebrow. What a weird thing to say. “Really? Cuz it seems like
it makes you sick or something.”
“Maybe it’s having you close that I miss.” She ran her finger delicately along
the buttons of his vest and met his gaze. “Vlad?”
Was it getting warm in here? Vlad swallowed hard, resisting the urge to undo
the top few buttons of his shirt. “Yeah?”
She tilted her head to the side, curiosity filling her lovely eyes. “Do you really
like that Meredith girl still?”
He didn’t have to think about it, not for a second, and he didn’t want to lie.
But he knew if he were another boy, a boy like Henry maybe, he wouldn’t have
answered. He would have bent down and kissed Snow so deeply before dragging her
back onto the dance floor with whispered promises and sweet nothings. But he
wasn’t that kind of boy. He was Vlad. Almost guilty, he said, “Yeah. I do.”
“Oh.” The hurt was there in her eyes, hurt that shouted loud and clear. Snow
wanted to be his everything, no matter the cost.
“It’s ... complicated.” Vlad made sure she was steady, then backed away from
her. The hall cooled considerably.
“Love usually is.” She shrugged again and smiled, all traces of sadness erased.
“What’s it like to be a vampire?”
“It’s ...” Vlad sighed, shaking his head. “It’s complicated too.”
“Would you ever ...” She had her well-groomed eyebrows raised, but then lowered
them, shaking her head. “Never mind.”
But Vlad couldn’t help but wonder if Snow were about to ask him to make her
into a vampire as well.
Clearing his throat, Vlad gave the subject a shove in another direction. “Do
you wanna dance?”
Snow beamed.
Vlad held out the crook of his arm and led her back into the gym. He hardly
thought about Meredith Brookstone the rest of the night.
Not more than five or six thousand times, anyway.
23
V BAR
THE CAB PULLED TO A STOP and Otis slipped the cabbie some money before
opening his door. Vlad slid out after him and yawned. The flight to New York
City had been short, but uneventful—there had been minor excitement when Otis
pointed out the Statue of Liberty as they were landing, but Vlad couldn’t see
it, so he just nodded noncommittally when Otis asked if he had. From the
airport, they drove straight through to Greenwich Village, with promises from
Otis that they’d stay in Midtown Manhattan so that Vlad could see Times Square.
Vlad was trying to be excited about the trip, but the fact remained that they
were here for Otis’s pretrial. And according to Vikas, this was Otis’s last
chance at getting out of the charges filed against him alive.
The cabbie pulled their suitcases from the trunk, wished them a nice day, and
before Vlad could open his mouth to say goodbye, he was gone, barreling down
the street as if he were in a hurry to get away from his pale, thin, ravenous
looking fares. Maybe, Vlad thought, he was.
Otis picked up their suitcases and nodded toward an unassuming café behind
Vlad. A small sign hung over the door, painted blue—like the door and window trim—with
white letters that read V Bar. Otis leaned closer and said, “Any idea what the
V might stand for?”
Vlad mulled the possibilities over for just a second. “A vampire bar? Really?”
Otis nodded. “The owner is a good friend of mine. Though not, as it were, a
good friend of your father’s.”
“Why not?”
“I’ve never been clear on that. But trust me. You didn’t want to be in the same
room with Tomas and Enrico.” Otis stepped forward, leading the way inside the
bar.
The moment Vlad stepped over the threshold, he felt at home. V Bar was small,
but cozy, with worn wood and small tables. A long bar lined the right side of
the room, and a large chalkboard hung over the bar proclaiming the menu to
thirsty visitors. To his left was a compilation of interesting artifacts—a
statue of an armless woman, an old Ouija board. On the bar sat a picture of
Count Chocula. In the corner, a piece of wooden trim was painted to look subtly
like blood-tipped fangs.
It was probably the coolest place Vlad had ever been in.
Otis stepped up to the bar and took a seat. After admiring the room a bit more,
Vlad sat beside him. A man behind the bar with curly light brown hair and a
lean, muscular form smiled at them and gave them a nod, as if to say he’d be
with them in a moment. There was quite a selection on the menu, everything from
tea to wine, but nothing, Vlad noted, that would satisfy a vampire’s palate. He
was beginning to wonder if perhaps the V in V Bar simply referred to who owned
the establishment, not the patrons. He frowned, somewhat disappointed. After
such a long trip, he could really use a drink.
“What can I get you gentlemen?” The bartender had warm eyes and a kind smile.
The blue of his T-shirt matched the shade of his eyes perfectly. Vlad bet that
he was a really nice guy.
Otis smiled back. “The house red, please. For both of us.”
The bartender beamed, offering Vlad a sly wink before turning back to Otis. “I
thought your guest was part of the club but had to ask to be certain. Are you
here on business or pleasure, Mr. Otis?”
“Business, unfortunately.”
The bartender nodded, his smile fading some. “I’ll make it a double then.”
“Would you please let Enrico know that I’m here, and I’ve brought a guest?”
“Of course.” He turned and picked up the phone, speaking quietly into it. Once
he hung up, he filled two wineglasses with what looked like red wine and sat
them on the bar. With a glance at Vlad, he poured one glass into a plastic cup
with a lid and straw. As he slid the cup forward, he said, “For appearances. We
wouldn’t want to attract any unwanted attention, would we?”
Vlad chuckled and shook his head. The cup was completely see-through, but
whatever. He’d just claim it was cranberry juice if anyone asked. He sipped
from the straw and recognized the spice immediately. Bloodwine.
Vlad spoke to Otis with his thoughts. “Is the bartender ... like us?”
Otis chuckled. “Why don’t you ask him?”
Taking another sip, Vlad looked around to be certain no one would hear. Then he
met the eyes of the bartender, who seemed to be awaiting his words. “Excuse me,
but are you a vampire too?”
He furrowed his brow, looking quite confused and said, “A vampire? Are you
putting me on? They don’t exist.”
Vlad blinked, lost. He’d been almost certain that the bartender had known
exactly what Otis was, what Vlad was. He started to mumble an apology, when
Otis and the bartender broke into laughter. The bartender shook his head, his
eyes sparkling. “No, little one, I am not. I’m blessed to be one of Enrico’s
drudges, but I am not a vampire—though I certainly wish to be.”
Vlad couldn’t help but be a little surprised. Like Tristian, this man looked
like a vampire, carried himself like a vampire. Maybe drudges took on those
traits after so many years in Elysia. He couldn’t ever imagine Henry doing so,
but then, he wasn’t sure he moved the way they did, either. “Has Enrico changed
many of his drudges?”
“Only one. But there is always hope.” He winked again and then stole away down
the length of the bar to help another customer.
“Otis Otis.” A man’s voice behind them, warm and inviting.
Before even turning around, Otis smiled broadly. “Enrico Ciotti.”
An Italian man with dark features embraced Otis tightly. “It has been too long,
my friend.”
“You say that every time I see you, Enrico.”
Enrico laughed and released him. “Well then, maybe you should come by more
often.” He smiled at Vlad and thrust out his hand. “This must be your nephew. I’m
pleased to make your acquaintance, Vladimir. Your uncle sings your praises
constantly.”
Vlad shook his hand, not mentioning that today was the first time Otis had ever
mentioned Enrico, and certainly not making mention of his dad. “Nice to meet
you.”
As Enrico settled onto the stool beside him, Otis said, “I trust you know why I’m
here.”
He nodded in response. “Ah yes. The pretrial. I was so elated that the Council
of Elders chose my fair city for it that I offered up space.”
“They turned you down, I trust?”
“On the contrary, they leaped at the offer. Apart from D’Ablo, of course.”
“Of course.” Otis wet his lips, suddenly looking nervous. Maybe it was just now
hitting him that this was his last chance to be proclaimed innocent. “I admit,
I’m surprised. I’d thought Central Park or perhaps the library ...”
“And insult me with their choice?” Enrico shook his head confidently. “Apart
from D’Ablo, I am good friends with every member of that council. Refusing my
offer would have created a rift—one I’m sure they’d rather avoid, considering
my son.”
Otis’s jaw tightened. “Is he here?”
“He’s around, I’m sure. Probably sleeping. We all can’t be day owls like
yourself, Otis.” Laughter bubbled out of Enrico as natural as breath.
“To be fair, the sun has begun to set. It’s not as if we came at noon.” The
tension hadn’t left Otis, but he was trying hard to smile and act casual. But
Vlad knew otherwise. Something was troubling Otis. Likely the mention of Enrico’s
son ... whoever he was. “Still, perhaps it’s best that he remains resting while
my nephew and I are here. We’ll retire to our hotel room in a bit and return
for the pretrial at midnight.”
Enrico waved a hand through the air, dismissing the notion. “Nonsense. There’s
no sense avoiding him.”
Their conversation continued, but Vlad’s attention waned. He felt the strangest
compulsion to leave the bar. He shook it off for a good ten minutes, trying to
focus on the conversation between Otis and Enrico. Finally, the pull was too
strong to ignore, and he slipped from his bar stool and quietly made his way to
the door. He paused there, taking the time to look back at Otis, who didn’t
even glance at him. In fact, no one seemed to notice him at all. The bartender
finished wiping off the counter. There was a woman who kept sipping her wine
and feverishly scribbling something on the page in front of her. Enrico and
Otis kept chatting. All of them seemed blissfully unaware that Vlad had even
moved at all. Raising an eyebrow, Vlad stepped out the door and onto the
sidewalk.
He turned south, following the pull at his core, and his steps only began to
slow when he recognized the man standing at the end of the block. Dark eyes.
Pale skin. A thin Cupid’s-bow mouth. Copper-colored hair. Vlad would have
recognized that face anywhere.
Dorian.
So that’s who Otis and Enrico had been talking about. Dorian. And Vlad would
have bet anything that Dorian was Enrico’s son.
Vlad couldn’t help but wonder if Dorian was responsible for the irresistible
pull he’d felt at the center of his being, urging him to leave the bar and
wander down the street.
Dorian nodded. At first Vlad thought it was in greeting, but then Dorian spoke.
“I am responsible for that. I do apologize, but it was really the only way to
get you alone without alerting the others.”
Vlad remained stiff, the thought of Dorian’s cravings for his blood never far
from his mind. “And you brought me here why?”
A smile crossed Dorian’s lips. “Not for the reason you might expect, though I’m
still very open to tasting your blood if you’re interested.”
Vlad crossed his arms in front of him.
Dorian chuckled. “No? Well then, onto my real motives. Do you have any idea how
many vampires are allowed to know the prophecy of the Pravus in its entirety
Vlad?” He paused, but only slightly. “Four. Just four. And I am the last of
that four. I am the only vampire in existence that can carry such knowledge. I
am the Keeper of the Prophecy.”
“The other three are dead?”
“The Foreteller and Transcriber of the Prophecy are both dead. They died to
hide this knowledge from Elysia. I keep it so that I may educate vampirekind
when the time is right.” He wet his lips and stepped forward cautiously, as if
knowing how on edge his presence made Vlad feel. He seemed to know just about
everything there was to know about Vlad. His eyes met Vlad’s and once again,
Vlad was struck by how harmless he looked. “I’d like to educate you right now,
if you’re willing.”
Vlad was about to ask about the third person who knew the prophecy, as Dorian
had only named two others besides himself, but then in his mind, a film jumped,
and he knew that Dorian was sharing a memory with him. The grainy image of two
men in a small, dark room came to life, then sharpened. Vlad couldn’t shake the
feeling that the room seemed somehow familiar, and then it hit him. It was the
training room in Siberia. The sounds of their breathing filled Vlad’s head, and
Vlad knew that he was seeing the memory from Dorian’s point of view. Silently,
Dorian moved forward and knelt before the men. One knelt beside him and seemed
to enter into a trance, then started speaking in Elysian code to no one in
particular, as if he were reading a book aloud. Dorian’s heart drummed in Vlad’s
ears.
The third man turned around, messing with something on the small table behind
him. When he turned back, Vlad could see he was holding a quill in his hand.
There was no ink in sight and the metal tip was glowing, like a red-hot coal.
Then, in a moment of sheer horror, Vlad saw the man holding the quill lean
forward and press the burning pen into Dorian’s skin. Dorian cried out but held
very still as the man worked over his skin. When the tip would cool, he’d move
back to the fireplace and then return to Dorian’s skin with a fresh quill,
burning words into Dorian’s exposed flesh. Vlad couldn’t get a good look at
what the man was writing, but he was almost positive that it was whatever the chanting
man was saying aloud.
Once Dorian healed, the man would begin again, branding and carving words into
Dorian again and again. At one point, Dorian tried to break away, unable to
face the pain any longer. The man with the pen pulled him back, his face
sympathetic, and attached chains to Dorian’s wrists to stop him from fleeing.
Then he continued to inscribe words on Dorian’s skin, over and over again. All
Vlad could do was watch in horrified disbelief.
Dorian’s thoughts broke in over the memory like the narrator in an old movie. “They
continued for a year, breaking only to feed, though I was not allowed to
partake. By the time we were done, I had not only put the prophecy of the
Pravus to memory, but ingrained it on my soul.”
The film jumped forward then. Exhausted and aged by his ordeal, Dorian lay on
the floor of the training room, spent. The chanting man had stopped chanting
and the man with the pen had ceased as well. A fourth man, one Vlad knew well,
entered the room and set Dorian free. Vlad watched as Vikas killed the
Foreteller and the Transcriber, though neither fought it. It was as if they’d
expected it, as if they all knew they had a role to play and were willing to
play it. Dorian crawled forward, lapping at the blood from their fatal wounds.
“Ever since I emerged from that room I have craved nothing but vampire
blood, and as I am the Keeper of the Prophecy, as it is stored within my veins,
all of Elysia bow to my whims. Perhaps they figure it is a small price compared
to the torment that I endured. I don’t know.”
The image froze on Dorian’s hand lovingly caressing the dead face of the
Inscriber, and just like that, Vlad was no longer watching Dorian’s memory.
Dorian said, “So to answer your question of where the prophecy is, the answer stands
before you. Simply put, it is within me.”
Vlad took a deep breath and blew it out, trying to erase those images from his
mind. “I don’t suppose you could jot it down for me.”
A smile touched Dorian’s lips. “No. I’m afraid I can’t. Nor can I tell you the
prophecy verbatim. I have discussed portions of it with various vampires over
time and books have been written on the subject based on those conversations,
but none but I know the prophecy in its entirety. However, I can answer direct
questions. And I will ... in time.”
Dorian turned around and started walking away. Over his shoulder, he called
out, “Your uncle will notice your departure in a moment. I suggest you hurry
back.”
“Wait. First tell me something. Something not about the prophecy. Something
about you.” Dorian paused and Vlad ran to catch up with him. Once he reached
his side, he asked, “Where do you get your powers from?”
Once again, Dorian smiled. “Ask your uncle.”
“Is that one of your secrets, Dorian?”
“I have only one secret, and that is not it. Perhaps one day I will share my
secret with you, but that day isn’t today.” Dorian started walking again, and
this time, Vlad didn’t follow.
He hurried back to V Bar and, just as he’d entered the door, Otis straightened
and looked around. His expression darkened when he saw Vlad returning. While
Vlad found his seat once again, Enrico excused himself to go help the
bartender. Otis eyed Vlad for a moment before he spoke. “Enrico has invited us
along for dinner. I’m assuming you missed that part of the conversation.”
Vlad swallowed hard, feeling very much like he was in trouble, but not knowing
why. “I did. Good, though. I’m starved.”
Otis emptied his glass and sat it on the bar. “He’s asked us to join him in
hunting humans for sport.”
At Vlad’s gawk, he said, “You don’t have to take part, but I’m not about to
leave you alone in a hotel room in New York City.”
24
THE HUNT
OTIS WHISPERED, as if he didn’t want the other vampires to hear, which
struck Vlad as enormously stupid, what with them having telepathy and all, but
hey ... whatever floated Otis’s boat. They had just exited the subway and were
now walking along the sidewalk, making their way north, toward Times Square and
beyond it, Central Park. “Are you ready for this, Vladimir? The hunt is
exhilarating, but not something I’m sure you’d agree with.”
Actually, Vlad found himself more intrigued by the idea than he’d ever admit. “I
don’t want to be rude or anything. It’ll be okay.”
“After your reaction to the very idea of hunting in Siberia a few years ago, I
thought the notion might sicken you.” Otis cocked an eyebrow at him, as if
defying him to deny it, or perhaps coaxing him to admit he was curious. “But if
you’re all right with it ...”
Vlad chewed his bottom lip thoughtfully. “How is it done? I mean ... we won’t
hurt anyone, will we?”
“We?” Otis slowed his steps, as if in disbelief. “You plan to hunt?”
“No. I just ... no.” He swallowed hard, resolving that he wouldn’t be partaking
in any fresh human blood tonight. Not even a drop. No matter how much it
appealed to him.
Licking his lips, as if parched by the subject, Otis said, “Every vampire hunts
differently. I always aim for the sick or homeless, those who don’t have a
chance of surviving much longer anyway. Enrico prefers tourists.”
“But don’t they have families to go home to?”
“Think of it this way, Vlad. Do the chickens and cows that humans devour have
families who will miss them? Perhaps. But whether or not they do is of no
consequence on the hunt.”
Vlad furrowed his brow, more than a little disturbed. “You can’t kill them,
Otis. You just can’t.”
After a thoughtful pause, Otis called up to Enrico. “Let’s try to let them live
tonight.”
Enrico’s laughter drifted back to them. “Let them live? That would be a
cruel fate.”
Vlad shot a glance at Otis. “What does he mean by that?”
“He means that killing them would be fast. Letting them live will require a
satisfying chase. And I can’t guarantee that the thirst won’t cloud our
reasoning a bit. We may kill them anyway.” Otis paused midstep, as if he were
having second thoughts about bringing Vlad along. “Are you sure you’re up to
this? You look a little green. Maybe I should take you back to the hotel.”
Vlad shrugged. He didn’t want Otis to miss out on the fun. Even if he was having
a hard time with the idea of attacking innocent people. “It would be easier if
I knew they were willing victims.”
“Victims are never willing, Vlad. That’s why they’re called victims and not
volunteers.” Otis sighed. “You don’t have to participate. Neither do I if it
makes the evening more ... palatable for you.”
Enrico’s voice found them again with a tone of celebration. “Ah ... as usual,
our hunting ground is full. Herd your choices to the park, gentlemen, and let
the games begin.”
Times Square was far cooler than any of the times he’d seen it on TV. Bright
lights were everywhere. The smells of food filled the air. And the people ...
so many people.
Otis spoke in a hurried tone, as if he’d all but forgotten his suggestion that
maybe they should sit this hunt out. “The key to a good hunt is to choose a
human who fits your mood. If you’re looking for a struggle, if you truly want a
fight that will fulfill your animalistic urges, choose a strong human,
preferably a runner. If you want a fast meal, the elderly are a good choice.”
Vlad flinched. “The elderly?”
“You’re feeling conflicted. That’s normal.” Then Otis hurried ahead into the
crowd.
Vlad shook his head and followed, albeit reluctantly. “Nothing about this is
normal, Otis.”
When he caught up with his uncle, Otis started rambling, and Vlad could tell
the scent of blood had him now. Otis looked captivated by the crowd. “Let me
put it into perspective for you. Being raised among humans, you have adapted
many of their so-called morals. You’ve been raised to believe that you shouldn’t
bring harm on humankind, that humans are not food, that you should do
everything in your power to protect your fellow man. I was raised that way too,
and for twenty years after I turned, I struggled with guilt at the things I was
doing. The urges inside me were too powerful to ignore, but eventually, I
realized that I was only hurting myself by ignoring them. I was no longer
human, so I needed to learn a new way of living, a new way of looking at the
world. You, Vladimir, may be half human, but every bit of you that I have seen
is a vampire. And this is the vampire way.”
Vlad shrugged, unwilling to listen to his uncle when he was chattering on like
some starved lunatic. “I guess ...”
Otis gestured to the crowd with a nod. “All that blood, just waiting to be
devoured. You may never hunt, but at least let me show you how to do it right.
Look around, smell the blood pumping through their veins. Find the one whose
blood really calls to you.”
“I ... I can’t, Otis. I think, I mean, you’re not acting like yourself.”
“Okay. That’s okay.” But it wasn’t okay. Not that Otis could reason that at the
moment. “Look over there. The man in the blue business suit? His blood smells
like a mixture of blackberries and pomegranates to me. So, now that I’ve found
my meal, I’ll plant thoughts in his head to direct him up the street to the
park.”
Vlad shook his head in disgust. He didn’t dare mention that the man was neither
sick, nor elderly. “Not so much a hunt than it is herding people like cattle,
huh?”
“The hunt really begins when we hit the park.”
Once the man had stepped from the cold, hard streets of Midtown Manhattan, into
the lush green of Central Park, he slowed his steps, turning some in mild
confusion, as if he were waking from a dream. Vlad glanced at Otis and said, “I
thought group hunting was illegal in cities.”
“While I’m thrilled you’ve been reading the Compendium, you may have
missed the short paragraph about the only un-governed city. As you might guess,
it makes New York a popular area for vampires to visit.”
The man stepped forward, moving deeper into the woods. Vlad could feel the
tension rise up in Otis and, with it, his hunger. Otis’s face had paled; his
fangs had elongated. He looked positively fierce in the light of the street
lamps. Vlad stuttered, actually frightened by the changes he saw in his uncle. “S-so
as long as you hunt here, you w-won’t get in trouble?”
“That’s right.” Otis barely glanced at him, like it was virtually impossible to
tear his gaze from his prey. His pupils were pinpoints. His voice was
accompanied by a guttural growl. “Let the games begin.”
Otis bolted across the few yards between where Vlad stood and where Otis’s
intended victim was wandering in a daze. In an instant, the man seemed to gather
his senses and realize that someone ... something was coming up behind
him fast. He turned, eyes terrified and round, mouth opening wide to scream.
Otis jumped up, pouncing on the man in a catlike move. Saliva dripped from his
fangs, and he growled, “Run. Or you will die.”
The man shoved Otis off of him—or thought he did; Vlad knew that Otis had let
him go—and ran deeper into the park, much to Otis’s visible pleasure. He sat
there, crouched, giving the man time to flee, and when Vlad approached him, he
looked up with a strange light in his eye. “It seems cruel, I know. But his
adrenaline will ease the pain of death some, so it’s better that he’s afraid.”
A hard, hot, hollow spot formed at Vlad’s center. “You are seriously freaking
me out, Otis.”
“I can’t stop now. He’d run for help, expose us all. Besides,” Otis grinned,
his sharp fangs bared. “It makes the blood even sweeter.”
It was very apparent that Otis—the real Otis, the one who taught mythology at
Bathory High and nuzzled Nelly’s neck when he thought Vlad wasn’t looking—wasn’t
here anymore. This man, this vampire, wasn’t the Otis that Vlad knew. He was a
hunter through and through, a creature that thirsted for blood and would do
anything within his power to get it. The sight of him scared Vlad like nothing
ever had before.
After another moment passed, the vampire Otis took off at a sprint, delaying
the chase purposefully. Vlad followed at a distance, watching out for Otis in a
way that made him feel very much like the responsible one of the two. He’d
smelled the guy’s blood, so rich and warm and tangy with fear, but couldn’t
understand why the hunt hadn’t taken control of him the way it had his uncle.
Maybe it was because Vlad had never hunted before. Maybe it was because he was
part human. Whatever it was, he was glad. Otis seemed hypnotized, bewitched by
the power of an ancient, carnal need, and Vlad wanted no part of it ... no
matter how much his gums throbbed and his stomach growled.
As he followed Otis, ignoring the terrified screams of the man he was chasing,
Vlad passed Enrico feeding on a platinum blonde in the bushes. He looked drunk,
like Otis, and the human part of Vlad wanted very much to run like hell.
When he caught up to Otis, he had the man cornered by a large tree. Otis was
growling. Then, in a flash, as if he’d reached the pinnacle of his thrill, Otis
leaped on the man. He tilted his head back, his long fangs glistening, ready to
tear open the man’s throat and swallow mouthfuls of his blood.
A monster. Otis was a monster. Maybe Joss and the Slayer Society weren’t so
wrong after all. Maybe vampires really were horrible beings, bent on human pain
and destruction. Maybe their use of stakes wasn’t entirely misguided.
Despite his horror, Vlad found himself moving closer to Otis’s victim. The
scent of the man’s blood was almost too much to bear. He wanted it.
Desperately.
But more than that, he wanted his uncle back.
“Otis! NO!”
Otis seemed to have just noticed him for the first time. Blinking, he looked up
from his impending meal.
Vlad shook his head sternly. “I’m not going to let you do this, Otis. It’s
wrong. Look at him; he’s terrified!”
The vampire Otis glanced briefly down at the man, as if the very idea that
humans could feel terror had never occurred to him.
“You call this hunting. You chase innocent people through the woods, terrify
them, then kill them. That’s not hunting, Otis. It’s not sport. It’s murder and
you know it. If this is the vampire way, then I’m really glad my dad took me
away from Elysia. It’s ... it’s horrible. And you’re horrible for doing it.”
That scary light left Otis’s eyes at last, and he looked sober again and filled
with shame.
But Vlad didn’t hang around long enough to be sure. He took off running, the
wind whipping through his hair, moving with vampire speed until he was back at
the hotel. He stepped into their room and closed the door, lying on the bed for
what seemed like an eternity.
Otis would feed. Of that he was certain.
Disgust filled him, and guilt too. He’d never spoken to his uncle that way
before. But then, it wasn’t his uncle he’d been speaking to. It had been the
vampire Otis, someone he didn’t even know.
After a long time, the door opened and Otis stepped inside. His eyes were red,
his expression drawn. He didn’t meet Vlad’s gaze, but sat on the foot of the
bed, his shoulders slumped. He was quiet for a long time. Then, as if unable to
stand the silence anymore, he spoke. “It hurts that you see me as a monster,
Vladimir.”
“I never said that Otis. I never said you were a monster.”
He’d thought it. Oh yes, he’d thought it. But he would never admit that to his
uncle, never reveal that for a moment, he understood Joss’s motives.
“You don’t have to say it. And ... you’re right, to an extent.” Otis sighed,
burying his head in his hands. “It’s so difficult to resist gorging myself on
their blood. Every day in Bathory, I somehow manage, always teetering on the
verge of a thirst-fueled madness. I don’t know how you do it. I don’t know how
you manage to refrain from slaughtering the entire town. You’re immensely
strong. Far stronger than me.”
Vlad raised an eyebrow. He’d never thought of himself as particularly strong
before. “What about Nelly? You two cuddle all the time, but you don’t seem to
be chomping down on her. You’re strong too, Otis.”
Otis shook his head. “That’s different. I don’t think of her in that way. But
everyone else ... especially the humans I don’t know by name ... it’s immensely
difficult to resist.”
Vlad swallowed hard. He couldn’t imagine what it was like to be a vampire used
to taking meals by force and then going stone sober. It had to be an awful
habit to break. “Did you kill that man, Otis?”
He looked up then and closed his eyes. Vlad couldn’t be sure if his expression
was one of relief or regret. “No. I did not. I wiped the experience from his
memory and returned him to Times Square. Then I went for a long walk before
returning here to beg your forgiveness.”
Vlad sat up, reached forward, and squeezed Otis’s shoulder. Otis placed his
hand over Vlad’s and met his eyes.
“You don’t need to, Otis. There’s nothing to forgive.”
25
THE PRETRIAL
AFTER A SHORT SUBWAY RIDE, Otis and Vlad headed back to V Bar. The city
had come alive in the nighttime hours, something that was the absolute opposite
of life in small town Bathory. Even V Bar was overflowing with customers, so it
took Otis a minute to garner the attention of the bartender. Once he did, the
bartender led them through the cellar door in the sidewalk to the storage area
beneath. He closed the metal doors over them, and Otis moved to the small glyph
behind a table and brushed it with his trembling fingers.
This was it. The moment that determined whether Otis would live or die.
“Otis?” Vlad’s voice shook slightly. “I’m scared.”
A section of wall opened to the right. Otis met Vlad’s eyes and sighed. “Me
too, Vlad. Me too.”
After Otis entered the room, a familiar person stepped from the shadows. Dorian
whispered, “It is important that you don’t speak at this hearing, Vlad, unless
you are called on. Also, telepathy is not allowed. Do you understand?”
Vlad nodded and Dorian placed a hand on Vlad’s elbow to guide him inside.
Beside the door was a second glyph. Ignoring all the fear that Dorian had
inflicted on him, Vlad tapped Dorian’s hand and nodded to the marking. “What’s
that?”
“That’s insurance that my influence cannot enter this room. It’s a new addition
to pretrials. Apparently my gifts at bringing about true justice are not
appreciated. As Em, the president of this council, despises me ...”
Vlad’s entire body went cold. “All it takes is a glyph to stop you?”
The corner of Dorian’s mouth rose in a smirk. He whispered, “No, but I like to
let Em think it will. Besides ... Em is probably the only vampire in this world
capable of killing me. I had hoped that she would be absent, as she normally is
for such proceedings, and I would be able to influence the others, but alas ...”
He sighed and Vlad could see that he was troubled. “Suffice it to say that Otis
is on his own, my young friend. His future lies in Em’s hands.”
With a deep breath, Vlad stepped through the door with Dorian at his side. He
was oddly comforted by Dorian’s presence.
The room was surprisingly posh for such a small, hidden space beneath the
streets of Greenwich Village. A long, mahogany table commanded the front of the
room, home to nine vampires. Vikas sat to the far right, D’Ablo to the far
left, and at the center sat a girl who looked no more than sixteen or seventeen
years old. She was dressed in black skinny jeans and a band T-shirt, her hair
cut in such a way that her burgundy-colored bangs curtained her left eye. Her
Converse-clad feet were tapping the concrete floor beneath the table, as if she
was having a difficult time holding still. Otis stood before the table and
several vampires sat in chairs behind him, waiting for the proceedings to
begin. Dorian led Vlad to an empty chair and then took one himself, only a few
chairs away.
Every vampire in the room had their eyes locked on Dorian, their expressions a
mingling of disgust, fear, and immense respect. The vampires to either side of
him stood and moved to the back of the room. The look in Dorian’s eyes said he
was used to this response, used to being the most feared, loathed, and
respected vampire in all of Elysia. Almost immediately, Vlad felt immensely
sorry for him. Dorian might be used to getting what he wanted, but there was a
reason his social skills were tacking—no one wanted to be social with him.
Dorian glanced at Vlad, his eyes betraying a sadness. Without telepathy, it
seemed Dorian knew that Vlad had witnessed his pain. He looked grateful.
The girl at the center began. “Otis Otis, you face a variety of charges, and as
this is your pretrial, not yet your trial, we shall approach this with a more
casual effort and assume that you know of the charges of which I speak?”
Otis’s voice was sure and strong, but hushed. “I do”
“And do you have any evidence-supported reason that these matters should not go
to trial?”
Otis’s Adam’s apple bobbed as he swallowed hard. “I do not have such evidence,
but I do have suspicions of treachery.”
“Treachery?” She rolled it over on her tongue, as if unfamiliar with the word. “How
so?”
“Em ... I ... I would rather we speak in private, as my theories involve a
certain member of this council.” His eyes darted to D’Ablo, who merely scowled
in return.
“I see” She wet her lips, as if debating his request, then said, “Speak here.
This council holds no secrets from one another.”
A small bead of sweat ran down Otis’s forehead. “I believe that D’Ablo holds
personal prejudice against me. Me ... and my nephew. I can better explain this
in private. Please ...”
The room grew very silent. Finally, Em stood. “If the council will pardon us
...”
She left her place at the table and she and Otis moved outside, into the
storage area, for several minutes. When they returned, she acted as if nothing
had happened and took her place once more. “As there is no evidence to support
not going to trial—”
“Em, please.” Otis’s eyes were shimmering, pleading with her.
“—your trial date has been set for May eleventh at nine P.M., at this location.
This session is adjourned.”
“Em.” A tear rolled down his cheek, his tone bordering on desperation.
Apparently, he’d been counting on their private conversation clearing him of
wrongdoing.
She crossed her ankles and frowned, her voice firm. “This session is adjourned,
Otis.”
Her eyes locked pointedly on Vlad for a moment, but he couldn’t read her
expression.
Slowly, the vampires filed out, first the audience, and then the council, at
last Dorian, until the only ones left in the room were Otis and Vlad. Vlad
approached his uncle slowly and placed a caring palm on his shoulder. Otis
reached up and cupped his hand. Neither spoke for a long time.
Vlad tried to think of something comforting to say. He settled on, “She can’t
be the last word in whether you live or die, Otis.”
Otis took a shuddered breath and released another tear. “Em is the oldest
vampire in existence, Vladimir. If I cannot convince her of DAblo’s treachery,
then I have no hope.”
He turned and walked out of the room, resolving himself to die at the word of a
teenage vampire.
26
NOT-SO-HAPPY NEW YEAR
NELLY SLIPPED A SILVER CUFF BRACELET onto her left wrist and checked her
hair in the mirror for the five millionth time. She looked beautiful in her
black satin cocktail dress with rhinestones dotting the bodice. She had on
heels, something that Vlad couldn’t recall ever having seen her wear before.
Plus, underneath the nervous exterior, she was positively glowing over her and
Otis’s New Year plans ... which both thrilled Vlad to no end and grossed him
out at the same time. Despite the “ew” factor of his aunt and uncle dating,
Vlad was pretty happy for the two of them.
“My earrings!” Nelly gasped, disappearing upstairs for a moment. When she came
back down, black and silver teardrops hung from her ears.
When the doorbell rang, Vlad first watched Nelly turn back to the mirror, her
fingers trembling, and then went to open the door. He had no idea why Otis
still knocked or rang the bell. It wasn’t like he didn’t practically live there
or anything. But Nelly was nervous and Otis probably was too, being that this
was the first date they’d gone on where both referred to the event as a date,
so Vlad wasn’t about to make waves. He opened the door and smiled at Otis, who
was looking dapper in a three-piece charcoal gray suit. Vlad kept his voice
low. “She’s in the living room, checking for gray hairs.”
Otis chuckled and when Nelly stepped out to see him, their eyes twinkled. An electricity
filled the air between them, one that made Vlad enormously uncomfortable. A
brief flash of something—the fear of losing her, maybe—crossed Otis’s eyes.
Then Otis stepped closer to Nelly without a word and kissed her full on the
mouth. Vlad coughed into his fist, trying not to make a retching sound, and the
lovers parted, cheeks flushed. Otis said, “I’m so blessed to have such beauty
in my life, Nelly.”
If she hadn’t been wearing an expensive dress, Vlad was pretty sure Nelly would
have melted into a pile of goo right there. “So,” he said, in an effort to
remind them that they weren’t alone just yet, “where is this shindig, anyway?”
“It’s in the ballroom at the Karloff Hotel in Stokerton, and I’ll have her home
by three A.M.”
“Three? I dunno ...” Vlad smirked, taking on a parental tone. “Promise to
behave yourselves?”
Otis grinned. “Not at all.”
Nelly blinked as if remembering that she had a ward and he’d probably require
something like sustenance and company eventually “What time will Henry be here?
The pizza’s getting cold.”
Glancing at the clock, Vlad said, “About a half hour from now. I’m going to
warm up some blood after he gets here.”
Then, Otis’s face suddenly dropped and all traces of joy were erased in an
instant. Before Vlad could ask what was wrong, he heard Vikas’s voice in his
thoughts. “Come, Mahlyenki Dyavol, something terrible has happened. I need
you and your uncle both. Get here as soon as you are able. It’s urgent.”
His voice sounded shaken and gruff in Vlad’s mind, as if his thoughts had been
full of sorrow. Vlad looked at Otis, who was placing a trembling kiss on Nelly’s
hand. “We have to go. Vikas needs us. And I’m afraid I don’t know how long we’ll
be.”
Nelly looked heartbroken, but understanding. She nodded.
Otis led Vlad to the door, looking more troubled with every step he took. “Nelly...”
he said as he opened the door, turning back to her with an anxious step.
She looked up, blinking disappointed tears away, but didn’t speak.
“I love you.” Otis’s tone was brimming with meaning.
Vlad paused midstep and looked over at his aunt. A small smile found her lips. “I
love you too, Otis.”
Vlad was pretty sure that was the first time that either of them had admitted
it. It was sweet and wonderful, and Vlad could barely contain his hopes that
this would mean they really would be a family one day... if they weren’t
already.
They exchanged quiet smiles for a long time, until Vlad tugged Otis’s sleeve,
reminding him of Vikas’s silent call. Once he and Otis were in the car, Vlad
turned to his uncle. “Vikas sounded scared.”
“More than that, he sounded as if he were in anguish. Buckle up. I’m going to
drive fast.”
Otis backed out of the driveway faster than he ever had and before Vlad knew
it, they were speeding through Bathory, barely stopping at stop signs. Not for
the first time, Vlad wished they could use their vampire speed out in the open.
Finally, Otis parked at the curb and they exited the car. Vlad followed his
uncle’s lead around the house to the backyard, where they found Vikas digging
near the rosebushes.
He was standing at the bottom of a very deep, very wide hole, slamming a shovel
into the frozen earth with a chink and tossing piles of dirt next to the
hole. Occasionally, a brown, roseless thorn would catch his skin and tear it
open, but his wounds healed immediately and he didn’t seem to notice the thorns
at all. Nor did he seem to notice Vlad or Otis, who were standing by the hole,
looking very confused. Otis crouched down and placed a caring hand on Vikas’s
shoulder. Vikas threw it off and muttered, “Help me.”
Otis furrowed his brow. “Vikas, what’s happened?”
“Help me!” As he yelled, he threw an extra shovel to Otis, who caught it just
before it would have hit him. Without another word, Otis removed his jacket, handed
it to Vlad, and dropped into the hole, then began digging.
Vlad watched them dig for an hour, all the while wondering what they were
digging for. Then the realization hit him and he spoke, his words quiet in the
too-quiet night. “It’s a grave.”
Otis shot Vlad a look, then seemed to realize he was right. They both looked at
Vikas, who’d finished digging at last and wiped the sweat from his brow with
his sleeve. His haunted eyes moved to a lump in the shadows near the house. The
lump was hastily wrapped in heavy canvas, but Vlad spied a lock of hair
sticking out at one end. With a gasp, his hand found his mouth. He would’ve
recognized that hair anywhere. “Oh my god ... Tristian.”
When Vlad flicked his gaze back to Vikas, he saw Vikas’s shoulders slump and
his moist eyes drop to the hole he and Otis were standing in. “He left several
hours ago to retrieve household supplies from the store. When he didn’t come
back right away, I contacted him telepathically. His response was weak,
muffled, his thoughts clouded. Then everything went black, and the pain ... the
pain...”
Vlad furrowed his brow. He knew that pain. He’d been in Jasik’s mind when his
life had ended. The experience had scarred him. And Jasik was virtually a
stranger to him; he couldn’t imagine what it would be like to have been inside
his drudge’s mind, Henry’s mind, when he died. Losing a drudge was bad enough,
but witnessing it helplessly from inside his skull ... what an unimaginable
nightmare.
Otis climbed from Tristian’s grave and reached his hand down to help Vikas out
as well. It was only then that Vlad realized there was anything odd about this
scene at all. He frowned. “Why a grave, Vikas? Why not a pyre?”
Vikas spoke through tears. “Tristian was a good drudge, Mahlyenki Dyavol, but
he was human. We cannot honor him the way that we honor vampirekind.”
Together, the three of them laid Tristian to rest in the earth. Vlad thought
about asking if they should call the police, but he was pretty sure that would
bring about an amount of trouble that they just didn’t need right now. Besides,
they already knew who did it, even though they couldn’t really prove it. The
Slayer Society. Maybe one slayer in particular.
Actually, there was no “maybe about it. Joss had murdered Tristian. That much
was clear by the open wound on Tristian’s chest. But what Vlad wanted to know
was why?
Once the earth was restored, Vikas said, “We should act immediately.”
Otis’s tone was clipped, angry. Rightfully so. “He’s out walking alone. There’s
no time like the present.”
Vlad shook his head, trying to maintain reason. He’d already seen one dead boy
tonight. He didn’t want to see two. Besides, even though he hated Joss for
taking Tristian’s life, he also understood Joss’s anger toward vampirekind.
Vampires hadn’t exactly been nurturing toward Vlad—he could only imagine how
they treated slayers. So there was a reason that Joss did the awful things that
he did. Unforgivable, yes, but not completely without reason. “Wait. You don’t
know for sure that Joss did this. What if it was someone else? I mean, it could’ve
been some psycho.”
But even Vlad didn’t believe the words that were rolling off his tongue.
They both looked at him, incredulous, and then Vikas spoke, his voice grave,
bitter. “I found Tristian with a stake buried in his chest. And I know of no
other slayer in Bathory tonight.”
Vlad shot his uncle a look. “You can’t go after him, Otis. You can’t kill Joss.”
Vikas exploded. “I can and I will! He murdered my Tristian. He stole my drudge
away from me. Innocent, sweet Tristian. And you would have me sit idly by while
he toast to his kill? This is madness!”
Otis released a tense breath. “Calm, Vikas. I’m sure my nephew has his reasons.
What would you have us do, Vladimir?”
“Let me handle it.”
Vikas said something else loudly in Russian. Vlad didn’t know the language, but
he knew when someone was swearing at him.
Otis, who spoke Russian fluently, held up a hand to calm Vikas’s ranting. “What
do you mean, handle it? This isn’t a situation that calls for a light touch,
Vladimir. It calls for blood.”
Vikas growled behind him. “Much blood!”
“You’ll have blood, Otis, but let me handle it.” His eyes moved to Tristian’s
grave and back to Otis. “Please.”
Otis didn’t speak. Or rather, he didn’t speak out loud. It became very obvious
that he and Vikas were discussing something telepathically After a long while,
Vikas swore again in Russian and made his way into the house. Otis offered Vlad
a single nod and then followed Vikas inside.
Vlad left immediately. He searched the town, every street, every inch, until
finally, at 2 A.M., only the cemetery remained. He crossed under the archway
that marked the entrance and moved between the stones, and there, standing near
Vlad’s parents’ tombstone, stood Joss. The look on his face was one of respect.
He was gazing at the stone, looking unaware of Vlad’s presence, but something
about the feeling in the air told Vlad that Joss was very much aware that he
was near. Vlad approached him cautiously and stood beside him, looking down at the
stone.
Joss spoke calmly, as if they were continuing a conversation they’d begun
earlier that day. “Your parents, did they know?”
Vlad swept his eyes over his mother’s name. His heart skipped a beat. “About me
being a vampire? Well ... yeah. My dad was a vampire.”
“You mean your creator.”
“No. I mean my dad. He and my mom made me the same way your parents made you.”
“Gross.”
“Yeah.” He was hoping that Joss was referring to the fact that parents doing
anything at all required to make babies was gross, and not the fact that his
dad was doing just that with a human, but he suspected it was the latter. They
stood there silent for a long time, until Vlad finally said, “What are you
doing at my parents’ grave?”
Joss’s voice was calm. Too calm. For some reason, it reminded Vlad of Dorian. “I
was apologizing to your mother ... before I kill you.”
Vlad barely had time to notice Joss flip open his jacket and withdraw his
wooden stake from a leather holster on his belt. But once the stake was in Joss’s
hand, Vlad noticed—oh man, did he notice—and moved across the cemetery with
vampire speed. Joss blinked, and then realized that Vlad was standing ten
headstones away. A smirk touched his lips. He looked both challenged and
irritated. “You’ve learned a new trick.”
Vlad brushed his hair from his eyes. “That’s just a taste. I’m not the same
vampire I was when you backstabbed me freshman year.”
The corner of Joss’s mouth twitched subtly. “Good. Because I’m not the same
slayer I was. This time, you won’t get back up.”
Joss flew at Vlad faster than he ever had before, but it still wasn’t fast
enough. Vlad moved with vampiric speed, barely breaking a sweat, dodging Joss’s
attack. He played keep-away for a while, darting back and forth across the
graveyard, until an image solidified in his mind, one he couldn’t shake: the
image of Tristian, lying dead.
Joss had killed Tristian. Without reason. Without sense. All because he though
Tristian might be a vampire, like Vlad. He’d killed him, and now was hoping
that Vlad’s death would soon follow.
Enraged, Vlad grabbed Joss by the shirt. Joss swung forward, catching the
corner of Vlad’s mouth with his fist. Vlad threw him across the cemetery. Joss
hit a large tombstone and crumpled to the ground. Blood seeped from his mouth,
and his arm was bending at a weird angle.
As Vlad bent over Joss and retrieved the cell phone from his inside jacket
pocket, he whispered, “I know how you think of yourself as an extinguisher of
evil and all, but just so you know, Tristian was human. So that makes you a
murderer.”
He dialed 911 and when the operator answered Vlad wiped the blood from his lip
and said, “My friend’s been beaten up pretty badly. He needs an ambulance. We’re
at Long Road Cemetery in Bathory.”
Joss rolled onto his back with a moan. Vlad knelt down, the phone still to his
ear, and said, “It’s okay, Joss. Help is on the way.”
Joss was lying in the hospital bed, his left arm hooked up to an IV, his right
arm in a cast. Other than the broken arm and some bruised ribs, he was fine,
but the staff insisted on keeping him overnight for observation. Vlad sat in a
chair beside the bed, waiting for Joss to say something, to say anything,
really. Joss hadn’t spoken to him since they left the cemetery.
Finally, breaking the silence, Joss croaked, “I didn’t kill Tristian, Vlad. I
mean, he looked just like a vampire, and I probably would have eventually—but
only for good reasons, only to help people. But I didn’t. I swear.”
One look at Joss, at the tears welling in his eyes and spilling over onto his
cheeks, and he knew that there was no need for him to say anything at all to
hurt Joss. He was beating himself up enough already, over an act he’d never
committed. But if Joss didn’t kill Tristian—and really why deny it now, af ter
being beaten so badly? Vlad had no reason to doubt his claim—then who did? But
then, it was likely a lie. One that would ensure he’d live through the night.
Vlad swallowed hard, trying to calm the bitter anger that threatened to well up
inside of him. “Otis and Vikas wanted to come after you, but I stopped them.”
“I guess I’d have more than just a broken arm if you hadn’t.”
“You’d be dead.” Their eyes met and both nodded in agreement.
Joss swallowed hard, his voice raspy, as if he were either very thirsty or on
the verge of tears. “Why did you stop them? Why are you here?”
“Believe it or not, despite everything you’ve done, despite everything that’s
happened, I still think of you as a friend, Joss. Besides, I wanted to do
something you wouldn’t do when you put me in the hospital.” Vlad chewed his
bottom lip for a moment, remembering his hospital stay, and how much it had
hurt that Joss refused to even acknowledge he felt even the tiniest bit bad for
almost taking Vlad’s life. It was awful, probably even worse than the physical
pain he’d endured. “I wanted to apologize.”
A look of immense shame crossed Joss’s face.
“I’m sorry I broke your arm, Joss. I’m sorry I put you in the hospital.”
Joss swallowed hard, trying to get his emotions under control. “I guess you
could’ve done worse.”
“Yeah. I could’ve.” Vlad was surprised how confident his words sounded, but it
was true. He was far more powerful than Joss now, and if he really wanted to,
he could kill him in an instant. “You swear on your sister’s soul you didn’t
kill Tristian?”
Joss’s eyes never left Vlad’s. “I swear it.”
Vlad grew quiet, thinking for a while. If it hadn’t been Joss, who else could
it be? Eddie Poe? Doubtful. Eddie was far weaker than Tristian. Another slayer?
Possibly. But who? Not Joss, that much was certain.
“And my dad’s journal. Did you take it?”
Joss’s eyes grew wide. “No. No, I didn’t. I don’t know anything about that.”
With a deep breath, he met Joss’s eyes and hoped for the impossible. “Joss, let’s
end this. Whatever this is between us, let’s just stop. You don’t try to kill
me anymore and I won’t be forced to defend myself. Let’s just get things back
to the way they used to be.”
“I can’t.”
“Joss—”
“No, you don’t understand. I can’t. If I don’t fulfill my duties, I’ll be
excommunicated from the Slayer Society, and they’ll cleanse Bathory of every
living being in sight just to be sure they got all of the vampires.” He shook
his head, his voice softening. “Besides, I made a promise to Cecile. It was my
fault she died. I was too scared to stop a vampire then. I’m not too scared
now. I have to keep going, Vlad.”
For a long time, neither spoke. Vlad thought about what Joss had said, about
the Slayer Society killing every living being in Bathory just to make certain
they’d rid the town of every vampire. He’d heard the love in Joss’s voice when
he spoke of his sister. They must have been very close. Then Vlad sighed,
resolving himself to whatever fate had in mind.
“Okay, Joss. Whatever has to happen, will happen.” He reached into his pocket
and withdrew Joss’s slayer coin. Then he turned it over in the light and placed
it neatly on Joss’s hospital bed, like some sort of peace offering.
Joss closed his hand over the coin and met Vlad’s gaze, an understanding
passing silently between them.
27
SCORE ONE FOR EDDIE POE
VLAD SLID OUT OF HENRY’S CAR and closed the door. Henry had barely cut
the engine when a group of girls met him by the driver’s side. Knowing it would
take Henry several minutes to peel himself away, Vlad shook his head and headed
across the parking lot, then up the front steps of Bathory High through a sea
of students. The first day back after winter break was always hectic, but today
was stressful too, knowing what awaited him in first period.
As he passed the small groups, several heads turned his way, but Vlad thought
nothing of it. His mind was really focused on just one thing: the huge exam
awaiting him in trigonometry. If he failed it, there was a good chance he might
flunk the entire semester. If he aced it, which was just about as close to
fiction as an idea could get, he’d likely pass. So today was really a life or
death kind of situation for Vlad. He had to do well on that test... or Nelly
was going to kill him.
He pulled open the front door and when he stepped inside, he couldn’t help but
notice that everyone seemed to be holding a school newspaper. And looking at
him. It was like a flashback in time to his freshman year, when Eddie had
published that blurry picture of him floating down from the belfry.
Eddie. Eddie knew about the belfry.
His thoughts turning back to the present, Vlad met the eyes of several of his
peers, and finally, his curiosity driven to the brink, Vlad pushed gently into
one mind after another. A jumbled stream of words filled his thoughts, pummeling
him like physical blows. “—monster.” “I had no idea ...” “— a killer
in our town?” “What a freakl” “That picture of him biting that girl...” “Vlad
is a vampire?”
With each word, Vlad’s eyes widened. He looked at the papers in their hands and
swallowed hard.
Oh no. Not this. Anything but this.
At the end of the hall stood a very smug-looking Eddie Poe. It was all Vlad
could do to restrain himself from racing down the hallway and breaking Eddie’s
nose.
Otis stepped out of his classroom and snatched one of the papers from Kelly
Anbrock’s hand. His eyes scanned the page and then, horrified, he looked up and
met Vlad’s gaze. Vlad didn’t need to read his thoughts to know what was
happening. Eddie had outed him as a vampire in the school newspaper. And by the
look in Otis’s eyes, he’d used Vlad’s name this time. Otis’s Adam’s apple
bobbed as he swallowed and he thought just two words to Vlad: “They know.”
Vlad tightened his grip on the handle on his backpack and threw a glance around
the hall at every single accusing gaze. His breathing picked up, his eyes began
to water, and just as Otis had said, “Don’t,” Vlad turned and bolted
back out the front door.
He raced down the front steps and the sidewalk away from the school. He thought
he heard Henry call after him, but couldn’t be sure, couldn’t care. Didn’t
care. Once he was clear of the school, he picked up the pace, moving as fast as
a vampire can move, whipping between houses, around trees, until he was safe in
his bedroom at last. There he paced back and forth, not knowing what to do. His
secret was out. Those who wouldn’t believe Eddie surely wouldn’t doubt Joss.
And Joss had made it abundantly clear last week that their friendship could not
be mended.
It was over. They’d won.
The only thing Vlad could think to do was get as far away from Bathory as he
possibly could.
He unzipped his backpack, dumping the contents on his bed. Then, with a
determined pace, he grabbed several items of clothing from his dresser and
closet, as well as the $54.38 from his secret box. It wouldn’t get him far, but
it was a start. Zipping the bag closed, Vlad considered writing a note for
Nelly, but nothing he could think to write would ever make her understand. He
threw his backpack over his shoulder and headed for the door.
A small breeze brushed his face and then Otis appeared, looking worried, but
not winded in the slightest. “You shouldn’t use your vampiric speed out in the
open like that, Vladimir. It could cause some raised eyebrows.”
“You said it yourself, Otis. They already know.” He set his jaw and fought back
tears. “I’m done hiding.”
Otis folded his arms in front of him. “But not done running, it seems. Where
are you going?”
“Away from here.”
“What about Nelly?”
“She’ll be fine. You’ll take care of her.”
“And Henry? What do you suppose it would do to a drudge to be abandoned by his
master?”
That gave Vlad pause, but only briefly. “I’ll release him before I go.”
“And me, Vladimir? Do you really think I’ll be okay without my nephew around?”
Hurt lurked in Otis’s eyes, blended neatly with concern. “Because if that’s
what you’re thinking, I can assure you that you’re wrong.”
“They know about me, Otis! What do you expect me to do?”
Otis quieted his voice, forcing his tone into something resembling calm, but it
was a falsehood, betrayed by the look in his eye. “I expect you to be a man and
face your problems head-on. Running away is never the answer.”
Vlad’s face grew hotter and in his imagination a couple hundred school papers
changed hands, chased by a murmur of gossip. They knew. They all knew. What
else was there to do but get away? He regarded his uncle with a glare. “What if
it is? What if the only way I’ll ever be happy or safe or okay again is if I
run away from Bathory and make a new life for myself somewhere else? What if I
can’t bear to see the way people will look at me now? What if I can’t stand to
hear them whispering about me?”
“How selfish of you, Vladimir. You’d abandon the woman who’s been a mother to
you these last seven years, who helped bring you into the world, and made
certain you were well-nourished since your very first intake of breath. You’d
tear away a part of your best friend’s soul. You’d rip yourself from my life,
taking with you any real meaning that I have found in all of Elysia. You would
do all of that because you’re afraid of the unknown?” Otis set his jaw and
shook his head curtly. “Very selfish, indeed.”
Selfish or not, Vlad was absolutely finished with this conversation. “Are you
done? I have to call a cab.”
Otis paused for a moment, but then moved out of Vlad’s way without saying a
word.
Vlad hurried down the steps, then turned and made his way into the kitchen
where he picked up the phone. As he dialed the number of the cab company, he
looked about the room. Memories filled him. Memories of countless breakfasts
with Henry after he stayed the night. Memories of holiday meals and baking
cookies with Nelly. Memories of his first dinner with Otis and threatening him
with a flash of fangs. This kitchen was important to him, the way that Nelly
was important to him. He pictured her finding out from Otis that he’d run away,
sobbing into a kitchen towel at the long plank table. She looked hollow, sad,
more lost than he ever cared to see her look. Vlad’s heart cracked, a small,
thin, crooked line, and good sense somehow managed to find its way in. He
returned the phone to its cradle and dropped his bag to the floor. His back to
the wall, he slid to the floor, tears escaping his frustrated eyes. With
shuddering sobs, Vlad broke down and cried into his hands.
“Vladimir.” Otis’s voice, much softer this time, as if he didn’t want to
interrupt.
Vlad looked up, not bothering to wipe away the tears that refused to stop
ebbing from his eyes. He was lost. He couldn’t stay here in Bathory, but he couldn’t
run away. He was trapped between what he loved and what he hated, with no way
out.
Otis crouched down beside him and handed him a handkerchief, understanding in
his eyes.
Vlad sniffled. “You would’ve let me go.”
“I did let you go.” Otis looked around the kitchen, then back to Vlad. “You
didn’t get very far.”
Vlad wiped at his eyes with the handkerchief and took a moment to steady his
breathing. “What am I going to do, Otis? They all know about me. Because of
Eddie, they all know.”
“I think you underestimate the ignorance of humankind. This will blow over,
Vlad. Give it time.”
“No. It won’t. It will change everything.” Vlad released a shuddering sigh. “One
thing’s for sure.”
Otis looked at him, his eyes full of curiosity. “What’s that?”
“I am never going back to Bathory High.”
28
THE EMPTINESS
VLAD STARED UP AT HIS BEDROOM CEILING, memorizing the small, crooked
crack in the plaster just over his bed, where he laid. He was trying very hard
not to think about what happened at school, and failing miserably. It was over.
His promise to his dad that he wouldn’t reveal his secret had been broken.
Everyone at school knew what he was. And soon, Elysia would descend on him for
breaking the law in a major way. It was so screwed up that all Vlad could do
was lie on his bed, stare at the ceiling, and wait for his world to crumble
into tiny little pieces.
There was a soft knock on the door. When Vlad didn’t answer, Otis opened the
door anyway and stepped inside, closing it quietly behind him. He stood there,
watching Vlad without speaking for several minutes. When Vlad refused to break
the silence first, Otis said, “Vladimir, it’s been two days. Nelly says you’ve
hardly eaten and barely left your room. She’s worried about you.”
Vlad stared straight ahead, drawing a line with his eyes along the crack in the
ceiling. Otis wasn’t telling him anything that he hadn’t already known.
After a pause, Otis ran a frustrated hand through his hair and sighed. “Come
back to school, Vlad. Please.”
Vlad swallowed hard, a small tear escaping his eye. It rolled down the side of
his head and settled on his earlobe. Wetting his dry, cracked lips, he opened
his parched mouth and said, “There’s nothing left for me there”
Otis watched him for a moment, then opened the door again. He hesitated in the
doorway for a moment, frustration ebbing from him. At last, he turned back to
Vlad. “I’m there.”
Without another word, Otis stepped out into the hall and closed the door behind
him.
Vlad lay still for a while, but finally sat up, forcing his attention away from
his flawed ceiling. He was hungry. And he couldn’t help but wonder if anything
good was on TV
29
AGAINST HIS WILL
WELL YOU CAN’T STAY HOME FOREVER!” Nelly’s voice had risen in both tone
and pitch to the point that Vlad was almost certain she was on the cusp of
shouting—some thing Nelly never did. He was still staring at her with a
confounded expression on his face when she pushed his backpack into his arms
and pointed at the front door. “March, Mister. Straight to school. And don’t
let me catch you skipping. You are done running from your problems and missing
out on your education.”
Vlad blinked. She sounded serious. Was she being serious? It had been three
days since everyone at Bathory High had learned his secret. She couldn’t
possibly expect him to go back to the stares and giggles, back to being the
walking freak show.
Nelly stomped over to the front door and opened it. “Go on.”
He blinked again. Oh crap, she really was serious! “Nelly, I—”
Then she did something that no words could defend against. She gave him that
look. That mom look. The one that said if Vlad didn’t get his butt out the
front door and fast, she was going to bury him in the backyard and plant
daisies over his remains.
With a heavy sigh, he slid the strap of his backpack over one shoulder and
stepped out onto the porch. Nelly promptly shut the door hard behind him. Not
quite slamming it, but threatening to. Then she locked it. He was going to
school, whether he liked it or not.
He watched the door for a moment in disbelief, contemplating what she might do
if he snuck in the back door, and then turned and moved down the steps. He’d
just stepped onto the walk when he spied a familiar figure standing outside the
gate. Joss was wearing a sheepish grin. His arm was still in a cast. “Hey,
Vlad.”
“Hey ... Joss.”
“Henry’s got a dentist appointment. I thought we’d walk to school together.”
Vlad parted his lips and made a sound that sounded like, “Ooookay.”
They crossed the street together and made their way down the sidewalk, toward
the school. Vlad had opted for the longer route to school for two reasons: 1)
He really wanted to delay going back to school, and 2) He was curious like
crazy why Joss was acting completely normal. After several long, silent steps,
Vlad cleared his throat and said, “So, what’s this about, anyway?”
“What do you mean?”
“What do I ...” Vlad ran a frustrated hand through his hair. “A week and a half
ago, you were trying to drive a stake through my chest, and now we’re walking
to school together as though nothing ever happened.”
Joss grew quiet, but Vlad could tell he was thinking of a way to phrase
whatever it was he was thinking. Finally, taking a deep breath, as if this
weren’t very easy for him either, he said, “The way I see it, day and night are
very different things ... just like us. So the way I figure it, maybe we should
take a break from trying to kill each another. During the day, we’ll be friends
... y’know? If you want, I mean.”
“And at night?”
“Foes. For the reasons we discussed in the hospital.”
They walked along in silence as Vlad mulled over the idea. In truth, he really
liked it, but he wasn’t sure if he could trust Joss. Not after everything that
had taken place between them. He shook his head, berating himself for making
himself vulnerable to the sadistic whims of a slayer, and said, “Okay. But you’ve
got to leave Otis and Vikas out of this. And no confrontations in Nelly’s
house. I don’t want her involved.”
“Okay. But you can’t hide inside Nelly’s house every night either.”
“Deal.” They approached the front of the school and Vlad slowed his steps. “Hey
Joss ... has anyone said anything about Eddie’s article lately?”
Joss smiled. Vlad couldn’t tell what his smile meant. “Everyone’s said
something, Vlad”
“Like what?”
But Joss was already up the steps and opening the front door.
Vlad took a brave breath and huffed up the stairs. Once he was inside, it
seemed like business as usual. Students were hurrying from their lockers to
first hour. Teachers were trying to keep the peace. The jocks were being jock-y
and the cheer-leaders were swooning at their jock-yness. The art kids were
sharing their sketchbooks with one another. It was a scene like any other
morning at Bathory High. Vlad was in shock. He’d fully expected torches and pitchforks.
A large wall of flesh slammed into Vlad’s side, knocking him off kilter. Tom
Gaiber snorted, “Watch where you’re going, goth boy.”
Bill Jensen snorted too. Vlad was beginning to think he was surrounded by
horses. Two large, annoying horses with bad body odor and low IQs. “You’re a
vampire, right? Show us your fangs, vampire boy.”
Vlad’s defenses raised, but he said nothing. Sometimes silence was your best
defense. Tom guffawed. “Yeah, you’re as much of a vampire as I am a werewolf.
And I’m not one.”
Resisting rolling his eyes was giving Vlad a migraine, so he closed them for a
moment instead. “Are you done yet? I have to get to class.”
Tom snorted. “Class? You’ve got none of that, loser.”
Thankfully, Mr. Hunjo appeared and shooed them both off with a warning glance
before they decided to beat some class into Vlad.
Vlad shot an expectant look at Joss, who smiled as he shuf fled the stack of
books in his hands. “Where’s Eddie?”
Joss shrugged. “He was expelled for writing a bogus article about a fellow
student—something Principal Snelgrove views as a form of bullying.”
And just like that, Vlad’s tension melted away. It was over. In a good way.
As Vlad and Joss walked into Otis’s classroom, Otis shot him a look that said
he doubted his nephew’s sanity. “Is this your way of handling it? A broken
arm and a mended friendship? I knew you went after him, but I assumed it was to
stop his heart from beating.”
Vlad cut Otis off with a crunch. It was none of his business anyway. Besides,
he wanted blood, he got it. He never said anything about death.
Otis looked at Joss and managed a somewhat pleasant tone. “Joss, it’s good to
see you back. I was worried something happened to you.”
Joss wasn’t smiling. “Something did, but I survived.”
“Well, it’s good to have you back. I trust you and your friend are ready for a
pop quiz.”
Vlad shot Otis a look before letting his eyes wander over to Meredith’s desk.
Sadly, he found it empty.
As if reading his thoughts, Joss leaned forward and said, “She’s out with mono.
Won’t be back until after spring break.”
Vlad nodded his thanks and then turned his attention back to the pop quiz that
had just been put on his desk. The air between him and Joss was strange,
awkward. Because even though they’d agreed not to kill each other during
daylight hours, there was always that other thing.
There was always the fact that both of them loved Meredith Brookstone.
30
THE PRAVUS
VIKAS RAN AT VLAD with the stake held high, but he didn’t just run, he
shifted in that superquick way that only vampires could move. For the evening,
they’d moved their training session to an old abandoned barn at the edge of
town. Vikas had said they’d require more space than the basement could supply.
He never mentioned that he wouldn’t be holding back at all and, if Vlad didn’t
defend, could seriously endanger his life.
In a flash, Vlad dodged his blow and spun around, ready for another attack.
“Good, Mahlyenki Dyavol. Excellent.” But no sooner had the compliment left his
lips than Vikas had leaped through the air and landed on top of Vlad, who hit
the ground hard, knocking the wind momentarily from his lungs. Vikas raised the
stake once more, a hopeful glimmer in his eye. He would not hold back, just as
a slayer wouldn’t hold back. He would not give up, just as a slayer wouldn’t
give up. He would never stop.
Vlad managed to slide his knee up between them and kicked Vikas backward. His
chest felt light, so much lighter than it ever had. Vlad felt a strange energy
pulse through him. He gave into its will, leaped to his feet, and snatched the
stake from Vikas’s hand almost without effort. Vikas came after him, but Vlad
was light ... so light and full of energy. He ran as hard and fast as he could
to the other end of the barn and, to his amazement, he kept going, running
halfway up the barn wall, its old boards creaking under his feet. He flipped
over then, planting his feet against a large beam, bouncing his way back and
forth between the wall and the beam until he was on the ground again and advancing
on Vikas. With a grin, he hit Vikas full force. Vikas fell to the ground and
Vlad brought the stake down, stopping before he broke the skin. Weirdly both
energized and exhausted, Vlad wiped the sweat from his brow and helped Vikas to
his feet. “How was that, old man?”
Vikas looked visibly shaken. He exchanged shocked glances with Otis, who stood
at the barn door and both shook their heads.
Vlad blinked, wondering if he’d done something wrong. “What? What is it?”
Otis stepped closer, slowly, carefully. After a moment, Vikas squeezed Vlad’s
shoulder. “We have never seen a vampire move in the way that you just moved.”
Vlad looked back and forth between them, confused. “But how can that be?”
Otis shook his head. “We don’t know.”
Vlad turned the corner, exhausted from training and wanting nothing more than
to go home and fall into his bed. He was so tired that it barely registered
that Dorian was waiting for him just around the bend. Gasping, he grabbed his
chest, feeling his heart hammer against his ribs in surprise. “Jeez, Dorian!
You almost scared me to death!”
“This fear is new to you? I was under the impression you’re always frightened
of me. Less so lately, but frightened, still.” He smiled his charming smile
and, once Vlad’s heart rate had settled, continued. “I’ve been trying to come
up with an answer to our plight, my young friend. I wanted to discuss it with
you.”
“We have a plight?” Vlad searched his exhausted mind for a bit, then nodded. “Oh,
you mean that whole you wanting to drink my blood and me being totally against
it thing.”
“That would be the one, yes.” Dorian closed his eyes for a moment and inhaled,
as if tasting the scent of blood in the air of Vlad’s hometown. When he opened
them again, he said, “Would you like to hear the solution I’ve come up with?”
Vlad chewed his bottom lip thoughtfully before answering with a nod.
“What if I allow you to control my actions? You can make me bite you as gently
as possible, drink as little as you deem fit, and stop me when you’d prefer.”
“No offense, Dorian, but that idea sucks.”
Dorian sighed. “You’re right. And to be frank, the only reason that I haven’t
forced you to my whims is that I have a sort of respect for you, Vlad ... that
and I am duty-bound. But even my appetite is not why I have come here tonight.
You have questions for me. So ... what would you ask of me?”
Vlad didn’t even want to know how Dorian knew that he’d been mulling over some
prophecy-based questions just hours before. But he was curious what Dorian
meant by being duty-bound. “What do you do all day, Dorian? Just wait around
for some sense that I might have questions for you?”
“Sometimes. I also travel the world. I’m rather fond of airplanes.”
“Don’t you spend time with family? Friends?”
“I visit my father, when he hasn’t much company, but as for friends ... well, I
don’t have any to speak of. Apart from a few bribery attempts from various
vampires over the years—D’Ablo being one of them—I haven’t spent extended time
with our kind. They ... dislike me.” He shrugged then, and changed the subject.
“About your questions ...”
Vlad chewed his bottom lip for a moment. It had never occurred to him how
lonely Dorian might be. Or maybe he wasn’t lonely. Maybe he was just bored a
lot. He thought for a moment before speaking. “Is the Pravus evil?”
Dorian cocked an eyebrow. “What a strange query, my young friend.”
Vlad shrugged. Strange or not, he needed to know if he was going to somehow
morph into this evil being, mad with power. “Well, people say that the Pravus
will rule over all vampirekind and enslave the human race, so ...”
“What people say this?”
“I don’t know. Vampire people. Vikas, for one.” Vlad was feeling oddly
frustrated and he wasn’t sure why, exactly. Maybe it was because he hadn’t
expected criticism or query in response to his simple question. “Is he wrong?”
Dorian raised a sharp eyebrow. “That’s difficult to say. Can you be more direct
in your questioning?”
Jeez. It was like talking to a Magic 8 Ball. With a sigh, Vlad pinched the
bridge of his nose and asked, “Will the Pravus rule over vampirekind and
enslave the human race?”
“He will do one out of necessity The other will be done in charity.”
“Which one will he ... I do out of necessity?”
“The Pravus will rule over vampirekind.”
Vlad’s heart thumped twice, hard. “And if I don’t want to?”
Dorian shook his head. “You’re asking my advice now, advice that I cannot give.”
After mulling this over for a bit, Vlad wondered aloud, “How can I enslave the
human race out of charity?”
Dorian narrowed his eyes, his attention waning. “Would you be opposed to
slitting open a vein and filling a cup? It would be cold, but I think it might
satiate my need.”
“No, Dorian.” He wouldn’t let Dorian feed ... and he would continue to keep
their interactions to himself. He wasn’t sure why, exactly, but Vlad wanted to
handle this on his own. Besides, Otis and Vikas had enough on their plates.
“You can’t blame a vampire for trying.” His sly smile slipped into a more
serious purse as he shook his head. “I must leave. The urge to feed from you is
becoming too intense. It’s almost unbearable now.”
Vlad nodded at this, still questioning Dorian’s motives. “Does this mean you’re
not going to attack me anymore?”
Dorian flashed him a smile as he turned to leave. “For now, my young friend.
Sleep well.”
31
MIDNIGHT MASQUERADE
VLAD FINISHED JOTTING DOWN THE DETAILS of his day and closed his journal
with a snap. It was getting full. Soon there would be no more room to write at
all.
But there was no time for musing about how full his journal had gotten. Vlad
had an appointment. A very important appointment. One he’d kept almost every
night and certainly every weekend night for the past four months. In fact, the
past few months had been oddly full of btiss—no sign of D’Ablo, no interference
by Dorian, not even so much as a sniffle from Eddie. Vlad’s life felt, for lack
of a better word, normal.
He dropped his journal on the chair and made his way to the arched windows,
then stepped from the belfry and floated gently down to the ground. He had made
it a block from school when a wooden stake whizzed by his head and stuck fast
in a tree trunk.
The corner of his mouth rose in a smirk before he turned around. That one was
close. But he knew Joss wouldn’t get it much closer. Ever since the hospital,
their fights were the equivalent of sparring and showing off.
Vlad turned, searching the darkness for Joss. When he found him—merely a shadow
within the shadows—he darted forward with vampire speed, clotheslining the
slayer. Joss made an oof sound and fell to the ground.
It was like a play, a theatrical representation of what vampires and slayers
were meant to do. The players moved back and forth across the stage, knowing
that when the sun rose, when the curtain came down, life would resume and the
play would be all but forgotten.
As a courtesy, neither of the players mentioned Meredith.
A bead of sweat dripped into Vlad’s left eye, but he brushed it away with the
back of his hand and high kicked Joss in the center of his chest. Joss did a
windmill kick, knocking Vlad’s feet out from under him. But neither stayed on
the ground for very long.
Vlad took to the trees, hopping almost silently from treetop to treetop in a
circle around Joss, who stood at the ready scanning the darkness for any clue
of where he’d gone. In a breath, Vlad dropped from a branch, ripped the stake
from the tree’s trunk and slashed forward, stopping with the sharp, silver
point pressing into Joss’s back.
The sun peeked over the horizon. Joss turned with a grin, taking his stake and
slipping it into the leather holster on his belt. Normalcy returned to the
stage. “Morning, Vlad.”
Vlad could barely contain a chuckle. “Morning, Joss. How was your night?”
“Oh, not bad. Had to fend off this vicious bloodsucker, but that’s about it.”
He shrugged casually, a twinkle in his eye. It was so good to see the old Joss
again, the one from before Joss had learned Vlad’s secret. But really, their
friendship was even better now. No more hiding things, no more lies. Joss knew
Vlad was a vampire, and though he wasn’t okay with it, he was okay with Vlad.
Vlad smirked. “Bloodsucker, eh?”
Joss straightened his shoulders in an effort to make himself look bigger,
tougher. The scary thing is, it worked. Nobody would’ve pegged Joss as a
muscular kinda guy, but in his position, he had to be. “More like a mosquito,
really. Bothersome, but no real threat to me.”
He rolled his eyes in response. “You had it easy. Some guy kept trying to poke
me with a toothpick.”
They locked eyes and laughed out loud. Then Joss slugged him gently in the
shoulder and said, “You comin’ over for breakfast?”
“Actually, I have to pack.”
They both knew what he was packing for. They both knew Otis’s trial was
tonight, but neither wanted to talk about it. Joss had pretty much decided that
he loathed every fiber of Otis’s being, and Vlad just wanted to forget the
trial was coming up at all.
A look of sympathy came over Joss’s face. “Oh. Well ... see ya.”
Vlad walked home alone, and quietly stole upstairs to his bedroom. A heavy
feeling filled his chest. He was escorting Otis to his death today, and no one—not
Nelly not Henry, not anyone but the vampires involved—knew that it was coming.
Through his open bedroom door, he heard Nelly and Otis talking at the bottom of
the stairs. Nelly’s voice sounded clueless and concerned. “Promise you’ll take
care of him and hurry back soon.”
Otis didn’t speak for several seconds, then finally lied as well as he was
able. “We’ll be back before you can miss us.”
As he listened to Otis ascend the stairs, a horrifying thought occupied his
mind.
He was about to lose a father for the second time.
32
THE TRYING OF OTIS OTIS
I MUST ADMIT, I DO FEEL A BIT BETTER about your letting Joss survive
after yesterday’s test.” Otis’s tone matched the bemused smirk he wore. He was
in an awfully good mood, considering they were in the midst of packing for a
trip that likely would end in his demise.
“What’s with all these quizzes, tests, and extra assignments lately, anyway? Am
I being punished for letting Joss live?” Vlad tossed some socks into his duffel
bag and shot Otis a mock-angry look. “Oh, I see. That’s your plan, isn’t it? Do
me in with a bunch of quizzes. Bore me to death.”
“If I wanted to do you in, Vladimir, I can think of a few other ways.”
“Don’t I have enough people after me, Otis? Joss, Principal Snelgrove...”
“Don’t forget D’Ablo.”
“There’s somebody I could live without.” Vlad furrowed his brow. “Speaking of
which, he’s been decidedly absent for a while now. Quiet, compared to how he
usually is. I don’t trust it.”
Otis folded a T-shirt and placed it in Vlad’s duffel bag. “Think he’s working
on some sordid plan to do you in?”
“Count on it. I’m that guy’s favorite hobby.”
“Maybe he’s changed.”
They exchanged looks and burst out laughing.
Vlad shook his head. “The question isn’t if he’s planning anything ... it’s what.”
A smile danced on Otis’s lips. “You’re very wise for being only sixteen years
of age.”
Vlad met his smile with one of his own. “I learned from the best. This really
old guy I know, goes by the name Otis. You might know him.”
Otis rolled his eyes. “I’m hardly old.”
“Oh, really? What year were you born?”
“Age is more than just a number, Vladimir.”
Vlad grew quiet for a moment, thinking about the immense age difference between
Otis and Nelly. He wondered if he would just go on aging or if at some point in
his life, time would freeze for him as well. “Have you told Nelly? Y’know, that
you might not be coming back?”
“No. There’s no need to upset her right now. She’ll learn of my death soon
enough.” His words seemed so final, like there wasn’t even a remote chance that
he’d survive his trial. He withdrew a parchment envelope from his inside jacket
pocket and handed it to Vlad. “If you would. It’s for Nelly. To explain why you’ve
returned home without me.”
“But, Otis. .. ”
“Please, Vladimir.” Otis’s somber gaze showed that he meant business. It also
meant that he didn’t want to entertain any far-fetched notions of him possibly
surviving his trial proceedings. “For me.”
Vlad gripped the envelope in his hand and offered his uncle a small nod. Just
moments ago they were laughing, and now, a solemn feeling hung in the air. He
would be escorting Otis to his funeral in just a few hours.
“Who wants cookies? I just pulled some out of the oven, and I thought you boys
might...” Nelly’s voice was almost singsongy as she entered the room. Her face
dropped as she looked at each of them. “What’s wrong? You both look upset.”
Vlad and Otis exchanged looks and at once, Otis said, “Not a thing, darling.
Vlad’s just feeling rather sullen about going on another trip without you. I
must admit, I share his troubles. Is that chocolate chip I smell?”
Nelly’s smile returned and she held up the plate of freshly baked goods. Otis
plucked one from the plate and took a bite. “Mmmm. Warm chocolate chip cookies.
Not even AB negative can compare.”
Nelly practically floated down the stairs and, just before he turned to follow,
Otis flashed Vlad a look that said everything, without speaking or using
telepathy. Don’t ruin this day for her. Give her one last moment with
me to hold onto. Please.
Before zipping up the duffel bag, Vlad slipped Otis’s letter inside and hoped
beyond hope that Nelly would never have to see it. He carried the bag
downstairs and dropped it next to the front door before retiring to the kitchen
for a few cookies of his own. Once he was there, he put on a pleasant smile and
endured chatter about the vacation Otis and Nelly had been thinking about. He
pretended that Otis was really coming back from New York and that when he did,
he was going to propose to Nelly and they were going to live happily as a
family. He pretended that everything was just fine, and that he and Otis had
years left together, and after he pretended for a while, he began to believe
it.
That is, until he saw the sad glimmer in Otis’s eyes when Nelly wasn’t looking.
Then he knew the truth. That Otis really was going to his death. That they
would never be a family and that he would be the one to tell Nelly of Otis’s
passing. His heart felt lifeless and heavy, hollow and cold. There was nothing
to look forward to now. Otis Otis, the strange teacher in a purple top hat who’d
stepped into his life as a threat and was now his uncle, his mentor, his
friend, was about to leave him forever. And there was nothing anybody could do
about it.
“Vladimir.”
Vlad looked up from his tormented, distracted thoughts to Otis, who smiled and
squeezed his shoulder. “I’ll miss you too.”
A half hour later, after they’d eaten all the cookies they could eat, Otis
kissed Nelly goodbye while Vlad loaded his bag into the car. As if in a hurry
to get his demise over with, Otis all but ran down the front steps and slid
into the driver’s seat. He barely spoke all the way to Stokerton International
Airport. He didn’t utter a word during the entire flight. He grunted V Bar’s
address to the cabbie once they left baggage claim at LaGuardia, but all the
way there, he did not speak. He did, however, grow paler and paler the closer
they got to his trial.
“Vladimir,” he finally managed to say once they’d exited the cab in front of V
Bar. “Avenge my death, would you?”
Vlad was still blinking at Otis’s casual tone when Otis stepped into the bar.
He’d said it like it was an afterthought. Pick up some milk on your way home,
don’t forget to pay the electric bill, and oh, be a dear and avenge my death
for me, would you? But then, he couldn’t imagine what must have been going
through his uncle’s mind at the moment. Vlad shook his head and followed Otis
inside.
Enrico greeted them both with handshakes. He offered them drinks, but neither
Vlad nor Otis was feeling particularly hungry. After a small amount of chatter,
Enrico said, “It’s about that time, my friend.”
He led them outside and down through the cellar door on the sidewalk, into the
cellar. Once Enrico touched the glyph that opened the hidden room, Vlad noticed
that something was different. The large table was covered with a black cloth.
Several large candleholders stood in the corners of the room, casting a soft glow
over the gathered group. It looked as if they were attending a funeral. In a
way, Vlad thought with a gulp, they were.
The chairs that had been placed at the back of the room had been removed.
Apparently, there would be no audience to Otis’s trial.
Even Dorian, who’d seemed unusually kind at the pretrial, was decidedly absent
from these proceedings.
Once they were shut inside the room, the small girl named Em spoke. “The
council calls Otis Otis before us. You have been accused of killing a fellow
vampire, your father, Ignatius; of disfiguring a council president; of
revealing your true nature to two humans—one Nelly, last name unknown, and one
Henry McMillan; and of aiding and abetting the known fugitive Tomas Tod. How do
you plead?”
Otis’s Adam’s apple bobbed as he swallowed hard. “Innocent of all charges, good
council.”
There was a murmur among the council and a distinct feeling of unease in the
air. Even Vlad raised an eyebrow at his uncle’s words. Otis was definitely
innocent of blasting D’Ablo’s hand off (that was Vlad’s fault) and of aiding
and abetting Vlad’s dad (who was no longer with the living, but some people
apparently cannot take a hint), but letting Nelly and Henry in on the secret
that he was a vampire? Oh yeah. Way guilty. Still, Vlad admired his uncle’s
guts. It had to take a lot of them to face the Council of Elders, let alone lie
to them.
Em raised her eyebrows a bit and then said, “As head of this council, I am
dismissing the charge against you of taking a fellow vampire’s life. Ignatius
had a bounty on his head, placed there by this council, and as such, you are
due the reward monies from collecting on that bounty.”
Otis looked surprised and at the same time, mildly relieved. “I’d like the
monies placed in a trust for my nephew’s college fund, if the council would see
to it.”
With nods from several members, Em said, “Your request is granted. Five hundred
thousand dollars will be placed in trust for your nephew’s college fund.”
D’Ablo stood, eliciting disapproving glances from almost every member of the
council. “On the charge of disfiguring a council president, I call a witness.
Vladimir Tod, take the stand please.”
Vlad shot a glance at Otis, whose mouth pursed some, but he didn’t make eye
contact. Then Vlad crossed the room and took a seat on the chair to the left of
the council. Once he was seated, D’Ablo unwrapped the stump that used to be his
hand and held it up for all to see. From the looks of it, it had healed up
perfectly; there was no trace of a scar. There was also no trace of a hand,
which was D’Ablo’s primary concern, Vlad would have bet. “I give you exhibit A.”
The room was quiet. Too quiet, considering that no one was supposed to know
about D’Ablo’s missing hand. Vlad felt his insides sour. Something wasn’t right
here. Why wasn’t anyone crying out for D’Ablo to be removed as council
president? Why, all of a sudden, was D’Ablo’s disfigurement no big deal?
The room was so quiet for so long that Vlad was beginning to wonder if D’Ablo
was ever going to ask him a question. Then, as if suddenly pleased with
himself, D’Ablo flashed a small smile at Otis and turned to Vlad. “You were
there the night my hand was permanently removed from my arm, yes?”
“Yes.”
“And precisely how was my hand destroyed?”
“By the ...” Vlad paused for a moment, trying to see exactly where D’Ablo was
going with this. He couldn’t pin the loss of his hand on Otis, and he certainly
couldn’t count on Vlad to pin it on Otis either. “By the Lucis.”
“And who was it that used the Lucis against me that night, obliterating my hand
and leaving me disfigured?”
To be honest, that was Vlad. But Vlad wasn’t sure where D’Ablo was going with
his line of questioning. He glanced at Otis, hesitating with the answer stuck
in his throat.
D’Ablo took a step closer and hissed, “Stop protecting him, Vlad. Your uncle
broke into the Stokerton council building and viciously attacked me with the
most dangerous weapon known to vampirekind, didn’t he? If allowed to live, Otis
will try to finish the job, won’t he?”
He couldn’t take it anymore. There was no way he was going to let this pompous
windbag make his uncle take the fall. Vlad stood. “No! It wasn’t Otis and you
know it. It was me, okay? I ruined your hand. But you—”
D’Ablo grinned broadly, turning back to the council. “I move to clear Otis Otis
of the second charge.”
Otis released an uneasy sigh.
Vikas said, “Motion granted. On the third charge of revealing your true nature
to two humans, I present myself as a witness and attest that I have spent much
time with Otis and the two aforementioned humans. They believe that Otis is
very much human. I would wager my seat on this council on it. I move to clear
Otis Otis of the third charge.”
He was lying. Everyone knew he was lying. But still Em said, “Motion granted.
On the charge of aiding and abetting Tomas Tod ...”
“A ridiculous charge, good council.” Enrico’s voice piped up from somewhere
behind Vlad.
“Enrico, it is only out of our deep respect and admiration for you that this
council allows your presence at these hearings. Speak out of turn once more and
you may have charges levied against you for interference.” Em’s eyebrows were
brought together in irritation. She meant business. She looked at the papers on
the table in front of her and said, “Now, on the charge of aiding and abetting
Tomas Tod ... I am under the impression that Mr. Tod is alive and well and
fleeing his own charges. Is this true?”
Otis wet his lips and said, “As I explained to the Stokerton council four years
ago, Tomas Tod perished in a fire at his home in Bathory.”
A low murmur flowed through the council. Clearly, something was up.
After muttering quietly to Vikas and listening to his response, Em nodded. She
turned to D’Ablo with a sneer. “D’Ablo, why hasn’t this council heard news of
this report prior to today? If the accused has presented your council with such
a theory, it is to be investigated thoroughly before charges can be brought
upon him.”
Vikas suppressed a smirk. “If it pleases the rest of the council—”
“I believe Otis has had quite enough help from you, Vikas,” Em snapped.
Vikas held up his hands in a relenting gesture. “I was merely going to suggest
that you ask Vladimir about his father. He stands as witness to Tomas’s demise.”
When Em met Vlad’s eyes, he was struck by the age and wisdom that lurked within
hers. He cleared his throat. “I found my father and mother burned to death in
their bed, where I’d left them alive that morning. It’s true. My dad is ... he’s
no longer with us.”
“I see.” Em turned to her fellow council members. They spoke for a long time in
whispers and murmurs. At one point, D’Ablo’s whispered voice rose above the
others, but Vlad still couldn’t make out what they were saying.
“Otis Otis.” Otis looked up, his eyes sunk in, his lips trembling ever so
subtly. He didn’t seem to be breathing. Horrible, seemingly unending tension
hung in the air as everyone waited for Em to speak again. This was it. This was
the moment that would steal Otis away from Vlad. Vlad’s heart had ceased
beating as he waited for the guillotine blade to fall, severing him from his
uncle forever. The corners of Em’s mouth rose slightly. “You are hereby cleared
of all charges. May the blessings of Elysia follow you now and always.”
Otis inhaled at last, tears shimmering in his eyes. Vlad all but flew across
the room to hug him. Otis was going to be just fine.
“The council calls Vladimir Tod before us.”
Vlad’s heart shot into his throat.
Otis looked up from their embrace. “What?”
Vikas snapped his eyes to Em. “What?”
But the smirk on D’Ablo’s face said it all.
33
PROBABLY THE WORST TEN MINUTES EVER
GLANCING BETWEEN OTIS AND VIKAS, Vlad slowly stepped forward and met the
eyes of Em, the only other teenage vampire he’d ever encountered. Except she
was old. Way old. The oldest vampire in existence. Without batting an eye, Em
spoke, all business. “Vladimir, you have been accused of disfiguring a council
president, of revealing your true nature to three humans—one Nelly, last name
unknown, one Henry McMillan, and one Joss McMillan—of leading the vampire Jasik
to his death via mind control, and entering into a romantic relationship with a
human—one Meredith Brookstone. As your father is deceased, you will also stand
trial for your father’s crime of the same nature—a romance with one Mellina
Tod. How do you plead?”
Vlad blinked, unable to comprehend what she was saying, what was happening. Was
she even speaking English? “I ... what? Henry is my drudge and Joss is a
slayer. How they count as part of—”
“Based on your own admission here today, you are found guilty of the charge of
disfiguring a council president. On the charge of revealing your true nature to
three humans—”
“I stand witness to the fact that both the boy named Henry and the boy named
Joss know Vlad’s true nature. If Jasik were here, he would attest to that as
well. And let me assure you that I can stand as witness to the third charge
also.” D’Ablo’s shoulders were back, a sneer on his face.
Vlad’s stomach shrank. Oh no. No, no, no. D’Ablo had set him up. Otis’s whole
trial was just some sadistic way to get to Vlad. And if that were true ...
Vikas being poisoned, his dad’s journal, Tristian’s death ... it must all have
been D’Ablo’s doing, or someone working for D’Ablo all along. He shot a glance
at his nemesis, knowing that D’Ablo was somehow responsible for all of it, all
of Vlad’s pain and anguish. Why was he even a bit surprised?
Em raised a sharp eyebrow. “And this ... Nelly?”
D’Ablo dropped his gaze from hers, but only briefly. “I have no knowledge of
her beliefs concerning Vladimir Tod.”
“Noted.” Em turned back to Vlad, who was inwardly plotting D’Ablo’s painful
demise. “This council finds you guilty of revealing your true nature to two
humans and of causing the death of the vampire Jasik.”
The few gathered started whispering among themselves. Vlad didn’t have to
strain to hear what they were saying. They spoke of his impending death. Vlad
shuddered.
Otis cried out, “This is madness! He’s just a boy!”
Enrico moved forward and placed a calm hand on Otis’s shoulder.
Vlad met Em’s sea green eyes and held her gaze for a moment before speaking. “Excuse
me, but I never got a pretrial. According to the Compendium of Conscientia,
all accused vampires must undergo a pretrial.”
Em set her jaw, as if bothered slightly by the knowledge that he’d read the
book. “That law governs vampires. And you are half-human.”
“By that logic, any sentence you give won’t matter.” He shook his head. This
was going nowhere fast. And it didn’t matter what Vlad said, didn’t matter what
arguments he brought forth, Em wouldn’t hear him. She’d already made up her
mind about that.
The corners of Em’s mouth rose in a small smile. “I assure you, it will.”
“So you can pick and choose when to acknowledge I’m a vampire and when to
acknowledge I’m less than that? That’s not fair.” His voice was rising in
upset, but he didn’t care. His thoughts raced back to the gathering of vampires
this past fall. There had been speculation about Em—that she might be one of D’Ablo’s
followers. If that was true ...
“Young one, life isn’t fair.” She picked up a pen and scribbled something on
the papers in front of her, dismissing him.
D’Ablo was practically glowing.
Vlad hissed, “What is D’Ablo giving you to make this okay in the eyes of
vampiric law, Em? Or rather ... what is he holding over your head?”
Em snapped her eyes up. They gleamed with anger and a hint of insult. “On the
charge of entering into a romance with a human ...”
Vlad felt Em slip into his mind and shuffle through his memories. It was
against the rules of the courtroom, but Em was beyond the law, beyond any law.
And she would stop at nothing to satisfy the wishes of her cult leader. Rules,
laws were in place for a reason, but apparently all bets were now off. Images
of Meredith passed through Vlad’s thoughts against his will. Their first kiss.
Their first dance. Walking her home. Their breakup.
Ignoring Vikas’s pleas, Em consulted the rest of the council quietly before
speaking again. “Vladimir Tod, you are guilty on all counts but one, and so you
are sentenced to death. As this council is mercifully understanding that you
are yet a child, we grant you one week to get your affairs in order. This
council is adjourned.”
Vlad snapped his eyes to D’Ablo. “It was never Joss. It was you. Vikas, the
journal, Tristian. Even Otis’s trial wasn’t your goal—but you knew it would get
me here. Why?”
D’Ablo waited until the room was nearly empty before he responded with a smirk.
“Again with your presumptions, Master Pravus.”
“Why?” Vlad set his jaw, almost growling the word.
D’Ablo paused for the span of two heartbeats. “To put it simply, you destroyed
my dagger and I knew that if you managed to escape the rest of the ritual, I
would need a fail-safe at the ready. If I can’t have your status, Master Pravus
... no one can.”
He walked out of the room and Vlad wished for the first time that he could turn
back the clock and fire the Lucis straight at D’Ablo’s heart.
34
GOING HOME
VLAD SLUMPED IN HIS SEAT on the plane, leaning his forehead against the
plastic wall by the tiny window to his right, staring at the clouds outside. He’d
never noticed how fluffy clouds were or how sometimes, when you were soaring
miles above them, they looked exactly like a soft blanket of snow. He’d also
never noticed how beautiful snow was. Or even ... Snow. He could picture her
now, her pale skin, her black hair, her painted lips. So loyal, so trusting. In
perfect contrast to Meredith.
Meredith ... who wore pink and always had a slight tan.
Meredith ... who wanted nothing to do with him.
And Snow.
Beside him, Otis shifted so that he was facing Vlad, as if that would make
carrying on a conversation easier. But Vlad didn’t want to talk. He didn’t feel
like talking. All he wanted to do was think about how pretty the world really
was and how much he was going to miss being a part of it.
“Vladimir, please try not to worry. Vikas has assured me that he will do
everything in his power to prevent your sentence from being carried out, and
Dorian has even volunteered to step in and make the council truly listen to
your appeal. You’re going to be fine.”
What Otis seemed to be forgetting was that if D’Ablo was smart enough to
arrange Vlad’s trial in secrecy, he was probably smart enough to know that
Dorian would volunteer to help Vlad out of his sentencing.
Vlad watched out the window, looking for even a small break in the clouds.
There was none.
Otis must have taken the hint, because he didn’t speak for the rest of the
plane ride. Two hours later, the plane landed on the runway at Stokerton
International Airport. Together, they wandered over to baggage claim to collect
their bags. They chatted but didn’t say anything of consequence. Vlad had sunk
too deep into his gloom to carry on any conversation with substance. As they
moved through the security gate, Vlad lugging his heavy duffel along behind
him, Otis paused midstep.
Vlad followed suit, raising an eyebrow at his uncle, whose face had gone
completely white. “Otis? You okay?”
“Yes. I’m ... I’m fine. Take my bag, will you?”
But Vlad didn’t have a chance to answer. Otis dropped his bag on the floor and
hurried through security, where Nelly was waiting. She moved to hug him, but he
dropped immediately to his knees. He looked like a man in dire need, pleading
before the only person in the world who could help him. Nelly’s eyes moved to
Vlad and then back to Otis on the floor in front of her.
Vlad dragged the bags closer. He’d never seen his uncle look so scared.
“Damn the laws, Nelly, and damn the legal system too. I love you. I can’t stop
loving you just for fear of being put to death by a corrupt government. I need
you.” His eyes shined with tears, as if he was terrified of her response. From
his inside jacket pocket, he withdrew a black velvet box. “Will you be my wife?”
Nelly’s eyes shined too, but hers were shining with joy. She bent down, hugging
him tightly. She didn’t have to say yes. And Vlad could tell by the way Otis
swept her up in his arms and kissed her that they’d be married soon.
He only hoped it would be before his sentence was carried out.
And that ... was highly unlikely.
35
A SLAYER’S LAMENT
JOSS PLUCKED THE PARCHMENT from the table in frustration, rereading what
he had already read five times, each time hoping the words would be different.
At the top of the letter was the seal of the Slayer Society: S.S. At the bottom
was their creed: FOR THE GOOD OF MANKIND.
His eyes moved over the page slowly, searching for even a hint that the letter
wasn’t authentic. But it was.
Joss,
It has come to our attention that you have not yet fulfilled your recently
assigned duties. While we appreciate the detailed reconnaissance that you have
faithfully provided us with, the vampire that you have been sent to dispatch
remains alive, and according to our sources, there are at least
two other known vampires residing there in Bathory. We are deeply disappointed
in your lack of progress and have convened in your absence to discuss a new
plan of action. As you insist against our gathered intelligence that the
vampire you have been sent to kill has eluded you, and due to your past
confusion with referring to the vampire known as Vladimir Tod as your “ friend,”
we have determined that if you do not fulfill your obligation to mankind and
this Society by dispatching these horrendous creatures by the end of the school
year, the town of Bathory will be cleansed. The choice is yours, slayer.
The letter was unsigned, but Joss didn’t need signatures to know who had sent
it. The Slayer Society was coming. And like the village of Jeremiah’s Lot in
Vermont, the ship Mary Celeste—both places where many people had
seemingly disappeared overnight—and many others both before and since, the
Society was planning to extinguish the entire town of Bathory, just to make
certain they rid it of every vampire in it.
Aunt Matilda, Uncle Mike, Mom, Dad, Henry, Vlad, Meredith. Everyone. All dead.
And there was nothing Joss could do to stop it ... short of killing the
vampires himself.
36
THE GREATEST GIFT
SMALL DROPS OF RAIN WERE FALLING in the alley behind The Crypt, tapping
Vlad gently on the shoulder, as if urging him to move things along, get this
over with as quickly and as painlessly as possible. Behind his back, Vlad held
a long-stem blood-red rose. He squeezed the stem in his palm out of
anxiousness, its thorns digging into his flesh, piercing the skin. The door
opened and, finally, Snow joined him.
She looked pretty as ever, with her dark eyes and curious smile. Tilting her
head up, she smiled as raindrops danced on her skin. “I love the rain.
Especially when it’s warm like this. Don’t you?”
In truth, Vlad hadn’t really thought much about the rain. He couldn’t even
think about it much now, even as it dripped onto his shoulders and pasted his
long black bangs against his pale forehead. All he could really think about was
the decision he’d made on the plane, what he came here to do, and how very much
he felt for Snow. He loved her. Against his will, he loved her. Even though he
still loved Meredith too.
Wetting his lips, he said, “Did you miss me while I was away?”
She smiled brightly, the light of her obvious happiness shining in her eyes. “Of
course I did. I’m really glad you’re back. After what you said the last time we
talked, I wasn’t sure you’d be coming back at all. What about you, did you miss
me at all?”
Vlad didn’t answer her question. Instead, he said, “I have a gift for you,
Snow. Close your eyes.”
Her cheeks were slick with rain; her black eyeliner smudged some under her
eyes, making her look raccoonlike. She moved closer and Vlad felt the warmth of
her skin from even a foot away. She closed her eyes, her lips curled up in a
trusting smile. He remembered what it had been like to kiss Snow, to have her
lips pressed against his, to feel warm and happy and confused and frightened.
The memory was what he focused on as he pulled the rose from behind his back.
Ever so gently, he pushed the petals to her nose. She inhaled and opened her
eyes, taking the bud in her hand. “Oh, Vlad, that’s so sweet! It’s beautiful!”
Vlad shook his head slowly, his fangs slipping from his gums. “That’s not the
gift, Snow. This is.”
He grabbed her by the shoulders forcibly ... unlike he’d ever grabbed her
before. He pulled her close, determined. Determined not to go back on his
decision, determined to do the right thing, no matter the cost. She gasped but
didn’t fight him, and Vlad closed his mouth over her neck, popping his fangs
through her smooth, pale flesh to the rushing river of crimson within. He
forced himself not to drink, but oh, how he wanted to, how he yearned to
swallow every drop of her blood. With tears escaping his eyes, he fed his
intent into the wound, releasing Snow as his drudge.
When he finished, he pulled away and she slumped against him, weakly clutching
the rose in her hand, the same as she did whenever he fed from her. Maybe it
was the bite that made her weak. Or maybe it was him. Vlad helped her gently to
the ground and placed a small, adoring kiss on her forehead. He whispered, “Goodbye,
Snow. You deserve to have someone who loves you, who really loves you ... not a
monster like me.”
Then he straightened, wiping her blood from the corner of his mouth, and walked
out of the alley—and away from Snow—forever.
37
SAYING GOODBYE
HOW LONG WILL YOU BE GONE?” Vlad climbed higher, just one more branch,
and settled onto the old oak in his backyard, dangling his tiny, eight-year-old
feet, trying hard not to look down. He couldn’t go as high as Henry, no matter
what Henry said. It was too scary.
Henry sat in the crook much higher than Vlad, looking out over the yard without
fear. He shrugged. “I dunno. My mom says we’ll be visiting for a while.”
Vlad’s mother made her way to the back door of the house with an armload of
groceries. She was dressed in a pretty yellow sundress and brown leather
sandals, her dark hair in a loose, beribboned ponytail. Her steps slowed as she
turned her eyes to the boys. “Be careful out there, you two.”
Vlad’s father seemed to appear out of nowhere to take a bag from her hands. His
dark eyes twinkled with kindness. He smiled reassuringly. “Mellina, darling,
they’re fine.”
His mom frowned, bit her bottom lip gently, her eyes full of concern. “I don’t
like when he climbs that tree. He could fall, Tomas.”
Tomas brushed his lips against her cheek and nodded, turning back to Vlad and
Henry as Melina made her way into the house. “Be careful, boys. And Vlad . . .”
He put a finger to his lips, reminding Vlad to keep his secret. But he didn’t
need to remind Vlad about that. Vlad knew it was important not to say anything
to anyone about being a vampire. Well, half-vampire, anyway. Not even Henry.
Not even though he really, really, really, really, really wanted to. It was
important. His dad had said so.
“My cousin Joss has a cool tree fort. We should build one in this tree.”
Vlad shrugged, wishing they could just get out of the tree already. He only
ever climbed it because Henry wanted to. “But I don’t know how to build stuff,
Henry.”
“So we’ll make it up. It’ll be fun.” Henry hooked his legs on the branch and
flipped over gingerly, until he was hanging upside-down, grinning at Vlad. Then
Henry’s grin slipped. He fell to the ground several feet below with a thump,
crying out as his body made impact.
Vlad shimmied down the tree as fast as he could. “Henry! Are you okay?”
Henry sat up, clutching his wounded knee. He looked very much like he was going
to start crying any second. A small, thin line of blood oozed from the scrape
on his knee.
Vlad’s tiny fangs shot from his gums.
Henry’s eyes went wide, his injury all but forgotten. “What are those?”
Vlad’s small shoulders sank. He’d let his dad down. “They’re my fangs.”
“Vlad, are you a vampire or something?” Henry’s eyes were big, and Vlad was
certain he saw fear in them. Not as much fear as when Henry had been falling
from the tree, but close.
He took a deep breath, glancing at the house. Then he sat down in front of
Henry and said, “Yeah, Henry. I’m a vampire. But it’s a secret. A very, very,
very big secret and you can’t tell anyone ever.”
Henry sat very still for a moment, and then cocked his head, admiring Vlad’s
fangs. “Do you drink blood and stuff?”
“Yeah.”
“Does it hurt when they go in the skin?”
“Not really. I bit my finger before, and it didn’t really feel like anything.”
“Bite me.”
“What?”
“Bite me! It’ll be like we’re blood brothers or something.” Vlad thought for a
moment. He’d never bit a person before, aside from himself. He was curious,
even though his dad said that good vampires only drank donated blood, the kind
that Aunt Nelly brought to his house in bags. But it wasn’t like Henry was any
old person. He was Henry. “Promise not to tell anyone?”
Henry nodded and held out his hand. Vlad licked his lips, leaned forward, and—
“Ow!” Henry pulled back his finger before Vlad could take a bite. Their eyes
met and they both laughed, then Henry held out his hand again, for real this
time.
Vlad bit into his finger. The tips of his fangs popped through the skin easily,
and warm, yummy blood covered his tongue. It sent a tingly shiver all through
his body. He swallowed and sat back, wondering if Henry would be mad.
Henry examined his finger closely, then looked at Vlad. “Cool.”
Vlad beamed, relieved. “I can kinda float a little too. Wanna see?”
Henry laughed. “You suck, Vlad.”
Vlad furrowed his brow. “What’s that mean?”
Henry shrugged and poked at the disappearing hole in his fingertip. “I dunno.
My brother, Greg, said it, so it must be cool.”
Vlad shook the memory from his thoughts, trying not to focus on the fact that
he was going to say goodbye to Henry today. He walked to school in a haze. Ever
since his trial, everything he did was in a crazy fog that refused to lift from
his weary shoulders. Nothing mattered anymore, not Henry’s jokes, not Otis’s
reassurances, not even Nelly’s baked goods. Vlad was going to die.
Unless he did something really drastic.
That was the plan. Take drastic action. Say goodbye to everyone and everything
he’d ever known, without cluing them in that he was doing just that. Run like
hell until he could think of a better course of action. Survive.
Joss had been missing from Vlad’s midnight wanderings last night, something
that greatly troubled him. Even Eddie seemed to be keeping his distance. Maybe
they could tell on some level that he was doomed. Maybe they could smell death
on him. Whatever it was, Vlad was alone. Even when he was hanging out with the
goths on the steps of Bathory High last night, he was alone. And saying
goodbye.
In broad daylight, Vlad floated up to the belfry. He couldn’t face school
today, no matter what Nelly or Otis might say about him skipping. His education
at the moment was on hold until he figured out a way to escape the vengeful
justice of Elysia.
As he stepped through the arch, he turned in an afterthought to be sure no one
saw him. Eddie Poe was standing on the ground, mouth agape. But it didn’t
matter. Nothing did. He offered Eddie a two-finger salute and stepped inside
his sanctuary.
Just a few hours. That’s all Vlad needed. Just a few more hours to mourn his
impending death, and this afternoon he’d start saying goodbye to everyone and
everything he loved.
Like Meredith. Like Henry. Like Joss. Like Otis. Like Nelly.
Everything.
Everything.
After watching the sun move from morning to afternoon, Vlad stood at the sound
of the final bell and stepped from the balcony, descending to a chorus of
clicks from Eddie’s camera. He didn’t care anymore. Let Eddie have his fun.
The moment his feet touched the ground, he stepped forward, walking out to the
parking lot, to Henry’s car. Concentrating on his drudge, he whispered aloud, “Hurry,
Henry.”
Not ten seconds later, Henry burst out of the front door of the school and
booked it to where Vlad stood. “Are you okay? I got the weirdest feeling something
was up. It’s the last day of school. Where have you been all day?”
Vlad forced a smile, trying hard to act like it was business as usual. “I’m
fine, just decided to start summer break early.”
Henry watched him for a moment, as if he couldn’t trust what Vlad was saying,
but had no idea why.
Vlad slid into the passenger seat and once Henry gunned the engine to life, he
said, “Did you know that I hang out in the old belfry all the time?”
Henry settled back in his seat, letting the car idle for a bit, the look on his
face one of immense surprise. “Really? I had no idea. What’s it like up there?”
“It’s nice. Sort of my secret place. Somewhere I can go when I really want to
be alone.”
“So why are you telling me now?”
Vlad wet his lips. He was giving Henry one of his most prized possessions,
willing it to him. He only hoped Henry would go there someday, break the boards
that covered the door and go inside. “Because you should check it out if you
get the chance. I think you’d like it there.”
“Henry!” They both looked up to see Meredith jogging across the parking lot,
waving.
Henry snapped his eyes to Vlad. “Should I floor it?”
“No, it’s okay.” It was more than okay, actually. It was perfect. Two birds,
one stone.
She reached the driver’s side breathless and held out Henry’s iPod to him. “You
dropped this when you ran out. Everything okay?”
Henry took it, shrugging. “Yeah. Just happy to officially be a senior.”
There was a moment when she seemed to be debating something. Then she met Vlad’s
eyes. Hers were full of a questioning, of hesitancy, of loss. “Hi, Vlad.”
Vlad smiled as warmly as he was able to. “Hey, Meredith. You look very pretty
today.”
A gentle smile touched her lips. “Thank you.”
And he wasn’t lying. She looked lovely with her tan skin and her pink shorts,
pink tennis shoes, and pink T-shirt. In a strange way, he felt like he was
talking to someone he had once known, but didn’t anymore.
A whiff of the sweet nectar that lurked in her veins teased Vlad’s senses, but
he remained still and strong. “I don’t think I ever told you how much you mean
to me. I mean, I know you’re going out with Joss now and that’s great. He’s a
good guy. I just wanted to make sure you knew.”
Henry’s jaw hit the floor. He looked at Meredith and shook his head, laughing
the way people surely laughed whenever a crazy person was near. Panicked.
Almost frightened. “He’s ... been taking cold medicine. It makes him ramble on
about some crazy stuff.”
“Actually, I’m quite lucid, Henry.” He looked from his friend back to Meredith.
“I mean it. I’ll never forget you.”
An echoed blend of sadness and concern crossed her brown eyes. “Why does that
sound like goodbye?”
Vlad merely shrugged.
Once Meredith had joined Joss on the sidewalk, Henry turned back to Vlad,
flabbergasted. “What was that?”
Vlad shook his head, his response at the ready. “Nothing. Just making sure she
knows how I feel.”
As Henry put the car in gear, he shook his head too. “Man, you are acting
really weird today, Vlad. You sure you’re not sucking down cold medicine?”
Vlad stared out the window as the car pulled from the parking lot. “Nope. Not
me. I’m actually feeling more rational than I ever have.”
Henry turned the radio up and drove him home.
It was the best, most subtle goodbye he could give his friend.
But he didn’t have the guts to release his drudge.
38
AN UNEXPECTED ENDING
VLAD LOOKED OUT OVER THE SCHOOL GROUNDS at Freedom Fest from atop the
hill behind the school, at the hot-air balloon rides being offered, at the
carnival games, at the many, many booths of deep-fried everything and cotton
candy, at the crowd of people all wearing smiles on their faces, and sighed.
Beside him, Otis sighed too, but more out of contentment. “Otis?”
“Yes, Vlad?”
“I think it’s time we cleaned out my parents’ old bedroom.”
Vlad could feel Otis looking at him from the corner of his eye. After a long
silence, Otis replied, “If you feel you’re ready ...”
He thought about the room, still charred, still home to whatever was left of
his parents’ memory. He thought about all the tears he had shed and how much he
wanted to remember the good things rather than the bad. With a hard swallow,
Vlad said, “I do. And I want to do it tonight.”
He had to do it tonight, after all. He was leaving tomorrow night, just after midnight.
“Can I ask what brought about this decision?”
“The need for change. I’ve held on to a lot of things from my past.” Down the
hill, walking hand in hand were Meredith and Joss, smiles lighting up their
faces, looking very much in love. Vlad dropped his gaze to the ground between
his feet. “I think it’s time I start letting go, don’t you?”
When Vlad glanced at Otis, he too was watching the happy couple. After a
moment, he met Vlad’s eyes. “I think that’s a very healthy attitude. Just make
sure you only let go and don’t forget the past entirely.”
Meredith and Joss disappeared into the crowd. Vlad watched the glowing balloons
for a while before breaking the comfortable silence between him and his uncle. “Otis?”
“Yes, Vlad?”
Vlad wet his lips. Tonight was a night for change. A night for honesty. A night
for closure. “You know I was feeding on Snow ... don’t you?”
“Yes, Vlad.”
“But you didn’t say anything, didn’t tell me you told me so, didn’t point out
all of my lies.”
Otis paused briefly, as if weighing whether or not Vlad really wanted him to
answer. “No ... I didn’t.”
“Why?”
“Because if all I had to do to see you eating right was listen to a few fibs
about it, then so be it.” He shrugged, and it occurred to Vlad that he’d kept
his secret needlessly. Otis would have understood. Otis quieted his voice some,
speaking gently, as if sensing the subject was a sensitive one. It was. “Of
course, you weren’t always feeding on her. There was a time midwinter that you
looked completely ravenous. Was it a crisis of conscience?”
Vlad scanned the crowd, looking for any sign of Henry or October, but the faces
all blended together. “Yeah ... kinda. Snow was starting to develop feelings
for me.”
Otis clucked his tongue. “That’s why I never feed on drudges. It’s too easy for
them to mistake the closeness of feeding sessions for romance.”
An image of Snow’s face flickered through his imagination, and Vlad felt
something hard and hollow at the center of his being. He recognized it
instantly as longing, but couldn’t really explain where it had come from. He
missed Snow. More than he would admit. Absently, he said to Otis, “You must
have had thousands of drudges by now.”
“Why would you get that impression?” Otis shook his head. “I have none,
actually. Never have. I’m not comfortable with the attachment, and I’ve heard
the temptation to create many is overwhelming. It’s against the law to have
more than two, you know, and like the rest of Elysia, if I don’t kill them, I
release them immediately.”
Vlad gaped openly at his uncle. “Is that such a common practice? To release
them so soon?”
Otis looked more than a little confused. “Of course it is. I assumed you’d read
that in the Compendium of Conscientia.”
The book. Oh crap. Vlad knew he’d forgotten something. He’d spent all of last
night searching but couldn’t seem to find the book anywhere. He’d hoped to take
it with him, but apparently that wasn’t an option. “About that ... I kinda lost
it.”
Otis’s eyes widened. He didn’t appear the least bit happy. “Lost it?”
Vlad cringed. “Yeah. Sorry.”
To Otis’s credit, he didn’t yell. But he did get quiet for a really, really
long time. After a while, he released what seemed like a very tense breath. “I’d
bet that your good friend Joss knows where the book is. You understand, of
course, how crucial it is that we retrieve the Compendium, yes?”
“Of course.” Vlad did understand, though it had never occurred to him that Joss
might have taken the book, which made him feel more than a little stupid. It
could have been part of Joss’s reconnaissance, after all. Maybe he could just
ask Joss for the book, before Otis had a reason to attack him. If Joss had it,
he’d hand it over. Unless ... unless D’Ablo took it, for some reason. Anxious
to drag Otis away from that line of thinking, Vlad said, “Will you keep feeding
on humans after you and Nelly are married?”
It was an innocent question, but something about the look in Otis’s eyes said
that the answer would be anything but innocent. “I’d give up anything to be
with your aunt. Even if it meant starvation.”
Vlad inhaled and against his will he took in the scent of human blood from the
gathered crowd, a delectable potpourri that Vlad found almost irresistible.
Strangely, he didn’t feel guilty for feeling that way. It seemed right,
somehow. It seemed ... normal. “Can I tell you something, Otis?”
“I would hope that you’d feel comfortable enough to come to me with anything.”
He inhaled the scent again, enjoying it. “I don’t really feel human anymore.
These days, I feel much more like a vampire.”
“Is that such a bad thing?” Otis raised an eyebrow, a smirk planted firmly on
his lips. “You are a vampire, Vlad. There’s no shame in it.”
Vlad nodded down the hill toward the crowd. He spotted Henry near the cotton
candy machine, his bottom lip covered in fluffy pink. “What do you see when you
look at them, Otis? Do you see people, or do you see warm meals?”
Otis laughed warmly. “That depends on how hungry I am.”
And there it was. The guilt. Vlad moved his eyes from Henry to a girl he’d once
sat behind in algebra to Eddie Poe to Mr. Hunjo. People he knew. People. He
swallowed hard and asked, “And if you’re hungry when you look at Nelly? What
will you see when you look at her?”
The expression on Otis’s face became haunted.
Vlad shook his head, berating himself for tolerating the monster within him,
even for a moment. “There is shame in it, Otis. It’s just not a shame anyone
talks about.”
As Vlad turned to walk away, Otis called after him. “I’ll never hurt her, Vlad.
I swear that to you.”
Only it wasn’t just Nelly that Vlad was worried about. It was everyone. Every
human he had ever known. But Otis had no way of knowing that. He peered over
his shoulder briefly as he made his way to the sidewalk and spoke to his uncle
with his thoughts. “I know you won’t, Otis. But I’m not as strong as
you are.”
Bathory was quiet as Vlad moved down the sidewalk in the direction of Nelly’s
house. She wouldn’t be there, as she was working another late shift at the
hospital, a fact that made his journey even quieter, even longer.
Darkness surrounded Vlad and with it, a silence that he took great comfort in.
For the first time in a long time, Vlad felt at peace. It was time to clean out
his parents’ bedroom, and then ... it was time to leave Bathory forever.
Out of the darkness came a sound. It was soft and breathy, a whisper that had
only barely escaped the speaker’s lips before it raced to Vlad’s ear. “For you,
Cecile.”
Vlad turned quickly, remembering those words from the night Joss staked him.
Terror enveloped his entire being as he scanned the dark. Joss was nowhere to
be found.
Then another sound. A low whistling. Vlad stepped back quickly, ready to run,
fearing the worst. To his left, someone said, “No!” Their tone was a mixture of
surprise and fear. Then, before he could blink, a dark figure stepped just in
front of him. The figure staggered back, turning toward him, and Vlad
recognized him instantly.
“Dorian?”
Dorian’s lips turned up in a semi-smile before he collapsed into Vlad’s arms.
Vlad managed to catch him, but half fell, easing Dorian onto the ground. Vlad’s
eyebrows were drawn together in concern and confusion. He was about to ask what
was wrong, when he noticed the stake—Joss’s stake, Vlad would have recognized
it anywhere—sticking out of Dorian’s chest.
Dorian had saved him. What’s more, he’d saved him from someone that Vlad had
begun to trust once again. Quickly—quicker than Vlad thought was possible—blood
seeped from Dorian’s back onto the ground, soaking Vlad’s jeans. A lump formed
in Vlad’s throat and tears welled in his eyes. Dorian—the only vampire in
existence who knew the truth of the Pravus prophecy—was going to die in his
arms. He swallowed hard. “Why are you here?”
Dorian coughed, blood spattering his lips. “I came ... to tell you my secret.”
In the distance, Vlad heard movement. Feet moving over grass. He searched the
darkness but couldn’t see Joss anywhere. If he didn’t get him and Dorian to
safety soon, they’d be in real trouble. But there was no way Dorian was going
to be able to move like this. He met Dorian’s eyes. “This stake has to come
out, Dorian.”
Dorian closed his eyes briefly. “No.”
Vlad thought about the night he’d been staked and how Otis and Vikas had saved
him. He gripped the stake and pulled hard.
Dorian screamed, but once it was out, he looked much more comfortable. Vlad
flung the stake behind him and put his wrist to his mouth. He was about to bite
the skin open and feed Dorian, when Dorian grabbed his arm and spoke sternly. “No,
Vlad. No. I’m ... dying. Drink from me. Quickly. Drink deep.”
Vlad furrowed his brow, darting his eyes about their dark surroundings for any
sign of the slayer. “Why?”
“Because of my secret. I told you that four vampires can know the prophecy, but
I only told you about the Foreteller, the Transcriber, and the Keeper. Do you
recall?”
Vlad did. It had been that day in New York, the day before Otis’s pretrial.
That night Otis had changed. Or maybe he hadn’t. Maybe Vlad was only seeing the
real him for the first time. He shook his head, clearing his mind, and
listened.
“There is one more. You, Vladimir. You are the Subject of the Prophecy.
Therefore, it is yours to carry. As the Pravus, if you drink my blood, you will
begin to understand all that was foretold about you. I couldn’t tell you before,
because you weren’t ready. But you are now. I can feel it. You’re ready to know
the truth. The truth of everything.” Dorian gasped, then settled again and
spoke with urgency. “The knowledge will come slowly. Drink, and you will know
much of it, but over time the parts you do not understand will become clear. It
is a lot of knowledge. It will take time to become known to you.”
“No. Dorian, I—”
A twig broke behind him. Just yards away.
Dorian grabbed him by the shirt collar and pulled him close, so close that Vlad
could feel his heartbeat weakening. His eyes were narrowed, his words forceful,
desperate. “Drink, before I die. This is the duty which I spoke of—my duty—to
pass this knowledge on to the Pravus. Now drink. Quickly.”
After a pause, one filled with thoughts of how Dorian’s blood had infected
Otis, Vlad nodded slowly and leaned forward, biting into Dorian’s neck. He
swallowed mouthfuls of blood and with each, he felt a strange surge of power.
He pulled away, unwilling to take Dorian’s life. Dorian stared up at him, an
odd smile on his lips. “How strange. It’s true about your eyes ... that was the
one thing I doubted.”
Dorian stretched out a hand, his skin paling drastically, and brushed the tips
of his fingers against Vlad’s Mark. In an instant that took Vlad’s breath away,
Dorian’s eyes flashed iridescent blue. Vlad gasped. Dorian smiled. “Foolish of
me to doubt, or perhaps arrogant. The other two, the Transcriber and the
Foreteller, their eyes were the same as ours, but orange and red. We were chosen,
the four of us, by something much larger than any of us, for a purpose that
must be served at any cost.”
“But why? Why do our eyes do that? Why were we chosen?”
A knowing smile, full of wisdom that Vlad couldn’t comprehend, knowledge of the
ages. “You’ll know that soon enough.”
Vlad spoke, his voice gruff, the weight of the world on his shoulders as Dorian’s
life slipped helplessly through his fingers. “Why now? Why didn’t you come to
me when I was ten or thirteen? Why did you wait?”
“You were a boy before, but with this—” He sucked in his breath, the pain on
his face intense and real. “—all of this, you’ve become a man. You’ve finally
become the vampire I see in my visions. The timing of our introduction was
never up to me.”
Fresh blood, warm and heavy, drizzled from Dorian’s back. Vlad tensed,
realizing that he could see the end. His voice grew hoarse. “I wish we’d met
sooner. There’s so much I need to ask you, so much I don’t know.”
A look of fear washed over Dorian, and astonishment at feeling that fear, as if
he’d never been afraid before. “Our time together draws short.”
Vlad clutched Dorian to him. He heard the slayer closing in but couldn’t bring
himself to face him just yet. He whispered, “Don’t die, Dorian. Don’t die.”
It was odd, but he’d come to feel a strange sort of connection to Dorian, a
connection that felt even stronger now. Dorian was a lost soul; so was Vlad.
Freaks, in every sense of the word. And now Dorian was dying.
Something strange and terrifying raced through Vlad’s veins. He got the oddest
impression that the same brilliant madness was rushing through Dorian. A moment
later it felt as if his insides were on fire, as if the prophecy itself was
being burned into his very soul. In his mind’s eye, he saw a vision—it was the
only word he could think of to describe it. It was like a movie image, but
more, as if he were standing on set while they filmed. He saw himself standing
on the steps of Bathory High, his arms raised. The ground was littered with
bodies. Dead bodies. People Vlad knew. People he’d known his entire life, right
alongside those he’d only met in recent years. Blood and carnage surrounded
him, and his only reaction was immense control over the situation. His face lit
up with power. Vampires and humans were everywhere, on the steps, in the
parking lot, in the street, engaged in combat and defense. Vlad watched in
horror as his eyes flashed that iridescent purple, much more brilliant than
ever before. Everyone froze at his command.
He was controlling them. He was ruling their every move. He was the Pravus,
reigning over vampirekind and enslaving the human race. Vlad’s thoughts shrank
back, terrified of the thing he’d become, or would become.
Then the vision was over. End scene.
Vlad gasped, his heart sinking. It was true. The prophecy was true. And it was
going to happen right here in Bathory. There was nothing Vlad could do to stop
it, nothing at all.
Dorian gasped for air, the blood from his wound slowing at last. “I have
foreseen the comings of kings and the crumbling of empires. But I never saw ...
this.”
Then Dorian went still.
Vlad watched him, waiting for him to move, but he didn’t. He felt Dorian’s
weight grow heavy, felt the life ebb from him as his flesh settled into a dead
state. And rather than feel sorrow, rather than feel a sense of mourning, Vlad
felt an enormous amount of anger and fury and want of justice welling up from
inside of him.
A whisper behind him. “For you, Cecile. And for me.”
With an infuriated roar, Vlad slipped from under Dorian and turned with
vampiric speed, landing on his feet just inches from a very surprised Joss, who
held the stake in his hand. It was still covered in Dorian’s blood.
Vlad grabbed Joss by the shirt, picking him up in the air, and threw him
against a tree several yards away.
On the ground lay Joss’s messenger bag. Sticking out of the open flap was Vlad’s
father’s journal.
Before Joss could recover, Vlad moved as fast as he was able to stand in front
of his once friend, his ultimate betrayer, the lying fiend, throwing punch
after punch after punch until Joss’s face was bleeding, his body trembling in
pain.
But still the slayer gripped the stake.
Vlad ripped the wooden instrument from Joss’s hand and pulled back his arm,
ready to end this, ready to stop Joss forever, ready to send a message to any
slayer who dared enter Bathory with blood on his mind. It would be easy. And
the price would be worth it. He gripped the stake tightly in his hand and
pulled back farther, aiming for Joss’s heart.
And then ... he heard a familiar voice. A voice he would have known anywhere. “Stop,
Vlad. Let him live.”
Suddenly, Vlad couldn’t breathe. It was as if all the air that surrounded him
refused to enter his lungs. His mouth fell open in utter shock. His fingers
trembled. He released Joss, who slid down the trunk of the tree, and turned to
face the speaker. He grasped at words, but at first nothing came. Then he met
the eyes of the intruder and all he could think was a single word—a word that
would change his life forever, a word that shook as it left his lips and
shattered everything that he ever thought he knew about his life.
“Dad?”