Bone Crossed
Patricia Briggs
1
I STARED AT MY REFLECTION IN THE MIRROR. I WASN’T
pretty, but my hair was thick and brushed my shoulders. My skin was
darker on my arms and face than it was on the rest of my body, but at
least, thanks to my Blackfoot father, I’d never be pasty pale.
There were two stitches Samuel had put in the cut on my chin, and the
bruise on my shoulder (not extensive damage considering I’d been
fighting something that liked to eat children and had knocked out a
werewolf). The dark thread looked from some angles like the legs of a
shiny black spider. Aside from that slight damage, there was nothing
wrong with my body. Karate and mechanicking kept me in good
shape.
My soul was a lot more battered than my body, but I couldn’t see it in
the mirror. Hopefully no one else could either. It was that invisible
damage that left me afraid to leave the bathroom and face Adam, who
waited in my bedroom. Though I knew with absolute certainty that
Adam wouldn’t do anything I didn’t want him to do—and had wanted
him to do for a long time.
I could ask him to leave. To give me more time. I stared at the woman
in the mirror, but all she did was stare back.
I’d killed the man who’d raped me. Was I going to let him have this
last victory? Let him destroy me as he’d intended?
“Mercy?” Adam didn’t have to raise his voice. He knew I could hear
him.
“Careful,” I told him as I left off mirror-gazing and began pulling on
clean underwear and an old T-shirt. “I have an ancient walking stick,
and I know how to use it.”
“The walking stick is lying across your bed,” he said.
When I came out of the bathroom, Adam was lying across my bed,
too.
He wasn’t tall, but he didn’t need height to add to the impression he
made. Wide cheekbones and a full, soft mouth topping a stubborn jaw
combined to give him movie-star beauty. When his eyes were open,
they were a dark chocolate only a shade lighter than mine. His body
was almost as pretty as his face—though I knew he didn’t think of
himself that way. He kept himself in shape because he was Alpha and
his body was a tool he used to keep his pack safe. He’d been a soldier
before he was Changed, and the military training was still there in the
way he moved and the way he took charge.
“When Samuel gets back from the hospital, he’s going to spend the
rest of the night at my house,” Adam said without opening his eyes.
Samuel was my roommate, a doctor, and a lone wolf. Adam’s house
was behind mine, with about ten acres between them—three were
mine and the rest were Adam’s. “We have time to talk.”
“You look horrible,” I said, not quite truthfully. He did look tired,
with dark circles under his eyes, but nothing short of mutilation could
make him look terrible. “Don’t they have beds in D.C.?”
He’d had to go to Washington (the capital—we were in the state) this
weekend to clean up a little mess that was sort of my fault. Of course
if he hadn’t ripped Tim’s corpse into bits on camera, and if the
resultant DVD hadn’t landed on a senator’s desk, there wouldn’t have
been a problem. So it was partially his fault, too.
Mostly it was Tim’s fault, and whoever had made a copy of the DVD
and mailed it off. I’d taken care of Tim. Bran, the head-honcho
werewolf above all of the other head-honcho werewolves, was
apparently taking care of the other person. Last year, I would have
expected to hear about a funeral. This year, with the werewolves
barely having admitted their existence to the world, Bran would
probably be more circumspect. Whatever that would mean.
Adam opened his eyes and looked at me. In the dimness of the room
(he’d only turned on the small light on the little table by my bed), his
eyes looked black. There was a bleakness in his face that hadn’t been
there before, and I knew it was because of me. Because he hadn’t
been able to keep me safe—and people like Adam take that pretty
seriously.
Personally, I figured it was up to me to keep me safe. Sometimes it
might mean calling in friends, but it was my responsibility. Still, he
saw it as a failure.
“So have you made up your mind?” he asked.
Would I accept him as my mate, he meant. The question had been up
in the air too long, and it was affecting his ability to keep his pack
under control. Ironically, what happened with Tim had resolved the
issue that had kept me from accepting Adam for months. I figured if I
could fight back against the fairy magic potion Tim had fed me, a
little Alpha mojo wasn’t going to turn me into a docile slave either.
Maybe I should have thanked him before I hit him with the tire iron.
Adam isn’t Tim, I told myself. I thought of Adam’s rage when he’d
broken down the door to my garage, of his despair when he persuaded
me to drink out of that damned fae goblet again. In addition to
robbing me of my will, the goblet also had the power to heal—and I’d
needed a lot of healing by that point. It had worked, but Adam had
felt like he was betraying me, believed I’d hate him for it. But he’d
done it anyway. I figured it was because he wasn’t lying when he said
he loved me. When I’d hidden in shame—I put that down to the fairy
brew, because I knew ... I knew I had nothing to be ashamed about—
he’d pulled my coyote self out from under his bed, bitten my nose for
being foolish, and held me all night long. Then he’d surrounded me
with his pack and safety whether I needed it or not.
Tim was dead. And he’d always been a loser. I’d be damned if I was
going to be the victim of a loser—or anyone else.
“Mercy?” Adam stayed on his back on my bed, taking the position of
vulnerability.
In answer, I pulled the T-shirt over my head and dropped it on the
floor.
Adam was off the bed faster than I’d ever seen him move, bringing
the comforter with him. He had it wrapped around me before I could
blink ... and then I was pressed tightly against him, my bare breasts
resting against his chest. He’d tipped his head to the side so my face
was pressed against his jaw and cheek.
“I meant to get the blanket between us,” he said tightly. His heart
pounded against mine, and his arms were shaking and rock hard. “I
didn’t mean you had to sleep with me right now—a simple ‘yes’
would have done.”
I knew he was aroused—even a regular person without a coyote nose
would have known it. I slid my hands up from his hips to his hard
belly and up his ribs and listened to his heart rate pick up even further
and a light sweat broke out on his jaw under my slow caress. I could
feel the muscles in his cheek move as he clenched his teeth, felt the
heat that flushed his skin. I blew in his ear, and he jumped away from
me as though I’d stuck him with a cattle prod.
Streaks of amber lit his eyes, and his lips were fuller, redder. I
dropped the comforter on top of my shirt.
“Damn it, Mercy.” He didn’t like to swear in front of women. I
always counted it a personal triumph when I could make him do it. “It
hasn’t even been a week since you were raped. I’m not sleeping with
you until you’ve talked to someone, a counselor, a psychologist.”
“I’m fine,” I said, though in fact, once distance had released me from
the safety he brought with him, I was aware of a sick churning in my
stomach.
Adam turned so he was facing the window, his back to me. “No,
you’re not. Remember, you can’t lie to a wolf, love.” He let out a
breath of air too forcefully to be a sigh. He rubbed his hair briskly,
trying to get rid of excess energy. Obligingly, it stuck up in small
curls that he usually kept too short to look anything but neat and wellgroomed.
“Who am I talking about?” he asked, though I didn’t think
the question was directed at me. “This is Mercy. Getting you to talk
about anything personal is like pulling teeth at the best of times.
Getting you to talk to a stranger ...”
I hadn’t thought myself particularly closemouthed. Actually, I’d been
accused of having a smart mouth. Samuel had told me more than once
that I’d probably live longer if I learned to bite my tongue
occasionally.
So I waited, without saying a word, for Adam to decide what he
wanted to do.
The room wasn’t cold, but I was shivering a little anyway—it must be
nerves. If Adam didn’t hurry up and do something, though, I was
going to be throwing up in the bathroom. I’d spent too much time
worshipping the porcelain goddess since Tim had made me overdose
on fairy juice to view the thought with any equanimity.
He wasn’t watching me, but he didn’t need to be. Emotions have a
scent. He swung back to look at me with a frown. He took in my state
with one comprehensive look.
He swore and strode back to me, wrapping me in his arms. He pulled
me tight against him, making low, soothing sounds in the back of his
throat. He rocked me gently.
I took a deep breath of Adam-scented air and tried to think. Normally,
this wouldn’t be difficult for me. But normally I wasn’t all but naked
in the arms of the hottest man I knew.
I’d misunderstood what he’d wanted.
To double-check, I cleared my throat. “When you said you needed my
answer to your claim today—you weren’t actually asking for sex?”
His body jerked involuntarily as he laughed, rubbing his jaw against
my face. “So, you think I’m the kind of person who’d do something
like that? After what happened just last week?”
“I thought that’s what it took,” I mumbled, feeling my cheeks heat up.
“How long did you spend in the Marrok’s pack?”
He knew how long. He was just making me feel stupid. “Mating
wasn’t something everyone talked to me about,” I told him
defensively. “Just Samuel ...”
Adam laughed again, one of his hands on my shoulder, the other
moving in a light caress on my butt, which should have tickled but
didn’t. “I just bet he was telling you the truth, the whole truth, and
nothing but the truth right then.”
I tightened my grip on him—somehow my hands had landed on his
lower back. “Probably not. So all you needed was my agreement?”
He grunted. “It won’t help with the pack, not until it’s for real. But
with Samuel out of the way, I thought you’d be able to decide if you
were interested or not. If you weren’t interested, I could regroup. If
you agreed to be mine, I can wait until Hell freezes over for you.”
His words sounded reasonable, but his scent told me something else.
It told me that my reasonable tones had soothed his worries, and his
mind was now on something other than our discussion.
Fair enough. Being this close to him, feeling his heat against me,
feeling his heartbeat race because he wanted me ... someone told me
that knowing someone desires you is the greatest aphrodisiac. It was
certainly true for me.
“Of course,” he said, still in that curiously calm voice, “waiting is
much easier in abstract than reality. I need you to tell me to back off,
all right?”
“Mmm,” I said. He brought a cleanness with him that washed the feel
of Tim off my skin far better than the shower did—but only when he
touched me.
“Mercy.”
I lowered my hands, sliding them beneath the waistline of his jeans
and digging my nails lightly into his skin.
He growled something more, but neither of us was listening. He
turned his head and tilted it. I expected serious and got playful as he
nipped at my lower lip. The roughness of his teeth sent tingles to my
fingertips, zings past my knees and down to my toes. Potent things,
Adam’s teeth.
I brought my suddenly shaking hands around to worry at the button
on his jeans, and Adam jerked his head up and put a staying hand on
mine.
Then I heard it, too.
“German car,” he said.
I sighed, slumping against him. “Swedish,” I corrected him. “Fouryear-
old Volvo station wagon. Gray.”
He looked at me in surprise that quickly turned to comprehension.
“You know the car.”
I moaned and tried to hide in his shoulder. “Damn, damn. It was the
newspapers.”
“Who is it, Mercy?”
Gravel shooshed, and headlights flashed on my window as the car
turned into the driveway. “My mom,” I told him. “Her sense of timing
is unreal. I should have realized she would read about ... about it.” I
didn’t want to name what had happened to me, what I’d done to Tim,
out loud. Not while I was mostly naked with Adam, anyway.
“You didn’t call her.”
I shook my head. I should have, I knew it. But it had been one of
those things I just couldn’t face.
He was smiling now. “You get dressed. I’ll go stall her until you’re
ready to come out.”
“There is no way I’ll ever be ready for this,” I told him.
He sobered, put his face next to mine, and rested his forehead against
me. “Mercy. It will be all right.”
Then he left, shutting the door to my bedroom as my doorbell rang the
first time. It rang twice more before he opened the outside door, and
he wasn’t being slow.
I grabbed clothes and desperately tried to remember if we’d done the
dishes from dinner. It was my turn. If it had been Samuel’s turn, I
wouldn’t have had to worry. It was stupid. I knew that she could care
less about the dishes—but it gave me something to do other than
panic.
I’d never even considered calling her. Maybe in ten years I might feel
ready.
I pulled on my pants and left my feet bare while I searched frantically
for a bra.
“She knows you’re here,” Adam said on the other side of the door—
as if he were leaning against it. “She’ll be out in a minute.”
“I don’t know who you think you are”—my mother’s voice was low
and dangerous—“but if you don’t get out of my way right this instant,
it won’t matter.”
Adam was the Alpha werewolf in charge of the local pack. He was
tough. He could be mean when he had to—and he wouldn’t stand a
chance against my mom.
“Bra, bra, bra,” I chanted as I pulled one out of the dirty-clothes
basket and hooked it. I pulled the thing around so fast I wouldn’t be
surprised to discover I’d given myself a rug burn. “Shirt. Shirt.” I
ransacked my drawers and found and discarded two shirts. “Clean
shirt, clean shirt.”
“Mercy?” called Adam, sounding a little desperate—how well I knew
that feeling.
“Mom, leave him alone!” I said. “I’ll be right out.”
Frustrated, I stared at my room. I had to have a clean shirt
somewhere. I had just been wearing one—but it had disappeared in
my search for a bra. Finally, I pulled on a shirt that said 1984:
GOVERNMENT FOR DUMMIES on the back. It was clean, or at
least it didn’t stink too badly. The oil smudge on the shoulder looked
permanent.
I took a deep breath and opened the door. I had to duck around Adam,
who was leaning against the door frame.
“Hey, Mom,” I said breezily. “I see you’ve met my—” What? Mate? I
didn’t think that was something my mother needed to hear. “I see
you’ve met Adam.”
“Mercedes Athena Thompson,” snapped my mother. “Explain to me
why I had to learn about what happened to you from a newspaper?”
I’d been avoiding meeting her gaze, but once she three-named me, I
had no choice.
My mother is five-foot-nothing. She’s only seventeen years older than
me, which means she’s not yet fifty and looks thirty. She can still
wear the belt buckles she won barrel racing on their original belts.
She’s usually blond—I’m pretty sure it’s her natural color—but the
shade changes from year to year. This year it was strawberry gold.
Her eyes are big and blue and innocent-looking, her nose slightly tiptilted,
and her mouth full and round.
With strangers, she sometimes plays a dumb blonde, batting her
eyelashes and speaking in a breathy voice that anyone who watched
old movies would recognize from Some Like It Hot or Bus Stop. My
mother has never, to my knowledge, changed her own flat tire.
If the sharp anger in her voice hadn’t been a cover for the bruised
look in her eyes, I could have responded in kind. Instead, I shrugged.
“I don’t know, Mom. After it happened ... I stayed coyote for a couple
of days.” I had a half-hysterical vision of calling her, and saying, “By
the way, Mom, guess what happened to me today...”
She looked me in the eyes, and I thought she saw more than I wanted
her to. “Are you all right?”
I started to say yes, but a lifetime of living with creatures who could
smell a lie had left me with a habit of honesty. “Mostly,” I said,
compromising. “It helps that he’s dead.” It was humiliating that my
chest was getting tight. I’d given myself all the self-pity time I would
allow.
Mom could cuddle her children like any of the best of parents, but I
should have trusted her more. She knew all about the importance of
standing on your own two feet. Her right hand was balled into a
white-knuckled fist, but when she spoke, her voice was brisk.
“All right,” she said, as if we’d covered everything she was going to
ask. I knew better, but I also knew it would be later and private.
She turned her angelic blue eyes on Adam. “Who are you, and what
are you doing in my daughter’s house at eleven at night?”
“I’m not sixteen,” I said in a voice even I could tell was sulky. “I can
even have a man stay all night if I want to.”
Mom and Adam both ignored me.
Adam had remained in position against my bedroom door frame, his
body held a little more casually than usual. I thought he was trying to
give my mother the impression that he was at home here: someone
who had authority to keep her out of my room. He lifted an eyebrow
and showed not even a touch of the panic I’d heard in his voice
earlier. “I’m Adam Hauptman, I live on the other side of her back
fence.”
She scowled at him. “The Alpha? The divorced man with the teenage
daughter?”
He gave her one of his sudden smiles, and I knew my mom had made
yet another conquest: she’s pretty cute when she scowls, and Adam
didn’t know many people gutsy enough to scowl at him. I had a
sudden revelation. I’d been making a tactical error for the past few
years if I’d really wanted him to quit flirting with me. I should have
smiled and smirked and batted my eyelashes at him. Obviously, a
woman snarling at him was something he enjoyed. He was too busy
looking at my mom’s scowl to see mine.
“That’s right, ma’am.” Adam quit leaning against the door and took a
couple of steps into the room. “Good to meet you at last, Margi.
Mercy speaks of you often.”
I didn’t know what my mother would have said to that, doubtless
something polite. But with a popping sound like eggs cracking on a
cement floor, something appeared between Mom and Adam, a foot or
so above the carpet. It was a human-sized something, black and
crunchy. It dropped to the floor, reeking of char, old blood, and rotten
corpses.
I stared at it for too long, my eyes failing to find a pattern that agreed
with what my nose told me. Even knowing that only a few things
could just appear in my living room without using the door couldn’t
make me acknowledge what it was. It was the green shirt, torn and
stained, with the hindquarters of a familiar Great Dane still visible,
that forced me to admit that this black and shrunken thing was Stefan.
I dropped to my knees beside him and reached out before snatching
my hand back, afraid to damage him more. He was obviously dead,
but since he was a vampire, that wasn’t as hopeless a thing as it might
have been.
“Stefan?” I said.
I wasn’t the only one who jumped when he grabbed my wrist. The
skin on his hand was dry and crackled disconcertingly against my
skin.
Stefan has been my friend since the first day I moved here to the Tri-
Cities. He is charming, funny, and generous—if given to
miscalculations on how forgiving I might be about innocent people he
killed trying to protect me.
It was still all I could do not to jerk away and rub off the feel of his
brittle skin on my arm. Ick. Ick. Ick. And I had the horrible feeling
that it was hurting him to hold on to me, that at any moment his skin
would crack and fall off.
His eyes opened to slits, his irises crimson instead of brown. His
mouth opened and shut twice without making any sound. Then his
hand tightened on mine until I couldn’t have pulled free if I had
wanted to. He sucked in a breath of air so he could talk, but he
couldn’t do it quite right, and I heard air hissing out of the side of his
ribs, where it had no business escaping from.
“She knows.” His voice didn’t sound like his at all. It was rough and
dry. As he pulled my hand slowly toward his face, with the last of the
air from that breath, he said intently, “Run.” And with those words,
the person who was my friend disappeared under the fierce hunger in
his face.
Looking into his mad eyes, I thought his advice was worth taking—
too bad I wasn’t going to be able to break free to follow it. He was
slow, but he had me, and I wasn’t a werewolf or vampire with
supernatural strength to help myself out.
I heard the distinctive clack of a bullet chambering, and a quick
glance showed me my mother with a wicked-looking Glock out and
pointed at Stefan. It was pink and black—trust my mom to have a
Barbie gun, cute but deadly.
“It’s all right,” I told her hastily—my mother wouldn’t hesitate to fire
if she thought he was going to hurt me. Normally I wouldn’t worry
about someone shooting at Stefan, vampires not being that vulnerable
to guns, but he was in bad shape. “He’s on our side.” Hard to sound
convincing when he was pulling me toward him, but I did my best.
Adam grabbed Stefan’s wrist and held it, so instead of Stefan pulling
me toward him, the vampire was slowly raising his own head off the
floor. As he came closer to my arm, Stefan opened his mouth and
scraps of burnt skin fell on my tan carpet. His fangs were white and
lethal-looking, and also a lot bigger than I remembered them being.
My breathing picked up, but I didn’t jerk back and whine, “Get it off!
Get it off!”—full points to me. Instead, I leaned over Stefan and put
my head into Adam’s shoulder. It put my neck at risk, but the smell of
werewolf and Adam helped mask the stench of what had been done to
Stefan. If Stefan needed blood to survive, I’d donate to him.
“It’s all right, Adam,” I said. “Let him go.”
“Don’t put down the gun,” Adam told my mother. “Mercy, if this
doesn’t work, you call my house and tell Darryl to collect whoever is
there and bring them here.”
And, in an act of bravery that was completely in character, Adam put
his wrist in front of Stefan’s face. The vampire didn’t appear to
notice, still pulling himself up by his grip on my arm. He wasn’t
breathing, so he couldn’t scent Adam, and I didn’t think he was
focusing any too well either.
I should have tried to stop Adam—I’d fed Stefan before without any
ill effects that I knew of, and I was pretty sure that Stefan cared
whether I lived or died. I wasn’t so sure how he felt about Adam. But
I was remembering Stefan telling me that there “shouldn’t” be any
problems because it had only been the once, and I’d met a few of
Stefan’s band of sheep—the people who served as his breakfast,
dinner, and lunch. They were all completely devoted to him. Don’t
get me wrong, he’s a great guy for a vampire—but I somehow
doubted that those people, mostly women, could live together devoted
to one man without some sort of vampire mesmerism at work. And
I’d sort of had my fill of magical compulsion for the year.
Any protest I made to Adam would be an exercise in futility anyway.
He was feeling especially protective of me at that moment—and all I
would do was stir up tempers, his, mine, and my mother’s.
Adam pressed his wrist against Stefan’s mouth, and the vampire
paused his incremental closing of the distance between my arm and
his fangs. He seemed confused for a moment—then he drew air in
through his nose.
Stefan’s teeth sank into Adam’s wrist, his free hand shot up to grab
Adam’s arm, and his eyes closed—all so fast it looked like the motion
of a cheaply drawn cartoon.
Adam sucked in his breath, but I couldn’t tell if it was because it hurt
him or because it felt good. When Stefan had fed from me, I’d been in
pretty rough shape. I didn’t remember much about it.
It was strangely intimate, Stefan holding me as he drank from Adam’s
wrist, and Adam leaning harder into me as Stefan fed. Intimate with
an audience. I turned my head to see that my mother still held her gun
in a steady two-handed grip, pointed at Stefan’s head. Her face as
calm as if she saw burnt bodies appear out of nowhere, then rise from
the dead to sink fangs into whoever was closest to them all the time,
though I knew that wasn’t true. I wasn’t sure she’d ever even seen one
of the werewolves in wolf form.
“Mom,” I said, “the vampire is Stefan, he’s a friend of mine.”
“I should put the gun away? Are you sure? He doesn’t look like a
friend.”
I looked at Stefan, who was looking better, though I still wouldn’t
have recognized him without my nose. “Truthfully, I’m not sure how
much good it would do anyway. Bullets, if they are silver, may work
on werewolves, but I don’t think any bullets do much to vampires.”
She tucked the Glock, hot, into the holster inside the waistline of the
back of her jeans. “So what do you do to vampires?”
Someone knocked on the door. I hadn’t heard anyone drive up, but I’d
been a little distracted.
“Don’t let them in your home in the first place,” suggested Adam.
Mom, who’d been on the way to the door, stopped. “Is this likely to
be a vampire?”
“Better let me get it,” I said. I wiggled my arm, and Stefan released
me and took a better grip on Adam. “Are you all right, Adam?”
“He’s too weak to feed fast,” Adam commented. “I’m good for a
while yet. If you’ll get my phone out for me and hit the speed dial, I’ll
call for some more wolves, though. I doubt one feeding will be
enough.”
With Mom watching, I behaved myself while I dug his phone out of
the holder on his belt. Instead of taking the time to sort through his
contacts, I just punched in his house number and handed him the
ringing phone. Whoever was outside was growing impatient.
I straightened my shirt and took a quick look at myself to make sure
there wasn’t anything that said, “Hey, I have a vampire in my house.”
I was going to have a bruise on my forearm, but it wasn’t too
noticeable yet. I slipped past Mom and opened the door about six
inches.
The woman standing on the porch didn’t look familiar. She was about
my height and age. Her dark hair had been highlighted with a lighter
shade (or her light brown hair had been striped with a darker color).
She wore so much foundation that I could smell it over the perfume
that a purely human nose might find light and attractive. Her
grooming was immaculate, like a purebred dog ready to be shown—
or a very expensive call girl.
Not a person you’d expect to find on the porch of an old mobile home
out in the boonies of Eastern Washington at night.
“Mercy?”
If she hadn’t spoken, I’d never have recognized her because my nose
was full of perfume and she didn’t look anything like the girl I’d gone
to college with. “Amber?”
Amber had been my college roommate Charla’s best friend. She’d
been studying to be a veterinarian, but I’d heard she’d dropped out her
first year in vet school. I hadn’t heard from her since I’d graduated.
When I’d last seen Amber she’d been wearing a Mohawk and had had
a ring in her nose (which had been bigger) and a small tattooed
hummingbird at the corner of her eye. She and Charla had been best
friends in high school. Though it had been Charla who had decided
they shouldn’t room together, Amber had always blamed me for it.
We had been acquaintances rather than friends.
Amber laughed, doubtless at the bewildered look on my face. There
was something brittle in the sound, not that I was in any position to be
picky. My manner was stiffer than usual, too. I had a vampire feeding
from a werewolf behind me; I wondered what she was hiding.
“It’s been a long time,” she said, after a short, awkward silence.
I joined her out on the porch and shut the door behind me, trying not
to look like I was keeping her out. “What brings you here?”
She folded her arms over her chest and turned to gaze at my scragglylooking
field where a rusty VW Rabbit rested on three tires. From
where we stood, the graffiti, the missing door, and the cracked
windshield weren’t visible, but it looked junky anyway. The old
wreck was a joke between Adam and me, and I wasn’t going to
apologize for it.
“I read about you in the paper,” she said.
“You live in the Tri-Cities?”
She shook her head. “Spokane. It made CNN, too, didn’t you know?
The fae, werewolves, death ... how could they resist?” For a moment
there was a flash of humor in her voice, though her face stayed
disconcertingly blank.
Lovely. The whole world knew I’d been raped. Yeah, that might have
struck me as funny, too—if I’d been Lucrezia Borgia. There were a
lot of reasons I’d never bothered to keep in contact with Amber.
She hadn’t driven over from Spokane to hunt me down after ten years
and tell me she’d read about the attack, either. “So you read about me
and decided it might be fun to tell me that the story about how I killed
my rapist was all over the country? You drove a hundred and fifty
miles for that?”
“Obviously not.” She turned back to face me, and the awkward
stranger had been replaced by the polished pro who was even more a
stranger to me. “Look. Do you remember when we took a day trip to
Portland to see that play? We went to the bar afterward, and you told
us about the ghost in the ladies’ room.”
“I was drunk,” I told her—which was true enough. “I think I told you
I was raised by werewolves, too.”
“Yes,” she said with sudden intentness. “I thought you were just
telling stories, but now we all know that werewolves are real, just like
the fae. And you’re dating one.”
That would have come out in the newspaper story, I thought. Double
yippee. There was a time when I tried to stay out of the spotlight
because it was safer. It was still safer, but I hadn’t been doing so good
at stealthy living the past year.
Unaffected by my inner dialogue, Amber kept talking. “So I thought
if you were dating one now, you had probably been telling the truth
then. And if you told the truth about the werewolves, then you were
probably telling the truth about seeing ghosts, too.”
Anyone else would have forgotten about that, but Amber had a mind
like a steel trap. She remembered everything. It was after that trip that
I quit drinking alcohol. People who know other people’s secrets can’t
afford to do things that impair their ability to control their mouths.
“My house is haunted,” she said.
I saw something move out of the corner of my eye. I took a step
toward Amber and turned a little. I still couldn’t see anything out
there, but with Amber a little downwind so her perfume didn’t ruin
my nose, I could smell it: vampire.
“And you want me to do something about it?” I asked. “You need to
call a priest.” Amber was Catholic.
“No one believes me,” she said starkly. “My husband thinks I’m
crazy.” The porch light caught her eyes, just for a minute, and I could
see that her pupils were dilated. I wondered if it was just the darkness
of the night or if she was on something.
She was making me uneasy, but I was pretty sure it was just the
weirdness of seeing Amber, queen of the unconventional, dressed up
like a rich man’s mistress. There was something soft and helpless
about her now that made me think prey, while the Amber I’d known
would have taken a baseball bat to anyone who annoyed her. She
wouldn’t have been afraid of a ghost.
Of course, my unease could have been caused by the vampire lurking
in the shadows or by the one in my home.
“Look,” I said. Stefan and what had been done to him were more
important to me than what had happened to Amber, or anything she
might want from me. “I can’t get away right now—I have company.
Why don’t you give me your phone number, and I’ll call you as soon
as things calm down.”
She fumbled her purse open and handed me a card. It was printed on
expensive high-cotton paper, but all that was on it was her first name
and a phone number.
“Thank you.” She sounded relieved, the tension flowing from her
shoulders. She gave me a small smile. “I’m sorry that you were
attacked—but I’m not surprised you got your own back. You were
always rather good at that.” Without waiting for me to answer, she
walked down the steps and got into her car, a newer Miata convertible
with the soft top up. She backed out of the driveway without looking
at me again and sped off into the night.
I wished she hadn’t been wearing perfume. She’d been upset about
something—she’d always been a terrible liar. But the timing was just
a little too convenient: Stefan arrives, tells me to run, and Amber
arrives with a place for me to run to.
I knew what Stefan had been telling me to run from, and it wasn’t
him. “She knows,” he’d said.
“She” was Marsilia, the Mistress of the Tri-Cities’ vampires. She’d
sent me out hunting a vampire who’d been on a killing spree that
risked her seethe. She’d figured I was her best chance to find him
because I can sense ghosts that other people don’t see, and vampire
lairs tend to attract ghosts.
She hadn’t thought I would really be able to kill him. When I did, it
made her very unhappy. The vamp I’d killed had been special, more
powerful than the others because he’d been demon-ridden. That the
demon had made him crazy and he’d been killing humans left and
right hadn’t bothered her except that it might have exposed the
vampires to the human world. He’d gone out of control when he’d
grown more powerful than his maker, but Marsilia believed that she
could have fixed that, taken control of him. She used me to find
him—she’d been sure he’d kill me.
And she’d have been right if I hadn’t had friends.
Since she’d sent me after him, she couldn’t seek retribution without
risking losing control of her seethe. Vampires take things like that
very seriously.
I’d have been safe if it hadn’t been for the second vampire.
Andre had been Marsilia’s left hand where Stefan was her right. He’d
also been responsible for creating the demon-possessing vampire
who’d killed more people than I could count on both hands. And
Andre and Marsilia had intended to make more. One had been more
than enough for me. So I’d killed Andre, knowing that it meant my
death.
But Stefan had hidden my crime. Hidden it with the deaths of two
innocent people whose only crimes had been that they were Andre’s
victims. He’d saved me, but the cost had been too high. Their deaths
had bought me two months.
Marsilia knew. She’d have never hurt Stefan so badly for anything
else.
She’d tortured and starved him and let him free to come to me. I
looked down at the red marks Stefan had put on my arm—if he’d
killed me, no blame would have fallen on her.
There was a noise, and I looked up. Darryl and Peter were walking
past the battered hulk of the Rabbit.
Darryl was tall, athletic, and Adam’s second. He got his dark skin
from his African father and his eyes from his Chinese mother. His
perfect features came from the happy combination of very different
genes, but the grace of his stride came from the accident that had
turned him into a werewolf. He liked nice clothes, and the crisp cotton
shirt he wore probably cost more than I made in a week.
I didn’t know how old he was, but I was pretty sure he wasn’t much
older than he looked. There’s something about the older wolves, an
air they carry of being not quite of this age of cars, cell phones, and
TVs, that Darryl didn’t have.
Peter was old enough to have been in the cavalry, but here and now he
worked as a plumber. He was good at his job, and he had a half dozen
people (human) on his payroll. But he walked to the right and behind
Darryl because Darryl was very dominant and Peter was one of the
few submissives in Adam’s pack.
Darryl stopped at the foot of the porch. He didn’t like me much most
of the time. I’d finally decided it was snobbery—he was a wolf and I
a coyote. He was a Ph.D. working in a high-priced think tank, and I
was a mechanic with dirt under my fingernails.
And worst of all, if I was Adam’s mate, he had to follow my orders.
Sometimes the chauvinism that permeates the rules by which the
werewolves operate works backward. No matter how submissive the
mate of the Alpha is, her commands are second only to his.
When he didn’t say anything, I just opened the door and led Adam’s
two wolves into my home.
2
STEFAN WASN’T AMENABLE TO CHANGING DONORS, SO
Peter and Darryl knelt, one on either side, and began to pry his grip
loose. When I approached to help, Adam snarled at me.
If he hadn’t snarled, I’d probably have let the wolves take care of it.
After all, they all have awesome werewolf superstrength. But if Adam
and I were going to have a relationship, something that was giving me
butterflies already, it was going to be on an equal footing. I couldn’t
afford to back down when Adam growled.
Besides, I despised the cowardly part of me that flinched at his anger.
Even if I was pretty sure it was the smart part.
Peter and Darryl were working on Stefan’s hands, so I went to his
head. I slipped my fingers into one side of his mouth, hoping that
vampires had the same reaction to pressure points as the rest of us.
But I didn’t need to use any nerve pinches, because as soon as my
fingers touched his mouth, he shuddered and released Adam, his arms
going limp at the same time as he pulled his fangs out.
“Won’t,” Stefan said as I pulled my fingers out of his mouth.
“Won’t.” It came out a whisper and faded eerily as he ran out of air.
His head moved until he rested against my shoulder, his eyes closed.
His face almost looked like his now, filled out and healing. The
broken places on his skin, hands, and lips looked like wounds now. It
said something about how bad he’d been that oozing wounds were an
improvement.
If his body hadn’t shook against me as if he were having an epileptic
fit, I’d have been happier.
“Do you know what’s wrong with him?” I asked Adam helplessly.
“I do,” Peter said. He casually pulled a huge pocketknife out of its
belt sheath and made a small cut in his wrist.
He moved me out from under Stefan and moved him around until
Stefan was lying down with his head on Peter’s lap, held steady by
the werewolf’s unwounded hand. Peter held his bloody wrist in front
of the vampire, who clamped his lips together and turned his head
away.
Adam, who had wrapped his hand around his own wrist to staunch the
bleeding, leaned forward. “Stefan. It’s all right. It’s not Mercy. It’s
not Mercy.”
Red eyes slitted open, and the vampire made a sound I’d never heard
before ... and wished I could still say that. It raised every hair on the
back of my neck, high-pitched and thin like a dog whistle but harsher
somehow. He struck and Peter jerked, gritting his teeth and hissing.
I didn’t notice when my mother left us, but she must have at some
point because she had Samuel’s big first-aid kit from the main
bathroom open on the couch. She knelt by Adam, but he surged to his
feet.
Alpha werewolves don’t admit to any pain in public, and seldom in
private. His wrist might look like it had been savaged, but he’d never
let my mother do anything about it. I stood up, too.
“Here,” I said, before he could say something to offend her or vice
versa. “Let me see.”
I tugged and pulled until I could see the wounds. “He’ll be all right,” I
told Mom with satisfaction. “It’s scabbed over already. A half hour
from now it’ll just be a few red marks.”
That was good.
My mother raised her eyebrow, and murmured, “And to think I was
always worried that you didn’t have any friends. I suppose I should
have been counting my blessings.”
I gave her a sharp look, and she smiled past the worry in her eyes.
“Vampires, Mercy? I thought they were made-up.”
She had always been good at making me feel guilty, which was more
than Bran had ever managed. “I couldn’t tell you,” I said. “They don’t
like it when humans know about them. It would have put you in
danger.” She narrowed her eyes at me. “Besides, Mom, I’ve never
actually seen any in Portland.” And had been very careful not to look
when I smelled them. Vampires like Portland—lots of rainy days.
“Can all of them just pop in wherever they want to?”
I shook my head, then reconsidered. “I only know of two, and
Stefan’s one of them.”
Adam was watching Stefan feed; he looked worried. I hadn’t realized
he and Stefan were more than casual acquaintances.
“Is he going to be all right?” Mom asked.
Adam was pale but healing just fine. Other wolves would have taken
longer, but Adam was an Alpha, and his pack gave him more power
than other wolves had. But if Stefan gnawed on Peter the way he’d
chewed up Adam, it would take Peter a while longer to heal.
She looked at me, and her dimples peeped out. “I was speaking of the
vampire. You do have it bad, don’t you?”
I’d been trying not to dwell on Stefan’s condition and why it was so
bad—and how it was my fault. “I don’t know, Mom,” I leaned against
her, just a little, before straightening to stand on my own. “I don’t
know that much about vampires. They’re hard to kill, but I’ve never
seen one as bad as this who survived.” Daniel, Stefan’s ... what?
Friend hadn’t quite covered it. Maybe just Stefan’s. Daniel had quit
feeding because he believed he had run crazy and killed a whole
bunch of people. He’d looked bad, but not as bad as Stefan.
“You care about him, too.”
She didn’t sound surprised, but she would have been if she knew as
much as I did about vampires.
I knew Stefan kept a bunch of people virtual prisoners to feed from—
though none of them had seemed to mind. I’d had my rose-colored
glasses ripped off when he’d killed two helpless people, people I’d
rescued, in order to protect me. It might have been the enigmatic
vampire Wulfe who’d twisted their necks, but Stefan had been the
director of that macabre little conspiracy.
But it hurt to see him like this.
“Yes,” I told Mom.
“You can let him go now,” Adam told Darryl. “He’s feeding.”
Darryl dropped Stefan’s arm and stepped back as if fearing
contamination. There wasn’t a lot of room left in my living room, but
he bumped his back up to the counter that separated the larger room
from the kitchen and curled his lip. Adam gave him a considering
look before turning his attention to the other wolf.
“Are you all right, Peter?” Adam asked.
I looked at the werewolf and saw that there was sweat gathering on
his forehead and he’d closed his eyes and turned them away from the
vampire, who was sprawled across his lap and fastened to his arm.
Judging from the difference between his reaction and Adam’s, it
might have been better to find a more dominant wolf to feed to
Stefan.
Peter didn’t answer, and Adam walked behind him so he could put a
hand on the skin of his neck. Almost immediately I could see the
impact of that touch as Peter relaxed against his Alpha with a sigh of
relief.
“I’m sorry,” Adam said. “If there’d been someone else ... Ben should
be here soon.”
There had been Darryl, who was staring at his shoes. Adam’s remark
hadn’t been pointed, but Darryl looked like he’d been slapped.
Peter shook his head. “No problem. It was bad for a minute, though. I
thought it was supposed to be a myth that vampires could trap your
mind.”
That was one of the problems with the vamps. Like the fae, there was
so much misinformation out there it was hard to sift truth from fact.
“He’s not himself,” I found myself saying. “He wouldn’t do it on
purpose.” I wasn’t entirely sure that was truthful, but it sounded good.
He’d taken me over once. It had all worked out just fine, but I’d rather
it never happened again.
My mother looked at me. “Do you have orange juice or something
else with sugar in it for the blood donors?”
I should have thought of that. I hopped over Stefan’s legs so I could
go to the kitchen and look. Once my roommate had declared me
completely unadventurous in my food choices, he’d taken over
shopping. I had no idea what he’d managed to stuff into the fridge.
I found a half-full bottle of low-pulp orange juice and poured two
glasses. I handed the first to Adam and held the second in front of
Peter.
“Do you need help?”
Peter gave me a half smile, shook his head, and took the glass,
downing it in quick time and handing me back the glass.
“More?”
“Not now,” he said. “Maybe when it’s over.”
MOM AND I SAT ON THE COUCH, ADAM TOOK A CHAIR, and
Darryl stayed where he was, pointedly not looking at the vampire.
There was a sharp knock on the door, and Darryl said, “Ben.”
He made no move to answer it, but it popped open anyway and Ben
stuck his head in. His blond hair looked almost white illuminated by
the porch light. He glanced at Stefan and said in his nifty British
accent, “Bloody hell. He’s in bad shape.”
But his attention was all for my mother.
“She’s married,” I warned him. “And if you call her a rude name,
she’ll shoot you with her pretty pink gun and I’ll spit on your grave.”
He considered me a moment and started to open his mouth.
Adam said, “Ben. Meet Mercy’s mother, Margi.”
Ben paled, closed his mouth, and opened it again. But nothing came
out. I didn’t think Ben was used to meeting mothers.
“I know.” I sighed. “She looks like my younger, better-looking sister.
Mom, this is Ben. Ben is a werewolf from England, and he has a foul
mouth when Adam’s not around to ride herd on him. He’s saved my
life a couple of times. Against the wall is Darryl, werewolf, genius,
Ph.D., and Adam’s second. Peter, also a werewolf, is the nice man
feeding Stefan.”
And after that, the awkwardness set in. Darryl wasn’t talking. Ben,
after one more bemused look at Mom, kept his head down and his
mouth shut. Peter was obviously distracted by the feeding vampire.
Adam was staring at Stefan with a worried frown.
He knew what Stefan’s first words had meant, too. But he couldn’t
talk to me about it in front of my mom until I did. And I wasn’t going
to let her know that Marsilia and her vampires were after me. Not
unless I had to.
Mom wanted to ask me about ... about the incident last week. About
Tim and how he died. But she wouldn’t ask me about anything until
everyone else was gone.
Me? I’d just as soon not talk about any of it. I wondered how long I
could keep everyone together, awkwardness being better than the
stomach-churning panic that conversation with Adam or my mother
was going to cause.
“I’m done in,” Peter said.
Stefan wasn’t any happier about changing donors this time. But
having an additional wolf did the trick and, with only minor damage
done to my end table, he was soon feeding off Ben. But only a few
minutes later, Stefan went limp, his mouth falling away.
“Is he dead?” Peter asked and took a sip of his second glass of orange
juice.
“Him?” asked Ben, extracting his wrist. “He’s been dead for years.”
Peter grunted. “You know what I mean.”
Truthfully, it was difficult to tell. He wasn’t breathing, but vampires
didn’t, not unless they needed to talk or pass for human. His heart
wasn’t beating, but again, that didn’t mean much.
“We’ll take him to my house,” Adam said. “The...” He glanced at
Mom. “My basement has a room without windows, where he’ll be
safer.” He meant the cage where they locked up werewolves when
they had control issues. He frowned. “Not that that will stop whoever
dumped him in the middle of your living room, Mercy.” He knew
“whoever” all right.
Marsilia, I thought, though maybe it had been Stefan himself. Or
maybe some other vampire. The one who’d explained that Marsilia
and Stefan were the only ones who could teleport like that was Andre,
the one I’d had to kill. Hard to trust his information too far.
“I’ll be careful,” I told Adam. “But you have to be careful, too. There
was a vampire watching the back of the house when I was out talking
to Amber.”
“Who’s Amber?” Adam’s question was just a hair faster than my
mother’s “Amber? Charla’s friend Amber from college?”
I nodded at Mom. “She read about ... I’ve apparently made national
news. She decided that she should look me up to check into her
haunted house.”
“That sounds like Amber,” Mom said. Char and Amber had spent a
number of weekends at my parents’ house in Portland while I was in
college. “She always was self-centered, and I don’t suppose that
would change. Though why would she think that you could help her
with a haunted house?”
I had never told Mom about seeing ghosts. I hadn’t really thought it
was anything unusual until recently. I mean, people see ghosts all the
time, right? They just don’t talk about it much. Having a daughter
who turned into a coyote was bad enough, so anything else I could
keep quiet about, I had.
This didn’t seem like the time to tell her about it either. I hadn’t told
her about last week. I hadn’t told her about vampires. I had no
intention of informing her of any other secrets I’d been keeping.
So I shrugged. “Maybe because I associate with werewolves and the
fae.”
“What did she expect you to do about it?” Adam asked. He’d have
listened in on the whole conversation with Amber; werewolves have
very good hearing.
“Beats me,” I told him. “Do I look like an expert at laying ghosts?”
Seeing them was a long way from sending them away. I wasn’t even
sure it was possible. I thought about what Amber had said. “Maybe
she just wanted me to go tell her that her house really is haunted.
Maybe she just needs someone to believe her.”
Adam knelt on the floor and picked up Stefan. “I’ll take him home
now.” Though Stefan was obviously taller than he was, Adam’s
supernatural strength wasn’t apparent—he just looked like someone
who could carry a great deal of weight without effort.
It should have been Darryl who picked up Stefan, not Adam. The
Alpha just didn’t do the heavy lifting when there were capable
minions about. Ben and Peter had both fed the vampire, but Darryl
didn’t have that excuse. He must have a real thing about vampires.
Adam didn’t seem to notice anything wrong with Darryl. “I’ll send
someone back to watch your house, tonight.” He looked at my mom.
“Do you need a place to stay? Mercy’s”—he glanced around—“a
little short on space.”
“I’m staying at the Red Lion in Pasco,” Mom said to Adam. To me
she said, “We left in a hurry and I couldn’t find anyone to watch
Hotep. He’s in the car.” Hotep was her Doberman pinscher, who liked
me even less than I liked him.
Adam nodded solemnly though I didn’t remember telling him that my
mom’s dog hated me.
“Adam,” I said. “Thank you. For saving Stefan.”
“No thanks necessary. We didn’t save him for you.”
Ben gave me an expression that might have been a smile if his face
hadn’t been so tight. “You weren’t there in the basement with that
thing.” Andre’s demon-possessed vampire, he meant, the first
vampire I’d killed. He had captured several of the wolves and Stefan
and ... played with them. Demons like causing pain.
“If it hadn’t been for Stefan ...” Ben shrugged, as if letting a memory
die away unspoken. “We owe him.”
Adam glanced at Darryl, who opened the door. I thought of
something.
“Wait.”
Adam stopped.
“If I talk to Mom ... does that count?” He’d told me I had to talk to
someone, and my mother wouldn’t go away until I told her
everything. It seemed like I should be able to kill two birds with one
stone.
He handed Stefan to Ben and walked to me. He touched my jaw, just
below my ear, and, as if our fascinated audience wasn’t watching, he
kissed me, touching me with nothing more than his fingertips and his
mouth.
At first the heat flushed through me ... followed by a horrible choking
fear. I couldn’t breathe, couldn’t move ...
When I came back to myself, I was sitting on the couch with my head
between my knees, Adam crooning to me. But he wasn’t touching me,
and neither was anyone else.
I sat up and came face-to-face with Adam. His face was still, but I
could see the wolf in his eyes and smell the wild on his skin.
“Panic attack,” I said needlessly. “I haven’t been having them as
often.” I lied and saw from the expression on his face that he knew it.
This one made four today. Yesterday, I’d done better.
“Talking to your mother counts,” he said. “We’ll take things slowly ...
see how it goes. You talk to your mother or anyone else you’d like.
But it’ll all keep until kissing me doesn’t cause a panic attack, all
right?”
He didn’t wait for an answer, just strode out of the house followed by
his entourage. Darryl waited until both Ben and Peter were out the
door before closing it gently behind them all.
“Mercy,” said my mother thoughtfully, “you never told me your
werewolf neighbor was quite that hot.”
“Mmm,” I said. I appreciated her effort, but now that the time was at
hand, I just wanted to get it over with. “And you didn’t get to see him
rip Tim’s corpse to pieces.”
I heard Mom suck in a hard breath. “I wish I had. Tell me about Tim.”
So I did. And she didn’t say a word until I was finished. I hadn’t
meant to tell her everything. But she didn’t say anything, didn’t move,
didn’t look at me. So I talked. Just barely, I managed to keep Ben’s
name out of it—his secrets were his to reveal—but everything else
roared in jagged bits or choked roughly out of someplace dark and
vile. It took a while to get it all out.
“Tim reminded you of Samuel,” she said when I was through.
I jerked my head off her lap.
“No, I’m not crazy.” She handed me a wad of tissues from the box
that sat on an arm of the couch. “That’s why you didn’t see it coming.
That’s why you didn’t see what he was. Samuel was always a bit of
an outcast, and it left you with a soft spot for outcasts.”
Samuel? Cheery, sweet-tempered (for a werewolf) Samuel an
outcast?
“He was not.” I grabbed a handful of tissues and wiped snot and salt
water from my face. My nose runs when I cry.
She nodded. “Sure he was. He likes humans, Mercy—and most
werewolves don’t.” She shivered at some memory or other. “He
listened to heavy metal and watched Star Trek reruns.”
“He was the Marrok’s second before he came here to lone wolf it for
a while. He wasn’t an outcast.”
She just looked at me.
“Lone wolf doesn’t mean outcast.” I set my jaw.
The door popped open, and Samuel, who’d been sitting out on the
porch for a while, came in. “Yes, it does. Hey, Margi—why’d you
bring that dog with you? He’s creepy-looking.”
Hotep was black with reddish brown eyes. He looked like Anubis.
Samuel was right, he was creepy-looking.
“I couldn’t find a sitter for him,” she said, standing up to get hugged.
“How have you been?”
He started to say fine ... then looked at me. “We’ve been taking our
knocks, Mercy and I. But, so far, we’ve gotten back into the ring.”
“That’s all you can do,” said Mom. “I need to go. Hotep will be fit to
burst by now, and I need to get some sleep.” She looked at me. “I can
stay for a few days—and Curt wanted me to tell you that you’re
welcome to come home for a while.” Curt was my stepfather, the
dentist.
“Thank you, Mom,” I told her, and meant it. Horrible as it had been, I
thought spilling it all might have helped. But I had to get her out of
town before Marsilia made her next move. “That was exactly what I
needed.” I took a deep breath. “Mom, I need you to go back to
Portland. I worked today. It was better, doing what I always do. I
think if I just stick to my normal routine, I’ll put it behind me.”
My mother narrowed her eyes at me and started to say something, but
Samuel had reached into his pocket and handed her a card.
“Here,” he said. “Call me. I’ll tell you how she’s doing.”
Mom raised her chin. “How is she doing?”
“Fair to middling,” he told her. “Some of it’s an act, but not all of it.
She’s tough—good genes. She’ll make it fine, but I think she’s right.
She’ll make it better after folks quit running around with sympathy
and pity and staring at her. And the best way to do that is to get back
to work, back to normal until other people forget about it.”
Bless Samuel.
“All right,” Mom said. She gave Samuel a stern look. “Now, I don’t
know what’s going on between you and my daughter and Adam
Hauptman—”
“Neither do we,” I muttered.
Samuel grinned. “We have it pretty well worked out as far as the sex
goes—Adam gets it—someday—and I don’t. But the rest is still up
for negotiation.”
“Samuel Cornick,” I sputtered in disbelief. “That is my mother.”
Mom grinned back at him and pulled him down so she could kiss his
cheek. “That’s how I was reading it as well. But I just wanted to
check.” She sobered, and, after a glance at me, said to Samuel, “You
take care of her for me.”
He nodded solemnly. “I will. And Adam has his whole pack on it. Let
me walk you to your car.”
He came back in the house, and I heard my mother’s car drive off. He
looked as tired as I felt.
“Adam has a couple of wolves on stakeout at the Red Lion, just
waiting for your mother to get there. She’ll be all right.”
“How was the emergency?” I asked.
He lit up. “Some poor fool took his pregnant wife across the country
to visit her mother two weeks from her delivery date. I got there just
in time to play catcher.”
Samuel loved babies. “Girl or boy?”
“Boy. Jacob Daniel Arlington, six pounds four ounces.”
“Did you go to Adam’s and see Stefan?” I asked.
He nodded. “I stopped by his house before I came home. Much good
as I did. Mostly I help people before they die. I’m not so helpful
afterward.”
“So what do you think?”
He shrugged. “He’s doing whatever it is that vampires do during the
day. Not sleeping, but something close to it. I expect he’ll rest tonight
and through tomorrow day. Which is what anyone of common sense
would tell you—and so Adam said. He declared me tired and useless,
then sent me back over here to keep an eye on you in case Marsilia
decides to try something else.”
“‘Tired and useless,’ ” I said in mock sympathy. “And even that
didn’t get you out of a job.”
He grinned. “Adam seems to think you’ve declared yourself his. But,
given his record of doing that without consulting you, I thought I’d
ask you myself.”
I raised my hands in helpless surrender. “What can I say. My mother
thinks he’s hot. I have no choice but to take him. Besides, it’s a
terrible thing to see a man crawling ... begging.”
He laughed. “I bet. Go to bed, Mercy. Morning comes early.” He
started down the hallway to his bedroom, then turned, walking
backward. “I’m going to tell Adam that you said he begged you.”
I raised an eyebrow. “Then I’ll tell him that you accused him of
lying.”
He laughed. “Good night, Mercy.”
I’d taken Adam for mine, chosen with my eyes and heart open. But
Samuel’s laugh still made me smile. I loved Samuel, too.
He worried me. Sometimes he seemed just like the old Samuel, funny
and lighthearted. But I was pretty sure that a lot of the time he was
just going through the motions, like an actor given a cue—“Enter
downstage left and smile happily.”
He’d come here, to stay with me, to try to get better—which was a
good sign, like an alcoholic who goes to his first A.A. meeting. But I
wasn’t sure if being here was helping him or not. He was old. Older
than I’d known when I’d grown up in his father’s pack. And though
werewolves don’t die of old age the way humans do, it can kill them
just as effectively.
Maybe if I could have loved Samuel differently. Maybe if Adam
hadn’t been there. If I had taken Samuel as my mate as he’d wanted
me to when he’d moved himself into my home, maybe it would have
fixed him.
He frowned at me. “What’s wrong?”
But you can’t marry someone to fix him, even if you love them. And I
didn’t love Samuel the way a woman should love her mate, the way I
loved Adam. Samuel didn’t love me that way either. Close, but not
quite. And except in horseshoes and hand grenades, close doesn’t
count.
“I love you, you know,” I told him.
His face went blank for a moment. He said, “Yes. I do know.” His
pupils contracted, and his gray eyes lightened to icy winter. Then he
smiled, a sweet, warm thing. “I love you, too.”
I went to bed with the distinct feeling that, this time, close might
really be just enough to do the trick.
SAMUEL WAS RIGHT—MORNING DID COME TOO EARLY I
yawned as I turned my van onto the street where my shop was—and
stopped dead in the middle of the road, all thoughts of sleep gone.
Someone had taken spray paint and had fun last night all over my
place of business.
I took it all in, then drove slowly into the parking lot and parked next
to Zee’s old truck. He came out of the office and walked up to me as I
got out and shut the van’s door, a tallish, thinnish, graying man. He
looked like he was in his late fifties or early sixties, but he was a lot
older than that: never judge one of the fae by their outward
appearance.
“Wow,” I said. “You’ve got to admire their dedication. They must
have been here for hours.”
“And no one drove by?” Zee snapped. “No one called the polizei?”
“Umm, probably not. There’s not a lot of traffic here at night.”
Reading the graffiti made me realize that there were themes and
insights to be gained from the canvas that someone had made of my
garage.
Green Paint, I was almost sure, was a young man whose thought
patterns paralleled Ben’s if the words he used were any indication.
“Look, he misspelled whore. I wonder if he did it on purpose? He
spelled it right on the front window. I wonder which one he did first?”
“I have called your police friend Tony,” Zee said, so angry his teeth
clicked together as he spoke. “He was sleeping, but he will be here in
a half hour.” He might have been upset on my account, but mostly, I
thought, it was the state of the garage. It had been his business long
before I bought it from him. Last week I’d have been angry, too. But
so much had happened since then that this ranked pretty low on my
list of worries.
Red Paint had a more pressing agenda than Green Paint. Red had
painted only two words: liar and murderer, over and over. Adam had
installed security cameras so we’d know for sure, but I was betting
Red Paint was Tim’s cousin Courtney. Tim had killed his best friend
before he attacked me, and there just weren’t all that many people left
who’d have gotten this worked up over his death.
I could hear a car approaching. An hour later, when traffic started to
build up with people headed to work, I wouldn’t have noticed. But it
was quiet this early in the morning, so I heard my mother’s approach.
“Zee,” I said urgently. “Is there any way you could hide this”—I
waved my hands at the shop—“for a few minutes?”
I didn’t know much about what he could and couldn’t do—outside of
fixing cars and playing with metal, he didn’t use magic much in front
of me. But I’d seen his real face once, so I knew his personal glamour
was good. If he could mask his face, surely he could hide a bunch of
green and red paint.
He frowned at me in deep displeasure. You didn’t ask for favors from
the fae—not only was it dangerous, but they tended to take offense.
Zee might love me, might owe me for freeing him from a tight spot,
but that would only take me so far.
“My mother is coming,” I told him. “The vampires are after me, and I
have to get her to leave. She won’t do it if she knows I’m in danger.”
Then, because I was desperate, I played dirty. “Not after what
happened with Tim.”
His face stilled. Then he grabbed my wrist and pulled me with him so
we were both standing closer to the garage.
He put his hand on the wall next to the door. “If it works, I won’t be
able to remove my hand without breaking the spell.”
When Mom turned the corner, the graffiti was gone.
“You’re the best,” I told him.
“Make her leave soon,” he said with a grimace. “This is not my sort
of magic.”
I nodded and had started to walk to where Mom was parking her car
when I saw the door clearly. Covered by red and green paint, it hadn’t
been as noticeable. Someone with some artistic skill had painted an X
on the door. In case I didn’t get the right idea, instead of two mere
lines, the shape was formed by two bones. They were ivory with
grayish shadows and just a faint blush of pink—not painted by a
couple of self-righteous and irate kids with spray paint. All it was
missing to keep it from Jolly Rogerhood was a skull.
“You’d better hide that,” Zee said. “Magic won’t.”
I put my back against the door and folded my arms.
“So why don’t you think it’s running right?” I asked him as my
mother walked over from her car, with Hotep on a leash.
“Because it is old,” Zee told me, taking the cue I had given him.
“Because it was not well designed in the first place. Because aircooled
engines need constant tinkering.”
“I was—Hey, Mom.”
“Margaret,” Zee said coolly.
“Mr. Adelbertsmiter.” My mom didn’t like Zee. She blamed him for
my decision to stay in the Tri-Cities and fix cars instead of finding a
teaching job, something much more in line with the kind of work she
thought I should be doing. Politeness done, she turned back to me. “I
thought I’d stop by before heading home.” She couldn’t get too close
though, because as soon as he caught my scent, Hotep growled and
lowered his head aggressively: protecting my mom from the bad
coyote.
“I’ll be fine,” I told her, curling my lip at the Doberman. I actually
like dogs, but not this one. “Give my love to Curt and the girls.”
“Don’t forget to work things out so you can come to Nan’s wedding.”
Nan was my younger half sister, and she was getting married in six
weeks. Luckily, I wasn’t part of the wedding party, so all I had to do
was sit and watch.
“I have it on the calendar,” I promised. “Zee’s going to take care of
the shop for me.”
She glanced at him, then back at me. “Fine, then.” She started to give
me a hug, then gave Hotep a rueful look. “You need to teach him to
behave like you did Ringo.”
“Ringo was a poodle, Mom. A fight between Hotep and me wouldn’t
end well for either of us. It’s all right. Not his fault.”
She sighed. “All right. You take care of yourself.”
“Love you. Drive carefully,” I told her.
“I always do. Love you.”
Zee was sweating by the time the car was out of sight. He took his
hand off the building and the paint returned. “I didn’t do it for you,”
he grouched. “I just didn’t want her hanging around longer than
necessary.”
We both stepped away from the door to look at the painting that was
now mostly covered by a big, fat-lettered red “LIAR.” The paint of
the crossed bones was thicker than the spray paint, so even though I
couldn’t see most of the color, I could see the outline of it.
“The vampires dropped Stefan in my living room last night,” I told
him. “He was in pretty rough shape. Peter ... one of Adam’s wolves,
thinks whoever did it was hoping Stefan would attack me and we’d
both be out of the way. Stefan wasn’t in any shape to talk much, but
what he did manage to convey was that Marsilia found out I killed
Andre.”
Zee traced his fingers over the bones and shook his head. “This might
be vampire work. But, Mercy, you’ve been putting your little nose so
many places it doesn’t belong; it could almost be anyone. I’ll talk to
Uncle Mike—but I expect your best bet for information about it is
Stefan, because it doesn’t feel like fae magic. How badly is Stefan
hurt?”
“If he were a werewolf, I think he’d be dead. You think this is
magic?” It felt like that to me, but I was hoping I was wrong.
Zee frowned. “For an evil bloodsucker, he’s not a bad sort.” High
praise from Zee. “And yes, there is magic here, but nothing I’m
familiar with.”
“Samuel thinks Stefan will be all right.”
Tony turned the corner in his unmarked car, which was discreetly
police modified with extra mirrors, a few extra antennae, and a bar of
lights along the back window, hidden from the casual eye by extradark
glass. He slowed when he caught sight of the damage. He pulled
up next to us and opened the door.
“You decorating for Christmas early, Mercy?” Tony could blend in
even better than I did. Today he looked like a Hispanic cop ... like the
poster child for Hispanic cops, handsome and clean-cut. When he was
playing drug dealer, he did it better than the real thing. I’d first met
him playing a homeless man. There was nothing magic or
supernatural about him, but the man was a chameleon.
I glanced at the building again. He was right. If you didn’t pay any
attention to the words, it had a sort of Christmasy look to it. The green
paint tended to be short top to bottom but long front side to side. The
red paint was fat and closed up. It looked sort of like garlands with
red balls hanging down.
There was even “Ho, ho, ho,” if you skipped around a little and
deleted an “e” on the last “ho.” Our green painter had a limited
vocabulary and occasionally mixed up a professional working woman
with a garden implement.
“Not really Christmasy thoughts,” I told Tony. “But the colors are
right. Actually, if the white wasn’t so dingy, it would almost look
festive—like that little Mexican restaurant in Pasco—the one with the
really hot salsa.” The fresh colors made the original paint job look
tired.
“Your boyfriend still got surveillance video going?”
“Yes, but I don’t know how to run it.”
“I do,” said Zee. “Let’s go take a look.”
I glanced at him. Vampires, remember? We don’t want the nice
human cops to see the vampires.
He gave me a bland look that clearly said, If the vampires were
clumsy enough to get caught by the cameras, that was their problem. I
couldn’t object out loud, but if the vampires made themselves
obvious, it would be Tony who was in danger.
Well, I thought as I led the way into the office, at least vampires
looked like everyone else. As long as they didn’t display their fangs
for the camera—or throw a car around—it was unlikely they’d be
spotted for what they were. And if it was obvious ... Tony wasn’t
stupid. He knew a lot about how the fae and the werewolves worked,
and I knew he suspected that there were a lot more nasties still
keeping quiet about themselves.
While Zee played with the electronics, Tony looked at me.
“How are you?” He smelled of worry, with a little of the metallic
scent of protective anger.
“Really tired of answering that question,” I replied blandly. “How
about you?”
He flashed his pearly whites at me. “Good for you. Do you think
Bright Future did this?”
If our minds kept working this much in sync, I’d pity poor Tony.
“Sort of. I think this is Tim’s cousin’s work,” I told him. “She’s a
member of Bright Future, but she didn’t do this under their banner.
Everything was directed at me—not the fae.”
“You want to press charges?”
I sighed. “I’ll call my insurance company. I’m afraid they might force
me to press charges in order to be reimbursed. I can’t afford to hire
someone to repaint it unless I use my insurance, and I can’t take the
time off work to repaint it myself.” I still had other things to pay for—
the damage a fae who wanted to eat me had done to Adam’s house
and car, for instance. And Zee had told me he was collecting the rest
of what I owed him on the business. Fae cannot lie, and we hadn’t had
time to work that out.
“How about Gabriel’s family,” Tony suggested. “There are enough of
them, and they could work after school. It would be cheaper than
hiring professionals and ... I think they need the money.”
Gabriel Sandoval was my man Friday, a high school student who
came in weekends and late afternoons to do paperwork, answer
phones, and do whatever else needed doing.
I had a sudden vision of the shop being overrun with little Sandovals
hanging from ladders and ropes. I’d let them loose in the office for
cleaning, and it was almost hard to recognize the place—for a bunch
of kids they were amazingly industrious. “That’s a good idea. I’ll
have Gabriel call his mom as soon as he gets here.”
“Here,” said Zee. He turned on the little security monitor and flipped
a switch. The system that Adam had installed was slick and
expensive. It ran on motion sensors, so we only had to watch it when
there was something moving. Something first moved at 10:15; we
watched a half-grown rabbit bop unhurriedly across the pavement out
of sight. At midnight someone appeared at the door of the garage. It
wasn’t two people with spray paint, so I was pretty sure it was
whoever painted a pair of crossed bones on my door.
His image was oddly shadowed, unrecognizable. The miscreant kept
his face out of camera range—impressive since there was a camera
placed just in front of the door to catch the face of anyone breaking in.
The only thing the camera got a clear shot of was the gloves he
wore—the old-fashioned kind: white with little buttons on the wrist.
There were odd glitches in the pictures, jumps where the camera
turned off because there was no movement for it to follow. By the
timers, it took him forty-five minutes to paint the bones on my door—
of which the cameras caught about ten minutes. Part of the missing
time covered how the painter got there and how he left.
I didn’t think he knew the cameras were there, and he still avoided
them. Some supernatural creatures just don’t film well: by tradition,
vampires are among them. The height was right for Wulfe, who
would be my first choice in any vampire magicking. Since Wulfe was
the vampire who knew for certain that I’d killed Andre, he was also
my top suspect for the informer who had told Marsilia about my
crimes.
The camera caught movement again.
“Stop it,” Tony said.
Two figures, still indistinct, froze on the edge of the lights of my
parking lot, and the little numbers on the lower right of the screen
read 2:08 A.M. Time had jumped almost a half hour from when the
bone painter had last been there.
“What was that all about?” he asked. “The person at your door?”
“I don’t know,” I told him. I almost said that his guess was as good as
mine, but it wasn’t. “Maybe someone was trying to break in, but
didn’t make it.” Impossible to tell what he’d been doing from the
camera shot. “It doesn’t matter, though, because he obviously wasn’t
the one who graffitied all over.”
Tony stared at me. Cops were almost as good as werewolves at
sensing lies. He turned abruptly and opened the door to examine it.
Like Zee, he traced the crossed bones with a light finger.
“Who have you been ticking off besides Bright Future? This looks
almost like something the old Mob might do—classy, but designed to
frighten the hell out of whoever received it.”
I sighed, shrugged. “No one wanted me to get Zee out of the murder
rap. But it’s not the kind of thing a fae would do—too visible. And a
werewolf who was ticked off that badly would just attack. I’ve got
some people who’ll look into it for me better than the police can.”
Frowning, Tony made an irritated noise. “Is this another one of your
‘It’s too dangerous for you mere human cops?’”
I rubbed my arms, but I wasn’t cold, just chilled. I was under no
illusions. Marsilia could have just killed me, but she was playing. But
no matter how playful the cat is, the mouse is just as dead in the end.
And the end would be whenever she decided. The only question was
how many people—how many of my friends—she decided to take
down with me.
Maybe I was panicking prematurely. Maybe she would settle for a
punishment. Stefan was hers, there was no reason for the gut-deep
feeling that he wouldn’t be the last to suffer for my sins. I didn’t know
Marsilia well enough to make that kind of prediction.
“Mercy?”
“I don’t know what the crossed bones mean.” Other than bad news.
“Zee tells me it is magical but probably not fae magic.” Zee was out,
anyone who cared to would know that he was fae, which was the
reason that the garage was mine now, instead of his. There was a lot
of prejudice against the fae. “He has a few contacts who’ll take a look
at it for me. I know a few other people I can ask, too.” Adam had a
witch on the pack’s payroll for cleanup. She was good, but it would
cost me a lot to hire her if Uncle Mike and Stefan didn’t know what it
was. This was shaping up into a real macaroni-and-cheese month.
“However, none of them will come within a hundred miles of a police
investigation. Do you have anyone on the KPD who is an expert in
magic?”
Tony held my gaze for a minute before giving up with a sigh. “Hell
no, Mercy. You should have seen the brass’s faces when they watched
that video—” He stopped and gave me a guilty look. It was a video of
me killing Tim ... and all the stuff before that. He shrugged nervously
and looked away. “There are a few who know something about fae or
werewolves, but ... if they know anything more, they keep it quiet for
fear of losing their jobs.”
He sighed and came back into the shop. “Go ahead,” he told Zee.
“Let’s watch Tim’s cousin paint the shop.”
Once the two shadowy people moved fully onto the parking lot,
Courtney was unmistakable. Instead of watching the whole process,
Zee fast-forwarded it until the pair walked off with bags of empty
spray-paint cans almost two hours later. He stopped the images when
Courtney was close to the camera and impossible to mistake, her
pretty, rounded face hard and angry. Zee flipped back and forth a little
until we got a clear view of her companion’s face, too.
The security system hadn’t been in place long, but Zee loved gadgets.
He must have spent some time playing with this one.
“It’s Courtney all right ... I don’t remember her last name,” I told
Tony. “I don’t recognize the man at all. If it were Bright Future,
there’d have been more people.”
“It’s personal,” Tony agreed grimly. “You are going to want to give
me those disks and file charges so we can give her some time to cool
off. She’s not going to stop harassing you anytime soon unless
someone heads her off at the pass. It’s safer for everyone if it’s the
police and not the werewolves or the fae.”
Zee ejected the disk and handed it to Tony.
Tony frowned at it a moment. “I’m not worried about the kids, Mercy.
But there’s something about those bones and that guy that is sending
my old radar into fits. If that’s not a death threat, I’ll be a monkey’s
uncle. You stick close to that werewolf boyfriend of yours for a
while.”
I gave him a martyred sigh. “Why do you think Zee is still here? I
suspect I’m not going to get a moment to myself for the next year, at
least.”
“Yeah,” he said, a smile lighting his eyes. “It’s tough when people
care about you.”
Zee made a sound that might have been a laugh. He covered it by
saying sourly, “Not that she makes it easy on them to watch over her.
You just wait. All she’s going to do for the next few weeks is
complain, complain, complain.”
3
WORD HAD GOTTEN OUT THAT I WAS BACK IN THE SHOP
and my regular customers started stopping in to express their
sympathy and support. The graffiti only made things worse. By nine I
was hiding in the garage, with the big overhead doors shut, even
though that meant that the garage was hot and stuffy, and my electric
bill was going to suffer.
I left Zee to handle the customers, poor customers. Zee is not a people
person. Years ago, when I first came to work here, his nine-year-old
son was in charge of the front desk and everyone was properly
grateful.
I spent most of the morning trying to figure out the troubles of a
twenty-year-old Jetta. Nothing more fun than sorting through
intermittent electrical problems, as long as you have a year or two to
waste. The owner got off her job at three in the morning and twice
had gone to start her car and found the battery drained though the
lights were off.
There was nothing wrong with the battery. Or the alternator. I was
upside-down in the driver’s seat, with my head up the Jetta’s dash,
when a sudden thought came to me. I rolled over and looked at the
shiny new CD player in the ancient car, which had held only a
cassette player when it had last visited here.
When Zee came in, I was using Power Words to describe service
techs who didn’t know how to tie their own shoes but felt free and
easy meddling in one of my cars. I’d been taking care of this Jetta for
as long as I’d been working on cars, and felt a special affection for it.
Zee blinked at me a couple of times to hide his amusement. “We
could give your bill to the place that put her stereo in.”
“Would they pay for it?” I asked.
Zee smiled. “They would if I took it in.” Zee took a personal interest
in our customers’ cars, too.
We locked up for lunch and went to our favorite taco wagon for
authentic Mexican tacos. That meant no cheese or iceberg lettuce, but
cilantro, lime, and radishes instead—a more-than-fair trade in my
view.
The wagon was parked in a lot next to a Mexican bakery just across
the cable bridge over the Columbia River, putting it in Pasco, but just
barely. Some wagons are step vans, but this one was a small trailer
laden with whiteboards that listed the menu with prices.
The sweet-faced woman who worked there spoke barely enough
English to take orders—which probably didn’t matter because there
were very few English-only speakers among her patrons. She said
something and patted my hand when I paid—and when I checked the
bag to make sure the little plastic cups of salsa were there, I saw she’d
added a couple of extra of my favorite tacos in our bag. Which proved
that everyone, even people who couldn’t read the newspaper, knew
about me.
Zee drove us to the park on the Kennewick side of the river, where
there were waterfront picnic tables for us to eat at. I sighed as we
walked along the river’s edge between the parking lot and the tables.
“I wish it hadn’t made the papers. How long before everyone forgets,
and I don’t get any more pitying looks?”
Zee grinned wolfishly at me. “I’ve told you before; you need to learn
Spanish. She congratulated you on killing him. And she knows a few
other men who could benefit from your efforts.” He picked a table
and sat down.
I sat down across from him and set the bag between us. “She did not.”
I don’t speak Spanish, but everyone who lives in the Tri-Cities for
long picks up a few words—besides she hadn’t said very much, even
in Spanish.
“Maybe not the last part of it,” agreed Zee, pulling out a chicken taco
and squeezing one of the lime segments over it. “Though I saw it in
her face. But she did say, ‘Bien hecho.’”
I knew the first word, but he made me ask for the last, waiting until
curiosity forced the words out of my mouth. “Which means? Good—”
“Good job.” His white teeth sank into the tortilla.
Stupid. It was stupid to let other people’s opinions matter, but having
someone else who didn’t view me as a victim cheered me up
immensely. After pouring green hot sauce over my goat taco, I ate
with a renewed appetite.
“I think,” I told Zee, “that I’ll go to the dojo tonight after I get done
with work.” I’d already missed Saturday’s early-morning session.
“It should be interesting to watch,” Zee said, which was as close as he
could come to lying. He had no desire to watch a bunch of people
working themselves up into a noxious puddle of sweat and fatigue
(his words). He must have been elected to be my bodyguard for a
little longer than just the workday.
SOMEONE HAD TALKED TO THEM ALL. I COULD SEE IT IN
the casual way they greeted me as I walked into the dojo. Muscles in
Sensei Johanson’s jaw twitched when he first saw me, but he led us
through the opening exercises and stretches with his usual sadistic
thoroughness.
By the time we started sparring, the muscles in my lower back, which
had been tense for the last week, were loose and moving well. After
the first two bouts, I was relaxed and settled into my usual love-hate
relationship with my third opponent, the devastatingly powerful
brown belt who was the bully of the dojo. He was careful, oh so
careful that Sensei never saw him do it, but he liked to hurt people ...
women. In addition to the full-contact part of Sensei’s chosen form,
Lee Holland was the other reason I was the only woman in the
advanced class. Lee wasn’t married, for which I was glad. No woman
deserved to have to live with him.
I actually liked to spar with him because I never felt guilty about
leaving bruises behind. I also enjoyed the frustrated look in his eyes
as his skilled moves (his brown belt justly outranked my own purple)
constantly failed to connect as well as they should.
Today there was something else in his eyes when he looked at the
stitches on my chin, a hot edge of desire that seriously creeped me
out. He was turned on that I had been raped. Either that or that I’d
killed someone. I preferred the latter but, knowing Lee, it was
probably the former.
“You are weak,” he told me, whispering so no one else could hear.
I’d been right about what had excited his interest.
“I killed the last person who thought that,” I said, and front kicked
him hard in the chest. Usually, I tempered my speed to something
more humanly possible. But his eyes made me quit playing human.
I’m not supernaturally strong, but in the martial arts, speed counts,
too.
I was moving at full tilt when I stepped around him while he was still
off balance. Tournament martial arts have two opponents facing each
other, but our style encourages us to strike from the back or the side—
keeping the enemies’ weapons facing the wrong way. I stepped hard
on the back of his knee, forcing him to drop to the floor. Before he
could respond, I hopped back three feet to give him a chance to get
up, this being only sparring and not a death match.
Our dojo did some grappling, but not much. Shi Sei Kai Kan is all
about putting your opponent down fast and moving on to the next
guy. It was developed for warfare, when a soldier might be facing
multiple opponents. Grappling left you vulnerable to attack from
another opponent. And I had no desire to get up close and personal
with Lee.
He roared with humiliation-charged rage and came for me. Block and
block, twist and dodge, I kept him from contacting me.
Someone called out sharply, “Sensei! Check out Lee’s fight.”
“Enough, Lee,” Sensei called from the far side of the dojo, where he’d
been working with someone. “That’s enough.”
Lee didn’t appear to hear him. If I hadn’t been so much faster than
him, I’d have been hurt already. As it was, I made sure he couldn’t
connect any of his hits. For a while, at least, until I got cocky and
overconfident.
I fell for a sham move with his right hand, while he slammed me in
the diaphragm and laid me out on the floor with his left. Ignoring my
lack of breath as much as I could, I rolled and stumbled to my feet.
And as I rolled, I saw that Adam was standing in the doorway in a
business suit. He had his arms folded on his chest as he waited for me
to deal with Lee.
So I did. I thought it was Adam’s presence that gave me the idea. I’d
spent some time at his dojo—in his garage—practicing a jumping,
spinning roundhouse kick. It was developed as a way to knock an
opponent off his horse, a sacrificial move that the foot soldier would
not expect to survive. Mounted warriors had more value as a weapon
than foot soldiers, so the sacrifice would be worth it. In modern days,
the kick is mostly for demos, used in combat with another skilled
person on the ground it is generally too slow, too flashy, to be useful.
Too slow unless you happened to be a part-time coyote and
supernaturally fast.
Lee would never expect me to try it.
My heel hit Lee’s jaw, and he collapsed on the floor almost before I’d
decided to use the move. I collapsed right next to him, still fighting
for breath from his hit to my diaphragm.
Sensei was beside Lee, checking him out almost before I landed.
Adam put his hand on my abdomen and pulled my legs straight to
facilitate breathing.
“Pretty,” he said. “Too bad you pulled it; if anyone deserved to lose
his head ...” He didn’t mean it as a joke. If he’d said it with a hair
more heat, I’d have been worried.
“Is he all right?” I tried to ask—and he must have understood.
“Knocked out cold, but he’ll be fine. Not even a sore neck for his
trouble.”
“I think you’re right,” Sensei said. “She pulled it, and angled her foot
perfectly for a tournament hit.” He held Lee still as the big man
moaned and started to stir.
Sensei looked at me and frowned. “You were stupid, Mercy. What is
the first rule of combat?”
By this time I could talk. “The best defense is fast tennis shoes,” I
said.
He nodded. “Right. When you noticed he was out of control—which
I’m sure was about two full minutes at least before I did, because I
was helping Gibbs with his axe kick—you should have called for
help, then gotten away from him. There was no point in letting this
continue until someone got hurt.”
From the sidelines, Gibbs, the other brown belt, said, “She’s sorry,
Sensei. She just got her directions confused. She kept running the
wrong way.”
There was a general laugh as tension dispersed.
Sensei guided Lee though a general check to make sure nothing was
permanently damaged. “Sit out for the rest of the lesson,” he told Lee.
“Then we’ll have a little talk.”
When Lee got up, he didn’t look at me or anyone else, just took up a
low-horse stance with a wall at his back.
Sensei stood up, and I followed suit. He looked at Adam.
Who bowed, fist to hand and eyes hidden behind dark sunglasses he
hadn’t been wearing when I’d first glimpsed him in the doorway.
Most of the werewolves I know carry dark glasses or wear hats that
can shadow their eyes.
“Adam Hauptman,” he said. “A friend of Mercy’s. Just here to
observe unless you object.”
Sensei was an accountant in real life. His day job was working for an
insurance firm, but here he was king. His eyes were cool and
confident as he looked at Adam.
“The werewolf,” he said. Adam was one of five or six of his pack
who had chosen to come out to the public.
“Hai,” agreed Adam.
“So why didn’t you help Mercy?”
“It is your dojo, Sensei Johanson.” Sensei raised an eyebrow, and
Adam’s sudden smile blazed out. “Besides, I’ve seen her fight. She’s
tough, and she’s smart. If she had thought she was in trouble, she’d
have asked for help.”
I glanced around as I rolled over and stood up, as good as new except
for the pretty bruises I was going to have on my belly. Zee was gone.
He wouldn’t have lingered, with Adam to take over guard duty. His
nose had wrinkled at the smell of sweaty bodies when we’d come
in—he’d been lucky it was relatively cool this fall. In full summer,
the dojo smelled from a block away, at least it did to my nose. To me
the scent was strong but not unpleasant, but I knew from the
comments of my fellow karate students that most humans disliked it
almost as much as Zee did.
Drama over, Adam went back to the sidelines, loosening his tie and
pulling his suit jacket off as a concession to the heat. Sensei had us do
three hundred side kicks (Lee was called from his position of disgrace
to participate) first to the left, then to the right. We all counted them
off in Japanese—though I suspected if a native speaker had dropped
in, they might’ve had difficulty understanding what we were saying.
The first hundred were easy, muscles warm and limber from earlier
calisthenics; the second ... not so much. Somewhere about 220, I lost
myself in the burning ache until it was almost a shock when we
stopped and switched sides. Wandering through the ranks of students
(there were twelve of us tonight) Sensei adjusted people’s form as he
saw necessary.
You could tell those of us who were more serious because our two
hundredth kicks looked just like our first. Students less diligent lost
height and form as exhaustion took its toll. There were still some
students in good form on the three hundredth kick—but not me.
AFTER CLASS, PEOPLE WERE TOO BUSY TRYING NOT TO
stare at the werewolf—all the while getting in a good look—to pay
any attention to me. I changed in the bathroom and took my time, out
of courtesy, so that they would all have time to change in the
anteroom in front of the dojo before I came out.
Sensei was waiting for me when I emerged.
“Good job, Mercy,” he told me with an emphasis that told me he
wasn’t talking about Lee. It was odd that the words he had for me
were the same ones, in a different language, that the woman in the
taco wagon had used, meant the same way.
“If it hadn’t been for this”—I tilted my head to indicate the dojo—“I
would have died that night instead of my attacker.” I gave him a
formal bow, two fists down. “Thank you for your teaching, Sensei.”
He returned my bow, and we both ignored the suspicious watering of
eyes.
Adam was waiting near the front door carefully examining his
fingernails. He had chosen to be amused by all the people staring at
him, which was a good thing. He had a temper. Sweat darkened his
Egyptian-cotton shirt, so it clung to the round lines of his shoulders
and arms, announcing to anyone that he was a hard body.
I took a deep breath to cool my jets and introduced him around. Only
Lee met his eyes for longer than a moment, and at first I thought
Adam was going to lose it. He gave Lee a scary smile. I was afraid of
what he—either he—was going to say, so I grabbed Adam’s arm and
tugged him out the door.
If he’d wanted to, Adam could have shaken me off, but he went along
with it. I hadn’t brought my car because the dojo was just a short hike
across cheatgrass and down the railroad tracks from my shop. Adam’s
SUV wasn’t there either.
“Did you drive a different car?” I asked in the parking lot.
“No, I had Carlos drop me off after work so I could walk back with
you to your shop.” Carlos was one of his wolves, one of three or four
who worked for him at his security business, but not one I knew well.
“I remember you told me you liked to cool down on the walk back.”
I’d told him that several years earlier. He’d been waiting for me at my
shop with a warning ... I looked down at the asphalt and turned my
head so he wouldn’t see my smile.
It had been after I first hauled the old parts car out of my pole barn
and stuck it in the middle of the field so Adam couldn’t help but see it
out of his window. He’d been dispensing orders left and right and,
knowing werewolves as I had, I hadn’t dared to defy him outright.
Instead, knowing how organized and neat Adam was, I’d tortured him
with the battered old Rabbit.
He’d stopped by the garage and found my car but not me. He’d never
said, but I thought he must have trailed me to the dojo—and instead
of complaining about the junkmobile, he’d dressed me down about
wandering around the Tri-Cities by myself at night. Exasperated, I’d
snarled right back at him. I’d told him I used the not-very-long walk
back to my shop as an after-workout cool off. It had been after his
divorce, but not by much. Years ago.
He’d remembered all this time.
“What are you so smug about?” he asked me.
He’d remembered what I’d told him, as if I’d been important to him
even then ... but I could have described the exact shade of the tie that
he had worn that day, the tone that worry had given his voice.
I hadn’t wanted to admit I was attracted to him. Not when he’d been
married, and not when he’d been single. I’d been raised by
werewolves, had left them, and didn’t want to find myself back in that
claustrophobic, violent environment. I especially had no desire to date
an Alpha werewolf.
And yet here I was, walking with Adam, who was as Alpha as could
be.
“Why didn’t you jump into the fight with Lee?” I asked, changing the
subject. He’d wanted to—that’s why the glasses had come on, so that
everyone wouldn’t see that his eyes had lightened to the wolf’s gold.
He didn’t answer right away. The man-made bank up to the railroad
track, which was the shortest route to my shop, was steep, and the
small gravel made it a bit treacherous. I was sore, so I ran up it. My
quads, tired from three hundred kicks, protested the additional effort I
was asking of them, but running meant the climb was over faster.
Adam ran easily up the slope behind me, even in slick dress shoes.
Something about the way he was following me made me feel nervous,
like I was a deer being stalked. So I stopped at the top and stretched
out my tired legs. I’d be damned if I would run from Adam.
“You had him,” Adam said, watching me. “He’s better than you in
form, but he has never fought for his life. I wouldn’t want you tied up
and alone with him for very long, but he never had a chance in the
dojo.” Then his voice deepened with a slightly rougher tone. “If you
hadn’t been stupid, you wouldn’t have even gotten hit. Don’t do that
again.”
“Nossir,” I told him.
I’d been trying not to think about Adam all day—since the crossed
bones on my door made it clear that Marsilia wasn’t finished with me.
I knew, even though Zee would check out other things, I knew that it
had been the vampires marking my business. And, like Tony had said,
it felt like a death threat. I was a dead woman, it was only a matter of
time. All I could do was figure out a way to keep other people from
dying with me.
Adam would die for his mate. He wouldn’t let me just leave, either.
Christy, his first wife, hadn’t been his mate or they’d still be married.
I had to figure out some way to undo what I had done last night.
But it was hard to believe in death with him here beside me, the rich
autumn sunlight glinting in his dark hair and lightening his eyes,
making him squint and highlighting faint laugh lines.
He took my hand in a casual move I had no way of evading without
making a big deal of it. Especially when I didn’t want to evade him.
He tilted his head as if trying to figure me out—had he caught what I
was thinking? His hand was broad-palmed and warm. The calluses on
it made it no softer than my own work-roughened skin.
I turned away from him, but kept his hand as I started down the track
to my shop. It was awkward for about four steps, then he made an
adjustment to his gait, and suddenly the rhythm of our bodies synced.
I closed my eyes, trusting my balance and Adam to keep me headed
in the right direction. If I cried, he’d ask me why, and you can’t lie to
a werewolf. I needed to distract him.
“You’re wearing a new cologne,” I told him, and my voice was
husky. “I like it.”
He laughed, a warm rumbly sound that settled in my stomach like a
warm piece of apple pie. “Shampoo most likely—” Then he laughed
again and tugged me off balance until I bumped against him. He let
go of my hand and took a light grip on my far shoulder, his arm warm
across my back. “No. You’re right, I’d forgotten. Jesse sprayed
something at me as I left the house tonight.”
“Jesse has excellent taste,” I told him. “You smell good enough to
eat.”
The arm across my shoulders stiffened. I thought back over what I’d
said and felt my cheeks warm right up. Part of it was embarrassment
... but part of it wasn’t. But it hadn’t been the Freudian slip that had
caught his attention.
Adam stopped. Since he was holding me, I stopped, too. I looked at
him, then followed his gaze to my shop.
Whoops. Oh well, I’d been looking for a way to distract him so he
wouldn’t wonder why I was upset. This wasn’t the ideal way to do it.
“I guess Zee didn’t tell you?”
“Who did it?” There was a growl in his voice. “The vampires?”
How to answer that without telling a lie, which he would smell, or
starting a war?
If I had known that Marsilia knew I’d killed Andre, I never would
have told Adam I was willing to be his mate. Another wolf might
understand that a war with the vampires wasn’t going to save me, just
get more people killed. A war with the vampires here in the Tri-Cities
might spread like the plague throughout all the Marrok’s dominion.
But Adam wouldn’t let it go. And Samuel would be at his side. I
would never be the great love of Samuel’s life, nor he of mine. But
that didn’t mean he didn’t love me, just as I loved him. And Samuel
would bring his father, the Marrok, into it.
Don’t panic, keep it casual, I told myself. “The vamps added some
decoration to my door, but most of it was Tim’s cousin and a friend.
You can watch it on the video if you want. Gabriel’s mother and
siblings are coming out Saturday to help paint it. The police are taking
care of it, Adam.” The last was because he was still stiff. “Tony
thinks it’s Christmasy. Maybe I’ll leave it for a few months.”
He turned his hot gaze on me.
“She still believes in her cousin, Adam. She thinks I made it all up to
get out of a murder charge.” I let him hear the sympathy for
Courtney’s plight in my voice, knowing Adam wouldn’t approve.
About wrong and right, Adam was pretty black-and-white. He’d be
irritated with my attitude, and it would distract him. Keep the focus
on Courtney and off the vampires.
Adam didn’t relax, but he did start walking again.
USUALLY I SHOWER AT THE SHOP AFTER PRACTICE, BUT I
didn’t want Adam to get a good look at the crossed bones on the door.
I wanted to keep him thinking about things other than the vampires
until I knew what my options were. So we jumped in my Vanagon
(my poor Rabbit was still in repairs from the damage a fae had done
to it last week).
Maybe I’d move. If I traveled to another vampire’s territory, it might
slow Marsilia down, especially if it was a vampire who didn’t like
her. Running away would chafe, but if I stayed, she’d kill me—and
Adam wouldn’t take it well and a lot of people would probably die
besides me.
I could try to take out Marsilia.
I actually gave that serious consideration, which was a sign of just
how desperate I was. Sure, I’d killed two vampires. The first one I’d
killed with a lot of help and a boatload of luck. The second one I’d
taken while he slept.
I had about as much chance of taking out Marsilia as my cat Medea
did of taking on a mountain lion. Maybe less.
While I thought, I chattered to Adam all the way home. My home.
Gas was expensive, and he wouldn’t mind walking the short distance
back to his.
If he wanted to wait while I showered, I figured I could walk with
him. I glanced at the sky and decided I had time to take a shower
without risking Adam’s being the first one to talk to Stefan.
I needed to find out what the artwork on my door meant—and to
make sure that running would work. Stefan might know, but neither
question was something I wanted to ask in public. I’d figure out how I
was going to get him alone when the time came.
“Mercy,” Adam said, breaking into my monologue about Karmann
Ghias and air-cooled versus water-cooled engines as I turned into my
drive. He sounded both amused and resigned. It was a tone I heard
from him a lot.
“Hmm?”
“Why did the vampires paint a pair of bones on your door?”
“I don’t know,” I told him in a deliberately relaxed voice. “I don’t
even know that it was the vampires. The camera didn’t catch who it
was exactly. Zee and I just figured it was the vampires because of
Stefan. He’s going to check with Uncle Mike to be sure it wasn’t a
fae, though.”
“I won’t let Marsilia hurt you,” he told me in the quiet tones he used
when making a vow of honor.
The wolves do that, some of the older ones, anyhow. I wouldn’t have
thought Adam was one of them. He was a 1950s model, stuck forever
looking like he was in his midtwenties. When I say older wolves, I
mean a lot older than 1950, a couple of hundred years at least.
It’s not that modern men don’t have honor, just most of them don’t
think of it that way. It gives them a flexibility that the previous
generations didn’t have. Some of the old lobos take their vows very,
very seriously.
What I wouldn’t have given to be stupid enough to believe that Adam
could promise that Marsilia wouldn’t kill me-and even more to
believe that he wouldn’t kill himself trying to keep his word.
I wasn’t resigned to my fate or anything like it, but if I had learned
one thing being raised by werewolves, it was to keep a clear eye on
probable outcomes and how to mitigate damage. And if Marsilia
wanted me dead ... well that was just the most probable outcome.
Really probable. Enough so that I could feel another stupid panic
attack hovering. My first today, if I didn’t count a little shortness of
breath once or twice.
“She’s not dumb enough to attack me,” I told him, opening my door.
“Especially once she hears I’ve officially accepted you as my mate.
That puts me under your pack’s protection. She won’t be able to do
much to me.” It should have been true ... but I didn’t think it would be
that easy. “Stefan’s the one in trouble.”
He got out and waited for me to round the front of the van, then he
asked, “Would you go out with me tomorrow ... to someplace nice?
Dinner and a little dancing.”
It hadn’t been what I expected him to say, not when he was watching
me with those cool, assessing eyes. It took me a moment to change
subjects, my impending death at Marsilia’s hands being a little
preoccupying.
Adam wanted to take me on a date.
He touched my face—he liked to do that and had been doing it more
and more lately. I could feel the warmth of his fingers all the way to
my toes. Suddenly, my approaching demise wasn’t so engrossing.
“All right. That would be good.” I put my hand on my stomach to
settle the butterflies, unsure as to whether it was the notion of going
on another date with Adam or the knowledge that I was going to have
to break it off with him before I brought death to him and his pack.
Maybe I’d have to go on the run tonight-would it hurt him more that
I’d agreed to a date? Should I find a reason that tomorrow wouldn’t
work?
A sudden thought came to me. If I hurt him enough, drove him from
me in anger ... would he care when Marsilia killed me, or would he let
it go? A newly familiar breathlessness started to shiver up from my
stomach—that panic attack that had been hovering.
“I need to take a shower,” I told him, my voice very steady. “But then
I’d like to talk to Stefan.”
“No problem,” he said agreeably, going up my front steps ahead of
me. He opened the door and held it for me. “I’ll wait while you
shower—Samuel’s not home.”
There was no reason to feel like Adam’s prey, I told myself firmly as
I walked past him into my own house. No reason to feel Adam’s
intent eyes on my back. He couldn’t read my mind to know that I was
planning on running. But I didn’t turn back as I said, “Make yourself
at home. I’ll be right out.” And I closed my bedroom door on him and
leaned against it.
I SCRUBBED MY HANDS FIRST, USING A STIFF-BRISTLED
brush and Fast Orange to get the last of the day’s grime off. It never
managed to get it all, but if it bothered Adam to run around with
someone who had dirt ingrained in the skin of her hands, he’d never
said anything. When they were as good as they were going to get, I
stepped into the shower.
Could I change my mind about being Adam’s mate?
I’m not as sensitive to pack magic as the werewolves are. They don’t
talk much about it. Secretive bunch, those werewolves. I’ve been
finding out that there’s a lot more to it than I’d believed. I knew it was
possible for a mated pair to dissolve their union, though I’d never met
any who had.
Had my agreement been just words, or had it started some process in
the pack magic? Consent, I knew, was necessary for a lot of magic to
take place. I am immune to some magic. Maybe mating would turn
out to be one of those things. I also knew pack magic worked subtly
differently for the Alpha than it did for the rest of the pack. Adam had
bound himself to me by declaring me his mate before his pack—and it
had had an effect on the pack’s magic, and on Adam. I was pretty sure
it didn’t work quite that way for most wolves, that both had to agree,
and that their mating was a more private matter.
I frowned. There was a ceremony. I was almost certain of it.
Something happened to make a couple into a mated pair—and then
there was some sort of werewolf-only ceremony. Maybe Adam had
done it backward? Maybe mating an Alpha was no different than
mating with any other wolf.
Maybe I was going to drive myself crazy. I needed real information,
and I had no idea who to ask.
It couldn’t be any of Adam’s pack—it would undermine his authority.
Besides, they’d just go tell him I was asking. Samuel didn’t seem like
a good choice either, not after we’d only just agreed not to try it as a
couple. Or Bran, for the same reason. I knew he had sent Samuel to
the Tri-Cities in a misguided attempt at matchmaking. I wasn’t sure
Samuel had told him it hadn’t worked. I wished, not for the first time,
that my foster father, Bryan, was still around. But he’d killed himself
a good long time ago.
I turned my face in to the hot spray of my shower. Okay. So assume
the mating thing wasn’t permanent. How would I make Adam hate
me?
Well, I certainly wasn’t sleeping with Samuel. Or hurting Jesse.
Water hit the healing wound on my chin, and I tipped my head down.
Making him leave me had seemed logical, but Adam wasn’t the kind
of person to leave when things got rough. And even if I managed it,
wouldn’t he still care if Marsilia killed me? Maybe if I had a few
months or a year to work on it, I might manage.
Could I run? With my bank balance, I might make it as far as Seattle.
The threatening panic attack faded as relief swamped me. First time
being broke had ever made me happy.
I might be a dead woman, but I was going to get to keep Adam for
however long I had left.
THOUGH ADAM’S HAND WAS COURTEOUSLY UNDER MY
arm as we walked across my field to the barbed-wire fence between
our properties, there was a proprietary feeling to the charged air that
always seemed to accompany him. Mine, it said.
If it weren’t for Marsilia, doubtless I’d have been grumpy about the
possessiveness stuff. As it was, I was unhappy because I couldn’t just
relax into the safety he represented ... not without risking his getting
hurt because of me.
Maybe I needed to leave, money or not.
My stomach was back in knots, and if I didn’t bottle everything up, I
was going to have that stupid panic attack, and not safely behind the
sound of water and the closed bathroom door. Right here where
anyone could see. Next to the poor beat-up Rabbit, with Adam’s
phone number painted on the roof. For a good time call ...
He stopped. “Mercy? What are you so angry about?”
He would know. Even I could smell it: anger and fear and ... I had it
all, and I had nothing.
It was too much. I closed my eyes and felt my body shake helplessly
and my throat close, refusing to let air through ...
Adam caught me as I fell and pulled me against him, in the shadow of
the old car. He was so warm, and I was so cold. He put his nose
against my neck. I couldn’t see him, lack of air left me with black
dots impairing my vision.
I heard the growl shake Adam’s chest, and his mouth closed on
mine—and I sucked a deep breath though my nose. I could breathe
again, and the weight on my stomach lifted, and I was left shaking,
with blood ... no, snot running down my face.
Embarrassed beyond anything, I jerked free of Adam’s hold—
knowing with humiliating certainty that he let me go. I wiped my face
with the bottom of my shirt. And settled in the shelter of the Rabbit,
my cheek against the cooling metal.
Weak. Broken. God damn it. God damn me. I felt the wave of it
hovering, ready to descend upon me again. Despair and helpless anger
... They were all dead. All dead, and it was my fault.
But no one was dead. Not yet.
All dead. All of my children, my loves, and it was my fault. I put them
at risk and failed. They died because of my failure.
I smelled Stefan.
Adam’s golden eyes met mine, the color proving the wolf ascendant.
He kissed me again, pressed something against my lips, forcing it
between my teeth with a forefinger and thumb without removing his
mouth from mine.
It was such a small scrap of bloody meat to burn down my throat as it
had. It meant something.
“Mine,” he told me. “You aren’t Stefan’s.”
The dry grass crackled under my head, and the coarse dirt made a
noise like sandpaper that echoed behind my eyes. I licked my lips and
tasted blood. Adam’s blood.
The Alpha’s blood and flesh ... pack.
“From this day forward,” said Adam, his voice pulling me out of
wherever I had been. “Mine to me and mine. Pack and only lover.”
There was blood on his face, too, and on the hands he touched my
face with.
“Yours to you, mine to me,” I answered, though it was a dry croaking
voice that made the noise. I didn’t know why I answered, other than
the old “shave and a hair cut” involuntary response. I’d heard this
ceremony so many times, even if he’d added the “only lover” part.
By the time I remembered why I shouldn’t do it, what it meant, it was
already too late.
Magic burned through me, following the path of that bit of flesh—and
I cried out as it tried to make me other than I was, less or more. Pack.
I felt them all through Adam’s touch and Adam’s blood. His to
protect to govern. All of them were mine now, too—and I theirs.
Panting, I licked my lips and stared at Adam. He let me go, coming to
his feet and taking two steps away from me where I lay against the
side of the old car. He’d bitten his forearm savagely.
“He can’t have you,” he told me, his gold eyes telling me the wolf
was still speaking. “Not now. Not ever. I don’t owe him that.”
Belatedly, I realized what had happened. I wiped my mouth with my
wrist to give myself time to think. My wrist was pink with Adam’s
blood.
Stefan was awake ... and somehow he’d invaded my mind. It had been
his panic attack I’d felt.
All dead... I had a sick, sick feeling that I knew who he meant. I’d met
some of the people, human people who fed Stefan. Had learned how
horribly vulnerable they were if something happened to the vampire
who fed off them and protected them.
I glanced at the setting sun. “It’s a little early for a vampire to be up,
isn’t it?” I asked.
Time for everyone to calm down. Me, included.
My sense of the pack was fading, but it would never completely go
away. Not now that Adam had made me pack. It was more usual to do
it in a full pack meeting, but the pack wasn’t required. Just a bit of the
Alpha’s flesh and blood and an exchange of vows.
I hadn’t thought it possible to induct someone who wasn’t a
werewolf. I certainly hadn’t thought that he could make me pack.
Magic works oddly on me sometimes, and at others I’m pretty much
immune to it. But from the results I could feel, it had worked just fine
this time.
Adam had turned and stood with his back to me, his shoulders
hunched, his hands fisted at his side. He didn’t answer my question,
but said stiffly, “I’m sorry for that. I panicked.”
I put my forehead down on my knees. “There’s been a lot of that
going around recently.”
I heard the dry grass crunch as he walked back to me. “Are you
laughing?” he sounded incredulous.
I looked up at him. The last rays of the sun silhouetted him in golden
rays and obscured the expression on his face. But I could see shame in
the set of his shoulders. He’d made me pack without asking me—
without asking the pack either, though that wasn’t strictly necessary,
just traditional. He was waiting for me to yell at him as he felt he
deserved.
Adam was used to paying for the consequences of his choices—and
sometimes the choices were hard ones. He’d been making a lot of
hard choices for me lately.
Stefan had been so far in my head that I had smelled like him. And
Adam had made me pack to save me. He was prepared to pay the
price—and I was pretty sure there would be a price extracted. But not
by me.
“Thank you, Adam,” I told him. “Thank you for tearing Tim into
small Tim bits. Thank you for forcing me to drink one last cup of
fairy bug-juice so I could have use of both of my arms. Thank you for
being there, for putting up with me.” By that point I wasn’t laughing
anymore. “Thank you for keeping me from being another of Stefan’s
sheep—I’ll take pack over that any day. Thank you for making the
tough calls, for giving me time.” I stood up and walked to him,
leaning against him and pressing my face against his shoulder.
“Thank you for loving me.”
His arms closed around me, pressing flesh painfully hard against
bone. Love hurts like that sometimes.
4
I’D HAVE LOVED TO STAY THERE FOREVER, BUT AFTER A
few minutes, I felt the cold sweat break out on my forehead and my
throat started to close down. I stepped back before I had to do
something more forceful in reaction to the aversion to touch that Tim
had left me with.
Only when I was no longer pressed against Adam did I notice we
were surrounded by pack.
Okay, four wolves doesn’t a pack make. But I hadn’t heard them
come, and, believe me, when there are five werewolves (including
Adam) about, you feel surrounded and overmatched.
Ben was there, a cheerful expression that looked just wrong on his
fine-featured face, which was more often angry or bitter than happy.
Warren, Adam’s third, looked like a cat in the cream. Aurielle,
Darryl’s mate, appeared neutral, but there was something in her
stance that told me she was pretty shaken up. The fourth wolf was
Paul, whom I didn’t know very well—but I didn’t like what I did
know.
Paul, the leader of the “I hate Warren because he’s gay” faction of
Adam’s pack, looked like he’d been sucker punched. I thought I’d just
given him a new most-hated person in the pack.
Behind me, Adam laid his hands on my shoulders. “My children,” he
said formally, “I give you Mercedes Athena Thompson, our newest
member.”
Much awkwardness ensued.
IF I HADN’T FELT HIM EARLIER, I WOULD HAVE THOUGHT
Stefan was still unconscious or dead or whatever from the sun. He lay
stiffly on the bed in the cage, like a corpse on a bier.
I turned the light on so I could see him better. Feeding had healed
most of the visible damage, though there were still red marks on his
cheeks. He looked fifty pounds lighter than he’d been the last time I’d
seen him—too much like a concentration camp victim for my peace
of mind. He’d been given new clothes to replace his filthy, torn, and
stained ones, the ubiquitous replacement clothing every wolf den had
lying around—sweats. The ones he wore were gray and hung off his
bones.
Adam was conducting what was rapidly developing into a full pack
meeting in his living room upstairs. He’d looked relieved when I’d
excused myself to see Stefan—I thought he was worried someone
would say something that might hurt my feelings. In that he
underestimated the thickness of my hide. People I cared about could
hurt my feelings, but almost complete strangers? I could care less
about what they thought.
Wolf packs were dictatorships, but when you’re dealing with a bunch
of Americans brought up on the Bill of Rights, you still had to step a
little carefully. New members were generally announced as
prospective rather than as faits accomplis. A little care would have
been especially appropriate when he was doing something as
outrageous as bringing a nonwerewolf into the pack.
I’d never heard of anyone doing that. Nonwerewolf mates weren’t
part of the pack, not really. They had status, as the mates of wolves,
but they weren’t pack. Couldn’t be made into pack with fifty fleshand-
blood ceremonies—the magic just wouldn’t let a human in.
Apparently my coyoteness was close enough to wolf that the pack
magic was willing to let me in.
Probably Adam should have discussed bringing me in with the
Marrok, too.
Cars were pulling up in front of the house, more of the pack. I could
feel the weight of them, their unease and confusion. Anger.
I rubbed my arms nervously.
“What’s wrong?” asked Stefan in a quiet, sane voice that would have
reassured me more if he’d moved or opened his eyes.
“Besides Marsilia?” I asked him.
He looked at me then, his lips curving faintly. “That’s enough, I
suppose. But Marsilia isn’t the reason this house is filling with
werewolves.”
I sat on the thickly carpeted basement floor and leaned my head
against the bars of the cage. The door was shut and locked, the key
that sometimes hung on the wall across the hallway gone. Adam
would have it. It didn’t matter though. I was pretty sure Stefan could
leave anytime he chose—the same way he’d appeared in my living
room.
“Right.” I sighed. “Well that’s your fault, too, I expect.”
He sat up and leaned forward. “What happened?”
“When you jumped inside my head,” I told him, “Adam took
offense.” I didn’t tell him exactly how everything had played out.
Prudence suggested Adam wouldn’t be pleased with me if I shared
pack business with a vampire. “What he did—and you’ll have to ask
him, I think—brought the pack down on his head.”
He frowned in obvious puzzlement, then slow comprehension
dawned. “I am sorry, Mercy. You weren’t meant to ... I didn’t mean
to.” He turned his head away. “I’m not used to being so alone. I was
dreaming, and there you were, the only one left with a tie of blood to
me. I thought I dreamed that, too.”
“She really had them all killed?” I whispered it, remembering some of
what he’d given me while he’d been in my head. “All of your ...”
Sheep wasn’t really PC, and I didn’t want to tick him off, even if
sheep is what all the vampires called the mundane humans they kept
to feed off. “All of your people?”
I knew some of them, and liked one or two. For some reason, though,
rather than the faces of the people I’d met living, it was the young
vampire Danny I remembered, his ghost rocking in the corner of
Stefan’s kitchen. Stefan hadn’t been able to protect him either.
Stefan gave me a sick look. “Disciplining me, she said. But I think it
was revenge as much as anything. And I can feed off them from a
distance. She wanted me starving when I landed at your feet.”
“She wanted you to kill me.”
He nodded jerkily. “That’s right. And if you hadn’t had half of
Adam’s pack at your house, I would have.”
I thought of the obstinate look on his face. “I think she underestimated
you,” I told him.
“Did she?” He smiled, just a little, and shook his head.
I leaned my head back against the wall. “I’m...” Still angry with you
didn’t cover it. He was a murderer of innocents, and here I was
talking to him, worried about him. I didn’t know how to complete that
thought, much less the sentence, so I went on to something else.
“So Marsilia knows I killed Andre, and you and Wulfe covered it
up?”
He shook his head. “She knows something—she didn’t talk much to
me. It was only me she punished, so I don’t think she knows about
Wulfe. And maybe not me ...” He looked at me from under the cover
of his bangs, which had grown in the last day—I’d heard a heavy
feeding could cause that. “I got the feeling I was being punished by
association. I was the seethe’s contact with you. I was the reason she
went to you for help and gave you permission to kill Andre’s pet. I
was the reason you succeeded. You are my fault.”
“She’s crazy.”
He shook his head. “You don’t know her. She’s trying to do what is
best for her people.”
The Tri-City seethe of vampires had mostly been in the area before
the towns were established. Marsilia had been sent here as
punishment for sleeping around with someone else’s favorite. She’d
been a person of influence, so had come here with attendants—
mostly, as far as I knew, Stefan, Andre—the second vampire I’d
killed—and a really creepy character named Wulfe.
Wulfe, who looked like a sixteen-year-old boy, had been a witch or
wizard as a human, and sometimes dressed like a medieval peasant. I
supposed he could be faking it, but I suspected that he was older than
Marsilia, who dated from the Renaissance, so the clothes fit.
Marsilia had been sent here to die, but she hadn’t. Instead, she’d seen
to it that her people survived. As civilization began to grow, life in the
seethe became easier. The fight for survival mostly a thing of the past,
Marsilia had settled into a decades-long period of apathy—I’d call it
sulking. She had only just begun to take an interest in things going on
about her, and as a result, the hierarchy of the seethe was restless.
Stefan and Andre had been loyal followers, but there were a couple of
other vamps who hadn’t been so happy to see Marsilia up and taking
charge. I’d met them: Estelle and Bernard, but I didn’t know enough
about vampires to figure out how much of a threat they were.
The first time I met Marsilia, I’d kind of admired her ... at least until
she’d enthralled Samuel. That had scared me. Samuel’s the secondmost-
dominant wolf in North America, and she and her vampires took
him ... easily. That fear had grown with every meeting.
“Not to be argumentative, Stefan,” I said. “But she’s bug-nuts. She
wanted to create another of those ... those things that Andre made.”
His face closed down. “You don’t know what you are talking about.
You have no idea what she gave up when she came here, or what she
has done for us.”
“Maybe not, but I met that creature, and so did you. Nothing good
could ever come of making another one.” Demonic possession isn’t a
pretty thing. I inhaled and tried to control my temper. I didn’t
succeed. “But you are right. I don’t know what makes her tick. I don’t
know you, either.”
He just looked at me, expressionlessly. “You play human very well,
driving around like Shaggy in your Mystery Machine. But the man I
thought you were could never have killed Andre’s victims like that.”
“Wulfe killed them.” He was making a point, not defending himself.
It made me angry; he should feel the need to defend himself.
“You agreed to it. Two people who had already been victimized
enough, and you two snapped their necks as if they were nothing
more than chickens.”
About that time he got angry, too. “I did it for you. Don’t you
understand? She would have destroyed you if she’d known. They
were nothing, less than nothing. Street people who would have died
on their own anyway. And she would have killed you!” He was on his
feet when he finished.
“They were nothing? How do you know? It wasn’t like you had a
conversation with them.” I stood up, too.
“They would have had to die anyway. They knew about us.”
“There we disagree,” I told him. “What about your vaunted power
over human minds?”
“It only works if the contact with us is very short—a feeding, no more
than that.”
“They were living, breathing people who were murdered. By you.”
“How did you know that Mercy was at Andre’s?” Warren’s calm
voice broke between us like a wave of ice water as he came down the
stairs. He walked past me and used the key to open the cage door.
“I’ve been wondering about that for a while.”
“What do you mean?” asked Stefan.
“I mean that we knew she’d found Andre because she told Ben,
thinking he couldn’t tell anyone else because he’d not changed back
from his wolf in all the time since the demon-possessed died. Ben
changed so he could tell us, but we still couldn’t go after her because
we didn’t know where Andre was. You had no way to know what she
was doing. How did you know she was off killing Andre, just in time
to cover up the crime?”
Stefan made no move to come out of the cage. He folded his arms and
leaned a shoulder against the bars instead as he considered Warren’s
question.
“It was Wulfe, wasn’t it?” I said. “He knew what I was doing because
one of the homes I found was his.”
“Wulfe,” said Warren slowly, after Stefan didn’t answer. “Is he the
kind of man who would be outraged that Marsilia would call down a
demon to infest a vampire? Would he want it stopped at the cost of
Andre’s destruction? Go to you for help doing it?”
Stefan closed his eyes. “He came to me. Told me Mercy was in
trouble and needed help. It was only later that I wondered why he’d
done it.”
“You’ve had these thoughts already,” Warren said. “So what did you
decide?”
“Does it matter?”
“It’s always a good thing to know your enemies,” answered Warren in
his lazy Texas drawl. “Who are yours?”
Stefan gave him the look of a baited bear, all frustration and ferocity.
“I don’t know.” He gritted out.
Warren smiled coolly, his eyes sharp. “Oh, I think you do. You aren’t
stupid; you aren’t a child. You know how these things work.”
“Wulfe used me to get to you,” I said. “Then he told Marsilia what
you’d done.”
Stefan just looked at me.
“With you and Andre out of the way, there is Wulfe, Bernard, and
Estelle.” I rubbed my hands together and wondered if knowing what
had happened would do Stefan any good. It wouldn’t change things,
and knowing that he’d fallen into Wulfe’s trap wasn’t going to help
Stefan now. Still, as Warren had said, it is a good thing to know your
enemies. “And Bernard and Estelle, Marsilia already doesn’t trust
them, right?”
Stefan nodded. “They work against her where they can, and she
knows it. They are of another’s making, given as gifts by a vampire
not easily refused. She must take care of them, as she would any such
gifts—but that doesn’t mean she has to trust them. Wulfe ... Wulfe is
a mystery even to himself, I think. You believe Wulfe engineered this
as a rise to power?” He looked away and didn’t speak for a minute,
obviously thinking about what I’d said.
Finally, he wrapped his hands around the bars of the open cage.
“Wulfe already has power ... if he wanted more, it was his for the
asking. But it looks like he had a part in my downfall for whatever
reason suited him.”
“If Marsilia knows that you helped when Mercy killed Andre, why
isn’t Mercy dead?” Warren asked.
“She was supposed to be,” Stefan said savagely. “Why do you think
Marsilia starved me until I was no more than a ravening beast, then
dropped me into Mercy’s living room? You didn’t think I did it
myself, did you?”
I nodded. “So she thought she’d get it all without cost to her or the
seethe? If you’d killed me, she could have claimed you’d escaped
while she was punishing you. Too bad you showed up in my house
and killed me. But she underestimated you.”
“She did not underestimate me,” said Stefan. “She knows me.” He
gave me a look that let me know that my earlier dig about not
knowing him had stung. “She just did not plan on you having the
Alpha werewolf in your home to spoil her plans.”
I’d been there—and I didn’t think he would have done it.
Stefan sneered at me when he saw my face. “Don’t waste your time
on romantic notions about me. I am vampire, and I would have killed
you.”
“He’s cute when he’s mad,” observed Warren dryly.
Stefan turned his back on us both.
“She’s all by herself, and she doesn’t even know it,” he said in soft
anguish.
He wasn’t talking about me.
He’d been hurt a lot recently, and I thought he deserved a rest. So I
turned to Warren, and asked, “Why aren’t you upstairs at the
meeting?”
Warren shrugged, his eyes veiled. “The boss will do better without me
to rock the boat.”
“Paul hates me more than he hates you,” I told him smugly.
He threw his head back and laughed—which is what I’d intended.
“Wanna bet? I kicked his ass from here to Seattle and back. He’s not
happy with me.”
“You’re a wolf. I’m a coyote—there’s no comparison.”
“Hey,” said Warren in mock offense. “You’re no threat to his
masculinity.”
“I’m polluting the pack,” I told him. “You’re just an aberration.”
“That’s because you called him a ... Stefan?”
I looked around, but the vampire was gone. I hadn’t gotten a chance
to ask him about the crossed bones on my door.
“Shee-it,” exclaimed Warren. “Shee-it.”
“DID YOU CALL BRAN?” I ASKED ADAM THE NEXT
EVENING , tugging down the short skirt of my favorite green-blue
dress until it was as good a barrier between Adam’s SUV’s leather
seats and my naked skin as it was going to be.
He hadn’t told me where we were going on our date, but Jesse had
called me as soon as he left and described what he was wearing—so I
knew I’d need the big guns. Though we share a back fence, the
distance by car is significantly longer, and I’d had time to skim into
the correct dress before he pulled up at my door.
Adam does suits. He wears suits to work, to pack meetings, to
political meetings. Since his hours are about the same as mine, that
means six days a week. Still there was a difference between his usual
work suits and the one he was wearing tonight. The first were made to
announce that this was the man in charge. This one said, “And he’s
sexy, too.” And he was.
“There’s no need to call Bran,” he told me irritably as he swung the
big vehicle onto the highway. “Half the pack probably called Bran as
soon as they got home. He’ll call me when he’s ready.”
He was probably right. I hadn’t asked, but his grim face when Warren
and I emerged from the basement last night—after everyone had left
except for Samuel—had told its own story.
Samuel had kissed me on the lips to irritate Adam and ruffled my
hair, “There you are, Little Wolf. Still naturally talented at causing
trouble, I see.”
That was unfair. It had been Stefan and Adam who’d caused this. I
informed Samuel of that, but only after he’d escorted me back home.
Adam called me once, earlier in the afternoon, to make sure I
remembered he was taking me out. I’d promptly called Jesse with
orders to let me know what her father was wearing. I owed her five
bucks, but it was worth it to see Adam smiling when I hopped into his
SUV.
But my mouth had soon taken care of that. His Explorer still had a
heck of a dent on the fender from where one of the wolves had hit it—
after being thrown by an angry fae. My fault. So I’d asked him if he
had an estimate yet, and he’d growled at me. Then I’d asked about
Bran.
So far our date was working out just spiffy.
I went back to playing with my skirt.
“Mercy,” Adam said, his voice even more growly than it had been.
“What?” If I snapped at him, it was his own fault for getting grumpy
at me first.
“If you don’t stop playing with that dress, I’m going to rip it right off
you, and we won’t be heading for dinner.”
I looked at him. He was watching the road, and both hands were on
the wheel ... but once I paid attention, I could see what I’d done to
him. Me. With remnants of grease under my fingernails and stitches in
my chin.
Maybe I hadn’t screwed up the date as badly as all of that. I smoothed
the skirt back down, successfully resisting the urge to pull it up farther
only because I wasn’t sure I could handle what might happen. I
thought Adam was joking, but ... I turned my head toward my side
window and tried to keep the grin off my face.
He drove us to a restaurant that had just opened in the boom-town that
was forming in West Pasco. Just a couple of years ago it had been
barren desert, but now there were restaurants, a theater, a Lowe’s and
... a hugeyenormous (Jesse’s word) giant-sized Wal-Mart.
“I hope you like Thai.” He parked us out in the middle of west
nowhere in the parking lot. Paranoia has odd manifestations. It gave
me panic attacks and made him park where he could manage a quick
getaway. Shared paranoia—could a happily-ever-after be far off for
us?
I hopped out of the front seat and said in suitably resolute tones, “I’m
sure they have hamburgers.”
I shut the door on his appalled face. The locks clicked, and there he
was, one arm on either side of me ... grinning.
“You like Thai,” he said. “Admit it.”
I folded my arms and ignored the gibbering idiot who kept shrieking
“he’s got me trapped, trapped” in the back of my head. It helped that
Adam up close is even better than half a car away. And Adam with a
grin ... well. He has a dimple, just one. That’s all he needs.
“Jesse told you, didn’t she?” I said grumpily. “Next time I see her,
I’m going to expose her for the secret-sharing kid she is. See if I
don’t.”
He laughed ... and dropped his arms and backed away, proving he’d
seen my erstwhile panic. I grabbed his arm to prove I wasn’t scared
and towed him around the Explorer toward the restaurant.
The food was excellent. As I pointed out to Adam, they did have
hamburgers. Neither of us ordered them, though doubtless they would
have been good, too. I could have been eating seaweed and dust,
though, and I still would have enjoyed it.
We talked about cars—and how I thought his Explorer was a pile of
junk and he thought I was stuck in the seventies in my preference for
cars. I pointed out that my Rabbit was a respectable eighties model, as
was my Vanagon—and the chances of his SUV being around in thirty
years was nil. Especially if his wolves kept getting thrown at it.
We talked about movies and books. He liked biographies, of all
things. The only biography I’d ever liked was Carry On, Mr.
Bowditch, which I’d read in seventh grade. He didn’t read fiction.
We got in an argument about Yeats. Not about his poetry, but about
his obsession with the occult. Adam thought it was ridiculous ... I
thought it was funny that a werewolf would think it so and baited him
until he caught me at it.
“Mercy,” he said—and his phone rang.
I drank a sip of water and prepared to listen in to his conversation.
But, as it turned out, it was very short.
“Hauptman,” he answered shortly.
“You’d better get over here, wolf,” said an unfamiliar voice and hung
up.
He looked down at the number and frowned. I got up and walked
around the table so I could look over his shoulder.
“It’s someone from Uncle Mike’s,” I told him, having memorized the
number.
Adam threw some money on the table and we trotted out the door.
Grim-faced, he threaded the Explorer through the traffic at something
more than the speed limit. We had just gotten on the interstate when
something happened.... I felt a flash of rage and horror, and someone
died. One of the pack.
I put my hand on Adam’s leg, digging in with my nails at the roiling
sorrow and rage that spun through the pack. He put his foot down and
slid through the evening traffic like an eel. Neither of us said a word
during the five minutes it took us to reach Uncle Mike’s.
The parking lot was full of big SUVs and trucks, the kind most of the
fae drive. Adam didn’t bother parking, just drove right up until he was
near the door and stopped. He didn’t wait for me—but he didn’t have
to. I was right behind him when he brushed by the bouncer who
guarded the door.
The bouncer didn’t even protest.
Uncle Mike’s smelled like beer, hot wings, and popcorn, which would
have made it smell like every other bar in the Tri-Cities except that it
also smelled like fae. I don’t know that they organize themselves that
way, but fae usually smell to me like the four elements that the old
philosophers proposed: earth, air, fire, and water, with a healthy dose
of magic.
None of those smells bothered me ... only the blood.
Uncle Mike’s commanding voice was backing people up and
tightening the crowd until Adam and I were blocked in. That’s when
Adam lost it and began tossing people around.
Not really a safe thing to do at Uncle Mike’s. Most of the fae I’ve met
are no match for a werewolf ... but there are ogres and other things
that look just like everyone else until they get ticked off.
Even so, it wasn’t until Adam began to change, ripping his charcoal
suit, that I realized something more was happening than him losing
his temper.
“Adam!” It was no use, my voice was lost in the noise of the crowd. I
put a hand on his back so I didn’t lose him, and I felt it.
Magic.
I jerked my hand back. It didn’t feel like fae magic. I looked around
for someone who was concentrating just a little too much on Adam
but couldn’t spot anyone over the crowd.
I did, however, see a little canvas bag hanging from the rafters just
behind us. About the same place Adam started using physical force to
move through the crowd. The ceilings in Uncle Mike’s are about
fourteen feet in the air. I wasn’t going to reach that bag without a
ladder—and I wasn’t going to be able to find a ladder anytime soon.
A slender, almost effeminate man walked under the bag as I watched.
He jerked to a halt, then threw back his head and roared. A sound so
huge that it drowned out all of the noise in the building, shaking the
rafters. His glamour, the illusion that made him look human,
shattered, and I swear I could almost see a pile of sparkling dust
spread out from him.
He was huge, an unearthly mass of gray and blue, still vaguely
human-shaped, but his face looked like it had melted, leaving only
vague bumps where his nose should have been. His mouth was pretty
easy to spot—it would be hard to miss all those big teeth. Silvery
eyes, too small for that huge face, glared out from under sparkly blue
eyebrows. He shook himself, and the sparkly dust scattered again,
melting as it touched warmer surfaces. He was shedding snow.
In the silence that followed, a small cranky voice said, “Freakin’ snow
elf.” I couldn’t see the speaker, but it sounded like it was coming from
somewhere right next to the newly emerged monster.
He roared again and reached down, hauling a woman up by the hair.
She was more angry than scared and pulled a weapon out of
somewhere and cut her own hair, dropping down and out of my sight
again. The thing—I’d never heard of a snow elf—shook the hair he
held and threw it behind him.
I glanced back at Adam, but in the short moments since I’d last
looked, he’d disappeared, leaving behind only a trail of bloody
bodies, most of them still standing and ticked off. I looked at the snow
elf and the bag above his head.
No one was watching me, not with a rampaging werewolf and an
abominable snowman in the room. I stripped off the dress and bra,
stepped out of my shoes and underwear as fast as I could. I’m not a
werewolf; my coyote shape comes between one breath and the next,
and brings exhilaration and not pain. The snow elf was still standing
underneath the bag when I jumped up, landed on someone’s
shoulders, and looked for him.
The crowd was so tight it was like being at a Metallica concert, and I
had a road of heads and shoulders right to the snow elf—who was ten
feet tall at the very least and stuck up a whole person’s worth over the
rest of the people.
He saw me coming and grabbed for me, but I’m fast and he missed.
Actually, he probably missed because he didn’t know I was going to
jump on his shoulder and launch myself at the little bag, rather than
because of any speed or dexterity on my part. That damned mountain
of a fae was fast, too.
The magic buzzed angrily at me as I snatched the bag in my jaws. I
dangled for a moment before the string that held it broke. I fell and
waited for the giant hands of the snow elf to crush me, but it was
Uncle Mike himself who snatched me out of the air and tossed me
toward the door.
As soon as I grabbed the bag, I knew I was right about it being some
sort of vicious spell aimed at the wolves. I didn’t know how Uncle
Mike knew it, too, but he snarled, “Take that thing out of here,”
before he melted back into the crowd.
Like a Dr. Seuss poem, I scrambled under, around, and through before
I got out the door. I’d have felt better if I hadn’t known that someone
I knew—because I knew most of Adam’s pack at least by face—was
dead. I’d have felt better if I had known Adam was all right. I’d have
settled for just not having the towering mountain of enraged ... snow
elf following me at full speed.
I’d never met anyone who called himself an elf, so I supposed my
view was skewed by Peter Jackson’s version of Tolkien’s fair folk.
The thing following me like a freight train didn’t fit my understanding
of the word at all.
Later, if I survived, I might derive some amusement from the face of
the bouncer, who suddenly realized what was coming at him—just
before he broke and ran. I passed him as we both jumped the short
step to the pavement outside the door. He ran with me a couple of
steps before he figured out who the snow elf was chasing and took a
sharp right.
The doorway slowed the monster down. He hit it with his shoulder,
taking the whole entryway wall with him as he left the building. He
threw the chunk of wall at me, but I hopped through the half-open
doorway a second time, just before it hit the ground. I crossed the
street at full speed and narrowly missed being hit by a semi on its way
to the industrial district just past Uncle Mike’s. Safe on the far side, I
glanced behind me, then stopped.
The man the snow elf had been was on his knees at the edge of the
parking lot, shaking his head as if he was slightly dazed. He looked up
at me. The silvery eyes were the same.
“Are you all right?” he asked. “Sorry, so sorry. I haven’t felt like that
since ... since my last battle. I didn’t hurt you, did I?” His gaze caught
on the chunks of wall and door that were left from when his missile
had missed me.
The effects of the little bag were evidently limited by distance.
I dropped the bag on the ground and shook myself and gave him an
“all’s well” yip. I wasn’t sure he got the message, but he didn’t try to
cross the road after me. I’d have changed back, but my clothes—my
favorite dress, a pair of expensive (even at half-off) Italian sandals,
and my underwear—were still in the bar somewhere. I’m not modest,
but the snow elf and I didn’t know each other well enough for me to
want be naked in front of him.
He was dazedly trying to pick up the mess he’d made when people
started leaving. One of Uncle Mike’s people, easily distinguished
from the patrons by the distinctive green doublet, stood on the edge of
the parking lot and waved his hands at me in a pushing motion. I
thought it was the bouncer who’d been at the door, but I’d have to
have seen his face frozen in terror again to be certain of it.
I picked up the bag and backed away from the road a dozen yards,
until my butt hit the side of an old warehouse fifty yards from the
road.
Uncle Mike’s parking lot gradually emptied, with Uncle Mike’s
minions directing traffic and helping the snow elf with his cleanup
efforts. Adam’s car sat in lonely splendor.
So did Mary Jo’s Jeep. The one I’d given a free tune-up to when she’d
taken her shift at guard-the-wimpy-coyote duty. I like Mary Jo. She’s
a firefighter, five-foot-three-and-a-half of solid muscle and solider
nerve.
One of the pack was dead. In the sudden quiet of the night, I could
feel the wave of mourning spreading through the pack as the others
acknowledged the absence of one of their own. They knew who it
was, but I wasn’t familiar enough with the pack magic to be certain. I
only had Mary Jo’s car.
There were just six cars left in the patron’s parking lot when Uncle
Mike strode out of the hole that used to be a door. He clapped a hand
on the snow elf’s shoulder and patted him before hopping over a
cement parking curb and crossing the street toward me. He had my
dress in his hands.
I changed and grabbed the dress and pulled it on. No bra, no
underwear, but at least I wasn’t naked. I kicked the bag toward Uncle
Mike. “What happened?”
He bent and picked up the bag. His face tightened, and he made a low,
huffing sound ... rather more like a lion or big cat of some kind than
anything I’d ever heard out of him before.
“Cobweb,” he said, “come throw this nasty bit of magic in the river
for me, would you?”
Something small and bright, about the size of a lightning bug (there
are none in the Tri-Cities) hovered over the bag for a moment, then it,
and the bag, disappeared.
“It affected you, too?” I asked.
I don’t know what kind of a fae Uncle Mike is. Something powerful
enough to control a tavern full of drunken fae seven nights a week.
“No,” he said. “Just that it was put in my territory, and I did not sense
it.”
He dusted off his hands, and his face regained its usual cheerful mien,
but I’d seen beneath that facade a few times so his mask of affable
tavern keeper didn’t reassure me the way it once would have. You
have to remember never to believe what you see with the fae.
“Smart coyote,” he told me. “I didn’t even check to see if there was a
cause for their snarling, just assumed they were being nasty-tempered,
the way werewolves are—and left it too late before I waded in.”
“What happened?” I asked again, but when he didn’t answer
immediately, I gave him an impatient flick of my hand and ran barefooted
back across the street, through the parking lot, and into the bar.
Inside, with the missing section of wall behind me, it didn’t look so
bad: a big, empty tavern after a couple of football teams had gotten
drunk and partied all night. Teams with really big players, I thought,
looking at the beam that the snow elf had taken out with his head—
elephants, maybe.
Adam, fully in human form again, sat with his back against the stage
riser on the far side of the room, his arms folded over his chest.
Somone had found him a pair of cutoffs to wear. Not like he was
angry ... just closed-up.
Next to him were two of his other wolves, Paul and one of Paul’s
cronies. Paul looked sick, and the other man, whose name escaped
me, was curled around a very still form.
I couldn’t see who it was, but I knew. Mary Jo’s car in the parking lot
told me. There was blood all over all of them. Adam’s hands were
covered, as was Paul’s shirt. The other man was drenched in it.
The wolves weren’t the only ones bleeding. There seemed to be a
triage of sorts going on at the opposite end of the building. I
recognized the woman who had cut her hair to free herself, but she
seemed to be one of the aid-givers rather than a victim.
Adam looked up and saw me, his face very bleak.
There was glass on the floor, and my feet were bare—but it would
have taken more than that to keep me from them.
Paul’s friend was sobbing. “I didn’t mean to. I didn’t mean to. I’m so
sorry.” He was rocking the body he held, Mary Jo’s body, as he
apologized over and over again.
I couldn’t get close to Adam without wading between Paul and his
friend. I stopped while still out of reach. It didn’t seem like a really
good idea to give Paul an easy target just yet.
Uncle Mike had followed me in, but he’d gone to the other huddle of
beings in that too-empty room first, and when he came over to us, he
had the shorn woman in tow. Like me, he stopped before he intruded
on their space.
“My apologies, Alpha,” he said. “My guests are entitled to an evening
of safety, and someone broke hospitality to bespell your wolves. Will
you let us repair the damage if we can?” He waved at Mary Jo.
Adam’s face changed from grim to intent in about half a breath. He
stood up and took Mary Jo from the wolf who held her. “Paul,” he
said, when the man wouldn’t let go.
Paul stirred and took his friend’s hands, pulling them away. The man
... Stan, I thought, though it might have been Sean, jerked once, then
collapsed against Paul.
In the meantime, the woman was protesting in a rapid flow of
Russian. I couldn’t understand the words, but I heard her refusal
clearly in her face and body language.
“Who are they going to tell?” Uncle Mike snapped. “They’re
werewolves. If they go to the press and reveal that there’s a fae who
can heal mortal wounds, we can go to the press and tell the interested
humans just how much of the horrors of the werewolf have been
carefully hidden from them.”
She turned to look at the wolves, a snarl on her face—and then she
just stopped when she saw me. Her pupils dilated until the whole of
her eyes were black.
“You,” she said. Then she laughed, a cackling sound that made the
skin on the back of my neck crawl. “Of course it would be you.”
For some reason the sight of me seemed to stop her protests. She
walked to Mary Jo, who hung limply from Adam’s curled arms. Like
the snow elf had before her, the fae shed her glamour, but hers
dripped from her head and down to her feet, where it puddled for a
moment, as if it were made of liquid instead of magic.
She was tall, taller than Adam, taller than Uncle Mike, but her arms
were reed-thin, and the fingers that touched Mary Jo were odd. It took
me a moment to see that each one had an extra joint and a small pad
on the underside, like a gecko’s.
Her face ... was ugly. As the glamour faded, her eyes shrank and her
nose grew and hung over her narrow-lipped mouth like the gnarled
limb of an old oak.
From her body, as the glamour cleared away, a soft violet light
gathered and flowed upward from her feet to her shoulders, then
down her arms to her hands. Her padded fingers turned Mary Jo’s
head and touched her under the chin where someone (probably Paul’s
repentant friend) had ripped out her throat.
The light never touched me ... but I felt it anyway. Like the first light
of the morning, or the spray of the salt sea on my face, it delighted my
skin. I heard Adam draw in a sharp breath, but he didn’t look away
from Mary Jo. After a few minutes, Mary Jo’s tank top started
glowing white in the pale purple light of the fae’s magic. The blood
that had made it look dark in the dimmed lights of the bar was gone.
The fae jerked her hands away. “It is done,” she told Adam. “I have
healed her body, but you must give her pulse and breath. Only if she
has not yet gone on will she return—I am no god to be giving life and
death.”
“CPR,” translated Uncle Mike laconically.
Adam dropped to his knees, set Mary Jo on the ground, and tilted her
head back and began.
“What about brain damage?” I asked.
The fae turned to me. “I healed her body. If they inspire her heart and
lungs soon, there will be no damage to her.”
Paul’s friend was sitting at Adam’s side, but Paul got up and opened
his mouth.
“Don’t,” I said urgently.
His eyes flashed at being given an order by me. I should have just let
Paul do it, but I was part of the pack now, willy-nilly—and that meant
keeping the pack safe.
“You can’t thank fae,” I told him. “Unless you want to live the rest of
your very long life in servitude to them.”
“Spoilsport,” said the fae woman.
“Mary Jo is precious to our pack,” I told her, bowing my head. “Her
loss would have left a wound for many months to come. Your healing
is a rare and marvelous gift.”
Mary Jo gasped, and Paul forgot he was angry with me. He wasn’t
anything special to her or she to him. She was sweet on a very nice
wolf named Henry, and Paul was married to a human I’d never met.
But Mary Jo was pack.
I would have turned to her, too, but the fae held my eyes. Her thinlipped
mouth curved into a cold smile. “This is the one, isn’t it?”
“Yes,” agreed Uncle Mike cautiously. He was a friend, usually. His
caution told me two things. This fae might hurt me, and Uncle Mike,
even in the center of his power, his tavern, didn’t think he could stop
her.
She looked me up and down with the air of an experienced cook at
Saturday Market, examining tomatoes for blemishes. “I thought there
would not be another coyote so rash as to climb the snow elf. You
owe me nothing for this, Green Man.”
I’d heard Uncle Mike called Green Man before. I still wasn’t sure
exactly what it meant.
And when the fae reached those long fingers out and touched me, I
wasn’t worried about much other than my own furry hide.
“I did it because of you, coyote. Do you know how much chaos you
have caused? The Morrigan says that is your gift. Rash, quick, and
lucky, just like Coyote himself. But that old Trickster dies in his
adventures—but you won’t be able to put yourself back together with
the dawn.”
I didn’t say anything. I’d thought her to be just another of the Tri-
Cities fae, denizens (mostly) of Fairyland, the fae reservation just
outside of Walla Walla, built either to keep us safe from the fae, or
the fae safe from the rest of us. Her healing Mary Jo had given me a
clue—healing with magic is no common or weak gift among the fae.
Uncle Mike’s caution told me she was scary powerful.
“We’ll have more words at a later date, Green Man.” She looked back
at me. “Who are you, little coyote, to cause the Great Ones such
consternation? You broke our laws, yet your defiance of our ruling
has been greatly to our benefit. Siebold Adlebertsmiter is innocent
and all the trouble was caused by humans. You must be punished—
and rewarded.”
She laughed as if I was pretty amusing. “Consider yourself
rewarded.”
The light that had continued to swirl around her feet uneasily stirred
and darkened until it was a dark stone circle about three feet around
and six inches thick. It solidified under her feet, lifting her half a foot
in the air like Aladdin’s carpet. The sides curved upward and formed
a dish—the memory of an old story supplied the rest. Not a dish but a
mortar. A giant mortar.
And she was gone. Not the way that Stefan could go, but just so
swiftly my eyes couldn’t follow her. I’d seen a fae fly through solid
matter before, so it wasn’t a surprise that she did so. Which was good,
because I’d just had one terrible surprise, I didn’t need any more.
The first rule about the fae is that you don’t want to attract their
attention—but they don’t tell you what to do once you have.
“I thought Baba Yaga was a witch,” I told Uncle Mike hollowly. Who
else would be flying around in a giant mortar?
“Witches aren’t immortal,” he told me. “Of course she’s not a witch.”
Baba Yaga is featured in the stories of a dozen countries scattered
around Eastern Europe. She’s not the hero in most of them. She eats
children.
I glanced over at Adam, but he was still focused on Mary Jo. She was
shaking like someone on the verge of hypothermia, but seemed to be
alive still.
“What about that bag,” I asked. “What if someone picks it up from the
river?”
“A few minutes of running water will remove any magic from a spell
set in fabric,” Uncle Mike told me.
“It was a trap for the wolves,” I told him. I knew that because it had
tasted like vampire. “No one else except for the mobile mountain was
affected ... Why him and none of the rest? And what in the world is a
snow elf? I’ve never heard of one.” As far as I’d ever known, “elf”
was one of those generic terms coined by mundanes as a way to refer
to the fae.
“The government,” said Uncle Mike, after a moment to consider what
he wanted to tell me (getting the fae to share information is harder
than getting a drop of water from a stone), “requires us to register and
tell them what kind of fae we are. So we chose something that appeals
to us. For some it is an old title or name, for others ... we make it up,
just like the humans have made up names for us for centuries. My
favorite is the infamous ‘Jack-Be-Nimble.’ I don’t know what that is,
but we have at least a dozen in our reservation.”
I couldn’t help but grin. Our government didn’t know they had a tiger
by the tail—and the tiger wasn’t going to tell them anytime soon. “So
he made up the snow elf bit?”
“Are you going to argue with him? As to why the bag aimed at the
wolf worked—”
“I have another true form,” said a soft, Norse-accented voice behind
me. There weren’t very many people who could sneak up on me—my
coyote senses keep me pretty aware of my environment—but I sure
hadn’t heard him.
It was the snow elf, or whatever he was, of course. He was a couple of
inches shorter than me—which he could have fixed as easily as Zee
could have gotten rid of his bald spot. I supposed someone whose true
form—at least one of them—was ten feet tall didn’t mind being short.
He looked at me and bowed, one of those abrupt and stiff movements
of head and neck that brings to mind martial artists. “I’m glad you are
fast,” he said.
I shook the hand he held out to me, which was cool and dry. “I’m glad
I’m fast, too,” I told him with honest sincerity.
He looked at Uncle Mike. “Do you know who set it? And if it was
aimed at the werewolves or at me?”
Adam was listening to the conversation. I wasn’t sure how I knew,
because it looked like he was totally involved with his battered
wolves. But there was something in the tension of his shoulders.
Uncle Mike shook his head. “I was too concerned with getting it away
from you. Berserker wolves are bad enough, but a berserker snow elf
loose in downtown Pasco is something I don’t want to see.”
I knew. The bag had smelled of vampire.
The snow elf knelt beside Mary Jo and touched her shoulder. Adam
pulled her gently away, setting her in Paul’s lap, and put himself
between her and the snow elf.
“Mine,” he said.
The elf raised his hands and smiled mildly, but there was a bite to his
words. “No harm, Alpha. I meant no trouble. My days of roaming the
mountains with a wolf pack at my beck and call are long over.”
Adam nodded, keeping his eyes on the enemy. “That may be. But she
is one of mine. And I am not one of yours.”
“Enough,” said Uncle Mike. “One fight a night is good enough. Go
home, Ymir.”
The kneeling elf looked at Uncle Mike, and the skin grew tight around
his eyes for a moment before he smiled brightly. I noticed that his
teeth were very white, if a little crooked. He stood up, using just the
muscles of his thighs, like a martial artist. “It has been a long night.”
He made a slow turn that encompassed not just Uncle Mike, the
wolves, and me, but everyone else in the room—who I just realized
were all watching us ... or maybe they were watching the snow elf.
“Of course it is time to go. I’ll see you all.”
No one said anything until he was out of the building.
“Well,” said Uncle Mike, sounding more Irish than usual. “Such a
night.”
MARY JO WAS MOVING BUT STILL DAZED WHEN WE GOT
her outside. So Adam instructed Paul and his friend (whose name, as
it happened, was Alec and not Sean or Stan at all) to take her to
Adam’s house. Paul packed Mary Jo in the back of her car with Alec
and started to get in.
He looked at my feet. “You shouldn’t be out here barefoot,” he told
the ground. Then he shut the car door, turned the key as he turned on
the lights, and left.
“He meant thank you,” said Adam. “I’ll say it, too. I can think of a lot
of things I’d rather do than try to defend Paul from Baba Yaga.”
“I should have let her have him,” I told Adam. “It would have made
your life easier.”
He grinned, then stretched his neck. “This could have been a very,
very bad night.”
I was looking over his shoulder at his SUV. “Would you settle for just
a little bad? Your insurance doesn’t have an exception for snow elves,
right?”
It had looked all right at first, then I thought it just had a flat tire. But
now I could see the right rear tire was bent up at a forty-five-degree
angle.
Adam pulled out his cell phone. “That doesn’t even register on my
scale of bad tonight,” he told me. He put his free arm around my
shoulder, pulling me against him as his daughter answered the phone.
He wasn’t wearing a shirt.
“Hey, Jesse,” he said. “It’s been a wild night, and we need you to
come pick us up at Uncle Mike’s.”
5
“SOME DATE,” ADAM MURMURED. IT DIDN’T MATTER
HOW quiet he was; we both knew that most of the pack was inside
his house listening to us as we stood on his back porch.
“No one could ever accuse you of being boring,” I said lightly.
He laughed with sober eyes. He’d scrubbed up in the bathroom at
Uncle Mike’s and changed as soon as we’d made it back to his house.
But I could still smell the blood on him.
“You need to see to Mary Jo,” I told him. “I need to go to bed.” She
would survive, I thought. But she’d survive better with me at home
and not disrupting the pack, who was forcing her to fight to live.
He hugged me for not saying all of that out loud. He lifted me to my
toes—clad in a pair of Jesse’s flip-flops—and set me back down.
“You go scrub your feet clean first so none of those cuts get infected.
I’ll send Ben over to watch your house until Samuel is satisfied with
Mary Jo’s condition and goes home.”
Adam watched from the porch as I walked home. I wasn’t halfway
there when Ben caught up with me. I invited him in, but he shook his
head.
“I’ll stay outside,” he said. “The night air keeps my head clear.”
I scrubbed my feet and dried them before I went to bed. I was asleep
before my head hit the pillow. But I woke up while the dark still held
sway, knowing that there was someone in my room. Though I listened
closely, I couldn’t hear anyone—so I was pretty sure it was Stefan.
I wasn’t worried. The vampires, except Stefan, wouldn’t have been
able to cross the threshold of my home. Most anyone else would have
woken Samuel.
The air told me nothing, which was odd—even Stefan had a scent.
Restlessly, I rolled onto my side and right up against the walking
stick, which had taken to sleeping with me every night. Mostly it gave
me the creeps when it did that—walking sticks shouldn’t be able to
move about on their own. But tonight the warm wood under my hand
felt reassuring. I closed my hand around it.
“There’s no need for violence, Mercy.”
I must have jumped because I was on my feet, stick in hand, before it
registered just whose voice I was hearing.
“Bran?”
And suddenly I could smell him, mint and musk that told me
werewolf combined with the certain sweet saltiness that was his own
scent.
“Don’t you have something more important to do?” I asked him,
flipping on the light. “Like ruling the world or something?”
He didn’t move from his spot on the floor, leaning against a wall,
except to put his forearm over his eyes as light flooded the room. “I
came here last weekend,” he said. “But you were asleep, and I didn’t
let them wake you up.”
I’d forgotten. In the hubbub of Baba Yaga, Mary Jo, the snow elf, and
the vampires, I’d forgotten why he would have come to visit me
personally. Suddenly I was suspicious of the arm he’d thrown over his
eyes.
That Alphas are protective of their packs is an understatement—and
Bran was the Marrok, the most Alpha wolf around. I might belong to
Adam’s pack just now, but Bran had raised me.
“I already talked it all over with Mom,” I said defensively.
And Bran grinned hugely, his arm coming down to reveal hazel eyes,
which looked almost green in the artificial light. “I bet you did. Are
my Samuel and your Adam hovering over you and giving you a bad
time?” His voice was full of (false) sympathy.
Bran is better than anyone I know, including the fae, at hiding what he
is. He looked like a teenager—there was a rip in his jeans, just over
the knee, and some ironic person had used a marker to draw an
anarchy symbol just over his thigh. His hair was ruffled. He was
perfectly capable of sitting around with an innocent smile on his
face—and then ripping someone’s head off.
“You’re frowning at me,” he said. “Is it such a puzzle that I’m here?”
I dropped to the middle of the floor. It is uncomfortable for me to be
in the same room for very long with Bran if my head is higher than
his. Part of it is habit, and part of it is the magic that makes Bran the
leader of all the wolves.
“Did someone call you about Adam bringing me into the pack?” I
asked.
This time Bran laughed, his shoulders shaking, and I saw how tired he
was.
“I’m glad I amuse you,” I told him grumpily.
Behind me the door opened, and Samuel said cheerily, “Is this a
private party, or can anyone join?”
How cool was that? In one sentence, one word actually (party),
Samuel told his father that we weren’t going to talk about Tim or why
I’d killed him, and that I was going to be okay. Samuel was good at
things like that.
“Come in,” I said. “How’s Mary Jo?”
Samuel sighed. “Da, let me tell you now. If I am dead, and a fae
offers to heal me—I’d prefer you tell her no.” He looked at me. “I
think she’ll be fine, eventually. But she’s not very happy right now.
She’s dazed and shocky to an extent I’ve never seen before in a wolf.
At least she’s not crying anymore. Adam finally forced her change,
and that helped a lot. She’s sleeping with Paul, Alec, Honey, and few
others on the monstrosity of a couch Adam keeps in the TV room in
the basement.”
He gave his father a keen-eyed look, then sat on the floor beside me—
and that was a message, too. He wasn’t between Bran and me, not
precisely. But he could have sat beside Bran. “So what brings you
here?”
Bran smiled at him, having seen the message Samuel wanted him to.
“You don’t have to protect her from me,” he said softly. “We’ve all
seen she does a pretty good job of protecting herself.”
With the wolves, there is always a lot more going on in a conversation
than just the words. For instance, Bran had just told us that he’d seen
the video, from the security camera, of me killing Tim ... and of
everything else, too. And that he’d approved of my actions.
It shouldn’t have pleased me so much; I was no child. But Bran’s
opinion still meant a lot.
“And yes,” he told me after a moment, “someone called me about
Adam bringing you into the pack. Lots of someones. Let me tell you
the answers to the questions I’ve been asked, and you can pass them
on to Adam. No. I had no idea it was possible to bring someone who
was not a werewolf into the pack. Especially you, upon whom magic
can be unpredictable. No. Once done, only Adam or you can break
those ties. If you want me to show you how, I will.” He paused.
I shook my head ... and then tempered it. “Not yet.”
Bran gave me an amused look under his eyebrows. “Fine. Just ask.
And no, I’m not mad. Adam is Alpha of his pack. I do not see how
anyone has been harmed by this.” Then he grinned, one of the rare
smiles he had when he wasn’t acting, just genuinely amused. “Except
maybe Adam. At least he doesn’t have a Porsche you can wrap
around a tree.”
“That was a long time ago,” I said hotly. “I paid for that. And after
you practically dared me to steal it, I don’t see why you were so angry
about it.”
“Telling you not to take it out wasn’t daring you, Mercy,” Bran said
patiently ... but there was something in his voice.
Was he lying?
“Yes, it was,” said Samuel. “And she’s right—you knew it.”
“So you didn’t have any reason to be so mad I wrecked the car,” I
said, triumphantly.
Samuel laughed out loud. “You still haven’t figured it out, have you,
Mercy? He never was mad about the car. He was the first one at the
scene of the accident. He thought you’d killed yourself. We all did.
That was a pretty spectacular wreck.”
I started to say something and found I couldn’t. The first thing I’d
seen after hitting the tree was the Marrok’s snarling face. I’d never
seen him that angry—and I’d done a lot, from time to time, to inspire
his rage.
Samuel patted me on the back. “It’s not often I see you absolutely
speechless.”
“So you had Charles teach me how to fix cars and how to drive
them.” Charles was Bran’s oldest son. He hated to drive, and until that
summer I’d thought he couldn’t drive. I should have known better—
Charles can do anything. And everything he did, he did very well.
That’s only one of the reasons that Charles intimidates me and
everyone else.
“Kept you busy and out of trouble for a whole summer,” said Bran
smugly.
He was teasing ... but serious as well. One of the oddest things about
being grown-up was looking back at something you thought you
knew and finding out the truth of it was completely different from
what you had always believed.
It gave me courage to do what I did next.
“I need some advice,” I told him.
“Sure,” he said easily.
I took a deep breath and started with my killing Marsilia’s best hope
of returning to Italy, jumped to Stefan’s appearance in my living room
and the unexpected visit from my old college nemesis, and ended it all
with the nearly fatal adventure at Uncle Mike’s and the little bag that
smelled like vampires and magic. I told him about Mary Jo and my
fear that if I told Adam about the bag, it would cause a war.
“I’ll stop by and see if I can help Mary Jo,” Bran said after I’d
finished. “I know a few tricks.”
Samuel looked relieved. “Good.”
“So,” I told Bran, “it is my fault. I chose to go after Andre. But
Marsilia’s not attacking me.”
“You expected a vampire to be straightforward?” asked Bran.
I supposed I had. “Amber gives me a reason to get out of town for a
little while. Without me around, Marsilia might leave everyone else
alone.” And it would give me a chance to think through my response.
A day or two to figure out something that wouldn’t lead to more
killing.
“And give Adam and me a chance to mount a proper response,”
Samuel growled.
I started to object ... but they had the right to go on the offensive. The
right to know that they were targets.
As long as Mary Jo survived, Adam wouldn’t bring a war to
Marsilia’s doorstep. And if Mary Jo didn’t survive ... Perhaps
Marsilia was crazy. I’d seen that kind of madness in the Marrok’s
pack, where the oldest wolves often came to die.
“If you leave, Marsilia might take that as a victory,” said Bran. “I
don’t know her well enough to know if that will help you or hurt you
in the end. I do think that getting out of here for a few days might not
be a bad idea.”
He didn’t say Marsilia would quit targeting my friends, I noticed. I
was pretty sure Uncle Mike would figure out that the vampires had
used his place to target the wolves—and if I thought that, Marsilia
surely would. She must be truly furious if she was willing to anger
Uncle Mike and enrage Adam in order to get to me.
I was betting that if I left, she’d wait, because she wanted me to
witness the pain I’d made her rain down upon my friends. But I
wasn’t sure. Still, it wouldn’t hurt.
“The problem is ... there’s something a little off about Amber’s offer.
Or maybe just after Tim ...” I swallowed. “I’m afraid to go.”
Bran looked at me with keen yellow eyes, weighing something in his
mind. “Fear is a good thing,” he said at last. “It teaches you not to
make the same mistake twice. You counter it with knowledge. What
are you afraid of?”
“I don’t know.” Which wasn’t the right answer.
“Gut check,” Bran said. “What does your gut tell you?”
“I think that maybe it’s the vampires again. Stefan lands in my lap to
give me a good scare—and look, here’s a way out. Out of the frying
pan and into the fire.”
Samuel was already shaking his head. “Marsilia isn’t going to send
you to Spokane to get you out of our protection before she takes care
of you. Not that it isn’t a good idea, but she’d send you to Seattle
maybe, she has some allies there. But in Spokane, there’s only one
vampire, and he doesn’t allow visitors. There are no packs, no fae,
nothing but a few powerless creatures who manage to stay out of his
sight.”
I felt my eyes widen. Spokane is a city of nearly half a million people.
“That’s a lot of territory for a single vampire.”
“Not for that single vampire,” said Samuel at the same time Bran said,
“Not for Blackwood.”
“So,” I said slowly. “What will this vampire do if I stay in Spokane
for a few days?”
“How would he know?” Bran asked. “You smell like coyote. But a
coyote smells a lot like a dog to someone who doesn’t hunt in the
forests—which I assure you, James Blackwood doesn’t do—and most
dog owners smell like their pets. I wouldn’t want you to move to
Spokane, but a couple of days or weeks won’t put you in danger.”
“So do you think it’s a good idea if I go?”
Bran raised his hip and pulled his cell phone out of his back pocket.
“Don’t you break them like that?” I asked. “I killed a couple of
phones by sitting on them.”
He just smiled and said into the phone, “Charles, I need you to find
out about an Amber ... ?” He looked at me and raised an eyebrow.
“Sorry to wake you, Charles. Chamberlain was her maiden name,” I
told Samuel’s brother apologetically. “I don’t know her married
name.” Charles would hear me as clearly as I heard him. Private
phone calls around werewolves needed headsets, not a cell phone
speaker.
“Amber Chamberlain,” Charles repeated. “That should limit it to a
hundred people or so.”
“She lives in Spokane,” I said. “I went to college with her.”
“That helps,” he told us. “I’ll get back to you.”
“Arm yourself with knowledge,” said Bran when he hung up. “But I
don’t see why you shouldn’t go.”
“Take some insurance with you.”
“It’s Stefan,” I shouted. Before I had the last word out of my mouth,
Bran had Stefan up against the opposite wall from where he’d been
sitting.
“Da.” Samuel was on his feet as well, a hand on his father’s shoulder.
He didn’t try to pry Bran’s hands off Stefan’s neck—that would have
been stupid. “Da. It’s all right. This is Stefan. Mercy’s friend.”
After a very long couple of seconds, Bran stepped back and dropped
his hands from Stefan’s throat. The vampire hadn’t fought back,
which was good.
Vampires are tough, maybe tougher than wolves because vampires
are already dead. Stefan had been one of Marsilia’s lieutenants,
powerful in his own right. He’d been a mercenary in life ... which had
been in Renaissance Italy.
But Bran is Bran.
“That was stupid,” said Samuel to Stefan. “What part of ‘never sneak
up on a werewolf’ don’t you understand?”
The Stefan I knew would have bowed gracefully, expressed his
apologies with a hint of humor. This Stefan gave a stiff jerk of his
neck. “I’m no use here. It’s a good idea to get Mercy out of the line of
fire—she’s the weakest target. Send me to keep her safe in Spokane.”
He sounded almost eager ... and I wondered what he’d been doing
since he’d left Adam’s. What was there for him to do? Maybe I
wasn’t the only one who was trying to find some action to take that
wouldn’t get me and everyone I cared about killed.
Still, I couldn’t let him get away with calling me ... “Weak?” I said.
Samuel turned on Stefan with a growl. “Stupid vampire. My father
had her nearly talked into going, and you ruined it.”
I laughed. I couldn’t help it. I hoped going to Spokane would keep my
friends safe, and they hoped me going to Spokane would keep me
safe. Maybe we were both right.
Bran’s phone rang, and we all listened to Charles tell us that Amber
was married to Corban Wharton, a moderately successful corporate
lawyer about ten years her senior. They had an eight-year-old son
with some sort of disability, hinted at in various newspaper articles
but not expressly stated. He rattled off an address or two, cell phone
numbers and real phone numbers ... and social security numbers and
most recent tax reports, personal and business. For an old wolf,
Charles knows how to make computers sit up and beg.
“Thank you,” said Bran.
“I can go back to sleep now?” asked Charles. He didn’t wait for an
answer, just hung up his end of the connection.
I looked at Samuel. “It will make your life easier if I leave.”
He nodded. “We can protect ourselves ... but you are too vulnerable.
And if you aren’t here, if Marsilia doesn’t know where you are, we
can get her to the table for negotiations.”
Bran looked at Stefan. “A vampire might draw too much attention in
Spokane.”
Stefan shrugged. “I’m not without resources. I was in this room for a
quarter of an hour, and none of you noticed me. If I feed well, no one
will know what I am.”
“You always smell like vampire to me,” I told him. Vampire and
popcorn. The good buttery kind. No, I don’t know why. I’ve never
seen him eat the stuff—I don’t know that vampires can.
He raised his hands. “No one without Mercy’s nose, then. If I’m in
the room with the Monster, then perhaps he’ll notice. Otherwise, he’ll
never know I was there. I’ve done it before.”
“The Monster?” Samuel asked.
“James Blackwood.”
Vampires give titles to some of the more powerful ones. Stefan was
the Soldier because he’d been a mercenary. Wulfe was the Wizard ...
and I knew he could do some magic. I resolved to stay away from any
vampire that other vampires called the Monster.
“There is this, too,” Stefan said. “I can jump from one location to
another—and I can take Mercy with me.”
“How far?” asked Bran with sudden intentness.
Stefan shrugged ... and never quite straightened up, as if it was too
much trouble. “Anywhere. But taking another person with me has a
cost. I’ll be useless for a day afterward.” He looked at me. “I have the
address.” He’d have overheard Charles give it to the rest of us. “I can
get there tonight and find a safe place nearby to spend the day.”
Bran raised an eyebrow at me.
“I’ll call Amber in the morning,” I said. It felt like running away, but
Bran seemed to think it was the right thing to do.
Stefan swept me a perfect bow and disappeared before he stood up.
“He used to hide his ability to do that,” I told them. It worried me that
he wasn’t hiding it anymore. As if it didn’t matter what people knew
about him.
Samuel smiled at me. “You decided to go to Spokane because he
needs to do something, didn’t you? You were all set to stay until he
started looking pathetic.” I gave him a look, and he raised his hands in
surrender. “I didn’t say he didn’t have a reason to look pathetic. You
just need to remember that sad sack or not, he’s still a vampire—and
more than a match for you if he decides not to be friendly. You’ve
cost him a lot, Mercy. He might not be your friend.”
I hadn’t thought about it that way. So I did, for maybe a tenth of a
second. “If he was mad at me, he’d have killed me when he dropped
in here starving. For that matter he could have come here anytime
tonight and killed me. You need me gone—so quit trying to make
trouble.”
Samuel frowned at me. “I’m not trying to make trouble. But you have
to remember he is a vampire, and vampires are not nice guys, no
matter how chivalrous and gallant Stefan appears. I like him, too. But
you are trying to forget what he is.”
I thought about the two dead people whose only crime was that they
had seen me when I staked Andre. “I know what he is,” I said
stubbornly.
“Vampire,” said Bran. “Evil, yes.” He grinned, and it made him look
like he should be going to high school. “But I think his Mistress made
a mistake when she chose to throw him away.”
“She broke him,” I said. And looking into Samuel’s eyes, I whispered,
“You stay safe, you and Adam. I’ll keep Stefan busy looking for
ghosts.”
If I was really looking for ghosts, of course, it would be stupid to
bring Stefan. Ghosts don’t like vampires, and they won’t come out
when there are vampires around. Samuel knew that, and he grinned at
me with serious eyes. “We’ll be fine.”
“Call me if you need me,” said Bran—to both of us, I thought. “If I’m
going to stop in to have a look at Mary Jo, I need to go now.” He
kissed me on my forehead, then did the same to Samuel (who had to
bend down). I didn’t know if he really knew who Mary Jo was, or just
seemed to. But I’d never seen him meet a wolf he didn’t know by
name.
Speaking of which ... “Hey, Bran?”
Halfway to the door, he turned back.
“What about that girl we sent to you? The one who was Changed so
young and hadn’t learned control. Is she all right?”
He smiled and looked a lot less tired. “Kara? She did fine last moon.
Give her a few more months, and she’ll be fully in control.” Waving
casually over his shoulder, he walked out into the dark.
“Get some rest,” I called after him. He shut the front door behind him
without answering.
We listened while Bran drove off—in a doubtlessly rented Mustang.
Once he was gone, Samuel said, “You have a few hours. Why don’t
you get some more sleep? I think I’ll hop the fence to Adam’s and see
what Da does for Mary Jo.”
“Why didn’t he just call?” I asked.
Samuel reached out and ruffled my hair. “He was checking up on
you.”
“Well,” I said. “At least he didn’t ask me if I was okay. I think I’d
have had to do something to him if he had.”
“Hey, Mercy,” said Samuel with false solicitude, “are you okay?”
I punched him, connecting only because he hadn’t expected it. “I am
now,” I told him, as he dropped to the ground and rolled—as if I’d
really had some force behind my fist, which I hadn’t.
SPOKANE IS ABOUT 150 MILES NORTHEAST OF THE
TRICITIES , and you know you’re getting close when you start
seeing trees.
My cell phone rang, and I answered without pulling over. I usually
obey the law, but I was late.
“Mercy?” It was Adam, and he wasn’t happy with me. I guessed
Samuel had told him about the vampires being responsible for the
debacle at Uncle Mike’s. I’d told him he could do it once I was safely
out of town.
“Uh-huh.” I pulled around an RV as we chugged up a small hill. It’d
pass me on the downhill side, but I had to take my passing pleasures
where I could—Vanagons are not speed demons. One of these days I
was going to put a Subaru flat six in it and see what that would do.
“Before you yell at me for not telling you about the vampires, you
should know that I am risking a ticket by talking to you while I drive.
Do you really want me to get a ticket for letting you yell at me?”
He gave a reluctant laugh, so I supposed he wasn’t too upset. “You’re
still on the road? I thought you left this morning.”
“Fixed a shift linkage in a Ford Focus at that rest stop near Connell,” I
told him. “Nice lady and her dog were stuck after having a clutch job
done by her brother-in-law. He hadn’t tightened down a few bolts,
and one of them fell off. Took me an hour or so before we found
someone who had a bolt and nut the right size.” And I had the oil
stains across my shoulders and the grit in my hair to prove it. In my
Rabbit I kept a towel to put on the ground. I also kept a selection of
useful car bits. It was going to be a while before my Rabbit was up
and running.
“How is Mary Jo?”
“She’s sleeping for real now.”
“Bran helped?”
“Bran helped.” I could hear the smile in his voice. “You be careful
ghost hunting—and don’t let Stefan bite you.”
There was just a little edge to the last.
“Jealous?” I asked. Yep. The RV passed me on the downhill.
“Maybe a little,” he said.
“Don’t be. We’ll be fine. Ghosts aren’t as dangerous as crazy vampire
ladies.” I couldn’t help the anxiety that crept into my voice.
“I’ll be careful—and Mercy?”
“Uhm?”
“Consider yourself yelled at,” he purred, then hung up.
I grinned at the phone and closed it.
AMBER’S DIRECTIONS TO HER HOUSE HAD BEEN CLEAR
and easy to follow. The relief in her voice when I’d called that
morning made me want to believe she really had a ghost problem and
wasn’t part of some secret vampire conspiracy to get me somewhere
I’d be easier to kill. Despite Bran’s assurances that it was unlikely
Marsilia would ship me off to Spokane, I was still feeling ... not
paranoid, really. Cautious. I was feeling cautious.
Zee had agreed to work the shop while I was gone. I probably could
have gotten him to work cheaper than usual because he was still
feeling guilty about stuff that wasn’t his fault. Cheaper would mean I
could eat peanut butter instead of ramen noodles for the rest of the
month, but I didn’t think any of it was his fault.
He had talked to Uncle Mike about the crossed bones on my door.
Definitely vampire work, he told me. The bones meant that I had
broken faith with the vampires and was no longer under their
protection—and anyone offering me aid of any kind was likely to find
themselves on the wrong side of the vampires as well. The broad
interpretation of that was horrifying. It meant that people like Tony
and Sensei Johanson were at risk, too.
It meant that it was probably a good thing that I get out of town for a
few days and figure out how to limit the number of victims Marsilia
could claim.
Amber lived in a Victorian mansion complete with a pair of towers.
The brick porch had been freshly tuck-pointed, the gingerbread work
around the roof edge and the windows bore a new coat of paint. Even
the roses looked ready for magazine display.
Frowning at the leaded glass glistening in the sun, I wondered when
I’d last cleaned the windows in my house. Had I ever cleaned the
windows? Samuel might have.
I was still thinking about it when the door opened. A startled boy
gawked at me, and I realized I hadn’t rung the doorbell.
“Hey,” I said. “Is your mom home?”
He recovered quickly and gave me a shy look out of a pair of misty
green eyes under long, thick eyelashes, and turned to ring the bell I
hadn’t.
“I’m Mercy,” I told him, while we waited for Amber to emerge from
the depths of the house. “Your mom and I went to school together.”
His wary look deepened, and he didn’t say anything. So I guessed she
hadn’t told him anything.
“Mercy, I was beginning to think you weren’t coming.” Amber
sounded harassed and not at all grateful, and that was before she saw
what I looked like—covered in old oil and parking-lot dirt.
Her son and I turned to look at her.
She still looked like a show dog, but her eyes were stressed. “Chad,
this is my friend who is going to help us with the ghost.” As she
spoke, her hands flew in a graceful dance, and I remembered Charles
had said her son had some sort of disability: he was deaf.
She turned her attention to me, but her hands still moved, letting her
son know what she was saying. “This is my son, Chad.” She took a
deep breath. “Mercy, I’m sorry. My husband has a client coming over
for dinner tonight. He didn’t tell me until just a few minutes ago. It’s
a formal dinner ...”
She looked at me, and her voice trailed off.
“What?” I said letting sharpness creep into my voice at the insult.
“Don’t I look like I’m up to a formal dinner? Sorry, the stitches in my
chin don’t come out for at least a week.”
Suddenly she laughed. “You haven’t changed a bit. If you didn’t bring
anything suitable, you can borrow something of mine. The guy who’s
coming is actually pretty well house-trained for a cutthroat
businessman. I think you’ll like him. I’ve got to do some inventorying
and run to the grocery store.” She tilted her head so her son could see
her mouth. “Chad, would you take Mercy to the guest room?”
He gave me another wary look, but nodded. As he went back inside
the house and started up the stairs, Amber told me, “I’d better warn
you, my husband is pretty unhappy about the ghost. He thinks Chad
and I are making it up. If you could manage not to mention it at
dinner in front of his client, I’d appreciate it.”
THERE WAS A BATHROOM ACROSS FROM THE ROOM I
WAS staying in. I took my suitcase and went in to scrub up. Before I
stripped off my grimy shirt, I closed my eyes and took a deep breath.
Sometimes ghosts only appear to one sense or another. Sometimes I
can only hear them—sometimes I can smell them. But the bathroom
smelled like soap and shampoo, water, and those stupid blue tablets
some people who didn’t have pets put in their toilets.
I didn’t see anything or hear anything either. But that didn’t keep the
hair on the back of my neck from rising as I pulled off my shirt and
stuffed it into the plastic compartment in my suitcase. I scoured my
hands until they were mostly clean and brushed the dirt out of my hair
and rebraided it. And all the while I could feel someone watching me.
Maybe it was only the power of suggestion. But I cleaned up as fast as
I could anyway. No ghostly writing appeared on the walls, no one
appeared in the mirror or moved stuff around.
I opened the bathroom door and found Amber waiting impatiently
right in front of the door. She didn’t notice that she’d startled me.
“I have to take Chad to softball practice, then do some shopping for
dinner tonight. Do you want to come?”
“Why not?” I said with a casual shrug. Staying in that house alone
didn’t appeal to me—some ghost hunter I was. Nothing had
happened, and I was already jumpy.
I took shotgun. Chad frowned at me, but sat in back. I didn’t think I
impressed him much. No one said anything until we dropped Chad
off. He didn’t look happy about going. Amber proved that she was
tougher than me because she ignored the puppy-dog eyes and
abandoned Chad to his coach’s indifferent care.
“So you decided not to become a history teacher,” Amber said as she
pulled away from the curb. Her voice was tight with nerves. The
stress was coming from her end, I thought—but then she’d never been
relaxing company.
“Decided isn’t quite the word,” I told her. “I took a job as a mechanic
to support myself until a teaching position opened ... and one day I
realized that even if someone offered me a job, I’d rather turn a
wrench.” And then, because she’d given me the opening, “I thought
you were going to be a vet.”
“Yes, well, life happened.” She paused. “Chad happened.” That was
too much honesty for her though, and she subsided into silence. In the
grocery store, I wandered away while she was testing tomatoes—they
all looked good to me. I bought a candy bar, just to see how much
she’d changed.
Not that much. By the time she’d finished lecturing me on the evils of
refined sugar, we were almost back to the house. She was feeling a lot
more comfortable—and she finally told me more about her ghost.
“Corban doesn’t believe we’re haunted,” she told me as she threaded
her way through the city. She glanced at my face and away. “I haven’t
actually seen or heard anything either. I just told him I had, so he’d
leave Chad alone.” She took a deep breath and looked at me again.
“He thinks Chad might do better at a boarding school—a private place
for troubled kids that a friend of his recommended.”
“He didn’t look troubled to me,” I said. “Aren’t ‘troubled’ kids
usually doing drugs or beating on the neighbor’s kids?” Chad had
looked like he’d rather have stayed home and read than go to play
ball.
Amber gave a nervous half laugh. “Corban doesn’t get along very
well with Chad. He doesn’t understand him. It’s the old Disney cliché
of a quarterback dad and bookworm son.”
“Does Corban know he’s not Chad’s father?”
She hit the brakes so hard that if I hadn’t been belted in, I might have
become better acquainted with her windshield. She sat there in the
middle of the road for a moment, oblivious to the honking horns
around us. I was glad we were in a stout Mercedes rather than the
Miata she’d driven to my house.
“You forget,” I said blandly. “I knew Harrison, too. We used to joke
about his eyelashes, and I’ve never see eyes like his since. Not until
today.” Harrison had been her one true love for about three months
until she dropped him for a premed student.
Amber started forward again and drove for a little until traffic settled
down. “I’d forgotten you knew him.” She sighed. “Funny. Yes,
Corban knows he’s not Chad’s father, but Chad doesn’t. It didn’t used
to matter, but I’m not so sure. Corban’s been ... different lately.” She
shook her head. “Still, he’s the one who suggested I ask you to come
over. He saw the article in the paper, and said, ‘Isn’t that the girl you
said used to see ghosts? Why don’t you have her come over and have
a look-see?”’
I figured I’d been pushy enough, so I asked a question that was less
intrusive. “What does the ghost do?”
“Moves things,” she told me. “It rearranges Chad’s room once or
twice a week. Chad says he’s seen the furniture moving around.” She
hesitated. “It breaks things, too. A couple of vases my husband’s
father brought over from China. The glass over my husband’s
diploma. Sometimes it takes things.” She glanced at me again. “Car
keys. Shoes. Some important papers of Cor’s turned up in Chad’s
room, under his bed. Corban was pretty mad.”
“At Chad?”
She nodded.
I hadn’t even met him, and I didn’t like her husband. Even if Chad
was doing everything himself—and I had no evidence to the
contrary—throwing him into reform school didn’t sound like the way
to make things better.
We picked up a morose Chad, who didn’t seem inclined to converse,
and she quit talking about the ghost.
AMBER WAS WORKING IN THE KITCHEN. I’D TRIED TO
HELP but she finally sent me to my room to stay out of her way. She
didn’t like the way I peeled apples. I’d brought a book from home—a
very old book—with real fairy tales in it. It was borrowed and I’d
have to return it soon, so I was reading as fast as I could.
I was taking notes on kelpies (thought extinct) when someone
knocked at my door twice and then opened it.
Chad stood with a notebook and a pencil in hand.
“Hey,” I said.
He turned the notebook around and I read, “How much is my dad
paying you?”
“Nothing,” I said.
His eyes narrowed, and he ripped away that page and showed me the
next one. Evidently he’d thought about this for a while. “Why are you
here? What do you want?”
I set my book aside and stared back at him. He was tough, but he
wasn’t Adam or Samuel: he blinked first.
“I have a vampire who wants to kill me,” I told him. Which I
shouldn’t have, of course, but I wanted to see what would happen.
Curiosity, Bran has told me more than once, might be as fatal for
coyotes as it is for cats.
Chad crumpled the paper and mouthed a word. Evidently he hadn’t
expected that response.
I raised my eyebrow. “Sorry. You’ll have to do better. I don’t lipread.”
He scribbled furiously. “Lyer” said his paper.
I took his pencil, and wrote, “liar.” Then I gave him back his
notebook, and said, “You want to bet?”
He clutched his notebook to his chest and stalked off. I liked him. He
reminded me of me.
Fifteen minutes later his mother barged in. “Red or purple?” she
asked me, still sounding frantic. “Come with me.”
Bewildered, I followed her down the hall and into the master bedroom
suite, where she’d laid out two dresses. “I only have five minutes
before I have to put the rolls in,” she said. “Red or purple?”
The purple had considerably more fabric. “Purple,” I said. “Do you
have shoes I can borrow, too? Or do you want me to go barefoot?”
She gave me a wild-eyed look. “Shoes I have, but not nylons.”
“Amber,” I told her. “I will put on high heels for you. And I will wear
a dress. But you aren’t paying me enough to wear nylons. My legs are
shaved and tan, that’ll have to do.”
“We can pay you. How much do you want?”
I looked but couldn’t tell if she was joking or not. “No charge,” I told
her. “That way I can leave when things get scary.”
She didn’t laugh. I was pretty sure Amber used to have a sense of
humor. Maybe.
“Look,” I told her. “Take a deep breath. Find the shoes for me, and go
put your rolls in the oven.”
She did take a deep breath, and it seemed to help.
When I went back to my room, Chad was there again with his
notebook. He was staring at the walking stick on my bed. I hadn’t
brought it with me, but it had come anyway. I wished I could ask it
what it wanted from me.
I picked it up and waited until he was looking at me so he could read
my lips. “This is what I use to beat problem children with.”
He clutched his notebook tighter, so I guessed his lipreading skills
were up to par. I put the stick back on the bed. “What did you want?”
He turned his notebook around and showed me a newspaper article
that had been cut out and was taped to a page of his notebook. “Alpha
Werewolf’s Girlfriend Kills Attacker” it said. There was a picture of
me looking battered and dazed. I didn’t remember anyone taking
pictures, but there were large chunks of that night I was pretty shaky
on.
“Yes,” I said, like my stomach didn’t suddenly hurt. “Old news.”
He turned the page, and I saw he had another observation for me.
“There R no vampyrs.” I guessed spelling wasn’t his strong suit. Even
at ten, I’d been able to spell “are.”
“Okay, thanks,” I said. “Good to know. I guess I’ll go home
tomorrow.”
He dropped his hands to his sides, the notebook swaying back and
forth with irritation like a cat’s tail. He knew sarcasm when he heard
it, even if he was lip-reading it.
“Don’t worry, kid,” I told him more gently. “I’m not a part of the plot
to send you off to kid-prison. If I don’t see anything, it doesn’t mean
that there’s nothing to see. And I’ll tell your father so, too.”
He blinked his eyes furiously, hugged his notebook again. He lifted
his chin—a smaller, less-stubborn version of his mother’s. And he
left.
AMBER TROTTED UP THE STAIRS DOUBLE TIME AND waved
to me as she went past. I heard her knock, then open a door. “You
need to clean up, too,” she told her son. “You don’t have to eat with
us—there’s a plate in the microwave—but I don’t want you scuttling
around trying to be unseen, either. You know how that irritates your
father. So comb your hair, wash your hands and face.”
I stripped off my clothes and pulled on the purple dress. It fit just
fine—a little tight in the shoulders and snugger in the hips than I
preferred, but when I looked at it in the full-length mirror, it looked
just fine. Amber, Char, and I had always been able to trade clothes
with each other.
The heels were higher than was comfortable, but as long as we were
staying in the house, they should be all right. Char’s feet had been
smaller than Amber’s and mine. I brushed out my hair again, then
French-braided it. A touch of lipstick and eyeliner, and I was good to
go.
I wished it was Adam I was about to eat with instead of Amber, her
jerk of a husband, and some important client. It was enough to make
me wish I had a plate in the microwave, too.
6
NEITHER OF THE TWO MEN WHO ENTERED THE HOUSE was
handsome. The shorter man was slightly balding, with plump hands
that had three thick gold rings on them. His suit was off-the-rack, but
the rack had been expensive. His eyes were pale, pale blue, almost as
pale as Samuel’s wolf eyes. The resemblance made me want to like
him. He stood by almost shyly as the other man hugged Amber.
“Hey, sweetie,” Amber’s husband said and, to my surprise, there was
honest warmth in his voice. “Thank you for fixing dinner for us on
such short notice.”
Corban Wharton was striking rather than good-looking. His nose was
too long for his broad face. His eyes were dark and wide-set—and
smiling. There was something solid and reassuring about him. He was
the kind of person that you’d want beside you in a courtroom. When
he looked at me, he frowned briefly, as if trying to place who I was.
“You must be Mercedes Thompson,” he said, holding out his hand.
He had a good handshake, a politician’s handshake—firm and dry.
“Call me Mercy,” I said. “Everyone does.”
He nodded. “Mercy, this is my friend and client Jim Blackwood.
Jim—Mercy Thompson, my wife’s friend who is visiting us this
week.”
Jim was talking to Amber and took just an instant to turn his attention
back to Corban and me.
Jim Blackwood. James Blackwood. How many James Black-woods
were there in Spokane, I wondered in dumb panic. Five or six? But I
knew—even though the strong cologne he wore kept me from
scenting vampire—I knew I wasn’t going to be lucky.
He’d think I smelled like I had dogs, Bran had assured me. And even
if he didn’t, even if he knew what I was—I was just visiting. He
couldn’t take offense at that, right?
I knew better. Vampires could take offense at anything they liked.
“Mr. Blackwood,” I greeted him, when he looked away from Amber.
Keep it simple. I didn’t know if vampires could sense lies like the
wolves could, but I wasn’t going to say, “It’s very good to meet you,”
or something similar when I was wishing myself a hundred miles
away.
I did my best to keep a social smile on my face while stupid thoughts
began to pile up. How was he going to eat with us? Vampires didn’t.
Not that I’d ever seen. What were the chances of a vampire’s showing
up and it not being some plot of Marsilia’s?
Blackwood hadn’t sounded like a vampire who would do anyone’s
bidding.
“Call me Jim,” he told me, just a hint of a British accent shading his
voice. “I’m sorry to intrude on your visit, but we had some urgent
business this afternoon, and Corban insisted on bringing me home.”
His round face was merry, and his handshake was even more
practiced than Corban’s had been. If it weren’t for that little talk I’d
had with Bran, I’d never have known what he was.
“Shall we go eat now?” Amber suggested, calm and in control now
that the preparations were finished. “It’s ready and not going to get
better if it sits around. I’m afraid I kept it simple.”
Simple was pepper steak over rice with salads and fresh rolls followed
by homemade apple pie. Somehow, the food disappeared from the
vampire’s plate. I never saw him eat or touch his plate—though I kept
half an eye on it with morbid fascination. Maybe a little hope. If I’d
seen even a single bite go in his mouth, then I’d have believed him to
be just what he seemed.
I stayed quiet while the men talked business—mostly contract
language and 401(k)s—and I was very happy to stay unnoticed.
Amber slipped in a sentence here and there, just enough to keep the
conversation going. I heard Chad sneak by the dining room and into
the kitchen. After a while he left again.
“Very good meal as always,” the vampire told Amber. “Beautiful,
charming—and a fine cook. As I keep telling Corban, I am going to
steal you one of these days.” I felt a chill go down my spine—he
wasn’t lying—but Corban and Amber just laughed as if it were an old
joke. Just then, he looked at me. “You’ve been awfully quiet tonight.
Corban tells me you went to school with Amber and you’re from
Kennewick. What is it you do there?”
“I fix things,” I mumbled to my plate.
“Things?” He sounded intrigued, just the opposite of what I’d hoped.
“Cars. Meet Mercedes the VW mechanic,” said Amber with a touch
of the sharpness that had been her trademark in the old days. “But I
bet I can still get her going on the royal families of Europe or the
name of Hitler’s German shepherd.” She smiled at James Blackwood,
the Monster who kept his territory free of vampires or anything else
that might challenge him. A coyote wouldn’t be much of a challenge.
Amber chatted on ... almost nervously. Maybe she thought I’d jump
up and tell her husband’s valuable client that they’d brought me over
to catch a ghost in the act. She wouldn’t be worried about it if she
knew what he was. “You’d have thought with her background—she’s
half-Blackfoot ... or is that Blackfeet? ... Anyway, she never studied
Native American history, just the European stuff.”
“I don’t like wallowing in tragedy,” I told her, trying desperately to
sound uninteresting. “And that’s what Native American history is
mostly. But now I just fix cars.”
“Blondi,” said Corban, “was the name of the dog.”
“Someone told me she was named after the comic strip Blondie,” I
added. That supposition had led to many arguments among the Nazi
trivia buffs I knew. I was hoping the conversation would devolve to
Hitler. He was dead and could do no more harm—unlike the dead
man in the room.
“You are Native American?” asked the vampire. Had he tried to catch
my eyes?
I was very good at keeping my gaze from meeting other people’s
unless it was on purpose—a useful skill around the wolves. I looked
at his jaw, and said, “Half. My father. I never knew him, though.”
He shook his head. “I’m very sorry.”
“Old news,” I said. Deciding that if Hitler wasn’t going to distract
him from me, maybe business would. It always worked with my
stepfather. “I take it Corban is keeping your company safely out of the
courts?”
“He’s very good at his job,” said the vampire with a pleased and
possessive smile. “With him beside me, Blackwood Industries will
stay afloat for a few more months, eh?”
Corban gave a hearty, and heartfelt, laugh. “Oh, I think a few months
at the least.”
“To making money,” said Amber, holding up her glass. “Lots of it.”
I pretended to sip the wine with the rest of them and was pretty sure
that my idea of making money was several orders of magnitude less
than theirs.
HE LEFT AT LAST IT HADN’T BEEN AS HORRIBLE AS I’D
feared. The Monster was charming and, I hoped, unaware that I was
anything except a not-very-interesting VW mechanic. Except for that
one moment, I’d mostly avoided notice.
Almost euphoric at my near escape, I didn’t worry about ghosts at all
while I changed. Then I went back downstairs to help Amber with the
cleanup.
She must have been worried or something, too, because she was
nearly as giddy as I was. We had an impromptu water fight in the
kitchen that ended in a draw when her husband stuck his head in the
doorway to see what the noise was all about, and nearly got a sponge
in the face for his trouble.
Discretion suggested that having escaped detection once, I should
head home in the morning. But Amber was a little drunk, so I decided
that conversation could wait until later. Dishes clean, clothes wet and
soapy, I left Amber necking with her husband in the kitchen.
I opened the bedroom door to find Chad in the middle of my bed, his
arms crossed over his chest. I could smell his fear from the doorway.
I closed the door behind me and took a good look around the room.
“Ghost?” I mouthed.
He glanced around the room, too, then shook his head.
“Not here? In your room?”
He gave me a cautious nod.
“How about we go in your room, then.”
Terror breathing out of every pore, he slipped off the bed and
followed me to his room: brave kid. He opened his bedroom door
cautiously—and then pushed it open, being very careful to keep his
feet in the hallway.
“I assume you don’t usually keep that bookcase facedown on the
floor,” I told him.
He gave me a dirty look, but he lost some of his fear.
I shrugged. “Hey, my boyfriend has a daughter”—boyfriend was such
an inadequate word—“and I had a pair of little sisters. None of them
keeps a clean room. I had to ask.”
Except for the bookcase, it was hard to tell what part of the mess was
a normal boy’s habitat and how much the ghost had caused. But the
bookcase, one of those half-sized things people put in kids’ rooms,
was easy to fix. I squeezed past Chad and into the room. The
bookcase was even lighter than I’d thought.
When I started reshelving his books, he knelt beside me and helped.
He read a little of everything—and not entirely limited to things I’d
think a kid would read: Jurassic Park, Interview with the Vampire,
and H. P. Lovecraft sat next to Harry Potter and Naruto manga
numbers one through fifteen. We worked for about twenty minutes to
put everything to rights, and by the time we finished, he wasn’t scared
anymore.
I could smell it, though. It was watching us.
I dusted my hands off and looked around. “You usually keep your
room this neat, kid?”
He nodded solemnly.
I shook my head. “You need help. Just like your mom. My little sister
kept fossilized lunches under her bed for the dust bunnies she raised
there.”
I picked up a game from the neat stack. “Want to play some
Battleship?” I wasn’t leaving him alone with that thing in there.
Chad armed himself with a notebook, and we went to war.
Historically, war has often been used as a distraction for problems at
home.
Both of us lay on our bellies on the floor facing each other and fired
our missiles. Adam called, and I told him he’d have to wait—battle
must take precedence over romance. He laughed, wished me good
night and good luck, just like that old war correspondent.
Chad’s two-point boat was devilishly well hidden, and he destroyed
my navy while I hunted it fruitlessly.
“Argh!” I cried with feeling. “You sank my battleship!”
Chad’s face lit with laughter, and someone knocked at the door. I
supposed I hadn’t needed to make so much noise since Chad couldn’t
hear me anyway.
“Come in,” I said. Reading my lips, Chad looked suddenly horrified,
and I reached over and patted his shoulder.
The door popped open, and I rolled halfway over and looked back
over my feet as if to see who it was. Most people would have needed
to look, so I did, but I’d heard him coming—and Amber had never
stalked angrily in her life. Stomp, yes. Stalk, no. Trust me—any
predator knows the difference.
“Isn’t it after bedtime?” Corban said. He was wearing a pair of sweats
and an old Seattle Seahawks shirt. His hair was rumpled as if he’d
been to bed. I supposed I’d woken him up.
“Nope,” I told him. “We’re playing games and waiting for the ghost
to show up. Want to join us?”
“There isn’t a ghost,” he said to his son, out loud and in sign.
I’d started to like Corban over dinner, he had seemed like a decent
guy. But he was being a bully now.
I rolled up until I was facing him. “Isn’t there?”
He frowned at me. “There are no such things as ghosts. I am very
happy you’ve come here to visit, but I don’t approve of encouraging
nonsense. If you tell them there isn’t one here, they’ll believe you.
Chad has enough to deal with without everyone thinking he’s crazy.”
He’d continued to sign, even though he was talking to me. I didn’t
know if he left out the bit where I was supposed to tell Chad and
Amber there weren’t any ghosts.
“He’s a damn fine naval commander,” I told Corban. “And I think
he’s too smart to make up ghosts.”
He signed my reply, too. Then he said, “He just wants attention.”
“He gets attention,” I said. “He wants to stop being scared because
someone he can’t see or hear is making a mess in his room. I thought
you were the one who suggested I come check it out. Why did you do
that if you don’t believe in ghosts?”
There was a loud bang as the car on the top of Chad’s chest of
drawers made a suicide run off its perch, zoomed three feet across the
room to hit the bookcase, and fell onto the floor. I’d been watching it
roll back and forth, just a little bit, out of the corner of my eye for the
last fifteen minutes, so I didn’t jump. Chad couldn’t hear it, so he
didn’t jump. But Corban did.
I got up and picked the car up. “Can you do that again?” I asked,
setting the car back on the top of the bookcase.
I knelt beside Chad and looked at him so he could see my mouth. “It
just made that car fall off. We’re all going to watch and see if it can
do it again.”
Silenced by the car’s fall, Corban sat down next to Chad and put a
hand on his shoulder—and we all watched the car turn slowly in place
then fall off the back of the bookcase.
Then the bookcase fell facedown on the floor, right on top of Chad’s
plastic ocean fleet. I caught a glimpse of someone standing there,
hands up, then nothing—and the sweet-salt smell of blood that I’d
been smelling since I first entered the room faded away.
I stayed where I was while Corban checked the bookcase and the car
for devices or strings or something. Finally, he looked back at Chad.
“Are you all right sleeping in here?”
“It’s gone,” I told them both, and Corban obliged me by signing it.
Chad nodded, and his hands flew. At the end of it, Corban grinned. “I
guess that’s true.” He looked at me. “He told me the ghost hasn’t
killed him yet.”
Corban hefted the bookcase upright again, and I looked down at the
mess of books and game pieces.
I waited until Chad glanced my way. Then I pointed at his two-hole
destroyer, plainly visible, surrounded by white, useless missile pegs.
“So that’s where you hid it, you little sneak.”
He grinned. Not a full-fledged grin, but enough that I knew he’d be
fine. Tough kid.
I left them to their manly nighttime rituals and went back to my room,
all thoughts of going home tomorrow shelved. I wasn’t going to
abandon Chad to the ghost. I still had no idea how to get rid of it, but
maybe I could help him live with it instead. He was already halfway
there.
Corban knocked at my door a few minutes later, then cracked it open.
“I don’t need to come in,” he said. He stared at me grimly. “Tell me
you didn’t engineer that somehow. I checked for wires and magnets.”
I raised my eyebrow at him. “I didn’t engineer anything.
Congratulations. Your house is haunted.”
He frowned. “I’m pretty good at sniffing out lies.”
“Good for you,” I told him sincerely. “Now I’m tired, and I need to go
to sleep.”
He backed away from my doorway and started down the hall. But he
hadn’t gotten two steps before he turned back. “If it is a ghost, is
Chad safe?”
I shrugged. Truthfully, the smell of blood bothered me. Ghosts, in my
experience, tend to smell like themselves. Mrs. Hanna, who used to
visit my shop sometimes—both when she was alive and after she
died—smelled like her laundry soap, her favorite perfume, and the
cats who shared her home with her. I didn’t think the blood was a
good sign.
Still, I gave him the truth as I knew it. “I’ve never been hurt by a
ghost, and I only know of a few stories where someone was hurt,
mostly only bruises. The Bell Witch supposedly killed a man named
John Bell in Tennessee a couple of centuries ago—but it was probably
something other than a ghost. And old John died of poison that the
Witch was supposed to have put in his medicine, something more
mundane hands could have done as well.”
He stared at me, and I returned it.
“You date a werewolf,” he said.
“That’s right.”
“And you say there are ghosts.”
“And fae,” I told him. “I work with one. After werewolves and fae,
ghosts aren’t such a leap now, are they?”
I shut my door and went to bed. After a few long minutes, he retreated
to his bedroom.
I usually have a hard time sleeping in strange places, but it was very
late (or really early), and I hadn’t gotten a full night’s sleep the night
before either. I slept like a baby.
When I woke up the next morning there were two puncture marks,
complete with a nifty purple bruise, on my neck. They were a lovely
addition to the stitches in my chin. And my lamb necklace was gone.
I stared at the bite in the bathroom mirror and heard Samuel tell me
that I shouldn’t count upon Stefan still being my friend ... and Stefan
making it clear that he needed to feed in order to avoid detection. I
knew there were consequences to being bitten, but I wasn’t sure what
they were.
Of course I’d met another vampire last night. For a moment I hoped it
was him. That Stefan hadn’t bitten me while I slept. Then I really
thought about being bitten by James Blackwood, who scared the
things that scared me. And I hoped it was Stefan.
Stefan would have needed an invitation into the house, though. Had I
asked him in, and he’d somehow erased the memory? I hoped so. It
seemed the lesser of two evils.
The bathroom door popped open—I’d just come in to brush my teeth,
so it wasn’t locked. Chad stared at my neck, then looked at me, eyes
wide.
And I hoped it was Stefan, because I was going to stay here until I
helped ... somehow.
“No,” I told Chad casually, “I wasn’t lying about the vampires.” I
thought I wouldn’t mention I’d received it last night if he didn’t think
of that himself. He didn’t need to be worrying about vampires as well
as ghosts.
“I shouldn’t have told you about it,” I said. “I’d appreciate it if you
didn’t tell your folks. The vampires like it better if no one knows
they’re around. And they take measures to ensure that is true.”
He looked at me for a moment. Then he zipped an imaginary zipper
across his lips, locked an invisible lock, and threw the key behind his
back: some things are universal.
“Thank you.” I put the cap on my toothbrush and packed up my
bathroom kit. “Any more trouble last night?”
He shook his head and wiped a wrist across his forehead to wipe off
imaginary sweat.
“Good. Do you get much activity from your ghost during the day?”
He shrugged, waited a moment, then nodded.
“So I’ll talk to your mom and maybe go for a jog.” No running in
coyote form in the city, especially when my efforts to stay out of
James Blackwood’s way had already failed so spectacularly. But if I
didn’t run most days, I started to get cranky. “And then we can stake
out your room for a while. Is there anywhere else the ghost visits?”
He nodded and mimed eating and cooking.
“Just the kitchen, or the dining room, too?”
He held up two fingers.
“Fine.” I checked my watch. “Meet you here at eight sharp.” I went
back to my room, but I didn’t catch Stefan’s scent or anything out of
the ordinary. Nor was there any sign of my necklace. Without it, I had
no protection against vampires. Not that it had done me much good
last night.
RUNNING IN THE CITY IS NOT MY FAVORITE THING. STILL,
the sun was shining, making it unlikely that I’d run into a vampire for
a while. I ran for about a half hour, then made a beeline for Amber’s
house.
Her car was gone from the driveway. She had things to do, she’d told
me—a hair appointment, errands to run, and some shopping. I’d told
her Chad and I would amuse ourselves on our own. Still, I’d expected
her to wait for me to return. I wasn’t sure I’d have left my ten-yearold
son alone in a haunted house. However, he seemed unfazed when
he met me at the bathroom door just as my watch read 8:00 A.M.
We explored the whole of the old house, starting with the bottom and
working our way up. Not that it was necessary or important to
explore, but I like old houses and I didn’t have any better plan than
waiting for the ghost to manifest. Come to think of it, I didn’t have
any better plan after it manifested. Banishing ghosts was not
something I’d ever tried, and everything I’d read about it over the
years (not much) seemed to indicate that doing it wrong was worse
than not doing it at all.
The cellar had been redone at some point, but behind a smallish oldfashioned
door, there was a room with a dirt floor filled with old
wooden milk crates and junk stored down there by some long-ago
person. Whatever its original purpose, it was now the perfect habitat
for black widows.
“Wow.” I pointed at the far corner of the ceiling with my borrowed
flashlight. “Look at the size of that spider. I don’t know that I’ve ever
seen one that big.”
Chad tapped me and I looked at his circle of light, centered on a
broken ladder-back chair.
“Yep,” I agreed. “That one’s bigger. I think we’ll just back out of here
and look elsewhere—at least until we have a nice can of spider
spray.” I shut the door a little more firmly than I might have. I don’t
mind spiders, and a black widow is one of the beauties of its kind ...
but they bite if you get in their way. Just like vampires. I rubbed my
neck to make sure the collar of my shirt and my hair were still
covering my own bite. This afternoon I’d go shopping. I needed to
pick up a scarf or high-necked shirt for better concealment before
Amber or Corban saw it. Maybe I could find another lamb necklace.
The rest of the basement was surprisingly clean of junk, dust, and
spiders. Maybe Amber hadn’t been as intimidated by the widows as
I’d been.
“We’re not trying to find out who the ghost is,” I told him. “Though
we could do that if you wanted to, I suppose. I’m just looking around
to see what I can see. If this turns out to be a trick someone is playing,
I don’t want to be taken in.”
He slashed his hands down in a way that needed no translation, his
eyes bright with anger.
“No. I don’t think you’re doing it.” I told him firmly. “If that was
faked last night, it was beyond any amateur fiddling. Maybe someone
has a bone to pick with your dad and is using you to do it.” I
hesitated. “But I don’t think it was faked.” Why would someone plant
the smell of fresh blood too faint for a human nose, for instance. Still,
I felt obligated to be as certain as I could that no one was playing
tricks.
He thought about that for a while, then gave me a solemn nod and
pointed out things of interest. A small, empty room behind a very
thick door that might have been a cold room. The old coal chute with
a box of old blankets placed near the end. I stuck my head in the
metal tunnel and sniffed, but only to confirm my suspicions : Chad
had been sliding down the coal chute for fun.
His eyes peered worriedly out from under his too-long hair. It didn’t
look dangerous to me—it looked fun. More fun if no one else knew,
I’d had a few places like that when I was his age. So I didn’t say
anything.
I showed him the old bare copper electrical wires, no longer in use but
still present, and the quarry marks on the granite stone blocks used to
wall in the basement. We checked out the basement ceiling below the
kitchen and dining room. Since I didn’t know exactly what had been
happening in the kitchen and dining room, I didn’t know what to look
for. But it stood to reason that it would have been put in shortly before
the haunting started—which was just a few months ago. Everything in
that part of the basement looked as though it was older than I was.
The next two floors weren’t nearly as interesting as the basement—no
black widows. Someone had thoroughly modernized them and left not
so much as a trace of an old servants’ stairway or dumb-waiter. The
woodwork was nice, but pine rather than hardwood—the
craftsmanship good but not extraordinary. The house had been built
by someone of the upper middle class, I judged, and not by one of the
truly wealthy. My trailer had been built for the truly poor, so I was a
good judge of such things.
The ghost hadn’t been to Chad’s room since last night—everything
was neatly in place. As Corban had said, there were no signs of wires
or strings or anything that could have made the car shoot across the
room. I supposed it could have been done with magic—I didn’t know
a lot about magic. But I hadn’t felt any, and I usually can tell if
someone’s using magic near me.
I looked at Chad. “Unless we find something really odd in the floor
above your room, I’m pretty convinced this is the real deal.”
In my room, my brush was on the floor, but I couldn’t swear I hadn’t
left it there. Under Chad’s gimlet eye, I made my bed and stuffed the
clothes I’d scattered all over the floor into my suitcase.
“The real problem is,” I told him as I tidied my mess and he sat on the
bed, “that I don’t know how to get the ghost to leave you alone. I can
see it better than you, I think—you didn’t see anything yesterday
except the things moving around?”
He shook his head.
“I did. Nothing clear, but I could see it. But I don’t know how to
make it go away. It’s not a repeater—a ghost that just repeats certain
actions over and over. There’s intelligence behind what it does—” I
had to say it twice for him to get it all.
When he did, Chad’s face twisted in a snarl, and he hissed.
I nodded. “It’s angry. Maybe if we can figure out what it’s angry
about, we can—”
Something made a huge crashing noise. My reaction must have given
it away because Chad stood up and touched my shoulder.
“Something downstairs,” I told him.
We found it in the kitchen. The fridge hung open and the wall
opposite it was dented and smeared with a wet and sticky substance
that was probably orange juice. A container of it lay open on the floor
along with half a dozen bottles of various condiments. The faucet was
on full force. The sink was stoppered and rapidly filling with hot
water.
While Chad turned the water off, I looked around the room. When
Chad touched my arm, I shook my head. “I don’t see it.”
Heaving a sigh, I started cleanup. I seemed to be doing that a lot here.
I scrubbed the wall, and Chad mopped the floor. There was nothing I
could do about the dents in the wall—and looking at them, I thought
maybe some of them were old.
Once everything was as good as it would get, I fixed sandwiches and
chips for lunch. Thus fortified, we continued our explorations by
going up to the attic.
There were actually two attics. The one above Chad’s room was
accessible by a narrow stairway hidden in a hall closet (maybe the last
remnant of a servants’ stair). I half expected dust and storage boxes,
but the attic held only a modern office with a professional-looking
computer set up on a cherry desk. There were skylights for an open,
airy feeling to offset the walls of cherry barrister’s book-cases
weighed down by leather-bound legal tomes. The only whimsical
feature was a lacy pillow on the narrow window seat in front of the
only window.
“You said there was another one?” I asked, standing on the stairs
because entering the room seemed intrusive.
Chad led the way to the other side of the second floor and into his
parent’s bedroom. I wondered why the office had been personalized
and charming while the bedroom suite, professionally decorated until
it would have been as equally comfortable in a department store as it
was in the old house, was impersonal and cold.
Inside the walk-in closet, there was a large rectangular door in the
ceiling. We had to get a chair and pull it under the door before I could
reach the latched hand pull, but the door turned out to be a folding
staircase. Once we pulled the chair away, the stairs dropped all the
way to the floor.
Flashlights in hand, we intrepid explorers climbed into the attic more
suited to a house like this than the previous one had been.
Structurally, it was the mirror image of the office minus the skylights
and gorgeous view. Light battled through the coating of white paint
that covered the only window, flickering on the motes of dust we had
disturbed with our presence.
Four old steamer trunks were lined up against the wall next to a pedal
sewing machine with SINGER scrawled in elaborate gold lettering
over the scratched wooden side of the cabinet. There were more
empty milk crates here, but in the attic, at least, someone had found a
way to keep the spiders out. I didn’t see any creepy-crawlies at all. Or
even very much dust. Trust Amber to dust her attic.
The trunks were locked. But the look of disappointment on Chad’s
face had me digging out my pocketknife. A little wiggling, a little
jiggling with the otherwise-useless toothpick, and the slimmest of the
blades had the first trunk open before you could sing three verses of
“Ninety-nine Bottles of Beer.” I know because I hum when I pick
locks—it’s a bad habit. Since I have no desire to become a
professional thief, though, I haven’t bothered to try to break myself of
it.
Yellowed linens with tatting around the edges and embroidered spring
baskets, or flowers, or some other appropriately feminine imagery
filled the first trunk, but the second was more interesting. House plans
(which we took out), deeds, old diplomas for people whose names
were unfamiliar to Chad, and a handful of newspaper articles dating
back to the 1920s about people with the same last name as the people
in the diplomas and deeds. Mostly death, birth, and marriage notices.
None of the death notices were about people who had died violently
or too young, I noticed.
While Chad was poring over the house plans he’d spread over the
closed lid of the first trunk, I stopped to read about the life of
Ermalinda Gaye Holfenster McGinnis Curtis Albright, intrigued by
the excessive last name. She’d died at age seventy-four in 1939. Her
father had been a captain on the wrong side of the Civil War, had
taken his family west, finding his fortune in timber and railroads.
Ermalinda had eight children, four of whom had survived her and had
a huge number of children themselves. Twice a widow, she’d married
a third man fifteen years before her death. He’d been—reading
between the lines—far younger than she.
“You go, girl,” I told her admiringly—and the stairway closed up and
slammed shut so hard that the resultant vibration from the floor had
Chad looking up from his plans. He wouldn’t have heard the snick of
the lock, though.
I dove for the door—too late, of course. When I put my nose to it, I
didn’t smell anyone. I couldn’t think of any reason anyone would lock
us in the attic, anyway. It wasn’t as if we were going to perish up here
... unless someone set the whole house on fire or something.
I pushed that helpful thought out of my head and decided it was
probably our ghost. I’d read about ghosts who set houses on fire.
Wasn’t Hans Holzer’s Borley Rectory supposedly burned down by its
ghosts? But then I was pretty sure that Hans Holzer had been proved a
fraud at some point ...
“Well,” I told Chad, “that tells us that our ghost is vindictive and
intelligent, anyway.” He looked pretty shook-up, clutching the plans
in a way that would make any historian cringe at the way the fragile
paper was wrinkling. “We might as well keep exploring, don’t you
think?”
When he still looked scared, I told him, “Your mother will be home
sooner or later. When she comes upstairs, we can have her let us out.”
Then I had an idea. I slipped my phone out of my front pocket, but
when I called the number I’d saved for Amber, I could hear the phone
in her bedroom ring.
“Does your mom have a cell phone?” She did. He punched the
number in, and I listened to her cell phone tell me she wasn’t
available. So I told her where we were and what had happened.
“When she gets the message, she’ll come let us out,” I told Chad
when I was finished. “If she doesn’t, we’ll call your dad. Want to see
what’s in the last trunk?”
He wasn’t happy about it, but he leaned on my shoulder while I
finagled the last lock.
We both stared at the treasure revealed when the last trunk opened.
“Wow,” I said. “I wonder if your parents know this is up here.” I
paused. “I wonder if this is worth anything?”
The last trunk was completely full of old records, mostly the thick
black vinyl kind labeled 78 rpm. There was a method to the storage, I
discovered. One pile was all children’s entertainment—The Story of
Hiawatha, various children’s songs. And a treasure, Snow White
complete with a storybook in the album cover that looked as though it
had been made about the same time as the movie. Chad turned up his
nose at Snow White, so I put it back in the correct pile.
My cell phone rang and I checked the number. “Not your mom,” I
told Chad. I flipped open the phone. “Hey, Adam. Did you ever listen
to the Mello-Kings?”
There was a little pause, and Adam sang in a passable bass, “Chip,
chip, chip went the little bird ... and something, something, something
went my heart. I assume there’s a reason you asked?”
“Chad and I are going though a box of old records,” I told him.
“Chad?” His voice was carefully neutral.
“Amber’s ten-year-old son. I have in my own two hands a 1957
record by the Mello-Kings. I think it might be the newest one in
here—nope. Chad just found a Beatles album ... uhm, cover. It looks
like the record is missing. So the Mello-Kings are probably the
newest thing here.”
“I see. No luck hunting ghosts?”
“Some.” I looked ruefully at the closed door that was keeping us
prisoner. “What about you? How’re negotiations with the Mistress?”
“Warren and Darryl are to meet with a pair of her vampires tonight.”
“Which ones?”
“Bernard and Wulfe.”
“Tell them to be careful,” I told him. “Wulfe is something more than
just a vampire.” I’d only met Bernard once, and he hadn’t impressed
me—or maybe I was just remembering Stefan’s reaction to him.
“Go teach your granny to suck eggs,” said Adam calmly. “Don’t
worry. Have you seen Stefan?”
I touched my fingers to my neck. How to answer that. “I don’t know,
he might have bitten me last night,” somehow didn’t seem the right
thing to say. “He has been making himself scarce so far. Maybe
tonight he’ll stop in to talk.”
I heard the door open downstairs. “I need to go now, Amber’s back.”
“All right. I’ll call you tonight.” And he hung up.
Someone ran up the stairs and into the bedroom. “Your mother’s
home,” I told Chad, and began replacing the records. They were
heavy. I couldn’t imagine what the whole trunk might weigh. Maybe
they packed the trunk when it was already in the attic—or had eight
strapping werewolves to carry it.
“It’s locked,” I told Amber, as she rattled the door. “I think there’s
some kind of a catch on your side.”
She was breathing hard as she pulled the stairs down.
Her attention was all for Chad, and she didn’t bother with speech as
her hands danced.
“We’re fine,” I interrupted her. “You have some neat records here.
Have you had them valued?”
She turned to stare at me, as if she’d forgotten I was there. Her pupils
were ... odd. Too large, I decided, even for the dim attic.
“The records? I think Corban found them when we bought this house.
Yes, he checked them out. They’re nothing special. Just old.”
“Did you have a good time shopping?”
She looked at me blankly. “Shopping?”
“Amber, are you all right?”
She blinked, then smiled. It was so full of sweetness and light that it
gave me cold chills. Amber was many things, but she wasn’t sweet.
There was something wrong with her.
“Yes. I bought a sweater and a couple of early Christmas presents.”
She waved it away. “How did you get stuck here?”
I shrugged, replacing the last records and pulling the trunk shut.
“Unless you have someone breaking into your house to play nasty
practical jokes, I’d say it was the ghost.”
I stood up and started past her to the opened door. And I smelled
vampire. Could Stefan be staying here? I paused to look around while
Chad thundered down the attic stairs leaving his mother and me alone
with the smell of vampire and fresh blood.
“What’s wrong?” Amber said, taking a step forward.
She smelled of sweat, sex, and a vampire who was not Stefan.
“Was shopping all you were doing?” I asked.
“What? I had my hair done, paid a few bills—that’s it. Are you all
right?”
She wasn’t lying. She didn’t know she’d been a snack for a vampire.
Today.
I looked at the daylight streaming through the windows and knew I
desperately needed to talk to Stefan.
7
I WAITED UNTIL DARK, THEN QUIETLY SNUCK OUT THE
back door and into the yard.
“Stefan?” I called, keeping it quiet so no one in the house would hear
me.
It wasn’t as stupid as all that to call for him. He’d come here to keep
an eye on me. It made sense that he’d be nearby, somewhere.
Watching.
I waited for a half an hour, though, and no Stefan. Finally, I went
inside and found Amber watching TV.
“I’m going to bed,” I told her.
Her neck, I noticed, was bared to the world without blemish—but
there are other places a vampire can feed. My own neck sported a
scarf, one of several I’d picked up that afternoon on a Goodwill
shopping spree that Chad and I had taken. The only thing I’d found
resembling a lamb had been a barrette with a cartoon sheep on it. Not
something to invoke the protection of the Son of God.
“You look tired,” she said with a yawn. “I know I’m exhausted.” She
muted the TV and faced me. “Corban told me about last night. Even if
you can’t do anything else, it means a lot to me that you’ve convinced
him that Chad isn’t just making things up and acting out.”
I rubbed the vampire bite, safely hidden under bright red silk. Amber
had a lot bigger problem than a ghost, but I had no idea how to help
her with that one either.
“Good,” I said. “I’ll see you in the morning.”
Once I was in my room, I couldn’t force myself to go to sleep. I
wondered if Corban knew what his client was and knew that the
vampire was feeding from his wife, or if he was a dupe like Amber. I
wondered at the oddity of Corban, who didn’t believe in ghosts,
suggesting Amber ask me to come and help them with theirs. But if
the vampire had decided to bring me here ... I had no idea why.
Unless it was some secret conspiracy, a way for Marsilia to get rid of
me, punish me for my sins without worrying about the wolves. But I
didn’t see Marsilia being anxious to owe a favor to any vampire—and
a vampire who was so territorial that he allowed no other vampires at
all was a poor candidate for cooperative problem solving.
Speaking of Blackwood ... he’d called Amber to him in the day. I’d
never heard of a vampire who was alive during the day, though
admittedly my experience with vampires was limited. I wondered
where Stefan was.
“Stefan?” I said, keeping my voice down. “Come out, come out,
wherever you are.” Maybe he couldn’t get in because he hadn’t been
invited. “Stefan? Come in.” But he still didn’t answer.
My phone rang, and I couldn’t help the silly butterflies in my stomach
when I answered.
“Hey, Adam,” I said.
“I thought you’d want to know that Warren and Darryl made it out of
the vampire den alive.”
I sucked in my breath. “You didn’t actually agree to their meeting on
Marsilia’s grounds?”
He laughed. “No, it just sounded better than saying they made it out
of Denny’s alive. It might not be romantic, but it’s open all night and
set in the middle of a brightly lit parking lot with no dark places for
skulking parties to ambush from.”
“Did they accomplish anything?”
“Not exactly.” He didn’t sound worried. “Negotiations take time. This
round was all posturing and threats. But Warren says he thinks
Marsilia might be after something more than just your pretty little
hide—a couple of hints Wulfe let drop. Marsilia knows I won’t budge
on you, but she might be willing to negotiate on something else. How
are you doing?”
“The walking stick followed me here,” I told him, because I knew it
would make him laugh again.
He did. And the rough caress of his mirth made my bones melt. “Just
don’t buy any sheep while you’re out, and you’ll be safe.”
The stick that followed me home and, in this case, to Spokane had
originally had the power of making every sheep belonging to its
caretaker bear twins. Like most fairy gifts, sooner or later it back-fired
on its human owner. I didn’t know if it still worked that way, and I
didn’t know why it was following me around either, but I was getting
sort of used to it.
“Any luck with your ghost?”
Now that we were safely out of the attic, I could tell him about it
without him speeding all the way over to rescue me. If Blackwood
had ignored me—mostly, anyway—he certainly wouldn’t ignore the
Alpha of the Columbia Basin Pack.
When I was finished, he asked, “Why’d it trap you in the attic?”
I shrugged and wriggled on the bed to get more comfortable. “I don’t
know. Probably the opportunity just presented itself. There are fae
who cause mischief like this—hobs and brownies and the like. But
this was a ghost. I saw it myself. What I haven’t seen is any sign of
Stefan. I’m a little worried about him.”
“He’s there to make sure Marsilia doesn’t send anyone after you,”
said Adam.
“Right,” I said. “So far, so good.” I touched the sore spot on my neck.
Could that be another explanation? Could it have been one of
Marsilia’s vampires?
But the sick feeling in my stomach told me that it wasn’t. Not with
Blackwood free to come and go in Amber’s home. Not with Amber
called, seduced, and fed from—in daylight.
“You don’t get to be as old as Stefan is without being able to take care
of yourself.”
“You’re right,” I said, “but he’s been cut adrift, and I’d be happier if
he weren’t making himself so scarce.”
“He’d not be much help in a ghost hunt—don’t ghosts avoid
vampires?”
“Ghosts and cats, Bran says,” I told him. “But my cat likes Stefan.”
“Your cat likes anyone she can convince to pet her.”
Something about the way he said it—a caress in his voice—made me
suspicious. I listened carefully and heard it, a faint purr.
“She likes you, anyway,” I said. “How’d she talk you into letting her
into your house again?”
“She yowled at the back door.” He sounded sheepish. I’d never seen
or heard of a cat that would associate with werewolves or coyotes
until Medea announced her presence at the door of my shop. Dogs
will—and so will most livestock—but not cats. Medea loves anyone
who will pet her ... or has the potential to pet her. Not unlike some
people I know.
“She’s playing you and Samuel off each other,” I informed him. “And
you, my dear sir, have just succumbed to her wiles.”
“My mother warned me about succumbing,” he said meekly. “You’ll
have to save me from myself. When I have you to pet, I won’t need
her.”
Faintly, through his phone, I heard the doorbell ring.
“It’s pretty late for visitors,” I said.
Adam started to laugh.
“What?”
“It’s Samuel. He just asked Jesse if we’ve seen your cat.”
I sighed. “Men are so easy. You’d better go confess your sins.”
When I disconnected, I stared into the dark wishing I were home. If I
were sleeping with Adam next to me, no stupid vampire would be
chewing on my neck. Finally, I got up, turned on the light, and
brought out the fairy book to read. After a few pages, I quit worrying
about vampires, pulled the comforter closer around my shoulders-
Amber must like her AC down at werewolf levels—and lost myself in
the story of the Roaring Bull of Bagbury and other fae who haunt
bridges.
I woke up shivering sometime later, clutching the fairy staff, which
I’d last seen leaning against the wall next to the door. The wood under
my fingers was hot—a contrast to the rest of the room. The cold was
so intense my nose was numb and my breath fogged.
A moment after I woke up, a high-pitched, atonal wail rang through
the walls of the house, abruptly cutting off.
I dumped my covers on the floor. The rare old book met the same
fate—but I was too worried about Chad to stop and rescue it. I ran out
of my bedroom and took the requisite four steps to the boy’s room.
The door wouldn’t open.
The knob turned, so it wasn’t locked. I put my shoulder against the
door, but it didn’t budge. I tried to use the walking stick, which was
still warmer than it should have been, as a crowbar, to force the door
open, but it didn’t work. There was nowhere to get a good place to
pry.
“Let me,” whispered Stefan just behind me.
“Where have you been?” I said, relief making me sharp. With the
vampire here, the ghost would go.
“Hunting,” he said, putting his shoulder to the door. “You looked like
you had everything under control.”
“Yeah,” I said. “Well, appearances can be deceiving.”
“I see that.”
I heard the wood begin to break as it gave reluctantly for the first few
inches. Then it jerked away from the vampire and flung itself against
the wall with a spiteful bang, leaving Stefan to stumble into the
bedroom.
If my room had been cold, Chad’s was frigid. Frost layered
everything in the room like unearthly lace. Chad lay still as the dead
in the center of his bed—he wasn’t breathing, but his eyes were open
and scared.
Both Stefan and I ran for the bed.
The ghost wasn’t gone though, and Stefan didn’t scare it away. We
couldn’t get Chad out of the bed. The comforter was frozen to him
and to the bed, and it wouldn’t release him. I dropped the walking
stick on the floor and grabbed the comforter with both hands and
pulled. It quivered under my hold like a living thing, damp from the
frost that melted from contact with my skin.
Stefan reached both hands just under Chad’s chin and ripped the
comforter in half. Quick as a striking snake he had Chad up and off
the bed.
I collected the staff and followed them out of the room and into the
hall, wishing I’d updated my CPR skills since high school.
But, safely out of the room, Chad started sucking in air like a vacuum.
“You need a priest,” Stefan told me.
I ignored him in favor of Chad. “You okay?”
The boy gathered himself together. His body might be thin, but his
spirit was pure tungsten. He nodded, and Stefan set him down on his
feet, steadying him a little when Chad swayed.
“I’ve never seen anything like that,” I admitted. I could see inside
Chad’s room to the water that ran down the rapidly clearing window.
I looked at Stefan. “I thought ghosts avoided you.”
He was staring into the room, too. “So did I. I ...” He looked at me
and stopped speaking. He tilted my chin up and looked at my neck, at
both sides of my neck. And I realized that I’d been bitten a second
time. “Who’s been chewing on you, cara mia?”
Chad looked at Stefan, then hissed and used his fingers to make a pair
of vampire fangs.
“Yes, I know,” Stefan told him—signing it, too. “Vampire.” Who
knew? Stefan could sign; somehow it didn’t seem like a vampire kind
of thing to do.
Chad had a few more things to say. When he was finished, Stefan
shook his head.
“That vampire isn’t here; she wouldn’t leave the Tri-Cities. This is a
different one.” He looked at me, angling his face so Chad couldn’t see
what he said. “How do you do it?” he asked conversationally. “How
do you go to a city of half a million and attract the only vampire here?
What did you do, run into him while jogging at night?”
I ignored the panic in my stomach caused by being bitten twice by
some jerk I’d only met once. Calling him a jerk made him less scary.
Or it should have. But James Blackwood had bitten me twice while I
slept through it ... or worse, he’d made me forget it.
“Just lucky, I guess,” I said. I didn’t want to talk about it with Chad
right here. He’d be a lot safer if he didn’t know James Blackwood
was a vampire.
Chad made a few more hand motions.
“Sorry,” said Stefan. “I’m Stefan, Mercy’s friend.”
Chad frowned.
“He’s one of the good guys,” I told him. He gave me a “fine, but
what’s he doing in my house in the middle of the night” look. I
pretended not to know what it meant. And I didn’t speak ASL, so he
was out there, too. Not fair, I supposed, but I didn’t want to lie to
him—and I really didn’t want to tell him the whole truth.
“They need to get away from here,” said Stefan. “And I’m taking you
back to the Tri-Cities.” He looked like he was going to say something
else, but glanced at Chad and shook his head. Probably something
more about Blackwood.
“Let me put some clothes on,” I said. “I think better when I’m not
running around in a T-shirt and underwear.”
I dressed in the bathroom—getting a good look at the second bite
while I did so. Then I covered them both up with my new used silkembroidered
red scarf.
Go back home? What would that accomplish? For that matter what
had I accomplished here?
I’d come to help Amber and get out of Marsilia’s sight for a little bit.
That had succeeded—or at least not hampered Adam’s negotiating. I
didn’t know that I’d helped Amber at all ... not yet.
I stared at my pale, sleep-starved face and wondered how I was going
to do that. Blackwood had them in his care.
I shivered. Though there was nothing I could pinpoint, no cold spot,
no smell, no sound—I could feel something watching me. “Leave the
boy alone,” I told my unseen watcher.
And every hair on my head tingled with sensation.
I waited for it to attack or show itself. But nothing else happened, just
that momentary connection, which faded more slowly than it had
come.
Stefan knocked. “Everything all right?”
“Fine,” I said. Something had happened, but I had no idea what. I was
tired and scared and angry. So I brushed my teeth and opened the
bathroom door.
Stefan and Chad were leaning on opposite sides of the hallway,
discussing something that had their hands moving a mile a minute.
“Stefan.”
He threw up his hands and appealed to me. “How can he think
Dragon Ball Z is better than Scooby-Doo? This generation has no
appreciation for the classics.”
I stood on tiptoe and kissed his cheek. Keeping my mouth turned
away from Chad, I said, “You’re a nice man.”
Stefan patted my head.
I checked Chad’s bedroom, but it looked as if nothing had happened,
and not even a trace of dampness from the frost remained. Only the
two pieces of comforter on either side of Chad’s bed gave any hint of
trouble.
“There are a couple of vampires that can do stuff like this,” Stefan
said, waving his hand at Chad’s room. “Move things without touching
them, kill people without being in the room. But I’ve never heard of a
ghost with this much power. They tend to be pathetic things trying to
pretend they are alive.”
I didn’t smell vampire, only blood—fading as the frost had faded. I
had seen the ghost—not clearly, but it had been there. Still, I turned
so Chad couldn’t read my lips. “Do you think Blackwood is playing
ghost?”
Stefan shook his head. “No, it’s not the Monster. Wrong heritage.
There was an Indian vampire in New York—” He looked at me and
grinned. He pressed a finger to his forehead. “Indian with a dot, not a
feather. Anyway, he and his get all could have done something like
what we saw tonight ... except for the cold. But only the vampires he
made directly could do it—and he only made Indian women into
vampires. They were all killed a century or more ago, and I think
Blackwood predated him anyway.”
Chad had been watching Stefan’s mouth with every evidence of
fascination. He made a few gestures, and Stefan signed back, saying,
“They’re dead. No. Someone else killed them. Yes, I’m sure it was
someone else.” He glanced at me. “Want to explain to the kid that I’m
more a Spike than a Buffy? A villain, not a superhero?”
I batted my eyelashes at him. “You’re my hero.”
He jerked several steps back from me as if I’d hit him. It made me
wonder what Marsilia had said to him while she’d tortured him.
“Stefan?”
He turned back to us with a hiss and an expression that made Chad
back into me. “I’m a vampire, Mercy.”
I wasn’t going to let him get away with the morose, self-hating
vampire act. He deserved better than that. “Yeah, we got that. It’s the
fangs that give it away—translate that for Chad, please.” I waited
while he did so, his hands jerky with anger or something related to it.
Chad relaxed against me.
Stefan continued signing, and said, almost defiantly, “I’m no one’s
hero, Mercy.”
I turned my face until I was looking directly at Chad. “Do you think
that means I won’t get to see him in spandex?”
Chad mouthed the last word with a puzzled look.
Stefan sighed. He touched Chad’s shoulder, and when the boy looked
up, he finger-spelled spandex slowly. Chad made a yuck face.
“Hey,” I told them, “watching good-looking men run around in tightfitting
costumes is high on my list of things I’d like to do before I
die.”
Stefan gave in and laughed. “It won’t be me,” he told me. “So what
do we do next, Haunt Huntress?”
“That’s a pretty lame superhero name,” I told him.
“Scooby-Doo is already taken,” he said with dignity. “Anything else
sounds lame in comparison.”
“Seriously,” I said, “I think we’d better go find his parents.” Who
hopefully were sleeping peacefully despite Chad’s cry and doors
banging into walls, not to mention all the talking we’d been doing.
Now that I thought of it, it was a bad sign they weren’t out here
fussing.
“We? You want me to come, too?” Stefan raised an eyebrow.
I wasn’t going to tell Chad to lie to his parents. And if something had
happened to Amber and her husband, I wanted Stefan with me. Their
room was on the opposite side of the house from Chad’s and mine,
their door was thick—and they didn’t have nifty hearing like Stefan
and I did. Maybe they were sleeping. I clutched my walking stick.
“Yeah. Come with us, Stefan. But, Chad?” I made sure he could see
my face. “You don’t want to tell your folks Stefan is a vampire, okay?
For the same reasons I told you before. Vampires don’t like people
knowing about them.”
Chad stiffened and glanced at Stefan and away.
“Hey. No, not Stefan,” I said. “He doesn’t mind. But others will.”
And his father probably wouldn’t believe him about that either—and
maybe he’d tell Blackwood about it. Blackwood, I was pretty sure,
wouldn’t be happy if Chad knew about vampires.
So we trekked to Amber’s room and opened the door. It was dark
inside, and I could see two still figures in the bed. For a moment I
froze, then realized I could hear them breathing. On the bedside table
next to Corban was an empty glass that had held brandy—I could
smell it now that I was through panicking. And on Amber’s side was
a prescription bottle.
Chad slid past me and scrambled over their footboard and into bed
beside them. With his parents here, he was no longer required to be
brave. Cold feet did what all the noise had failed to do, and Corban
sat up.
“Chad ...” He saw us. “Mercy? Who’s that with you, and what are you
doing in my bedroom?”
“Corban?” Amber rolled over. She sounded a little dopey but woke up
just fine when she noticed Chad and then us. “Mercy? What
happened?”
I told them, leaving out Stefan’s vampire status. I didn’t, actually,
mention him at all except as part of “we.” They didn’t care. Once they
heard Chad hadn’t been breathing, they weren’t worried about Stefan
at all.
“I’ve never seen anything like it,” I admitted to them both. “I’m out of
my league. I think you need to get Chad out of here and into a hotel
tonight.”
Corban had listened to everything with a poker face. He got out of
bed and grabbed a robe in almost the same motion. I heard him walk
down the hall, but he didn’t go into Chad’s room. Just stood outside it
for a moment and returned. I knew what he saw—nothing but a
ripped-up comforter—and was glad he’d been there for the little toycar
demonstration.
He stood in the doorway of his bedroom and looked at us. “First, we
pack for a couple of days. Second, we find a hotel. Third, I talk to my
cousin’s brother-in-law, who is a Jesuit priest.”
“I’m headed home,” I told him before he could tell me to go away and
never come back. I needed to help them do something about
Blackwood, who was snacking on Amber, but I didn’t know what.
And from the sounds of it, no one had ever been able to do something
about this vampire. “There’s nothing I can do for you, and I have a
business to run.”
“Thank you for coming,” Amber said. She got out of bed and hugged
me. And I knew what she was most grateful for was convincing her
husband that Chad hadn’t been lying. I thought that was the least of
her worries.
Over her shoulder, Corban stared at me as if he suspected I’d
somehow caused everything. I wondered about that, too. Something
had made their ghost much worse, and I was the obvious place to look
for a reason.
I left them to their preparations, packed my own bags, and hugged
Amber again before I left.
She still smelled like vampire—but then so did Stefan and I.
STEFAN WAITED UNTIL WE WERE MOSTLY OUT OF
SPOKANE, driving past the airport, before he said anything. “Do you
need me to drive?”
“Nope,” I answered. I might be tired, but I didn’t like anyone else to
drive my Vanagon. As soon as Zee and I put the Rabbit back together,
the van was going back in the garage. Besides ... “I don’t think I’ll be
sleeping again anytime in the next millennium. How did he bite me
twice without my knowing it?”
“Some vampires can do that,” Stefan said in the same sort of soothing
voice a doctor uses to tell you that you have a terminal illness. “It’s
not among my gifts—or any of our seethe except perhaps Wulfe.”
“He bit me twice. That’s worse than just once, right?” Silence
followed my question.
Something wiggled in my front pocket. I twitched, then realized what
had happened. I pulled my vibrating cell phone out without looking at
the number. “Yes?” Maybe I sounded abrupt, but I was scared and
Stefan hadn’t answered me.
There was a little silence, and Adam said, “What’s wrong? Your fear
woke me up.”
I blinked really fast, wishing I was home already. Home with Adam
instead of driving in the dark with a vampire.
“I’m sorry it bothered you.”
“A benefit of the pack bond,” Adam told me. Then, because he knew
me, he said, “I’m Alpha, so I get things first. No one else in the pack
felt it. What scared you?”
“The ghost,” I told him, then let out my breath in a gusty sigh. “And
the vampire.”
He coaxed the whole story out of me. Then he sighed. “Only you
could go to Spokane and get bitten by the one vampire in the whole
city.” He didn’t fool me. For all the amusement in his voice, I could
hear the anger, too.
But if he was pretending, I could pretend. “That’s pretty much what
Stefan said. I don’t think it’s fair. How was I to know that Amber’s
husband’s best client was the vampire?”
Adam gave me a rueful laugh. “The real question is why didn’t we
suspect that’s what would happen. But you are safe now?”
“Yes.”
“Then it’ll wait until you get here.”
He hung up without saying good-bye.
“So,” I said, “tell me what Blackwood can do to me now that he’s fed
off me twice.”
“I don’t know,” Stefan told me. Then he sighed. “If I have exchanged
blood with someone twice, I can always find him, no matter where he
goes. I could call him to me—and if he is near, I could force him to
come to me. But that is with a true blood exchange—yours to me,
mine to you. Eventually ... it is possible to force a master-slave
relationship upon those you exchange blood with. A precaution, I
suppose, because a newly turned vampire can get nasty. A simple
feeding is less risky. But your reactions are not always the usual.
There could be no ill effects to you at all.”
I thought of Amber, who had been feeding the vampire for who
knows how long, and her husband, who could be in the same
condition, and felt sick. “Out of the frying pan and into the fire,” I
said. “Damn it.” Okay. Think positive. If I hadn’t gone to Spokane at
all, the vampire would still have had Amber and her husband, only no
one would have known. “If I was unconscious, could he have forced a
blood exchange?”
He sighed and slumped in his seat. “You don’t remember him biting.
That doesn’t mean you were unconscious.”
I wasn’t expecting it. I hadn’t had one since leaving the Tri-Cities.
But I managed to pull over, hop out of the van, and make it to the
barrow pit at the side of the road before throwing up. It wasn’t
sickness ... it was sheer, stark terror. The panic attack to end all panic
attacks. My heart hurt, my head hurt, and I couldn’t stop crying.
And then it stopped. Warmth ran through me and around me: pack.
Adam. So much for not bothering Adam’s wolves, who were already
unhappy about me, with my troubles. Stefan wiped my face off with a
Kleenex and dropped it to the ground before picking me up and
carrying me back to the car. He didn’t put me in the driver’s seat.
“I can drive,” I told him, but there was no force in my voice. Pack
magic had broken the panic attack, but I could still feel them all
waiting and ready.
Ready to rescue me again.
He ignored my feeble protest and put the old van in gear.
“Is there any reason why he’d have simply fed from me and not done
a blood exchange?” I asked, more out of a morbid desire to know
everything rather than any real hope.
“With a blood exchange, you can call upon him as well,” Stefan said
reluctantly.
“How many? Just one exchange?”
He shrugged. “It varies from person to person. With your
idiosyncratic reaction to vampire magic, it could take a hundred or
only one.”
“When you say I could call him. Does that mean he’d have to come to
me?”
“A vampire’s relationship to those he feeds upon is not an equal one,
Mercy,” he snapped. “No. He could hear you. That is all. If you have
blood exchanges with all of your food”—he bit out the word—“the
voices in your head can drive you mad. So we only do it with our own
flocks. There are some benefits. The sheep becomes stronger, immune
to pain for a brief time—as you know from your own experiences. A
vampire gains a servant and eventually a slave who will willingly feed
him and take care of his needs during the day.”
“I’m sorry,” I told him. “I didn’t mean to make you angry. I just have
to know what I’m up against.”
He reached over and patted my knee. “I understand. I’m sorry.” The
next words came slower. “It is shaming to me, to be what I am. The
man I was would never have accepted life at the expense of so many.
But I am not he, not any longer.”
He passed a semi (we were going uphill). “If he was just feeding from
you because you were convenient, then he probably didn’t do an
exchange ... except ...”
“Except what?”
“I don’t think that he could have blocked your memory so well if it
wasn’t a real exchange. A human, yes. But you are strong-willed.” He
shrugged. “Most Master vampires feed off their get—other vampires.
Blackwood will tolerate no other vampires in his territory, and I don’t
know that he has any get himself. Maybe he makes up the difference
by exchanging blood whenever he feeds.”
I mulled over what he’d told me, then dozed a little. I woke with a
start as we took the exit onto Highway 395 at Ritzville. Only a little
over seventy miles until we got home.
“He won’t be able to coerce you if you find another vampire to tie
yourself to,” Stefan said.
I looked at him, but he was staring intently at the road—as if we were
threading through the mountains of Montana instead of gliding down
an empty stretch of mostly flat and straight pavement.
“Are you offering?”
He nodded. “I am perilously short of food. The exchange will feed me
better, and I won’t have to hunt again for a few nights.”
I thought for a minute. Not that I was going to do it, but there was
more to his offer—with vampires, I was learning, there usually was.
With Stefan that didn’t necessarily mean that he was hiding some
benefit to him.
“And you’ll gain yourself an enemy,” I guessed. “James Blackwood
holds Spokane, all by himself, against all the supernatural peoples, not
just vampires. That means he’s obsessively possessive—and tough.
He won’t be happy with you for keeping me from him.”
He shrugged. “He probably can’t call you all the way from Spokane
when you are in the Tri-Cities. He probably wouldn’t even try, if he
exchanges blood every time he feeds. But if you are tied to me, that
would be certain.” He spoke slowly. “We already have had one blood
exchange. And I can make sure it won’t be horrible.”
If Blackwood called me to him, if he took me as one of his sheep,
Adam would bring the pack in to rescue me. Mary Jo had almost paid
the ultimate price for my problems already. As long as I stayed in the
Tri-Cities, he might not even realize that the reason he couldn’t call
me was Stefan.
“Adam is my mate,” I told him. I didn’t know if I should tell him that
Adam had made me one of the pack. “Can Blackwood get Adam
through me?”
Stefan shook his head. “I can’t either. It’s been tried. Our old Master
... Marsilia’s maker, liked wolves and experimented. The ties of the
blood operate on a different level from the werewolf pack. He took an
Alpha’s mate, she was a werewolf also, to his menagerie hoping to
control the Alpha and his whole pack through her, and it failed.”
“Marsilia likes werewolf to dine upon,” I said. I’d seen it for myself.
“From what I’ve seen, I’d say that feeding upon them seems to be
addictive,” he glanced at me. “I’ve never done it myself. Not until the
other night. I don’t intend to do it again.”
I was either about to make the stupidest decision of my life or the
smartest.
“Is it permanent?” I asked. “This bond between the two of us?”
He gave me a sharp look. Started to say something, but stopped
before the words left his mouth.
Finally, he said, “I’ve told you things tonight that other vampires
don’t know. Forbidden things. If I were Marsilia’s get truly, or if she
had not broken my ties with the seethe, I could not have told you that
much.”
He tapped the palm of his hands on the steering wheel and a giant RV
towing a Honda Accord passed us. “These things drive like anemic
school buses,” he said. “Odd that it should be so much fun.”
I waited. If the answer had been yes, the bond is permanent, he
wouldn’t be so indecisive. If it wasn’t permanent, once Blackwood
was eliminated, it could be removed. A temporary bond with Stefan
wasn’t as scary as, say, the more permanent bond between Adam and
me.
“Marsilia can break the bonds between Master and sheep,” he said.
“She can either take them herself, or simply dissolve them.”
“That’s not very helpful,” I told him. “I have the distinct impression
that she’d just as soon kill us both as see us.”
“There is that,” he said softly. “Yes. But I think, from a few things
he’s let drop, that Wulfe can do it, too.” His voice grew very cold and
un-Stefan-like. “And Wulfe owes me in such a way that even if
Marsilia has declared me enemy to the seethe, he could not turn down
my request.” He relaxed and shook his head. “But as soon as the bond
between us was ended, you’d be vulnerable to Blackwood again.”
I didn’t find Wulfe much of a step up from Marsilia. But then, I didn’t
have a choice, did I? I’d abandoned Amber until I could regroup, but I
couldn’t leave Amber to die at Blackwood’s whim.
I wondered if Zee still felt guilty enough, because I got hurt trying to
help him, to allow me use of his fae-spelled knife and the amulet I’d
used to hunt vampires. Maybe even another magically virtuous stake.
I’d never seriously considered killing Marsilia as a way to save
myself. First, I’d been to the seethe. Second, she had too many
minions who would kill me back.
So why did I think I could kill Blackwood?
I knew, I knew, that the James Blackwood I’d met was not the real
face of the vampire. But I had met him, and he wasn’t too scary. He
didn’t have minions. And he was using Amber without her knowledge
or permission, turning her into his slave: a woman who left her child
alone in a house with a ghost and an almost stranger. I couldn’t help
Amber with her ghost ... maybe I’d even made it worse. But I could
help her with the vampire.
“All right,” I said. “I’d rather have to”—I nearly choked on the next
word—“obey you than listen to him.”
He watched me for a heartbeat. “All right,” he agreed.
HE PULLED OVER AT A REST AREA. THERE WAS A ROW OF
semis parked for the night, but the lot for cars was empty. He
unbuckled and walked between the front seats to the back. I followed
him slowly.
He sat on the bench seat in the back and patted the seat beside him.
When I hesitated, he said, “You don’t have to do this. I’m not going
to force you.”
If I didn’t have Stefan to interfere, Blackwood probably could make
me do whatever he wanted. I’d have no way to help Amber.
Of course, if Marsilia killed me first, I wouldn’t have to worry about
any of it.
“Am I putting Adam and his pack in more danger?” I asked.
Stefan did me the courtesy of considering it, though I could smell his
eagerness: he smelled like a wolf hot on the trail of something tasty. If
I ran, I wondered, would he be compelled to chase me the way a
werewolf would have?
I stared at him and reminded myself that I’d known him a long time.
He’d never made any move he thought would harm me. This was
Stefan, not some nameless hunter.
“I don’t see how,” he told me. “Adam won’t like it, I’m sure. Witness
his reaction when I called you by accident. But he’s a practical man.
He knows all about desperate choices.”
I sat down beside him, all too conscious of the cool temperature of his
body, cooler, I thought than usual. I was glad to know that this would
help him, too. I was really, really tired of causing all my friends
nothing but grief.
He brushed my hair away from my neck, and I caught his hand.
“What about the wrist?” The last time he’d bitten my wrist.
He shook his head. “It’s more painful. Too many nerves near the
surface.” He looked at me. “Do you trust me?”
“I wouldn’t be doing this if I didn’t.”
“Okay. I’m going to restrain you a little because if you jerk while I’m
still at your neck, you might make me cut through the wrong thing
and you could bleed to death.” He didn’t pressure me, just sat on the
plush bench seat as if he could stay there the rest of my life.
“How?” I said.
“I’ll have you fold your arms over your stomach, and I’ll hold them
there.”
I did a panic check, but Tim had never restrained me that way. I tried
not to think about how he’d held me down and was only moderately
successful.
“Go up to the front of the van,” Stefan said. “The keys are in the
ignition. You’ll have to drive yourself home because I can’t stay here.
I have to hunt now. I’ll—”
I wrapped my arms around myself and leaned against him. “Okay, do
it.”
His arm came slowly around my shoulders and over my right arm.
When I stayed put, he put his hand over my arms in such a way that I
couldn’t free myself.
“All right?” He asked calmly, as if need hadn’t turned his eyes jewelbright,
like Christmas lights in the dark van.
“All right,” I said.
His teeth must have been razor-sharp because I didn’t feel them slice
through skin, only the cool dampness of his mouth. Only when he
began to draw blood did it start to hurt.
Who feeds at my table?
The roar in my head made me panic as Stefan’s bite had not. But I
held very still, like a mouse when it first notices the cat. If you don’t
move, it might not attack.
The steady draw of Stefan’s mouth faltered for an instant. Then he
resumed feeding, patting my knee with his free hand. It shouldn’t
have comforted me, but it did. He’d heard the scary monster, too, and
he wasn’t running.
After a while, the ache deepened into pain—and the now-wordless
roar of anger echoing in my head grew muffled. I started to feel cold,
as if it wasn’t just blood he was taking, but all the warmth in my
body. Then his mouth moved, and he laved the wounds with his
tongue.
“If you looked into a mirror,” he whispered, “you would not see my
marks. He wanted you to see what he’d done.”
I shivered helplessly, and he lifted me to his lap. He was warm, hot to
my cold skin. He lifted me a little and pulled a folding knife out of his
pocket. He used the knife and sliced down his wrist like you’re
supposed to if you want to do suicide right.
“I thought the wrist was too painful,” I managed through my sluggish
thoughts and vibrating jaw.
“For you,” he said. “Drink, Mercy. And shut up.” A faint smile
crossed his face, then he leaned his head back so I couldn’t see his
expression anymore.
Maybe it should have bothered me more. Maybe if this had been a
normal night, it would have. But useless squeamishness was beyond
me. I’ve hunted as a coyote for most of my life, and she never stopped
to cook her food. The taste of blood was nothing new or horrible to
me, not when it was Stefan’s blood—and he wasn’t dying or in pain
or anything.
I put my lips against his wrist and closed my mouth over the cut.
Stefan made a noise—it didn’t sound like pain. He put his free hand
on my head lightly and then lifted it off as if he didn’t want to coerce
me even that much. This was my choice freely made.
His blood didn’t taste like rabbit or mouse. It was more bitter—and
somehow sweeter at the same time. Mostly it was hot, sizzling hot,
and I was cold. I drank as the cut under my tongue slowly closed.
And I remembered this taste. Like eating at McDonald’s twice in a
day and ordering the same meal. I had a momentary flash of memory,
just Blackwood’s voice in my ears.
I didn’t remember what he’d said or what he’d done, but brief
memory of the sound had me curled up on the bench seat, my
forehead on Stefan’s thigh while I cried. Stefan pulled his wrist away
and used his other hand to pet my head lightly.
“Mercy,” he said gently. “He won’t do that again. Not now. You are
mine. He can’t fog your mind or force you to do anything.”
With my voice muffled by the fabric of his jeans, I said, “Does this
mean you can read my mind?”
He laughed a little. “Only while you drink. That isn’t my gift. Your
secrets are safe.” His laugh washed away Blackwood’s voice.
I lifted up my head. “I’m glad I don’t remember more of what he
did,” I told Stefan. But I thought that my desire to see Blackwood’s
body burn like Andre’s might have a more personal reason than just
what he was doing to Amber.
“How are you feeling?” he asked.
I took a breath and evaluated myself. “Awesome. Like I could run
from here to the Tri-Cities faster than the van could take us.”
He laughed. “I don’t think that’s true ... unless we get a flat tire.”
He stood up and he looked better than I’d seen him since ... since
before he’d landed on the floor of my living room looking like
something that had been buried a hundred years. I got up and had to
sit down again.
“Balance,” he said. “It’s a little like being drunk. That’ll fade fast, but
I’d better drive us home.”
I should have felt terrible. Some small voice was yammering that I
should have checked with my Alpha before doing anything this ...
permanent.
But I felt fine, better than fine—and it wasn’t just the vampire’s
blood. I felt truly in control of my life for the first time since Tim’s
assault. Which was pretty funny under the circumstances.
But I’d made the decision to put myself in Stefan’s power.
“Stefan?” I watched the reflectors on the side of the road pass by.
“Hmm.”
“Did anyone talk to you about the thing someone painted on the door
of my shop?” I’d kept forgetting to ask him about it—though
subsequent events had made it more obvious that it had been some
sort of threat from Marsilia.
“No one said anything to me,” he said. “But I saw it myself.”
Headlights reflected red in his eyes. Like the flash of a camera, only
scarier. It made me smile.
“Marsilia had it done?”
“Almost certainly.”
I could have left it there. But we had time to kill, and I had Bran’s
voice in my head saying, Information is important, Mercy. Get all the
facts you can.
“What exactly does it mean?”
“It’s the mark of a traitor,” he said. “It means that one of our own has
betrayed us, and she and all who belong to her are fair marks. A
declaration of war.”
It was no more than I had expected. “There’s some sort of magic in
it,” I told him. “What does it do?”
“Keeps you from painting over it for long,” he said. “And if it stays
there long, you’ll start attracting nasties who have no affiliation to the
vampire.”
“Terrific.”
“You could always replace the door.”
“Yeah,” I told him glumly. Maybe the insurance company would
replace it when I explained that the bones couldn’t be painted over,
but I didn’t get my hopes up.
We drove for a while in silence, and I worried through the past few
days, trying to see if there was something I’d missed or something I
should have done differently.
“Hey, Stefan? How come I couldn’t smell Blackwood after he bit me?
Tonight I was a little distracted, but yesterday, with the first bite, I
checked.”
“He would have known what you are after he tasted you.” Stefan
stretched, and the van swayed a little with his movement. “I don’t
know whether he was trying to fool you into thinking him human, or
if he always cleans up after himself in that way. There were things in
the Old Country that hunted us by scent—not just werewolves—or by
things that were left behind, hair, saliva, or blood. Many of the older
vampires always remove any trace of themselves from their lairs and
from their hunting grounds.”
I’d almost forgotten they could do that.
The change in the sound of the car’s engine as he slowed for city
traffic woke me up.
“Do you want to go to your home or Adam’s?” he asked.
Good question. Even though I was pretty sure Adam would
understand what I’d done, I wasn’t exactly looking forward to
discussing matters with him. And I was too tired to work my way
through exactly what I wanted to leave out—and how I was going to
kill Blackwood. I really wanted to talk to Zee before I talked to
Adam, and I wanted to get a good long sleep before I did either.
“Mine.”
I’d gone back to dozing when the van slowed abruptly. I looked up
and saw why: there was someone standing in the middle of the road,
looking down as if she’d lost something. She wasn’t paying any
attention at all to us.
“Do you know her?” We were on my road, just a few properties from
our house, so Stefan’s question was reasonable.
“No.”
He stopped about a dozen yards away, and she finally looked up. The
purr of the van’s engine subsided, and Stefan glanced behind him,
then opened the door and got out.
Trouble.
I stripped off my clothes, popped open my door, and shifted as I
hopped out. A coyote may not be big, but it has fangs and surprisingly
effective claws. I slipped under the van’s side and out under the front
bumper, where Stefan was leaning, his arms crossed casually across
his chest.
The girl was no longer alone. Three vampires stood beside her. The
first two I’d seen before, though I didn’t know their names. The third
was Estelle.
In Marsilia’s seethe there had once been five vampires who had
reached some sort of power plateau so that they did not depend upon
the Mistress of the seethe for survival: Stefan; Andre, whom I’d
killed; Wulfe, the übercreepy wizard in a boy’s body; Bernard, who
reminded me of a merchant out of a Dickens novel; and Estelle, the
Mary Poppins of the undead. I’d never seen her when she wasn’t
dressed like an Edwardian governess, and tonight was no exception.
As if he’d been waiting for me to appear at his side, Stefan glanced
down at me, then said, “Estelle, how nice to see you.”
“I’d heard she hadn’t destroyed you,” Estelle said in her prim English
voice. “She tortured you, starved you, banished you—then sent you to
kill your little coyote bitch.”
Stefan spread his hands out as if to showcase his own living ... undead
flesh. “It is as you heard it.” There was a musical cadence to his
voice, and he sounded more Italian than usual.
“Yet here you are, you and the bitch both.”
I growled at her, and I heard Stefan’s smile in his reply. “I don’t think
she likes being called a bitch.”
“Marsilia is mad. She’s been mad since she awoke twelve years ago,
and she hasn’t gotten better with time.” Estelle’s voice softened, and
she stepped forward. “If she weren’t mad, she would never have
tortured you—her favorite.”
She obviously waited for Stefan’s reply, which didn’t come. “I have a
proposition for you,” she told him. “Join with me, and we will put
Marsilia out of her misery—you know that she’d have urged you to
do just that if she were aware of what she’s become. She will see us
all destroyed in her obsession with returning to Italy. This is our
home—our seethe bows to no other. Italy holds nothing for us.”
“No,” Stefan said. “I will not move against the Mistress.”
“She is your Mistress no more,” Estelle hissed. She strode forward
until I was pressed against Stefan’s leg. “She tortured you—I saw
what she did. You, who love her—she starved you and flayed the skin
from you. How can you support her now?”
Stefan didn’t reply.
And I knew, with absolute certainty, that I was right to trust him to
protect me and not turn me into his mindless slave. Stefan didn’t turn
on those he loved. No matter what.
Estelle threw up her hands. “Idiot. Fool. She will go down, either by
my hand or by Bernard’s. And you know that the seethe will do better
in my hands than in that fool Bernard’s. I have contacts. I can make
us grow and thrive until not even the courts of Italy will rival what we
build.”
Stefan quit leaning against the van. He spat on the ground with
deliberate slowness.
She tensed, furious at the insult, and he smiled grimly. “Do it,” he
said—and, with a flick of his wrist and the magic of a Highlander
episode, he held a sword in one hand. It was efficient-looking rather
than beautiful: deadly.
“Soldier, you’ll regret this,” Estelle said.
“I regret many things,” he replied, his voice sharpening with a cold,
roiling anger. “Letting you walk off tonight might be another one.
Maybe I shouldn’t do it.”
“Soldier,” she said. “Remember who it was who betrayed you. You
know how to reach me—don’t wait until it is too late.”
The vampires left with preternatural speed, their human bait running
after them. Stefan waited, sword in hand, while a car purred to life
and one of the seethe’s black Mercedes lit up. It roared past us and
disappeared into the night.
He looked around, then asked me, “Do you smell anything, Mercy?”
I tested the air, but, except for Stefan, the vampires were gone ... or
upwind. I shook my head and trotted back to the van. Stefan,
gentleman that he had once been, stayed outside until I was dressed.
“That was interesting,” I said, as he got in and put the van in gear.
“She’s a fool.”
“Marsilia?”
Stefan shook his head. “Estelle. She’s no match for Marsilia. Bernard
... he’s tougher and stronger even if he’s younger. Together, they
might manage something, but it’ll be without me.”
“It didn’t sound like they were working together,” I said.
“They’ll work together until they’ve achieved their goals, then fight it
out. But they are fools if they think they’ll even get that far. They’ve
forgotten, or have never known, what Marsilia can be.”
HE PULLED UP IN THE DRIVEWAY AND WE BOTH GOT OUT
of the van.
“If you need me, if you hear Blackwood call you again—just think of
my name as you wish me at your side, and I’ll come.” He looked
grim. I hoped it was the encounter with Estelle and not worry for me.
“Thank you.”
He brushed a thumb over my cheek. “Wait for a while before you
thank me. You might change your mind.”
I patted his arm. “Decision’s made.”
He gave me a shallow bow and disappeared.
“That is just so cool,” I told the empty air, and, suddenly so tired I
could hardly keep my eyes open, I went inside and tucked myself into
bed.
8
ADAM WAS SITTING ON THE FOOT OF MY BED WHEN I
woke up the next ... afternoon. He was leaning against the wall
reading a well-worn copy of The Book of Five Rings. It was resting on
Medea’s back, and she was purring, wiggling her stub tail—which she
uses more like a dog than a cat.
“Aren’t you supposed to be at work?” I asked.
He turned a page, and said in an absent voice, “My boss is flexible.”
“Doesn’t dock your pay for shirking,” I mused. “How can I get a boss
like yours?”
He grinned. “Mercy, even when Zee was your boss, he wasn’t. I have
no idea how you would ever find anyone you’d listen to ... unless you
wanted to.” He marked his place and set the book beside him. “I’m
sorry your foray into exorcism didn’t go well.”
I considered it. “It depends upon your outlook, I suppose. I learned a
few things ... like did you know that Stefan knew sign language? Why
do you suppose a vampire would need to learn to sign? That ghosts
aren’t always harmless. I always thought the only way a ghost could
kill was if it scared someone to death.”
He waited, curling his fingers over the lump my toes made in the
covers. His other hand was rubbing Medea’s head, just behind her
ears. Adam knows how to listen better than most people. So I told him
what I hadn’t told him before.
“I think it might have been my fault.”
“What do you mean?”
“Until I came, it wasn’t doing much ... just standard poltergeist stuff.
Moving things around. Frightening, all right, but not dangerous. Then
I show up, and things change. Chad almost gets killed. Ghosts just
don’t do that—even Stefan said so. I think I did something to make it
worse.”
He tightened his hold on my toes. “Has that ever happened to you
before?”
I shook my head.
“Then maybe you’re claiming too much credit. Maybe it would have
happened anyway, and if you hadn’t been there with Stefan, the boy
would have died.”
I wasn’t sure he was right, but confessing my fear made me feel
better, anyway.
“How is Mary Jo?” I asked.
He sighed. “She’s still a little ... off, but Samuel’s sure now that she’ll
be fine in a few more days.” He relaxed and smiled at me a little.
“She’s ready to go out and take on the whole seethe all by herself. She
also told Ben that if he’d keep his mouth shut, she’d love to get naked
with him. We’ve decided we’ll know that she’s back to herself when
she quits flirting with him.”
I couldn’t help but laugh. Mary Jo was as liberated as a woman could
get—being a werewolf had not altered that a bit. Ben was a
misogynist of the highest (or lowest, depending upon your viewpoint)
order with the added bonus of a foul mouth. The two of them were
like flame and dynamite.
“No more troubles with the vampires?” I asked.
“None.”
“But negotiations didn’t accomplish much,” I said.
He nodded comfortably. “Don’t worry so, Mercy. We can take care of
ourselves.”
Maybe it was the way he said it ...
“So what did you do?”
“We have a couple of guests staying with us now. Neither of them
seems to have Stefan’s ability to disappear at will.”
“And you’ll keep them until ...”
“Until we have an apology for the events at Uncle Mike’s and
reparations paid to Mary Jo. And an agreement not to try something
like that again.”
“Do you think you’ll get it?”
“Bran called her to deliver our request. I’m certain we’ll get it.”
Some tightness eased in my chest. The one thing that Marsilia did
care about was the seethe. If Bran got involved in a battle, Marsilia’s
seethe was dead. The vampires in the Tri-Cities simply didn’t have
the numbers that the Marrok could bring into play—and Marsilia
knew it.
“So she’ll have to concentrate on me,” I said.
He smiled. “The agreement is that she will not attack the pack unless
one of us newly and directly attacks her.”
“She doesn’t know I’m pack,” I said.
“After we get that apology and promise from her in writing, I’ll take
great pleasure in informing her of that.”
I sat up and rolled forward until I was up on all fours and my face was
an inch from his. I kissed him lightly. He kept his hands on the cat.
“I like the way you operate, mister,” I said. “Can I interest you in the
pancakes I’m going to make after I shower?”
He tilted his head and gave me a deeper kiss, though he left his hands
where they’d been. When he moved away, neither of us was breathing
steadily.
“Now you can tell me why you smell like Stefan,” he said—almost
gently.
I raised my arm and sniffed. I did smell like Stefan, more than riding
home in a van would have accounted for.
“Weird.”
“Why do you smell like the vampire, Mercy?”
“Because we exchanged blood,” I told him—and then explained what
Stefan had told me about vampire bites on the way from Spokane. I
couldn’t remember which part was supposed to be secret and which
parts weren’t—but it didn’t matter. I wasn’t going to keep anything
from Adam, not when he’d made me part of his pack.
Stefan was certain that neither he nor Blackwood would have been
able to affect the wolves through me. But I didn’t know enough about
pack magic to be certain—and I didn’t think he did either. The only
thing I did know was that Adam would agree with what I had done,
though I knew he wouldn’t be ecstatic about it.
By the time I’d finished, he’d dumped Medea on the floor (for which
he’d have to atone if he wanted to touch her again today) in favor of
pacing the room. He kept going a few rounds. He stopped when he
was across the room and gave me an unhappy look.
“Stefan is better than Blackwood.”
“That’s what I thought.”
“Why didn’t you tell me about Blackwood after the first bite?” he
asked. He sounded ... hurt.
I didn’t know.
He gave a short, unamused laugh. “I’m trying. I really am. But you
have to bend a little, too, Mercy. Why didn’t you tell me what was
going on until you were on your way back here? When it was too late
to do anything about it.”
“I should have.”
He looked at me with dark, wounded eyes. So I tried to do better.
“I’m not used to leaning on people, Adam.” I started slowly, but the
words came faster as I continued. “And ... I’ve cost you so much
lately. I thought—a vampire bite. Ick. Scary ... But it didn’t seem too
harmful. Like a giant mosquito or ... the ghost. Frightening but not
harmful. I’ve been bitten before, you remember, and nothing bad
happened. If I’d told you—you’d have made me come home. And
there was Chad—you’d like him-this ten-year-old kid with more
courage than most grown-ups, who was being terrorized by a ghost. I
thought I could help. And I could stay out of Marsilia’s hair so she
would listen to you. It wasn’t until Stefan was so worried—and that
was right before we came home, after the second bite—that I realized
that there was something more dangerous about them.”
I shrugged helplessly, blinking back tears that I would not let fall.
“I’m sorry. It was stupid. I’m stupid. I can’t move without making
everything worse.” I turned my face away.
“No,” he said. The bed sagged as he sat down next to me. “It’s all
right.” He bumped my shoulder deliberately with his. “You aren’t
stupid. You’re right. I’d have made you come home if I’d had to
collect you myself with ropes and a gag. And your boy Chad would
have died.”
I leaned a little against his shoulder, and he leaned a little back.
“You never used to get into trouble like this”—amusement threaded
through his voice—“except for a few memorable occasions. Maybe
it’s like that fae woman, the one at Uncle Mike’s, said.” He didn’t say
Baba Yaga’s name. I didn’t blame him. “Maybe you’ve absorbed a
little of Coyote, and chaos follows you.” He touched my neck lightly.
“That vampire is going to be sorry for this.”
“Stefan?”
He laughed, and this time he meant it. “Him, too, probably. But I
won’t have to do anything about that. No. I was speaking of
Blackwood.”
Adam stuck around until I’d showered, and he ate the pancakes I
made afterward. Samuel came in while we were eating. He looked
tired and smelled like antiseptic and blood. Without a word, he poured
the last of the batter in the pan.
When Samuel looked like that, it meant he’d had a bad day. Someone
had died or been crippled, and he hadn’t been able to fix it.
He took his cooked pancakes and sat down at the table beside Adam.
After dousing his meal in maple syrup, he stopped moving. Just
looked at the pool of liquid sugar as if it held the secrets of the
universe.
He shook his head. “I guess my eyes were bigger than my appetite.”
He dumped the food in the garbage disposal and ran it like he’d enjoy
stuffing a person down it.
“So what is it this time?” I asked. “‘Johnny fell down and broke his
arm’ or ‘my wife ran into a door’?”
“Baby Ally got bitten by their pit bull,” he growled, flipping the
switch so the disposal quieted. In an artifically high-pitched voice, he
said, “‘But Iggy’s so good. Sure he’s bitten me a couple of times. But
he’s always adored Ally. He watches her while I shower.’ ” He
walked off a little steam, then said, in his own voice, “You know, it’s
not the pit bulls. It’s the people who own them. The kind of people
who want a pit bull are the very last people who should have a dog.
Or a child. Who leaves a two-year-old alone with a dog that’s already
killed a puppy? So now the dog dies, the girl gets reconstructive
surgery and will probably still have scars—and her idiot mother, who
caused it all, goes unpunished.”
“Her mom will probably feel bad for the rest of her life,” I ventured.
“It’s not jail time, but she’ll be punished.”
Samuel gave me a look under his brows. “She’s too busy making sure
everyone knows it wasn’t her fault. By the time she’s through, people
will be sympathizing with her.”
“Same thing happened with German shepherds a couple of decades
ago,” said Adam. “Then Dobermans and Rottweilers. And the ones
who suffer are the kids and the dogs. You aren’t going to change
human nature, Samuel. Someone who’s seen as much of it as you
have should know when to quit fighting.”
Samuel turned to say something, got a good look at my neck, and
froze.
“I know,” I said. “Only I could go to Spokane and get the only
vampire in the whole city to bite me on the first day I was there.”
He didn’t laugh. “Two bites means he owns you, Mercy.”
I shook my head. “No. Two blood exchanges means he owns me. So I
had Stefan bite me again, and now Stefan owns me instead of the
Boogeyman of Spokane.”
He leaned a hip against the counter, folded his arms over his chest,
and looked at Adam. “You approved this?” He sounded incredulous.
“Since when did Mercy ask my approval ... or anyone’s approval
before she did something? But I’d have told her to go ahead if she
asked me. Stefan is a step above Blackwood.”
Samuel frowned at him. “She’s now second in your pack. That gives
Stefan your pack as well as Mercy.”
“No,” I told him. “Stefan says not. Says it’s been tried before and
didn’t work.”
“A vampire’s sheep does as it is told.” Samuel’s voice grew deep and
rough with worry, so I didn’t take offense at being called a sheep.
Though I would have under other circumstances, even if it were true.
“When he tells you to call the wolves, you’ll have no choice. And if
the vampire, whose slave you are, tells a different story—I know
which one I’d doubt. ‘Old vampires lie better than they tell the truth.’
” The last was a werewolf aphorism. And it was true that a lying
vampire could be difficult to detect. They had no pulse, and they
didn’t sweat. But lies still have a feel to them.
I shrugged, trying to look as if Samuel wasn’t worrying me. “You can
ask Stefan how it works tonight if you want.”
“If she calls the pack, she has to use my power to do it,” Adam said.
“She can’t do that if I don’t let her.”
I tried not to show the relief I felt. “Good. Don’t let me call the pack
for a while, all right?”
“A while?” said Samuel. “Did Stefan tell you he could let you go after
a little while? Maybe when Blackwood loses interest? A vampire
never loses its sheep except to death.”
He was scared for me. I could see that. It didn’t stop me from
snapping at him anyway. “Look. I was out of options.” I didn’t tell
them that Wulfe could sever the bond between Stefan and me. It had
been told to me in confidence, and I really did try not to blurt out
everything anyone told me in secret. Except, maybe, to Adam.
He closed his eyes and looked sick. “Yes. I know.” “A vampire can’t
take an Alpha wolf as a sheep,” said Adam. “Maybe we can work
from that to free Mercy when it seems useful. What we don’t want to
do is go off half-cocked and get rid of Stefan so the”—he gave me an
ironic lift of his eyebrow—“Boogeyman of Spokane takes over again.
I’m with Mercy. If you have to listen to a vampire, Stefan’s not the
worst choice.”
“Why can’t a vampire take over an Alpha?” I asked.
It was Samuel who answered me. “I’d almost forgotten that. It’s the
way the pack works, Mercy. If a vampire isn’t strong enough to take
every wolf in the pack, all at once, he can’t take the Alpha. It doesn’t
mean it can’t happen—there are a couple of vampires in the Old
Country ... no, most of them are gone, I think. Anyway there are none
here who could do it.”
“What about Blackwood?” I asked.
Samuel shrugged unhappily. “I’ve never met Blackwood, and I’m not
sure Da has either. I’ll ask.”
“Do that,” said Adam. “In the meantime, that makes Stefan an even
better choice. He’s not going to be taking over. I think I’m mostly
bothered by the close ties between Blackwood and your friend
Amber.”
I’d lost my appetite. After scraping my plate clean, I put it in the
dishwasher. Me, too. Killing Blackwood was the only solution to it I
could see. I started to put my glass in the dishwasher but changed my
mind and refilled it with cranberry juice. Its bite suited my mood.
“Mercy?” Adam had obviously asked me something I hadn’t heard.
I looked at him, and he asked me again. “Blackwood has a
relationship with both Amber and her husband?”
“That’s right,” I told him. “Her husband is his lawyer, and Blackwood
is feeding on Amber and...” It seemed like something that I should
hide. But I’d smelled the sex on her. “Anyway I don’t think that she
knows anything. She thought she’d been out shopping.” Her husband?
I didn’t want him to be part of it. “I’m pretty sure he doesn’t know his
client is preying on Amber. But I don’t know how much else he
knows.”
“When did the hauntings start?” Samuel looked grim. “How long
have they been having trouble with a ghost?”
I had to think about it. “Not long. A few months.”
“About the time that demon-ridden vampire showed up,” said Adam.
“So?” I said. That one had never made the papers.
Adam turned to Samuel, his movement such that anyone watching
would know that he was a predator. “What do you know about
Blackwood?”
Adam’s voice and posture were just a little too agressive for an Alpha
standing in Samuel’s kitchen. Another day, another time, Samuel
would have let it go. But he’d had a bad day ... and I thought that the
vampires hadn’t helped. He snarled and snapped a hand out to shove
Adam back.
Adam caught it and knocked it away as he came to his feet.
Bad, I thought, carefully not moving. This was very bad. Power, rank
with musk and pack, vibrated through the house, making the air thick.
Both of them were on edge. They were dominants—tyrants if I’d have
allowed it. But their strongest, most urgent need was to protect.
And I’d been recently harmed while under their protection. Once with
Tim and a second time with Blackwood—and to a lesser extent with
Stefan. It left them both dangerously aggressive.
Being a werewolf wasn’t like being a human with a hot temper—it
was a balance: a human soul against a predator’s instinctive drives.
Push it too hard, and it was the animal in control—and the wolf didn’t
care who it hurt.
Samuel was the more dominant, but he wasn’t an Alpha. If it came to
a fight, neither of them would fare well. In a few breaths, the pause
before battle would stretch too long, and someone would die.
I grabbed my full glass of juice and tossed it on them, putting out a
forest fire with a thimbleful of cranberry juice. They were standing
almost nose to nose, so I got them both. The rage in their eyes as they
turned to me would have caused a lesser person to run. I knew better.
I ate a bite of pancake from Adam’s plate that attached itself like glue
to the back of my throat. I reached across the table and took Samuel’s
coffee cup and rinsed the sticky knot down my throat.
You can’t pretend not to be scared by werewolves. They know. But
you can meet their eyes, if you’re tough enough. And if they let you.
Adam’s eyes closed, and he took a couple of steps until his back
rested against the wall. Samuel nodded at me—but I saw more than
he’d have wanted me to. He was better than he’d been, but he wasn’t
the happy wolf I’d grown up knowing. Maybe he hadn’t been as
easygoing as I’d once thought—but he’d been better than this.
“Sorry,” he told Adam. “Bad day at the office.”
Adam nodded, but didn’t open his eyes. “I shouldn’t have pushed.”
Samuel took a towel out of a drawer and wet it down in the sink. He
cleaned cranberry juice off his face and rubbed his hair with it—
which made it stick straight up in the air. If you couldn’t see his eyes,
you might have thought he was just a kid.
He grabbed a second towel and soaked it, too. Then said, “Heads up,”
and threw it at Adam. Who caught it in one hand without looking. It
might have been more impressive if one wet end hadn’t slapped him
in the face.
“Thanks,” he said ... dryly, while water slid down his face after the
cranberry juice. I ate another piece of pancake.
By the time Adam cleaned up, his eyes were clear and dark and I’d
finished all of his pancakes and used Samuel’s towel to mop up the
mess on the floor. I thought Samuel would have done it—but not in
front of Adam. Besides, I’d made the mess.
“So,” he said to Samuel without looking directly at him. “Do you
know anything about Blackwood other than that he’s a nasty piece of
work and to stay out of Spokane?”
“No,” Samuel said. “I don’t think my father does either.” He waved a
hand. “Oh, I’ll ask. He’ll have data—how much he’s worth, what his
business interests are. Where he stays and the names of all the people
he’s been bribing to keep everyone from suspecting what he is. But he
doesn’t know Blackwood. I’d say it is safe to say that he’s big and
bad—otherwise, he wouldn’t have held Spokane for the past sixty
years.”
“He is active during the day,” I said. “When he took Amber, it was
daytime.”
Both of them stared at me, and, mindful of their recent dominance
issues, I dropped my eyes.
“What do you think?” asked Adam, his voice still a little hoarser than
normal. He had a hotter temper than Samuel at the best of times.
“Does he know what Mercy is?”
“He had his minion call her into his territory, and he staked his claim
on her—I’d say that would make it a big affirmative.” Samuel
growled.
“Now wait a minute,” I said. “What would a vampire want with me?”
Samuel raised his eyebrows. “Marsilia wants to kill you. Stefan wants
to”—he put on a Romanian accent for the next three words—“suck
your blood. And Blackwood apparently wanted you for the same
reason.”
“You think he set this whole thing up just to get me to Spokane?” I
asked incredulously. “First of all, there was a ghost. I saw it myself.
Not silly vampire tricks or any other kind of tricks. This was a ghost.
Ghosts don’t like vampires.” Although this one had stuck around for
longer than I’d expected. “Second, why me?”
“I don’t know about the ghost,” Samuel said. “But the second
question has a multitude of possible answers.”
“The first one that occurs to me”—Adam was still keeping his eyes
down—“is Marsilia. Suppose she knew immediately what had
happened to Andre. She knows she can’t go after you, so she trades
favors with Blackwood. He turns Amber into his go-to girl, and when
the opportunity presents itself, he sends her to get you—just as
Marsilia dumps Stefan in the middle of your living room. And once
you didn’t die—Amber comes and summons you to Spokane. A few
wolves get hurt—”
“Mary Jo almost died,” I said. “And it could have been worse.” I
thought of the snow elf, and said, “A lot worse.”
“Would Marsilia have cared? Worried about your friends here—and
informed that the crossed bones on the door of your shop means that
all of your friends are at risk—you take the rope Blackwood has
thrown you. And you follow his bait all the way to Spokane.”
Samuel shook his head. “It doesn’t quite track,” he said. “Vampires
don’t cooperate the way the wolves do. Blackwood doesn’t have the
reputation of doing anyone favors.”
“Hey, my pretty,” said Adam in a deadpan imitation of a Disney
witch, “would you like a taste of something sweet? All you have to do
is lure Mercy to Spokane.”
“No,” I said. “It works on the surface, but not when you really look. I
can ask, but I’d bet the relationship between Amber’s husband and
Blackwood goes back years, not months. So he knew them first. If
Marsilia just called him and gave him my name, it would be unlikely
that he’d know that Amber knew me—we haven’t spoken since I got
out of college.”
I’d had my paranoid moments because of the timing of Amber’s
request. But there was simply no way Marsilia had sent Amber, and
the likelihood of further Byzantine plots went down from there.
I drew a breath. “I expect that Blackwood thought I was human, at
least until he bit me the first time. Bran says I smell like a coyote—
doglike unless you know coyotes—but not magic. Stefan told me
Blackwood would know I wasn’t human after he tasted me.”
Both of the werewolves were watching me now.
“Bad luck does just happen,” I told them.
“Blackwood doesn’t seem to be the kind of person to do favors for
another vampire.” Samuel’s voice sounded almost cheery.
He didn’t. Vampires were evil, territorial, and ... I thought of
something.
“What if he’s making a play to add the Tri-Cities to his territory,” I
asked. “Say he read about the attack on me—and saw that I was
Adam’s girlfriend. Maybe he has connections and got to see the video
of Adam tearing into Tim’s body, so he knows our relationship isn’t
casual. Maybe Corban sees him read the article and mentions that his
wife knew me, and the vampire sees an opportunity to make the Tri-
Cities werewolves cooperate with him in preparation to move in on
Marsilia. Maybe he doesn’t know he can’t use me to take over the
pack. Maybe he would have used me as a hostage. The ghost is
happenstance. Just a convenient reason to convince Amber to invite
me over.”
“Marsilia’s just lost her two right-hand men,” said Samuel. “Andre
and Stefan. She’s vulnerable now.”
“She has three other powerful vampires,” I told him. “But Bernard
and Estelle don’t seem pleased with Marsilia lately.” I told them
about the confrontation the night before. “There’s Wulfe, I guess, but
he’s ...” I shrugged. “I wouldn’t want to have to depend upon Wulfe
for loyalty—he’s not the type.”
“Vampires are predators,” Adam said. “Same as us. If Blackwood
smells weakness, I suppose it makes sense that he’d try for more
territory.”
“I like it,” Samuel said. “Blackwood isn’t a team player. This fits. It
doesn’t mean it’s right, but it fits.”
Adam stretched the tension out of his neck, and I heard vertebrae pop.
He gave me a little smile. “Tonight I call Marsilia and tell her what
we just talked about. It’s not set in stone, but it’s plausible. I bet we’ll
find Marsilia more cooperative.” He looked at Samuel. “If you’re
home, I’d better go to work. I’ll have Jesse come here when school’s
out, too—if you don’t mind. Aurielle’s booked, Honey has work to
do, and Mary Jo is ... not up to snuff.”
After Adam left, Samuel went to bed. If anything started happening,
he’d be up fast enough—but it told me that Samuel, at least, didn’t
think there’d be an attack in the daytime.
Neither of them even so much as mentioned the cranberry juice I’d
thrown on them.
A FEW HOURS LATER, A CAR DROVE UP AND JESSE GOT
out. She waved at the receding car, then bounced into the house in a
wave of optimism, black-and-blue-striped hair, and—
I put a hand over my nose. “What is that perfume you’re wearing?”
She laughed. “Sorry, I’ll go wash up. Natalie had a new bottle and
insisted on spraying everyone with it.”
I waved her to my bedroom with the hand that wasn’t plugging my
nose. “Go use mine. Samuel’s trying to sleep next to the main bath.”
And when she just stood there. “Hurry, for Pete’s sake. That stuff is
rank.”
She sniffed her arm. “Not to my nose. It smells like roses.”
“There are no roses,” I told her, “that smell like formaldehyde.”
She grinned at me, then bounced off to my bathroom to scrub up.
“So,” she said when she returned, “since we’re both under house
arrest until the vamps settle down, and since I was an ace student
today and got my homework done at school—how about you and I
make some brownies?”
We made brownies, and she helped me change the oil in my van. It
was getting dark by the time we set up my air compressor to blow out
the water in my very small underground sprinkler system for the
winter when Samuel appeared at the door bleary-eyed and growly, a
brownie in one hand.
He made some grumbles about twittering girls who made too much
noise. I looked up at the darkening sky and thought the lateness of the
hour had more to do with his rising than the roar of my air
compressor.
He made Jesse laugh with his snarls. He made a pretense of being
offended and turned to me. “Are you finished?”
He could see I was rolling up cords and hose, so I rolled my eyes at
him.
“Disrespect,” he told Jesse, shaking his head sadly. “That’s all I get.
Maybe if I take you out and feed you, she’ll start treating me with the
respect I deserve.”
But he grabbed the compressor before I could start rolling it to the
pole barn.
“Where are you taking us?” Jesse said.
“Mexican,” he said positively.
She groaned and suggested a Russian café that had just opened
nearby. The two of them argued restaurants all the way to the pole
barn and back and into the car.
In the end, we went out for pizza, a place on Columbia with a
playground, noise, and great food. Adam was waiting, watching the
little TV in my kitchen, when we got back. He looked tired.
“Boss run you ragged?” I asked sympathetically, handing him a
brownie.
He looked at it. “Did you make this, or did Jesse?”
Her indignant “Dad” got her an unrepentant grin. “Just kidding,” he
said as he ate.
“I’ve been staying up nights,” he told me. “Between the vampires and
the Washington bigwigs, I’m going to have to start taking naps like a
two-year-old.”
“Trouble?” asked Samuel carefully.
He meant, trouble over me—or rather over that nifty video I’d never
seen of Adam in a half-wolf form, ripping up Tim the Rapist’s dead
body.
Adam shook his head. “Not really. Mostly just the same old, same
old.”
“Have you called Marsilia?” I asked.
“What?” Jesse had been getting a glass of milk for her dad, and she
set it down a little too hard.
“Mercy,” growled Adam.
“Part of the reason you’re here is that your dad has a pair of vampires
in his holding cell,” I informed her. “We’re in negotiation with
Marsilia so she’ll quit trying to kill everyone.”
“I only get told half of what goes on,” said Jesse.
Adam covered his eyes in a mock-exasperated fashion, and Samuel
laughed. “Hey, old man. This is the tip of the iceberg. Mercy’s going
to be leading you around with a ring in your nose.” But there was
something in his eyes that wasn’t amusement.
I didn’t think anyone else noticed or heard the odd note of
unhappiness in his voice. Samuel didn’t want me, not really. He
didn’t want to be an Alpha ... but he wanted what Adam had, Jesse as
much as me, I thought—a family: kids, a wife, a white picket fence or
whatever the equivalent had been when he was a kid.
He wanted a home, and his last home had died with his last human
mate long before I was born. He glanced at me just then, and I didn’t
know what was in my face, but it stopped him. Just stopped all the
expression, and for a moment he looked amazingly like his half
brother, Charles—one of the scariest people I’ve ever met. Charles
can just look at raging werewolves and have them whimpering in the
corner.
But it was only for an instant. He patted me on my head and said
something funny to Jesse.
“So,” I said. “Did you call Marsilia, Adam?”
He watched Samuel, but said, “Yes, ma’am. I got Estelle. She’s
supposed to give Marsilia my message and have her call me back.”
“She’s playing one-upmanship games,” observed Samuel.
“Let her,” Adam said. “Doesn’t mean I need to do the same.”
“Because you have the edge,” I said with satisfaction. “You have a
bigger threat.”
“What?” asked Jesse.
“The Big Bad Boogeyman vampire of Spokane,” I said, sitting on the
table. “He’s coming to get her.”
It wasn’t a sure thing, but it didn’t have to be as long as we could
convince Marsilia of it. If I had been Marsilia, I would’ve been
worried about Blackwood.
ADAM AND JESSE WENT HOME. SAMUEL WENT TO BED,
and so did I. When my cell phone rang, I was in the middle of a
dream about garbage cans and frogs—don’t ask, and I won’t tell.
“Mercy,” Adam purred.
I looked down at my feet, where Medea slept. She blinked her big
green-gold eyes at me and purred again.
“Adam.”
“I called to tell you that I finally got in touch with Marsilia herself.”
I sat up, suddenly not sleepy at all. “And?”
“I told her about Blackwood. She listened all the way through,
thanked me for my concern, and hung up.”
“She’s hardly going to panic over the phone and swear to be forever
friends,” I said, and he laughed.
“No, I don’t think so. But I thought I’d do my bit for goodwill and let
her two baby vamps go.”
“Besides, now that Jesse knows they’re there, you’re not going to be
able to keep her away.”
“Thanks for that.”
“Anytime. Hostage-holding is for the bad guys.”
He laughed again, this time faintly bitterly. “You obviously haven’t
seen the good guys in action.”
“No,” I told him. “Maybe you were just mistaken on who the good
guys were.”
There was a long pause, and he said in a soft, midnight voice, “Maybe
you’re right.”
“You’re the good guy,” I explained to him. “So you have to cope with
all the good-guy rules. Fortunately, you have an exceptionally
talented and incredibly gifted sidekick ...”
“Who turns into a coyote,” he said, a smile in his voice.
“So you don’t have to worry about the bad guys very much.”
And we settled into some serious, heart-accelerating flirting. Over the
phone, passion brought on no panic attack.
I hung up eventually. We both had to get up in the morning, but the
call left me restless and not sleepy in the slightest. After a few
minutes I got up and took a good look at the stitches in my face. They
were tiny and neat, individually tied and set so when my face altered,
they wouldn’t pull. Trust a werewolf to give me stitches so I could
shift with them.
I stripped out of my clothes and opened my bedroom door. And as a
coyote, I popped out of the newly installed dog door and dashed out
into the night.
I covered several miles before heading out to the river and my
favorite running ground. It wasn’t until I stopped to get a drink from
the river that I smelled vampire—and not my vampire. I stood in the
shallows of the river and lapped at the water as if I hadn’t sensed a
thing.
But it didn’t matter because this vampire had no desire to remain
unseen. If I hadn’t smelled him, the distinctive sound of a shotgun
shell jacked into place was quite an announcement of intentions. He
must have followed me from home. Or maybe his sense of smell was
werewolf good. At any rate, he knew who I was.
Bernard stood on the bank, the gun held with obvious familiarity with
the barrel pointed at yours truly. Vampire with shotgun—it seemed a
little like Jaws with a chain saw, too much of a good thing.
I’d have preferred a chain saw in this case. I hate shotguns. I have
scars on my butt from a close-range hit, but that wasn’t the only time
I’d been shot—just the worst. Montana ranchers don’t like coyotes.
Even coyotes who are just passing through and would never attack a
lamb or chase a chicken. No matter how much fun chasing chickens is
...
I wagged my tail at the vampire.
“Marsilia was so certain he’d kill you,” Bernard told me. He always
sounded to me like one of the Kennedys, his a’s broad and flat. “But I
see that he fooled her. She’s not as smart as she thinks—and that will
be her downfall. I need you to call your Master so I can talk to him.”
It took me a moment to remember who the Master he was referring to
was. And then I didn’t know how to do it. I had so many new ties, and
I didn’t know how to use any of them. What if I tried to call Stefan
and ended up with Adam here?
I took too long. Bernard pulled the trigger. I think he meant to miss
me—unless he was a really bad shot. But several of those stupid
pellets hit, and I yipped sharply. He had the next shell in the gun
before I finished complaining.
“Call him,” Bernard said.
Fine. It couldn’t be that difficult, or Stefan would have told me more
about how to do that. I hoped.
Stefan? I thought as hard as I could. Stefan!
If I’d thought he’d be in any danger, I’d never have tried it, but I was
pretty sure that Bernard, like Estelle, was going to try to recruit Stefan
for his side in the civil war Marsilia had brewing in her seethe. He
wouldn’t try anything right away, and after the way Stefan had dealt
with Estelle, I wasn’t worried about Bernard as long as the element of
surprise wasn’t a factor.
Bernard was wearing jeans, running shoes, and a semicasual buttonfront
shirt—and he still looked like a nineteenth-century businessman.
Even though his shoes had a glow-in-the-dark swoosh on them, he
wasn’t someone who would blend in with the crowd.
“I’m sorry you’re so stubborn,” he said. But before he could get the
gun up for a final, painful-if-not-fatal shot, Stefan appeared from ...
somewhere and jerked the gun out of his hands. He swung it by the
barrel into a rock, then handed the not-so-useful remains back to
Bernard.
I waded out of the water and shook off over both of them—but neither
reacted.
“What do you want?” asked Stefan coolly. I padded over to him and
sat at his feet. He looked down at me and before Bernard could
answer his first question, he said, “I smell blood. Did he hurt you?”
I opened my mouth and gave him a laughing look. I knew from
experience that the couple of birdshot in my backside weren’t deep,
probably not even deep enough that they would need to be dug out—
fur has many advantages. I wasn’t all that happy about it, but Stefan
didn’t have a wolf’s understanding about body language. So I told
him I was fine in a way he couldn’t mistake—and my rump hurt when
I wagged my tail.
He gave me a look that might, under other circumstances, have been
doubtful. “Fine,” he said, then looked over at Bernard, who was
twirling the broken shotgun.
“Oh,” said Bernard. “Is it my turn? You’re through coddling your
pretty new slave? Marsilia was certain that you were so fond of your
last flock that you wouldn’t have the stomach to replace them soon.”
Stefan was very still. So angry he had even stopped breathing.
Bernard braced the shotgun on the ground and gripped it one-handed,
butt up—leaning on it as if it were one of those short canes that Fred
Astaire used to dance with.
“You should have heard them screaming your name,” he said. “Oh, I
forgot, you did.”
He braced himself for an attack that never came. Instead, Stefan
folded his arms and relaxed. He even started breathing again, for
which I was grateful.
Have you ever sat around while someone held their breath? For a
while it doesn’t bother you, but eventually you start holding your
breath with them, willing them to breathe. It’s one of those automatic
reflexes. Fortunately, the only vampire I associate with much likes to
talk—so he breathes.
I sat at his side, trying to look harmless and cheerful—but looking
around for more vampires. There was one in the trees; she’d let
herself be silhouetted briefly against the sky. There was no way to
communicate what I’d seen to Stefan as there would have been with
Adam. He’d have read the tilt of my head and the paw on his foot.
Bernard’s verbal attack hadn’t had quite the effect he’d expected ... or
at least been ready for. But that didn’t seem to faze him. He smiled,
showing his fangs. “She had only you left,” he told Stefan. “Wulfe’s
been ours for months, and so was Andre. But he was afraid of you, so
he wouldn’t let us do anything.” There was a world of frustration in
the last two words, and he jerked up the gun, threw it casually over
his shoulder, and began pacing.
For the first time, he looked to me like what he was. Somehow,
before, he’d always looked like an extra from a Dickens movie—
someone full of pomp and circumstance and nothing more. Now, in
motion, he looked like a predator, the Edwardian facade nothing but a
thin skin to hide what was beneath.
Estelle had always unnerved me, but I discovered I hadn’t been afraid
of Bernard until just then.
Stefan stayed silent while Bernard ranted. “He was worse than
Marsilia, in the end. He brought that thing ... that uncontrollable
abomination among us.” He paused and stared at me. I dropped my
eyes immediately, but I could feel his attention burning into my skin.
“It is good your sheep killed it, though Marsilia couldn’t see it. It
would have brought upon us our doom—and she did us the second
favor by killing Andre.”
He stopped speaking for a moment, but his eyes were still on me,
digging through fur to see me. It was uncomfortable and scary.
“We would let her live—and if Marsilia has her way, she is dead—
just like your last flock.” Bernard waited for that to sink in. “Marsilia
has minions who work in the day ... Hell. With the crossed bones on
your coyote’s business proclaiming her a traitor to all of us, how long
do you think she’ll survive? Goblins, harriers, the carrion feeders—
there are a lot of Marsilia’s allies who hunt in the day.”
“She is the Alpha’s mate. The wolves will keep her safe when I
cannot.”
Bernard laughed. “There are some of them who would kill her faster
than Marsilia ever would. A coyote? Please.” His voice softened.
“You know she will die. If Marsilia wanted to kill her for slaying
Andre, how do you think she’ll feel now that you’ve taken the coyote
for your own? She doesn’t want you, but our Mistress has ever been
jealous. And you protected this one for years when you should have
told us all that there was a walker living among us. You took chances
for her—what would have happened if another vampire had noticed
what she was? Marsilia knows you care for her, more than you ever
did the sheep you fed off. Eventually, Mercedes will die, and it will
be your fault.”
Stefan flinched at that. I didn’t need to look at his face to see it,
because I felt him jerk against me.
“You need Marsilia to die, or Mercy will,” Bernard said. “Whom do
you love, Soldier? The one who saved you or the one who abandoned
you? Whom do you serve?”
He waited, and so did I.
“She was a fool to let you go alive,” Bernard murmured. “There were
two others she trusted with the place she sleeps. Andre is dead. But
you know, don’t you? And you rise a full hour before she does. You
can keep this from being a bloody battle with many casualties. Who
will die? Lily, our gifted musician, almost certainly. Estelle hates her,
you know—she is talented and beautiful when Estelle is neither. And
Marsilia loves her dearly. Lily will die.” Then he smiled. “I’d kill her
myself, but I know that you care for her, too. You could protect her
from Estelle, Stefan.”
And he went on naming names. Lesser vampires, I thought, but
people Stefan cared for.
When he finished, he looked at Stefan’s stubborn face and shook his
head in exasperation. “Stefan, for God’s sake. What are you doing?
You belong nowhere. She doesn’t want you. She couldn’t be more
plain if she had killed you outright. Estelle is foolish. She thinks she
can rule when Marsilia is gone. But I know better. Neither of us is
strong enough to hold the seethe unless we could work together—but
we will not. There are no ties between us, no love, and that is the only
way two nearly equal vampires can work together for long. But you
could. I would serve you as faithfully as you have served all these
years. We need you if we are to survive.” He had begun pacing again.
“Marsilia will see us all dead. You know that. She is crazy—only a
crazy woman could put her trust in Wulfe. She’ll have the humans
hunting us again, not just this seethe but all of our kind. And we will
not survive. Please, Stefan.”
Stefan went down on one knee and wrapped his arm around my
shoulders. He bowed his head and whispered to me. “I am sorry.”
Then he stood up. “I am an old soldier,” he told Bernard. “I serve only
one, even though she has forsaken me.” He stretched out his hand,
and this time I felt him pull something from me as his sword appeared
in his hand. “Would you try me here?” he asked.
Bernard made a frustrated noise, then threw up his hands in a
theatrical gesture. “No. No. Please, Stefan. Just stay out of it when the
fight begins.”
And he turned and ran. It wasn’t like the way Stefan could disappear,
but it would have pushed me to keep with him—and I’m fast. It was
fast enough that he probably didn’t hear Stefan say, “No.”
He stood beside me and watched Bernard until the vampire was out of
sight. And he waited a little more. I watched the female slip out of the
trees and found another one as he left his cover. That one Stefan
raised a hand to and got a salute in return.
“It will be a bloodbath,” he told me. “And he is right. I could stop it.
But I won’t.”
I wondered suddenly why Marsilia had let him live. If he knew where
she slept, and no one else did, if he rose before her and could take
himself wherever he chose, then he was a threat to her. She surely
knew that if Bernard did.
Stefan sat on a likely boulder and linked his hands over a knee. “I
meant to come to you when darkness fell,” he told me. “There are
things I need to tell you about this link between us—” He gave me a
shadow of his usual smile. “Nothing dire.”
He looked out at the water. “But I thought I’d clean up my front porch
a little first. The newspapers have been piling up because no one is
living there now.” I had the sinking feeling I knew where this was
going. “I was thinking I’d have to call and have the newspaper
stopped—and then I read the newspaper. About the man you killed.
So I went to Zee and got the full story.”
He looked at me. “I’m sorry,” he said.
I stood up deliberately and shook as if my fur was wet.
He smiled again, just a quirk of his lips. “I’m glad you killed him.
Wish I’d been there to watch.”
I thought of where he’d been, tortured by Marsilia, and wished I could
watch him kill her as well.
I sighed and walked over to him, then put my chin on his knee. We
both watched the water flow under the sliver of moon. There were
houses nearby, but where we sat it was only us and the river.
9
I LEFT STEFAN FINALLY I NEEDED TO GET UP EARLY TO
get back to work, and it might be nice to have some sleep. When I
glanced back over my shoulder for a last, concerned look, he was
gone. I hoped he hadn’t gone back to his house—that didn’t seem like
the smartest place for him to hang out—but he would do as he
pleased. He was like me in that way.
The lights were on at home, and I redoubled my pace as soon as I saw
them. I dove through the dog door and found Warren pacing in the
living room. Medea sat on the back of the couch and watched him
with an annoyed look on her face.
“Mercy,” Warren said with relief. “Get changed; get dressed. We’re
attending a peace powwow with the vampires, and you were
specifically requested.”
I ran into my room and shifted back to human. What with one thing
and another, I had a roomful of dirty clothes and nothing more.
“We’re talking peace-treaty time?” I asked throwing dirty pants over
my shoulder.
“We hope so,” Warren said, following me into the room. “Who shot
you?”
“Vampire, no biggie,” I said. “He wasn’t aiming to kill. I don’t even
think any of the shot stuck.”
“Nope, but you won’t be happy about sitting down tonight.”
“I’m never happy sitting down when there are vampires around—
Stefan usually excepted. What did Marsilia say?”
“She didn’t call us, and we couldn’t get a lot of sense out of the
vampire who did. She read a note, then giggled a lot.”
“Lily?” I looked at Warren.
“That’s what Samuel said.” He pulled a shirt off his shoulder, where I
must have thrown it, and dropped it on the floor.
“She called him, too?”
He shrugged. “Yes. Marsilia wanted him there, too. No, I don’t know
what it’s about, and neither does Adam. However, it’s unlikely that
she’s going to annihilate us once we get there. Adam sent me here to
bring you when you got back. I think he wanted you dressed, though.”
“Smart aleck,” I told him, hopping into my jeans. I found a decent bra
and put that on. I finally found a clean shirt folded in the shirt drawer.
I wondered who’d but it there.
It’s not that I’m not neat. In my garage, every tool is exactly where it
belongs at the end of the day. Sometimes there’s a little friction when
Zee has been in there because he and I have a different idea of where
some of the tools should be.
Someday, when time presents itself, I’ll clean my room. Having a
roommate forces me to keep the rest of the house reasonably clean.
But no one cares about my room, and that puts it pretty far down on
my list of to-dos. It’s below, for instance, keeping solvent, saving
Amber from Blackwood, and attending the meeting with Marsilia. I’ll
almost certainly get to it before I get around to planting a garden,
though.
I pulled on the clean shirt. It was dark blue and emblazoned with
BOSCH GENUINE GERMAN AUTO PARTS. Not the shirt I’d have
picked out to pay a formal call on the Vampire Queen, but I supposed
she’d have to take it or leave it. At least it didn’t have any oil stains.
Warren picked up a handful of jeans and unburied my shoes. “Now all
you need is socks, and we can go.”
His cell phone rang, and he tossed the shoes at me and answered.
“Yes, boss. She’s here and almost dressed.”
Adam’s voice was a little muffled, and he was talking very quietly—
but I still heard him. He sounded a little wistful.
“Almost, eh?”
Warren grinned. “Yep. Sorry, boss.”
“Mercy, get a wiggle on,” Adam said in a louder voice. “Marsilia’s
holding things up until you’re here—since you were a material part of
the recent unrest.”
He hung up.
“I’m wiggling. I’m wiggling,” I muttered, pulling on socks and shoes.
I wished I’d had a chance to replace my necklace.
“Your socks don’t match.”
I marched out the door. “Thank you. Since when did you become a
fashionista?”
“Since you decided to wear a green sock and a white sock,” he said,
following me. “We can take my truck.”
“I have another pair just like it, too,” I said. “Somewhere.” Except I
thought I’d thrown out the mate to the green sock last week.
THE WROUGHT-IRON GATES AROUND THE SEETHE WERE
open, but the driveway was clogged with cars, so we parked off the
gravel driveway. The Spanish-style adobe compound was lit with
orangish lantern-style lights that flickered almost like the real thing.
I didn’t know the vampire at the door, and, very unvampirelike, he
simply opened the door, and said, “Down the hall to the stairway at
the end and downstairs to the bottom.”
I hadn’t remembered there being a stairway at the end of the hall
when I’d been here before. Probably because the huge, full-lengthand-
then-some painting of a Spanish villa had been in front of it
instead of leaning against a side wall.
Although we’d entered on the ground floor, the stairway we were on
took us down two full flights. I can see in the dark almost as well as a
cat, and the stairwell was dark for me—a human would be almost
helpless. As we descended, the smell of vampire clogged my nose.
There was a small anteroom with a single vampire—another one I
didn’t recognize. I didn’t actually know more than a handful of
Marsilia’s vampires by sight. This one had silvery gray hair and a
very young-looking face, and was dressed in a traditional black
funeral suit. He’d been seated behind a very small table, but as we
came down the last three steps, he stood up.
He ignored Warren entirely, and said, “You are Mercedes
Thompson.” He wasn’t quite asking a question, but his statement was
far from certain. He also had an accent of some sort, but I couldn’t
place it.
“Yes,” said Warren shortly.
The vampire opened the door and swept us a short bow.
The room we entered was huge for a house—more a small
gymnasium than a room. There were stands of seats—bleachers
really, on either side of the long side of the room. Bleachers filled
with silent watchers. I hadn’t realized that there were so many
vampires in the whole of the Tri-Cities, then I saw that a lot of the
people were human—the sheep, I thought, like me.
And in the very center of the room was the huge oak chair festooned
with carvings and accented with dull brass. I couldn’t see them, but I
knew the brass thorns on the arms of the chair were sharp and dark
with old blood ... some of it was mine.
That chair was one of the treasures of the seethe, vampire magic and
old magic combined. The vampires used it to determine the truth of
whatever poor being had the brass thorns stuck in its hands. It’s
gruesomely appropriate that a lot of vampire magic has to do with
blood.
The presence of the chair raised my suspicions that this wasn’t to be a
negotiation for peace between the vampires and the werewolves. The
last time I’d seen that chair, it had been at a trial. It made me nervous,
and I wished I knew exactly what the words were that had been used
to invite us here.
It was easy to pick out the werewolves—they were standing in front
of two rows of empty seats: Adam, Samuel, Darryl and his mate,
Aurielle, Mary Jo, Paul, and Alec. I wondered which ones Marsilia
had specified and which were Adam’s choice.
Darryl was the first to notice us because the door was almost as silent
as the crowd of vampires. His eyes swept over me from head to toe
and for a moment he looked appalled. Then he glanced around the
crowd—all the vampires and their menageries were dressed up in
their finest, be that ball gown or double-breasted suit. I thought I saw
at least one Union army jacket. He looked at my T-shirt, then relaxed
and gave me a subtle smile.
It seemed he decided it was okay I hadn’t dressed up to meet the
enemy. Adam had been talking rather intently with Samuel (about the
upcoming football game, I later found out—we don’t discuss
important matters in front of the bad guys) but looked at his second,
then looked up as we walked over to him.
“Mercy,” he said, his voice ringing in the room as if it were empty.
“Thank goodness. Maybe now we can get some business done.”
“Maybe,” Marsilia said.
She was right behind us. I knew she hadn’t been there a moment ago
because Warren jumped when I did. Warren was more wary than I
was—no one snuck up on him. Ever. The side effect of being hunted
by his own kind for most of his century-and-a-half-long life.
He turned, shoving me behind him, and snarled at her—something he
wouldn’t have normally done. All the vampires in the room rose to
their feet, and their anticipation of blood was palpable.
Marsilia laughed, a beautiful, ringing laugh that stopped a second
before I expected it to, making it more unsettling than her sudden
appearance. Her sudden, businesslike appearance. The only other
times I’d seen her, she’d worn clothing designed to attract attention to
her beauty. This time she wore a business suit. The only concession to
femininity was the narrow skirt instead of pants and the rich wine
color of the wool.
“Sit,” she said—as if she were talking to a poodle—and the roomful
of vampires sat. She never looked away from me.
“How kind of you to make an appearance,” she said, her abyss-dark
eyes cold with power.
Only Warren’s warmth allowed me to answer her with anything
approaching calm. “How kind of you to issue your invitations in
advance, so I could be on time,” I said. Perhaps not wisely—but, hey,
she already hated me. I could smell it.
She stared at me a moment. “It makes a joke,” she said.
“It is rude,” I returned, taking a step to the side. If I got her mad
enough to attack me, I didn’t want Warren to take the hit.
It was only when I stepped around him that I realized I was meeting
her gaze. Stupid. Even Samuel wasn’t proof against the power of her
eyes. But I couldn’t look down, not with Adam’s power rising to
choke me. I wasn’t just a coyote here, I was the Alpha of the
Columbia Basin Pack’s mate—because he said so, and because I said
so.
If I looked down, I was acknowledging her superiority, and I wouldn’t
do that. So I met her eyes, and she chose to allow me to do so.
She lowered her eyelids, not so far as to lose our informal staring
contest, but to veil her expression. “I think,” she said in a voice so soft
that only Warren and I heard her, “I think that had we met at a
different place and time, I could have liked you.” She smiled, her
fangs showing. “Or killed you.”
“Enough games,” she said, louder. “Call him for me.”
I froze. That’s why she wanted me. She wanted Stefan back. For a
moment all I could see was the blackened dead thing that she’d
dropped in my living room. I remembered how long it had taken me
to realize who it was.
She’d done that to him—and now she wanted him back. Not if I could
help it.
Adam hadn’t moved from where he’d been standing, telling the room
he trusted me to take care of myself. I wasn’t sure he really thought
so—I knew I didn’t—but he needed me to stand on my own two feet.
“Call whom?” he asked.
She smiled at him without looking away from me. “Didn’t you know?
Your mate belongs to Stefan.”
He laughed, an oddly happy sound in this dirge-shadowed room. It
was a good excuse to turn my back on Marsilia and quit playing the
stare game. Turning my back meant that I didn’t lose—only that the
contest was over.
I tried not to let the sick fear I felt show on my face. I tried to be what
Adam—and Stefan—needed me to be.
“Like a coyote, Mercy is adaptable,” Adam told Marsilia. “She
belongs to whom she decides. She belongs everywhere she wants to,
for just as long as she wants to.” He made it sound like a good thing.
Then he said, “I thought this was about preventing war.”
“It is,” said Marsilia. “Call Stefan.”
I lifted my chin and glanced at her over my shoulder. “Stefan is my
friend,” I told her. “I won’t bring him to his execution.”
“Admirable,” she told me briskly. “But your concern is misplaced. I
can promise that he won’t be hurt physically by me or by mine
tonight.”
I slanted a glance at Warren, and he nodded. Vampires might be hard
to read, but he was better at sensing lies than I was, and his nose
agreed with mine: she was being truthful.
“Or hold him here,” I said.
The smell of her hatred had died away, and I couldn’t tell anything
about how she felt. “Or hold him here,” she agreed. “Witness!”
“Witnessed,” said the vampires. All of them. All at exactly the same
time. Like puppets, only creepier.
She waited. Finally, she said, “I mean him no harm.”
I thought of earlier tonight, when he’d turned down Bernard even
though I was pretty sure he agreed with Bernard’s assessment of her
continued rule of the seethe. In the end, he loved her more than he
loved his seethe, his menagerie of sheep, or his own life.
“You harm him by your continued existence,” I told her, as quietly as
I could. And she flinched.
I thought about that flinch ... and about the way she’d let him live
even though he, of all her vampires, had reason to see her dead—and
had the means to do so. Maybe Stefan wasn’t the only one who loved.
It hadn’t kept her from torturing him, though.
I closed my eyes, trusting Warren, trusting Adam to keep me safe. I
only wished I could keep Stefan safe. But I knew what he would want
me to do.
Stefan, I called, just as I had earlier—because I knew he would want
me to. Surely he knew where I was calling from and would come
ready to protect himself.
Nothing happened. No Stefan.
I looked toward Marsilia and shrugged. “I called,” I told her. “But he
doesn’t have to come when I call.”
It didn’t seem to bother her. She just nodded—a surprisingly
businesslike gesture from a woman who would have looked more at
home in a Renaissance gown of silk and jewels than she did in her
modern suit.
“Then I call this meeting to order,” she said, strolling to the old
thronelike chair in the center of the room. “First, I would call Bernard
to the chair.”
He came, reluctant and stiff. I recognized the pattern of his
movement—he looked like a wolf called against his will. I knew he
wasn’t of her making, but she had power over him just the same. He
was still wearing the clothes I’d last seen him in. The harsh overhead
fluorescent lights glinted off the small balding spot on the top of his
head.
He sat unwillingly.
“Here, caro, let me help.” Marsilia took each hand and impaled it on
the upthrust brass thorns. He fought. I could see it in the grimness of
his face and the tenseness of his muscles. I couldn’t see that it cost
Marsilia anything at all to keep him under her control.
“You’ve been naughty, no?” she asked. “Disloyal.”
“I have not been disloyal to the seethe,” he gritted out.
“Truth,” said a boy’s voice.
The Wizard himself. I hadn’t seen him—though I’d looked. His light
gold hair had been trimmed close to his skull. He had a vague smile
on his face as he strolled down from the top of the bleachers across
from us. He used the bleacher seats as stairs.
He looked like a young high school student. He’d died before his
features had had a chance to grow into maturity. He looked soft and
young.
Marsilia smiled when she saw him. He hopped over the last three
seats and landed lightly on the hardwood floor. She was shorter than
he was, but the kiss he gave her made my stomach hurt. I knew he
was hundreds of years old, but it didn’t matter—because he looked
like a kid.
He stepped back and reached out a finger and ran it over Bernard’s
hand and down to the chair arm. When he picked it up it dripped
blood. He licked it off slowly, letting a few drops roll down the palm
of his hand, over his wrist, until it stained the light green sleeves of
his dress shirt.
I wondered who he was performing for. Surely the vampires wouldn’t
be bothered by his licking blood—and I was sort of right but mostly
wrong. Bothered might not be the word, but there was a generalized
motion from the stands as vampires leaned forward and some of them
even licked their lips.
Ugh.
“You have betrayed me, haven’t you, Bernard?” Marsilia was still
looking at Wulfe, and he held out his hand. She took it and traced the
drying blood, letting her mouth linger over his wrist while Bernard
quivered, trying not to answer the question.
“I have not betrayed the seethe,” Bernard said again. And though she
grilled him for ten minutes or more, that was all he would say.
Stefan appeared beside me. His eyes were on the sleeve of his white
dress shirt as he casually fixed a cuff link, then he pulled the sleeve of
his subtly pin-striped gray suit over it with a just-right tug. He looked
at me, and Marsilia looked at him.
She waved her hand at Bernard. “Get up—Wuife, put him somewhere
obvious, would you?”
Shaking and stumbling, Bernard rose, his hands dripping on the pale
floor all the way to the stands, where Wulfe cleared out space on the
bottom tier of seats for them both. He began cleaning Bernard’s
hands, like a cat licking ice cream.
Stefan didn’t say anything, just ran his eyes over me in a quick
survey. Then he looked at Adam, who nodded regally back, though he
smiled a little, and I realized that he and Stefan were wearing the
same thing, except that Adam wore a dark blue shirt.
Mary Jo saw the resemblance and grinned. She turned to say
something to Paul, I thought, when a surprised look came over her
face, and she just dropped. Alec caught her before she hit the floor as
if this wasn’t the first time she’d done something like that. Leftovers
from the close brush with death, I hoped, not something the vampires
were doing.
Stefan left me for Mary Jo. He touched her throat, ignoring Alec’s
silent snarl.
“Relax,” Stefan told the wolf. “She will take no harm from me.”
“She’s been doing that a lot,” Adam told him. That he didn’t step
between his vulnerable pack member and the vampire was an
unsubtle message.
“She’s waking up,” Stefan said just before her eyes fluttered open.
And only after Mary Jo was clearly awaken did Stefan look at
Marsilia.
“Come to the chair, Soldier,” she told him.
He stared at her for so long that I wondered if he would do it. He
might love her, but he didn’t like her very much at the moment—and,
I hoped, didn’t trust her either.
But he patted Mary Jo’s knee and walked out to where Marsilia
waited for him.
“Wait,” she told him before he sat down. She looked at the stands
across from us, where the vampires and their food sat. “Do you want
me to question Estelle, first? Would that make you happier?”
I couldn’t tell who she was speaking to.
“Fine,” she said. “Bring Estelle here.”
A door I hadn’t noticed opened on the far side of the room and Lily,
the gifted pianist and quite insane vampire who never left the seethe
and Marsilia’s protection, came in carrying Estelle like a new groom
carried his bride over the threshold. Lily was even dressed in a frothy
white mass of lace that could have been a wedding dress to Estelle’s
dark suit. Though I’d never seen a bride with blood all over her face
and down her gown. If I were a vampire, I think I’d only wear black
or dark brown—to hide the stains.
Estelle hung limp in Lily’s arms, and her neck looked like a pack of
hyenas had been chewing on her.
“Lily,” Marsilia chided. “Haven’t I told you about playing with your
food?”
Lily’s sapphire eyes glittered with a hungry iridescence visible even
in the overly brightly lit room. “Sorry,” she said. She skipped a couple
of steps. “Sorry, ’Stel.” She smiled whitely at Stefan, then she
plopped Estelle’s limp form on the chair, like a doll. She moved
Estelle’s head so it wasn’t flopped to the side, then straightened her
skirt. “Is that good?”
“Fine. Now be a good girl and go sit next to Wulfe, please.”
Lilly had been in her thirties, I thought, when she was killed, but her
mind had stopped developing far earlier. She smiled brightly and
skipped over to Wulfe and bounced down to the seat beside him. He
patted her knee, and she put her head on his shoulder.
As with Bernard, Marsilia stuck Estelle’s hands on the thorns. The
limp vampire came to shrieking, screaming life as soon as her second
hand was pierced.
Marsilia allowed it for a minute, then said, “Stop,” in a voice that
fired like a .22. It popped but didn’t thunder.
Estelle froze midscream.
“Did you betray me?” Marsilia asked.
Estelle jerked. Shook her head frantically. “No. No. No. Never.”
Marsilia looked at Wulfe. He shook his head. “If you control her
enough to keep her on the chair, Mistress, she can’t answer with
truth.”
“And if I don’t, all she does is scream.” She looked into the bleachers.
“As I told you. You can try it yourself if you choose? No?” She pulled
Estelle’s hands off the chair. “Go sit by Wulfe, Estelle.”
A Hispanic man came to his feet on one of the seats behind me. He
had a tear tattooed just below one eye and he, like Wulfe, hopped
down to the floor via the seats, though without Wulfe’s grace. It was
more as if he fell slowly down the bleachers, landing on hands and
knees on the unforgiving floor.
“Estelle, Estelle,” he moaned, brushing by me. He was human, one of
her sheep, I thought.
Marsilia raised an eyebrow, and a vampire followed Estelle’s human
at three or four times his speed. He caught up to him before the man
had made it halfway across the floor. The vampire had the appearance
of a very elderly man. He looked as though he’d died of old age
before being made a vampire, though there was nothing old or shaky
in the hold he kept on the struggling man.
“What would you have me do, Mistress?” the old man said.
“I would have had you not allow him to interrupt us here,” Marsilia
said. I glanced at Warren, who frowned. She was lying then. I’d
thought so. This was part of the script. After a thoughtful moment
Marsilia said, “Kill him.”
There was a snap, and the man dropped to the ground—and every
vampire in the place who had been breathing stopped. Estelle fell to
the ground, four or five feet from Wulfe. I glanced away and
unexpectedly caught Marsilia staring at me. She wanted me dead; I
could see it in the hungry look she had. But she had more pressing
business just now
Marsilia gestured at the chair in invitation to Stefan. “Please, accept
my apologies for the delay.”
Stefan stared at her. If there was an emotion on his face, I couldn’t
read it.
He’d taken a step forward, and she stopped him once again. “No.
Wait. I have a better idea.”
She looked at me. “Mercedes Thompson. Come let us partake of your
truth. Witness for us the things you have seen and heard.”
I folded my arms, not in outright refusal—but I didn’t go waltzing
over either. This was Marsilia’s show, but I wouldn’t let her have the
upper hand completely. Warren’s hand closed over my shoulder—a
show of support, I thought. Or maybe he was trying to warn me.
“You will do as I say because you want me to stop hurting your
friends,” she purred. “The wolves are more worthy targets ... but there
is that delicious policeman—Tony, isn’t it? And the boy who works
for you. He has such a big family, doesn’t he? Children are so
fragile.” She looked at Estelle’s man, dead almost at her feet.
Stefan stared at her, then looked at me. And once I saw his eyes, I
knew the emotion he was trying to hold back ... rage.
“You sure?” I asked him.
He nodded. “Come.”
I wasn’t happy about doing it, but she was right. I wanted my friends
safe.
I sat on the chair and scooted forward until my arms wouldn’t be
stretched out trying to reach the sharp brass. I slammed both hands
down and tried not to wince as the thorns bit deep—or gasp as magic
pulsed in my ears.
“Yum,” said Wuife—and I nearly jerked my hands away again. Could
he taste me through the thorns, or was he just trying to harass me?
“I sent Stefan to you,” Marsilia said. “Will you tell our audience what
he looked like?”
I looked at Stefan, and he nodded. So I described the wizened thing
that had fallen to my floor as closely as I could remember it, working
to keep my voice impersonal rather than angry or ... anything else
inappropriate.
“Truth,” said Wulfe when I finished.
“Why was he in that state?” Marsilia asked.
Stefan nodded so I answered her. “Because he tried to save my life by
covering up my involvement in Andre’s ... death? Destruction? What
do you call it when a vampire is killed permanently?”
The skin on her face thinned until I could see the bones beneath. And
she was even more beautiful, more terrible in her rage. “Dead,” she
said.
“Truth,” said Wulfe. “Stefan tried to cover up your involvement in
Andre’s death.” He looked around. “I helped cover it up, too. It
seemed the thing to do at the time ... though I later repented and
confessed.”
“There are crossed bones on the door of your home,” Marsilia said.
“My shop,” I answered. “And yes.”
“Did you know,” she said, “that no vampire except Stefan can go into
your shop? It is your home as much as that ratty trailer in Finley is.”
Why had she told me that? Stefan was watching her, too.
“Tell our audience the why of the bones.”
“Betrayal,” I said. “Or so I am told. You asked me to kill one
monster, and I chose to kill two.”
“Truth,” said Wulfe.
“When did Stefan know you were a walker, Mercedes Thompson?”
“The first time I met him,” I told her. “Almost ten years ago.”
“Truth,” said Wulfe.
She looked toward the bleachers again and addressed someone there.
“Remember that.” She turned to stare at me, then glanced at Stefan as
she asked me, “Why did you kill Andre?”
“Because he knew how to build sorcerers-demon-possessed. He’d
done it once, and you and he planned on doing it again. People died
for his games—and more people would die for yours, both of yours.”
“Truth,” said Wulfe.
“What care we how many people die?” asked Marsilia, waving at the
dead man and speaking to everyone here. “They are short-lived, and
they are food.”
She’s meant it rhetorically, but I answered her anyway.
“They are many, and they could destroy your seethe in a day if they
knew it existed. It would take them a month to wipe all of you out of
existence in this country. And if you were creating monsters like that
thing Andre brought into existence, I would help them.” I leaned
forward as I spoke. My hands throbbed in time with my heartbeat, and
I found that the rhythm of my words followed the pain.
“Truth,” said Wulfe in a satisfied tone.
Marsilia put her mouth near my ear. “That was for my soldier,” she
murmured in tones that reached no farther than my ears. “Tell him
that.”
She lowered her mouth until it hovered over my neck, but I didn’t
flinch.
“I do think I would have liked you, Mercedes,” she said. “If you
weren’t what you are, and I wasn’t what I am. You are Stefan’s
sheep?”
“We exchanged blood twice,” I said.
“Truth,” said Wulfe, sounding amused.
“You belong to him.”
“You would think so,” I agreed.
She let out a huff of exasperation. “You make this simple thing
difficult.”
“You make it difficult. I understand what you are asking, though, and
the answer is yes.”
“Truth.”
“Why did Stefan make you his?”
I didn’t want to tell her. I didn’t want her to know I had any
connection to Blackwood whatsoever—though probably Adam had
already told her. So I attacked.
“Because you murdered his menagerie. The people he cared about,” I
said hotly.
“Truth,” Stefan ground out.
“Truth,” agreed Wulfe softly.
Marsilia, her face angled toward me, looked obscurely satisfied. “I
have what I need of you, Ms. Thompson. You may vacate the chair.”
I pulled my hands off the chair and tried not to wince—or relax—as
the uncomfortable pulse of magic left me. Before I could get up,
Stefan’s hand was under my arm, lifting me to my feet.
His back was to Marsilia, and all his attention seemed to be on me—
though I had the feeling that all of his being was focused on his
former Mistress. He took one of my hands in both of his and raised it
to his mouth, licking it clean with gentle thoroughness. If we hadn’t
been in public, I’d have told him what I thought of that. I thought he
caught a little of it in my face because the corners of his mouth turned
up.
Marsilia’s eyes flashed red.
“You overstep yourself.” It was Adam, but it didn’t sound like him.
I turned and saw him stride over the floor of the room without making
a noise. If Marsilia’s face had been frightening, it was nothing
compared to his.
Stefan, undeterred, had picked up my other hand and treated it the
same way—though he was a little more brisk about it. I didn’t jerk it
away because I wasn’t sure he’d let me—and the struggle would light
Adam’s fuse for sure.
“I heal her hands,” Stefan said, releasing me and stepping back. “As is
my privilege.”
Adam stopped next to me. He picked up my hands—which did look
better—and gave Stefan a short, sharp nod. He tucked my hand
around his upper arm, then returned with me to the wolves.
I could feel in the pounding of his heart, in the tightness of his arm,
that he was on the edge of losing it. So I dropped my head against his
arm to muffle my voice. Then I said, “That was all aimed at
Marsilia.”
“When we get home,” said Adam, not bothering to speak quietly,
“you will allow me to enlighten you about how something can
accomplish more than one purpose at the same time.”
Marsilia waited until we were seated with the rest of the wolves
before she continued her program for the evening.
“And now for you,” she said to Stefan. “I hope you have not
reconsidered your cooperation.”
In answer, Stefan sat in the thronelike chair, raised both hands over
the sharp thorns, and slammed them down with such force that I could
hear the chair groan from where I stood.
“What do you wish to know?” he asked.
“Your feeder told us that I killed your former menagerie,” she said.
“How do you know it to be true?”
He lifted his chin. “I felt each of them die, by your hand. One a day
until they were no more.”
“Truth,” agreed Wulfe in a tone I hadn’t heard from him before. It
made me look. He sat with Estelle collapsed at his feet, Lily leaning
against one side, and Bernard sitting stiffly on the other. Wulfe’s face
was somber and ... sad.
“You are no longer of this seethe.”
“I am no longer of this seethe,” Stefan agreed coolly.
“Truth,” said Wulfe.
“You were never mine, really,” she told him. “You had always your
free will.”
“Always,” he agreed.
“And you used that to hide Mercy from me. From justice.”
“I hid her from you because I judged her no risk to you or the seethe.”
“Truth,” murmured Wulfe.
“You hid her because you liked her.”
“Yes,” agreed Stefan. “And because there would be no justice in her
death. She had not killed one of us—and would not, except that you
set that task to her.” For the first time since he sat in the chair, he
looked directly at her. “You asked her to kill the monster you could
not find—and she did it. Twice.”
“Truth.”
“She killed Andre!” Marsilia’s voice rose to a roar, and power echoed
in it and through the room we were in. The lights dimmed a little, then
regained their former wattage.
Stefan smiled sourly at her. “Because there was no choice. We left her
no choice—you, I, and Andre.”
“Truth.”
“You chose her over me,” Marsilia said, and her power lit the air with
strangeness. I took a step closer to Adam and shivered.
“You knew she hunted Andre, knew she’d killed him—and you hid
what she did from me. You forced me to torture you and destroy your
power base. You must answer to me.” Her voice thundered, vibrating
the floor and rattling the walls. The suspended lights drifted back and
forth, making shadows play.
“Not anymore,” said Stefan. “I do not belong to you.”
“Truth,” snapped Wulfe, suddenly coming to his feet. “That is fair
truth—you felt it yourself.”
Across from us, high in the bleachers, a vampire stood up. He had soft
features, wide-spaced eyes, and an upturned nose that should have
made him look something other than vampire. Like Wulfe and
Estelle’s human, he strode down the seats. But there was no bounce to
his step or hesitation. His path might as well have been straight and
paved for all it impeded him. He landed on the floor and walked to
Wulfe.
He wore a tuxedo and a pair of dark-metal gauntlets. Hinged metal on
the top and chain link below. He flexed his fingers and blood dripped
from the gloves to the floor.
No one made any move to clean it up.
He turned, and in a light, breathy voice, he said, “Accepted. He is no
man of yours, Marsilia.”
I had no idea who he was, but Stefan did. He froze where he sat, all of
his being focused on the vampire in the bloody gauntlets. Stefan’s
face was blank, as if the whole world had tilted from its axis.
Marsilia smiled. “Tell me. Did Bernard approach you to betray me?”
“Yes,” Stefan said, without expression.
“Did Estelle do the same?”
He took a deep breath, blinked a couple of times, and relaxed in the
chair. “Bernard seemed to have the seethe’s best interest at heart,” he
said.
“Truth,” Wulfe said.
“But Estelle, when she asked me to join her against you, Estelle just
wanted power.”
“Truth.”
Estelle shrieked and tried to get to her feet, but she couldn’t move
away from Wulfe.
“And what did you tell them?” she asked.
“I told them I wouldn’t make a move against you.” Stefan sounded
utterly weary, but somehow his words carried over the noise Estelle
was making.
“Truth,” declared Wulfe.
Marsilia looked at the gauntlet-wearing vampire, who sighed and bent
to Estelle. He petted her hair a couple of times until she quieted. We
all heard the crack when her neck broke. He took his time separating
her head from her body. I looked away and swallowed hard.
“Bernard,” Marsilia said, “we believe it would be good if you return
to your maker until you learn the habit of loyalty.”
Bernard stood up. “It was all a trick,” he said, his voice incredulous.
“All a trick. You killed Stefan’s people—knowing he loved them.
You tortured him. All to catch Estelle and me in our little rebellion ...
a rebellion born from the heart of your own Andre.”
Marsilia said, “Yes. Don’t forget that I set up his little favorite,
Mercedes, to be the lever I needed to move the world. If she hadn’t
killed Andre, if he hadn’t helped her cover it up, then I could not have
sent him out from the seethe. Then I could not have used him to
witness against you and Estelle. Had you been of my making,
disposing of you would have been much easier and cost me less.”
Bernard looked at Stefan, who was sitting as if it would hurt to move,
his head slightly bent.
“Stefan, of all of us, was loyal to the death. So you tortured him,
killed his people, threw him out—because you knew that he’d refuse
us. That his loyalty was such that despite what you had done to him,
he’d still remain yours.”
“I counted on it,” she said. “By his refusal, your rebellion is robbed of
its legitimacy.” She looked at the man who’d killed Estelle. “You, of
course, had no idea that your children would behave so.”
He gave her a small smile, one predator to another, “I’m not on the
chair.” He pulled off the gauntlets and tossed them into Wulfe’s lap.
“Not even by such a slim connection.” His hands were bloodied, but I
couldn’t tell if it was from one wound or many. “I’ve heard your
truths, and can only hope you’ll find them as galling as I.”
“Come, Bernard,” he said. “It is time for us to leave.”
Bernard rose without protest, shock and dismay in every line of his
body. He followed his maker to the doorway, but turned back before
leaving the room entirely. “God save me,” he said looking at Marsilia,
“from such loyalty. You have ruined him for your whim. You are not
worthy of his gift—as I told him.”
“God won’t save any of us,” said Stefan in a low voice. “We are all of
us damned.”
He and Bernard stared at each other across the room. Then the
younger vampire bowed and followed his maker out the door. Stefan
pulled his hands free and stood up.
“Stefan—” said Marsilia, sweet-voiced. But before she finished the
last syllable, he was gone.
10
MARSILIA FROZE FOR A MOMENT, STARING AT THE PLACE
Stefan had been. Then she looked at me, a look of such malevolence I
had to work not to step back even though there was half of a very
large room between us.
She closed her eyes and brought her features back under control.
“Wulfe,” she asked, “do you have it?”
“I do, Mistress,” the vampire said. He stood up and drifted over to
her, pulling an envelope out of his back pocket.
Marsilia looked at it, bit her lip, then said in a low voice, “Give it to
her.”
Wulfe altered his path so he came more directly to us. He handed me
the envelope that was none the worse for the time it had spent in his
pocket. It was heavy paper, the kind that wedding invitations or
graduation announcements are engraved on. Stefan’s name was
gracefully lettered across the front. It was sealed with red wax that
smelled like vampire and blood.
“You will give this to Stefan,” Marsilia said. “Tell him there is
information here. Not apologies or excuses.”
I took the envelope and felt a strong desire to crumple it and drop it
on the floor.
“Bernard is right,” I said. “You used Stefan. Hurt him, broke him, in
order to play your little game. You don’t deserve him.”
Marsilia ignored me. “Hauptman,” she said with calm courtesy, “I
thank you for your warning about Blackwood. In return for this, I
accede to your truce. The signed documents will be sent to your
house.”
She took a deep breath and turned from Adam to me. “It is the
judgement of this night that the action you took against us ... killing
Andre ... has not resulted in damage to the seethe. That you had no
intention of moving against the seethe was borne out by your truthtested
testimony.” She sucked in a breath. “It is my judgement that the
seethe suffered no harm, and you are not an ally turned traitor. No
further punishment will be taken against you—and the crossed bones
will be removed ...” She glanced down at her wrist.
“I can do it tonight,” said Wulfe in gentle tones.
She nodded. “Removed before dawn.” She hesitated, then said in a
quiet voice, as if the words were pulled from her throat, “This is for
Stefan. If it were up to me, your blood and bones would nourish my
garden, walker. Take care not to push me again.”
She turned on her heel and left out the same door Bernard had taken.
Wulfe looked at Adam. “Allow me to escort you out of the seethe so
that no harm comes to you.”
Adam lowered his eyelids. “Are you implying I cannot protect my
own?”
Wulfe dropped his eyes and bowed low. “But of course not. Merely
suggesting that my presence might save you the trouble. And save us
the mess to clean up afterward.”
“Fine.”
Adam led the way. I let the other wolves pass me and tried not to be
hurt when Mary Jo and Aurielle deliberately avoided looking at me. I
didn’t know what cause ... or rather which cause was bothering
them—coyote, vampire prey, or causing Marsilia to target the pack. It
didn’t matter, really—there was nothing I could do about any of it.
Warren, Samuel, and Darryl waited until the others were gone, then
Warren gave me a little smile and went ahead. Darryl paused, and I
looked at him. I outranked him, which put me at the end of the pack,
to protect us from attack from behind. Then he smiled, a warm
expression I couldn’t say I’d ever seen on his face, not directed at me
anyway. And he went ahead.
“Oh no, you don’t,” said Samuel, amused. “I’m outside the pack, and
so I can tag along with you.”
“I really need a good night’s sleep,” I told him as I fell into step
beside him.
“I guess that’s what comes from fraternizing with vampires.” He put a
hand over my shoulder. A cold hand.
I’d been so busy sweating with fear I’d become accustomed to both
the feeling and the smell. I hadn’t noticed that Samuel was scared,
too.
The last time he’d come here, Lily had taken him for a snack—and
Marsilia had done worse, robbing him of his will until he was hers.
For me it would have been terrifying. I couldn’t imagine what it
would feel like to a werewolf who lived only because he controlled
his wolf. All the time.
I reached up and put my hand over his. “Let’s get out of here,” I said.
And all the way through the room, I was conscious of the two still
bodies on the floor, and of the vampires and their menageries, who sat
silently on the bleachers, obedient to orders I couldn’t hear. They
watched us leave with their predatory eyes, and I felt them on my
back all the way to the door.
Just like the ghost in the bathroom at Amber’s house.
I SAT SHOTGUN IN THE SUBURBAN ADAM HAD DRIVEN
over. I didn’t know if it was a rental or a new vehicle—which is what
it smelled like. Paul, Darryl, and Aurielle filled the first backseat.
Samuel drove his own car, a nifty new Mercedes in bing cherry red.
Mary Jo, who had been heading toward Adam’s vehicle until she saw
me, abruptly changed directions and got into Warren’s old truck.
Alec, trailing her around like a lost puppy, followed.
“And I thought Bran could be Byzantine,” I said finally, trying to
relax in the safety of the leather upholstery as Adam drove through
the gates.
“I didn’t catch it all,” said Darryl. He must have been tired because
his voice was even deeper than usual, buzzing my ears so I had to
listen closely to catch all of his words. “For some reason she had to
convince Stefan that he was out of the seethe. Then, when her traitors
approached him, he had to refuse their offers before he could witness
that they’d made them?”
“That’s what it sounded like to me,” said Adam. “And only with his
witness and their maker’s consent could she deal with her traitors.”
“Makes sense,” offered Paul almost shyly. “The way the seethe
works, if he belonged to her—his witness is hers. If those two were
imposed on her, she couldn’t have them killed at her word. She’d
need outside verification.”
I wondered if I’d been set up. I thought of Wulfe’s oh-so-convenient
aid when I’d killed Andre. He’d known I was looking for Andre—I’d
stumbled upon his resting place before I found Andre’s. I’d thought
he kept it from the Mistress for his own reasons ... but maybe he
hadn’t. Maybe Marsilia had planned it.
My head hurt.
“Maybe we were suspecting the wrong vampire of trying to take over
Marsilia’s seethe,” Adam said.
I thought about the vampire who had been Bernard’s maker and had
stood to watch this ... trial.
I didn’t want to be sympathetic; I wanted to hate Marsilia cleanly for
what she had done to Stefan. But I’d become passing familiar with
evil and all its shades, and that vampire, Bernard’s maker, set off
every alarm that I had. Not that all vampires weren’t evil ... I wished
suddenly that I could say except for Stefan. But I couldn’t. I’d met his
menagerie, the ones Marsilia had killed—and I knew that for most of
them, except for the very few who became vampire, Stefan would be
their death. Still, the other vampire had hit pretty high on my coyote’s
“get me out of here” scale. There had been something in his face ...
“Makes me glad I’m a werewolf,” said Darryl. “All I have to worry
about is when Warren will lose his self-control and challenge me.”
“Warren’s self-control is very good,” said Adam. “I wouldn’t wait
dinner on his losing it.”
“Better Warren as second than a coyote in the pack,” said Aurielle
tightly.
The atmosphere in the car changed.
Adam’s voice was soft, “Do you think so?”
“‘Rielle,” Darryl warned.
“I think so.” Her voice brooked no argument. She was a high school
teacher, Darryl’s mate, which made her ... not precisely third in the
pack—that was Warren. But second and a half, just below Darryl. If
she had been a man, I didn’t think she would have ranked much
lower.
“Unlike vampires, wolves tend to be straightforward critters,” I
murmured, trying not to feel hurt. Rejection, for a coyote raised by
wolves, was nothing new. I’d spent most of my adulthood running
from it.
I wouldn’t have thought that exhaustion and hurt was a recipe for
epiphany, but there it was. I’d left my mother and Portland before she
could tell me to go. I’d lived alone, stood on my own two feet,
because I didn’t want to learn to lean on anyone else.
I’d seen my resistance to Adam as a fight for survival, for the right to
control my own actions instead of a life spent following orders ...
because I wanted to obey. The duty that Stefan clung to with awful
stubbornness was the life I’d rejected.
What I hadn’t seen was that I had been unwilling to put myself in a
place where I could be rejected again. My mother had given me to
Bran when I was a baby. A gift he returned when I became ...
inconvenient. At sixteen, I’d moved back in with my mother, who
was married to a man I’d never met and had two daughters who
hadn’t known of my existence until Bran had called my mother to tell
her he was sending me home. They had been all that was loving and
gracious—but I was a hard person to lie to.
“Mercy?”
“Just a minute,” I told Adam, “I’m in the middle of a revelation.”
No wonder I hadn’t just rolled over at Adam’s feet like any sensible
person would when courted by a sexy, lovable, reliable man who
loved me. If Adam ever rejected me ... I felt a low growl rise in my
throat.
“You heard her,” said Darryl, amused. “We’ll have to wait for her
revelation. We have a prophet for our Alpha’s mate.”
I waved at him irritably. Then looked up at Adam, whose eyes were,
quite properly, on the road.
“Do you love me?” I asked him, pulse pounding in my ears.
He gave me a curious look. He was wolf, he knew intensity when he
heard it. “Yes. Absolutely.”
“You’d better,” I told him, “or you’ll regret it.”
I looked over my shoulder at Aurielle, holding the full force of my
will close to me. Adam was mine.
Mine.
And I would take up all the burdens he could give me, even as he did
the same with mine. It would be an equal sharing. That meant he
protected me from the vampires ... and I protected him from what
problems I could.
I stared at Aurielle, met the predator in her eyes with the one in mine.
And after only a few minutes, she dropped her eyes. “Suck it up and
deal with it,” I told her, and I put my head on Adam’s shoulder and
fell asleep.
IT WAS, SADLY NOT VERY LONG BEFORE ADAM STOPPED
the car. I stayed where I was, half-awake, while Darryl, Aurielle, and
Paul got out of the car. We stayed where we were until I heard
Darryl’s Subaru fire up, and Adam started for home.
“Mercy?”
“Mmm.”
“I’d like to take you home with me.”
I sat up, rubbed my eyes, and sighed. “Once I go horizontal, I’m
going to be out like a light,” I told him. “It’s been days”—I tried to
remember, but I was too tired—“several at least since I had a good
night’s sleep.” The sun, I noticed, was brightening in the sky.
“That’s all right,” he said. “I’d just ...”
“Yeah, me too.” But I shivered a little. It was all very well and good
to get hot and heavy over the phone, but this was real. I stayed awake
all the way to his house.
AN ALPHA’S HOME IS SELDOM EMPTY—AND WITH THE
recent troubles, Adam was keeping a guard there, too. When we came
in, we were greeted by Ben, who gave us an offhand salute and trotted
back downstairs, where there were a number of guest bedrooms.
Adam escorted me up the stairs with a hand on the small of my back.
I was sick-to-my-stomach nervous and found myself taking in deep
breaths to remind myself that this was Adam ... and all we were going
to do was sleep.
Repairs were in progress on the hall bathroom. The door was back up,
and mostly the hall wall next to it just needed taping, texturing, and
painting. But the white carpet at the top of the stairs was still stained
with brown spots of old blood—mine. I’d forgotten about that. Should
I offer to have his carpet cleaned? Could blood be cleaned out of a
white carpet? And what kind of stupid person puts white carpet in a
house frequented by werewolves?
Bolstered by indignation, I took a step into his bedroom and froze. He
glanced at my face and pulled a T-shirt out of a drawer and threw it at
me. “Why don’t you use the bathroom first,” he said. “There’s a spare
toothbrush in the top right-hand drawer.”
The bathroom felt safer. I folded my dirty clothes and left them in a
small pile on the floor before pulling on his T-shirt. He wasn’t much
taller than me, but his shoulders were broad, and the sleeves hung
down past my elbows. I washed my face around the stitches in my
chin, brushed my teeth, then just stood there for a few minutes,
gathering courage.
When I opened the door, Adam brushed by and closed the bathroom
behind him—pushing me gently into his room to face the bed with its
turned-down comforter.
There should be only so much terror you can feel in a night. I should
have met my limit and then some. And the fear of something that
wasn’t going to happen—Adam would never hurt me—shouldn’t
have been enough to register.
Still, it took every bit of courage I had to crawl into his bed. Once I
was there, though, in one of those odd little psychological twists
everyone has, the scent of him in the sheets made me feel better. My
stomach settled down. I yawned a few times and fell asleep to the
sound of Adam’s electric razor.
I awoke surrounded by Adam, his scent, his warmth, his breath. I
waited for the panic attack that didn’t come. Then I relaxed, soaking it
up. By the light sneaking in around the heavy blinds, it was late
afternoon. I could hear people moving around the house. His
sprinklers were on, valiant defenders of his lawn in the never-ending
battle against the sun.
Outside, it was probably in the seventies, but his house—like mine
since Samuel moved in—had a chill edge to the air that made the
warmth surrounding me that much better. Werewolves don’t like the
heat.
Adam was awake, too.
“So,” I said ... half-embarrassed, half-aroused, and, just to round
things out, half-scared, too. “Are you up for a trial run?”
“A trial run?” he asked, his voice all rumbly with sleep. The sound of
it helped a lot with the halves I was feeling—virtually eliminating
embarrassed, reducing scared, and pushing aroused up a few notches.
“Well, yes.” I couldn’t see his face, but I didn’t need to. I could feel
his willingness to participate in my trial pressed against my backside.
“Thing is, I’ve had different things happen with these stupid panic
attacks. If I stop breathing, you could just ignore it. Eventually I start
breathing again, or I pass out. But if I throw up ...” I let him draw his
own conclusions.
“Quite a mood breaker,” he observed, his face on the back of my neck
as he wrapped an arm more fully around me on top of the covers.
I tapped his arm with my finger, and warned, only half in jest, “Don’t
laugh at me.”
“I wouldn’t dream of it. I’ve heard stories about what happens to
people who laugh at you. I like my coffee without salt, please. Tell
you what,” he said, his voice dropping even lower. “Why don’t we
just play for a bit—and see how far it gets? I promise not to be”—
amusement fought with other things in his voice—“dismayed if you
throw up.”
And then he slid down in the bed.
When I flinched, he stopped and asked me about it. I found I couldn’t
say anything. There are things you don’t tell someone you’re still
trying to impress. There are other things you don’t want to remember
either. Panic tightened my throat.
“Shh,” he said. “Shh.” And he kissed me there, where he’d caused me
to shy. It was a gentle, caring touch—almost passionless, and moved
on to somewhere less ... tainted.
But he was a good hunter. Adam isn’t patient by nature, but his
training was very thorough. He worked his way back to the first bad
spot and tried again.
I still flinched ... but I told him a little. And like the wolf he was, he
laved the wound in my soul, bandaging it with his care—and moved
on to the next. He explored thoroughly, found each mental wound—
and a few I didn’t know I had—and replaced them with other ... better
things. And when passion began to grow too wild, too fast ...
“So,” he murmured, “are you ticklish here?”
Yep. Who’d have known it? I looked at my inner elbow as if I’d never
seen it before.
He laughed, bounced over a little, and made a raspberry noise with his
mouth on my belly. My knees jerked up in reflex, and I bopped him
on the head with my elbow.
“Are you all right?” I pulled away from him and sat up—all desire to
laugh gone. Trust me to clobber Adam while we’re making out.
Stupid, clumsy idiot, me.
He took one look at my face, put both arms over his head, and rolled
on his back, moaning in agony.
“Hey,” I said. And when he didn’t stop, I poked him in the side—I
knew some of his ticklish spots, too. “Stop that. I didn’t hit you that
hard.” He’d been taking lessons from Samuel.
He opened one eye. “How would you know?”
“You have a hard head,” I informed him. “If I didn’t damage my
elbow, I didn’t hurt your head.”
“Come here,” he said opening his arms wide, eyes glittering with
laughter ... and heat.
I crawled over on top of him. We both closed our eyes for a bit while
I made myself comfortable. He ran his hands over my back.
“I love this,” he told me, a little breathless and yellow-eyed.
“Love what?” I turned my head and put my ear on his chest so I could
hear the pounding of his heart.
“Touching you ...” He deliberately ran a hand over my bare butt. “Do
you know how long I’ve wanted to do this?”
He dug in with his fingers. Tension from the night before had left me
tight, and it felt good. I went limp, and if I could have purred, I would
have.
“Someone looking at us might think we’re asleep,” I told him.
“You think so? Only if they don’t notice my pulse rate ... or yours.”
He hit just the right spot, and I moaned.
“Just like Medea,” he murmured. “All I have to do is put my hands on
you. You can be spitting mad ... and then you lean against me and go
all soft and still.” He put his mouth against my ear. “That’s how I
know you want me as much as I want you.” His arms were tight
around me, and I knew that I wasn’t the only one with wounds.
“I don’t purr as well as Medea,” I told him.
“Are you sure about that?”
And he proceeded to show me what he meant. If I didn’t ever reach
Medea’s volume, I came close. By the time he got down to business,
there was no room in the inferno he’d made of me for fear or memory.
There was only Adam.
THE NEXT TIME I WOKE UP I WAS SMILING I WAS ALONE in
the bed, but that didn’t matter because I could hear Adam
downstairs—he was talking to Jesse. Either they were making
lunch—I checked the window shades—dinner, or someone was
getting chopped into small bits.
Soon I’d start worrying. But for now ... the vampires weren’t going to
kill everyone I knew. They weren’t even going to kill me. The sun
was up. And matters between Adam and me were right and tight.
Mostly. We had a lot of things to talk about. For instance, did he want
me to move in? For a night, it was wonderful. But his house wasn’t
exactly private; any of his pack could be here on any given day.
I liked my home, scruffy as it was. I liked having my own territory.
And ... what about Samuel? I frowned. He was still ... not whole, and
for some reason bunking at my house was helping. With me he could
have a pack, but not be Alpha and responsible for everyone. I wasn’t
sure it would work out so well for him if I moved in with Adam—and
I knew it wouldn’t work out if he moved over here, too.
See, worrying already.
I took a deep breath and let it go. Tomorrow I would worry about
Samuel, about Stefan, and about Amber, whose ghost was the least of
her problems. I was just going to enjoy today. For the whole day I
was going to be happy and carefree.
I slid out of bed and realized I was stark naked. Which was only to be
expected. But there was no sign of underwear on the floor or in the
bedding. I was head and shoulders under the bed when Adam said,
from the doorway, “I spy with my little eye something that begins
with the letter A.”
“I’ll spy your little eye and squish it,” I threatened, but, since the bed
hid me, there was a grin on my face. I’m not body shy—not growing
up among werewolves. I can fake it so people don’t get the wrong
idea ... but with Adam it would be the right one. I wiggled the
something in question, and he patted it. “I’ve been smelling whatever
you’ve been cooking”—something with lemon and chicken—“it’s
making me hungry. But I can’t find my underwear.”
“You could go without,” he suggested, sitting on the bed just to the
right of me.
“Hah,” I said. “Not on your life, buster. Jesse and who knows who
else are down there. I’m not running around without underwear.”
“Who would know?” he asked. “I would know,” I told him, pulling
my head out from under the bed only to see that he had my bright blue
panties dangling from a finger.
“They were under the pillow,” he said with an innocent smile.
I snatched them and put them on. Then I hopped up and went to the
bathroom, where the rest of my clothes were. I dressed, took a step
toward the bathroom, and had a flashback.
I’d been here, unworthy, soiled ... stained. I couldn’t face them,
couldn’t look into their faces because they all knew...
“Shh, shh,” Adam crooned in my ear. “That’s over. It’s over and done
with.”
He held me, sitting on the bathroom floor with me on his lap, while I
shook and the flashback faded.
When I could breathe normally again, I sat up with an attempt at
dignity. “Sorry,” I said.
I’d thought that last night would have taken care of the flashbacks, the
panic attacks—I was cured, right?
I reached up and grabbed a hand towel and wiped my wet face—and
found that it just kept getting wet. I’d been so sure everything would
be back to normal now.
“It takes longer than a week to get over something like that,” Adam
told me, as if he could read my mind. “But I can help, if you’ll let
me.”
I looked at him, and he ran a thumb under my eyes. “You’ll have to
open up, though, and let the pack in.”
He smiled, a sad smile. “You’ve been blocking pretty ferociously
since sometime on the trip back from Spokane. If I were to guess, I
expect it was when you let Stefan bite you.”
I had no idea what he was talking about, and I guessed it showed.
“Not on purpose?” he said.
Somehow, I’d slid off his lap and was leaning against the opposite
wall. “Not that I know.”
“You had a panic attack on the way home,” he told me.
I nodded and remembered the warmth of the pack that had pulled me
out of it. Remarkable, awesome—and buried under the rest of the
events of the past two nights.
His lids lowered. “That’s better ... a bit better.” He looked up from the
floor and focused on me, yellow highlights dancing in his irises. He
reached out and touched me just under my ear.
It was a light touch, just barely skin to skin. It should have been
casual.
He laughed a little, sounding just a bit giddy. “Just like Medea,
Mercy,” he said, dropping his hand and drawing a breath that sounded
just a little ragged. “Let me try this again.” He held out his hand.
When I put mine in it, he closed his eyes and ... I felt a trickle of life,
warmth, and health dribbling from his hand to mine. It felt like a hug
on a summer’s day, laughter, and sweet honey.
I spread out into it through him, sliding into something I just knew
were warm depths that would surround me with—
But the pack didn’t want me. And the minute the thought crossed my
mind, the trickle dried up—and Adam jerked his hand back with a
hiss of pain that brought me up to my knees. I reached out to touch
him, then pulled my hand back so I didn’t hurt him again.
“Adam?”
“Stubborn,” he said with an appraising look. “I got bits and pieces
from you, though. We don’t love you, so you won’t take anything
from us?” The question in his voice was self-addressed, as if he
weren’t quite sure of his analysis.
I sat back down on my heels, caught by the accuracy of his reading.
“Instincts drive the wolf ... coyote, too, I imagine,” he told me after a
moment. He looked relaxed, one knee up and the other stretched out
just to the side of me. “Truth is without flourishes or manners and
runs with a logic all its own. You can’t let the pack give without
giving in return, and if we don’t want your gift ...”
I didn’t say anything. I didn’t understand how the pack worked, but
the last part was right. After a bit, he said, “It’s inconvenient
sometimes to be a part of the pack. When the pack magic is in full
swing—like now with the moon close to her zenith—there’s no
hiding everything from each other all the time like we do as humans.
Some things, yes, but we can’t chose which ones stay safely secret.
Paul knows I’m still angry with him over his attack on Warren, and it
makes him cringe—which just makes me angrier because it’s not
remorse for trying to attack Warren when he was hurt but fear of my
anger.”
I stared at him.
“It’s not all bad,” he told me. “It’s knowing who they are, what’s
important to them, what makes them different. What strengths they
each contribute to the pack.”
He hesitated. “I’m not sure how much you’ll get. If I want to, at full
moon in wolf form, I can read everyone almost always—that’s part of
being Alpha. It allows me to use the individuals to build a pack. Most
of the pack get bits and pieces, mostly things that concern them or big
things.” He gave me a little smile. “I didn’t know that bringing you
into the pack would work at all, you know. I couldn’t have done it
with a human mate, but you are always an unknown.” He looked at
me intently. “You knew Mary Jo had been hurt.”
I shook my head. “No. I knew someone had been hurt—but I didn’t
know it was Mary Jo until I saw her.”
“Okay,” he said, encouraged by my answer. “It shouldn’t be bad for
you then. Unless you need them, or they need you, the pack will just
be ... a shield at your back, warmth in the storm. Our mate bond—
when it settles down—will probably add a little oddity to it.”
“What do you mean ‘when it settles down’?” I asked him.
He shrugged. “Hard to explain.” He gave me an amused look. “When
I was learning how to be a wolf, I asked my teacher what mating felt
like. He told me it was different for different couples—and being
Alpha adds a twist to it as well.”
“So you don’t know?” Because that wasn’t an answer—and Adam
didn’t evade questions. He answered or told you he wasn’t going to.
“I do now,” he said. “Our bond”—he made a gesture with his hand
indicating something in the small space in the bathroom that lay
between us—“feels to me like a bridge, like the suspension bridge
over the Columbia. It has foundations and the cables and all that it
needs to be a bridge, but it doesn’t span the river yet.” He looked at
my face and grinned. “I know it sounds stupid, but you asked.
Anyway, if all you felt when Mary Jo was dying was that someone
was hurt, that you caught the few who don’t welcome you as part of
our pack is my fault. You felt them through me. On your own, you
won’t even be aware of it unless certain conditions are met. Things
like proximity, how open you are to the pack, and if the moon is full.”
He grinned. “Or how grumpy you are with them.”
“So if I don’t feel it, it shouldn’t matter if they don’t want me?”
He gave me a neutral look. “Of course it matters—but it won’t be
shoved down your throat every minute of the day. Mostly, I expect
you’ll know the ones who don’t want a coyote in the pack. As Warren
knows the wolves who hate what he is more than what he does.”
Briefly, sorrow lit his eyes for Warren’s trials, but he kept speaking.
“Just as Darryl knows the wolves who resent being given orders by a
black man made uppity by a good education.” He smiled, just a little.
“You aren’t alone, most people are prejudiced about something. But
you know, after a while the edges wear down. You know who hated
Darryl the most when he joined us, way back when we were still in
New Mexico?”
I raised my eyebrows in inquiry.
“Aurielle. She thought he was an arrogant, self-important snob.”
“Which he is,” I observed. “But he’s also smart, quick, and given to
small kindnesses when no one is watching.”
“So,” he nodded. “We are none of us perfect, and as pack, we learn to
take these imperfections and make them only a small part of who we
are. Let us bring you truly into our shelter, Mercedes. And the wolves
who resent you will deal with it as you will deal with the ones you
don’t like, for whatever reason. I think, with the healing you have
already done on your own, the pack can help stop your panic attacks.”
“Ben’s rude,” I said, considering it.
“See, you already know most of us,” Adam said. “And Ben adores
you. He doesn’t quite know how to deal with it yet. He’s not used to
liking anyone ... and liking a woman ...”
“Ish,” I said, deadpan.
“Let’s try again,” he suggested, and put out his hand.
This time when I touched him, all I felt was skin and calluses, no
warmth, no magic.
He tilted his head and evaluated me sternly. “It’s hard to argue with
instinct, even with reason and logic, isn’t it? May I knock?”
“What?”
“May I see if I can touch you first? Maybe that’ll allow you to open to
the pack.”
It sounded harmless enough. Warily, I nodded ... and I felt him, felt
his spirit or something, touch me. It wasn’t like when I’d called
Stefan. That had been as intimate as talking was—not very much.
Adam’s touch reminded me more of the presence I felt sometimes in
church—but this was unmistakably Adam and not God.
And because it was Adam, I let him in, accepting him into my secret
heart. Something settled into place with a rightness that rang in my
soul. Then the floodgates opened.
THE NEXT TIME I WAS CONSCIOUS OF ANYTHING REAL, I
was back in Adam’s lap but on his bedroom floor instead of in the
bathroom. A number of the pack surrounded us and stood with their
hands linked. My head hurt like the one and only time I’d gotten truly
drunk, only much worse.
“We’re going to have to work on your filtering skills, Mercy,” said
Adam, his voice sounding a little rough.
As if that was a signal, the pack broke apart and became individuals
again—though I hadn’t been aware they were anything else until it
was gone. Something stopped, and my head didn’t hurt so much.
Uncomfortable at being on the floor when everyone else was on their
feet, I rolled forward and tried to use my hands to get leverage so I
could stand.
“Not so fast,” Samuel murmured. He hadn’t been one of the circle, I’d
have noticed him, but he pushed his way through to the front of the
line. He gave me a hand and pulled until I was on my feet.
“I’m sorry,” I told Adam, knowing something bad had happened, but
I couldn’t quite focus on what it had been.
“Nothing to be sorry for, Mercy,” Samuel assured me with a little
edge to his voice. “Adam is old enough to know better than to draw
his mate into the pack at the same time as he seals your mate bond.
Sort of like someone teaching a baby to swim in the ocean. During a
tsunami.”
Adam hadn’t gotten up when I did, and when I looked at him, his face
was grayish underneath his tan. He had his eyes closed, and he was
sitting as if moving would be very painful. “Not your fault, Mercy. I
asked you to open up to me.”
“What happened?” I asked him.
Adam opened his eyes, and they were as yellow as I’d ever seen them.
“Full-throttle overload,” he said. “Someone probably should call
Darryl and Warren and make sure they’re all right. They stepped in
without notice and helped tuck you back into your own skin.”
“I don’t remember,” I said warily.
“Good,” said Samuel. “Fortunately for us all, the mind has a way of
protecting itself.”
“You went from fully closed to fully open,” Adam said. “And when
you opened yourself up to me, the mate bond settled in, too. Before I
realized what happened you ...” He waved his hands. “Sort of spread
out through the pack bonds.”
“Like Napoleon trying to take over Russia,” said Samuel “There just
wasn’t enough of you to go around.”
I remembered a bit then. I’d been swimming, drowning in memories
and thoughts that weren’t mine. They’d flowed over me, around me,
and through me like a river of ice—stripping me raw as the shards
passed by. It had been cold and dark; I couldn’t breathe. I’d heard
Adam calling my name ...
“Aurielle answered,” reported Ben from the hallway. “She says
Darryl is fine. Warren’s not picking up, so I called his boy toy’s cell.
Boy will check up and call me back.”
“I bet you didn’t call him a boy toy to his face,” I said.
“You can effing believe I did,” answered Ben with injured dignity.
“You should have heard what he called me.”
Kyle, Warren’s human boyfriend, who in his day job was a barracuda
divorce lawyer, had a tongue that could be as razor-sharp as his mind.
I’d bet money on the outcome of any verbal skirmish between Kyle
and Ben, and it wouldn’t be on Ben.
“Is Dad all right?” asked Jesse. The wolves moved aside almost
sheepishly to let her through—and I realized they must have kept her
away while the matter was still in doubt. Judging by Adam’s eyes, he
held on to control by a gnat’s hair—so keeping his vulnerable human
daughter away had been a good idea. But I knew Jesse—I wouldn’t
have wanted to have been the one keeping her back.
Adam got hastily to his feet and almost didn’t lean on Mary Jo—
who’d put her hand out when he swayed.
“I’m just fine,” he told his daughter, and gave her a quick hug.
“Jesse’s the one who called Samuel,” Mary Jo told him. “We didn’t
even think of it. He told us what to do.”
“Jesse’s the bomb,” I said with conviction. She gave me a shaky grin.
“The trick,” Samuel said to me, “is to join with the pack and with
Adam—without losing yourself in them. It’s instinctive for the
werewolves, but I expect you’re going to have to work on it.”
IN THE END, I WENT HOME FOR DINNER, SLIPPING OUT
ALMOST unnoticed in the gathering that followed our close call. I
needed some time alone. Adam saw me leave, but made no move to
stop me—he knew I’d be back.
There was a bowl of tuna fish, pickles, and mayo in the fridge, so I
made a sandwich and fed what was left to the cat. As she ate with
delicate haste, I called Kyle’s cell phone.
“Uhmm?”
The sound was so relaxed, I pulled the phone away from my ears to
make sure it was Kyle’s phone I’d gotten. But there it was on the little
screen-KYLE’s CELL.
“Kyle? I was calling to see how Warren was.”
“Sorry, Mercy,” Kyle laughed, and I heard water splash. “We’re in
the hot tub. He’s fine. How are you? Ben said you were all right.”
“Fine. Warren?”
“Was passed out in the hallway, where he’d evidently been headed to
the kitchen with an empty glass.”
“Wasn’t empty when I was carrying it,” Warren’s warm Southerntouched
voice sounded amused.
“Ah,” said Kyle, “I didn’t notice much besides Warren. But he woke
up in a few minutes—”
“Cold water in your face does that,” observed Warren, amused.
“But he was stiff and sore—thus the hot tub.”
“Tell him I’m sorry,” I told Kyle.
“Nothin’ to be sorry for,” said Warren. “Pack magic can be tricky
sometimes. That’s what Adam, Darryl, and I are for, sweetheart. I
don’t feel you in the pack anymore. Problems?”
“Probably not,” I told him. “Samuel says I just burned out the circuit
for a while. It should come back on line soon.”
“Apparently it wasn’t necessary that I pass anything on,” said Kyle
dryly.
A car pulled into the driveway—a Mercedes, I thought. But I didn’t
recognize the individual car. “Give Warren a hug from me, instead,” I
said. “And enjoy the hot tub.”
I hung up before Kyle could say something outrageous in response
and went to the door to see who was there.
Corban, Amber’s husband was just coming up the steps. He looked
disconcerted when I opened the door before he knocked. He also
looked upset, his tie askew, his cheeks unshaven.
“Corban?” I said. I couldn’t imagine why he was here when a phone
was so much easier. “What’s wrong?”
He recovered from his momentary hesitation and all but hopped up
the last step. He put out a hand, and I noticed he was wearing leather
driving gloves—and holding something odd-looking. That’s all I had
time to notice before he hit me with the Taser.
Tasers are becoming commonplace among police departments,
though I’d never actually seen one in the flesh before. Somewhere on
YouTube there is a cameraphone video showing what happened to a
student who broke some rule or other in a university library. He was
Tasered, then Tasered again because he wouldn’t get up when they
told him to.
It hurt. It hurt like ... I didn’t know what. I dropped to the ground and
lay there frozen while Corban frisked me. He went through my
pockets, dropping my cell phone to the porch. He grabbed my
shoulders and knees and tried to jerk lift me.
I’m a lot heavier than I look—muscle will do that—and he was no
werewolf, just a desperate man whispering, “I’m sorry. I’m sorry.”
I’d make sure he was sorry, I thought through the haze of pain. “I
don’t get mad I get even” was more of a credo than a cliché to me.
The people I’d seen Tasered were only knocked out of commission
for a few seconds. Even the kid in the library had been able to make
noise. I was absolutely helpless, and I didn’t know why.
I tried touching the pack or Adam for help. I found where the
connection should have been, but the Taser had nothing on the pain
when I tried to force contact. My head hurt so badly it felt like my
ears should be bleeding.
It was still daylight, so calling Stefan wasn’t going to be much help.
The second time, he got me up and took me to his car. His trunk
popped with a beep, and he dumped me in it. My head bounced off
the floor a couple of times. When I got out of this, Amber was going
to be a widow.
Scrabbling fingers pulled my hands together behind my back, and I
recognized the signature sound of a zip tie. He used another on my
ankles. Prying my mouth open, he stuffed it with a sock that tasted of
fabric softener and smelled faintly of Amber, then he wrapped what
felt like an Ace bandage around that.
“It’s Chad,” he told me, eyes wild. “He has Chad.”
I caught a glimpse of the fresh bite mark in his neck just before he
shut the trunk.
11
IT MUST HAVE BEEN AT LEAST FIFTEEN MINUTES BEFORE
the effects wore off, and I began to function again. The first
conclusion I came to was that whatever he’d hit me with had been no
normal Taser. No way in Hell. Ill and shaking, I huddled in the
vibrating trunk and tried to come up with a plan.
I couldn’t shift yet, but before we reached Spokane I’d be able to.
And the zip ties weren’t tight enough to hold the coyote. The car was
newer, and I could see the tab that would release the trunk. So I
wasn’t trapped.
The realization did a lot to stop my panic. No matter what, I wouldn’t
have to face Blackwood.
I relaxed into the floor of the trunk and tried to figure out why the
vampire wanted me badly enough to ruin his lawyer to get me. It
might be that he didn’t value Corban—but I’d gotten the feeling that
their association was of long standing. Was he trying to take over the
Tri-Cities as well as Spokane? Take me down and hold me hostage to
force the wolves to act against Marsilia?
It had seemed like a possibility ... had it been just yesterday? But with
the warfare between wolf and vampire at an end in the Tri-Cities,
kidnapping me to influence Adam seemed like a stupid move to make
just now. And a vampire who was stupid didn’t successfully hold a
city against all comers. There was a chance, just barely, that he hadn’t
heard what happened. It was that chance that meant I couldn’t dismiss
the theory outright.
And Marsilia was down three of her most powerful vampires. If he
wanted to move against her, now was the time to strike at her.
Kidnapping me wasn’t a strike—it was, at best, an end run. Especially
now that Marsilia had declared a truce with the wolves. Kidnapping
me, I judged, would do nothing except send Adam to Marsilia with an
offer of alliance.
See? It was stupid to take me—if his purpose was to take over
Marsilia’s territory.
Since Blackwood couldn’t be that dumb, and I found myself
indisputably lying in Corban’s trunk, I was inclined to think we had
been wrong about Blackwood’s intentions.
So what did he want with me?
It could be as simple as pride. He’d claimed me as food—maybe as he
claimed anyone who came to Amber’s house. Then Stefan came along
and took me from him.
The theory had the benefit of conforming to the KISS principle—
Keep It Simple, Stupid. It meant that Blackwood didn’t have anything
to do with Chad’s ghost. It supposed that it was sheer dumb bad luck
that I had gone blithely into his hunting ground when I went to
Amber’s to look for a ghost.
Vampires are arrogant and territorial. It was not only possible but
probable that having fed from me, he would believe I belonged to
him. If he was possessive enough—and his holding the city for
himself presupposed that Blackwood was very possessive—it was
entirely reasonable that he would send a minion to fetch me.
It was a neat, simple solution, and it didn’t depend upon my being
anything special. Ego, Bran liked to say, got in the way of truth more
often than anything else.
Trouble was, it still didn’t quite fit.
Being alone in the trunk with nothing better to do gave me time to
analyze the whole thing. From the beginning, Amber’s first approach
had bothered me. Upon reflection, it struck me as even more wrong.
The Amber with whom I’d had a water fight, who gave dinner parties
for her husband’s clients, would be neither so thoughtless or gauche
as to approach me to help her with a ghost because she’d read about
my rape—the rape of a near stranger, really, after all these years—in
the newspaper.
I hadn’t seen her in a long time. But, in retrospect, there had been an
awkwardness in her manner that was unlike either the woman she’d
been or the one she’d grown to be. It might have been explained by
the odd situation, but I thought it more probable that she’d been sent.
Which left the question, why did Blackwood want me?
What could he have known about me before he required me to travel
to Amber’s?
The newspapers announced that I was dating a werewolf. Amber
knew I saw ghosts. I sucked in a deep breath—she also knew I’d been
raised with a foster family in Montana until I was sixteen. It wasn’t
something I’d kept hidden—just the part about my foster family being
werewolves, except that time when I was drunk.
But among the werewolves, the knowledge of the walker, the coyote
shapeshifter, who’d been raised by Bran, was well-known. So say that
he didn’t know anything about me until the newspaper articles. Say
Amber looked at the newspaper, and said, “Goodness—I know her. I
wonder if she might not be useful helping us deal with our ghost. She
said she could see ghosts.”
Blackwood said to himself, “Hmm. A girl whose boyfriend is the
Alpha of the Tri-Cities. A girl with an affinity for ghosts.” And being
much older than me, he might have known more about walkers than I
did. So he put two and two together and got, “Hey, I wonder if she
might not be that walker who was raised by Bran a few years ago.” So
he asked Amber if I was from Montana. And she told him I was raised
by a foster family there.
Maybe he wanted something from a walker. Here I had an
uncomfortable moment remembering Stefan telling me about the
Master of Milan, who was addicted to the blood of werewolves. But
Stefan had taken blood from me and hadn’t seemed to be much
affected by it. Anyway, suppose Blackwood wanted a walker and so
he sent Amber to find me and persuade me to come to Spokane.
I didn’t like it as well as the KISS theory. But that was mostly
because it meant that he wouldn’t quit hunting me just because I’d
escaped from this car. It meant that he’d just keep coming until he got
what he wanted—or he was killed.
It fit what I knew. Walkers are rare. If there are other walkers around,
I’ve never met one. So if he figured out what I was, and he wanted
one, it would be logical for him to come after me. The question it left
me was, What did he want with a walker?
The tingling in my arms and legs had faded and left only a dogged
ache behind. It was time to escape ... and then I really thought about
what Corban had said: “He has Chad.”
Corban had kidnapped me because Blackwood had Chad. I wondered
what Blackwood would do if Corban came back, and I’d escaped him.
Maybe he’d just send him out again. But I remembered Marsilia’s
indifference when she’d ordered Estelle’s man killed ... when she’d
killed all of Stefan’s people. She was hurt that he was still angry with
her after he’d figured out what she had done. Maybe she had no
understanding of Stefan’s attachment to his people ... because humans
were food.
Maybe Blackwood would simply kill Chad.
I couldn’t take that chance.
Abruptly, the sharp edge of terror made itself at home in my innards
because I really was trapped. I couldn’t escape, not when it could
mean that Chad would die.
Dry-mouthed, I tried to sort out my tools. There was the fairy staff, of
course. It wasn’t there at the moment, but eventually it would come to
me. It was accounted by the fae to be a powerful artifact—if only
vampires were afraid of sheep.
I couldn’t find the pack or Adam. Samuel had said that the
connections would reset. He hadn’t given me a timeline—and I hadn’t
been anxious to repeat the experience, so I hadn’t asked. Adam said
that distance made the connection thinner.
I remembered that Samuel had once run all the way to Texas to
escape his father ... and it had worked. But Spokane was a lot closer
to the Tri-Cities than Texas was to Montana. So maybe if I stalled
Blackwood long enough, I could call the whole pack in to save me—
again.
After dark, and it would soon be after dark, there was Stefan. I could
call to him, and he’d come to me, just as he had when Marsilia had
asked me to do it—but I’d have to do it before Blackwood forced me
to exchange blood with him again. I assumed that what had worked to
break Blackwood’s hold would work in the reverse.
And, as with calling in the pack, I would only be calling him in to die.
If he didn’t judge himself to be a match for Blackwood—and he
hadn’t—I could only accept his opinion. He knew more about
Blackwood than I did.
If I left, I left a boy I liked to die at the hands of a monster. If I stayed
... I would be putting myself in the hands of a monster. The Monster.
Maybe he didn’t intend to kill me. I could make myself believe that
easily. Less easy to dismiss was the already demonstrated desire of
his to make me his puppet.
I could always leave. I shifted and told myself that it was because I
didn’t want to face Blackwood while I was tied up and helpless. As
coyote I wiggled out of the bonds and gag, then I shifted back, got
dressed, and fingered the release tab on the trunk’s lock.
So I rode in the trunk of Corban’s car all the way to Spokane. When
the car slowed and left the smooth growl of the interstate for the stop
and go of city traffic, I straightened my clothes. My fingers touched a
stick ... the silver-and-wood staff was tucked under my cheek. I
stroked it because it made me feel better.
“You’d better hide yourself, my pretty,” I murmured in a fake pirate
accent. “Or you’ll be put in his treasure room and never let see the
light of day.”
Something under my ear chimed, we took a hard corner, and I lost
track of where the staff was. I hoped it had listened to me and left. It
wouldn’t be much help against a vampire, and I didn’t want it to come
to harm while it was in my care.
“Now you’re talking to inanimate objects,” I said out loud. “And
believing they are listening to you. Get a grip, Mercy.”
The car slowed to a crawl, then stopped. I heard the clang of chain
and metal on pavement, then the car moved slowly forward. It
sounded like Blackwood’s gates were a little more upscale than
Marsilia’s. Did vampires worry about things like that?
I rolled up, crossed my legs, and bent over until my chin rested on my
heels. When Corban opened the trunk, I simply sat up. It must have
looked as though I’d been doing it all along. I hoped that it would
draw his attention away from the contents of the trunk, so he wouldn’t
notice the staff. If it was still in there at all.
“Blackwood has Chad?” I asked him.
His mouth opened, but no sound came out.
“Look,” I said, climbing out of the trunk with less grace than I’d
planned. Damned Taser or stun gun or whatever it had been. “We
don’t have much time. I need to know what the situation is. You said
he had Chad. Exactly what did he tell you to do? Did he tell you why
he wanted me?”
“He has Chad,” Corban said. He closed his eyes, and his face flushed
red—like a weight lifter after a great effort. His voice came slowly. “I
get you when you are alone. No one around. Not your roommate. Not
your boyfriend. He would tell me when. I bring you back. My son
lives.”
“What does he want me for?” I asked, while still absorbing that
Blackwood had known when I was alone. I couldn’t believe someone
could have been following me—even if I hadn’t detected them, there
was still Adam and Samuel.
He shook his head. “Don’t know.” He reached out and grabbed my
wrist. “I have to take you now.”
“Fine,” I said, and my heart rate doubled. Even now, I thought with a
quick glance at the gate and the ten-foot stone walls. Even now I
could break away and run. But there was Chad.
“Mercy,” he said, forcing his voice. “One more thing. He wanted me
to tell you about Chad. So you would come.”
Just because you knew it was a trap didn’t mean you could stay out if
the bait was good enough. With a ragged sigh, I decided that one deaf
boy with the courage to face down a ghost should inspire me to a
tenth of his courage.
My course laid out, I took a good look at the geography of
Blackwood’s trap for me. It was dark, but I can see in the dark.
Blackwood’s house was smaller than Adam‘s, smaller even than
Amber’s, though it was meticulously crafted out of warm-colored
stone. The grounds encompassed maybe five or six acres of what had
once been a garden of roses. But it had been a few years since any
gardener had touched these.
He would have another house, I thought. One suitably grand with a
professional garden and lawn service that kept it beautiful. There he
would receive his business guests.
This place, with its neglected and overgrown gardens, was his home.
What did it tell me about him? Other than that he liked quality over
size and preferred privacy to beauty or order.
The walls surrounding the grounds were older than the house, made
of quarried stone and hand laid without mortar. The gate was wrought
iron and ornate. His house wasn’t really small—it just looked
undersized for the presentation it was given. Doubtless the house it
had replaced had been huge and better suited to the property, if not to
the vampire.
Corban paused in front of the door. “Run if you can,” he said. “It isn’t
right ... not your problem.”
“Blackwood has made it my problem,” I told him. I walked in front of
him and pushed open the door. “Hey, honey, I’m home,” I announced
in my best fifties-movie-starlet voice. Kyle, I felt, would have
approved of the voice, but not the wardrobe. My shirt was going on a
day and a half, the jeans ... I didn’t remember how long I’d been
wearing the jeans. Not much longer than the shirt.
The entryway was empty. But not for long.
“Mercedes Thompson, my dear,” said the vampire. “Welcome to my
home at long last.” He glanced at Corban. “You have served. Go rest,
my dear guest.”
Corban hesitated. “Chad?”
The vampire had been looking at me like I was something that
delighted him ... maybe he needed some breakfast. Corban’s
interruption caused a flash of irritation to sweep briefly across his
face. “Have you not completed the mission I gave you? What harm
could the boy come to if that is true? Now go rest.”
I let all thoughts of Corban drift from me. His fate, his son’s fate ...
Amber’s fate were beyond my control right now. I could afford only
to concentrate on the here and now.
It was a trick Bran had taught to us all on our first hunt. Not to worry
about what had been or what would be, just the now. Not what a
human might feel knowing she’d killed a rabbit that had never done
her any harm. That she’d killed it with teeth and claws, and eaten it
raw with relish ... including parts her human side would rather have
not known were inside a soft and fuzzy bunny.
So I forgot about the bunny, about what the results of tonight might
be, and focused on the here and now. I forced back the panic that
wanted to stop my breath and thought, Here and now.
The vampire had given up his business suit. Like most of the
vampires I’d met, he was more comfortable in clothing of other eras.
Werewolves learn to go with the times so they don’t fall into the
temptation of living in the past.
I can place women’s fashions of the past hundred years within about
ten years, and before that to the nearest century. Men’s clothing not so
much, especially when they are not formal clothes. The button fly on
his cotton pants told me it was before zippers were used much. His
shirt was dark brown with a tunic neck that would allow it to be
pulled over his head, so there were no buttons on it.
Know your prey, Bran had told us. Observe.
“James Blackwood,” I said. “You know, when Corban introduced us,
I couldn’t believe my ears.”
He smiled, pleased. “I scared you.” But then he frowned. “You are
not frightened now.”
Rabbit, I thought hard. And made the mistake of meeting his eyes the
way I had that little bunny’s so long ago—as I had Aurielle’s last
night. But neither Aurielle nor the bunny had been a vampire.
I WOKE UP TUCKED INTO A TWIN-SIZED BED, AND, NO
MATTER how hard I tried, I couldn’t see beyond that moment when
he’d met my eyes. The room was mostly dark, with no sign of a
window to be seen. The only light came from a night-light plugged
into a wall socket next to a door.
I threw back the covers and saw that he’d stripped me to my panties.
Shuddering, I dropped to my knees ... remembering ... remembering
other things.
“Tim is dead,” I said, and the sound came out in a growl worthy of
Adam. And once I’d heard it and knew it for a fact, I realized I didn’t
smell of sex the way that Amber had. I did, however, smell of blood. I
reached up to my neck and found the first set of bite marks, the
second, and a new third just a centimeter to the left of the second.
Stefan’s had healed.
I shook a little in relief that it wasn’t worse, then a little more in anger
that didn’t quite hide how frightened I was. But relief and anger
wouldn’t leave me helpless in the middle of a panic attack.
The door was locked, and he had left me with nothing to pick it with.
The light switch worked, but it didn’t show me anything I hadn’t
seen. A plastic bin that held only my jeans and T-shirt. There was a
quarter and the letter for Stefan in my pants pockets, but he’d taken
the pair of screws I’d collected while trying to fix the woman’s clutch
at the rest stop on the way to Amber’s house.
The bed was a stack of foam mattress pads that would yield nothing I
could make into weapon or tool.
“His prey never escapes,” whispered a voice in my ear.
I froze where I knelt beside the bed. There was no one else in the
room with me.
“I should know,” it ... he said. “I’ve watched them try.”
I turned slowly around but saw nothing ... but the smell of blood was
growing stronger.
“Was it you at the boy’s house?” I asked.
“Poor boy,” said the voice sadly, but it was more solid now. “Poor
boy with the yellow car. I wish I had a yellow car ...”
Ghosts are odd things. The trick would be getting all the information I
could without driving it away by asking something that conflicted
with its understanding of the world. This one seemed pretty cognizant
for a ghost.
“Do you follow Blackwood’s orders?” I asked.
I saw him. Just for an instant. A young man above sixteen but not yet
twenty wearing a red flannel shirt and button-up canvas pants.
“I’m not the only one who must do as he tells,” the voice said, though
the apparition just stared at me without moving its lips.
And he was gone before I could ask him where Chad and Corban
were ... or if Amber was here. I should have asked Corban. All that
my nose told me was that the air-filtration system he had on his
HVAC system was excellent, and the filter had been dosed lightly
with cinnamon oil. I wondered if that had been done on my account,
or if he just liked cinnamon.
The things in the room—plastic bin and bed, pillow and bedding,
were brand-new. So were the paint and the carpet.
I pulled on my shirt and pants, regretting the underwire bra he’d
taken. I could maybe have managed something with the underwire.
I’ve jimmied my share of car door locks and a few house locks along
the way as well. The shoes I didn’t mind so much.
Someone knocked tentatively at the door. I hadn’t heard anyone
walking. Maybe it was the ghost.
The scrape of a lock and the door opened. Amber opened the door,
and said, “Silly, Mercy. Why did you lock yourself in?” Her voice
was as light as her smile, but something wild lurked behind her eyes.
Something very close to a wolf.
Vampire? I wondered. I’d met one of Stefan’s menagerie who was
well on his way to vampirehood. Or maybe it was just the part of
Amber who knew what was going on.
“I didn’t,” I told her. “Blackwood did.” She smelled funny, but the
cinnamon kept me from pinpointing it.
“Silly,” she said again. “Why would he do that?” Her hair looked as if
she hadn’t combed it since the last time I’d seen her, and her striped
shirt was buttoned one button off.
“I don’t know,” I told her.
But she had changed subjects already. “I have dinner ready. You’re
supposed to join us for dinner.”
“Us?”
She laughed, but there was no smile in her eyes, just a trapped beast
growing wild with frustration. “Why Corban, Chad, and Jim, of
course.”
She turned to lead the way, and I noticed she was limping badly.
“Are you hurt?” I asked her.
“No, why do you ask?”
“Never mind,” I said gently, because I’d noticed something else.
“Don’t worry about it.”
She wasn’t breathing.
Here and now, I counseled myself. No fear, no rage. Just observation:
know your enemy. Rot. That’s what I’d been smelling: that first hint
that a steak’s been in the fridge too long.
She was dead and walking, but she wasn’t a ghost. The word that
occurred to me was zombie.
Vampires, Stefan had once told me, have different talents. He and
Marsilia could vanish and reappear somewhere else. There were
vampires who could move things without touching them.
This one had power over the dead. Ghosts who obeyed him. No one
escapes, he’d told me. Not even in death.
I followed Amber up a long flight of stairs to the main floor of the
house. We arrived in a broad swath of space that was both dining
room, kitchen, and living room. It was daylight ... morning from the
position of the sun—maybe ten o’clock or so. But it was dinner that
was set at the table. A roast—pork, my nose belatedly told me—sat
splendidly adorned with roasted carrots and potatoes. A pitcher of ice
water, a bottle of wine, and a loaf of sliced homemade bread.
The table was big enough to seat eight, but there were only five
chairs. Corban and Chad were sitting next to each other, with their
backs to us on the only side set with two places. The remaining three
chairs were obviously of the same set, but one, the one opposite
Corban and Chad, had a padded backrest and arms.
I sat down next to Chad.
“But, Mercy, that’s my place,” Amber said.
I looked at the boy’s tear-stained face and Corban’s blank one ... He,
at least, was still breathing. “Hey, you know I like kids,” I told her.
“You get him all the time.”
Blackwood still hadn’t arrived. “Does Jim speak ASL?” I asked
Amber.
Her face went blank. “I can’t answer any questions about Jim. You’ll
have to ask him.” She blinked a couple of times, then she smiled at
someone just behind me.
“No, I don’t,” said Blackwood.
“You don’t speak ASL?” I looked over my shoulder—not incidentally
letting Chad see my lips. “Me either. It was one of those things I
always meant to learn.”
“Indeed.” I’d amused him, it seems.
He sat down in the armchair and gestured to Amber to take the other.
“She’s dead,” I told him. “You broke her.”
He went very still. “She serves me still.”
“Does she? Looks more like a puppet. I bet she’s more work and
trouble dead than she was alive.” Poor Amber. But I couldn’t let him
see my grief. Focus on this room and survival. “So why do you keep
her around when she’s broken?” Without allowing him time to
answer, I bowed my head and said a quiet prayer over the food ... and
asked for help and wisdom while I was at it. I didn’t get an answer,
but I had the feeling someone might be listening—and I hoped it
wasn’t just the ghost.
THE VAMPIRE WAS STARING AT ME WHEN I FINISHED.
“Bad manners, I know,” I said, taking a slice of bread and buttering it.
It smelled good, so I put it down on the plate in front of Chad with a
thumbs-up sign. “But Chad can’t pray out loud for the rest of us.
Amber is dead, and Corban ...” I tilted my head to look at Chad’s
father, who hadn’t moved since I’d come into the room except for the
gentle rise and fall of his chest. “Corban’s not in any shape to pray,
and you’re a vampire. God’s not going to listen to anything you have
to say.”
I took a second slice of bread and buttered it.
Unexpectedly, the vampire threw back his head and laughed, his
fangs sharp and ... pointy. I tried not to think of them in my neck.
It wasn’t nearly as creepy as Amber laughing right along with him. A
cold hand touched the back of my neck and was gone—but not before
someone whispered, “Careful,” in my ear. I hated it when ghosts
snuck up on me.
Chad grabbed my knee, his eyes widening. Had he seen the ghost? I
shook my head at him while Blackwood wiped his dry eyes with his
napkin.
“You have always been something of a scamp, haven’t you?”
Blackwood said. “Tell me, did Tag ever discover who it was that stole
all of his shoelaces?”
His words slipped inside me like a knife, and I did my best not to
react.
Tag was a wolf in Bran’s pack. He’d never left Montana, and only he
and I knew about the shoelace incident. He’d found me hiding from
Bran’s wrath—I don’t remember what I’d done—and when I
wouldn’t come on my own he’d taken off his bootlaces and made a
collar and leash out of them for coyote me. Then he’d dragged me
through Bran’s house to the study.
He knew who’d stolen his shoelaces all right. And until I left for
Portland, I’d given him shoelaces every holiday—and he’d laugh.
No way any of Bran’s wolves were spying for the vampires.
I hid my thoughts with a couple of mouthfuls of bread. When I could
swallow, I said, “Great bread, Amber. Did you make it yourself?”
Nothing I could say about the shoelaces struck me as useful. So I
changed the subject to food. Amber could always be counted upon to
talk about nutrition. Death wouldn’t change that.
“Yes,” she told me. “All whole grains. Jim has taken me for his cook
and housekeeper. If only I hadn’t ruined it for him.” Yeah, poor Jim.
Amber had forced him to kill her—so he wouldn’t get a new cook.
“Hush,” Blackwood said.
I turned my head so I sort of faced Blackwood. “Yeah,” I said. “That
won’t work anymore. Even a human nose is going to smell rotting
flesh in a few days. Not what you want in a cook. Not that you need a
cook.” I took another bite of bread.
“So how long have you been watching me?” I asked.
“I’d despaired of ever finding another walker,” he told me. “Imagine
my joy when I heard that the Marrok had taken one under his wing.”
“Yeah, well,” I said, “it wouldn’t have worked very well for you if I’d
stayed.” Ghosts, I thought. He’d used ghosts to watch me.
“I’m not worried about werewolves,” said Blackwood. “Did Corban
or Amber tell you what my business is?”
“Nope. Your name never crossed their lips once you were gone.” It
was the truth, but I saw his mouth tighten. He didn’t like that. Didn’t
like his pets not paying attention to him. It was the first sign of
weakness I’d seen. I wasn’t sure if it would be useful or not. But I’d
take what I could get.
Know your enemy.
“I deal with ... specialty ammunition,” he said, looking at me through
narrowed eyes. “Most of it top secret government stuff. I have, for
instance, been very successful with a variety of ammunition designed
for killing werewolves. I have, among other things, a silver version of
the old Black Talon. Silver is a lousy metal for bullets; it doesn’t
expand well. Instead of mushrooming, this one opens up like a
flower.” He spread his hand so it looked like a starfish.
“And then there are those very interesting tranquilizer darts of Gerry
Wallace’s design. Now that was a surprise. I’d never have thought of
DMSO as a delivery system for the silver—or a tranquilizer gun as a
delivery system. But then, his father was a vet. This is why tools may
be useful.”
“You knew Gerry Wallace?” I asked, because I couldn’t help it. I took
another bite as if my stomach weren’t clenched, so he wouldn’t think
that the answer mattered too much.
“He came to me first,” Blackwood said. “But it didn’t suit me to do as
he asked ... the Marrok is a bit larger target than I wanted to take on.”
He smiled apologetically. “I am essentially a lazy creature, so my
maker used to say. I sent Gerry on his way with an idea about
building a superweapon against werewolves in some convoluted
scheme sure to fail and no memory of coming to me at all. Imagine
my surprise when the boy actually came up with something
interesting.” He smiled gently at me.
“You need to watch Bran closer,” I told him. I grabbed a pitcher of
water and poured it. “He’s more subtle, and it makes that omniscient
thing work better for him. If you tell everyone everything you know,
they don’t wonder about things you don’t tell them. Bran...” I
shrugged. “You just know he knows what you’re thinking.”
“Amber,” said the vampire. “Make sure your husband and the boy
who is not his son eat their dinner, would you?”
“Of course.”
Chad’s cold hand on my knee squeezed very tight. “You say that like
it’s a revelation,” I told Blackwood. “You need to work on your
verbal ammunition, too. Corban has always known that Chad’s not his
biological son. That doesn’t matter to him at all. Chad’s still his son.”
The stem of the water glass the vampire was holding broke. He set the
pieces very carefully on his empty plate. “You aren’t afraid enough of
me,” he said very carefully. “Perhaps it is time to instruct you
further.”
“Fine,” I said. “Thank you for the meal, Amber. Take care of
yourselves, Corban and Chad.”
I stood up and lifted an inquiring eyebrow.
He thought it was stupidity that I wasn’t afraid of him. But if you
shiver in fear in a pack of werewolves, that’s really stupid. If you’re
scared enough, even a wolf with good control starts having problems.
If his control isn’t strong—well, let’s just say that I learned to be very
good at burying my fear.
Pushing Blackwood wasn’t stupid either. If he’d killed me the first
time—well, at least it would have been a quick death. But the longer
he let it go on, the more I knew he needed me. I couldn’t imagine for
what—but he needed me for something.
My bad luck he was taking it on as a challenge. I wondered what he
thought would scare me more than Amber before I caught a good
tight hold on my thoughts. There was no future, just the vampire and
me standing by the table.
“Come,” he said, and led the way back down the stairway.
“How is it that you can walk in the daylight?” I asked him. “I’ve
never heard of a vampire who could run around during the day.”
“You are what you eat,” he said obscurely. “My maker used to say
that. Mann ist was mann ißt. She wouldn’t let me feed off drunkards
or people who consumed tobacco.” He laughed, and I wouldn’t let
myself think of it as sinister. “Amber reminds me a bit of her ... so
concerned with nutrition. Neither of them was wrong. But my maker
didn’t understand the full implications of what she said.” He laughed
again. “Until I consumed her.”
The door to the room I’d awoken in was open. He stopped and turned
off the light as we passed. “Mustn’t waste electricity.”
And then he opened another door to a much bigger room. A room of
cages. It smelled like sewage, disease, and death. Most of the cages
were empty. But there was a man curled naked in the floor of one of
the cages.
“You see, Mercedes,” he said, “you aren’t the first rare creature to be
my guest. This is an oakman. I’ve had him for ... How long have you
belonged to me, Donnell Greenleaf?”
The fae stirred and raised his face off the cement floor. Once he must
have been a formidable figure. Oakmen, I remembered from the old
book I’d borrowed, were not tall, no more than four feet, but they
were stout “as a good oaken table.” This one was little more than skin
and bones.
In a voice as dry as high summer in the Tri-Cities, he said, “Fourscore
years and a dozen and one. Two seasons more and eighteen
days.”
“Oakmen,” said Blackwood smugly, “like the oaks they are named
after, eat only the sunlight.”
You are what you eat indeed.
“I’ve never tried to see if I could live on light,” he said. “But he keeps
me from burning, don’t you, Donnell Greenleaf?”
“It is my honor to bear that burden,” said the fae in a hopeless voice,
his face to the floor.
“So you kidnapped me so you could turn into a coyote?” I asked
incredulously.
The vampire just smiled and escorted me to a largish cage, with a bed.
There was also a bucket from which the odor of sewage was
emanating. It smelled like Corban, Chad, and Amber.
“I can keep you alive for a long time,” the vampire said. He grabbed
me by the back of my neck and shoved my face against the cage while
he stood behind me. “Maybe even all of your natural life. What? No
smart comment?”
He didn’t see the faint figure that stood before me with her finger over
her pursed mouth. She looked as if she’d been somewhere between
sixty and a hundred years old when she’d died—like Santa’s wife, she
was all rounded and sweet. Quiet, that finger said. Or maybe, just—
Don’t let on you can see me.
Blackwood didn’t see her, even though he had been using the other
ghost as an errand boy. I wondered what it meant. She smelled like
blood, too.
He put me in the cage next to the one that he had been keeping Chad
and Corban in. Presumably he didn’t need to confine Amber anymore.
“This could have been so much more pleasant for you,” he said.
The woman and her hushing finger were gone, so I gave my tongue
free rein. “Tell that to Amber.”
He smiled, showing fangs. “She enjoyed it. I’ll give you one last
chance. Be cooperative, and I’ll let you stay in the other room.”
Maybe I could get out through the roof of the other room. But
somehow I didn’t think so. The cage in the Marrok’s house looks just
like all the rest of the bedrooms. The bars are set behind the drywall.
I leaned against the far side of my cage, the one that backed up to the
cement outer wall. “Tell me why you can’t just order me around?
Make me cooperate?” Like Corban.
He shrugged. “You figure it out.” He locked the door with a key and
used the same key to open the oakman’s door.
The fae whimpered as he was dragged out of the cage. “I can’t feed
from you every day, Mercy,” Blackwood said. “Not if I want to keep
you around. The last walker I had died fifty years ago—but I kept him
for sixty-three years. I take care of what is mine.”
Yeah, I bet Amber would agree with that one.
Blackwood knelt on the floor where the oakman lay curled in a fetal
position. The fae was staring at me with large black eyes. He didn’t
fight when Blackwood—with a look meant for me—grabbed his leg
and bit down on the artery in the fae’s groin to feed.
“The oak said,” the fae said in English-accented Welsh, “Mercy
would free me in the Harvest season.”
I stared at him, and he smiled before the vampire did something
painful to him and he closed his eyes to endure. If he’d understood
Welsh, I was sure he’d have done something more extreme. How the
oakman knew I’d understand him, I didn’t know.
There are two ways to free a prisoner—escape is the first. I had the
feeling that the oakman was looking for the second.
When he finished, the oakman was barely conscious, and Blackwood
looked a dozen years younger. Vampires weren’t supposed to do
that—but I didn’t know any vampires who fed from fae either. He
picked up the oakman with no visible effort and tossed him over his
shoulder. “Let’s get you a little sun, shall we?” Blackwood sounded
cheery.
The door to the room closed behind him, and a woman’s trembly
voice said, “It’s because you’re too much for him right now, dear. He
did try to make you his servant ... but your ties to the wolves and to
that other vampire—and how did you manage that, clever girl?—have
blocked him. It won’t be forever. Eventually, he’ll exchange enough
blood for you to be his—but not for a few months yet.”
Mrs. Claus ghost stood in the cage with her back to me, looking at the
door that had closed behind Blackwood.
“What does he want from me?” I asked her.
She turned and smiled at me. “Why, me, dear.”
She had fangs.
“You’re a vampire,” I said.
“I was,” she agreed. “It isn’t the usual thing, I admit. Though that
young man you met earlier is one as well. We’re tied to James. Both
his. John was the only vampire James ever made—and I blush to
admit that James is my fault.”
“Your fault?”
“He was always so kind, so attentive. A nice young man, I thought.
Then one night one of my other children showed me the murdhuacha
James had captured—one of the merrow folk, dear.” That faint accent
was Cockney or Irish, I thought, but so faint I couldn’t be sure.
“Well,” she said, sounding exasperated. “We just don’t do that, dear.
First off—the fae aren’t a people to toy with. Secondly, whatever we
exchange blood with could become vampire. When they’re magical
folk, the results can be unpleasant.” She shook her head. “Well, when
I confronted him...” She looked down at herself ruefully. “He killed
me. I haunted him, followed him from home all the way to here—
which wasn’t the smartest idea I’ve ever had. When he took that other
man, the one who was like you—well, then he saw me. And found he
still had use for this old woman.”
I had no idea why she was telling me so much—unless she was
lonely. I almost felt sorry for her.
Then she licked her lips, and said, “I could help you.”
Vampires are evil. It was almost as if the Marrok himself were
whispering in my ear.
I raised an eyebrow.
“If you feed me, I’ll tell you what to do.” She smiled, her fangs
carefully concealed. “Just a drop or two, love. I’m only a ghost—it
wouldn’t take much.”
12
“I COULD JUST TAKE IT FROM YOU WHILE YOU SLEEP
dear,” the ghost said. “I was only trying to make it a gift. If you give it
as a gift, I can help you.” She looked like the sort of woman you’d
hire to watch your children, I thought. Sweet and loving, a little
complacent.
“You won’t,” I growled. And I felt a little pop of something.
Something I’d done.
Her eyes widened and she backtracked. “Of course not, dearie. Of
course not—if you don’t want me to.”
She’d tried to cover it up. But I’d done something. I’d felt it once
before, in the bathroom at Amber’s house when I’d told the ghost to
leave Chad alone. Magic. It wasn’t the magic the fae used, or the
witches, but it was magic. I could smell it.
“Tell me,” I said, trying to put some push behind it, imitating the
authority that Adam wore closer than any of his well-tailored shirts.
“How did Blackwood manage the haunting at Amber’s house. Was it
you?”
Her lips tightened in frustration, and her eyes lit up like the vampire
she had been. But she answered me. “No. It was the boy, James’s
little experiment.”
Outside of the cages and out of reach was a table stacked with
cardboard boxes. A pile of five-gallon buckets—six or eight of
them—was on one corner. They fell over with a crash and rolled to
the drain in the center of the room.
“That’s what you were,” she called in a vicious tone that sounded
wrong coming out of that grandmotherly face. “He made you vampire
and played with you until he was bored. Then he killed you and kept
playing until your body rotted away.”
Like Blackwood had done to Amber, I thought, except he hadn’t
managed to make her into a vampire before he’d turned her into a
zombie. Here and now, I told myself. Don’t waste energy on what you
can’t change just now.
The buckets quit rolling and the whole room was silent—except for
my own breathing.
She shook herself briskly. “Never fall in love,” she told me. “It makes
you weak.”
I couldn’t tell if she was talking about herself or the dead boy or even
Blackwood. But I had other things I was more interested in. If I could
just get her to answer my questions.
“Tell me,” I said, “exactly why Blackwood wants me.”
“You are rude, dear. Didn’t that old wolf teach you any manners?”
“Tell me,” I said, “how Blackwood thinks to use me.”
She hissed, showing her fangs.
I met her gaze, dominating her as if she were a wolf. “Tell me.”
She looked away, drew herself up, and smoothed her skirts as if she
were nervous instead of angry, but I knew better.
“He is what he eats,” she said finally, when I didn’t back down. “He
told you so. I’d never heard of it before—how should I have known
what he was doing? I thought he was feeding from it because of the
taste. But he supped its power down as he drank its blood. Just as he
will yours. So that he can use me as he wants to.”
And she was gone.
I stared after her. Blackwood was feeding from me, and he’d gain ...
what? I drew in a breath. No. The ability to do just what I had been
doing—controlling a ghost.
If she’d stuck around, I’d have asked her a dozen more questions. But
she wasn’t the only ghost around here.
“Hey,” I said softly. “She’s gone now. You can come out.”
He smelled a little differently than she did, though mostly they both
smelled like stale blood. It was a subtle difference, but I could discern
it when I tried. His scent had lingered as I’d questioned the old
woman, which was how I’d known he hadn’t left.
He had been the one in Amber’s house. The one who’d almost killed
Chad.
He faded in gradually, sitting on the open cement floor with his back
toward me. He was more solid this time, and I could see that his shirt
had been hand-sewn, though it wasn’t particularly well-done. He
wasn’t from this century or the twentieth—probably sometime in the
eighteen hundreds.
He pulled a bucket free of the pile and rolled it across the floor, away
from us both, until it hit the oakman’s empty cage. He gave me a
quick, sullen look over his shoulder. Then, staring at the remaining
buckets, he said, “Are you going to make me tell you things?”
“It was rude,” I admitted, without really answering. If he knew
something that would help me get Chad, Corban, and me out of there
in one piece, I’d do anything I needed to. “I don’t mind being rude to
someone who wants to hurt me, though. Do you know why she wants
blood?”
“With blood, freely given, she can kill people with a touch,” he said.
“It doesn’t work if she steals it—though she might do that just for
spite.” He waved a hand, and a box tipped on its side, spilling packing
peanuts on the tabletop. Five or six of them whirled up like a
miniature tornado. He lost interest, and they fell to the ground.
“With her touch?” I asked.
“Mortal, witch, fae, or vampire: she can kill any of them. They called
her Grandmother Death when she was alive.” He looked at me again.
I couldn’t read the expression on his face. “When she was a vampire,
I mean. Even the other vampires were scared of her. That’s how he
figured out what he could do.”
“Blackwood?”
The ghost scooted around to face me, his hand going through the
bucket he’d just been playing with. “He told me. Once, just after it
had been his turn to drink from her—she was Mistress of his seethe—
he killed a vampire with his touch.” Lesser vampires fed from the
Master or Mistress who ruled the seethe, and were fed from in return.
As they grew more powerful, they quit needing to feed from the one
who ruled the seethe. “He said he was angry and touched this woman,
and she just crumbled into dust. Just like his Mistress could do. But a
couple of days later, he couldn’t do it. It wasn’t his turn to feed from
her for a couple more weeks, so he hired a fae-blooded prostitute—I
forget what kind she was—and drained her dry. The fae’s powers
lasted longer for him. He experimented and figured out that the longer
he let them live while he fed, the longer he could use what he’d
gained from them.”
“Can he still do that?” I asked intently. “Kill with a touch?” No
wonder no one challenged him for territory.
He shook his head. “No. And she’s dead, so he can’t borrow her
talents anymore. She can still kill if he feeds her blood. But he can’t
use her now like he used to before that old Indian man died. It’s not
that she minds the killing, but she doesn’t like to do what he wants.
Especially exactly what he wants and no more. He uses her for
business, and business”—he licked his lips as if trying to remember
the exact words Blackwood had used—“business is best conducted
with precision.” He smiled, his eyes wide and innocent. They were
blue. “She prefers bloodbaths, and she’s not above setting up the
killing ground to point to James as the killer. She did that once, before
he’d realized he wasn’t still controlling her. He was very unhappy.”
“Blackwood had a walker,” I said, putting it together. “And he fed
from him so he could control her—the lady who was just here.”
“Her name is Catherine. I’m John.” The boy looked at a bucket, and it
moved. “He was nice, Carson Twelve Spoons. He talked to me
sometimes and told me stories. He told me that I shouldn’t have given
myself to James, that I shouldn’t be James’s toy. That I should let
myself go to the Great Spirit. That he would have been able to help
me once.”
He smiled at me, and this time I caught a hint of malice. “He was a
bad Indian. When he was a boy, not much older than me, he killed a
man to take his horse and wallet. It made him not able to do the things
he should have been able to do. He couldn’t tell me what to do.”
The malice freed me from the distracting pity I’d been feeling. And I
saw what I’d missed the first time I’d looked him in the eye. And I
knew the reason that this ghost was different from any I’d seen
before.
Ghosts are remnants of people who have died, what’s left after the
soul goes on. They are mostly collections of memories given form. If
they can interact, respond to outside stimuli, they tend to be fragments
of the people they had been: obsessive fragments—like the ghosts of
dogs who guard their masters’ old graves or the ghost I’d once seen
who was looking for her puppy.
Immediately after they die, though, sometimes they are different. I’ve
seen it a couple of times at funerals, or in the house of someone who’s
just passed away. Sometimes the newly dead keep watch over the
living, as if to make sure that all is well with them. Those are more
than remnants of the people they’d been—I can see the difference.
I’ve always thought those are their souls.
That was what I’d seen in Amber’s dead eyes. My stomach clenched.
When you die, it should be a release. It wasn’t fair, wasn’t right, that
Blackwood had somehow discovered a way to hold them past death.
“Did Blackwood tell you to kill Chad?” I asked.
His fists clenched. “He has everything. Everything. Books and toys.”
His voice rose as he spoke. “He has a yellow car. Look at me. Look at
me!” He was on his feet. He stared at me with wild eyes, but when he
spoke again, he whispered. “He has everything, and I’m dead. Dead.
Dead.” He disappeared abruptly, but the buckets scattered. One of
them flew up and hit the bars of my cage and broke into chunks of
tough orange plastic. A shard hit me and cut my arm.
I wasn’t sure if that was supposed to be a yes or a no.
Alone, I sat down on the bed and leaned against the cold cement wall.
John the Ghost knew more about walkers than I did. I wondered if
he’d told the truth: there was a moral code I had to follow to keep my
abilities—which now seemed to include some sort of ability to control
ghosts. Though, with my indifferent success at it, I suspected it was
something that you had to practice to get right.
I tried to figure out how that talent might help me get all of us
prisoners out of there safely. I was still fretting when I heard people
coming down the stairs: visitors.
I stood up to welcome them.
The visitors were fellow prisoners. And a zombie.
Amber was chattering away about Chad’s next softball game as she
led Corban, still obviously under thrall to the vampire, and Chad, who
was following because there was nothing else for him to do. He had a
bruise on the side of his face that he hadn’t had when I left him in the
dining room.
“Now you get a good night’s sleep,” she told them. “Jim’s going to
bed, too, as soon as he gets that fae locked back up where he belongs.
We don’t want you to be tired when it’s time to get up and be doing.”
She held the door open as if it were something other than a cage—did
she think it was a hotel room?
Watching the zombie was like watching one of those tapes where they
take bits that someone actually said and piece them together to make
it sound like they were talking about something else entirely. Sound
bites of things Amber would have said came out of the dead woman’s
mouth with little or no relation to what she was doing.
Corban stumbled in and stopped in the middle of the cage. Chad ran
past his mother’s animated corpse and stopped, wide-eyed and
shaking next to the bed. He was only ten, no matter how much
courage he had.
If he survived this, he’d be in therapy for years. Assuming he could
find a therapist who’d believe him. Your mother was a what? Have
some Thorazine ... Or whatever the newest drug of choice was for the
mentally ill.
“Oops,” said Amber, manically cheerful. “I almost forgot.” She
looked around and shook her head sadly. “Did you do this, Mercy?
Char always said that you both suited each other because you were
slobs at heart.” As she was talking, she gathered up the buckets—
though she didn’t bother cleaning up the broken one—and stacked
most of them where they had been. She took one and put it inside
Chad and Corban’s cage before removing the used one in the corner.
“I’ll just take this up and clean it, shall I?”
She locked the door.
“Amber,” I said, putting force in my voice. “Give me the key.” She
was dead, right? Did she have to listen to me, too?
She hesitated. I saw her do it. Then she gave me a bright smile.
“Naughty, Mercy. Naughty. You’ll be punished for that when I tell
Jim.”
She took the bucket and whistled when she shut the door. I could hear
her whistling all the way up the stairs. I needed more practice, or
maybe there was some trick to it.
I bowed my head and waited for Blackwood to bring the oakman back
with my arms crossed over my middle and my head turned away from
Chad. I ignored it when he rattled the cage to catch my attention.
When Blackwood came in, I didn’t want him to find me holding
Chad’s hand or talking to him or anything.
I didn’t think there was a rat’s chance in a cattery that Blackwood
would let Chad live after everything he’d seen. But I didn’t intend to
give the vampire any more reason to hurt him. And if I lowered my
guard, I’d have a hard time keeping the fear at bay.
After a time, the oakman stumbled in the door in front of Blackwood.
He didn’t look much better than he had when Blackwood had finished
with him. The fae looked a little above four feet tall, though he’d be
taller if he were standing straight. His arms and legs were oddly
proportioned in subtle ways: legs short and arms overlong. His neck
was too short for his broad-foreheaded, strong-jawed head.
He walked right into his cell without struggling, as if he had fought
too many times and suffered defeat. Blackwood locked him in. Then,
looking at me, the vampire tossed his key in the air and snatched it
back before it hit the ground. “I won’t be sending Amber down with
keys anymore.”
I didn’t say anything, and he laughed. “Pout all you want, Mercy. It
won’t change anything.”
Pout? I looked away. I’d show him pout.
He started for the door.
I swallowed my rage and managed to not let it choke me. “So how did
you do it?”
Vague questions are harder to ignore than specific ones. They inspire
curiosity and make your victim respond even if he wouldn’t have
talked to you at all otherwise.
“Do what?” he asked.
“Catherine and John,” I said. “They aren’t like normal ghosts.”
He smiled, pleased I’d noticed. “I’d like to claim some sort of
supernatural powers,” he told me, then laughed because he found
himself so funny. He wiped imaginary tears of mirth from his eyes.
“But really it is their choice. Catherine is determined to somehow
avenge herself upon me. She blames me for ending her reign of terror.
John ... John loves me. He’ll never leave me.”
“Did you tell him to kill Chad?” I asked coolly, as if the answer were
mere curiosity.
“Ah, now, that is the question.” He shrugged. “That’s why I need you.
No. He ruined my game. If he’d done as I’d told him, you’d have
brought yourself here and given yourself to me to spare your friends.
He made them run. It took me half the day to find them. They didn’t
want to come with me—and ... Well, you saw my poor Amber.”
I didn’t want to know. Didn’t want to ask the next question. But I
needed to know what he’d done to Amber. “What did you eat that let
you make zombies?”
“Oh, she’s not a zombie,” he told me. “I’ve seen zombies three
centuries old that look almost as fresh as a day-old corpse. They’re
passed down in their families like the treasures they are. I’m afraid I’ll
have to get rid of Amber’s body in a week or so unless I put her in the
freezer. But witches need knowledge as well as power—and they’re
more trouble to keep than they are worth. No. This is something I
learned from Carson—I trust Catherine or John told you about
Carson. Interesting that one murder left him unable to do anything
with his powers, when I—who you’ll have to trust when I tell you that
I’ve done much, much worse than a mere larcenous homicide—had
no trouble using what I took from him. Perhaps his trouble was
psychosomatic, do you think?”
“You told me how you keep Catherine and John,” I said. “How are
you keeping Amber?”
He smiled at Chad, who was standing as far from his father as he
could get. He looked fragile and scared. “She stayed to protect her
son.” He looked back at me. “Any more questions?”
“Not right now.”
“Fine—oh, and I’ve seen to it that John won’t be coming back to visit
you anytime soon. And Catherine, I think, is best kept away, too.” He
closed the door gently behind him. The stairs creaked under his feet as
he left.
When he was gone, I said, “Oakman, do you know when the sun goes
down?”
The fae, once more sprawled on the cement floor of his cage, turned
his head to me. “Yes.”
“Will you tell me?”
There was a long pause. “I will tell you.”
Corban stumbled forward a step and swayed a little, blinking rapidly.
Blackwood had released him.
He took a deep, shaky breath, then turned urgently to Chad and began
signing.
“I don’t know how much Chad caught of what’s going on ... too
much. Too much. But ignorance might get him killed.”
It took me a second to realize he was talking to me—his whole body
was focused on his son. When he was finished, Chad—who still was
keeping a lot of space between them—began to sign back.
While watching his son’s hands, Corban asked me, “How much do
you know about vampires? Do we have any chance of getting out of
here?”
“Mercy will grant me freedom this Harvest season,” said the oakman
hoarsely. In English this time.
“I will if I can,” I told him. “But I don’t know that it’ll happen.”
“The oak told me,” he said, as if that should make it as real as if it had
already happened. “It is not a terribly old tree, but it was very angry
with the vampire, so it stretched itself. I hope it has not...
doneitselfpermanentharm.” His words tumbled over each other and
lost consonants. He turned his head away from me and sighed
wearily.
“Are oaks so trustworthy?” I asked.
“Used to be,” he told me. “Once.”
When he didn’t say anything more, I told Corban the most important
part of what I knew about the monster who held us. “You can kill a
vampire with a wooden stake through the heart, or by cutting off his
head, drowning him in holy water—which is impractical unless you
have a swimming pool and a priest who will bless it—direct sunlight,
or fire. I’m told it’s better if you combine a couple of methods.”
“What about garlic?”
I shook my head. “Nope. Though a vampire I know told me that given
a victim who smells like garlic and one that doesn’t, most of them
will pick the one who doesn’t. Not that we have access to garlic or
wooden stakes.”
“I know about the sunlight—who doesn’t? But it doesn’t seem to
affect Blackwood.”
I nodded toward the oakman. “Apparently he is able to steal some of
the abilities of those he drinks from.” No way was I going to talk
about blood exchanges with Chad watching. “The oakmen like this
gentleman here feed from sunlight—so Blackwood gained an
immunity to the sun.”
“And blood,” said the oakman. “In the old days we were given blood
sacrifices to keep the trees happy.” He sighed. “Feeding me blood is
how he keeps me alive when this cold-iron cell would kill me.”
Ninety-three years he’d been a prisoner of Blackwood’s. The thought
chilled any optimism that had survived the ride here from the Tri-
Cities. The oakman wasn’t mated to a werewolf, though—or bound to
a vampire.
“Have you ever killed one?” the oakman asked.
I nodded. “One with help and another one who was hampered because
it was daytime and he was sleeping.”
I didn’t think that was the answer he’d been expecting.
“I see. Do you think you can kill this one?”
I turned around pointedly, looking at the bars. “I don’t seem to be
doing so well at that. No stake, no swimming pool of holy water, no
fire—” And now that I’d said that, I noticed that there was very little
that was even flammable here. Chad’s bedding, our clothes ... and that
was it.
“You can put me down as something else that won’t be of any use,”
Corban said, bitterly. “I couldn’t even stop myself from kidnapping
you.”
“That Taser was one of Blackwood’s developments?”
“Not a Taser—Taser’s a brand name. Blackwood sells his stun gun to
... certain government agencies who want to question prisoners
without showing any harm. It’s a lot hotter than anything Taser
makes. Not legal for the civilian market but—” He sounded proud of
it—proud and slick, as if presenting the product at a sales meeting. He
stopped himself, and said simply, “I’m sorry.”
“Not your fault,” I told him. I looked at Chad, who still seemed
thoroughly spooked. “Hey, why don’t you translate for me a minute.”
“Okay.” Corban looked at his son, too. “Let me tell him what I’m
doing.” He wiggled his hands, then said, “Go.”
“Blackwood’s a vampire,” I told Chad. “What that means is that your
father can’t do anything but follow Blackwood’s orders—it’s part of
what a vampire does. I’m a little protected for the same reason I can
see ghosts and talk to them. That’s the only reason he hasn’t done the
same thing to me ... yet. You’ll know when your father’s being
controlled, though. Blackwood doesn’t like your dad signing to you—
he can’t read sign. So if your dad’s not signing to you, that’s one
thing to look for. And your dad fights his control, and you can see that
in his shoulders—”
I broke off because Chad began gesturing wildly, his fingers
exaggerating all the movements. His equivalent of yelling, I
supposed.
Corban didn’t translate what Chad said, but he signed very slowly so
he wouldn’t be misunderstood and spoke his words out loud when he
answered. “Of course I’m your father. I held you in my arms the day
you were born and sat vigil in the hospital when you almost died the
next day. You are mine. I’ve earned the right to be your dad.
Blackwood wants you alone and afraid. He’s a bully and feeds on
misery as much as blood. Don’t let him win.”
Chad’s bottom jaw went first, but before I saw tears, his face was
hidden against Corban.
It wasn’t the best time for Amber to come in.
“It’s hot upstairs,” she announced. “I’m to sleep down here with you.”
“Do you have the key?” I asked. Not that I expected Blackwood to
have forgotten. Mostly I just wanted to keep her attention and let
Chad, who hadn’t noticed her, have his moment with his dad.
She laughed. “No, silly. Jim was not very happy with you—I’m not
going to help you escape. I’ll just sleep out here. It’ll be quite
comfortable. Just like camping out.”
“Come here,” I said. I didn’t know that it would work. I didn’t know
anything.
But she came. I didn’t know if she was compelled, or just following
my request.
“What do you need?” She stopped within an easy arm’s reach.
I put my arm through the bars and held out my hand. She looked at it
a moment, but took it.
“Amber,” I said solemnly, looking into her eyes. “Chad will be safe. I
promise.”
She nodded earnestly. “I’ll take care of him.”
“No.” I swallowed and then put authority in my voice. “You’re dead,
Amber.” Her expression didn’t change. I narrowed my eyes at her in
my best Adam imitation. “Believe me.”
First her face lit up with that horrible fake smile, and she started to
say something. She looked down at my hand, then over to Corban and
Chad—who hadn’t noticed her yet.
“You’re dead,” I told her, again.
She collapsed where she stood. It wasn’t graceful or gentle. Her head
bounced off the floor with a hollow sound.
“Can he take her again?” asked Corban urgently.
I knelt and closed her eyes. “No,” I told him with more conviction
than I felt. Who knew what Blackwood could do? But her husband
needed to believe it was over for her. At any rate, it wouldn’t be
Amber who walked around in her body. Amber was gone.
“Thank you,” he told me, with tears in his eyes. He wiped his face and
tapped Chad on the shoulder.
“Hey, kid,” he said, and he stepped away so Chad could see Amber’s
body. They talked for a long time then. Corban played it tough and
gave his son the gift of the belief in the superman qualities of fathers
for at least one more day.
We slept, all of us, as far from Amber’s body as we could get. They
pushed the bed up close to my cell and the two of them slept on that
and I slept on the floor next to them. Chad reached though the bars
and kept a hand on my shoulder. The cell floor could have been a bed
of nails, and I would still have slept.
“MERCY?”
The voice was unfamiliar—but so was the cement under my cheek. I
stirred and regretted it immediately. Everything hurt.
“Mercy, it is dark, and Blackwood will be here soon.”
I sat up and looked across the room at the oakman. “Good evening.” I
didn’t use his name. Some of the fae can be funny about names, and
the way Blackwood had overused it made me think that the oakman
was one of those. I couldn’t thank him, and I searched for a way to
acknowledge his honoring my request, but I didn’t find one.
“I’m going to try something,” I said finally. I closed my eyes and
called to Stefan. When I felt I’d done as good a job at that as I could, I
opened my eyes and rubbed my aching neck.
“What are you trying to do?” Corban asked.
“I can’t tell you,” I said. “I’m very sorry. But Blackwood can’t knowand
I’m not sure it worked.” But I thought so. I never had been able to
feel Stefan like I did Adam. If Blackwood hadn’t managed to take me
over ... yet ... that should mean Stefan could still hear me. I hoped.
I tried touching Adam, too. But I couldn’t feel anything from him or
the pack. It was probably just as well. Blackwood had said he was
ready for werewolves, and I believed him.
Blackwood didn’t come down. We all tried not to notice Amber, and I
was grateful for the coolness of the basement. The ghosts didn’t show
up either. We talked about vampires until I’d told them everything I
knew in general—only leaving out the names.
Stefan also did not come.
After hours of tedium and a few minutes of embarrassment when
someone had to use the buckets left for us, I finally tried to sleep
again. I dreamed of sheep. Lots of sheep.
SOMEWHERE IN THE MIDDLE OF THE NEXT DAY I
REGRETTED that I had not eaten the food Amber had prepared. But
I was more thirsty than anything. The fairy staff showed up once, and
I told it to go away and be safe, speaking softly so no one would
notice. When I glanced back at the corner it had been in, it was gone
again.
Chad taught me and the oakman how to swear in ASL and worked
with us until we were pretty good at finger spelling. It left my hands
aching, but kept him occupied.
We knew that Blackwood was paying attention to us again when
Corban stopped in the middle of a sentence. After a few minutes he
turned his head, and Blackwood opened the door.
The vampire looked at me without favor. “And where do you suppose
I’m going to find another cook for you?” He took the body away and
returned a few hours later with apples and oranges and bottled
water—tossing them carelessly through the bars.
His hands smelled of Amber, rot, and earth. I supposed he’d buried
her somewhere.
He took Corban away. When Chad’s father returned, he was
stumblingly weak and had another bite mark on his neck.
“My friend is better at that than you are,” I said in a snotty voice
because Blackwood had paused, with the cage door open, to look at
Chad. “He doesn’t leave huge bruises behind.”
The vampire slammed the door, locked it, and stowed the key in his
pants pocket. “Whenever you open your mouth,” he said, “I marvel
that the Marrok didn’t wring your neck years ago.” He smiled a little.
“Fine. Since you are the cause of my hunger, you may feed it.”
The cause of his hunger ... when I sent Amber away from her dead
body, it must have hurt him. Good. Now all I had to do was get him to
make a lot more zombies or whatever he wanted to call them. Then I
could destroy them, too. I might weaken him enough that we could
take him. Of course, the nearest available people to become zombies
were us.
He opened my cage door, and I had to think really hard about the
present not to panic. I fought him. I didn’t think he’d expected it.
Years of karate had honed my reflexes, and I was faster than a human
would have been. But I was weak—an apple a day might keep the
doctor away, but it’s not, by itself, the best diet for optimum
performance. After a time that was too short for my ego to be happy,
he had me pinned.
He left me aware this time when he bit my neck. It hurt the whole
time, either a further punishment or Stefan’s bites were giving him
trouble—I didn’t know enough to tell. When he tried to feed me in
return, I fought as hard as I could and finally he grabbed my jaw and
forced his gaze on me.
I woke up on the far side of the cage, and Blackwood was gone. Chad
was making noise, trying to get my attention. I rose to hands and
knees. When it was quite clear that I wasn’t going to get up farther
than that, I sat up instead of standing. Chad stopped making those sad,
desperate sounds. I made the sign he’d taught me for the “f-word” and
finger-spelled, very slowly with clumsy fingers. “That’s it. No more
Ms. Nice Girl. Next time I scalp him.”
It made him smile a very little. Corban was sitting in the middle of
their cage looking at a mark in the cement.
“Well, oakman,” I said, tiredly. “Is it daylight or darkness?”
Before he answered me, Stefan was there in my cage. I blinked
stupidly at him. I’d given up on him, but I hadn’t realized it until he
was there. I reached out and touched his arm lightly to make sure he
was real.
He patted my hand and gave a quick look up as if he could see
through the ceiling to the floor above. “He knows I’m here. Mercy—”
“You have to take Chad,” I told him urgently
“Chad?” Stefan followed my gaze and stiffened. He started to shake
his head.
“Blackwood killed his mother—but left her a zombie to do his chores
until I killed her for real.” I told him. “Chad has to be taken to safety.”
He stared at the boy, who was staring back. “If I take him, I can’t
come back for a couple of nights. I’ll be unconscious, and no one
knows where you are but me—and Marsilia.” He bit her name out as
if he still weren’t happy with her. “And she wouldn’t lift a finger to
help you.”
“I can survive a couple of nights,” I told him with conviction.
Stefan clenched his hands. “If I do it,” he told me fiercely, “if I do this
and you survive—you will forgive me for the others.”
“Yes,” I said. “Get Chad out of here.”
He was gone, then reappeared standing next to Chad. He started to
use ASL to say something—but we both heard Blackwood race down
the stairs.
“To Adam or Samuel,” I said urgently.
“Yes,” Stefan told me. “Stay alive.”
He waited until I nodded, then he disappeared with Chad.
BLACKWOOD WAS MUCH MORE UNHAPPY ABOUT
STEFAN’S presence in his house than he was with Chad’s escape. He
ranted and raved, and if he hit me again, I was worried I might not be
able to keep my promise to Stefan.
Apparently he came to the same conclusion. He stood looking down
at me. “There are ways to keep other vampires out of my home. But
they are taxing, and I expect that your friend Corban won’t survive
my thirst.” He bent forward. “Ah, now you are frightened. Good.” He
inhaled like a wine taster with a particularly fine vintage.
He left.
I curled up on the floor and hugged my misery to me—along with the
fairy staff. The oakman stirred.
“Mercy, what is it that you have?”
I raised one hand and waved it feebly in the air so he could see it. It
didn’t hurt as much as I thought it should.
There was a little pause, and the Oakman said, reverently, “How did
that come to be here?”
“It’s not my fault,” I told him. It took me a moment to sit up ... and I
realized that Blackwood had been much more in control of himself
than he appeared because nothing was broken. There wasn’t much of
me that wasn’t bruised—but not broken was good.
“What do you mean?” the oakman asked.
“I tried to give it back,” I explained, “but it keeps showing up. I told it
that this wasn’t a good place for it, but it leaves for a while, then
comes back.”
“By your leave,” he said formally, “may I see it?”
“Sure,” I said, and tried to throw it to him. I should have been able to
do it. The distance between our cages was less than ten feet, but the ...
bruises made it more difficult than normal.
It landed on the floor halfway between us. But as I stared at it in
dismay, it rolled back toward me, not stopping until it was against the
cage bars.
The third time I threw it, the oakman caught it out of the air.
“Ah, Lugh, you did such fine work,” he crooned, petting the thing. He
rested a cheek against it. “It follows you because it owes you service,
Mercy.” He smiled, awakening lines and wrinkles in the dark-woodcolored
face and brightening his black eyes to purple. “And because it
likes you.”
I started to say something to him, but a surge of magic interrupted me.
The oakman’s smile drained away. “Brownie magic,” he told me. “He
seeks to lock the other vampire out. The brownie was His before me,
and she found her release just this past spring. His use of her power is
still nearly complete.” He looked over at Corban. “The magic he
works will leave him hungry.”
I had one thing I could do—and it meant abandoning my word to
Stefan. But I couldn’t let Blackwood kill Corban without making any
attempt to defend him.
I stripped out of my clothes and shifted. The bars in my cage were set
close together. But, I hoped, not too close.
Coyotes are narrow side to side. Very narrow. Anything I can get my
head through, I can get everything else through, too. When I stood on
the other side of my cage, I shook my fur straight and watched the
door open.
Blackwood wasn’t watching for me, he was looking at Corban. So I
got in the first strike.
Speed is the one physical power I have. I’m as fast as most
werewolves—and from what I’ve seen, most vampires, too.
I should have been weakened and a little slow because of the damage
Blackwood had dealt me—and the lack of real food and because I’d
been feeding the vampire. Except that exchanging blood with a
vampire can have other effects. I’d forgotten that. It made me strong.
I wished, fiercely, that I weighed a couple of hundred pounds instead
of just over thirty. Wished for longer fangs and sharper claws—
because all I could do was surface damage he healed almost as soon
as I inflicted it.
He grabbed me in both hands and threw me at the cement wall. It
seemed as though I flew in slow motion. There was time to twist and
hit on my feet instead of my side as he’d intended. There was power
to vault off unhurt and hit the ground, already running back to attack.
This time, though, I didn’t have surprise on my side. If I’d been
running from him, he couldn’t have caught me. But up close, the
advantage of superior speed lost out to the disadvantage of my size. I
hurt him once, digging my fangs into his shoulder, but I was looking
for a kill—and there was just no way a coyote, no matter how fast or
strong, could kill a vampire.
I dodged back, looking for an opening ... and he fell face-first on the
cement floor. Standing like a victory flag, stuck deep into
Blackwood’s back, was the walking stick.
“Fair spearman was I once,” the oakman said. “And Lugh was better
still. Nothing he built but what couldn’t become a spear when
needed.”
Panting, I stared at him, then down at Blackwood. Who wiggled.
I shifted back to human because I could deal with doors better that
way. Then I ran for the kitchen where, hopefully, there would be a
knife big enough to go through bone.
The wooden block beside the sink yielded both a butcher knife and a
large French chef’s knife. I grabbed one in each hand and ran down
the stairs.
The door was shut and the knob wouldn’t turn. “Let me in,” I ordered
in a voice I hardly recognized as mine.
“No. No,” said John’s voice. “You can’t kill him. I’ll be alone.”
But the door opened, and that was all I cared about.
I didn’t see John, but Catherine was kneeling beside Blackwood. She
spared a glare for me, but she was paying more attention to the dying
(I fervently hoped) vampire.
“Let me drink, dear,” she crooned to him. “Let me drink, and I’ll take
care of her for you.”
He looked at me as he tried to get his arms underneath him. “Drink,”
he said. Then he smiled at me.
With a crow of triumph she bent her head.
She was still drinking when the butcher knife swooshed through her
insubstantial head and cut cleanly through Blackwood’s neck. An axe
would have been better, but with his strength still lingering in my
arms, the butcher knife got the job done. A second cut took his head
completely off.
His head touched my toes, and I edged them away. A knife in either
hand, I had no chance to feel triumphant or sick at what I’d done. Not
with a very solid Catherine smiling her grandmotherly smile only six
feet from me.
She smiled, her mouth red with Blackwood’s blood. “Die,” she said,
and reached out—
Last year Sensei spent six months on sai forms. The knives weren’t so
well-balanced for fighting, but they worked. It was a butcher’s job I
made of it—and I managed it only by clinging fiercely to the here and
now. The floors, the walls, and I were all drenched in blood. And she
wasn’t dead ... or rather she was dead already. The knives kept her off
me, but none of the wounds seemed to affect her at all.
“Throw me the stick,” said the oakman softly.
I dropped the French chef’s knife and grabbed the staff with my free
hand. It slid out of Blackwood’s back as if it didn’t want to be there.
For a moment I thought that the end was a sharp point, but my
attention was focused on Catherine and I couldn’t be sure.
I tossed it to the Oakman and drove Catherine away from Corban’s
cage. He’d collapsed when I’d cut off Blackwood’s head in a motion
not unlike Amber’s zombie. I hoped he wasn’t dead—but there wasn’t
anything I could do about it if he was.
Out of the corner of my eye, I saw the oakman lick the blood-covered
stick with a tongue at least eight inches long. “Death blood is best,”
he told me. And then he flung the stick at the outside wall, and said a
word ...
The blast knocked me off my feet and onto Blackwood’s corpse.
Something hit me in the back of the head.
I STARED AT THE POOL OF SUNLIGHT THAT COVERED MY
hand. It took me a moment to realize that whatever had hit me must
have knocked me out. Under my hand was a thick pile of ash, and I
jerked away. Buried in the ash was a key. It was a pretty key, one of
those ornate skeleton keys. It took all my willpower to put my hand
back into what had been Blackwood and pick it up. I hurt from head
to heels, but the bruises the vampire had inflicted after Chad escaped
were mostly gone. And the others were fading as I watched.
I didn’t want to think about that too much.
The oakman had a hand stretched though the bars, but he hadn’t been
able to touch the sunlight streaming into the basement from the hole
he’d blasted in the wall with my walking stick. His eyes were closed.
I opened the cage, but he didn’t move. I had to drag him out. I didn’t
pay attention to whether or not he was breathing. Or I tried very hard
not to. So what if he wasn’t, I thought. Fae are very hard to kill.
“Mercy?” It was Corban.
I stared at him a moment, trying to figure out what to do next.
“Could you unlock my door?” His voice was soft and gentle. The sort
of voice you’d use on a madwoman.
I looked down at myself and realized that I was naked and covered
with blood from head to toe. The butcher knife was still in my left
hand. My hand had cramped around it, and I had to work to drop it on
the floor.
The key unlocked Corban’s door, too.
“Chad’s with some friends of mine,” I told him. My voice slurred a
bit, and I recognized that I was a little shocky. The realization helped
me a little, and my voice was clearer when I told him, “The kinds of
friends who might be able to protect a boy from a vampire run amok.”
“Thank you,” he said. “You were unconscious a long time. How are
you feeling?”
I gave him a tired smile. “My head hurts.”
“Let’s get you cleaned up.”
He led me up the stairs. I didn’t think that I should have grabbed my
clothes until I stood alone in a huge, gold-and-black bathroom. I
turned the shower on.
“John,” I said. I didn’t bother looking for him because I could feel
him. “You will never harm anyone again.” I felt the push of magic
that told me whatever it was I could do to ghosts had worked on him.
So I added, “And get out of this bathroom,” for good measure.
I scrubbed myself raw and wrapped myself in a towel big enough for
three of me. When I came out, Corban was pacing in the hall in front
of the bathroom.
“Who do you call about something like this?” he asked. “It doesn’t
look good. Blackwood is missing; Amber is dead—probably buried in
the backyard. I’m a lawyer, and if I were my own client, I’d advise
myself to avoid trial, plead guilty, and do reduced time if I could get
it.”
He was scared.
It finally occurred to me that we’d survived. Blackwood and his sweet
grandmotherly vampire ghost were gone. Or at least I hoped she was
gone. There wasn’t a second pile of ashes in the basement.
“Did you notice the other vampire?” I asked him.
He gave me a blank look. “Other vampire?”
“Never mind,” I told him. “I expect the sunlight killed her.”
I got up and found a phone on a small table in the corner of the living
room. I dialed Adam’s cell phone.
“Hey,” I said. It sounded like I’d been smoking cigars all night.
“Mercy?” And I knew I was safe.
I sat on the floor. “Hey.” I said again.
“Chad told us where you are,” he told me. “We’re about twenty
minutes away.”
“Chad told you?” Stefan would still be unconscious, I’d known. It just
hadn’t occurred to me that Chad could tell them where we were.
Stupid me. All he’d have needed was a piece of paper.
“Chad’s all right?” asked Corban urgently.
“Fine,” I told him. “And he’s leading the cavalry here.”
“It sounds like we’re not needed,” said Adam.
I needed him.
“Blackwood is dead,” I told Adam.
“I thought so, since you are calling me,” Adam said.
“If it weren’t for the oakman, it might have been bad,” I told him.
“And I think the oakman is dead.”
“All honor to him, then,” said Samuel’s voice. “To die killing one of
the dark-bound evils is not a bad thing, Mercy. Chad asks after his
father.”
I wiped my face and gathered my thoughts. “Tell Chad he’s fine.
We’re both fine.” I watched bruises fade from my legs. “Could you ...
could you stop at a convenience store and buy a yellow toy car for
me? Bring it with you when you come?”
There was a little pause. “A yellow toy car?” asked Adam.
“That’s right.” I remembered something else. “Adam, Corban’s
worried that the police will think he’s killed Amber-and probably
Blackwood, though there won’t be any body.”
“Trust me,” said Adam. “We’ll fix it for everyone.”
“All right,” I told him. “Thank you.” And then I thought a little more.
“The vampires will want Chad and Corban gone. They know too
much.”
“You and Stefan and the pack are the only ones who know that,” said
Adam. “The pack doesn’t care, and Stefan won’t betray them.”
“Hey,” I told him lightly—pressing the handset into my face until it
almost hurt. “I love you.”
“I’ll be there.”
I LEFT CORBAN SITTING IN THE LIVING ROOM AND
WALKED reluctantly down the stairs. I didn’t want to know for sure
that the oakman was dead. I didn’t want to confront Catherine if she
was still about ... and I thought she would have killed me if she could
have. But I also didn’t want to be naked when Adam came.
The oakman was gone. I decided that it must be a good thing. The fae
didn’t—as far as I knew—turn into dust and blow away when they
died. So if he wasn’t here, that meant he’d left.
“Thank you,” I whispered because he wasn’t there to hear me. Then I
put my clothes on and ran up the stairs to wait for rescue with Corban.
When Adam came, he had the yellow car I’d asked him for. It was a
one-sixteenth scale model of a VW bug. He watched as I took it out of
the package and followed me down the stairs and set it on the bed in
the small room where I’d first woken up.
“It’s for you,” I said.
No one answered me.
“Are you going to tell me what that was about?” Adam asked as we
went back upstairs.
“Sometime,” I told him. “When we’re telling ghost stories around a
campfire, and I want to scare you.”
He smiled, and his arm tightened around my shoulders. “Let’s go
home.”
I closed my hand on the lamb necklace I’d found on the table next to
the phone, as if someone had left it for me to find.
13
THE FOLLOWING SATURDAY WE PAINTED THE GARAGE.
True to his word, Wulfe had removed the crossed bones. The least he
could have done was repaint the door, but he’d managed to remove
the bones and leave the graffiti that had covered them alone. I thought
he’d done it just to bug me.
Gabriel’s sisters had voted for pink as the new color and were very
disappointed when I insisted on white. So I told them they could paint
the door pink.
It’s a garage. What can it hurt?
“It’s a garage,” I told Adam, who was looking at the Day-Glo pink
door. “What can it hurt?”
He laughed and shook his head. “It makes me squint, even in the dark,
Mercy. Hey, I know what I can get you for your next birthday,” he
said. “A set of open-end wrenches in pink or purple. Leopard print,
maybe.”
“You have me confused with my mother,” I said with dignity. “The
door was painted with cheap spray paint—as no reputable paint
company had anything this gaudy in their color palette. Give it a
couple weeks, and it’ll turn this sickly orangish pink color. Then I can
hire them to paint it brown or green.”
“Police have searched Blackwood’s house,” Adam told me. “They
haven’t found any sign of Blackwood or Amber. Officially, they
believe Amber might have run off with Blackwood.” He sighed. “I
know that it tarnishes Amber unfairly, but it was the best story we
could come up with and still leave her husband in the clear.”
“The people who matter know,” I told him. Amber didn’t have any
immediate family she cared for. In a few months, I was tentatively
planning a trip to Mesa, Arizona, where Char was living. I’d tell her,
because Char was the only other person Amber would care about.
“No one is going to get into trouble about this, are they?”
“The people who matter know,” he answered with a faint smile.
“Unofficially, Blackwood scared the bejeebers out of a lot of people
who are glad to see him gone. No one will take it further.”
“Good.” I touched the bright white wall next to the door. It looked
better. I hoped that it wouldn’t scare away customers. People are
funny. My customers look at my run-down-appearing garage and
know they are saving the money I don’t put into face-lifts.
Tim’s cousin Courtney had paid for all of the paint and labor in return
for my dropping the charges against her. I figured she had been hurt
enough.
“I heard you and Zee worked out something on the garage.”
I nodded. “I have to repay him immediately—he said so, and he is fae
so it must be done. He’s going to loan me the money to do it at the
same interest rate as the original loan.”
He grinned and opened the pink door so I could precede him inside.
“So you’re paying him the same amount as before?”
“Uncle Mike came up with it, and it made Zee happy.” Amused him
was more like it. All the fae have a strange sense of humor.
Stefan was sitting on my stool by the cash register. He’d spent two
nights unmoving in Adam’s basement, then disappeared without a
word to either Adam or me.
“Hey, Stefan,” I said.
“I came to tell you that we no longer share a bond,” he told me stiffly.
“Blackwood broke it.”
“When?” I asked. “He didn’t have time. You answered my call—and
it wasn’t very long after that when Blackwood died.”
“I imagine when he fed from you again,” Stefan said. “Because when
Adam called me to tell me you’d disappeared, I couldn’t find you at
all.”
“Then how did you manage to find me?” I asked.
“Marsilia.”
I looked at his face, but I couldn’t read how much it had cost him to
ask for her help. Or what she’d demanded in return.
“You didn’t tell me,” Adam said. “I’d have gone with you.”
The vampire smiled grimly. “Then she would have told me nothing.”
“She knew where Blackwood denned?” Adam asked.
“That’s what I hoped.” Stefan picked up a pen and played with it. I
must have used it last because his fingers acquired a little black grease
for his trouble. “But no. What she did know was that Mercy had a
message for me with a blood-and-wax seal. Her blood. She could
track the message. Since it was just outside of Spokane, we were both
pretty sure Mercy still had it with her.”
That reminded me. I pulled the battered missive out of my back
pocket. It hadn’t gone through the wash with my jeans—but only
because Samuel had a habit of checking pockets before he did
laundry. Something about nuts and bolts in the dryer being irritatingly
noisy—I thought that was directed at me, but I could have been
paranoid.
Stefan took the letter like I was handing him a bottle of nitroglycerine.
He opened it and read. When he was through, he balled it up in a fist
and stared at the counter.
“She says,” he told us in a low, controlled voice, “that my people are
safe. She and Wulfe took them and convinced me that they had
died—so I would believe it. It was necessary that I believe they were
dead, that Marsilia no longer wanted me in the seethe. She has them
safe.” He paused. “She wants me to come home.”
“What are you going to do?” Adam asked.
I was pretty sure I knew. But I hoped that he made her work like hell
for it. She might not have killed his people, but she’d hurt them—
Stefan had felt it.
“I’m going to take the matter under advisement,” he said. But he
straightened out the note and read it again.
“Hey, Stefan,” I said.
He looked up.
“You’re pretty terrific, you know? I appreciate all the chances you
took for me.”
He smiled, folded the letter carefully. “Yeah, well you’re pretty
terrific yourself. If you ever want to be dinner again sometime ...” He
popped out of the office without saying good-bye.
“Better collect your purse,” said Adam. “We don’t want to be late.”
Adam was taking me to Richland, where the local light opera
company was performing The Pirates of Penzance. Gilbert and
Sullivan, pirates and no vampires, he’d promised me.
It was a great production. I laughed until I was hoarse and came out
humming the final number. “Yes,” I told him. “I think the guy playing
the Pirate King was awesome.”
He stopped where he was.
“What?” I asked, frowning at the big smile on his face.
“I didn’t say I liked the Pirate King,” he told me.
“Oh.” I closed my eyes—and there he was. A warm, edgy presence
right on the edge of my perception. When I opened my eyes, he was
standing right in front of me. “Cool,” I told him. “You’re back.”
He kissed me leisurely. When he was finished, I was more than ready
to head home. Fast.
“You make me laugh,” he told me seriously.
I WENT BACK TO MY HOUSE TO SLEEP SAMUEL WAS
working until the early-morning hours, and I wanted to be there when
he got home.
I stopped before I went in because something was different. I took a
deep breath but didn’t smell any vampires lurking at my door. But
there was an oak tree next to my bedroom window.
It hadn’t been there when I’d left this morning to go paint. But there it
was, with a trunk nearly two inches around and branches that were a
couple of feet taller than my trailer. There was no sign of freshly
turned earth, just the tree. Its leaves were starting to change color for
the autumn.
“You’re welcome,” I said. When I started back to go into the house, I
tripped over the walking stick. “Hey. You’re back.”
I set it on my bed while I showered, and it was still there when I got
out. I put on one of Adam’s flannel shirts because the fall nights were
pretty nippy and my roommate didn’t want to turn up the heat. And
because it smelled like Adam.
When the doorbell rang, I pulled on a pair of shorts and left the stick
where it was.
Marsilia stood on the porch. She was wearing low-rise jeans and a
low-cut black sweater.
“My letter was opened tonight,” she told me.
I folded my arms over my chest and did not invite her in. “That’s
right, I gave it to Stefan.”
She tapped a foot. “Did he read it?”
“You didn’t actually kill his people,” I told her in a bored voice. “You
just hurt them and ripped his ties from them so he’d think they died.”
“You disapprove?” She raised an eyebrow. “Any other Master would
have killed them—it would have been easier. If he had been himself,
he’d have known what we’d done.” She smiled at me. “Oh, I see. You
were worried about his sheep. Better hurt a little and alive—wouldn’t
you say?”
“Why are you here?” I asked her.
Her face went blank, and I thought she might not answer. “Because
the letter was read, and Stefan did not come.”
“You tortured him,” I said hotly. “You almost forced him to do
something he’d never willingly do—”
“I wish he’d killed you,” she told me sincerely. “Except that would
have hurt him. I know Stefan. I know his control. You were never in
any danger.”
“He doesn’t believe that,” I told her. “Now you throw him a bone.
‘Look, Stefan, we didn’t really kill your people. We tortured you, hurt
you, abandoned you—but it was all in a good cause. We meant Andre
to die, and let you twist in guilt for months because it served our
purpose.’ And you wonder why he didn’t come back to you.”
“He understands,” she said.
“I do.” Stefan’s hands came down upon my shoulders, and he pulled
me a few inches back from the threshold of the door. “I understand
the why and the how.”
She stared at him ... and for a moment I could see how old, how tired
she was. “For the good of the seethe,” she told him.
He put his chin on the top of my head. “I know.” He wrapped both
arms around me just above my chest and pulled me against him. “I’ll
come back. But not right now.” He sighed into my hair. “Tomorrow.
I’ll get my people from you then.” And he was gone.
Marsilia looked at me. “He’s a soldier,” she told me. “He knows
about sacrificing himself for the good of the whole. That’s what
soldiers do. It’s not the torture he can’t forgive me for. Nor deceiving
him about his people. It’s because I put you in harm’s way he is so
angry.” Then she said, very calmly, “If I could kill you, I would.”
And she disappeared, just like Stefan had.
“Right back atcha,” I told the space where she had been.
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