Vampire Academy, Spirit bound.
Richelle Mean
ONE
THERE'S A BIG DIFFERENCE BETWEEN death threats and love
letters--even if the person writing the death threats still claims to actually
love you. Of course, considering I once tried to kill someone I loved, maybe
I had no right to judge.
Today's letter had been perfectly timed, not that I should have
expected any less. I'd read it four times so far, and even though I was
running late, I couldn't help but read it a fifth time.
My dearest Rose,
One of the few downsides to being awakened is that we no longer
require sleep; therefore we also no longer dream. It's a shame, because if I
could dream, I know I'd dream about you. I'd dream about the way you
smell and how your dark hair feels like silk between my fingers. I'd dream
about the smoothness of your skin and the fierceness of your lips when we
kiss.
Without dreams, I have to be content with my own imagination--
which is almost as good. I can picture all of those things perfectly, as well
as how it'll be when I take your life from this world. It's something I regret
having to do, but you've made my choice inevitable. Your refusal to join me
in eternal life and love leaves no other course of action, and I can't allow
someone as dangerous as you to live. Besides, even if I forced your
awakening, you now have so many enemies among the Strigoi that one of
them would kill you. If you must die, it'll be by my hand. No one else's.
Nonetheless, I wish you well today as you take your trials--not that
you need any luck. If they're actually making you take them, it's a waste of
everyone's time. You're the best in that group, and by this evening you'll
wear your promise mark. Of course, that means you'll be all that much more
of a challenge when we meet again--which I'll definitely enjoy.
And we will be meeting again. With graduation, you'll be turned out
of the Academy, and once you're outside the wards, I'll find you. There is no
place in this world you can hide from me. I'm watching.
Love,
Dimitri
7
Despite his "warm wishes" I didn't really find the letter inspiring as I
tossed it onto my bed and blearily left the room. I tried not to let his words
get to me, though it was kind of impossible to not be creeped out by
something like that. There is no place in this world you can hide from me.
I didn't doubt it. I knew Dimitri had spies. Since my former instructorturned-
lover had been turned into an evil, undead vampire, he'd also become
a sort of leader among them--something I'd helped speed along when I killed
off his former boss. I suspected a lot of his spies were humans, watching for
me to step outside my school's borders. No Strigoi could have stayed on a
twenty-four-hour stakeout. Humans could, and I'd recently learned that
plenty of humans were willing to serve the Strigoi in exchange for the
promise of being turned someday. Those humans considered eternal life
worth corrupting their souls and killing off others to survive. Those humans
made me sick.
But the humans weren't what made my steps falter as I walked
through grass that had turned bright green with summer's touch. It was
Dimitri. Always Dimitri. Dimitri, the man I'd loved. Dimitri, the Strigoi I
wanted to save. Dimitri, the monster I'd most likely have to kill. The love
we'd shared always burned within me, no matter how often I told myself to
move on, no matter how much the world did think I'd moved on. He was
always with me, always on my mind, always making me question myself.
"You look like you're ready to face an army."
I shifted out of my dark thoughts. I'd been so fixated on Dimitri and
his letter that I'd been walking across campus, oblivious to the world, and
hadn't noticed my best friend, Lissa, falling into step with me, a teasing
smile on her face. Her catching me by surprise was a rarity because we
shared a psychic bond, one that always kept me aware of her presence and
feelings. I had to be pretty distracted to not notice her, and if ever there was
a distraction, it was someone wanting to kill me.
I gave Lissa what I hoped was a convincing smile. She knew what had
happened to Dimitri and how he was now waiting to kill me after I'd tried--
and failed--to kill him. Nonetheless, the letters I got from him every week
worried her, and she had enough to deal with in her life without my undead
stalker to add to the list.
"I kind of am facing an army," I pointed out. It was early evening, but
late summer still found the sun up in the Montana sky, bathing us in golden
light as we walked. I loved it, but as a Moroi--a peaceful, living vampire--
Lissa would eventually grow weak and uncomfortable in it.
She laughed and tossed her platinum hair over one shoulder. The sun
lit up the pale color into angelic brilliance. "I suppose. I didn't think you'd
8
really be all that worried."
I could understand her reasoning. Even Dimitri had said these would
be a waste of my time. After all, I'd gone to Russia to search for him and had
faced real Strigoi--killing a number of them on my own. Maybe I shouldn't
have been afraid of the upcoming tests, but all the fanfare and expectation
suddenly pressed in upon me. My heart rate increased. What if I couldn't do
it? What if I wasn't as good as I thought I was? The guardians who would
challenge me out here might not be true Strigoi, but they were skilled and
had been fighting a lot longer than me. Arrogance could get me into a lot of
trouble, and if I failed, I'd be doing it in front of all the people who cared
about me. All the people who had such faith in me.
One other thing also concerned me.
"I'm worried about how these grades will affect my future," I said.
That was the truth. The trials were the final exam for a novice guardian like
me. They ensured I could graduate from St. Vladimir's Academy and take
my place with true guardians who defended Moroi from the Strigoi. The
trials pretty much decided which Moroi a guardian would be assigned to.
Through our bond, I felt Lissa's compassion--and her worry. "Alberta
thinks there's a good chance we can stay together--that you'll still be my
guardian."
I grimaced. "I think Alberta was saying that to keep me in school." I'd
dropped out to hunt Dimitri a few months ago and then returned--something
that didn't look good on my academic record. There was also the small fact
that the Moroi queen, Tatiana, hated me and would probably be going out of
her way to influence my assignment--but that was another story. "I think
Alberta knows the only way they'd let me protect you is if I was the last
guardian on earth. And even then, my odds would still be pretty slim."
Ahead of us, the roar of a crowd grew loud. One of the school's many
sports fields had been transformed into an arena on par with something from
Roman gladiatorial days. The bleachers had been built up, expanded from
simple wooden seats to luxuriously cushioned benches with awnings to
shade the Moroi from the sun. Banners surrounded the field, their bright
colors visible from here as they whipped in the wind. I couldn't see them yet,
but I knew there would be some type of barracks built near the stadium's
entrance where novices waited, nerves on edge. The field itself would have
turned into an obstacle course of dangerous tests. And from the sound of
those deafening cheers, plenty were already there to witness this event.
"I'm not giving up hope," Lissa said. Through the bond, I knew she
meant it. It was one of the wonderful things about her--a steadfast faith and
optimism that weathered the most terrible ordeals. It was a sharp contrast to
9
my recent cynicism. "And I've got something that might help you out today."
She came to a stop and reached into her jeans pocket, producing a
small silver ring scattered with tiny stones that looked like peridots. I didn't
need any bond to understand what she was offering.
"Oh, Liss . . . I don't know. I don't want any, um, unfair advantage."
Lissa rolled her eyes. "That's not the problem, and you know it. This
one's fine, I swear."
The ring she offered me was a charm, infused with the rare type of
magic she wielded. All Moroi had control of one of five elements: earth, air,
water, fire, or spirit. Spirit was the rarest--so rare, it had been forgotten over
the centuries. Then Lissa and a few others had recently surfaced with it.
Unlike the other elements, which were more physical in nature, spirit was
tied into the mind and all sorts of psychic phenomena. No one fully
understood it.
Making charms with spirit was something Lissa had only recently
begun to experiment with--and she wasn't very good at it. Her best spirit
ability was healing, so she kept trying to make healing charms. The last one
had been a bracelet that singed my arm.
"This one works. Only a little, but it'll help keep the darkness away
during the trial."
She spoke lightly, but we both knew the seriousness of her words.
With all of spirit's gifts came a cost: a darkness that showed itself now as
anger and confusion, and eventually led to insanity. Darkness that
sometimes bled over into me through our bond. Lissa and I had been told
that with charms and her healing, we could fight it off. That was also
something we had yet to master.
I gave her a faint smile, moved by her concern, and accepted the ring.
It didn't scald my hand, which I took as a promising sign. It was tiny and
only fit on my pinky. I felt nothing whatsoever as it slid on. Sometimes that
happened with healing charms. Or it could mean the ring was completely
ineffectual. Either way, no harm done.
"Thanks," I said. I felt delight sweep through her, and we continued
walking.
I held my hand out before me, admiring the way the green stones
glittered. Jewelry wasn't a great idea in the kind of physical ordeals I'd be
facing, but I would have gloves on to cover it.
"Hard to believe that after this, we'll be done here and out in the real
world," I mused aloud, not really considering my words.
Beside me, Lissa stiffened, and I immediately regretted speaking.
"Being out in the real world" meant Lissa and I were going to undertake a
10
task she'd--unhappily--promised to help me with a couple months ago.
While in Siberia, I'd learned there might be a way to restore Dimitri
back to being a dhampir like me. It was a long shot--possibly a lie--and
considering the way he was fixated on killing me, I had no illusions that I
would have any other choice but to kill him if it came down to him or me.
But if there was a way I might save him before that happened, I had to find
out.
Unfortunately, the only lead we had to making this miracle come true
was through a criminal. Not just any criminal either: Victor Dashkov, a royal
Moroi who had tortured Lissa and committed all sorts of other atrocities that
had made our lives hell. Justice had been served, and Victor was locked
away in prison, which complicated things. We'd learned that so long as he
was destined for a life behind bars, he saw no reason to share what he knew
about his half-brother--the only person who had once allegedly saved a
Strigoi. I'd decided--possibly illogically--that Victor might give up the
information if we offered him the one thing no one else could: freedom.
This idea was not foolproof, for a number of reasons. First, I didn't
know if it would work. That was kind of a big thing. Second, I had no idea
how to stage a prison break, let alone where his prison even was. And
finally, there was the fact that we would be releasing our mortal enemy. That
was devastating enough to me, let alone Lissa. Yet as much as the idea
troubled her--and believe me, it did--she'd firmly sworn she would help me.
I'd offered to free her from the promise dozens of times in the last couple
months, but she'd stood firm. Of course, considering we had no way to even
find the prison, her promise might not matter in the end.
I tried to fill the awkward silence between us, explaining instead that
I'd really meant we'd be able to celebrate her birthday in style next week. My
attempts were interrupted by Stan, one of my longtime instructors.
"Hathaway!" he barked, coming from the direction of the field. "Nice of you
to join us. Get in there now!"
Thoughts of Victor vanished from Lissa's mind. Lissa gave me a
quick hug. "Good luck," she whispered. "Not that you need it."
Stan's expression told me that this ten-second goodbye was ten
seconds too long. I gave Lissa a grin by way of thanks, and then she headed
off to find our friends in the stands while I scurried after Stan.
"You're lucky you aren't one of the first ones," he growled. "People
were even making bets about whether you'd show."
"Really?" I asked cheerfully. "What kind of odds are there on that?
Because I can still change my mind and put down my own bet. Make a little
pocket money."
11
His narrowed eyes shot me a warning that needed no words as we
entered the waiting area adjacent to the field, across from the stands. It had
always amazed me in past years how much work went into these trials, and I
was no less impressed now as I saw it up close. The barrack that novices
waited in was constructed out of wood, complete with a roof. The structure
looked as though it had been part of the stadium forever. It had been built
with remarkable speed and would be taken down equally quickly once the
trials were over. A doorway about three people wide gave a partial glimpse
onto the field, where one of my classmates was waiting anxiously for her
name to be called. All sorts of obstacles were set up there, challenges to test
balance and coordination while still having to battle and elude the adult
guardians who would be lurking around objects and corners. Wooden walls
had been constructed on one end of the field, creating a dark and confusing
maze. Nets and shaky platforms hung across other areas, designed to test just
how well we could fight under difficult conditions.
A few of the other novices crowded the doorway, hoping to get an
advantage by watching those who went ahead of them. Not me. I would go
in there blind, content to take on whatever they threw before me. Studying
the course now would simply make me overthink and panic. Calm was what
I needed now.
So I leaned against one of the barrack walls and watched those around
me. It appeared that I really had been the last to show up, and I wondered if
people had actually lost money betting on me. Some of my classmates
whispered in clusters. Some were doing stretches and warm-up exercises.
Others stood with instructors who had been mentors. Those teachers spoke
intently to their students, giving last-minute words of advice. I kept hearing
words like focus and calm down.
Seeing the instructors made my heart clench. Not so long ago, that
was how I'd pictured this day. I'd imagined Dimitri and me standing
together, with him telling me to take this seriously and not to lose my cool
when I was out on the field. Alberta had done a fair amount of mentoring for
me since I'd returned from Russia, but as captain, she was out on the field
herself now, busy with all sorts of responsibilities. She had no time to come
in here and hold my hand. Friends of mine who might have offered
comfort--Eddie, Meredith, and others--were wrapped up in their own fears. I
was alone.
Without her or Dimitri--or, well, anyone--I felt a surprising ache of
loneliness flow through me. This wasn't right. I shouldn't have been alone.
Dimitri should have been here with me. That's how it was supposed to have
been. Closing my eyes, I allowed myself to pretend he was really there, only
12
inches away as we spoke.
"Don't worry, comrade. I can do this blindfolded. Hell, maybe I
actually will. Do you have anything I can use? If you're nice to me, I'll even
let you tie it on." Since this fantasy would have taken place after we'd slept
together, there was a strong possibility that he would have later helped me
take off that blindfold--among other things.
I could perfectly picture the exasperated shake of his head that would
earn me. "Rose, I swear, sometimes it feels like every day with you is my
own personal trial."
But I knew he'd smile anyway, and the look of pride and
encouragement he'd give me as I headed toward the field would be all I
needed to get through the tests--
"Are you meditating?"
I opened my eyes, astonished at the voice. "Mom? What are you
doing here?"
My mother, Janine Hathaway, stood in front of me. She was just a few
inches shorter than me but had enough fight in her for someone twice my
size. The dangerous look on her tanned face dared anyone to bring on a
challenge. She gave me a wry smile and put one hand on her hip.
"Did you honestly think I wouldn't come to watch you?"
"I don't know," I admitted, feeling kind of guilty for doubting her. She
and I hadn't had much contact over the years, and it was only recent events--
most of them bad--that had begun to reestablish our connection. Most of the
time, I still didn't know how to feel about her. I oscillated between a little
girl's need for her absent mother and a teenager's resentment over
abandonment. I also wasn't entirely sure if I'd forgiven her for the time she
"accidentally" punched me in a mock fight. "I figured you'd have, you know,
more important things to do."
"There's no way I could miss this." She inclined her head toward the
stands, making her auburn curls sway. "Neither could your father."
"What?"
I hurried toward the doorway and peered out onto the fields. My view
of the stands wasn't fantastic, thanks to all the obstacles on the field, but it
was good enough. There he was: Abe Mazur. He was easy to spot, with his
black beard and mustache, as well as the emerald green scarf knotted over
his dress shirt. I could even barely make out the glint of his gold earring. He
had to be melting in this heat, but I figured it would take more than a little
sweat for him to tame down his flashy fashion sense.
If my relationship with my mother was sketchy, my relationship with
my father was practically nonexistent. I'd met him back in May, and even
13
then, it wasn't until after I'd gotten back that I found out I was his daughter.
All dhampirs had one Moroi parent, and he was mine. I still wasn't sure how
I felt about him. Most of his background remained a mystery, but there were
plenty of rumors that he was involved with illegal business. People also
acted like he was the kneecap-breaking type, and though I'd seen little
evidence of this, I didn't find it surprising. In Russia, they called him Zmey:
the serpent.
While I stared at him in astonishment, my mom strolled over to my
side. "He'll be happy you made it in time," she said. "He's running some big
wager on whether you'd show. He put his money on you, if that makes you
feel any better."
I groaned. "Of course. Of course he'd be the bookie behind the pool. I
should have known as soon as--" My jaw dropped. "Is he talking to Adrian?"
Yup. Sitting beside Abe was Adrian Ivashkov--my more-or-less
boyfriend. Adrian was a royal Moroi--and another spirit user like Lissa. He'd
been crazy about me (and often just crazy) ever since we first met, but I'd
had eyes only for Dimitri. After the failure in Russia, I'd returned and
promised to give Adrian a shot. To my surprise, things had been . . . good
between us. Great, even. He'd written me up a proposal of why dating him
was a sound decision. It had included things like "I'll give up cigarettes
unless I really, really need one" and "I'll unleash romantic surprises every
week, such as: an impromptu picnic, roses, or a trip to Paris--but not actually
any of those things because now they're not surprises."
Being with him wasn't like it had been with Dimitri, but then, I
supposed, no two relationships could ever be exactly alike. They were
different men, after all. I still woke up all the time, aching over the loss of
Dimitri and our love. I tormented myself over my failure to kill him in
Siberia and free him from his undead state. Still, that despair didn't mean my
romantic life was over--something it had taken me a while to accept. Moving
on was hard, but Adrian did make me happy. And for now, that was enough.
But that didn't necessarily mean I wanted him cozying up to my pirate
mobster father either.
"He's a bad influence!" I protested.
My mother snorted. "I doubt Adrian will influence Abe that much."
"Not Adrian! Abe. Adrian's trying to be on good behavior. Abe will
mess everything up." Along with smoking, Adrian had sworn he'd quit
drinking and other vices in his dating proposal. I squinted at him and Abe
across the crowded stands, trying to figure out what topic could be so
interesting. "What are they talking about?"
"I think that's the least of your problems right now." Janine Hathaway
14
was nothing if not practical. "Worry less about them and more about that
field."
"Do you think they're talking about me?"
"Rose!" My mother gave me a light punch on the arm, and I dragged
my eyes back to her. "You have to take this seriously. Keep calm, and don't
get distracted."
Her words were so like what I'd imagined Dimitri saying that a small
smile crept onto my face. I wasn't alone out here after all.
"What's so funny?" she asked warily.
"Nothing," I said, giving her a hug. She was stiff at first and then
relaxed, actually hugging me back briefly before stepping away. "I'm glad
you're here."
My mother wasn't the overly affectionate type, and I'd caught her off
guard. "Well," she said, obviously flustered, "I told you I wouldn't miss
this."
I glanced back at the stands. "Abe, on the other hand, I'm not so sure
of."
Or . . . wait. An odd idea came to me. No, not so odd, actually. Shady
or not, Abe had connections--ones extensive enough to slip a message to
Victor Dashkov in prison. Abe had been the one to ask for info about Robert
Doru, Victor's spirit-wielding brother, as a favor to me. When Victor had
sent back the message saying he had no reason to help Abe with what he
needed, I'd promptly written off my father's assistance and jumped to my
prison-break idea. But now--
"Rosemarie Hathaway!"
It was Alberta who called me, her voice ringing loud and clear. It was
like a trumpet, a call to battle. All thoughts of Abe and Adrian--and yes,
even Dimitri--vanished from my mind. I think my mother wished me good
luck, but the exact wording was lost on me as I strode toward Alberta and
the field. Adrenaline surged through me. All my attention was now on what
lay ahead: the test that would finally make me a guardian.
15
TWO
MY TRIALS WERE A BLUR.
You'd think, seeing as they were the most important part of my
education at St. Vladimir's, that I'd remember everything in perfect,
crystalline detail. Yet my earlier thoughts were kind of realized. How could
these measure up to what I'd already faced? How could these mock fights
compare to a mob of Strigoi descending on our school? I'd had to stand
against overwhelming odds, not knowing if those I loved were alive or dead.
And how could I fear a so-called battle with one of the school's instructors
after having fought Dimitri? He'd been lethal as a dhampir and worse as a
Strigoi. Not that I meant to make light of the trials. They were serious.
Novices failed them all the time, and I refused to be one of them. I was
attacked on all sides, by guardians who'd been fighting and defending Moroi
since before I was born. The arena wasn't flat, which complicated
everything. They'd filled it with contraptions and obstacles, beams and steps
that tested my balance--including a bridge that painfully reminded me of that
last night I'd seen Dimitri. I'd pushed him after plunging a silver stake into
his heart--a stake that had fallen out during his plummet to the river below.
The arena's bridge was a bit different from the solid wooden one upon
which Dimitri and I had fought in Siberia. This one was rickety, a badly
constructed path of wooden planks with only rope rails for support. Every
step made the entire bridge swing and shake, and holes in the boards showed
me where former classmates had (unfortunately for them) discovered weak
spots. The test they assigned me on the bridge was probably the worst of all.
My goal was to get a "Moroi" away from a group of "Strigoi" that were in
pursuit. My Moroi was being played by Daniel, a new guardian who had
come with others to the school to replace those killed in the attack. I didn't
know him very well, but for this exercise, he was playing completely docile
and helpless--even a little afraid, just as any Moroi I was guarding might
have been.
He gave me a little resistance about stepping onto the bridge, and I
used my calmest, most coaxing voice to finally get him to walk out ahead of
me. Apparently they were testing people skills as well as combat skills. Not
far behind us on the course, I knew the guardians acting as Strigoi were
16
approaching.
Daniel stepped out, and I shadowed him, still giving him reassurances
while all my senses stayed on alert. The bridge swung wildly, telling me
with a jolt that our pursuers had joined us. I glanced back and saw three
"Strigoi" coming after us. The guardians playing them were doing a
remarkable job--moving with as much dexterity and speed as true Strigoi
would. They were going to overtake us if we didn't get a move on.
"You're doing great," I told Daniel. It was hard to keep the right tone
in my voice. Screaming at Moroi might put them into shock. Too much
gentleness would make them think it wasn't serious. "And I know you can
move faster. We need to keep ahead of them--they're getting closer. I know
you can do this. Come on."
I must have passed that persuasive part of the test because he did
indeed pick up his speed--not quite enough to match that of our pursuers, but
it was a start. The bridge shifted crazily again. Daniel yelped convincingly
and froze, gripping the rope sides tightly. Ahead of him, I saw another
guardian-as-Strigoi waiting on the opposite side of the bridge. I believed his
name was Randall, another new instructor. I was sandwiched between him
and the group at my back. But Randall stayed still, waiting on the first plank
of the bridge so that he could shake it and make it harder for us.
"Keep going," I urged, my mind spinning. "You can do it."
"But there's a Strigoi there! We're trapped," Daniel exclaimed.
"Don't worry. I'll deal with him. Just move."
My voice was fierce this time, and Daniel crept forward, pushed on by
my command. The next few moments required perfect timing on my part. I
had to watch the "Strigoi" on both sides of us and keep Daniel in motion, all
the while monitoring where we were on the bridge. When we were almost
three quarters of the way across, I hissed, "Drop down on all fours right
now! Hurry!"
He obeyed, coming to a halt. I immediately knelt, still speaking in an
undertone: "I'm about to shout at you. Ignore it." In a louder voice, for the
benefit of those coming after us, I exclaimed, "What are you doing? We
can't stop!"
Daniel didn't budge, and I again spoke softly. "Good. See where the
ropes connect the base to the rails? Grab them. Grab them as tightly as you
can, and do not let go, no matter what happens. Wrap them around your
hands if you have to. Do it now!"
He obeyed. The clock was ticking, and I didn't waste another moment.
In one motion, while still crouched, I turned around and hacked at the ropes
with a knife I'd been given along with my stake. The blade was sharp, thank
17
God. The guardians running the trial weren't messing around. It didn't
instantly slice the ropes, but I cut through them so quickly that the "Strigoi"
on either side of us didn't have time to react.
The ropes snapped just as I again reminded Daniel to hold on. The
two halves of the bridge swung toward the sides of wooden scaffolding,
carried by the weight of the people on them. Well, ours did at least. Daniel
and I had been prepared. The three pursuers behind us hadn't been. Two fell.
One just barely managed to catch hold of a plank, slipping a bit before
securing his grip. The actual drop was six feet, but I'd been told to regard it
as fifty--a distance that would kill me and Daniel if we fell.
Against all odds, he was still clutching the rope. I was hanging on as
well, and once the rope and wood were lying flat against the scaffolding's
sides, I began scrambling up it like a ladder. It wasn't easy climbing over
Daniel, but I did it, giving me one more chance to tell him to hang on.
Randall, who'd been waiting ahead of us, hadn't fallen off. He'd had his feet
on the bridge when I cut it, though, and had been surprised enough to lose
his balance. Quick to recover, he was now shimmying up the ropes, trying to
climb up to the solid surface above. He was much closer to it than me, but I
just managed to grab his leg and stop him. I jerked him toward me. He
maintained his grip on the bridge, and we struggled. I knew I probably
couldn't pull him off, but I was able to keep getting closer. At last, I let go of
the knife I'd been holding and managed to get the stake from my belt--
something that tested my balance. Randall's ungainly position gave me a
shot at his heart, and I took it.
For the trials, we had blunt-ended stakes, ones that wouldn't pierce
skin but which could be used with enough force to convince our opponents
that we knew what we were doing. My alignment was perfect, and Randall,
conceding it would have been a killing blow, relinquished his hold and
dropped off the bridge.
That left me the painful task of coaxing Daniel to climb up. It took a
long time, but again, his behavior wasn't out of character with how a scared
Moroi might behave. I was just grateful he hadn't decided a real Moroi
would have lost his grip and fallen.
After that challenge came many more, but I fought on, never slowing
down or letting exhaustion affect me. I slipped into battle mode, my senses
focused on basic instincts: fight, dodge, kill.
And while staying tuned to those, I still had to be innovative and not
fall into a lull. Otherwise, I wouldn't be able to react to a surprise like the
bridge. I managed it all, battling on with no other thoughts beyond
accomplishing the tasks before me. I tried not to think of my instructors as
18
people I knew. I treated them like Strigoi. I pulled no punches.
When it finally ended, I almost didn't realize it. I was simply standing
there in the middle of the field with no more attackers coming at me. I was
alone. Slowly, I became more aware of the world's details. Crowds in the
stands cheering. A few instructors nodding to each other as they joined in.
The pounding of my own heart.
It wasn't until a grinning Alberta tugged at my arm that I realized it
was over. The test I'd waited for my entire life, finished in what felt like a
blink of an eye.
"Come on," she said, wrapping her arm around my shoulder and
guiding me toward the exit. "You need to get some water and sit down."
Dazed, I let her lead me off the field, around which people were still
cheering and crying my name. Behind us, I heard some people saying they
had to take a break and fix the bridge. She led me back to the waiting area
and gently pushed me onto a bench. Someone else sat beside me and handed
me a bottle of water. I looked over and saw my mother. She had an
expression on her face that I had never seen before: pure, radiant pride.
"That was it?" I asked at last.
She surprised me again with genuinely amused laughter. "That was
it?" she repeated. "Rose, you were out there for almost an hour. You blew
through that test with flying colors--probably one of the best trials this
school's ever seen."
"Really? It just seemed . . ." Easy wasn't quite the right word. "It was
a haze, that's all."
My mom squeezed my hand. "You were amazing. I'm so, so proud of
you."
The realization of it all truly, truly hit me then, and I felt a smile of my
own spreading over my lips. "Now what happens?" I asked.
"Now you become a guardian."
I'd been tattooed many times, but none of those events came close to
the ceremony and fanfare that occurred while getting my promise mark.
Before, I'd received molnija marks for kills I'd made in unexpected, tragic
circumstances: fighting Strigoi in Spokane, the school attack and rescue--
events that were cause for mourning, not celebration. After all those kills,
we'd kind of lost count, and while guardian tattoo artists still tried to log
every individual kill, they'd finally given me a star-shaped mark that was a
fancy way of saying we'd lost count.
Tattooing isn't a fast process, even if you're getting a small one, and
19
my entire graduating class had to get them. The ceremony took place in what
was usually the Academy's dining room, a room they were able to
remarkably transform into something as grand and elaborate as we'd find at
the Royal Court. Spectators--friends, family, guardians--packed the room as
Alberta called our names one at a time and read our scores as we approached
the tattoo artist. The scores were important. They would be made public and,
along with our overall school grades, influence our assignments. Moroi
could request certain grads for their guardians. Lissa had requested me, of
course, but even the best scores in the world might not compensate for all
the black behavioral marks on my record.
There were no Moroi at this ceremony, though, aside from the handful
who had been invited as guests by the new graduates. Everyone else
gathered was a dhampir: either one of the established guardians or about-tobecome-
guardians like me. The guests sat in the back, and the senior
guardians sat near the front. My classmates and I stood the whole time,
maybe as some sort of last test of endurance.
I didn't mind. I'd changed out of my torn and dirty clothes into simple
slacks and a sweater, an outfit that seemed dressy while still retaining a
solemn feel. It was a good call because the air in the room was thick with
tension, all faces a mix of joy at our success but also anxiety about our new
and deadly role in the world. I watched with shining eyes as my friends were
called up, surprised and impressed at many of the scores.
Eddie Castile, a close friend, got a particularly high score in one-onone
Moroi protection. I couldn't help a smile as I watched the tattooist give
Eddie his mark. "I wonder how he got his Moroi over the bridge," I
murmured in an undertone. Eddie was pretty resourceful.
Beside me, another friend of mine, Meredith, gave me a puzzled look.
"What are you talking about?" Her voice was equally soft.
"When we were chased onto the bridge with a Moroi. Mine was
Daniel." She still looked confused, and I elaborated. "And they put Strigoi
on each side?"
"I crossed the bridge," she whispered, "but it was just me being
chased. I took my Moroi through a maze."
A glare from a nearby classmate shut us up, and I hid my frown.
Maybe I wasn't the only one who'd gone through the trial in a daze. Meredith
had her facts screwed up.
When my name was called, I heard a few gasps as Alberta read my
scores. I had the highest in the class by far. I was kind of glad she didn't read
my academic grades. They would have totally taken away some of the glory
of the rest of my performance. I'd always done well in my combat classes,
20
but math and history . . . well, those were a bit lacking, particularly since I
always seemed to be dropping in and out of school.
My hair was pulled tightly into a bun, with every stray wisp held with
hairpins so that the artist would have nothing to interfere with his work. I
leaned forward to give him a good view and heard him grunt in surprise.
With the back of my neck covered in marks, he'd have to be tricky. Usually
a new guardian provided a blank canvas. This guy was good, though, and
managed to delicately place the promise mark in the center of the nape of
my neck after all. The promise mark looked like a long, stretched-out S, with
curly ends. He fit it in between the molnija marks, letting it wrap around
them like an embrace. The process hurt, but I kept my face blank, refusing to
flinch. I was shown the final results in a mirror before he covered it up with
a bandage so it would heal cleanly.
After that, I rejoined my classmates and watched as the rest of them
received their tattoos. It meant standing for another two hours, but I didn't
mind. My brain was still reeling with everything that had happened today. I
was a guardian. A real, honest-to-goodness guardian. And with that thought
came questions. What would happen now? Would my scores be good
enough to erase my record of bad behavior? Would I be Lissa's guardian?
And what about Victor? What about Dimitri?
I shifted uneasily as the full impact of the guardian ceremony hit me.
This wasn't just about Dimitri and Victor. This was about me--about the rest
of my life. School was over. I would no longer have teachers tracking my
every move or correcting me when I made mistakes. All decisions would be
on me when I was out protecting someone. Moroi and younger dhampirs
would look to me as the authority. And I would no longer have the luxury of
practicing combat one minute and lounging in my room the next. There were
no clear-cut classes anymore. I would be on duty all the time. The thought
was daunting, the pressure almost too great. I'd always equated graduation
with freedom. Now I wasn't so sure. What new shape was my life going to
take? Who would decide? And how could I reach Victor if I was assigned to
guard anyone besides Lissa?
Across the room, I met Lissa's eyes among the audience. They burned
with a pride that matched my mother's, and she grinned when our gazes met.
Get that look off your face, she chastised through the bond. You
shouldn't look that anxious, not today. You need to celebrate.
I knew she was right. I could handle what was to come. My worries,
which were many, could wait one more day--particularly since the exuberant
mood of my friends and family ensured that I would celebrate. Abe, with
that influence he always seemed to wield, had secured a small banquet room
21
and thrown a party for me that seemed more suited to a royal debutante, not
some lowly, reckless dhampir.
Before the event, I changed yet again. Prettier party clothes now
seemed more appropriate than the formal molnija ceremony outfit. I put on a
short-sleeved, emerald green wrap dress and hung my nazar around my
neck, even though it didn't match. The nazar was a small pendant that
looked like an eye, with different shades of blue circling it. In Turkey, where
Abe came from, it was believed to offer protection. He'd given it to my
mother years ago, and she'd in turn given it to me.
By the time I'd put on makeup and brushed out my tangled hair into
long, dark waves (because my tattoo bandages didn't go with the dress at
all), I hardly looked like someone capable of fighting monsters or even
throwing a punch. No--that wasn't quite true, I realized a moment later.
Staring into the mirror, I was surprised to see a haunted look in my brown
eyes. There was pain there, pain and loss that even the nicest dress and
makeup couldn't hide.
I ignored it and set off for the party, promptly running into Adrian as
soon as I stepped outside my dorm. Without a word, he swept me into his
arms and smothered me with a kiss. I was totally caught off guard. It figured.
Undead creatures didn't surprise me, but one flippant royal Moroi could.
And it was quite the kiss, one that I almost felt guilty about sinking
into. I'd had concerns when first dating Adrian, but many of them had
disappeared over time. After watching him flirt shamelessly and take
nothing seriously for so long, I'd never expected to see such devotion from
him in our relationship. I also hadn't expected to find my feelings for him
growing--which seemed so contradictory considering I still loved Dimitri
and was concocting impossible ways to save him.
I laughed when Adrian set me down. Nearby, a few younger Moroi
had stopped to watch us. Moroi dating dhampirs wasn't super uncommon at
our age, but a notorious dhampir dating the Moroi queen's great-nephew?
That was kind of out there--especially since it was widely known how much
Queen Tatiana hated me. There had been few witnesses to my last meeting
with her, when she'd screamed at me to stay away from Adrian, but word of
that kind of thing always gets around.
"Like the show?" I asked our voyeurs. Realizing they'd been busted,
the Moroi kids hastily continued on their way. I turned back to Adrian and
smiled. "What was that? It was kind of a big kiss to throw on me in public."
"That," he said grandly, "was your reward for kicking so much ass in
those trials." He paused. "It was also because you look totally hot in that
dress."
22
I gave him a wry look. "Reward, huh? Meredith's boyfriend got her
diamond earrings."
He caught hold of my hand and gave an unconcerned shrug as we
began to walk to the party. "You want diamonds? I'll give you diamonds. I'll
shower you in them. Hell, I'll get you a gown made out of them. But it's
going to be skimpy."
"I think I'll settle for the kiss after all," I said, imagining Adrian
dressing me like a swimsuit model. Or a pole dancer. The jewelry reference
also suddenly brought on an unwanted memory. When Dimitri had held me
captive in Siberia, lulling me into blissful complacency with his bites, he'd
showered me with jewelry too.
"I knew you were a badass," continued Adrian. A warm summer
breeze ruffled the brown hair he so painstakingly styled each day, and with
his free hand, he absentmindedly tried to arrange it back into place. "But I
didn't realize just how much until I saw you dropping guardians out there."
"Does that mean you're going to be nicer to me?" I teased.
"I'm already nice to you," he said loftily. "Do you know how badly I
want a cigarette right now? But no. I manfully suffer through nicotine
withdrawal--all for you. But I think seeing you out there will make me a
little more careful around you. That crazy dad of yours is kind of gonna
make me cautious too."
I groaned, recalling how Adrian and Abe had been sitting together.
"God. Did you really have to hang out with him?"
"Hey, he's awesome. A little unstable, but awesome. We got along
great." Adrian opened the door to the building we were seeking. "And he's a
badass in his way too. I mean, any other guy who wore scarves like that?
He'd be laughed out of this school. Not Abe. He'd beat someone almost as
badly as you would. In fact . . ." Adrian's voice turned nervous. I gave him a
surprised look.
"In fact what?"
"Well . . . Abe said he liked me. But he also made it clear what he'd do
to me if I ever hurt you or did anything bad." Adrian grimaced. "In fact, he
described what he'd do in very graphic detail. Then, just like that, he
switched to some random, happy topic. I like the guy, but he's scary."
"He's out of line!" I came to a halt outside the party's room. Through
the door, I heard the buzz of conversation. We were apparently among the
last to arrive. I guessed that meant I'd be making a grand entrance fitting for
the guest of honor. "He has no right to threaten my boyfriends. I'm eighteen.
An adult. I don't need his help. I can threaten my boyfriends myself."
My indignation amused Adrian, and he gave me a lazy smile. "I agree
23
with you. But that doesn't mean I'm not going to take his 'advice' seriously.
My face is too pretty to risk."
His face was pretty, but that didn't stop me from shaking my head in
exasperation. I reached for the door's handle, but Adrian pulled me back.
"Wait," he said.
He drew me into his arms again, our lips meeting in another hot kiss.
My body pressed to his, and I found myself confused by my own feelings
and the realization that I was reaching a point where I might want more than
just kissing.
"Okay," said Adrian when we'd finally broken away. "Now we can go
in."
He had that same light tone to his voice, but in his dark green eyes, I
saw the kindling of passion. I wasn't the only one considering more than just
kissing. So far, we'd avoided discussing sex, and he'd actually been very
good about not pressuring me. I think he knew I just wasn't ready after
Dimitri, but in moments like these, I could see just how difficult it was for
Adrian to hold back.
It softened something inside of me, and standing on my tiptoes, I gave
him another kiss. "What was that?" he asked a few moments later.
I grinned. "Your reward."
When we finally made it into the party, everyone in the room greeted
me with cheers and proud smiles. A long time ago, I'd thrived on being the
center of attention. That desire had faded a little, but now, I put on a
confident face and accepted my loved ones' praise with swagger and
happiness. I held up my hands triumphantly, earning more clapping and
approval.
My party was almost as much of a blur as my trials. You never really
realize how many people care about you until they all turn out to support
you. It made me feel humble and almost a little teary. I kept that to myself,
though. I could hardly start crying at my own victory party.
Everyone wanted to talk to me, and I was surprised and delighted each
time some new person approached me. It wasn't often that I had all the
people I loved best in one place, and, uneasily I realized this opportunity
might never come again.
"Well, you've finally got a license to kill. It's about time."
I turned and met the amused eyes of Christian Ozera, a onetime
annoyance who'd become a good friend. So good, in fact, that in my joyous
zeal, I reached out and hugged him--something he clearly didn't expect. I
was surprising everyone today.
"Whoa, whoa," he said backing up, flushing. "It figures. You're the
24
only girl who'd get all emotional about the thought of killing. I don't even
want to think about what goes on when you and Ivashkov are alone."
"Hey, look who's talking. You're itching to get out there yourself."
Christian shrugged by way of agreement. It was a standard rule in our
world: Guardians protected Moroi. Moroi didn't get involved in battles. Yet
after recent Strigoi attacks, a lot of Moroi--though hardly a majority--had
begun to argue that it was time for Moroi to step up and start helping the
guardians. Fire users like Christian were particularly valuable since burning
was one of the best ways to kill a Strigoi (along with staking and
decapitation). The movement to teach Moroi to fight was currently--and
purposely--stalled in the Moroi government, but that hadn't stopped some
Moroi from practicing in secret. Christian was one of them. Glancing beside
him, I blinked in astonishment. There was someone with him, someone I'd
hardly noticed.
Jill Mastrano hovered near him like a shadow. A Moroi freshman--
well, soon to be a sophomore--Jill had come forward as someone who also
wanted to fight. She had sort of become Christian's student.
"Hey Jill," I said, giving her a warm smile. "Thanks for coming."
Jill flushed. She was determined to learn to defend herself, but she
grew flustered among others--particularly around "celebrities" like me.
Rambling was her nervous reaction. "I had to," she said, brushing her long,
light brown hair out of her face. Like always, it was a tangle of curls. "I
mean, it's so cool what you did. At the trials. Everyone was amazed. I heard
one of the guardians saying that they'd never seen anything like you, so
when Christian asked if I wanted to come, of course I had to. Oh!" Her light
green eyes went wide. "I didn't even tell you congratulations. Sorry.
Congratulations."
Beside her, Christian struggled to keep a straight face. I made no such
attempts and laughingly gave her a hug too. I was in serious danger of
turning warm and fuzzy. I'd probably get my tough guardian status revoked
if I kept this up. "Thanks. Are you two ready to take on a Strigoi army yet?"
"Soon," said Christian. "But we might need your backup." He knew as
well as I did that Strigoi were way out of their league. His fire magic had
helped me a lot, but on his own? That'd be a different story. He and Jill were
teaching themselves to use magic offensively, and when I'd had time
between classes, I'd taught them a few combat moves.
Jill's face fell a little. "It's going to stop once Christian's gone."
I turned to him. It was no surprise he'd be leaving. We'd all be
leaving. "What are you going to do with yourself?" I asked.
He shrugged. "Go to Court with the rest of you. Aunt Tasha says we're
25
going to have a 'talk' about my future." He grimaced. Whatever his plans
were, it looked like they weren't the same as Tasha's. Most royal Moroi
would head off to elite colleges. I wasn't sure what Christian had in mind.
It was standard practice after graduation for new guardians to go to
the Moroi Royal Court for orientation and to get their assignments. We were
all due to leave in a couple of days. Following Christian's gaze, I saw his
aunt across the room, and so help me, she was talking to Abe.
Tasha Ozera was in her late twenties, with the same glossy black hair
and ice blue eyes that Christian had. Her beautiful face was marred,
however, by some terrible scarring on one side--the result of injuries
inflicted by Christian's own parents. Dimitri had been turned into a Strigoi
against his will, but the Ozeras had purposely chosen to turn for the sake of
immortality. It had ironically cost them their lives when the guardians
hunted them down. Tasha had raised Christian (when he wasn't at school)
and was one of the main leaders in the movement supporting those Moroi
who wanted to fight Strigoi.
Scar or not, I admired her and still thought she was beautiful. From
my wayward father's attitude, it was clear he did too. He poured her a glass
of champagne and said something that made her laugh. She leaned forward,
like she was telling him a secret, and he laughed in return. My jaw dropped.
Even from this far away, it was obvious they were flirting.
"Dear God," I said with a shudder, hastily turning back to Christian
and Jill. Christian seemed torn between smugness at my discomfort and his
own unease at watching a woman he regarded as a mother get hit upon by a
pirate mobster guy. A moment later, Christian's expression softened as he
turned back to Jill and continued our conversation.
"Hey, you don't need me," he said. "You'll find others around here.
You'll have your own superhero club before you know it."
I found myself smiling again, but my kindly feelings were suddenly
shattered by a jolt of jealousy. It wasn't my own, though. It was Lissa's,
coming through the bond. Startled, I glanced around and spotted her across
the room, giving Christian the look of death as he spoke to Jill.
It's worth mentioning that Christian and Lissa used to date. More than
date. They'd been deeply in love, and honestly, they kind of still were.
Unfortunately, recent events had badly strained their relationship, and
Christian had broken up with her. He'd loved her but had lost his trust in her.
Lissa had spun out of control when another spirit user named Avery Lazar
had sought to control her. We'd eventually stopped Avery, and she was
currently locked away in a mental institution, last I'd heard. Christian now
26
knew the reasons for Lissa's horrible behavior, but the damage was done.
Lissa had initially been depressed, but her sorrow had now turned to anger.
She claimed she wanted nothing to do with him anymore, but the
bond gave her away. She was always jealous of any girl he talked to--
particularly Jill, whom he'd been spending a lot of time with lately. I knew
for a fact there was nothing romantic going on there. Jill idolized him as
some wise teacher, nothing more. If she had a crush on anyone, it was
Adrian, who always treated her like a kid sister. We all kind of did, really.
Christian followed my gaze, and his expression hardened. Realizing
she had his attention, Lissa immediately turned away and began talking to
the first guy she found, a good-looking dhampir from my class. She turned
on the flirtatious charm that came so easily to spirit users, and soon, both of
them were laughing and chatting in a way similar to Abe and Tasha. My
party had turned into a round of speed dating.
Christian turned back to me. "Well, looks like she's got plenty to keep
her busy."
I rolled my eyes. Lissa wasn't the only one who was jealous. Just as
she grew angry whenever he hung out with other girls, Christian became
prickly when she spoke to other guys. It was infuriating. Rather than admit
they still had feelings and just needed to patch things up, those two idiots
just kept displaying more and more hostility toward each other.
"Will you stop already and actually try to talk to her like a rational
person someday?" I groaned.
"Sure," he said bitterly. "The day she starts acting like a rational
person."
"Oh my God. You guys are going to make me rip my hair out."
"It'd be a waste of nice hair," said Christian. "Besides, she's made her
attitude perfectly clear."
I started to protest and tell him how stupid he was, but he had no
intention of sticking around to hear a lecture I'd already given a dozen times.
"Come on, Jill," he said. "Rose needs to mingle more."
He quickly stepped away, and I had half a mind to go beat some sense
into him when a new voice spoke.
"When are you going to fix that?" Tasha was standing next to me,
shaking her head at Christian's retreat. "Those two need to be back together."
"I know that. You know that. But they can't seem to get it through
their heads."
"Well, you'd better get on it," she said. "If Christian goes to college
across the country, it'll be too late." There was a dry--and exasperated--note
in her voice when she mentioned Christian going to college.
27
Lissa was going to Lehigh, a university near the Court, per an
arrangement with Tatiana. Lissa would get to attend a bigger university than
Moroi usually went to, in exchange for spending time at the Court and
learning the royal trade.
"I know," I said in exasperation. "But why am I the one who has to fix
it?"
Tasha grinned. "Because you're the only one forceful enough to make
them see reason."
I decided to let Tasha's insolence go, mostly because her talking to me
meant that she wasn't talking to Abe. Glancing across the room, I suddenly
stiffened. He was now talking to my mother. Snatches of their conversation
came to me through the noise.
"Janine," he said winningly, "you haven't aged a day. You could be
Rose's sister. Do you remember that night in Cappadocia?"
My mother actually giggled. I had never heard her do that before. I
decided I never wanted to again. "Of course. And I remember how eager you
were to help me when my dress strap broke."
"Dear God," I said. "He's unstoppable."
Tasha looked puzzled until she saw what I was talking about. "Abe?
He's actually pretty charming."
I groaned. "Excuse me."
I headed toward my parents. I accepted that they'd once had a
romance--one that led to my conception--but that didn't mean I wanted to
watch them relive it. They were recounting some walk on the beach when I
reached them. I promptly tugged Abe's arm away. He was standing way too
close to her.
"Hey, can I talk to you?" I asked.
He looked surprised but shrugged. "Certainly." He gave my mother a
knowing smile. "We'll talk more later."
"Is no woman safe around here?" I demanded as I led him away.
"What are you talking about?"
We came to a stop by the punch bowl. "You're flirting with every
woman in this room!"
My chastising didn't faze him. "Well, there are so many lovely women
here. . . . Is that what you wanted to talk to me about?"
"No! I wanted to talk to you about threatening my boyfriend. You had
no right to do that."
His dark eyebrows shot up. "What, that? That was nothing. Just a
father looking out for his daughter."
"Most fathers don't threaten to disembowel their daughters'
28
boyfriends."
"That's not true. And anyway, that's not what I actually said. It was
much worse."
I sighed. He seemed to delight in my exasperation.
"Think of it as a graduation gift. I'm proud of you. Everyone knew
you'd be good, but no one knew you'd be that good." He winked. "They
certainly didn't expect you to destroy their property."
"What property?"
"The bridge."
I frowned. "I had to. It was the most efficient way. God, that was a
bitch of a challenge. What'd the other grads do? They didn't actually fight in
the middle of that thing, did they?"
Abe shook his head, loving every minute of his superior knowledge.
"No one else was put in that situation."
"Of course they were. We all face the same tests."
"Not you. While planning the trials, the guardians decided you needed
something . . . extra. Something special. After all, you'd been out fighting in
the real world."
"What?" The volume of my voice caught the attention of a few others.
I lowered it, and Meredith's earlier words came back to me. "That's not fair!"
He didn't seem concerned. "You're superior to the others. Making you
do easy things wouldn't have been fair."
I'd faced a lot of ridiculous things in my life, but this was pretty out
there. "So they had me do that crazy bridge stunt instead? And if they were
surprised I cut it, then what the hell else did they expect me to do? How else
was I supposed to survive that?"
"Hmm." He stroked his chin absentmindedly. "I honestly don't think
they knew."
"Oh, for God's sake. This is unbelievable."
"Why are you so mad? You passed."
"Because they put me in a situation they didn't even know how to get
out of." I gave him a suspicious look. "And how do you even know about
this? This is all guardian business."
An expression I didn't like at all came over his face. "Ah, well, I was
with your mother last night and--"
"Whoa, okay. Just stop," I interrupted. "I do not want to hear what you
and my mother were doing last night. I think that'd be worse than the
bridge."
He grinned. "Both are in the past, so no need to worry now. Enjoy
your success."
29
"I'll try. Just don't do me any more favors with Adrian, okay? I mean,
I'm glad you came to support me, but that's more than enough."
Abe gave me a canny look, reminding me that underneath that
swagger he was indeed a shrewd and dangerous man. "You were more than
happy to have me do you a favor after your return from Russia."
I grimaced. He had a point, seeing as he had managed to get a
message into a high-security prison. Even if it hadn't led to anything, he still
got points.
"Okay," I admitted. "That was pretty amazing. And I'm grateful. I still
don't know how you pulled that off." Suddenly, like a dream you recall a day
later, I remembered the thought I'd had just before my trials. I lowered my
voice. "You didn't actually go there, did you?"
He snorted. "Of course not. I wouldn't set foot in that place. I simply
worked my network."
"Where is that place?" I asked, hoping I sounded bland.
He wasn't fooled. "Why do you want to know?"
"Because I'm curious! Convicted criminals always disappear without a
trace. I'm a guardian now, and I don't even know anything about our own
prison system. Is there just one prison? Are there lots?"
Abe didn't answer right away. He was studying me carefully. In his
business, he suspected everyone of ulterior motives. As his daughter, I was
probably doubly suspect. It was in the genes.
He must have underestimated my potential for insanity because he
said at last, "There's more than one. Victor's in one of the worst. It's called
Tarasov."
"Where is it?"
"Right now?" He considered. "In Alaska, I think."
"What do you mean, 'right now'?"
"It moves throughout the year. Right now it's in Alaska. Later, it'll be
in Argentina." He gave me a sly smile, apparently wondering how astute I
was. "Can you guess why?"
"No, I--wait. Sunlight." It made perfect sense. "Alaska's got almost
nonstop daylight this time of year--but nonstop night in the winter."
I think he was prouder of my realization than of my trials. "Any
prisoners trying to escape would have a hard time." In full sun, no Moroi
fugitive would get very far. "Not that anyone can escape through that level
of security anyway." I tried to ignore how foreboding that sounded.
"Seems like they'd put it pretty far north in Alaska then," I said,
hoping to worm out the actual location indirectly. "You get more light that
way."
30
He chuckled. "Even I can't tell you that. That's information the
guardians keep close, buried in their headquarters."
I froze. Headquarters . . .
Abe, despite being usually observant, didn't notice my reaction. His
eyes were watching something across the room. "Is that Renee Szelsky? My,
my . . . she's grown lovely over the years."
I grudgingly waved him away, largely because I wanted to chase this
new plan in my mind--and because Renee wasn't anyone I knew very well,
which made him hitting on her less appalling. "Well, don't let me stop you.
Go lure more women into your web."
Abe didn't need much prodding. Alone, I let my brain spin, wondering
if my developing scheme had any chance of success. His words had sparked
a new plan in my mind. It wasn't much crazier than most of my others.
Across the room, I met Lissa's jade eyes again. With Christian out of sight,
her mood had improved. She was enjoying herself and was excited about the
adventures ahead of us, now that we were free and out in the world. My
mind flashed back to the anxieties I'd felt earlier in the day. We might be
free now, but reality would catch up with us soon. The clock was ticking.
Dimitri was waiting, watching. I wondered briefly if I'd still get his weekly
letters, now that I'd be leaving the school.
I smiled at her, feeling kind of bad that I'd be ruining her mood when I
told her we might now have a very real chance of busting out Victor
Dashkov.
31
THREE
THE NEXT COUPLE OF DAYS were strange. The other novices and
I might have had the flashiest graduation, but we weren't the only ones
finishing our education at St. Vladimir's. The Moroi had their own
commencement ceremony, and campus grew packed with visitors. Then,
almost as quickly as they came, parents disappeared--taking their sons and
daughters with them. Royal Moroi left to spend their summers with their
parents at luxury estates--many in the Southern Hemisphere, where the days
were shorter this time of year. "Ordinary" Moroi left with their parents too,
off to more modest homes, possibly getting summer jobs before college.
And of course, with school wrapping up for the summer, all the other
students left too. Some with no family to go home to, usually dhampirs,
stayed year-round, taking special electives, but they were the minority.
Campus grew emptier each day as my classmates and I waited for the day
when we'd be taken to the Royal Court. We made our farewells to others,
Moroi moving on or younger dhampirs who'd soon be following in our
footsteps.
One person I was sad to part with was Jill. I happened to catch her as I
was walking toward Lissa's dorm the day before my Court trip. There was a
woman with Jill, presumably her mother, and both were carrying boxes. Jill's
face lit up when she saw me.
"Hey Rose! I said goodbye to everyone else but couldn't find you,"
she said excitedly.
I smiled. "Well, I'm glad you caught me."
I couldn't tell her that I'd been saying goodbye too. I'd spent my last
day at St. Vladimir's walking all the familiar sites, starting with the
elementary campus where Lissa and I had first met in kindergarten. I'd
explored the halls and corners of my dorms, walked past favorite
classrooms, and even visited the chapel. I'd also passed a lot of time in areas
filled with bittersweet memories, like the training areas where I'd first gotten
to know Dimitri. The track where he used to make me run laps. The cabin
where we'd finally given in to each other. It had been one of the most
amazing nights of my life, and thinking about it always brought me both joy
and pain.
32
Jill didn't need to be burdened with any of that, though. I turned
toward her mother and started to offer my hand until I realized she couldn't
shake it while maneuvering the box. "I'm Rose Hathaway. Here, let me carry
that."
I took it before she could protest because I was certain she would.
"Thank you," she said, pleasantly surprised. I fell in step with them as they
began walking again. "I'm Emily Mastrano. Jill's told me a lot about you."
"Oh yeah?" I asked, giving Jill a teasing smile.
"Not that much. Just how I hang out with you sometimes." There was
a slight warning in Jill's green eyes, and it occurred to me that Emily
probably didn't know her daughter practiced forbidden forms of Strigoikilling
magic in her free time.
"We like having Jill around," I said, not blowing her cover. "And one
of these days, we're going to teach her to tame that hair."
Emily laughed. "I've been trying for almost fifteen years. Good luck."
Jill's mother was stunning. The two didn't resemble each other much,
at least not superficially. Emily's lustrous hair was straight and black, her
eyes deep blue and long-lashed. She moved with a willowy grace, very
different from Jill's always self-conscious walk. Yet, I could see the shared
genes here and there, the heart-shaped faces and lip shapes. Jill was still
young, and as she grew into her features, she'd likely be a heartbreaker
herself someday--something she was probably oblivious to right now.
Hopefully her self-confidence would grow.
"Where's home for you guys?" I asked.
"Detroit," said Jill, making a face.
"It's not that bad," laughed her mom.
"There are no mountains. Just highways."
"I'm part of a ballet company there," Emily explained. "So we stay
where we can pay the bills." I think I was more surprised that people went to
the ballet in Detroit than that Emily was a ballerina. It made sense, watching
her, and really, with their tall and slim builds, Moroi were ideal dancers as
far as humans were concerned.
"Hey, it's a big city," I told Jill. "Enjoy the excitement while you can
before you come back to the boring middle of nowhere." Of course, illicit
combat training and Strigoi attacks were hardly boring, but I wanted to make
Jill feel better. "And it won't be that long." Moroi summer vacations were
barely two months. Parents were eager to return their children to the safety
of the Academy.
"I guess," said Jill, not sounding convinced. We reached their car, and
I loaded the boxes into the trunk.
33
"I'll e-mail you when I can," I promised. "And I bet Christian will too.
Maybe I can even talk Adrian into it."
Jill brightened, and I was happy to see her return to her normal
overexcited self. "Really? That would be great. I want to hear everything
that goes on at Court. You'll probably get to do all sorts of cool things with
Lissa and Adrian, and I bet Christian will find out all sorts of things . . .
about things."
Emily didn't seem to notice Jill's lame editing attempt and instead
fixed me with a pretty smile. "Thanks for your help, Rose. It was great to
meet you."
"You too--umph!"
Jill had thrown herself into me with a hug. "Good luck with
everything," she said. "You're so lucky--you're going to have such a great
life now!"
I returned the hug, unable to explain how jealous of her I was. Her life
was still safe and innocent. She might resent spending a summer in Detroit,
but the stay would be brief, and soon she'd be back in the familiar and easy
world of St. Vladimir's. She wouldn't be setting out into the unknown and its
dangers.
It was only after she and her mother had driven off that I could bring
myself to respond to her comment. "I hope so," I murmured, thinking about
what was to come. "I hope so."
My classmates and select Moroi flew out early the next day, leaving
the rocky mountains of Montana behind for the rolling hills of Pennsylvania.
The Royal Court was a lot like I remembered, with the same imposing,
ancient feel that St. Vladimir's tried to impart with its towering buildings and
intricate stone architecture. But the school also seemed to want to show off a
wise, studious air, whereas the Court was more ostentatious. It was like the
buildings themselves tried to make sure we all knew that this was the seat of
power and royalty among the Moroi. The Royal Court wanted us to be
amazed and maybe a little cowed.
And even though I'd been here before, I was still impressed. The doors
and windows of the tan stone buildings were embossed and framed in
pristine golden decorations. They were a far cry from the brightness I'd seen
in Russia, but I realized now that the Court's designers had modeled these
buildings off the old European ones--the fortresses and palaces of Saint
Petersburg. St. Vladimir's had benches and paths in the quads and
courtyards, but the Court went a step further. Fountains and elaborate statues
34
of past rulers adorned the lawns, exquisite marble works that had previously
been hidden in snow. Now, in the full throes of summer, they were bright
and on display. And everywhere, everywhere were flowers on trees, bushes,
paths--it was dazzling.
It made sense that new grads would visit the guardians' central
administration, but it occurred to me that there was another reason they
brought new guardians here in the summer. They wanted my classmates and
me to see all of this, to be overwhelmed and appreciative of the glory for
which we were fighting. Looking at the faces of the new graduates, I knew
the tactic was working. Most had never been here before.
Lissa and Adrian had been on my flight, and the three of us clustered
together as we walked with the group. It was as warm as it had been in
Montana, but the humidity here was much thicker. I was sweating after only
a little light walking.
"You did bring a dress this time, right?" asked Adrian.
"Of course," I said. "They've got some fancy things they want us to go
to, aside from the main reception. Although, they might give me my blackand-
white for that."
He shook his head, and I noticed his hand start to move toward his
pocket before hesitating and pulling back. He might have been making
progress in quitting smoking, but I was pretty sure the subconscious urge to
automatically reach for a pack when outdoors was hard to get rid of so
quickly.
"I mean for tonight. For dinner."
I glanced questioningly at Lissa. Her schedule at Court always had
assorted functions thrown into it that "average people" didn't attend. With
my new and uncertain status, I wasn't sure if I'd be going with her. I sensed
her puzzlement through the bond and could tell that she didn't have a clue
about any special dinner plans.
"What dinner?" I asked.
"The one I set up with my family."
"The one you--" I came to an abrupt halt and stared wide-eyed, not
liking the smirk on his face one bit. "Adrian!" A few of the new grads gave
me curious looks and continued walking around us.
"Come on, we've been going out a couple months. Meeting parents is
part of the dating ritual. I've met your mom. I even met your scary-ass dad.
Now it's your turn. I guarantee none of my family's gonna make the kind of
suggestions your dad did."
I'd actually kind of met Adrian's dad before. Or, well, I'd seen him at a
party. I doubted he had any idea who I was--my crazy reputation aside. I
35
knew almost nothing about Adrian's mother. He actually spoke very little
about his family members--well, most of them.
"Just your parents?" I asked warily. "Any other family I should know
about?"
"Well . . ." Adrian's hand twitched again. I think this time he wanted a
cigarette as some sort of protection from the warning note in my voice.
Lissa, I observed, seemed highly amused by all of this. "My favorite greataunt
might stop by."
"Tatiana?" I exclaimed. For the hundredth time, I wondered how I had
lucked out with a guy related to the leader of the entire Moroi world. "She
hates me! You know what happened the last time we talked." Her Royal
Majesty had laid into me, yelling about how I was too trashy to hook up with
her nephew and how she had great "plans" for him and Lissa.
"I think she's come around."
"Oh, come on."
"No, really." He almost looked like he was telling the truth. "I talked
to my mom the other day, and . . . I don't know. Aunt Tatiana doesn't seem
to hate you as much."
I frowned, and the three of us began to walk again. "Maybe she
admires your recent vigilante work," mused Lissa.
"Maybe," I said. But I didn't really believe it. If anything, me going
rogue should have made me more despicable in the queen's eyes.
I felt kind of betrayed that Adrian had sprung this dinner on me, but
there was nothing to be done about it now. The only bright side was that I
had the impression he was teasing me about his aunt stopping by. I told him
I'd go, and my decision put him in a good enough mood that he didn't ask
too many questions when Lissa and I said we were going to do "our own
thing" that afternoon. My classmates were all getting a tour of the Court and
its grounds as part of their indoctrination, but I'd seen it all before and was
able to wiggle out of it. Lissa and I dropped our belongings off in our rooms
and then set out to the far side of the Court, where the not-so-royal people
lived.
"Are you going to tell me yet what this other part of your plan is?"
asked Lissa.
Ever since Abe had explained about Victor's prison, I'd been making
another mental list of the problems we'd have breaking into it. Mainly, there
were two, which was one less than I'd initially had since talking to Abe. Not
that things were really much easier. First, we had no clue where in Alaska
this place was. Second, we didn't know what the prison's defenses and layout
were like. We had no idea what we had to bust through.
36
Yet, something told me all of these answers could be found in one
source, which meant I really only had one immediate problem: how to reach
that source. Fortunately, I knew someone who might be able to help get us
there.
"We're going to see Mia," I told her.
Mia Rinaldi was a former Moroi classmate of ours--a former enemy,
actually. She was also the poster child for total personality makeovers. She'd
gone from a scheming bitch who was willing to crush--and sleep with--
anyone in her quest for popularity to a down-to-earth, confident girl eager to
learn to defend herself and others from Strigoi. She lived here at Court with
her father.
"You think Mia knows how to break into a prison?"
"Mia's good, but I don't think she's that good. She can probably help
us get intel, though."
Lissa groaned. "I can't believe you just used the word intel. This really
is turning into a spy movie." She spoke flippantly, but I could feel the worry
within her. The light tone was masking her fear, the unease she still felt
about freeing Victor, despite her promise to me.
Those non-royals who worked and did ordinary things at Court lived
in apartments far from the queen's quarters and receiving hall. I'd gotten
Mia's address in advance, and we set out across the perfectly manicured
grounds, grumbling to each other along the way about the hot day. We found
her at home, casually dressed in jeans and a T-shirt with a Popsicle in her
hand. Her eyes widened when she saw us outside her door.
"Well, I'll be damned," she said.
I laughed. It was the kind of response I'd give. "Nice to see you too.
Can we come in?"
"Of course." She stepped aside. "You want a Popsicle?"
Did I ever. I took a grape one and sat with her and Lissa in the small
living room. The place was a far cry from the opulence of royal guest
housing, but it was cozy and clean and undoubtedly well loved by Mia and
her father.
"I knew the grads were coming," Mia said, brushing blond curls out of
her face. "But I wasn't sure if you were with them or not. Did you even
graduate?"
"I did," I said. "Got the promise mark and everything." I lifted my hair
so she could see the bandage.
"I'm surprised they let you back in after you took off on your killing
spree. Or did you get extra credit for that?"
Apparently, Mia had heard the same tall tale about my adventures that
37
everyone else had. That was fine with me. I didn't want to talk about the
truth. I didn't want to talk about Dimitri.
"Do you think anyone could stop Rose from doing what she wants?"
asked Lissa with a smile. She was trying to keep us from getting into too
much detail about my past whereabouts, for which I was grateful.
Mia laughed and crunched on a big chunk of lime ice. It was a wonder
she didn't get brain freeze. "True." Her smile faded as she swallowed the
bite. Her blue eyes, always shrewd, studied me in silence for a few moments.
"And Rose wants something now."
"Hey, we're just happy to see you," I said.
"I believe you. But I also believe you've got an ulterior motive."
Lissa's smile grew. She was amused by me being caught in my spy
game. "What makes you say that? Can you read Rose that well or do you
just always assume she's got an ulterior motive?"
Now Mia smiled again. "Both." She scooted forward on the couch,
fixing me with a serious look. When had she grown so perceptive? "Okay.
No point in wasting time. What do you need my help with?"
I sighed, busted. "I need to get inside the guardians' main security
office."
Beside me, Lissa made a sort of strangled noise. I felt kind of bad for
her. While she could conceal her thoughts from me on occasion, there wasn't
much she did or said that came as a true surprise. Me? I continually
blindsided her. She had no clue what was coming half the time, but honestly,
if we were planning on springing a renowned criminal out of prison, then
breaking into a security office shouldn't have been that big of a shock.
"Wow," said Mia. "You don't waste time with the little stuff." Her grin
twitched a bit. "Of course, you wouldn't come to me with little stuff. You
could do that yourself."
"Can you get me--us--in there?" I asked. "You're friendly with some
of the guardians here . . . and your dad has access to a lot of places. . . ." I
didn't know Mr. Rinaldi's exact job, but I thought it was maintenancerelated.
"What are you looking for?" she asked. She held up a hand when I
opened my mouth to protest. "No, no. I don't need details. Just a general idea
so I can figure this out. I know you're not going there just to tour the place."
"I need some records," I explained.
Her eyebrows rose. "Personnel? Trying to get yourself a job?"
"I--no." Huh. That wasn't a bad idea, considering my precarious
position with being assigned to Lissa. But no. One issue at a time. "I need
some records about outside security at other places--schools, royal homes,
38
prisons." I tried to keep my expression casual as I mentioned that last one.
Mia was on board with some crazy things, but even she had her limits. "I
figured they must keep that stuff there?"
"They do," she said. "But most of it's electronic. And no offense, but
that might even be beyond your abilities. Even if we could get to one of their
computers, everything's password protected. And if they walk away, they
lock the computers. I'm guessing you haven't become a hacker since the last
time I saw you."
No, certainly not. And unlike the heroes of those spy movies Lissa
teased me about, I had no tech-savvy friends who could even come close to
breaking that kind of encryption and security. Damn. I stared glumly at my
feet, wondering if I had any chance at all of getting more information out of
Abe.
"But," said Mia, "if the information you need isn't too current, they
might still have paper copies."
I jerked my head up. "Where?"
"They've got mass storage rooms, tucked away in one of the
basements. Files and files. Still under lock and key--but probably easier to
get to than fighting the computers. Again, depends on what you need. How
old it is."
Abe had given me the impression that Tarasov Prison had been
around for a while. Surely there was a record of it in these archives. I didn't
doubt the guardians had gone digital a while ago, which meant we might not
find up-to-the-minute details on the place's security, but I'd settle for a
blueprint.
"It might be what we need. Can you get us in?"
Mia was quiet for several seconds, and I could see her mind whirring.
"Possibly." She glanced at Lissa. "Can you still compel people into being
your slaves?"
Lissa grimaced. "I don't like to think of it like that, but yeah, I can." It
was another of spirit's perks.
Mia considered a few moments more and then gave a quick nod.
"Okay. Come back around two, and we'll see what we can do."
Two in the afternoon for the rest of the world meant the middle of the
night for Moroi, who ran on a nocturnal schedule. Being out in broad
daylight didn't feel particularly sneaky, but I had to figure Mia's planning
here was based on the fact that there would also be fewer people around that
time of day.
I was trying to decide if we should socialize more or head out when a
knock interrupted my thoughts. Mia flinched and suddenly looked
39
uncomfortable. She rose to get the door, and a familiar voice drifted down
the hall toward us.
"Sorry I'm early, but I--"
Christian stepped into the living room. He abruptly shut up when he
saw Lissa and me. Everyone seemed frozen, so it looked like it was up to me
to pretend like this wasn't a horribly awkward situation.
"Hey, Christian," I said cheerfully. "How's it going?"
His eyes were on Lissa, and it took him a moment to drag them to me.
"Fine." He glanced at Mia. "I can come back. . . . "
Lissa hastily stood up. "No," she said, voice cool and princesslike.
"Rose and I have to go anyway."
"Yeah," I agreed, following her lead. "We have . . . stuff . . . to do.
And we don't want to interrupt your . . ." Hell, I had no idea what they were
going to do. Wasn't sure I wanted to.
Mia had found her voice. "Christian wanted to see some of the moves
I've been practicing with the campus guardians."
"Cool." I kept the smile on my face as Lissa and I moved toward the
door. She stepped as far around Christian as she could. "Jill will be jealous."
And not just Jill. After another round of goodbyes, Lissa and I left and
set back off across the grounds. I could feel the anger and jealousy radiating
through her bond.
"It's only their fight club, Liss," I said, having no need for her side of
the conversation. "Nothing's going on. They're going to talk punches and
kicking and other boring stuff." Well, actually that stuff was pretty sweet,
but I wasn't about to glorify Christian and Mia hanging out.
"Maybe now nothing's going on," she growled, staring stonily ahead.
"But who knows what could happen? They spend time together, practice
some physical moves, one thing leads to another--"
"That's ridiculous," I said. "That kind of stuff isn't romantic at all."
Another lie, seeing as that was exactly how my relationship with Dimitri had
begun. Again, best not to mention that. "Besides, Christian can't be involved
with every girl he hangs out with. Mia, Jill--no offense, but he's not really
that much of a ladies' man."
"He's really good-looking," she argued, those dark feelings still
seething within her.
"Yeah," I conceded, keeping my eyes carefully on the pathway. "But
it takes more than that. And besides, I thought you didn't care what he did."
"I don't," she agreed, not even convincing herself, let alone me. "Not
at all."
My attempts to distract her proved pretty useless for the rest of the
40
day. Tasha's words came back to me: Why haven't you fixed this? Because
Lissa and Christian were being too damned unreasonable, both caught up in
their own pissed-off feelings--which were kind of pissing me off in return.
Christian would have been pretty helpful in my illicit escapades, but I had to
keep my distance for Lissa's sake.
I finally left her to her bad mood when dinner came around.
Compared to her romantic situation, my relationship with a semi-spoiled
royal playboy from a disapproving family seemed downright optimistic.
What a sad and scary world this was becoming. I assured Lissa I'd head
straight back after dinner and that we'd go see Mia together. The mention of
Mia didn't make Lissa happy, but the thought of a potential break-in did
distract her momentarily from Christian.
The dress I had for dinner was maroon, made of light, gauzy material
that was great for summer weather. The neckline was decent, and little cap
sleeves gave it a classy edge. With my hair in a low ponytail that did a
decent job of hiding the healing tattoo, I almost looked like a respectable
girlfriend--which only went to show how deceptive appearances were,
seeing as I was part of a crazy scheme to bring my last boyfriend back from
the dead.
Adrian surveyed me from head to toe when I arrived at his parents'
town house. They kept a permanent residence here at the Court. The small
smile on his face told me he liked what he saw.
"You approve?" I asked, spinning around.
He slipped an arm around my waist. "Unfortunately, yes. I was hoping
you'd show up in something a lot sluttier. Something that would scandalize
my parents."
"Sometimes it's like you don't even care about me as a person," I
observed as we walked inside. "It's like you're just using me for shock
value."
"It's both, little dhampir. I care about you, and I'm using you for shock
value."
I hid a smile as the Ivashkovs' housekeeper led us toward the dining
room. The Court actually had restaurants and cafes tucked away within its
buildings, but royals like Adrian's parents would consider it classier to have
a fancy dinner in their home. Me, I would have preferred being out in public.
More escape options.
"You must be Rose."
My assessment of the exits was interrupted when a very tall, very
elegant Moroi woman came into the room. She wore a long, dark green satin
dress that immediately made me feel out of place and that perfectly matched
41
the color of her--and Adrian's--eyes. Her dark hair was pulled into a bun,
and she smiled down at me with genuine warmth as she took my hand.
"I'm Daniella Ivashkov," she said. "It's very nice to meet you at last."
Was it really? My hand automatically shook hers in return. "Nice to
meet you too, Lady Ivashkov."
"Call me Daniella, please." She turned to Adrian and tsked as she
straightened the collar of his button-up shirt. "Honestly, darling," she said.
"Do you even look in a mirror before you walk out the door? Your hair's a
mess."
He dodged her as she reached toward his head. "Are you kidding? I
spent hours in front of the mirror to make it look this way."
She gave a tormented sigh. "Some days I can't decide if I'm lucky or
not to have no other children." Behind her, quiet servants were setting food
out on the table. Steam rose up from the platters, and my stomach rumbled. I
hoped no one else heard. Daniella glanced off down the hall beyond her.
"Nathan, will you hurry up? The food's getting cold."
A few moments later, heavy footsteps sounded on the ornate wood
floor, and Nathan Ivashkov swept into the room. Like his wife, he was
dressed formally, the blue satin of his tie gleaming next to the starkness of
his heavy black suit coat. I was glad they had air-conditioning in here, or
he'd have been melting in that heavy fabric. The feature on him that stood
out the most was what I remembered from before: a distinctly silver head of
hair and mustache. I wondered if Adrian's hair would look like that when he
was older. Nah, I'd never find out. Adrian would probably dye his hair at the
first sign of gray--or silver.
Adrian's father might be exactly as I remembered, but it was clear he
had no clue who I was. In fact, he seemed genuinely startled to see me.
"This is Adrian's, ah, friend, Rose Hathaway," said Daniella gently.
"You remember--he said he'd bring her tonight."
"It's nice to meet you, Lord Ivashkov."
Unlike his wife, he didn't offer to put us on a first-name basis, which
relieved me a little. The Strigoi who had forcefully turned Dimitri had been
named Nathan too, and it wasn't a name I wanted to speak aloud. Adrian's
father looked me over, but it wasn't with the appreciation Adrian had shown
earlier. It was more like I was an oddity. "Oh. The dhampir girl."
He wasn't rude exactly, just disinterested. I mean, it wasn't like he
called me a blood whore or anything. We all sat down to eat, and although
Adrian kept his typical devil-may-care smile on his face, I again got the vibe
that he really, really wanted a cigarette. Probably hard liquor, too. Being
around his parents was not something he enjoyed. When one of the servants
42
poured us all wine, Adrian looked immensely relieved and didn't hold back.
I shot him a cautioning look that he ignored.
Nathan managed to rapidly devour his balsamic-glazed pork
medallions while still looking elegant and proper. "So," he said, attention
focused on Adrian, "now that Vasilisa's graduated, what are you going to do
with yourself? You aren't going to keep slumming with high school students,
are you? There's no point in you being there anymore."
"I don't know," said Adrian lazily. He shook his head, further tousling
his carefully mussed hair. "I kind of like hanging out with them. They think
I'm funnier than I really am."
"Unsurprising," his father replied. "You aren't funny at all. It's time
you do something productive. If you aren't going to go back to college, you
should at least start sitting in on some of the family business meetings.
Tatiana spoils you, but you could learn a lot from Rufus."
I knew enough about royal politics to recognize the name. The oldest
member of each family was usually its "prince" or "princess" and held a
Royal Council position--and was eligible to become king or queen. When
Tatiana had taken the crown, Rufus had become prince of the Ivashkov
family since he was the next oldest.
"True," said Adrian deadpan. He wasn't eating so much as pushing his
food around. "I'd really like to know how he keeps his two mistresses a
secret from his wife."
"Adrian!" snapped Daniella, a flush spilling over her pale cheeks.
"Don't say things like that at our dinner table--and certainly not in front of a
guest."
Nathan seemed to notice me again and gave a dismissive shrug. "She
doesn't matter." I bit my lip on that, repressing the urge to see if I could
throw my china plate Frisbee style and hit him in the head. I decided against
it. Not only would it ruin dinner, but the plate probably wouldn't get the lift I
needed. Nathan turned his scowl back to Adrian. "But you do. I'm not going
to have you sitting around doing nothing--and using our money to fund it."
Something told me I should stay out of this, but I couldn't stand to see
Adrian dressed down by his annoying father. Adrian did sit around and
waste money, but Nathan didn't have the right to make fun of him for it. I
mean, sure, I did all the time. But that was different.
"Maybe you could go to Lehigh with Lissa," I offered. "Keep studying
spirit with her and then . . . do whatever else you were doing the last time
you were in college. . . ."
"Drinking and skipping classes," said Nathan.
"Art," said Daniella. "Adrian took art classes."
43
"Really?" I asked, turning to him in surprise. Somehow, I could
imagine him as an artistic type. It fit his erratic personality. "Then this would
be perfect. You could pick it up again."
He shrugged and finished his second glass of wine. "I don't know.
This college would probably have the same problem the last one did."
I frowned. "What's that?"
"Homework."
"Adrian," growled his father.
"It's okay," said Adrian breezily. He rested his arm casually on the
table. "I don't really need a job or extra money. After Rose and I get married,
the kids and I'll just live off of her guardian paycheck."
We all froze, even me. I knew perfectly well that he was joking. I
mean, even if he harbored fantasies of marriage and kids (and I was pretty
sure he didn't), the meager salary a guardian made would never be enough to
keep him in the luxurious life he required.
Adrian's father, however, clearly did not think he was joking. Daniella
seemed undecided. Me, I was just uncomfortable. It was a very, very bad
topic to bring up at a dinner like this, and I couldn't believe Adrian had gone
there. I didn't even think the wine was to blame. Adrian just liked tormenting
his father that much.
The awful silence grew thicker and thicker. My gut instinct to fill
conversation voids was raging, but something told me to stay quiet. The
tension increased. When the doorbell rang, all four of us nearly jumped out
of our chairs.
The housekeeper, Torrie, scurried off to answer it, and I breathed a
mental sigh of relief. An unexpected visitor would help ease the tension.
Or maybe not.
Torrie cleared her throat when she returned, clearly flustered as she
looked from Daniella to Nathan. "Her Royal Majesty Queen Tatiana is
here."
No. Way.
All three Ivashkovs stood up abruptly, and a half second later, I joined
them. I hadn't believed Adrian earlier when he said Tatiana might come.
From his face, he seemed pretty surprised now too. But sure enough, there
she was. She swept into the room, elegant in what must have been business
casual for her: tailored black slacks and jacket with a red silk and lace blouse
underneath. Little jeweled barrettes gleamed in her dark hair, and those
imperious eyes peered down at us all as we offered hasty bows. Even her
own family followed formalities.
"Aunt Tatiana," said Nathan, forcing what looked like a smile onto his
44
face. I don't think he did it very often. "Won't you join us for dinner?"
She waved a hand dismissively. "No, no. I can't stay. I'm on my way
to meet with Priscilla but thought I'd stop by when I heard Adrian had
returned." Her gaze fell on him. "I can't believe you've been here all day and
didn't come visit." Her voice was cool, but I swear there was an amused
twinkle in her eyes. It was scary. She wasn't someone I thought of as warm
and fuzzy. The whole experience of seeing her outside of one of her
ceremonial rooms was totally unreal.
Adrian grinned at her. He was clearly the most comfortable person in
the room right now. For reasons I never understood, Tatiana loved and
spoiled Adrian. That wasn't to say that she didn't love her other family
members; it was just clear that he was her favorite. It had always surprised
me, considering what a scoundrel he was sometimes.
"Aw, I figured you had more important things to do than see me," he
told her. "Besides, I quit smoking, so now we won't be able to go sneak
cigarettes out behind the throne room together."
"Adrian!" chastised Nathan, turning bright red. It occurred to me then
that I could have based a drinking game around how many times he
exclaimed his son's name disapprovingly. "Auntie, I'm sor--"
Tatiana held up a hand again. "Oh, be silent, Nathan. No one wants to
hear it." I almost choked. Being in the same room with the queen was horrid,
but it was almost worth it to see her verbally bitch-slap Lord Ivashkov. She
turned back to Adrian, face thawing. "You've finally quit? It's about time. I
suppose this is your doing?"
It took me a moment to realize she was speaking to me. Until that
point, I'd kind of hoped she might not have even noticed me. It seemed the
only explanation for her not screaming at them to remove the rebellious little
blood whore. It was shocking. Her voice wasn't accusatory, either. It was . . .
impressed.
"W-well, it wasn't me, Your Majesty," I said. My meekness was a far
cry from my behavior at our last meeting. "Adrian was the one who had the,
uh, determination to do it."
So help me, Tatiana chuckled. "Very diplomatic. They should assign
you to a politician."
Nathan didn't like the attention on me. I wasn't sure I did either, semipleasant
or not. "Are you and Priscilla doing business tonight? Or just
having a friendly dinner?"
Tatiana dragged her gaze from me. "Both. There's been some interfamily
squabbling going on. Not publicly, but it's getting out. People are
making noise about security. Some are ready to start training up right now.
45
Others are wondering if guardians can go without sleep." She rolled her
eyes. "And those are the tamest of the suggestions."
No question about it. This visit had gotten a lot more interesting.
"I hope you're going to shut those would-be militants up," growled
Nathan. "Us fighting alongside guardians is absurd."
"What's absurd," said Tatiana, "is having strife among the royal
classes. That's what I want to 'shut up.'" Her tone grew lofty, very queenlike.
"We're the leaders among the Moroi. We have to set an example. We need to
be unified to survive."
I studied her curiously. What did that mean? She hadn't agreed or
disagreed with Nathan's stance on Moroi fighting. She'd only mentioned
establishing peace among her people. But how? Was her method to
encourage the new motion or squash it? Security was a huge concern for
everyone after the attack, and it fell on her to figure it out.
"Sounds pretty hard to me," said Adrian, playing oblivious to the
seriousness of the matter. "If you still want a cigarette afterward, I'll make an
exception."
"I'll settle for you coming to make a proper visit tomorrow," she said
dryly. "Leave the cigarettes at home." She glanced at his empty wineglass.
"And other things." A flash of steely resolve crossed her gaze, and even
though it melted as quickly as it had come, I felt almost relieved. There was
the icy Tatiana I knew.
He saluted. "Noted."
Tatiana gave the rest of us brief glances. "Have a good evening," was
her only farewell. We bowed again, and then she headed back toward the
front door. As she did, I heard scuffling and murmured voices. She'd been
traveling with a retinue, I realized, and had left them all in the foyer while
she came to say hello to Adrian.
Dinner was quiet after that. Tatiana's visit had kind of left us all
astonished. At least it meant I didn't have to hear Adrian and his father
bicker anymore. Daniella mostly maintained what little conversation there
was, attempting to inquire about my interests, and I realized she hadn't said a
word during Tatiana's brief visit. Daniella had married into the Ivashkovs,
and I wondered if she found the queen intimidating.
When the time came for us to leave, Daniella was all smiles while
Nathan retired to his study.
"You need to come by more often," she told Adrian, smoothing his
hair in spite of his protests. "And you're welcome anytime, Rose."
"Thank you," I said, dumbfounded. I kept studying her face to see if
she was lying, but I didn't think she was. It made no sense. Moroi didn't
46
approve of long-term relationships with dhampirs. Royal Moroi especially
didn't. And royal Moroi related to the queen especially didn't, at least if past
experience was any indication.
Adrian sighed. "Maybe if he's not around. Oh, damn. That reminds
me. I left my coat here last time--I wanted to get out too fast."
"You've got, like, fifty coats," I remarked.
"Ask Torrie," said Daniella. "She'll know where it is."
Adrian went off to find the housekeeper, leaving me with his mother. I
should have made polite, inconsequential small talk, but my curiosity was
getting the better of me.
"Dinner was really great," I told her honestly. "And I hope you won't
take this the wrong way . . . but I mean . . . well, you seem okay with Adrian
and me dating."
She nodded serenely. "I am."
"And . . ." Well, it had to be said. "Tat--Queen Tatiana kind of seemed
okay with it too."
"She is."
I made sure my jaw didn't drop to the floor. "But . . . I mean, the last
time I talked to her, she was really mad. She kept telling me over and over
how she'd never allow us to be together in the future or get married or
anything like that." I cringed, recalling Adrian's joke. "I figured you'd feel
the same. Lord Ivashkov does. You can't really want your son to be with a
dhampir forever."
Daniella's smile was kind but wry. "Do you plan on being with him
forever? Do you plan on marrying him and settling down?"
The question totally caught me off guard. "I . . . no . . . I mean, no
offense to Adrian. I just never--"
"Planned on settling down at all?" She nodded wisely. "That's what I
thought. Believe me, I know Adrian wasn't serious earlier. Everyone's
jumping to conclusions that haven't even happened. I've heard of you, Rose--
everyone has. And I admire you. And based on what I've learned, I'm
guessing you aren't the type who would quit being a guardian to be a
housewife."
"You're right," I admitted.
"Then I don't see the problem. You're both young. You're entitled to
have fun and do what you want now, but I--you and I--know that even if you
see Adrian off and on for the rest of your life, you aren't going to get married
or settle down. And it has nothing to do with what Nathan or anyone says.
It's the way of the world. It's the kind of person you are. I can see it in your
eyes. Tatiana's realized it too, and that's why she eased up. You need to be
47
out there fighting, and that's what you'll do. At least if you truly intend to be
a guardian."
"I do." I was staring at her in wonder. Her attitude was amazing. She
was the first royal I'd met who hadn't immediately freaked out and gone
crazy over the idea of a Moroi and dhampir match. If other people shared her
view, it would make a lot of others' lives easier. And she was right. It didn't
matter what Nathan thought. It wouldn't have even mattered if Dimitri had
been around. The bottom line was that Adrian and I wouldn't be together for
the rest of our lives because I'd always be on guardian duty, not lounging
around like he did. Realizing that freed things up . . . yet it made me a little
sad too.
Behind her, I could see Adrian approaching down the hall. Daniella
leaned forward, pitching her voice low for me. There was a wistful note to
her words when she spoke, the tone of a concerned mother. "But Rose?
While I'm fine with you two dating and being happy, please try not to break
his heart too much when the time comes."
48
FOUR
I DECIDED IT'D BE BEST not to mention my conversation with
Adrian's mother to him. I didn't need psychic powers to sense his mixed
mood as we walked back to guest housing. His father had annoyed him, but
his mother's seeming acceptance had cheered him up. I didn't want to
damage that by letting Adrian know she was only okay with our dating
because she figured it was a temporary, fun thing.
"So you're going off with Lissa?" he asked when we reached my
room.
"Yup, sorry. You know--girl stuff." And by girl stuff, I meant
breaking and entering.
Adrian seemed a little disappointed, but I knew he didn't begrudge our
friendship. He gave me a small smile and wrapped his arms around my
waist, leaning down to kiss me. Our lips met, and that warmth that always
surprised me spread through me. After a few sweet moments, we broke
apart, but the look in his eyes said it wasn't easy for him.
"See you later," I said. He gave me one more quick kiss and then
headed off to his own room.
I immediately sought out Lissa, who was hanging out in her own
room. She was staring intently at a silver spoon, and through our bond, I
could sense her intent. She was attempting to infuse it with spirit's
compulsion, so that whoever held it would cheer up. I wondered if she
intended it for herself or was just randomly experimenting. I didn't probe her
mind to find out.
"A spoon?" I asked with amusement.
She shrugged and set it down. "Hey, it's not easy to keep getting a
hold of silver. I have to take what I can get."
"Well, it'd make for happy dinner parties."
She smiled and put her feet upon the ebony coffee table that sat in the
middle of her little suite's living room. Each time I saw it, I couldn't help but
be reminded of the glossy black furniture that had been in my own prison
suite back in Russia. I had fought Dimitri with a stake made from a chair's
leg of similar style.
49
"Speaking of which . . . how was your dinner party?"
"Not as bad as I thought," I admitted. "I never realized what an
asshole Adrian's dad was, though. His mom was actually pretty cool. She
didn't have a problem with us dating."
"Yeah, I've met her. She is nice . . . though I never thought she was
nice enough to be okay with scandalous dating. I don't suppose Her Royal
Majesty showed up?" Lissa was joking, so my response floored her.
"She did, and . . . it wasn't awful."
"What? Did you say 'wasn't'?"
"I know, I know. It was so crazy. It was this really quick visit to see
Adrian, and she acted like me being there was no big deal." I didn't bother
delving into the politics of Tatiana's views on Moroi training for battle. "Of
course, who knows what would have happened if she stayed? Maybe she
would have turned into her old self. I would have needed a whole set of
magic silverware then--to stop me from pulling a knife on her."
Lissa groaned. "Rose, you cannot make those kinds of jokes."
I grinned. "I say the things you're too afraid to."
This made her smile in return. "It's been a long time since I've heard
that," she said softly. My trip to Russia had fractured our friendship--which
had ended up showing me just how much it really meant to me.
We spent the rest of the time hanging out, talking about Adrian and
other gossip. I was relieved to see she'd gotten over her earlier mood about
Christian, but as the day progressed, her anxiety grew about our pending
mission with Mia.
"It's going to be okay," I told her when the time came. We were
heading back across the Court grounds, dressed in comfortable jeans and Tshirts.
It was nice to be free of school curfew, but again, being out in the
bright sunlight didn't make me feel very covert. "This'll be easy."
Lissa cut me a look but said nothing. The guardians were the security
force in our world, and this was their headquarters. Breaking in was going to
be anything but easy.
Mia looked determined when we reached her, though, and I felt
encouraged by her attitude--and that she was wearing all black. True, it
wouldn't do much in sunlight, but it made this all feel more legitimate. I was
dying to know what had happened with Christian, and Lissa was too. Again,
it was one of those topics best left unexplained.
Mia did, however, explain her plan to us, and I honestly felt it had
about a 65 percent chance of working. Lissa was uneasy about her role since
it involved compulsion, but she was a trooper and agreed to do it. We went
over everything in detail a few more times and then set out to the building
50
that housed guardian operations. I'd been there once before, when Dimitri
had taken me to see Victor in the holding cells adjacent to the guardians'
HQ. I'd never spent much time in the main offices before, and as Mia had
predicted, they were lightly staffed this time of the day.
When we walked in, we were immediately met by a reception area
like you'd find in any other administrative office. A stern guardian sat at a
desk with a computer, filing cabinets and tables all around him. He probably
didn't have much to do at this time of night, but he was still clearly on high
alert. Beyond him was a door, and it held my attention. Mia had explained
that it was a gateway to all the guardian secrets, to their records and main
offices--and surveillance areas that monitored high-risk regions of the Court.
Stern or not, the guy had a small smile for Mia. "Isn't it a little late for
you? You aren't here for lessons, are you?"
She grinned back. He must have been one of the guardians she'd
grown friendly with during her time at Court. "Nah, just up with some
friends and wanted to show them around."
He arched an eyebrow as he took in me and Lissa. He gave a slight
nod of acknowledgment. "Princess Dragomir. Guardian Hathaway."
Apparently our reputations preceded us. It was the first time I'd been
addressed by my new title. It startled me--and made me feel slightly guilty
about betraying the group I'd just become a member of.
"This is Don," explained Mia. "Don, the princess has a favor to ask."
She looked meaningfully at Lissa.
Lissa took a deep breath, and I felt the burnings of compulsion magic
through our bond as she focused her gaze upon him. "Don," she said firmly,
"give us the keys and codes to the records archives downstairs. And then
make sure the cameras in those areas are turned off."
He frowned. "Why would I--" But as her eyes continued to hold his, I
could see the compulsion seize him. The lines on his face smoothed into
compliance, and I breathed a sigh of relief. Plenty of people were strong
enough to resist compulsion--particularly that of ordinary Moroi. Lissa's was
much stronger because of spirit, though you never knew if someone might
break through.
"Of course," he said, standing up. He opened a desk drawer and
handed Mia a set of keys that she promptly gave to me. "The code is
4312578."
I committed it to memory, and he beckoned us through the allpowerful
door. Beyond it, corridors spread in all directions. He pointed to
one on our right. "Down there. Take a left at the end, go downstairs two
flights, and it's the door on the right."
51
Mia glanced at me to make sure I understood. I nodded, and she
turned back to him. "Now make sure the surveillance is off."
"Take us there," said Lissa firmly.
Don couldn't resist her command, and she and Mia followed him,
leaving me on my own. This part of the plan was all on me, and I hurried
down the hall. The facility might be lightly staffed, but I could still run into
someone--and would have no compulsion to help me talk my way out of
trouble.
Don's directions were spot-on, but I still wasn't prepared when I
punched in the code and entered the vault. Rows and rows of filing cabinets
stretched down a huge hall. I couldn't see the end of it. Drawers were
stacked five high, and the faint fluorescent lighting and eerie silence gave it
all a spooky, almost haunted feel. All the guardians' information from before
the digital age. God only knew how far back these records went. To
medieval days in Europe? I suddenly felt daunted and wondered if I could
pull this off.
I walked to the first cabinet on my left, relieved to see it was labeled.
AA1 it read. Below it was AA2 and so forth. Oh dear. It was going to take
me several cabinets to even get out of the As. I was grateful the organization
was as simple as alphabetical order, but I now understood why these
cabinets went on forever. I had to go back more than three quarters of the
way down the room to get to the Ts. And it wasn't until I got to the TA27
drawer that I found the file for Tarasov Prison.
I gasped. The file was thick, filled with all sorts of documents. There
were pages on the prison's history and its migration patterns, as well as floor
plans for each of its locations. I could hardly believe it. So much information
. . . but what did I need? What would be useful? The answer came quickly:
all of it. I shut the drawer and tucked the folder under my arm. Okay. Time
to get out of here.
I turned around and began heading for the exit at a light jog. Now that
I had what I needed, the urgency of escape was pressing on me. I was almost
there when I heard a soft click, and the door opened. I froze as a dhampir I
didn't recognize stepped through. He froze as well, clearly astonished, and I
took it as a small blessing that he didn't immediately pin me against the wall
and start interrogating me.
"You're Rose Hathaway," he said. Good lord. Was there anyone who
didn't know who I was?
I tensed, unsure what to expect now, but spoke as though us meeting
here made perfect sense. "So it would seem. Who are you?"
"Mikhail Tanner," he said, still puzzled. "What are you doing here?"
52
"Running an errand," I said breezily. I indicated the file. "The
guardian on duty down here needed something."
"You're lying," he said. "I'm the guardian on archive duty. If someone
needed something, they would have sent me."
Oh, shit. Talk about best-laid plans failing. Yet as I stood there, a
strange thought came to me. His appearance wasn't familiar at all: curly
brown hair, average height, late twenties. Pretty good-looking, really. But
his name . . . something about his name . . .
"Ms. Karp," I gasped. "You're the one . . . you were involved with Ms.
Karp."
He stiffened, blue eyes narrowing warily. "What do you know about
that?"
I swallowed. What I'd done--or tried to do for Dimitri--wasn't without
precedent. "You loved her. You went out to kill her after she . . . after she
turned."
Ms. Karp had been a teacher of ours a few years ago. She'd been a
spirit user, and as the effects of it began to drive her insane, she'd done the
only thing she could to save her mind: become a Strigoi. Mikhail, her lover,
had done the only thing he'd known to end that evil state: search for and kill
her. It occurred to me that I was standing face-to-face with the hero of a love
story nearly as dramatic as my own.
"But you never found her," I said softly. "Did you?"
He took a long time in answering, his eyes weighing me heavily. I
wondered what he was thinking about. Her? His own pain? Or was he
analyzing me?
"No," he said finally. "I had to stop. The guardians needed me more."
He spoke in that calm, controlled way that guardians excelled at, but
in his eyes, I saw grief--a grief I more than understood. I hesitated before
taking a shot at the only chance I had to not get busted and end up in a jail
cell.
"I know . . . I know you have every reason to drag me out of here and
turn me in. You should. It's what you're supposed to do--what I'd do too. But
the thing is, this . . ." I again nodded at the folder. "Well, I'm kind of trying
to do what you did. I'm trying to save someone."
He remained quiet. He could probably guess who I meant and
assumed "save" meant "kill." If he knew who I was, he'd know who my
mentor had been. Few knew about my romantic relationship with Dimitri,
but me caring about him would have been a foregone conclusion.
"It's futile, you know," Mikhail said at last. This time, his voice
cracked a little. "I tried . . . I tried so hard to find her. But when they
53
disappear . . . when they don't want to be found . . ." He shook his head.
"There's nothing we can do. I understand why you want to do it. Believe me,
I do. But it's impossible. You'll never find him if he doesn't want you to."
I wondered how much I could tell Mikhail--how much I should. It
occurred to me then that if there was anyone else in this world who
understood what I was going through, it would be this man. Besides, I didn't
have a lot of options here.
"The thing is, I think I can find him," I said slowly. "He's looking for
me."
"What?" Mikhail's eyebrows rose. "How do you know?"
"Because he, um, sends me letters about it."
That fierce warrior look immediately returned. "If you know this, if
you can find him . . . you should get backup to kill him."
I flinched at those last words and again feared what I had to say next.
"Would you believe me if I said there was a way to save him?"
"You mean by destroying him."
I shook my head. "No . . . I mean really save. A way to restore him to
his original state."
"No," Mikhail said swiftly. "That's impossible."
"It might not be. I know someone who did it--who turned a Strigoi
back." Okay, that was a small lie. I didn't actually know the person, but I
wasn't going to get into the string of knowing-someone-who-knewsomeone
. . .
"That's impossible," Mikhail repeated. "Strigoi are dead. Undead.
Same difference."
"What if there was a chance?" I said. "What if it could be done? What
if Ms. Karp--if Sonya--could become Moroi again? What if you could be
together again?" It'd also mean she'd be crazy again, but that was a
technicality for later.
It felt like an eternity before he answered, and my anxiety grew. Lissa
couldn't compel forever, and I'd told Mia I would be fast. This plan would
fall apart if I didn't get out soon. Yet, watching him deliberate, I could see
his mask falter. After all this time, he still loved his Sonya.
"If what you're saying is true--and I don't believe it--then I'm coming
with you."
Whoa, no. Not in the plan. "You can't," I said swiftly. "I've already
got people in place." Another small lie. "Adding more might ruin things. I'm
not doing it alone," I said, cutting off what I figured would be his next
argument. "If you really want to help me--really want to take a chance on
bringing her back--you need to let me go."
54
"There's no way it can be true," he repeated. But there was doubt in
his voice, and I played on it.
"Can you take that chance?"
More silence. I was starting to sweat now. Mikhail closed his eyes for
a moment and took a deep breath. Then he stepped aside and gestured to the
door. "Go."
I nearly sagged in relief and immediately grabbed the door handle.
"Thank you. Thank you so much."
"I could get in a lot of trouble for this," he said wearily. "And I still
don't believe it's possible."
"But you hope it is." I didn't need a response from him to know I was
right. I opened the door, but before going through, I paused and glanced at
him. This time, he no longer hid the grief and pain in his face. "If you mean
it . . . if you want to help . . . there might be a way you can."
Another piece of the puzzle had unraveled itself for me, another way
we might pull this off. I explained what I needed from him and was
surprised at how quickly he agreed. He really was like me, I realized. We
both knew the idea of bringing back Strigoi was impossible . . . and yet we
so, so wanted to believe it could be done
I slipped back upstairs alone after that. Don wasn't at his desk, and I
wondered what Mia had done with him. I didn't wait to find out and instead
headed outside, off to a small courtyard that we'd established as our
rendezvous point. Mia and Lissa were both waiting there, pacing. No longer
distracted with anxiety, I opened myself to the bond and felt Lissa's
agitation.
"Thank God," she said when she saw me. "We thought you'd been
caught."
"Well . . . it's a long story." One I didn't bother with. "I got what I
needed. And . . . I actually got a whole lot more. I think we can do this."
Mia gave me a look that was both wry and wistful. "I sure do wish I
knew what you guys were doing."
I shook my head as the three of us walked away. "No," I replied. "I'm
not sure that you do."
55
FIVE
I DECIDED IT'D BE BEST if Lissa and I stayed up late when we
returned to her room, poring over the documents. She was a jumble of
feelings when I told her about my encounter with Mikhail--which I hadn't
mentioned to Mia. Lissa's initial reaction was surprise, but there were other
things too. Fear over the trouble I could have gotten into. A bit of warm
romanticism over what both Mikhail and I were willing to do for those we
loved. Wonder if she would do the same if Christian were in that situation.
She decided instantly that she would; her love for him was still that strong.
Then she told herself that she actually didn't care about him anymore, which
I would have found annoying if I wasn't so distracted.
"What's wrong?" she asked.
I'd sighed aloud in dismay without realizing it while I read her
thoughts. Not wanting her to know I'd been perusing her mind, I pointed at
the papers spread out on her bed. "Just trying to make sense of this." Not
entirely that far off from the truth.
The prison's layout was complex. The cells occupied two floors and
were tiny--only one prisoner per cell. The papers didn't explain why, but the
reason was obvious. It went along with what Abe had said about keeping
criminals from turning Strigoi. If I'd been locked away in prison for years, I
could understand the temptation of cracking and killing my roommate to
become Strigoi and escape. The cells were also kept housed in the very
center of the building, surrounded by guards, offices, "exercise rooms," a
kitchen, and a feeders' room. The documents explained guard rotations, as
well as prisoner feeding schedules. They were apparently escorted to the
feeders one at a time, heavily guarded, and only allowed very short spurts of
blood. Again, everything kept the prisoners weak and prevented them from
turning Strigoi.
It was all good information, but I had no reason to believe any of it
was up-to-date, since the file was five years old. It was also likely the prison
had all sorts of new surveillance equipment in place. Probably the only
things we could count on being the same were the prison's location and the
building's layout.
"How good are you feeling about your charm-making skills?" I asked
Lissa.
56
Although she hadn't been able to put as much spirit healing into my
ring as a woman I knew named Oksana could, I had noticed my darknessinduced
temper soothed a little. Lissa'd made a ring for Adrian too, though I
couldn't say for sure if it was what was helping him control his vices lately--
vices he usually indulged in to control spirit.
She shrugged and rolled over onto her back. Exhaustion filled her, but
she was trying to stay awake for my sake. "Getting better. Wish I could meet
Oksana."
"Maybe someday," I said vaguely. I didn't think Oksana would ever
leave Siberia. She'd run off with her guardian and wanted to keep a low
profile. Besides, I didn't want Lissa over there anytime soon after my
ordeals. "Have you been able to put in anything besides healing?" A moment
later, I answered my own question. "Oh, right. The spoon."
Lissa grimaced, but it turned into a yawn. "I don't think it worked so
well."
"Hmm."
"Hmm?"
I glanced back at the blueprints. "I'm thinking if you could make a few
more compulsion charms, it would go a long way to help with this. We need
to make people see what we want them to see." Surely if Victor--whose
powers of compulsion were nowhere near hers--had managed a lust charm,
she could do what I needed. She just needed more practice. She understood
the basic principles but had trouble making her desired effects last. The only
problem was that in asking her to do this, I was making her use more spirit.
Even if the side effects didn't show up right away, they would likely come
back to haunt her in the future.
She glanced at me curiously, but when I saw her yawn again, I told
her not to worry about it. I'd explain tomorrow. She offered no argument,
and after a quick hug, we each retired to our own beds. We weren't going to
get much sleep, but we had to get what we could. Tomorrow was a big day.
I'd worn a variation of the guardians' formal black-and-white outfit
when I went to Victor's trial. In normal bodyguard situations, we wore
ordinary clothes. But for fancy events, they wanted us looking crisp and
professional. The morning after our daring break-in, I got my first true taste
of guardian fashion.
I'd worn hand-me-down clothes at Victor's trial but now had an
official guardian outfit, tailored exactly to my measurements: straight-legged
black slacks, a white button-up blouse, and a black dress jacket that fit me
57
perfectly. It certainly wasn't meant to be sexy, but the way it hugged my
stomach and hips did good things for my body. I felt satisfied with my
reflection in the mirror, and after several minutes of thought, I pulled my
hair into a neatly braided bun that showed off my molnija marks. The skin
was still irritated, but at least the bandage was gone. I looked very . . .
professional. I was actually kind of reminded of Sydney. She was an
Alchemist--a human who worked with Moroi and dhampirs to hide the
existence of vampires from the world. With her proper sense of fashion, she
always looked ready for a business meeting. I kept wanting to send her a
briefcase for Christmas.
If ever there was a time for me to show off, today was the day. After
the trials and graduation, this was the next biggest step in becoming a
guardian. It was a luncheon that all new grads attended. Moroi eligible for
new guardians would also attend, hoping to scope out the candidates. Our
scores from school and the trials would have been made public knowledge
by now, and this was a chance for Moroi to meet us and put in bids for who
they wanted to guard them. Naturally, most guests would be royal, but a few
other important Moroi would also qualify.
I really had no interest in showing off and hooking a posh family.
Lissa was the only one I wanted to guard. Still, I had to make a good
impression. I needed to make it clear that I was the one who should be with
her.
She and I walked over to the royal ballroom together. It was the only
place large enough to hold us all, since more than just St. Vladimir's grads
were in attendance. All the American schools had sent their new recruits,
and for a moment, I found the sea of black and white dizzying. Bits of
color--royals dressed up in their finest clothing--livened the palette up a
little. Around us, soft watercolor murals made the walls seem to glow. Lissa
hadn't worn a ball gown or anything, but she looked very elegant in a
formfitting teal dress made of raw silk.
The royals mingled with the social ease they'd been raised with, but
my classmates moved about uneasily. No one seemed to mind. It wasn't our
job to seek out others; we would be approached. The grads all wore name
tags--engraved metal ones. There were no HELLO, MY NAME IS . . .
stickers here. The tags made us identifiable so that the royals could come
and do their interrogations.
I didn't expect anyone except my friends to talk to me, so Lissa and I
headed straight for the buffet and then occupied a quiet corner to munch on
our canapes and caviar. Well, Lissa ate caviar. It reminded me too much of
Russia.
58
Adrian, of course, sought us out first. I gave him a crooked grin.
"What are you doing here? I know you aren't eligible for a guardian."
With no concrete plans for his future, it was assumed Adrian would
simply live at Court. As such, he'd need no outside protection--though he'd
certainly qualify if he chose to strike out into the world.
"True, but I could hardly miss a party," he said. He held a glass of
champagne in his hand, and I wondered if the effects of the ring Lissa had
given him were wearing off. Of course, the occasional drink really wasn't the
end of the world, and the dating proposal's language had been loose in that
area. It was mostly the smoking I wanted him to stay away from. "Have you
been approached by a dozen hopeful people?"
I shook my head. "Who wants reckless Rose Hathaway? The one who
drops out without warning to do her own thing?"
"Plenty," he said. "I sure do. You kicked ass in the battle, and
remember--everyone thinks you went off on some Strigoi-killing spree.
Some might think it's worth your crazy personality."
"He's right," a voice suddenly said. I looked up and saw Tasha Ozera
standing near us, a small smile on her scarred face. In spite of the
disfigurement, I thought she looked beautiful today--more royal than I'd ever
seen her. Her long black hair gleamed, and she wore a navy skirt and lacy
tank top. She even had on high heels and jewelry--something I was certain
I'd never seen her wearing.
I was happy to see her; I hadn't known she'd come to Court. An odd
thought occurred to me. "Have they finally let you have a guardian?" The
royals had a lot of quiet, polite ways of shunning those who were in
disgrace. In the Ozeras' case, their guardian allotment had been cut in half as
kind of a punishment for what Christian's parents had done. It was totally
unfair. The Ozeras deserved the same rights as any other royal family.
She nodded. "I think they're hoping it'll shut me up about Moroi
fighting with dhampirs. Kind of a bribe."
"One you won't fall for, I'm sure."
"Nope. If anything, it'll just give me someone to practice with." Her
smile faded, and she cast uncertain looks among us. "I hope you won't be
offended . . . but I put in a request for you, Rose."
Lissa and I exchanged startled glances. "Oh." I didn't know what else
to say.
"I hope they'll give you to Lissa," Tasha added hastily, clearly
uncomfortable. "But the queen seems pretty dead-set on her own choices. If
that's the case . . ."
"It's okay," I said. "If I can't be with Lissa, then I really would rather
59
be with you." It was the truth. I wanted Lissa more than anyone else in the
world, but if they kept us apart, then I'd absolutely prefer Tasha to some
snobby royal. Of course, I was pretty sure my odds of getting assigned to her
were as bad as those of getting assigned to Lissa. Those who were angry at
me for running off would go out of their way to put me in the most
unpleasant situation possible. And even if she was being granted a guardian,
I had a feeling Tasha's preferences wouldn't be high priority either. My
future was still a big question mark.
"Hey," exclaimed Adrian, offended that I hadn't named him as my
second choice.
I shook my head at him. "You know they'd assign me to a woman
anyway. Besides, you've got to do something with your life to earn a
guardian."
I meant it jokingly, but a small frown made me think I might have
actually hurt his feelings. Tasha, meanwhile, looked relieved. "I'm glad you
don't mind. In the meantime, I'll do what I can to help you two." She rolled
her eyes. "Not that my opinion counts for much."
Sharing my misgivings about getting assigned to Tasha seemed
pointless. Instead, I started to thank her for the offer, but we were then
joined by yet another visitor: Daniella Ivashkov. "Adrian," she chastised
gently, a small smile on her face, "you can't keep Rose and Vasilisa all to
yourself." She turned to Lissa and me. "The queen would like to see you
both."
Lovely. We both stood up, but Adrian remained sitting, having no
desire to visit his aunt. Tasha apparently didn't either. Seeing her, Daniella
gave a curt, polite nod. "Lady Ozera." She then walked away, assuming we'd
follow. I found it ironic that Daniella seemed willing to accept me but still
held that typical aloof Ozera-prejudice. I guess her niceness only went so
far.
Tasha, however, had long since grown immune to that sort of
treatment. "Have fun," she said. She looked over at Adrian. "More
champagne?"
"Lady Ozera," he said grandly, "you and I are two minds with a single
thought."
I hesitated before following Lissa to Tatiana. I'd taken in Tasha's
grand appearance but only now really paid attention to something. "Is all
your jewelry silver?" I asked.
She absentmindedly touched the opal necklace around her neck. Her
fingers were adorned with three rings. "Yes," she said, confused. "Why?"
"This is going to sound really weird . . . well, maybe not compared to
60
my normal weirdness. But could we, um, borrow all of those?"
Lissa shot me a look and immediately guessed my motives. We
needed more charms and were short on silver. Tasha arched an eyebrow, but
like so many of my friends, she had a remarkable ability to roll with weird
ideas.
"Sure," she said. "But can I give them to you later? I don't really want
to strip my jewelry in the middle of this party."
"No problem."
"I'll have them sent to your room."
With that settled, Lissa and I walked over to where Tatiana was
surrounded by admirers and those wanting to suck up. Daniella had to be
mistaken in saying Tatiana wanted to see both of us. The memory of her
yelling at me over Adrian still burned in my head, and dinner at the
Ivashkovs' hadn't fooled me into thinking the queen and I were suddenly
best friends.
Yet, astonishingly, when she caught sight of Lissa and me, she was all
smiles. "Vasilisa. And Rosemarie." She beckoned us closer, and the group
parted. I approached with Lissa, my steps tentative. Was I going to get
yelled at in front of all these people?
Apparently not. There were always new royals to meet, and Tatiana
first introduced Lissa to all of them. Everyone was curious about the
Dragomir princess. I was introduced as well, though the queen didn't go out
of her way to sing my praises as she did Lissa's. Still, being acknowledged at
all was incredible.
"Vasilisa," said Tatiana, once the formalities were finished, "I was
thinking you should visit Lehigh soon. Arrangements are being made for
you to go in, oh, maybe a week and a half. We thought it would be a nice
treat for your birthday. Serena and Grant will accompany you, naturally, and
I'll send a few others." Serena and Grant were the guardians who had
replaced Dimitri and me as Lissa's future protection. Of course they'd be
going with her. Then, Tatiana said the most startling thing of all. "And you
can go too, if you'd like, Rose. Vasilisa could hardly celebrate without you."
Lissa lit up. Lehigh University. The lure that had made her accept a
life at Court. Lissa yearned for as much knowledge as she could get, and the
queen had given her a chance at it. The prospect of a visit totally filled her
with eagerness and excitement--especially if she could celebrate her
eighteenth birthday there with me. It was enough to distract her from Victor
and Christian, which was saying something.
"Thank you, Your Majesty. That'd be great."
There was a strong possibility, I knew, that we might not be around
61
for this scheduled visit--not if my plan for Victor worked. But I didn't want
to ruin Lissa's happiness--and I could hardly mention it in this royal crowd. I
was also kind of stunned that I'd been invited at all. After issuing the invite,
the queen said nothing else to me and continued speaking with the others
around her. Yet, she'd been pleasant--for her, at least--while addressing me,
just as she had at the Ivashkov home. Not best-friend nice but certainly not
raving-bitch insane, either. Maybe Daniella had been right.
More pleasantries followed as everyone chatted and tried to impress
the queen, and it soon became clear that I was no longer needed. Glancing
around the room, I found someone I needed to talk to and meekly separated
myself from the group, knowing Lissa could fend for herself.
"Eddie," I called, reaching the other side of the ballroom. "Alone at
last."
Eddie Castile, a longtime friend of mine, grinned when he saw me. He
too was a dhampir, tall with a long, narrow face that still had a cute, boyish
look to it. He had tamed his dark, sandy-blond hair for a change. Lissa had
once hoped Eddie and I would date, but he and I were strictly just friends.
His best friend had been Mason, a sweet guy who'd been crazy about me and
who had been murdered by Strigoi. After his death, Eddie and I had adopted
protective attitudes toward each other. He'd later been kidnapped during the
attack at St. Vladimir's, and his experiences had made him a serious and
determined guardian--sometimes a little too serious. I wanted him to have
more fun and was delighted to see the happy glint in his hazel eyes now.
"I think every royal in the room's been trying to bribe you," I teased. It
wasn't entirely a joke. I'd been keeping an eye on him throughout the party,
and there'd always been someone with him. His record was stellar. Surviving
the awful events in his life might have scarred him, but they reflected well
on his skills. He had great grades and ratings from the trial. Most
importantly, he didn't have my reckless reputation. He was a good catch.
"Kind of seems that way." He laughed. "I didn't really expect it."
"You're so modest. You're the hottest thing in this room."
"Not compared to you."
"Yeah. As shown by the people lining up to talk to me. Tasha Ozera's
the only one who wants me as far as I know. And Lissa, of course."
Lines of thought creased Eddie's face. "Could be worse."
"It will be worse. No way will I get either of them."
We fell silent, and a sudden anxiety filled me. I'd come to ask a favor
of Eddie, and it no longer seemed like a good idea. Eddie was on the verge
of a shining career. He was a loyal friend, and I'd been certain he'd help with
what I needed . . . but I suddenly didn't think I could ask. Like Mia,
62
however, Eddie was observant.
"What's wrong, Rose?" His voice was concerned--that protective
nature kicking in.
I shook my head. I couldn't do it. "Nothing."
"Rose," he said warningly.
I looked away, unable to meet his eyes. "It's not important. Really."
I'd find another way, someone else.
To my surprise, he reached out to touch my chin and tip my head back
up. His gaze caught mine, allowing no escape. "What do you need?"
I stared at him for a long time. I was so selfish, risking the lives and
reputations of friends I cared about. If Christian and Lissa weren't on the
outs, I'd be asking him, too. But Eddie was all that was left to me.
"I need something . . . something that's pretty extreme."
His face was still serious, but his lips tugged into a wry smile.
"Everything you do is extreme, Rose."
"Not like this. This is . . . well, it's something that could ruin
everything for you. Get you in big trouble. I can't do that to you."
That half smile vanished. "It doesn't matter," he said fiercely. "If you
need me, I'll do it. No matter what it is."
"You don't know what it is."
"I trust you."
"It's kind of illegal. Treasonous, even."
That took him aback for a moment, but he stayed resolute. "Whatever
you need. I don't care. I've got your back." I'd saved Eddie's life twice, and I
knew he meant what he said. He felt indebted to me. He would go wherever
I asked, not out of romantic love, but out of friendship and loyalty.
"It's illegal," I repeated. "You'd have to sneak out of Court . . . tonight.
And I don't know when we'd be back." It was entirely possible that we
wouldn't come back. If we had a run-in with prison guards . . . well, they
might take lethal measures to do their duty. It was what all of us had trained
for. But I couldn't pull this breakout off with Lissa's compulsion alone. I
needed another fighter at my back.
"Just tell me when."
And that was all there was to it. I didn't tell him the full extent of our
plan, but I gave him that night's rendezvous location and told him what he
would need to bring. He never questioned me. He said he'd be there. New
royals came to talk to him just then, and I left him, knowing he'd show up
later. It was hard, but I pushed aside my guilt over possibly endangering his
future.
63
Eddie arrived, just as he'd promised, when my plan unfolded later that
night. Lissa did too. Again, night meant "broad daylight." I felt that same
anxiety I did when we'd sneaked around with Mia. Light exposed
everything, but then, most people were asleep. Lissa, Eddie, and I still
moved through the Court's grounds as covertly as we could, meeting Mikhail
in a section of the compound that held all sorts of garaged vehicles. The
garages were big metal, industrial-looking buildings set on the fringes of
Court, and no one else was out.
We slipped into the garage he'd indicated last night, and I was relieved
to find no one else there. He surveyed the three of us, looking surprised at
my "strike team," but he offered no questions and made no further attempts
to join us. More guilt surged up within me. Here was someone else who was
risking his future for me.
"Gonna be a tight fit," he mused.
I forced a smile. "We're all friends here."
Mikhail didn't laugh at my joke but instead popped the trunk of a
black Dodge Charger. He wasn't kidding about the tight fit. It was a newer
one, which was kind of a shame. An older model would have been bigger,
but guardians only kept top-of-the-line stuff around.
"Once we're far enough away, I'll pull over and let you out," he said.
"We'll be fine," I assured him. "Let's do this."
Lissa, Eddie, and I crawled into the trunk. "Oh God," muttered Lissa.
"I hope no one's claustrophobic."
It was like a bad game of Twister. The trunk was large enough for
some luggage but not intended for three people. We were squeezed together,
and personal space was nonexistent. We were all up close and personal.
Satisfied we were all snug, Mikhail closed the trunk and darkness engulfed
us. The engine started a minute later, and I felt the car move.
"How long until you think we stop?" asked Lissa. "Or die from carbon
monoxide poisoning?"
"We haven't even left the Court yet," I noted. She sighed.
The car drove off, and not too long afterward, we came to a stop.
Mikhail must have reached the gates and been chatting with the guards. He'd
told me earlier that he'd come up with some excuse or other to run an errand,
and we had no reason to believe the guards would question him or search the
car. The Court wasn't worried about people sneaking out, like our school had
been. The biggest concern here was people getting inside.
A minute passed, and I uneasily wondered if there was a problem.
Then the car moved again, and all three of us exhaled in relief. We picked up
speed, and after what I suspected was a mile or so, the car veered sideways
64
and came to a stop. The trunk popped open, and we spilled out of it. I'd
never been so grateful for fresh air. I got in the passenger seat beside
Mikhail, and Lissa and Eddie took the back. Once we were settled, Mikhail
continued driving without another word.
I allowed myself a few more moments of guilt over the people I'd
involved but then let it go. It was too late to worry now. I also let go of my
guilt about Adrian. He would have been a good ally, but I could hardly ask
for his help in this.
And with that, I settled back and turned my thoughts to the job before
us. It would take us about an hour to get to the airport, and from there, the
three of us were off to Alaska.
65
SIX
"YOU KNOW WHAT WE NEED?"
I was sitting between Eddie and Lissa, on our flight from Seattle to
Fairbanks. As the shortest--marginally--and the mastermind, I'd gotten stuck
with the middle seat.
"A new plan?" asked Lissa.
"A miracle?" asked Eddie.
I paused and glared at them both before responding. Since when had
they become the comedians here? "No. Stuff. We need cool gadgets if we're
going to pull this off." I tapped the prison blueprint that had been on my lap
for almost every part of our trip so far. Mikhail had dropped us off at a small
airport an hour away from the Court. We'd caught a commuter flight from
there to Philadelphia, and from there to Seattle and now Fairbanks. It
reminded me a little of the crazy flights I'd had to take from Siberia back to
the U.S. That journey had also gone via Seattle. I was starting to believe that
city was a gateway to obscure places.
"I thought the only tools we needed were our wits," mused Eddie. He
might be serious about his guardian work most of the time, but he could also
turn on his dry humor when relaxed. Not that he was totally at ease with our
mission here, now that he knew more of (but not all) the details. I knew he'd
snap back into readiness once we landed. He'd been understandably shocked
when I'd revealed we were freeing Victor Dashkov. I hadn't told Eddie
anything about Dimitri or spirit, only that getting Victor out played a larger
role in the greater good. Eddie's trust in me was so implicit that he'd taken
me at my word and pursued the issue no further. I wondered how he'd react
when he learned the truth.
"At the very least, we're going to need a GPS," I said. "There's only
latitude and longitude on this thing. No real directions."
"Shouldn't be hard," said Lissa, turning a bracelet over and over in her
hands. She'd opened her tray and spread out Tasha's jewelry across it. "I'm
sure even Alaska has modern technology." She'd also turned on a droll
attitude, even with anxiety radiating through the bond.
Eddie's good mood faded a little. "I hope you aren't thinking of guns
or anything like that."
"No. Absolutely not. If this works how we want, no one will even
66
know we're there." A physical confrontation was likely, but I hoped to
minimize serious injury.
Lissa sighed and handed me the bracelet. She was worried because a
lot of my plan depended on her charms--literally and figuratively. "I don't
know if this'll work, but maybe it'll give you more resistance."
I took the bracelet and slipped it on my wrist. I felt nothing, but I only
rarely did with charmed objects. I'd left Adrian a note saying that Lissa and I
had wanted to escape for a "girls' getaway" before my assignment and her
college visit. I knew he'd be hurt. The girl angle would carry a lot of weight,
but he'd feel injured at not being invited along on a daring vacation--if he
even believed we were on one. He probably knew me well enough by now to
guess most of my actions had ulterior motives. My hope was that he'd spread
the story to Court officials when our disappearance was noticed. We'd still
get in trouble, but a wild weekend was better than a prison break. And
honestly, how could things get worse for me? The one flaw here was that
Adrian could visit my dreams and grill me on what was really going on. It
was one of the more interesting--and occasionally annoying--spirit abilities.
Lissa hadn't learned to walk dreams, but she had a crude understanding of
the principle. Between that and compulsion, she'd tried to charm the bracelet
in a way that would block Adrian when I slept later.
The plane began its descent into Fairbanks, and I gazed out the
window at tall pines and stretches of green land. In Lissa's thoughts, I read
how she'd been half-expecting glaciers and snowbanks, despite knowing it
was full summer here. After Siberia, I'd learned to keep an open mind about
regional stereotypes. My biggest concern was the sun. It had been full
daylight when we'd left the Court, and as our travels took us west, the time
zone change meant that the sun stayed with us. Now, though it was almost
nine in the evening, we had a full, sunny blue sky, thanks to our northern
latitude.
It was like a giant safety blanket. I hadn't mentioned this to Lissa or
Eddie, but it seemed likely Dimitri would have spies everywhere. I was
untouchable at St. Vladimir's and the Court, but his letters had clearly stated
he'd be waiting for me to leave those boundaries. I didn't know the extent of
his logistics, but humans watching the Court in daylight wouldn't have
surprised me. And even though I'd left hidden in a trunk, there was a strong
possibility that Dimitri was already in pursuit. But the same light that
guarded the prisoners would keep us safe too. We'd barely have a few hours
of night to guard against, and if we pulled this off quickly, we'd be out of
Alaska in hardly any time at all. Of course, that might not be such a good
thing. We'd lose the sun.
67
Our first complication came after we landed and tried to rent a car.
Eddie and I were eighteen, but none of the car companies would rent to
anyone so young. After the third refusal, my anger began to grow. Who
would have thought we'd be delayed by something so idiotic? Finally, at a
fourth counter, the woman hesitantly told us that there was a guy about a
mile from the airport who would likely rent us a car if we had a credit card
and a big enough deposit.
We made the walk in pleasant weather, but I could tell the sun was
starting to bother Lissa by the time we reached our destination. Bud--of
Bud's Rental Cars--didn't seem quite as sleazy as expected and did indeed
rent us a car when we produced enough money. From there, we got a room
at a modest motel and went over our plans again.
All our information indicated that the prison ran on a vampire
schedule, which meant this was their active time of the day. Our plan was to
stay in the hotel until the following day, when the Moroi "night" came, and
catch some sleep beforehand. It gave Lissa more time to work on her
charms. Our room was easily defendable.
My sleep was Adrian-free, for which I was grateful, meaning he'd
either accepted the girl trip or couldn't break through Lissa's bracelet. In the
morning, we rustled up some doughnuts for breakfast and ate a little blearyeyed.
Running against our vampire schedule was throwing us all off a little.
The sugar helped kick-start us, though, and Eddie and I left Lissa
around ten to go do some scouting. We bought my coveted GPS and a few
other things at a sporting goods store along the way and used it to navigate
remote country roads that seemed to lead nowhere. When the GPS claimed
we were a mile from the prison, we pulled off to the side of a small dirt road
and set off on foot across a field of tall grass that stretched endlessly before
us.
"I thought Alaska was tundra," said Eddie, crunching through the tall
stalks. The sky was blue and clear again, with only a few clouds that did
nothing to keep the sun away. I'd started out in a light jacket but now had it
tied around my waist as I sweated. Occasionally a welcome gust of wind
would roll through, flattening the grass and whipping my hair around.
"I guess not all parts. Or maybe we have to go further north. Oh, hey.
This looks promising."
We came to a stop before a high, barbwire fence with an enormous
PRIVATE PROPERTY--NO UNAUTHORIZED PERSONNEL
ALLOWED sign on it. The lettering was red, apparently to emphasize how
serious they were. Personally, I would have added a skull and crossbones to
really drive the message home.
68
Eddie and I studied the fence for a few moments, then gave each other
resigned glances. "Lissa will heal up anything we get," I said hopefully.
Climbing barbed wire isn't impossible, but it's not fun. Tossing my
jacket on the wires I had to grip went a long way to protect me, but I still
ended up with some scratches and snagged clothing. Once I was at the top, I
jumped down, preferring the jolting landing to another climb down. Eddie
did the same, grimacing at the hard impact.
We walked a little farther, and then the dark line of a building came
into sight. We both came to a halt as one and knelt down, seeking what
coverage we could in the grass. The prison file had indicated that they had
cameras on the outside, which meant we risked detection if we got too close.
I'd bought high-power binoculars along with the GPS and took them out
now, studying the building's exterior.
The binoculars were good--really good--as well they should have been
for the price. The level of detail was amazing. Like so many Moroi
creations, the building was a mixture of the old and the new. The walls were
made of sinister gray stone blocks and almost entirely obscured the actual
prison, whose roof just barely peeped above. A couple of figures paced
along the top of the walls, living eyes to go with the cameras. The place
looked like a fortress, impenetrable and inescapable. It deserved to be on a
rocky cliff, with a sinister black sky behind it. The field and sun seemed out
of place.
I handed the binoculars to Eddie. He made his own assessment and
then gestured to the left. "There."
Squinting, I just barely made out a truck or SUV driving up toward
the prison. It went around the back and vanished from sight. "Our only way
in," I murmured, recalling the blueprint. We knew we had no shot of scaling
the walls or even getting close enough on foot without being spotted. We
needed to literally walk through the front door, and that's where the plan got
a little sketchy.
Eddie lowered the binoculars and glanced over at me, brow furrowed.
"I meant what I said before, you know. I trust you. Whatever reason you're
doing this, I know it's a good one. But before things start moving, are you
sure this is what you want?"
I gave a harsh laugh. "Want? No. But it's what we need to do."
He nodded. "Good enough."
We watched the prison a while longer, moving around to get different
angles while still keeping a wide perimeter. The scenario was about what
we'd expected, but having a 3-D visual was still helpful.
After about a half hour, we returned to the hotel. Lissa sat cross-
69
legged on one of the beds, still working on the charms. The feelings coming
through her were warm and content. Spirit always made her feel good--even
if it had side effects later--and she thought she was making progress.
"Adrian called my cell phone twice," she told me when we entered.
"But you didn't answer?"
"Nope. Poor guy."
I shrugged. "It's better this way."
We gave her a rundown of what we'd seen, and her happy mood began
to plummet. Our visit made what we were going to do later today more and
more real, and working with so much spirit had already put her on edge. A
few moments later, I sensed her swallowing her fear. She became resolved.
She'd told me she would do this and she intended to stand by her word, even
though she dreaded each second that brought her closer to Victor Dashkov.
Lunch followed, and then a few hours later, it was time to put the plan
into motion. It was early evening for humans, which meant the vampiric
night would be drawing to an end soon. It was now or never. Lissa nervously
distributed the charms she'd made for us, worried they wouldn't work. Eddie
dressed up in his newly bestowed black-and-white guardian formalwear
while Lissa and I stayed in our street clothes--with a couple alterations.
Lissa's hair was a mousy brown, the result of some wash-in temporary hair
color. My hair was tightly bound up underneath a curly red wig that
reminded me uncomfortably of my mother. We sat in the backseat of the car
while Eddie drove us chauffeur style back along the remote road we'd
followed earlier. Unlike before, we didn't pull over. We stayed on the road,
driving right up to the prison--or, well, to its gatehouse. No one spoke as we
drove, but the tension and anxiety within us all grew and grew.
Before we could even get near the outer wall, there was a checkpoint
manned by a guardian. Eddie brought the car to a stop, and I tried to look
calm. He lowered the window, and the guardian on duty walked over and
knelt so that they were at eye level.
"What's your business here?"
Eddie handed over a piece of paper, his attitude confident and
unconcerned, as though this were perfectly normal. "Dropping off new
feeders."
The file had contained all sorts of forms and papers for prison
business, including status reports and order forms for supplies--like feeders.
We'd made a copy of one of the feeder requisition forms and filled it out.
"I wasn't notified of a delivery," the guardian said, not suspicious so
much as puzzled. He peered at the paperwork. "This is an old form."
Eddie shrugged. "It's just what they gave me. I'm kind of new at this."
70
The man grinned. "Yeah, you barely look old enough to be out of
school."
He glanced toward Lissa and me, and despite my practiced control, I
tensed. The guardian frowned as he studied us. Lissa had given me a
necklace, and she'd taken a ring, both charmed with a slight compulsion
spell to make others think we were human. It would have been much easier
to make her victim wear a charm and force them to think they were seeing
humans, but that wasn't possible. The magic was harder this way. He
squinted, almost like he was looking at us through a haze. If the charms had
worked perfectly, he wouldn't have given us a second glance. The charms
were a little flawed. They were changing our appearances but not quite as
clearly as we'd hoped. That was why we'd gone to the trouble of altering our
hair: if the human-illusion failed, we'd still have some identity protection.
Lissa readied herself to work direct compulsion, though we'd hoped it
wouldn't come to that with every person we met.
A few moments later, the guardian turned from us, apparently
deciding we were human after all. I exhaled and unclenched my fists. I
hadn't even realized I'd been holding them. "Hang on a minute, and I'll call
this in," he told Eddie.
The guardian stepped away and picked up a phone inside his booth.
Eddie glanced back at us. "So far so good?"
"Aside from the old form," I grumbled.
"No way to know if my charm's working?" asked Eddie.
Lissa had given him one of Tasha's rings, charmed to make him
appear tan-skinned and black-haired. Since she wasn't altering his race, the
magic only needed to blur his features. Like our human charms, I suspected
it wasn't projecting the exact image she'd hoped for, but it should have
altered his appearance enough that no one would identify Eddie later. With
our resistance to compulsion--and knowing there was a charm in place,
which negated its effects on us--Lissa and I couldn't say for certain what he
looked like to others.
"I'm sure it's fine," said Lissa reassuringly.
The guardian returned. "They say go on in, and they'll sort it out
there."
"Thanks," said Eddie, taking the form back.
The guard's attitude implied that he assumed this was a clerical error.
He was still diligent, but the idea of someone sneaking feeders into a prison
was hardly the kind of thing one would expect--or view as a security risk.
Poor guy.
Two guardians greeted us when we arrived at the door in the prison's
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wall. The three of us got out and were led into the grounds between the wall
and the prison itself. Whereas St. Vladimir's and the Court's grounds had
been lush and filled with plants and trees, the land here was stark and lonely.
Not even grass, just hard-packed earth. Was this what served as the
prisoners' "exercise area"? Were they even allowed outside at all? I was
surprised there wasn't a moat of some sort out here.
The inside of the building was as grim as its exterior. The holding
cells at Court were sterile and cold, all metal and blank walls. I'd expected
something similar. But whoever had designed Tarasov had foregone the
modern look and instead emulated the kind of prison one might have found
back in Romania in medieval days. The harsh stone walls continued down
the hall, gray and foreboding, and the air was chill and damp. It had to make
for unpleasant working conditions for the guardians assigned here.
Presumably they wanted to ensure the intimidating facade extended
everywhere, even for prisoners first entering the gates. According to our
blueprint, there was a little section of dorms where employees lived.
Hopefully those were nicer.
Dark Ages decor or not, we passed the occasional camera as we
walked down the hallway. This place's security was in no way primitive.
Occasionally we heard the heavy slamming of a door, but overall, there was
a perfect, eerie silence that was almost creepier than shouts and screams.
We were taken to the warden's office, a room that still had the same
gloomy architecture yet was filled with the usual administrative accessories:
desk, computer, etc. It looked efficient, nothing more. Our escorts explained
that we were going to see the assistant warden, since the senior one was still
in bed. It figured. The subordinate would have gotten stuck with the night
shift. I hoped that meant he was tired and unobservant. Probably not. That
rarely happened to guardians, no matter their assignments.
"Theo Marx," said the assistant warden, shaking Eddie's hand. He was
a dhampir not much older than us, and I wondered if he'd only been freshly
assigned here.
"Larry Brown," replied Eddie. We'd come up with a boring name for
him, one that wouldn't stand out, and had used it in the paperwork.
Theo didn't speak to Lissa and me, but he did give us that same
puzzled glance the first guy had as the charm's glamour attempted its
illusion. Another delay followed, but once more, we slipped through. Theo
returned his attention to Eddie and took the requisition form.
"This is different from the usual one," he said.
"I have no clue," said Eddie apologetically. "This is my first time."
Theo sighed and glanced at the clock. "The warden'll be on duty in
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another couple hours. I think we're just going to have to wait until he's here
to figure out what's going on. Sommerfield's usually got their act together."
There were a few Moroi facilities in the country that gathered
feeders--those on the fringes of human society who were content to spend
their lives high on vampire endorphins--and then distributed them.
Sommerfield was the name of one such facility, located in Kansas City.
"I'm not the only new person they just received," Eddie said. "Maybe
someone got confused."
"Typical," snorted Theo. "Well, you might as well have a seat and
wait. I can get coffee if you want."
"When are we getting a feeding?" I suddenly asked, using the
whiniest, dreamiest voice I could. "It's been so long."
Lissa followed my lead. "They said we could when we got here."
Eddie rolled his eyes at what was typical feeder behavior. "They've
been like this the whole time."
"I can imagine," said Theo. "Humph. Feeders." The door to his office
was partially ajar and he called out of it. "Hey, Wes? Can you come here?"
One of the escort guardians stuck his head inside. "Yeah?"
Theo gave us a dismissive wave. "Take these two down to the feeding
area so they don't drive us crazy. If someone's up, they can use them."
Wes nodded and beckoned us out. Eddie and I made the briefest of
eye contact. His face betrayed nothing, but I knew he was nervous. Getting
Victor out was our job now, and Eddie didn't like sending us to the dragon's
lair.
Wes led us through more doors and security checkpoints as we went
deeper into the prison. I realized that for every layer of security I crossed to
get in, I was going to have to cross it again to escape. According to the
blueprint, the feeding area was situated on the opposite side of the prison. I'd
assumed we'd take some route along the periphery, but instead we cut right
through the building's center--where the prisoners were kept. Studying had
given me a sense of the layout, but Lissa didn't realize where we were
headed until a sign alerted us: WARNING--NOW ENTERING PRISONER
AREA (CRIMINAL). I thought that was an odd wording. Wasn't everyone
in here a criminal?
Heavy double doors blocked this section off, and Wes used both an
electronic code and a physical key to cross through. Lissa's pace didn't
change, but I felt her anxiety increase as we entered a long corridor lined
with bar-covered cells. I didn't feel any better about it myself, but Wes--
while still alert--didn't display any sign of fear. He entered this area all the
time, I realized. He knew its security. The prisoners might be dangerous, but
73
passing by them was a routine activity for him.
Still, peeking inside the cells nearly made my heart stop. The little
compartments were as dark and gloomy as anything, containing only barebones
furnishings. Most of the prisoners were asleep, thankfully. A few,
however, watched as we walked by. None of them said anything, but the
silence was almost scarier. Some of the Moroi held there looked like
ordinary people you'd pass on the street, and I wondered what they could
have possibly done to end up here. Their faces were sad, devoid of all hope.
I did a double take and realized that some of the prisoners weren't Moroi;
they were dhampirs. It made sense but still caught me off guard. My own
kind would have criminals that needed to be dealt with, too.
But not all of the prisoners appeared benign. Others looked like they
definitely belonged in Tarasov. There was a malevolence about them, a
sinister feel as their eyes locked onto us and didn't let go. They scrutinized
our every detail, though for what reason, I couldn't say. Were they seeking
out anything that might offer escape? Could they see through our facades?
Were they simply hungry? I didn't know but felt grateful for the silent
guardians posted throughout the hall. I was also grateful that I didn't see
Victor and assumed he lived in a different hall. We couldn't risk being
recognized yet.
We finally exited the prisoners' corridor through another set of double
doors and at last reached the feeding area. It too felt like a medieval
dungeon, but images had to be kept up for the sake of the prisoners. Decor
aside, the feeding room's layout was similar to what St. Vladimir's had,
except it was smaller. A few cubicles offered moderate privacy, and a boredlooking
Moroi guy was reading a book at a desk but looked ready to fall
asleep. There was only one feeder in the room, a scraggly-looking, middleaged
human who sat in a chair with a dopey smile on his face, staring at
nothing.
The Moroi flinched when we entered, his eyes going wide. Clearly,
we were the most exciting thing to happen to him all night. He didn't have
that moment of disorientation when he glanced at us; he apparently had low
compulsion resistance, which was good to know.
"What's this?"
"Two new ones just came in," said Wes.
"But we're not due," said the Moroi. "And we never get ones this
young. They always give us the old, used-up ones."
"Don't ask me," said Wes, moving toward the door once he'd indicated
seats for Lissa and me. It was clear he found escorting feeders beneath him.
"Marx wants them here until Sullivan gets up. My guess is it's going to turn
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out to be a mistake, but they were complaining about needing a fix."
"Wonderful," groaned the Moroi. "Well, our next meal's due in fifteen
minutes, so I can give Bradley over there a break. He's so gone, I doubt he'd
notice if someone else gave blood instead of him."
Wes nodded. "We'll call down when we've got this straight."
The guardian left, and the Moroi picked up a clipboard with a sigh. I
had the feeling everyone here was kind of tired of their jobs. I could
understand why. This had to be a miserable place to work. Give me the
wider world anytime.
"Who's due to feed in fifteen minutes?" I asked.
The Moroi's head jerked up in astonishment. It wasn't the kind of
question a feeder asked. "What did you say?"
Lissa stood up and got him in her gaze. "Answer her question."
The man's face went slack. He was easy to compel. "Rudolf Kaiser."
No one either of us recognized. He could have been in here for mass
murder or embezzlement for all I knew. "When's Victor Dashkov due?"
asked Lissa.
"Two hours."
"Alter the schedule. Tell his guards there's been a readjustment and he
has to come now instead of Rudolf."
The Moroi's blank eyes--now as dazed looking as Bradley the feeder's,
really--seemed to take a moment to process this. "Yes," he said.
"This is something that might happen normally. It won't raise
suspicion."
"It won't raise suspicion," he repeated in a monotone.
"Do it," she ordered, voice hard. "Call them, set it up, and do not take
your eyes off of me."
The Moroi complied. While speaking on the phone, he identified
himself as Northwood. When he disconnected, the arrangements had been
made. We had nothing to do but wait now. My entire body was tightly
wound with tension. Theo had said we had over an hour until the warden
was on duty. No one would ask questions until then. Eddie simply had to kill
time with Theo and not raise suspicions behind a paperwork error. Calm
down, Rose. You can do this.
While we waited, Lissa compelled Bradley the feeder into a heavy
sleep. I didn't want any witnesses, even not drugged ones. Likewise, I turned
the room's camera ever so slightly, so it no longer could see the bulk of the
room. Naturally, we'd have to deal with the prison's entire surveillance
system before we left, but for now, we needed no watching security
personnel to catch sight of what was about to happen.
75
I had just settled into one of the cubicles when the door opened. Lissa
had stayed in her chair near Northwood's desk, so that she could keep her
compulsion on him. We'd instructed him that I would be the feeder. I was
enclosed, but through Lissa's sight, I saw the group enter: two guardians . . .
and Victor Dashkov.
The same distress she'd felt when seeing him at her trial shot up
within her. Her heart rate increased. Her hands shook. The only thing that
had finally calmed her back at the trial was the resolution of it all, knowing
Victor would be locked away forever and unable to hurt her again.
And now we were about to change all that.
Forcibly, Lissa shoved her fear out of her mind so that she could keep
her hold on Northwood. The guardians beside Victor were stern and ready
for action, though they didn't really need to be. The sickness that had
plagued him for years--the one Lissa had temporarily healed him of--was
starting to rear its head again. Lack of exercise and fresh air appeared to
have taken a toll too, as had the limited blood prisoners were supposedly
given. The guards had him clad in shackles as an extra precaution, and the
heavy weight dragged him down, almost making him shuffle.
"Over there," said Northwood, pointing at me. "That one."
The guardians led Victor past Lissa, and he barely gave her a second
glance. She was working double compulsion: keeping Northwood under her
control and using a quick burst to make herself insignificant to Victor when
he walked by. The guardians settled him into a chair beside me and then
stepped back, still keeping him in sight. One of them struck up conversation
with Northwood, noting our newness and youth. If I ever did this again, I'd
have Lissa charm us into looking older.
Sitting beside me, Victor leaned toward me and opened his mouth.
Feedings were so second nature, the motions always the same, that he hardly
had to think about what he did. It was like he didn't even see me.
Except, then . . . he did.
He froze, his eyes going wide. Certain characteristics marked the
royal Moroi families, and light, jade-green eyes ran amongst both the
Dashkovs and the Dragomirs. The weary, resigned look in his disappeared,
and the cunning sharpness that so characterized him--the shrewd intellect I
knew well--snapped into place. It reminded me eerily of some of the
prisoners we'd passed earlier.
But he was confused. Like the other people we'd encountered, my
charm was muddling his thoughts. His senses told him I was a human . . . yet
the illusion wasn't perfect. There was also the fact that Victor, as a strong
non-spirit compulsion wielder, was relatively resistant to it. And just as
76
Eddie, Lissa, and I had been immune to one another's charms because we
knew our true identities, Victor experienced the same effect. His mind might
insist that I was human, but his eyes told him I was Rose Hathaway, even
with my wig. And once that knowledge was solidified, the human illusion
disappeared for him.
A slow, intrigued smile spread over his face, blatantly displaying his
fangs. "Oh my. This might be the best meal I've ever had." His voice was
barely audible, covered by the conversation of the others.
"Put your teeth anywhere near me and it'll be your last meal," I
murmured, voice just as quiet. "But if you want any chance of getting out of
here and seeing the world again, you'll do exactly what I say."
He gave me a questioning look. I took a deep breath, dreading what I
had to say next.
"Attack me."
77
SEVEN
"NOT WITH YOUR TEETH," I added hastily. "Throw yourself at
me. Swing your shackles. Whatever you can do."
Victor Dashkov was not a stupid man. Others might have hesitated or
asked more questions. He did not. He might not know exactly what was
going on, but he sensed that this was a shot at freedom. Possibly the only
one he'd ever get. He was someone who had spent a large part of his life
masterminding complicated plots, so he was a pro at slipping right into
them.
Holding his hands up as much as he could manage, he lunged at me,
making a good show of trying to choke me with the chain between his cuffs.
As he did, I gave a bloodcurdling shriek. In an instant, the guardians were
there to stop this crazy prisoner who was senselessly attacking a poor girl.
But as they reached to subdue him, I leapt up and attacked them. Even if
they'd expected me to be dangerous--and they hadn't--I had so much surprise
on them that they had no time to react. I almost felt bad at how unfair it was
to them.
I punched the first hard enough that he lost his grip on Victor and flew
backward, hitting the wall near Lissa as she frantically compelled
Northwood to stay calm and not call anyone in the midst of this chaos. The
other guardian had slightly more time to react, but he was still slow in letting
go of Victor and turning on me. I used the opening and got a punch in,
forcing the two of us into a grappling match. He was big and formidable,
and once he deemed me a threat, he didn't hold back. A blow to my shoulder
sent shooting pain through my arm, and I responded with a swift knee in his
stomach. Meanwhile, his counterpart was on his feet heading toward us. I
had to end this fast, not only for my own sake but also because they would
undoubtedly call for backup if given a moment's chance.
I grabbed the one closest to me and pushed him as hard as I could into
a wall--headfirst. He staggered, dazed, and I did it again, just as his partner
reached me. That first guardian slumped to the ground, unconscious. I hated
doing that, but part of my training had been learning to differentiate between
incapacitating and killing. He should only have a headache. I hoped. The
other guardian was very much on the offensive, however, and he and I
circled each other, getting in some shots and dodging others.
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"I can't knock him out!" I called to Lissa. "We need him. Compel
him."
Her response came through the bond. She could compel two people at
the same time, but it took a lot of strength. We weren't out of this yet, and
she couldn't risk burning herself out so soon. Frustration replaced fear within
her.
"Northwood, go to sleep," she barked. "Right there. On your desk.
You're exhausted and will sleep for hours."
Out of the corner of my eye, I saw Northwood slump, his head hitting
the desk with a thump. Everyone who worked here would have a concussion
by the time we were through. I threw myself at the guardian then, using my
full weight to get him within Lissa's line of sight. She pushed her way into
our fight. He glanced at her in surprise, and that was all she needed.
"Stop!"
He didn't respond as quickly as Northwood, but he did hesitate. This
guy was more resistant.
"Stop fighting!" she repeated more forcefully, intensifying her will.
Strong or not, he couldn't stand against that much spirit. His arms fell
to his sides, and he stopped wrestling me. I stepped back to catch my breath,
straightening my wig back into place.
"Holding this one's going to be hard," Lissa told me.
"Hard as in five minutes or five hours?"
"Somewhere in the middle."
"Then let's move. Get Victor's key from him."
She demanded the guardian give her the key for the shackles. He told
us the other guardian had it. Sure enough, I frisked the unconscious body--he
was breathing steadily, thank God--and retrieved the key. Now I turned my
full attention on Victor. Once the fight had started, he'd stepped out of the
way and simply observed quietly while all sorts of new possibilities
undoubtedly formed in his twisted mind.
I approached and put on my "scary face" as I held up the key. "I'm
going to unlock your cuffs now," I told him, in a voice both sweet and
menacing. "You're going to do exactly what we tell you to do. You're not
going to run, start a fight, or in any way interfere with our plans."
"Oh? Are you using compulsion nowadays too, Rose?" he asked
dryly.
"I don't need it." I unlocked the shackles. "I can render you
unconscious as easily as that guy and drag you out. Makes no difference to
me."
The heavy cuffs and chains fell to the floor. That sly, smug look
79
stayed on his face, but his hands gently touched each wrist. I noticed then
that there were welts and bruises on them. Those shackles weren't meant for
comfort, but I refused to feel sorry for him. He glanced back up at us.
"How charming," he mused. "Out of all the people who would attempt
to rescue me, I never would have expected you two . . . and yet, in
retrospect, you're probably the most capable."
"We don't need your running commentary, Hannibal," I snapped.
"And don't use the word rescue. It makes it sound like you're some
wrongfully imprisoned hero."
He arched an eyebrow, like he believed that might indeed be the case.
Instead of disputing me, he nodded toward Bradley, who had actually slept
through the fight. In his drugged state, Lissa's compulsion had been more
than enough to knock him out.
"Give him to me," said Victor.
"What?" I exclaimed. "We don't have time for this!"
"And I have no strength for whatever you have in mind," hissed
Victor. That pleasant and all-knowing mask vanished, replaced by one
vicious and desperate. "Imprisonment involves more than bars, Rose. They
starve us of food and blood, trying to keep us weak. Walking here is the only
exercise I get, and that's effort enough. Unless you really do plan on
dragging me out of here, give me blood!"
Lissa interrupted any response I could make. "Be fast."
I stared at her in astonishment. I'd been about to deny Victor, but
through the bond I felt an odd mix of feelings from her. Compassion and . . .
understanding. Oh, she still hated him, absolutely. But she also knew what it
was like to live on limited blood.
Mercifully, Victor was fast. His mouth was at the human's neck
practically before Lissa finished speaking. Dazed or no, feeling teeth in his
neck was enough to wake Bradley up. He woke with a start, his face soon
moving into the delight feeders took from vampire endorphins. A short burst
of blood was all Victor would need, but when Bradley's eyes started to go
wide in surprise, I realized Victor was taking more than a quick drink. I leapt
forward and jerked Victor away from the scattered feeder.
"What the hell are you doing?" I demanded, shaking Victor hard. It
was something I'd wanted to do for a long time. "Did you think you could
drain him and become Strigoi right in front of us?"
"Hardly," said Victor, wincing at the grip I had on him.
"That's not what he was doing," said Lissa. "He just lost control for a
second."
His bloodlust satisfied, Victor's smooth demeanor had returned. "Ah,
80
Vasilisa. Always so understanding."
"Don't make any assumptions," she growled.
I shot glares at both of them. "We have to go. Now." I turned to the
compelled guardian. "Take us to the room where they monitor all security
footage."
He didn't respond to me, and with a sigh, I looked expectantly at
Lissa. She repeated my question, and he immediately began to leave the
room. My adrenaline was running high from the fight, and I was anxious to
finish all of this and get us out of here. Through the bond, I sensed her
nervousness. She might have defended Victor's need for blood, but as we
walked, she kept as far away from him as possible. The stark realization of
who he was and what we were doing was creeping up on her. I wished I
could comfort her, but there was no time.
We followed the guardian--Lissa asked his name; it was Giovanni--
through more halls and security checkpoints. The route he led us on went
around the prison's edge, not through the cells. I held my breath almost the
entire time, terrified we'd run into someone. Too many other factors were
working against us; we didn't need that too. Our luck held, though, and we
ran into no one--again probably a result of doing this near the end of the
night and not passing through a high-security zone.
Lissa and Mia had gotten the Court guardian to erase the security
footage there too, but I hadn't witnessed it. Now, when Giovanni led us into
the prison's surveillance room, I couldn't help a small gasp. Monitors
covered the walls, and consoles with complex buttons and switches sat in
front of them. Computer-covered desks were everywhere. I felt like this
room had the power to blast off into space. Everything in the prison was in
view: each cell, several halls, and even the warden's office, where Eddie sat
making small talk with Theo. Two other guardians were in here, and I
wondered if they'd seen us in the halls. But no--they were too fixated on
something else: a camera that had been turned to face a blank wall. It was
the one I'd adjusted in the feeding room.
They were leaning toward it, and one of them was saying how they
should call someone to check down there. Then they both looked up and
noticed us.
"Help her subdue them," Lissa ordered Giovanni.
Again, there was hesitation. We would have been better off with a
"helper" with a weaker will, but Lissa had had no idea when she chose him.
Like before, he eventually sprang into action. Also like before, surprise went
a long way in subduing these two guardians. I was a stranger--immediately
raising their guard--but still appeared as human. Giovanni was their
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coworker; they didn't expect an attack from him.
That didn't make them easy to take down, though. Having backup
went a long way, and Giovanni was good at his job. We rendered one
guardian unconscious pretty quickly, Giovanni using a choke hold to briefly
cut off the guy's air until he collapsed. The other guard kept his distance
from us, and I noticed his eyes continually shifting toward one of the walls.
It had a fire extinguisher, a light switch, and a round silver button.
"That's an alarm!" exclaimed Victor, just as the guardian lunged for it.
Giovanni and I tackled him at the same time, stopping the guy just
before his hand could brush the button and send a legion of guards down on
us. A blow to the head knocked this guardian out too. With each person I
took out in this prison break, a knot of guilt and nausea twisted tighter and
tighter in my stomach. Guardians were the good guys, and I couldn't help
but keep thinking I was fighting on the side of evil.
Now that we were left to ourselves, Lissa knew the next step.
"Giovanni, disable all the cameras and erase the last hour's worth of
footage."
There was a greater hesitation on his part this time. Getting him to
fight his friends had required a lot of forceful compulsion on her part. She
was keeping her control but growing weary, and it was only going to get
harder making him obey our commands.
"Do it," growled Victor, coming to stand beside Lissa. She flinched at
his proximity, but as his gaze joined hers, Giovanni complied with the order
and began flipping switches on the consoles. Victor couldn't match Lissa's
power by a long shot, but his small burst of compulsion had strengthened
hers.
One by one, the monitors went black, and then Giovanni typed in a
few commands on the computer that stored digital footage from the cameras.
Red error lights were flashing on the consoles, but there was no one here
now to fix them.
"Even if he erases it, there are those who might be able to recover it
from the hard drive," noted Victor.
"It's a chance we'll have to take," I said irritably. "Reprogramming or
whatever isn't really in my skill set."
Victor rolled his eyes. "Perhaps, but destruction certainly is."
It took me a moment to get what he meant, but then it clicked. With a
sigh, I grabbed the fire extinguisher from the wall and beat the computer to a
pulp until it was nothing more than a pile of plastic and metal fragments.
Lissa winced at each blow and kept glancing at the door.
"I hope that's soundproof," she muttered.
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"It looks sturdy," I said confidently. "And now it's time to go."
Lissa ordered Giovanni to return us to the warden's office at the front
of the prison. He complied, leading us back through the maze we'd gone
through earlier. His codes and security card got us through each checkpoint.
"I don't suppose you can compel Theo into letting us walk out?" I
asked Lissa.
Her mouth was set in a grim line. She shook her head. "I don't even
know how much longer I can hold Giovanni. I've never used someone as a
puppet before."
"It's okay," I said, trying to reassure both of us. "We're almost done
with this."
But we were going to have another fight on our hands. After beating
up half the Strigoi in Russia, I still felt good about my own strength, but that
guilty feeling wouldn't leave me. And if we ran into a dozen guardians, even
my strength wasn't going to hold.
I'd lost my bearings from the blueprint, but it turned out that
Giovanni's route back to the main office was taking us through a block of
cells after all. Another sign read overhead WARNING--NOW ENTERING
PRISONER AREA (PSYCHIATRIC).
"Psychiatric?" I asked in surprise.
"Of course," murmured Victor. "Where else do you think they send
prisoners with mental problems?"
"To hospitals," I responded, holding back a joke about all criminals
having mental problems.
"Well, that's not always--"
"Stop!"
Lissa interrupted him and came to an abrupt halt before the door. The
rest of us nearly walked into her. She jerked away, taking several steps back.
"What's wrong?" I asked.
She turned to Giovanni. "Find another way to the office."
"This is the fastest way," he argued.
Lissa slowly shook her head. "I don't care. Find another, one where
we won't run into others."
He frowned, but her compulsion held. He abruptly turned, and we
scurried to keep up. "What's wrong?" I repeated. Lissa's mind was too
tangled for me to pull out her reasoning. She grimaced.
"I felt spirit auras behind there."
"What? How many?"
"At least two. I don't know if they sensed me or not."
If not for Giovanni's clip and the urgency pressing on us, I would have
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come to a stop. "Spirit users . . ."
Lissa had looked so long and hard for others like her. Who'd have
thought we'd find them here? Actually . . . maybe we should have expected
this. We knew spirit users danced with insanity. Why wouldn't they end up
in a place like this? And considering the trouble we'd gone through to learn
about the prison, it was no wonder these spirit users had remained hidden. I
doubted anyone working here even knew what they were.
Lissa and I exchanged brief glances. I knew how badly she wanted to
investigate this, but now wasn't the time. Victor already looked too
interested in what we'd said, so Lissa's next words were in my head: I'm
pretty sure any spirit users would see through my charms. We can't risk our
real descriptions being discovered--even if they came from people who are
allegedly crazy.
I nodded my understanding, pushing aside curiosity and even regret.
We'd have to check into this another time--say, like, the next time we
decided to break into a maximum-security prison.
We finally reached Theo's office without further incident, though my
heart pounded furiously the entire way as my brain kept telling me, Go! Go!
Go! Theo and Eddie were chatting Court politics when our group entered.
Eddie immediately leapt up and went for Theo, recognizing it was time to
go. He had Theo in a choke hold as efficiently as Giovanni had managed
earlier, and I was glad someone else was doing this dirty work besides me.
Unfortunately, Theo managed a good yelp before passing out and falling to
the ground.
Immediately, the two guardians who had escorted us in earlier
charged the office. Eddie and I jumped into the fray, and Lissa and Victor
got Giovanni in on it too. To make things more difficult, just after we
subdued one of the guardians, Giovanni broke out of the compulsion and
began fighting against us. Worse, he ran to the wall where I discovered--too
late--there was another silver alarm button. He slammed his fist against it,
and a piercing wail filled the air.
"Shit!" I yelled.
Lissa's skills weren't in physical fighting, and Victor wasn't much
better. It was all on me and Eddie to finish these last two--and we had to do
it fast. The second of the escort guardians went down, and then it was just us
and Giovanni. He got a good hit in on me--one that knocked my head
against the wall. It wasn't good enough to make me pass out, but the world
spun and black and white spots danced before my eyes. It froze me up for a
moment, but then Eddie was on him, and Giovanni was soon no longer a
threat.
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Eddie took my arm to steady me, and then the four of us immediately
ran out of the room. I glanced back at the unconscious bodies, again hating
myself for it. There was no time for guilt, though. We had to get out. Now.
Every guardian in this prison would be here in less than a minute.
Our group ran to the front doors, only to discover them locked from
the inside. Eddie swore and told us to wait. He ran back to Theo's office and
returned with one of the security cards that Giovanni had often swiped at the
doors. Sure enough, this one let us out, and we made a mad dash for the
rental car. We piled in, and I was glad Victor kept up with all of us and made
none of his annoying comments.
Eddie stepped on the gas and headed back toward the way we'd come
in. I sat beside him in the front. "I guarantee the gate guy's going to know
about the alarm," I warned. Our original hope had been to simply leave and
tell him there'd been a paperwork mix-up after all.
"Yup," Eddie agreed, face hard. Sure enough, the guardian stepped
out of his gatehouse, arms waving.
"Is that a gun?" I exclaimed.
"I'm not stopping to find out." Eddie pushed hard on the gas, and
when the guardian realized we were coming through regardless, he jumped
out of the way. We crashed through the wooden arm that blocked the road,
leaving it a mess of splinters.
"Bud's gonna keep our deposit," I said.
Behind us, I heard the sounds of gunshots. Eddie swore again, but as
we sped away, the shots grew fainter, and soon, we were out of range. He
exhaled. "If those had hit our tires or windows, we'd have had a lot more to
worry about than a deposit."
"They're going to send people after us," said Victor from the backseat.
Once again, Lissa had moved as far from him as she could. "Trucks are
probably leaving right now."
"You don't think we guessed that?" I snapped. I knew he was trying to
be helpful, but he was the last person I wanted to hear from at the moment.
Even as I spoke, I peered back and saw the dark shapes of two vehicles
speeding down the road after us. They were gaining quickly, leaving no
question that the SUVs would soon catch up to our little compact car.
I looked at our GPS. "We need to turn soon," I warned Eddie, not that
he needed my advice.
We'd mapped out an escape route beforehand, one that took lots and
lots of twisty turns on these remote back roads. Fortunately, there were a lot
of them. Eddie made a hard left and then almost an immediate right. Still,
the pursuing vehicles stayed with us in the rearview mirror. It wasn't until a
85
few turns later that the road behind us stayed clear.
Tense silence filled the car as we waited for the guardians to catch up.
They didn't. We'd made too many confusing turns, but it took nearly ten
minutes for me to accept that we might have actually pulled this off.
"I think we lost them," said Eddie, the wonder in his voice matching
my feelings. His face was still lined with worry, his hands gripping the
wheel hard.
"We won't lose them until we clear Fairbanks," I said. "I'm sure they'll
search it, and it's not that big."
"Where are we going?" asked Victor. "If I'm allowed to ask."
I squirmed around in my seat so that I could look him in the eye.
"That's what you're going to tell us. As hard as it is to believe, we didn't do
all that just because we missed your pleasant company."
"That is hard to believe."
I narrowed my eyes. "We want to find your brother. Robert Doru."
I had the satisfaction of momentarily catching Victor off guard. Then
his sly look returned. "Of course. This is a follow-up to Abe Mazur's
request, isn't it? I should have known he wouldn't take no for an answer. Of
course, I never would have guessed you were in league with him."
Victor apparently didn't know I was actually in the familial league
with Abe, and I wasn't about to enlighten him. "Irrelevant," I said coldly.
"Now, you're going to take us to Robert. Where is he?"
"You forget, Rose," mused Victor. "You aren't the one with
compulsion here."
"No, but I am the one who can tie you up by the side of the road and
make an anonymous call back to the prison with your whereabouts."
"How do I know you won't get what you want from me and then turn
me back in anyway?" he asked. "I have no reason to trust you."
"You're right. I sure as hell wouldn't trust me. But if things work out,
there's a chance we might let you go afterward." No, there really wasn't. "Is
this something you want to gamble on? You'll never get another opportunity
like this, and you know it."
Victor had no witty quip for that. Score another one for me.
"So," I continued, "are you going to take us to him or not?"
Thoughts I couldn't read churned behind his eyes. No doubt he was
scheming about how he could work this to his advantage, probably figuring
out how to escape us before we even reached Robert. It was what I would
have done.
"Las Vegas," Victor said at last. "We need to go to Las Vegas."
86
EIGHT
AFTER THE BITCHING I'D DONE to Abe about always going to
remote, crappy places, I should have been excited about the prospect of
going to Sin City. Alas, I had a few reservations about my next epic trip.
First of all, somewhere like Las Vegas was the last place I would expect a
semi-crazy recluse to be. From the bits and pieces I'd heard, Robert had
dropped off the radar and wanted to be alone. A busy, tourist-filled city
didn't really fit that description. Second, cities like that were perfect feeding
grounds for Strigoi. Crowded. Reckless. Low inhibitions. Very easy for
people to disappear--especially when most of them were out at night.
Part of me was certain it had to be a trick on Victor's part, but he
swore up and down that it was true. So, with no other leads, Las Vegas
became our next destination. We didn't have much time to debate the matter
anyway, knowing the guardians would be searching Fairbanks for us.
Admittedly, Lissa's charms had altered our appearances enough that they
wouldn't be looking for people with our descriptions. They knew what
Victor looked like, though, so the sooner we were out of Alaska, the better.
Unfortunately, we had a slight problem.
"Victor has no ID," said Eddie. "We can't take him on a plane."
It was true. All of Victor's possessions had been seized by prison
authorities, and in the midst of disabling surveillance and taking out half a
dozen guardians, we'd hardly had time to go searching for his personal stuff.
Lissa's compulsion was phenomenal, but she was exhausted after wielding
so much at the prison. Besides, guardians would likely be watching the
airport. Our "friend" Bud the car rental guy provided the solution. He hadn't
been thrilled to see his car returned with all the scratches from Eddie's
daredevil driving, but enough cash had finally stopped the human's
muttering about "renting to a bunch of kids." It was Victor who thought of
an alternative plan and suggested it to Bud.
"Is there a private airport nearby? With flights we might charter?"
"Sure," said Bud. "But it won't be cheap."
"It's not an issue," I said.
Bud eyed us askance. "Did you guys rob a bank or something?"
No, but we were packing a lot of currency. Lissa had a trust fund that
87
doled her out monthly money until she was eighteen, as well as a high-limit
credit card. I had a credit card of my own, leftover from when I'd sweettalked
Adrian into funding my Russian trip. I'd let go of the rest of my
assets, like the huge bank account he'd set up. But, wrong or not, I'd decided
to keep one card on hand, just in case of emergency.
This was certainly an emergency, so we used the card to pay for part
of the private plane's cost. The pilot couldn't take us as far as Las Vegas, but
he could take us to Seattle, where he was able to connect us with another
pilot he knew who could go the rest of the way. More money.
"And Seattle again," I mused, just before the plane took off. The little
jet's interior had a set of four seats, two on each side facing each other. I sat
next to Victor, and Eddie sat across from him. We figured that was the best
protective configuration.
"What about Seattle?" asked Eddie, puzzled.
"Never mind."
Little private jets aren't nearly as fast as big commercial ones, and our
trip took a large part of the day. During it, I continued asking Victor about
his brother's role in Las Vegas and finally got the answer I wanted. Victor
would have had to tell us eventually, but I think he'd gotten a sadistic thrill
out of prolonging the answer.
"Robert doesn't live in Las Vegas proper," he explained. "He has a
small house--a cabin, I suppose--out by Red Rock Canyon, miles outside the
city."
Ah. Now that was more what I'd expected. Lissa stiffened at the
mention of a cabin, and I felt unease through the bond. When Victor had
kidnapped her, he'd taken her to a cabin in the woods and tortured her there.
I gave her as reassuring a look as I could. It was times like these I wished the
bond worked both ways so that I could truly send her comfort.
"So we'll go out there?"
Victor snorted. "Certainly not. Robert values his privacy too much. He
wouldn't let strangers come to his home. But he'll come to the city if I ask."
Lissa eyed me. Victor could be setting us up. He had lots of
supporters. Now that he's out, he could call them instead of Robert to meet
us.
I gave her a tiny nod, again wishing I could respond back through the
bond. I'd thought of this as well. It was imperative we never leave Victor
alone to make unsupervised calls. And actually, this plan to meet in Las
Vegas itself made me feel better. For our own safety from Victor's
henchmen, it was better to be in the city than out in the middle of nowhere.
"Seeing as I've been so helpful," said Victor, "I have the right to know
88
what you want with my brother." He glanced at Lissa. "Looking for spirit
lessons? You had to have done some excellent investigative work to find out
about him."
"You have no right to know about our plans," I retorted sharply. "And
seriously? If you're keeping track of who's been the most helpful here, we
are totally beating you on the score-card. You've got a ways to go to catch
up after what we did at Tarasov."
Victor's only response was a small smile.
Some of our flight time took place at night, which meant it was early
morning when we landed in Las Vegas. The safety of sunlight. I was
surprised to see how crowded the airport was. The private one in Seattle had
had a fair amount of planes, but the Fairbanks airport had nearly been
deserted. This strip was chock-full of little jets, many of them screaming
"luxury." I shouldn't have been surprised. Las Vegas was the playground of
celebrities and other wealthy people, many of whom probably couldn't lower
themselves to fly commercial with ordinary passengers.
There were taxis there, sparing us the ordeal of another rental car. But
when the driver asked us where we were going, we all stayed silent. I turned
to Victor.
"The middle of the city, right? The Strip?"
"Yes," he agreed. He'd been certain Robert would want to meet
strangers somewhere very public. Somewhere he could easily flee.
"The Strip's a big place," said the driver. "You got any place in
particular or should I just drop you off in the middle of the street?"
Silence fell over us. Lissa shot me a meaningful look. "The Witching
Hour?" I considered it. Las Vegas was a favorite place for some Moroi. The
bright sun made it less appealing for Strigoi, and the windowless casinos
created comfortable, dark atmospheres. The Witching Hour was a hotel and
casino we'd all heard of. While it had plenty of human customers, it was
actually owned by Moroi, so it had lots of clandestine features to make it a
great getaway for vampires. Feeders in back rooms. Special Moroi-only
lounges. A fair number of guardians on patrol.
Guardians . . .
I shook my head and glanced sideways at Victor. "We can't take him
there." Of all the hotels in Las Vegas, the Witching Hour was the last we'd
want to go to. Victor's escape had to be breaking news all over the Moroi
world. Taking him into Vegas's largest concentration of Moroi and
guardians was probably the worst thing we could do at this point.
In the rearview mirror, the driver's face looked impatient. It was Eddie
89
who finally piped up. "The Luxor."
He and I were in the backseat, with Victor between us, and I peered
over. "Where did that come from?"
"It puts distance between us and the Witching Hour." Eddie suddenly
looked a little sheepish. "And I've always wanted to stay there. I mean, if
you're coming to Vegas, why not stay in a pyramid?"
"You can't fault that logic," said Lissa.
"The Luxor it is," I said to the driver.
We rode in silence, all of us--well, except for Victor--staring at the
sights in awe. Even in the daytime, the streets of Las Vegas were teeming
with people. The young and glamorous walked side by side with older
couples from Middle America, who'd probably saved and saved to make this
trip. The hotels and casinos we passed were huge, flashy, and inviting.
And when we reached the Luxor . . . yup. It was just like Eddie had
said. A hotel shaped like a pyramid. I stared up at it when we got out of the
car, trying hard not to let my jaw drop like the starry-eyed tourist I was. I
paid the driver and we headed inside. I didn't know how long we'd be
staying, but we definitely needed a room as our base of operation.
Stepping into the hotel was like being back in the night-clubs in Saint
Petersburg and Novosibirsk. Flashing lights and the overwhelming scent of
smoke. And noise. Noise, noise, noise. The slot machines beeped and rang,
chips fell, people yelled in dismay or delight, and the low thrum of
conversation filled the room like humming bees. I grimaced. The stimuli
grated on my senses.
We passed through the casino's edge to get to the front desk, where
the attendant didn't even blink at three teenagers and an old man getting a
room together. I had to imagine that around here, they saw it all. Our room
was average-size, with two double beds, and somehow we'd lucked out with
an amazing view. Lissa stood at the window, entranced by the sights of
people and cars on the Strip below, but I jumped straight to business.
"Okay, call him," I ordered Victor. He'd settled down on one of the
beds, hands crossed and expression serene, as though he truly were on
vacation. Despite that smug smile, I could see the fatigue etched on his face.
Even with his blood refill, the escape and long trip had been exhausting, and
the effects of his slowly returning disease were naturally taking a toll on his
physical strength.
Victor immediately reached for the hotel's phone, but I shook my
head. "Liss, let him use your cell. I want a record of this number."
She gingerly handed the phone over, as though he might contaminate
it. He took it and gave me a nigh-angelic look. "I don't suppose I could have
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some privacy? It's been so long since Robert and I have talked."
"No," I snapped. The harshness in my voice startled even me, and it
occurred to me Lissa wasn't the only one suffering from all the spirit used
today.
Victor gave a small shrug and began dialing. He'd told us on one of
the flights that he had Robert's number memorized, and I had to take it on
faith that that was who he was calling. I also had to hope Robert's number
hadn't changed. Of course, even if Victor hadn't seen his brother in years,
Victor had only been imprisoned a short while and had probably kept tabs
on Robert beforehand.
Tension filled the room as we waited while the phone rang. A moment
later, I heard a voice answer through the phone's speaker--though I couldn't
make out the exact words.
"Robert," said Victor pleasantly, "it's Victor."
This received a frantic response on the other end. I only could hear
half of the conversation, but it was intriguing. Victor first had to spend a lot
of time convincing Robert that he was out of prison. Apparently, Robert
wasn't so removed from Moroi society that he was out of touch with current
news. Victor told him that the details would be revealed later and then began
making his pitch for Robert to come meet us.
It took a long time. I got the feeling that Robert lived in fear and
paranoia, which reminded me of Ms. Karp when she'd been in the advanced
stages of spirit's insanity. Lissa's gaze stayed fixed on the scene outside the
window during the entire call, but her feelings mirrored mine: fear that this
could someday be her fate. Or mine as well, if I siphoned away spirit's
effects. The image of the Tarasov sign flashed briefly through her mind:
WARNING--NOW ENTERING PRISONER AREA (PSYCHIATRIC).
Victor's voice turned surprisingly cajoling as he spoke to his brother,
gentle even. I was reminded uneasily of the old days, before we'd known
about Victor's demented plans for Moroi domination. Back then, he'd treated
us kindly too and had practically been a member of Lissa's family. I
wondered if at some point he'd been sincere or if it had all been an act.
Finally, after almost twenty minutes, Victor convinced Robert to
come see us. The unintelligible words on the other end of the phone were
filled with anxiety, and at this point, I felt convinced that Victor truly was
talking to his crazy brother and not one of his accomplices. Victor set up a
dinner meeting at one of the hotel's restaurants and at last disconnected.
"Dinner?" I asked when Victor set the phone down. "Isn't he worried
about being out after dark?"
"It's an early dinner," Victor replied. "Four thirty. And the sun won't
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go down until almost eight."
"Four thirty?" I asked. "Good God. Are we getting the senior citizen
special?"
But he made a good point about the time and sun. Without the safety
of Alaska's nearly nonstop summer light, I was starting to feel suffocated by
the pressure of sunrise and sunset boundaries, even though it was summer
here. Unfortunately, a safe early dinner still meant we had hours to pass.
Victor leaned back on the bed, arms behind his head. I think he was
attempting an unconcerned air, but my guess was that it was actually
exhaustion driving him to seek the bed's comfort.
"Care to try your luck downstairs?" He glanced over at Lissa. "Spirit
users make remarkably good card players. I don't have to tell you how good
you are at reading people." She made no response.
"Nobody's leaving this room," I said. I didn't like the idea of us all
being cooped up here, but I couldn't risk an escape attempt or Strigoi lurking
in the casino's dark corners.
After showering the dye from her hair, Lissa pulled up a chair by the
window. She refused to get any closer to Victor. I sat cross-legged on the
second bed, where there was plenty of room for Eddie to sit too, but he
remained upright against a wall, in perfect guardian posture as he watched
Victor. I had no doubt Eddie could maintain that position for hours, no
matter how uncomfortable it got. We'd all been trained to endure harsh
conditions. He did a good job at looking stern, but every once in a while, I'd
catch him studying Victor curiously. Eddie had stood by me in this act of
treason but still didn't know why I'd done it.
We'd been there a few hours when someone knocked at the door. I
leapt up.
Eddie and I mirrored each other, both of us straightening to rigid
attention, hands going for our stakes. We'd ordered lunch an hour ago, but
room service had long since come and gone. It was too early for Robert, and
besides, he didn't know the name our room was under. There was no nausea,
though. No Strigoi at our door. I met Eddie's gaze, silent messages passing
between us on what to do.
But it was Lissa who acted first, rising from her chair and taking a few
steps across the room. "It's Adrian."
"What?" I exclaimed. "Are you sure?"
She nodded. Spirit users usually only saw auras, but they could sense
each other if they were close enough--just as she had at the prison. Still,
none of us moved. She gave me a dry look.
"He knows I'm here," she pointed out. "He can feel me too."
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I sighed, still keeping my hand on my stake, and strode to the door. I
squinted through the peephole. Standing there, his expression amused and
restless, was Adrian. I could see no one else, and with no indication of
Strigoi to be found, I finally opened the door. His face lit with joy when he
saw me. Leaning in, he gave me a quick kiss on the cheek before stepping
into the room.
"You guys didn't really think you could go off on a party weekend
without me, did you? Especially here of all places--"
He froze, and it was one of those rare moments when Adrian Ivashkov
was caught totally and completely off guard.
"Did you know," he said slowly, "that Victor Dashkov is sitting on
your bed?"
"Yeah," I said. "It was kind of a shock to us too."
Adrian dragged his gaze from Victor and glanced around the room,
noticing Eddie for the first time. Eddie had been standing so still that he
practically seemed like part of the furniture. Adrian turned to me.
"What the hell is going on? Everyone is out looking for him!"
Lissa's words spoke to me through my bond. You might as well tell
him. You know he won't leave now.
She was right. I didn't know how Adrian had found us, but now that
he had, there was no way he'd go. I glanced hesitantly at Eddie, who guessed
my thoughts.
"We'll be fine," he said. "Go talk. I won't let anything happen."
And I'm strong enough again that I can compel him if he tries
anything, Lissa added.
I sighed. "Okay. We'll be right back."
I took Adrian's arm and led him outside. As soon as we were in the
hallway, he started in again. "Rose, what's--"
I shook my head. In our time here, I'd heard enough noise from other
hotel guests in the hall to know that my friends would hear our conversation
if we talked out there. Instead, Adrian and I took the elevator and headed
downstairs, where the noise of the casino would mask our words. We found
a slightly out-of-the-way corner, and Adrian practically pushed me against
the wall, his expression dark. His light attitude annoyed me sometimes, but I
preferred it to when he was upset, largely because I feared spirit would add
an unstable edge.
"You leave me a note saying you're sneaking off for one last party
weekend, and instead I find you holed up with one of the most notorious
criminals ever? When I left Court, that's all everyone was talking about!
Didn't that guy try to kill you?"
93
I answered his question with a question. "How did you even find us?"
"The credit card," he said. "I was waiting for you to use it."
My eyes widened. "You promised me when I got all those that you
wouldn't go snooping!" Since my accounts and cards had come with his
help, I'd known he had access to the records but had believed him when he'd
said he'd respect my privacy.
"When you were in Russia, I kept that promise. This is different. I
kept checking and checking with the company, and as soon as the activity
with the charter plane showed up, I called and found out where you were
going." Adrian's arrival here so soon after ours wasn't that unbelievable if he
had been monitoring the card. Once he'd had the information he needed, he
could have easily booked a flight. A nonstop commercial jet would have
made up the time on our slower, multistop trip. "There was no way I could
resist Vegas," he continued. "So I thought I'd surprise you and show up to
join in the fun." I'd used my card for the room, I realized, again tipping off
our location. No one else was linked to my or Lissa's cards, but the ease with
which he'd tracked us made me nervous.
"You shouldn't have done that," I growled. "We might be together, but
there are boundaries you've got to respect. This is none of your business."
"It's not like I was reading your diary! I just wanted to find my
girlfriend and--" It was a sign of Adrian's distress that his mind was only
now beginning to backtrack and put pieces together. "Oh lord. Rose, please
tell me you guys aren't the ones who busted him out? They're all looking for
two human girls and a dhampir guy. The descriptions don't match at all . . ."
He groaned. "But it was you, wasn't it? Somehow, you broke into a
maximum-security prison. With Eddie."
"Must not have been all that secure," I remarked lightly.
"Rose! This guy has fucked with both of your lives. Why would you
free him?"
"Because . . ." I hesitated. How could I explain this to Adrian? How
could I explain that which, by all evidence in our world, was impossible?
And how could I explain what goal in particular was driving this? "Victor
has information we need. Or, well, he has access to someone we need. This
was the only way we could get it."
"What on earth could he possibly know to make you do all this?"
I swallowed. I walked into prisons and nests of Strigoi, but saying
what I did next to Adrian filled me with apprehension. "Because there might
be a way to save Strigoi. To turn them back to the way they were. And
Victor . . . Victor knows someone who might have done this."
Adrian stared at me for several long seconds, and even in the midst of
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the casino's movement and noise, it was like the world grew still and silent.
"Rose, that's impossible."
"It might not be."
"If there was a way to do that, we would know."
"It involves spirit users. And we only just found out about them."
"That doesn't mean it's--oh. I see." His deep green eyes flashed, and
this time, they were angry. "It's him, isn't it? This is your last crazy attempt
to get to him. To Dimitri."
"Not just him," I said vaguely. "It could save all Strigoi."
"I thought this was over!" Adrian exclaimed. His voice was loud
enough that a few people at nearby slot machines glanced over. "You told
me it was over. You told me you could move on and be with me."
"I meant it," I said, surprised at the desperate note in my voice. "It's
something we only just found out about. We had to try."
"And what then? What if this stupid fantasy works? You free Dimitri
in some miraculous act, and you drop me like that." He snapped his fingers.
"I don't know," I said wearily. "We're just taking this one step at a
time. I love being with you. Really. But I can't ignore this."
"Of course you can't." He turned his eyes heavenward. "Dreams,
dreams. I walk them; I live them. I delude myself with them. It's a wonder I
can spot reality anymore." The weird sound of his voice made me nervous. I
could recognize one of his slightly crazy, spirit-induced lapses. Then, he
turned from me with a sigh. "I need a drink."
Whatever pity I'd felt for him turned to anger. "Oh, good. That'll fix
everything. I'm glad in a world gone mad, you've still got your old
standbys."
I flinched at his glare. He didn't do it very often, and when he did, it
was a powerful thing. "What do you expect me to do?" he asked.
"You could . . . you could . . ." Oh God. "Well, now that you're here,
you could help us. Plus, this guy we're meeting. He's another spirit user."
Adrian didn't betray his thoughts, but I had a feeling that I had piqued
his interest. "Yeah, that's exactly what I want. To help my girlfriend get her
old boyfriend back." He turned away again, and I heard him mutter, "I need
two drinks."
"Four thirty," I called after him. "We're meeting at four thirty."
There was no response, and Adrian melted into the crowd.
I returned to the room in a dark cloud that had to be obvious to
everyone. Lissa and Eddie were smart enough not to ask questions, but
Victor, of course, had no such reserves.
"What? Mr. Ivashkov isn't joining us? I'd so been looking forward to
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his company."
"Shut up," I said, crossing my arms and leaning against the wall near
Eddie. "Don't speak unless you're spoken to."
The next couple hours dragged by. I was convinced that any minute,
Adrian would come back and reluctantly agree to help us. We could use his
compulsion if things went bad, even though he couldn't match Lissa. Surely .
. . surely he loved me enough to come to my aid? He wouldn't abandon me?
You're an idiot, Rose. It was my own voice that chastised me in my head, not
Lissa's. You've given him no reason to help. You just hurt him again and
again. Just like you did Mason.
When four fifteen came around, Eddie looked over at me. "Should we
stake out a table?"
"Yeah." I was restless and upset. I didn't want to stay in this room any
longer, trapped with dark feelings that wouldn't go away. Victor rose from
the bed, stretching as though getting up from a relaxing nap. Still, I could
have sworn there was an eager glint hidden in the depths of his eyes. By all
accounts, he and his half-brother were close, though I'd seen no indication
that Victor displayed love or loyalty to anyone. Who knew? Maybe
somewhere there was true affection for Robert.
We formed a sort of protective configuration with me in the front,
Eddie in the back, and the two Moroi between us. I opened the room's door
and came face-to-face with Adrian. His hand was raised as though he'd been
about to knock. He arched an eyebrow.
"Oh, hey," he said. He had the standard laid-back Adrian expression
on his face, though his voice was a bit strained. I knew he wasn't happy
about any of this. I could see it in the tight set of his jaw and agitation in his
eyes. Nonetheless, he was putting on a good front for the others, for which I
was grateful. Most importantly, he'd come back. That was what mattered,
and I could ignore the scent of alcohol and smoke wreathing him. "So . . . I
hear there's some party going on. Mind if I join you?"
I gave him a weak, grateful smile. "Come on."
Our group now up to five, we headed down the hall toward the
elevator. "I was cleaning up at poker, you know," Adrian added. "So this
better be good."
"I don't know if it'll be good," I mused. The elevator doors opened.
"But I think it'll be memorable."
We stepped inside, off to see Robert Doru. And what might be
Dimitri's only salvation.
96
NINE
ROBERT DORU WAS EASY TO SPOT.
It wasn't because he looked like Victor. It wasn't even because of any
dramatic running-toward-each-other reunion type thing between him and his
brother. Rather, it was Lissa's mind that tipped me off. I saw Robert through
her eyes, the golden aura of a spirit user lighting up his corner of the
restaurant like a star. It caught her by surprise, and she stumbled briefly.
Spirit users were too rare a sight for her to be fully used to them. Seeing
auras was something she could tune in or out, and just before "turning his
off," she noted that even though his had the brilliant gold she saw in Adrian,
there was also a feel of instability to it. Sparks of other colors flashed there
too, but they trembled and flickered. She wondered if it was a mark of
spirit's insanity setting in.
His eyes lit up as Victor approached the table, but the two didn't hug
or touch. Victor simply sat down beside his brother. The rest of us stood
there awkwardly for a moment. The whole situation was too weird. But it
was the reason we'd come, and after several more seconds, my friends and I
joined the brothers at the table.
"Victor . . ." breathed Robert, eyes wide. Robert might have had some
of the Dashkov facial features, but his eyes were brown, not green. His
hands toyed with a napkin. "I can't believe it. . . . I've wanted to see you for
so long. . . ."
Victor's voice was gentle, as it had been on the phone, as if he were
talking to a child. "I know, Robert. I missed you too."
"Are you staying? Can you come back and stay with me?" Part of me
wanted to snap that that was a ridiculous idea, but the desperation in Robert's
voice sparked a tiny bit of pity in me. I remained silent, simply watching the
drama before me unfold. "I'd hide you. It'd be great. Just the two of us."
Victor hesitated. He wasn't stupid. Despite my vague claims on the
plane, he knew the odds of me letting him go were nonexistent. "I don't
know," he said quietly. "I don't know."
The waiter's arrival jolted us out of our haze, and we all ordered
drinks. Adrian ordered a gin and tonic and wasn't even carded. I wasn't sure
if it was because he looked twenty-one or was convincing enough with
spirit. Regardless, I wasn't thrilled about it. Alcohol muted spirit. We were in
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a precarious situation, and I would have liked him at full strength. Of course,
considering he'd been drinking earlier, it probably didn't matter now.
After the waiter left, Robert seemed to notice the rest of us. His eyes
passed over Eddie quickly, sharpened at Lissa and Adrian, and lingered on
me for a long time. I stiffened, not liking the scrutiny. He finally turned back
to his brother.
"Who have you brought, Victor?" Robert still had that oblivious,
scattered air to him but it was lit with suspicion now. Fear and paranoia.
"Who are these children? Two spirit users and . . ." His gaze fell on me
again. He was reading my aura. "One of the shadow-kissed?"
For a moment, I was astonished at his use of the term. Then I
remembered what Mark, Oksana's husband, had told me. Robert had once
been bonded to a dhampir--and that dhampir had died, drastically speeding
up the deterioration of Robert's mind.
"They're friends," said Victor smoothly. "Friends who'd like to talk to
you and ask you some questions."
Robert frowned. "You're lying. I can tell. And they don't consider you
a friend. They're tense. They keep their distance from you."
Victor didn't deny the friend claim. "Nonetheless, they need your help,
and I promised it to them. It was the price for me being allowed to visit
you."
"You shouldn't have made promises for me." Robert's napkin was now
in shreds. I kind of wanted to give him mine.
"But didn't you want to see me?" asked Victor winningly. His tone
was warm, his smile almost genuine.
Robert looked troubled. Confused. I was again reminded of a child
and was starting to have my doubts that this guy had ever transformed a
Strigoi. He was spared an answer yet again when our drinks arrived. None of
us had even picked up our menus, much to the waiter's obvious annoyance.
He left, and I opened mine without really seeing it.
Victor then introduced us to Robert, as formally as he might at any
diplomatic function. Prison hadn't dulled his sense of royal etiquette. Victor
gave first names only. Robert turned back to me, that frown still on his face,
and glanced between Lissa and me. Adrian had said that whenever we were
together, our auras showed that we were linked.
"A bond . . . I've almost forgotten what it was like . . . but Alden. I've
never forgotten Alden . . ." His eyes grew dreamy and almost vacant. He was
reliving a memory.
"I'm sorry," I said, surprised to hear the sympathy in my words. This
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was hardly the harsh interrogation I'd envisioned. "I can only imagine what
it must have been like . . . losing him. . . ."
The dreamy eyes grew sharp and hard. "No. You cannot. It's like
nothing you can imagine. Nothing. Right now . . . right now . . . you have the
world. A universe of senses beyond those of others, an understanding of
another person that no one can have. To lose that . . . to have that ripped
away . . . it would make you wish for death."
Wow. Robert was pretty good at killing conversation, and we all kind
of sat there hoping the waiter would return this time. When he did, we all
made halfhearted attempts at ordering food--except Robert--most of us
deciding on the spot. The restaurant served Asian cuisine, and I ordered the
first thing I saw on the menu: an egg roll sampler.
With food ordered, Victor continued taking the firm hand with Robert
that I seemed incapable of managing.
"Will you help them? Will you answer their questions?"
I had a feeling that Victor was pushing Robert on this not so much as
a way to pay back us rescuing him, but rather because Victor's scheming
nature was dying to know everyone's secrets and motivations.
Robert sighed. Whenever he looked at Victor, there was such a strong
expression of devotion and even idol worship. Robert probably couldn't
refuse his brother anything. He was the perfect type to play into Victor's
plans, and I realized I should possibly be grateful that Robert had grown
unstable. If he'd been in full control of his powers, Victor would never have
bothered with Lissa last time. He would have already had his own private
spirit wielder to use however he wanted.
"What do you want to know?" asked Robert blearily. He addressed
me, apparently recognizing my leadership.
I glanced at my friends for moral support and received none. Neither
Lissa nor Adrian approved of this mission in the first place, and Eddie still
didn't know its purpose. I swallowed, steeling myself, and directed my full
attention to Robert.
"We heard you freed a Strigoi once. That you were able to convert
him--or her--back to their original state."
Surprise flashed on Victor's usually composed face. He certainly
hadn't expected this.
"Where did you hear this?" demanded Robert.
"From a couple I met in Russia. Their names are Mark and Oksana."
"Mark and Oksana . . ." Again, Robert's gaze slipped away for a
moment. I had a feeling this happened a lot, that he didn't spend much time
in reality. "I didn't know they were still together."
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"They are. They're doing really great." I needed him back in the
present. "Is it true? Did you do what they said? Is it possible?"
Robert's responses were always preceded by a pause. "Her."
"Huh?"
"It was a woman. I freed her."
I gasped in spite of myself, hardly daring to process his words.
"You're lying." It was Adrian who spoke, his tone harsh.
Robert glanced at him with an expression amused and scornful. "And
who are you to say that? How can you tell? You've bruised and abused your
powers so much, it's a wonder you can even touch the magic anymore. And
all these things you do to yourself . . . it doesn't truly help, does it? Spirit's
punishment still affects you . . . soon you won't be able to tell reality from
dream. . . ."
The words stunned Adrian for a moment, but he kept going. "I don't
need any physical signs to see that you're lying. I know you are because
what you're describing is impossible. There's no way to save a Strigoi. When
they're gone, they're gone. They're dead. Undead. Forever ."
"That which is dead doesn't always stay dead. . . ." Robert's words
weren't directed at Adrian. They were spoken to me. I shivered.
"How? How did you do it?"
"With a stake. She was killed with a stake, and in doing so, was
brought back to life."
"Okay," I said. "That is a lie. I've killed plenty of Strigoi with stakes,
and believe me, they stay dead."
"Not just any stake." Robert's fingers danced along the edge of his
glass. "A special stake."
"A stake charmed with spirit," said Lissa suddenly.
He lifted his eyes to her and smiled. It was a creepy smile. "Yes. You
are a clever, clever girl. A clever, gentle girl. Gentle and kind. I can see it in
your aura."
I stared off at the table, my mind in overdrive. A stake charmed with
spirit. Silver stakes were charmed with the four main Moroi elements: earth,
air, water, and fire. It was that infusion of life that destroyed the undead
force within a Strigoi. With our recent discovery of how to charm objects
with spirit, infusing a stake had never even occurred to us. Spirit healed.
Spirit had brought me back from the dead. In joining with the other elements
within a stake, was it truly possible that the twisted darkness that gripped
Strigoi could be obliterated, thus restoring that person to their rightful state?
I was grateful for the food's arrival because my brain was still moving
sluggishly. The egg rolls provided a welcome opportunity to think.
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"Is it really that easy?" I asked at last.
Robert scoffed. "It's not easy at all."
"But you just said . . . you just said we need a spirit-charmed stake.
And then I kill a Strigoi with it." Or well, not kill. The technicalities were
irrelevant.
His smile returned. "Not you. You can't do it."
"Then who . . ." I stopped, the rest of my words dying on my lips.
"No. No."
"The shadow-kissed don't have the gift of life. Only the spiritblessed,"
he explained. "The question is: Who's capable of doing it? Gentle
Girl or Drunken Sod?" His eyes flicked between Lissa and Adrian. "My
wager would be on Gentle Girl."
Those words were what snapped me out of my stunned state. In fact,
they were what shattered this whole thing, this far-fetched dream of saving
Dimitri.
"No," I repeated. "Even if it was possible--and I'm not sure if I believe
you--she can't do it. I won't let her."
And in a turn of events almost as astonishing as Robert's revelation,
Lissa spun toward me, anger flooding our bond. "And since when can you
tell me what I can or can't do?"
"Since I don't recall you ever taking guardian training and learning to
stake a Strigoi," I returned evenly, trying to keep my voice calm. "You only
punched Reed, and that was hard enough." When Avery Lazar had tried to
take over Lissa's mind, she'd sent her shadow-kissed brother to do some
dirty work. With my help, Lissa had punched him and kept him away. It had
been beautifully executed, but she'd hated it.
"I did it, didn't I?" she exclaimed.
"Liss, throwing a punch is nothing like staking a Strigoi. And that's
not even counting the fact that you have to get near one in the first place.
You think you could get in range before one bit you or snapped your neck?
No."
"I'll learn." The determination in her voice and mind was admirable,
but it took guardians decades to learn what we did--and plenty still got
killed.
Adrian and Eddie looked uncomfortable in the midst of our bickering,
but Victor and Robert seemed both intrigued and amused. I didn't like that.
We weren't here for their entertainment.
I tried to deflect the dangerous topic by turning back to Robert. "If a
spirit user brought back a Strigoi, then that person would become shadowkissed."
I didn't point out the obvious conclusion to Lissa. Part of what had
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driven Avery crazy (aside from normal spirit usage) had been bonding with
more than one person. Doing so created a very unstable situation that rapidly
led all people involved into darkness and insanity.
Robert's eyes grew dreamy as he stared beyond me. "Bonds form
when someone dies--when their soul has actually left and moved onto the
world of the dead. Bringing it back is what makes them shadow-kissed.
Death's mark is upon them." His gaze suddenly snapped onto me. "Just as it
is on you."
I refused to avoid his eyes, despite the chill his words sent through
me. "Strigoi are dead. Saving one would mean its soul was brought back
from the world of the dead too."
"No," he argued. "Their souls do not move on. Their souls linger . . .
neither in this world nor the next. It's wrong and unnatural. It's what makes
them what they are. Killing or saving a Strigoi sends the soul back to a
normal state. There is no bond."
"Then there's no danger," Lissa said to me.
"Aside from a Strigoi killing you," I pointed out.
"Rose--"
"We'll finish this conversation later." I gave her a hard look. We held
each other's gazes a moment, and then she turned to Robert. There was still
an obstinacy in the bond I didn't like.
"How do you charm the stake?" she asked him. "I'm still learning."
I again started to chastise her and then thought better of it. Maybe
Robert was wrong. Maybe all it actually took to convert a Strigoi was a
spirit-infused stake. He only thought a spirit user had to do it because he had
done it. Allegedly. Besides, I'd much rather Lissa preoccupy herself with
charming than fighting. If the charm part sounded too hard, she might have
to give up altogether.
Robert glanced at me and then Eddie. "One of you must have a stake
on you. I'll show you."
"You can't take a stake out in public," exclaimed Adrian, in what was
a remarkably wise observation. "It might be weird for humans, but it's still
obvious that it's a weapon."
"He's right," Eddie said.
"We could go back to the room after dinner," said Victor.
He had that perfectly pleasant and bland look on his face. I studied
him, hoping my expression showed my distrust. Even with her zeal, I could
sense the hesitation in Lissa too. She wasn't keen on following any
suggestion of Victor's. We'd seen in the past how desperately far Victor
would go in attempting to fulfill his plans. He'd convinced his own daughter
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to turn Strigoi and help him escape jail. For all we knew, he was planning
the same for--
"That's it," I gasped, feeling my eyes go wide as I stared at him.
"That's what?" Victor asked.
"That's why you had Natalie turn. You thought . . . you knew about
this. What Robert had done. You were going to use her Strigoi strength and
then have him turn her back."
Victor's already pale face went paler, and he seemed to age before our
eyes. His smug look disappeared, and he looked away. "Natalie is dead and
long gone," he said stiffly. "There's no point in discussing her."
Some of us made an attempt to eat after that, but my egg roll seemed
tasteless now. Lissa and I were thinking the same thing. Among all of
Victor's sins, I'd always considered him convincing his own daughter to turn
Strigoi to be the most awful. It was what had really sealed the deal for me
about him being a monster. Suddenly, I was forced to reevaluate things--
forced to reevaluate him. If he'd known he could bring her back, it made
what he had done terrible--but not as terrible. He was still evil in my mind,
no question. But if he had believed he could bring Natalie back, then that
meant he believed in Robert's power. There was still no way I was letting
Lissa near a Strigoi, but this incredible tale had become slightly more
credible. I couldn't let it go without further investigation.
"We can go up to the room after this," I said at last. "But not for long."
My words were to Victor and Robert. Robert seemed to have faded into his
own world again, but Victor nodded.
I gave Eddie a quick glance and got a curt nod of a different sort from
him. He understood the risk in taking the brothers to a private place. Eddie
was telling me he would be extravigilant--not that he wasn't already.
By the time we finished dinner, Eddie and I were both rigid and tense.
He walked near Robert, and I stayed by Victor. We kept Lissa and Adrian
between the brothers. Yet, even keeping close, it was hard as we cut through
the crowded casino. People stopped in our path, walked around us, through
us . . . it was chaos. Twice, our group got split by oblivious tourists. We
weren't too far from the elevators, but I was getting uneasy about the
possibility of Victor or Robert running off through the mob of people
"We need to get out of this crowd," I shouted over to Eddie.
He gave me another of his quick nods and took an abrupt left that
caught me by surprise. I steered Victor in that same direction, and Lissa and
Adrian sidestepped to keep up with us. I was puzzled until I saw that we
were approaching a hall with an EMERGENCY EXIT sign on it. Away from
the busy casino, the noise level dimmed.
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"Figure there are probably stairs here," Eddie explained.
"Crafty guardian." I flashed him a smile.
Another turn showed us a janitorial closet on our right and ahead of
us: a door with a symbol for stairs. The door appeared to lead both outside
and to upper floors.
"Brilliant," I said.
"You're, like, on the tenth floor," pointed out Adrian. It was the first
time he'd spoken in a while.
"Nothing like a little exercise to--damn." I came to an abrupt halt in
front of the door. It had a small warning sign saying that an alarm would go
off if the door was opened. "Figures."
"Sorry," said Eddie, like he was personally responsible.
"Not your fault," I said, turning. "Back we go." We'd have to take our
chances in the crowd. Maybe the roundabout detour had tired Victor and
Robert out enough to make escape unappealing. Neither of them was that
young anymore, and Victor was still in bad shape.
Lissa was too tense to think much about being led around, but Adrian
gave me a look that clearly said he thought this traipsing was a waste of his
time. Of course, he thought this whole Robert thing was a waste of time. I
was honestly surprised he was coming with us at all back to the room. I
would have expected him to stay in the casino with his cigarettes and
another drink.
Eddie, leading our group, took a few steps back toward the casino
down the hallway. And then it hit me.
"Stop!" I screamed.
He responded instantly, coming to a halt in the narrow space. A bit of
confusion followed. Victor stumbled into Eddie in surprise, and then Lissa
stumbled into Victor. Instinct made Eddie reach for his stake, but mine was
already out. I'd grabbed it as soon as the nausea had swept me.
There were Strigoi between us and the casino.
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TEN
AND ONE OF THEM. . . ONE OF THEM . . .
"No," I breathed, even as I sprang toward the one closest to me--a
woman. There appeared to be three Strigoi around us.
Eddie was in motion too, and both of us were trying to shove the
Moroi behind us. They didn't need much urging. At the sight of Strigoi, the
Moroi had begun to back up--creating sort of a bottleneck. Between Eddie's
instant reflexes and the Moroi panic, I was pretty sure no one had noticed
what I already had spotted.
Dimitri was among them.
No, no, no, I said, this time to myself. He'd warned me. Over and
over, he'd said in his letters that as soon as I was out of the safety of the
wards, he would be coming for me. I'd believed him and yet . . . seeing the
reality of it was a totally different thing. It had been three months, but in that
instant, a million memories ran through my mind in crystal clear sharpness.
My captivity with Dimitri. The way his mouth--so, so warm, despite his cold
skin--had kissed mine. The feel of his fangs pressing into my neck and the
sweet bliss that followed . . .
He looked exactly the same too, with that chalky white pallor and redringed
eyes that so conflicted with the soft, chin-length brown hair and
otherwise gorgeous lines of his face. He even had a leather duster on. It had
to be a new one, seeing as his previous coat had gotten pretty torn up in our
last fight on the bridge. Where did he keep getting them?
"Get out!" I yelled. My words were to the Moroi, even as my stake bit
into the female Strigoi's heart. The momentary confusion with all of us in the
hall had been more of a detriment to her than me. I got a good line of sight
on her, and it was clear that she hadn't expected me to be so fast. I'd killed a
lot of Strigoi because they'd underestimated me.
Eddie didn't have my luck. He stumbled when Victor shoved past him,
allowing the other Strigoi--a guy--near the front to backhand Eddie against
the wall. Still, that was the kind of thing we faced all the time, and Eddie
responded beautifully. He immediately came back from the hit, and with the
Moroi out of the way now, Eddie was able to lunge toward the Strigoi and
engage him fully.
And me? My attention was on Dimitri.
105
I stepped over the fallen Strigoi without even looking at her. Dimitri
had hovered near the back, sending his minions into the front lines of battle.
Maybe it was because I knew Dimitri so well, but I suspected he wasn't
surprised that I'd take out the one so quickly and that Eddie was giving the
other a tough time. I doubted Dimitri cared whether they lived or died. They
were just distractions for him to get to me.
"I told you," said Dimitri, eyes both amused and sharp. He was
watching my every move, each of us subconsciously mirroring the other as
we waited for an opening to attack. "I told you I'd find you."
"Yeah," I said, trying to ignore the grunts of Eddie and the other
Strigoi. Eddie could take him. I knew he could. "I got the memos."
A ghost of a smile curled up Dimitri's lips, showing the fangs that
somehow triggered a mix of both longing and loathing in me. Instantly, I
shoved those feelings aside. I'd hesitated before with Dimitri and nearly died
because of it. I'd refused to let it happen again, and the adrenaline pumping
through my body served as a good reminder that this was a do-or-die
situation.
He made the first move, but I dodged it--almost having sensed it
coming. That was the problem with us. We knew each other too well--knew
each other's moves too well. Of course, that hardly meant we were an even
match. Even in life, he'd had more experience than me, and his Strigoi
abilities tipped the scale.
"Yet here you are," he said, still smiling. "Foolishly stepping outside
when you should have stayed in the safety of Court. I couldn't believe it
when my spies told me."
I said nothing, instead attempting a swipe with my stake. He saw that
coming too and sidestepped it. His having spies didn't surprise me--even in
the daytime. He controlled a network of Strigoi and humans alike, and I'd
known he had eyes and ears observing Court. The question was: How the
hell had he gotten into this hotel in the middle of the day? Even with human
watchers at the airport or monitoring credit cards as Adrian had done,
Dimitri and his Strigoi friends should have had to wait until nightfall to get
here.
No, not necessarily, I realized a moment later. Strigoi occasionally
had work-arounds. Trucks and vans with dark, completely sealed cabins.
Underground entrances. Moroi wanting to casino-jump from the Witching
Hour knew about secret tunnels connecting certain buildings. Dimitri would
have known about all this too. If he'd been waiting for me to come outside of
wards, he would have done whatever it took to get to me. I knew better than
anyone else how resourceful he was.
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I also knew he was trying to distract me with talking.
"And strangest of all," he continued, "you didn't come alone. You
brought Moroi. You've always taken risks with your own life, but I didn't
expect you to be so hasty with theirs."
Something occurred to me then. Aside from the faint hum of the
casino on the other end of the hallway and the sounds of our fight,
everything else was silent. We were missing an important noise. Say, like,
the alarm from a fire door.
"Lissa!" I yelled. "Get the hell out of here! Get them all out of here."
She should have known better. They all should have known better.
That door led to the upper floors--and outdoors. The sun was still out. It
didn't matter if the alarm brought hotel security down on us. Hell, that might
scare the Strigoi off. What mattered was that the Moroi fled to safety.
But a quick check of my bond told me the problem. Lissa was frozen.
Stunned. She'd suddenly seen who I was fighting, and the shock of it was too
much. Knowing Dimitri was a Strigoi was one thing. Seeing it--really, really
seeing it--well, that was different. I knew from personal experience. Even
after being prepared, his appearance still unnerved me. She was blindsided,
unable to think or move.
It only took me a heartbeat to assess her feelings, but in a fight with a
Strigoi, a single second could be the difference between life and death.
Dimitri's chatter had worked, and although I watched him and thought I had
my guard up, he got through and shoved me against the wall, hands pinning
my arms so painfully that I lost my grip on the stake.
He put his face right up to mine, so close that our foreheads touched.
"Roza . . ." he murmured. His breath was warm and sweet against my skin. It
seemed like it should have smelled like death or decay, but it didn't. "Why?
Why did you have to be so difficult? We could have spent eternity
together . . ."
My heart thundered in my chest. I was afraid, terrified of the death
that I knew had to be seconds away. And at the same time, I was filled with
sorrow over having lost him. Seeing the features of his face, hearing that
same accented voice that even now wrapped around me like velvet . . . I felt
my heart breaking all over again. Why? Why had this happened to us? Why
was the universe so cruel?
I managed to flip the switch again, once more shutting out the fact that
this was Dimitri. We were predator and prey--and I was in danger of being
eaten.
"Sorry," I said through gritted teeth, shoving hard--and failing--to
break his grip. "My eternity doesn't involve being part of the undead mafia."
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"I know," he said. I could have sworn there was sadness in his face
but later convinced myself I must have imagined it. "Eternity will be lonely
without you."
A piercing shriek suddenly rang in my ears. Both of us winced. Noises
intended to startle humans were hell on sensitive hearing like we had. Yet I
couldn't help but feel relief. The fire door. Finally, those idiots--and yes, I
had no qualms about calling my friends idiots when they were acting that
way--had left the building. I felt sunlight through the bond and took comfort
in that as Dimitri's fangs neared the artery that would spill the life's blood
from my neck.
I hoped the alarm would distract him, but he was too good. I struggled
once more, hoping I could use surprise on him, but it was to no avail. What
did surprise him was Eddie's stake plunging into the side of his stomach.
Dimitri snarled in pain and let go of me, turning on Eddie. Eddie's
face was hard, unblinking. If seeing Dimitri fazed him, my friend didn't
show it. For all I knew, Eddie wasn't even registering this as Dimitri.
Probably all he saw was a Strigoi. It was the way we were trained. See
monsters, not people.
Dimitri's attention was off me for the moment. He wanted to draw out
my death. Eddie was simply an annoyance he needed to rid us of so that he
could continue the game.
Eddie and Dimitri engaged in a dance similar to the one I'd been in
with Dimitri earlier, except that Eddie didn't know Dimitri's moves like I
did. So Eddie wasn't able to completely avoid Dimitri grabbing him by the
shoulder and shoving him to the wall. The maneuver had been intended to
crush Eddie's skull, but Eddie managed to shift enough so that it was his
body that took the brunt of the impact. It still hurt, but he was alive.
All of this took place in milliseconds. And in those fleeting moments,
my perspective shifted. When Dimitri had been looming over me, about to
bite me, I had managed to overcome that impulse to think of him as Dimitri,
the person I'd once known and loved. Continually forced into a victim
position, with my life about to end, I had kept kicking myself into fightfight-
fight mode.
Now, watching someone else battle Dimitri . . . seeing Eddie's stake
snake out at him . . . well, suddenly, I lost that cool objectivity. I
remembered why I'd come here. I remembered what we'd just learned from
Robert. Fragile. It was still all so fragile. I'd sworn to myself that if we
reached a moment where Dimitri was about to kill me and I hadn't learned
more about saving Strigoi, I would do it. I would kill him. And this was my
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chance. Between Eddie and me, we could take Dimitri down. We could end
this evil state, just as he'd once wanted.
Yet . . . less than a half hour ago, I'd been given a small piece of hope
that a Strigoi could be saved. True, that part about a spirit user doing it was
absurd, but Victor had believed. And if someone like him had believed . . .
I couldn't do it. Dimitri couldn't die. Not yet.
I shot out with my stake, a hard strike that raked the silver point
against the back of Dimitri's head. He let out a roar of rage and managed to
turn and push me off while still fending Eddie away. Dimitri was that good.
But Eddie's stake was getting closer to Dimitri's heart, and my friend's gaze
was unwavering, intent on his kill.
Dimitri's attention flitted between the two of us, and in one small
lapse--only half a breath long--I saw Eddie get his stake in the zone, ready to
take a shot at Dimitri's heart. A shot that looked like it might succeed where
mine had failed.
And that was why, in one smooth motion, I struck out with my stake,
swiping it across Dimitri's face and knocking Eddie's arm aside as I did. It
was a beautiful face. I hated to mar it but knew Dimitri would heal. As I
made that attack, I pushed past him, shoving into Eddie so that he and I
stumbled toward the fire door that was still shrieking its warning. Eddie's
stony face registered surprise, and for a moment we were deadlocked: me
pushing him to the door and him pushing back toward Dimitri. I saw the
hesitation, though. The positioning was off, and Eddie was on the verge of
shoving me into a Strigoi, which his training wouldn't allow.
Dimitri was already seizing the opportunity, though. His hand reached
out and grabbed my shoulder, trying to jerk me back. Eddie caught hold of
my arm and pulled me forward. I cried out in surprise and pain. It felt like
they were going to rip me in two. Dimitri was by far the strongest, but even
stuck in the middle, my weight played a role, and I lent my force to Eddie's,
which helped us gain some ground. Still, it was slow going. Like walking in
honey. For each step I managed forward, Dimitri dragged me back.
But Eddie and I were making slow--and very, very painful--progress
toward the wailing door. A few moments later, I heard the clatter of feet and
voices. "Security," grunted Eddie, giving me a tug.
"Shit," I said.
"You can't win," Dimitri hissed. He'd managed to get both hands on
my shoulders now and was overpowering us.
"Oh yeah? We're about to have the entire Luxor Attack Squad here."
"We're about to have a pile of bodies here. Humans," he said
dismissively.
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Those humans reached us. I'm not sure what their impressions were.
Some guy attacking teenagers? They shouted about us all letting go and
facing them, directions the three of us ignored in our epic tug-of-war match.
Then they must have laid hands on Dimitri. He was still gripping me, but his
hold slackened enough that one huge pull from Eddie and a near-leap on my
part broke me free. Eddie and I didn't even look back, though the security
guards were now shouting at us too.
They weren't the only ones shouting. Just before I pushed open the
door, I heard Dimitri calling to me. There was laughter in his voice. "It's not
over, Roza. Do you really think there's anywhere you can go in this world
where I can't find you?" The same warning, always the same warning.
I did my best to ignore the fear those words inspired. Eddie and I burst
into smoggy desert air, as well as sunshine that was still hanging in there,
despite being early evening. We were in the Luxor's parking lot--which
wasn't crowded enough for us to hide in. With no spoken communication, he
and I tore off toward the busy Strip, knowing our physical abilities would
surpass those of any human pursuers and let us get lost in the mobs of
people.
It worked. I never saw how many followed us. My guess was the
security staff were devoting their attention to the tall guy killing people in
their hotel. The voices shouting after us faded, and Eddie and I finally
slowed to a stop in front of New York-New York, and again, without even
talking, we immediately turned inside the hotel. It had a twisted layout and
was more crowded than the Luxor, and we easily blended in until we could
find an empty spot of wall on the far side of the hotel's casino.
The run had been hard even for us, and it took us a moment to catch
our breath as we stood there. I knew things were serious when Eddie finally
turned on me, and anger lit his features. Eddie was always the picture of
calm and control, ever since his first abduction by Strigoi last year. It had
toughened him, made him more determined to face any challenge. But oh,
was he mad at me now.
"What the hell was that?" exclaimed Eddie. "You let him go!"
I put on my best tough face, but he seemed to be outdoing me today.
"What, did you miss the part where I was slashing him with my stake?"
"I had his heart! I had a shot, and you stopped me!"
"Security was coming. We didn't have time. We had to get out of
there, and we couldn't let them see us do the killing."
"I don't think any of them are left to report seeing anything," Eddie
replied evenly. He seemed to be trying to regain his composure. "Dimitri left
a pile of corpses there. You know it. People died because you wouldn't let
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me stake him."
I flinched, realizing Eddie was right. It should have ended there. I
hadn't gotten a good look at the number of security guards. How many had
died? It wasn't relevant. Only the fact that innocent people had died
mattered. Even one was too many. And it was my fault.
My silence caused Eddie to press his advantage. "How could you of
all people forget that lesson? I know he used to be your instructor--used to
be. But he's not the same. They drilled that into us over and over. Don't
hesitate. Don't think of him as a real person."
"I love him," I blurted out, without meaning to. Eddie hadn't known.
Only a handful of people knew about my romantic relationship with Dimitri
and what had happened in Siberia.
"What?" Eddie exclaimed with a gasp. His outrage had transformed to
shock.
"Dimitri . . . he's more than my instructor . . ."
Eddie continued staring at me for several heavy seconds. "Was," he
said at last.
"Huh?"
"He was more than your instructor. You loved him." Eddie's
momentary confusion was gone. He was back to hard guardian now, no
sympathy. "I'm sorry, but it's in the past, whatever was between you. You
have to know that. The person you loved is gone. The guy we just saw? Not
the same."
I slowly shook my head. "I . . . I know. I know it's not him. I know
he's a monster, but we can save him . . . if we can do what Robert was telling
us about. . . ."
Eddie's eyes widened, and for a moment, he was dumbstruck. "That's
what this is about? Rose, that's ridiculous! You can't believe that. Strigoi are
dead. They're gone to us. Robert and Victor were feeding you a bunch of
crap."
Now I grew surprised. "Then why are you even here? Why have you
stuck with us?"
He threw his hands up in exasperation. "Because you're my friend. I
stayed with you through all of this . . . breaking out Victor, listening to his
crazy brother . . . because I knew you needed me. You all did, to help keep
you safe. I thought you had a real reason for getting Victor out--and that you
were going to return him. Does it sound crazy? Yeah, but that's normal for
you. You've always had good reasons for what you do." He sighed. "But this
. . . this is crossing a line. Letting Strigoi go in order to chase some idea--
some idea that couldn't possibly work--is ten times worse than what we did
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with Victor. A hundred times worse. Every day Dimitri walks the world is
another day that people are going to die."
I collapsed against the wall and closed my eyes, feeling sick to my
stomach. Eddie was right. I had screwed up. I'd promised myself that I
would kill Dimitri if I faced him before we could pursue Robert's solution. It
all should have ended today . . . but I had choked up. Again.
I opened my eyes and straightened up, needing to find a new purpose
before I burst into tears in the middle of this casino. "We have to find the
others. They're out there unprotected."
It was probably the only thing that could have stopped Eddie's
scolding just then. Instinctual duty kicked in. Protect Moroi.
"Can you tell where Lissa's at?"
My bond had kept me connected to her during our escape, but I hadn't
allowed myself any deeper probing than confirming she was alive and okay.
I expanded the link a little further now. "Across the street. At MGM." I'd
seen the ginormous hotel when we ran into this one but hadn't realized Lissa
was there. Now I could feel her, hiding out in a crowd like us, scared but not
injured. I would have rather she and the others opted to hang out in the sun,
but instinct had driven her to the shelter of walls.
Eddie and I spoke no more about Dimitri as we headed out and
crossed the busy road. The sky was turning peach, but I still felt secure out
there. Far more secure than in the Luxor's hallway. With the bond, I could
always find Lissa, and without any hesitation, I led Eddie through MGM's
twists and turns--honestly, the layout of these places just got more and more
confusing--until we saw Lissa and Adrian standing near a row of slot
machines. He was smoking. She spotted me, sprinted over, and threw her
arms around me.
"Oh my God. I was so scared. I didn't know what had happened to you
guys. I hate that one-way bond."
I forced a smile for her. "We're fine."
"In a bruised kind of way," mused Adrian, strolling over. I didn't
doubt it. In the adrenaline of a fight, it was easy to not notice injuries and
pain. Later, when the battle lust faded, you started to realize just what you'd
put your body through.
I was so grateful to see Lissa okay that I missed what Eddie had
already noticed. "You guys, where are Victor and Robert?"
Lissa's happy face crumpled, and even Adrian looked grim. "Damn
it," I said, needing no explanation.
Lissa nodded, eyes wide and distraught. "We lost them."
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ELEVEN
WELL. HOW PERFECT.
It took us a while to decide our next course of action. We tossed
around a few feeble ideas to track Robert and Victor, all of which we
eventually shot down. Robert's phone was a cell, and while the CIA could
trace those kinds of things, we certainly couldn't. Even if Robert's address
was listed in the phone book, I knew Victor wouldn't have let them go back
there. And while Adrian and Lissa could spot a spirit user's aura, we could
hardly go wandering aimlessly in a city and expect to find something.
No, we were out of luck with those two. There was nothing to be done
now but head back to Court and face whatever punishment awaited us. We--
I--had screwed up.
With sunset approaching--and seeing as we no longer had a known
criminal to get us in trouble--my group glumly decided to head to the
Witching Hour to make our travel plans. Lissa and I had the potential to be
recognized over there, but runaway girls weren't quite in the same category
as fugitive traitors. We decided to roll the dice (no pun intended) and hang
around guardians rather than risk more Strigoi attacks before we could get
out of Vegas.
The Witching Hour was no different from any of the other casinos
we'd been to--unless you knew what to look for. Humans there were too
interested in the allure of the games and glitz to notice that a lot of the other
patrons were uniformly tall, slim, and pale. As for the dhampirs? Humans
couldn't tell that we weren't human. It was only the uncanny sense Moroi
and dhampirs had that let us know who was who.
Sprinkled throughout the cheering, chattering, and--at times--wailing
crowd were guardians. As in demand as guardians were, only a handful
could be allocated full-time to a place like this. Fortunately, their numbers
were reinforced by the wealthy and powerful who'd come to play. Excited
Moroi whooped over slot machines or roulette while silent, watchful
guardians hovered behind them, keeping an eye on everything. No Strigoi
would come here.
"What now?" asked Lissa, almost yelling over the noise. It was the
first time any of us had spoken since deciding to go here. We'd come to a
halt near some blackjack tables, right in the thick of everything.
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I sighed. My mood was so dark, I didn't even need any spirit side
effects. I lost Victor, I lost Victor. My own mental accusations were on an
endless loop.
"We find their business center and book tickets out of here," I said.
"Depending on how long until we can catch a flight, we might have to get a
room again."
Adrian's eyes were scanning the action around us, lingering longest on
one of the many bars. "Wouldn't kill us to spend a little time here."
I snapped. "Really? After everything that's happened, that's all you
can think about?"
His enraptured gaze turned back to me and became a frown. "There
are cameras here. People who may recognize you. Getting hard proof that
you were in this casino and not Alaska is a good thing."
"True," I admitted. I think Adrian's typical blase air was masking
discomfort. Aside from learning why I'd really come to Las Vegas, he'd also
run into Strigoi--Dimitri among them. That was never an easy experience for
any Moroi. "Though we've got no alibi for when we were actually in
Alaska."
"So long as Victor doesn't get himself spotted around here, no one's
going to make the connection." Adrian's voice became bitter. "Which really
shows how stupid they all are."
"We helped put Victor away," said Lissa. "No one would think we'd
be crazy enough to let him out."
Eddie, staying silent, gave me a pointed look.
"Then it's settled," said Adrian. "Somebody go book us tickets. I'm
going to get a drink and try my hand at some games. The universe owes me
some good luck."
"I'll get the tickets," said Lissa, scanning a sign that pointed out the
directions for the pool, restrooms--and business center.
"I'll go with you," said Eddie. Whereas before his expression had been
accusatory, he now seemed to be avoiding my eyes altogether.
"Fine," I said, crossing my arms. "Let me know when you're done,
and we'll find you." That was to Lissa, meaning she'd tell me through the
bond.
Convinced he was free, Adrian headed straight for the bar, me trailing
after him.
"A Tom Collins," he told the Moroi bartender. It was like Adrian had
a mental cocktail dictionary in his head and just checked them off one by
one. I almost never saw him drink the same thing twice.
"You want it spiked?" the bartender asked. He wore a crisp white shirt
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and black bow tie and hardly appeared older than me.
Adrian made a face. "No."
The bartender shrugged and turned around to make the drink.
"Spiked" was Moroi code for putting a shot of blood into the drink. There
were a couple of doors behind the bar, ones that probably led to feeders.
Glancing down the bar, I could see happy, laughing Moroi with red-tinged
drinks. Some liked the thought of having blood with their alcohol. Most--
like Adrian, apparently--wouldn't take blood unless it was "straight from the
source." It supposedly didn't taste the same.
While we waited, an older Moroi standing next to Adrian glanced
over at me and nodded with approval. "You got yourself a good one," he
told Adrian. "Young, but that's the best way." The guy, who was either
drinking red wine or pure blood, jerked his head toward the others standing
at the bar. "Most of these are used and washed-up."
I followed his shrug, even through there was no need. Interspersed
among the humans and Moroi were several dhampir women, dressed very
glamorously in silk and velvet dresses that left little to the imagination. Most
were older than me. Those who weren't had a weary look in their eyes,
despite their flirtatious laughter. Blood whores. I glared at the Moroi.
"Don't you dare talk about them like that, or I'll smash that wineglass
in your face."
The guy's eyes widened, and he looked at Adrian. "Feisty."
"You have no idea," said Adrian. The bartender returned with the Tom
Collins. "She's had kind of a bad day."
The asshole Moroi guy didn't look back at me. He apparently didn't
take my threat nearly as seriously as he should have. "Everyone's having
kind of a bad day. You hear the news?"
Adrian looked relaxed and amused as he sipped his drink, but standing
so close to him, I felt him stiffen a little. "What news?"
"Victor Dashkov. You know, that guy who kidnapped the Dragomir
girl and was plotting against the queen? He escaped."
Adrian's eyebrows rose. "Escaped? That's crazy. I heard he was at
some maximum-security place."
"He was. No one really knows what happened. There were supposedly
humans involved . . . and then the story gets weird."
"How weird?" I asked.
Adrian slipped an arm around me, which I suspected was a silent
message to let him do the talking. Whether that was because he believed that
was "proper" blood whore behavior or because he was worried I'd punch the
guy, I couldn't say.
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"One of the guards was in on it--though he claims he was being
controlled. He also conveniently says it's all a haze and he can't remember
much. I heard it from some royals who are helping with the investigation."
Adrian laughed, taking down a big gulp of his drink. "That is
convenient. Sounds like an inside job to me. Victor'd have a lot of money.
Easy enough to bribe a guard. That's what I think happened."
There was a pleasant smoothness to Adrian's voice, and as a slightly
dopey smile came over the other guy's face, I realized Adrian had pulled a
little compulsion. "I bet you're right."
"You should tell your royal friends," added Adrian. "An inside job."
The guy nodded eagerly. "I will."
Adrian held his gaze a few moments more and then finally glanced
down to the Tom Collins. The glaze-eyed look faded from the man, but I
knew Adrian's order to spread the "inside job" story would stick. Adrian
gulped down the rest of the drink and set the empty glass on the bar. He was
about to speak again when something across the room caught his attention.
The Moroi man noticed too, and I followed both of their gazes to see what
had them both so starstruck.
I groaned. Women, of course. At first I thought they were dhampirs
since my kind seemed to be making up most of the eye candy here. A double
take revealed a surprise: The women were Moroi. Moroi showgirls, to be
precise. There were several of them, clad in similar short, low-cut sequined
dresses. Only, each one wore a different jewel-toned color: copper, peacock
blue . . . Feathers and rhinestones glittered in their hair, and they smiled and
laughed as they passed through the gaping crowd, beautiful and sexy in a
way different from my race.
Which wasn't a surprise. I tended to notice Moroi men ogling dhampir
girls more often, simply because I was a dhampir. But naturally, Moroi men
were attracted to and infatuated with their own women. It was how their race
survived, and though Moroi men might want to fool around with dhampirs,
they almost always ended up with their own kind in the end.
The showgirls were tall and graceful, and their fresh, brilliant
appearances made me think they must be on their way to a performance. I
could just imagine what a glittering display of dancing they must make. I
could appreciate that, but Adrian clearly appreciated it more, judging from
his wide-eyed look. I elbowed him.
"Hey!"
The last of the showgirls disappeared through the casino crowd, off
toward a sign that said THEATER, just as I'd suspected. Adrian looked back
at me, turning on a rogue smile.
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"Nothing wrong with looking." He patted my shoulder.
The Moroi standing next to him nodded in agreement. "I think I might
take in a show today." He swirled his drink around. "All this Dashkov
business and that mess with the Dragomirs . . . makes me sad for poor Eric.
He was a good guy."
I put on a dubious look. "You knew Lissa's fath--Eric Dragomir?"
"Sure." The Moroi gestured for a refill. "I've been a manager here for
years. He was here all the time. Believe me, he had an appreciation for those
girls."
"You're lying," I said coolly. "He adored his wife." I'd seen Lissa's
parents together. Even at a young age, I'd been able to see how crazy in love
they were.
"I'm not saying he did anything. Like your boyfriend said, nothing
wrong with looking. But a lot of people knew the Dragomir prince liked to
party it up wherever he went--especially if there was female company." The
Moroi sighed and lifted his glass. "Damn shame what happened to him.
Here's hoping they catch that Dashkov bastard and leave Eric's little girl
alone."
I didn't like this guy's insinuations about Lissa's dad and was grateful
she wasn't around. What made me uneasy was that we'd recently found out
Lissa's brother Andre had also been kind of a party boy who fooled around
and broke hearts. Did that kind of thing run in the family? What Andre had
done wasn't right, but there was a big difference between a teenage boy's
exploits and those of a married man. I didn't like to admit it, but even the
most in-love guys still checked out other women without cheating. Adrian
was proof. Still, I didn't think Lissa would like the idea of her dad flirting
around with other women. The truth about Andre had been hard enough, and
I didn't want anything to shatter the angelic memories of her parents.
I shot Adrian a look that said listening to this guy any longer really
would come down to a fistfight. I didn't want to be standing here if Lissa
came searching for us. Adrian, always more astute than he appeared, smiled
down at me.
"Well, my sweet, shall we try our luck? Something tells me you're
going to beat the odds--like always."
I cut him a look. "Cute."
Adrian winked at me and stood up. "Nice talking to you," he told the
Moroi.
"You too," the man said. The thrall of compulsion was wearing off.
"You should dress her better, you know."
"I'm not interested in putting clothes on her," Adrian called as he
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steered me away.
"Watch it," I warned through gritted teeth, "or you might be the one
with a wineglass in your face."
"I'm playing a part, little dhampir. One that's going to make sure you
stay out of trouble." We stopped near the casino's poker room, and Adrian
gave me a head-to-toe assessment. "That guy was right about the clothes,
though."
I gritted my teeth. "I can't believe he said those things about Lissa's
dad."
"Gossip and rumors never go away--you of all people should know
that. Doesn't matter if you're dead. Besides, that conversation was actually to
our--by which I mean your--advantage. Somebody else is probably
considering the inside-job theory already. If that guy can help get it around
even more, it'll ensure no one even thinks the world's most dangerous
guardian could have been involved."
"I suppose." Forcibly, I pushed my temper down. I had always been
trigger-happy, and I knew for sure now that the bits of darkness I'd gleaned
from Lissa in the last twenty-four hours were making things worse, as I'd
feared. I changed the subject, steering to safer ground. "You're being pretty
nice now, considering how mad you were earlier."
"I'm not all that happy, but I've done some thinking," Adrian said.
"Oh? Care to enlighten me?
"Not here. We'll talk later. We've got more important things to worry
about."
"Like covering up a crime and getting out of this city without being
attacked by Strigoi?"
"No. Like me winning money."
"Are you crazy?" Asking Adrian that was never a good idea. "We just
escaped a bunch of bloodthirsty monsters, and all you can think about is
gambling?"
"The fact that we're alive means we should live," he argued.
"Especially if we've got the time, anyway."
"You don't need any more money."
"I will if my dad turns me out. Besides, it's really about enjoying the
game."
By "enjoying the game," I soon realized that Adrian meant "cheating."
If you considered using spirit cheating. Because there was so much mental
power tied into spirit, its users were very good at reading people. Victor had
been right. Adrian joked and kept ordering drinks, but I could tell he was
paying close attention to the others. And even though he was careful not to
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say anything explicitly, his expressions spoke for him--confident, uncertain,
annoyed. Without words, he was still able to project compulsion and bluff
the other players.
"Be right back," I told him, feeling Lissa's call.
He waved me off, unconcerned. I wasn't worried about his safety
either, seeing as there were a few guardians in the room. What concerned me
was the possibility some casino official would notice his compulsion and
throw us all out. Spirit users wielded it the most strongly, but all vampires
had it to a certain extent. Using it was considered immoral, so it was banned
among Moroi. A casino would definitely have reason to be on the lookout
for it.
The business center turned out to be near the poker room, and I found
Lissa and Eddie quickly. "What's the report?" I asked as we walked back.
"We've got a flight in the morning," said Lissa. She hesitated. "We
could have gone out tonight, but . . ."
She didn't need to finish. After what we'd faced today, no one wanted
to risk even the slightest chance of running into a Strigoi. Going to the
airport would only require a taxi ride, but even still, that would mean we'd
have to risk walking out into the darkness.
I shook my head and led them toward the poker room. "You did the
right thing. We've got time to kill now. . . . Do you want to get a room and
get some sleep?"
"No." She shivered, and I felt fear in her. "I don't want to leave this
crowd. And I'm kind of afraid of what I'd dream. . . ."
Adrian might be able to act like he didn't care about the Strigoi, but
those faces were still haunting Lissa--especially Dimitri's. "Well," I said,
hoping to make her feel better, "staying up will help get us back on the
Court's schedule. You can also watch Adrian get thrown out by casino
security."
As I'd hoped, watching Adrian cheat with spirit did indeed distract
Lissa--so much so that she grew interested in trying it herself. Great. I urged
her to safer games and recapped how Adrian had planted the idea of an
inside job in the Moroi guy's head. I left out the part about Lissa's father.
The night miraculously passed without incident--either of the Strigoi or
security type--and a couple of people even recognized Lissa, which would
help our alibi. Eddie didn't speak to me the entire night.
We left the Witching Hour in the morning. None of us were happy
about losing Victor or the attack, but the casino had soothed us all a little--at
least until we got to the airport. At the casino, we'd been flooded with Moroi
news, insulated from the human world. But while waiting for our plane, we
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couldn't help but watch the TVs that seemed to be everywhere.
The headline story that night was all about a mass killing over at the
Luxor, one that had left no clues for the police. Most of the casino guards
involved had died from broken necks, and no other bodies were found. My
guess was that Dimitri had tossed his cronies outside, where the sun would
turn them to ash. Meanwhile, Dimitri himself had slipped away, leaving no
other witnesses behind. Even the cameras had recorded nothing, which didn't
surprise me. If I could disable surveillance at a prison, Dimitri could
certainly manage it at a human hotel.
Whatever mood-improvement we'd achieved instantly disappeared,
and we didn't talk much. I stayed out of Lissa's mind because I didn't need
her depressed feelings amplifying my own.
We'd arranged a direct flight to Philadelphia and would then catch a
commuter flight back to the airport near Court. What we'd face once
there . . . well, that was probably the least of our concerns.
I wasn't worried about Strigoi boarding our plane in the daytime, and
without any prisoners to watch, I allowed myself to fall into much-needed
sleep. I couldn't remember the last time I'd gotten any on this trip. I slept
heavily, but my dreams were haunted by the fact that I'd let one of the
Moroi's most dangerous criminals escape and allowed a Strigoi to walk free
and gotten a bunch of humans killed. I held none of my friends responsible.
This disaster was all on me.
120
TWELVE
WHICH WAS CONFIRMED WHEN WE finally stumbled back to
the Royal Court.
I wasn't the only one in trouble, of course. Lissa was summoned to the
queen for chastising, though I knew she'd suffer no actual punishment. Not
like Eddie and me. We might be out of school, but we were technically
under the jurisdiction of the official guardians now, which meant we faced
as much trouble as any disobedient employee. Only Adrian escaped any
consequences. He was free to do whatever he wanted.
And really, my punishment wasn't as bad as it could have been.
Honestly, what did I have to lose at this point? My chances of guarding
Lissa had already been sketchy, and no one had wanted me as a guardian
except Tasha anyway. A crazy Vegas weekend--which was our cover story--
was hardly enough to dissuade her from taking me on. It was enough,
however, to make some of Eddie's prospects withdraw their requests for him
to be their guardian. Enough still wanted him that he was in no danger of
losing a good position, but I felt horribly guilty. He didn't breathe a word to
anyone about what we'd done, but each time he looked at me, I could see the
condemnation in his eyes.
And I saw a lot of him in the next couple days. It turned out guardians
had a system in place to deal with those who were disobedient.
"What you did was so irresponsible that you might as well be back in
school. Hell, elementary school, even."
We were in one of the offices in the guardians' headquarters, being
yelled at by Hans Croft, the guy in charge of all the guardians at Court and
someone who was instrumental in guardian assignments. He was a dhampir
in his early fifties, with a bushy gray-and-white mustache. He was also an
asshole. The scent of cigar smoke always encircled him. Eddie and I were
sitting meekly before him while he paced with his hands behind his back.
"You could have gotten the last Dragomir killed--not to mention the
Ivashkov boy. How do you think the queen would have reacted to the death
of her great-nephew? And talk about timing! You go off party-hopping right
when the guy who tried to kidnap the princess is running loose. Not that you
would know that, seeing as you were probably too busy playing slot
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machines and using your fake IDs."
I winced at the reference to Victor, though I suppose I should have
been relieved that we were above suspicion for his escape. Hans read my
grimace as an admission of guilt.
"You might have graduated," he declared, "but that does not mean you
are invincible."
This whole encounter reminded me of when Lissa and I had returned
to St. Vladimir's, when we'd been chastised for the same thing: recklessly
running off and endangering her. Only this time, there was no Dimitri to
defend me. That memory made a lump form in my throat as I remembered
his face, serious and gorgeous, those brown eyes intense and passionate as
he spoke up for me and convinced the others of my value.
But no. No Dimitri here. It was just Eddie and me alone, facing the
consequences of the real world.
"You." Hans pointed a stubby finger at Eddie. "You might be lucky
enough to slide out of this without too many repercussions. Sure, you'll have
a black mark on your record forever. And you've totally screwed up your
chances of ever having an elite royal position with other guardians to
support you. You'll get some assignment though. Working alone with some
minor nobility, probably."
High-ranking royals had more than one guardian, which always made
protection easier. Hans's point was that Eddie's assignment would be lowly--
creating more work and danger for him. Casting him a sidelong glance, I
saw that hard, determined look on his face again. It seemed to say he didn't
care if he had to guard a family by himself. Or even ten families. In fact, he
gave off the vibe that they could drop him alone into a nest of Strigoi and
he'd take them all on.
"And you." Hans's sharp voice jerked my gaze back to him. "You will
be lucky to ever have a job."
Like always, I spoke without thinking. I should have taken this
silently like Eddie. "Of course I'll have one. Tasha Ozera wants me. And
you're too short on guardians to keep me sitting around."
Hans's eyes gleamed with bitter amusement. "Yes, we are short on
guardians, but there's all sorts of work we need done--not just personal
protection. Someone has to staff our offices. Someone has to sit and guard
the front gates."
I froze. A desk job. Hans was threatening me with a desk job. All of
my horrible imaginings had involved me guarding some random Moroi,
someone I didn't know and would possibly hate. But in any of those
scenarios, I would be out in the world. I would be in motion. I would be
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fighting and defending.
But this? Hans was right. Guardians were needed for the Court's
administrative jobs. True, they only kept a handful--we were too valuable--
but someone had to do it. One of those someones being me was too awful to
comprehend. Sitting around all day for hours and hours . . . like the guards in
Tarasov. Guardian life had all sorts of unglamorous--but necessary--tasks.
It truly, truly hit me then that I was in the real world. Fear slammed
into me. I'd taken on the title of guardian when I graduated, but had I really
understood what it meant? Had I been playing make-believe--enjoying the
perks and ignoring the consequences? I was out of school. There would be
no detention for this. This was real. This was life and death.
My face must have given away my feelings. Hans gave a small, cruel
smile. "That's right. We've got all sorts of ways to tame troublemakers.
Lucky for you, your ultimate fate's still being decided. And in the meantime,
there's a lot of work that needs to be done around here that you two are
going to be helping with."
That "work" over the next few days turned out to be menial manual
labor. Honestly, it wasn't too different from detention, and I was pretty sure
it had just been created to give wrongdoers like us something awful to do.
We worked twelve hours a day, much of it outdoors hauling rocks and dirt to
build some new, pretty courtyard for a set of royal town houses. Sometimes
we were put on cleaning duty, scrubbing floors. I knew they had Moroi
workers for these kinds of things, and probably they were being given a
vacation right now.
Still, it was better than the other work Hans would give us: sorting and
filing mountains and mountains of paper. That gave me a new appreciation
for information going digital . . . and again made me worry about the future.
Over and over, I kept thinking about that initial conversation with Hans. The
threat that this could be my life. That I would never be a guardian--in the
true sense--to Lissa or any other Moroi. Throughout my training, we'd
always had a mantra: They come first. If I had really and truly screwed up
my future, I'd have a new mantra: A comes first. Then B, C, D . . .
Those work days kept me away from Lissa, and the front-desk staff
within our respective buildings went out of their way to keep us apart too. It
was frustrating. I could keep track of her through the link, but I wanted to
talk to her. I wanted to talk to anyone. Adrian stayed away too and didn't
bother with dreams, making me wonder how he felt. We'd never had our
"talk" after Las Vegas. Eddie and I often worked side by side, but he wasn't
speaking to me, which left me with hours of being trapped with my own
thoughts and guilt.
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And believe me, I had plenty of things to intensify my guilt. Around
Court, people didn't really notice workers. So whether I was inside or
outside, people were always talking like I wasn't there. The biggest topic
was Victor. Dangerous Victor Dashkov on the loose. How could it have
happened? Did he have powers no one knew about? People were afraid,
some even convinced he'd show up at Court and try to kill everyone in their
sleep. The "inside job" theory was running rampant, which continued to
keep us above suspicion. Unfortunately, it meant a lot of people now
worried about traitors within our midst. Who knew who might be working
for Victor Dashkov? Spies and rebels could be lurking at Court, planning all
sorts of atrocities. I knew all the stories were exaggerated, but it didn't
matter. They all came from one kernel of truth: Victor Dashkov was walking
the world a free man. And only I--and my accomplices--knew it was all
because of me.
Being seen in Las Vegas had continued to provide an alibi for the
prison break and had made what we'd done seem even more rash. People
were aghast that we'd let the Dragomir princess run off while there was a
dangerous man on the loose--the man who'd assaulted her! Thank God,
everyone said, that the queen had pulled us out of there before Victor found
us. The Las Vegas trip had also opened up a whole new line of speculation--
one that involved me personally.
"Well, that doesn't surprise me about Vasilisa," I overheard a woman
say while I was working outdoors one day. She and some friends were
strolling along toward the feeders' building and didn't even see me. "She's
run away before, right? Those Dragomirs can be wild ones. She'll probably
go straight back to the first party she can find, once they catch Victor
Dashkov."
"You're wrong," her friend said. "That's not why she went. She's
actually pretty levelheaded. It's that dhampir that's always with her--the
Hathaway girl. I heard she and Adrian Ivashkov went to Las Vegas to elope.
The queen's people just barely got there in time to stop them. Tatiana's
furious, especially since Hathaway declared nothing will keep her and
Adrian apart."
Whoa. That was kind of a shock. I mean, I guessed it was better for
people to think Adrian and I were running off than for them to accuse me of
aiding and abetting a fugitive, but still . . . I was kind of amazed at how that
conclusion had come about. I hoped Tatiana hadn't heard about our so-called
elopement. I was pretty sure that would ruin whatever progress she and I had
made.
My first real social contact came in the form of an unlikely source. I
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was shoveling dirt into a raised flower bed and sweating like crazy. It was
nearing bedtime for Moroi, meaning the sun was out in full summer glory.
We at least had a pretty site while working: the Court's giant church.
I'd spent a lot of time at the Academy's chapel but had rarely visited
this church since it was set far from the main buildings of the Court. It was
Russian Orthodox--the predominant Moroi religion--and reminded me a lot
of some of the cathedrals I'd seen while actually in Russia, though not nearly
as big. It was made of beautiful red stonework, its towers topped with greentiled
domes, which were in turn topped with golden crosses.
Two gardens marked the far boundaries of the church's extensive
grounds, one of which we were working on. Near us was one of the Court's
most remarkable sites: a giant statue of some ancient Moroi queen that was
almost ten times my height. A matching statue of a king stood on the
opposite side of the grounds. I could never remember their names but was
pretty sure we'd gone over them in one of my history classes. They'd been
visionaries, changing the Moroi world of their time.
A figure appeared in my periphery, and I assumed it was Hans coming
to give us another awful chore. Looking up, I was astonished to see it was
Christian.
"Figures," I said. "You know you'll get in trouble if someone sees you
talking to me."
Christian shrugged and sat on the edge of a partially completed stone
wall. "Doubt it. You're the one who'll get into trouble, and I really don't
think things can get any worse for you."
"True," I grunted.
He sat there in silence for several moments, watching me shovel pile
after pile of dirt. Finally, he asked, "Okay. So how and why did you do it?"
"Do what?"
"You know exactly what. Your little adventure."
"We got on a plane and flew to Las Vegas. Why? Hmm. Let's think." I
paused to wipe sweat off my forehead. "Because where else are we going to
find pirate-themed hotels and bartenders who don't card very much?"
Christian scoffed. "Rose, don't bullshit me. You did not go to Las
Vegas."
"We've got plane tickets and hotel receipts to prove it, not to mention
people who saw the Dragomir princess hit it big on slot machines."
My attention was on my work, but I suspected Christian was shaking
his head in exasperation. "As soon as I heard three people had broken Victor
Dashkov out of prison, I knew it had to be you. Three of you gone? No
question."
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Not far away, I saw Eddie stiffen and glance around uneasily. I did the
same. I might have been desperate for social contact, but not at the risk of
dangerous parties overhearing us. Our crimes getting out would make garden
labor seem like a vacation. We were alone, but I still pitched my voice low
and attempted an honest face.
"I heard they were humans hired by Victor." That was yet another
theory running wild, as was this one: "Actually, I think he turned Strigoi."
"Right," Christian said snidely. He knew me too well to believe me.
"And I also heard one of the guardians has no memory of what made him
attack his friends. He swears he was under the control of someone. Anyone
who had that kind of compulsion could probably make others see humans,
mimes, kangaroos. . . ."
I refused to look at him and slammed the shovel hard into the ground.
I bit my lip on any angry retort.
"She did it because she thinks Strigoi can be restored to their original
form."
My head shot up, and I stared at Eddie in disbelief, astonished he'd
spoken. "What are you doing?"
"Telling the truth," replied Eddie, never stopping his work. "He's our
friend. You think he's going to report us?"
No, rebel Christian Ozera was not going to report us. But that didn't
mean I wanted this out. It's a fact of life: The more people who know a
secret, the more likely it is to leak.
Unsurprisingly, Christian's reaction was not all that different from
everyone else's. "What? That's impossible. Everyone knows that."
"Not according to Victor Dashkov's brother," said Eddie.
"Will you stop it?" I exclaimed.
"You can tell him or I will."
I sighed. Christian's pale blue eyes were staring at us, wide and
shocked. Like most of my friends, he rolled with crazy ideas, but this was
pushing the crazy line.
"I thought Victor Dashkov was an only child," Christian said.
I shook my head. "Nope. His dad had an affair, so Victor's got an
illegitimate half-brother. Robert. And he's a spirit user."
"Only you," said Christian. "Only you would find something like
this."
I ignored what appeared to be a return to his normal cynicism. "Robert
claims to have healed a Strigoi--killed the undead part of her and brought her
back to life."
"Spirit has limits, Rose. You might have been brought back, but
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Strigoi are gone."
"We don't know about spirit's full range," I pointed out. "Half of it is
still a mystery."
"We know about St. Vladimir. If he could restore Strigoi, don't you
think a guy like him would have been doing it? I mean, if that's not
miraculous, what is? Something like that would have survived in the
legends," argued Christian.
"Maybe. Maybe not." I retied my ponytail, replaying our encounter
with Robert in my mind for the hundredth time. "Maybe Vlad didn't know
how. It's not all that easy."
"Yeah," agreed Eddie. "This is the good part."
"Hey," I shot back at him. "I know you're mad at me, but with
Christian here, we really don't need anyone else making snide comments."
"I don't know," said Christian. "For something like this, you actually
might need two people. Now explain how this miracle is supposedly done."
I sighed. "By adding spirit to a stake, along with the other four
elements."
Spirit charms were still a new concept to Christian too. "Never
thought of that. I guess spirit would shake things up . . . but I can't imagine
you staking a Strigoi with a spirit-charmed stake would be enough to bring
them back."
"Well . . . that's the thing. According to Robert, I can't do it. It has to
be done by a spirit user."
More silence. I'd rendered Christian speechless yet again.
At last he said, "We don't know that many spirit users. Let alone any
who could fight or stake a Strigoi."
"We know two spirit users." I frowned, recalling Oksana in Siberia
and Avery locked away . . . where? A hospital? A place like Tarasov? "No,
four. Five, counting Robert. But yeah, none of them can really do it."
"It doesn't matter because it can't be done," Eddie said.
"We don't know that!" The desperation in my own voice startled me.
"Robert believes it. Victor even believes." I hesitated. "And Lissa does too."
"And she wants to do it," Christian said, catching on quickly.
"Because she would do anything for you."
"She can't."
"Because she doesn't have the ability or because you won't let her?"
"Both," I cried. "I'm not letting her anywhere near a Strigoi. She's
already . . ." I groaned, hating to reveal what I'd discovered in our time apart
through the bond. "She got a hold of a stake and is trying to charm it. So far,
she hasn't had much luck, thank God."
127
"If this were possible," began Christian slowly. "It could change our
world. If she could learn . . . "
"What? No!" I'd been so eager to get Christian to believe me, and now
I wished he hadn't. The one saving grace in all this was that with none of my
friends thinking it was possible, none of them had given any thought to Lissa
actually trying to fight a Strigoi. "Lissa's no warrior. No spirit user we know
is, so unless we find one, I'd rather . . . " I winced. "I'd rather Dimitri died."
That finally made Eddie stop working. He threw down his shovel.
"Really? I never would have guessed that." Sarcasm to rival my own.
I spun around and strode toward him, my fists clenched. "Look, I can't
take this anymore! I'm sorry. I don't know what else to say. I know I screwed
up. I let Dimitri get away. I let Victor get away."
"You let Victor get away?" asked Christian, startled.
I ignored him and continued shouting at Eddie. "It was a mistake.
With Dimitri . . . it was a weak moment. I failed in my training. I know I did.
We both know it. But you know I didn't intend the damage I caused. If
you're really my friend, you have to know it. If I could take it back . . ." I
swallowed, surprised to feel my eyes burning. "I would. I swear I would,
Eddie."
His face was perfectly still. "I believe you. I am your friend, and I
know . . . I know you didn't mean for things to turn out like they did."
I sagged in relief, surprised at how truly worried I'd been about losing
his respect and friendship. Looking down, I was startled to see my fists
balled up. I relaxed them, unable to believe I'd been that upset. "Thank you.
Thank you so much."
"What's all this shouting?"
We both turned and saw Hans heading toward us. And he looked
pissed off. I also noticed then that Christian had practically vanished into
thin air. Just as well.
"This isn't social time!" growled Hans. "You two still have another
hour left today. If you're going to get distracted, then maybe you should be
separated." He beckoned to Eddie. "Come on. There's some filing with your
name on it."
I shot Eddie a sympathetic look as Hans led him away. Yet I was
relieved it wasn't me off to do paperwork.
I continued my labors, my mind spinning with the same questions I'd
had all week. I had meant what I said to Eddie. I wanted so badly for this
dream of Dimitri being saved to be true. I wanted it more than anything--
except Lissa risking her life. I shouldn't have hesitated. I should have just
killed Dimitri. Victor wouldn't have escaped. Lissa wouldn't have given
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Robert's words a second thought.
Thinking of Lissa pushed me into her mind. She was in her room,
doing some last-minute packing before going to bed. Tomorrow was her
Lehigh visit. Unsurprisingly, my invitation to go with her had been revoked
in light of recent events. Her birthday--something that had been horribly
overlooked in this mess--was this weekend as well, and it didn't seem right
for me to be apart from her during it. We should have been celebrating
together. Her thoughts were troubled, and she was so consumed by them that
a sudden knock at the door made her jump.
Wondering who could be visiting her at this hour, she opened the door
and gasped to see Christian standing there. It was surreal to me too. Part of
me still kept thinking we were in our school dorms, where rules--
theoretically--kept guys and girls out of each other's rooms. But we were no
longer there. We were technically adults now. He must have gone straight to
her room after seeing me, I realized.
It was astonishing how quickly the tension ratcheted up between
them. A bundle of emotions burst into Lissa's chest, the usual mix of anger,
grief, and confusion.
"What are you doing here?" she demanded.
The same emotions were in his face. "I wanted to talk to you."
"It's late," she said stiffly. "Besides, I seem to remember you don't like
talking."
"I want to talk about what happened with Victor and Robert."
That was enough to startle her out of her anger. She cast an anxious
look into the hallway and then beckoned him inside. "How do you know
about that?" she hissed, hastily shutting the door.
"I just saw Rose."
"How did you get to see her? I can't see her." Lissa was as frustrated
as me over how our superiors had been keeping us apart.
Christian shrugged, careful to maintain a safe distance between them
in the suite's small living room. Both of them had their arms crossed
defensively, though I don't think they realized how they were mirroring each
other. "I snuck into her prison camp. They've got her shoveling dirt for
hours."
Lissa grimaced. With the way they'd kept us separated, she hadn't
known much about my activities. "Poor Rose."
"She's managing. Like always." Christian's eyes turned toward the
couch and her open suitcase, where a silver stake lay on top of a silk blouse.
I doubted that shirt would survive the trip without a million wrinkles.
"Interesting thing to bring on a college visit."
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Lissa hastily shut the suitcase. "That's none of your business."
"Do you really believe it?" he asked, ignoring her comment. He took a
step forward, his eagerness apparently making him forget about wanting to
keep away. Even as distracted as she was by the situation, Lissa immediately
became aware of their new proximity, the way he smelled, the way the light
shone on his black hair. . . . "Do you think you could bring back a Strigoi?"
She turned her attention back to the conversation and shook her head.
"I don't know. I really don't. But I feel like . . . I feel like I have to try. If
nothing else, I want to know what spirit in a stake will do. That's harmless
enough."
"Not according to Rose."
Lissa gave him a rueful smile, realized what she was doing, and
promptly dropped it. "No. Rose doesn't want me going anywhere near this
idea--even though she wants it to be real."
"Tell me the truth." His gaze burned to her. "Do you think you have
any chance of staking a Strigoi?"
"No," she admitted. "I could barely throw a punch. But . . . like I said,
I feel like I should try. I should try to learn. To stake one, I mean."
Christian pondered this for a few moments and then gestured toward
the suitcase again. "You're going to Lehigh in the morning?"
Lissa nodded.
"And Rose got cut from the trip?"
"Of course."
"Did the queen offer to let you bring another friend?"
"She did," admitted Lissa. "In particular, she suggested Adrian. But
he's sulking . . . and I'm not really sure if I'm in the mood for him."
Christian seemed pleased by this. "Then bring me."
My poor friends. I wasn't sure how much more shock any of them
could handle today.
"Why the hell would I bring you?" she exclaimed. All her anger
returned at his presumption. It was a sign of her agitation that she'd sworn.
"Because," he said, face calm, "I can teach you how to stake a
Strigoi."
130
THIRTEEN
"THE HELL YOU CAN," I said aloud to no one.
"No, you can't," said Lissa, with an expression that matched my own
incredulity. "I know you've been learning to fight with fire, but you haven't
done any staking."
Christian's face was adamant. "I have--a little. And I can learn more.
Mia's got some guardian friends here that have been teaching her physical
combat, and I've learned some of it."
The mention of him and Mia working together didn't do much to
improve Lissa's opinion. "You've barely been here a week! You make it
sound like you've been training for years with some master."
"It's better than nothing," he said. "And where else are you going to
learn? Rose?"
Lissa's outrage and disbelief dimmed a little. "No," she admitted.
"Never. In fact, Rose would drag me away if she caught me doing it."
Damn straight I would. In fact, despite the obstacles and staff that kept
blocking me, I was tempted to march over there right now.
"Then this is your chance," he said. His voice turned wry. "Look, I
know things aren't . . . great with us, but that's irrelevant if you're going to
learn this. Tell Tatiana you want to bring me to Lehigh. She won't like it, but
she'll let you. I'll show you what I know in our free time. Then, when we get
back, I'll take you to Mia and her friends."
Lissa frowned. "If Rose knew . . ."
"That's why we'll start when you're away from Court. She'll be too far
away from you to do anything."
Oh, for the love of God. I would give them some lessons about
fighting--starting with a punch to Christian's face.
"And when we get back?" asked Lissa. "She'll find out. It's inevitable
with the bond."
He shrugged. "If she's still on landscape duty, we'll be able to get
away with it. I mean, she'll know, but she won't be able to interfere. Much."
"It may not be enough," Lissa said with a sigh. "Rose was right about
that--I can't expect to learn in a few weeks what it took her years to do."
Weeks? That was her timeline on this?
"You have to try," he said, almost gentle. Almost.
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"Why are you so interested in this?" Lissa asked suspiciously. "Why
do you care so much about bringing Dimitri back? I mean, I know you liked
him, but you don't quite have the same motivation here that Rose does."
"He was a good guy," said Christian. "And if there was a way to turn
him back to a dhampir? Yeah, that'd be amazing. But it's more than that . . .
more than just him. If there was a way to save all Strigoi, that would change
our world. I mean, not that setting them on fire isn't cool after they've gone
on killing sprees, but if we could stop those killing sprees in the first place?
That's the key to saving us. All of us."
Lissa was speechless for a moment. Christian had spoken
passionately, and there was a hope radiating off of him that she just hadn't
expected. It was . . . moving.
He took advantage of her silence. "Besides, there's no telling what
you'd do without any guidance. And I'd like to reduce the odds of you
getting yourself killed, because even if Rose wants to deny it, I know you're
going to keep pushing this."
Lissa stayed quiet yet again, pondering the situation. I listened to her
thoughts, not liking at all where they were going.
"We're leaving at six," she said at last. "Can you meet me downstairs
at five thirty?" Tatiana wouldn't be thrilled when she heard about the new
guest choice, but Lissa was pretty sure she could do some fast talking in the
morning.
He nodded. "I'll be there."
Back in my room, I was totally aghast. Lissa was going to attempt to
learn to stake a Strigoi--behind my back--and she was going to get Christian
to help her. Those two had been snarling at each other since the breakup. I
should have felt flattered that sneaking around me was bringing them
together, but I wasn't. I was pissed off.
I considered my options. The buildings Lissa and I were staying in
didn't have the kind of front-desk curfew security that our school dorms had
had, but the staff here had been instructed to tip off someone in the
guardians' office if I got too social. Hans had also told me to stay away from
Lissa until further notice. I pondered it all for a moment, thinking it might be
worth Hans dragging me from Lissa's room, and then finally thought of an
alternate plan. It was late but not too late, and I left my room for the one next
door to mine. Knocking on the door, I hoped my neighbor was still awake.
She was a dhampir my age, a recent graduate from a different school.
I didn't own a cell phone, but I'd seen her talking on one earlier today. She
answered the door a few moments later and fortunately didn't appear to have
been in bed.
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"Hey," she said, understandably surprised.
"Hey, can I send a text from your phone?"
I didn't want to commandeer her phone with a conversation, and
besides, Lissa might just hang up on me. My neighbor shrugged, stepped
into the room, and returned with the phone. I had Lissa's number memorized
and sent her the following note:
I know what you're going to do, and it is a BAD idea. I'm going to
kick both your asses when I find you.
I handed the phone back to its owner. "Thanks. If anyone texts back,
can you let me know?"
She told me she would, but I didn't expect any return texts. I got my
message another way. When I returned to the room and Lissa's mind, I got to
be there when her phone chimed. Christian had left, and she read my text
with a rueful smile. My answer came through the link. She knew I was
watching.
Sorry, Rose. It's a risk I'll have to take. I'm doing this.
I tossed and turned that night, still angry at what Lissa and Christian
were trying to do. I didn't think I'd ever fall asleep, but when Adrian came to
me in a dream, it became clear that my body's exhaustion had defeated my
mind's agitation.
"Las Vegas?" I asked.
Adrian's dreams always occurred in different places of his choosing.
Tonight, we stood on the Strip, very near where Eddie and I had
rendezvoused with Lissa and him at the MGM Grand. The bright lights and
neon of the hotels and restaurants gleamed in the blackness, but the whole
setting was eerily silent compared to the reality. Adrian had not brought the
cars or people of the real Las Vegas here. It was like a ghost town.
He smiled, leaning against a pole covered in paper ads for concerts
and escort services. "Well, we didn't really get a chance to enjoy it while we
were there."
"True." I stood a few feet away, arms crossed over my chest. I had on
jeans and a T-shirt, along with my nazar. Adrian had apparently decided not
to dress me tonight, for which I was grateful. I could have ended up like one
of those Moroi showgirls, in feathers and sequins. "I thought you were
avoiding me." I still wasn't entirely sure where our relationship stood,
despite his flippant attitude back at the Witching Hour.
He snorted. "It's not by my choice, little dhampir. Those guardians are
doing their best to keep you in solitary. Well, kind of."
"Christian managed to sneak in and talk to me earlier," I said, hoping
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to avoid the issue that had to be on Adrian's mind: that I'd risked lives to
save my ex-boyfriend. "He's going to try to teach Lissa to stake a Strigoi."
I waited for Adrian to join in my outrage, but he appeared as lax and
sardonic as usual. "Not surprised she's gonna try. What surprises me is that
he'd actually be interested in helping with some crazy theory."
"Well, it's crazy enough to appeal to him . . . and can apparently
overpower them hating each other lately."
Adrian tilted his head, making some of the hair fall over his eyes. A
building with blue neon palm trees cast an eerie glow upon his face as he
gave me a knowing look. "Come on, we both know why he's doing it."
"Because he thinks his after-school group with Jill and Mia qualifies
him to teach that stuff?"
"Because it gives him an excuse to be around her--without making it
look like he gave in first. That way, he can still seem manly."
I shifted slightly so that the lights of a giant sign advertising slot
machines didn't shine in my eyes. "That's ridiculous." Especially the part
about Christian being manly.
"Guys do ridiculous things for love." Adrian reached into his pocket
and held up a pack of cigarettes. "Do you know how badly I want one of
these right now? Yet I suffer, Rose. All for you."
"Don't turn romantic on me," I warned, trying to hide my smile. "We
don't have time for that, not when my best friend wants to go monster
hunting."
"Yeah, but how is she actually going to find him? That's kind of a
problem." Adrian didn't need to elaborate on the "him."
"True," I admitted.
"And she hasn't been able to charm the stake yet anyway, so until she
does, all the kung-fu skills in the world won't matter."
"Guardians don't do kung-fu. And how did you know about the
stake?"
"She's asked for my help a couple of times," he explained.
"Huh. I didn't know that."
"Well, you've been kind of busy. Not that you've even spared a
thought for your poor pining boyfriend."
With all my chores, I hadn't spent a huge amount of time in Lissa's
head--just enough to check in with her. "Hey, I would have taken you over
filing any day." I'd been so afraid that Adrian would be furious with me after
Vegas, yet here he was, light and playful. A little too light. I wanted him to
focus on the problem at hand. "What's your take on Lissa and the charms? Is
she close to doing it?"
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Adrian absentmindedly played with the cigarettes, and I was tempted
to tell him to go ahead and have one. This was his dream, after all. "Unclear.
I haven't taken to charms the way she has. It's weird having the other
elements in there . . . makes it hard to manipulate spirit."
"Are you helping her anyway?" I asked suspiciously.
He shook his head in amusement. "What do you think?"
I hesitated. "I . . . I don't know. You help her with most spirit things,
but helping her with this would mean . . ."
". . . Helping Dimitri?"
I nodded, not trusting myself to elaborate.
"No," Adrian said at last. "I'm not helping her, simply because I don't
know how."
I exhaled with relief. "I really am sorry," I told him. "For
everything . . . for lying about where I was and what I was doing. It was
wrong. And I don't understand . . . well, I don't get why you're being so nice
to me."
"Should I be mean?" He winked. "Is that the kind of thing you're
into?"
"No! Of course not. But, I mean, you were so mad when you came to
Vegas and found out what was going on. I just thought . . . I don't know. I
thought you hated me."
The amusement faded from his features. He came over to me and
rested his hands on my shoulders, his dark green eyes dead serious. "Rose,
nothing in this world could make me hate you."
"Not even trying to bring my ex-boyfriend back from the dead?"
Adrian held onto me, and even in a dream, I could smell his skin and
cologne. "Yeah, I'll be honest. If Belikov were walking around right now,
alive like he used to be? There would be some problems. I don't want to
think what would happen with us if . . . well, it's not worth wasting time on.
He's not here."
"I still . . . I still want us to work," I said meekly. "I would still try,
even if he were back. I just have a hard time letting someone I care about
go."
"I know. You did what you did out of love. I can't be mad at you over
that. It was stupid, but that's how love is. Do you have any idea what I'd do
for you? To keep you safe?"
"Adrian . . ."
I couldn't meet his eyes. I suddenly felt unworthy. He was so easy to
underestimate. The only thing I could do was lean my head against his chest
and let him wrap his arms around me.
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"I'm sorry."
"Be sorry you lied," he said, pressing a kiss to my forehead. "Don't be
sorry you loved him. That's part of you, part you have to let go, yeah, but
still something that's made you who you are."
Part you have to let go . . .
Adrian was right, and that was a damned scary thing to admit. I'd had
my shot. I'd made my gamble to save Dimitri, and it had failed. Lissa
wouldn't get anywhere with the stake, meaning I really did have to treat
Dimitri the way everyone else did: He was dead. I had to move on.
"Damn it," I muttered.
"What?" asked Adrian.
"I hate it when you're the sane one. That's my job."
"Rose," he said, forcibly trying to keep a serious tone, "I can think of
many words to describe you, sexy and hot being at the top of the list. You
know what's not on the list? Sane."
I laughed. "Okay, well, then my job is to be the less crazy one."
He considered. "That I can accept."
I brought my lips up to his, and even if there were still some shaky
things in our relationship, there was no uncertainty in how we kissed.
Kissing in a dream felt exactly like real life. Heat blossomed between us,
and I felt a thrill run through my whole body. He released my hands and
wrapped his arms around my waist, bringing us closer. I realized that it was
time to start believing what I kept saying. Life did go on. Dimitri might be
gone, but I could have something with Adrian--at least until my job took me
away. That was, of course, assuming I got one. Hell, if Hans kept me on
desk duty here and Adrian continued his slothful ways, we could be together
forever. Adrian and I kissed for a long time, pressing closer and closer. At last
I broke things off. If you had sex in a dream, did that mean you'd really done
it? I didn't know, and I certainly wasn't going to find out. I wasn't ready for
that yet.
I stepped back, and Adrian took the hint. "Find me when you get some
freedom."
"Hopefully soon," I said. "The guardians can't punish me forever."
Adrian looked skeptical, but he let the dream dissolve without further
comment. I returned to my own bed and my own dreams.
The only thing that stopped me from intercepting Lissa and Christian
when they met up early in her lobby the next day was that Hans summoned
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me to work even earlier. He put me on paperwork duty--in the vaults,
ironically enough--leaving me to file and stew over Lissa and Christian as I
watched them through my bond. I took it as a sign of my multitasking skills
that I was able to alphabetize and spy at the same time.
Yet my observations were interrupted when a voice said, "Didn't
expect to find you here again."
I blinked out of Lissa's head and looked up from my paperwork.
Mikhail stood before me. In light of the complications that had ensued with
the Victor incident, I'd nearly forgotten Mikhail's involvement in our
"escape." I set the files down and gave him a small smile.
"Yeah, weird how fate works, huh? They actually want me here now."
"Indeed. You're in a fair amount of trouble, I hear."
My smile turned into a grimace. "Tell me about it." I glanced around,
even though I knew we were alone. "You didn't get in any trouble, did you?"
He shook his head. "No one knows what I did."
"Good." At least one person had escaped this debacle unscathed. My
guilt couldn't have handled him getting caught too.
Mikhail knelt so that he was eye level with me, resting his arms on the
table I sat at. "Were you successful? Was it worth it?"
"That's a hard question to answer."
He arched an eyebrow.
"There were some . . . not so successful things that happened. But we
did find out what we wanted to know--or, well, we think we did."
His breath caught. "How to restore a Strigoi?"
"I think so. If our informant was telling the truth, then yeah. Except,
even if he was . . . well, it's not that easy to do. It's nearly impossible,
really."
"What is it?"
I hesitated. Mikhail had helped us, but he wasn't in my circle of
confidants. Yet even now, I saw that haunted look in his eyes, the one I'd
seen before. The pain of losing his beloved still tormented him. It likely
always would. Would I be doing more harm than good by telling him what
I'd learned? Would this fleeting hope only hurt him more?
I finally decided to tell him. Even if he told others--and I didn't think
he would--most would laugh it off anyway. There would be no damage
there. The real trouble would come if he told anyone about Victor and
Robert--but I didn't actually have to mention their involvement to him.
Unlike Christian, it had apparently not occurred to Mikhail that the prison
break so big in Moroi news had been pulled off by the teens he helped
smuggle out. Mikhail probably couldn't spare a thought for anything that
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didn't involve saving his Sonya.
"It takes a spirit user," I explained. "One with a spirit-charmed stake,
and then he . . . or she . . . has to stake the Strigoi."
"Spirit . . ." That element was still foreign to most Moroi and
dhampirs--but not to him. "Like Sonya. I know spirit's supposed to make
them more alluring . . . but I swear, she never needed it. She was beautiful
on her own." As always, Mikhail's face took on that same sad look it did
whenever Ms. Karp was mentioned. I'd never really seen him truly happy
since meeting him and thought he'd be pretty good-looking if he ever
genuinely smiled. He suddenly seemed embarrassed at his romantic lapse
and returned to business. "What spirit user could do a staking?"
"None," I said flatly. "Lissa Dragomir and Adrian Ivashkov are the
only two spirit users I even know--well, aside from Avery Lazar." I was
leaving Oksana and Robert out of this. "Neither of them has the skill to do
it--you know that as well as I do. And Adrian has no interest in it anyway."
Mikhail was sharp, picking up on what I didn't say. "But Lissa does?"
"Yes," I admitted. "But it would take her years to learn to do it. If not
longer. And she's the last of her line. She can't be risked like that."
The truth of my words hit him, and I couldn't help but share his pain
and disappointment. Like me, he'd put a lot of faith into this last-ditch effort
to be reunited with his lost love. I had just affirmed that it was possible . . .
yet impossible. I think it would have been easier on both of us to learn it had
all been a hoax.
He sighed and stood up. "Well . . . I appreciate you going after this.
Sorry your punishment is for nothing."
I shrugged. "It's okay. It was worth it."
"I hope . . ." His face turned hesitant. "I hope it ends soon and doesn't
affect anything."
"Affect what?" I asked sharply, catching the edge in his voice.
"Just . . . well, guardians who disobey orders sometimes face long
punishments."
"Oh. This." He was referring to my constant fear of being stuck with a
desk job. I tried to play flippant and not to show how much that possibility
scared me. "I'm sure Hans was bluffing. I mean, would he really make me do
this forever just because I ran away and--"
I stopped, my mouth hanging open when a knowing glint flashed in
Mikhail's eyes. I'd heard long ago how he'd tried to track down Ms. Karp,
but the logistics had never really hit me until now. No one would have
condoned his search. He would have had to leave on his own, breaking
protocol, and come skulking back when he finally gave up on locating her.
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He would have been in just as much trouble as me for going MIA.
"Is that . . ." I swallowed. "Is that why you . . . why you work down
here in the vaults now?"
Mikhail didn't answer my question. Instead, he glanced down with a
small smile and pointed at my stacks of paper. "F comes before L," he said
before turning and leaving.
"Damn," I muttered, looking down. He was right. Apparently I
couldn't alphabetize so well while watching Lissa. Still, once I was alone,
that didn't stop me from tuning back into her mind. I wanted to know what
she was doing . . . and I didn't want to think about how what I'd done would
probably be considered worse than Mikhail's deeds in the eyes of the
guardians. Or that a similar--or worse--punishment might be in store for me.
Lissa and Christian were at a hotel near Lehigh's campus. The middle
of the vampiric day meant evening for the human university. Lissa's tour
wouldn't start until their morning the next day, which meant she had to bide
her time at the hotel now and try to adjust to a human schedule.
Lissa's "new" guardians, Serena and Grant, were with her, along with
three extras that the queen had sent as well. Tatiana had allowed Christian to
come along and hadn't been nearly as opposed as Lissa had feared--which
again made me question if the queen really was as awful as I'd always
believed. Priscilla Voda, a close advisor of the queen that both Lissa and I
liked, was also accompanying Lissa as she looked around the school. Two of
the additional guardians stayed with Priscilla; the third stayed with
Christian. They ate dinner as a group and then retired to their rooms. Serena
was actually staying with Lissa in hers while Grant stood guard outside the
door. Watching all this triggered a pang in me. Pair guarding--it was what I'd
been trained for. What I'd been expecting my whole life to do for Lissa.
Serena was a picture-perfect example of guardian aloofness, being
there but not there as Lissa hung up some of her clothes. A knock at the door
immediately shot Serena into action. Her stake was in hand, and she strode
to the door, looking out through its peephole. I couldn't help but admire her
reaction time, though part of me would never believe anyone could guard
Lissa as well as I could. "Get back," Serena said to Lissa.
A moment later, the tension in Serena faded a tiny bit, and she opened
the door. Grant stood there with Christian beside him.
"He's here to see you," Grant said, like it wasn't obvious.
Lissa nodded. "Um, yeah. Come on in."
Christian stepped inside when Grant backed away. Christian gave
Lissa a meaningful look as he did, making a small head nod toward Serena.
"Hey, um, would you mind giving us some privacy?" As soon as the
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words were out of Lissa's mouth, she turned bright pink. "I mean . . . we
just . . . we just need to talk about some things, that's all."
Serena kept her face almost neutral, but it was clear she thought they
were going to do more than talk. Average teen dating wasn't usually hot
gossip in the Moroi world, but Lissa, with her notoriety, attracted a bit more
attention with her romantic affairs. Serena would have known Christian and
Lissa had gone out and broken up. For all she knew, they were back together
now. Lissa inviting him on this trip certainly suggested it.
Serena glanced around warily. The balance of protection and privacy
was always difficult with Moroi and guardians, and hotel rooms like this
made it even harder. If they were on a vampiric schedule, with everyone
sleeping during daylight hours, I didn't doubt Serena would have stepped
into the hall with Grant. But it was dark outside, and even a fifth-floor
window could be a Strigoi liability. Serena wasn't keen on leaving her new
charge alone.
Lissa's hotel suite had an expansive living room and work area, with
an adjacent bedroom accessible through frosted-glass French doors. Serena
nodded toward them. "How about I just go in there?" A smart idea. Provided
privacy but kept her close by. Then, Serena realized the implications, and
she blushed. "I mean . . . unless you guys want to go in there and I'll--"
"No," exclaimed Lissa, growing more and more embarrassed. "This is
fine. We'll stay in here. We're just talking."
I wasn't sure whose benefit that was for, Serena's or Christian's.
Serena nodded and disappeared into the bedroom with a book, which
reminded me eerily of Dimitri. She shut the door. Lissa wasn't sure how well
noise traveled, so she turned the TV on.
"God, that was miserable," she groaned.
Christian seemed totally at ease as he leaned against the wall. He
wasn't the formal type by any means, but he'd put on dress clothes for dinner
earlier and still wore them. They looked good on him, no matter how much
he always complained. "Why?"
"Because she thinks we're--she thinks we're--well, you know."
"So? What's the big deal?"
Lissa rolled her eyes. "You're a guy. Of course it doesn't matter to
you."
"Hey, it's not like we haven't. Besides, better for her to think that than
to know the truth."
The reference to their past sex life inspired a mix of emotions--
embarrassment, anger, and longing--but she refused to let that show. "Fine.
Let's just get this over with. We've got a big day, and our sleep's going to be
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all screwy as it is. Where do we start? Do you want me to get the stake?"
"No need yet. We should just practice some basic defensive moves."
He straightened up and moved toward the center of the room, dragging a
table out of the way.
I swear, if not for the context, watching the two of them attempt
combat training on their own would have been hilarious.
"Okay," he said. "So you already know how to punch."
"What? I do not!"
He frowned. "You knocked out Reed Lazar. Rose mentioned it, like, a
hundred times. I've never heard her so proud about something."
"I punched one person once in my life," she pointed out. "And Rose
was coaching me. I don't know if I could do it again."
Christian nodded, looking disappointed--not in her skills but because
he had an impatient nature and wanted to jump right into the really hard-core
fighting stuff. Nonetheless, he proved a surprisingly patient teacher as he
went over the fine art of punching and hitting. A lot of his moves were
actually things he'd picked up from me.
He'd been a decent student. Was he at guardian levels? No. Not by a
long shot. And Lissa? She was smart and competent, but she wasn't wired
for combat, no matter how badly she wanted to help with this. Punching
Reed Lazar had been a beautiful thing, but it didn't appear to be anything
that would ever become natural for her. Fortunately, Christian started with
simple dodging and watching one's opponent. Lissa was just a beginner at it
but showed a lot of promise. Christian seemed to chalk it up to his
instructive skills, but I'd always thought spirit users had a kind of
preternatural instinct about what others might do next. I doubted it would
work on Strigoi, though.
After a little of that, Christian finally returned to offense, and that's
when things went bad.
Lissa's gentle, healing nature didn't mesh with that, and she refused to
really strike out with her full force, for fear of hurting him. When he realized
what was happening, his snarky temper started to rise.
"Come on! Don't hold back."
"I'm not," she protested, delivering a punch to his chest that didn't
come close to budging him.
He raked a hand irritably through his hair. "You are too! I've seen you
knock on a door harder than you're hitting me."
"That's a ridiculous metaphor."
"And," he added, "you aren't aiming for my face."
"I don't want to leave a mark!"
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"Well, at the rate we're going, there's no danger of that," he muttered.
"Besides, you can heal it away."
I was amused at their bickering but didn't like his casual
encouragement of spirit use. I still hadn't shaken my guilt over the long-term
damage that the prison break could have caused.
Reaching forward, Christian grabbed her by the wrist and jerked her
toward him. He balled her fingers with his other hand and then slowly
demonstrated how to swing a punch upward by pulling her fist toward his
face. He was more interested in showing the technique and motion, so it
only brushed against him.
"See? Arc upward. Make the impact right there. Don't worry about
hurting me."
"It's not that simple. . . ."
Her protest died off, and suddenly, they both seemed to notice the
situation they were in. There was barely any space between them, and his
fingers were still wrapped around her wrist. They felt warm against Lissa's
skin and were sending electricity through the rest of her body. The air
between them seemed thick and heavy, like it might just wrap them up and
pull them together. From the widening of Christian's eyes and sudden intake
of breath, I was willing to bet he was having a similar reaction at being so
close to her body.
Coming to himself, he abruptly released her hand and stepped back.
"Well," he said roughly, though still clearly unnerved by the proximity, "I
guess you aren't really serious about helping Rose."
That did it. Sexual tension notwithstanding, anger kindled up in Lissa
at the comment. She balled her fist and totally caught Christian off guard
when she swung out and socked him in the face. It didn't have the grace of
her Reed punch, but it took Christian hard. Unfortunately, she lost her
balance in the maneuver and stumbled forward into him. The two of them
went down together, hitting the floor and knocking over a small table and
lamp nearby. The lamp caught the table's corner and broke.
Meanwhile, Lissa had landed on Christian. His arms instinctively
went out around her, and if the space between them before had been small, it
was nonexistent now. They stared into each other's eyes, and Lissa's heart
was pounding fiercely in her chest. That tantalizing electric feeling crackled
around them again, and all the world for her seemed to focus on his lips.
Both she and I wondered later if they might have kissed, but just then,
Serena came bursting out of the bedroom.
She was on guardian high alert, body tense and ready to face an army
of Strigoi with her stake in hand. She came screeching to a halt when she
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saw the scene before her: what appeared to be a romantic interlude.
Admittedly, it was an odd one, what with the broken lamp and swelling red
mark on Christian's face. It was pretty awkward for everyone, and Serena's
attack mode faded to one of confusion.
"Oh," she said uncertainly. "Sorry."
Embarrassment flooded Lissa, as well as self-resentment at being
affected so much by Christian. She was furious at him, after all. Hastily, she
pulled away and sat up, and in her flustered state, she felt the need to make it
clear that there was nothing romantic whatsoever going on.
"It . . . it's not what you think," she stuttered, looking anywhere except
at Christian, who was getting to his feet and seemed just as mortified as
Lissa. "We were fighting. I mean, practicing fighting. I want to learn to
defend against Strigoi. And attack them. And stake them. So Christian was
kind of helping me, that's all." There was something cute about her
rambling, and it reminded me charmingly of Jill.
Serena visibly relaxed, and while she'd mastered that blank face all
guardians excelled at, it was clear she was amused. "Well," she said, "it
doesn't look like you're doing a very good job."
Christian turned indignant as he stroked his injured cheek. "Hey! We
are too. I taught her this."
Serena still thought it was all funny, but a serious, considering glint
was starting to form in her eyes. "That seems like it was more lucky than
anything else." She hesitated, like she was on the verge of a big decision. At
last she said, "Look, if you guys are serious about this, then you need to
learn to do it the right way. I'll show you how."
No. Way.
I was seriously on the verge of escaping the Court and hitchhiking to
Lehigh to really show them how to throw a punch--with Serena as my
example--when something jolted me away from Lissa and back into my own
reality. Hans.
I had a sarcastic greeting on my lips, but he didn't give me a chance.
"Forget the filing and follow me. You've been summoned."
"I--what?" Highly unexpected. "Summoned where?"
His face was grim. "To see the queen."
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FOURTEEN
THE LAST TIME TATIANA HAD wanted to yell at me, she'd
simply taken me to one of her private sitting rooms. It had made for a weird
atmosphere, like we were at teatime--except people didn't usually scream at
other people during teatime. I had no reason to believe this would be any
different . . . until I noticed my escort was leading me to the main business
buildings of the Court, the places where all royal governing was conducted.
Shit. This was more serious than I'd thought.
And indeed, when I was finally ushered into the room where Tatiana
waited . . . well, I nearly came to a standstill and couldn't enter. Only a slight
touch on my back from one of the guardians with me kept me moving
forward. The place was packed.
I didn't know for sure which room I was in. The Moroi actually kept a
bona fide throne room for their king or queen, but I didn't think this was it.
This room was still heavily decorated, conveying an old-world royal feel,
with painstakingly carved floral molding and shining gold candleholders on
the walls. There were actually lit candles in them too. Their light reflected
off the metallic decorations in the room. Everything glittered, and I felt like
I'd stumbled into a stage production.
And really, I might as well have. Because after a moment's surveying,
I realized where I was. The people in the room were split. Twelve of them
sat at a long table on a dais at what was clearly meant to be the focal point of
the room. Tatiana herself sat at the middle of the table, with six Moroi on
one side and five Moroi on the other. The other side of the room was simply
set with rows of chairs--still elaborate and padded with satin cushions--
which were also filled with Moroi. The audience.
The people sitting on either side of Tatiana were the tip-off. They
were older Moroi, but ones who carried a regal air. Eleven Moroi for the
eleven acting royal families. Lissa was not eighteen--though she was about
to be, I realized with a start--and therefore had no spot yet. Someone was
sitting in for Priscilla Voda. I was looking at the Council, the princes and
princesses of the Moroi world. The oldest member of each family claimed
the royal title and an advisory spot beside Tatiana. Sometimes the eldest
waived the spot and gave it to someone the family felt was more capable, but
the selectee was almost always at least forty-five. The Council elected the
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Moroi king or queen, a position held until death or retirement. In rare
circumstances, with enough backing from the royal families, a monarch
could be forcibly removed from office.
Each prince or princess on the Council was in turn advised by a
family council, and glancing back at the audience, I recognized clusters of
family members sitting together: Ivashkovs, Lazars, Badicas . . . The very
back rows appeared to be observers. Tasha and Adrian sat together, and I
knew for a fact they weren't members of the Royal Council or family
councils. Still, seeing them set me at ease a little.
I remained near the entrance to the room, shifting uneasily from foot
to foot, wondering what was in store. I hadn't just earned public humiliation;
I'd apparently earned it in front of the most important Moroi in the world.
Wonderful.
A gangly Moroi with patchy white hair stepped forward, around the
side of the long table, and cleared his throat. Immediately, the hum of
conversation died. Silence filled the room.
"This session of the Moroi Royal Council is now in order," he
declared. "Her Royal Majesty, Tatiana Marina Ivashkov, is presiding." He
gave a slight bow in her direction and then discretely backed off to the side
of the room, standing near some guardians who lined the walls like
decorations themselves.
Tatiana always dressed up at the parties I saw her at, but for a formal
event like this, she was really channeling the queen look. Her dress was
long-sleeved navy silk, and a glittering crown of blue and white stones sat
atop her elaborately braided hair. In a beauty pageant, I would have written
such gems off as rhinestones. On her, I didn't question for a moment that
they were real sapphires and diamonds.
"Thank you," she said. She was also using her royal voice, resonant
and impressive, filling the room. "We will be continuing our conversation
from yesterday."
Wait . . . what? They'd been discussing me yesterday too? I noticed
then that I'd wrapped my arms around myself in a sort of protective stance
and immediately dropped them. I didn't want to look weak, no matter what
they had in store for me.
"Today we will be hearing testimony from a newly made guardian."
Tatiana's sharp gaze fell on me. The whole room's did. "Rosemarie
Hathaway, will you please come forward?"
I did, keeping my head high and posture confident. I didn't exactly
know where to stand, so I picked the middle of the room, directly facing
Tatiana. If I was going to be paraded in public, I wished someone would
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have tipped me off to wear guardian black and white. Whatever. I'd show no
fear, even in jeans and a T-shirt. I gave a small, proper bow and then met her
eyes directly, bracing for what was to come.
"Will you please state your name?" she asked.
She'd already done it for me, but I still said, "Rosemarie Hathaway."
"How old are you?"
"Eighteen?"
"And how long have you been eighteen?"
"A few months."
She waited a couple moments to let it sink in, as though this were
important information. "Miss Hathaway, we understand that around that
time, you withdrew from St. Vladimir's Academy. Is this correct?"
That's what this was about? Not the Vegas trip with Lissa?
"Yes." I offered no more info. Oh God. I hoped she didn't get into
Dimitri. She shouldn't have known about my relationship with him, but there
was no telling what information could spread around here.
"You went to Russia to hunt Strigoi."
"Yes."
"As a type of personal revenge following the attack at St. Vladimir
's?"
"Er . . . yes."
No one said anything, but my response definitely caused a stir in the
room. People shifted uneasily and glanced at their neighbors. Strigoi always
inspired fear, and someone actively seeking them out was still an unusual
concept among us. Oddly, Tatiana seemed very pleased by this confirmation.
Was it going to be used as more ammunition against me?
"We would assume then," she continued, "that you are one of those
who believe in direct strikes against the Strigoi?"
"Yes."
"Many had different reactions to the terrible attack at St. Vladimir's,"
she said. "You aren't the only dhampir who wanted to strike back against the
Strigoi--though you were certainly the youngest."
I hadn't known about others going on vigilante sprees--well, aside
from some reckless dhampirs in Russia. If that was the story about my trip
she was willing to believe, that was fine with me.
"We have reports from both guardians and Alchemists in Russia that
you were successful." This was the first time I'd heard the Alchemists
mentioned in public, but of course they'd be a common topic among the
Council. "Can you tell me how many you killed?"
"I . . ." I stared in surprise. "I'm not sure, Your Majesty. At least . . ." I
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racked my brain. "Seven." It might have been more. She thought so too.
"That might be a modest estimate compared to what our sources say,"
she noted grandly. "Nonetheless, still an impressive number. Did you
perform the kills by yourself?"
"Sometimes I did. Sometimes I had help. There were . . . some other
dhampirs I worked with once in a while." Technically, I'd had Strigoi help as
well, but I wasn't going to mention that.
"They were close to your age?"
"Yes."
Tatiana said no more, and as though receiving a cue, a woman beside
her spoke up. I believed she was the Conta princess.
"When did you kill your first Strigoi?"
I frowned. "Last December."
"And you were seventeen?"
"Yes."
"Did you perform that kill yourself?"
"Well . . . mostly. A couple friends helped with distraction." I hoped
they weren't going to push for more details. My first kill had occurred when
Mason had died, and aside from the events surrounding Dimitri, that
memory tormented me the most.
But Princess Conta didn't want too many other details. She and the
others--who soon joined in the questioning--mostly wanted to know about
my kills. They were slightly interested in knowing when other dhampirs had
helped me--but didn't want to go into when I'd had Moroi help. They also
glossed over my disciplinary record, which I found baffling. The rest of my
academic details were mentioned--my exceptional combat grades, how I'd
been one of the best when Lissa and I had run away our sophomore year and
how quickly I'd made up for lost time to become top in my class again (at
least as far as fighting went). They talked also about how I'd protected Lissa
whenever we were out in the world alone and finally concluded with my
exceptional trial scores.
"Thank you, Guardian Hathaway. You may leave."
Tatiana's dismissive voice left no room for doubt. She wanted me out
of there. I was only too eager to comply, giving another bow, and then
scurrying out. I cast a quick glance at Tasha and Adrian as I did, and the
queen's voice rang out as I cleared the door, "That concludes our session
today. We will convene again tomorrow."
I wasn't surprised when Adrian caught up with me a few minutes later.
Hans hadn't ordered me to come back and work after the session, so I had
decided to read that as freedom.
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"Okay," I said, slipping my hand into Adrian's. "Enlighten me with
your royal political wisdom. What was that all about?"
"No clue. I'm the last person to ask about political stuff," he said. "I
don't even go to those things, but Tasha found me at the last minute and said
to come with her. I guess she got a tip-off you'd be there--but she was just as
confused."
Neither of us had said anything, but I realized I was leading him
toward one of the buildings that housed commerce--restaurants, shops, etc. I
was starving all of a sudden.
"I got the impression this was part of something they'd already been
talking about--she mentioned their last session."
"It was closed. Like tomorrow's. No one knows what they're
discussing."
"Then why make this one public?" It didn't seem fair that the queen
and Council could pick and choose what they shared with others. Everything
should have been public.
He frowned. "Probably because they're going to hold a vote soon, and
that'll be public. If your testimony plays some role, then the Council may
want to make sure other Moroi witnessed it--so that everyone understands
the decision when it comes." He paused. "But what do I know? I'm no
politician."
"Makes it sound like it's already decided," I grumbled. "Why have a
vote at all? And why would I have anything to do with government?"
He opened the door to a small cafe that sold light lunch food--burgers
and sandwiches. Adrian had been raised with fancy restaurants and gourmet
food. I think he preferred that, but he also knew I didn't like always being on
display or being reminded that I was with a royal from an elite family. I
appreciated that he'd known I'd just want something ordinary today.
Nonetheless, our being together earned us a few curious glances and
whispers from the diner's patrons. At the school, we'd been a source of
speculation, but here at Court? We were a main-stage attraction. Images
were important at Court, and most dhampir-Moroi relationships were carried
out in secret. Us being so open--especially considering Adrian's
connections--was scandalous and shocking, and people weren't always
discreet with their reactions. I'd heard all sorts of things since returning to
Court. One woman had called me shameless. Another had speculated aloud
why Tatiana hadn't simply "dealt with me."
Fortunately, most of our audience was content to stare today, making
them easy to ignore. There was a small line of thought on Adrian's forehead
as we sat down at a table. "Maybe they're voting to make you Lissa's
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guardian after all."
I was so astonished that I couldn't say anything for several seconds
when the waitress suddenly appeared. I finally stammered out my order and
then stared at Adrian with wide eyes.
"Seriously?" The session had been an examination of my skills, after
all. It made sense. Except . . . "No. The Council wouldn't go to the trouble of
holding sessions for one guardian assignment." My hopes fell.
Adrian gave a shrug of acknowledgment. "True. But this isn't an
ordinary guardian assignment. Lissa's the last of her line. Everyone--
including my aunt--has a special interest in her. Giving her someone like
you who's . . ." I gave him a dangerous look as he grasped for a word. ". . .
Controversial could upset some people."
"And that's why they actually wanted me there to describe what I've
done. To convince people in person that I'm competent." Even as I spoke the
words, I still didn't dare believe them. It was too good to be true. "I just can't
imagine it, seeing as I seem to be in so much trouble with the guardians."
"I don't know," he said. "It's just a guess. Who knows? Maybe they do
think the Las Vegas thing was just a harmless prank." There was a bitter
tone in his voice over that. "And I told you that Aunt Tatiana was coming
around to you. Maybe she wants you as Lissa's guardian now but needs to
make a public display to justify it."
That was a startling thought. "But if I do get to come with Lissa, what
are you going to do? Get respectable and come to college too?"
"I don't know," he said, green eyes thoughtful as he sipped his drink.
"Maybe I will."
That was also unexpected, and my conversation with his mother
returned to my mind. What if I was Lissa's guardian in college and he was
with us for the next four years? I was fairly certain Daniella had thought
we'd be splitting up this summer. I'd thought so too . . . and was surprised to
feel how relieved I was that I might get to stay with him. Dimitri always left
my heart full of pain and longing, but I still wanted Adrian in my life.
I grinned at him and rested my hand on his. "I'm not sure what I'd do
with you if you were respectable."
He lifted my hand to his lips and kissed it. "I've got some
suggestions," he told me. I didn't know if it was his words or the feel of his
mouth on my skin that sent shivers through me. I was about to ask what
those suggestions were when our interlude was interrupted . . . by Hans.
"Hathaway," he said, one eyebrow arched as he stood over us. "You
and I have some very different ideas about the definition of 'punishment.'"
He had a point. In my mind, punishment involved easy things like
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lashings and starvation. Not filing.
Instead, I replied, "You didn't tell me to come back after I saw the
queen."
He gave me an exasperated look. "I also didn't tell you to go off on a
playdate. Come on. Back to the vaults."
"But I have a BLT coming!"
"You'll get your lunch break in another couple hours like the rest of
us."
I tried to repress my outrage. They hadn't been feeding me bread
crusts and water during my work detail, but the food hadn't tasted much
better. Just then, the waitress returned with our food. I grabbed the sandwich
before she even set the plates down and wrapped it in a napkin. "Can I take
it to go?"
"If you can eat it before we get back." His voice was skeptical, seeing
as the vault was pretty close. Clearly, he was underestimating my ability to
consume food.
In spite of Hans's disapproving expression, I gave Adrian a kiss
goodbye and a look that told him maybe we'd continue our conversation. He
gave me a happy, knowing smile that I only saw for a second before Hans
ordered me away. True to my expectations, I managed to get the sandwich
down before we arrived back at the guardians' building, though I did feel a
little nauseous for the next half hour or so.
My lunchtime was almost dinnertime for Lissa, out in the human
world. Returning to my miserable punishment, I cheered up a little at the joy
running through her via our bond. She'd spent the whole day on her campus
tour of Lehigh, and it was everything she'd hoped it could be. She loved it
all. She loved the beautiful buildings, the grounds, the dorms . . . and
especially the classes. A glimpse at the course catalog opened up a world of
subjects that even St. Vladimir's superior education hadn't offered us. She
wanted to see and do everything that the school had to offer.
And even though she wished I was there, she was still excited about
the fact that it was her birthday. Priscilla had given her some elaborate
jewelry and had promised a fancy dinner that night. It wasn't exactly the type
of celebration Lissa had hoped for, but the thrill of her eighteenth birthday
was still intoxicating--particularly as she looked around at the dream school
she'd be attending soon.
I confess, I felt a pang of jealousy. Despite Adrian's theory about why
the queen had called me in today, I knew--as did Lissa--that the odds of me
going to college with her were still probably nonexistent. Some petty part of
me couldn't understand how Lissa could therefore be excited about it if I
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wasn't going to be along. Childish of me, I know.
I didn't have long to sulk, though, because once all the touring was
done, Lissa's entourage returned to the hotel. Priscilla told them they could
clean up for an hour or so before heading to dinner. For Lissa, this meant
more fighting-practice time. My brooding mood immediately turned irate.
Things got worse when I realized that earlier in the day, Serena had
told Grant about Lissa and Christian's desire to defend themselves. He
apparently thought that it was a good idea too. It would figure. Lissa had two
progressive guardians. Why couldn't she have gotten some stodgy, oldschool
person who would be horrified at the thought of a Moroi even
thinking about fighting off a Strigoi?
So, while I sat helpless and unable to smack sense into any of them,
Lissa and Christian now had two instructors. Not only did this mean more
learning opportunities, it also meant Serena had a competent partner to
demonstrate certain moves with. She and Grant sparred, explaining
maneuvers while Lissa and Christian watched wide-eyed.
Fortunately (well, not for Lissa), she and I soon noticed something.
The guardians didn't know the true reason Lissa was interested in fighting.
They had no idea--how could they have?--that she wanted to go hunt and
stake a Strigoi in the feeble hope of bringing him back to life. They thought
she just wanted to learn basic defense, something that seemed very sensible
to them. So that was what they taught.
Grant and Serena also made Lissa and Christian practice on each
other. I suspected there were a couple reasons for this. One was that Lissa
and Christian didn't have the skill to do much damage to each other. The
second reason was that it amused the guardians.
It did not amuse Lissa and Christian. There was still so much tension
between them, both sexual and angry, that they resented being in such close
contact. Grant and Serena stopped the two Moroi from doing any more face
punching, but simple dodges often meant brushing against each other,
fingers sliding against skin in the heat of the action. Every once in a while,
the guardians would have someone play Strigoi--putting Lissa or Christian
on the offensive. The two Moroi welcomed this to a certain extent; after all,
direct attacks were what they wanted to learn.
But, when Christian (playing Strigoi) lunged at Lissa and pushed her
into a wall, learning offense suddenly didn't seem like such a good idea to
her. The maneuver pressed them right up to each other, his arms holding
hers. She could smell him and feel him and was overwhelmed by the fantasy
of him just holding her there and kissing her.
"I think you two should go back to basic defense," said Grant,
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interrupting her traitorous feelings. He sounded like he was more worried
about them hurting each other than the possibility that they might start
making out.
It took Lissa and Christian a moment to even register his words, let
alone part from each other. When they did, both avoided eye contact and
returned to the couch. The guardians launched into more examples of how to
avoid an attacker. Lissa and Christian had seen this so many times that they
knew the lesson by heart, and their earlier attraction gave way to frustration.
Lissa was too polite to say anything, but after fifteen minutes of
Serena and Grant showing how to block with your arms and dodge someone
reaching for you, Christian finally spoke. "How do you stake a Strigoi?"
Serena froze at Christian's words. "Did you say stake?"
Rather than being shocked, Grant chuckled. "I don't think that's
anything you need to worry about. You want to focus on getting away from
a Strigoi, not getting closer."
Lissa and Christian exchanged an uneasy look.
"I helped kill Strigoi before," Christian pointed out. "I used fire at the
school's attack. Are you saying that's not okay? That I shouldn't have done
it?"
Now Serena and Grant traded glances. Ha, I thought. Those two
weren't as progressive as I thought. They were coming from a defense point
of view, not offense.
"Of course you should have," said Grant at last. "What you did was
amazing. And in a similar situation? Sure. You wouldn't want to be helpless.
But that's the point--you have your fire. If it came down to you fighting a
Strigoi, your magic's going to be the way to go. You already know how to
use it--and it'll keep you safely out of their range."
"What about me?" asked Lissa. "I don't have any kind of magic like
that."
"You'll never get close enough to a Strigoi for it to be a problem," said
Serena fiercely. "We won't let you."
"Besides," added Grant with amusement, "it's not like we just go
around handing out stakes." I would have given anything for them to go take
a look in her suitcase right then.
Lissa bit her lip and refused to make eye contact with Christian again,
for fear of giving away their intentions. This was not going according to
their crazy plan. Christian again took the lead.
"Can you at least demo it?" he asked, trying--and succeeding--to look
like someone just seeking the sensational and exciting. "Is it hard to do? It
seems like all you have to do is aim and hit."
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Grant snorted. "Hardly. There's a bit more to it than that."
Lissa leaned forward, clasping her hands together as she followed
Christian's lead. "Well, then don't worry about teaching us. Just show us."
"Yeah. Let's see." Christian shifted restlessly beside her. As he did,
their arms brushed, and instantly they moved apart.
"It's not a game," Grant said. Nonetheless, he walked over to his coat
and produced his stake. Serena stared incredulously.
"What are you going to do?" she asked. "Stake me?"
He gave that small chuckle of his and searched the room with his
sharp eyes. "Of course not. Ah. There we are." He walked over to a small
armchair that had a decorative pillow. He lifted it up and tested its width. It
was fat and thickly filled with some sort of dense stuffing. He returned to
Lissa and gestured for her to stand. To everyone's astonishment, he handed
her his stake.
Locking his body into a rigid position, he gripped the pillow hard
between his hands and extended it out a couple feet in front of him. "Go
ahead," he said. "Aim and hit it."
"Are you crazy?" asked Serena.
"Don't worry," he said. "Princess Voda can afford the incidentals. I'm
proving a point. Strike the pillow."
Lissa hesitated only a few more moments. An excitement that seemed
unusually intense filled her. I knew she'd been anxious to learn this, but her
desire for it seemed higher than before. Gritting her teeth, she stepped
forward and awkwardly tried to impale the pillow with her stake. She was
cautious--fearing she'd hurt Grant--but there was no need for her to worry.
She didn't even budge him, and all she managed with the stake was a slight
snagging of the fabric on the surface. She tried a few more times but
achieved little more.
Christian, being who he was, said, "That's all you can do?"
Glaring, she handed him the stake. "You do better."
Christian stood, snarky smile disappearing as he studied the pillow
critically and sized up his blow. As he did, Lissa glanced around and saw the
humor in the guardians' eyes. Even Serena had relaxed. They were making
their point, proving staking wasn't an easy thing to learn. I was glad, and my
opinion of them rose.
Christian finally made his move. He did actually pierce the fabric, but
the pillow and its stuffing proved too much to break through. And again,
Grant wasn't shaken at all. After more failed attempts, Christian sat down
again and handed the stake back. It was kind of fun to see Christian's cocky
attitude shot down a little. Even Lissa enjoyed it, despite her own frustration
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over how difficult this was becoming.
"The stuffing's got too much resistance," Christian complained.
Grant handed his stake to Serena. "What, and you think a Strigoi's
body is going to be easier to get through? With muscles and ribs in the
way?"
Grant got back into his position, and without hesitation, Serena struck
with the stake. Its point burst through the other side of the pillow, coming to
a halt just in front of Grant's chest as tiny fluffy pieces of stuffing drifted to
the ground. She jerked it out and handed it to him like it had been the
simplest thing in the world.
Both Christian and Lissa stared in amazement. "Let me try again," he
said.
By the time Priscilla called them to dinner, there wasn't a pillow in
that hotel room left untouched. Boy, she was going to be surprised when she
got the bill. Lissa and Christian hacked away with the stake while the
guardians looked on with a superior air, confident their message was being
delivered. Staking Strigoi was not easy.
Lissa was finally getting it. She realized that in some ways, piercing a
pillow--or a Strigoi--wasn't even about understanding the principle. Sure,
she'd heard me talk about lining your shot up to get to the heart and miss the
ribs, but this was more than knowledge. A lot of it was strength--strength
she physically didn't have yet. Serena, though seemingly petite, had spent
years building up her muscle and could get that stake through practically
anything. One hour-long lesson wouldn't give Lissa that kind of strength,
and she whispered as much to Christian when the group went out to dinner.
"You're quitting already?" he asked, voice equally low as they rode in
the backseat of an SUV. Grant, Serena, and a third guardian were there too,
but they were deep in discussion.
"No!" Lissa hissed back. "But I've got to, like, train before I can do
it."
"Like lift weights?"
"I . . . I don't know." The others were still talking to each other, but
Lissa's topic was too dangerous for her to risk them hearing. She leaned
close to Christian, unnerved yet again at how his closeness and familiarity
affected her. Swallowing, she tried to keep her face impassive and stick to
the topic. "But I'm just not strong enough. It's physically impossible."
"Sounds like you're giving up."
"Hey! You didn't make it through any of the pillows either."
He flushed slightly. "I almost got through that green one."
"There was hardly anything in it!"
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"I just need more practice."
"You don't need to do anything," she shot back, fighting to keep her
voice quiet through her anger. "This isn't your fight. It's mine."
"Hey," he snapped, eyes glittering like pale blue diamonds, "you're
crazy if you think I'm going to just let you go and risk--"
He cut himself off and actually bit his lip, as though will alone wasn't
enough to stop him from talking. Lissa stared at him, and both of us began
wondering how he would have finished. What wouldn't he risk? Her putting
herself in danger? That was my guess.
Even without talk, he spoke volumes with his expression. Through
Lissa's eyes, I saw him drinking in her features and trying to hide his
emotions. At last, he jerked away and broke that intimate space between
them, getting as far from her as he could.
"Fine. Do whatever you want. I don't care."
Neither of them spoke after that, and since it was lunchtime for me, I
returned to my own reality and welcomed a filing break--only to be
informed by Hans that I had to keep working.
"Come on! Isn't it lunchtime? You have to feed me," I exclaimed.
"That's just beyond cruel. At least throw me some crumbs."
"I did feed you. Or, well, you fed yourself when you inhaled that
sandwich. You wanted your lunch break then. You got it. Now you keep
working."
I slammed my fists against the endless piles of paper before me.
"Can't I at least do something else? Paint buildings? Haul rocks?"
"I'm afraid not." A smile twisted the corners of his lips. "There's a lot
of filing we need done."
"How long? How long are you going to punish me?"
Hans shrugged. "Until someone tells me to stop."
He left me alone again, and I leaned back in my chair, forcibly trying
not to flip the table in front of me over. I thought it would make me feel
momentarily better, but it also meant I'd have to redo the work I'd done.
With a sigh, I returned to my task.
Lissa was at dinner when I tuned back into her later. It might have
technically been in honor of her birthday, but really, it was all royal
conversation with Priscilla. That was no way to spend a birthday, I decided.
I'd have to make this up to her whenever I earned freedom. We'd have a real
party, and I'd be able to give her my birthday present: gorgeous leather boots
that Adrian had helped me acquire back at school.
Being in Christian's head might have been more interesting, but since
that wasn't an option, I returned to my own and mulled over my earlier talk
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with Adrian. Was this punishment finally going to end? Was an official
royal decree going to put me and Lissa together at last, despite the guardians'
normal policy?
Trying to figure it out was like being on a hamster wheel. A lot of
work. No progress. But it got me through the dinner conversation, and
before I knew it, Lissa's group was getting up and heading for the
restaurant's door. It was dark out now, and Lissa couldn't help but feel the
weirdness of being on a human schedule. Back at school or the Court, this
would be the middle of the day. Instead, they were now heading back to
their hotel and would be going to bed. Well, probably not right away. I had
no doubt that if Lissa and Christian could get over their current huff, they'd
be back to stabbing more pillows. As much as I wanted those two dating
again, I couldn't help but think they were a lot safer apart.
Or maybe not.
The group had hung out at the restaurant far past the normal dinner
hour, so the lot was mostly empty as they walked across it. The guardians
hadn't exactly parked in the back, but they weren't near the main entrance
either. They had, however, made a point of parking next to one of the street
lamps illuminating the lot.
Except it wasn't lit now. The light had been broken.
Grant and Priscilla's guardian noticed it right away. It was the kind of
little detail we were trained to notice: anything unusual, anything that might
have changed. In a flash, the two of them had stakes out and were flanking
the Moroi. It only took seconds for Serena and the guardian assigned to
Christian to follow suit. That was something else we were trained to do. Be
on guard. React. Follow your colleagues.
They were fast. All of them were fast. But it didn't matter.
Because suddenly, there were Strigoi everywhere.
I'm not entirely sure where they came from. Maybe they'd been
behind the cars or on the parking lot's edges. If I'd had a bird-eye's view of
the situation or been there myself with my "nausea alarm," I might have had
a better sense of it all. But I was watching the scene through Lissa's eyes,
and the guardians were going out of their way to block her from the Strigoi
who seemed to have appeared out of thin air as far as she was concerned.
Most of the actions were a blur to her. Her bodyguards were shoving her
around, trying to keep her safe as white, red-eyed faces popped up
everywhere. She saw it all through a fear-filled haze.
But before long, both of us could see people dying. Serena, just as fast
and strong as she'd been in the hotel room, staked a male Strigoi cleanly
through the heart. Then, in return, a female Strigoi leapt at Priscilla's
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guardian and broke his neck. Lissa was distantly aware of Christian's arm
around her, pressing her against the SUV and shielding her with his own
body. The remaining guardians were also still forming a protective ring as
best they could, but they were distracted. Their circle was faltering--and they
were dropping.
One by one, the Strigoi killed the guardians. It wasn't for lack of skill
on the guardians' part. They were simply outnumbered. One Strigoi tore out
Grant's throat with her teeth. Serena was backhanded hard against the
asphalt, landing facedown and not moving. And, horror of horrors, the
Strigoi didn't seem to be sparing Moroi either. Lissa--pushing so hard
against the SUV that it seemed as though she might become one with it--
stared wide-eyed as one Strigoi swiftly and efficiently ripped into Priscilla's
neck, pausing to drink her blood. The Moroi woman didn't even have time to
register surprise, but at least there had been no real suffering. The
endorphins dimmed the pain as the blood and life were drained from her
body.
Lissa's emotions shifted into something beyond fear, something that
hardly felt like anything at all. She was in shock. Numbed. And with a cold,
hard certainty, she knew that her death was coming and accepted it. Her
hand found Christian's, squeezing it tightly, and turning toward him, she
took small comfort in knowing the last sight she would see in life was the
beautiful, crystalline blue of his eyes. From the look on his face, his thoughts
were along similar themes. There was warmth in his eyes, warmth and love
and--
Total and complete astonishment.
His eyes widened, focusing on something just behind Lissa. At that
same moment, a hand grabbed Lissa's shoulder and whipped her around.
This is it, a small voice inside her whispered. This is where I die.
Then, she understood Christian's astonishment.
She was facing Dimitri.
Like me, she had that surreal sense of it being Dimitri yet not being
Dimitri. So many of his features were the same . . . and yet so many were
different. She tried to say something, anything, but while the words formed
on her lips, she just couldn't manage to get them out.
Intense heat suddenly flared behind her, and a brilliant light lit
Dimitri's pale features. Neither Lissa nor I needed to see Christian to know
he had produced a ball of fire with his magic. Either the shock of seeing
Dimitri or fear for Lissa had spurred Christian into action. Dimitri squinted
slightly at the light, but then a cruel smile twisted his lips, and the hand
resting on her shoulder slid up to her neck.
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"Put it out," said Dimitri. "Put it out or she dies."
Lissa finally found her voice, even with her air cut off. "Don't listen to
him," she gasped out. "He's going to kill us anyway."
But behind her, the heat died. Shadows fell across Dimitri's face once
again. Christian wouldn't risk her, even though she was right. It hardly
seemed to matter.
"Actually," said Dimitri, voice pleasant amid the grim scene, "I'd
rather you two stay alive. At least for a little while longer."
I felt Lissa's face move to a frown. I wouldn't have been surprised if
Christian's did too, judging from the confusion in his voice. He couldn't even
manage a snarky comment. He could only ask the obvious: "Why?"
Dimitri's eyes gleamed. "Because I need you to be bait for Rose."
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FIFTEEN
IN MY PANICKED MIND RIGHT then, getting up and running on
foot to Lehigh--despite it being miles and miles away--seemed like a totally
solid plan. A heartbeat later, I knew this was out of my league. Way, way
out of my league.
As I shot up from my table and tore out of the room, I felt a sudden
longing for Alberta. I'd seen her jump into action at St. Vladimir's and knew
she could take charge of any situation. At this point in our relationship, she
would respond to any threat I brought to her. The guardians at Court were
still strangers to me. Who could I go to? Hans? The guy who hated me? He
wouldn't believe me, not like Alberta or my mother would. Running down
the quiet hallways, I dismissed all such worries. It didn't matter. I would
make him believe. I would find anyone I could. Anyone who could get Lissa
and Christian out of this.
Only you can, a voice hissed in my head. You're the one Dimitri
wants.
I ignored that thought too, largely because in my distraction, I collided
into someone rounding a corner.
I gave a muffled cry that sounded like "Oomph" as my face slammed
into someone's chest. I looked up. Mikhail. I would have been relieved,
except I was too pumped full of adrenaline and worry. I grabbed his sleeve
and began tugging him toward the stairs.
"Come on! We have to get help!"
Mikhail remained were he was, not budging against my pull. He
frowned, face calm. "What are you talking about?"
"Lissa! Lissa and Christian. They've been taken by Strigoi--by
Dimitri. We can find them. I can find them. But we have to hurry."
Mikhail's confusion grew. "Rose . . . how long have you been down
here?"
I didn't have time for this. Leaving him, I fled up the stairs to the main
levels of the complex. A moment later I heard his footsteps behind me.
When I reached the main office, I expected someone to chastise me for
leaving my punishment, except . . . no one seemed to even notice me.
The office was in chaos. Guardians were running around, calls were
being made, and voices rose to frantic levels. They knew, I realized. They
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already knew.
"Hans!" I called, pushing my way through the crowd. He was on the
other side of the room and had just hung up on a cell call. "Hans, I know
where they are. Where the Strigoi took Lissa and Christian."
"Hathaway, I don't have time for your--" His scowl faltered. "You
have that bond."
I stared in astonishment. I'd been ready for him to dismiss me as a
nuisance. I'd been ready for a long fight to convince him. I gave him a hasty
nod.
"I saw it. I saw everything that happened." Now I frowned. "How do
you know already?"
"Serena," he said grimly.
"Serena's dead . . ."
He shook his head. "No, not yet. Though she certainly sounded like it
on the phone. Whatever happened, it took everything she had to make that
call. We have Alchemists coming to get her, and . . . clean up."
I replayed the events, remembering how Serena had been slammed
against the asphalt. It had been a hard blow, and when she didn't move, I'd
assumed the worst. Yet if she'd survived--and apparently she must have--I
could just barely form a mental image of her dragging her cell phone out of
her pocket with bloody hands. . . .
Please, please let her be alive, I thought, not sure who I was praying
to.
"Come on," said Hans. "We need you. There are teams already
forming."
There was another surprise. I hadn't expected him to bring me on so
quickly. A new respect for Hans settled over me. He might act like an
asshole, but he was a leader. When he saw an asset, he used it. In one swift
motion, he was hurrying out the door, several guardians following him. I
struggled to keep up with their longer strides and saw Mikhail coming as
well.
"You're doing a rescue," I told Hans. "That's . . . rare." I hesitated to
even speak the words. I certainly didn't want to discourage this. But Moroi
rescues weren't normal. When Strigoi took them, they were often regarded
as dead. The rescue we'd done after the Academy attack had been an oddity,
one that had taken a lot of persuasion.
Hans gave me a wry look. "So is the Dragomir princess."
Lissa was precious to me, worth more than anything else in the world.
And for the Moroi, I realized, she was precious too. Most Moroi captured by
Strigoi might be regarded as dead, but she wasn't most Moroi. She was the
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last in her line, the last of one of twelve ancient families. Losing her
wouldn't just be a hit to Moroi culture. It would be a sign, an omen that the
Strigoi were truly defeating us. For her, the guardians would risk a rescue
mission.
In fact, it appeared they would risk a lot of things. As we arrived at
the garages where the Court's vehicles were stored, I saw masses of other
guardians arriving--along with Moroi. I recognized a few. Tasha Ozera was
among them, and like her, the others were fire users. If we'd learned
anything, it was how valuable they were in a fight. It appeared the
controversy of Moroi going to battle was being ignored right now, and I was
amazed at how quickly this group had been summoned. Tasha's eyes met
mine, her face grave and drawn. She said nothing to me. She didn't need to.
Hans was barking orders, splitting people into groups and vehicles.
With every bit of self-control I could muster, I waited patiently near him.
My restless nature made me want to jump in and start demanding to know
what I could do. He would get to me, I assured myself. He had a role for me;
I just had to wait.
My self-control was also being tested with Lissa. After Dimitri had
taken her and Christian away, I'd left her mind. I couldn't go back, not yet. I
couldn't stand to see them--to see Dimitri. I knew I'd have to once I began
directing the guardians, but for now, I held off. I knew Lissa was alive. That
was all that mattered for the time being.
Still, I was so wound up and filled with tension that when someone
touched my arm, I nearly turned on them with my stake.
"Adrian . . ." I breathed. "What are you doing here?"
He stood there looking down at me, and his hand gently brushed my
cheek. I had only ever seen such a serious, grim look on his face a couple of
times. As usual, I didn't like it. Adrian was one of those people who should
always be smiling.
"As soon as I heard the news, I knew where you'd be."
I shook my head. "It happened like . . . I don't know, ten minutes
ago?" Time had blurred for me. "How could everyone know so soon?"
"It was radioed across the Court as soon as they found out. They've
got an instant alert system. In fact, the queen's kind of in lockdown."
"What? Why?" Somehow that annoyed me. Tatiana wasn't the one in
danger. "Why waste resources on her?" A nearby guardian gave me a critical
look over that.
Adrian shrugged. "Strigoi attack relatively close by? They take it as a
pretty serious security threat for us."
Relatively was the key word. Lehigh was about an hour and a half
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from Court. Guardians were always on alert, though with each passing
second, I wished they'd move faster and be on alert. If Adrian hadn't shown
up, I was pretty sure I would have lost my patience and told Hans to hurry.
"It's Dimitri," I said in a low voice. I hadn't been sure if I should tell
anyone else that. "He's the one who took them. He's using them to lure me
there."
Adrian's face grew darker. "Rose, you can't . . ." He trailed off, but I
knew his meaning.
"What choice do I have?" I exclaimed. "I have to go. She's my best
friend, and I'm the only one who can lead them to her."
"It's a trap."
"I know. And he knows I know."
"What will you do?" Again, I knew exactly what Adrian meant.
I glanced down at the stake I'd unconsciously pulled out earlier.
"What I have to. I have to . . . I have to kill him."
"Good," said Adrian, relief flooding his features. "I'm glad."
For some reason, that irritated me. "God," I snapped. "Are you that
eager to get rid of any competition?"
Adrian's face stayed serious. "No. I just know that as long as he's still
alive--or, well, kind of alive--then you're in danger. And I can't stand that. I
can't stand knowing that your life is in the balance. And it is, Rose. You'll
never be safe until he's gone. I want you safe. I need you to be safe. I can't . .
. I can't have anything happen to you."
My flare of anger vanished as quickly as it had come. "Oh, Adrian,
I'm sorry. . . ."
I let him draw me into his arms. Resting my head against his chest, I
felt his heartbeat and the softness of his shirt, I allowed myself a brief and
fleeting moment of comfort. I just wanted to sink into him then and there. I
didn't want to be consumed by these feelings of fear: fear for Lissa and fear
of Dimitri. I went cold all over as a sudden realization slipped over me. No
matter what happened, I would lose one of them tonight. If we rescued
Lissa, Dimitri would die. If he survived, she would die. There was no happy
ending for this story, nothing that could save my heart from being crushed
into pieces.
Adrian brushed my forehead with his lips and then leaned down
toward my mouth. "Be careful, Rose. No matter what happens, please,
please be careful. I can't lose you."
I didn't know what to say to that, how to respond to all that emotion
pouring from him. My own mind and heart were flooded with so many
mixed feelings that I could barely form a coherent thought. Instead, I drew
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my lips to his and kissed him. In the midst of all the death tonight--the death
that already had happened and that which was still to come--that kiss seemed
more powerful than any he and I had ever shared. It was alive. I was alive,
and I wanted to stay that way. I wanted to bring Lissa back, and I wanted to
return to Adrian's arms again, return to his lips and all this life. . . .
"Hathaway! Good God, do I need to hose you down?"
I broke abruptly from Adrian and saw Hans glaring at me. Most of the
SUVs were loaded up. Now it was my turn to act. I gave Adrian a look of
farewell, and he forced a small smile that I think was supposed to be brave.
"Be careful," he repeated. "Bring them back--and bring yourself back
too."
I gave him a quick nod and then followed an impatient Hans into one
of the SUVs. The most bizarre sense of deja vu settled over me as I slid into
the backseat. This was so like the time Victor had kidnapped Lissa that I
nearly froze up. Then, too, I had ridden in a similar black SUV, directing
guardians toward Lissa's location. Only it had been Dimitri sitting beside
me--the wonderful, brave Dimitri I'd known so long ago. Yet those
memories were so etched into my mind and heart that I could picture every
detail: the way he'd tucked his hair behind his ears, the fierce look in his
brown eyes as he'd stepped on the gas to get us to Lissa faster. He'd been so
determined, so ready to do what was right.
This Dimitri--Dimitri the Strigoi--was also determined. But in a very
different way.
"You gonna be able to do this?" asked Hans from the front seat. A
hand gently squeezed my arm, and I was startled to see Tasha beside me. I
hadn't even noticed she was riding with us. "We're counting on you."
I nodded, wanting to be worthy of his respect. In best guardian
fashion, I kept my emotions off my face, trying not to feel that conflict
between the two Dimitris. Trying not to remember that the night we'd gone
after Lissa and Victor had been the same night Dimitri and I had fallen prey
to the lust charm. . . .
"Head toward Lehigh," I said in a cool voice. I was a guardian now.
"I'll direct you when we get closer."
We'd only been on the road for about twenty minutes when I sensed
Lissa's group coming to a halt. Dimitri had apparently chosen a hideout not
too far from the university, which would make it easier for us to find than if
they'd kept moving. Of course, I had to remind myself that Dimitri wanted to
be found. Knowing that the guardians with me wouldn't need my directions
until we were closer to Lehigh, I steeled myself and jumped into Lissa's head
to see what was going on.
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Lissa and Christian hadn't been harmed or attacked, aside from being
pushed and dragged around. They sat in what looked like a storage room--a
storage room that hadn't been used in a very long time. Dust coated
everything in a heavy layer, so much that it was hard to make out some of
the objects piled on the rickety shelves. Some tools, maybe. Paper here and
there, as well as the occasional box. A bare lightbulb was the only light in
the room, giving everything a harsh and dingy feel.
Lissa and Christian sat in straight-backed wooden chairs, their hands
bound behind their backs with rope. For a moment, deja vu hit again. I
remembered last winter when I too, along with my friends, had been bound
to chairs and held captive by Strigoi. They'd drunk from Eddie, and Mason
had died. . . .
No. Don't think like that, Rose. Lissa and Christian are alive.
Nothing's happened to them yet. Nothing will happen to them.
Lissa's mind was on the here and now, but a little probing let me see
what the overall building had looked like when she'd been brought in. It had
seemed to be a warehouse--an old, abandoned one--which made it a nice
place for the Strigoi to hole up with their prisoners.
There were four Strigoi in the room, but as far as Lissa was
concerned, only one really mattered. Dimitri. I understood her reaction.
Seeing him as a Strigoi had been hard for me. Surreal, even. I'd adapted
somewhat, simply because of all the time I'd spent with him. Still, even I
was caught by surprise sometimes at seeing him like that. Lissa hadn't been
prepared at all and was in total shock.
Dimitri's dark brown hair was worn loose around his chin today, a
look I'd always loved on him, and he was pacing rapidly, causing his duster
to swirl around him. A lot of the time, his back was to Lissa and Christian,
which made it that much more troubling for her. Without seeing his face, she
could almost believe it was the Dimitri she'd always known. He was arguing
with the other three as he walked back and forth across the small space,
agitation radiating off him in an almost palpable wave.
"If the guardians really are coming," snarled one Strigoi, "then we
should be posted outside." She was a tall, gangly redhead who appeared to
have been Moroi when turned. Her tone implied that she did not think
guardians were actually coming, though.
"They're coming," said Dimitri in a low voice, that lovely accent
making my heart ache. "I know they are."
"Then let me get out there and be useful!" she snapped. "You don't
need us to babysit these two." Her tone was dismissive. Scornful, even. It
was understandable. Everyone in the vampire world knew Moroi didn't fight
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back, and Lissa and Christian were firmly bound.
"You don't know them," said Dimitri. "They're dangerous. I'm not
even sure this is enough protection."
"That's ridiculous!"
In one smooth motion, Dimitri turned and backhanded her. The hit
knocked her back a few feet, her eyes widening in fury and shock. He
resumed his pacing as though nothing had happened.
"You will stay here, and you will guard them as long as I tell you to,
do you understand?" She glared back and gingerly touched her face but said
nothing. Dimitri glanced at the others. "And you'll stay too. If the guardians
actually make it this far inside, you'll be needed for more than just guard
duty."
"How do you know?" demanded another Strigoi, a black-haired one
who might have been human once. A rarity among Strigoi. "How do you
know they'll come?"
Strigoi had amazing hearing, but with their bickering, Lissa had a
brief opportunity to speak undetected to Christian. "Can you burn my
ropes?" she murmured in a nearly inaudible voice. "Like with Rose?"
Christian frowned. When he and I had been captured, it was what he'd
done to free me. It had hurt like hell and left blisters on my hands and wrists.
"They'll notice," he breathed back. The conversation went no further because
Dimitri came to an abrupt halt and turned toward Lissa.
She gasped at the sudden and unexpected movement. Swiftly
approaching her, he knelt down before her and peered into her eyes. She
trembled in spite of her best efforts. She had never been this close to a
Strigoi, and the fact that it was Dimitri was that much worse. The red rings
around his pupils seemed to burn into her. His fangs looked poised to attack.
His hand snaked out and gripped her neck, tilting her face up so he
could get an even better look into her eyes. His fingers dug into her skin, not
enough to cut off her air but enough that she would have bruises later. If
there was a later.
"I know the guardians will come because Rose is watching," said
Dimitri. "Aren't you, Rose?" Loosening his hold a little, he ran his fingertips
over the skin of Lissa's throat, so gently . . . yet there was no question he had
the power to snap her neck.
It was like he was looking into my eyes at the moment. My soul. I
even felt like he was stroking my neck. I knew it was impossible. The bond
existed between Lissa and me. No one else could see it. Yet, just then, it was
like no one else existed but him and me. It was like there was no Lissa
between us.
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"You're in there, Rose." A pitiless half smile played over his mouth.
"And you won't abandon either of them. You also aren't foolish enough to
come alone, are you? Maybe once you would have--but not anymore."
I jerked out of her head, unable to stare into those eyes--and see them
staring back at me. Whether it was my own fear or a mirroring of Lissa's, I
discovered my body was also trembling. I forced it to stop and tried to slow
my racing heart. Swallowing, I glanced around to see if anyone had noticed,
but they were all preoccupied with discussing strategy--except for Tasha.
Her cool blue gaze studied me, her face drawn with concern. "What
did you see?"
I shook my head, unable to look at her either. "A nightmare," I
murmured. "My worst nightmare coming true."
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SIXTEEN
I DIDN'T HAVE A PRECISE count of how many Strigoi were with
Dimitri's group. So much of what I'd seen through Lissa had been blurred
with confusion and terror. The guardians, knowing we were expected, had
simply had to make a best guess about how many to send. Hans had hoped
overwhelming force would make up for us losing the element of surprise.
He'd dispatched as many guardians as he could reasonably clear from the
Court. Admittedly, the Court was protected by wards, but it still couldn't be
left entirely undefended.
Having the new grads there had helped. Most of them had been left
behind, allowing the seasoned guardians to go on our hunting party. That left
us with forty or so. It was as unusual as large groups of Strigoi banding
together. Guardians were usually sent out in pairs, maybe groups of three at
most, with Moroi families. This large of a force had the potential to bring
about a battle rivaling that of the Academy attack.
Knowing that sneaking through the dark wouldn't work, Hans stopped
our convoy a little ways from the warehouse the Strigoi were holed up at.
The building was situated on a service road cutting off from the highway. It
was an industrial area, hardly a deserted path in the woods, but all the
businesses and factories were shut down this late at night. I stepped out of
the SUV, letting the warm evening wrap around me. It was humid, and the
moisture in the air felt especially oppressive when I was already smothered
with fear.
Standing beside the road, I felt no nausea. Dimitri hadn't posted
Strigoi this far, which meant our arrival was still--kind of--a surprise. Hans
walked over to me, and I gave him the best estimate I could on the situation,
based on my limited information.
"But you can find Vasilisa?" he asked.
I nodded. "As soon as I'm in the building, the bond will lead me
straight to her."
He turned, staring off into the night as cars sped by on the nearby
highway. "If they're already waiting outside, they'll smell and hear us long
before we see them." Passing headlights briefly illuminated his face, which
was lined in thought. "You said there are three layers of Strigoi?"
"As far as I could tell. There are some on Lissa and Christian, then
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some outside." I paused, trying to think what Dimitri would do in this
situation. Surely I knew him well enough, even as a Strigoi, to calculate his
strategy. "Then another layer inside the building--before you get to the
storage room." I didn't know this for certain, but I didn't tell Hans. The
assumption was made on my own instincts, drawn from what I would do and
what I thought Dimitri would do. I figured it would be best if Hans planned
for three waves of Strigoi.
And that's exactly what he did. "Then we go in with three groups.
You'll lead the group going in for the extraction. Another team will
accompany yours and eventually split off. They'll fight whoever's right
inside, letting your group head for the captives."
It sounded so . . . militaristic. Extraction. Captives. And me . . . a team
leader. It made sense with the bond, but always in the past, they'd simply
used my knowledge and left me on the sidelines. Welcome to being a
guardian, Rose. At school, we'd conducted all sorts of exercises, running as
many different Strigoi scenarios as our instructors could dream up. Yet, as I
stared up at the warehouse, all of those drills seemed like playacting, a game
that could in no way measure up to what I was about to face. For half a
second, the responsibility of it all seemed daunting, but I quickly shoved
aside such concerns. This was what I had been trained to do, what I had been
born to do. My own fears didn't matter. They come first. Time to prove it.
"What are we going to do since we can't sneak up on them?" I asked.
Hans had a point about the Strigoi detecting us in advance.
An almost mischievous smile flickered on his face, and he explained
his plan to the group while also dividing us into our teams. His approach
tactic was bold and reckless. My kind of plan.
And like that, we were off. An outsider analyzing us might have said
we were on a suicide mission. Maybe we were. It honestly didn't matter. The
guardians wouldn't abandon the last Dragomir. And I wouldn't have
abandoned Lissa even if there were a million Dragomirs.
So, with sneaking having been ruled out, Hans opted for a full-on
attack. Our group loaded back into the eight SUVs and tore off down the
street at illegal speeds. We took up the entire width of the road, gambling on
no oncoming traffic. Two SUVs led the charge side by side, then two rows
of three. We shot to the end of the road, came to a halt with screeching tires
at the front of the warehouse, and spilled out of our cars. If slow stealth
wasn't an option, we'd gain surprise by going fast and furious.
Some of the Strigoi were indeed surprised. Clearly, they'd seen our
approach, but it had happened so fast that they'd had only a little time to
react. Of course, when you were as fast and deadly as Strigoi, a little time
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was all you needed. A group of them surged at us, and Hans's "outside team"
charged back, those guardians putting themselves between my group and the
other going inside. The Moroi fire users had been assigned to the outside
group, for fear of setting the building on fire if they went inside.
My team moved around the battle, inevitably running into a few
Strigoi who hadn't fallen to the first team's distraction. With well-practiced
determination, I ignored the nausea sweeping through me from being this
close to Strigoi. Hans had strictly ordered me not to stop unless any Strigoi
were directly in my path, and he and another guardian were beside me to
cover any threats that might come at me. He wanted nothing to delay me
from leading them to Lissa and Christian.
We fought our way into the warehouse, entering a dingy hall blocked
by Strigoi. I'd been right in my guess that Dimitri would have layers of
security. A bottleneck formed in the small space, and for a few moments
things were chaotic. Lissa was so close. It was like she was calling to me,
and I burned with impatience as I waited for the hall to clear. My team was
in the back, letting the other group do the fighting. I saw Strigoi and
guardians alike fall and tried not to let it distract me. Fight now, grieve later.
Lissa and Christian. I had to focus on them.
"There," said Hans, tugging my arm. A gap had formed ahead of us.
There were still plenty of Strigoi, but they were distracted enough that my
companions and I slipped through. We took off down the hall, which opened
into a large empty space that made up the warehouse's heart. A few pieces of
trash and debris were all that was left of the goods once stored here.
Doors led off of the room, but now I didn't need the bond to tell me
where Lissa was. Three Strigoi stood guard outside a doorway. So. Four
layers of security. Dimitri had one-upped me. It didn't matter. My group had
ten people. The Strigoi snarled, bracing in anticipation as we charged them.
Through an unspoken signal, half of my group engaged them. The rest of us
busted down the door.
Despite my intense focus on reaching Lissa and Christian, one tiny
thought had always been dancing in the back of my brain. Dimitri. I hadn't
seen Dimitri in any of the Strigoi we'd encountered. With my full attention
on our attackers, I hadn't slipped into Lissa's head to verify the situation, but
I felt totally confident that he was still inside the room. He would have
stayed with her, knowing I would come. He would be waiting to face me.
One of them dies tonight. Lissa or Dimitri.
Having reached our goal, I no longer needed extra protection. Hans
pulled out his stake on the first Strigoi he encountered, pushing past me and
jumping into the fray. The rest of my group did likewise. We poured into the
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room, and if I thought there'd been chaos earlier, it was nothing compared to
what we faced. All of us--guardians and Strigoi--just barely fit inside the
room, which meant we were fighting in very, very close quarters. A female
Strigoi--the one Dimitri had slapped earlier--came at me. I fought on
autopilot, barely aware of my stake piercing her heart. In this room, full of
shouting and death and colliding, there were only three people in the world
that mattered to me now: Lissa, Christian, and Dimitri.
I'd found him at last. Dimitri was with my two friends against the far
wall. No one was fighting him. He stood with arms crossed, a king
surveying his kingdom as his soldiers battled the enemy. His eyes fell on
me, his expression amused and expectant. This was where it would end. We
both knew it. I shoved my way through the crowd, dodging Strigoi. My
colleagues pushed into the fray beside me, dispatching whom-ever stood in
my way. I left them to their fight, moving toward my objective. All of this,
everything happening, had led to this moment: the final showdown between
Dimitri and me.
"You're beautiful in battle," said Dimitri. His cold voice carried to me
clearly, even above the roar of combat. "Like an avenging angel come to
deliver the justice of heaven."
"Funny," I said, shifting my hold on the stake. "That is kind of why
I'm here."
"Angels fall, Rose."
I'd almost reached him. Through the bond, I felt a brief surge of pain
from Lissa. A burning. No one was harming her yet, but when I saw her
arms move out of the corner of my eye, I realized what had happened.
Christian had done what she'd asked: He'd burned her ropes. I saw her move
to untie him in return, and then my attention shifted back to Dimitri. If Lissa
and Christian were free, then so much the better. It would make their escape
easier, once we cleared out the Strigoi. If we cleared out the Strigoi.
"You've gone to a lot of trouble to get me here," I told Dimitri. "A lot
of people are going to die--yours and mine."
He shrugged, unconcerned. I was almost there. In front of me, a
guardian battled a bald Strigoi. That lack of hair was not attractive with his
chalk white skin. I moved around them.
"It doesn't matter," said Dimitri. He tensed as I approached. "None of
them matter. If they die, then they obviously aren't worthy."
"Prey and predator," I murmured, recalling what he'd said to me while
holding me prisoner.
I'd reached him. No one stood between us now. This was different
from our past fights, where we'd had lots of room to size each other up and
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plan our attacks. We were still crammed into the room, and in keeping our
distance from the others, we'd closed the gap between us. That was a
disadvantage for me. Strigoi outmatched guardians physically; extra room
helped us compensate with more maneuverability.
I didn't need to maneuver quite yet, though. Dimitri was trying to wait
me out, wanting me to make the first move. He kept a good position, though,
one that blocked me from getting a clear shot on his heart. I could do some
damage if I cut him elsewhere with the stake, but he would likely get a hit in
on me that would be packed with power in this proximity. So I tried to wait
him out as well.
"All this death is because of you, you know," he said. "If you'd let me
awaken you . . . let us be together . . . well, none of this would have
happened. We'd still be in Russia, in each other's arms, and all of your
friends here would be safe. None of them would have died. It's your fault."
"And what about the people I'd have to kill in Russia?" I demanded.
He'd shifted his weight a little. Was that an opening? "They wouldn't be safe
if I--"
A crashing sound off to my left startled me. Christian, now freed, had
just slammed his chair into a Strigoi engaged with a guardian. The Strigoi
shrugged Christian off like a fly. Christian flew backward, slamming into a
wall and landing on the floor with a slightly stunned look. In spite of myself,
I spared him a glance and saw Lissa running to his side. And so help me, she
had a stake in her hand. How she'd managed that, I had no idea. Maybe she'd
picked it up from a fallen guardian. Maybe none of the Strigoi had thought
to search her when she came in. After all, why on earth would a Moroi be
carrying a stake?
"Stop it! Stay out of the way!" I yelled at them, turning back to
Dimitri. Letting those two distract me had cost me. Realizing Dimitri was
about to attack, I managed to dodge without even seeing what he was doing.
It turned out he'd been reaching for my neck, and my imprecise evasion had
spared me the full damage. Still, his hand caught me on the shoulder,
knocking me back almost as far as Christian had gone. Unlike my friend,
though, I had years of training that had taught me to recover from something
like that. I'd honed a lot of balance and recovery skills. I staggered only a
little, then quickly regained my footing.
I could only pray Christian and Lissa would listen to me and not do
anything stupid. My attention had to stay on Dimitri, or I'd get myself killed.
And if I died, Lissa and Christian died for sure. My impression while
fighting our way inside had been that the guardians outnumbered the Strigoi,
though that meant little sometimes. Still, I had to hope my colleagues would
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finish our foes off, leaving me to do what I had to do.
Dimitri laughed at my dodge. "I'd be impressed if that wasn't
something a ten-year-old could do. Now your friends . . . well, they're also
fighting at a ten-year-old level. And for Moroi? That's actually pretty good."
"Yeah, well, we'll see what your assessment is when I kill you," I told
him. I made a small feint to test how much he was paying attention. He
sidestepped with hardly any notice at all, as graceful as a dancer.
"You can't, Rose. Haven't you figured that out by now? Haven't you
seen it? You can't defeat me. You can't kill me. Even if you could, you can't
bring yourself to do it. You'll hesitate. Again."
No, I wouldn't. That's what he didn't realize. He'd made a mistake
bringing Lissa here. She increased the stakes--no pun intended--on
everything. She was here. She was real. Her life was on the line, and for
that . . . for that, I wouldn't hesitate.
Dimitri must have grown tired of waiting for me. He leapt out, hand
again going for my neck. And again I evaded, letting my shoulder take the
brunt of the hit. This time he held on to my shoulder. He jerked me toward
him, triumph flaring in those red eyes. In the sort of space we were in, this
was probably all he needed to kill me. He had what he wanted.
Apparently, though, he wasn't the only one who wanted me. Another
Strigoi, maybe thinking he'd help Dimitri, pushed toward us and reached for
me. Dimitri bared his fangs, giving the other Strigoi a look of pure hatred
and fury.
"Mine!" Dimitri hissed, hitting the other Strigoi in a way that he had
clearly not expected.
And that was my opening. Dimitri's brief distraction had caused him
to loosen his grip on me. That same close proximity which made him so
lethal to me now made me just as dangerous. I was by his chest, by his heart,
and I had my stake in hand.
I'll never be able to say for sure just how long the next series of events
took. In some ways, it felt like only one heartbeat passed. At the same
moment, it was as though we were frozen in time. Like the entire world had
stopped.
My stake was moving toward him, and as Dimitri's eyes fell on me
once more, I think he finally believed I would kill him. I was not hesitating.
This was happening. My stake was there--
And then it wasn't.
Something hit me hard on my right side, pushing me away from
Dimitri and ruining my shot. I stumbled, barely avoiding hitting anyone.
While I always tried to be vigilant regarding all things around me in a fight,
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I'd let my guard down in that direction. The Strigoi and guardians were on
my left. The wall--and Lissa and Christian--were on my right.
And it was Lissa and Christian who had shoved me out of the way.
I think Dimitri was as astonished as I was. He was also equally
astonished when Lissa came toward him with that stake in her hand. And
like lightning through the bond, I read what she had very, very carefully kept
from me the last day: She had managed to charm the stake with spirit. It was
the reason she'd been so keyed up during her last stake-practice session with
Grant and Serena. Knowing she had the tool she needed had fueled her
desire to use it. Her hiding all of that information from me was a feat on par
with charming the stake.
Not that it mattered right now. Charmed stake or no, she couldn't get
near Dimitri. He knew it too, and his surprise immediately changed to
delighted amusement--almost indulgent, like the way one watches a child do
something adorable. Lissa's attack was awkward. She wasn't fast enough.
She wasn't strong enough.
"No!" I screamed, leaping toward them, though pretty certain I wasn't
going to be fast enough either.
Suddenly, a blazing wall of heat and flame appeared before me, and I
barely had the presence of mind to back up. That fire had shot up from the
floor, forming a ring around Dimitri that kept me from him. It was
disorienting, but only for a moment. I knew Christian's handiwork.
"Stop it!" I didn't know what to do, if I should attack Christian or leap
into the fire. "You'll burn us all alive!" The fire was fairly controlled--
Christian had that much skill--but in a room this size, even a controlled fire
was deadly. Even the other Strigoi backed away.
The flames were closing in on Dimitri, growing tighter and tighter. I
heard him scream, could see the look of agony, even through the fire. It
began to consume his coat, and smoke poured out from the blaze. Some
instinct told me I needed to stop this . . . and yet, what did it matter? I'd
come to kill him. Did it matter if someone else did it for me?
And that's when I noticed Lissa was still on the offensive. Dimitri was
distracted, screaming as the flames wrapped around him. I was screaming
too . . . for him, for her . . . it's hard to say. Lissa's arm shot through the
flames, and again, pain surged through the bond--pain that dwarfed the
earlier singe from Christian burning her ropes. Yet she kept going, ignoring
the fiery agony. Her alignment was right. She had the stake aimed at the
heart.
The stake went in, piercing him.
Well, kind of.
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Just like when she'd practiced with the pillow, she didn't quite have
the strength to get the stake where it needed to go. I felt her steel herself, felt
her summon up every ounce of strength she had. Throwing her full weight
into it, she shoved again, using both hands. The stake went in further. Still
not enough. This delay would have cost her her life in a normal situation.
This was not a normal situation. Dimitri had no means to block her, not with
the fire slowly eating him. He did manage a small struggle that loosened the
stake, undoing what little progress she'd made. Grimacing, she tried again,
pushing the stake back to its former position.
Still, it wasn't enough.
I came to my senses then, knowing I needed to stop this. Lissa was
going to burn herself up if she kept trying to stake him. She lacked the skill.
Either I needed to stake him or we just needed to let the fire finish him off. I
moved forward. Lissa caught sight of me in her periphery and sent out a
blast of compulsion at me.
No! Let me do this!
The command hit me hard, an invisible wall that made me come to a
halt. I stood there dazed, both from the compulsion itself and the realization
that she'd used it on me. It only took a moment for me to shake it off. She
was too distracted to put her full power into the order, and I was pretty
compulsion-resistant anyway.
Yet, that slight delay had stopped me from reaching her. Lissa seized
her last chance, knowing she'd get no other.
One more time, fighting through the fire's searing pain, she threw
everything she had into shoving the stake all the way into Dimitri's heart.
Her strike was still awkward, still requiring a little more wiggling and
pushing than the clean hit a trained guardian would make. Clumsy or not,
the stake finally made it. It pierced his heart. And as it did, I felt magic flood
our bond, the familiar magic I'd felt so many times when she performed a
healing.
Except . . . this was a hundred times more powerful than anything I'd
ever felt before. It froze me up as neatly as her compulsion had. I felt as
though all of my nerves were exploding, like I'd just been struck by
lightning.
White light suddenly burst out around her, a light that dwarfed the
fire's brightness. It was like someone had dropped the sun into the middle of
that room. I cried out, my hand rising instinctively to shield my eyes as I
stepped backward. From the sounds in the room, everyone else was having a
similar reaction.
For a moment, it was as if there was no bond anymore. I felt nothing
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from Lissa--no pain, no magic. The bond was as colorless and empty as the
white light filling the room. The power she'd used had over-flooded and
overwhelmed our bond, numbing it.
Then the light simply disappeared. No fade-out. Just . . . gone in an
eye blink. Like a switch had been flipped. There was silence in the room,
save for a few murmurings of discomfort and confusion. That light must
have been toxic to sensitive Strigoi eyes. It was hard enough for me.
Starbursts danced in my sight. I couldn't focus on anything as the afterimage
of that brilliance burned across my vision.
At last--with a little squinting--I could vaguely see again. The fire was
gone, though black smudges on the wall and ceiling marked its presence, as
did some lingering smoke. By my estimation, there should have been a lot
more damage. I could spare no time for that miracle, though, because there
was another one taking place in front of me.
Not just a miracle. A fairy tale.
Lissa and Dimitri were both on the floor. Their clothes were burned
and singed. Angry red and pink patches marked her beautiful skin from
where the fire had hit hardest. Her hands and wrists were particularly bad. I
could see spots of blood where the flames had actually burned some of her
skin away. Third-degree burns, if I was recalling my physiology classes
correctly. Yet she seemed to feel no pain, nor did the burns affect her hands'
movement.
She was stroking Dimitri's hair.
While she sat in some semblance of an upright position, he was in an
ungainly sprawl. His head rested in her lap, and she was running her fingers
through his hair in a gentle, repetitive motion--like one does to comfort a
child or even an animal. Her face, even marred with the fire's terrible
damage, was radiant and filled with compassion. Dimitri had called me an
avenging angel, but she was an angel of mercy as she gazed down at him
and crooned soothing, nonsense words.
With the state of his clothes and what I'd seen in the fire, I'd expected
him to be burned to a crisp--some sort of blackened, skeletal nightmare. Yet
when he shifted his head, giving me my first full view of his face, I saw that
he was completely unharmed. No burns marked his skin--skin that was as
warm and tanned as it had been the first day I'd met him. I caught only a
glimpse of his eyes before he buried his face against Lissa's knee. I saw
endless depths of brown, the depths I'd fallen into so many times. No red
rings.
Dimitri . . . was not a Strigoi.
And he was weeping.
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SEVENTEEN
THE ENTIRE ROOM SEEMED to hold its breath.
Yet even in the face of miracles, guardians--or Strigoi, for that
matter--were hard to distract. Fights that had paused now resumed with just
as much fury. The guardians had the upper hand, and those of them who
weren't engaged with the last surviving Strigoi suddenly leapt toward Lissa,
trying to pull her away from Dimitri. To everyone's surprise, she held on to
him tightly and made a few feeble attempts to fight off those crowding
around her. She was fierce and protective, again putting me in mind of a
mother defending her child.
Dimitri was holding on to her just as intently, but both he and Lissa
were outmatched. The guardians finally pried them apart. There were
confused shouts as guardians tried to determine whether they should kill
Dimitri. It wouldn't have been hard. He was helpless now. He could barely
stand when they jerked him to his feet.
That woke me up. I'd simply been staring, frozen and dumbstruck.
Shaking off my daze, I sprang forward, though I wasn't sure who I was
going for: Lissa or Dimitri.
"No! Don't!" I yelled, seeing some of the guardians move in with
stakes. "He's not what you think! He's not Strigoi! Look at him!"
Lissa and Christian were shouting similar things. Someone grabbed
me and pulled me back, telling me to let the others handle this. Without even
thinking, I turned and punched my captor in the face, discovering too late it
was Hans. He fell back a little, seeming more surprised than offended.
Attacking him was enough to attract the attention of others, however, and
soon I had my own group of guardians to fight off. My efforts didn't do any
good, partially because I was outnumbered and partially because I couldn't
take them on the same way I'd attacked Strigoi.
As the guardians hauled me out, I noticed then that Lissa and Dimitri
had already been removed from the room. I demanded to know where they
were, yelling that I had to see them. No one listened to me. They dragged me
away, out of the warehouse, passing a disturbing amount of bodies. Most
were Strigoi, but I recognized a few faces from the guardian regiment at the
Court. I grimaced, even though I hadn't known them well. The battle was
over, and our side had won--but at a great cost. The surviving guardians
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would be doing cleanup now. I wouldn't have been surprised if Alchemists
showed up, but at the moment, none of that was my concern.
"Where's Lissa?" I kept demanding as I was shoved inside one of the
SUVs. Two guardians slid in with me, one sitting on each side. I didn't know
either of them. "Where's Dimitri?"
"The princess has been taken to safety," one of the guardians said
crisply. He and the other guy stared straight ahead, and I realized neither was
going to acknowledge the question about Dimitri. He might as well not exist
for any of them.
"Where's Dimitri?" I repeated, speaking more loudly in the hopes that
might get an answer. "Is he with Lissa?"
That got a reaction. "Of course not," said the guardian who'd spoken
before.
"Is he . . . is he alive?" It was one of the hardest questions I'd ever
asked, but I had to know. I hated to admit it, but if I were in Hans's place, I
wouldn't have been looking for miracles. I would have been exterminating
anything I perceived as a threat.
"Yes," said the driver at last. "He . . . it . . . is alive."
And that was all I could get out of them, no matter how much I argued
and demanded to be released from the car--and believe me, I did a lot of that.
Their ability to ignore me was pretty impressive, really. To be fair, I'm not
even sure that they knew what had happened. Everything had occurred so
fast. The only thing these two knew was that they'd been ordered to escort
me out of the building.
I kept hoping someone I knew might join us in our SUV. Nope. Only
more unknown guardians. No Christian or Tasha. Not even Hans--of course,
that was understandable. He was probably afraid I'd accidentally punch him
again.
When we were loaded up and on the road, I finally gave up my
badgering and sank back into the seat. Other SUVs had left with ours, but I
had no clue whether my friends were in them.
The bond between Lissa and me was still numb. After that initial
shock where I'd felt nothing, I'd slowly regained a slight sense of her, telling
me we were still connected and that she was alive. That was about it. With
all that power that had blasted through her, it was almost like the bond had
been temporarily fried. The magic between us was fragile. Each time I tried
to use the bond to check on her, it was as though I'd stared too brightly at
something and was still blinded. I just had to assume it would reestablish
itself soon because I needed her insight on what had happened.
No, scratch insight. I needed to know what had happened, period. I
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was still in a bit of shock, and the long ride back to Court allowed me time
to process what few facts I had access to. I immediately wanted to jump to
Dimitri but needed to start at the beginning if I really wanted to analyze all
that had occurred.
First: Lissa had charmed a stake and withheld the info from me.
When? Before her college trip? At Lehigh? While captive? It didn't matter.
Second, in spite of her failed pillow attempts, she had gotten the stake
into Dimitri's heart. It had been a struggle, but Christian's fire had made it
possible. I winced, recalling the burns Lissa had suffered during that ordeal.
I'd felt the pain of those before the bond blanked out, and I'd also seen the
marks on her. Adrian wasn't the world's best healer, but hopefully his magic
would be enough to take care of her injuries.
The third and final fact here . . . well . . . was it a fact? Lissa had
stabbed Dimitri and used the same magic she would for a healing . . . and
then? That was the big question. What had happened, aside from what felt
like a nuclear explosion of magic through our bond? Had I really seen what I
thought I'd seen?
Dimitri had . . . changed.
He was no longer a Strigoi. I felt it in my heart, even though I'd only
had that brief glimpse of him. It had been enough to allow me to see the
truth. The Strigoi features were gone. Lissa had done everything Robert had
sworn she needed to do to restore a Strigoi, and certainly after all that
magic . . . well, it was easy to believe anything was possible. That image of
Dimitri came back to me, clinging to Lissa with tears running down his face.
I'd never seen him so vulnerable. Somehow, I didn't believe Strigoi cried.
Something in my heart twisted painfully, and I blinked rapidly to stop
from crying too. Glancing around, I tuned back into my surroundings.
Outside the car, the sky was lightening. It was nearly sunrise. The guardians
with me had signs of weariness on their faces, yet the alert expressions in
their eyes never faltered. I'd lost track of the time, but my internal clock told
me we'd been on the road for a while. We had to almost be back at Court.
Tentatively, I touched the bond and found it was back but still fragile.
It was like it flickered in and out, still reestablishing itself. That was enough
to put me at ease, and I breathed a sigh of relief. When the bond had first
come about years ago, it had been so strange . . . surreal. Now I'd accepted it
as part of my life. Its absence today had felt unnatural.
Looking through Lissa's eyes, at the SUV she rode in, I immediately
hoped I'd see Dimitri with her. That one glimpse at the warehouse hadn't
been enough. I needed to see him again, needed to see if this miracle had
truly happened. I wanted to drink in those features, to gaze at the Dimitri
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from so long ago. The Dimitri I loved.
But he wasn't with Lissa. Christian was there, however, and he
glanced over at her as she stirred. She'd been asleep and still felt groggy.
That, combined with the aftereffect of that searing power earlier, kept our
connection a little hazy. Things shifted out of focus for me off and on, but
overall, I could follow what was happening.
"How do you feel?" asked Christian. His voice and his eyes as he
peered at her were filled with so much affection that it seemed impossible
she didn't notice. But then, she was a little preoccupied right now.
"Tired. Worn out. Like . . . I don't know. Like I've been thrown around
in a hurricane. Or run over by a car. Pick something horrible, and that's what
I feel like."
He gave her a small smile and gently touched her cheek. Opening
myself to her senses more, I felt the pain of her burns and that he was tracing
the skin near one, though being careful to keep away from it.
"Is it awful?" she asked him. "Is all my skin melted off? Do I look like
some alien?"
"No," he said, with a small laugh. "There's not that much. You're
beautiful, like always. It would take a lot for that to change."
The throbbing pain she felt made her think that there was more
damage than he was admitting to, but the compliment and the way he'd said
it went a long way to soothe her. For a moment, her whole existence focused
on his face and the way the rising sun was starting to light it up.
Then the rest of her world came crashing down on her.
"Dimitri! I need to see Dimitri!"
There were guardians in the car, and she glanced around at them as
she spoke. As with me, no one seemed willing to acknowledge him or what
had happened.
"Why can't I see him? Why'd you take him away?" This was directed
to anyone who would answer, and at last, Christian did.
"Because they think he's dangerous."
"He's not. He's just . . . He needs me. He's hurting inside."
Christian's eyes suddenly went wide, his face filling with panic. "He's
not . . . You aren't bonded to him, are you?"
I guessed by the look on his face that Christian was recalling Avery
and how bonding with multiple people had pushed her over the edge.
Christian hadn't been there for Robert's explanation of the soul going to the
world of the dead and how restored Strigoi didn't get bonded.
Lissa shook her head slowly. "No . . . I just know. When I . . . when I
healed him, we had this connection, and I felt it. What I had to do . . . I can't
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explain it." She ran a hand through her hair, frustrated that she couldn't put
her magic into words. Weariness was starting to overtake her. "It was like I
had to do surgery on his soul," she said at last.
"They think he's dangerous," repeated Christian gently.
"He's not!" Lissa glared around at the rest of the car's occupants, all of
whom were looking somewhere else. "He's not Strigoi anymore."
"Princess," began one of the guardians uneasily, "no one really knows
what happened. You can't be sure that--"
"I am sure!" she said, voice too loud for the small space. There was a
regal, commanding air to it. "I know. I saved him. I brought him back. I
know with every single part of me that he's no longer Strigoi!"
The guardians looked uncomfortable, again not speaking. I think they
were just confused, and really, how could they not be? There was no
precedent for this.
"Shh," said Christian, putting his hand on hers. "There's nothing you
can do until we're back at Court. You're still hurt and exhausted--it's written
all over you."
Lissa knew he was right. She was hurt, and she was exhausted. That
magic had ripped her apart. At the same time, what she had done for Dimitri
had created a bond to him--not a magical one, but a psychological one. She
really was like a mother. She felt desperately protective and concerned.
"I need to see him," she said.
She did? What about me?
"You will," said Christian, sounding more certain than I suspected he
was. "But just try to rest now."
"I can't," she said, even while stifling a yawn.
That smile flickered back across his lips, and he slipped his arm
around her, pulling her as close as the seat belts would allow. "Try," he told
her.
She rested her head against his chest, and his closeness was a type of
healing in and of itself. Worry and concern for Dimitri still coursed through
her, but her body's needs were stronger for the moment. At last, she drifted
into sleep in Christian's embrace, just barely hearing him murmur, "Happy
birthday."
Twenty minutes later, our convoy arrived back at Court. I thought this
meant instant freedom, but my guardians took their time in getting out,
waiting for some signal or directions that no one had bothered to tell me
about. It turned out they were waiting for Hans.
"No," he said, firmly putting a hand on my shoulder as I shot out of
the car and tried to race away to . . . well, I wasn't sure where. Wherever
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Dimitri was. "Hold on."
"I have to see him!" I exclaimed, trying to push past. Hans was like a
brick wall. Considering he'd actually fought a lot more Strigoi than me
tonight, you'd have thought he'd be tired. "You have to tell me where he is."
To my surprise, Hans did. "Locked away. Far, far out of your reach.
Or anyone else's. I know he used to be your teacher, but it's better if he's
kept away for now."
My brain, weary from the night's activities and overwrought with
emotion, took a moment to process this. Christian's words came back to me.
"He's not dangerous," I said. "He's not a Strigoi anymore."
"How can you be so certain?"
The same question Lissa had been asked. How could we really answer
that? We knew because we'd gone to incredible pains to find out how to
transform a Strigoi, and when we'd completed those steps, there'd been an
atom bomb of magic. Wasn't that enough proof for anyone? Hadn't Dimitri's
appearance been enough?
Instead, my answer was like Lissa's. "I just know."
Hans shook his head, and now I could see he actually was exhausted.
"No one knows what's going on with Belikov. Those of us that were
there . . . well, I'm not sure what I saw. All I do know is that he was leading
Strigoi a little while ago, and now he's out in the sun. It doesn't make any
sense. No one knows what he is."
"He's a dhampir."
"And until we do," he continued, ignoring my comment, "Belikov has
to stay locked up while we examine him." Examine? I didn't like the sound
of that. It made Dimitri seem like a lab animal. It made my temper flare, and
I nearly started yelling at Hans. A moment later, I got myself under control.
"Then I need to see Lissa."
"She's been taken to the medical center for treatment--which she
needs very badly. You can't go there," he added, anticipating my next
response. "Half the guardians are there. It's chaos, and you'd be in the way."
"Then what the hell am I supposed to do?"
"Go get some sleep." He gave me a wry look. "I still think you've got
a bad attitude, but after what I saw back there . . . well, I'll say this. You
know how to fight. We need you--probably for more than paperwork. Now
go take care of yourself."
And that was that. The dismissal in his voice was clear, and as the
guardians hurried around, it was like I didn't exist. Whatever trouble I'd been
in before seemed long forgotten. No more filing in the wake of this. But
what was I supposed to do? Was Hans crazy? How could I sleep? I had to do
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something. I had to see Dimitri--but I didn't know where they'd taken him.
Probably the same jail Victor had been kept in, which was inaccessible to
me. I also needed to see Lissa--but she was deep in the medical center. I had
no power here. I needed to appeal to someone with influence.
Adrian!
If I went to Adrian, maybe he could pull some strings. He had his
royal connections. Hell, the queen loved him, in spite of his slacker ways.
As much as it killed me to accept, I was realizing that getting in to see
Dimitri right away was going to be nearly impossible. But the medical
center? Adrian might be able to get me in to see Lissa, even if it was
crowded and chaotic. The bond was still blurry, and talking to her directly
would allow me to score faster answers about Dimitri. Plus, I wanted to see
for myself that she was all right.
Yet when I reached the housing Adrian stayed in at Court, I was
informed by the doorman that Adrian had already left a little while ago to--
ironically enough--go to the medical center. I groaned. Of course he'd
already be there. With his healing abilities, they would have summoned him
out of bed. Weak or not, he could definitely help.
"Were you there?" the doorman asked me as I started to turn away.
"What?" For a minute I thought he was talking about the medical
center.
"The battle with the Strigoi! The rescue. We've been hearing all sorts
of things."
"Already? What did you hear?"
The guy's eyes were wide and excited. "They say almost every
guardian died. But that you captured a Strigoi and brought him back."
"No, no . . . there were more injuries than deaths. And the other . . ."
For a moment, I couldn't breathe. What had happened? What had really
happened with Dimitri? "A Strigoi was changed back to a dhampir."
The doorman stared. "Were you hit on the head?"
"I'm telling the truth! Vasilisa Dragomir did it. With her spirit power.
Spread that around."
I left him with his mouth hanging open. And like that, I had no more
options, no one else to get information from. I went back to my room feeling
defeated but far too keyed up to sleep. At least, that's what I initially
thought. After some pacing, I sat on the bed to try to come up with a plan.
Yet before long, I felt myself falling into a heavy sleep.
I awoke with a start, confused and aching in parts of my body that I
hadn't realized had taken hits in the fight. I peered at the clock, astonished at
how long I'd slept. In vampire time, it was late morning. Within five
182
minutes, I had showered and put on non-torn, non-bloody clothes. Just like
that, I was out the door.
People were out and about their daily business, yet every couple or
group I passed seemed to be talking about the battle at the warehouse--and
about Dimitri.
"You know she can heal," I heard one Moroi guy say to his wife.
"Why not Strigoi? Why not the dead?"
"It's insane," the woman countered. "I've never believed in this spirit
thing anyway. It's a lie to cover up the fact that the Dragomir girl never
specialized."
I didn't hear the rest of their conversation, but others I passed had
similar themes. People were either convinced the whole thing was a scam or
were regarding Lissa as a saint already. Every so often, I'd heard something
weird, like that the guardians had captured a bunch of Strigoi to experiment
on. In all the speculation, though, I never heard Dimitri's name come up or
knew what was really happening to him.
I followed the only plan I had: Go to the guardian building that held
the Court's jail, though I was unsure what I'd actually do when I got there. I
wasn't even entirely sure that was where Dimitri still was, but it seemed the
most likely place. When I passed a guardian along the way, it took me
several seconds to realize I knew him. I came to a halt and turned.
"Mikhail!" He glanced back and, seeing me, walked over. "What's
going on?" I asked, relieved to see a friendly face. "Have they let Dimitri
out?"
He shook his head. "No, they're still trying to figure out what
happened. Everyone's confused, even though the princess still swore up and
down after she saw him that he's not Strigoi anymore."
There was a wonder in Mikhail's voice--and wistfulness too. He was
hoping that it was true, that there might be a chance for his beloved to be
saved. My heart ached for him. I hoped he and Sonya could have a happy
ending just like--
"Wait. What did you say?" His words drew my romantic musings to a
halt. "Did you say Lissa saw him? You mean after the fight?" I immediately
reached for the bond. It was gradually growing clearer--but Lissa was asleep,
so I learned nothing.
"He asked for her," Mikhail explained. "So they let her in--guarded, of
course."
I stared, my jaw nearly dropping to the ground. Dimitri was seeing
visitors. They were actually letting him see visitors. The knowledge lit up
the dark mood that had been building in me. I turned away. "Thanks,
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Mikhail."
"Wait, Rose--"
But I didn't stop. I ran to the guardians' holding building at a full-out
sprint, oblivious to the looks I got. I was too excited, too invigorated with
this new info. I could see Dimitri. I could finally be with him, back the way
he was supposed to be.
"You can't see him."
I literally came to a halt when the guardian on duty in the front
reception area stopped me.
"Wh-what? I need to see Dimitri."
"No visitors."
"But Lissa--er, Vasilisa Dragomir got to see him."
"He asked for her."
I stared incredulously. "He must have asked for me too."
The guardian shrugged. "If he did, no one's told me."
The anger I'd kept back last night finally awoke. "Then go find
someone who knows! Dimitri wants to see me. You have to let me in. Who's
your boss?"
The guardian scowled at me. "I'm not going anywhere until my shift is
over. If you've got clearance, someone will let you know. Until then, no one
without special permission is allowed to go down there."
After taking out a fair portion of Tarasov's security, I felt pretty
confident I could easily dispatch this guy. However, I felt equally confident
that once I got to the depths of the jail cells, I'd run into a lot more
guardians. For a second, taking them out seemed very reasonable. It was
Dimitri. I would do anything for him. A slight stirring in the bond made me
see reason. Lissa had just woken up.
"Fine," I said. I lifted my chin and gave him a haughty look. "Thanks
for the 'help.'" I didn't need this loser. I'd go to Lissa.
She was staying at almost the opposite end of the Court's grounds
from the holding area, and I covered the distance at a light jog. When I
finally reached her and she opened the door to her room, I saw that she'd
gotten ready almost as quickly as I had. In fact, I could feel that she'd been
pretty close to leaving. Studying her face and hands, I was relieved to see
that almost all of the burns were gone. A few red spots lingered on her
fingers, but that was it. Adrian's handiwork. No doctor could have made that
happen. In a pale blue tank top, with her blond hair pulled back, she didn't
look at all like anyone who'd been through such a major ordeal less than
twenty-four hours ago.
"Are you okay?" she asked. In spite of everything else that had
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happened, she'd never stopped worrying about me.
"Yeah, fine." Physically, at least. "You?"
She nodded. "Fine."
"You look good," I said. "Last night . . . I mean, I was pretty scared.
With the fire . . ." I couldn't quite finish.
"Yeah," she said, looking away from me. She seemed nervous and
uncomfortable. "Adrian's been pretty great healing people."
"Is that where you're going?" There was agitation and restlessness in
the bond. It would make sense if she wanted to hurry over to the medical
center and help out too. Except . . . further probing gave me the startling
truth. "You're going to see Dimitri!"
"Rose--"
"No," I said eagerly. "It's perfect. I'll go with you. I was just over
there, and they wouldn't let me in."
"Rose--" Lissa looked very uncomfortable now.
"They gave me some bullshit about how he'd asked for you and not
me and that that's why they couldn't let me in. But if you're going, they'll
have to let me."
"Rose," she said firmly, finally breaking through my chatter. "You
can't go."
"I--what?" I replayed her words, just in case I'd misheard them. "Of
course I can. I need to see him. You know I do. And he needs to see me."
She slowly shook her head, still looking nervous--but also
sympathetic. "That guardian was right," she said. "Dimitri hasn't been asking
for you. Only me."
All my eagerness, all that fire, froze up. I was dumbstruck, confused
more than anything. "Well . . ." I recalled how he'd clung to her last night,
that desperate look on his face. I hated to admit it, but it kind of made sense
why he would have asked for her first. "Of course he'd want to see you.
Everything's so new and strange, and you're the one who saved him. Once he
comes around more, he'll want to see me too."
"Rose, you can't go." This time the sadness in Lissa's voice was
mirrored through the bond, flooding into me. "It's not just that Dimitri didn't
ask to see you. He asked specifically not to see you."
185
EIGHTEEN
THE THING THAT REALLY SUCKS about being psychically
linked to someone is that you have a pretty good idea when they're lying--or,
in this case, not lying. Still, my response was immediate and instinctive.
"That's not true."
"Isn't it?" She gave me a pointed look. She too knew that I could feel
the truth in her words.
"But that . . . it can't . . . " I wasn't at a loss for words very often--and
certainly not with Lissa. So frequently in our relationship, I'd been the one
being assertive and explaining to her why things had to be the way they
were. Somewhere along the way, with me not realizing it, Lissa had lost that
fragility.
"I'm sorry," she said, voice still kind but also firm. The bond betrayed
how much she hated telling me unpleasant things. "He asked me . . . told me
specifically not to let you come. That he doesn't want to see you."
I stared at her pleadingly, my voice almost childlike. "But why? Why
would he say that? Of course he wants to see me. He must be confused. . . ."
"I don't know, Rose. All I know is what he told me. I'm so sorry." She
reached for me like she might hug me, but I stepped away. My head was still
reeling.
"I'll go with you anyway. I'll wait upstairs with the other guardians.
Then, when you tell Dimitri I'm there, he'll change his mind."
"I don't think you should," she said. "He seemed really serious about
you not coming--almost frantic. I think knowing you're there would upset
him."
"Upset him? Upset him? Liss, it's me! He loves me. He needs me."
She winced, and I realized I'd been shouting at her. "I'm just going on
what he said. It's all so confusing . . . please. Don't put me in this position.
Just . . . wait and see what happens. And if you want to know what's going
on, you can always . . ."
Lissa didn't finish, but I knew what she was suggesting. She was
offering to let me see her meeting with Dimitri through the bond. It was a
big gesture on her part--not that she could have stopped me if I wanted to do
it. Still, she didn't usually like the idea of being "spied" on. This was the best
thing she could think of to make me feel better.
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Not that it really did. All of this was still crazy. Me being denied
access to Dimitri. Dimitri allegedly not wanting to see me! What the hell?
My gut reaction was to ignore everything she'd just said and go along with
her, demanding access when she arrived. The feelings in the bond were
begging me not to, though. She didn't want to create trouble. She might not
understand Dimitri's wishes either, but she felt they should be honored until
the situation could be better assessed.
"Please," she said. The plaintive word finally cracked me.
"Okay." It killed me to say it. It was like admitting defeat. Think of it
as a tactical retreat.
"Thank you." This time she did hug me. "I swear I'll get more
information and figure out what's going on, okay?"
I nodded, still dejected, and we walked out of the building together.
With grim reluctance, I parted with her when the time came, letting her go
off to the guardians' building while I headed toward my room. As soon as
she was out of my sight, I immediately slipped into her head, watching
through her eyes as she walked through the perfectly manicured grass. The
bond was still a little hazy but growing clearer by the minute.
Her feelings were a jumble. She felt bad for me, guilty that she'd had
to refuse me. At the same time, she was anxious to visit Dimitri. She needed
to see him too--but not in the same way I did. She still had that feeling of
responsibility for him, that burning urge to protect him.
When she arrived at the building's main office, the guardian who'd
stopped me gave her a nod of greeting and then made a quick phone call. A
few moments later, three guardians entered and gestured for Lissa to follow
them into the depths of the building. They all looked unusually grim, even
for guardians.
"You don't have to do this," one of them told her. "Just because he
keeps asking . . ."
"It's fine," she said with the cool, dignified air of any royal. "I don't
mind."
"There'll be plenty of guards around just like last time. You don't need
to worry about your safety."
She gave all of them a sharp look. "I was never worried about it to
begin with."
Their descent into the building's lower levels brought back painful
memories of when Dimitri and I had visited Victor. That had been the
Dimitri I'd had a perfect union with, the Dimitri who understood me entirely.
And after the visit, he'd been enraged at Victor's threats against me. Dimitri
had loved me so much that he'd been willing to do anything to protect me.
187
A key card-protected door finally allowed access to the holding level,
which consisted mostly of a long hallway lined with cells. It didn't have the
depressing feel that Tarasov had had, but this place's stark and steel-lined
industrial air didn't exactly inspire warm and fuzzy feelings.
Lissa could hardly walk down the hall because it was so crowded with
guardians. All that security for one person. It wasn't impossible for a Strigoi
to break through a cell's steel bars, but Dimitri was no Strigoi. Why couldn't
they see that? Were they blind?
Lissa and her escort made their way through the crowd and came to a
stop in front of his cell. It was as cold looking as everything else in this
prison area, with no more furnishings than were absolutely required. Dimitri
sat on the narrow bed, his legs drawn up to him as he leaned into a corner of
the wall and kept his back to the cell's entrance. It wasn't what I had
expected. Why wasn't he beating at the bars? Why wasn't he demanding to
be released and telling them he wasn't a Strigoi? Why was he taking this so
quietly?
"Dimitri."
Lissa's voice was soft and gentle, filled with a warmth that stood out
against the harshness of the cell. It was the voice of an angel.
And as Dimitri slowly turned around, it was obvious he thought so
too. His expression transformed before our eyes, going from bleakness to
wonder. He wasn't the only one filled with wonder. My mind might have been
tied to Lissa's, but back across Court, my own body nearly stopped
breathing. The glimpse I'd gotten of him last night had been amazing. But
this . . . this full-on view of him looking at Lissa--at me--was awe-inspiring.
It was a wonder. A gift. A miracle.
Seriously. How could anyone think he was a Strigoi? And how could I
have possibly let myself believe the Dimitri I'd been with in Siberia was this
one? He'd cleaned up from the battle and wore jeans and a simple black Tshirt.
His brown hair was tied back into a short ponytail, and a faint shadow
across his lower face showed that he needed to shave. Probably no one
would let him get near a razor. Regardless, it almost made him look sexier--
more real, more dhampir. More alive. His eyes were what really pulled it all
together. His death white skin--now gone--had always been startling, but
those red eyes had been the worst. Now they were perfect. Exactly as they
used to be. Warm and brown and long-lashed. I could have gazed at them
forever.
"Vasilisa," he breathed. The sound of his voice made my chest
tighten. God, I'd missed hearing him speak. "You came back."
188
As soon as he began approaching the bars, the guardians around Lissa
started closing rank, ready to stop him should he indeed bust through. "Back
off!" she snapped in a queenly tone, glaring at everyone around her. "Give
us some space." No one reacted right away, and she put more power into her
voice. "I mean it! Step back!"
I felt the slightest trickle of magic through our link. It wasn't a huge
amount, but she was backing her words with a little spirit-induced
compulsion. She could hardly control such a large group, but the command
had enough force to make them clear out a little and create space between
her and Dimitri. She turned her attention back to him, demeanor instantly
changing from fierce to kind.
"Of course I came back. How are you? Are they . . ." She cast a
dangerous look at the guardians in the hall. "Are they treating you okay?"
He shrugged. "Fine. Nobody's hurting me." If he was anything like his
old self, he would have never admitted if anyone was hurting him. "Just a lot
of questions. So many questions." He sounded weary, again . . . very unlike
a Strigoi who never needed rest. "And my eyes. They keep wanting to
examine my eyes."
"But how do you feel?" she asked. "In your mind? In your heart?" If
the whole situation hadn't been so sobering, I would have been amused. It
was very much a therapist's line of questioning--something both Lissa and I
had experienced a lot of. I'd hated being asked those questions, but now I
truly wanted to know how Dimitri felt.
His gaze, which had so intently focused on her, now drifted away and
grew unfocused. "It's . . . it's hard to describe. It's like I've woken up from a
dream. A nightmare. Like I've been watching someone else act through my
body--like I was at a movie or a play. But it wasn't someone else. It was me.
All of it was me, and now here I am, and the whole world has shifted. I feel
like I'm relearning everything."
"It'll pass. You'll get more used to it, once you settle back into your
old self." That was a guess on her part, but one she felt confident of.
He inclined his head toward the gathered guardians. "They don't think
so."
"They will," she said adamantly. "We just need more time." A small
silence fell, and Lissa hesitated before speaking her next words. "Rose . . .
wants to see you."
Dimitri's dreamy, morose attitude snapped in a heartbeat. His eyes
focused back on Lissa, and I got my first glimpse of true, intense emotion
from him. "No. Anyone but her. I can't see her. Don't let her come here.
Please."
189
Lissa swallowed, unsure how to respond. The fact that she had an
audience made it harder. The best she could do was lower her voice so the
others wouldn't hear. "But . . . she loves you. She's worried about you. What
happened . . . with us being able to save you? Well, a lot of it was because of
her."
"You saved me."
"I only did the final piece. The rest . . . well, Rose did, um, a lot." Say,
like, organizing a prison break and releasing fugitives.
Dimitri turned from Lissa, and the fire that had briefly lit his features
faded. He walked over to the side of the cell and leaned against the wall. He
closed his eyes for a few seconds, took a deep breath, and then opened them.
"Anyone but her," he repeated. "Not after what I did to her. I did a lot
of things . . . horrible things." He turned his hands palm-up and stared at
them for a moment, like he could see blood. "What I did to her was worst of
all--especially because it was her. She came to save me from that state, and I
. . ." He shook his head. "I did terrible things to her. Terrible things to others.
I can't face her after that. What I did was unforgivable."
"It's not," said Lissa urgently. "It wasn't you. Not really. She'll forgive
you."
"No. There's no forgiveness for me--not after what I did. I don't
deserve her, don't deserve to even be around her. The only thing I can
do . . ." He walked back over to Lissa, and to the astonishment of both of us,
he fell to his knees before her. "The only thing I can do--the only redemption
I can try for--is to pay you back for saving me."
"Dimitri," she began uneasily, "I told you--"
"I felt that power. In that moment, I felt you bring my soul back. I felt
you heal it. That's a debt I can't ever repay, but I swear I'll spend the rest of
my life trying." He was looking up at her, that enraptured look back on his
face.
"I don't want that. There's nothing to repay."
"There's everything to pay," he argued. "I owe you my life--my soul.
It's the only way I can come close to ever redeeming myself for all the things
I did. It's still not enough . . . but it's all I can do." He clasped his hands. "I
swear, whatever you need, anything--if it's in my power--I'll do it. I'll serve
and protect you for the rest of my life. I'll do whatever you ask. You have
my loyalty forever."
Again, Lissa started to say she didn't want that, but then a canny
thought came to mind. "Will you see Rose?"
He grimaced. "Anything but that."
"Dimitri--"
190
"Please. I'll do anything else for you, but if I see her . . . it'll hurt too
much."
That was probably the only reason that could have made Lissa drop
the subject. That and the desperate, dejected look on Dimitri's face. It was
one she had never seen before, one I'd never seen before either. He'd always
been so invincible in my eyes, and this sign of vulnerability didn't make him
seem weaker to me. It simply made him more complex. It made me love him
more--and want to help him.
Lissa could only give him a small nod as answer before one of the
guardians in charge said she had to leave. Dimitri was still on his knees as
they escorted her out, staring after her with an expression that said she was
the closest to any hope he had left in this world.
My heart twisted with both sorrow and jealousy--and a bit of anger
too. I was the one he should have looked at that way. How dare he? How
dare he act like Lissa was the greatest thing in the world? She'd done a lot to
save him, true, but I was the one who'd traveled around the globe for him. I
was the one who had continually risked my life for him. Most importantly, I
was the one who loved him. How could he turn his back on that?
Both Lissa and I were confused and upset as she left the building.
Both of us were distraught over Dimitri's state. Despite how angry I was
over his refusal to see me, I still felt horrible at seeing him so low. It killed
me. He'd never acted that way before. After the Academy's attack, he had
certainly been sad and had grieved over that loss. This was a different kind
of despair. It was a deep sense of depression and guilt that he didn't feel he
could escape from. Both Lissa and I were shocked by that. Dimitri had
always been a man of action, someone ready to get up after a tragedy and
fight the next battle.
But this? This was unlike anything we'd ever seen in him, and Lissa
and I had wildly varying ideas on how to solve it. Her gentler, sympathetic
approach was to keep talking to him while also calmly persuading Court
officials that Dimitri was no longer a threat. My solution to this problem was
to go to Dimitri, no matter what he claimed he wanted. I'd busted in and out
of a prison. Getting into a jail cell should be cake. I was still certain that
once he saw me, he'd have a change of heart about all this redemption stuff.
How could he truly think I wouldn't forgive him? I loved him. I understood.
And as far as convincing officials that he wasn't dangerous . . . well, my
method there was a little fuzzy still, but I had a feeling it would involve a lot
of yelling and beating on doors.
Lissa knew perfectly well that I had observed her encounter with
Dimitri, so she didn't feel obligated to come see me, not when she knew they
191
could still use her over at the medical center. She'd heard Adrian had nearly
collapsed with all the magic he'd wielded to help others. It seemed so
uncharacteristic of him, so unselfish . . . he'd done amazing deeds, at great
cost to himself.
Adrian.
There was a problem. I hadn't had a chance to see him since getting
back after the warehouse fight. And aside from hearing about him healing
others, I really hadn't thought about him at all. I'd said that if Dimitri really
could be saved, it didn't mean the end of Adrian and me. Yet, Dimitri had
barely been back twenty-four hours, and here I was, already obsessing ov--
"Lissa?"
Despite the fact that I'd pulled back to my own mind, part of me was
still absentmindedly following along with Lissa. Christian was standing
outside the medical center, leaning against its wall. From his posture, it
appeared as though he'd been there for a while waiting for something--or
rather, someone.
She came to a halt, and inexplicably, all thoughts of Dimitri vanished
from her mind. Oh, come on. I wanted those two to patch things up, but we
had no time for this. Dimitri's fate was a lot more important than bantering
with Christian.
Christian didn't look like he was in a snarky mood, though. His
expression was curious and concerned as he regarded her. "How are you
feeling?" he asked. They hadn't talked to each other since the ride back, and
she'd been largely incoherent during a lot of it.
"Fine." She touched her face absentmindedly. "Adrian healed me."
"I guess he is good for something." Okay, maybe Christian was
feeling a little snarky today. But only a little.
"Adrian's good for lots of things," she said, though she couldn't help a
small smile. "He ran himself into the ground here all night."
"What about you? I know how you are. As soon as you were up and
around, you were probably right there beside him."
She shook her head. "No. After he healed me, I went to see Dimitri."
All mirth disappeared from Christian's face. "You've talked to him?"
"Twice now. But yeah. I have."
"And?"
"And what?"
"What's he like?"
"He's like Dimitri." She suddenly frowned, reconsidering her words.
"Well . . . not quite like Dimitri."
"What, does he still have some Strigoi in him?" Christian straightened
192
up, blue eyes flashing. "If he's still dangerous, you have no business going
near--"
"No!" she exclaimed. "He's not dangerous. And . . ." She took a few
steps forward, returning his glare. "Even if he was, you have no business
telling me what I can or can't do!"
Christian sighed dramatically. "And here I thought Rose was the only
one who threw herself into stupid situations, regardless of whether they
might kill her."
Lissa's anger flared up rapidly, likely because of all the spirit she'd
been using. "Hey, you didn't have any issues helping me stake Dimitri! You
trained me for it."
"That was different. We were in a bad situation already, and if things
went wrong . . . well, I could have incinerated him." Christian regarded her
from head to toe, and there was something in his gaze . . . something that
seemed like more than just objective assessment. "But I didn't have to. You
were amazing. You made the hit. I didn't know if you could, but you did . . .
and the fire . . . You didn't flinch at all, but it must have been awful. . . ."
There was a catch in his voice as he spoke, like he was only now truly
assessing the consequences of what might have happened to Lissa. His
concern and admiration made her flush, and she tilted her head--an old
trick--so that the pieces of hair that had escaped from her ponytail would fall
forward and hide her face. There was no need for it. Christian was now
staring pointedly at the ground.
"I had to do it," she said at last. "I had to see if it was possible."
He looked up. "And it was . . . right? There really isn't any trace of
Strigoi?"
"None. I'm positive. But no one believes it."
"Can you blame them? I mean, I helped out with it and I wanted it to
be true . . . but I'm not sure I ever really, truly thought someone could come
back from that." He glanced away again, his gaze resting on a lilac bush.
Lissa could smell its scent, but the distant and troubled look on his face told
her that his thoughts weren't on nature. Neither were they on Dimitri, I
realized. He was thinking about his parents. What if there'd been spirit users
around when the Ozeras had turned Strigoi? What if there had been a way to
save them?
Lissa, not guessing what I had, remarked, "I don't even know that I
believed either. But as soon as it happened, well . . . I knew. I know. There's
no Strigoi in him. I have to help him. I have to make others realize it. I can't
let them lock him up forever--or worse." Getting Dimitri out of the
warehouse without the other guardians staking him had been no easy feat for
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her, and she shivered recalling those first few seconds after his change when
everyone had been shouting to kill him.
Christian turned back and met her eyes curiously. "What did you
mean when you said he was like Dimitri but not like Dimitri?"
Her voice trembled a little when she spoke. "He's . . . sad."
"Sad? Seems like he should be happy he was saved."
"No . . . you don't understand. He feels awful about everything he did
as a Strigoi. Guilty, depressed. He's punishing himself for it because he
doesn't think he can be forgiven."
"Holy shit," said Christian, clearly caught off guard. A few Moroi
girls had walked by just then and looked scandalized at his swearing. They
hurried off, whispering among themselves. Christian ignored them. "But he
couldn't help it--"
"I know, I know. I already went over it with him."
"Can Rose help?"
"No," Lissa said bluntly.
Christian waited, apparently hoping she'd elaborate. He grew annoyed
when she didn't. "What do you mean she can't? She should be able to help us
more than anyone!"
"I don't want to get into it." My situation with Dimitri bothered her a
lot. That made two of us. Lissa turned toward the medical building. It looked
regal and castle-like on the outside, but it housed a facility as sterile and
modern as any hospital. "Look, I need to get inside. And don't look at me
like that."
"Like what?" he demanded, taking a few steps toward her.
"That disapproving, pissed-off look you get when you don't get your
way."
"I don't have that look!"
"You have it right now." She backed away from him, moving toward
the center's door. "If you want the whole story, we can talk later, but I don't
have the time . . . and honestly . . . I don't really feel like telling it."
That pissed-off look--and she was right, he did have it--faded a little.
Almost nervously, he said, "Okay. Later then. And Lissa . . ."
"Hmm?"
"I'm glad you're all right. What you did last night . . . well, it really
was amazing."
Lissa stared at him for several heavy seconds, her heart rate rising
slightly as she watched a light breeze ruffle his black hair. "I couldn't have
done it without your help," she said at last. With that, she turned and went
inside, and I returned completely to my own head.
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And like earlier, I was at a loss. Lissa would be busy the rest of the
day, and standing and yelling in the guardians' office wouldn't really help me
get to Dimitri. Well, I supposed there was the off chance I might annoy them
so much that they'd throw me in jail too. Then Dimitri and I would be next to
each other. I promptly dismissed that plan, fearing the only thing it would
land me with was more filing.
What could I do? Nothing. I needed to see him again but didn't know
how. I hated not having a plan. Lissa's encounter with Dimitri hadn't been
nearly long enough for me, and anyway, I felt it was important to take him in
through my eyes, not hers. And oh, that sadness . . . that utter look of
hopelessness. I couldn't stand it. I wanted to hold him, to tell him everything
would be okay. I wanted to tell him I forgave him and that we'd make
everything like it used to be. We could be together, just the way we
planned . . .
The thought brought tears to my eyes, and left alone with my
frustration and inactivity, I returned to my room and flounced onto the bed.
Alone, I could finally let loose the sobs I'd been holding in since last night. I
didn't even entirely know what I was crying for. The trauma and blood of the
last day. My own broken heart. Dimitri's sorrow. The cruel circumstances
that had ruined our lives. Really, there were a lot of choices.
I stayed in my room for a good part of the day, lost in my own grief
and restlessness. Over and over, I replayed Lissa's meeting with Dimitri,
what he'd said and how he looked. I lost track of time, and it took a knock at
the door to snap me out of my own suffocating emotions.
Hastily rubbing an arm over my eyes, I opened the door to find Adrian
standing out there. "Hey," I said, a little surprised by his presence--not to
mention guilty, considering I'd been moping over another guy. I wasn't ready
to face Adrian yet, but it appeared I had no choice now. "Do you . . . do you
want to come in?"
"Wish I could, little dhampir." He seemed to be in a hurry, not like
he'd come to have a relationship talk. "But this is just a drop-by visit to issue
an invitation."
"Invitation?" I asked. My mind was still on Dimitri. Dimitri, Dimitri,
Dimitri.
"An invitation to a party."
195
NINETEEN
"ARE YOU CRAZY?" I ASKED.
He gave me the same wordless look he always did when I asked that
question.
I sighed and tried again. "A party? That's pushing it, even for you.
People just died! Guardians. Priscilla Voda." Not to mention, people had just
come back from the dead. Probably best to leave that part out. "This isn't the
time to get trashed and play beer pong."
I expected Adrian to say that it was always a good time for beer pong,
but he remained serious. "Actually, it's because people died that there's
going to be a party. It's not a kegger type. Maybe party's not even the right
word. It's a . . ." He frowned, grasping at words. "A special event. An elite
one."
"All royal parties are elite ones," I pointed out.
"Yeah, but not every royal is invited to this. It's the . . . well, elite of
the elite."
That really wasn't helping. "Adrian--"
"No, listen." He made that familiar gesture of his that indicated
frustration, running his hand through his hair. "It's not so much a party as a
ceremony. An old, old tradition from . . . I don't know. Romania, I think.
They call it the Death Watch. But it's a way to honor the dead, a secret that's
been passed on through the oldest bloodlines."
Flashbacks of a destructive secret society at St. Vladimir's came back
to me. "This isn't some Mana thing, is it?"
"No, I swear. Please, Rose. I'm not all that into it either, but my mom's
making me go, and I'd really like it if you were there with me."
Elite and bloodline were warning words to me. "Will there be other
dhampirs there?"
"No." He then added quickly, "But I made arrangements for some
people you'll approve of to be there. It'll make it better for both of us."
"Lissa?" I guessed. If ever there was an esteemed bloodline, hers was
it.
"Yeah. I just ran into her at the medical center. Her reaction was about
like yours."
That made me smile. It also piqued my interest. I wanted to talk to her
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more about what had happened during her visit to Dimitri and knew she'd
been avoiding me because of it. If going to some silly royal ritual or
whatever it was could get me to her, then so much the better.
"Who else?"
"People you'll like."
"Fine. Be mysterious. I'll go to your cult meeting."
That earned me a return smile. "Hardly a cult, little dhampir. It really
is a way to pay last respects to the people killed in that fight." He reached
out and ran a hand along my cheek. "And I'm glad . . . God, I'm so glad you
weren't one of them. You don't know. . . ." His voice caught, the flippant
smile trembling for a moment before stabilizing again. "You don't know
how worried I was. Every minute you were gone, every minute I didn't know
what had happened to you . . . it was agony. And even after I heard you were
okay, I kept asking everyone at the medical center what they knew. Had they
seen you fight, did you get hurt . . ."
I felt a lump in my throat. I hadn't been able to see Adrian when I'd
returned, but I should have sent a message, at least. I squeezed his hand and
tried to make a joke of something that really wasn't funny. "What'd they say?
That I was a badass?"
"Yeah, actually. They couldn't stop talking about how amazing you
were in battle. Word got back to Aunt Tatiana too about what you did, and
even she was impressed."
Whoa. That was a surprise. I started to ask more, but his next words
brought me up short.
"I also heard you were yelling at anyone you could to find out about
Belikov. And that you were beating down the guardians' doors this
morning."
I looked away. "Oh. Yeah. I . . . Look, I'm sorry, but I had to--"
"Hey, hey." His voice was heavy and earnest. "Don't apologize. I
understand."
I looked up at him. "You do?"
"Look, it's not like I didn't expect this if he came back."
I glanced back at him hesitantly, studying his serious expression. "I
know. I remember what you said before. . . ."
He nodded, then gave me another rueful smile. "Of course, I didn't
actually expect any of this to work. Lissa tried to explain the magic she
used . . . but good God. I don't think I could ever do anything like she did."
"Do you believe?" I asked. "Do you believe he's no longer Strigoi?"
"Yeah. Lissa said he's not, and I believe her. And I saw him from a
distance out in the sun. But I'm not sure it's a good idea for you to try to see
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him."
"That's your jealousy talking." I had absolutely no right to sound
accusing, considering the way my heart was all tangled up over Dimitri.
"Of course it's jealousy," said Adrian nonchalantly. "What do you
expect? The former love of your life comes back--from the dead, no less.
That's not something I'm really excited about. But I don't blame you for
feeling confused."
"I told you before--"
"I know, I know." Adrian didn't sound particularly upset. In fact, there
was a surprisingly patient tone in his voice. "I know you said him coming
back wouldn't affect things between us. But saying one thing before it
happens and then actually having that thing happen are two different things."
"What are you getting at?" I asked, kind of confused.
"I want you, Rose." He squeezed my hand more tightly. "I've always
wanted you. I want to be with you. I'd like to be like other guys and say I
want to take care of you too, but . . . well. When it comes down to it, you'd
probably be the one taking care of me."
I laughed in spite of myself. "Some days I think you're in more danger
from yourself than anyone else. You smell like cigarettes, you know."
"Hey, I have never, ever said I was perfect. And you're wrong. You're
probably the most dangerous thing in my life."
"Adrian--"
"Wait." With his other hand, he pressed his fingers over my lips. "Just
listen. It'd be stupid for me to think that your old boyfriend coming back isn't
going to have any effect on you. So do I like you wanting to see him? No, of
course not. That's instinct. But there's more, you know. I do believe that he's
a dhampir again. Absolutely. But . . ."
"But what?" Adrian's words had me more curious than ever now.
"But just because he isn't a Strigoi doesn't mean it's entirely gone from
him. Hold on." Adrian could see my mouth opening in outrage. "I'm not
saying he's evil or means to be evil or anything like that. But what he went
through . . . It's huge. Epic. We really don't know much about the changing
process. What effect did that kind of life have on him? Are there violent
parts of him that might suddenly lash out? That's what I'm worried about
Rose. I know you. I know you aren't going to be able to help yourself. You'll
have to see him and talk to him. But is it safe? That's what no one knows.
We don't know anything about this. We don't know if he's dangerous."
Christian had said the same thing to Lissa. I examined Adrian intently.
It sounded like a convenient excuse to keep Dimitri and me apart. Yet, I saw
truth in those deep green eyes. He meant it. He was nervous about what
198
Dimitri might do. Adrian had also been honest about being jealous, which I
had to admire. He hadn't ordered me not to see Dimitri or tried to dictate my
behavior. I liked that too. I extended my hand and laced my fingers with
Adrian's.
"He's not dangerous. He's . . . sad. Sad for what he's done. The guilt's
killing him."
"I can imagine. I probably wouldn't forgive myself either if I suddenly
realized I'd been brutally killing people for the last four months." Adrian
pulled me to him and kissed the top of my head. "And for everyone's sake--
yes, even his--I really hope he is exactly the way he was. Just be careful,
okay?"
"I will," I said, kissing his cheek. "Inasmuch as I ever am."
He grinned and released me. "That's the best I can hope for. For now,
I've got to head back to my parents' for a little bit. I'll come back for you at
four, okay?"
"Okay. Is there anything I should wear to this secret party?"
"Nice dress clothes are fine."
Something occurred to me. "If this is so elite and prestigious, how are
you going to get a lowly dhampir like me in?"
"With this." Adrian reached for a bag he'd set down upon entering. He
handed it to me.
Curiously, I opened the bag and gaped at what I saw. It was a mask,
one that just covered the top half of the face around the eyes. It was
intricately worked with gold and green leaves and bejeweled flowers.
"A mask?" I exclaimed. "We're wearing masks to this thing? What is
this, Halloween?"
He winked. "See you at four."
We didn't actually put on the masks until we arrived at the Death
Watch. As part of the secret nature of it all, Adrian said we didn't want to
call any attention to ourselves while going to it. So we walked across the
Court's grounds dressed up--I wore the same dress I'd worn to dinner at his
parents'--but not getting much more notice than the two of us usually did
when we were together. Besides, it was late, and a lot of the Court was
getting ready for bed.
Our destination surprised me. It was one of the buildings that nonroyal
Court workers lived in, one that was very near Mia's. Well, I supposed
the last place you'd look for a royal party would be at the home of a
commoner. Except we didn't go to any of the apartments inside. Once we
stepped into the building's lobby, Adrian indicated we should put our masks
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on. He then took me over to what appeared to be a janitor's closet.
It wasn't. Instead, the door opened to a staircase leading down into
darkness. I couldn't see the bottom, which put me on high alert. I
instinctively wanted to know the details of every situation I entered. Adrian
seemed calm and confident as he headed down, so I took it on faith he wasn't
leading me to some sacrificial altar. I hated to admit it, but curiosity over
this Death Watch thing was temporarily taking my mind off Dimitri.
Adrian and I eventually reached another door, and this one had two
guards. Both men were Moroi, both masked like Adrian and me. Their
postures were stiff and defensive. They said nothing but simply looked at us
expectantly. Adrian said a few words that sounded like Romanian, and a
moment later, one of the men unlocked the door and gestured us inside.
"Secret password?" I murmured to Adrian as we swept past.
"Passwords, actually. One for you and one for me. Every guest has a
unique one."
We stepped into a narrow tunnel lit only by torches embedded in the
walls. Their dancing flames cast fanciful shadows as we passed by. From far
ahead, the low murmur of conversation reached us. It sounded surprisingly
normal, like any conversation you'd hear at a party. Based on Adrian's
description, I'd half-expected to hear chanting or drums.
I shook my head. "I knew it. They keep a medieval dungeon under the
Court. I'm surprised there aren't chains on the walls."
"Scared?" Adrian teased, clasping hold of my hand.
"Of this? Hardly. I mean, on the Rose Hathaway Scale of Scariness,
this is barely a--"
We emerged out of the hall before I could finish. An expansive room
with vaulted ceilings spread out before us, something that boggled my
spatially challenged brain as I tried to recall just how far underground we'd
gone. Wrought-iron chandeliers holding lit candles hung from the ceiling,
casting the same ghostly light the torches had. The walls were made of
stone, but it was a very artful, pretty stone: gray with reddish flecks,
polished into smooth round pieces. Someone had wanted to keep the Old
World dungeon feel but still have the place look stylish. It was a typical line
of royal thinking.
Fifty or so people were milling around the room, some huddled in
groups. Like Adrian and me, they wore formal clothing and half masks. All
the masks were different. Some had a floral theme like mine, while others
were decorated with animals. Some simply had swirls or geometric designs.
Even though the masks only covered half the guests' faces, the sketchy
lighting went a long way to obscure any other identifying features. I
200
scrutinized them carefully, hoping I might pick out details that would give
someone away.
Adrian led me out of the entryway and over toward a corner. As my
view of the area expanded, I could see a large fire pit in the middle of the
room, embedded in the stone floor. No fire burned in it, but everyone kept
well away. For a moment, I had a disorienting flash of deja vu, thinking back
to my time in Siberia. I'd been to a type of memorial ceremony there too--
though hardly one with masks or passwords--and everyone had sat around a
bonfire outdoors. It had been in Dimitri's honor, as all those who had loved
him sat and told stories about him.
I tried to get a better look at the fire, but Adrian was intent on keeping
us behind the bulk of the crowd. "Don't bring attention to yourself," he
warned.
"I was just looking."
"Yeah, but anyone who looks too close is going to realize you're the
shortest person here. It'd be pretty obvious you're a dhampir. This is elite old
blood, remember?"
I frowned at him as much as I could through the mask. "But I thought
you said you'd made arrangements for me to be here?" I groaned when he
didn't answer. "Does 'making arrangements' mean just sneaking me in? If so,
those guys were kind of crap security."
Adrian scoffed. "Hey, we had the right passwords. That's all it takes. I
stole--er, borrowed them off my mom's list."
"Your mom's one of the people who helped organize this?"
"Yup. Her branch of the Tarus family's been deep inside this group for
centuries. They apparently had a really big ceremony here after the school
attack."
I turned all of this over in my mind, trying to decide how I felt. I hated
when people were obsessed with status and appearances, yet it was hard to
fault them wanting to honor those who had been killed--particularly when a
majority of them had been dhampirs. The Strigoi attack on St. Vladimir's
was a memory that would forever haunt me. Before I could ponder much
further, a familiar sensation swept me.
"Lissa's here," I said, looking around. I could feel her nearby but
didn't spot her immediately in the sea of masks and shadows. "There."
She stood apart from some of the others, wearing a rosehued dress and
a white and gold mask with swans on it. Through our link, I felt her
searching for anyone she knew. I impulsively started to go to her, but Adrian
held me back, telling me to wait while he retrieved her.
"What is all this?" she asked when she reached me.
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"I figured you'd know," I told her. "It's all top secret royal stuff."
"Too top secret for me," she said. "I got my invite from the queen. She
told me it was part of my heritage and to keep it to myself, and then Adrian
came and said I had to come for your sake."
"Tatiana invited you directly?" I exclaimed. Maybe I shouldn't have
been surprised. Lissa would have hardly needed sneaking in like I did. I
figured someone would have made sure she got an invitation, but I'd
assumed it had all been Adrian's doing. I glanced around uneasily. "Is
Tatiana here?"
"Likely," said Adrian, voice annoyingly casual. As usual, his aunt's
presence didn't have the same impact on him that it did the rest of us. "Oh,
hey. There's Christian. With the fire mask."
I didn't know how Adrian spotted Christian, aside from the not-sosubtle
mask metaphor. With his height and dark hair, Christian easily
blended in with the other Moroi around him and had even been chatting with
a girl standing nearby, which seemed out of character. "No way did he get a
legit invite," I said. If any Ozeras had been deemed special enough to come
to this, Christian wouldn't have been one of them.
"He didn't," agreed Adrian, making a small gesture for Christian to
join us. "I gave him one of the passwords I stole from Mom."
I gave Adrian a startled look. "How many did you steal?"
"Enough to--"
"Let us come to attention."
A man's booming voice rang out through the room, halting both
Adrian's words and Christian's steps. With a grimace, Christian returned to
where he'd been standing, cut off from us now on the other side of the room.
It looked like I wouldn't have the chance to ask Lissa about Dimitri after all.
Without any direction, the others in the room began forming a circle
around the fire pit. The room wasn't big enough for us to make a singlelayered
circle, so I was still able to stay behind other Moroi as I watched the
spectacle. Lissa stood by me, but her attention was fixated across from us,
on Christian. She was disappointed that he hadn't been able to join us.
"Tonight we come to honor the spirits of those who died fighting the
great evil that has plagued us for so long." This was the same man who had
called us to attention. The black mask he wore glittered with silver swirls.
He wasn't anyone special that I recognized. It was probably safe to assume
that he was someone from an important bloodline who happened to have a
good voice for bringing people together. Adrian confirmed it.
"That's Anthony Badica. They always recruit him as an emcee."
Anthony seemed more like a religious leader than an emcee right now,
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but I didn't want to answer back and attract anyone's notice.
"Tonight we honor them," continued Anthony.
I flinched as almost everyone around us repeated those words. Lissa
and I exchanged startled looks. Apparently, there was a script we hadn't been
told about.
"Their lives were taken from us too soon," continued Anthony.
"Tonight we honor them."
Okay, this script might not be so hard to follow after all. Anthony kept
talking about how terrible the tragedy was, and we repeated the same
response. The whole idea of this Death Watch still weirded me out, but
Lissa's sadness permeated the bond and began to affect me too. Priscilla had
always been good to her--and polite to me. Grant might have only been
Lissa's guardian a short time, but he had protected her and helped her. In
fact, if not for Grant's work with Lissa, Dimitri might still be a Strigoi. So,
slowly, the gravity of it all began to hit me, and even if I thought there were
better ways to mourn, I appreciated the acknowledgment the dead were
getting.
After a few more refrains, Anthony gestured someone forward. A
woman in a glittering emerald mask came forward with a torch. Adrian
shifted beside me. "My darling mother," he murmured.
Sure enough. Now that he'd pointed it out, I could clearly make out
Daniella's features. She tossed her torch into the fire pit, and it lit up like the
Fourth of July. Someone must have doused that wood with either gasoline or
Russian vodka. Maybe both. No wonder the other guests had kept their
distance. Daniella melted into the crowd, and another woman came forward
holding a tray with golden goblets. Walking around the circle, she handed a
cup to each person. When she ran out, another woman appeared with a tray.
As the goblets were distributed, Anthony explained, "Now we will
toast and drink to the dead, so that their spirits will move on and find peace."
I shifted uncomfortably. People talked about restless spirits and the
dead finding peace without really knowing what that meant. Being shadowkissed
came with the ability to see the restless dead, and it had taken me a
long time to gain control so that I didn't see them. They were always around
me; I had to work to keep them blocked out. I wondered what I'd see now if
I let down my walls. Would the ghosts of those killed the night of Dimitri's
attack be hovering around us?
Adrian sniffed his cup as soon as he got it and scowled. For a
moment, I felt panic until I sniffed mine too. "Wine. Thank God," I
whispered to him. "From your face, I thought it was blood." I recalled how
much he hated blood that wasn't straight from the source.
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"Nah," he murmured back. "Just a bad vintage."
When everyone had their wine, Anthony raised his cup over his head
with both hands. With the fire behind him, it gave him an almost sinister,
otherworldly look. "We drink to Priscilla Voda," he said.
"We drink to Priscilla Voda," everyone repeated.
He brought the goblet down and took a sip. So did everyone else--
well, except for Adrian. He gulped half his down, bad vintage or not.
Anthony raised his cup over his head again.
"We drink to James Wilket."
As I repeated the words, I realized James Wilket was one of Priscilla's
guardians. This crazy group of royals really was showing respect to
dhampirs. We went through the other guardians one by one, but I kept my
sips small, wanting to keep a level head tonight. I was pretty sure that by the
end of the name list, Adrian was faking his sips because he'd run out.
When Anthony finished naming all who had died, he held his cup up
again and approached the blazing fire, which had begun to make the small
room uncomfortably hot. The back of my dress was growing damp with
sweat.
"To all those lost by the great evil, we honor your spirits and hope
they will move on in peace to the next world." He then dumped the
remainder of his wine into the flames.
All this talk of spirits lingering in the world certainly didn't go along
with the usual Christian afterlife beliefs that dominated Moroi religion. It
made me wonder just how old this ceremony really was. Once more, I had
an urge to drop my barriers and see if any of this had really drawn ghosts to
us, but I feared what I'd find. Besides, I promptly got distracted when
everyone else in the circle began dumping their wine into the fire as well.
One by one, going clockwise, each person approached. All was silent as this
happened, save for the crackling in the fire pit and shifting of logs. Everyone
watched respectfully.
When my turn came, I fought hard not to tremble. I hadn't forgotten
that Adrian had sneaked me in here. Lowly Moroi weren't allowed, let alone
dhampirs. What would they do? Declare the space violated? Mob me? Cast
me into the fire?
My fears proved unfounded. No one said or did anything unusual as I
poured out my wine, and a moment later, Adrian stepped forward for his
turn. I melted back beside Lissa. When the entire circle had gone up, we
were led into a moment of silence for the departed. Having witnessed Lissa's
kidnapping and subsequent rescue, I had a lot of dead to ponder. No amount
of silence would ever do them justice.
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Another unspoken signal seemed to pass through the room. The circle
dispersed, and the tension lifted. People again fell into small chatty groups,
just like at any other party, though I did see tears on the faces of some.
"A lot of people must have liked Priscilla," I observed.
Adrian turned toward a table that had mysteriously been arranged
during the ceremony. It sat against the back wall and was filled with fruit,
cheese, and more wine. Naturally, he poured a glass.
"They aren't all crying for her," he said.
"I find it hard to believe they're crying for the dhampirs," I pointed
out. "No one here even knew them."
"Not true," he said.
Lissa quickly caught his meaning. "Most of the people who went on
the rescue would have been guardians assigned to Moroi. They couldn't all
be Court guardians."
She was right, I realized. We'd had too many people with us at the
warehouse. Many of these Moroi had undoubtedly lost guardians that they'd
become close to. Despite the disdain I often had for these types of royals, I
knew some had probably formed legitimate friendships with and
attachments to their bodyguards.
"This is a lame party," a voice suddenly said. We turned and saw that
Christian had finally made his way over to us. "I couldn't tell if we were
supposed to be having a funeral or summoning the devil. It was kind of a
half-assed attempt at both."
"Stop it," I said, surprising myself. "Those people died for you last
night. Whatever this is, it's still out of respect for them."
Christian's face grew sober. "You're right."
Beside me, I'd felt Lissa light up inside when she saw him. The
horrors of their ordeal had brought them closer together, and I recalled the
tenderness they'd shared on the ride back. She offered him a warm look and
got a tentative smile in return. Maybe some good would come of all that had
happened. Maybe they'd be able to fix their problems.
Or maybe not.
Adrian broke into a grin. "Hey. Glad you could make it."
For a moment, I thought he was speaking to Christian. Then I looked
and saw a girl in a peacock mask had joined us. With the mingling people
and masks, I hadn't noticed that she was purposely standing near us. I peered
at her, seeing only blue eyes and golden curls before I finally recognized her.
Mia.
"What are you doing here?" I asked.
She grinned. "Adrian got me a password."
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"Adrian apparently got passwords for half the party."
He seemed very pleased with himself. "See?" he said, smiling at me.
"I told you I'd make this worth your while. The whole gang's here. Nearly."
"This is one of the weirdest things I've ever seen," said Mia, glancing
around. "I don't see why it has to be a secret that the people who got killed
were heroes. Why can't they wait for the group funeral?"
Adrian shrugged. "I told you, this is an ancient ceremony. It's a
holdover from the Old Country, and these people think it's important. From
what I know, it used to be a lot more elaborate. This is the modernized
version."
It occurred to me then that Lissa hadn't said a single word since we'd
noticed Christian had come with Mia. I opened myself to the bond, feeling a
flood of jealousy and resentment. I still maintained Mia was one of the last
people Christian would be involved with. (Okay, it was hard for me to
imagine him involved with anyone. His getting together with Lissa had been
monumental.) Lissa couldn't see that, though. All she saw was him
continually hanging out with other girls. As our conversation continued,
Lissa's attitude grew frostier, and the friendly looks he'd been giving her
began to fade.
"So is it true?" Mia asked, oblivious to the drama unfolding around
her. "Is Dimitri really . . . back?"
Lissa and I exchanged glances. "Yes," I said firmly. "He's a dhampir,
but no one believes it yet. Because they're idiots."
"It just happened, little dhampir." Adrian's tone was gentle, though the
topic clearly made him uncomfortable too. "You can't expect everyone to get
on board with it right away."
"But they are idiots," said Lissa fiercely. "Anyone who talks to him
can tell he's not a Strigoi. I'm pushing for them to let him out of his cell so
that people can actually see for themselves."
I wished she would push a little harder for me to get to see him, but
now wasn't the time to talk about that. Eyeing the room, I wondered if some
people would have trouble accepting Dimitri because of his role in the
deaths of their loved ones. He hadn't been in control of himself, but that
wasn't enough to bring back the dead.
Still uncomfortable around Christian, Lissa was growing restless. She
also wanted to leave and check on Dimitri. "How long do we have to stay
here? Is there more to--"
"Who the hell are you?"
Our little cluster turned as one and found Anthony standing by us.
Considering most of us were here illicitly, he could have been speaking to
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anyone. But, based on where his gaze was fixed, there was no question who
he meant.
He was talking to me.
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TWENTY
"YOU'RE NOT MOROI!" HE CONTINUED. He wasn't shouting,
but we'd definitely gotten the attention of the people standing near us.
"You're Rose Hathaway, aren't you? How dare you and your impure blood
invade the sanctity of our--"
"That's enough," a lofty voice suddenly said. "I'll take it from here."
Even with her face covered, there was no mistaking that voice.
Tatiana swept in beside the guy, wearing a silver flowered mask and a longsleeved
gray dress. I'd probably seen her earlier in the crowd and not even
realized it. Until she spoke, she blended in with everyone else.
The whole room was quiet now. Daniella Ivashkov scurried up behind
Tatiana, her eyes widening behind her mask when she recognized me.
"Adrian--" she began.
But Tatiana was seizing the situation. "Come with me."
There was no question that the order was for me or that I would obey.
She turned and walked swiftly toward the room's entrance. I hurried behind
her, as did Adrian and Daniella.
As soon as we were out in the torch-lit hall, Daniella turned on
Adrian. "What were you thinking? You know I don't mind you bringing
Rose to certain events, but this was--"
"Inappropriate," said Tatiana crisply. "Although, perhaps it is fitting
that a dhampir see how much the sacrifices of her people are respected."
That shocked us all into a moment of silence. Daniella recovered
herself first. "Yes, but tradition states that--"
Tatiana interrupted her again. "I'm well aware of the tradition. It's a
bad breach of etiquette, but Rosemarie being here certainly doesn't ruin our
intentions. Losing Priscilla . . ." Tatiana didn't choke up, exactly, but she lost
some of her normal composure. I didn't think of someone like her as having
a best friend, but Priscilla pretty much had been. How would I act if I'd lost
Lissa? Not nearly so controlled.
"Losing Priscilla is something I'll feel for a very, very long time,"
Tatiana managed at last. Her sharp eyes were on me. "And I hope you really
do understand how much we need and value you and all the other guardians.
I know sometimes your race feels underappreciated. You aren't. Those who
died have left a gaping hole in our ranks, one that leaves us even more
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undefended, as I'm sure you must know."
I nodded, still surprised Tatiana wasn't shrieking for me to get out.
"It's a big loss," I said. "And it makes the situation worse because numbers
are what harm us half the time--especially when the Strigoi form large
groups. We can't always match that."
Tatiana nodded, seeming pleasantly surprised we'd agreed on
something. That made two of us. "I knew you'd understand.
Nonetheless . . ." She turned toward Adrian. "You shouldn't have done this.
Some lines of propriety need to be maintained."
Adrian was surprisingly meek. "Sorry, Aunt Tatiana. I just thought it
was something Rose should see."
"You'll keep this to yourself, won't you?" asked Daniella, turning back
to me. "A lot of the guests are very, very conservative. They wouldn't want
this getting out."
That they met by firelight and played dress-up? Yeah, I could see
them wanting that kept a secret.
"I won't tell anyone," I assured them.
"Good," said Tatiana. "Now, you should still probably leave before--is
that Christian Ozera?" Her eyes had drifted back toward the crowded room.
"Yes," both Adrian and I said.
"He didn't get an invitation," exclaimed Daniella. "Is that your fault
too?"
"It's not my fault so much as my genius," said Adrian.
"I doubt anyone will know, so long as he behaves himself," said
Tatiana with a sigh. "And I'm sure he'd take any opportunity he can to talk to
Vasilisa."
"Oh," I said, without thinking. "That's not Lissa." Lissa had actually
turned her back toward Christian and was speaking to someone else while
casting anxious looks out the door at me.
"Who is it?" asked Tatiana.
Crap. "That's, um, Mia Rinaldi. She's a friend of ours from St.
Vladimir's." I'd almost considered lying and giving her a royal name. Some
families were so big that it was impossible to keep track of everyone.
"Rinaldi." Tatiana frowned. "I think I know a servant with that name."
I was actually pretty impressed that she knew the people who worked for
her. Yet again, my opinion of her shifted.
"A servant?" asked Daniella, giving her son a warning look. "Is there
anyone else I should know about?"
"No. If I'd had more time, I probably could have got Eddie here. Hell,
maybe even Jailbait."
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Daniella looked scandalized. "Did you just say Jailbait?"
"It's just a joke," I said hastily, not wanting to make this situation
worse. I was afraid of how Adrian might answer. "It's what we sometimes
call our friend Jill Mastrano."
Neither Tatiana nor Daniella seemed to think that was a joke at all.
"Well, no one seems to realize they don't belong," said Daniella,
nodding toward Christian and Mia. "Though the gossips here will no doubt
be running wild with how Rose interrupted this event."
"Sorry," I said, feeling bad that I might have gotten her in trouble.
"Nothing to be done for it now," said Tatiana wearily. "You should
leave now so that everyone thinks you were severely chastised. Adrian, you
come back with us and make sure your other 'guests' don't raise any
attention. And do not do something like this again."
"I won't," he said, almost convincingly.
The three began to turn away, leaving me to skulk off, but Tatiana
paused and glanced back. "Wrong or not, don't forget what you saw here.
We really do need guardians."
I nodded, a flush of pride running through me at her acknowledgment.
Then she and the others returned to the room. I watched them wistfully,
hating that everyone in there thought I'd been kicked out in disgrace.
Considering it could have gone a lot worse for me, I decided to count my
blessings. I removed the mask, having nothing more to hide, and made the
trek back upstairs and outdoors.
I hadn't gotten very far when someone stepped out in front of me. It
was a sign of my preoccupation that I nearly leapt ten feet in the air.
"Mikhail," I exclaimed. "You scared me half to death. What are you
doing out here?"
"Actually, I've been looking for you." There was an anxious, nervous
look about him. "I went by your building earlier, but you weren't around."
"Yeah, I was at the Masquerade of the Damned."
He stared at me blankly.
"Never mind. What's up?"
"I think we might have a chance."
"Chance for what?"
"I heard you tried to see Dimitri today."
Ah, yes. The topic I definitely wanted to think more about. "Yeah.
'Try' is pretty optimistic. He doesn't want to see me, never mind the army of
guardians blocking me out."
Mikhail shifted uncomfortably, peering around like a frightened
animal. "That's why I came to find you."
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"Okay, I'm really not following any of this." I was also starting to get
a headache from the wine.
Mikhail took a deep breath and exhaled. "I think I can sneak you in to
see him."
I waited for a moment, wondering if there was a punch line coming or
if maybe this was all some delusion born out of my wound-up emotions.
Nope. Mikhail's face was deadly serious, and while I still didn't know him
that well, I'd picked up enough to realize he didn't really joke around.
"How?" I asked. "I tried and--"
Mikhail beckoned for me to follow. "Come on, and I'll explain. We
don't have much time."
I wasn't about to waste this chance and hurried after him. "Has
something happened?" I asked, once I'd caught up to his longer stride. "Did .
. . did he ask for me?" It was more than I dared to hope for. Mikhail's use of
the word sneak didn't really support that idea anyway.
"They've lightened his guard," Mikhail explained.
"Really? How many?" There had been about a dozen down there
when Lissa visited, including her escort. If they'd come to their senses and
realized they only needed a guy or two on Dimitri, then that boded well for
everyone accepting that he was no longer Strigoi.
"He's down to about five."
"Oh." Not great. Not horrible. "But I guess even that means they're a
little closer to believing he's safe now?"
Mikhail shrugged, keeping his eyes on the path ahead of us. It had
rained during the Death Watch, and the air, while still humid, had cooled a
little. "Some of the guardians do. But it'll take a royal decree from the
Council to officially declare what he is."
I almost came to a halt. "Declare what he is?" I exclaimed. "He's not a
what! He's a person. A dhampir like us."
"I know, but it's out of our hands."
"You're right. Sorry," I grumbled. No point in shooting the messenger.
"Well, I hope they get off their asses and come to a decision soon."
The silence that followed spoke legions. I gave Mikhail a sharp glare.
"What? What aren't you telling me?" I demanded.
He shrugged. "The rumor is that there's some other big thing being
debated in the Council right now, something that takes priority."
That enraged me too. What in the world could take priority over
Dimitri? Calm, Rose. Stay calm. Focus. Don't let the darkness make this
worse. I always fought to keep it buried, but it often exploded in times of
stress. And this? Yeah, this was a pretty stressful time. I shifted back to the
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original topic.
We reached the holding building, and I took the steps up two at a
time. "Even if they've lightened the guardians on Dimitri, they still won't let
me in. The ones that are there would know I was ordered to keep away."
"A friend of mine's covering the front shift right now. We won't have
long, but he'll tell the guardians in the holding area that you were authorized
to come down."
Mikhail was about to open the door, and I stopped him, putting my
hand on his arm. "Why are you doing this for me? The Moroi Council might
not think Dimitri's a big deal, but the guardians do. You could get in big
trouble."
He looked down at me, again with that small, bitter smile. "Do you
have to ask?"
I thought about it. "No," I said softly.
"When I lost Sonya . . ." Mikhail closed his eyes for a heartbeat, and
when he opened them, they seemed to be staring off into the past. "When I
lost her, I didn't want to go on living. She was a good person--really. She
turned Strigoi out of desperation. She saw no other way to save herself from
spirit. I would give anything--anything--for a chance to help her, to fix
things between us. I don't know if that'll ever be possible for us, but it is
possible for you right now. I can't let you lose this."
With that, he let us in, and sure enough, there was a different guardian
on duty. Just as Mikhail had said, the guy called down to tell the jail
guardians Dimitri had a visitor. Mikhail's friend seemed incredibly nervous
about it all, which was understandable. Still, he was willing to help. It was
amazing, I thought, what friends would do for each other. These last couple
of weeks were undeniable proof of that.
Just like at Lissa's visit, two guardians showed up to escort me
downstairs. I recognized them from when I'd been in her head, and they
seemed surprised to see me. If they'd overheard Dimitri adamantly saying he
didn't want me to visit, then my presence would indeed be shocking. But as
far as they knew, someone in power had condoned me being here, so they
asked no questions.
Mikhail trailed us as we wound our way down, and I felt my heartbeat
and breathing grow rapid. Dimitri. I was about to see Dimitri. What would I
say? What would I do? It was almost too much to comprehend. I had to keep
mentally slapping myself to focus, or else I was going to slide into
dumbstruck shock.
When we reached the hallway that held the cells, I saw two guardians
standing in front of Dimitri's cell, one at the far end, and two others by the
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entrance we'd come through. I stopped, uneasy about the thought of others
overhearing me talk to Dimitri. I didn't want an audience like Lissa had had,
but with the emphasis on security here, I might not have a choice.
"Can I get a little privacy?" I asked.
One of my escorts shook his head. "Official orders. Two guardians
have to be posted at the cell at all times."
"She's a guardian," pointed out Mikhail mildly. "So am I. Let us go.
The rest can wait by the door."
I flashed Mikhail a grateful look. I could handle having him nearby.
The others, deciding we would be safe enough, moved discreetly to the ends
of the hall. It wasn't total and complete privacy, but they wouldn't hear
everything.
My heart felt ready to burst from my chest as Mikhail and I walked
over to Dimitri's cell and faced it. He was seated almost as he had been when
Lissa arrived: on the bed, curled up into himself, back facing us.
Words stuck in my throat. Coherent thought fled from my mind. It
was like I'd totally forgotten the reason I'd come here.
"Dimitri," I said. At least, that's what I tried to say. I choked up a
little, so the sounds that came out of my mouth were garbled. It was
apparently enough, though, because Dimitri's back suddenly went rigid. He
didn't turn around.
"Dimitri," I repeated, more clearly this time. "It's . . . me."
There was no need for me to say any more. He'd known from that first
attempt at his name who I was. I had a feeling he would have known my
voice in any situation. He probably knew the sound of my heartbeat and
breathing. As it was, I think I stopped breathing while I waited for his
response. When it came, it was a little disappointing.
"No."
"No what?" I asked. "As in, no, it's not me?"
He exhaled in frustration, a sound almost--but not quite--like the one
he used to make when I did something particularly ridiculous in our
trainings. "No, as in I don't want to see you." His voice was thick with
emotion. "They weren't supposed to let you in."
"Yeah. Well, I kind of found a work-around."
"Of course you did."
He still wouldn't face me, which was agonizing. I glanced over at
Mikhail, who gave me a nod of encouragement. I guessed I should be glad
that Dimitri was talking to me at all.
"I had to see you. I had to know if you were okay."
"I'm sure Lissa's already updated you."
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"I had to see for myself."
"Well, now you see."
"All I see is your back."
It was maddening, yet every word I got out of him was a gift. It felt
like a thousand years since I'd heard his voice. Like before, I wondered how
I could have ever confused the Dimitri in Siberia with this one. His voice
had been identical in both places, the same pitch and accent, yet as a Strigoi,
his words had always left a chill in the air. This was warm. Honey and velvet
and all sorts of wonderful things wrapping around me, no matter the terrible
things he was saying.
"I don't want you here," said Dimitri flatly. "I don't want to see you."
I took a moment to assess strategy. Dimitri still had that depressed,
hopeless feel around him. Lissa had approached it with kindness and
compassion. She'd gotten through his defenses, though a lot of that was
because he regarded her as his savior. I could try a similar tactic. I could be
gentle and supportive and full of love--all of which were true. I loved him. I
wanted to help him so badly. Yet I wasn't sure that particular method would
work for me. Rose Hathaway was not always known for the soft approach. I
did, however, play on his sense of obligation.
"You can't ignore me," I said, trying to keep my volume out of range
of the other guardians. "You owe me. I saved you."
A few moments of silence passed. "Lissa saved me," he said carefully.
Anger burned within my chest, just it had when I'd watched Lissa visit
him. How could he hold her in such high regard but not me?
"How do you think she got to that point?" I demanded. "How do you
think she learned how to save you? Do you have any idea what we--what I--
had to go through to get that information? You think me going to Siberia
was crazy? Believe me, you haven't even come close to seeing crazy. You
know me. You know what I'm capable of. And I broke my own records this
time. You. Owe. Me."
It was harsh, but I needed a reaction from him. Some kind of emotion.
And I got it. He jerked around, eyes glinting and power crackling through
his body. As always, his movements were both fierce and graceful.
Likewise, his voice was a mix of emotions: anger, frustration, and concern.
"Then the best thing I can do is--"
He froze. The brown eyes that had been narrowed with aggravation
suddenly went wide with . . . what? Amazement? Awe? Or perhaps that
stunned feeling I kept having when I saw him?
Because suddenly, I was pretty sure he was experiencing the same
thing I had earlier. He'd seen me plenty of times in Siberia. He'd seen me
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just the other night at the warehouse. But now . . . now he was truly viewing
me with his own eyes. Now that he was no longer Strigoi, his whole world
was different. His outlook and feelings were different. Even his soul was
different.
It was like one of those moments when people talked about their lives
flashing before their eyes. Because as we stared at one another, every part of
our relationship replayed in my mind's eye. I remembered how strong and
invincible he'd been when we first met, when he'd come to bring Lissa and
me back to the folds of Moroi society. I remembered the gentleness of his
touch when he'd bandaged my bloodied and battered hands. I remembered
him carrying me in his arms after Victor's daughter Natalie had attacked me.
Most of all, I remembered the night we'd been together in the cabin, just
before the Strigoi had taken him. A year. We'd known each other only a
year, but we'd lived a lifetime in it.
And he was realizing that too, I knew, as he studied me. His gaze was
all-powerful, taking in every single one of my features and filing them away.
Dimly, I tried to recall what I looked like today. I still wore the dress from
the secret meeting and knew it looked good on me. My eyes were probably
bloodshot from crying earlier, and I'd only had time for a quick brushing of
my hair before heading off with Adrian.
Somehow, I doubted any of it mattered. The way Dimitri was looking
at me . . . it confirmed everything I'd suspected. The feelings he'd had for me
before he'd been turned--the feelings that had become twisted while a
Strigoi--were all still there. They had to be. Maybe Lissa was his savior.
Maybe the rest of the Court thought she was a goddess. I knew, right then,
that no matter how bedraggled I looked or how blank he tried to keep his
face, I was a goddess to him.
He swallowed and forcibly gained control of himself, just like he
always had. Some things never changed. "Then the best thing I can do," he
continued calmly, "is to stay away from you. That's the best way to repay the
debt."
It was hard for me to keep control and maintain some sort of logical
conversation. I was as awestruck as he was. I was also outraged. "You
offered to repay Lissa by staying by her side forever!"
"I didn't do the things . . ." He averted his eyes for a moment, again
struggling for control, and then met mine once more. "I didn't do the things
to her that I did to you."
"You weren't you! I don't care." My temper was starting to burn again
"How many?" he exclaimed. "How many guardians died last night
because of what I did?"
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"I . . . I think six or seven." Harsh losses. I felt a small pang in my
chest, recalling the names read off in that basement room.
"Six or seven," Dimitri repeated flatly, anguish in his voice. "Dead in
one night. Because of me."
"You didn't act alone! And I told you, you weren't you. You couldn't
control yourself. It doesn't matter to me--"
"It matters to me!" he shouted, his voice ringing through the hallway.
The guardians at each end shifted but didn't approach. When Dimitri spoke
again, he kept his voice lower, but it was still trembling with wild emotions.
"It matters to me. That's what you don't get. You can't understand. You can't
understand what it's like knowing what I did. That whole time being Strigoi .
. . it's like a dream now, but it's one I remember clearly. There can be no
forgiveness for me. And what happened with you? I remember that most of
all. Everything I did. Everything I wanted to do."
"You're not going to do it now," I pleaded. "So let it go. Before--
before everything happened, you said we could be together. That we'd get
assignments near each other and--"
"Roza," he interrupted, the nickname piercing my heart. I think he'd
slipped up, not truly meaning to call me that. There was a twisted smile on
his lips, one without humor. "Do you really think they're going to ever let
me be a guardian again? It'll be a miracle if they let me live!"
"That's not true. Once they realize you've changed and that you're
really your old self . . . everything'll go back to how it was."
He shook his head sadly. "Your optimism . . . your belief that you can
make anything happen. Oh, Rose. It's one of the amazing things about you.
It's also one of the most infuriating things about you."
"I believed that you could come back from being a Strigoi," I pointed
out. "Maybe my belief in the impossible isn't so crazy after all."
This conversation was so grave, so heartbreaking, yet it still kept
reminding me of some of our old practice sessions. He'd try to convince me
of some serious point, and I'd counter it with Rose-logic. It would usually
earn me a mix of amusement and exasperation. I had the feeling that were
the situation just a little different, he'd have that same attitude now. But this
was not a practice session. He wouldn't smile and roll his eyes. This was
serious. This was life and death.
"I'm grateful for what you did," he said formally, still struggling to
master his feelings. It was another trait we shared, both of us always
working to stay in control. He'd always been better at it than me. "I do owe
you. And it's a debt I can't pay. Like I said, the best thing I can do is stay out
of your life."
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"If you're part of Lissa's, then you can't avoid me."
"People can exist around each other without . . . without there being
any more than that," he said firmly. It was such a Dimitri thing to say. Logic
fighting emotion.
And that's when I lost it. Like I said, he was always better at keeping
control. Me? Not so much.
I threw myself against the bars, so rapidly that even Mikhail flinched.
"But I love you!" I hissed. "And I know you love me too. Do you really
think you can spend the rest of your life ignoring that when you're around
me?"
The troubling part was that for a very long time at the Academy,
Dimitri had been convinced he could do exactly that. And he had been
prepared to spend his life not acting on his feelings for me.
"You love me," I repeated. "I know you do." I stretched my arm
through the bars. It was a long way from touching him, but my fingers
reached out desperately, as though they might suddenly grow and be able to
make contact. That was all I needed. One touch from him to know he still
cared, one touch to feel the warmth of his skin and--
"Isn't it true," said Dimitri quietly, "that you're involved with Adrian
Ivashkov?"
My arm dropped.
"Wh--where did you hear that?"
"Things get around," he said, echoing Mikhail.
"They certainly do," I muttered.
"So are you?" he asked more adamantly.
I hesitated before answering. If I told him the truth, he'd have more
ground to make his point about us keeping apart. It was impossible for me to
lie to him, though.
"Yes, but--"
"Good." I'm not sure how I expected him to react. Jealousy? Shock?
Instead, as he leaned back against the wall, he looked . . . relieved. "Adrian's
a better person than he gets credit for. He'll be good to you."
"But--"
"That's where your future is, Rose." A bit of that hopeless, worldweary
attitude was returning. "You don't understand what it's like coming
through what I did--coming back from being a Strigoi. It's changed
everything. It's not just that what I did to you is unforgiveable. All my
feelings . . . my emotions for you . . . they changed. I don't feel the way I
used to. I might be a dhampir again, but after what I went through . . . well,
it's scarred me. It altered my soul. I can't love anyone now. I can't--I don't--
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love you. There's nothing more between you and me."
My blood turned cold. I refused to believe his words, not after the way
he'd looked at me earlier. "No! That's not true! I love you and you--"
"Guards!" Dimitri shouted, his voice so loud that it was a wonder the
whole building didn't shake. "Get her out of here. Get her out of here!"
With amazing guardian reflexes, the guards were down at the cell in a
flash. As a prisoner, Dimitri wasn't in a position to make requests, but the
authorities here certainly weren't going to encourage a situation that would
create a commotion. They began herding Mikhail and me out, but I resisted.
"No, wait--"
"Don't fight it," murmured Mikhail in my ear. "Our time's running out,
and you couldn't have accomplished anything else today anyway."
I wanted to protest, but the words stuck on my lips. I let the guardians
direct me out, but not before I gave Dimitri one last, lingering look. He had a
perfect, guardian-blank look on his face, but the piercing way he stared at
me made me certain there was a lot going on within him.
Mikhail's friend was still on duty upstairs, which let us slip out
without getting in--much--more trouble. As soon as we were outdoors, I
came to a halt and kicked one of the steps angrily.
"Damn it!" I yelled. A couple of Moroi across the courtyard--probably
coming home from some late party--gave me startled looks.
"Calm down," said Mikhail. "This was the first time you've seen him
since the change. There are only so many miracles you can expect right
away. He'll come around."
"I'm not so sure," I grumbled. Sighing, I looked up at the sky. Little
wispy clouds moved lazily about, but I barely saw them. "You don't know
him like I do."
Because while part of me thought that a lot of what Dimitri had said
was indeed a reaction to the shock of returning to himself, there was another
part of me that wondered. I knew Dimitri. I knew his sense of honor, his
adamant beliefs about what was right and wrong. He stood by those beliefs.
He lived his life by them. If he truly, truly believed that the right thing to do
was to avoid me and let any relationship between us fade, well . . . there was
a good chance he might very well act on that idea, no matter the love
between us. As I'd recalled earlier, he'd certainly shown a lot of resistance
back at St. Vladimir's.
As for the rest . . . the part about him no longer loving me or being
able to love anyone . . . well, that would be a different problem all together if
it were true. Both Christian and Adrian had worried there would be some
piece of Strigoi left in him, but their fears had been about violence and
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bloodshed. No one would have guessed this: that living as a Strigoi had
hardened his heart, killing any chance of him loving anyone.
Killing any chance of him loving me.
And I was pretty sure that if that was the case, then part of me would
die too.
219
TWENTY-ONE
THERE WAS LITTLE MORE MIKHAIL and I could say to each
other after that. I didn't want him to get in trouble for what he'd done, and I
let him lead us out of the guardians' building in silence. As we emerged
outside, I could see the sky purpling in the east. The sun was nearly up,
signaling the middle of our night. Briefly flipping into Lissa's mind, I read
that the Death Watch had finally ended, and she was on her way back to her
room--worried about me and still annoyed that Christian had shown up with
Mia.
I followed Lissa's example, wondering if sleep might ease the agony
that Dimitri had left in my heart. Probably not. Still, I thanked Mikhail for
his help and the risk he'd taken. He merely nodded, like there was nothing to
thank him for. It was exactly what he would have wanted me to do for him if
our roles had been reversed and Ms. Karp had been the one behind bars.
I feel into a heavy sleep back in my bed, but my dreams were
troubled. Over and over, I kept hearing Dimitri tell me he couldn't love me
anymore. It beat into me over and over, smashing my heart into little pieces.
At one point, it became more than a dreamlike beating. I heard real beating.
Someone was pounding on my door, and slowly, I dragged myself out of my
awful dreams.
Bleary-eyed, I went to the door and found Adrian. The scene was
almost a mirror of last night when he'd come to invite me to the Death
Watch. Only this time, his face was much grimmer. For a second, I thought
he'd heard about my visit to Dimitri. Or that maybe he'd gotten in a lot more
trouble than we'd realized for sneaking half of his friends into a secret
funeral.
"Adrian . . . this is early for you. . . ." I glanced over at a clock,
discovering that I'd actually slept in pretty late.
"Not early at all," he confirmed, face still serious. "Lots of stuff going
on. I had to come tell you the news before you heard it somewhere else."
"What news?"
"The Council's verdict. They finally passed that big resolution they've
been debating. The one you came in for."
"Wait. They're done?" I recalled what Mikhail had said, that a mystery
issue had been keeping the Council busy. If it was finished, then they could
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move on to something else--say, like, officially declaring Dimitri a dhampir
again. "That's great news." And if this really was tied into when Tatiana had
had me come describe my skills . . . well, was there really a chance I might
be named Lissa's guardian? Could the queen have really come through?
She'd seemed friendly enough last night.
Adrian regarded me with something I'd never seen from him: pity.
"You have no idea, do you?"
"No idea about what?"
"Rose . . ." He gently rested a hand on my shoulder. "The Council just
passed a decree lowering the guardian age to sixteen. Dhampirs'll graduate
when they're sophomores and then go out for assignments."
"What?" Surely I'd misheard.
"You know how panicked they've been about protection and not
having enough guardians, right?" He sighed. "This was their solution to
increasing your numbers."
"But they're too young!" I cried. "How can anyone think sixteen-yearolds
are ready to go out and fight?"
"Well," said Adrian, "because you testified that they were."
My mouth dropped, everything freezing around me. You testified that
they were . . . No. It couldn't be possible.
Adrian gently nudged my arm, trying to shake me out of my stupor.
"Come on, they're still wrapping up. They made the announcement in an
open session, and some people are . . . a little upset."
"Yeah, I'll say." He didn't need to tell me twice. I immediately started
to follow, then realized I was in my pajamas. I quickly changed and brushed
my hair, still scarcely able to believe what he'd just said. My preparation
only took five minutes, and then we were out the door. Adrian wasn't overly
athletic, but he kept a pretty good pace as we headed toward the Council's
hall.
"How did this happen?" I asked. "You don't really mean that . . . that
what I said played a role?" I'd meant my words to be a demand, but they
came out with more of a pleading note.
He lit a cigarette without breaking stride, and I didn't bother chastising
him for it. "It's apparently been a hot topic for a while. It was a pretty close
vote. The people pushing for it knew they'd need to show a lot of evidence to
win. You were their grand prize: a teen dhampir slaying Strigoi left and
right, long before graduation."
"Not that long," I muttered, my fury kindling. Sixteen? Were they
serious? It was ludicrous. The fact that I had been unknowingly used to
support this decree made me sick to my stomach. I'd been a fool, thinking
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they'd all ignored my rule breaking and had simply paraded me in to praise
me. They'd used me. Tatiana had used me.
When we reached it, the Council hall was in as much chaos as Adrian
had implied. True, I hadn't spent a lot of time in these kinds of meetings, but
I was pretty sure that people standing up in clusters and yelling at each other
wasn't normal. The Council's herald probably didn't usually scream himself
hoarse trying to bring order to the crowd either.
The only spot of calm was Tatiana herself, sitting patiently in her seat
at the center of the table, just as Council etiquette dictated. She looked very
pleased with herself. The rest of her colleagues had lost all sense of
propriety and were on their feet like the audience, arguing amongst
themselves or anyone else ready to pick a fight. I stared in amazement,
unsure what to do in all this disorder.
"Who voted for what?" I asked.
Adrian studied the Council members and ticked them off on his
fingers. "Szelsky, Ozera, Badica, Dashkov, Conta, and Drozdov. They were
against it."
"Ozera?" I asked in surprise. I didn't know the Ozera princess--
Evette--very well, but she'd always seemed pretty stiff and unpleasant. I had
new respect for her now.
Adrian nodded over to where Tasha was furiously addressing a large
group of people, eyes flashing and arms waving wildly. "Evette was
persuaded by some of her family members."
That made me smile too, but only for a moment. It was good that
Tasha and Christian were being acknowledged amongst their clan again, but
the rest of our problem was still alive and kicking. I could deduce the rest of
the names.
"So . . . Prince Ivashkov voted for it," I said. Adrian shrugged by way
of apology for his family. "Lazar, Zeklos, Tarus, and Voda." That the Voda
family would vote for extra protection wasn't entirely a surprise, considering
the recent slaughter of one of their members. Priscilla wasn't even in her
grave yet, and the new Voda prince, Alexander, seemed clearly unsure what
to do with his sudden promotion.
I gave Adrian a sharp look. "That's only five to six. Oh." Realization
dawned. "Shit. Royal tiebreaker."
The Moroi voting system had been set up with twelve members, one
for each family, and then whoever the reigning king or queen was. True, it
often meant one group got two votes, since the monarch rarely voted against
his or her own family. It had been known to happen. Regardless, the system
should have had thirteen votes, preventing ties. Except . . . a recent problem
222
had developed. There were no Dragomirs on the Council anymore, meaning
ties could occur. In that rare event, Moroi law dictated that the monarch's
vote carried extra weight. I'd heard that had always been controversial, and
yet at the same time, there wasn't much to be done for it. Ties in the Council
would mean nothing ever got settled, and since monarchs were elected,
many took it on faith that they would act in the best interests of the Moroi.
"Tatiana's was the sixth," I said. "And hers swayed it." Glancing
around, I saw a bit of anger on the faces of those from the families who had
voted against the decree. Apparently, not everyone believed Tatiana had
acted in the best interest of the Moroi.
Lissa's presence sang to me through the bond, so her arrival a few
moments later was no surprise. News had spread fast, though she didn't yet
know the fine details. Adrian and I waved her over. She was as
dumbfounded as we were.
"How could they do that?" she asked.
"Because they're too afraid that someone might make them learn to
defend themselves. Tasha's group was getting too loud."
Lissa shook her head. "No, not just that. I mean, why were they even
in session? We should be in mourning after what happened the other day--
publicly. The whole Court, not just some secret part of it. One of the Council
members even died! Couldn't they wait for the funeral?" In her mind's eye, I
could see the images from that grisly night, where Priscilla had died right
before Lissa's eyes.
"But was easily replaceable," a new voice said. Christian had joined
us. Lissa took a few steps away from him, still annoyed about Mia. "And
actually, it's the perfect time. The people who wanted this had to jump at
their chance. Every time there's a big Strigoi fight, everyone panics. Fear'll
make a lot of people get on board with this. And if any Council members
were undecided before this, that battle probably pushed them over."
That was pretty wise reasoning for Christian, and Lissa was
impressed, despite her troubled feelings for him right now. The Council's
herald finally managed to make his voice heard over the shouts of the
audience. I wondered if the group would have quieted down if Tatiana
herself had started yelling at them to shut up. But no. That was probably
beneath her dignity. She was still sitting there calmly, like nothing unusual
was going on.
Nonetheless, it took several moments for everyone to settle down and
take their seats. My friends and I hurriedly grabbed the first ones we could
find. With peace and quiet achieved at last, the weary-looking herald yielded
the floor to the queen.
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Smiling grandly at the assembly, she addressed them in her most
imperious voice. "We'd like to thank everyone for coming today and
expressing your . . . opinions. I know some are still unsure about this
decision, but Moroi law has been followed here--laws that have been in
place for centuries. We will have another session soon to listen to what you
have to say in an orderly fashion." Something told me that was an empty
gesture. People could talk all they wanted; she wouldn't listen. "This
decision--this verdict--will benefit the Moroi. Our guardians are already so
excellent." She gave a condescending nod toward the ceremonial guardians
standing along the room's walls. They wore typically neutral faces, but I was
guessing that, like me, they probably wanted to punch half the Council.
"They are so excellent, in fact, that they train their students to be ready to
defend us at an early age. We will all be safer from tragedies like that which
recently occurred."
She lowered her head a moment in what must have been a show of
grieving. I recalled last night when she'd choked up over Priscilla. Had that
been an act? Was her best friend's death a convenient way for Tatiana to
push forward with her own agenda. Surely . . . surely, she wasn't that cold.
The queen lifted her head and continued. "And again, we're happy to
listen to you register your opinions, although by our own laws, this matter is
settled. Further sessions will have to wait until an adequate period of
mourning has passed for the unfortunate departed."
Her tone and body language implied that this was indeed the end of
the discussion. Then, an impertinent voice suddenly broke the room's
silence.
My voice.
"Well, I'd kind of like to register my opinion now."
Inside my head, Lissa was shouting: Sit down, sit down! But I was
already on my feet, moving toward the Council's table. I stopped at a
respectful distance, one that would let them notice me but not get me tackled
by guardians. And oh, they noticed me. The herald flushed bright red at my
rule breaking.
"You are out of line and in violation of all Council protocol! Sit down
right now before you are removed." He glanced over at the guardians, like
he expected them to come charging forward right then. None of them
moved. Either they didn't perceive me as a threat, or they were wondering
what I was going to do. I was also wondering this.
With a small, delicate hand gesture, Tatiana waved the herald back. "I
daresay there's been so much breach of protocol today that one more
incident won't make a difference." She fixed me with a kind smile, one that
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was apparently intended to make us look like friends. "Besides, Guardian
Hathaway is one of our most valuable assets. I'm always interested in what
she has to say."
Was she really? Time to find out. I addressed my words to the
Council.
"This thing you've just passed is utterly and totally insane." I
considered it a great feat on my part that I didn't use any swear words there
because I had some adjectives in mind that were much more fitting. Who
said I didn't understand Council etiquette? "How can any of you sit there and
think it's okay to send sixteen-year-olds out to risk their lives?"
"It's only two years' difference," said the Tarus prince. "It's not like
we're sending ten-year-olds."
"Two years is a lot." I thought for a moment about when I'd been
sixteen. What had happened in those two years? I'd run off with Lissa,
watched friends die, traveled around the world, fallen in love. . . . "You can
live a lifetime in two years. And if you want us to keep being on the front
lines--which most of us willingly do when we graduate--then you owe us
those two years."
This time, I glanced back at the audience. The reactions were mixed.
Some clearly agreed with me, nodding along. Some looked as though
nothing in the world would change their minds about the decree being just.
Others wouldn't meet my eyes. . . . Had I swayed them? Were they
undecided? Embarrassed at their own selfishness? They might be the keys.
"Believe me, I would love to see your people enjoy their youth." This
was Nathan Ivashkov speaking. "But right now, that's not an option we have.
The Strigoi are closing in. We're losing more Moroi and guardians every
day. Getting more fighters out there will stop this, and really, we're just
letting those dhampirs' skills go to waste by waiting a couple years. This
plan will protect both our races."
"It'll kill mine off faster!" I said. Realizing I might start shouting if I
lost control, I took a deep breath before going on. "They won't be ready.
They won't have all the training they need."
And that was where Tatiana herself made her master play. "Yet, by
your own admission, you were certainly prepared at a young age. You killed
more Strigoi before you were eighteen than some guardians kill their entire
lives."
I fixed her with a narrow-eyed look. "I," I said coldly, "had an
excellent instructor. One that you currently have locked up. If you want to
talk about skills going to waste, then go look in your own jail."
There was a slight stirring in the audience, and Tatiana's we're pals
225
face grew a little cold. "That is not an issue we are addressing today.
Increasing our protection is. I believe you have even commented in the past
that the guardian ranks are lacking in numbers." My own words, thrown
back at me from last night. "They need to be filled. You--and many of your
companions--have proven you're able to defend us."
"We were exceptions!" It was egotistical, but it was the truth. "Not all
novices have reached that level."
A dangerous glint appeared in her eye, and her voice grew silky
smooth again. "Well, then, perhaps we need more excellent training. Perhaps
we should send you to St. Vladimir's or some other academy so that you can
improve your young colleagues' education. My understanding is that your
upcoming assignment will be a permanent administrative one here at Court.
If you wanted to help make this new decree successful, we could change that
assignment and make you an instructor instead. It might speed up your
return to a bodyguard assignment."
I gave her a dangerous smile of my own. "Do not," I warned, "try to
threaten, bribe, or blackmail me. Ever. You won't like the consequences."
That might have been going too far. People in the audience exchanged
startled looks. Some of their expressions were disgusted, as though they
could expect nothing better of me. I recognized a few of those Moroi. They
were ones I'd overheard talking about my relationship with Adrian and how
the queen hated it. I also suspected a number of royals from last night's
ceremony were here too. They'd seen Tatiana lead me out and no doubt
thought my outburst and disrespect today were a type of revenge.
The Moroi weren't the only ones who reacted. Regardless of whether
they shared my opinions, a few guardians stepped forward. I made sure to
stay exactly where I was, and that, along with Tatiana's lack of fear, kept
them in place.
"We're getting weary of this conversation," Tatiana said, switching to
the royal we. "You can speak more--and do so in the proper manner--when
we have our next meeting and open the floor to comments. For now, whether
you like it or not, this resolution has been passed. It's law."
She's letting you off! Lissa's voice was back in my head. Back away
from this before you do something that'll get you in real trouble. Argue
later.
It was ironic because I'd been on the verge of exploding and letting
my full rage out. Lissa's words stopped me--but not because of their content.
It was Lissa herself. When Adrian and I had discussed the results earlier, I'd
noted one piece of faulty logic.
"It wasn't a fair vote," I declared. "It wasn't legal."
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"Are you a lawyer now, Miss Hathaway?" The queen was amused,
and her dropping of my guardian title now was a blatant lack of respect. "If
you're referring to the monarch's vote carrying more weight than others on
the Council, then we can assure you that that has been Moroi law for
centuries in such situations." She glanced at her fellow Council members,
none of whom raised a protest. Even those who'd voted against her couldn't
find fault with her point.
"Yeah, but the entire Council didn't vote," I said. "You've had an
empty spot in the Council for the last few years--but not anymore." I turned
and pointed at where my friends were sitting. "Vasilisa Dragomir is eighteen
now and can fill her family's spot." In all of this chaos, her birthday had been
overlooked, even by me.
The eyes in the room turned on Lissa--something she did not like.
However, Lissa was used to being in the public eye. She knew what was
expected of a royal, how to look and carry herself. So, rather than cringing,
she sat up straight and stared ahead with a cool, regal look that said she
could walk up to that table right now and demand her birthright. Whether it
was that magnificent attitude alone or maybe a little spirit charisma, she was
almost impossible to look away from. Her beauty had its usual luminous
quality, and around the room, a lot of the faces held the same awe for her
that I'd observed around Court. Dimitri's transformation was still an enigma,
but those who believed in it were indeed regarding her as some kind of saint.
She was becoming larger than life in so many people's eyes, both with her
family name and mysterious powers--and now the alleged ability to restore
Strigoi.
Smug, I looked back at Tatiana. "Isn't eighteen the legal voting age?"
Checkmate, bitch.
"Yes," she said cheerfully. "If the Dragomirs had a quorum."
I wouldn't say my stunning victory exactly shattered at that point, but
it certainly lost a little of its luster. "A what?"
"A quorum. By law, for a Moroi family to have a Council vote, they
must have a family. She does not. She's the only one."
I stared in disbelief. "What, you're saying she needs to go have a kid
to get a vote?"
Tatiana grimaced. "Not now, of course. Someday, I'm sure. For a
family to have a vote, they must have at least two members, one of whom
must be over eighteen. It's Moroi law--again, a law that's been in the books
for centuries."
A few people were exchanging confused and surprised looks. This
was clearly not a law many were familiar with. Of course, this situation--a
227
royal line reduced to one person--wasn't one that had occurred in recent
history, if it had ever occurred at all.
"It's true," said Ariana Szelsky reluctantly. "I've read it."
Okay, that was when my stunning victory shattered. The Szelsky
family was one I trusted, and Ariana was the older sister of the guy my mom
protected. Ariana was a pretty bookish kind of person, and seeing as she'd
voted against the guardian age change, it seemed unlikely she'd offer this
piece of evidence if it weren't true.
With no more ammunition, I resorted to old standbys.
"That," I told Tatiana, "is the most fucked-up law I have ever heard."
That did it. The audience broke into shocked chatter, and Tatiana gave
up on whatever pretense of friendliness she'd been clinging to. She beat the
herald to any orders he might have given.
"Remove her!" shouted Tatiana. Even with the rapidly growing noise,
her voice rang clearly through the room. "We will not tolerate this sort of
vulgar behavior!"
I had guardians on me in a flash. Honestly, with how often I'd been
dragged away from places lately, there was almost something comfortably
familiar about it. I didn't fight the guardians as they led me to the door, but I
also didn't let them take me without a few parting words.
"You could change the quorum law if you wanted, you sanctimonious
bitch!" I yelled back. "You're twisting the law because you're selfish and
afraid! You're making the worst mistake of your life. You'll regret it! Wait
and see--you'll wish you'd never done it!"
I don't know if anyone heard my tirade because by then, the hall was
back to the chaos it had been in when I entered. The guardians--three of
them--didn't let go of me until we were outside. Once they released me, we
all stood around awkwardly for a moment.
"What now?" I asked. I tried to keep the anger out of my voice. I was
still furious and worked up, but it wasn't these guys' fault. "Are you going to
lock me up?" Seeing as it would bring me back to Dimitri, it would almost
be a reward.
"They only said to remove you," one of the guardians pointed out.
"No one said what to do with you after that."
Another guardian, old and grizzled but still fierce looking, gave me a
wry look. "I'd take off while you can, before they really have a chance to
punish you."
"Not that they won't find you if they really want to," added the first
guardian.
With that, the three of them headed back inside, leaving me confused
228
and upset. My body was still revved for a fight, and I was filled with the
frustration I always experienced whenever I was faced with a situation I felt
powerless in. All that yelling for nothing. I'd accomplished nothing.
"Rose?"
I shifted from my churning emotions and looked up at the building.
The older guardian hadn't gone inside and still stood in the doorway. His
face was stoic, but I thought I saw a twinkle in his eye. "For what it's worth,"
he told me, "I thought you were fantastic in there."
I didn't feel much like smiling, but my lips betrayed me. "Thanks," I
said.
Well, maybe I'd accomplished one thing.
229
TWENTY-TWO
I DIDN'T TAKE THE GUY'S advice and tear off out of there, though
I didn't exactly sit on the front step either. I lingered nearby in a cluster of
cherry trees, figuring it would only be a matter of time before the assembly
ended and people spilled out the doors. After several minutes passed and
nothing happened, I flipped into Lissa's mind and discovered things were
still in full force. Despite Tatiana declaring twice now that the session was
over, people were still standing around and arguing in groups.
Tasha was standing in one such group with Lissa and Adrian, making
one of the impassioned speeches she was so good at. Tasha might not be as
coldly calculating as Tatiana was when it came to political moves, but Tasha
did have a keen sense of ripples in the system and recognized opportunities
when they came. She was against the age-lowering decree. She was for
teaching Moroi to fight. Neither of those was getting her very far, so she
jumped on the next best thing: Lissa.
"Why are we arguing among ourselves about how best to kill Strigoi
when we can save them?" Tasha put one arm around Lissa and one around
Adrian, drawing them both forward. Lissa still wore her serenely confident
look, but Adrian looked ready to bolt if given half a chance. "Vasilisa--who,
by the way, is indeed being denied her fair voice here, thanks to an archaic
law--has shown that Strigoi can be brought back."
"That hasn't been proven," exclaimed one man in the crowd.
"Are you kidding?" asked a woman beside him. "My sister was with
the group that brought him back. She says he's definitely a dhampir. He was
even out in the sun!"
Tasha nodded in approval at the woman. "I was there as well. And
now we have two spirit users capable of doing this for other Strigoi."
As much as I respected Tasha, I wasn't entirely with her on this. The
amount of power--not to mention effort involved in the staking--that Lissa
had required with Dimitri had been staggering. It had even temporarily hurt
the bond. That didn't mean she couldn't do it again. Nor did it mean she
wouldn't want to again. She was just naively compassionate enough to throw
herself into the line of fire to help others. But I knew the more power a spirit
user wielded, the quicker they'd travel down the road to insanity.
And Adrian . . . well, he was almost a nonissue here. Even if he
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wanted to go staking Strigoi, he didn't have the kind of healing power it
would take to restore one--at least not now. It's wasn't uncommon for Moroi
to use their elements in different ways. Some fire users, like Christian, had
skilled control of flame itself. Others could only use their magic to, say,
warm the air in a room. Likewise, Lissa and Adrian had their strengths with
spirit. His greatest healing triumph was mending a fracture, and she still
couldn't walk dreams, no matter how much she practiced.
So, really, Tasha had one spirit user capable of saving Strigoi, and that
one could hardly transform legions of those monsters. Tasha did seem to
recognize this a little.
"The Council shouldn't be wasting time with age laws," she continued.
"We need to sink our resources into finding more spirit users and recruiting
them to help save Strigoi." She fixed her gaze on someone in the crowd.
"Martin, didn't your brother get turned against his will? With enough work,
we could bring him back to you. Alive. Just like you knew him. Otherwise,
he's just going to get staked when guardians find him--and of course he'll be
slaughtering innocents along the way."
Yeah, Tasha was good. She could paint a good image and nearly
brought that Martin guy to tears. She didn't really mention people who'd
turned Strigoi willingly. Lissa, still standing with her, wasn't sure how she
felt about the idea of a Strigoi-saving spirit army, but she did recognize how
this was all part of several other plans Tasha had--including one to get Lissa
voting rights.
Tasha played up Lissa's abilities and character, scoffing at what was
clearly an outdated law from an era that never could have foreseen this
situation. Tasha further pointed out that a full Council of twelve families
would send a message to Strigoi everywhere about Moroi unity.
I didn't want to hear any more. I'd let Tasha wield her political magic
and talk more to Lissa later. I was still so agitated about what had happened
when I'd yelled at the Council that I couldn't stand to see that room anymore.
I left her mind and returned to my own, yelping when I saw a face right in
front of mine.
"Ambrose!"
One of the best-looking dhampirs on the planet--after Dimitri, of
course--flashed me a gleaming, movie-star smile. "You were so still, I
thought maybe you were trying to be a dryad."
I blinked. "A what?"
He gestured to the cherry trees. "Nature spirits. Beautiful women who
become one with trees."
"I'm not sure if that was a compliment or not," I said. "But it's good to
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see you again."
Ambrose was a true oddity in our culture: a male dhampir who had
neither taken guardian vows nor run off to hide among humans. Female
dhampirs often chose not to join the guardians in order to focus on raising
families. That's why we were so rare. But men? They had no excuse, as far
as most people were concerned. Rather than skulk off in disgrace, however,
Ambrose had chosen to stay and simply work for the Moroi another way. He
was essentially a servant--a high-class one who served drinks at elite parties
and gave massages to royal women. He also, if rumors were true, served
Tatiana in physical ways. That was so creepy, though, I promptly put it out
of my mind.
"You too," he told me. "But if you aren't communing with nature,
what are you doing?"
"It's a long story. I kind of got thrown out of a Council meeting."
He looked impressed. "Literally thrown out?"
"Dragged, I guess. I'm surprised I haven't seen you around," I mused.
"Of course, I've kind of been, um, distracted this last week."
"So I've heard," he said, giving me a sympathetic look. "Although, I
actually have been away. Just got back last night."
"Just in time for the fun," I muttered.
The guileless look on his face told me hadn't heard about the decree
yet. "What are you doing now?" he asked. "This doesn't look like
punishment. Did you finish your sentence?"
"Something like that. I'm kind of waiting for someone now. Was just
going to hang out in my room."
"Well, if you're killing time, why don't you come see Aunt Rhonda?"
"Rhonda?" I scowled. "No offense, but your aunt didn't really impress
me with her abilities last time."
"None taken," he said cheerfully. "But she's been wondering about
you. And Vasilisa. So, if you're just hanging around . . ."
I hesitated. He was right that I had nothing better to do right now. I
was stuck on options with both Dimitri and the Council's idiotic resolutions.
Yet Rhonda--his fortune-telling Moroi aunt--wasn't someone I really wanted
to see again. Despite my glib words, the truth was that in retrospect, some of
Rhonda's predictions had come true. I just didn't like what they'd been.
"Fine," I said, trying to look bored. "Make it fast."
He smiled again, like he could see through my ruse, and led me off to
a building I'd been to once before. It housed a luxurious salon and spa
frequented by royal Moroi. Lissa and I had had our nails done there, and as
Ambrose and I wound our way through it to Rhonda's lair, I felt a strange
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pang within me. Manicures and pedicures . . . they seemed like the most
trivial things in the world. But on that day, they'd been wonderful. Lissa and
I had laughed and grown closer . . . just before the school was attacked and
everything fell apart. . . .
Rhonda told fortunes in a back room that was far from the busy spa.
Despite the seedy feel of it, she did a pretty brisk business and even had her
own receptionist. Or, well, she used to. This time, the desk was empty, and
Ambrose led me straight through to Rhonda's room. It looked exactly the
same as before, like being inside a heart. Everything was red: the wallpaper,
the decorations, and the cushions covering the floor.
Rhonda herself sat on the floor, eating a cup of yogurt, which seemed
terribly ordinary for someone who allegedly wielded mystical powers. Curly
black hair cascaded around her shoulders, making the large gold hoops in
her ears gleam.
"Rose Hathaway," she said happily, setting the yogurt aside. "What a
nice surprise."
"Shouldn't you have seen me coming?" I asked dryly.
Her lips twitched with amusement. "That's not my power."
"Sorry to interrupt your dinner," Ambrose said, gracefully folding his
muscled body as he sat down. "But Rose isn't easy to catch hold of."
"I imagine not," she said. "I'm impressed you got her to come at all.
What can I do for you today, Rose?"
I shrugged and sank down beside Ambrose. "I don't know. I'm only
here because Ambrose talked me into it."
"She didn't think your last reading was very good," he said.
"Hey!" I shot him a chastising look. "That's not exactly what I said."
Last time, Lissa and Dimitri had been with me. Rhonda's tarot cards
had shown Lissa crowned with power and light--no surprise. Rhonda had
said Dimitri would lose what he valued most, and he had: his soul. And me?
Rhonda had bluntly told me that I'd kill the undead. I'd scoffed at that,
knowing I had a lifetime of Strigoi-killing ahead of me. Now I wondered if
"undead" meant the Strigoi part of Dimitri. Even if I hadn't driven the stake,
I'd certainly played a major role.
"Maybe another reading would help the other one make more sense?"
she offered.
My mind was putting together another fraud psychic joke, which was
why it was so astonishing when my mouth said, "That's the problem. The
other one did make sense. I'm afraid . . . I'm afraid of what else the cards will
show."
"The cards don't make the future," she said gently. "If something's
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meant to be, it'll be, regardless of whether you see it here. And even then . . .
well, the future is always changing. If we had no choices, there'd be no point
in living."
"See now," I said flippantly, "that's the kind of vague gypsy response I
was hoping for."
"Roma," she corrected. "Not gypsy." Despite my snark, she still
seemed to be in a good mood. Easygoing attitudes must have run in their
family. "Do you want the cards or not?"
Did I? She was right about one thing--the future would unfold with or
without me seeing it in the cards. And even if the cards showed it, I probably
wouldn't understand it until afterward.
"Okay," I said. "Just for fun. I mean, last time was probably a lucky
guess."
Rhonda rolled her eyes but said nothing as she began shuffling her
tarot deck. She did it with such precision that the cards seemed to move
themselves. When she finally stopped, she handed the deck to me to cut. I
did, and she put it back together.
"We did three cards before," she said. "We've got time to do more if
you'd like. Five, perhaps?"
"The more there are, the more likely it is that anything can get
explained."
"If you don't believe in them, then it shouldn't be an issue."
"Okay, then. Five."
She grew serious as she flipped out the cards, her eyes carefully
studying them. Two of the cards had come out upside down. I didn't take
that as a good sign. Last time, I'd learned that it made seemingly happy cards
. . . well, not so happy.
The first one was one the Two of Cups, showing a man and a woman
together in a grassy, flower-filled field while the sun shone above them.
Naturally, it was upside down.
"Cups are tied to emotions," Rhonda explained. "The Two of Cups
shows a union, a perfect love and blossoming of joyous emotions. But since
it's inverted--"
"You know what?" I interrupted. "I think I'm getting the hang of this.
You can skip that one. I have a good idea what it means." It might as well
have been Dimitri and me on that card, the cup empty and full of heartache. .
. . I really didn't want to hear Rhonda analyze what was already tearing my
heart up.
So she went on to the next one: the Queen of Swords, also upside
down.
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"Cards like this refer to specific people," Rhonda told me. The Queen
of Swords looked very imperious, with auburn hair and silver robes. "The
Queen of Swords is clever. She thrives on knowledge, can outwit her
enemies, and is ambitious."
I sighed. "But upside down . . ."
"Upside down," said Rhonda, "all of those traits get twisted. She's still
smart, still trying to get her way . . . but she's doing it through insincere
ways. There's a lot of hostility and deception here. I'd say you have an
enemy."
"Yeah," I said, eyeing the crown. "I think I can guess who. I just
called her a sanctimonious bitch."
Rhonda didn't comment and moved on to the next one. It was facing
the right way, but I kind of wished it wasn't. It had a whole bunch of swords
stuck in the ground and a woman tied and blindfolded to one. Eight of
Swords.
"Oh, come on," I exclaimed. "What is it with me and swords? You
gave me one this depressing last time." It had shown a woman weeping in
front of a wall of swords.
"That was the Nine of Swords," she agreed. "It could always be
worse."
"I have a hard time believing that."
She picked up the rest of the deck and scanned through it, finally
pulling out one card. The Ten of Swords. "You could have drawn this." It
showed a dead guy lying on the ground with a bunch of swords driven
through him.
"Point taken," I said. Ambrose chuckled beside me. "What's the nine
mean?"
"The nine is being trapped. Unable to get out of a situation. It can also
mean slander or accusation. Summoning courage to escape something." I
glanced back at the queen, thinking of the things I'd said in the Council
room. Those would definitely count as accusations. And being trapped?
Well, there was always the possibility of a lifetime of paperwork . . .
I sighed. "Okay, what's the next one?" It was the best-looking one in
the bunch, the Six of Swords. It had a bunch of people in a boat, rowing off
over moonlit water.
"A journey," she said.
"I was just on a journey. A few of them." I eyed her suspiciously.
"Man, this isn't, like, some kind of a spiritual journey is it?"
Ambrose laughed again. "Rose, I wish you'd get tarot readings every
day."
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Rhonda ignored him. "If it were in cups, maybe. But swords are
tangible. Action. A true, out-and-about journey."
Where on earth would I go? Did it mean I was traveling to the
Academy like Tatiana had suggested? Or was it possible that, in spite of all
my rule breaking and calling her royal highness names, I might actually get
an assignment after all? One away from Court?
"You could be looking for something. It may be a physical journey
combined with a spiritual journey," she said, which sounded like a total way
to cover her ass. "This last one . . ." Her eyebrows knitted into a frown at the
fifth card. "This is hidden from me."
I peered at it. "The Page of Cups. Seems pretty obvious. It's a page
with, um, cups."
"Usually I have a clear vision. . . . The cards speak to me in how they
connect. This one's not clear."
"The only thing that's not clear is whether it's a girl or a boy." The
person on the card looked young but had hair and an androgynous face that
made the gender impossible to determine. The blue tights and tunic didn't
help, though the sunny field in the background seemed promising.
"It can be either," Rhonda said. "It's the lowest in rank of the cards
that represent people in each suit: King, Queen, Knight, and then Page.
Whoever the page is, it's someone trustworthy and creative. Optimistic. It
could mean someone who goes on the journey with you--or maybe the
reason for your journey."
Whatever optimism or truth I'd had in the cards pretty much
disappeared with that. Given that she'd just said about a hundred things it
could be, I didn't really consider it authoritative. Usually, she noticed my
skepticism, but her attention was still on the card as she frowned.
"But I just can't tell. . . . There's a cloud around it. Why? It doesn't
make sense."
Something about her confusion sent a chill down my spine. I always
told myself this was fake, but if she'd been making it all up . . . well,
wouldn't she have made something up about the Page of Cups? She wasn't
putting on a very convincing act if this last card was making her question
herself. The thought that maybe there was some mystical force out there
blocking her sobered up my cynical attitude.
With a sigh, she looked up at last. "Sorry that's all I can tell you. Did
the rest help?"
I scanned the cards. Heartache. An enemy. Accusations. Entrapment.
Travel. "Some of it tells me things I already know. The rest leaves me with
more questions."
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She smiled knowingly. "That's how it usually is."
I thanked her for the reading, secretly glad I didn't have to pay for it.
Ambrose walked me out, and I tried to shake off the mood Rhonda's fortune
had left me in. I had enough problems in my life without letting a bunch of
stupid cards bother me.
"You going to be okay?" he asked when we finally emerged. The sun
was climbing higher. The Royal Court would be going to bed soon, ending
what had been a turbulent day. "I . . . I wouldn't have brought you if I'd
known how much it would upset you."
"No, no," I said. "It's not the cards. Not exactly. There's a bunch of
other things going on . . . one you should probably know about."
I hadn't wanted to bring up the decree when we'd first run into each
other, but as a dhampir, he had a right to hear about what had happened. His
face was perfectly still as I spoke, save for his dark brown eyes, which grew
wider while the story progressed.
"There's some mistake," he said at last. "They wouldn't do that. They
wouldn't do that to sixteen-year-olds."
"Yeah, well, I didn't think so either, but they were apparently serious
enough about it to throw me out when I, um, questioned it."
"I can just imagine your 'questioning.' All this'll do is make more
dhampirs drop out of the guardians . . . unless, of course, being that young
makes them more open for brainwashing."
"Kind of a sensitive area for you, huh?" I asked. After all, he too was
a guardian drop-out.
He shook his head. "Staying in this society was nearly impossible for
me. If any of those kids do decide to drop out, they won't have the powerful
friends I did. They'll be outcasts. That's all this'll do. Either kill off teens or
cut them off from their own people."
I wondered what powerful friends he'd had, but this was hardly the
time to learn his life history. "Well, that royal bitch doesn't seem to care."
The thoughtful, distracted look in his eyes suddenly sharpened. "Don't
call her that," he warned with a glare. "This isn't her fault."
Whoa. Cue surprise. I'd almost never seen sexy, charismatic Ambrose
be anything but friendly. "Of course it's her fault! She's the supreme ruler of
the Moroi, remember?"
His scowl deepened. "The Council voted too. Not her alone."
"Yeah, but she voted in support of this decree. She swayed the vote."
"There must have been a reason. You don't know her like I do. She
wouldn't want this kind of thing."
I started to ask if he was out of his mind but paused when I
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remembered his relationship with the queen. Those romantic rumors made
me queasy, but if they were true, I supposed he might have legitimate
concern for her. I also decided it was probably best that I didn't know her the
way he did. The bite marks on his neck certainly indicated some sort of
intimate activity.
"Whatever's going on between you is your business," I told him
calmly, "but she's used it to trick you into thinking she's someone she isn't.
She did it to me too, and I fell for it. It's all a scam."
"I don't believe it," he said, still stone-faced. "As queen, she's put into
all sorts of tough situations. There must be more to it--she'll change the
decree, I'm certain of it."
"As queen," I said, imitating his tone, "she should have the ability
to--"
My words fell off as a voice spoke in my head. Lissa's.
Rose, you're going to want to see this. But you have to promise not to
cause any trouble. Lissa flashed a location to me, along with a sense of
urgency.
Ambrose's hard look shifted to one of concern. "Are you okay?"
"I--yeah. Lissa needs me." I sighed. "Look, I don't want us to fight,
okay? Obviously we've each got different views of the situation . . . but I
think we both agree on the same key point."
"That kids shouldn't be sent off to die? Yeah, we can agree on that."
We smiled tentatively at each other, and the anger between us diffused. "I'll
talk to her, Rose. I'll find out the real story and let you know, okay?"
"Okay." I had a hard time believing anyone could really have a heartto-
heart with Tatiana, but again, there might be more to their relationship
than I realized. "Thanks. It was good seeing you."
"You too. Now go--go to Lissa."
I needed no further urging. Along with the sense of urgency, Lissa had
passed one other message through the bond that sent my feet flying: It's
about Dimitri.
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TWENTY-THREE
I DIDN'T NEED THE BOND to find Lissa. The crowd tipped me off
to where she--and Dimitri--were.
My first thought was that some kind of stoning or medieval mobbing
was going on. Then I realized that the people standing around were simply
watching something. I pushed through them, heedless of the dirty looks I
got, until I stood in the front row of the onlookers. What I found brought me
to a halt.
Lissa and Dimitri sat side by side on a bench while three Moroi and--
yikes--Hans sat opposite them. Guardians stood scattered around them, tense
and ready to jump in if things went bad, apparently. Before I even heard a
word, I knew exactly what was going on. This was an interrogation, an
investigation to determine what Dimitri was exactly.
Under most circumstances, this would be a weird place for a formal
investigation. It was, ironically, one of the courtyards Eddie and I had
worked on, the one that stood in the shadow of the statue of the young
queen. The Court's church stood nearby. This grassy area wasn't exactly holy
ground, but it was close enough to the church that people could run to it in
an emergency. Crucifixes didn't hurt Strigoi, but they couldn't cross over
into a church, mosque, or any other sacred place. Between that and the
morning sun, this was probably as safe a location and time as officials could
muster up to question Dimitri.
I recognized one of the Moroi questioners, Reece Tarus. He was
related to Adrian on his mom's side but had also spoken in favor of the age
decree. So I took an instant dislike to him, particularly considering the
haughty tone he used toward Dimitri.
"Do you find the sun blinding?" asked Reece. He had a clipboard in
front of him and appeared to be going down a checklist.
"No," said Dimitri, voice smooth and controlled. His attention was
totally on his questioners. He had no clue I was there, and I kind of liked it
that way. I wanted to just gaze at him for a moment and admire his features.
"What if you stare into the sun?"
Dimitri hesitated, and I'm not sure anyone but me caught the sudden
glint in his eyes--or knew what it meant. The question was stupid, and I
think Dimitri--maybe, just maybe--wanted to laugh. With his normal skill,
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he maintained his composure.
"Anyone would go blind staring into the sun long enough," he replied.
"I'd go through what anyone else here would."
Reece didn't seem to like the answer, but there was no fault in the
logic. He pursed his lips together and moved on to the next question. "Does
it scald your skin?"
"Not at the moment."
Lissa glanced over at the crowd and noticed me. She couldn't feel me
the way I could through our bond, but sometimes it seemed she had an
uncanny sense of when I was around. I think she sensed my aura if I was
close enough, since all spirit users claimed the field of light around shadowkissed
people was very distinct. She gave me a small smile before turning
back to the questioning.
Dimitri, ever vigilant, noticed her tiny movement. He looked over to
see what had distracted her, caught sight of me, and faltered a little on
Reece's next question, which was, "Have you noticed whether your eyes
occasionally turn red?"
"I . . ." Dimitri stared at me for several moments and then jerked his
head back toward Reece. "I haven't been around many mirrors. But I think
my guards would have noticed, and none of them have said anything."
Nearby, one of the guardians made a small noise. He barely managed
to keep a straight face, but I think he too had wanted to snicker at the
ridiculous line of questioning. I couldn't recall his name, but when I'd been
at Court long ago, he and Dimitri had chatted and laughed quite a bit when
together. If an old friend was starting to believe Dimitri was a dhampir
again, then that had to be a good sign.
The Moroi next to Reece glared around, trying to figure out where the
noise had come from, but discovered nothing. The questioning continued,
this time having to do with whether Dimitri would step into the church if
they asked him to.
"I can go right now," he told them. "I'll go to services tomorrow if you
want." Reece made another note, no doubt wondering if he could get the
priest to douse Dimitri in holy water.
"This is all a distraction," a familiar voice said in my ear. "Smoke and
mirrors. That's what Aunt Tasha says." Christian now stood beside me.
"It needs to be done," I murmured back. "They have to see that he isn't
Strigoi anymore."
"Yeah, but they've barely signed the age law. The queen gave the goahead
for this as soon as the Council's session let out because it's sensational
and will make people pay attention to something new. It was how they
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finally got the hall cleared. 'Hey, go look at the sideshow!'"
I could almost hear Tasha saying that word for word. Regardless,
there was truth to it. I felt conflicted. I wanted Dimitri to be free. I wanted
him to be the way he used to be. Yet I didn't appreciate Tatiana doing this
for her own political gain and not because she actually cared about what was
right. This was possibly the most monumental thing to happen in our history.
It needed to be treated as such. Dimitri's fate shouldn't be a convenient
"sideshow" to distract everyone from an unfair law.
Reece was now asking both Lissa and Dimitri to describe exactly
what they'd experienced the night of the raid. I had a feeling this was
something they'd recounted quite a bit. Although Dimitri had been the
picture of nonthreatening composure so far, I still sensed that gray feel to
him, the guilt and torment he felt over what he had done as a Strigoi. Yet,
when he turned to listen to Lissa tell her version of the story, his face lit up
with wonder. Awe. Worship.
Jealousy flashed through me. His feelings weren't romantic, but it
didn't matter. What mattered was that he had rejected me but regarded her as
the greatest thing in the world. He'd told me never to talk to him again and
sworn he'd do anything for her. Again I felt that petulant sense of being
wronged. I refused to believe that he couldn't love me anymore. It wasn't
possible, not after all he and I had been through together. Not after
everything we'd felt for each other.
"They sure seem close," Christian noted, a suspicious note in his
voice. I had no time to tell him his worries were unfounded because I wanted
to hear what Dimitri had to say.
The story of his change was hard for others to follow, largely because
spirit was still so misunderstood. Reece got as much out of it as he could and
then turned the questioning over to Hans. Hans, ever practical, had no need
for extensive interrogation. He was a man of action, not words. Gripping a
stake in his hand, he asked Dimitri to touch it. The standing guardians
tensed, probably in case Dimitri tried to grab the stake and go on a rampage.
Instead, Dimitri calmly reached out and held the top of the stake for a
few moments. There was a collective intake of breath as everyone waited for
him to scream in pain since Strigoi couldn't touch charmed silver. Instead,
Dimitri looked bored.
Then he astonished them all. Drawing his hand back, he held out the
bottom of his muscled forearm toward Hans. With the sunny weather,
Dimitri was wearing a T-shirt, leaving the skin there bare.
"Cut me with it," he told Hans.
Hans arched an eyebrow. "Cutting you with this will hurt no matter
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what you are."
"It would be unbearable if I were a Strigoi," Dimitri pointed out. His
face was hard and determined. He was the Dimitri I'd seen in battle, the
Dimitri who never backed down. "Do it. Don't go easy on me."
Hans didn't react at first. Clearly, this was an unexpected course of
action. Decision finally flashed across his features, and he struck out,
swiping the stake's point against Dimitri's skin. As Dimitri had requested,
Hans didn't hold back. The point dug deep, and blood welled up. Several
Moroi, not used to seeing blood (unless they were drinking it), gasped at the
violence. As one, we all leaned forward.
Dimitri's face showed he definitely felt pain, but charmed silver on a
Strigoi wouldn't just hurt--it would burn. I'd cut a lot of Strigoi with stakes
and heard them scream in agony. Dimitri grimaced and bit his lip as the
blood flowed over his arm. I swear, there was pride in his eyes at his ability
to stay strong through that.
When it became obvious he wouldn't start flailing, Lissa reached
toward him. I sensed her intentions; she wanted to heal him.
"Wait," said Hans. "A Strigoi would heal from this in minutes."
I had to give Hans credit. He'd worked two tests into one. Dimitri shot
him a grateful look, and Hans gave a small nod of acknowledgment. Hans
believed, I realized. Whatever his faults, Hans truly thought Dimitri was a
dhampir again. I would love him forever for that, no matter how much filing
he made me do.
So, we all stood there watching poor Dimitri bleed. It was kind of
sick, really, but the test worked. It was obvious to everyone that the cut
wasn't going anywhere. Lissa was finally given leave to heal it, and that
caused a bigger reaction among the crowd. Murmurs of wonder surrounded
me, and those enraptured goddess-worshipping looks showed on people's
faces.
Reece glanced at the crowd. "Does anyone have any questions to add
to ours?"
No one spoke. They were all dumbfounded by the sights before them.
Well, someone had to step forward. Literally.
"I do," I said, striding toward them.
No, Rose, begged Lissa.
Dimitri wore an equally displeased look. Actually, so did almost
everyone sitting near him. When Reece's gaze fell on me, I had a feeling he
was seeing me in the Council room all over again, calling Tatiana a
sanctimonious bitch. I put my hands on my hips, not caring what they
thought. This was my chance to force Dimitri to acknowledge me.
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"When you used to be Strigoi," I began, making it clear that I believed
that was in the past, "you were very well connected. You knew about the
whereabouts of lots of Strigoi in Russia and the U.S., right?"
Dimitri eyed me carefully, trying to figure out where I was going.
"Yes."
"Do you still know them?"
Lissa frowned. She thought I was going to inadvertently implicate
Dimitri as still being in contact with other Strigoi.
"Yes," he said. "So long as none of them have moved." The answer
came more swiftly this time. I wasn't sure if he'd guessed my tactic or if he
just trusted that my Rose-logic would go somewhere useful.
"Would you share that information with the guardians?" I asked.
"Would you tell us all the Strigoi hideouts so that we could strike out against
them?"
That got a reaction. Proactively seeking Strigoi was as hotly debated
as the other issues going around right now, with strong opinions on all sides.
I heard those opinions reiterated behind me in the crowd, some people
saying I was suggesting suicide while others acknowledged we had a
valuable tool.
Dimitri's eyes lit up. It wasn't the adoring look he often gave Lissa,
but I didn't care. It was similar to the ones we used to share, in those
moments where we understood each other so perfectly, we didn't even need
to vocalize what we were thinking. That connection flashed between us, as
did his approval--and gratitude.
"Yes," he replied, voice strong and loud. "I can tell you everything I
know about Strigoi plans and locations. I'd face them with you or stay
behind--whichever you wanted."
Hans leaned forward in his chair, expression eager. "That could be
invaluable." More points for Hans. He was on the side of hitting out at
Strigoi before they came to us.
Reece flushed--or maybe he was just feeling the sun. In their efforts to
see if Dimitri would burn up in the light, the Moroi were exposing
themselves to discomfort. "Now hold on," Reece exclaimed over the
increasing noise. "That has never been a tactic we endorse. Besides, he could
always lie--"
His protests were cut off by a feminine scream. A small Moroi boy,
no more than six, had suddenly broken from the crowd and run toward us. It
was his mother who had screamed. I moved in to stop him, grabbing his
arm. I wasn't afraid that Dimitri would hurt him, only that the boy's mother
would have a heart attack. She came forward, face grateful.
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"I have questions," the boy, obviously trying to be brave, said in a
small voice.
His mother reached for him, but I held up my hand. "Hang on a sec." I
smiled down at him. "What do you want to ask? Go ahead." Behind him,
fear flashed over his mother's face, and she cast an anxious look at Dimitri.
"I won't let anything happen to him," I whispered, though she had no way of
knowing I could back that up. Nonetheless, she stayed where she was.
Reece rolled his eyes. "This is ridic--"
"If you're Strigoi," the boy interrupted loudly, "then why don't you
have horns? My friend Jeffrey said Strigoi have horns."
Dimitri's eyes fell not on the boy but on me for a moment. Again, that
spark of knowing shot between us. Then, face smooth and serious, Dimitri
turned to the boy and answered, "Strigoi don't have horns. And even if they
did, it wouldn't matter because I'm not Strigoi."
"Strigoi have red eyes," I explained. "Do his eyes look red?"
The boy leaned forward. "No. They're brown."
"What else do you know about Strigoi?" I asked.
"They have fangs like us," the boy replied.
"Do you have fangs?" I asked Dimitri in a singsong voice. I had a
feeling this was already-covered territory, but it took on a new feel when
asked from a child's perspective.
Dimitri smiled--a full, wonderful smile that caught me off guard.
Those kinds of smiles were so rare from him. Even when happy or amused,
he usually only gave half smiles. This was genuine, showing all his teeth,
which were as flat as those of any human or dhampir. No fangs.
The boy looked impressed. "Okay, Jonathan," said his mother
anxiously. "You asked. Let's go now."
"Strigoi are super strong," continued Jonathan, who possibly aspired
to be a future lawyer. "Nothing can hurt them." I didn't bother correcting
him, for fear he'd want to see a stake shoved through Dimitri's heart. In fact,
it was kind of amazing that Reece hadn't already requested that. Jonathan
fixed Dimitri with a piercing gaze. "Are you super strong? Can you be hurt?"
"Of course I can," replied Dimitri. "I'm strong, but all sorts of things
can still hurt me."
And then, being Rose Hathaway, I said something I really shouldn't
have to the boy. "You should go punch him and find out."
Jonathan's mother screamed again, but he was a fast little bastard,
eluding her grasp. He ran up to Dimitri before anyone could stop him--well,
I could have--and pounded his tiny fist against Dimitri's knee.
Then, with the same reflexes that allowed him to dodge enemy
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attacks, Dimitri immediately feinted falling backward, as though Jonathan
had knocked him over. Clutching his knee, Dimitri groaned as though he
were in terrible pain.
Several people laughed, and by then, one of the other guardians had
caught hold of Jonathan and returned him to his near-hysterical mother. As
he was being dragged away, Jonathan glanced over his shoulder at Dimitri.
"He doesn't seem very strong to me. I don't think he's a Strigoi."
This caused more laughter, and the third Moroi interrogator, who'd
been quiet, snorted and rose from his seat. "I've seen all I need to. I don't
think he should walk around unguarded, but he's no Strigoi. Give him a real
place to stay and just keep guards on him until further decisions are made."
Reece shot up. "But--"
The other man waved him off. "Don't waste any more time. It's hot,
and I want to go to bed. I'm not saying I understand what happened, but this
is the least of our problems right now, not with half the Council wanting to
rip the other half's heads off over the age decree. If anything, what we've
seen today is a good thing--miraculous, even. It could alter the way we've
lived. I'll report back to Her Majesty."
And like that, the group began dispersing, but there was wonder on
some of their faces. They too were beginning to realize that if what had
happened to Dimitri was real, then everything we'd ever known about Strigoi
was about to change. The guardians stayed with Dimitri, of course, as he and
Lissa rose. I immediately moved toward them, eager to bask in our victory.
When he'd been "knocked over" by Jonathan's tiny punch, Dimitri had given
me a small smile, and my heart had leapt. I'd known then that I'd been right.
He did still have feelings for me. But now, in the blink of an eye, that
rapport was gone. Seeing me walk toward them, Dimitri's face grew cold
and guarded again.
Rose, said Lissa through the bond. Go away now. Leave him alone.
"The hell I will," I said, both answering her aloud and addressing him.
"I just furthered your case."
"We were doing fine without you," said Dimitri stiffly.
"Oh yeah?" I couldn't believe what I was hearing. "You seemed pretty
grateful a couple minutes ago when I thought up the idea of you helping us
against Strigoi."
Dimitri turned to Lissa. His voice was low, but it carried to me. "I
don't want to see her."
"You have to!" I exclaimed. A few of the departing people paused to
see what the racket was about. "You can't ignore me."
"Make her go away," Dimitri growled.
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"I'm not--"
ROSE!
Lissa shouted in my head, shutting me up. Those piercing jade eyes
stared me down. Do you want to help him or not? Standing here and yelling
at him is going to make him even more upset! Is that what you want? Do you
want people to see that? See him get mad and yell back at you just so you
don't feel invisible? They need to see him calm. They need to see him . . .
normal. It's true--you did just help. But if you don't walk away right now,
you could ruin everything.
I stared at them both aghast, my heart pounding. Her words had all
been in my mind, but Lissa might as well have strode up to me and chewed
me out aloud. My temper shot up even more. I wanted to go rant at both of
them, but the truth of her words penetrated through my anger. Starting a
scene would not help Dimitri. Was it fair that they were sending me away?
Was it fair that the two of them were teaming up and ignoring what I'd just
done? No. But I wasn't going to let my hurt pride screw up what I'd just
achieved. People had to accept Dimitri.
I shot them both looks that made my feelings clear and then stormed
away. Lissa's feelings immediately changed to sympathy through the bond,
but I blocked them out. I didn't want to hear it.
I'd barely cleared the church's grounds when I ran into Daniella
Ivashkov. Sweat was starting to smudge her beautifully applied makeup,
making me think she'd been out here for a while watching the Dimitrispectacle
too. She appeared to have a couple friends with her, but they kept
their distance and chatted amongst themselves when she stopped in front of
me. Swallowing my anger, I reminded myself she'd done nothing to piss me
off. I forced a smile.
"Hi, Lady Ivashkov."
"Daniella," she said kindly. "No titles."
"Sorry. It's still a weird thing."
She nodded toward where Dimitri and Lissa were departing with his
guards. "I saw you there, just now. You helped his case, I think. Poor Reece
was pretty flustered."
I recalled that Reece was related to her. "Oh . . . I'm sorry. I didn't
mean to--"
"Don't apologize. Reece is my uncle, but in this case, I believe in what
Vasilisa and Mr. Belikov are saying."
Despite how angry Dimitri had just made me, my gut instinct resented
the dropping of his "guardian" title. Yet I could forgive her, considering her
attitude.
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"You . . . you believe Lissa healed him? That Strigoi can be restored?"
I was realizing there were lots of people who believed. The crowd had just
demonstrated as much, and Lissa was still building her following of
devotees. Somehow, my line of thinking always tended to assume all royals
were against me. Daniella's smile turned wry.
"My own son is a spirit user. Since accepting that, I've had to accept a
lot of other things I didn't believe were possible."
"I suppose you would," I admitted. Beyond her, I noticed a Moroi
man standing near some trees. His eyes occasionally fell on us, and I could
have sworn I'd seen him before. Daniella's next words turned my attention
back to her.
"Speaking of Adrian . . . he was looking for you earlier. It's short
notice now, but some of Nathan's relatives are having a late cocktail party in
about an hour, and Adrian wanted you to go." Another party. Was that all
anyone ever did here at Court? Massacres, miracles . . . it didn't matter.
Everything was cause for a party, I thought bitterly.
I'd probably been with Ambrose and Rhonda when Adrian went
searching. It was interesting. In passing on the invitation, Daniella was also
saying that she wanted me to go. Unfortunately, I had a hard time being as
open to it. Nathan's family meant the Ivashkovs, and they wouldn't be so
friendly.
"Will the queen be there?" I asked suspiciously.
"No, she has other engagements."
"Are you sure? No unexpected visits?"
She laughed. "No, I'm certain of it. Rumor has it that you two being in
the same room together . . . isn't such a good idea."
I could only imagine the stories going around about my Council
performance, particularly since Adrian's father had been there to witness it.
"No, not after that ruling. What she did . . ." The anger I'd felt earlier
began to blaze again. "It was unforgivable." That weird guy by the tree was
still waiting around. Why?
Daniella didn't confirm or deny my statement, and I wondered where
she stood on the issue. "She's still quite fond of you."
I scoffed. "I have a hard time believing that." Usually, people who
yelled at you in public weren't too "fond" of you, and even Tatiana's cool
composure had cracked near the end of our spat.
"It's true. This will blow over, and there might even be a chance for
you to be assigned to Vasilisa."
"You can't be serious," I exclaimed. I should have known better.
Daniella Ivashkov didn't really seem like the joking type, but I really did
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believe I'd crossed the line with Tatiana.
"After everything that's happened, they don't want to waste good
guardians. Besides, she doesn't want there to be animosity between you."
"Yeah? Well, I don't want her bribery! If she thinks putting Dimitri
out there and dangling a royal job is going to change my mind, she's wrong.
She's a lying, scheming--"
I stopped abruptly. My voice had gone loud enough that Daniella's
nearby friends were now staring. And I really didn't want to say the names I
thought Tatiana deserved in front of Daniella.
"Sorry," I said. I attempted civility. "Tell Adrian I'll come to the
party . . . but do you really want me to go? After I crashed the ceremony the
other night? And after, um, other things I've done?"
She shook her head. "What happened at the ceremony is as much
Adrian's fault as it is yours. It's done, and Tatiana let it go. This party's a
much more lighthearted event, and if he wants you there, then I want him to
be happy."
"I'll go shower and change now and meet him at your place in an
hour."
She was tactful enough to ignore my earlier outburst. "Wonderful. I
know he'll be happy to hear that."
I declined to tell her that I was actually happy about the thought of
flaunting myself in front of some Ivashkovs in the hopes that it would get
back to Tatiana. I no longer believed for an instant that she accepted what
was going on with Adrian and me or that she would let my outburst blow
over. And truthfully, I did want to see him. We hadn't had much time to talk
recently.
After Daniella and her friends left, I figured it was time to get to the
bottom of things. I headed straight over to the Moroi who'd been lurking
around, hands on my hips.
"Okay," I demanded. "Who are you, and what do you want?"
He was only a few years older than me and didn't seem at all fazed by
my tough-girl attitude. He crooked me a smile, and I again pondered where
I'd seen him.
"I've got a message for you," he said. "And some gifts."
He handed over a tote bag. I looked inside and found a laptop, some
cords, and several pieces of paper. I stared up at him in disbelief.
"What's this?"
"Something you need to get a move on--and not let anyone else know
about. The note will explain everything."
"Don't play spy movie with me! I'm not doing anything until you--"
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His face clicked. I'd seen him back at St. Vladimir's, around the time of my
graduation--always hovering in the background. I groaned, suddenly
understanding the secretive nature--and cocky attitude. "You work for Abe."
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TWENTY-FOUR
THE MAN GRINNED. "YOU MAKE that sound like a bad thing."
I made a face and looked back into the techno-bag with new
appreciation. "What's going on?"
"I'm the messenger. I just run errands for Mr. Mazur."
"Is that a nice way of saying you spy for him? Find out everyone's
dirty secrets so that he can use them against people and keep playing his
games?" Abe seemed to know everything about everyone--especially royal
politics. How else could he manage it without having eyes and ears
everywhere? Say, at Court? For all I knew, he had my room wired with
microphones.
"Spying's a harsh word." I notice the guy didn't deny it. "Besides, he
pays well. And he's a good boss." He turned from me, job done, but gave
one last warning. "Like I said--it's time sensitive. Read the note as soon as
you can."
I had half a mind to throw it at the guy. I was getting used to the idea
of being Abe's daughter, but that didn't mean I wanted to get tied up in some
wacky scheme of his. A bag of hardware seemed foreboding.
Nonetheless, I hauled it back to my suite and emptied the contents
onto my bed. There were a few sheets of paper, the top one being a typed
cover letter.
Rose,
I hope Tad was able to get this to you in a timely manner. And I hope
you weren't too mean to him. I'm doing this on behalf of someone who wants
to speak to you about an urgent matter. However, it's a conversation that no
one else must hear. The laptop and satellite modem in this bag will allow
you to have a private discussion, so long as you're in a private location. I've
included step-by-step instructions on how to configure it. Your meeting will
take place at 7 a.m.
There was no name at the bottom, but I didn't need one. I set the letter
down and stared at the jumble of cords. Seven was less than an hour away.
"Oh, come on, old man," I exclaimed.
To Abe's credit, the accompanying papers did have very basic
directions that didn't require a computer engineer's insight. The only
problem was, there were a lot of them, detailing where each cord went, what
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password to log in with, how to configure the modem, and so on. For a
moment I considered ignoring it all. Yet when someone like Abe used the
word urgent, it made me think maybe I shouldn't be so hasty in my
dismissal.
So, bracing myself for some technical acrobatics, I set to following his
instructions. It took almost the entire time I had, but I managed to hook up
the modem and camera and access the secure program that would allow me
to video-conference with Abe's mysterious contact. I finished with a few
minutes to spare and waited the time out by staring at a black window in the
middle of the screen, wondering what I'd gotten myself into.
At exactly seven, the window came to life, and a familiar--but
unexpected--face appeared.
"Sydney?" I asked in surprise.
The video had that same, slightly jerky feel most Internet feeds had,
but nonetheless, the face of my (kind of) friend Sydney Sage smiled back at
me. Hers was a dry-humored smile, but that was typical of her.
"Good morning," she said, stifling a yawn. From the state of her chinlength
blond hair, it was likely she'd just gotten out of bed. Even in the poor
resolution, the golden lily tattoo on her cheek gleamed. All Alchemists had
that same tattoo. It consisted of ink and Moroi blood, imparting Moroi good
health and longevity to the wearer. It also had a bit of compulsion mixed in
to keep the Alchemists' secret society from revealing anything they shouldn't
about vampires.
"Evening," I said. "Not morning."
"We can argue your messed-up unholy schedule some other time," she
said. "That's not what I'm here for."
"What are you here for?" I asked, still astonished to see her. The
Alchemists did their jobs almost reluctantly, and while Sydney liked me
better than most Moroi or dhampirs, she wasn't the type to make friendly
phone (or video) calls. "Wait . . . you can't be in Russia. Not if it's
morning . . ." I tried to remember the time change. Yes, for humans over
there, the sun would be down or about to be right now.
"I'm back in my native country," she said with mock grandeur. "Got a
new post in New Orleans."
"Whoa, nice." Sydney had hated being assigned to Russia, but my
impression had been she was stuck there until finishing her Alchemist
internship. "How'd you manage that?"
Her small smile turned to an expression of discomfort. "Oh, well.
Abe, um, kind of did me a favor. He made it happen."
"You made a deal with him?" Sydney must have really hated Russia.
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And Abe's influence must have really been deep if he could affect a human
organization. "What did you give him in return? Your soul?" Making a joke
like that to someone as religious as her wasn't very appropriate. Of course, I
think she thought Moroi and dhampirs ate souls, so maybe my comment
wasn't too out there.
"That's the thing," she said. "It was kind of an 'I'll let you know when
I need a favor in the future' arrangement."
"Sucker," I said.
"Hey," she snapped. "I don't have to be doing this. I'm actually doing
you a favor by talking to you."
"Why are you talking to me exactly?" I wanted to question her more
about her open-ended deal with the devil but figured that would get me
disconnected.
She sighed and brushed some hair out of her face. "I need to ask you
something. And I swear I won't tell on you . . . I just need to know the truth
so that we don't waste our time on something."
"Okay . . ." Please don't ask me about Victor, I prayed.
"Have you broken into any place lately?"
Damn. I kept my face perfectly neutral. "What do you mean?"
"The Alchemists had some records stolen recently," she explained.
She was all business-serious now. "And everyone's going crazy trying to
figure out who did it--and why."
Mentally, I breathed a sigh of relief. Okay. It wasn't about Tarasov.
Thank God there was one crime I wasn't guilty of. Then the full meaning of
her words hit me. I glared.
"Wait. You guys get robbed, and I'm the one you suspect? I thought I
was off your list of evil creatures?"
"No dhampir is off my list of evil creatures," she said. That half smile
of hers had returned, but I couldn't tell if she was joking or not. It faded
quickly, showing what a big deal this was for her. "And believe me, if
anyone could break into our records, you could. It's not easy. Practically
impossible."
"Um, thank you?" I wasn't sure if I should feel flattered or not.
"Of course," she continued scornfully, "they only stole paper records,
which was stupid. Everything's backed up digitally nowadays, so I'm not
sure why they'd go digging through dinosaur filing cabinets."
I could give her a lot of reasons why someone would do that, but
finding out why I was her number-one suspect was more important. "That is
stupid. So why do you think I'd do it?"
"Because of what was stolen. It was information about a Moroi named
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Eric Dragomir."
"I--what?"
"That's your friend, right? His daughter, I mean."
"Yeah . . ." I was almost speechless. Almost. "You have files on
Moroi?"
"We have files on everything," she said proudly. "But when I tried to
think who could commit a crime like this and would be interested in a
Dragomir . . . well, your name popped into my head."
"I didn't do it. I do a lot of things, but not that. I didn't even know you
had those kinds of records."
Sydney regarded me suspiciously.
"It's the truth!"
"Like I said before," she told me, "I won't turn you in. Seriously. I just
want to know so that I can get people to stop wasting time on certain leads."
Her smugness sobered. "And, well, if you did do it . . . I need to keep the
attention off you. I promised Abe."
"Whatever it takes for you to believe me, I didn't do it! But now I
want to know who did. What did they steal? Everything on him?"
She bit her lip. Owing Abe a favor might mean she'd go behind her
own people's backs, but she apparently had limits on how much she'd betray.
"Come on! If you've got digital backup, you have to know what was
taken. This is Lissa we're talking about." An idea came to me. "Could you
send me copies?"
"No," she said swiftly. "Absolutely not."
"Then please . . . just a hint of what they were about! Lissa's my best
friend. I can't let anything happen to her."
I fully braced myself for rejection. Sydney didn't seem very
personable. Did she have friends? Could she understand what I felt?
"Mostly bio stuff," she said at last. "Some of his history and
observations we'd made."
"Observ--" I let it go, deciding I really didn't want to know more than
I had to about Alchemists spying on us. "Anything else?"
"Financial records." She frowned. "Particularly about some large
deposits he made to a bank account in Las Vegas. Deposits he went out of
his way to cover up."
"Las Vegas? I was just there. . . ." Not that it was relevant.
"I know," she said. "I saw some Witching Hour security tapes of your
adventure. The fact that you'd run off like that is part of why I suspected
you. It seemed in character." She hesitated. "The guy with you . . . the tall
Moroi with dark hair . . . is that your boyfriend?"
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"Er, yeah."
It took a long time and great effort for her to concede the next
statement. "He's cute."
"For an evil creature of the night?"
"Of course." She hesitated again. "Is it true you guys went there to
elope?"
"What? No! These stories get to you guys too?" I shook my head,
almost laughing at how ridiculous this all was, but knowing I needed to get
back to the facts. "So, Eric had an account in Vegas he was moving money
into?"
"It wasn't his. It was some woman's."
"What woman?"
"No one--well, no one we can track. She was just down as 'Jane Doe.'"
"Original," I muttered. "Why would he be doing that?"
"That we don't know. Or really care about. We just want to know who
broke in and stole our stuff."
"The only thing I know about that is that it wasn't me." Seeing her
scrutinizing look, I threw up my hands. "Come on! If I wanted to know
about him, I'd just ask Lissa. Or steal our own records."
Several moments of silence passed.
"Okay. I believe you," she said.
"Really?"
"Do you want me to not believe you?"
"No, it was just easier than I thought convincing you."
She sighed.
"I want to know more about these records," I said fiercely. "I want to
know who Jane Doe is. If you could get me other files--"
Sydney shook her head. "Nope. This is where I cut you off. You know
too much already. Abe wanted me to keep you out of trouble, and I've done
that. I've done my part."
"I don't think Abe's going to let you go so easily. Not if you made an
open-ended deal."
She didn't acknowledge that, but the look in her brown eyes made me
think she agreed. "Good night, Rose. Morning. Whatever."
"Wait, I--"
The screen went black.
"Damn," I growled, shutting the laptop more forcefully than I should
have.
Every part of that conversation had been a shock, starting with Sydney
and ending with someone stealing Alchemist records about Lissa's father.
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Why would anyone care about a dead man? And why steal the records at all?
To learn something? Or to try to hide information? If that last one was true,
then Sydney was right that it had been a failed effort.
I replayed it all in my head as I got ready for bed, staring at my
reflection while brushing my teeth. Why, why, why? Why do it? And who? I
needed no more intrigue in my life, but anything involving Lissa had to be
treated seriously. Unfortunately, it soon became clear I wouldn't figure out
anything tonight, and I fell asleep with all those questions spinning around
in my head.
I woke up the next morning feeling a little less overwhelmed--but still
short on answers. I debated whether or not to tell Lissa about what I'd
learned and finally decided I should. If someone was gathering information
on her father, she had a right to know, and besides, this was hardly the same
as rumors about his--
A thought startled me in the middle of scrubbing shampoo into my
hair. I'd been too tired and surprised to string together the pieces last night.
That guy at the Witching Hour had said Lissa's dad was there a lot. Now
Sydney's records reported that he'd made large deposits into an account in
Las Vegas. Coincidence? Maybe. But as time went on, I was starting not to
believe in coincidences anymore.
Once presentable, I set out toward Lissa's side of Court--but didn't get
very far. Adrian was waiting for me down in my building's foyer, slumped
back into an armchair.
"It's early for you, isn't it?" I teased, coming to a stop in front of him.
I expected a smile in return, but Adrian didn't look particularly
cheerful this morning. In fact, he appeared kind of bedraggled. His hair
lacked its usual styling care, and his clothing--unusually dressy for this time
of day--was wrinkled. The scent of clove cigarettes hung around him.
"Easy to be early when you don't get much sleep," he responded. "I
was up a lot of the night waiting for someone."
"Waiting for--oh. God." The party. I'd totally forgotten the party his
mother had invited me to. Abe and Sydney had distracted me. "Adrian, I'm
so sorry."
He shrugged and didn't touch me when I sat down on the arm of his
chair. "Whatever. I probably shouldn't be surprised anymore. I'm starting to
realize I've been deluding myself."
"No, no. I was going to go, but then you won't believe what--"
"Save it. Please." His voice was weary, his eyes bloodshot. "It's not
255
necessary. My mom told me she saw you over at Dimitri's questioning."
I frowned. "But that's not why I missed the party. There was this
guy--"
"That's not the point, Rose. The point is that you managed to make
time for that--and a visit to his cell, if what I heard is true. Yet, you couldn't
bother showing up at something you said you'd do with me--or even send a
message. That was all you had to do: say you couldn't go. I waited over an
hour for you at my parents' house before giving up."
I started to say he could have tried to contact me, but honestly, why
should he have? It wasn't his responsibility. I was the one who'd told
Daniella I'd meet him there. It was my fault for not showing up.
"Adrian, I'm sorry." I clasped his hand, but he didn't squeeze back.
"Really, I meant to, but--"
"No," he interrupted again. "Ever since Dimitri came back . . . no,
scratch that. Ever since you became obsessed with changing him, you've
been torn over me. No matter what's happened between us, you've never
really given yourself over to our relationship. I wanted to believe what you
told me. I thought you were ready . . . but you weren't."
Protests rose to my lips, but once more, I stopped them. He was right.
I'd said I'd give dating him a fair shot. I'd even sunk into the comfortable
role of his girlfriend, yet the whole time . . . the whole time, part of me had
been consumed with Dimitri. I'd known it too but had kept living split lives.
A weird flashback to my time with Mason popped into my head. I'd led the
same double life with him, and he'd died for it. I was a mess. I didn't know
my own heart.
"I'm sorry," I said again. "I really do want us to have something. . . ."
Even to me, the words sounded so lame. Adrian gave me a knowing smile.
"I don't believe that. Neither do you." He stood up and ran his hand
over his hair, not that it did any good. "If you really want to be with me, then
you've got to mean it this time."
I hated seeing him so grim. I especially hated being the reason. I
followed him to the door. "Adrian, wait. Let's talk more."
"Not now, little dhampir. I need some sleep. I just can't handle playing
this game right now."
I could have gone after him. I could have tackled him to the ground.
But it wouldn't have been worth it . . . because I had no answers to give him.
He'd been right about everything, and until I could make up my own
confused mind, I had no right to force a talk. Besides, considering the state
he was in, I doubted any further conversation would have been productive.
Yet as he started to step outside, I couldn't help my next words.
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"Before you go--and I understand why you have to--there's something I've
got to ask you. Something that's not about us. It affects--it affects Lissa."
This slowly brought him to a halt. "Always a favor." With a worldweary
sigh, he glanced at me over his shoulder. "Make it fast."
"Someone broke into the Alchemists' records and stole information
about Lissa's dad. Some of it was ordinary life history stuff, but there were
some documents about him making secret deposits into a bank account in
Las Vegas. Some woman's bank account."
Adrian waited a few moments. "And?"
"And I'm trying to figure out why someone would do that. I don't want
anyone snooping around her family. Do you have any idea what her dad
would have been doing?"
"You heard the guy at the casino. Her dad was there a lot. Maybe he
had gambling debts and was paying off a loan shark."
"Lissa's family's always had money," I pointed out. "He couldn't have
gotten into that much debt. And why would anyone care enough to steal that
info?"
Adrian threw up his hands. "I don't know. That's all I've got, at least
this early in the morning. I don't have the brain power for intrigue. I can't
really picture any of that being a threat to Lissa, though."
I nodded, disappointed. "Okay. Thanks."
He continued on his way, and I watched him go. Lissa lived near him,
but I didn't want him to think I was following him. When he'd put enough
distance between us, I stepped outdoors as well and started to head in the
same direction. The faint sound of bells brought me to a halt. I hesitated,
suddenly unsure where to go.
I wanted to talk to Lissa and tell her what Sydney had told me. Lissa
was alone for a change; this was the perfect opportunity. And yet . . . the
bells. It was Sunday morning. Mass was about to start at the Court's church.
I had a hunch about something, and in spite of everything that had
happened--including with Adrian--I had to see if I was right.
So I sprinted off toward the church, going in the opposite direction of
Lissa's building. The doors were shut when I reached my destination, but a
few other latecomers were trying to quietly slip in. I entered with them,
pausing to get my bearings. Clouds of incense hung in the air, and my eyes
took a moment to adjust from sunlight to candlelight. Since this church
dwarfed St. Vladimir's chapel, it was packed with a lot more people than I
was used to seeing at mass. Most of the seats were full.
But not all of them.
My hunch had been right. Dimitri sat in one of the back pews. A few
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guardians sat near him, of course, but that was it. Even in a crowded church,
no one else had joined him on the bench. Reece had asked Dimitri if he'd
step inside the church yesterday, and Dimitri had gone one step further,
saying he'd even go to Sunday services.
The priest had already begun to speak, so I moved down Dimitri's pew
as quietly as I could. Silence didn't matter, though, because I still attracted a
fair amount of attention from nearby people who were astonished to see me
sitting next to the Strigoi-turned-dhampir. Eyes stared and several hushed
conversations broke out.
The guardians had left some space near Dimitri, and when I sat beside
him, the look on his face showed he was both surprised and not surprised by
this.
"Don't," he said in a hushed voice. "Don't start--not in here."
"Wouldn't dream of it, comrade," I murmured back. "Just came for the
good of my soul, that's all."
He didn't need to say a word to convey to me that he doubted I was
here for any holy reasons. I stayed quiet throughout the service, though.
Even I respected some boundaries. After several minutes, the tension in
Dimitri's body eased a little. He'd grown wary when I joined him but must
have eventually decided I'd be on good behavior. His attention shifted off of
me and focused on the singing and the praying, and I did my best to watch
him without being obvious.
Dimitri used to go to the school's chapel because it brought him peace.
He had always said that even though the killing he did destroyed evil in the
world, he still felt the need to come think about his life and seek forgiveness
for his sins. Seeing him now, I realized that was truer than ever.
His expression was exquisite. I was so used to seeing him hide
emotions that it was a bit startling for him to suddenly have a host of them
on his face. He was absorbed in the priest's words, his gorgeous face
completely focused. And I realized he was taking everything the priest was
saying about sin personally. Dimitri was replaying all the awful things he'd
done as a Strigoi. From the despair on his face, you'd think that Dimitri
himself was responsible for all the sins of the world the priest spoke of.
For a moment, I thought I saw hope on Dimitri's face too, just a spark
of it mixed in with his guilt and sorrow. No, I realized. Not hope. Hope
implies that you think you have a chance at something. What I saw in
Dimitri was longing. Wistfulness. Dimitri wished that by being here in this
holy place and listening to the messages conveyed, he might find redemption
for what he had done. Yet . . . at the same time, it was clear he didn't believe
that was possible. He wanted it but could never have it as far as he was
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concerned.
Seeing that in him hurt me. I didn't know how to react to that kind of
bleak attitude. He thought there was no hope for him. Me? I couldn't
imagine a world without hope.
I also never would have imagined I'd quote back a church lesson, but
when the rest of the crowd stood up to take communion, I found myself
saying to Dimitri: "Don't you think that if God can supposedly forgive you,
it's kind of egotistical for you not to forgive yourself?"
"How long have you been waiting to use that line on me?" he asked.
"Actually, it just came to me. Pretty good, huh? I bet you thought I
wasn't paying attention."
"You weren't. You never do. You were watching me."
Interesting. To know that I was watching him, would Dimitri have had
to have watched me watching him? It boggled the mind. "You didn't answer
my question."
He kept his eyes on the communion line while composing his answer.
"It's irrelevant. I don't have to forgive myself even if God does. And I'm not
sure He would."
"That priest just said God would. He said God forgives everything.
Are you calling the priest a liar? That's pretty sacrilegious."
Dimitri groaned. I never thought I'd take joy in tormenting him, but
the frustrated look on his face wasn't because of his personal grief. It was
because of me being impertinent. I'd seen this expression a hundred times on
him, and the familiarity of it warmed me, as crazy as that sounds.
"Rose, you're the one being sacrilegious. You're twisting these
people's faith for your own purposes. You've never believed in any of this.
You still don't."
"I believe that the dead can come back to life," I said seriously. "The
proof is sitting right next to me. If that's true, then I think you forgiving
yourself isn't that much more of a leap."
His gaze hardened, and if he was praying for anything right then, it
was that the communion process would speed up so that he could get out of
here and away from me. We both knew he had to wait this church service
out. If he ran out, it would make him look Strigoi.
"You don't know what you're talking about," he said.
"Don't I?" I hissed, leaning closer. I did it to drive home my point, but
all it did (for me, at least) was give me a better view of the way the
candlelight shone on his hair and how long and lean his body was. Someone
had apparently decided he could be trusted to shave, and his face was
smooth, showing its wonderful, perfect lines.
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"I know exactly what I'm talking about," I continued, trying to ignore
how his presence affected me. "I know that you've been through a lot. I
know that you did terrible things--I saw them. But it's in the past. It was
beyond your control. It's not like you're going to do it again."
A strange, haunted look crossed his face. "How do you know? Maybe
the monster didn't leave. Maybe there's still something Strigoi lurking in
me."
"Then you need to defeat it by moving on with your life! And not just
through your chivalrous pledge to protect Lissa. You need to live again. You
need to open yourself up to people who love you. No Strigoi would do that.
That's how you'll save yourself."
"I can't have people loving me," he growled. "I'm incapable of loving
anyone in return."
"Maybe you should try instead of just feeling sorry for yourself!"
"It's not that easy."
"Da--" I just barely stopped myself from swearing in a church.
"Nothing we've ever done has been easy! Our life before--before the attack
wasn't easy, and we made it through that! We can make it through this too.
We can make it through anything together. It doesn't matter if you put your
faith in this place. I don't care. What matters is that you put your faith in us."
"There is no us. I've already told you that."
"And you know I'm not a very good listener."
We were keeping our voices low, but I think our body language
clearly indicated an argument. The other churchgoers were too distracted to
notice, but Dimitri's guardians were regarding us carefully. Again, I
reminded myself about what Lissa and Mikhail had both said. Getting
Dimitri angry in public was not going to do him any favors. The problem
was, I had yet to say anything that didn't make him angry.
"I wish you hadn't come here," he said at last. "It's really better for us
to stay apart."
"That's funny because I could have sworn you once said we were
meant to be together."
"I want you to stay away from me," he said, ignoring my comment. "I
don't want you to keep trying to bring back feelings that are gone. That's the
past. None of that's going to happen again. Not ever. It's better for us if we
act like strangers. It's better for you."
The loving, compassionate feelings he had stirred within me heated
up--to fury. "If you're going to tell me what I can or can't do," I growled in
as low a tone as I could manage, "then at least have the courage to say it to
my face!"
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He spun around so quickly that he might have indeed still been
Strigoi. His face was filled with . . . what? Not that earlier depression. Not
rage either, though there was a bit of anger. There was more, though . . . a
mingling of desperation, frustration, and maybe even fear. Underscoring all
of it was pain, like he suffered from terrible, exquisite agony.
"I don't want you here," he said, eyes blazing. The words hurt, but
something about it all thrilled me, just as his earlier agitation at my flippant
comments had. This wasn't the cold and calculating Strigoi. This wasn't the
defeated man in the cell. This was my old instructor, my lover, who attacked
everything in life with intensity and passion. "How many times do I have to
tell you that? You need to stay away from me."
"But you aren't going to hurt me. I know that."
"I've already hurt you. Why can't you understand that? How many
times do I have to say it?"
"You told me . . . you told me before you left that you loved me." My
voice trembled. "How can you let that go?"
"Because it's too late! And it's easier than being reminded of what I
did to you!" His control snapped, his voice echoing through the back of the
church. The priest and those still taking communion didn't notice, but we'd
definitely gotten the attention of those in the back half of the church. A few
of the guardians stiffened, and again, I had to repeat the warning to myself.
No matter how furious I was at Dimitri, no matter how betrayed I felt that
he'd turned away from me . . . I could not risk others thinking he was
dangerous. Dimitri hardly looked like he was going to snap someone's neck,
but he was clearly upset, and one might confuse his frustration and pain for
something more sinister.
I turned from him, trying to calm my churning emotions. When I
looked back, our eyes locked, power and electricity burning between us.
Dimitri could ignore it all he wanted, but that connection--that deep calling
of our souls--was still in there. I wanted to touch him, not just with this
brushing of my leg but with everything. I wanted to wrap him in my arms
and hold him against me, reassuring him that we could do anything together.
Without even realizing it, I reached toward him, needing that touch. He
sprang up like I was a snake, and all of his guardians shot forward, braced
for what he might do.
But he did nothing. Nothing except stare at me with a look that made
my blood run cold. Like I was something strange and bad. "Rose. Please
stop. Please stay away." He was working hard to stay calm.
I shot up, now as angry and frustrated as him. I had a feeling if I
stayed, we'd both snap. In an undertone, I murmured, "This isn't over. I
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won't give up on you."
"I've given up on you," he said back, voice also soft. "Love fades.
Mine has."
I stared at him in disbelief. All this time, he'd never phrased it like
that. His protests had always been about some greater good, about the
remorse he felt over being a monster or how it had scarred him from love.
I've given up on you. Love fades. Mine has.
I backed up, the sting of those words hitting me as hard as if he'd
slapped me. Something shifted in his features, like maybe he knew how
much he'd hurt me. I didn't stick around to see. Instead, I pushed my way out
of the aisle and ran out the doors in the back, afraid that if I stayed any
longer, everyone in the church would see me cry.
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TWENTY-FIVE
I DIDN'T WANT TO SEE anyone after that. I trekked back to my
room as quickly as I could, hardly noticing the obstacles and people in my
path. Over and over, Dimitri's words played in my head: Love fades. Mine
has. Somehow, that was the worst thing he could have said. Don't get me
wrong: The rest wasn't easy either. Having him tell me he was going to
avoid me and ignore our past relationship made me feel awful too. Yet,
within that, no matter how much it hurt, was the tiny hope that there was still
some spark of love between us. That he still loved me.
But . . . love fades.
That was something else altogether. It meant that what we had would
die, going pale until it crumbled and drifted away like dried up leaves in the
wind. The thought of it caused a pain in my chest and stomach, and I curled
up on my bed, wrapping my arms around myself as though that might lessen
the hurt. I couldn't accept what he had said. I couldn't accept that somehow,
after his ordeal, his love for me had gone away.
I wanted to stay in my room for the rest of the day, curled up in the
darkness of my covers. I forgot about Sydney's conversation and my earlier
concerns about Lissa's dad. I even let go of Lissa herself. She had a few
errands today, but every so often, a message would flit to me through the
bond: Come join me?
When I didn't contact her, she began to grow worried. I was suddenly
afraid that she--or someone else--might come seeking me in my room. So I
decided to leave. I had no real destination; I just had to keep moving. I
walked around the Court, scouting places I'd never seen before. It was filled
with more statues and fountains than I'd realized. Their beauty was lost on
me, though, and when I returned to my room hours later, I was exhausted
from all the walking. Oh well. At least I'd dodged having to talk to anyone.
Or had I? It was late, past my usual bedtime, when a knock came at
my door. I was hesitant to answer. Who would be coming by so late? Did I
want the distraction or did I want to keep my solitude? I had no idea who it
could be, save that it wasn't Lissa. God. For all I knew, it was Hans,
demanding to know why I hadn't been showing up for my work detail. After
much thinking (and more persistent knocking), I decided to open it.
It was Adrian.
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"Little dhampir," he said with a small, weary smile. "You look like
you've seen a ghost."
Not a ghost, exactly. Believe me, I knew ghosts when I saw them. "I
just . . . I just didn't really expect to see you after this morning. . . ."
He entered and sat down on my bed, and I was glad to see he'd
cleaned up since our earlier talk. He wore fresh clothes, and his hair was
back to its normal perfection. I still caught the lingering scent of cloves, but
after what I'd put him through, he was entitled to his vices.
"Yeah, well, I didn't expect to come by either," he admitted. "But
you . . . well . . . you got me thinking about something."
I sat down beside him, keeping a healthy distance. "Us?"
"No. Lissa."
"Oh." I'd accused Dimitri of being egotistic, but here I was, naturally
assuming love for me was all that could have driven Adrian over.
His green eyes turned speculative. "I kept thinking about what you'd
said, about her dad. And you were right--right about the gambling thing.
He'd have the money to pay off any debt. He wouldn't have had to keep it a
secret. So I went and asked my mom."
"What?" I exclaimed. "No one's supposed to know that--"
"Yeah, yeah, I figured your information had been top secret. Don't
worry. I told her that when we were in Vegas, we heard some people talking
about it--about Lissa's dad making secret deposits."
"What'd she say?"
"The same thing I did. Well, actually, she snapped at me first. She
said Eric Dragomir was a good man and that I shouldn't spread rumors about
the dead. She suggested that maybe he had a gambling problem, but if so,
people shouldn't focus on that, when he did so many great things. After the
Death Watch, I think she's afraid of me causing more public scenes."
"She's right. About Eric," I said. Maybe someone had stolen those
records as some part of a slander campaign. Admittedly, spreading rumors
about the dead was pointless, but maybe someone wanted to blacken the
Dragomir reputation and get rid of any chance of the voting law being
changed for Lissa? I was about to say as much to Adrian when he
interrupted with something even more shocking.
"And then my dad overheard us, and he was like, 'He was probably
funding some mistress. You're right--he was a nice guy. But he liked to flirt.
And he liked the ladies.'" Adrian rolled his eyes. "That's a direct quote: 'He
liked the ladies.' My dad is such an ass. He sounds twice his age."
I gripped Adrian's arm without realizing it. "What did he say after
that?"
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Adrian shrugged but left my hand where it was. "Nothing. My mom
got mad and said the same thing to him that she said to me, that it was cruel
to spread stories no one could prove."
"Do you think it's true? Do you think Lissa's dad had a mistress? Was
that what he was paying out for?"
"Don't know, little dhampir. Honestly? My dad's the type who would
jump on any rumor he could. Or make one up. I mean, we know Lissa's dad
liked to party. It's easy to jump to conclusions from there. Probably he had
some dirty secret. Hell, we all do. Maybe whoever stole those files just
wanted to exploit that."
I told him my theory about it being used against Lissa. "Or," I said,
reconsidering, "maybe someone who supports her took it. So that it wouldn't
get out."
Adrian nodded. "Either way, I don't think Lissa's in mortal danger."
He started to rise, and I pulled him back. "Adrian, wait . . . I . . ." I
swallowed. "I wanted to apologize. The way I've been treating you, what I've
been doing . . . it wasn't fair to you. I'm sorry."
He looked away from me, eyes focused on the ground. "You can't
help the way you feel."
"The thing is . . . I don't know how I feel. And that sounds stupid, but
it's the truth. I care about Dimitri. I was stupid to think I'd be unaffected by
him being back. But I realize now . . ." Love fades. Mine has. "I realize now
that it's over with him. I'm not saying that's easy to get past. It'll take a while,
and I'd be lying to both of us if I said it wouldn't."
"That makes sense," Adrian said.
"It does?"
He glanced at me, a flicker of amusement in his eyes. "Yes, little
dhampir. Sometimes you make sense. Go on."
"I . . . well, like I said . . . I've got to heal from him. But I do care
about you. . . . I think I even love you a little." That got a small smile. "I
want to try again. I really do. I like having you in my life, but I may have
jumped into things too soon before. You don't have any reason to want me
after the way I've dragged you around, but if you want to get together again,
then I want to."
He studied me for a long time, and my breath caught. I'd meant what I
said: He had every right to end things with us . . . and yet, the thought that he
might terrified me.
At last, he pulled me against him and lay back against the bed. "Rose,
I have all sorts of reasons to want you. I haven't been able to stay away from
you since I saw you at the ski lodge."
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I shifted closer to Adrian on the bed and pressed my head against his
chest. "We can make this work. I know we can. If I screw up again, you can
leave."
"If only it were that easy," he laughed. "You forget: I have an
addictive personality. I'm addicted to you. Somehow I think you could do all
sorts of bad things to me, and I'd still come back to you. Just keep things
honest, okay? Tell me what you're feeling. If you're feeling something for
Dimitri that's confusing you, tell me. We'll work it out."
I wanted to tell him that--regardless of my feelings--he had nothing to
worry about with Dimitri because Dimitri had rejected me a number of times
now. I could chase after Dimitri all I wanted, and it wouldn't do any good.
Love fades. Those words still stung, and I couldn't bear to give voice to that
pain. But as Adrian held me and I thought about how understanding he was
about all of this, some wounded part of me acknowledged that the opposite
was true as well: Love grows. I would try with him. I really would.
I sighed. "You're not supposed to be this wise. You're supposed to be
shallow and unreasonable and . . . and . . ."
He pressed a kiss to my forehead. "And?"
"Mmm . . . ridiculous."
"Ridiculous I can manage. And the others . . . but only on special
occasions."
We were wrapped close together now, and I tilted my head to study
him, the high cheekbones and artfully messy hair that made him so
gorgeous. I remembered his mother's words, that regardless of what we
wanted, he and I would eventually have to part ways. Maybe this was how
my life was going to be. I'd always lose the men I loved.
I pulled him hard against me, kissing his mouth with a force that
caught even him by surprise. If I had learned anything about life and love, it
was that they were tenuous things that could end at any moment. Caution
was essential--but not at the cost of wasting your life. I decided I wasn't
going to waste it now.
My hands were already tugging at Adrian's shirt before that thought
was fully formed. He didn't question it or hesitate in taking my clothes off in
return. He might have moments of profoundness and understanding, but he
was still . . . well, Adrian. Adrian lived his life in the now, doing the things
he wanted without much second-guessing. And he had wanted me for a very
long time.
He was also very good at this sort of thing, which was why my clothes
came off faster than his. His lips were hot and eager against my throat, but
he was careful to never once let his fangs brush my skin. I was a little less
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gentle, surprising myself when I dug my nails into the bare skin of his back.
His lips moved lower, tracing the line of my collarbone while he deftly took
off my bra one-handed.
I was a little astonished at my body's reaction as we both fought to get
the other's jeans off first. I'd convinced myself that I'd never want sex again
after Dimitri, but right now? Oh, I wanted it. Maybe it was some
psychological reaction to Dimitri's rejection. Maybe it was an impulse to live
for the moment. Maybe it was love for Adrian. Or maybe it was just lust.
Whatever it was, it made me powerless beneath his hands and mouth,
which seemed intent on exploring every part of me. The only time he paused
was when all my clothes were finally off and I lay there naked with him. He
was almost naked too, but I hadn't quite gotten to his boxers yet. (They were
silk because, honestly, what else would Adrian wear?). He cupped my face
in his hands, his eyes filled with intensity and desire--and a bit of wonder.
"What are you, Rose Hathaway? Are you real? You're a dream within
a dream. I'm afraid touching you will make me wake up. You'll disappear." I
recognized a little of the poetic trance he sometimes fell into, the spells that
made me wonder if he was catching a little of the spirit-induced madness.
"Touch me and find out," I said, drawing him to me.
He didn't hesitate again. The last of his clothes came off, and my
whole body heated at the feel of his skin and the way his hands slid over me.
My physical needs were rapidly trampling over any logic and reason. There
was no thought, just us, and the fierce urgency bringing us together. I was all
burning need and desire and sensation and--
"Oh, shit."
It came out as kind of a mumble since we'd been kissing, our lips
eagerly seeking out the other's. With guardian reflexes, I barely managed to
shift away, just as our hips started to come together. Losing the feel of him
was shocking to me, more so for him. He was stunned, simply staring in
astonishment as I wriggled further from him and finally managed a sitting
position on the bed.
"What . . . what's wrong? Did you change your mind?"
"We need protection first," I said. "Do you have any condoms?"
He processed this for a few seconds and then sighed. "Rose, only you
would pick this instant to remember that."
That was a fair point. My timing kind of sucked. Still, it was better
than remembering it afterward. In spite of my body's rampant desire--and it
was still there, believe me--I suddenly had a startling, vivid image of
Dimitri's sister Karolina. I'd met her in Siberia, and she'd had a baby that
was about six months old. The baby was adorable, as babies often are, but
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by God, she had been so much work. Karolina had a waitressing job, and as
soon as she was home from that, her attention went to the baby. When she
was at work, Dimitri's mother took care of the baby. And the baby always
needed something: food, changing, rescue from choking on a small object.
His sister Sonya had been on the verge of having a baby too, and with the
way I'd left things with his youngest sister, Viktoria, I wouldn't be surprised
to find she was pregnant before long. Huge life changes made from small,
careless actions.
So I was pretty confident I didn't want a baby in my life right now, not
this young. With Dimitri, it hadn't been a concern, thanks to dhampir
infertility. With Adrian? It was an issue, as was the fact that while disease
was rare among both our races, I wasn't the first girl Adrian had been with.
Or the second. Or the third . . .
"So do you have any?" I asked impatiently. Just because I was in
responsible mode, it didn't mean I wanted sex any less.
"Yes," said Adrian, sitting up as well. "Back in my bedroom."
We stared at each other. His bedroom was far away, over in the Moroi
section of Court.
He slid nearer, putting his arm around me and nibbling my earlobe.
"The odds of anything bad happening are pretty low."
I closed my eyes and tipped my head back against him. He wrapped
his hands around my hips and stroked my skin. "What are you, a doctor?" I
asked.
He laughed softly, his mouth kissing the spot just behind my ear. "No.
I'm just someone willing to take a risk. You can't tell me you don't want
this."
I opened my eyes and pulled away so that I could look at him directly.
He was right. I did want this. Very, very badly. And the part of me--which
was pretty much all of me--that burned with lust was attempting to win me
over. The odds probably were low, right? Weren't there people who tried
forever to get pregnant and couldn't? My desire had an okay argument, so it
was kind of a surprise when my logic won.
"I can't take the risk," I said.
Now Adrian studied me, and at last, he nodded. "Okay. Another time
then. Tonight we'll be . . . responsible."
"That's all you're going to say?"
He frowned. "What else would I say? You said no."
"But you . . . you could have compelled me."
Now he was really astonished. "Do you want me to compel you?"
"No. Of course not. It just occurred to me that . . . well, that you could
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have."
Adrian cupped my face in his hands. "Rose, I cheat at cards and buy
liquor for minors. But I would never, ever force you into something you
don't want. Certainly not this--"
His words were cut off because I'd pressed myself against him and
started kissing him again. Surprise must have kept him from doing anything
right away, but soon, he pushed me away with what seemed like great
reluctance.
"Little dhampir," he said dryly, "if you want to be responsible, this is
not a good way to do it."
"We don't have to let this go. And we can be responsible."
"All of those stories are--"
He came screeching to a halt when I tossed my hair out of the way
and offered my neck to him. I managed to turn slightly so that I could meet
his eyes, but I said nothing. I didn't have to. The invitation was obvious.
"Rose . . ." he said uncertainly--though I could see the longing spring
up in his face.
Drinking blood wasn't the same as sex, but it was a yearning all
vampires had, and doing it while aroused--so I'd heard--was a mind-blowing
experience. It was also taboo and hardly ever done, so people claimed. It
was where the definition of blood whore had originated: dhampirs who gave
their blood during sex. The idea of dhampirs yielding blood at all was
considered disgraceful, but I'd done it before: with Lissa when she needed
food and with Dimitri when he'd been Strigoi. And it had been glorious.
He tried again, his voice steadier this time. "Rose, do you know what
you're asking?"
"Yes," I said firmly. I gently ran a finger along his lips and then
slipped in to touch his fangs. I threw his own words back at him. "You can't
tell me you don't want this."
He did want it. In a heartbeat, his mouth was at my neck and his fangs
were piercing my skin. I cried out at the sudden pain, a sound that softened
to a moan as the endorphins that came with every vampire bite flooded into
me. An exquisite bliss consumed me. He pulled me hard against him as he
drank, almost onto his lap, pressing my back against his chest. I was
distantly aware of his hands all over me again, of his lips upon my throat.
Mostly, all I knew was that I was drowning in pure, ecstatic sweetness. The
perfect high.
When he pulled away, it was like losing part of myself. Like being
incomplete. Confused, needing him back, I reached for him. He gently
pushed my hand away, smiling as he licked his lips.
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"Careful, little dhampir. I went longer than I should have. You could
probably grow wings and fly off right now."
It actually didn't sound like a bad idea. In a few more moments,
though, the intense, crazy part of the high faded, and I settled back to
myself. I still felt wonderful and dizzy; the endorphins had fed my body's
desire. My reasoning slowly came back to me, allowing (kind of) coherent
thought to penetrate that happy haze. When Adrian was convinced I was
sober enough, he relaxed and lay down on the bed. I joined him a moment
later, curling up against his side. He seemed as content as I was.
"That," he mused, "was the best not-sex ever."
My only response was a sleepy smile. It was late, and the more I
crashed down from the endorphin rush, the drowsier I felt. Some tiny part of
me said that even though I'd wanted this and cared about Adrian, the whole
act had been wrong. I hadn't done it for the right reasons, instead letting
myself get carried away by my own grief and confusion.
The rest of me decided that wasn't true, and the nagging voice soon
faded into exhaustion. I fell asleep against Adrian, getting the best night of
sleep I'd had in a long time.
I wasn't entirely surprised that I was able to get out of bed, shower,
get dressed, and even blow-dry my hair without Adrian waking up. My
friends and I had spent many a morning trying to drag him out of bed in the
past. Hungover or sober, he was a heavy sleeper.
I spent more time on my hair than I had in a while. The telltale mark
of a vampire bite was fresh on my neck. So I wore my hair down, careful to
style it with a part so that the long waves hung heavy on the bite side.
Satisfied the bruise would stay camouflaged, I pondered what to do next. In
an hour or so, the Council was going to listen to arguments from factions
with varying ideas on the new age decree, Moroi fighting, and the Dragomir
vote. Provided they let me in the hall, I had no intention of missing the
debates on the hottest issues in our world right now.
I didn't want to wake up Adrian, though. He was tangled up in my
sheets and slept peacefully. If I woke him up, I'd feel obligated to stick
around while he got ready. Through the bond, I felt Lissa sitting alone at a
cafe table. I wanted to see her and have breakfast, so I decided Adrian could
fend for himself. I left him a note about where I was, told him the door
would lock on his way out, and drew lots of x's and o's.
When I was halfway to the cafe, though, I sensed something that
ruined my breakfast plan. Christian had sat down with Lissa.
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"Well, well," I muttered. With everything else going on, I hadn't paid
much attention to Lissa's personal life. After what had happened at the
warehouse, I wasn't entirely surprised to see them together, though her
feelings told me there had been no romantic reconciliation . . . yet. This was
an uneasy attempt at friendship, a chance to get over their constant jealousy
and distrust.
Far be it from me to intrude on love at work. I knew another place
near the guardians' buildings that also had coffee and doughnuts. It would
do, provided no one there remembered that I was technically still on
probation and had made a scene in a royal hall.
The odds on that probably weren't good.
Still, I decided to give it a try and headed over, eyeing the overcast
sky uneasily. Rain wouldn't help my mood any. When I got to the cafe, I
discovered I didn't have to worry about anyone paying attention to me.
There was a bigger draw: Dimitri.
He was out with his personal guard, and even though I was glad he
had some freedom, the attitude that he needed close watching still angered
me. At least there was no giant crowd today. People who came in for
breakfast couldn't help but stare, but few lingered. He had five guardians
with him this time, which was a significant reduction. That was a good sign.
He sat alone at a table, coffee and a half-eaten glazed doughnut in front of
him. He was reading a paperback novel that I would have bet my life was a
Western.
No one sat with him. His escort simply maintained a ring of
protection, a couple near the walls, one at the entrance, and two at nearby
tables. The security seemed pointless. Dimitri was completely engrossed in
his book, oblivious to the guards and occasional spectators--or he was
simply making a good show of not caring. He seemed very harmless, but
Adrian's words came back to me. Was there any Strigoi left in him? Some
dark part? Dimitri himself claimed he still carried the piece that prevented
him from ever truly loving anyone.
He and I had always had this uncanny awareness of each other. In a
crowded room, I could always find him. And in spite of his preoccupation
with the book, he looked up when I walked toward the cafe's counter. Our
eyes met for a millisecond. There was no expression on his face . . . and yet,
I had the feeling he was waiting for something.
Me, I realized with a start. Despite everything, despite our fight in the
church . . . he still thought I would pursue and make some pledge of my
love. Why? Did he just expect me to be that unreasonable? Or was it
possible . . . was it possible he wanted me to approach him?
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Well, whatever the reason, I decided I wouldn't give it to him. He'd
hurt me too many times already. He'd told me to stay away, and if that was
all part of some elaborate game to toy with my feelings, I wasn't going to
play. I gave him a haughty look and turned away sharply as I walked up to
the counter. I ordered chai and a chocolate eclair. After a moment's
consideration, I ordered a second eclair. I had a feeling it was going to be
one of those days.
My plan had been to eat outside, but as I glanced toward the tinted
windows, I could just barely make out the pattern of raindrops hitting the
panes. Damn. I briefly considered fighting the weather and going
somewhere else with my food, but I decided I wasn't going to let Dimitri
scare me off. Spying a table far from him, I headed toward it, going out of
my way not to look at or acknowledge him.
"Hey Rose. Are you going to the Council today?"
I came to a halt. One of Dimitri's guardians had spoken, giving me a
friendly smile as he did. I couldn't recall the guy's name, but he'd seemed
nice whenever we passed each other. I didn't want to be rude, and so,
reluctantly, I answered back--even though it meant staying near Dimitri.
"Yup," I said, making sure my attention was only on the guardian.
"Just grabbing a bite before I do."
"Are they going to let you in?" asked another of the guardians. He too
was smiling. For a moment, I thought they were mocking my last outburst.
But no . . . that wasn't it. Their faces showed approval.
"That's an excellent question," I admitted. I took a bite of my eclair.
"But I figure I should give it a try. I'll also try to be on good behavior."
The first guardian chuckled. "I certainly hope not. That group
deserves all the grief you can give them over that stupid age law." The other
guardians nodded.
"What age law?" asked Dimitri.
Reluctantly, I looked over at him. As always, he swept my breath
away. Stop it, Rose, I scolded myself. You're mad at him, remember? And
now you've chosen Adrian.
"The decree where royals think sending sixteen-year-old dhampirs out
to fight Strigoi is the same as sending eighteen-year-olds," I said. I took
another bite.
Dimitri's head shot up so quickly, I nearly choked on my food.
"Which sixteen-year-olds are fighting Strigoi?" His guardians tensed but did
nothing else.
It took me a moment to get the bite of eclair down. When I could
finally speak, I was almost afraid to. "That's the decree. Dhampirs graduate
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when they're sixteen now."
"When did this happen?" he demanded.
"Just the other day. No one told you?" I glanced over at the other
guardians. One of them shrugged. I had the impression that they might
believe Dimitri was truly a dhampir but that they weren't ready to get chatty
with him. His only other social contact would have been Lissa and his
interrogators.
"No." Dimitri's brow furrowed as he pondered the news.
I ate my eclair in silence, hoping it would push him to talk more. It
did.
"That's insane," he said. "Morality aside, they aren't ready that young.
It's suicide."
"I know. Tasha gave a really good argument against it. I did too."
Dimitri gave me a suspicious look at that last part, particularly when a
couple of his guardians smiled.
"Was it a close vote?" he asked. He spoke to me interrogation style, in
the serious and focused way that had so defined him as a guardian. It was a
lot better than depression, I decided. It was also better than him telling me to
go away.
"Very close. If Lissa could have voted, it wouldn't have passed."
"Ah," he said, playing with the edges of his coffee cup. "The
quorum."
"You know about that?" I asked in surprise.
"It's an old Moroi law."
"So I hear."
"What's the opposition trying to do? Sway the Council back or get
Lissa the Dragomir vote?"
"Both. And other things."
He shook his head, tucking some hair behind his ear. "They can't do
that. They need to pick one cause and throw their weight behind it. Lissa's
the smartest choice. The Council needs the Dragomirs back, and I've seen
the way people look at her when they put me on display." Only the slightest
edge of bitterness laced his words, indicating how he felt about that. Then it
was back to business. "It wouldn't be hard to get support for that--if they
don't divide their efforts."
I started in on my second eclair, forgetting about my earlier resolution
to ignore him. I didn't want to distract him from the topic. It was the first
thing that had brought the old fire back to his eyes, the only thing he seemed
truly interested in--well, aside from pledging lifelong devotion to Lissa and
telling me to stay out of his life. I liked this Dimitri.
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It was the same Dimitri from long ago, the fierce one who was willing
to risk his life for what was right. I almost wished he'd go back to being
annoying, distant Dimitri, the one who told me to stay away. Seeing him
now brought back too many memories--not to mention the attraction I
thought I'd smashed. Now, with that passion all over him, he seemed sexier
than ever. He'd worn that same intensity when we'd fought together. Even
when we'd had sex. This was the way Dimitri was supposed to be: powerful
and in charge. I was glad and yet . . . seeing him the way I loved only made
my heart feel that much worse. He was lost to me.
If Dimitri guessed my feelings, he didn't show it. He looked squarely
at me, and, like always, the power of that gaze wrapped around me. "The
next time you see Tasha, will you send her to me? We need to talk about
this."
"So, Tasha can be your friend, but not me?" The sharp words were out
before I could stop them. I flushed, embarrassed that I'd lapsed in front of
the other guardians. Dimitri apparently didn't want an audience either. He
looked up at the one who had initially addressed me.
"Is there any way we could have some privacy?"
His escort exchanged looks, and then, almost as one being, they
stepped back. It wasn't a considerable distance, and they still maintained a
ring around Dimitri. Nonetheless, it was enough that all of our conversation
wouldn't be overheard. Dimitri turned back to me. I sat down.
"You and Tasha have completely different situations. She can safely
be in my life. You can't."
"And yet," I said with an angry toss of my hair, "it's apparently okay
for me to be in your life when it's convenient--say, like, running errands or
passing messages."
"It doesn't really seem like you need me in your life," he noted dryly,
inclining his head slightly toward my right shoulder.
It took me a moment to grasp what had happened. In tossing my hair,
I'd exposed my neck--and the bite. I tried not to blush again, knowing I had
nothing to feel embarrassed about. I pushed the hair back.
"That's none of your business," I hissed, hoping the other guardians
hadn't seen.
"Exactly." He sounded triumphant. "Because you need to live your
own life, far away from me."
"Oh, for God's sake," I exclaimed. "Will you stop with the--"
My eyes lifted from his face because an army suddenly descended
upon us.
Okay, it wasn't exactly an army, but it might as well have been. One
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minute it was just Dimitri, me, and his security, and then suddenly--the room
was swarming with guardians. And not just any guardians. They wore the
black-and-white outfits guardians often did for formal occasions, but a small
red button on their collars marked them as guardians specifically attached to
the queen's guard. There had to be at least twenty of them.
They were lethal and deadly, the best of the best. Throughout history,
assassins who had attacked monarchs had found themselves quickly taken
down by the royal guard. They were walking death--and they were all
gathering around us. Dimitri and I both shot up, unsure what was happening
but certain the threat here was directed at us. His table and its chairs were
between us, but we still immediately fell into the standard fighting stance
when surrounded by enemies: Go back-to-back.
Dimitri's security wore ordinary clothing and seemed a bit astonished
to see their brethren, but with guardian efficiency, the escort promptly joined
the advancing queen's guard. There were no more smiles or jokes. I wanted
to throw myself in front of Dimitri, but in this situation, it was kind of
difficult.
"You need to come with us right now," one of the queen's guards said.
"If you resist, we'll take you by force."
"Leave him alone!" I yelled, looking from face to face. That angry
darkness exploded within me. How could they still not believe? Why were
they still coming after him? "He hasn't done anything! Why can't you guys
accept that he's really a dhampir now?"
The man who'd spoken arched an eyebrow. "I wasn't talking to him."
"You're . . . you're here for me?" I asked. I tried to think of any new
spectacles I might have caused recently. I considered the crazy idea that the
queen had found out I'd spent the night with Adrian and was pissed off about
it. That was hardly enough to send the palace guard for me, though . . . or
was it? Had I really gone too far with my antics?
"What for?" demanded Dimitri. That tall, wonderful body of his--the
one that could be so sensual sometimes--was filled with tension and menace
now.
The man kept his gaze on me, ignoring Dimitri. "Don't make me
repeat myself: Come with us quietly, or we will make you." The glimmer of
handcuffs showed in his hands.
My eyes went wide. "That's crazy! I'm not going anywhere until you
tell me how the hell this--"
That was the point at which they apparently decided I wasn't coming
quietly. Two of the royal guardians lunged for me, and even though we
technically worked for the same side, my instincts kicked in. I didn't
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understand anything here except that I would not be dragged away like some
kind of master criminal. I shoved the chair I'd been sitting in earlier at one of
the guardians and aimed a punch at the other. It was a sloppy throw, made
worse because he was taller than me. That height difference allowed me to
dodge his next grab, and when I kicked hard at his legs, a small grunt told
me I'd hit home.
I heard a few scattered screams. The people working at the cafe
ducked behind their counter like they expected automatic weapons to come
out. The other patrons who'd been eating breakfast hurriedly sprang from
their tables, heedlessly knocking over food and dishes. They ran for the
exits--exits that were blocked by still more guardians. This brought more
screams, even though the exits were being cut off because of me.
Meanwhile, other guardians were joining the fray. Although I got a
couple of good punches in, I knew the numbers were too overwhelming.
One guardian caught hold of my arm and began trying to put the cuffs on
me. He stopped when another set of hands grabbed me from the other side
and jerked me away.
Dimitri.
"Don't touch her," he growled.
There was a note in his voice that would have scared me if it had been
directed toward me. He shoved me behind him, putting his body protectively
in front of mine with my back to the table. Guardians came at us from all
directions, and Dimitri began dispatching them with the same deadly grace
that had once made people call him a god. He didn't kill any of the ones he
fought, but he made sure they were out of action. If anyone thought his
ordeals as a Strigoi or being locked up had diminished his fighting ability,
they were terribly mistaken. Dimitri was a force of nature, managing to take
on both impossible odds and stop me each time I tried to join the fight. The
queen's guards might have been the best of the best, but Dimitri . . . well, my
former lover and instructor was in a category all his own. His fighting skills
were beyond anyone else's, and he was using them all in defense of me.
"Stay back," he ordered me. "They aren't laying a hand on you."
At first, I was overwhelmed by his protectiveness--even though I
hated not being part of a fight. Watching him fight again was also
entrancing. He made it look beautiful and lethal at the same time. He was a
one-man army, the kind of warrior that protected his loved ones and brought
terror to his enemies--
And that's when a horrible revelation hit me.
"Stop!" I suddenly yelled. "I'll come! I'll come with you!"
No one heard me at first. They were too involved with the fight.
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Guardians kept trying to sneak behind Dimitri, but he seemed to sense them
and would shove chairs or anything else he could get a hold of at them--
while still managing to kick and punch those coming at us head-on. Who
knew? Maybe he really could have taken on an army by himself.
But I couldn't let him.
I shook Dimitri's arm. "Stop," I repeated. "Don't fight anymore."
"Rose--"
"Stop!"
I was pretty sure I'd never screamed any word so loudly in my life. It
rang through the room. For all I knew, it rang through the entire Court.
It didn't exactly make everyone come to a halt, but many of the
guardians slowed down. A few of the cowering cafe workers peered over the
counter at us. Dimitri was still in motion, still ready to take everyone on, and
I had to practically throw myself at him to get him to notice me.
"Stop." This time, my voice was a whisper. An uneasy silence had
fallen over everyone. "Don't fight them anymore. I'm going to go with
them."
"No. I won't let them take you."
"You have to," I begged.
He was breathing hard, every part of him braced and ready to attack.
We locked gazes, and a thousand messages seemed to flow between us as
the old electricity crackled in the air. I just hoped he got the right message.
One of the guardians tentatively stepped forward--having to go around
the unconscious body of his colleague--and Dimitri's tension snapped. He
started to block the guardian and defend me again, but I instead put myself
between them, clasping Dimitri's hand and still looking into his eyes. His
skin was warm and felt so, so right touching mine.
"Please. No more."
I saw then that he finally understood what I was trying to say. People
were still afraid of him. No one knew what he was. Lissa had said him
behaving calmly and normally would soothe fears. But this? Him taking on
an army of guardians? That was not going to get him points for good
behavior. For all I knew, it was already too late after this, but I had to
attempt damage control. I couldn't let them lock him up again--not because
of me.
As he looked at me, he seemed to send a message of his own: that he
would still fight for me, that he would fight until he collapsed to keep them
from taking me.
I shook my head and gave his hand a parting squeeze. His fingers
were exactly as I remembered, long and graceful, with calluses built up from
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years of training. I let go and turned to face the guy who had originally
spoken. I assumed he was some sort of leader.
I held out my hands and slowly stepped forward. "I'll go quietly. But,
please . . . don't lock him back up. He just thought . . . he just thought I was
in trouble."
The thing was, as the handcuffs were clamped onto my wrists, I was
starting to think I was in trouble too. As the guardians helped each other up,
their leader took a deep breath and made the proclamation he'd been trying
to make since entering. I swallowed, waiting to hear Victor's name.
"Rose Hathaway, you are under arrest for high treason."
Not quite what I'd expected. Hoping my submission had earned me
points, I asked, "What kind of high treason?"
"The murder of Her Royal Majesty, Queen Tatiana."
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TWENTY-SIX
MAYBE IT WAS SOMEONE'S SICK sense of humor, but I ended
up in Dimitri's now-vacated cell.
I had come quietly after that guardian laid the charges before me. In
fact, I'd become comatose because too much of what he'd said was
impossible to process. I couldn't even really get to the part about me. I
couldn't feel outrage or indignation over the accusation because I was still
stuck on the part about Tatiana being dead.
Not just dead. Murdered.
Murdered?
How had that happened? How had that happened around here? This
Court was one of the most secure places in the world, and Tatiana in
particular was always guarded--by the same group that had descended on
Dimitri and me so quickly. Unless she'd left Court--and I was pretty sure she
hadn't--no Strigoi could have killed her. With the constant threats we faced,
murder among dhampirs and Moroi was almost unheard of. Sure, it
happened. It was inevitable in any society, but with the way ours was
hunted, we rarely had time to turn on each other (shouting in Council
meetings aside). That was part of why Victor had been so condemned. His
crimes were about as bad as things got.
Until now.
Once I got past the impossible idea of Tatiana being dead, I was able
to ask the real question: Why me? Why were they accusing me? I was no
lawyer, but I was pretty sure calling someone a sanctimonious bitch was not
hard evidence in a trial.
I tried getting more details from the guards outside my cell, but they
remained hard-faced and silent. After making my voice hoarse from
shouting, I slumped onto the bed and went to Lissa's mind, where I was
certain I'd get more information.
Lissa was frantic, trying to get answers from anyone she could.
Christian was still with her, and they stood inside the foyer of one of the
administrative buildings, which was filled with a flurry of activity. Dhampirs
and Moroi alike ran everywhere, some frightened of this new government
instability and others hoping to take advantage of it. Lissa and Christian
stood in the midst of it all, like leaves swept along in a storm's fury.
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While Lissa was now technically an adult, she had still always been
under the wing of some older person at Court--usually Priscilla Voda, and
occasionally even Tatiana. Neither of them was available now, for obvious
reasons. While many royals respected her, Lissa had no real source to turn
to.
Seeing her agitation, Christian clasped her hand. "Aunt Tasha will
know what's going on," he said. "She'll turn up sooner or later. You know
she won't let anything happen to Rose."
Lissa knew there was a bit of uncertainty in that statement but didn't
mention it. Tasha might not want anything to happen to me, but she certainly
wasn't all-powerful.
"Lissa!"
Adrian's voice caused both Lissa and Christian to turn around. Adrian
had just entered, along with his mother. Adrian looked as though he had
literally gone straight from my bedroom to here. He wore yesterday's
clothes, slightly rumpled, and his hair was styled with none of his usual care.
By comparison, Daniella looked polished and put together, the perfect
picture of a businesswoman who hadn't lost her femininity.
At last! Here were people who might have answers. Lissa rushed over
to them gratefully.
"Thank God," Lissa said. "No one will tell us what's happened . . .
except that the queen is dead and Rose is locked up." Lissa looked up at
Daniella's face pleadingly. "Tell me there's been some kind of mistake."
Daniella patted Lissa's shoulder and gave as comforting a look as she
could manage, given the circumstances. "I'm afraid not. Tatiana was killed
last night, and Rose is their main suspect."
"But she would never have done that!" exclaimed Lissa.
Christian joined her in righteous fury. "Her yelling at the Council that
day isn't enough to convict her for murder." Ah, Christian and I had the
same line of reasoning. It was almost scary. "Neither is crashing the Death
Watch."
"You're right. It's not enough," agreed Daniella. "But it doesn't make
her look good either. And apparently, they have other evidence they say
proves her guilt."
"What kind of evidence?" Lissa demanded.
Daniella turned apologetic. "I don't know. That's still part of the
investigation. They'll have a hearing to present the evidence and question her
whereabouts, possible motives . . . that kind of thing." She glanced around at
the people rushing by. "If they even get that far. This kind of thing . . . it
hasn't happened in ages. The Council gains absolute control until a new
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monarch is elected, but there's still going to be chaos. People are afraid. I
won't be surprised if the Court goes under martial law."
Christian turned to Lissa, hope on his face. "Did you see Rose last
night? Was she with you?"
Lissa frowned. "No. I think she was in her room. The last time I saw
her was the day before yesterday."
Daniella didn't look happy about that. "That's not going to help. If she
was alone, then she has no alibi."
"She wasn't alone."
Three sets of eyes turned in Adrian's direction. It was the first time
he'd spoken since first calling to Lissa. Lissa hadn't focused on him too
much yet, meaning I hadn't either. She'd only observed his superficial
appearance when he arrived, but now she could see the little details. Worry
and distress had left their marks, making him look older than he was. When
she tuned in to his aura, she saw the usual gold of a spirit user, but it and its
other colors were muddied and tinged with darkness. There was a flickering
there too, a warning of spirit's instability taking hold. This had all come
about too quickly for him to react, but I suspected he'd hit the cigarettes and
liquor as soon as he had a free moment. It was how Adrian coped with this
sort of thing.
"What are you saying?" Daniella asked sharply.
Adrian shrugged. "She wasn't alone. I was with her all night."
Lissa and Christian did a good job of maintaining neutral expressions,
but Daniella's face registered the shock that any parent would have upon
hearing about her child's sex life. Adrian noticed her reaction as well.
"Save it," he warned. "Your morals, your opinions . . . none of it
matters right now." He gestured toward a group of panicked people running
by, screaming about how Victor Dashkov must have surely come to Court to
kill them all. Adrian shook his head and turned back to his mother. "I was
with Rose. That proves she didn't do it. We'll deal with your motherly
disapproval about my love life later."
"That's not what worries me! If they do have hard evidence and you
get mixed up in this, you could be under suspicion too." The composure
Daniella had entered with was beginning to crack.
"She was my aunt," cried Adrian incredulously. "Why on earth would
Rose and I kill her?"
"Because she disapproved of you dating. And because Rose was upset
over the age ruling." This came from Christian. Lissa glared, but he merely
shrugged. "What? I'm just stating the obvious. Someone else would if I
didn't. And we all heard the stories--people have been making up things that
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are extreme even for Rose." A strong comment indeed.
"When?" asked Daniella, clutching Adrian's sleeve. "When were you
with Rose? When did you get there?"
"I don't know. I don't remember," he said.
She tightened her grip. "Adrian! Take this seriously. This is going to
make a huge difference on how things proceed. If you got there before
Tatiana was killed, then you won't be tied to it. If you were with Rose
afterward--"
"Then she has an alibi," he interrupted. "And there's no problem."
"I hope that's true," murmured Daniella. Her eyes didn't seem focused
on my friends anymore. The wheels in her head were spinning, her thoughts
jumping ahead as she tried to think how best to protect her son. I had been
an unfortunate case for her. He was, understandably, a red-alert emergency
for her. "We're still going to have to get you a lawyer. I'll talk to Damon. I
have to find him before the hearing tonight. And Rufus will have to know
about this too. Damn." Adrian arched an eyebrow at that. I had the
impression Lady Ivashkov didn't swear very often. "We have to find out
what time you were there."
Adrian still wore his distress around him like a cloak and looked as
though he might fall over if he didn't get nicotine or alcohol soon. I hated to
see him like that, particularly over me. There was strength within him, no
question, but his nature--and the sketchy effects of spirit--made coping with
this hard. Yet, through his agitation, he managed to pull up a memory to
help his frantic mother.
"There was someone in the building lobby when I came in . . . a
janitor or something, I think. No one at the front desk, though." Most
buildings usually kept a staff member around for emergencies or concierge
services.
Daniella's face lit up. "That's it. That's what we'll need. Damon will
find out the time you were there so that we can get you free and clear of
this."
"And so he can defend me if things turn bad?"
"Of course," she answered swiftly.
"What about Rose?"
"What about her?"
Adrian still looked ready to fall apart, but there was seriousness and
focus in his green eyes. "If you find out Aunt Tatiana was killed before I was
there, and Rose is thrown to the wolves alone, will Damon be her lawyer?"
His mother faltered. "Oh, well, darling . . . Damon doesn't really do
that sort of thing. . . ."
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"He will if you ask him to," said Adrian sternly.
"Adrian," she said wearily, "you don't know what you're talking about.
They say the evidence against her is bad. If our family's shown supporting--"
"It's not like we're supporting murder! You met Rose. You liked her.
Can you look me in the eye and say it's okay for her to go in with whatever
half-assed defense they dredge up for her? Can you?"
Daniella blanched, and I swear, she actually cringed away. I don't
think she was used to such fierce resoluteness from her devil-may-care son.
And though his words were perfectly sane, there was kind of a crazy
desperation in his voice and attitude that was a little scary. Whether that was
caused by spirit or just his own emotion, I couldn't say.
"I . . . I'll speak to Damon," Daniella said at last. She'd had to swallow
a few times before actually getting the words out.
Adrian let out a deep breath and some of that fury went with it.
"Thank you."
She scurried away, melting into the crowd and leaving Adrian alone
with Christian and Lissa. The two of them looked only a little less stunned
than Daniella had.
"Damon Tarus?" Lissa guessed. Adrian nodded.
"Who's that?" asked Christian.
"My mom's cousin," said Adrian. "The family lawyer. A real shark.
Kind of sleazy too, but he can pretty much get anyone out of anything."
"That's something, I suppose," mused Christian. "But is he good
enough to fight this so-called hard evidence?"
"I don't know. I really don't know." Adrian absentmindedly reached
for his pocket, the usual cigarette spot, but he had none today. He sighed. "I
don't know what their evidence is or how Aunt Tatiana even died. All I
heard was that they found her dead this morning."
Lissa and Christian exchanged grimaces. Christian shrugged, and
Lissa turned back to Adrian, taking on the role of messenger.
"A stake," said Lissa. "They found her in bed with a silver stake
through her heart."
Adrian said nothing, and his expression didn't really change. It
occurred to Lissa that in all this talk about innocence, evidence, and lawyers,
everyone had kind of overlooked the fact that Tatiana had been Adrian's
great-aunt. He hadn't approved of some of her decisions and had made
plenty of jokes about her behind her back. But she was still his family,
someone he'd known his entire life. He had to be feeling the pain of her
death on top of everything else. Even I felt a little conflicted. I hated her for
what she'd done to me, but I'd never wanted her dead. And I couldn't help
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but remember that she'd occasionally spoken to me like I was a real person.
Maybe it had been faked, but I was pretty sure she'd been sincere the night
she'd stopped by the Ivashkovs'. She'd been weary and thoughtful, mostly
just concerned about bringing peace to her people.
Lissa watched Adrian go, sympathy and sorrow flooding through her.
Christian gently tapped her arm. "Come on," he said. "We've found out what
we needed to know. We're just in the way here."
Feeling helpless, Lissa let him lead her outside, dodging more
panicked crowds. The orange of a low sun gave every leaf and tree a golden,
warm feel. There had been a lot of people out when we returned from the
warehouse with Dimitri, but it was nothing compared to this. People were
buzzing with fear, hurrying to pass the news. Some were already in
mourning, clad in black, with tears on their faces. I wondered how much of
that was real. Even in the midst of tragedy and crime, royals would be
scrambling for power.
And each time she heard my name, Lissa would grow more and more
angry. It was the bad anger too, the kind that felt like black smoke in our
bond and often made her lash out. It was spirit's curse.
"I can't believe this!" she exclaimed to Christian. I noticed, even if she
didn't, that he was hurriedly taking her somewhere where there weren't
people. "How could anyone think that about Rose? It's a set up. It has to be."
"I know, I know," he said. He knew spirit's danger signs too and was
trying to calm her down. They'd reached a small, grassy area in the shade of
a large hazelnut tree and settled onto the ground. "We know she didn't do it.
That's all there is to it. We'll prove it. She can't be punished for something
she didn't do."
"You don't know this group," grumbled Lissa. "If someone's out to get
her, they can make all sorts of things possible." With only the faintest
awareness, I drew a little of that darkness from her into me, trying to calm
her down. Unfortunately, it just made me angrier.
Christian laughed. "You forget. I grew up around this group. I went to
school with this group's kids. I know them--but we're not panicking until we
know more, okay?"
Lissa exhaled, feeling much better. I was going to take too much
darkness if I wasn't careful. She gave Christian a small, tentative smile.
"I don't remember you being this reasonable before."
"It's because everyone has different definitions of 'reasonable. ' Mine's
just misunderstood, that's all." His voice was lofty.
"I think you must be misunderstood a lot," she laughed.
His eyes held hers, and the smile on his face transformed into
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something warmer and softer. "Well, I hope this isn't misunderstood.
Otherwise, I might get punched."
Leaning over, he brought his lips to hers. Lissa responded with no
hesitation or thought whatsoever, losing herself in the sweetness of the kiss.
Unfortunately, I was swept along with it. When they pulled away, Lissa felt
her heart rate increase and her cheeks flush.
"What exactly was that the definition of?" she asked, reliving how his
mouth had felt.
"It means 'I'm sorry,'" he said.
She looked away and nervously plucked at some of the grass. Finally,
with a sigh, she looked back up. "Christian . . . was there ever . . . was there
ever anything between you and Jill? Or Mia?"
He stared in surprise. "What? How could you think that?"
"You spent so much time with them."
"There is only one person I have ever wanted," he said. The steadiness
of his gaze, of those crystal blue eyes, left no question as to who that person
was. "No one else has ever come close. In spite of everything, even with
Avery--"
"Christian, I'm so sorry for that--"
"You don't have to--"
"I do--"
"Damn it," he said. "Will you let me finish a sent--"
"No," Lissa interrupted. And she leaned over and kissed him, a hard
and powerful kiss that burned through her body, one that told her there was
no one else in the world for her either.
Well. Apparently Tasha had been right: I was the only one who could
bring them back together. I just somehow hadn't expected my arrest to play a
role.
I pulled away from her head to give them some privacy and save
myself from watching them make out. I didn't begrudge them their moment.
There was nothing either could do for me right now, and they deserved their
reunion. Their only course of action was to wait for more information, and
really, their method of passing time was a lot healthier than whatever Adrian
was probably doing.
I lay down on the bed and stared up at the ceiling. There was nothing
but plain metal and neutral colors around me. It drove me crazy. I had
nothing to watch, nothing to read. I felt like an animal trapped in a cage. The
room seemed to grow smaller and smaller. All I could do was replay what
I'd learned via Lissa, analyzing every word of what had been said. I had
questions about everything, of course, but the one thing that stuck with me
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was Daniella mentioning a hearing. I needed to know more about that.
I got my answer--hours later.
I'd fallen into sort of a numb haze by then and almost didn't recognize
Mikhail standing in front of my cell door. I leapt from my bed to the bars
and saw that he was unlocking the door. Hope surged through me.
"What's going on?" I asked. "Are they letting me go?"
"I'm afraid not," he said. His point was proven when, after opening the
door, he promptly put my hands in cuffs. I didn't fight it. "I'm here to take
you to your hearing."
Stepping into the hall, I saw other guardians gathered. My own
security detail. A mirror of Dimitri's. Lovely. Mikhail and I walked together,
and mercifully, he spoke along the way instead of maintaining that awful
silence that seemed to be common treatment for prisoners.
"What's the hearing exactly? A trial?"
"No, no. Too soon for a trial. A hearing decides whether you're going
to trial."
"That sounds kind of like a waste of time," I pointed out. We emerged
from the guardians' building, and that fresh, damp air was the sweetest thing
I'd ever tasted.
"It's a bigger waste of time if you go to a full-fledged trial, and they
realize there was no case to stand on. At the hearing, they'll lay out all the
evidence they have, and a judge--or, well, someone acting as a judge--will
decide if you should have a trial. The trial makes it official. That's where
they pass the verdict and dole out the punishment."
"Why'd they take so long for the hearing? Why'd they make me wait
in that cell all day?"
He laughed, but not because he thought it was funny. "This is fast,
Rose. Very fast. It can take days or weeks to get a hearing, and if you do go
to trial, you'll stay locked up until then."
I swallowed. "Will they move fast on that too?"
"I don't know. No monarch's been murdered in almost a hundred
years. People are running wild, and the Council wants to establish order.
They're already making huge plans for the queen's funeral--a giant spectacle
that'll distract everyone. Your hearing is also an attempt to establish order."
"What? How?"
"The sooner they convict the murderer, the safer everyone will feel.
They think this case against you is so solid, they want to rush it through.
They want you to be guilty. They want to bury her knowing her killer is
moving toward justice, so that everyone can sleep easy when the new king
or queen is elected."
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"But I didn't--" I let my denial go. There was no point.
Ahead of us, the building that housed the courtroom loomed. It had
seemed forbidding the first time I'd been here for Victor's trial, but that had
been owing to fear of the memories he sparked in me. Now . . . now it was
my own future on the line. And apparently not just my own future--the
Moroi world was watching and waiting, hoping I was a villain who could be
safely put away forever. Swallowing, I gave Mikhail a nervous look.
"Do you think . . . do you think they'll send me to trial?"
He didn't answer. One of the guards held the door open for us.
"Mikhail?" I urged. "Will they really put me on trial for murder?"
"Yes," he said sympathetically. "I'm pretty sure they will."
287
TWENTY-SEVEN
WALKING INTO THE COURTROOM was one of the most surreal
experiences of my life--and not just because I was the one being accused
here. It just kept reminding me of Victor's trial, and the idea that I was now
in his place was almost too weird to comprehend.
Entering a room with a troop of guardians makes people stare--and
believe me, there were a lot of people packed in there--so naturally, I didn't
skulk or look ashamed. I walked with confidence, my head held high. Again,
I had that eerie flashback to Victor. He too had walked in defiantly, and I'd
been appalled that someone who had committed his crimes could behave
that way. Were these people thinking the same thing about me?
On the dais at the front of the room sat a woman I didn't recognize.
Among the Moroi, a judge was usually a lawyer who had been appointed to
the position for the purposes of the hearing or whatever. The trial itself--at
least a big one like Victor's--had been presided over by the queen. She had
been the one to ultimately decide the final verdict. Here, the Council
members would be the ones to decide if I even reached that stage. The trial
makes it official. That's where they pass the verdict and dole out the
punishment.
My escort took me to the front seating of the room, past the bar that
separated the key players from the audience, and motioned me toward a spot
next to a middle-aged Moroi in a very formal and very designer black suit.
The suit screamed, I'm sorry the queen is dead, and I'm going to look
fashionable while showing my grief. His hair was a pale blond, lightly laced
with the first signs of silver. Somehow, he made it look good. I presumed
this was Damon Tarus, my lawyer, but he didn't say a word to me.
Mikhail sat beside me as well, and I was glad they'd chosen him to be
the one who literally didn't leave my side. Glancing back, I saw Daniella and
Nathan Ivashkov sitting with other high-ranking royals and their families.
Adrian had chosen not to join them. He sat farther back, with Lissa,
Christian, and Eddie. All of their faces were filled with worry.
The judge--an elderly, gray-haired Moroi who looked like she could
still kick ass--called the room to attention, and I twisted around to face
forward again. The Council was entering, and she announced them one by
one. Two sets of benches had been arranged for them, two rows of six with a
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thirteenth in back raised. Of course, only eleven of the spots were filled, and
I tried not to scowl. Lissa should have been sitting there.
When the Council was settled, the judge turned to face the rest of us
and spoke in a voice that rang through the room. "This hearing is now in
order, in which we will determine whether there is enough evidence to--"
A commotion at the door cut her off, and the audience craned their
necks to see what was going on.
"What's this disturbance about?" the judge demanded.
One of the guardians had the door partially open and was leaning out,
apparently speaking to whoever was in the hall. He ducked back into the
room. "The accused's lawyer is here, Your Honor."
The judge glanced at Damon and me and then delivered a frown to the
guardian. "She already has a lawyer."
The guardian shrugged and appeared comically helpless. If there had
been a Strigoi out there, he would have known what to do. This bizarre
interruption of protocol was beyond his skill set. The judge sighed.
"Fine. Send whoever it is up here and let's get this settled."
Abe walked in.
"Oh dear lord," I said out loud.
I didn't have to scold myself for speaking out of turn because a hum of
conversation immediately filled the room. My guess was that half were in
awe because they knew Abe and his reputation. The other half were
probably just stunned by his appearance.
He wore a gray cashmere suit, considerably lighter than Damon's grim
black. Underneath it was a dress shirt that was so bright a white, it seemed to
glow--particularly next to the brilliant crimson silk tie he wore. Other spots
of red were scattered about his outfit--a handkerchief in the pocket, ruby cuff
links. Naturally, it was all as perfectly tailored and expensive as Damon's
outfit. But Abe didn't look like he was in mourning. He didn't even look like
he was coming to a trial. It was more like he'd been interrupted on his way to
a party. And of course, he sported his usual gold hoop earrings and trimmed
black beard.
The judge silenced the room with a hand motion as he strutted up to
her.
"Ibrahim Mazur," she said, with a shake of her head. There were equal
parts amazement and disapproval in her voice. "This is . . . unexpected."
Abe swept her a gallant bow. "It's lovely to see you again, Paula. You
haven't aged a day."
"We aren't at a country club, Mr. Mazur," she informed him. "And
while here, you will address me by my proper title."
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"Ah. Right." He winked. "My apologies, Your Honor." Turning, he
glanced around until his eyes rested on me. "There she is. Sorry to have
delayed this. Let's get started."
Damon stood up. "What is this? Who are you? I'm her lawyer."
Abe shook his head. "There must have been some mistake. It took me
a while to get a flight here, so I can see why you would have appointed a
community lawyer to fill in."
"Community lawyer!" Damon's face grew red with indignation. "I'm
one of the most renowned lawyers among American Moroi."
"Renowned, community." Abe shrugged and leaned back on his heals.
"I don't judge. No pun intended."
"Mr. Mazur," interrupted the judge, "are you a lawyer?"
"I'm a lot of things, Paula--Your Honor. Besides, does it matter? She
only needs someone to speak for her."
"And she has someone," exclaimed Damon. "Me."
"Not anymore," said Abe, his demeanor still very pleasant. He had
never stopped smiling, but I thought I saw that dangerous glint in his eyes
that frightened so many of his enemies. He was the picture of calm, while
Damon looked like he was ready to have a seizure.
"Your Honor--"
"Enough!" she said in that resounding voice of hers. "Let the girl
choose." She fixed her brown eyes on me. "Who do you want to speak for
you?"
"I . . ." My mouth dropped open at how abruptly the attention shifted
to me. I'd been watching the drama between the two men like a tennis match,
and now the ball had hit me in the head.
"Rose."
Startled, I turned slightly. Daniella Ivashkov had crept over in the row
behind me. "Rose," she whispered again, "you have no idea who that Mazur
man is." Oh, didn't I? "You want nothing to do with him. Damon's the best.
He's not easy to get."
She moved back to her seat, and I looked between my two potential
lawyers' faces. I understood Daniella's meaning. Adrian had talked her into
getting Damon for me, and then she had talked Damon into actually doing it.
Rejecting him would be an insult to her, and considering she was one of the
few royal Moroi who'd been nice to me about Adrian, I certainly didn't want
to earn her dislike. Besides, if this was some setup by royals, having one of
them on my side was probably my best chance at getting off.
And yet . . . there was Abe, looking at me with that clever smile of
his. He was certainly very good at getting his way, but a lot of that was by
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force of his presence and reputation. If there really was some absurd
evidence against me, Abe's attitude wouldn't be enough to make it go away.
Of course, he was sly, too. The serpent. He could make the impossible
happen; he'd certainly pulled a lot of strings for me.
That did not, however, change the fact that he wasn't a lawyer.
On the other hand, he was my father.
He was my father, and although we still barely knew each other, he'd
gone to great lengths to get here and saunter in with his gray suit to defend
me. Was it fatherly love gone bad? Was he really all that good a lawyer?
And at the end of the day, was it true that blood ran thicker than water? I
didn't know. I actually didn't like that saying. Maybe it worked for humans,
but it made no sense with vampires.
Anyway, Abe was staring at me intently with dark brown eyes nearly
identical to mine. Trust me, he seemed to say. But could I? Could I trust my
family? I would have trusted my mother if she were here--and I knew she
trusted Abe.
I sighed and gestured toward him. "I'll take him." In an undertone, I
added, "Don't let me down, Zmey."
Abe's smile grew broader as shocked exclamations filled the audience,
and Damon protested in outrage. Daniella might have had to persuade him to
take me on in the beginning, but now this case had become a matter of pride
for him. His reputation had just been sullied by me passing him up.
But I'd made my choice, and the exasperated judge would hear no
more arguments about it. She shooed Damon away, and Abe slid into his
seat. The judge began with the standard opening speech, explaining why we
were here, etc., etc. As she spoke, I leaned toward Abe.
"What have you gotten me into?" I hissed to him.
"Me? What have you gotten yourself into? Couldn't I have just picked
you up at the police station for underage drinking, like most fathers?"
I was beginning to understand why people got irritated when I made
jokes in dangerous situations.
"My fucking future's on the line! They're going to send me to trial and
convict me!"
Every trace of humor or cheer vanished from his face. His expression
grew hard, deadly serious. A chill ran down my spine.
"That," he said in a low, flat voice, "is something I swear to you is
never, ever going to happen."
The judge turned her attention back to us and the prosecuting lawyer,
a woman called Iris Kane. Not a royal name, but she still looked pretty hardcore.
Maybe that was just a lawyer thing.
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Before the evidence against me was laid out, the queen's murder was
also described in all its grisly detail. How'd she'd been found this morning in
bed, a silver stake through her heart and a profound look of horror and shock
on her face. Blood had been everywhere: on her nightgown, the sheets, her
skin . . . The pictures were shown to everyone in the room, triggering a
variety of reactions. Gasps of surprise. More fear and panic. And some . . .
some people wept. Some of those tears were undoubtedly because of the
whole terrible situation, but I think many cried because they'd loved or liked
Tatiana. She'd been cold and stiff at times, but for the most part, her reign
had been a peaceful and just one.
After the pictures, they called me up. The hearing didn't run the way a
normal trial did. There was no formal switching back of lawyers as they
questioned witnesses. They each just sort of stood there and took turns
asking questions while the judge kept order.
"Miss Hathaway," began Iris, dropping my title. "What time did you
return to your room last night?"
"I don't know the exact time. . . ." I focused on her and Abe, not the
sea of faces out there. "Somewhere around 5 a.m., I think. Maybe 6."
"Was anyone with you?"
"No, well--yes. Later." Oh, God. Here it comes. "Um, Adrian
Ivashkov visited me."
"What time did he arrive?" asked Abe.
"I'm not sure of that either. A few hours after I got back, I guess."
Abe turned his charming smile on Iris, who was rustling through some
papers. "The queen's murder has been pretty accurately narrowed down to
between seven and eight. Rose wasn't alone--of course, we would need Mr.
Ivashkov to testify to that effect."
My eyes flicked briefly to the audience. Daniella looked pale. This
was her nightmare: Adrian getting involved. Glancing farther over, I saw
that Adrian himself seemed eerily calm. I really hoped he wasn't drunk.
Iris held up a sheet of paper triumphantly. "We have a signed
statement from a janitor who says Mr. Ivashkov arrived at the defendant's
building at approximately nine twenty."
"That's pretty specific," said Abe. He sounded amused, like she'd said
something cute. "Do you have any desk staff to confirm that?"
"No," Iris said icily. "But this is enough. The janitor remembers
because he was about to take his break. Miss Hathaway was alone when the
murder took place. She has no alibi."
"Well," said Abe, "at least according to some questionable 'facts.'"
But no more was said about the time. The evidence was admitted into
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the official records, and I took a deep breath. I hadn't liked that line of
questioning, but it had been expected, based on the earlier conversations I'd
heard via Lissa. The no-alibi thing wasn't good, but I kind of shared Abe's
vibe. What they had so far still didn't seem strong enough to send me to trial.
Plus, they hadn't asked anything else about Adrian, which left him out of
this.
"Next exhibit," said Iris. There was smug triumph all over her face.
She knew the time thing was sketchy, but whatever was coming up, she
thought it was gold.
But actually, it was silver. A silver stake.
So help me, she had a silver stake in a clear plastic container. It
gleamed in the incandescent lighting--except for its tip. That was dark. With
blood.
"This is the stake used to kill the queen," declared Iris. "Miss
Hathaway's stake."
Abe actually laughed. "Oh, come on. Guardians are issued stakes all
the time. They have an enormous, identical supply."
Iris ignored him and looked at me. "Where is your stake right now?"
I frowned. "In my room."
She turned and glanced out over the crowd. "Guardian Stone?"
A tall dhampir with a bushy black mustache rose from the crowd.
"Yes?"
"You conducted the search of Miss Hathaway's room and belongings,
correct?"
I gaped in outrage. "You searched my--"
A sharp look from Abe silenced me.
"Correct," said the guardian.
"And did you find any silver stakes?" asked Iris.
"No."
She turned back to us, still smug, but Abe seemed to find this new
information even more ridiculous than the last batch. "That proves nothing.
She could have lost the stake without realizing it."
"Lost it in the queen's heart?"
"Miss Kane," warned the judge.
"My apologies, Your Honor," said Iris smoothly. She turned to me.
"Miss Hathaway, is there anything special about your stake? Anything that
would distinguish it from others?"
"Y-yes."
"Can you describe that?"
I swallowed. I had a bad feeling about this. "It has a pattern etched
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near the top. A kind of geometric design." Guardians had engraving done
sometimes. I'd found this stake in Siberia and kept it. Well, actually, Dimitri
had sent it to me after it had come loose from his chest.
Iris walked over to the Council and held out the container so that each
of them could examine it. Returning to me, she gave me my turn. "Is this
your pattern? Your stake?"
I stared. It was indeed. My mouth opened, ready to say yes, but then I
caught Abe's eye. Clearly, he couldn't talk directly to me, but he sent a lot of
messages in that gaze. The biggest one was to be careful, be sly. What would
a slippery person like Abe do?
"It . . . it looks similar to the design on mine," I said at last. "But I
can't say for sure if it's the exact same one." Abe's smile told me I'd
answered correctly.
"Of course you can't," Iris said, as though she'd expected no better.
She handed off the container to one of the court clerks. "But now that the
Council has seen that the design matches her description and is almost like
her stake, I would like to point out that testing has revealed"--she held up
more papers, victory all over her face--"that her fingerprints are on it."
There, it was. The big score. The "hard evidence."
"Any other fingerprints?" asked the judge.
"No, Your Honor. Just hers."
"That means nothing," said Abe with a shrug. I had a feeling that if I
stood and suddenly confessed to the murder, he would still claim it was
dubious evidence. "Someone steals her stake and wears gloves. Her
fingerprints would be on it because it's hers."
"That's getting kind of convoluted, don't you think?" asked Iris.
"The evidence is still full of holes," he protested. "That's what's
convoluted. How could she have gotten into the queen's bedroom? How
could she have gotten through the guards?"
"Well," mused Iris, "those would be questions best explored in trial,
but considering Miss Hathaway's extensive record of breaking into and out
of places, as well as the countless other disciplinary marks she has, I don't
doubt she could have found any number of ways to get inside."
"You have no proof," said Abe. "No theory."
"We don't need it," said Iris. "Not at this point. We have more than
enough to go to trial, don't we? I mean, we haven't even gotten to the part
where countless witnesses heard Miss Hathaway tell the queen she'd regret
establishing the recent guardian law. I can find the transcript if you like--not
to mention reports of other 'expressive' commentary Miss Hathaway made in
public."
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A memory came back to me, of standing outside with Daniella while I
ranted--with others watching--about how the queen couldn't buy me off with
an assignment. Not a good decision on my part. Neither was busting in on
the Death Watch or complaining about the queen being worth protecting
when Lissa had been captured. I'd given Iris a lot of material.
"Oh yes," Iris continued. "We also have accounts of the queen
declaring her extreme disapproval of Miss Hathaway's involvement with
Adrian Ivashkov, particularly when the two ran off to elope." I opened my
mouth at that, but Abe silenced me. "There are countless other records of
Her Majesty and Miss Hathaway sparring in public. Would you like me to
find those papers too, or are we able to vote on a trial now?"
This was directed at the judge. I had no legal background, but the
evidence was pretty damning. I would have said that there was definitely
reason to consider me a murder suspect, except . . .
"Your Honor?" I asked. I think she'd been about to give her
declaration. "Can I say something?"
The judge thought about it, then shrugged. "I see no reason not to.
We're collecting all the evidence there is."
Oh, me freelancing was not in Abe's plan at all. He strode to the stand,
hoping to stop me with his wise counsel, but he wasn't fast enough.
"Okay," I said, hoping I sounded reasonable and wasn't going to lose
my temper. "You've put up a lot of suspicious stuff here. I can see that." Abe
looked pained. It was not an expression I'd seen on him before. He didn't
lose control of situations very often. "But that's the thing. It's too suspicious.
If I were going to murder someone, I wouldn't be that stupid. Do you think
I'd leave my stake stuck in her chest? Do you think I wouldn't wear gloves?
Come on. That's insulting. If I'm as crafty as you claim my record says I am,
then why would I do it this way? I mean, seriously? If I did it, it'd be a lot
better. You'd never even peg me as a suspect. This is all really kind of an
insult to my intelligence."
"Rose--" began Abe, a dangerous note in his tone. I kept going.
"All this evidence you've got is so painfully obvious. Hell, whoever
set this up might as well have painted an arrow straight to me--and someone
did set me up, but you guys are too stupid to even consider that." The
volume of my voice was rising, and I consciously brought it back to normal
levels. "You want an easy answer. A quick answer. And you especially want
someone with no connections, no powerful family to protect them . . ." I
hesitated there, unsure how to classify Abe. "Because that's how it always is.
That's how it was with that age law. No one was able to stand up for the
dhampirs either because this goddamned system won't allow it."
295
It occurred to me then that I had strayed pretty far off the subject--and
was making myself look more guilty by slamming the age law. I reined
myself back in.
"Um, anyway, Your Honor . . . what I'm trying to say is that this
evidence shouldn't be enough to accuse me or send me to trial. I wouldn't
plan a murder this badly."
"Thank you, Miss Hathaway," said the judge. "That was very . . .
informative. You may take your seat now while the Council votes."
Abe and I returned to our bench. "What in the world were you
thinking?" he whispered.
"I was telling it like it is. I was defending myself."
"I wouldn't go that far. You're no lawyer."
I gave him a sidelong look. "Neither are you, old man."
The judge asked the Council to vote on whether they believed there
was enough evidence to make me a viable suspect and send me to trial. They
did. Eleven hands went up. Just like that, it was over.
Through the bond, I felt Lissa's alarm. As Abe and I rose to leave, I
looked out in the audience, which was starting to disband and buzzing with
talk over what would happen now. Her light green eyes were wide, her face
unusually pale. Beside her, Adrian too looked distressed, but as he stared at
me, I could see love and determination radiating. And in the back, behind
both of them . . .
Dimitri.
I hadn't even known he was here. His eyes were on me too, dark and
endless. Only I couldn't read what he was feeling. His face betrayed nothing,
but there was something in his eyes . . . something intense and intimidating.
The image of him ready to take down that group of guardians flashed
through my mind, and something told me that if I asked, he would do it
again. He would fight his way to me through this courtroom and do
everything in his power to rescue me from it.
A brushing of my hand distracted me from him. Abe and I had started
to exit, but the aisle ahead of us was packed with people, bringing us to a
halt. The touch against my hand was a small piece of paper shoved between
my fingers. Glancing over, I saw Ambrose was sitting near the aisle, staring
straight ahead. I wanted to ask what was going on, but some instinct kept me
silent. Seeing as the line still wasn't moving, I hastily opened the paper,
keeping it out of Abe's sight.
The paper was tiny, its elegant cursive almost impossible to read.
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Rose,
If you're reading this, then something terrible has happened. You
probably hate me, and I don't blame you. I can only ask that you trust that
what I did with the age decree was better for your people than what others
had planned. There are some Moroi who want to force all dhampirs into
service, whether they want it or not, by using compulsion. The age decree
has slowed that faction down.
However, I write to you with a secret you must put right, and it is a
secret you must share with as few as possible. Vasilisa needs her spot on the
Council, and it can be done. She is not the last Dragomir. Another lives, the
illegitimate child of Eric Dragomir. I know nothing else, but if you can find
this son or daughter, you will give Vasilisa the power she deserves. No
matter your faults and dangerous temperament, you are the only one I feel
can take on this task. Waste no time in fulfilling it.
--Tatiana Ivashkov
I stared at the piece of paper, its writing swirling before me, but its
message burning into my mind. She is not the last Dragomir. Another lives.
If that was true, if Lissa had a half-brother or half-sister . . . it would
change everything. She would get a vote on the Council. She would no
longer be alone. If it was true. If this was from Tatiana. Anyone could sign
her name to a piece of paper. It didn't make it real. Still, I shivered, troubled
at the thought of getting a letter from a dead woman. If I allowed myself to
see the ghosts around us, would Tatiana be there, restless and vengeful? I
couldn't bring myself to let down my walls and look. Not yet. There had to
be other answers. Ambrose had given me the note. I needed to ask him . . .
except we were moving down the aisle again. A guardian nudged me along.
"What's that?" asked Abe, always alert and suspicious.
I hastily folded the note back up. "Nothing."
The look he gave me told me he didn't believe that at all. I wondered
if I should tell him. It is a secret you must share with as few as possible. If
he was one of the few, this wasn't the place. I tried to distract him from it
and shake the dumbstruck look that must have been on my face. This note
was a big problem--but not quite as big as the one immediately facing me.
"You told me I wouldn't go to trial," I said to Abe. My earlier
annoyance returned. "I took a big chance with you!"
"It wasn't a big chance. Tarus couldn't have got you out of this either."
297
Abe's easy attitude about all this infuriated me further. "Are you
saying you knew this hearing was a lost cause from the beginning?" It was
what Mikhail had said too. How nice to have such faith from everyone.
"This hearing wasn't important," Abe said evasively. "What happens
next is."
"And what is that exactly?"
He gave me that dark, sly gaze again. "Nothing you need to worry
about yet."
One of the guardians put his hand on my arm, telling me I needed to
move. I resisted his pull and leaned toward Abe.
"The hell I don't! This is my life we're talking about," I exclaimed. I
knew what would come next. Imprisonment until the trial. And then more
imprisonment if I was convicted. "This is serious! I don't want to go to trial!
I don't want to spend the rest of my life in a place like Tarasov."
The guard tugged harder, pushing us forward, and Abe fixed me with
a piercing gaze that made my blood run cold.
"You will not go to trial. You will not go to prison," he hissed, out of
the guards' hearing. "I won't allow it. Do you understand?"
I shook my head, confused over so much and not knowing what to do
about any of it. "Even you have your limits, old man."
His smile returned. "You'd be surprised. Besides, they don't even send
royal traitors to prison, Rose. Everyone knows that."
I scoffed. "Are you insane? Of course they do. What else do you think
they do with traitors? Set them free and tell them not to do it again?"
"No," said Abe, just before he turned away. "They execute traitors."
298
Many thanks to all the friends and family who have lent their considerable
support to me as I worked on this, especially my amazing and patient
husband. I know I couldn't get through this without you! Special thanks also
to my pal Jen Ligot and her eagle eyes.
On the publishing side, I'm always grateful for the hard work of my
agent Jim McCarthy, as well as everyone else at Dystel & Goderich Literary
Management--including Lauren Abramo, who helps spread Vampire
Academy around the world. Thank you also to the gang at Penguin Books--
Jessica Rothenberg, Ben Schrank, Casey McIntyre, and so many others--
who work a lot of magic for this series. My publishers outside the U.S. are
also doing wonderful things for getting the word out about Rose, and I'm
constantly amazed to see the growing international response. Thank you so
much for all you do.
A last shout-out to my readers, whose continued enthusiasm still
overwhelms me. Thank you for reading and loving these characters as much
as I do.
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