Frostbite
Vampire Academy Book 2
Richelle
Mead
CONTENTS
Like always, this book
couldn't have been written without the help and support of my friends and
family. In particular, I need to thank my IM Counseling Team: Caitlin, David,
Jay, Jackie, and Kat. You guys logged more late-night online hours than I can
even begin to count. I couldn't have gotten through this book and the rest of
this year's craziness without you.
Thanks also to my agent, Jim
McCarthy, who has moved heaven, earth, and deadlines to help me finish what I
need to. I'm glad you've got my back. And finally, many thanks to Jessica
Rothenberg and Ben Schrank at Razorbill for their continued support and hard
work.
For Kat Richardson, who is very wise.
THINGS DIE. BUT THEY DON'T always stay dead. Believe
me, I know.
There's a race of vampires on this earth who are
literally the walking dead. They're called Strigoi, and if you're not already
having nightmares about them, you should be. They're strong, they're fast, and
they kill without mercy or hesitation. They're immortal, too—which kind of
makes them a bitch to destroy. There are only three ways to do it: a silver
stake through the heart, decapitation, and setting them on fire. None of those
is easy to pull off, but it's better than having no options at all.
There are also good vampires walking the world.
They're called Moroi. They're alive, and they possess the incredibly cool power
to wield magic in each of the four elements— earth, air, water, and fire.
(Well, most Moroi can do this—but I'll explain more about the exceptions
later). They don't really use the magic for much anymore, which is kind of sad.
It'd be a great weapon, but the Moroi strongly believe magic should only be
used peacefully. It's one of the biggest rules in their society. Moroi are also
usually tall and slim, and they can't handle a lot of sunlight. But they do
have superhuman senses that make up for it: sight, smell, and hearing.
Both kinds of vampires need blood. That's what makes them vampires, I guess. Moroi don't kill to take it,
however. Instead, they keep humans around who willingly donate small amounts.
They volunteer because vampire bites contain endorphins that feel really,
really good and can become addictive. I know this from personal experience.
These humans are called feeders and are essentially vampire-bite junkies.
Still, keeping feeders around is better than the way
the Strigoi do things, because, as you might expect, they kill for their blood.
I think they like it. If a Moroi kills a victim while drinking, he or she will
turn into a Strigoi. Some Moroi do this by choice, giving up their magic and
their morals for immortality. Strigoi can also be created by force. If a
Strigoi drinks blood from a victim and then makes that person drink Strigoi
blood in return, well…you get a new Strigoi. This can happen to anyone: Moroi,
human, or … dhampir.
Dhampir.
That's what I am. Dhampirs are half-human, half-Moroi.
I like to think we got the best traits of both races. I'm strong and sturdy,
like humans are. I can also go out in the sun as much as I want. But, like the
Moroi, I have really good senses and fast reflexes. The result is that dhampirs
make the ultimate bodyguards—which is what most of us are. We're called
guardians.
I've spent my entire life training to protect Moroi
from Strigoi. I have a whole set of special classes and practices I take at St.
Vladimir's Academy, a private school for Moroi and dhampirs. I know how to use
all sorts of weapons and can land some pretty mean kicks. I've beaten up guys
twice my size—both in and out of class. And really, guys are
pretty much the only ones I beat up, since there are very few girls in any of
my classes.
Because while dhampirs inherit all sorts of great
traits, there's one thing we didn't get. Dhampirs can't have children with
other dhampirs. Don't ask me why. It's not like I'm a geneticist or anything.
Humans and Moroi getting together will always make more dhampirs; that's where
we came from in the first place. But that doesn't happen so much anymore; Moroi
tend to stay away from humans. Through another weird genetic fluke, however,
Moroi and dhampirs mixing will create dhampir children. I know, I know: it's
crazy. You'd think you'd get a baby that's three-quarters vampire, right? Nope.
Half human, half Moroi.
Most of these dhampirs are born from Moroi men and
dhampir women getting together. Moroi women stick to having Moroi babies. What
this usually means is that Moroi men have flings with dhampir women and then
take off. This leaves a lot of single dhampir mothers, and that's why not as
many of them become guardians. They'd rather focus on raising their children.
As a result, only the guys and a handful of girls are
left to become guardians. But those who choose to protect Moroi are serious
about their jobs. Dhampirs need Moroi to keep having kids. We have to
protect them. Plus, it's just…well, it's the honorable thing to do. Strigoi are
evil and unnatural. It isn't right for them to prey on the innocent. Dhampirs
who train to be guardians have this drilled into them from the
time they can walk. Strigoi are evil. Moroi must be protected. Guardians
believe this. I believe this.
And there's one Moroi I want to protect more than
anyone in the world: my best friend, Lissa. She's a Moroi princess. The Moroi
have twelve royal families, and she's the only one left in hers—the Dragomirs.
But there's something else that makes Lissa special, aside from her being my
best friend.
Remember when I said every Moroi wields one of the
four elements? Well, it turns out Lissa wields one no one even knew existed
until recently: spirit. For years, we thought she just wasn't going to develop
her magical abilities. Then strange things started happening around her. For
example, all vampires have an ability called compulsion that lets them force
their will on others. Strigoi have it really strongly. It's weaker in Moroi,
and it's also forbidden. Lissa, however, has it almost as much as a Strigoi.
She can bat her eyelashes, and people will do what she wants.
But
that's not even the coolest thing she can do.
I said earlier that dead things don't always stay
dead. Well, I'm one of them. Don't worry—I'm not like the Strigoi. But I did
die once. (I don't recommend it.) It happened when the car I was riding in slid
off the road. The accident killed me, Lissa's parents, and her brother. Yet,
somewhere in the chaos—without even realizing it—Lissa used spirit to bring me
back. We didn't know about this for a long time. In fact, we didn't even know
spirit existed at all.
Unfortunately, it turned out that one person
did know about spirit before we did. Victor Dashkov, a dying Moroi prince,
found out about Lissa's powers and decided he wanted to lock her up and make
her his own personal healer—for the rest of her life. When I realized someone
was stalking her, I decided to take matters into my own hands. I broke us out
of school to run off and live among humans. It was fun—but also kind of
nerve-wracking—to always be on the run. We got away with this for two years until
the authorities at St. Vladimir's hunted us down and dragged us back a few
months ago.
That was when Victor made his real move, kidnapping
her and torturing her until she gave into his demands. In the process, he took
some pretty extreme measures—like zapping me and Dimitri, my mentor, with a
lust spell. (I'll get to him later). Victor also exploited the way
spirit was starting to make Lissa mentally unstable. But even that wasn't as
bad as what he did to his own daughter Natalie. He went so far as to encourage
her to turn into a Strigoi to help cover his escape. She ended up getting
staked. Even when captured after the fact, Victor didn't seem to display too
much guilt over what he'd asked her to do. Makes me think I wasn't missing out
on growing up without a father.
Still, I now have to protect Lissa from Strigoi and
Moroi. Only a few officials know about what she can do, but I'm sure there
are other Victors out there who would want to use her. Fortunately, I have an
extra weapon to help me guard her. Somewhere during my healing in the car
accident, spirit
forged a psychic bond between her and me.
I can see and feel what she experiences. (It only works one way, though. She
can't "feel" me.) The bond helps me keep an eye on her and know when
she's in trouble, although sometimes, it's weird having another person inside
your head. We're pretty sure there are lots of other things spirit can do, but
we don't know what they are yet.
In the meantime, I'm trying to be the best guardian I
can be. Running away put me behind in my training, so I have to take extra
classes to make up for lost time. There's nothing in the world I want more than
to keep Lissa safe. Unfortunately, I've got two things that complicate my
training now and then. One is that I sometimes act before I think. I'm getting
better at avoiding this, but when something sets me off, I tend to punch first
and then find out who I actually hit later. When it comes to those I care about
being in danger…well, rules seem optional.
The other problem in my life is Dimitri. He's the one
who killed Natalie, and he's a total badass. He's also pretty good-looking.
Okay—more than good-looking. He's hot—like, the kind of hot that makes you stop
walking on the street and get hit by traffic. But, like I said, he's my instructor.
And he's twenty-four. Both of those are reasons why I shouldn't have
fallen for him. But, honestly, the most important reason is that he and I will
be Lissa's guardians when she graduates. If he and I are checking each other
out, then that means we aren't looking out for her.
I haven't had much luck in getting over him, and I'm
pretty sure he still feels the same about me. Part of what makes it so
difficult is that he and I got pretty hot and heavy when we got hit with the
lust spell. Victor had wanted to distract us while he kidnapped Lissa, and it
had worked. I'd been ready to give up my virginity, and Dimitri had been ready
to take it. At the last minute, we broke the spell, but those memories are
always with me and make it kind of hard to focus on combat moves sometimes.
By the way, my name's Rose Hathaway. I'm seventeen
years old, training to protect and kill vampires, in love with a
completely unsuitable guy, and have a best friend whose weird magic could drive
her crazy.
Hey,
no one said high school was easy.
I DIDN'T THINK MY DAY could get any worse until my
best friend told me she might be going crazy. Again.
"I…
what did you say?"
I stood in the lobby of her dorm, leaning over one of
my boots and adjusting it. Jerking my head up, I peered at her through the
tangle of dark hair covering half my face. I'd fallen asleep after school and
had skipped using a hairbrush in order to make it out the door on time. Lissa's
platinum blond hair was smooth and perfect, of course, hanging over her
shoulders like a bridal veil as she watched me with amusement.
"I said that I think my pills might not be
working as well anymore."
I straightened up and shook the hair out of my face.
"What does that mean?" I asked. Around us, Moroi hurried past, on
their way to meet friends or go to dinner.
"Have you started …" I lowered my voice.
"Have you started getting your powers back?"
She shook her head, and I saw a small flash of regret
in her eyes. "No … I feel closer to the magic, but I still can't
use it. Mostly what I'm noticing lately is a little of the other stuff, you
know…I'm getting more depressed now and then. Nothing even close to what
it used to be," she added hastily, seeing my face. Before
she'd gone on her pills, Lissa's moods could get so low that she cut herself.
"It's just there a little more than it was."
"What about the other things you used to get?
Anxiety? Delusional thinking?"
Lissa laughed, not taking any of this as seriously as
I was. "You sound like you've been reading psychiatry textbooks."
I actually had been reading them. "I'm
just worried about you. If you think the pills aren't working anymore, we need
to tell someone."
"No, no," she said hastily. "I'm fine,
really. They're still working…just not quite as much. I don't think we should
panic yet. Especially you—not today, at least."
Her change in subject worked. I'd found out an hour
ago that I would be taking my Qualifier today. It was an exam—or rather, an
interview—all novice guardians were required to pass during junior year at St.
Vladimir's Academy. Since I'd been off hiding Lissa last year, I'd missed mine.
Today I was being taken to a guardian somewhere off-campus who would administer
the test to me. Thanks for the notice, guys.
"Don't worry about me," Lissa repeated,
smiling. "I'll let you know if it gets worse."
"Okay,"
I said reluctantly.
Just to be safe, though, I opened my senses and
allowed myself to truly feel her through our psychic bond. She had been telling
the truth. She was calm and happy this morning, nothing to worry about. But,
far back in her mind, I sensed a knot of dark,
uneasy feelings. It wasn't consuming her or anything, but it had the same feel
as the bouts of depression and anger she used to get. It was only a trickle,
but I didn't like it. I didn't want it there at all. I tried pushing farther
inside her to get a better feel for the emotions and suddenly had the weird
experience of touching. A sickening sort of feeling seized me, and I jerked out
of her head. A small shudder ran through my body.
"You okay?" Lissa asked, frowning. "You
look nauseous all of a sudden."
"Just…nervous for the test," I lied.
Hesitantly, I reached out through the bond again. The darkness had completely
disappeared. No trace. Maybe there was nothing wrong with her pills after all.
"I'm fine."
She pointed at a clock. "You won't be if you
don't get moving soon."
"Damn it," I swore. She was right. I gave
her a quick hug. "See you later!"
"Good
luck!" she called.
I hurried off across campus and found my mentor,
Dimitri Belikov, waiting beside a Honda Pilot. How boring. I supposed I
couldn't have expected us to navigate Montana mountain roads in a Porsche, but
it would have been nice to have something cooler.
"I
know, I know," I said, seeing his face. "Sorry I'm late."
I remembered then that I had one of the most important
tests of my life coming up, and suddenly, I forgot all about Lissa and her pills possibly not working. I wanted to
protect her, but that wouldn't mean much if I couldn't pass high school and
actually become her guardian.
Dimitri stood there, looking as gorgeous as ever. The
massive, brick building cast long shadows over us, looming like some great
beast in the dusky predawn light. Around us, snow was just beginning to fall. I
watched the light, crystalline flakes drift gently down. Several landed and
promptly melted in his dark hair.
"Who
else is going?" I asked.
He
shrugged. "Just you and me."
My mood promptly shot up past "cheerful" and
went straight to "ecstatic." Me and Dimitri. Alone. In a car. This
might very well be worth a surprise test.
"How far away is it?" Silently, I begged for
it to be a really long drive. Like, one that would take a week. And would
involve us staying overnight in luxury hotels. Maybe we'd get stranded in a
snowbank, and only body heat would keep us alive.
"Five
hours."
"Oh."
A bit less than I'd hoped for. Still, five hours was
better than nothing. It didn't rule out the snowbank possibility, either.
The dim, snowy roads would have been difficult for
humans to navigate, but they proved no problem for our dhampir eyes. I stared
ahead, trying not to think about how Dimitri's aftershave filled the car with a
clean, sharp scent that made me want to melt. Instead, I
tried to focus on the Qualifier again.
It wasn't the kind of thing you could study for. You
either passed it or you didn't. High-up guardians visited novices during their
junior year and met individually to discuss students' commitment to being
guardians. I didn't know exactly what was asked, but rumors had trickled down
over the years. The older guardians assessed character and dedication, and some
novices had been deemed unfit to continue down the guardian path.
"Don't they usually come to the Academy?" I
asked Dimitri. "I mean, I'm all for the field trip, but why are we going
to them?"
"Actually, you're just going to a him, not
a them." A light Russian accent laced Dimitri's words, the only
indication of where he'd grown up. Otherwise, I was pretty sure he spoke
English better than I did. "Since this is a special case and he's doing us
the favor, we're the ones making the trip."
"Who
is he?"
"Arthur
Schoenberg."
I
jerked my gaze from the road to Dimitri.
"What?"
I squeaked.
Arthur Schoenberg was a legend. He was one of the
greatest Strigoi slayers in living guardian history and used to be the head of
the Guardians Council—the group of people who assigned guardians to Moroi and
made decisions for all of us. He'd eventually retired and gone back to
protecting one of the royal families, the Badicas.
Even retired, I knew he was still lethal. His exploits were part of my
curriculum.
"Wasn't… wasn't there anyone else
available?" I asked in a small voice.
I could see Dimitri hiding a smile. "You'll be
fine. Besides, if Art approves of you, that's a great recommendation to have on
your record."
Art. Dimitri
was on a first-name basis with one of the most badass guardians around. Of
course, Dimitri was pretty badass himself, so I shouldn't have been surprised.
Silence fell in the car. I bit my lip, suddenly
wondering if I'd be able to meet Arthur Schoenberg's standards. My grades were
good, but things like running away and getting into fights at school might cast
a shadow on how serious I was about my future career.
"You'll be fine," Dimitri repeated.
"The good in your record outweighs the bad."
It was like he could read my mind sometimes. I smiled
a little and dared to peek at him. It was a mistake. A long, lean body, obvious
even while sitting. Bottomless dark eyes. Shoulder-length brown hair tied back
at his neck. That hair felt like silk. I knew because I'd run my fingers
through it when Victor Dashkov had ensnared us with the lust charm. With great
restraint, I forced myself to start breathing again and look away.
"Thanks,
Coach," I teased, snuggling back into the seat.
"I'm here to help," he replied. His voice
was light and relaxed—rare for him. He was usually wound up tightly,
ready for any attack. Probably he figured he was safe inside a Honda—or at
least as safe as he could be around me. I wasn't the only one who had trouble
ignoring the romantic tension between us.
"You know what would really help?" I asked,
not meeting his eyes.
"Hmm?"
"If you turned off this crap music and put on
something that came out after the Berlin Wall went down."
Dimitri laughed. "Your worst class is history,
yet somehow, you know everything about Eastern Europe."
"Hey,
gotta have material for my jokes, Comrade."
Still
smiling, he turned the radio dial. To a country station.
"Hey!
This isn't what I had in mind," I exclaimed.
I could tell he was on the verge of laughing again.
"Pick. It's one or the other."
I
sighed. "Go back to the 1980’s stuff."
He flipped the dial, and I crossed my arms over my
chest as some vaguely European-sounding band sang about how video had killed
the radio star. I wished someone would kill this radio.
Suddenly,
five hours didn't seem as short as I'd thought.
Arthur and the family he protected lived in a small
town along I-90, not far from Billings. The general Moroi opinion was split on
places to live. Some argued that big cities were the
best since they allowed vampires to be lost in the crowds; nocturnal activities
didn't raise so much attention. Other Moroi, like this family, apparently,
opted for less populated towns, believing that if there were fewer people to
notice you, then you were less likely to be noticed.
I'd convinced Dimitri to stop for food at a
twenty-four-hour diner along the way, and between that and stopping to buy gas,
it was around noon when we arrived. The house was built in a rambler style, all
one level with gray-stained wood siding and big bay windows—tinted to block
sunlight, of course. It looked new and expensive, and even out in the middle of
nowhere, it was about what I'd expected for members of a royal family.
I jumped down from the Pilot, my boots sinking through
an inch of smooth snow and crunching on the gravel of the driveway. The day was
still and silent, save for the occasional breath of wind. Dimitri and I walked
up to the house, following a river rock sidewalk that cut through the front
yard. I could see him sliding into his business mode, but his overall attitude
was as cheery as mine. We'd both taken a kind of guilty satisfaction in the
pleasant car ride.
My foot slipped on the ice-covered sidewalk, and
Dimitri instantly reached out to steady me. I had a weird moment of déjà vu,
flashing back to the first night we'd met, back when he'd also saved me from a
similar fall. Freezing temperatures or not, his hand felt warm on my arm, even
through the layers of down in my parka coat.
"You
okay?" He released his hold, to my dismay.
"Yeah," I said, casting accusing eyes at the
icy sidewalk. "Haven't these people ever heard of salt?"
I meant it jokingly, but Dimitri suddenly stopped
walking. I instantly came to a halt too. His expression became tense and alert.
He turned his head, eyes searching the broad, white plains surrounding us
before settling back on the house. I wanted to ask questions, but something in
his posture told me to stay silent. He studied the building for almost a full
minute, looked down at the icy sidewalk, then glanced back at the driveway,
covered in a sheet of snow broken only by our footprints.
Cautiously, he approached the front door, and I
followed. He stopped again, this time to study the door. It wasn't open, but it
wasn't entirely shut either. It looked like it had been closed in haste, not
sealing. Further examination showed scuffs along the door's edge, as though it
had been forced at some point. The slightest nudge would open it. Dimitri
lightly ran his fingers along where the door met its frame, his breath making
small clouds in the air. When he touched the door's handle it jiggled a little,
like it had been broken.
Finally,
he said quietly, "Rose, go wait in the car."
"But
wh—"
"Go."
One word—but one filled with power. In that single
syllable I was reminded of the man I'd seen throw people around and stake a
Strigoi. I backed up, walking on the snow-covered lawn
rather than risk the sidewalk. Dimitri stood where he was, not moving until I'd
slipped back into the car, closing the door as softly as possible. Then, with
the gentlest of movements, he pushed on the barely held door and disappeared
inside.
Burning with curiosity, I counted to ten and then
climbed out of the car.
I knew better than to go in after him, but I had to
know what was going on with this house. The neglected sidewalk and driveway
indicated that no one had been home for a couple days, although it could also
mean the Badicas simply never left the house. It was possible, I supposed, that
they'd been the victims of an ordinary break-in by humans. It was also possible
that something had scared them off—say, like Strigoi. I knew that possibility
was what had made Dimitri's face turn so grim, but it seemed an unlikely
scenario with Arthur Schoenberg on duty.
Standing on the driveway, I glanced up at the sky. The
light was bleak and watery, but it was there. Noon. The sun's highest point
today. Strigoi couldn't be out in sunlight. I didn't need to fear them, only
Dimitri's anger.
I circled around the right side of the house, walking
in much deeper snow—almost a foot of it. Nothing else weird about the house
struck me. Icicles hung from the eaves, and the tinted windows revealed no
secrets. My foot suddenly hit something, and I looked down. There, half-buried
in the snow, was a silver stake. It had been driven into the ground. I picked it up and brushed off the snow, frowning. What
was a stake doing out here? Silver stakes were valuable. They were a guardian's
most deadly weapon, capable of killing a Strigoi with a single strike through
the heart. When they were forged, four Moroi charmed them with magic from each
of the four elements. I hadn't learned to use one yet, but gripping it in my
hand, I suddenly felt safer as I continued my survey.
A large patio door led from the back of the house to a
wooden deck that probably would have been a lot of fun to hang out on in the
summer. But the patio's glass had been broken, so much so that a person could
easily get through the jagged hole. I crept up the deck steps, careful of the ice,
knowing I was going to get in major trouble when Dimitri found out what I was
doing. In spite of the cold, sweat poured down my neck.
Daylight, daylight, I reminded myself. Nothing to worry about.
I reached the patio and studied the dark glass. I
couldn't tell what had broken it. Just inside, snow had blown in and made a
small drift on pale blue carpet. I tugged on the door's handle, but it was
locked. Not that that mattered with a hole that big. Careful of the sharp
edges, I reached through the opening and unlocked the handle's latch from the
inside. I removed my hand just as carefully and pulled open the sliding door.
It hissed slightly along its tracks, a quiet sound that nonetheless seemed too
loud in the eerie silence.
I stepped through the doorway, standing in the patch
of sunlight that had been cast inside by opening the
door. My eyes adjusted from the sun to the dimness within. Wind swirled through
the open patio, dancing with the curtains around me. I was in a living room. It
had all the ordinary items one might expect. Couches. TV. A rocking chair.
And
a body.
It was a woman. She lay on her back in front of the
TV, her dark hair spilling on the floor around her. Her wide eyes stared upward
blankly, her face pale—too pale even for a Moroi. For a moment I thought her
long hair was covering her neck, too, until I realized that the darkness across
her skin was blood—dried blood. Her throat had been ripped out.
The horrible scene was so surreal that I didn't even
realize what I was seeing at first. With her posture, the woman might very well
have been sleeping. Then I took in the other body: a man on his side only a
couple feet away, dark blood staining the carpet around him. Another body was
slumped beside the couch: small, child-size. Across the room was another. And
another. There were bodies everywhere, bodies and blood.
The scale of the death around me suddenly registered,
and my heart began pounding. No, no. It wasn't possible. It was day. Bad things
couldn't happen in daylight. A scream started to rise in my throat, suddenly
halted when a gloved hand came from behind me and closed over my mouth. I
started to struggle; then I smelled Dimitri's aftershave.
"Why," he asked, "don't you ever
listen? You'd be dead if they were still here."
I couldn't answer, both because of the hand and my own
shock. I'd seen someone die once, but I'd never seen death of this magnitude.
After almost a minute, Dimitri finally removed his hand, but he stayed close
behind me. I didn't want to look anymore, but I seemed unable to drag my eyes
away from the scene before me. Bodies everywhere. Bodies and blood.
Finally, I turned toward him. "It's
daytime," I whispered. "Bad things don't happen in the day." I
heard the desperation in my voice, a little girl's plea that someone would say
this was all a bad dream.
"Bad things can happen anytime," he told me.
"And this didn't happen during the day. This probably happened a couple of
nights ago."
I dared a peek back at the bodies and felt my stomach
twist. Two days. Two days to be dead, to have your existence snuffed
out—without anyone in the world even knowing you were gone. My eyes fell on a
man's body near the room's entrance to a hallway. He was tall, too well-built
to be a Moroi. Dimitri must have noticed where I looked.
"Arthur
Schoenberg," he said.
I stared at Arthur's bloody throat. "He's
dead," I said, as though it wasn't perfectly obvious. "How can he be
dead? How could a Strigoi kill Arthur Schoenberg?" It didn't seem
possible. You couldn't kill a legend.
Dimitri didn't answer. Instead his hand moved down and
closed around where my own hand held the stake. I flinched.
"Where did you get this?" he asked. I
loosened my grip and let him take the stake.
"Outside.
In the ground."
He held up the stake, studying its surface as it shone
in the sunlight. "It broke the ward."
My mind, still stunned, took a moment to process what
he'd said. Then I got it. Wards were magic rings cast by Moroi. Like the
stakes, they were made using magic from all four of the elements. They required
strong Moroi magic-users, often a couple for each element. The wards could
block Strigoi because magic was charged with life, and the Strigoi had none.
But wards faded quickly and took a lot of maintenance. Most Moroi didn't use
them, but certain places kept them up. St. Vladimir's Academy was ringed with
several.
There had been a ward here, but it had been shattered
when someone drove the stake through it. Their magic conflicted with each
other; the stake had won.
"Strigoi can't touch stakes," I told him. I
realized I was using a lot of can't and don't statements. It
wasn't easy having your core beliefs challenged. "And no Moroi or dhampir
would do it."
"A
human might."
I
met his eyes. "Humans don't help Strigoi—" I stopped. There it was
again. Don't. But I couldn't help it. The one thing we could count on in
the fight against Strigoi was their limitations—sunlight, ward, stake magic,
etc. We used their weaknesses against
them. If they had others—humans—who would help them and weren't affected by those
limitations …
Dimitri's face was stern, still ready for anything,
but the tiniest spark of sympathy flashed in his dark eyes as he watched me
wage my mental battle.
"This
changes everything, doesn't it?" I asked.
"Yeah,"
he said. "It does."
DIMITRI MADE ONE PHONE CALL, and a veritable SWAT team
showed up.
It took a couple of hours, though, and every minute
spent waiting felt like a year. I finally couldn't take it anymore and returned
to the car. Dimitri examined the house further and then came to sit with me.
Neither of us said a word while we waited. A slide show of the grisly sights
inside the house kept playing in my mind. I felt scared and alone and wished he
would hold me or comfort me in some way.
Immediately, I scolded myself for wanting that. I
reminded myself for the thousandth time that he was my instructor and had no
business holding me, no matter what the situation was. Besides, I wanted to be
strong. I didn't need to go running to some guy every time things got tough.
When the first group of guardians showed up, Dimitri
opened the car door and glanced over at me. "You should see how this is
done."
I didn't want to see any more of that house, honestly,
but I followed anyway. These guardians were strangers to me, but Dimitri knew
them. He always seemed to know everybody. This group was surprised to find a
novice on the scene, but none of them protested my presence.
I walked behind them as they examined the house. None
of them touched anything, but they knelt by the bodies and studied the
bloodstains and broken windows. Apparently, the Strigoi had entered the house
through more than just the front door and back patio.
The guardians spoke in brusque tones, displaying none
of the disgust and fear I felt. They were like machines. One of them, the only
woman in the group, crouched beside Arthur Schoenberg. I was intrigued since
female guardians were so rare. I'd heard Dimitri call her Tamara, and she
looked about twenty-five. Her black hair just barely touched her shoulders,
which was common for guardian women.
Sadness flickered in her gray eyes as she studied the
dead guardian's face. "Oh, Arthur," she sighed. Like Dimitri, she
managed to convey a hundred things in just a couple words. "Never thought
I'd see this day. He was my mentor." With another sigh, Tamara rose.
Her face had become all businesslike once more, as
though the guy who'd trained her wasn't lying there in front of her. I couldn't
believe it. He was her mentor. How could she keep that kind of control?
For half a heartbeat, I imagined seeing Dimitri dead on the floor instead. No.
No way could I have stayed calm in her place. I would have gone on a rampage. I
would have screamed and kicked things. I would have hit anyone who tried to
tell me things would be okay.
Fortunately, I didn't believe anyone could actually
take down Dimitri. I'd seen him kill a Strigoi without
breaking a sweat. He was invincible. A badass. A god.
Of
course, Arthur Schoenberg had been too.
"How could they do that?" I blurted out. Six
sets of eyes turned to me. I expected a chastising look from Dimitri for my
outburst, but he merely appeared curious. "How could they kill him?"
Tamara gave a small shrug, her face still composed.
"The same way they kill everyone else. He's mortal, just like the rest of
us."
"Yeah,
but he's … you know, Arthur Schoenberg."
"You tell us, Rose," said Dimitri.
"You've seen the house. Tell us how they did it."
As they all watched me, I suddenly realized I might be
undergoing a test after all today. I thought about what I'd observed and heard.
I swallowed, trying to figure out how the impossible could be possible.
"There were four points of entry, which means at
least four Strigoi. There were seven Moroi…" The family who lived here had
been entertaining some other people, making the massacre that much larger.
Three of the victims had been children. "… and three guardians. Too many
kills. Four Strigoi couldn't have taken down that many. Six probably could if
they went for the guardians first and caught them by surprise. The family would
have been too panicked to fight back."
"And how did they catch the guardians by
surprise?" Dimitri prompted.
I hesitated. Guardians, as a general rule, didn't get
caught by surprise. "Because the wards were broken. In a household without
wards, there'd probably be a guardian walking the yard at night. But they
wouldn't have done that here."
I waited for the next obvious question about how the
wards had been broken. But Dimitri didn't ask it. There was no need. We all
knew. We'd all seen the stake. Again, a chill ran down my spine. Humans working
with Strigoi—a large group of Strigoi.
Dimitri simply nodded as a sign of approval, and the
group continued their survey. When we reached a bathroom, I started to avert my
gaze. I'd already seen this room with Dimitri earlier and had no wish to repeat
the experience. There was a dead man in there, and his dried blood stood out in
stark contrast against the white tile. Also, since this room was more interior,
it wasn't as cold as the area by the open patio. No preservation. The body
didn't smell bad yet, exactly, but it didn't smell right, either.
But as I started to turn away, I caught a glimpse of
something dark red—more brown, really—on the mirror. I hadn't noticed it before
because the rest of the scene had held all of my attention. There was writing
on the mirror, done in blood.
Poor, poor Badicas. So few
left. One royal family nearly gone. Others to follow.
Tamara snorted in disgust and turned away from the
mirror, studying other details of the bathroom. As we walked out, though, those words repeated in my head. One royal
family nearly
gone. Others to follow.
The Badicas were one of the smaller royal clans, it
was true. But it was hardly like those who had been killed here were the last
of them. There were probably almost two hundred Badicas left. That wasn't as
many as a family like, say, the Ivashkovs. That particular royal family was
huge and widespread. There were, however, a lot more Badicas than there were
some other royals.
Like
the Dragomirs.
Lissa
was the only one left.
If the Strigoi wanted to snuff out royal lines, there
was no better chance than to go after her. Moroi blood empowered Strigoi, so I
understood their desire for that. I supposed specifically targeting royals was
simply part of their cruel and sadistic nature. It was ironic that Strigoi
would want to tear apart Moroi society, since many of them had once been a part
of it.
The mirror and its warning consumed me for the rest of
our stay at the house, and I found my fear and shock transforming into anger.
How could they do this? How could any creature be so twisted and evil that
they'd do this to a family—that they'd want to wipe out an entire bloodline?
How could any creature do this when they'd once been like me and Lissa?
And thinking of Lissa—thinking of Strigoi wanting to
wipe out her family too—stirred up a dark rage within me. The intensity of that emotion nearly knocked me over.
It was something black and miasmic, swelling and roiling. A storm cloud ready
to burst. I suddenly wanted to tear up every Strigoi I could get my hands on.
When I finally got into the car to ride back to St.
Vladimir's with Dimitri, I slammed the door so hard that it was a wonder it
didn't fall off.
He
glanced at me in surprise. "What's wrong?"
"Are you serious?" I exclaimed, incredulous.
"How can you ask that? You were there. You saw that."
"I
did," he agreed. "But I'm not taking it out on the car."
I fastened my seat belt and glowered. "I hate
them. I hate them all! I wish I'd been there. I would have ripped their
throats out!"
I was nearly shouting. Dimitri stared at me, face
calm, but he was clearly astonished at my outburst.
"You really think that's true?" he asked me.
"You think you could have done better than Art Schoenberg after seeing
what the Strigoi did in there? After seeing what Natalie did to you?"
I faltered. I'd tangled briefly with Lissa's cousin,
Natalie, when she became a Strigoi, just before Dimitri had shown up to save
the day. Even as a new Strigoi—weak and uncoordinated—she'd literally thrown me
around the room.
I closed my eyes and took a deep breath. Suddenly, I
felt stupid. I'd seen what Strigoi could do. Me running in impetuously and
trying to save the day would have only resulted in a quick death. I was developing into a tough guardian,
but I still had a lot to learn—and one seventeen-year-old girl couldn't have
stood against six Strigoi.
I opened my eyes. "I'm sorry," I said,
gaining control of myself. The rage that had exploded inside me diffused. I
didn't know where it had come from. I had a short temper and often acted
impulsively, but this had been intense and ugly even for me. Weird.
"It's okay," said Dimitri. He reached over
and placed his hand on mine for a few moments. Then he removed it and started
the car. "It's been a long day. For all of us."
When we got back to St. Vladimir's Academy around
midnight, everyone knew about the massacre. The vampiric school day had just
ended, and I hadn't slept in more than twenty-four hours. I was bleary-eyed and
sluggish, and Dimitri ordered me to immediately go back to my dorm room and get
some sleep. He, of course, looked alert and ready to take on anything.
Sometimes I really wasn't sure if he slept at all. He headed off to consult
with other guardians about the attack, and I promised him I'd go straight to
bed. Instead, I turned toward the library once he was out of sight. I needed to
see Lissa, and the bond told me that was where she was.
It
was pitch-black as I walked along the stone walkway that crossed the quad from
my dorm to the secondary school's main building. Snow completely covered the
grass, but the sidewalk had been meticulously cleared of all ice and snow. It reminded me of the poor Badicas' neglected home.
The commons building was large and gothic-looking,
more suited to a medieval movie set than a school. Inside, that air of mystery
and ancient history continued to permeate the building: elaborate stone walls and
antique paintings warring with computers and fluorescent lights. Modern
technology had a foothold here, but it would never dominate.
Slipping through the library's electronic gate, I
immediately headed for one of the back corners where geography and travel books
were kept. Sure enough, I found Lissa sitting there on the floor, leaning
against a bookcase.
"Hey," she said, looking up from an open
book propped up on one knee. She brushed a few strands of pale hair out of her
face. Her boyfriend, Christian, lay on the floor near her, his head propped up
on her other knee. He greeted me by way of a nod. Considering the antagonism
that sometimes flared up between us, that was almost on par with him giving me
a bear hug. Despite her small smile, I could feel the tension and fear in her;
it sang through the bond.
"You
heard," I said, sitting down cross-legged.
Her smile slipped, and the feelings of fear and unease
within her intensified. I liked that our psychic connection let me protect her
better, but I didn't really need my own troubled feelings amplified.
"It's awful," she said with a shudder.
Christian shifted and linked his fingers through hers. He squeezed her hand.
She squeezed back. Those two were so in love and sugary sweet with each other that I felt like brushing my teeth
after being around them. They were subdued just now, however, no doubt thanks
to the massacre news. "They're saying…they're saying there were six or
seven Strigoi. And that humans helped them break the wards."
I leaned my head back against a shelf. News really did
travel fast. Suddenly, I felt dizzy. "It's true."
"Really?" asked Christian. "I figured
that was just a bunch of hyped-up paranoia."
"No …" I realized then that nobody knew
where I'd been today. "I… I was there."
Lissa's eyes widened, shock coursing into me from her.
Even Christian—the poster child for "smartass"—looked grim. If not
for the horribleness of it all, I would have taken satisfaction in catching him
off guard.
"You're
joking," he said, voice uncertain.
"I thought you were taking your Qualifier…"
Lissa's words trailed off.
"I was supposed to," I said. "It was
just a wrong-place-and-wrong-time kind of thing. The guardian who was going to
give me the test lived there. Dimitri and I walked in, and…"
I couldn't finish. Images of the blood and death that
had filled the Badica house flashed through my mind again. Concern crossed both
Lissa's face and the bond.
"Rose,
are you okay?" she asked softly.
Lissa was my best friend, but I didn't want her to
know how scared and upset the whole thing had made me. I
wanted to be fierce.
"Fine,"
I said, teeth clenched.
"What was it like?" asked Christian.
Curiosity filled his voice, but there was guilt there too—like he knew it was
wrong to want to know about such a horrible thing. He couldn't stop himself
from asking, though. Lack of impulse control was one thing we had in common.
"It
was …" I shook my head. "I don't want to talk about it."
Christian started to protest, and then Lissa ran a
hand through his sleek black hair. The gentle admonishment silenced him. A
moment of awkwardness hung between us all. Reading Lissa's mind, I felt her
desperately grope for a new topic.
"They say this is going to mess up all of the
holiday visits," she told me after several more moments. "Christian's
aunt is going to visit, but most people don't want to travel, and they want
their kids to stay here where it's safe. They're terrified this group of
Strigoi is on the move."
I hadn't thought about the ramifications of an attack
like this. We were only a week or so away from Christmas. Usually, there was a
huge wave of travel in the Moroi world this time of year. Students went home to
visit their parents; parents came to stay on campus and visit their children.
"This is going to keep a lot of families
separated," I murmured.
"And mess up a lot of royal get-togethers,"
said Christian.
His brief seriousness had vanished; his
snide air was back. "You know how they are this time of year—always
competing with each other to throw the biggest parties. They won't know what to
do with themselves."
I could believe it. My life was about fighting, but
the Moroi certainly had their share of internal strife—particularly with nobles
and royals. They waged their own battles with words and political alliances,
and honestly, I preferred the more direct method of hitting and kicking. Lissa
and Christian in particular had to navigate some troubled waters. They were
both from royal families, which meant they got a lot of attention both inside
and outside of the Academy.
Things were worse for them than for most Moroi royals.
Christian's family lived under the shadow cast by his parents. They had
purposely become Strigoi, trading their magic and morality to become immortal
and subsist on killing others. His parents were dead now, but that didn't stop
people from not trusting him. They seemed to think he'd go Strigoi at any
moment and take everyone else with him. His abrasiveness and dark sense of
humor didn't really help things, either.
Lissa's attention came from being the last one left in
her family. No other Moroi had enough Dragomir blood in them to earn the name.
Her future husband would probably have enough somewhere in his family tree to
make sure her children were Dragomirs, but for now, being the only one made her
kind of a celebrity.
Thinking about this suddenly reminded me of the
warning scrawled on the mirror. Nausea welled up in me. That
dark anger and despair stirred, but I pushed it aside with a joke.
"You guys should try solving your problems like
we do. A fistfight here and there might do you royals some good."
Both Lissa and Christian laughed at this. He glanced
up at her with a sly smile, showing his fangs as he did. "What do you
think? I bet I could take you if we went one on one."
"You
wish," she teased. Her troubled feelings lightened.
"I
do, actually," he said, holding her gaze.
There was an intensely sensual note to his voice that
made her heart race. Jealousy shot through me. She and I had been best friends
our entire life. I could read her mind. But the fact remained: Christian was a
huge part of her world now, and he played a role I never could—just as he could
never have a part of the connection that existed between me and her. We both
sort of accepted but didn't like the fact that we had to split her attention,
and at times, it seemed the truce we held for her sake was paper thin.
Lissa
brushed her hand against his cheek. "Behave."
"I am," he told her, his voice still a
little husky. "Sometimes. But sometimes you don't want me to…."
Groaning, I stood up. "God. I'm going to leave
you guys alone now."
Lissa blinked and dragged her eyes away from
Christian, suddenly looking embarrassed.
"Sorry," she murmured. A delicate pink flush
spread over her cheeks. Since she was pale like all Moroi, it actually sort of made her look prettier. Not that she needed much help
in that department. "You don't have to go…."
"No, it's fine. I'm exhausted," I assured
her. Christian didn't look too broken up about seeing me leave. "I'll
catch you tomorrow."
I started to turn away, but Lissa called to me.
"Rose? Are you…are you sure you're okay? After everything that
happened?"
I met her jade green eyes. Her concern was so strong
and deep that it made my chest ache. I might be closer to her than anyone else
in the world, but I didn't want her worrying about me. It was my job to
keep her safe. She shouldn't be troubled about protecting me—particularly if
Strigoi had suddenly decided to make a hit list of royals.
I flashed her a saucy grin. "I'm fine. Nothing to
worry about except you guys tearing each other's clothes before I get a chance
to leave."
"Then
you better go now," said Christian dryly.
She elbowed him, and I rolled my eyes. "Good
night," I told them.
As soon as my back was to them, my smile vanished. I
walked back to my dorm with a heavy heart, hoping I wouldn't dream about the
Badicas tonight.
THE LOBBY OF MY DORM was abuzz when I sprinted downstairs
to my before-school practice. The commotion didn't surprise me. A good night's
sleep had gone far to chase away the images from last night, but I knew neither
I nor my classmates would easily forget what had taken place outside Billings.
And yet, as I studied the faces and clusters of other
novices, I noticed something weird. The fear and tension from yesterday were
still around, certainly, but something new was there too: excitement. A couple
of freshmen novices were practically squealing with joy as they spoke in hushed
whispers. Nearby, a group of guys my own age were gesturing wildly,
enthusiastic grins on their faces.
I had to be missing something here—unless all of
yesterday had been a dream. It took every ounce of self-control I had not to go
over and ask somebody what was happening. If I delayed, I'd be late for
practice. The curiosity was killing me, though. Had the Strigoi and their
humans been found and killed? That would certainly be good news, but something
told me that wasn't the case. Pushing open the front doors, I lamented that I'd
just have to wait until breakfast to find out.
"Hath-away,
don't run-away," a singsong voice called.
I glanced behind me and grinned. Mason Ashford,
another novice and a good friend of mine, jogged up and fell in step with me.
"What are you, twelve?" I asked, continuing
on toward the gym.
"Nearly," he said. "I missed your
smiling face yesterday. Where were you?"
Apparently my presence at the Badica house still
wasn't widely known. It wasn't a secret or anything, but I didn't want to
discuss any gory details. "Had a training thing with Dimitri."
"God," muttered Mason. "That guy is
always working you. Doesn't he realize he's depriving us of your beauty and
charm?"
"Smiling face? Beauty and charm? You're laying it
on a little thick this morning, aren't you?" I laughed.
"Hey, I'm just telling it like it is. Really,
you're lucky to have someone as suave and brilliant as me paying this much
attention to you."
I kept grinning. Mason was a huge flirt, and he liked
to flirt with me in particular. Part of it was just because I was good at it
and liked to flirt back. But I knew his feelings toward me were more than just
friendly, and I was still deciding how I felt about that. He and I had the same
goofy sense of humor and frequently drew attention to ourselves in class and
among friends. He had gorgeous blue eyes and messy red hair that never seemed
to lie flat. It was cute.
But dating someone new was going to be kind of
difficult when I still kept thinking about the time I was half-naked in bed
with Dimitri.
"Suave and brilliant, huh?" I shook my head.
"I don't think you pay nearly as much attention to me as you do your ego.
Someone needs to knock it down a little."
"Oh yeah?" he asked. "Well, you can try
your best on the slopes."
I
stopped walking. "The what?"
"The
slopes." He tilted his head. "You know, the ski trip."
"What ski trip?" I was apparently missing
something serious here.
"Where have you been this morning?" he
asked, looking at me like I was a crazy woman.
"In bed! I only got up, like, five minutes ago.
Now, start from the beginning and tell me what you're talking about." I
shivered from the lack of movement. "And let's keep walking." We did.
"So, you know how everyone's afraid to have their
kids come home for Christmas? Well, there's this huge ski lodge in Idaho
that's exclusively used by royals and rich Moroi. The people who own it are
opening it up for Academy students and their families—and actually any other
Moroi who want to go. With everyone in one spot, they're going to have a ton of
guardians to protect the place, so it'll be totally safe."
"You can't be serious," I said. We reached
the gym and stepped inside out of the cold.
Mason nodded eagerly. "It's true. The place is
supposed to be amazing." He gave me the grin that always made me smile in
return. "We're going to live like royalty, Rose. At least for a week or
so. We take off the day after Christmas."
I stood there, both excited and stunned. I hadn't seen
this coming. It really was a brilliant idea, one that let families reunite
safely. And what a reunion spot! A royal ski lodge. I'd expected to spend most
of my holiday break hanging out here and watching TV with Lissa and Christian.
Now I'd be living it up in five-star accommodations. Lobster dinners. Massages.
Cute ski instructors …
Mason's enthusiasm was contagious. I could feel it
welling up in me, and then, suddenly, it slammed to a halt.
Studying my face, he saw the change right away.
"What's wrong? This is cool."
"It is," I admitted. "And I get why
everyone's excited, but the reason we're getting to go to this fancy place is
because, well, because people are dead. I mean, doesn't this all seem
weird?"
Mason's
cheery expression sobered a little. "Yeah, but we're alive, Rose. We can't
stop living because other people are dead. And we have to make sure more people
don't die. That's why this place is such a great idea. It's safe." His
eyes turned stormy. "God, I can't wait until we're out of here in the
field. After hearing about what happened, I just want to go tear apart some
Strigoi. I wish we could go now, you know? There's no reason. They could use
the extra help, and we pretty much know everything
we need to."
The fierceness in his voice reminded me of my outburst
yesterday, though he wasn't quite as worked up as I'd been. His eagerness to
act was impetuous and naïve, whereas mine had been born out of some weird, dark
irrationality I still didn't entirely understand.
When I didn't respond, Mason gave me a puzzled look.
"Don't you want to?"
"I don't know, Mase." I stared down at the
floor, avoiding his eyes as I studied the toe of my shoe. "I mean, I don't
want Strigoi out there, attacking people either. And I want to stop them in
theory… but, well, we aren't even close to being ready.
I've seen what they can do I
don't know. Rushing in isn't the answer." I shook
my head and looked back up. Good grief. I sounded so logical and cautious. I
sounded like Dimitri. "It's not important since it's not going to happen
anyway. I suppose we should just be excited about the trip, huh?"
Mason's moods were quick to change, and he turned
easygoing once more. "Yup. And you'd better try to remember how to ski,
because I'm calling you out on knocking down my ego out there. Not that it's
going to happen."
I smiled again. "Boy, it sure is going to be sad
when I make you cry. I kind of feel guilty already."
He opened his mouth, no doubt to deliver some smartass
reply, and then caught sight of something—or rather, someone—behind me. I
glanced over and saw Dimitri's tall form approaching from the other side of the
gym.
Mason swept me a gallant bow. "Your lord and
master. Catch you later, Hathaway. Start planning your ski strategies." He
opened the door and disappeared into the frigid darkness. I turned around and
joined Dimitri.
Like other dhampir novices, I spent half of my school
day on one form or another of guardian training, be it actual physical combat
or learning about Strigoi and how to defend against them. Novices also
sometimes had practices after school. I, however, was in a unique situation.
I still stood by my decision to run away from St.
Vladimir's. Victor Dashkov had posed too much of a threat to Lissa. But our
extended vacation had come with consequences. Being away for two years had put
me behind in my guardian classes, so the school had declared that I had to make
up for it by going to extra practices before and after school.
With
Dimitri.
Little did they know that they were also giving me
lessons in avoiding temptation. But my attraction to him aside, I was a fast
learner, and with his help, I had almost caught up to the other seniors.
Since he wasn't wearing a coat, I knew we'd be working
inside today, which was good news. It was freezing out. Yet even the happiness
I felt over that was nothing compared to what I felt when I saw what exactly he
had set up in one of the training rooms.
There were practice dummies arranged on the far wall,
dummies that looked amazingly lifelike. No straw-stuffed burlap bags here. There were men and women, wearing
ordinary clothes, with rubbery skin and different hair and eye colors. Their
expressions ranged from happy to scared to angry. I'd worked with these dummies
before in other trainings, using them to practice kicks and punches. But I'd never
worked with them while holding what Dimitri held: a silver stake.
"Sweet,"
I breathed.
It was identical to the one I'd found at the Badica
house. It had a hand grip at the bottom, almost like a hilt without the little
side flourishes. That was where its resemblance to a dagger ended. Rather than
a flat blade, the stake had a thick, rounded body that narrowed to a point,
kind of like an ice pick. The entire thing was a little shorter than my
forearm.
Dimitri leaned casually against the wall, in an easy stance
he always pulled off remarkably well, despite being almost six-seven. With one
hand, he tossed the stake into the air. It spun around in a cartwheel a couple
of times and then came down. He caught it hilt first.
"Please
tell me I get to learn how to do that today," I said.
Amusement flashed in the dark depths of his eyes. I
think he had a hard time keeping a straight face around me sometimes.
"You'll be lucky if I let you hold it
today," he said. He flipped the stake into the air again. My eyes followed
it longingly. I started to point out that I had already held one, but I knew
that line of logic would get me nowhere.
Instead, I tossed my backpack on the floor, threw off
my coat, and crossed my arms expectantly. I had on loose pants tied at the
waist and a tank top with a hoodie over it. My dark hair was pulled brutally
back into a ponytail. I was ready for anything.
"You want me to tell you how they work and why I
should always be cautious around them," I announced.
Dimitri stopped flipping the stake and stared at me in
astonishment.
"Come on," I laughed. "You don't think
I know how you work by now? We've been doing this for almost three months. You
always make me talk safety and responsibility before I can do anything
fun."
"I see," he said. "Well, I guess you've
got it all figured out. By all means, go on with the lesson. I'll just wait
over here until you need me again."
He tucked the stake into a leather sheath hanging from
his belt and then made himself comfortable against the wall, hands stuffed in
pockets. I waited, figuring he was joking, but when he said nothing else, I
realized he'd meant his words. With a shrug, I launched into what I knew.
"Silver always has powerful effects on any
magical creature—it can help or hurt them if you put enough power into it.
These stakes are really hard-core because it takes four different Moroi to make
them, and they use each of the elements during the forging." I frowned,
suddenly considering something. "Well, except spirit. So these things are
supercharged and are about the only non-decapitating
weapon that can do damage to a Strigoi—but to kill them, it has to be through
the heart."
"Will
they hurt you?"
I shook my head. "No. I mean, well, yeah, if you
drive one through my heart it will, but it won't hurt me like it would a Moroi.
Scratch one of them with this, and it'll hit them pretty hard—but not as hard
as it'd hit a Strigoi. And they won't hurt humans, either."
I stopped for a moment and stared absentmindedly at
the window behind Dimitri. Frost covered the glass in sparkling, crystalline
patterns, but I hardly noticed. Mentioning humans and stakes had transported me
back to the Badica house. Blood and death flashed through my thoughts.
Seeing Dimitri watching me, I shook off the memories
and kept going with the lesson. Dimitri would occasionally give a nod or ask a
clarifying question. As the time ticked down, I kept expecting him to tell me I
was finished and could start hacking up the dummies. Instead, he waited until
almost ten minutes before the end of our session before leading me over to one
of them—it was a man with blond hair and a goatee. Dimitri took the stake out
from its sheath but didn't hand it to me.
"Where
are you going to put this?" he asked.
"In the heart," I replied irritably. "I
already told you that like a hundred times. Can I have it now?"
He
allowed himself a smile. "Where's the heart?"
I
gave him an are-you-serious look. He merely shrugged.
With overdramatic emphasis, I pointed to the left side
of the dummy's chest. Dimitri shook his head.
"That's
not where the heart is," he told me.
"Sure it is. People put their hands over their
hearts when they say the Pledge of Allegiance or sing the national
anthem."
He
continued to stare at me expectantly.
I turned back to the dummy and studied it. In the back
of my brain, I remembered learning CPR and where we had to place our hands. I
tapped the center of the dummy's chest.
"Is
it here?"
He arched an eyebrow. Normally I thought that was
cool. Today it was just annoying. "I don't know," he said. "Is
it?"
"That's
what I'm asking you!"
"You shouldn't have to ask me. Don't you all have
to take physiology?"
"Yeah. Junior year. I was on 'vacation,'
remember?" I pointed to the gleaming stake. "Can I please touch it
now?"
He flipped the stake again, letting it flash in the
light, and then it disappeared in the sheath. "I want you to tell me
where the heart is the next time we meet. Exactly where. And I want to know
what's in the way of it too."
I gave him my fiercest glare, which—judging from his
expression—must not have been that fierce. Nine out of ten times, I thought
Dimitri was the sexiest thing walking the earth. Then, there were times like
this …
I headed off to first period, a combat class, in a bad
mood. I didn't like looking incompetent in front of Dimitri,
and I'd really, really wanted to use one of those stakes. So in class I
took out my annoyance on anyone I could punch or kick. By the end of class, no
one wanted to spar with me. I'd accidentally hit Meredith—one of the few other
girls in my class—so hard that she'd felt it through her shin padding. She was
going to have an ugly bruise and kept looking at me as though I'd done it on
purpose. I apologized to no avail.
Afterward, Mason found me once again. "Oh,
man," he said, studying my face. "Who pissed you off?"
I immediately launched into my tale of silver stake
and heart woes.
To my annoyance, he laughed. "How do you not know
where the heart is? Especially considering how many of them you've
broken?"
I gave him the same ferocious look I'd given Dimitri.
This time, it worked. Mason's face paled.
"Belikov is a sick, evil man who should be thrown
into a pit of rabid vipers for the great offense he committed against you this
morning."
"Thank you." I said primly. Then, I
considered. "Can vipers be rabid?"
"I don't see why not. Everything can be. I
think." He held the hallway door open for me. "Canadian geese might
be worse than vipers, though."
I gave him a sidelong look. "Canadian geese are
deadlier than vipers?"
"You ever tried to feed those little
bastards?" he asked, attempting seriousness and failing. "They're
vicious. You get thrown to vipers, you die quickly. But the geese? That'll go
on for days. More suffering."
"Wow. I don't know whether I should be impressed
or frightened that you've thought about all this," I remarked.
"Just trying to find creative ways to avenge your
honor, that's all."
"You
just never struck me as the creative type, Mase."
We stood just outside our second-period classroom.
Mason's expression was still light and joking, but there was a suggestive note
in his voice when he spoke again. "Rose, when I'm around you, I think of all
sorts of creative things to do."
I was still giggling about the vipers and abruptly
stopped, staring at him in surprise. I'd always thought Mason was cute, but
with that serious, smoky look in his eyes, it suddenly occurred to me for the
first time that he was actually kind of sexy.
"Oh, look at that," he laughed, noticing how
much he'd caught me off guard. "Rose gets rendered speechless. Ashford 1,
Hathaway 0."
"Hey, I don't want to make you cry before the
trip. It won't be any fun if I've already broken you before we even hit the
slopes."
He laughed, and we stepped into the room. This was a
class on bodyguard theory, one that took place in an actual classroom instead
of the practice field. It was a nice break from all
the physical exertion. Today, there were three guardians standing at the front
who weren't from the school's regiment. Holiday visitors, I realized. Parents
and their guardians had already started coming to campus to accompany their
children to the ski resort. My interest was piqued immediately.
One of the guests was a tall guy who looked like he
was about a hundred years old but could still kick major ass. The other guy was
about Dimitri's age. He had deeply tanned skin and was built well enough that a
few of the girls in class looked ready to swoon.
The last guardian was a woman. Her auburn hair was
cropped and curly, and her brown eyes were currently narrowed in thought. As
I've said, a lot of dhampir women choose to have children rather than follow the
guardian path. Since I too was one of the few women in this profession, I was
always excited to meet others—like Tamara.
Only, this wasn't Tamara. This was someone I'd known
for years, someone who triggered anything but pride and excitement. Instead, I felt
resentment. Resentment, anger, and burning outrage.
The
woman standing in front of the class was my mother.
I COULDN'T BELIEVE IT. JANINE Hathaway. My mother. My
insanely famous and stunningly absent mother. She was no Arthur Schoenberg, but
she did have a pretty stellar reputation in the guardian world. I hadn't seen
her in years because she was always off on same insane mission. And yet…here
she was at the Academy right now—right in front of me—and she hadn't
even bothered to let me know she was coming. So much for motherly love.
What the hell was she doing here anyway? The answer
came quickly. All the Moroi who came to campus would have their guardians in
tow. My mother protected a noble from the Szelsky clan, and several members of
that family had shown up for the holidays. Of course she'd be here with him.
I slid into my chair and felt something inside of me
shrivel up. I knew she had to have seen me come in, but her attention was
focused elsewhere. She had on jeans and a beige T-shirt, covered with what had
to be the most boring denim jacket I'd ever seen. At only five feet tall, she
was dwarfed by the other guardians, but she had a presence and way of standing
that made her seem taller.
Our instructor, Stan, introduced the guests and
explained that they were going to share real-life experiences with us.
He paced the front of the room, bushy eyebrows
knitting together as he spoke. "I know this is unusual," he
explained. "Visiting guardians usually don't have time to stop by our
classes. Our three guests, however, have made time to come talk to you today in light of what's happened recently…"
He paused a moment, and no one needed to tell us what he
was referring to. The Badica attack. He cleared his throat and tried again.
"In light of what's happened, we thought it might better prepare you to
learn from those currently working in the field."
The class tensed with excitement. Hearing
stories—particularly ones with a lot of blood and action—was a hell of a lot
more interesting than analyzing theory from a textbook. Apparently some of the
other campus guardians thought so too. They often stopped by our classes, but
they were present today in a larger-than-usual number. Dimitri stood among them
in the back.
The old guy went first. He launched into his story,
and I found myself getting hooked in. It described a time when the youngest son
of the family he guarded had wandered off in a public place that Strigoi were
lurking in.
"The sun was about to set," he told us in a
gravelly voice. He swept his hands in a downward motion, apparently to
demonstrate how a sunset worked. "There were only two of us, and we had to
make a snap decision on how to proceed."
I leaned forward, elbows propped up on my desk.
Guardians often worked in pairs. One—the near guard—usually stayed close to those being guarded while the
other—the far guard—scouted the area. The far guard still usually stayed within
eye contact, so I recognized the dilemma here. Thinking about it, I decided
that if I were in that situation, I'd have the near guardian take the rest of
the family to a secure location while the other guardian searched for the boy.
"We had the family stay inside a restaurant with
my partner while I swept the rest of the area," continued the old guardian.
He spread his hands out in a sweeping motion, and I felt smug over having made
the correct call. The story ended happily, with a found boy and no Strigoi
encounters.
The second guy's anecdote talked about how he'd gotten
the drop on a Strigoi stalking some Moroi.
"I wasn't even technically on duty," he
said. He was the really cute one, and a girl sitting near me stared at him with
wide, adoring eyes. "I was visiting a friend and the family he guarded. As
I was leaving their apartment, I saw a Strigoi lurking in the shadows. He never
expected a guardian to be out there. I circled the block, came up behind him,
and …" The man made a staking motion, far more dramatic than the old guy's
hand gestures had been. The storyteller even went so far as to mimic twisting
the stake into the Strigoi's heart.
And then it was my mother's turn. A scowl spread over
my face before she even said a word, a scowl that grew worse once she actually
launched into the story. I swear, if I didn't believe her incapable of having the
imagination for it—and her bland clothing choices proved she really didn't have
an imagination—I would have thought she was lying. It was
more than a story. It was an epic tale, the kind of thing that gets made into
movies and wins Oscars.
She talked about how her charge, Lord Szelsky, and his
wife had attended a ball put on by another prominent royal family. Several
Strigoi had been lying in wait. My mother discovered one, promptly staked it,
and then alerted the other guardians present. With their help, she hunted down
the other Strigoi lurking around and performed most of the kills herself.
"It wasn't easy," she explained. From anyone
else that statement would have sounded like bragging. Not her. There was a
briskness to the way she spoke, an efficient way of stating facts that left no
room for flourishes. She'd been raised in Glasgow and some of her words still
had a Scottish lilt. "There were three others on the premises. At the
time, that was considered an unusually large number to be working together.
That's not necessarily true now, considering the Badica massacre." A few
people flinched at the casual way she spoke about the attack. Once again, I
could see the bodies. "We had to dispatch the remaining Strigoi as quickly
and quietly as possible, so as not to alert the others. Now, if you have the
element of surprise, the best way to take Strigoi is to come around from
behind, break their necks, and then stake them. Breaking their necks won't kill
them, of course, but it stuns them and allows you to do the staking before they
can make any noise. The most difficult part is actually sneaking up on them,
because their hearing is so acute. Since I'm smaller and lighter than most guardians, I can move fairly quietly. So I ended
up performing two of the three kills myself."
Again, she used that matter-of-fact tone as she
described her own stealthy skills. It was annoying, more so than if she'd been
openly haughty about how awesome she was. My classmates' faces shone with
wonder; they were clearly more interested in the idea of breaking a Strigoi's
neck than analyzing my mother's narrative skills.
She continued with the story. When she and the other
guardians had killed the remaining Strigoi, they'd discovered two Moroi had
been taken from the party. Such an act wasn't uncommon for Strigoi. Sometimes
they wanted to save Moroi for a later "snack"; sometimes
lower-ranking Strigoi were dispatched by more powerful ones to bring back prey.
Regardless, two Moroi were gone from the ball, and their guardian had been
injured.
"Naturally, we couldn't leave those Moroi in
Strigoi clutches," she said. "We tracked the Strigoi to their hideout
and found several of them living together. I'm sure you can recognize how rare
that is."
It was. The evil and selfish nature of Strigoi made
them turn on each other as easily as they did their victims. Organizing for
attacks—when they had an immediate and bloody goal in mind—was the best they
could do. But living together? No. It was almost impossible to imagine.
"We managed to free the two captive Moroi, only to
discover that others were being held prisoner," my mother said. "We couldn't send the ones we'd rescued back by
themselves, though, so the guardians who were with me escorted them out and
left it to me to get the others."
Yes, of course, I thought. My mother bravely went in
alone. Along the way, she got captured but managed to escape and rescue the
prisoners. In doing so, she performed what had to be the hat trick of the
century, killing Strigoi in all three ways: staking, decapitation, and setting
them on fire.
"I had just staked a Strigoi when two more
attacked," she explained. "I didn't have time to pull the stake out
when the others jumped me. Fortunately, there was an open fireplace nearby, and
I pushed one of the Strigoi into it. The last one chased me outside, into an
old shed. There was an axe inside and I used that to cut off her head. I then
took a can of gasoline and returned to the house. The one I'd thrown into the
fireplace hadn't completely burned, but once I doused him in gasoline, he went up
pretty quickly."
The classroom was in awe as she spoke. Mouths dropped.
Eyes bugged. Not a sound could be heard. Glancing around, I felt like time had
frozen for everyone—except me. I appeared to be the only one unimpressed by her
harrowing tale, and seeing the awe on everyone's faces enraged me. When she
finished, a dozen hands shot up as the class peppered her with questions about
her techniques, whether she was scared, etc.
After
about the tenth question, I couldn't take it anymore. I raised my hand. It took
her a while to notice and call on me. She seemed mildly astonished to find me
in class. I considered myself lucky that she even recognized me.
"So, Guardian Hathaway," I began. "Why
didn't you guys just secure the place?"
She frowned. I think she'd gone on her guard the
moment she called on me. "What do you mean?"
I shrugged and slouched back in my desk, attempting a
casual and conversational air. "I don't know. It seems to me like you guys
messed up. Why didn't you scope out the place and make sure it was clear of
Strigoi in the first place? Seems like you could have saved yourself a lot of
trouble."
All eyes in the room turned toward me. My mother was
momentarily at a loss for words. "If we hadn't gone through all that
'trouble,' there'd be seven more Strigoi walking the world, and those
other captured Moroi would be dead or turned by now."
"Yeah, yeah, I get how you guys saved the day and
all that, but I'm going back to the principles here. I mean, this is a theory
class, right?" I glanced over at Stan who was regarding me with a very
stormy look. He and I had a long and unpleasant history of classroom conflicts,
and I suspected we were on the verge of another. "So I just want to figure
out what went wrong in the beginning."
I'll say this for her—my mother had a hell of a lot
more self-control than I did. Had our roles been reversed, I would have walked
over and smacked me by now. Her face stayed perfectly calm, however, and a
small tightness in the set of her lips was the only sign that I was pissing her
off.
"It's not that simple," she replied.
"The venue had an extremely complex layout. We went through it initially
and found nothing. It's believed the Strigoi came in after the festivities had
started—or that there might have been passages and hidden rooms we hadn't been
aware of."
The class ooh'ed and ahh'ed over the idea of hidden
passages, but I wasn't impressed.
"So what you're saying is that you guys either
failed to detect them during your first sweep, or they broke through the
'security' you set up during the party. Seems like someone messed up either
way."
The tightness in her lips increased, and her voice
grew frosty. "We did the best we could with an unusual situation. I can
see how someone at your level might not be able to grasp the intricacies of
what I'm describing, but once you've actually learned enough to go beyond theory,
you'll see how different it is when you're actually out there and lives are
in your hands."
"No doubt," I agreed. "Who am I to
question your methods? I mean, whatever gets you the molnija marks,
right?"
"Miss Hathaway." Stan's deep voice rumbled
through the room. "Please take your things and go wait outside for the
remainder of class."
I stared at him in bewilderment. "Are you
serious? Since when is there anything wrong with asking questions?"
"Your attitude is what's wrong." He pointed
at the door. "Go."
A silence heavier and deeper than when my mother had told her story descended over everyone. I did my best
not to cower under the stares of guardians and novices alike. This wasn't the
first time I'd been kicked out of Stan's class. It wasn't even the first time
I'd been kicked out of Stan's class while Dimitri was watching. Slinging my
backpack over my shoulder, I crossed the short distance to the door—a distance
that felt like miles—and refused to make eye contact with my mother as I
passed.
About five minutes before the class let out, she
slipped out of the room and walked over to where I sat in the hallway. Looking
down on me, she put her hands on her hips in that annoying way that made her
seem taller than she was. It wasn't fair that someone over half a foot shorter
than me could make me feel so small.
"Well. I see your manners haven't improved over
the years."
I stood up and felt a glare snap into place.
"Nice to see you too. I'm surprised you even recognized me. In fact, I
didn't even think you remembered me, seeing as how you never bothered to
let me know you were on campus."
She shifted her hands from her hips and crossed her
arms across her chest, becoming—if possible—even more impassive. "I
couldn't neglect my duty to come coddle you."
"Coddle?" I asked. This woman had never
coddled me in her life. I couldn't believe she even knew the word.
"I wouldn't expect you to understand. From what I
hear, you don't really know what 'duty' is."
"I know exactly what it is," I retorted. My
voice was intentionally haughty. "Better than most people."
Her eyes widened in a sort of mock surprise. I used
that sarcastic look on a lot of people and didn't appreciate having it directed
toward me. "Oh really? Where were you for the last two years?"
"Where were you for the last five?" I
demanded. "Would you have known I was gone if someone hadn't told
you?"
"Don't turn this back on me. I was away because I
had to be. You were away so you could go shopping and stay up
late."
My hurt and embarrassment morphed into pure fury.
Apparently, I was never going to live down the consequences of running away
with Lissa.
"You have no idea why I left," I
said, my voice's volume rising. "And you have no right to make assumptions
about my life when you don't know anything about it."
"I've read reports about what happened. You had
reason for concern, but you acted incorrectly." Her words were formal and
crisp. She could have been teaching one of my classes. "You should have
gone to others for help."
"There was no one I could go to—not when I didn't
have hard proof. Besides, we've been learning that we're supposed to think
independently."
"Yes," she replied. "Emphasis on learning.
Something you missed out on for two years. You're hardly in a position to
lecture me about guardian protocol."
I wound up in arguments all the time; something in my
nature made that inevitable. So I was used to defending myself and having
insults slammed at me. I had a tough skin. But somehow, around her—in the brief
times I had been around her—I always felt like I was three years old.
Her attitude humiliated me, and touching on my missed training— already a
prickly subject—only made me feel worse. I crossed my arms in a fair imitation
of her own stance and managed a smug look.
"Yeah? Well, that's not what my teachers think.
Even after missing all that time, I've still caught up with everyone else in my
class."
She didn't answer right away. Finally, in a flat
voice, she said, "If you hadn't left, you would have surpassed them."
Turning military-style, she walked off down the hall.
A minute later, the bell rang, and the rest of Stan's class spilled into the
hall.
Even Mason couldn't cheer me up after that. I spent
the rest of the day angry and annoyed, sure that everyone was whispering about
my mother and me. I skipped lunch and went to the library to read a book about
physiology and anatomy.
When it was time for my after-school training with
Dimitri, I practically ran up to the practice dummy. With a curled fist, I
slapped its chest, very slightly to the left but mostly in the center.
"There," I told him. "The heart is
there, and the sternum and ribs are in the way. Can I have the stake now?"
Crossing my arms, I glanced up at him triumphantly,
waiting for him to shower me with praise for my new cunning. Instead, he simply
nodded in acknowledgment, like I should already have known that. And yeah, I
should have.
"And how do you get through the sternum and the
ribs?" he asked.
I sighed. I'd figured out the answer to one question,
only to be given another. Typical.
We spent a large part of the practice going over that,
and he demonstrated several techniques that would yield the quickest kill.
Every movement he made was both graceful and deadly. He made it look
effortless, but I knew better.
When he suddenly extended his hand and offered the
stake to me, I didn't understand at first. "You're giving it to me?"
His eyes sparkled. "I can't believe you're
holding back. I figured you'd have taken it and run by now."
"Aren't
you always teaching me to hold back?" I asked.
"Not
on everything."
"But
on some things."
I heard the double meaning in my voice and wondered
where it had come from. I'd accepted a while ago that there were too many
reasons for me to even think about him romantically anymore. Every once in a
while, I slipped a little and kind of wished he would too. It'd have been nice
to know that he still wanted me, that I still drove him crazy. Studying him
now, I realized he might not ever slip because I didn't drive him crazy
anymore. It was a depressing thought.
"Of course," he said, showing no indication
we'd discussed anything other than class matters. "It's like everything
else. Balance. Know which things to run forward with—and know which to leave
alone." He placed a heavy emphasis on that last statement.
Our eyes met briefly, and I felt electricity race
through me. He did know what I was talking about. And like always, he
was ignoring it and being my teacher—which is exactly what he should have been
doing. With a sigh, I pushed my feelings for him out of my head and tried to
remember that I was about to touch the weapon I'd been longing for since
childhood. The memory of the Badica house came back to me yet again. The
Strigoi were out there. I needed to focus.
Hesitantly, almost reverentially, I reached out and
curled my fingers around the hilt. The metal was cool and tingled against my
skin. It was etched along the hilt for better grip, but in trailing my fingers
over the rest of it, I found the surface to be as smooth as glass. I lifted it
from his hand and brought it to me, taking a long time to study it and get used
to its weight. An anxious part of me wanted to turn around and impale all of
the dummies, but instead I looked up at Dimitri and asked, "What should I
do first?"
In his typical way, he covered basics first, honing
the way I held and moved with the stake. Later on, he finally let me attack one
of the dummies, at which point I did indeed discover it was not effortless.
Evolution had done a smart thing in protecting the heart with the sternum and
ribs. Yet through
it all, Dimitri never faltered in
diligence and patience, guiding me through every step and correcting the finest
details.
"Slide up through the ribs," he
explained, watching me try to fit the stake's point through a gap in the bones.
"It'll be easier since you're shorter than most of your attackers. Plus,
you can slide along the lower rib's edge."
When practice ended, he took the stake back and nodded
his approval.
"Good.
Very good."
I glanced at him in surprise. He didn't usually hand
out a lot of praise.
"Really?"
"You
do it like you've been doing it for years."
I felt a delighted grin creep over my face as we
started leaving the practice room. When we neared the door, I noticed a dummy
with curly red hair. Suddenly, all the events from Stan's class came tumbling
back into my head. I scowled.
"Can
I stake that one next time?"
He picked up his coat and put it on. It was long and
brown, made of distressed leather. It looked very much like a cowboy duster,
though he'd never admit to it. He had a secret fascination with the Old West. I
didn't really understand it, but then, I didn't get his weird musical
preferences either.
"I
don't think that'd be healthy," he said.
"It'd be better than me actually doing it to her,"
I grumbled, slinging my backpack over one shoulder. We headed out to the
gym.
"Violence isn't the answer to your
problems," he said sagely.
"She's the one with the problem. And I thought
the whole point of my education was that violence is the answer."
"Only to those who bring it to you first. Your
mother isn't assaulting you. You two are just too much alike, that's all."
I stopped walking. "I'm not anything like her! I
mean…we kind of have the same eyes. But I'm a lot taller. And my hair's
completely different." I pointed to my pony tail, just in case he wasn't
aware that my thick brown-black hair didn't look like my mother's auburn curls.
He still had kind of an amused expression, but there
was something hard in his eyes too. "I'm not talking about your
appearances, and you know it."
I looked away from that knowing gaze. My attraction to
Dimitri had started almost as soon as we'd met—and it wasn't just because he
was so hot, either. I felt like he understood part of me that I didn't
understand myself, and sometimes I was pretty sure I understood parts of him
that he didn't understand either.
The only problem was that he had the annoying tendency
to point out things about myself I didn't want to understand.
"You
think I'm jealous?"
"Are you?" he asked. I hated it when he
answered my questions with questions. "If so, what are you jealous of
exactly?"
I
glanced back at Dimitri. "I don't know. Maybe I'm jealous of her
reputation. Maybe I'm jealous because she's put more time into her reputation
than into me. I don't know."
"You don't think what she did was great?"
"Yes. No. I don't know.
It just sounded like such a … I don't know…like she was bragging. Like she did
it for the glory." I grimaced. "For the marks." Molnija marks
were tattoos awarded to guardians when they killed Strigoi. Each one looked
like a tiny x made of lightning bolts. They went on the backs of our
necks and showed how experienced a guardian was.
"You think facing down
Strigoi is worth a few marks? I thought you'd learned something from the Badica
house."
I felt stupid. "That's not what I—"
"Come on."
I stopped walking. "What?"
We'd been heading toward my
dorm, but now he nodded his head toward the opposite side of campus. "I
want to show you something."
"What is it?"
"That not all marks are badges of honor."
I HAD NO IDEA WHAT Dimitri was talking about, but I
followed along obediently.
To my surprise, he led me out of the boundaries of the
campus and into the surrounding woods. The Academy owned a lot of land, not all
of which was actively used for educational purposes. We were in a remote part
of Montana, and at times, it seemed as though the school was just barely
holding back the wilderness.
We walked quietly for a while, our feet crunching
through thick, unbroken snow. A few birds flitted by, singing their greetings
to the rising sun, but mostly all I saw were scraggly, snow-heavy evergreen
trees. I had to work to keep up with Dimitri's longer stride, particularly since
the snow slowed me down a little. Soon, I discerned a large, dark shape ahead.
Some kind of building.
"What is that?" I asked. Before he could
answer, I realized it was a small cabin, made out of logs and everything.
Closer examination showed that the logs looked worn and rotten in some places.
The roof sagged a little.
"Old watch-post," he said. "Guardians
used to live on the edge of campus and keep watch for Strigoi."
"Why
don't they anymore?"
"We don't have enough guardians to staff it.
Besides, Moroi have warded campus with enough protective magic that most don't
think it's necessary to have actual people on guard." Provided no humans
staked the wards, I thought.
For a few brief moments, I entertained the hope that
Dimitri was leading me off to some romantic getaway. Then I heard voices on the
opposite side of the building. A familiar hum of feeling coursed into my mind.
Lissa was there.
Dimitri and I rounded the corner of the building,
coming up on a surprising scene. A small frozen pond lay there, and Christian
and Lissa were ice skating on it. A woman I didn't know was with them, but her
back was to me. All I could see was a wave of jet-black hair that arced around
her when she skated to a graceful stop.
Lissa grinned when she saw me. "Rose!"
Christian glanced over at me as she spoke, and I got the distinct impression he
felt I was intruding on their romantic moment.
Lissa moved in awkward strides to the pond's edge. She
wasn't so adept at skating.
I could only stare in bewilderment—and jealousy.
"Thanks for inviting me to the party."
"I figured you were busy," she said.
"And this is secret anyway. We aren't supposed to be here." I could
have told them that.
Christian skated up beside her, and the strange woman
soon followed. "You bringing party crashers, Dimka?" she asked.
I wondered who she was talking to, until I heard
Dimitri laugh. He didn't do it that often, and my surprise
increased. "It's impossible to keep Rose away from places she shouldn't
be. She always finds them eventually."
The woman grinned and turned around, flipping her long
hair over one shoulder, so that I suddenly saw her face full-on. It took every ounce
of my already dubiously held self-control not to react. Her heart-shaped face
had large eyes exactly the same shade as Christian's, a pale wintry blue. The
lips that smiled at me were delicate and lovely, glossed in a shade of pink
that set off the rest of her features.
But across her left cheek, marring what would have
otherwise been smooth, white skin were raised, purplish scars. Their shape and
formation looked very much like someone had bitten into and torn out part of
her cheek. Which, I realized, was exactly what had happened.
I swallowed. I suddenly knew who this was. It was
Christian's aunt. When his parents had turned Strigoi, they'd come back for
him, hoping to hide him away and turn him Strigoi when he was older. I didn't
know all the details, but I knew his aunt had fended them off. As I'd observed
before, though, Strigoi were deadly. She'd provided enough of a distraction
until the guardians showed up, but she hadn't walked away without damage.
She extended her gloved hand to me. "Tasha Ozera,"
she said. "I've heard a lot about you, Rose."
I
gave Christian a dangerous look, and Tasha laughed.
"Don't
worry," she said. "It was all good."
"No, it wasn't," he countered.
She shook her head in
exasperation. "Honestly, I don't know where he got such horrible social
skills. He didn't learn them from me." That was obvious, I thought.
"What are you guys doing out here?" I
asked.
"I wanted to spend some
time with these two." A small frown wrinkled her forehead. "But I
don't really like hanging around the school itself. They aren't always
hospitable…."
I didn't get that at first.
School officials usually fell all over themselves when royals came to visit.
Then I figured it out.
"Because … because of what happened …"
Considering the way everyone
treated Christian because of his parents, I shouldn't have been surprised to
find his aunt facing the same discrimination.
Tasha shrugged. "That's
the way it is." She rubbed her hands together and exhaled, her breath
making a frosty cloud in the air. "But let's not stand out here, not when
we can build a fire inside."
I gave a last, wistful
glance at the frozen pond and then followed the others inside. The cabin was
pretty bare, covered in layers of dust and dirt. It consisted of only one room.
There was a narrow bed with no covers in the corner and a few shelves where
food had probably once been stored. There was a fireplace, however, and we soon
had a blaze going that warmed the small area. The five of us sat down, huddling
around its heat, and Tasha produced a bag of marshmallows that we cooked over
the flames.
As we feasted on that gooey goodness, Lissa and
Christian talked to each other in that easy, comfortable way they always had.
To my surprise, Tasha and Dimitri also talked in a familiar and light way. They
obviously knew each other from way back when. I'd actually never seen him so
animated before. Even when affectionate with me, there'd always been a serious
air about him. With Tasha, he bantered and laughed.
The more I listened to her, the more I liked her. Finally,
unable to stay out of the conversation, I asked, "So are you coming on the
ski trip?"
She nodded. Stifling a yawn, she stretched herself out
like a cat. "I haven't been skiing in ages. No time. Been saving all my
vacation for this."
"Vacation?" I gave her a curious look.
"Do you have…a job?"
"Sadly, yes," Tasha said, though she didn't
actually sound very sad about it. "I teach martial arts classes."
I stared in astonishment. I couldn't have been more
surprised if she'd said she was an astronaut or a telephone psychic.
A lot of royals just didn't work at all, and if they
did, it was usually in some sort of investment or other moneymaking business
that furthered their family fortunes. And those who did work certainly
didn't do a lot of martial arts or physically demanding jobs. Moroi had a lot
of great attributes: exceptional senses—smell, sight, and hearing—and the power
to work magic. But physically, they were tall and
slender, often small-boned. They also got weak from being in sunlight. Now,
those things weren't enough to prevent someone from becoming a fighter, but
they did make it more challenging. An idea had built up among the Moroi over
time that their best offense was a good defense, and most shied away from the
thought of physical conflict. They hid in well-protected places like the
Academy, always relying on stronger, hardier dhampirs to guard them.
"What do you think, Rose?" Christian seemed
highly amused by my surprise. "Think you could take her?"
"Hard
to say," I said.
Tasha crooked me a grin. "You're being modest.
I've seen what you guys can do. This is just a hobby I picked up."
Dimitri chuckled. "Now you're being
modest. You could teach half the classes around here."
"Not likely," she said. "It'd be pretty
embarrassing to be beaten up by a bunch of teenagers."
"I don't think that'd happen," he said.
"I seem to remember you doing some damage to Neil Szelsky."
Tasha rolled her eyes. "Throwing my drink in his
face wasn't actually damage—unless you consider the damage it did to his suit.
And we all know how he is about his clothes."
They both laughed at some private joke the rest of us
weren't in on, but I was only half-listening. I was still intrigued about her
role with the Strigoi.
The self-control I'd tried to maintain finally
slipped. "Did
you start learning to fight before or
after that happened to your face?"
"Rose!"
hissed Lissa.
But Tasha didn't seem upset. Neither did Christian,
and he usually grew uncomfortable when the attack with his parents was brought
up. She regarded me with a level, thoughtful look. It reminded me of the one I
sometimes got from Dimitri if I did something surprising that he approved of.
"After," she said. She didn't lower her gaze
or look embarrassed, though I sensed sadness in her. "How much do you
know?"
I
glanced at Christian. "The basics."
She nodded. "I knew … I knew what Lucas and Moira
had become, but that still didn't prepare me. Mentally, physically, or emotionally.
I think if I had to live through it again, I still wouldn't be ready. But after
that night, I looked at myself— figuratively—and realized how defenseless I
was. I'd spent my whole life expecting guardians to protect me and take care of
me.
"And that's not to say the guardians aren't
capable. Like I said, you could probably take me in a fight. But they—Lucas and
Moira—cut down our two guardians before we realized what had happened. I
stalled them from taking Christian— but just barely. If the others hadn't shown
up, I'd be dead, and he'd—" She stopped, frowned, and kept going. "I
decided that I didn't want to die that way, not without putting up a real fight
and doing everything I could to protect myself and those I love. So I learned all sorts of self-defense. And
after a while, I didn't really, uh, fit in so well with high society around
here. So I moved to Minneapolis and made a living from teaching others."
I didn't doubt there were other Moroi living in
Minneapolis—though God only knew why—but I could read between the lines. She'd
moved there and integrated herself with humans, keeping away from other
vampires like Lissa and I had for two years. I started to wonder also if there
might have been something else there between the lines. She'd said she'd
learned "all sorts of self-defense"—apparently, more than just
martial arts. Going along with their offense-defense beliefs, the Moroi didn't
think magic should be used as a weapon. Long ago, it had been used that way,
and some Moroi still secretly did today. Christian, I knew, was one of them. I
suddenly had a good idea of where he might have picked up that kind of thing.
Silence fell. It was hard to follow up a sad story
like that. But Tasha, I realized, was one of those people who could always
lighten a mood. It made me like her even more, and she spent the rest of the
time telling us funny stories. She didn't put on airs like a lot of royals did,
so she had lots of dirt on everyone. Dimitri knew a lot of the people she spoke
of— honestly, how did someone so antisocial seem to know everyone in
Moroi and guardian society?—and would occasionally add some small detail. They
had us in hysterics until Tasha finally looked at her watch.
"Where's the best place
a girl can go shopping around here?" she asked.
Lissa and I exchanged looks. "Missoula,"
we said in unison.
Tasha sighed. "That's a
couple hours away, but if I leave soon, I can probably still get in some time
before the stores close. I'm hopelessly behind in Christmas shopping."
I groaned. "I'd kill to go shopping."
"Me too," said Lissa.
"Maybe we could sneak
along…." I gave Dimitri a hopeful look.
"No," he said immediately. I gave a sigh
of my own.
Tasha yawned again.
"I'll have to grab some coffee, so I don't sleep on the drive in."
"Can't one of your guardians drive for
you?"
She shook her head. "I don't have any."
"Don't have any …"
I frowned, parsing her words. "You don't have any guardians?"
"Nope."
I shot up. "But that's
not possible! You're royal. You should have at least one. Two, really."
Guardians were distributed
among Moroi in a cryptic, micromanaged way by the Guardian Council. It was kind
of an unfair system, considering the ratio of guardians to Moroi. Non-royals
tended to get them by a lottery system. Royals always got them.
High-ranking royals often got more than one, but even the lowest-ranking member
of royalty wouldn't have been without one.
"The Ozeras aren't exactly first in line when
guardians get assigned," said Christian bitterly. "Ever since…my
parents died…there's kind of been a shortage."
My anger flared up. "But that's not fair. They
can't punish you for what your parents did."
"It's not punishment, Rose." Tasha didn't
seem nearly as enraged as she should have been, in my opinion. "It's just…a
rearranging of priorities."
"They're leaving you defenseless. You can't go
out there by yourself!"
"I'm not defenseless, Rose. I've told you that.
And if I really wanted a guardian, I could make a nuisance of myself, but it's
a lot of hassle. I'm fine for now."
Dimitri
glanced over at her. "You want me to go with you?"
"And keep you up all night?" Tasha shook her
head. "I wouldn't do that to you, Dimka."
"He doesn't mind," I said quickly, excited
about this solution.
Dimitri seemed amused by me speaking for him, but he
didn't contradict me. "I really don't."
She
hesitated. "All right. But we should probably go soon."
Our illicit party dispersed. The Moroi went one
direction; Dimitri and I went another. He and Tasha made plans to meet up in a
half hour.
"So what do you think of her?" he asked when
we were alone.
"I
like her. She's cool." I thought about her for a moment. "And I get what you mean about the marks."
"Oh?"
I nodded, watching my footing as we walked along the
paths. Even when salted and shoveled, they could still collect hidden patches
of ice.
"She didn't do what she did for glory. She did it
because she had to. Just like…just like my mom did." I hated to admit it,
but it was true. Janine Hathaway might be the worst mother ever, but she was a
great guardian. "The marks don't matter. Molnijas or scars."
"You're
a fast learner," he said with approval.
I swelled under his praise. "Why does she call
you Dimka?"
He laughed softly. I'd heard a lot of his laughter
tonight and decided I'd like to hear more of it.
"It's
a nickname for Dimitri."
"That doesn't make any sense. It doesn't sound
anything like Dimitri. You should be called, I don't know, Dimi or
something."
"That's
not how it works in Russian," he said.
"Russian's weird," In Russian, the nickname
for Vasilisa was Vasya, which made no sense to me.
"So
is English."
I gave him a sly look. "If you'd teach me to
swear in Russian, I might have a new appreciation for it."
"You
swear too much already."
"I
just want to express myself."
"Oh, Roza…" He sighed, and I felt a thrill
tickle me. "Roza" was my name in Russian. He rarely used it.
"You express yourself more than anyone else I know."
I smiled and walked on a bit without saying anything
else. My heart skipped a beat, I was so happy to be around him. There was
something warm and right about us being together.
Even as I floated along, my mind churned over
something else that I'd been thinking about. "You know, there's something
funny about Tasha's scars."
"What's
that?" he asked.
"The scars…they mess up her face," I began
slowly. I was having trouble putting my thoughts into words. "I mean, it's
obvious she used to be really pretty. But even with the scars now … I don't
know. She's pretty in a different way. It's like…like they're part of her. They
complete her." It sounded silly, but it was true.
Dimitri didn't say anything, but he gave me a sidelong
glance. I returned it, and as our eyes met, I saw the briefest glimpse of the
old attraction. It was fleeting and gone too soon, but I'd seen it. Pride and
approval replaced it, and they were almost as good.
When he spoke, it was to echo his earlier thoughts.
"You're a fast learner, Roza."
I WAS FEELING PRETTY GOOD about life when I headed to
my before-school practice the next day. The secret gathering last night had
been super fun, and I felt proudly responsible for fighting the system and
encouraging Dimitri to go with Tasha. Better still, I'd gotten my first crack
at a silver stake yesterday and had proven I could handle one. High on myself,
I couldn't wait to practice even more.
Once I was dressed in my usual workout attire, I
practically skipped down to the gym. But when I stuck my head inside the
practice room from the day before, I found it dark and quiet. Flipping on the
light, I peered around just in case Dimitri was conducting some kind of weird,
covert training exercise. Nope. Empty. No staking today.
"Shit,"
I muttered.
"He's
not here."
I yelped and nearly jumped ten feet in the air.
Turning around, I looked straight into my mother's narrowed brown eyes.
"What are you doing here?" As soon as the
words were out of my mouth, her appearance registered with me. A stretchy
spandex shirt with short sleeves. Loose, drawstring workout pants similar to
the ones I wore. "Shit," I said again.
"Watch your mouth," she snapped. "You
might behave like you have no manners, but at least try not to sound that
way."
"Where's
Dimitri?"
"Guardian Belikov is in bed. He just got back a couple of hours ago and
needed to sleep."
Another expletive was on my lips, and I bit it back.
Of course Dimitri was asleep. He'd had to drive with Tasha to Missoula during
daylight in order to be there during human shopping hours. He'd technically
been up all of the Academy's night and had probably only just gotten back. Ugh.
I wouldn't have been so quick to encourage him to help her if I'd known it'd
result in this.
"Well," I said hastily. "I guess that
means practice is canceled—"
"Be quiet and put these on." She handed me
some training mitts. They were similar to boxing gloves but not as thick and
bulky. They shared the same purpose, however: to protect your hands and keep
you from gouging your opponent with your nails.
"We've been working on silver stakes," I
said sulkily shoving my hands into the mitts.
"Well,
today we're doing this. Come on."
Wishing I'd been hit by a bus on my walk from the dorm
today, I followed her out toward the center of the gym. Her curly hair was
pinned up to stay out of the way, revealing the back of her neck. The skin
there was covered in tattoos. The top one was a serpentine line: the promise
mark, given when
guardians graduated from academies like
St. Vladimir's and agreed to serve. Below that were the molnija marks
awarded each time a guardian killed a Strigoi. They were shaped like the
lightning bolts they took their name from. I couldn't gauge exact numbers, but
let's just say it was a wonder my mom had any neck left to tattoo. She'd
wielded a lot of death in her time.
When she reached the spot she wanted, she turned
toward me and adopted an attack stance. Half expecting her to jump me then and
there, I quickly mirrored it.
"What
are we doing?" I asked.
"Basic
offensive and defensive parrying. Use the red lines."
"That's
all?" I asked.
She leapt toward me. I dodged—just barely—and tripped
over my own feet in the process. Hastily, I righted myself.
"Well," she said in a voice that almost sounded
sarcastic. "As you seem so keen on reminding me, I haven't seen you in
five years. I have no idea what you can do."
She moved on me again, and again I just barely kept
within the lines in escaping her. That quickly became the pattern. She never
really gave me the chance to go on the offensive. Or maybe I just didn't have
the skills to take the offensive. I spent all my time defending
myself—physically, at least. Grudgingly, I had to acknowledge to myself that
she was good. Really good. But I certainly wasn't going to tell her
that.
"So, what?" I asked. "This is your way
of making up for maternal negligence?"
"This is my way of making you get rid of that
chip on your shoulder. You've had nothing but attitude for me since I arrived.
You want to fight?" Her fist shot out and connected with my arm.
"Then we'll fight. Point."
"Point," I conceded, backing up to my side.
"I don't want to fight. I've just been trying to talk to you."
"Mouthing off to me in class isn't what I'd
really call talking. Point."
I grunted from the hit. When I'd first begun training
with Dimitri, I'd complained that it wasn't fair for me to fight someone a foot
taller than me. He'd pointed out that I'd fight plenty of Strigoi taller than
me and that the old adage was true: size doesn't matter. Sometimes I thought ht
was giving me false hope, but judging from my mom's performance here, I was
starting to believe him.
I'd never actually fought anyone smaller than me. As
one of the few girls in the novice classes, I accepted that I was almost always
going to be shorter and slimmer than my opponents. But my mother was smaller
still and clearly had nothing but muscle packed into her petite body.
"I
have a unique style of communication, that's all," I said.
"You have a petty teenage delusion that you've
somehow been wronged for the last seventeen years." Her foot hit my thigh.
"Point. When in reality, you've been treated no differently than any other
dhampir. Better, actually. I could have sent you off to live with my cousins.
You want to be a blood whore? Is that what you wanted?"
The term "blood whore" always made me
flinch. It was a term often applied to the single dhampir mothers who decided
to raise their children instead of becoming guardians. These women often had
short-term affairs with Moroi men and were looked down on for it—even though
there wasn't really anything else they could have done, since Moroi men usually
ended up marrying Moroi women. The "blood whore" term came from the
fact that some dhampir women let men drink blood from them during sex. In our
world, only humans gave blood. A dhampir doing it was dirty and
kinky—especially during sex. I suspected only a few dhampir women actually did
this, but unfairly, the term tended to get applied to all of them. I had given
blood to Lissa when we had run away, and although it had been a necessary act,
the stigma still stayed with me.
"No. Of course I don't want to be a blood
whore." My breathing was becoming heavy. "And they're not all like
that. There're only a few that actually are."
"They bring that reputation on themselves,"
she growled. I dodged her strike. "They should be doing their duty as
guardians, not continuing to fool around and have flings with Moroi."
"They're raising their children," I grunted.
I wanted to yell but couldn't waste the oxygen. "Something you'd know
nothing about. Besides, aren't you the same as they are? I don't see a ring on
your finger. Wasn't my dad just a fling for you?"
Her face turned hard, which is saying something when you're already beating up your daughter. "That,"
she said tightly, "is something you know nothing about.
Point."
I winced at the blow but was happy to see I'd struck a
nerve. I had no clue who my dad was. The only bit of information I had was that
he was Turkish. I might have my mom's curvy figure and pretty face—though I
could smugly say mine was much prettier than hers nowadays—but the rest of my
coloring was from him. Lightly tanned skin with dark hair and eyes.
"How'd it happen?" I asked. "Were you
on some assignment in Turkey? Meet him at a local bazaar? Or was it even
cheaper than that? Did you go all Darwin and select the guy most likely to pass
on warrior genes to your offspring? I mean, I know you only had me because it
was your duty, so I suppose you had to make sure you could give the
guardians the best specimen you could."
"Rosemarie," she warned through gritted
teeth, "for once in your life, shut up."
"Why? Am I tarnishing your precious reputation?
It's just like you told me: you aren't any different from any other dhampir
either. You just screwed him and—"
There's a reason they say, "Pride goeth before a
fall." I was so caught up in my own cocky triumph that I stopped paying
attention to my feet. I was too close to the red line. Going outside of it was
another point for her, so I scrambled to stay within and dodge her at the same
time. Unfortunately, only one of those could work. Her fist came flying at me,
fast and hard—and, perhaps most importantly, a bit higher
than the permissable according to rules of this kind of exercise. It smacked me
in the face with the power of a small truck, and I flew backward, hitting the
hard gym floor back-first and head-second. And I was out of the lines. Damn it.
Pain cracked through the back of my head, and my
vision went blurry and sparkly. Within seconds, my mother was leaning over me.
"Rose? Rose? Are you okay?" Her voice
sounded hoarse and frantic. The world swam.
At some point after that, other people came, and I
somehow wound up in the Academy's med clinic. There, someone shone a light in
my eyes and started asking me incredibly idiotic questions.
"What's
your name?"
"What?"
I asked, squinting at the light.
"Your
name." I recognized Dr. Olendzki peering over me.
"You
know my name."
"I
want you to tell me."
"Rose.
Rose Hathaway."
"Do
you know your birthday?"
"Of course I do. Why are you asking me such
stupid things? Did you lose my records?"
Dr.
Olendzki gave an exasperated sigh and walked off, taking the annoying light
with her. "I think she's fine," I heard her tell someone. "I
want to keep her here for the school day, just to make sure she doesn't have a
concussion. I certainly don't want her anywhere near her
guardian classes."
I spent the day moving in and out of sleep because Dr.
Olendzki kept waking me up to do her tests. She also gave me an ice pack and
told me to keep it close to my face. When the Academy's classes let out, she
deemed me well enough to leave.
"I swear, Rose, I think you should have a
frequent patient's card." There was a small smile on her face. "Short
of those with chronic problems like allergies and asthma, I don't think there's
any other student I've seen here so often in such a short period of time."
"Thanks," I said, not really sure I wanted
the honor. "So, no concussion?"
She shook her head. "No. You're going to have
some pain, though. I'll give you something for that before you go." Her
smile faded, and suddenly she looked nervous. "To be honest, Rose, I think
most of the damage happened to, well, your face."
I shot up from the bed. "What do you mean 'most
of the damage happened to my face'?"
She gestured to the mirror above the sink on the far
side of the room. I ran over to it and looked at my reflection.
"Son
of a bitch!"
Purplish red splotches covered the upper portion of
the left side of my face, particularly near the eye. Desperately, I turned
around to face her.
"This is going to go away soon, right? If I keep
the ice on it?"
She shook her head again. "The ice can help…but
I'm afraid you're going to have a wicked black eye. It'll probably be at its
worst tomorrow but should clear up in a week or so. You'll be back to normal
before long."
I left the clinic in a daze that had nothing to do
with my head injury. Clear up in a week or so? How could Dr. Olendzki speak so
lightly about this? Didn't she realize what was happening? I was going to look
like a mutant for Christmas and most of the ski trip. I had a black eye. A
freaking black eye.
And
my mother had given it to me.
I ANGRILY PUSHED THROUGH THE double doors that led
into the Moroi dorm. Snow swirled in behind me, and a few people lingering on
the main floor glanced up upon my entrance. Not surprisingly, several of them
did double takes. Swallowing, I forced myself not to react. It would be okay.
No need to freak out. Novices got injured all the time. It was actually rarer not
to get injured. Admittedly, this was a more noticeable injury than most,
but I could live with it until it healed, right? And it wasn't like anyone
would know how I'd received it.
"Hey
Rose, is it true your own mother punched you?"
I froze. I'd know that taunting soprano voice
anywhere. Turning slowly, I looked into the deep blue eyes of Mia Rinaldi.
Curly blond hair framed a face that might have been cute if not for the
malicious smirk on it.
A year younger than us, Mia'd taken on Lissa (and me
by default) in a war to see who could tear apart the other's life most
quickly—a war, I should add, that she started. It had involved her
stealing Lissa's ex-boyfriend—despite the fact Lissa had decided in the end she
didn't want him—and the spreading of all sorts of rumors.
Admittedly, Mia's hatred hadn't been entirely
unjustified. Lissa's older brother, Andre—who had been killed in
the same car accident that technically "killed" me—had used Mia
pretty badly when she was a freshman. If she weren't such a bitch now, I would
have felt sorry for her. It had been wrong of him, and while I could understand
her anger, I don't know that it was fair of her to take that out on Lissa in
the way she did.
Lissa and I had technically won the war in the end,
but Mia had inexplicably bounced back. She didn't run with the same elite that
she once had, but she had rebuilt a small contingent of friends. Malicious or
not, strong leaders always attract followers.
I'd found that about 90 percent of the time, the most
effective response was to ignore her. But we had just crossed over to the other
10 percent, because it's impossible to ignore someone announcing to the world
that your mother just punched you—even if it was true. I stopped walking and
turned around. Mia stood near a vending machine, knowing she'd drawn me out. I
didn't bother asking how she'd found out about my mother giving me the black
eye. Things rarely stayed secret around here.
When she caught full sight of my face, her eyes
widened in unabashed delight. "Wow. Talk about a face only a mother could
love."
Ha. Cute. From anyone else, I would have applauded the
joke.
"Well, you're the expert on face injury," I
said. "How's your nose?"
Mia's icy smile twitched a little, but she didn't back
down. I'd broken her nose about a month ago—at a school dance of all places—and
while the nose had since healed, it now sat just the tiniest bit askew. Plastic
surgery could probably fix it up, but from my understanding of her family's
finances, that wasn't possible just now.
"It's better," she replied primly.
"Fortunately, it was only broken by a psychopathic whore and not anyone
actually related to me."
I gave her my best psychopathic smile. "Too bad.
Family members hit you by accident. Psychopathic whores tend to come back for
more."
Threatening physical violence against her was usually
a pretty sound tactic, but we had too many people around right now for that to
be a legitimate concern for her. And Mia knew it. Not that I was above
attacking someone in this kind of setting—hell, I'd done it lots of times—but I
was trying to work on my impulse control lately.
"Doesn't look like much of an accident to
me," she said. "Don't you guys have rules about face punches? I mean,
that looks really far out of bounds."
I opened my mouth to tell her off, but nothing came
out. She had a point. My injury was far out of bounds; in that sort of
combat, you aren't supposed to hit above the neck. This was way above that
forbidden line.
Mia saw my hesitation, and it was like Christmas
morning had come a week early for her. Until that moment, I don't think there'd ever been a time in our antagonistic
relationship in which she'd rendered me speechless.
"Ladies," came a stern, female voice. The
Moroi attending the front desk leaned over it and fixed us with a sharp look.
"This is a lobby, not a lounge. Either go upstairs or go outside."
For a moment, breaking Mia's nose again sounded like
the best idea in the world—to hell with detention or suspension. After a deep
breath, I decided retreat was my most dignified action now. I stalked off
toward the stairs leading up to the girls' dorm. Over my shoulder, I heard Mia
call, "Don't worry, Rose. It'll go away. Besides, it's not your face guys
are interested in."
Thirty seconds later, I beat on Lissa's door so hard,
it was a wonder my fist didn't go through the wood. She opened it slowly and
peered around.
"Is it just you out here? I thought there was an
army at the—oh my God." Her eyebrows shot up when she noticed the left
side of my face. "What happened?"
"You haven't heard already? You're probably the
only one in the school who hasn't," I grumbled. "Just let me
in."
Sprawling on her bed, I told her about the day's
events. She was properly appalled.
"I heard you'd been hurt, but I figured it was
one of your normal things," she said.
I stared up at the spackled ceiling, feeling
miserable. "The worst part is, Mia was right. It wasn't an accident."
"What, you're saying your mom did it on
purpose?" When I didn't answer, Lissa's voice
turned incredulous. "Come on, she wouldn't do that. No way."
"Why? Because she's perfect Janine Hathaway,
master of controlling her temper? The thing is, she's also perfect Janine
Hathaway, master of fighting and controlling her actions. One way or another,
she slipped up."
"Yeah, well," said Lissa, "I think her
stumbling and missing her punch is more likely than her doing it on purpose.
She'd have to really lose her temper."
"Well, she was talking to me. That's
enough to make anyone lose their temper. And I accused her of sleeping with my
dad because he was the soundest evolutionary choice."
"Rose," groaned Lissa. "You kind of
left out that part in your recap. Why'd you say that to her?"
"Because
it's probably true."
"But you had to know it'd upset her. Why do you
keep provoking her? Why can't you just make peace with her?"
I sat upright. "Make peace with her? She gave
me a black eye. Probably on purpose! How do I make peace with someone like
that?"
Lissa just shook her head and walked over to the
mirror to check her makeup. The feelings coming through our bond were ones of
frustration and exasperation. Lingering in the back was a bit of anticipation,
too. I had the patience to examine her carefully, now that I'd finished my
venting. She had on a silky lavender shirt and a knee-length black skirt. Her
long hair had the kind of smooth perfection only achieved by spending an hour of your life on it with a hair dryer
and flat iron.
"You
look nice. What's up?"
Her feelings shifted slightly, her irritation with me
dimming a little. "I'm meeting Christian soon."
For a few minutes there, it had felt like the old days
with Lissa and me. Just us, hanging out and talking. Her mention of Christian,
as well as the realization that she'd have to leave me soon for him, stirred
up dark feelings in my chest…feelings I had to reluctantly admit were jealousy.
Naturally, I didn't let on to that.
"Wow. What'd he do to deserve that? Rescue
orphans from a burning building? If so, you might want to make sure he didn't
set the building on fire in the first place." Christian's element was
fire. It was fitting since it was the most destructive one.
Laughing, she turned from the mirror and noticed me
gently touching my swollen face with my fingers. Her smile turned kind.
"It doesn't look that bad."
"Whatever. I can tell when you're lying, you
know. And Dr. Olendzki says it'll be even worse tomorrow." I lay back down
on the bed. "There probably isn't enough concealer in the world to cover
this, is there? Tasha and I'll have to invest in some Phantom of the Opera-style
masks."
She sighed and sat on the bed near me. "Too bad I
can't just heal it."
I
smiled. "That would be nice."
The compulsion and charisma
brought on by spirit were great, but really, healing was her coolest ability.
The range of things she could achieve was staggering.
Lissa was also thinking
about what spirit could do. "I wish there were some other way to control
the spirit … in a way that still let me use the magic…."
"Yeah," I said. I
understood her burning desire to do great things and help people. It radiated
off of her. Hell, I would also have liked to have this eye cleared up in an
instant rather than days. "I wish there were too."
She sighed again. "And
there's more to me than just wishing I could heal and do other stuff with
spirit. I also, well, just miss the magic. It's still there; it's just blocked
off by the pills. It's burning inside of me. It wants me, and I want it. But
there's a wall between us. You just can't imagine it."
"I can, actually."
It was true. Along with
having a general sense for her feelings, I could sometimes also "slip into
her." It was hard to explain and ever harder to endure. When that
happened, I could literally see through her eyes and feel what she
experienced. During those times, I was her. Many times, I'd been in her
head while she longed for the magic, and I'd felt the burning need she spoke
of. She often woke up at night, yearning for the power she could no longer
reach.
"Oh yeah," she
said ruefully. "I forget about that sometimes."
A sense of bitterness filled
her. It wasn't directed at me so much as it was the no-win
nature of her situation. Anger sparked inside of her. She didn't like feeling
helpless any more than I did. The anger and frustration intensified into something
darker and uglier, something I didn't like.
"Hey,"
I said, touching her arm. "You okay?"
She closed her eyes briefly, then opened them. "I
just hate it."
The intensity of her feelings reminded me of our
conversation, the one we'd had just before I went to the Badica house.
"You still feel like the pills might be weakening?"
"I
don't know. A little."
"Is
it getting worse?"
She shook her head. "No. I still can't use the
magic. I feel closer to it… but it's still blocked off."
"But
you still… your moods …"
"Yeah … they're acting up. But don't worry,"
she said, seeing my face. "I'm not seeing things or trying to hurt
myself."
"Good." I was glad to hear it but still
worried. Even if she still couldn't touch the magic, I didn't like the idea of
her mental state slipping again. Desperately, I hoped the situation would just
stabilize on its own. "I'm here," I told her softly, holding her
gaze. "If anything happens that's weird…you tell me, okay?"
Like that, the dark feelings disappeared within her.
As they did, I felt a weird ripple in the bond. I can't explain what it was,
but I shuddered from the force. Lissa didn't notice. Her mood perked up again,
and she smiled at me.
"Thanks,"
she said. "I will."
I smiled, happy to see her back to normal. We lapsed
into silence, and for the briefest of moments, I wanted to pour my heart out to
her. I'd had so much on my mind lately: my mother, Dimitri, and the Badica
house. I'd been keeping those feelings locked up, and they were tearing me
apart. Now, feeling so comfortable with Lissa for the first time in a long
time, I finally felt that I could let her into my feelings for a change.
Before I could open my mouth, I felt her thoughts
suddenly shift. They became eager and nervous. She had something she wanted to
tell me, something she'd been thinking about intently. So much for pouring my
heart out. If she wanted to talk, I wouldn't burden her with my problems, so I
pushed them aside and waited for her to speak.
"I found something in my research with Ms.
Carmack. Something strange…"
"Oh?"
I asked, instantly curious.
Moroi usually developed their specialized element
during adolescence. After that, they were put into magic classes specific to
that element. But as the only spirit user on record at the moment, Lissa didn't
really have a class she could join. Most people believed she just hadn't
specialized, but she and Ms. Carmack—the magic teacher at St. Vladimir's—had
been meeting independently to learn what they could about spirit. They
researched both current and old records, checking for clues that might lead to
other spirit users, now that they knew some of the
telltale signs: an inability to specialize, mental instability, etc.
"I didn't find any confirmed spirit users, but I
did find…reports of, um, unexplained phenomena."
I blinked in surprise. "What kind of stuff?"
I asked, pondering what would count as "unexplained phenomena" for
vampires. When she and I had lived with humans, we would have been
considered unexplained phenomena.
"They're scattered reports…but, like, I read this
one about a guy who could make others see things that weren't there. He could
get them to believe they were seeing monsters or other people or
whatever."
"That
could be compulsion."
"Really powerful
compulsion. I couldn't do that, and I'm stronger—or used to be—in it than
anyone we know. And that power comes from using spirit…."
"So," I finished, "you think this
illusion guy must have been a spirit user too." She nodded. "Why not
contact him and find out?"
"Because there's no information listed! It's
secret. And there are others just as strange. Like someone who could physically
drain others. People standing nearby would get weak and lose all their
strength. They'd pass out. And there was someone else who could stop things in
midair when they were thrown at him." Excitement lit up her features.
"He
could have been an air user," I pointed out.
"Maybe," she said. I could feel the
curiosity and excitement swirling through her. She
desperately wanted to believe there were others out there like her.
I smiled. "Who knew? Moroi have Roswell- and Area
51-type stuff. It's a wonder I'm not being studied somewhere to see if they can
figure out the bond."
Lissa's speculative mood turned teasing. "I wish
I could see into your mind sometimes. I'd like to know how you feel
about Mason."
"He's my friend," I said stoutly, surprised
at the abrupt change in subject. "That's it."
She tsked. "You used to flirt—and do other
stuff—with any guy you could get your hands on."
"Hey!"
I said, offended. "I wasn't that bad."
"Okay…maybe not. But you don't seem interested in
guys anymore."
I was
interested in guys—well, one guy.
"Mason's really nice," she continued.
"And crazy about you."
"He is," I agreed. I thought about Mason,
about that brief moment when I'd thought he was sexy outside Stan's class.
Plus, Mason was really funny, and we got along beautifully. He wasn't a bad
prospect as far as boyfriends went.
"You guys are a lot alike. You're both doing
things you shouldn't."
I laughed. That was also true. I recalled Mason's
eagerness to take on every Strigoi in the world. I might not be ready for
that—despite my outburst in the car—but I shared some of his recklessness. It might be time to give him a shot,
I thought. Bantering with him was fun, and it had been a long time since I'd
kissed anyone. Dimitri made my heart ache … but, well, it wasn't like anything
else was going on there.
Lissa watched me appraisingly, like she knew what I
was thinking—well, aside from the Dimitri stuff. "I heard Meredith say you
were an idiot for not going out with him. She said it's because you think
you're too good for him."
"What!
That's not true."
"Hey, I didn't say it. Anyway, she said
she's thinking of going after him."
"Mason and Meredith?" I scoffed.
"That's a disaster in the making. They have nothing in common."
It was petty, but I'd gotten used to Mason always
doting on me. Suddenly, the thought of someone else getting him irked me.
"You're possessive," Lissa said, again
guessing my thoughts. No wonder she got so annoyed at me reading her mind.
"Only
a little."
She laughed. "Rose, even if it's not Mason, you
really should start dating again. There are lots of guys who would kill to go
out with you—guys who are actually nice."
I hadn't always made the best choices when it came to
men. Once again, the urge to spill all my worries to her seized me. I'd been
hesitant to tell her about Dimitri for so long, even though the secret burned
inside of me. Sitting with her here reminded me that she was my best
friend. I could tell her anything, and she wouldn't judge
me. But, just like earlier, I lost the chance to tell her what was on my mind.
She glanced over at her alarm clock and suddenly
sprang up from the bed.
"I'm
late! I've got to meet Christian!"
Joy filled her, underscored with a bit of nervous anticipation.
Love. What could you do? I swallowed back the jealousy that started to raise
its ugly head. Once again, Christian had taken her away from me. I wasn't going
to be able to unburden myself tonight.
Lissa and I left the dorm, and she practically sprinted
away, promising we'd talk tomorrow. I wandered back to my own dorm. When I got
to my room, I passed by my mirror and groaned when I saw my face. Dark purple
surrounded my eye. In talking to Lissa, I'd almost forgotten about the whole
incident with my mother. Stopping to get a closer look, I stared at my face.
Maybe it was egotistical, but I knew I looked good. I wore a C-cup and had a
body much coveted in a school where most of the girls were supermodel slim. And
as I'd noted earlier, my face was pretty too. On a typical day, I was a nine
around here—ten on a very good one.
But today? Yeah. I was practically in negative
numbers. I was going to look fabulous for the ski trip.
"My mom beat me up," I informed my
reflection. It looked back sympathetically.
With a sigh, I decided I might as well get ready for
bed. There was nothing else I wanted to do tonight, and maybe extra sleep would speed the healing. I went down the
hall to the bathroom to wash my face and brush my hair. When I got back to my
room, I slipped on my favorite pajamas, and the feel of soft flannel cheered me
up a little.
I was packing my backpack for the next day when a
burst of emotion abruptly shot through my bond with Lissa. It caught me unaware
and gave me no chance to fight it. It was like being knocked over by a
hurricane-force wind, and suddenly, I was no longer looking at my backpack. I
was "inside" Lissa, experiencing her world firsthand.
And
that's when things got awkward.
Because
Lissa was with Christian.
And
things were getting … hot.
Christian
was kissing her, and wow, was it a kiss. He wasn't messing
around. It was the kind of kiss that small children shouldn't be allowed to
see. Hell, it was the kind of kiss no one should be allowed to see—let
alone experience through a psychic link.
As I've noted before, strong emotion from Lissa could
make this phenomenon happen—the one where I got pulled inside her head. But
always, always, it was because of some negative emotion. She'd get upset
or angry or depressed, and that would reach out to me. But this time? She
wasn't upset.
She
was happy. Very, very happy.
Oh
man. I needed to get out of here.
They were up in the attic of the school's chapel or,
as I liked to call it, their love nest. The place had been a regular hangout
for them, back when each of them was feeling antisocial and wanted to escape.
Eventually, they'd decided to be antisocial together, and one thing had led to
another. Since they started publicly dating, I hadn't known they spent much time
here anymore. Maybe they were back for old time's sake.
And indeed, a celebration did seem to be going on.
Little scented candles were set up around the dusty old place, candles that
filled the air with the scent of lilacs. I would have
been a little nervous about setting all those candles in a confined space
filled with flammable boxes and books, but Christian probably figured he could
control any accidental infernos.
They finally broke that insanely long kiss and pulled
back to look at each other. They lay on their sides on the floor. Several
blankets had been spread under them.
Christian's face was open and tender as he regarded
Lissa, his pale blue eyes aglow with some inner emotion. It was different from
the way Mason regarded me. There was certainly adoration with him, but Mason's
was a lot like when you walk into a church and fall to your knees in awe and
fear of something you worship but don't really understand. Christian clearly
worshipped Lissa in his way, but there was a knowing glint to his eyes, a sense
that the two of them shared an understanding of each other so perfect and
powerful that they didn't even need words to convey it.
"Don't you think we're going to go to hell for
this?" asked Lissa.
He reached out and touched her face, trailing his
fingers along her cheek and neck and down to the top of her silky shirt. She
breathed heavily at that touch, at the way it could be so gentle and small, yet
evoke such a strong passion within her.
"For this?" He played with the shirt's edge,
letting his finger just barely brush inside of it.
"No," she laughed. "For this." She
gestured around the attic. "This is a church.
We shouldn't be doing this kind of, um, thing up here."
"Not true," he argued. Gently, he pushed her
onto her back and leaned over her. "The church is downstairs. This is just
storage. God won't mind."
"You don't believe in God," she chastised.
Her hands made their way down his chest. Her movements were as light and
deliberate as his, yet they clearly triggered the same powerful response in
him.
He sighed happily as her hands slid under his shirt
and up his stomach. "I'm humoring you."
"You'd say anything right now," she accused.
Her fingers caught the edge of his shirt and pushed it up. He shifted so she
could push it all the way off him and then leaned back over her, bare-chested.
"You're right," he agreed. He carefully
undid one button on her blouse. Just one. Then he again leaned down and gave
her one of those hard, deep kisses. When he came up for air, he continued on as
though nothing had happened. "Tell me what you need to hear, and I'll say
it." He unfastened another button.
"There's nothing I need to hear," she
laughed. Another button popped free. "You can tell me whatever you
want—it'd just be nice if it were true."
"The truth, huh? No one wants to hear the truth.
The truth is never sexy. But you …" The last button came undone, and he spread her shirt away. "You are too goddamned
sexy to be real."
His words held his trademark snarky tone, but his eyes
conveyed a different message entirely. I was witnessing this scene through
Lissa's eyes, but I could imagine what he saw. Her smooth, white skin. Slender
waist and hips. A lacy white bra. Through her, I could feel that the lace was
itchy, but she didn't care.
Feelings both fond and hungry spread over his
features. From within Lissa, I could feel her heart race and breathing quicken.
Emotions similar to Christian's clouded all other coherent thoughts. Shifting
down, he lay on top of her, pressing their bodies together. His mouth sought
hers out again, and as their lips and tongues made contact, I knew I had to
get out of there.
Because I understood it now. I understood why Lissa
had dressed up and why the love nest had been decked out like a Yankee Candles
showroom. This was it. The moment. After a month of dating, they were
going to have sex. Lissa, I knew, had done it before with a past boyfriend. I
didn't know Christian's past, but I sincerely doubted many girls had fallen
prey to his abrasive charm.
But in feeling what Lissa felt, I could tell that none
of that mattered. Not in that moment. In that moment, there were only the two
of them and the way they felt about each other right now. And in a life filled
with more worries than someone her age should have had, Lissa
felt absolutely certain about what she was doing now. It was what she wanted.
What she'd wanted for a very long time with him.
And
I had no right to be witnessing it.
Who was I kidding? I didn't want to witness it.
I took no pleasure in watching other people get it on, and I sure as hell
didn't want to experience sex with Christian. It'd be like losing my virginity
virtually.
But Jesus Christ, Lissa wasn't making it easy to get out
of her head. She had no desire to detach from her feelings and emotions, and
the stronger they grew, the stronger they held me. Trying to distance myself
from her, I focused my energies on coming back to myself, concentrating as hard
as I could.
More
clothes disappeared …
Come
on, come on, I told myself sternly.
The
condom came out… yikes.
You're your own person, Rose. Get back in your head.
Their
limbs intertwined, their bodies moving together …
Son of a—
I ripped out of her and back to myself. Once again, I
was back in my room, but I no longer had any interest in packing my backpack.
My whole world was askew. I felt strange and violated—almost unsure if I was
Rose or if I was Lissa. I also felt that resentment toward Christian again. I
certainly didn't want to have sex with Lissa, but there was that same pang
inside of me, that frustrated feeling that I was no longer the center of her
world.
Leaving the backpack untouched, I went right to bed,
wrapping my arms around myself and curling into a ball to try to squelch the
ache within my chest.
I fell asleep pretty quickly and woke up early as a
result. Usually, I had to be dragged out of bed to go meet Dimitri, but today I
showed up early enough that I actually beat him to the gym. As I waited, I saw
Mason cutting across to one of the buildings that held classrooms.
"Whoa,"
I called. "Since when are you up this early?"
"Since I had to retake a math test," he
said, walking over to me. He gave me his mischievous smile. "Might be
worth skipping, though, to hang out with you."
I laughed, remembering my conversation with Lissa.
Yes, there were definitely worse things I could do than flirt and start something
with Mason.
"Nah. You might get in trouble, then I'd have no
real challenge on the slopes."
He rolled his eyes, still smiling. "I'm the
one with no real challenge, remember?"
"You ready to bet on something yet? Or are you
still too afraid?"
"Watch it," he warned, "or I might take
back your Christmas present."
"You
got me a present?" I hadn't expected that.
"Yup. But if you keep back-talking, I might give
it to someone else."
"Like
Meredith?" I teased.
"She
isn't even in your league, and you know it."
"Even
with a black eye?" I asked with a grimace.
"Even
with two black eyes."
The look he gave me just then wasn't teasing or even
really suggestive. It was just nice. Nice, friendly, and interested. Like he
really cared. After all the stress lately, I decided I liked being cared about.
And with the neglect I was starting to feel from Lissa, I realized I also kind
of liked having someone who wanted to pay so much attention to me.
"What
are you doing on Christmas?" I asked.
He shrugged. "Nothing. My mom almost came down
but had to cancel at the last minute … you know, with everything that
happened."
Mason's mother wasn't a guardian. She was a dhampir
who'd chosen to just be domestic and have kids. As a result, I knew he saw her
quite a bit. It was ironic, I thought, that my mom actually was here,
but for all intents and purposes, she might as well have been somewhere else.
"Come hang with me," I said on impulse.
"I'll be with Lissa and Christian and his aunt. It'll be fun."
"Really?"
"Very
fun."
"That's
not what I was asking about."
I
grinned. "I know. Just be there, okay?"
He swept me one of the gallant bows he liked to make.
"Absolutely."
Mason wandered off just as Dimitri showed up for our
practice. Talking to Mason had made me feel giddy and happy; I hadn't thought
about my face at all with him. But with Dimitri, I suddenly became
self-conscious. I didn't want to be anything less than perfect with him, and as
we walked inside, I went out of my way to avert my face so he couldn't look at
me full-on. Worrying about that brought my mood down, and as it plummeted, all
the other things that had been upsetting me came tumbling back.
We returned to the training room with the dummies, and
he told me he simply wanted me to practice the maneuvers from two days ago.
Happy he wasn't going to bring up the fight, I set to my task with a burning
zeal, showing the dummies just what would happen if they messed with Rose
Hathaway. I knew my fighting fury was fired up by more than just a simple
desire to do well. My feelings were out of control this morning, raw and
intense after both the fight with my mother and what I'd witnessed with Lissa
and Christian last night. Dimitri sat back and watched me, occasionally
critiquing my technique and offering suggestions for new tactics.
"Your hair's in the way," he said at one
point. "Not only are you blocking your peripheral vision, you're running
the risk of letting your enemy get a handhold."
"If I'm actually in a fight, I'll wear it
up." I grunted as I shoved the stake neatly up between the dummy's
"ribs." I didn't know what these artificial bones were made of, but
they were a bitch to work around. I thought about my mom again and added a little extra force to the jab.
"I'm just wearing it down today, that's all."
"Rose," he said warningly. Ignoring him, I
plunged again. His voice came more sharply the next time he spoke. "Rose.
Stop."
I backed away from the dummy, surprised to find my
breathing labored. I hadn't realized I was working that hard. My back hit the
wall. With nowhere to go, I looked away from him, directing my eyes toward the
ground.
"Look
at me," he ordered.
"Dimitri—"
"Look at me."
No matter our close history, he was still my
instructor. I couldn't refuse a direct order. Slowly, reluctantly, I turned toward
him, still tilting my head slightly down so the hair hung over the sides of my
face. Rising from his chair, he walked over and stood before me.
I avoided his eyes but saw his hand move forward to
brush back my hair. Then it stopped. As did my breathing. Our short-lived
attraction had been filled with questions and reservations, but one thing I'd
known for sure: Dimitri had loved my hair. Maybe he still loved it. It was
great hair, I'll admit. Long and silky and dark. He used to find excuses to
touch it, and he'd counseled me against cutting it as so many female guardians
did.
His hand hovered there, and the world stood still as I
waited to see what he would do. After what seemed like an eternity, he let his hand gradually fall back to his
side. Burning disappointment washed over me, yet at the same time, I'd learned
something. He'd hesitated. He'd been afraid to touch me, which maybe—just
maybe—meant he still wanted to. He'd had to hold himself back.
I slowly tipped my head back so that we made eye contact.
Most of my hair fell back from my face—but not all. His hand trembled again,
and I hoped again he'd reach forward. The hand steadied. My excitement dimmed.
"Does it hurt?" he asked. The scent of that
aftershave, mingled with his sweat, washed over me. God, I wished he had
touched me.
"No,"
I lied.
"It
doesn't look so bad," he told me. "It'll heal."
"I hate her," I said, astonished at just how
much venom those three words held. Even while suddenly turned on and wanting
Dimitri, I still couldn't drop the grudge I held against my mother.
"No,
you don't," he said gently.
"I
do."
"You don't have time to hate anyone," he
advised, his voice still kind. "Not in our profession. You should make
peace with her."
Lissa had said exactly the same thing. Outrage joined
my other emotions. That darkness within me started to unfurl. "Make peace
with her? After she gave me a black eye on purpose! Why am I the only
one who sees how crazy that is?"
"She absolutely did not do it on
purpose," he said, voice hard. "No matter how much you resent her,
you have to believe that. She wouldn't do that, and anyway, I saw her later
that day. She was worried about you."
"Probably more worried someone will bring her up
on child abuse charges," I grumbled.
"Don't
you think this is the time of year for forgiveness?"
I sighed loudly. "This isn't a Christmas special!
This is my life. In the real world, miracles and goodness just don't
happen."
He was still eyeing my calmly. "In the real
world, you can make your own miracles."
My frustration suddenly hit a breaking point, and I
gave up trying to maintain my control. I was so tired of being told reasonable,
practical things whenever something went wrong in my life. Somewhere in me, I
knew Dimitri only wanted to help, but I just wasn't up for the well-meant
words. I wanted comfort for my problems. I didn't want to think about what
would make me a better person. I wished he'd just hold me and tell me not to
worry.
"Okay, can you just stop this for once?" I
demanded, hands on my hips.
"Stop
what?"
"The whole profound Zen crap thing. You don't
talk to me like a real person. Everything you say is just some wise,
life-lesson nonsense. You really do sound like a Christmas special." I
knew it wasn't entirely fair to take my anger out on him, but I found myself practically shouting. "I
swear, sometimes it's just like you want to hear yourself talk! And I know you're
not always this way. You were perfectly normal when you talked to Tasha. But
with me? You're just going through the motions. You don't care about me. You're
just stuck in your stupid mentor role."
He stared at me, uncharacteristically surprised.
"I don't care about you?"
"No." I was being petty—very, very petty.
And I knew the truth—that he did care and was more than just a mentor. I
couldn't help myself, though. It just kept coming and coming. I jabbed his
chest with my finger. "I'm another student to you. You just go on and on
with your stupid life lessons so that—"
The hand I'd hoped would touch my hair suddenly
reached out and grabbed my pointing hand. He pinned it to the wall, and I was
surprised to see a flare of emotion in his eyes. It wasn't exactly anger…but it
was frustration of another kind.
"Don't
tell me what I'm feeling," he
growled.
I saw then that half of what I'd said was true. He was
almost always calm, always in control—even when fighting. But he'd also told me
how he'd once snapped and beaten up his Moroi father. He'd actually been like
me once—always on the verge of acting without thinking, doing things he knew he
shouldn't.
"That's
it, isn't it?" I asked.
"What?"
"You're
always fighting for control. You're the same as me."
"No," he said, still obviously worked up.
"I've learned my control."
Something about this new realization emboldened me.
"No," I informed him. "You haven't. You put on a good face, and
most of the time you do stay in control. But sometimes you can't. And sometimes
…" I leaned forward, lowering my voice. "Sometimes you don't want
to."
"Rose…"
I could see his labored breathing and knew his heart
was beating as quickly as mine. And he wasn't pulling away. I knew this was
wrong—knew all the logical reasons for us staying apart. But right then, I
didn't care. I didn't want to control myself. I didn't want to be good.
Before he realized what was happening, I kissed him.
Our lips met, and when I felt him kiss me back, I knew I was right. He pressed
himself closer, trapping me between him and the wall. He kept holding my hand,
but his other one snaked behind my head, sliding into my hair. The kiss was
filled with so much intensity; it held anger, passion, release….
He was the one who broke it. He jerked away from me
and took several steps back, looking shaken.
"Do
not do that again," he said stiffly.
"Don't
kiss me back then," I retorted.
He
stared at me for what seemed like forever. "I don't give 'Zen lessons' to
hear myself talk. I don't give them because you're
another student. I'm doing this to teach you control."
"You're
doing a great job," I said bitterly.
He closed his eyes for half a second, exhaled, and
muttered something in Russian. Without another glance at me, he turned and left
the room.
I DIDN'T SEE DIMITRI FOR a while after that. He'd sent
a message later that day saying that he thought we should cancel our next two
sessions because of the rapidly approaching plans to leave campus. Classes were
about to end anyway, he said; taking a break from practice seemed like the
reasonable thing.
It was a lame excuse, and I knew that wasn't the
reason he was canceling. If he wanted to avoid me, I would have preferred he
made up something about how he and the other guardians had to up Moroi security
or practice top-secret ninja moves.
Regardless of his story, I knew he was avoiding me
because of the kiss. That damned kiss. I didn't regret it, not exactly. God
only knew how much I'd been wanting to kiss him. But I'd done it for the wrong
reasons. I'd done it because I was upset and frustrated and had simply wanted
to prove that I could. I was so tired of doing the right thing, the
smart thing. I was trying to be more in control lately, but I seemed to be
slipping.
I hadn't forgotten the warning that he'd once given
me— that us being together wasn't just about age. It would interfere with our
jobs. Pushing him into the kiss…well, I'd fanned the
flames of a problem that could eventually hurt Lissa. I shouldn't have done it.
Yesterday, I'd been unable to stop myself. Today I could see more clearly and
couldn't believe what I'd done.
Mason met me on Christmas morning, and we went to go
hang out with the others. It provided a good opportunity to push Dimitri out of
my head. I liked Mason—a lot. And it wasn't like I had to run off and marry
him. Like Lissa had said, it would be healthy for me to just date someone
again.
Tasha was hosting our Christmas brunch in an elegant
parlor in the Academy's guest quarters. Lots of group activities and parties
were occurring throughout the school, but I'd quickly noticed that Tasha's
presence always created a disturbance. People either secretly stared or went
out of their way to avoid her. Sometimes she would challenge them. Sometimes
she would just lie low. Today, she'd chosen to stay out of the other royals'
way and simply enjoy this small, private party of those who didn't shun her.
Dimitri had been invited to the gathering, and a bit
of my resolve faltered when I saw him. He'd actually dressed up for the
occasion. Okay, "dressed up" might have been an exaggeration, but it
was the closest I'd ever seen him come to that. Usually he just looked a little
rough…like he could spring into battle at any given moment. Today, his dark
hair was tied at the back of his neck, as though he'd actually tried to make it
neat. He wore his usual jeans and leather boots, but instead of a T-shirt or
thermal shirt, he had on a finely knit black sweater. It was just an ordinary sweater, nothing designer or
expensive, but it added a touch of polish I didn't usually see, and good God,
did it fit him well.
Dimitri wasn't mean to me or
anything, but he certainly didn't go out of his way to make conversation with
me. He did talk to Tasha, however, and I watched with fascination as they
conversed in that easy way of theirs. I'd since learned that a good friend of
his was a distant cousin of Tasha's family; that was how the two of them knew
each other.
"Five?" asked
Dimitri in surprise. They were discussing the friend's children. "I hadn't
heard that."
Tasha nodded. "It's
insane. I swear, I don't think his wife's had more than six months off between
kids. She's short, too— so she just gets wider and wider."
"When I first met him,
he swore he didn't even want kids."
Her eyes widened excitedly.
"I know! I can't believe it. You should see him now. He just melts
around them. I can't even understand him half the time. I swear, he speaks more
baby talk than English."
Dimitri smiled his rare
smile. "Well…children do that to people."
"I can't imagine it
happening to you," she laughed. "You're always so stoic. Of
course … I suppose you'd be doing baby talk in Russian, so no one would ever
know."
They both laughed at that,
and I turned away, grateful Mason was there to talk to. He was a good
distraction from
everything, because in addition to
Dimitri ignoring me, Lissa and Christian were chatting on in their own little
world too. Sex appeared to have made them that much more in love, and I
wondered if I'd get to spend any time with her at all on the ski trip. She did
eventually break away from him to give me my Christmas present.
I opened the box and stared inside. I saw a string of
maroon-colored beads, and the scent of roses floated out.
"What
the …"
I lifted the beads out, and a heavy gold crucifix
swung from the end of them. She'd given me a chotki. It was similar to a
rosary, only smaller. Bracelet-size.
"Are you trying to convert me?" I asked
wryly. Lissa wasn't a religious nut or anything, but she believed in God and
attended church regularly. Like many Moroi families who'd come from Russia and
Eastern Europe, she was an Orthodox Christian.
Me? I was pretty much an Orthodox Agnostic. I figured
God probably existed, but I didn't have the time or energy to investigate.
Lissa respected that and never tried to push her faith on me, which made the
gift that much weirder.
"Flip
it over," she said, clearly amused at my shock.
I did. On the back of the cross, a dragon wreathed in
flowers had been carved into the gold. The Dragomir crest. I looked up at her,
puzzled.
"It's
a family heirloom," she said. "One of my dad's good friends has been
saving boxes of his stuff. This was in it. It belonged
to my great-grandmother's guardian."
"Liss …" I said. The chotki took on a whole
new meaning. "I can't… you can't give me something like this."
"Well, I certainly can't keep it. It's meant for
a guardian. My guardian."
I wound the beads around one wrist. The cross felt
cool against my skin.
"You know," I teased, "there's a good
possibility I'll get kicked out of school before I can become your
guardian."
She
grinned. "Well, then you can give it back."
Everyone laughed. Tasha started to say something, then
stopped when she looked up at the door.
"Janine!"
My mother stood there, looking as stiff and impassive
as ever.
"Sorry
I'm late," she said. "I had business to take care of."
Business.
As always. Even on Christmas.
I felt my stomach turn and heat rise to my cheeks as
the details of our fight came rushing back to my mind. She'd never sent one
word of communication since it had happened two days ago, not even when I was
in the infirmary. No apologies. Nothing. I gritted my teeth.
She
sat down with us and soon joined in the conversation. I'd long since discovered
she could really only talk about one subject: guardian business. I wondered if
she had any hobbies. The Badica attack was on everyone's mind, and this drove
her into a conversation about some similar fight she'd been in. To my horror, Mason was riveted by her every
word.
"Well, decapitations aren't as easy as they
seem," she said in her matter-of-fact way. I'd never thought they were
easy at all, but her tone suggested that she believed everyone thought they
were cake. "You've got to get through the spinal cord and tendons."
Through the bond, I felt Lissa grow queasy. She wasn't
one for gruesome talk.
Mason's eyes lit up. "What's the best weapon to
do it with?"
My mother considered. "An axe. You can get more
weight behind it." She made a swinging motion by way of illustration.
"Cool," he said. "Man, I hope they let
me carry an axe." It was a comical and ludicrous idea, since axes were
hardly convenient weapons to carry around. For half a second, the thought of
Mason walking down the street with an axe over his shoulder lightened my mood a
little. The moment quickly passed.
I honestly couldn't believe we were having this
conversation on Christmas. Her presence had soured everything. Fortunately, the
gathering eventually dispersed. Christian and Lissa went off to do their own
thing, and Dimitri and Tasha apparently had more catching up to do. Mason and I
were well on our way to the dhampir dorm when my mother joined us.
None of us said anything. Stars cluttered the black
sky, sharp and bright, their glitter matched in the ice and snow around us. I
wore my ivory parka with fake fur trimming. It did a
good job keeping my body warm, even though it did nothing against the chilly
gusts that seared my face. The whole time we walked, I kept expecting my mother
to turn off toward the other guardian areas, but she came right inside the dorm
with us.
"I've been wanting to talk to you," she
finally said. My alarms clicked on. What had I done now?
That was all she said, but Mason picked up on the hint
immediately. He was neither stupid nor oblivious to social cues, though at that
moment, I kind of wished he was. I also found it ironic that he wanted to fight
every Strigoi in the world but was afraid of my mother.
He glanced at me apologetically, shrugged, and said,
"Hey, I've got to get, um, somewhere. I'll see you later."
I watched with regret as he left, wishing I could run
after him. Probably my mom would only tackle me and punch my other eye if I
tried to escape. Better to do things her way and get this over with. Shifting
uncomfortably, I looked everywhere but at her and waited for her to speak. Out
of the corner of my eye, I noticed a few people glancing over at us. Recalling
how everyone in the world seemed to know about her giving me the black eye, I
suddenly decided I didn't want witnesses around for whatever lecture she was
about to unleash on me.
"You
want to, um, go to my room?" I asked.
She
looked surprised, almost uncertain. "Sure."
I led her upstairs, keeping a safe distance away as we walked. Awkward tension built between us. She didn't
say anything when we reached my room, but I saw her examine every detail
carefully, as though a Strigoi might be lurking in there. I sat on the bed and
waited while she paced, unsure what I should do. She ran her fingers over a
stack of books on animal behavior and evolution.
"Are
these for a report?" she asked.
"No.
I'm just interested in it, that's all."
Her eyebrows rose. She hadn't known that. But how
would she? She didn't know anything about me. She continued her appraisal,
stopping to study little things that apparently surprised her about me. A
picture of Lissa and me dressed up like fairies for Halloween. A bag of
SweeTarts. It was as though my mother were meeting me for the first time.
Abruptly, she turned and extended her hand toward me.
"Here."
Startled, I leaned forward and held my palm out
underneath hers. Something small and cool dropped into my hand. It was a round
pendant, a small one—not much bigger than a dime in diameter. A base of silver
held a flat disc of colored glass circles. Frowning, I ran my thumb over its
surface. It was strange, but the circles almost made it look like an eye. The
inner one was small, just like a pupil. It was so dark blue that it looked
black. Surrounding it was a larger circle of pale blue, which was in turn
surrounded by a circle of white. A very, very thin ring of that dark blue color
circled the outside.
"Thanks," I said. I hadn't expected anything
from her. The gift was weird—why the hell would she give me an eye?—but it was
a gift. "I… I didn't get you anything."
My mom nodded, face blank and unconcerned once more.
"It's fine. I don't need anything."
She turned away again and started walking around the
room. She didn't have a lot of space to do it, but her shorter height gave her a
smaller stride. Each time she passed in front of the window over my bed, the
light would catch her auburn hair and light it up. I watched her curiously and
realized she was as nervous as me.
She halted in her pacing and glanced back toward me.
"How's your eye?"
"Getting
better."
"Good." She opened her mouth, and I had a
feeling she was on the verge of apologizing. But she didn't.
When she started pacing again, I decided I couldn't
stand the inactivity. I began putting my presents away. I'd gotten a pretty
nice haul of stuff this morning. One of them was a silk dress from Tasha, red
and embroidered with flowers. My mother watched me hang it in the room's tiny
closet.
"That
was very nice of Tasha."
"Yeah," I agreed. "I didn't know she
was going to get me anything. I really like her."
"Me
too."
I turned from the closet in surprise and stared at my
mom. Her astonishment mirrored mine. If I hadn't known any better, I'd have said we'd just agreed on something. Maybe
Christmas miracles did happen.
"Guardian
Belikov will be a good match for her."
"I—" I blinked, not entirely sure what she
was talking about. "Dimitri?"
"Guardian Belikov," she corrected sternly,
still not approving of my casual way of addressing him.
"What…
what kind of match?" I asked.
She raised an eyebrow. "You haven't heard? She's
asked him to be her guardian—since she doesn't have one."
I felt like I'd been punched again. "But he's…assigned
here. And to Lissa."
"Arrangements can be made. And regardless of the
Ozera reputation…she's still royal. If she pushes, she can get her way."
I stared bleakly into space. "Well, I guess they are
friends and everything."
"More
than that—or possibly could be."
Bam!
Punched again.
"What?"
"Hmm? Oh. She's…interested in him."
By my mother's tone, it was clear that romantic matters actually held no
interest for her. "She's willing to have dhampir children, so it's
possible they might eventually make an, um, arrangement if he were her
guardian."
Oh.
My. God.
Time
froze.
My
heart stopped beating.
I realized my mother was waiting for a response. She
was leaning against my desk, watching me. She might be able to hunt down
Strigoi, but she was oblivious to my feelings.
"Is … is he going to do it? Be her
guardian?" I asked weakly.
My mom shrugged. "I don't think he's agreed to it
yet, but of course he will. It's a great opportunity."
"Of course," I echoed. Why would Dimitri
turn down the chance to be a guardian to a friend of his and to have a
baby?
I think my mom said something else after that, but I
didn't hear it. I didn't hear anything. I kept thinking about Dimitri leaving
the Academy, leaving me. I thought about the way he and Tasha had gotten
along with each other so well. And then, after those recollections, my
imagination started improvising future scenarios. Tasha and Dimitri together.
Touching. Kissing. Naked. Other things …
I squeezed my eyes shut for half a second and then
opened them.
"I'm
really tired."
My mom stopped mid-sentence. I had no idea what she'd
been saying before I interrupted her.
"I'm really tired," I repeated. I could hear
the hollowness in my own voice. Empty. No emotion. "Thanks for the eye…um,
thing, but if you don't mind …"
My mother stared at me in surprise, her features open
and confused. Then, just like that, her usual wall of cool professionalism slammed back into place. Until that
moment, I hadn't realized how much she'd let it up. But she had. For just a
brief time, she'd made herself vulnerable with me. That vulnerability was now
gone.
"Of
course," she said stiffly. "I don't want to bother you."
I wanted to tell her it wasn't that. I wanted to tell
her I wasn't kicking her out for any personal reason. And I wanted to tell her
that I wished she were the kind of loving, understanding mother you always hear
about, one I could confide in. Maybe even a mother I could discuss my troubled
love life with.
God. I wished I could tell anyone about that,
actually. Especially right now.
But I was too caught up in my own personal drama to
say a word. I felt like someone had ripped my heart out and tossed it across
the other side of the room. There was a burning, agonizing pain in my chest,
and I had no idea how it could ever be filled. It was one thing to accept that
I couldn't have Dimitri. It was something entirely different to realize someone
else could.
I didn't say anything else to her because my speech
capabilities no longer existed. Fury glinted in her eyes, and her lips
flattened out into that tight expression of displeasure she so often wore.
Without another word, she turned around and left, slamming the door behind her.
That door slam was something I would have done too, actually. I guess we really
did share some genes.
But I forgot about her almost immediately. I just kept
sitting there and thinking. Thinking and imagining.
I spent the rest of the day doing little more than
that. I skipped dinner. I shed a few tears. But mostly, I just sat on my bed
thinking and growing more and more depressed. I also discovered that the only
thing worse than imagining Dimitri and Tasha together was remembering when he
and I had been together. He would never touch me again like that, never
kiss me again…
This
was the worst Christmas ever.
THE SKI TRIP COULDN'T HAVE come a moment too soon. It
was impossible to get the Dimitri and Tasha thing out of my head, but at least
packing and getting ready made sure I didn't devote 100 percent of my brain
power to him. More like 95 percent.
I had other things to distract me, too. The Academy
might—rightfully—be overprotective when it came to us, but sometimes that
translated into pretty cool stuff. Example: The Academy had access to a couple
of private jets. This meant no Strigoi could attack us at an airport, and it
also meant we got to travel in style. Each jet was smaller than a commercial plane,
but the seats were cushy and had lots of leg room. They extended far enough
back that you could practically lie down to sleep. On long flights, we had
little consoles in the seats that gave us TV movie options. Sometimes they'd
even break out fancy meals. I was betting this flight, however, would be too
short for any movies or substantial food.
We left late on the twenty-sixth. When I boarded the
jet, I looked around for Lissa, wanting to talk to her. We hadn't really spoken
after the Christmas brunch. I wasn't surprised to see her sitting with
Christian, and they didn't look like they wanted to be interrupted. I couldn't
hear their conversation, but he'd put his arm around her
and had that relaxed, flirty expression that only she could bring out. I remained
fully convinced that he could never do as good a job as me of taking care of
her, but he clearly made her happy. I put on a smile and nodded at them as I
passed down the aisle toward where Mason was waving at me. As I did, I also
walked by Dimitri and Tasha sitting together. I pointedly ignored them.
"Hey,"
I said sliding into the seat beside Mason.
He
smiled at me. "Hey. You ready for the ski challenge?"
"As
ready as I'll ever be."
"Don't
worry," he said. "I'll go easy on you."
I scoffed and leaned my head back against the seat.
"You're so delusional."
"Sane
guys are boring."
To my surprise, he slid his hand over mine. His skin
was warm, and I felt my own skin tingle where he touched me. It startled me.
I'd convinced myself Dimitri was the only one I'd ever respond to again.
It's time to move on, I thought. Dimitri
obviously has. You should have done it a long time ago.
I laced my fingers with Mason's, catching him off
guard. "I do. This is going to be fun."
And
it was.
I
tried to keep reminding myself that we were here because of a tragedy, that
there were Strigoi and humans out there who might strike again. No one else
seemed to remember that, though, and I admit, I was
having a difficult time myself.
The resort was gorgeous. It was built to sort of look
like a log cabin, but no pioneer cabin could have held hundreds of people or
had such luxury accommodations. Three stories of gleaming, golden-colored wood
sat among lofty pine trees. The windows were tall and gracefully arched, tinted
for Moroi convenience. Crystal lanterns—electric, but shaped to look like
torches—hung around all the entrances, giving the entire building a glittering,
almost bejeweled look.
Mountains—which my enhanced eyes could just barely
make out in the night—surrounded us, and I bet the view would have been
breathtaking when it was light out. One side of the grounds led off to the
skiing area, complete with steep hills and moguls, as well as lifts and tow
ropes. Another side of the lodge had an ice rink, which delighted me since I'd
missed out that one day by the cabin. Near that, smooth hills were reserved for
sledding.
And
that was just the outside.
Inside, all sorts of arrangements had been made to
cater to Moroi needs. Feeders stayed on hand, ready to serve twenty-four hours
a day. The slopes ran on a nocturnal schedule. Wards and guardians circled the
entire place. Everything a living vampire could want.
The main lobby had a cathedral ceiling and an enormous
chandelier hanging over it. Its floor was intricately tiled marble, and the
front desk stayed open around the clock, ready to indulge our every need. The
rest of the lodge, hallways and lounges, had a red, black, and
gold color scheme. The deep shade of red dominated over the other hues, and I wondered
if its resemblance to blood was a coincidence. Mirrors and art adorned the
walls, and little ornamental tables had been placed here and there. They held
vases of pale green, purple-spotted orchids that filled the air with a spicy
scent.
The room I shared with Lissa was bigger than our dorm
rooms put together and had the same rich colors as the rest of the lodge. The
carpet was so plush and deep that I immediately shed my shoes at the door and
walked in barefoot, luxuriating in the way my feet sank into that softness. We
had king-size beds, covered in feather duvets and set with so many pillows that
I swore a person could get lost in them all and never be seen again. French
doors opened on to a spacious balcony, which, considering we were on the top floor,
would have been cool if not for the fact it was freezing outside. I suspected
the two-person hot tub on the far end would go a long way to make up for the
cold.
Drowning in so much luxury, I reached an overload
point where the rest of the accommodations started swimming together. The
jetted marble bathtub. The plasma-screen TV. The basket of chocolate and other
snacks. When we finally decided to go skiing, I had to practically drag myself
from the room. I could probably have spent the rest of my vacation lounging in
there and been perfectly content.
But we finally ventured outside, and once I managed to
push Dimitri and my mother out of my head, I started to enjoy myself. It helped that the lodge was so
enormous; there was little chance of running into them.
For the first time in weeks, I was able to finally
focus on Mason and realize just how much fun he was. I also got to hang out
with Lissa more than I had in a while, which put me in an even better mood.
With Lissa, Christian, Mason, and me, we were able to
get kind of a double-date thing going. The four of us spent almost all of the
first day skiing, though the two Moroi had a bit of trouble keeping up.
Considering what Mason and I went through in our classes, he and I weren't
afraid to try daring stunts. Our competitive natures made us eager to go out of
our way to outdo each other.
"You guys are suicidal," remarked Christian
at one point. It was dark outside, and tall light posts illuminated his bemused
face.
He and Lissa had been waiting at the bottom of the
mogul hill, watching Mason and me come down. We'd been moving at insane speeds.
The part of me that had been trying to learn control and wisdom from Dimitri
knew it was dangerous, but the rest of me liked embracing that recklessness.
That dark streak of rebelliousness still hadn't let me go.
Mason grinned as we skidded to a halt, sending up a
spray of snow. "Nah, this is just a warm-up. I mean, Rose has been able to
keep up with me the whole time. Kid stuff."
Lissa
shook her head. "Aren't you guys taking this too far?"
Mason
and I looked at each other. "No."
She shook her head. "Well, we're going inside.
Try not to kill yourselves."
She and Christian left, arm and arm. I watched them
go, then turned back to Mason. "I'm good for a while longer. You?"
"Absolutely."
We took a lift back up to the top of the hill. When we
were just about to head down, Mason pointed.
"Okay, how about this? Hit those moguls there,
then jump over that ridge, swing back with a hairpin turn, dodge those trees,
and land there."
I followed his finger as he pointed out a jagged path
down one of the biggest slopes. I frowned.
"That
one really is insane, Mase."
"Ah,"
he said triumphantly. "She finally cracks."
I glowered. "She does not." After another
survey of his crazy route, I conceded. "Okay. Let's do it."
He
gestured. "You first."
I took a deep breath and leapt off. My skis slid
smoothly over the snow, and piercing wind blasted into my face. I made the
first jump neatly and precisely, but as the next part of the course sped
forward, I realized just how dangerous it really was. In that split second, I
had a decision to make. If I didn't do it, I'd never hear the end of it from
Mason—and I really wanted to show him up. If I did manage it, I could
feel pretty secure about my awesomeness. But if I tried and messed up … I could
break my neck.
Somewhere in my head, a voice that sounded
suspiciously like Dimitri's started talking about wise choices and
learning when to show restraint.
I
decided to ignore that voice and went for it.
This course was as hard as I'd feared, but I pulled it
off flawlessly, one insane move after another. Snow flew up around me as I made
each sharp, dangerous turn. When I safely reached bottom, I looked up and saw
Mason gesturing wildly. I couldn't make out his expression or words, but I
could imagine his cheers. I waved back and waited for him to follow suit.
But he didn't. Because when Mason got halfway down, he
wasn't able to pull off one of the jumps. His skis caught, and his legs
twisted. Down he went.
I reached him at about the same time some of the
resort staff did. To everyone's relief, Mason hadn't broken his neck or
anything else. His ankle did appear to have a nasty sprain, however, which was
probably going to limit his skiing for the rest of the trip.
One of the instructors monitoring the slopes ran
forward, fury all over her face.
"What were you kids thinking?" she
exclaimed. She turned on me. "I couldn't believe it when you did those
stupid stunts!" Her glare fixed on Mason next. "And then you had
to go ahead and copy her!"
I wanted to argue that it had all been his idea, but
blame didn't matter at this point. I was just glad he was all right. But as we
all went inside, guilt began to gnaw at me. I had acted irresponsibly. What if he'd been seriously
injured? Horrible visions danced through my mind. Mason with a broken leg … a
broken neck…
What had I been thinking? No one had made me do that
course. Mason had suggested it… but I hadn't fought back. Goodness knew I
probably could have. I might have had to endure some mockery, but Mason was
crazy enough about me that feminine wiles probably would have stopped this
madness. I'd gotten caught up in the excitement and the risk—much as I had in
kissing Dimitri—not giving enough thought to the consequences because secretly,
inside of me, that impulsive desire to be wild still lurked. Mason had it too,
and his called to me.
That
mental Dimitri voice chastised me once more.
After Mason was safely returned to the lodge and had
ice on his ankle, I carried our equipment back outside toward the storage
buildings. When I went back inside, I went through a different doorway than I
normally used. This entrance was set behind a huge, open porch with an ornate
wooden railing. The porch was built into the side of the mountain and had a
breathtaking view of the other peaks and valleys around us— if you felt like
standing around long enough in freezing temperatures to admire it. Which most
people didn't.
I walked up the steps to the porch, stomping snow off
my boots as I did. A thick scent, both spicy and sweet, hung in the air.
Something about it felt familiar, but before I could identify it, a voice
suddenly spoke to me out of the shadows.
"Hey,
little dhampir."
Startled, I realized someone was indeed standing on
the porch. A guy—a Moroi—leaned against the wall not far from the door. He
brought a cigarette up to his mouth, took a long drag, and then dropped it to
the floor. He stamped the butt out and crooked me a smile. That was the scent,
I realized. Clove cigarettes.
Warily, I stopped and crossed my arms as I took him
in. He was a little shorter than Dimitri but wasn't as lanky as some Moroi guys
ended up looking. A long, charcoal coat—probably made out of some insanely
expensive cashmere-wool blend—fit his body exceptionally well, and the leather
dress shoes he wore indicated more money still. He had brown hair that looked
like it had been purposely styled to appear a little unkempt, and his eyes were
either blue or green—I didn't have quite enough light to know for sure. His
face was cute, I supposed, and I pegged him to be a couple years older than me.
He looked like he'd just come from a dinner party.
"Yeah?"
I asked.
His eyes swept over my body. I was used to attention
from Moroi guys. It just usually wasn't so obvious. And I usually wasn't
bundled up in winter clothing and sporting a black eye.
He
shrugged. "Just saying hi, that's all."
I waited for more, but all he did was stuff his hands
into the coat's pockets. With a shrug of my own, I took a couple steps forward.
"You
smell good, you know," he suddenly said.
I stopped walking again and gave him a puzzled look,
which only made his sly smile grow a little bigger.
"I…
um, what?"
"You
smell good," he repeated.
"Are you joking? I've been sweating all day. I'm
disgusting." I wanted to walk away, but there was something eerily
compelling about this guy. Like a train wreck. I didn't find him attractive per
se; I was just suddenly interested in talking to him.
"Sweat isn't a bad thing," he said, leaning
his head against the wall and looking upward thoughtfully. "Some of the
best things in life happen while sweating. Yeah, if you get too much of it and
it gets old and stale, it turns pretty gross. But on a beautiful woman?
Intoxicating. If you could smell things like a vampire does, you'd know what
I'm talking about. Most people mess it all up and drown themselves in perfume.
Perfume can be good…especially if you get one that goes with your chemistry.
But you only need a hint. Mix about 20 percent of that with 80 percent of your
own perspiration…mmm." He tilted his head to the side and looked at me.
"Dead sexy."
I suddenly remembered Dimitri and his aftershave.
Yeah. That had been dead sexy, but I certainly wasn't going to tell this
guy about it.
"Well, thanks for the hygiene lesson," I
said. "But I don't own any perfume, and I'm going to go shower all
this hot sweaty action off me. Sorry."
He pulled out a pack of cigarettes and offered it to
me. He moved only a step closer, but it was enough for me to smell something
else on him. Alcohol. I shook my head at the cigarettes, and he tapped one out
for himself.
"Bad
habit," I said, watching him light it.
"One of many," he replied. He inhaled
deeply. "You here with St. Vlad's?"
"Yup."
"So
you're going to be a guardian when you grow up."
"Obviously."
He exhaled smoke, and I watched it drift away into the
night. Heightened vampire senses or no, it was a wonder he could smell anything
around those cloves.
"How long until you grow up?" he asked.
"I might need a guardian."
"I graduate in the spring. But I'm already spoken
for. Sorry."
Surprise
flickered in his eyes. "Yeah? Who is he?"
"She's
Vasilisa Dragomir."
"Ah." His face split into a huge grin.
"I knew you were trouble as soon as I saw you. You're Janine Hathaway's
daughter."
"I'm Rose Hathaway," I corrected, not
wanting to be defined by my mother.
"Nice to meet you, Rose Hathaway." He
extended a gloved hand to me that I hesitantly took. "Adrian
Ivashkov."
"And you think I'm trouble," I
muttered. The Ivashkovs were a royal family, one of the wealthiest and most
powerful. They were the kind of people who thought they could get anything they
wanted and walked over those in their way. No wonder he was so arrogant.
He laughed. He had a nice laugh, rich and almost
melodious. It made me think of warm caramel, dripping from a spoon.
"Handy, huh? Each of our reputations precedes us."
I shook my head. "You don't know anything about
me. And I only know of your family. I don't know anything about
you."
"Want
to?" he asked tauntingly.
"Sorry.
I'm not into older guys."
"I'm
twenty-one. Not that much older."
"I have a boyfriend." It was a small lie.
Mason certainly wasn't my boyfriend yet, but I hoped Adrian would leave me
alone if he thought I was taken.
"Funny you didn't mention that right away,"
Adrian mused. "He didn't give you that black eye, did he?"
I felt myself blushing, even in the cold. I'd been
hoping he wouldn't notice the eye, which was stupid. With his vampire eyes,
he'd probably noticed as soon as I stepped onto the porch.
"He wouldn't be alive if he did. I got it during …
practice. I mean, I'm training to be a guardian. Our classes are always
rough."
"That's pretty hot," he said. He dropped
this second cigarette to the ground and put it out with his foot.
"Punching
me in the eye?"
"Well,
no. Of course not. I meant that the idea of getting rough with you is hot. I'm a big fan of full-contact
sports."
"I'm sure you are," I said dryly. He was
arrogant and presumptuous, yet I still couldn't quite force myself to leave.
The sound of footsteps behind me made me turn. Mia
came around the path and walked up the steps. When she saw us, she stopped
suddenly.
"Hey,
Mia."
She
glanced between the two of us.
"Another guy?"
she asked. From her tone, you would have thought I had my own harem of men.
Adrian gave me a questioning, amused look. I gritted
my teeth and decided not to dignify that with a response. I opted for
uncharacteristic politeness.
"Mia,
this is Adrian Ivashkov."
Adrian turned on the same charm he'd used on me. He
shook her hand. "Always a pleasure to meet a friend of Rose's, especially
a pretty one." He spoke like he and I had known each other since
childhood.
"We
aren't friends," I said. So much for politeness.
"Rose only hangs out with guys and
psychopaths," said Mia. Her voice carried the usual scorn she harbored for
me, but there was a look on her face that showed Adrian had clearly caught her
interest.
"Well," he said cheerfully, "since I'm
both a psychopath and a guy, that would explain why we're such good
friends."
"You
and I aren't friends either," I told him.
He
laughed. "Always playing hard to get, huh?"
"She's not that hard to get," said Mia,
clearly upset that Adrian was paying more attention to me. "Just ask half
the guys at our school."
"Yeah," I retorted, "and you can ask
the other half about Mia. If you can do a favor for her, she'll do lots of
favors for you." When she'd declared war on Lissa and me, Mia had managed
to get a couple of guys to tell everyone at school that I'd done some pretty
awful things with them. The ironic thing was that she'd gotten them to lie for
her by sleeping with them herself.
A flicker of embarrassment passed over her face, but
she held her ground.
"Well,"
she said, "at least I don't do them for free."
Adrian
made some cat noises.
"Are you done?" I asked. "It's past
your bedtime, and the grown-ups would like to talk now." Mia's youthful
looks were a sore point with her, one I frequently enjoyed exploiting.
"Sure," she said crisply. Her cheeks turned
pink, intensifying her porcelain-doll appearance. "I have better things to
do anyway." She turned toward the door, then paused with her hand resting
on it. She glanced toward Adrian. "Her mom gave her that black eye, you
know."
She went inside. The fancy glass doors swung shut
behind her.
Adrian and I stood there in silence. Finally, he took
out the cigarettes again and lit another. "Your mom?"
"Shut
up."
"You're one of those people who either has soul
mates or mortal enemies, aren't you? No in-between. You and Vasilisa are
probably like sisters, huh?"
"I
guess."
"How
is she?"
"Huh?
What do you mean?"
He shrugged, and if I didn't know better, I'd have
said he was overdoing casualness. "I don't know. I mean, I know you guys
ran away…and there was that stuff with her family and Victor Dashkov…."
I
stiffened at the reference to Victor. "So?"
"Dunno. Just figured it might be a lot for her
to, you know, handle."
I studied him carefully, wondering what he was getting
at. There had been a brief leak about Lissa's fragile mental health, but it had
been well-contained. Most people had forgotten about it or assumed it was a lie.
"I've got to go." I decided avoidance was
the best tactic just now.
"Are you sure?" He sounded only mildly
disappointed. Mostly he seemed as cocky and amused as before. Something about
him still intrigued me, but whatever it was, it wasn't enough to combat
everything else I was feeling, or to risk discussing Lissa. "I thought it
was time for the grown-ups to talk. Lots of grown-up things I'd like to talk
about."
"It's late, I'm tired, and your cigarettes are
giving me a headache," I growled.
"I suppose that's fair." He drew in on the
cigarette and let out the smoke. "Some women think they make me look
sexy."
"I think you smoke them so you have something to
do while thinking up your next witty line."
He choked on the smoke, caught between inhaling and
laughing. "Rose Hathaway, I can't wait to see you again. If you're this
charming while tired and annoyed and this gorgeous while bruised and in
ski clothes, you must be devastating at your peak."
"If by 'devastating' you mean that you should
fear for your life, then yeah. You're right." I jerked open the door.
"Good night, Adrian."
"I'll
see you soon."
"Not
likely. I told you, I'm not into older guys."
I walked into the lodge. As the door closed, I just
barely heard him call behind me, "Sure, you aren't."
LISSA WAS UP AND GONE before I even stirred the next
morning, which meant I had the bathroom to myself while I got ready for the
day. I loved that bathroom. It was enormous. My king-size bed would have fit
comfortably inside it. A scalding shower with three different nozzles woke me
up, though my muscles ached from yesterday. As I stood in front of the
full-length mirror and combed my hair, I saw with some disappointment that the
bruise was still there. It was significantly lighter, however, and had turned yellowish.
Some concealer and powder almost entirely covered it up.
I headed downstairs in search of food. The dining room
was just shutting down breakfast, but one of the waitresses gave me a couple of
peach marzipan scones to go. Munching on one as I walked, I expanded my senses
to get a feel for where Lissa was. After a couple of moments, I sensed her on
the other side of the lodge, away from the student rooms. I followed the trail
until I arrived at a room on the third floor. I knocked.
Christian opened the door. "Sleeping Beauty
arrives. Welcome."
He ushered me inside. Lissa sat cross-legged on the
room's bed and smiled when she saw me. The room was as sumptuous as mine, but most of the furniture had been
shoved aside to make space, and in that open area, Tasha stood.
"Good
morning," she said.
"Hey,"
I said. So much for avoiding her.
Lissa
patted a spot beside her. "You've got to see this."
"What's going on?" I sat down on the bed and
finished the last of the scone.
"Bad
things," she said mischievously. "You'll approve."
Christian walked over to the empty space and faced
Tasha. They regarded each other, forgetting about Lissa and me. I'd apparently
interrupted something.
"So why can't I just stick with the consuming
spell?" asked Christian.
"Because it uses a lot of energy," she told
him. Even with jeans and a ponytail—and the scar—she managed to look
ridiculously cute. "Plus, it'll most likely kill your opponent."
He
scoffed. "Why wouldn't I want to kill a Strigoi?"
"You might not always be fighting one. Or maybe
you need information from them. Regardless, you should be prepared either
way."
They were practicing offensive magic, I realized.
Excitement and interest replaced the sullenness I'd acquired upon seeing Tasha.
Lissa hadn't been kidding about them doing "bad things." I'd always
suspected they were practicing offensive magic, but… wow. Thinking about it and
actually seeing it were two very different things. Using magic as a weapon was
forbidden. A punishable offense. A student experimenting with it might be forgiven and simply disciplined, but
for an adult to actively be teaching a minor…yeah. That could get Tasha in major
trouble. For half a second, I toyed with the idea of turning her in.
Immediately, I dismissed the notion. I might hate her for making moves on
Dimitri, but part of me sort of believed in what she and Christian were doing.
Plus, it was just cool.
"A
distracting spell is almost as useful," she continued.
Her blue eyes took on the intense focus I often saw
Moroi get while using magic. Her wrist flicked forward, and a streak of fire
snaked past Christian's face. It didn't touch him, but from the way he
flinched, I suspected it had been close enough for him to feel the heat.
"Try
it," she told him.
Christian hesitated for only a moment and then made
the same hand motion she had. Fire streaked out, but it had none of the finely
tuned control hers had had. He also didn't have her aim. It went straight for
her face, but before it could touch her, it parted and split around her, almost
like it had hit an invisible shield. She'd deflected it with her own magic.
"Not bad—aside from the fact you would have
burned my face off."
Even I wouldn't want her face burned off. But her hair…ah,
yes. We'd see how pretty she was without that raven-black mane.
She and Christian practiced a while longer. He
improved as time went by, though he clearly had a ways to go
before he had Tasha's skill. My interest grew and grew as they went on, and I
found myself pondering all the possibilities this kind of magic could offer.
They wrapped up their lesson when Tasha said she had
to go. Christian sighed, clearly frustrated that he hadn't been able to master
the spell in an hour. His competitive nature was almost as strong as mine.
"I still think it'd be easier to just burn them
entirely," he argued.
Tasha smiled as she brushed her hair into a tighter
ponytail. Yeah. She could definitely do without that hair, particularly
since I knew how much Dimitri liked long hair.
"Easier because it involves less focus. It's
sloppy. Your magic'll be stronger in the long run if you can learn this. And,
like I said, it has its uses."
I
didn't want to agree with her, but I couldn't help it.
"It could be really useful if you were fighting
with a guardian," I said excitedly. "Especially if completely burning
a Strigoi takes so much energy. This way, you use just a quick burst of your
strength to distract the Strigoi. And it will distract one since they
hate fire so much. Then that's all the time a guardian would need to stake
them. You could take down a whole bunch of Strigoi that way."
Tasha grinned at me. Some Moroi—like Lissa and Adrian—
smiled without showing their teeth. Tasha always showed hers, including the
fangs.
"Exactly. You and I'll have to go Strigoi hunting
someday," she teased.
"I
don't think so," I replied.
The words in and of themselves weren't that bad, but
the tone I used to deliver them certainly was. Cold. Unfriendly. Tasha looked
momentarily surprised at my abrupt change in attitude but shrugged it off.
Shock from Lissa traveled to me through the bond.
Tasha didn't seem bothered, however. She chatted with
us a bit longer and made plans to see Christian for dinner. Lissa gave me a
sharp look as she, Christian, and I walked down the elaborate spiral staircase
leading back down to the lobby.
"What
was that about?" she asked.
"What
was what about?" I asked innocently.
"Rose," she said meaningfully. It was hard
to play dumb when your friend knew you could read her mind. I knew exactly what
she was talking about. "You being a bitch to Tasha."
"I
wasn't that much of a bitch."
"You were rude," she exclaimed, stepping out
of the way of a bunch of Moroi children who came tearing through the lobby.
They were bundled up in parkas, and a weary-looking Moroi ski instructor
followed them.
I put my hands on my hips. "Look, I'm just
grumpy, okay? Didn't get much sleep. Besides, I'm not like you. I don't have to
be polite all the time."
As happened so often lately, I couldn't believe what
I'd just said. Lissa stared at me, more astonished than hurt.
Christian glowered, on the verge of snapping back at me, when Mason mercifully
approached us. He hadn't needed a cast or anything, but he had a slight limp to
his walk.
"Hey
there, Hop-Along," I said, sliding my hand into his.
Christian put his anger for me on hold and turned to
Mason. "Is it true your suicidal moves finally caught up with you?"
Mason's eyes were on me. "Is it true you were
hanging out with Adrian Ivashkov?"
"I—what?"
"I
heard you guys got drunk last night."
"You
did?" asked Lissa, startled.
I looked between both their faces. "No, of course
not! I barely know him."
"But
you do know him," pushed Mason.
"Barely."
"He's
got a bad reputation," warned Lissa.
"Yeah,"
said Christian. "He goes through a lot of girls."
I couldn't believe this. "Will you guys lay off?
I talked to him for, like, five minutes! And that's only because he was
blocking my way inside. Where are you getting all this?" Immediately, I
answered my own question. "Mia."
Mason
nodded and had the grace to look embarrassed.
"Since
when do you talk to her?" I asked.
"I
just ran into her, that's all," he told me.
"And
you believed her? You know she lies half the time."
"Yeah, but there's usually some truth in the
lies. And you did talk to him."
"Yes.
Talk. That's it."
I really had been trying to give some serious thought
about dating Mason, so I didn't appreciate him not believing me. He had
actually helped me unravel Mia's lies earlier in the school year, so I was
surprised he'd be so paranoid about them now. Maybe if his feelings really had
grown for me, he was more susceptible to jealousy.
Surprisingly, it was Christian who came to the rescue
and changed the subject. "I suppose there's no skiing today, huh?" He
pointed to Mason's ankle, immediately triggering an indignant response.
"What, you think this is going to slow me
down?" asked Mason.
His anger diminished, replaced by that burning need to
prove himself—the need he and I both shared. Lissa and Christian looked at him
like he was crazy, but I knew nothing we said would stop him.
"You guys want to come with us?" I asked
Lissa and Christian.
Lissa shook her head. "We can't. We have to go to
this luncheon being hosted by the Contas."
Christian
groaned. "Well, you have to go."
She elbowed him. "So do you. The invitation said
I get to bring a guest. Besides, this is just a warm-up for the big one."
"Which
one is that?" asked Mason.
"Priscilla Voda's huge dinner," sighed
Christian. Seeing him look so pained made me smile. "The queen's best
friend. All the snobbiest royals will be there, and I'll have to wear a
suit."
Mason flashed me a grin. His earlier antagonism was
gone. "Skiing's sounding better and better, huh? Less of a dress
code."
We left the Moroi behind and went outside. Mason
couldn't compete with me in the same way he had yesterday; his movements were
slow and awkward. Still, he did remarkably well when one considered everything.
The injury wasn't as bad as we'd feared, but he had the prudence to stick to
extremely easy runs.
The full moon hung in the blankness, a glowing sphere
of silvery white. The electric lights overpowered most of its illumination on
the ground, but here and there, in the shadows, the moon just barely managed to
cast its glow. I wished it were bright enough to reveal the surrounding
mountain range, but those peaks stayed shrouded in darkness. I'd forgotten to
look at them when it was light out earlier.
The runs were super simple for me, but I stayed with
Mason and only occasionally teased him about how his remedial skiing was
putting me to sleep. Boring runs or no, it was just nice to be outside with my
friends, and the activity stirred my blood enough to warm me against the chill
air. The light posts lit up the snow, turning it into a vast sea of white, the
flakes' crystals sparkling faintly. And if I managed to turn away and block the lights
from my field of vision, I could look up and see the stars spilling over the
sky. They stood out stark and crystalline in the clear, freezing air. We stayed
out for most of the day again, but this time, I called it quits early,
pretending to be tired so Mason could get a break. He might manage easy skiing
with his tender ankle, but I could tell it was starting to hurt him.
Mason and I headed back
toward the lodge walking very close to each other, laughing about something
we'd seen earlier. Suddenly, I saw a streak of white in my peripheral vision,
and a snowball smashed into Mason's face. I immediately went on the defensive,
jerking backward and peering around. Whoops and cries sounded from an area of
the resort grounds that held storage sheds and was interspersed with looming
pines.
"Too slow,
Ashford," someone called. "Doesn't pay to be in love."
More laughs. Mason's best
friend, Eddie Castile, and a few other novices from school materialized from
behind a cluster of trees. Beyond them, I heard more shouts.
"We'll still take you
in, though, if you want to be on our team," said Eddie. "Even if you
do dodge like a girl."
"Team?" I asked excitedly.
Back at the Academy,
throwing snowballs was strictly prohibited. School officials were inexplicably
afraid that we'd throw snowballs packed with glass shards or razor blades,
though I had no clue how they thought we'd get a hold of that kind of stuff in
the first place.
Not that a snowball fight was that rebellious,
but after all the stress I'd been through recently, throwing objects at other
people suddenly sounded like the best idea I'd heard in a while. Mason and I
dashed off with the others, the prospect of forbidden fighting giving him new
energy and causing him to forget the pain in his ankle. We set to the fight
with a die-hard zeal.
The fight soon became a matter of nailing as many
people as possible while dodging attacks from others. I was exceptional at both
and furthered the immaturity by catcalling and shouting silly insults at my
victims.
By the time someone noticed what we were doing and
yelled at us, we were all laughing and covered with snow. Mason and I once
again started back for the lodge, and our mood was so high, I knew the Adrian
thing was long forgotten.
Indeed, Mason looked at me just before we went inside.
"Sorry I, uh, jumped all over you about Adrian earlier."
I squeezed his hand. "It's okay. I know Mia can
tell some pretty convincing stories."
"Yeah…but even if you were with him…it's not like
I have any right…"
I stared at him, surprised to see his usual brash
countenance turn shy. "Don't you?" I asked.
A
smile turned up his lips. "Do I?"
Smiling back, I stepped forward and kissed him. His
lips felt amazingly warm in the freezing air. It wasn't like the
earth-shattering kiss I'd had with Dimitri before the trip, but it was sweet and nice—a friendly sort of kiss that
maybe could turn into more. At least, that was how I saw it. From the
look on Mason's face, it appeared his whole world had been rocked.
"Wow," he said, eyes wide. The moonlight
made his eyes look silvery blue.
"You see?" I said. "Nothing to worry
about. Not Adrian, not anybody."
We kissed again—a bit longer this time—before finally
dragging ourselves apart. Mason was clearly in a better mood, as well as he
should have been, and I dropped into bed with a smile on my face. I wasn't
technically sure if Mason and I were a couple now, but we were very close to
it.
But
when I slept, I dreamed about Adrian Ivashkov.
I stood with him on the porch again, only it was
summer. The air was balmy and warm, and the sun hung bright in the sky, coating
everything in golden light. I hadn't been in this much sun since living among
humans. All around, the mountains and valleys were green and alive. Birds sang
everywhere.
Adrian leaned against the porch's railing, glanced
over, and did a double-take when he saw me. "Oh. Didn't expect to see you
here." He smiled. "I was right. You are devastating when
you're cleaned up."
Instinctively,
I touched the skin around my eye.
"It's
gone," he said.
Even without being able to see it, I somehow knew he
was right. "You aren't smoking."
"Bad habit," he said. He nodded toward me.
"You scared? You're wearing a lot of protection."
I frowned, then looked down. I hadn't noticed my clothing.
I wore a pair of embroidered jeans I'd seen once but had been unable to afford.
My T-shirt was cropped, showing off my stomach, and I wore a belly-button ring.
I'd always wanted to get my belly button pierced but had never been able to
afford it. The charm I now wore here was a little silver dangly one, and
hanging at the end of it was that weird blue eye pendant my mom had given me.
Lissa's chotki was wound around my wrist.
I looked back up at Adrian, studying the way the sun
shone off his brown hair. Here, in full daylight, I could see that his eyes
were indeed green—a deep emerald as opposed to Lissa's pale jade. Something
startling suddenly occurred to me.
"Doesn't
all this sun bother you?"
He
gave a lazy shrug. "Nah. It's my dream."
"No,
it's my dream."
"Are
you sure?" His smile returned.
I
felt confused. "I… I don't know."
He chuckled, but a moment later, the laugher faded.
For the first time since I'd met him, he looked serious. "Why do you have
so much darkness around you?"
I
frowned. "What?"
"You're surrounded in blackness." His eyes
studied me shrewdly, but not in a checking-me-out sort of way. "I've never seen anyone like you. Shadows everywhere. I
never would have guessed it. Even while you're standing here, the shadows keep
growing."
I looked down at my hands but saw nothing out of the
ordinary. I glanced back up. "I'm shadow-kissed…."
"What's
that mean?"
"I died once." I'd never talked to anyone
other than Lissa and Victor Dashkov about that, but this was a dream. It didn't
matter. "And I came back."
Wonder
lit his face. "Ah, interesting…"
I
woke up.
Someone was shaking me. It was Lissa. Her feelings hit
me so hard through the bond that I briefly snapped into her mind and found
myself looking at me. "Weird" didn't begin to cover it. I pulled back
into myself, trying to sift through the terror and alarm coming from her.
"What's
wrong?"
"There's
been another Strigoi attack."
I WAS OUT OF BED in a flash. We found the entire lodge
abuzz with the news. People clustered in small groups in the halls. Family
members sought each other out. Some conversations were conducted in terrified
whispers; some were loud and easy to overhear. I stopped a few people, trying
to get the story straight. Everyone had a different version of what had
happened, though, and some wouldn't even pause to talk. They hurried past,
either seeking out loved ones or preparing to leave the resort, convinced there
might be a safer place elsewhere.
Frustrated with the differing stories, I finally—reluctantly—knew
I had to seek out one of the two sources who would give me solid information.
My mother or Dimitri. It was like flipping a coin. I wasn't really thrilled
with either one of them right now. I debated momentarily and finally decided on
my mother, seeing as how she wasn't getting it on with Tasha Ozera.
The door to my mother's room was ajar, and as Lissa
and I entered, I saw that a sort of makeshift headquarters had been established
here. Lots of guardians were milling around, moving in and out, and discussing
strategy. A few gave us odd looks, but no one stopped or questioned us. Lissa
and I slid onto a small sofa to listen to a conversation my
mother was having.
She stood with a group of guardians, one of whom was
Dimitri. So much for avoiding him. His brown eyes glanced at me briefly and I
averted my gaze. I didn't want to deal with my troubled feelings for him right
now.
Lissa and I soon discerned the details. Eight Moroi
had been killed along with their five guardians. Three Moroi were missing,
either dead or turned Strigoi. The attack hadn't really happened near here; it
had been somewhere in northern California. Nonetheless, a tragedy like this
couldn't help but reverberate within the Moroi world, and for some, two states
away was far too close. People were terrified, and I soon learned what in
particular made this attack so notable.
"There
had to be more than last time," said my mother.
"More?" exclaimed one of the other
guardians. "That last group was unheard of. I still can't believe nine
Strigoi managed to work together—you expect me to believe they managed to get
more organized still?"
"Yes,"
snapped my mother.
"Any
evidence of humans?" someone else asked.
My mother hesitated, then: "Yes. More broken
wards. And the way it was all conducted…it's identical to the Badica
attack."
Her voice was hard, but there was a kind of weariness
in it, too. It wasn't physical exhaustion, though. It was mental, I realized.
Strain and hurt over what they were talking about. I always thought of my mother as some sort of
unfeeling killing machine, but this was clearly hard for her. It was a hard,
ugly matter to discuss—but at the same time, she was tackling it without
hesitation. It was her duty.
A lump formed in my throat that I quickly swallowed
down. Humans. Identical to the Badica attack. Ever since that massacre, we'd
extensively analyzed the oddity of such a large group of Strigoi teaming up and
recruiting humans. We'd spoken in vague terms about "if something like this
ever happens again …" But no one had seriously talked about this group—the
Badica killers—doing it again. One time was a fluke—maybe a bunch of Strigoi
had happened to gather and impulsively decided to go on a raid. It was
horrible, but we could write that off.
But now…now it looked as though that group of Strigoi
hadn't been a random occurrence. They'd united with purpose, utilized humans
strategically, and had attacked again. We now had what could be a pattern:
Strigoi actively seeking out large groups of prey. Serial killings. We could no
longer trust the protective magic of the wards. We couldn't even trust
sunlight. Humans could move around in the day, scouting and sabotaging. The
light was no longer safe.
I remembered what I'd said to Dimitri at the Badica
house: This
changes everything, doesn't it?
My mother flipped through some papers on a clipboard.
"They don't have forensic details yet, but the same number of Strigoi
couldn't have done this. None of the Drozdovs or their staff escaped. With five guardians, seven Strigoi
would have been preoccupied—at least temporarily—for some to escape. We're
looking at nine or ten, maybe."
"Janine's right," said Dimitri. "And if
you look at the venue…it's too big. Seven couldn't have covered it."
The Drozdovs were one of the twelve royal families.
They were large and prosperous, not like Lissa's dying clan. They had plenty of
family members to go around, but obviously, an attack like this was still
horrible. Furthermore, something about them tickled my brain. There was
something I should remember … something I should know about the Drozdovs.
While part of my mind puzzled that out, I watched my
mother with fascination. I'd listened to her tell her stories. I'd seen and felt
her fight. But really, truly, I'd never seen her in action in a real-life
crisis. She showed every bit of that hard control she did around me, but here,
I could see how necessary it was. A situation like this created panic. Even
among the guardians, I could sense those who were so keyed up that they wanted
to do something drastic. My mother was a voice of reason, a reminder that they
had to stay focused and fully assess the situation. Her composure calmed
everybody; her strong manner inspired them. This, I realized, was how a leader
behaved.
Dimitri
was just as collected as she was, but he deferred to her to run things. I had
to remind myself sometimes that he was young as far as guardians went. They
discussed the attack more, how the Drozdovs had been having a belated Christmas party in a banquet hall when they were
attacked.
"First Badicas, now Drozdovs," muttered one
guardian. "They're going after royals."
"They're going after Moroi," said Dimitri
flatly. "Royal. Non-royal. It doesn't matter."
Royal. Non-royal. I suddenly knew why the Drozdovs
were important. My spontaneous instincts wanted me to jump up and ask a
question right now, but I knew better. This was the real deal. This was no time
for irrational behavior. I wanted to be as strong as my mother and Dimitri, so I
waited for the discussion to end.
When the group started to break up, I leapt up off the
sofa and pushed my way toward my mother.
"Rose," she said, surprised. Like in Stan's
class, she hadn't noticed me in the room. "What are you doing here?"
It was such a stupid question, I didn't try to answer
it. What did she think I was doing here? This was one of the biggest things to
happen to the Moroi.
I
pointed to her clipboard. "Who else was killed?"
Irritation
wrinkled her forehead. "Drozdovs."
"But
who else?"
"Rose,
we don't have time—"
"They had staff, right? Dimitri said non-royals.
Who were they?"
Again, I saw the weariness in her. She took these
deaths hard. "I don't know all the names." Flipping through a few
pages, she turned the clipboard toward me. "There."
I
scanned the list. My heart sank.
"Okay,"
I told her. "Thanks."
Lissa and I left them to go about their business. I
wished I could have helped, but the guardians ran smoothly and efficiently on
their own; they had no need for novices underfoot.
"What was that about?" asked Lissa, once we
were heading back to the main part of the lodge.
"The Drozdovs' staff," I said. "Mia's
mom worked for them…."
Lissa
gasped. "And?"
I
sighed. "And her name was on the list."
"Oh God." Lissa stopped walking. She stared
off into space, blinking back tears. "Oh God," she repeated.
I moved in front of her and placed my hands on her
shoulders. She was shaking.
"It's okay," I said. Her fear came to me in
waves, but it was a numbed fear. Shock. "This is going to be okay."
"You heard them," she said. "There's a
band of Strigoi organizing and attacking us! How many? Are they coming
here?"
"No," I said firmly. I had no evidence of
that, of course. "We're safe here."
"Poor
Mia …"
There was nothing I could say to that. I thought Mia
was an absolute bitch, but I wouldn't wish this on anyone, not even my worst
enemy—which, technically, she was. Immediately, I corrected that thought. Mia
wasn't my worst enemy.
I couldn't bear to leave Lissa's side for the rest of
the day. I knew there were no Strigoi lurking in the lodge, but my protective
instincts ran too strong. Guardians protected their Moroi. Like usual, I also
worried about her being anxious and upset, so I did my best to diffuse those
feelings.
The other guardians provided reassurance for Moroi
too. They didn't walk side by side with the Moroi, but they reinforced lodge
security and stayed in constant communication with guardians at the scene of
the attack. Information flowed in all day about the grisly specifics, as well
as speculation about where the band of Strigoi was. Little of this was shared
with novices, of course.
While the guardians did what they did best, the Moroi
also did what they—unfortunately—did best: talk.
With so many royals and other important Moroi at the
lodge, a meeting was organized that night to discuss what had happened and what
might be done in the future. Nothing official would be decided here; the Moroi
had a queen and a governing council elsewhere for those types of decisions.
Everyone knew, though, that opinions gathered here would make their way up the
chain of command. Our future safety could very well depend on what was
discussed in this meeting.
It was held in an enormous banquet hall inside the lodge,
one with a podium and plenty of seating. Despite the businesslike atmosphere,
you could tell this room had been designed for things other than meetings about
massacres and defense. The carpet had the texture of velvet and
showed an ornate floral design in shades of silver and black. The chairs were
made of black polished wood and had high backs, clearly intended for fancy
dining. Paintings of long-dead Moroi royalty hung on the walls. I stared
briefly at one of a queen whose name I didn't know. She wore an old-fashioned
dress—too heavy on lace for my tastes—and had pale hair like Lissa's.
Some guy I didn't know was in charge of moderating and
stood at the podium. Most of the royals on hand gathered at the front of the
room. Everyone else, including students, took seats wherever they could.
Christian and Mason had found Lissa and me by that point, and we all started to
sit in the back when Lissa suddenly shook her head.
"I'm
going to sit in the front."
The three of us stared at her. I was too dumbfounded to
probe her mind.
"Look." She pointed. "The royals are
sitting up there, sitting by family."
It was true. Members of the same clans had clustered
near each other: Badicas, Ivashkovs, Zekloses, etc. Tasha sat there as well,
but she was by herself. Christian was the only other Ozera there.
"I
need to be up there," said Lissa.
"No
one expects you to be there," I told her.
"I
have to represent the Dragomirs."
Christian
scoffed. "It's all a bunch of royal bullshit."
Her face set into a determined expression. "I need
to be up there."
I opened myself up to Lissa's feelings and liked what
I found. She'd spent most of the day quiet and afraid, much as she had when
we'd found out about Mia's mom. That fear was within her still, but it was
overpowered by a steady confidence and determination. She recognized that she
was one of the ruling Moroi, and as much as the idea of roving bands of Strigoi
scared her, she wanted to do her part.
"You should do it," I said softly. I also
liked the idea of her defying Christian.
Lissa met my eyes and smiled. She knew what I had
sensed. A moment later, she turned to Christian. "You should join your
aunt."
Christian opened his mouth to protest. If not for the
horribleness of the situation, seeing Lissa order him around would have been funny.
He was always stubborn and difficult; those who tried to push him didn't
succeed. Watching his face, I saw the same realization I'd had about Lissa come
over him. He liked seeing her strong too. He pressed his lips together in a
grimace.
"Okay." He caught her hand, and the two of
them walked off toward the front.
Mason and I sat down. Just before things started,
Dimitri sat down on the other side of me, hair tied behind his neck and the
leather coat draping around him as he settled in the chair. I glanced at him in
surprise but said nothing. There were few guardians at
this gathering; most were too busy doing damage control. It would figure. There
I was, stuck between both of my men.
The meeting kicked off shortly thereafter. Everyone
was eager to talk about how they thought the Moroi should be saved, but really,
two theories got the most attention.
"The answer's all around us," said one
royal, once he'd been given leave to speak. He stood by his chair and looked
around the room. "Here. In places like this lodge. And St.
Vladimir's. We send our children to safe places, places where they have safety
in numbers and can be easily guarded. And look how many of us made it here,
children and adults alike. Why don't we live this way all the time?"
"Plenty
of us already do," someone shouted back.
The man waved that off. "A couple of families
here and there. Or a town with a large Moroi population. But those Moroi are
still decentralized. Most don't pool their resources—their guardians, their
magic. If we could emulate this model…" He spread his hands out. "…
we'd never have to worry about Strigoi again."
"And Moroi could never interact with the rest of
the world again," I muttered. "Well, until humans discovered secret
vampire cities sprouting up in the wilderness. Then we'd have lots of
interactions."
The other theory about how to protect the Moroi
involved fewer logistical problems but had greater personal impact—
particularly for me.
"The problem is simply that we don't have enough
guardians." This plan's advocate was some woman from the Szelsky clan.
"And so, the answer is simple: get more. The Drozdovs had five
guardians, and that wasn't enough. Only six to protect over a dozen Moroi!
That's unacceptable. It's no wonder these kinds of things keep happening."
"Where do you propose getting more guardians
from?" asked the man who'd been in favor of Moroi banding together.
"They're kind of a limited resource."
She pointed to where I and a few other novices sat.
"We've got plenty already. I've watched them train. They're deadly. Why
are we waiting until they turn eighteen? If we accelerated the training program
and focused more on combat training than bookwork, we could turn out new
guardians when they're sixteen."
Dimitri made a sound low in his throat that didn't
seem happy. Leaning forward, he placed his elbows on his knees and rested his
chin in his hands, eyes narrowed in thought.
"Not only that, we have plenty of potential
guardians going to waste. Where are all the dhampir women? Our races are
intertwined. The Moroi are doing their part to help the dhampirs survive. Why
aren't these women doing theirs? Why aren't they here?"
A
long, sultry laugh came as an answer. All eyes turned toward Tasha Ozera.
Whereas many of the other royals had dressed up, she was easy and casual. She
wore her usual jeans, a white tank top that showed a bit of midriff, and a blue, lacy knit cardigan that came to her knees.
Glancing
at the moderator, she asked, "May I?"
He nodded. The Szelsky woman sat down; Tasha stood up.
Unlike the other speakers, she strode right up to the podium, so she could be
clearly seen by everyone. Her glossy black hair was pulled back into a
ponytail, completely exposing her scars in a way I suspected was intentional.
Her face was bold and defiant. Beautiful.
"Those women aren't here, Monica, because they're
too busy raising their children—you know, the ones you want to start sending
out to the fronts as soon as they can walk. And please don't insult us all by
acting like the Moroi do a huge favor to the dhampirs by helping them
reproduce. Maybe it's different in your family, but for the rest of us, sex is
fun. The Moroi doing it with dhampirs aren't really making that big of a
sacrifice."
Dimitri had straightened up now, his expression no
longer angry. Probably he was excited that his new girlfriend had mentioned
sex. Irritation shot through me, and I hoped that if I had a homicidal look on
my face, people would assume it was for Strigoi and not the woman currently
addressing us.
Beyond Dimitri, I suddenly noticed Mia sitting by
herself, farther down the row. I hadn't realized she was here. She was slumped
in her seat. Her eyes were red-rimmed, her face paler than usual. A funny ache
burned in my chest, one I'd never expected her to bring about.
"And the reason we're waiting for these guardians
to turn eighteen is so that we can allow them to enjoy some
pretense of a life before forcing them to spend the rest of their days in
constant danger. They need those extra years to develop mentally as well as
physically. Pull them out before they're ready, treat them like they're parts
on an assembly line—and you're just creating Strigoi fodder."
A few people gasped at Tasha's callous choice of
words, but she succeeded in getting everyone's attention.
"You create more fodder still if you try making
the other dhampir women become guardians. You can't force them into that life
if they don't want it. This entire plan of yours to get more guardians relies
on throwing children and the unwilling into harm's way, just so you
can—barely—stay one step ahead of the enemy. I would have said it's the
stupidest plan I've ever heard, if I hadn't already had to listen to his."
She pointed at the first speaker, the one who had
wanted Moroi compounds. Embarrassment clouded his features.
"Enlighten us then, Natasha," he said.
"Tell us what you think we should do, seeing as you have so much
experience with Strigoi."
A thin smile played on Tasha's lips, but she didn't
rise to the insult. "What do I think?" She strode closer to the
stage's front, gazing at us as she answered his question. "I think we
should stop coming up with plans that involve us relying on someone or
something to protect us. You think there are too few guardians? That's not the
problem. The problem is there are too many Strigoi. And we've let them multiply
and become more powerful because we do nothing about them except
have stupid arguments like this. We run and hide behind the dhampirs and let
the Strigoi go unchecked. It's our fault. We are the reason those
Drozdovs died. You want an army? Well, here we are. Dhampirs aren't the only
ones who can learn to fight. The question, Monica, isn't where the dhampir
women are in this fight. The question is: Where are we?"
Tasha was shouting by now, and the exertion turned her
cheeks pink. Her eyes shone with her impassioned feelings, and when combined
with the rest of her pretty features—and even with the scar—she made a striking
figure. Most people couldn't take their eyes off her. Lissa watched Tasha with
wonder, inspired by her words. Mason looked hypnotized. Dimitri looked impressed.
And farther past him …
Farther past him was Mia. Mia no longer hunched in her
chair. She was sitting up straight, straight as a stick, her eyes as wide as
they could go. She stared at Tasha as though she alone held all the answers to
life.
Monica Szelsky looked less awed, and she fixed her
gaze on Tasha. "Surely you aren't suggesting the Moroi fight alongside the
guardians when the Strigoi come?"
Tasha regarded her levelly. "No. I'm suggesting
the Moroi and the guardians go fight the Strigoi before they come."
A guy in his twenties who looked like a Ralph Lauren
spokesmodel shot up. I would have wagered money he was royal. No one else could
have afforded blond highlights that perfect. He untied an expensive sweater
from around his
waist and draped it over the back of his
chair. "Oh," he said in a mocking voice, speaking out of turn.
"So, you're going to just give us clubs and stakes and send us off to do
battle?"
Tasha shrugged. "If that's what it takes, Andrew,
then sure." A sly smile crossed her pretty lips. "But there are other
weapons we can learn to use, too. Ones the guardians can't."
The look on his face showed how insane he thought that
idea was. He rolled his eyes. "Oh yeah? Like what?"
Her
smile turned into a full-fledged grin. "Like this."
She waved her hand, and the sweater he'd placed on the
back of his chair burst into flames.
He yelped in surprise and knocked it to the floor,
stamping it out with his feet.
There was a brief, collective intake of breath
throughout the room. And then … chaos broke out.
PEOPLE STOOD UP AND SHOUTED, everyone wanting their
opinion to be heard. As it was, most of them held the same view: Tasha was
wrong. They told her she was crazy. They told her that in sending out Moroi and
dhampirs to fight the Strigoi, she'd be expediting the extinction of both
races. They even had the nerve to suggest that that was Tasha's plan all
along—that she was somehow collaborating with the Strigoi in all of this.
Dimitri stood up, disgust all over his features as he
surveyed the chaos. "You might as well leave. Nothing useful's going to
happen now."
Mason and I rose, but he shook his head when I started
to follow Dimitri out.
"You
go on," said Mason. "I want to check something out."
I glanced at the standing, arguing people. I shrugged.
"Good luck."
I couldn't believe it had only been a few days since
I'd spoken to Dimitri. Stepping out into the hall with him, I felt like it'd
been years. Being with Mason these last couple of days had been fantastic, but
seeing Dimitri again, all of my old feelings for him came rushing back.
Suddenly, Mason seemed like a child. My distress over the Tasha situation also
came back, and stupid words fell out of my mouth before I could
stop them.
"Shouldn't you be in there protecting
Tasha?" I asked. "Before the mob gets her? She's going to get in big
trouble for using magic like that."
He
raised an eyebrow. "She can take care of herself."
"Yeah, yeah, because she's a badass karate magic
user. I get all that. I just figured since you're going to be her guardian and
all…"
"Where
did you hear that?"
"I have my sources." Somehow, saying I'd
heard it from my mom sounded less cool. "You've decided to, right? I mean,
it sounds like a good deal, seeing as she's going to give you fringe benefits…."
He gave me a level look. "What happens between
her and me is none of your business," he replied crisply.
The words between her and me stung. It sounded
like he and Tasha were a done deal. And, as often happened when I was hurt, my
temper and attitude took over.
"Well, I'm sure you guys'll be happy together.
She's just your type, too—I know how much you like women who aren't your own
age. I mean, she's what, six years older than you? Seven? And I'm seven years
younger than you."
"Yes," he said after several moments of
silence. "You are. And every second this conversation goes on, you only
prove how young you really are."
Whoa. My jaw almost hit the floor. Not even my mother punching me had hurt as badly as that. For a
heartbeat, I thought I saw regret in his eyes, like he too realized just how
harsh his words had been. But the moment passed, and his expression was hard
once more.
"Little
dhampir," a voice suddenly said nearby.
Slowly, still stunned, I turned toward Adrian
Ivashkov. He grinned at me and gave a brief nod of acknowledgment to Dimitri. I
suspected my face was bright red. How much had Adrian heard?
He held up his hands in a casual gesture. "I
don't want to interrupt or anything. Just wanted to talk to you when you have
time."
I wanted to tell Adrian I didn't have time to play
whatever game he was into now, but Dimitri's words still smarted. He was
looking at Adrian now in a very disapproving way. I suspected he, like everyone
else, had heard about Adrian's bad reputation. Good, I thought. I
suddenly wanted him to be jealous. I wanted to hurt him as much as he'd hurt me
lately.
Swallowing my pain, I unearthed my man-eating smile,
one I hadn't used to full effect in sometime. I walked over to Adrian and put a
hand on his arm.
"I've got time now." I gave a nod of my own
to Dimitri and steered Adrian away, walking close to him. "See you later,
Guardian Belikov."
Dimitri's dark eyes followed us stonily. Then I turned
away and didn't look back.
"Not into older guys, huh?" asked Adrian
once we were alone.
"You're imagining things," I said.
"Clearly, my stunning beauty has clouded your mind."
He
laughed that nice laugh of his. "That's entirely possible."
I started to step back, but he tossed an arm around
me. "No, no, you wanted to play chummy with me—now you've got to see it
through."
I rolled my eyes at him and let the arm stay. I could
smell alcohol on him as well as the perpetual smell of cloves. I wondered if he
was drunk now. I had the feeling that there was probably little difference
between his attitudes drunk or sober.
"What
do you want?" I asked.
He studied me for a moment. "I want you to grab
Vasilisa and come with me. We're going to have some fun. You'll probably want a
swimsuit too." He seemed disappointed by the admission of this.
"Unless you want to go naked."
"What? A bunch of Moroi and dhampirs just got
slaughtered, and you want to go swimming and 'have fun'?"
"It's not just swimming," he said patiently.
"Besides, that slaughter is exactly why you should go do this."
Before I could argue that, I saw my friends round the
corner: Lissa, Mason, and Christian. Eddie Castile was with the group, which shouldn't
have surprised me, but Mia was as well—which certainly did surprise me. They
were deep in conversation, though they all stopped talking when they saw me.
"There
you are," said Lissa, a puzzled look on her face.
I remembered Adrian's arm was still around me. I
stepped out of it. "Hey, guys," I said. A moment of awkwardness hung
around us, and I was pretty sure I heard a low chuckle from Adrian. I beamed at
him and then my friends. "Adrian invited us to go swimming."
They stared at me in surprise, and I could almost see
the wheels of speculation turning in their heads. Mason's face darkened a
little, but like the others, he said nothing. I stifled a groan.
Adrian took me inviting the others to his secret
interlude pretty well. With his easygoing attitude, I hadn't really expected
anything else. Once we had swimsuits, we followed his directions to a doorway
in one of the far wings of the lodge. It held a staircase that led down—and
down and down. I nearly got dizzy as we wound around and around. Electric
lights hung in the walls, but as we went farther, the painted walls changed to
carved stone.
When we reached our destination, we discovered Adrian
had been right—it wasn't just swimming. We were in a special spa area of the
resort, one used only for the most elite Moroi. In this case, it was reserved
for a bunch of royals I assumed were Adrian's friends. There were about thirty
others, all his age or older, who bore the marks of wealth and elitism.
The spa consisted of a series of hot mineral pools.
Maybe once they'd been in a cave or something, but the lodge builders had long
since gotten rid of any sort of rustic surroundings. The black stone walls and
ceiling were as polished and beautiful as anything else in the resort. It was
like being in a cave—a really nice, designer cave. Racks of towels lined the
walls, as did tables full of exotic food. The baths matched the rest of the
room's hewn-out décor: stone-lined pools
containing hot water that was heated from some underground source. Steam filled
the room, and a faint, metallic smell hung in the air. Sounds of partygoers
laughing and splashing echoed around us.
"Why is Mia with
you?" I asked Lissa softly. We were winding our way through the room,
looking for a pool that wasn't occupied.
"She was talking to
Mason when we were getting ready to leave," she returned. She kept her
voice just as quiet. "It seemed mean to just… I don't know … leave her …"
Even I agreed with that.
Obvious signs of grief were written all over her face, but Mia seemed at least
momentarily distracted by whatever Mason was telling her.
"I thought you didn't
know Adrian," Lissa added. Disapproval hung in her voice and in the bond.
We finally found a large pool, a little out of the way. A guy and a girl were
on the opposite side, all over each other, but there was plenty of room for the
rest of us. They were easy to ignore.
I put a foot into the water and pulled it back
immediately.
"I don't," I told
her. Cautiously, I inched the foot back in, slowly followed by the rest of my
body. When I got to my stomach, I grimaced. I had on a maroon bikini, and the
scalding water caught my stomach by surprise.
"You
must know him a little. He invited you to a party."
"Yeah,
but do you see him with us now?"
She followed my gaze. Adrian stood on the far side of
the room with a group of girls in bikinis much smaller than mine. One was a
Betsey Johnson suit I'd seen in a magazine and coveted. I sighed and looked
away.
We'd all slipped into the water by then. It was so hot
I felt like I was in a soup kettle. Now that Lissa seemed convinced of my
innocence with Adrian, I tuned into the others' discussion.
"What are you talking about?" I interrupted.
It was easier than listening and figuring it out myself.
"The meeting," said Mason excitedly.
Apparently, he'd gotten over seeing me and Adrian together.
Christian had settled onto a small shelf in the pool.
Lissa curled up beside him. Putting a proprietary arm around her, he tipped his
back so it rested on the edge.
"Your boyfriend wants to lead an army against the
Strigoi," he told me. I could tell he was saying it to provoke me.
I looked at Mason questioningly. It wasn't worth the
effort to challenge the "boyfriend" comment.
"Hey, it was your aunt who suggested
it," Mason reminded Christian.
"She only said we should find the Strigoi before
they find us again," countered Christian. "She wasn't pushing for
novices fighting. That was Monica Szelsky."
A waitress came by then with a tray of pink drinks.
These were in elegant, long-stemmed crystal glasses with sugared rims. I had a strong suspicion the drinks were
alcoholic, but I doubted anyone who made it into this party was going to get
carded. I had no idea what they were. Most of my experiences with alcohol had
involved cheap beer. I took a glass and turned back to Mason.
"You think that's a good idea?" I asked him.
I sipped the drink, cautiously. As a guardian in training, I felt like I should
always be on alert, but tonight I once again felt like being rebellious. The
drink tasted like punch. Grapefruit juice. Something sweet, like strawberries.
I was still pretty sure there was alcohol in it, but it didn't appear strong
enough for me to lose sleep over.
Another waitress soon appeared with a tray of food. I
eyed it and recognized almost nothing. There was something that looked vaguely
like mushrooms stuffed with cheese, as well as something else that looked
little round patties of meat or sausage. As a good carnivore, I reached for
one, thinking it couldn't be that bad.
"It's foie gras," said Christian. There was
a smile on his face I didn't like.
I
eyed him warily. "What's that?"
"You don't know?" His tone was cocky, and
for once in his life, he sounded like a true royal touting his elite knowledge
over us underlings. He shrugged. "Take a chance. Find out."
Lissa
sighed in exasperation. "It's goose liver."
I jerked my hand back. The waitress moved on, and
Christian laughed. I glared at him.
Meanwhile, Mason was still hung up on my question
about whether novices going to battle before graduation was a good idea.
"What else are we doing?" he asked
indignantly. "What are you doing? You run laps with Belikov every
morning. What's that doing for you? For the Moroi?"
What was that doing for me? Making my heart race and
my mind have indecent thoughts.
"We
aren't ready," I said instead.
"We've
only got six more months," piped in Eddie.
Mason nodded his agreement. "Yeah. How much more
can we learn?"
"Plenty," I said, thinking of how much I'd
picked up from my tutoring sessions with Dimitri. I finished my drink.
"Besides, where does it stop? Let's say they end school six months early,
then send us off. What next? They decide to push back further and cut our
senior year? Our junior year?"
He shrugged. "I'm not afraid to fight. I could
have taken on Strigoi when I was a sophomore."
"Yeah,"
I said dryly. "Just like you did skiing on that slope."
Mason's face, already flushed from the heat, turned
redder still. I immediately regretted my words, particularly when Christian
started laughing.
"Never thought I'd live to see the day when I agreed
with you, Rose. But sadly, I do." The cocktail waitress came by again, and
both Christian and I took new drinks. "The Moroi have got to start helping
us defend themselves."
"With magic?" asked Mia suddenly.
It was the first time she'd
spoken since we'd got here. Silence met her. I think Mason and Eddie didn't
respond because they knew nothing about fighting with magic. Lissa, Christian,
and I did—and were trying very hard to act like we didn't. There was a funny
sort of hope in Mia's eyes, though, and I could only imagine what she'd gone
through today. She'd woken up to learn her mother was dead and then been
subjected to hours and hours of political bantering and battle strategies. The
fact that she was sitting here at all seeming semi-composed was a miracle. I
assumed people who actually liked their mothers would barely be able to
function in that situation.
When no one else looked like
they were going to answer her, I finally said, "I suppose. But… I don't
know much about that."
I finished the rest of my
drink and averted my eyes, hoping someone else would take up the conversation.
They didn't. Mia looked disappointed but said no more when Mason switched back
to the Strigoi debate.
I took a third drink and
sank into the water as far as I reasonably could and still hold the glass. This
drink was different. It looked chocolatey and had whipped cream on top. I took
a taste and definitely detected the bite of alcohol. Still, I figured the
chocolate probably diluted it.
When I was ready for a
fourth drink, the waitress was nowhere in sight. Mason seemed really, really
cute to me all of
a sudden. I would have liked a little
romantic attention from him, but he was still going on about Strigoi and the
logistics of leading a strike in the middle of the day. Mia and Eddie were
nodding along with him eagerly, and I got the feeling that if he decided to
hunt Strigoi right now, they'd follow. Christian was actually joining the talk,
but it was more to play devil's advocate. Typical. He thought a sort of
preemptive strike would require guardians and Moroi, much as Tasha had
said. Mason, Mia, and Eddie argued that if the Moroi weren't up to it, the
guardians should take matters into their own hands.
I confess, their enthusiasm was kind of contagious. I
rather liked the idea of getting the drop on Strigoi. But in the Badica and
Drozdov attacks, all of the guardians had been killed. Admittedly the Strigoi
had organized into huge groups and had help, but all that told me was that our
side needed to be extra careful.
His cuteness aside, I didn't want to listen to Mason
talk about his battle skills anymore. I wanted another drink. I stood up and
climbed over the edge of the pool. To my astonishment, the world started
spinning. I'd had that happen before when I got out of baths or hot tubs too
quickly, but when things didn't right themselves, I realized those drinks might
have been stronger than I thought.
I also decided a fourth wasn't such a good idea, but I
didn't want to get back in and let everyone know I was drunk. I headed off
toward a side room I'd seen the waitress disappear into. I hoped maybe there
was a secret stash of desserts somewhere, chocolate mousse
instead of goose liver. As I walked, I paid special attention to the slippery
floor, thinking that falling into one of the pools and cracking my skull would
definitely cost me coolness points.
I was paying so much attention to my feet and trying
not to stagger that I walked into someone. To my credit, it'd been his fault;
he'd backed into me.
"Hey,
watch it," I said, steadying myself.
But he wasn't paying attention to me. His eyes were on
another guy, a guy with a bloody nose.
I'd
walked right into the middle of a fight.
TWO GUYS I'D NEVER MET before were squaring off
against each other. They looked to be in their twenties, and neither noticed
me. The one who'd bumped into me shoved the other one hard, forcing him to
stagger back considerably.
"You're afraid!" yelled the guy by me. He
had on green swimming trunks, and his black hair was slicked back with water.
"You're all afraid. You just want to hole up in your mansions and let the
guardians do your dirty work. What are you going to do when they're all dead?
Who'll protect you then?"
The other guy wiped the blood off his face with the
back of his hand. I suddenly recognized him—thanks to his blond highlights. He
was the royal who'd yelled at Tasha about wanting to lead Moroi to battle.
She'd called him Andrew. He tried to land a hit and failed; his technique was
all wrong. "This is the safest way. Listen to that Strigoi-lover, and
we'll all be dead. She's trying to kill our whole race off!"
"She's
trying to save us!"
"She's
trying to get us to use black magic!"
The
"Strigoi-lover" had to be Tasha. The non-royal guy was the first
person outside of my little circle whom I'd ever heard speak in her favor. I
wondered how many others out there shared his view. He punched Andrew again,
and my base instincts—or maybe the punch—made me leap into action.
I sprang forward and wedged myself between them. I was
still dizzy and a bit unsteady. If they hadn't been standing so close, I
probably would have fallen over. They both hesitated, clearly caught off guard.
"Get
out of here," snapped Andrew.
Being male and Moroi, they had greater height and
weight than I, but I was probably stronger than either one alone. Hoping I
could make the most of that, I grabbed each of them by the arm, pulled them
toward me, and then shoved them away as hard as I could. They staggered, not
having expected my strength. I staggered a little too.
The non-royal glared and took a step toward me. I was
counting on the fact that he'd be old-fashioned and not hit a girl. "What
are you doing?" he exclaimed. Several people had gathered and were
watching excitedly.
I
returned his glare. "I'm trying to stop you guys from being any more
idiotic than you already are! You want to help? Stop fighting each other!
Ripping each other's heads off isn't going to save the Moroi unless you're
trying to thin stupidity out of the gene pool." I pointed at Andrew.
"Tasha Ozera is not trying to kill everyone off. She's trying to
get you to stop being a victim." I turned to the other guy. "And as
for you, you've got a long ways to go if you think this is the way to get your
point across. Magic—especially offensive magic—takes a lot of self-control, and
so far, you aren't impressing me with yours. I have more than you do,
and if you knew me at all, you'd know how crazy that
is."
The two guys stared at me, stunned. I was apparently
more effective than a taser. Well, at least for several seconds I was. Because
once the shock of my words wore off, they went at each other again. I got
caught in the crossfire and shoved away, nearly falling in the process.
Suddenly, from behind me, Mason came to my defense. He punched the first guy he
could—the non-royal.
The guy flew backward, falling into one of the pools
with a splash. I yelped, remembering my earlier fear about skull-cracking, but
a moment later, he found his feet and rubbed water out of his eyes.
I grabbed Mason's arm, trying to hold him back, but he
shrugged me off and went after Andrew. He shoved Andrew hard, pushing him into
several Moroi—andrew's friends, I suspected—who seemed to be trying to break up
the fight. The guy in the pool climbed out, fury written all over his face, and
made moves toward Andrew. This time, both Mason and I blocked his way. He
glared at all of us.
"Don't,"
I warned him.
The guy clenched his fists and looked as though he
might try to take us on. But we were intimidating, and he didn't appear to have
an entourage of friends here like Andrew— who was shouting obscenities and
being led away—did. With a few muttered threats, the non-royal backed off.
As soon as he was gone, I turned on Mason. "Are
you out of your mind?"
"Huh?"
he asked.
"Jumping
into the middle of that!"
"You
jumped in too," he said.
I started to argue, then realized he was right.
"It's different," I grumbled.
He
leaned forward. "Are you drunk?"
"No. Of
course not. I'm just trying to keep you from doing something stupid. Just
because you have delusions of being able to kill a Strigoi doesn't mean you
have to take it out on everyone else."
"Delusions?"
he asked stiffly.
I started to feel kind of nauseous just then. My head
spinning, I continued toward the side room, hoping I didn't stumble.
But when I reached it, I saw that it wasn't some kind
of dessert or drink room after all. Well, at least not in the way I'd been thinking.
It was a feeder room. Several humans reclined on satin-covered chaise lounges
with Moroi by their sides. Jasmine incense burned in the air. Stunned, I
watched with an eerie fascination as a blond Moroi guy leaned forward and bit
into the neck of a very pretty redhead. All of these feeders were exceptionally
good-looking, I realized just then. Like actresses or models. Only the best for
royalty.
The guy drank long and deep, and the girl closed her
eyes and parted her lips, an expression of pure bliss on her face as Moroi
endorphins flooded into her bloodstream. I shivered, taken back to when I too
had experienced that same kind of euphoria. In
my alcohol-hazed mind, the whole thing suddenly seemed startlingly erotic. In
fact, I almost felt intrusive—like I was watching people have sex. When the
Moroi finished and licked the last of the blood away, he brushed his lips
against her cheek in a soft kiss.
"Want
to volunteer?"
Light fingertips brushed my neck, and I jumped. I
turned around and saw Adrian's green eyes and knowing smirk.
"Don't
do that," I told him, knocking his hand away.
"Then
what are you doing in here?" he asked.
I
gestured around me. "I'm lost."
He
peered at me. "Are you drunk?"
"No. Of
course not…but …" The nausea had settled a little, but I still didn't feel
right. "I think I should sit down."
He took my arm. "Well, don't do it in here.
Someone might get the wrong idea. Let's go somewhere quiet."
He steered me off into a different room, and I looked
around with interest. It was a massage area. Several Moroi lay back on tables
and were getting back and foot massages from hotel staff. The oil they used
smelled like rosemary and lavender. Under any other circumstances, a massage
would have sounded great, but lying on my stomach seemed like the worst idea
just now.
I sat down on the carpeted floor, leaning back against
the wall. Adrian walked away and returned with a glass of water. Sitting down
as well, he handed it to me.
"Drink
this. It'll help."
"I told you, I'm not drunk," I mumbled. But
I downed the water anyway.
"Uh-huh." He smiled at me. "You did
nice work with that fight. Who was the other guy that helped you?"
"My
boyfriend," I said. "Sort of."
"Mia
was right. You do have a lot of guys in your life."
"It's
not like that."
"Okay." He was still smiling. "Where's
Vasilisa? I figured she'd be attached to you."
"She's
with her boyfriend." I studied him.
"What's with the tone? Jealous? You want him for
yourself?"
"God,
no. I just don't like him."
"Does
he treat her badly?" he asked.
"No,"
I admitted. "He adores her. He's just kind of a jerk."
Adrian was clearly enjoying this. "Ah, you are
jealous. Does she spend more time with him than you?"
I ignored that. "Why do you keep asking about
her? Are you interested in her?"
He laughed. "Rest easy, I'm not interested in her
in the same way I am you."
"But
you are interested."
"I
just want to talk to her."
He left to fetch me more water. "Feeling better?"
he asked, handing the glass to me. It was crystal and intricately carved. It
seemed too fancy for plain water.
"Yeah
… I didn't think those drinks were that strong."
"That's the beauty of them," he chuckled.
"And speaking of beauty … that's a great color on you."
I shifted. I might not have been showing as much skin
as those other girls, but I was showing more than I really wanted to with
Adrian. Or was I? There was something weird about him. His arrogant manner
annoyed me…but I still liked being around him. Maybe the smartass in me
recognized a kindred spirit.
Somewhere in the back of my drunken mind, a light
clicked on. But I couldn't quite get to it. I drank more water.
"You haven't had a cigarette in, like, ten
minutes," I pointed out, wanting to change the subject.
He
made a face. "No smoking in here."
"I'm
sure you've made up for it in punch."
His smile returned. "Well, some of us can
hold our liquor. You aren't going to be sick, are you?"
I
still felt tipsy but no longer nauseous. "No."
"Good."
I thought back to when I'd dreamed about him. It had
been just a dream, but it had stuck with me, particularly the talk about me
being surrounded in darkness. I wanted to ask him about it… even though I knew
it was stupid. It had been my dream, not his.
"Adrian…"
He
turned his green eyes on me. "Yes, darling?"
I
couldn't bring myself to ask. "Never mind."
He started to retort, then tilted his head toward the
door. "Ah, here she comes."
"Who—"
Lissa stepped into the room, eyes scanning around.
When she spotted us, I saw relief break over her. I couldn't feel it, though.
Intoxicants like alcohol numbed the bond. It was another reason I shouldn't
have taken such a stupid chance tonight.
"There you are," she said, kneeling beside
me. Glancing at Adrian, she gave him a nod. "Hey."
"Hey yourself, cousin," he returned, using
the family terms royals sometimes used around each other.
"You okay?" Lissa asked me. "When I saw
how drunk you were, I thought you might have fallen in somewhere and
drowned."
"I'm
not—" I gave up trying to deny it. "I'm fine."
Adrian's usual expression had turned serious as he
studied Lissa. It again reminded me of the dream. "How'd you find
her?"
Lissa gave him a puzzled look. "I, um, checked
all the rooms."
"Oh." He looked disappointed. "I
thought you might have used your bond."
Both
she and I stared.
"How do you know about that?" I demanded.
Only a few people at school knew about
it. Adrian had spoken about it as casually as he might have my hair color.
"Hey, I can't reveal
all my secrets, can I?" he asked mysteriously. "And besides, there's
a certain way you two act around each other … it's hard to explain. It's pretty
cool… all the old myths are true."
Lissa regarded him warily.
"The bond only works one way. Rose can sense what I'm feeling and
thinking, but I can't do it back to her."
"Ah." We sat in
silence a few moments, and I drank more water. Adrian spoke again. "What'd
you specialize in anyway, cousin?"
She looked embarrassed. We
both knew it was important to keep her spirit powers secret from others who
might abuse her healing, but her cover story of not having specialized always
bothered her.
"I haven't," she said.
"Do they think you're going to? Late
bloomer?"
"No."
"You're probably higher
in the other elements, though, right? Just not strong enough to really master
any?" He reached out to pat her shoulder in an exaggerated show of
comfort.
"Yeah, how'd you—"
The instant his fingers
touched her, she gasped. It was as though a bolt of lightning had struck her. The
strangest look crossed her face. Even drunk, I felt the flood of joy
that came pouring through the bond. She stared at Adrian in wonder. His eyes
were locked onto hers too. I didn't understand why they were looking at each
other like that, but it bothered me.
"Hey,"
I said. "Stop that. I told you, she has a boyfriend."
"I know," he said, still watching her. A
small smile turned his lips. "We need to have a chat someday,
cousin."
"Yes,"
she agreed.
"Hey." I was more confused than ever. "You
have a boyfriend. And there he is."
She blinked back to reality. All three of us turned
toward the doorway. Christian and the others stood there. I suddenly had a
flashback to when they'd found me with Adrian's arm around me. This wasn't much
better. Lissa and I were sitting on either side of him, very close.
She sprang up, looking mildly guilty. Christian was
regarding her curiously.
"We're
getting ready to leave," he said.
"Okay,"
she told him. She looked down at me. "Ready?"
I nodded and started to clamber to my feet. Adrian
caught my arm as I did and helped me up. He smiled at Lissa. "Nice talking
to you." To me, he murmured very quietly, "Don't worry. I told you,
I'm not interested in her in that way. She doesn't look as good in a bathing
suit. Probably not as good out of one either."
I
pulled my arm away. "Well, you'll never find out."
"It's
okay," he said. "I have a good imagination."
I joined the others, and we
headed back toward the main part of the lodge. Mason gave me as strange a look
as Christian had given Lissa and stayed away from me, walking toward the front
with Eddie. To my surprise and discomfort, I found myself walking beside Mia.
She looked miserable.
"I… I'm really sorry about what happened,"
I said finally.
"You don't have to act like you care, Rose."
"No, no. I mean it.
It's horrible…I'm so sorry." She wouldn't look at me. "Is…that is,
are you going to see your dad soon?"
"Whenever they have the memorial," she
said stiffly.
"Oh."
I didn't know what else to
say and gave up, instead turning my attention to the stairs as we climbed back
up to the lodge's main level. Unexpectedly, Mia was the one who continued the
conversation.
"I watched you break up
that fight …" she said slowly. "You mentioned offensive magic. Like
you knew about it."
Oh. Great. She was going to
make a play at blackmail…or was she? At the moment, she seemed almost civil.
"I was just
guessing," I said. No way was I going to bust Tasha and Christian. "I
don't really know that much. Just stories I've heard."
"Oh." Her face fell. "What kind of
stories?"
"Um, well…"I tried
to think of something neither too vague nor too specific. "Like I told
those guys…the concentration thing is big. Because if you're in a battle with
Strigoi, all sorts of things can distract you. So you've got to
keep control."
That was actually a basic guardian rule, but it must
have been new to Mia. Her eyes widened with eagerness. "What else? What
kind of spells do people use?"
I shook my head. "I don't know. I don't really
even know how spells work, and like I said, these are just…stories I've heard.
My guess is you just find ways to use your element as a weapon. Like … fire
users really have an advantage because fire'll kill Strigoi, so it's easy for
them. And air users can suffocate people." I'd actually experienced that
last one vicariously through Lissa. It had been horrible.
Mia's eyes grew wider still. "What about a water
user?" she asked. "How could water hurt a Strigoi?"
I paused. "I, uh, never heard any stories about
water users. Sorry."
"Do you have any ideas, though? Ways that, like,
someone like me could learn to fight?"
Ah. So that's what this was about. It actually wasn't
all that crazy. I remembered how excited she'd looked at the meeting when Tasha
had talked about attacking Strigoi. Mia wanted to take revenge on the Strigoi
for her mother's death. No wonder she and Mason had been getting along so well.
"Mia," I said gently, catching hold of the
door to let her pass. We were almost at the lobby now. "I know how you
must want to … do something. But I think you're better off just sort of letting
yourself, um, grieve."
She reddened, and suddenly, I was seeing the normal
and angry Mia. "Don't talk down to me," she said.
"Hey, I'm not. I'm serious. I'm just saying you
shouldn't do anything rash while you're still upset. Besides …" I bit off
my words.
She
narrowed her eyes. "What?"
Screw it. She needed to know. "Well, I don't
really know what good a water user would be against a Strigoi. It's probably
the least useful element to use on one of them."
Outrage filled her features. "You're a real
bitch, you know that?"
"I'm
just telling you the truth."
"Well, let me tell you the truth. You're a
total idiot when it comes to guys."
I
thought about Dimitri. She wasn't entirely off base.
"Mason's great," she continued. "One of
the nicest guys I know—and you don't even notice! He'd do anything for you, and
you were off throwing yourself at Adrian Ivashkov."
Her words surprised me. Could Mia have a crush on
Mason? And while I certainly hadn't been throwing myself at Adrian, I could see
how it might have looked that way. And even if it weren't true, that wouldn't
have stopped Mason from feeling hurt and betrayed.
"You're
right," I said.
Mia stared at me, so astonished I'd agreed with her
that she didn't say anything else for the rest of the walk.
We reached the part of the lodge that split off into
different wings for guys and girls. I grabbed a hold of Mason's arm as the
others walked off.
"Hang on," I told him. I badly needed to
reassure him about Adrian, but a tiny part of me wondered if I was doing it
because I actually wanted Mason or because I just liked the idea of him wanting
me and selfishly didn't want to lose that. He stopped and looked at me. His
face was wary. "I wanted to tell you I'm sorry. I shouldn't have yelled at
you after the fight—I know you were just trying to help. And with Adrian…nothing
happened. I mean it."
"It didn't look that way," Mason said. But
the anger on his face had faded.
"I know, but believe me, it's all him. He's got
some kind of stupid crush on me."
My tone must have been convincing because Mason
smiled. "Well. Hard not to."
"I'm not interested in him," I continued.
"Or anyone else." It was a small lie, but I didn't think it mattered
just then. I was going to be over Dimitri soon, and Mia had been right about
Mason. He was wonderful and sweet and cute. I would be an idiot not to pursue
this … right?
My hand was still on his arm, and I pulled him toward
me. He didn't need much more of a signal. He leaned down and kissed me, and in
the process, I found myself pressed up against the wall—very much like with
Dimitri in the practice room. Of course, it felt nothing like how it had with
Dimitri, but it was still nice in its way. I put my arms around
Mason and started to pull him closer.
"We
could go … somewhere," I said.
He
pushed back and laughed. "Not when you're drunk."
"I'm not… that… drunk anymore," I said,
trying to pull him back.
Giving me a small kiss on the lips, he stepped back.
"Drunk enough. Look, this isn't easy, believe me. But if you still want me
tomorrow—when you're sober—then we'll talk."
He leaned down and kissed me again. I tried to wrap my
arms around him, but he broke away once more.
"Easy
there, girl," he teased, backing toward his hallway.
I glared at him, but he only laughed and turned
around. As he walked away, my glare faded, and I headed back to my room with a
smile on my face.
I WAS TRYING TO PAINT my toenails the next morning—not
easy with such a god-awful hangover—when I heard a knock at the door. Lissa had
been gone when I woke up, so I staggered across the room, trying not to ruin my
wet nail polish. Opening up the door, I saw one of the hotel staff standing
outside with a large box in both arms. He shifted it slightly so that he could peer
around and look at me.
"I'm
looking for Rose Hathaway."
"That's
me."
I took the box from him. It was big but not all that
heavy. With a quick thank-you, I shut the door, wondering if I should have
tipped him. Oh well.
I sat on the floor with the box. It had no markings on
it and was sealed with packing tape. I found a pen and stabbed at the tape.
Once I'd hacked off enough, I opened the box and peered inside.
It
was filled with perfume.
There had to be at least thirty little bottles of
perfume packed into the box. Some I'd heard of, some I hadn't. They ranged from
crazy expensive, movie-star caliber to cheap kinds I'd seen in drugstores. Eternity.
Angel. Vanilla Fields. Jade Blossom. Michael Kors. Poison. Hypnotic Poison.
Pure Poison. Happy. Light Blue. Jõvan Musk. Pink Sugar. Vera Wang. One by one, I picked up the boxes, read the descriptions,
and then pulled out the bottles for a sniff.
I was about halfway through when reality hit. These
had to be from Adrian.
I didn't know how he'd managed to get all of these
delivered to the hotel in such a short amount of time, but money can make
almost anything happen. Still, I didn't need the attention of a rich, spoiled
Moroi; apparently he hadn't picked up on my signals. Regretfully, I started to
place the perfumes back in the box—then stopped. Of course I'd return them…but
there was no harm in sniffing the rest before I did.
Once more, I started pulling out bottle after bottle.
Some I just sniffed the cap of; others I sprayed in the air. Serendipity. Dolce & Gabbana.
Shalimar. Daisy. Note after note hit me: rose, violet,
sandalwood, orange, vanilla, orchid …
By the time I was finished, my nose barely worked
anymore. All of these had been designed for humans. They had a weaker sense of
smell than vampires and even dhampirs, so these scents were extra strong. I had
a new appreciation for what Adrian had meant about only a splash of perfume
being necessary. If all these bottles were making me dizzy, I could only
imagine what a Moroi would smell. The sensory overload wasn't really helping
the headache I'd woken up with either.
I packed up the perfume for real this time, stopping
only when I came to a certain kind that I really liked. I
hesitated, holding the little box in my hand. Then, I took the red bottle out
and re-sniffed it. It was a crisp, sweet fragrance. There was some kind of
fruit—but not a candied or sugary fruit. I racked my brain for a scent I'd once
smelled on a girl I knew in my dorm. She'd told me the name. It was like a cherry…but
sharper. Currant, that's what it was. And here it was in this perfume, mixed
with some florals: lily of the valley and others I couldn't identify. Whatever
the blend, something about it appealed to me. Sweet—but not too sweet. I
read the box, looking for the name. Amor Amor.
"Fitting," I muttered, seeing how many love
problems I seemed to have lately. But I kept the perfume anyway and repacked
the rest.
Hoisting the box up in my arms, I took it down to the
front desk and acquired some packing tape to reseal it. I also got directions
to Adrian's room. Apparently, the Ivashkovs practically had their own wing. It
wasn't too far from Tasha's room.
Feeling like a delivery girl, I walked down the hall
and stopped in front of his door. Before I could manage to knock, it opened up,
and Adrian stood before me. He looked as surprised as I felt.
"Little dhampir," he said cordially.
"Didn't expect to see you here."
"I'm returning these." I hoisted the box toward
him before he could protest. Clumsily, he caught it, staggering a bit in surprise. Once he had a good grip, he took a few steps
back and set it on the floor.
"Didn't you like any of them?" he asked.
"You want me to get you some more?"
"Don't
send me any more gifts."
"It isn't a gift. It's a public service. What
woman doesn't own perfume?"
"Don't
do it again," I said firmly.
Suddenly,
a voice behind him asked, "Rose? Is that you?"
I
peered beyond him. Lissa.
"What
are you doing here?"
Between my headache and what I had assumed was some
interlude with Christian, I'd blocked her out as best I could this morning.
Normally I would have known the instant I approached that she was inside the
room. I opened myself up again, letting her shock run into me. She hadn't
expected me to show up here.
"What
are you doing here?" she asked.
"Ladies, ladies," he said teasingly.
"No need to fight over me."
I glared. "We're not. I just want to know what's
going on here."
A breath of aftershave hit me, and then I heard a voice
behind me: "Me too."
I jumped. Spinning around, I saw Dimitri standing in
the hallway. I had no clue what he was doing in the Ivashkov wing.
On
his way to Tasha's room, a voice
inside me suggested.
Dimitri no doubt always expected me to get into all
sorts of trouble, but I think seeing Lissa there caught him off guard. He
stepped past me and came into the room, looking between the three of us.
"Male and female students aren't supposed to be
in each other's rooms."
I knew pointing out that Adrian wasn't technically a
student wasn't going to get us out of trouble here. We weren't supposed to be
in any guy's room.
"How
do you keep doing this?" I asked Adrian, frustrated.
"Do
what?"
"Keep
making us look bad!"
He
chuckled. "You guys are the ones who came here."
"You shouldn't have let them in," scolded
Dimitri. "I'm sure you know the rules at St. Vladimir's."
Adrian shrugged. "Yeah, but I don't have to
follow any school's stupid rules."
"Perhaps not," said Dimitri coldly.
"But I would have thought you'd still respect those rules."
Adrian rolled his eyes. "I'm kind of surprised to
find you lecturing about underage girls."
I saw the anger kindle in Dimitri's eyes, and for a
moment, I thought I might have seen the loss of control I'd teased him about.
But he stayed composed, and only his clenched fists showed how angry he was.
"Besides," continued Adrian, "nothing
sordid was going on. We were just hanging out."
"If you want to 'hang out' with young girls, do
it at one of the public areas."
I didn't really like Dimitri calling us 'young girls,'
and I kind of felt like he was overreacting here. I also suspected part of his
reaction had to do with the fact that I was here.
Adrian laughed just then, a weird kind of laugh that
made my skin crawl. "Young girls? Young girls? Sure. Young and old
at the same time. They've barely seen anything in life, yet they've already
seen too much. One's marked with life, and one's marked with death…but they're
the ones you're worried about? Worry about yourself, dhampir. Worry about
you, and worry about me. We're the ones who are young."
The rest of us just sort of stared. I don't think
anyone had expected Adrian to suddenly take an abrupt trip to Crazyville.
Adrian was calm and looked perfectly normal again. He
turned away and strolled toward the window, glancing casually back at the rest
of us as he pulled out his cigarettes.
"You ladies should probably go. He's right. I am
a bad influence."
I exchanged looks with Lissa. Hurriedly, we both left
and followed Dimitri down the hall toward the lobby.
"That was…strange," I said a couple of
minutes later. It was stating the obvious, but, well, someone had to.
"Very," said Dimitri. He didn't sound angry so much as puzzled.
When we reached the lobby, I started to follow Lissa
back toward our room, but Dimitri called to me.
"Rose,"
he said. "Can I talk to you?"
I felt a sympathetic rush of feeling from Lissa. I
turned toward Dimitri and stepped off to the side of the room, out of the way
of those passing through. A party of Moroi in diamonds and fur swept past us,
anxious looks on their faces. Bellhops followed with luggage. People were still
leaving in search of safer places. The Strigoi paranoia was far from over.
Dimitri's voice snapped my attention back to him.
"That's Adrian Ivashkov." He said the name the same way everyone else
did.
"Yeah,
I know."
"This
is the second time I've seen you with him."
"Yeah,"
I replied glibly. "We hang out sometimes."
Dimitri arched an eyebrow, then jerked his head back
toward where we'd come from. "You hang out in his room a lot?"
Several retorts popped into my head, and then a golden
one took precedence. "What happens between him and me is none of your
business." I managed a tone very similar to the one he'd used on me when
making a similar comment about him and Tasha.
"Actually, as long as you're at the Academy, what
you do is my business."
"Not
my personal life. You don't have any say in that."
"You're
not an adult yet."
"I'm close enough. Besides, it's not like I'll
magically become an adult on my eighteenth birthday."
"Clearly,"
he said.
I
blushed. "That's not what I meant. I meant—"
"I know what you meant. And the technicalities
don't matter right now. You're an Academy student. I'm your instructor. It's my
job to help you and to keep you safe. Being in the bedroom of someone like him
… well, that's not safe."
"I can handle Adrian Ivashkov," I muttered.
"He's weird— really weird, apparently—but harmless."
I secretly wondered if Dimitri's problem might be that
he was jealous. He hadn't pulled Lissa aside to yell at her. The thought made
me slightly happy, but then I remembered my earlier curiosity about why Dimitri
had even wandered by.
"Speaking of personal lives … I suppose you were
off visiting Tasha, huh?"
I knew it was petty, and I expected a "none of
your business" response. Instead he replied, "Actually, I was
visiting your mother."
"You going to hook up with her too?" I knew
of course that he wasn't, but the quip seemed too good to pass up.
He seemed to know that too and merely gave me a weary
glance. "No, we were looking over some new data about the Strigoi in the
Drozdov attack."
My anger and snarkiness dried up. The Drozdovs. The Badicas. Suddenly, everything that had happened this
morning seemed incredibly trivial. How could I have stood there arguing with
Dimitri about romances that might or might not be happening when he and the
other guardians were trying to protect us?
"What'd
you find out?" I asked quietly.
"We've managed to track some of the
Strigoi," he said. "Or at least the humans with them. There were
witnesses who lived nearby who spotted a few of the cars the group used. The
plates were all from different states—the group appears to have split up, probably
to make it harder for us. But one of the witnesses did catch one plate number.
It's registered to an address in Spokane."
"Spokane?" I asked incredulously.
"Spokane, Washington? Who makes Spokane their hideout?" I'd
been there once. It was about as boring as every other backwoods northwest
city.
"Strigoi, apparently," he said, deadpan.
"The address was fake, but other evidence shows they really are there.
There's a kind of shopping plaza that has some underground tunnels. There've
been Strigoi sightings around that area."
"Then …" I frowned. "Are you going to
go after them? Is somebody going to? I mean, this is what Tasha's been saying
all along…. If we know where they are …"
He shook his head. "The guardians can't do
anything without permission from higher up. That's not going to happen anytime
soon."
I
sighed. "Because the Moroi talk too much."
"They're
being cautious," he said.
I felt myself getting worked up again. "Come on.
Even you can't want to be careful on this one. You actually know where
Strigoi are hiding out. Strigoi who massacred children. Don't you want to go
after them when they don't expect it?" I sounded like Mason now.
"It's not that easy," he said. "We
answer to the Guardian Council and the Moroi government. We can't just run off
and act on impulse. And anyway, we don't know everything yet. You should never
walk into any situation without knowing all the details."
"Zen life lessons again," I sighed. I ran a
hand through my hair, tucking it behind my ears. "Why'd you tell me this,
anyway? This is guardian stuff. Not the kind of thing you let novices in
on."
He considered his words, and his expression softened.
He always looked amazing, but I liked him best like this. "I've said a few
things…the other day and today…that I shouldn't have. Things that insulted your
age. You're seventeen…but you're capable of handling and processing the same
things those much older than you do."
My
chest grew light and fluttery. "Really?"
He nodded. "You're still really young in a lot of
ways— and act young—but the only way to really change that is to treat you like
an adult. I need to do that more. I know you'll take this information and
understand how important it is and keep it to yourself."
I didn't love being told I acted young, but I liked
the idea that he would talk to me like an equal.
"Dimka," came a voice. Tasha Ozera walked up
to us. She smiled when she saw me. "Hello, Rose."
There
went my mood. "Hey," I said flatly.
She placed a hand on Dimitri's forearm, sliding her
fingers over the leather of his coat. I eyed those fingers angrily. How dare
they touch him?
"You've
got that look," she told him.
"What look?" he asked. The stern look he'd
worn with me vanished. There was a small, knowing smile on his lips. Almost a
playful one.
"That
look that says you're going to be on duty all day."
"Really? I have a look like that?" There was
a teasing, mocking tone to his voice.
She
nodded. "When does your shift technically end?"
Dimitri actually looked—I swear—sheepish. "An
hour ago."
"You can't keep doing this," she groaned.
"You need a break."
"Well … if you consider that I'm always Lissa's
guardian…"
"For now," she said knowingly. I felt sicker
than I had last night. "There's a big pool tournament going on upstairs."
"I can't," he said, but the smile was still
on his face. "Even though I haven't played in a long time …"
What
the—? Dimitri played pool?
Suddenly, it didn't matter that we'd just had a
discussion about him treating me like an adult. Some small part of me did know
what a compliment that was—but the rest of me wanted him to treat me like he
did Tasha. Playful. Teasing. Casual. They were so familiar with each other, so
completely at ease.
"Come on, then," she begged. "Just one
round! We could take them all."
"I can't," he repeated. He sounded
regretful. "Not with everything going on."
She sobered a little. "No. I suppose not."
Glancing at me, she said teasingly, "I hope you realize what a hard-core
role model you have here. He's never off duty."
"Well," I said, copying her lilting tone
from earlier, "for now, at least."
Tasha looked puzzled. I don't think it occurred to her
I'd be making fun of her. Dimitri's dark look told me he knew exactly what I
was doing. I immediately realized I'd just killed whatever progress I'd made as
an adult.
"We're
finished here, Rose. Remember what I said."
"Yeah," I said, turning away. I suddenly
wanted to go to my room and veg for a while. This day was making me tired
already. "Definitely."
I hadn't gotten far when I ran into Mason. Good God.
Men everywhere.
"You're mad," he said as soon as he looked
at my face. He had a knack for discovering my moods. "What happened?"
"Some
… authority problems. It's been a weird morning."
I sighed, unable to get Dimitri off the brain. Looking
at Mason, I remembered how I'd been convinced I wanted to get serious with him
last night. I was a head case. I couldn't make up my mind about anyone.
Deciding the best way to banish one guy was to pay attention to another, I
grabbed Mason's hand and steered him away.
"Come on. Wasn't the deal to go somewhere…um,
private today?"
"I figured you weren't drunk anymore," he
joked. But his eyes looked very, very serious. And interested. "I assumed
it was all off."
"Hey, I stand by my claims, no matter what."
Opening my mind, I searched for Lissa. She was no longer in our room. She'd
gone off to some other royal event, no doubt still practicing for Priscilla
Voda's big dinner. "Come on," I told Mason. "We'll go to my
room."
Aside from when Dimitri inconveniently happened to be
passing by someone's room, nobody was really enforcing the mixed-gender rule.
It was practically like being back in my Academy dorms. As Mason and I went
upstairs, I related to him what Dimitri had told me about the Strigoi in
Spokane. Dimitri had told me to keep it to myself, but I was mad at him again,
and I didn't see any harm in telling Mason. I knew he'd be interested in this.
I
was right. Mason got really worked up.
"What?" he
exclaimed as we walked into my room. "They're not doing anything?"
I shrugged and sat on my bed. "Dimitri
said—"
"I know, I know … I
heard you. About being careful and all that." Mason paced around my room
angrily. "But if those Strigoi go after another Moroi…another family…damn
it! They're going to wish they weren't so careful then."
"Forget about it,"
I said. I felt kind of miffed that me on a bed wasn't enough to deter him from
crazy battle plans. "There's nothing we can do."
He stopped walking. "We could go."
"Go where?" I asked stupidly.
"To Spokane. There are buses you can catch in
town."
"I … wait. You want us
to go to Spokane and take on Strigoi?"
"Sure. Eddie'd do it
too … we could go to that mall. They wouldn't be organized or anything, so we
could wait and pick them off one by one …"
I could only stare. "When did you get so
dumb?"
"Oh, I see. Thanks for the vote of
confidence."
"It's not about
confidence," I argued, standing up and approaching him. "You kick
major ass. I've seen it. But this … this isn't the way. We can't go get Eddie
and take on Strigoi. We need more people. More planning. More
information."
I rested my hands on his chest. He placed his over
them and smiled. The fire of battle was still in his eyes, but I could tell his mind was shifting to more immediate concerns. Like me.
"I
didn't mean to call you dumb," I told him. "I'm sorry."
"You're just saying that now because you want to
have your way with me."
"Of course I am," I laughed, happy to see
him relax. The nature of this conversation reminded me a little of the one
Christian and Lissa had had in the chapel.
"Well," he said, "I don't think I'm
going to be too hard to take advantage of."
"Good.
Because there are lots of things I want to do."
I slid my hands up and around his neck. His skin was
warm beneath my fingers, and I remembered how much I'd enjoyed kissing him last
night.
Suddenly, out of nowhere, he said, "You really
are his student."
"Whose?"
"Belikov's. I was just thinking about when you
mentioned needing more information and stuff. You act just like him. You've
gotten all serious since you've been hanging out with him."
"No,
I haven't."
Mason had pulled me closer, but now I suddenly didn't
feel so romantic. I'd wanted to make out and forget Dimitri for a while,
not have a conversation about him. Where had this come from? Mason was supposed
to be distracting me.
He didn't notice anything was wrong. "You've just
changed, that's all. It's not bad … just different."
Something about that made me angry, but before I could
snap back, his mouth met mine in a kiss. Reasonable discussions sort of
vanished. A bit of that dark temper started to rise in me, but I simply
channeled that intensity into physicality as Mason and I fell on top of each
other. I yanked him down on the bed, managing to do so without stopping the
kissing. I was nothing if not a multitasker. I dug my nails into his back while
his hands slid up the back of my neck and released the ponytail I'd just made
minutes ago. Running his fingers through the unbound hair, he shifted his mouth
down and kissed my neck.
"You are … amazing," he told me. And I could
tell that he meant it. His whole face glowed with affection for me.
I arched upward, letting his lips press harder against
my skin while his hands slipped under the bottom of my shirt. They trailed
upward along my stomach, just barely tracing the edge of my bra.
Considering
we'd just been having an argument a minute ago, I was surprised to see things
escalating so quickly. Honestly, though … I didn't mind. This was the way I
lived my life. Everything was always fast and intense with me. The night
Dimitri and I had fallen victim to Victor Dashkov's lust charm, there'd been
some pretty furious passion going on too. Dimitri had controlled it, though, so
sometimes we'd taken things slowly…and that had been wonderful in its own way.
But most of the time, we hadn't been able to hold ourselves back. I could feel
it all over again. The ways his hands
had run over my body. The deep, powerful kisses.
It was then that I realized something.
I was kissing Mason, but in
my head, I was with Dimitri. And it wasn't like I was simply remembering
either. I was actually imagining I was with Dimitri—right now—reliving
that night all over again. With my eyes closed, it was easy to pretend.
But when I opened them and
saw Mason's eyes, I knew he was with me. He adored me and had wanted me
for a long time. For me to do this … to be with him and pretend I was with
someone else …
It wasn't right.
I wiggled out of his reach. "No … don't."
Mason stopped immediately
because that's the kind of guy he was.
"Too much?" he
asked. I nodded. "That's okay. We don't have to do that."
He reached for me again, and
I moved farther away. "No, I just don't… I don't know. Let's call it
quits, okay?"
"I…" He was
speechless for a moment. "What happened to the 'lots of things' you wanted
to do?"
Yeah … it looked pretty bad,
but what could I say? I can't get physical with you because when I do, I just
think about the other guy I actually want. You're just a stand-in.
I swallowed, feeling stupid. "I'm sorry, Mase.
I just can't."
He sat up and ran a hand over his hair. "Okay.
All right."
I could hear the hardness in his voice. "You're
mad."
He glanced over at me, a stormy expression on his
face. "I'm just confused. I can't read your signals. One moment you're
hot, the next you're cold. You tell me you want me, you tell me you don't. If
you picked one, that'd be fine, but you keep making me think one thing and then
you end up going in a completely different direction. Not just now—all the
time."
It was true. I had gone back and forth with him.
Sometimes I was flirty, other times I completely ignored him.
"Is there something you want me to do?" he
asked when I didn't say anything. "Something that'll… I don't know. Make
you feel better about me?"
"I
don't know," I said weakly.
He
sighed. "Then what do you want in general?"
Dimitri, I
thought. Instead, I repeated myself. "I don't know."
With a groan, he stood up and headed for the door.
"Rose, for someone who claims she wants to gather as much information as
possible, you really have a lot to learn about yourself."
The door slammed behind him. The noise made me flinch,
and as I stared at where Mason had just stood, I realized he was right. I did
have a lot to learn.
LISSA FOUND ME LATER IN the day. I'd fallen asleep
after Mason left, too dejected to leave the bed. Her slamming of the door
jolted me awake.
I was happy to see her. I needed to spill about the
fumbled thing with Mason, but before I could, I read her feelings. They were as
troubled as mine. So, as always, I put her first.
"What
happened?"
She sat on her bed, sinking into the feather duvet,
her feelings both furious and sad. "Christian."
"Really?" I'd never known them to fight.
They teased each other a lot, but it was hardly the kind of thing that could
nearly bring her to tears.
"He
found out… I was with Adrian this morning."
"Oh, wow," I said. "Yeah. That might be
a problem." Standing up, I walked over to the dresser and found my brush.
Wincing, I stood in front of the gilt-framed mirror and began brushing out the
snarls acquired during my nap.
She groaned. "But nothing happened! Christian's
freaking out over nothing. I can't believe he doesn't trust me."
"He trusts you. The whole thing's just weird,
that's all." I thought about Dimitri and Tasha. "Jealousy makes
people do and say stupid things."
"But nothing happened," she repeated.
"I mean, you were there and—hey, I never found out. What were you
doing there?"
"Adrian
sent me a bunch of perfume."
"He—you
mean that giant box you were carrying?"
I
nodded.
"Whoa."
"Yeah. I came to return it," I said.
"The question is, what were you doing there?"
"Just talking," she said. She started to
light up, on the verge of telling me something, but then she paused. I felt the
thought almost reach the front of her mind and then get shoved back. "I've
got a lot to tell you, but first tell me what's up with you."
"Nothing's
up with me."
"Whatever, Rose. I'm not psychic like you, but I
know when you're pissed off about something. You've been kind of down since
Christmas. What's up?"
Now wasn't the time to get into what had happened on
Christmas when my mom told me about Tasha and Dimitri. But I did tell Lissa the
story about Mason—editing out why I had stopped—and simply driving home how I
had.
"Well…"
she said when I finished. "That was your right."
"I know. But I kind of led him on. I can see why
he'd be upset."
"You guys can probably fix it, though. Go talk to
him. He's crazy about you."
It was more than
miscommunication. Things with Mason and me couldn't be patched up so easily.
"I don't know," I told her. "Not everyone's like you and
Christian."
Her face darkened.
"Christian. I still can't believe he's being so stupid about this."
I didn't mean to, but I
laughed. "Liss, you guys'll kiss and make up in like a day. More than
kiss, probably."
It slipped out before I
could stop it. Her eyes widened. "You know." She shook her head in
exasperation. "Of course you know."
"Sorry," I said. I
hadn't meant to let her know I knew about the sex thing, not until she told me
herself.
She eyed me. "How much do you know?"
"Um, not much," I
lied. I'd finished brushing my hair but began playing with the brush's handle
in order to avoid her eyes.
"I have got to
learn to keep you out of my mind," she muttered.
"Only way I can 'talk' to you lately."
Another slipup.
"What's that supposed to mean?" she
demanded.
"Nothing … I…" She
was giving me a sharp look. "I… I don't know. I just feel like we don't
talk as much anymore."
"Takes two to fix that," she said, voice
kind again.
"You're right," I
said, not pointing out that two could fix that only if one wasn't always with
her boyfriend. True, I was guilty in my own way of locking things up—but I had
wanted to talk to her a number of times lately. The timing just never seemed to be right—not even now. "You know,
I never thought you'd be first. Or I guess I never thought I'd be a senior and
still be a virgin."
"Yeah,"
she said dryly. "Me either."
"Hey!
What's that supposed to mean?"
She grinned, then caught sight of her watch. Her smile
fell. "Ugh. I've got to go to Priscilla's banquet. Christian was supposed
to go with me, but he's off being an idiot…." Her eyes focused hopefully
on me.
"What? No. Please, Liss. You know how I hate
those formal royal things."
"Oh, come on," she begged. "Christian
flaked out. You can't throw me to the wolves. And didn't you just say we needed
to talk more?" I groaned. "Besides, when you're my guardian, you'll
have to do these things all the time."
"I know," I said darkly. "I thought I
could maybe enjoy my last six months of freedom."
But in the end, she conned me into going with her, as
we'd both known she would.
We didn't have much time, and I had to do a rush
shower, blow-dry, and makeup job. I'd brought Tasha's dress on a whim, and
while I still wanted her to suffer horribly for being attracted to Dimitri, I
was grateful for her present now. I pulled on the silken material, happy to see
the shade of red was just as killer on me as I'd imagined. It was a long,
Asian-style dress with flowers embroidered into the silk. The high neck and
long hem covered a lot of skin, but the material clung
to me and looked sexy in a different kind of way than showing a lot of skin
did. My black eye was practically nonexistent by now.
Lissa, as always, looked amazing. She wore a deep
purple dress by Johnna Raski, a well-known Moroi designer. It was sleeveless
and made of satin. The tiny amethyst-like crystals set into the straps sparkled
against her pale skin. She wore her hair up in a loose, artfully styled bun.
When we reached the banquet room, we drew a few eyes. I
don't think the royals had expected the Dragomir princess to bring her dhampir
friend to this highly anticipated, invitation-only dinner. But hey, Lissa's
invite had said "and guest." She and I took our places at one of the
tables with some royals whose names I promptly forgot. They were happy to
ignore me, and I was happy to be ignored.
Besides, it wasn't like there weren't plenty of other
distractions. This room was done all in silver and blue. Midnight blue silk
cloths covered the tables, so shiny and smooth that I was terrified to eat on
them. Sconces of beeswax candles hung all over the walls, and a fireplace
decorated with stained glass crackled away in one corner. The effect was a
spectacular panorama of color and light, dizzying to the eye. In the corner, a
slim Moroi woman played soft cello music, her face dreamy as she focused on the
song. The clinking of crystal wineglasses complemented the strings' low, sweet
notes.
Dinner was equally amazing. The food was elaborate,
but I recognized everything on my plate (china, of course) and liked all of it. No foie gras here. Salmon in a sauce of
shiitake mushrooms. A salad with pears and goat cheese. Delicate almond-stuffed
pastries for dessert. My only complaint was that the portions were small. The
food seemed more like it was there to simply decorate the plates, and I swear,
I finished it in ten bites. Moroi might still need food along with their blood,
but they didn't need as much as a human—or, say, a growing dhampir girl—needed.
Still, the food alone could have justified me coming
along on this venture, I decided. Except, when the meal ended, Lissa told me we
couldn't leave.
"We
have to mingle," she whispered.
Mingle?
Lissa
laughed at my discomfort. "You're the social one."
It was true. In most circumstances, I was the one who
put myself out there and wasn't afraid to talk to people. Lissa tended to be
shyer. Only, with this group, the tables were turned. This was her element, not
mine, and it amazed me to see just how well she could interact with royal high
society now. She was perfect, polished and polite. Everyone was eager to talk
to her, and she always seemed to know the right thing to say. She wasn't using
compulsion, exactly, but she definitely put out an air that drew others to her.
I think it might have been an unconscious effect of spirit. Even with the meds,
her magical and natural charisma came through. Whereas intense social
interactions had once been forced and stressful for her, she now conducted them
with ease. I was proud of her. Most of the conversation
stayed pretty light: fashion, royal love lives, etc. No one seemed to want to
spoil the atmosphere with ugly Strigoi talk.
So I clung to her side for the rest of the night. I
tried to tell myself it was just practice for the future, when I'd follow her
around like a quiet shadow anyway. The truth was, I just felt too uncomfortable
with this group and knew my usual snarky defense mechanisms really weren't
useful here. Plus, I was painfully aware that I was the only dhampir dinner
guest. There were other dhampirs, yes, but they were in formal guardian mode,
hovering on the periphery of the room.
As Lissa worked the crowd, we drifted over to a small
group of Moroi whose voices were growing louder. One of them I recognized. He
was the guy from the fight that I'd helped break up, only this time he wore a
striking black tuxedo instead of a swimsuit. He glanced up at our approach,
blatantly checked us out, but apparently didn't remember me. Ignoring us, he
continued on with his argument. Not surprisingly, Moroi protection was the
topic. He was the one who'd been in favor of Moroi going on the offensive
against the Strigoi.
"What part of 'suicide' don't you
understand?" asked one of the men standing nearby. He had silvery hair and
a bushy mustache. He wore a tux too, but the younger guy looked better in one.
"Moroi training as soldiers will be the end of our race."
"It's not suicide," exclaimed the young guy.
"It's the right thing to do. We have to start looking out for ourselves.
Learning to fight and use our magic is our greatest asset, other than the
guardians."
"Yes, but with the guardians, we don't need other
assets," said Silver Hair. "You've been listening to non-royals. They
don't have any guardians of their own, so of course they're scared. But that's
no reason to drag us down and put our lives at risk."
"Then don't," said Lissa suddenly. Her voice
was soft, but everyone in the little group stopped and looked at her.
"When you talk about Moroi learning how to fight, you make it sound like
an all-or-nothing matter. It's not. If you don't want to fight, then you
shouldn't have to. I completely understand." The man looked slightly
mollified. "But, that's because you can rely on your guardians. A
lot of Moroi can't. And if they want to learn self-defense, there's no reason
why they shouldn't do it on their own."
The younger guy grinned triumphantly at his adversary.
"There, you see?"
"It's not that easy," countered Silver Hair.
"If it was just a matter of you crazy people wanting to get yourselves killed,
then fine. Go do it. But where are you going to learn all these so-called
fighting skills?"
"We'll figure the magic out on our own. Guardians
will teach us actual physical fighting."
"Yes, see? I knew that was where this was going.
Even if the rest of us don't take part in your suicide
mission, you still want to strip us of our guardians to train up your pretend
army."
The young guy scowled at the word pretend, and
I wondered if more fists would fly. "You owe it to us."
"No,
they don't," said Lissa.
Intrigued gazes turned her way again. This time, it
was Silver Hair who regarded her triumphantly. The younger guy's features
flushed with anger.
"Guardians
are the best battle resources we have."
"They are," she agreed, "but that
doesn't give you the right to take them away from their duty." Silver Hair
practically glowed.
"Then how are we supposed to learn?"
demanded the other guy.
"The same way guardians do," Lissa informed
him. "If you want to learn to fight, go to the academies. Form classes and
start at the beginning, the same way the novices do. That way, you won't be
taking guardians away from active protection. It's a safe environment, and the
guardians there specialize in teaching students anyway." She paused
thoughtfully. "You could even start making defense part of the standard
curriculum for Moroi students already there."
Astonished
stares fell on her, mine included. It was such an elegant solution, and
everyone else around us realized it. It gave no party 100 percent of its
demands, but it met most in a way that didn't really harm the other side. Pure
genius. The other Moroi studied her with wonder and fascination.
Suddenly, everyone started talking at once, excited
about the idea. They drew Lissa in, and soon there was a passionate
conversation going on about her plan. I got shuffled to the edges and decided
that was just fine. Then I retreated altogether and sought out a corner near a
door.
Along the way, I passed a server with a tray of hors
d'oeuvres. Still hungry, I eyed them suspiciously but saw nothing that looked
like the foie gras from the other day. I gestured to one that looked like some
sort of braised, rare meat.
"Is
that goose liver?" I asked.
She
shook her head. "Sweetbread."
That
didn't sound bad. I reached for it.
"It's
pancreas," said a voice behind me. I jerked back.
"What?" I squeaked. The waitress took my
shock for rejection and moved on.
Adrian Ivashkov moved into my line of sight, looking
immensely pleased with himself.
"Are you messing with me?" I asked.
"'Sweetbread' is pancreas?" I don't know why that shocked me
so much. Moroi consumed blood. Why not internal organs? Still, I repressed a
shudder.
Adrian
shrugged. "It's really good."
I
shook my head in disgust. "Oh, man. Rich people suck."
His amusement continued. "What are you doing
here, little dhampir? Are you following me around?"
"Of course not," I scoffed. He was dressed
to perfection, as
always. "Especially not after all
the trouble you've gotten us into."
He flashed one of his tantalizing smiles, and despite
how much he annoyed me, I again felt that overwhelming urge to be near him.
What was up with that?
"I don't know," he teased. He looked
perfectly sane now, exhibiting no trace of the weird behavior I'd witnessed in
his room. And yeah, he looked a lot better in a tuxedo than any guy I'd
seen in there so far. "As many times as we keep seeing each other? This
is, what, the fifth time? It's starting to look suspicious. Don't worry,
though. I won't tell your boyfriend. Either of them."
I opened my mouth to protest, then remembered he'd
seen me with Dimitri earlier. I refused to blush. "I only have one boyfriend.
Sort of. Maybe not anymore. And anyway, there's nothing to tell. I don't even
like you."
"No?" asked Adrian, still smiling. He leaned
toward me, like he had a secret to share. "Then why are you wearing my
perfume?"
This
time, I did blush. I took a step back. "I'm not."
He laughed. "Of course you are. I counted the
boxes after you left. Besides, I can smell it on you. It's nice. Sharp…but
still sweet—just like I'm sure you are deep down inside. And you got it right,
you know. Just enough to add an edge…but not enough to drown your own
scent." The way he said "scent" made it sound like a dirty word.
Royal Moroi might make me uncomfortable, but smartass guys hitting on me didn't. I dealt with them on a
regular basis. I shook off my shyness and remembered who I was.
"Hey," I said, tossing my hair back. "I
had every right to take one. You offered them. Your mistake is in assuming me
taking one means anything. It doesn't. Except that maybe you should be more
careful with where you dump all that money of yours."
"Ooh, Rose Hathaway is here to play, folks."
He paused and took a glass of what looked like champagne from a passing waiter.
"You want one?"
"I
don't drink."
"Right." Adrian handed me a glass anyway,
then shooed the waiter away and took a drink of the champagne. I had a feeling
it wasn't his first of the night. "So. Sounds like our Vasilisa put my dad
in his place."
"Your …" I glanced back at the group I'd
just left. Silver Hair still stood there, gesticulating wildly. "That
guy's your dad?"
"That's
what my mom says."
"You agree with him? About how Moroi fighting
would be suicide?"
Adrian shrugged and took another sip. "I don't
really have an opinion on that."
"That's not possible. How can you not feel one
way or another?"
"Dunno. Just not something I think about. I've
got better things to do."
"Like stalk me," I suggested. "And
Lissa." I still wanted to know why she'd been in his room.
He smiled again. "I told you, you're the one
following me."
"Yeah,
yeah, I know. Five times—" I stopped. "Five times?"
He
nodded.
"No, it's only been four." With my free
hand, I ticked them off. "There was that first night, the night at the
spa, then when I came to your room, and now tonight."
The
smile turned secretive. "If you say so."
"I do say so…" Again, my words
trailed off. I had talked to Adrian one other time. Sort of. "You can't
mean …"
"Mean what?" A curious, eager expression lit
his eyes. It was more hopeful than presumptuous.
I swallowed, recalling the dream. "Nothing."
Without thinking about it, I took a drink of champagne. Across the room,
Lissa's feelings burned back to me, calm and content. Good.
"Why
are you smiling?" Adrian asked.
"Because
Lissa's still over there, working that crowd."
"No surprise there. She's one of those people who
can charm anyone she wants if she tries hard enough. Even people who hate
her."
I
gave him a wry look. "I feel that way when I talk to you."
"But you don't hate me," he said, finishing
the last of his champagne. "Not really."
"I
don't like you either."
"So you keep saying." He took a step toward
me, not threatening, just making the space between us more intimate. "But
I can live with that."
"Rose!"
The sharpness of my mother's voice cut through the
air. A few people within earshot glanced over at us. My mother—all five angry
feet of her—stormed up to us.
WHAT
DO YOU THINK
YOU'RE doing?" she demanded. Her voice was still too loud as far as I was concerned.
"Nothing, I—"
"Excuse us, Lord
Ivashkov," she growled. Then, like I was five years old, she grabbed me by
my arm and jerked me out of the room. Champagne sloshed out of my glass and
splashed onto the skirt of my dress.
"What do you think you're
doing?" I exclaimed, once we were out in the hall. Mournfully, I
looked down at my dress. "This is silk. You could have ruined
it."
She grabbed the champagne
flute and set it down on a nearby table. "Good. Maybe it'll stop you from
dressing up like a cheap whore."
"Whoa," I said,
shocked. "That's kind of harsh. And where do you get off turning motherly
all of a sudden?" I gestured to the dress. "This isn't exactly cheap.
You thought it was nice of Tasha to give it to me."
"That's because I
didn't expect you to wear it out with Moroi and make a spectacle of
yourself."
"I'm not making a
spectacle of myself. And anyway, it covers everything up."
"A dress that tight might as well be showing
everything," she retorted. She, of course, was dressed in guardian black:
tailored black linen pants and a matching blazer. She had a few curves of her
own, but the clothing hid them.
"Especially when you're with a group like that.
Your body's…conspicuous. And flirting with Moroi doesn't really help."
"I
wasn't flirting with him."
The accusation made me angry because I felt I'd been
on really good behavior lately. I used to flirt all the time— and do other
things—with Moroi guys, but after a few talks and one embarrassing incident
with Dimitri, I'd realized how stupid that was. Dhampir girls did have to be
careful with Moroi guys, and I kept that in mind all the time now.
Something petty occurred to me. "Besides," I
said mockingly, "isn't that what I'm supposed to do? Hook up with a Moroi
and further my race? It's what you did."
She
glowered. "Not when I was your age."
"You
were only a few years older than me."
"Don't do anything stupid, Rose," she said.
"You're too young for a baby. You don't have the life experience for it—
you haven't even lived your own life yet. You won't be able to do the kind of
job you wish you could."
I groaned, mortified. "Are we really even
discussing this? How did we go from me allegedly flirting to suddenly having a
litter? I'm not having sex with him or anyone else, and even if I were, I know about birth control. Why are you
talking to me like I'm a child?"
"Because you act like one." It was
remarkably like what Dimitri had told me.
I
glared. "So you're going to send me to my room now?"
"No, Rose." She suddenly looked tired.
"You don't have to go to your room, but don't go back in there, either.
Hopefully you didn't draw too much attention."
"You make it sound like I was giving a lap dance
in there," I told her. "I just had dinner with Lissa."
"You'd be surprised what things can spark
rumors," she warned. "Especially with Adrian Ivashkov."
With that, she turned and headed off down the hall.
Watching her, I felt anger and resentment burn through me. Overreact much? I
hadn't done anything wrong. I knew she had her whole blood-whore paranoia, but
this was extreme, even for her. Worst of all, she'd dragged me out of there,
and several people had witnessed it. For someone who supposedly didn't want me
attracting attention, she'd kind of messed that one up.
A couple of Moroi who'd been standing near Adrian and
me walked out of the room. They glanced in my direction and then whispered
something as they passed.
"Thanks,
Mom," I muttered to myself.
Humiliated, I stalked off in the opposite direction,
not really sure where I was going. I headed out toward the back of the lodge,
away from all the activity.
The hall eventually ended, but a door leading to some
stairs sat on the left. The door was unlocked, so I followed the stairs upward
to another door. To my pleasure, it opened up onto a small rooftop deck that
didn't appear to see much use. A blanket of snow lay over it all, but it was
early morning out here, and the sun shone brightly, making everything glitter.
I brushed snow off of a large, box-like object that
looked to be part of the ventilation system. Heedless of my dress, I sat down
on it. Wrapping my arms around myself, I stared off, taking in the view and the
sun I rarely got to enjoy.
I was startled when the door opened a few minutes
later. When I looked back I was even more startled still to see Dimitri emerge.
My heart gave a small flutter, and I turned away, unsure what to think. His
boots crunched in the snow as he walked over to where I was sitting. A moment
later, he took off his long coat and draped it over my shoulders.
He
sat down beside me. "You must be freezing."
I
was, but I didn't want to admit it. "The sun's out."
He tipped his head back, looking up at the perfect
blue sky. I knew he missed the sun as much as I did sometimes. "It is. But
we're still on a mountain in the middle of winter."
I didn't answer. We sat there in a comfortable silence
for a while. Occasionally, a light wind blew clouds of snow around. It was
night for Moroi, and most would be going to bed soon, so the ski runs were
quiet.
"My
life is a disaster," I finally said.
"It's
not a disaster," he said automatically.
"Did
you follow me from the party?"
"Yes."
"I didn't even know you were there." His
dark clothes indicated he must have been on guardian duty at the party.
"So you saw the illustrious Janine cause a commotion by dragging me
out."
"It wasn't a commotion. Hardly anyone noticed. I
saw because I was watching you."
I refused to let myself get excited over that.
"That's not what she said," I told him. "I might as well have
been working a corner as far as she was concerned."
I
relayed the conversation from the hallway.
"She's
just worried about you," Dimitri said when I finished.
"She
overreacted."
"Sometimes
mothers are overprotective."
I stared at him. "Yeah, but this is my mother.
And she didn't seem that protective, really. I think she was more worried I'd
embarrass her or something. And all that becoming-a-mother-too-young stuff was
stupid. I'm not going to do anything like that."
"Maybe
she wasn't talking about you," he said.
More
silence. My jaw fell open.
You don't have the life
experience for it—you haven't even lived your own life yet. You won't be able
to do the kind of job you wish you could.
My mom had been twenty when I was born. Growing up,
that had always seemed really old to me. But now…that was only a few years off for me. Not old at all. Did
she think she'd had me too soon? Had she done a shoddy job raising me simply
because she didn't know any better at the time? Did she regret the way things
had turned out between us? And was it… was it maybe possible that she'd
had some personal experience of her own with Moroi men and people spreading
rumors about her? I'd had inherited a lot of her features. I mean, I'd even
noticed tonight what a nice figure she had. She had a pretty face, too—for a
nearly forty-year-old, I mean. She'd probably been really, really good-looking
when she was younger….
I sighed. I didn't want to think about that. If I did,
I might have to reevaluate my relationship with her—maybe even acknowledge my
mother as a real person—and I already had too many relationships stressing me.
Lissa always worried me, even though she seemed to be okay for a change. My
so-called romance with Mason was in shambles. And then, of course, there was
Dimitri….
"We
aren't fighting right now." I blurted out.
He
gave me a sidelong look. "Do you want to fight?"
"No. I hate fighting with you. Verbally, I mean.
I don't mind in the gym."
I thought I detected the hint of a smile. Always a
half-smile for me. Rarely a full one. "I don't like fighting with you
either."
Sitting next to him there, I marveled at the warm and
happy emotions springing up inside of me. There was something about being
around him that felt so good, that moved me in a way Mason couldn't. You can't force love, I realized. It's
there or it isn't. If it's not there, you've got to be able to admit it. If it
is there, you've got to do whatever it takes to protect the ones you love.
The next words that came out
of my mouth astonished me, both because they were completely unselfish and
because I actually meant them.
"You should take it."
He flinched. "What?"
"Tasha's offer. You
should take her up on it. It's a really great chance."
I remembered my mom's words
about being ready for children. I wasn't. Maybe she hadn't been. But Tasha was.
And I knew Dimitri was too. They got along really well. He could go be her
guardian, have some kids with her … it would be a good deal for both of them.
"I never expected to
hear you say anything like that," he told me, voice tight.
"Especially after—"
"What a bitch I've
been? Yeah." I tugged his coat tighter against the cold. It smelled like
him. It was intoxicating, and I could half-imagine being wrapped in his
embrace. Adrian might have been onto something about the power of scent.
"Well. Like I said, I don't want to fight anymore. I don't want us to hate
each other. And…well …" I squeezed my eyes shut and then opened them.
"No matter how I feel about us … I want you to be happy."
Silence yet again. I noticed then that my chest
hurt.
Dimitri reached out and put his arm around me. He
pulled me to him, and I rested my head on his chest. "Roza," was all
he said.
It was the first time he'd really touched me
since the night of the lust charm. The practice room had been something
different … more animal. This wasn't even about sex. It was just about being
close to someone you cared about, about the emotion that kind of connection
flooded you with.
Dimitri might run off with Tasha, but I would still
love him. I would probably always love him.
I
cared about Mason. But I would probably never love him.
I sighed into Dimitri, just wishing I could stay like
that forever. It felt right being with him. And—no matter how much the thought
of him and Tasha made me ache—doing what was best for him felt right. Now, I
knew, it was time to stop being a coward and do something else that was right.
Mason had said I needed to learn something about myself. I just had.
Reluctantly, I pulled away and handed Dimitri his
coat. I stood up. He regarded me curiously, sensing my unease.
"Where
you going?" he asked.
"To
break someone's heart," I replied.
I admired Dimitri for a heartbeat more—the dark,
knowing eyes and silken hair. Then I headed inside. I had to apologize to Mason…and
tell him there'd never be anything between us.
THE HIGH HEELS WERE STARTING to hurt me, so I took them
off when I went back inside, walking barefoot through the lodge. I hadn't been
to Mason's room, but I remembered him mentioning the number once and found it
without difficulty.
Shane, Mason's roommate, opened the door a few moments
after I knocked. "Hey, Rose."
He stepped aside for me, and I walked in, peering
around. Some infomercial was playing on the TV—one downside of a nocturnal life
was a shortage of good programming—and empty soda cans covered nearly every
flat surface. There was no sign of Mason anywhere.
"Where
is he?" I asked.
Shane
stifled a yawn. "I thought he was with you."
"I
haven't seen him all day."
He yawned again, then frowned in thought. "He was
throwing some stuff in a bag earlier. I figured you guys were running off for
some crazy romantic getaway. Picnic or something. Hey, nice dress."
"Thanks," I murmured, feeling a frown of my
own coming on.
Packing a bag? That didn't make any sense. There was nowhere to go. There was no way to go, either.
This resort was as tightly guarded as the Academy. Lissa and I had only managed
to break out of that place with compulsion, and it had still been a pain in the
ass. Yet, why on earth would Mason pack a bag if he wasn't leaving?
I asked Shane a few more questions and decided to
follow up on the possibility, crazy as it seemed. I found the guardian in
charge of security and scheduling. He gave me the names of those guardians
who'd been on duty around the resort's borders when Mason had last been seen.
Most of the names I knew, and most were off duty now, making them easy to find.
Unfortunately, the first couple hadn't seen Mason
around today. When they asked why I wanted to know, I gave vague answers and
hurried off. The third person on my list was a guy named Alan, a guardian who
usually worked the Academy's lower campus. He was just coming in after skiing,
taking his equipment off near the door. Recognizing me, he smiled as I
approached.
"Sure,
I saw him," he said, bending down to his boots.
Relief flooded over me. Until then, I hadn't realized
how worried I'd been.
"Do
you know where he is?"
"Nope. Let him and Eddie Castile…and, what's her
name, the Rinaldi girl, out through the north gate and didn't see them after
that."
I stared. Alan continued unhooking his skis as though
we were discussing slope conditions.
"You let Mason and Eddie … and Mia out?"
"Yup."
"Um … why?"
He finished and looked back
up at me, a kind of happy and bemused look on his face. "Because they
asked me."
An icy feeling started
creeping through me. I found out which guardian had watched the north gate with
Alan and immediately sought him out. That guardian gave me the same response.
He'd let Mason, Eddie, and Mia out, no questions asked. And, like Alan, he
didn't seem to think there was anything wrong with that. He appeared almost
dazed. It was a look I'd seen before … a look that came over people when Lissa
used compulsion.
In particular, I'd seen it
happen when Lissa didn't want people to remember something very well. She could
bury the memory in them, either erasing it all together or planting it for
later. She was so good at compulsion, though, that she could just make people
forget completely. For them to still have some memories meant someone who
wasn't as good at compulsion had worked on them.
Someone, say, like Mia.
I wasn't the fainting type,
but for just a moment, I felt like I could keel over. The world spun, and I
closed my eyes and took a deep breath. When I could see again, my surroundings
stayed stable. Okay. No problem. I would reason this out.
Mason, Eddie, and Mia had
left the resort earlier today. Not only that, they had done it by using
compulsion—which
was utterly forbidden. They hadn't told
anyone. They'd left through the north gate. I'd seen a map of the resort. The
north gate guarded a driveway that connected to the only semi-major road in the
area, a small highway that led to a little town about twelve miles away. The
town Mason had mentioned that had buses.
To
Spokane.
Spokane—where this traveling pack of Strigoi and their
humans might be living.
Spokane—where Mason could fulfill all his crazy dreams
of slaying Strigoi.
Spokane—which
he only knew about because of me.
"No, no, no," I murmured to myself, almost
running toward my room.
There, I stripped off the dress and changed into heavy
winter clothes: boots, jeans, and a sweater. Grabbing my coat and gloves, I
hurried back toward the door and then paused. I was acting without thinking.
What was I actually going to do? I needed to tell someone, obviously…but that
would get the trio in a lot of trouble. It would also tip Dimitri off that I'd
gone and gossiped about the Spokane Strigoi information he'd told me in
confidence as a sign of respecting my maturity.
I studied the time. It would take a while for anyone
around the resort to know we were missing. If I could actually get
out of the resort.
A few minutes later, I found myself knocking on
Christian's door. He answered, looking sleepy and cynical as usual.
"If you've come to apologize for her," he
told me loftily, "you can just go ahead and—"
"Oh,
shut up," I snapped. "This isn't about you."
Hastily, I relayed the details of what was going on.
Even Christian didn't have a witty response for that one.
"So…Mason, Eddie, and Mia went to Spokane to hunt
Strigoi?"
"Yes."
"Holy shit. Why didn't you go with them? Seems
like something you'd do."
I resisted the urge to smack him. "Because I'm
not insane! But I'm going to go get them before they do something even
stupider."
That was when Christian caught on. "And what do
you need from me?"
"I need to get off the resort's property. They
got Mia to use compulsion on the guards. I need you to do the same thing. I
know you've practiced it."
"I have," he agreed. "But…well…"
For the first time ever, he looked embarrassed. "I'm not very good at it.
And doing it on dhampirs is nearly impossible. Liss is a hundred times better
than me. Or probably any Moroi."
"I
know. But I don't want her to get in trouble."
He
snorted. "But you don't mind if I do?"
I
shrugged. "Not really."
"You're
a piece of work, you know that?"
"Yeah.
I do, actually."
So, five minutes later, he and I found ourselves
trekking out to the north gate. The sun was coming up, so most everyone was
inside. This was a good thing, and I hoped it'd make our escape that much
easier.
Stupid, stupid, I kept thinking. This was going to blow up in our faces. Why had Mason
done this? I knew he'd had this whole crazy vigilante attitude…and he'd
certainly seemed upset that the guardians hadn't done anything about the recent
attack. But still. Was he really that unhinged? He had to know how dangerous
this was. Was it possible…was it possible I'd upset him so much with the
making-out disaster that he'd gone off the deep end? Enough to go do this and
get Mia and Eddie to join him? Not that those two would be hard to convince.
Eddie would follow Mason anywhere, and Mia was almost as gung ho as Mason to
kill every Strigoi in the world.
Yet, out of all the questions I had about this, one
thing was definitely clear. I'd told Mason about the Strigoi in Spokane. Hands
down, this was my fault, and without me, none of this would have happened.
"Lissa always makes eye contact," I coached
Christian as we approached the exit. "And speaks in a really, like, calm
voice. I don't know what else. I mean, she concentrates a lot too, so try that.
Focus on forcing your will on them."
"I
know," he snapped. "I've seen her do it."
"Fine,"
I snapped back. "Just trying to help."
Squinting, I saw that only one guardian stood at the
gate, a total stroke of luck. They were in between shifts. With the sun out, the risk of Strigoi had disappeared. The
guardians would still continue in their duties, but they could relax just a
bit.
The guy on duty didn't seem particularly alarmed by
our appearance. "What are you kids doing out here?"
Christian swallowed. I could see the lines of tension
on his face.
"You're going to let us out of the gate," he
said. A note of nervousness made his voice tremble, but otherwise, he did a
fair approximation of Lissa's soothing tones. Unfortunately, it had no effect
on the guardian. As Christian had pointed out, using compulsion on a guardian
was nearly impossible. Mia had gotten lucky. The guardian grinned at us.
"What?"
he asked, clearly amused.
Christian
tried again. "You're going to let us out."
The guy's smile faltered just a little, and I saw him
blink in surprise. His eyes didn't glaze over in the same way Lissa's victims
did, but Christian had done enough to briefly enthrall him. Unfortunately, I
could tell right then and there that it wouldn't be enough to make him let us
out and forget. Fortunately, I'd been trained to compel people without the use
of magic.
Sitting near his post was an enormous Maglite, two
feet long and easily seven pounds. I grabbed the Maglite and clocked him on the
back of the head. He grunted and crumpled to the ground. He'd barely seen me
coming, and despite the horribleness of what I'd just done, I kind of wished
one of my instructors had been there to grade me on such an
awesome performance.
"Jesus Christ," exclaimed Christian.
"You just assaulted a guardian."
"Yeah." So much for getting the guys back
without getting anyone in trouble. "I didn't know just how much you sucked
at compulsion. I'll deal with the fallout later. Thanks for your help. You
should head back before the next shift comes on."
He shook his head and grimaced. "No, I'm going
with you on this."
"No," I argued. "I only needed you to
get through the gate. You don't have to get in trouble over this."
"I'm already in trouble!" He pointed at the
guardian. "He saw my face. I'm screwed either way, so I might as well help
you save the day. Stop being a bitch for a change."
We hurried off, and I cast one last, guilty glance at
the guardian. I was pretty sure I hadn't hit him hard enough to cause real
damage, and with the sun coming out, he wouldn't freeze or anything.
After about five minutes of walking down the highway,
I knew we had a problem. Despite being covered and wearing sunglasses, the sun
was taking its toll on Christian. It was slowing us down, and it wouldn't take
that long for someone to find the guardian I'd taken out and come after us.
A car—not one of the Academy's—appeared behind us, and
I made a decision. I didn't approve of hitchhiking in the least. Even someone
like me knew how dangerous it was. But we needed to get
to town fast, and I prayed Christian and I could take down any creepy
stalker guy who tried to mess with us.
Fortunately, when the car pulled over, it was just a
middle-aged couple who looked more concerned than anything else. "You kids
okay?"
I jerked my thumb behind me. "Our car slid off
the road. Can you take us to town so I can call my dad?"
It worked. Fifteen minutes later, they dropped us off
at a gas station. I actually had trouble getting rid of them because they
wanted to help us so much. Finally, we convinced them we'd be fine, and we
walked the few blocks over to the bus station. As I'd suspected, this town
wasn't much of a hub for real travel. Three lines serviced the town: two that
went to other ski resorts and one that went to Lowston, Idaho. From Lowston,
you could go on to other places.
I'd half-hoped that we might beat Mason and the others
before their bus came. Then we could have hauled them back without any trouble.
Unfortunately, there was no sign of them. The cheery woman at the counter knew
exactly who we were talking about, too. She confirmed that all three of them
had bought tickets to Spokane by way of Lowston.
"Damn it," I said. The woman raised her
eyebrows at my language. I turned to Christian. "You got money for the
bus?"
Christian and I didn't talk much along the way, except
for me to tell him he'd been an idiot about Lissa and Adrian. By the time we
reached Lowston, I finally had him convinced, which
was a minor miracle. He slept the rest of the way to Spokane, but I couldn't. I
just kept thinking over and over that this was my fault.
It was late afternoon by the time we reached Spokane.
It took a few people, but we finally found someone who knew the shopping center
Dimitri had mentioned. It was a long ways from the bus station, but it was
walkable. My legs were stiff after almost five hours of riding a bus, and I
wanted the movement. The sun was a while from setting, but it was lower and
less detrimental to vampires, so Christian didn't mind the walk either.
And, as often happened when I was in calm settings, I
felt a tug into Lissa's head. I let myself fall into her because I wanted to
know what was happening back at the resort.
"I know you want to protect them, but we need to
know where they are."
Lissa sat on the bed in our room while Dimitri and my
mom stared her down. It was Dimitri who had spoken. Seeing him through her eyes
was interesting. She had a fond respect for him, very different from the
intense roller coaster of emotions I always experienced.
"I told you," said Lissa, "I don't
know. I don't know what happened."
Frustration and fear for us burned through her. It
saddened me to see her so anxious, but at the same time, I was glad I hadn't
gotten her involved. She couldn't report what she didn't know.
"I can't believe they
wouldn't have told you where they were going," said my mother. Her words
sounded flat, but there were lines of worry on her face. "Especially with
your…bond."
"It only works one way," said Lissa sadly.
"You know that."
Dimitri knelt down so he
could be at Lissa's height and look her in the eye. He pretty much had to do
that to look anyone in the eye. "Are you sure there's nothing? Nothing at
all you can tell us? They're nowhere in town. The man at the bus station didn't
see them … though we're pretty sure that's where they must have gone. We need
something, anything to go on."
Man at the bus station? That was
another stroke of luck. The woman who'd sold us the tickets must have gone
home. Her replacement wouldn't know us.
Lissa gritted her teeth and
glared. "Don't you think if I knew, I'd tell you? You don't think I'm
worried about them too? I have no idea where they are. None. And why'd
they even leave… it doesn't make any sense either. Especially why they'd go
with Mia, of all people." A twinge of hurt flickered through the bond,
hurt at being left out of whatever we were doing, no matter how wrong.
Dimitri sighed and leaned
back on his heels. From the look on his face, he obviously believed her. It was
also obvious that he was worried—worried in more than a professional way. And
seeing that concern—that concern for me—ate up my heart.
"Rose?" Christian's voice brought me back to
myself. "We're here, I think."
The plaza consisted of a wide, open area in front of a
shopping center. A café was carved into a
corner of the main building, its tables spilling out into the open area. A
crowd moved in and out of the complex, busy even at this time of the day.
"So,
how do we find them?" asked Christian.
I shrugged. "Maybe if we act like Strigoi,
they'll try to stake us."
A small, reluctant smile played over his face. He
didn't want to admit it, but he'd thought my joke was funny.
He and I went inside. Like any mall, it was filled
with familiar chains, and a selfish part of me thought that maybe if we found
the group soon enough, we could still get in shopping time.
Christian and I walked the length of it twice and saw
no signs of our friends or anything resembling tunnels.
"Maybe
we're in the wrong place," I finally said.
"Or maybe they axe," suggested
Christian. "They could have gone to some other—wait."
He pointed, and I followed the gesture. The three
renegades sat at a table in the middle of the food court, looking dejected.
They looked so miserable, I almost felt sorry for them.
"I'd
kill for a camera right now," said Christian, smirking.
"This isn't funny," I told him, striding
toward the group. Inside, I breathed a sigh of relief. The group clearly hadn't found any Strigoi, were all still alive, and could
maybe be taken back before we got in even more trouble.
They didn't notice me until I was almost right next to
them. Eddie's head jerked up. "Rose? What are you doing here?"
"Are you out of your mind?" I yelled. A few
people nearby gave us surprised looks. "Do you know how much trouble
you're in? How much trouble you've gotten us in?"
"How the hell did you find us?" asked Mason
in a low voice, glancing anxiously around.
"You guys aren't exactly criminal
masterminds," I told them. "Your informant at the bus station gave
you away. That, and I figured out that you'd want to go off on your pointless Strigoi-hunting
quest."
The look Mason gave me revealed he still wasn't
entirely happy with me. It was Mia who replied, however.
"It
isn't pointless."
"Oh?" I demanded. "Did you kill any
Strigoi? Did you even find any?"
"No,"
admitted Eddie.
"Good,"
I said. "You got lucky."
"Why are you so against killing Strigoi?"
asked Mia hotly. "Isn't that what you train for?"
"I
train for sane missions, not childish stunts like this."
"It isn't childish," she cried. "They
killed my mother. And the guardians weren't doing anything. Even their
information is bad. There weren't any Strigoi in the tunnels. Probably none in
the whole city."
Christian
looked impressed. "You found the tunnels?"
"Yeah,"
said Eddie. "But like she said, they were useless."
"We should see them before we go," Christian
told me. "It'd be kind of cool, and if the data was bad, there's no
danger."
"No,"
I snapped. "We're going home. Now."
Mason looked tired. "We're going to search the
city again. Even you can't make us go back, Rose."
"No, but the school's guardians can when I call
and tell them you're here."
Call it blackmailing or being a tattletale; the effect
was the same. The three of them looked at me like I had just simultaneously
gut-punched them all.
"You'd really do that?" asked Mason.
"You'd sell us out like that?"
I rubbed my eyes, wondering desperately why I was
trying to be the voice of reason here. Where was the girl who'd run away from
school? Mason had been right. I had changed.
"This isn't about selling anyone out. This is
about keeping you guys alive."
"You think we're that defenseless?" asked
Mia. "You think we'd get killed right away?"
"Yes," I said. "Unless you've found
some way to use water as a weapon?"
She
flushed and didn't say anything.
"We
brought silver stakes," said Eddie.
Fantastic. They must have stolen them. I looked at
Mason pleadingly.
"Mason.
Please. Call this off. Let's go back."
He
looked at me for a long time. Finally, he sighed. "Okay."
Eddie and Mia looked aghast, but Mason had assumed a
leadership role with them, and they didn't have the initiative to go on without
him. Mia seemed to take it the hardest, and I felt bad for her. She'd barely
had any real time to grieve for her mother; she'd just jumped right on board
with this revenge thing as a way to cope with the pain. She'd have a lot to
deal with when we got back.
Christian was still excited about the idea of the
underground tunnels. Considering he spent all his time in an attic, I shouldn't
have been all that surprised.
"I saw the schedule," he told me.
"We've got a while before the next bus."
"We can't go walking into some Strigoi
lair," I argued, walking toward the mall's entrance.
"There are no Strigoi there," said Mason.
"It's seriously all janitorial stuff. There was no sign of anything weird.
I really do think the guardians had bad information."
"Rose,"
said Christian, "let's get something fun out of this."
They all looked at me. I felt like a mom who wouldn't
buy her kids candy at the grocery store.
"Okay,
fine. Just a peek, though."
The others led Christian and me to the opposite end of
the mall, through a door marked staff
only. We dodged a couple of janitors, then slipped through another door
that led us to a set of stairs going down. I had a brief moment of déjà vu, recalling the steps down to Adrian's spa party. Only
these stairs were dirtier and smelled pretty nasty.
We reached the bottom. It wasn't so much a tunnel as a
narrow corridor, lined in grime-caked cement. Ugly fluorescent lights were
embedded sporadically along the walls. The passage went off to our left and
right. Boxes of ordinary cleaning and electrical supplies sat around.
"See?"
said Mason. "Boring."
I
pointed in each direction. "What's down there?"
"Nothing,"
sighed Mia. "We'll show you."
We walked down to the right and found more of the
same. I was starting to agree with the boring assessment when we passed some
black writing on one of the walls. I stopped and looked at it. It was a list of
letters.
D
B
C
O
T
D
V
L
D
Z
S
I
Some had lines and x marks next to them, but
for the most part the message was incoherent. Mia noticed my scrutiny.
"It's probably a janitor thing," she said.
"Or maybe some gang did it."
"Probably," I said, still studying it. The
others shifted restlessly, not understanding my fascination with the jumble of
letters. I didn't understand my fascination either, but something in my head
tugged at me to stay.
Then
I got it.
B for Badica, Z for Zeklos, I for Ivashkov
…
I stared. The first letter of every royal family's
name was there. There were three D names, but based on the order, you could
actually read the list as a size ranking. It started with the smaller
families—Dragomir, Badica, Conta—and went all the way up to the giant Ivashkov
clan. I didn't understand the dashes and lines beside the letters, but I
quickly noticed which names had an x beside them: Badica and Drozdov.
I stepped back from the wall. "We have to get out
of here," I said. My own voice scared me a little. "Right now."
The others looked at me in surprise. "Why?"
asked Eddie. "What's going on?"
"I'll
tell you later. We just need to go."
Mason pointed in the direction we'd been heading.
"This lets out a few blocks away. It's closer to the station."
I peered down into the dark unknown. "No," I
said. "We're going back the way we came."
They all looked at me like I was insane as we retraced our steps, but nobody questioned me yet. When we
emerged from the mall's front, I breathed a sigh of relief to see that the sun
was still out, though it was steadily sinking into the horizon and casting
orange and red light onto the buildings. The remaining light would still be
enough for us to get back to the bus station before we were really in any
danger of seeing Strigoi.
And I knew now that there really were Strigoi in
Spokane. Dimitri's information had been correct. I didn't know what the list
meant, but it clearly had something to do with the attacks. I needed to report
it to the other guardians immediately, and I certainly couldn't tell the others
what I'd realized until we were safely at the lodge. Mason was likely to go
back into the tunnels if he knew what I did.
Most of our walk back to the station proceeded in
silence. I think my mood had cowed the others. Even Christian seemed to have
run out of snide comments. Inside, my emotions swirled, oscillating between anger
and guilt as I kept reexamining my role in everything.
Ahead of me, Eddie stopped walking, and I nearly ran
into him. He looked around. "Where are we?"
Snapping out of my own thoughts, I surveyed the area
too. I didn't remember these buildings. "Damn it," I exclaimed.
"Are we lost? Didn't anyone keep track of which way we went?"
It
was an unfair question since I clearly hadn't paid attention either, but my
temper had pushed me past reason. Mason studied me
for a few moments, then pointed. "This way."
We turned and walked down a narrow street between two
buildings. I didn't think we were going the right way, but I didn't really have
a better idea. I also didn't want to stand around debating.
We hadn't gone very far when I heard the sound of an
engine and squealing tires. Mia was walking in the middle of the road, and
protective conditioning kicked in before I even saw what was coming. Grabbing
her, I jerked her out of the street and up against one of the building walls.
The boys had done the same.
A large, gray van with tinted windows had rounded the
corner and was headed in our direction. We pressed flat against the wall,
waiting for it to go past.
Only
it didn't.
Screeching to a halt, it stopped right in front of us,
and the doors slid open. Three big guys spilled out, and again, my instincts
kicked in. I had no clue who they were or what they wanted, but they clearly
weren't friendly. That was all I needed to know.
One of them moved toward Christian, and I struck out
and punched him. The guy barely staggered but was clearly surprised to have
felt it at all, I think. He probably hadn't expected someone as small as me to
be much of a threat. Ignoring Christian, he moved toward me. In my peripheral
vision, I saw Mason and Eddie squaring off with the other two. Mason had actually pulled out his stolen silver stake. Mia
and Christian stood there, frozen.
Our attackers were relying a lot on bulk. They didn't
have the sort of background we had in offensive and defensive techniques. Plus,
they were human, and we had dhampir strength. Unfortunately, we also had the
disadvantage of being cornered against the wall. We had nowhere to retreat to.
Most importantly, we had something to lose.
Like
Mia.
The guy who'd been sparring with Mason seemed to
realize this. He backed off from Mason and instead grabbed her. I barely saw
the flash of his gun before its barrel was pressed against her neck. Backing
off from my own adversary, I yelled at Eddie to stop. We'd all been trained to
respond instantly to those kinds of orders, and he halted his attack, glancing
at me questioningly When he saw Mia, his face went pale.
I wanted nothing more than to keep pummeling these
men—whoever they were—but I couldn't risk this guy hurting Mia. He knew it,
too. He didn't even have to make the threat. He was human, but he knew enough
about us to know that we'd go out of our way to protect the Moroi. Novices had
a saying grilled into us from an early age: Only they matter.
Everyone stopped and looked between him and me.
Apparently we were the acknowledged leaders here. "What do you want?"
I asked harshly.
The guy pressed his gun closer to Mia's neck, and she whimpered. For all her talk about fighting, she was
smaller than me and not nearly as strong. And she was too terrified to move.
The man inclined his head toward the van's open door.
"I want you to get inside. And don't start anything. You do, and she's
gone."
I looked at Mia, the van, my other friends, and then
back to the guy. Shit.
I HATE BEING POWERLESS. AND I hate going down without
a fight. What had taken place outside in the alley hadn't been a real fight. If
it had—if I'd been beaten into submission … well, yeah. Maybe I could accept
that. Maybe. But I hadn't been beaten. I'd barely gotten my hands dirty.
Instead, I'd gone quietly.
Once they had us sitting on the floor of the van,
they'd bound each of our hands behind our back with flex-cuffs— strips of
plastic that cinched together and held just as well as anything made of metal.
After that, we rode in near silence. The men
occasionally murmured something to each other, speaking too softly for any of
us to hear. Christian or Mia might have been able to understand the words, but
they were in no position to communicate anything to the rest of us. Mia looked
as terrified as she had out on the street, and while Christian's fear had
rapidly given way to his typical haughty anger, even he didn't dare act out
with guards nearby.
I was glad for Christian's self-control. I didn't
doubt any of these men would smack him if he got out of line, and neither I nor
the other novices were in a position to stop them. That was what really drove
me crazy. The instinct to protect Moroi was so deeply
ingrained in me that I couldn't even pause to worry about myself. Christian and
Mia were the focus. They were the ones I had to get out of this mess.
And how had this mess started? Who were these guys?
That was a mystery. They were human, but I didn't believe for an instant that a
group of dhampirs and Moroi had been random kidnapping victims. We'd been
targeted for a reason.
Our captors made no attempts to blindfold us or
conceal our route, which I didn't take as a good sign. Did they think we didn't
know the city well enough to retrace our steps? Or did they figure it didn't
matter since we wouldn't be leaving wherever they were taking us? All I sensed
was that we were driving away from downtown, off toward a more suburban area.
Spokane was as dull as I'd imagined. Unlike where pristine white snow lay in
drifts, slushy gray puddles lined the streets and dirty patches dotted the
lawns. There were also a lot fewer evergreen trees than I was used to. The
scraggly, leafless deciduous trees here seemed skeletal by comparison. They
only added to the mood of impending doom.
After what felt like less than an hour, the van turned
down a quiet cul-de-sac, and we drove up to a very ordinary—yet large—house.
Other houses—identical in the way suburban homes often are—stood nearby, which
gave me hope. Maybe we could get some help from the neighbors.
We pulled inside the garage, and once the door was
back down, the men ushered us into the house. It looked a lot more interesting
on the inside. Antique, claw-footed sofas and chairs.
A large, saltwater fish tank. Swords crossed over the fireplace. One of those
stupid modern art paintings that consisted of a few lines splayed across the
canvas.
The part of me that enjoyed destroying things would
have liked to study the swords in detail, but the main floor wasn't our
destination. Instead, we were led down a narrow flight of stairs, down to a
basement as large as the floor above. Only, unlike the main floor's open space,
the basement was sectioned off into a series of halls and closed doors. It was
like a rat's maze. Our captors led us through it without hesitation, into a
small room with a concrete floor and unpainted drywall.
The furniture inside consisted of several very
uncomfortable-looking wooden chairs with slatted backs—backs that proved to be
a convenient place for rebinding our hands. The men seated us in such a way
that Mia and Christian sat on one side of the room, and the rest of us dhampirs
sat on the other. One guy—the leader, apparently—watched carefully as one of
his henchmen bound Eddie's hands with new flex-cuffs.
"These are the ones you especially have to
watch," he warned, nodding toward us. "They'll fight back." His
eyes traveled first to Eddie's face, then Mason's, and then mine. The guy and I
held each other's gaze for several moments, and I scowled. He looked back over
at his associate. "Watch her in particular."
When we'd been restrained to his satisfaction, he
barked out a few more orders to the others and then left the room, shutting the door loudly behind him. His steps echoed
through the house as he walked upstairs. Moments later, silence fell.
We sat there, staring at each other. After several
minutes, Mia whimpered and started to speak. "What are you going to—"
"Shut up," growled one of the men. He took a
warning step toward her. Blanching, she cringed but still looked as though she
might say something else. I caught her eye and shook my head. She stayed
silent, eyes wide and a slight tremble to her lip.
There's nothing worse than waiting and not knowing
what'll happen to you. Your own imagination can be crueler than any captor.
Since our guards wouldn't talk to us or tell us what was in store, I imagined
all sorts of horrible scenarios. The guns were the obvious threat, and I found
myself pondering what a bullet would feel like. Painful, presumably. And where
would they shoot? Through the heart or the head? Quick death. But somewhere
else? Like the stomach? That would be slow and painful. I shuddered at the
thought of my life bleeding out of me. Thinking of all that blood put me in
mind of the Badica house and maybe having our throats slit. These men could
have knives as well as guns.
Of course, I had to wonder why we were still alive at
all. Clearly they wanted something from us, but what? They weren't asking for
information. And they were human. What would humans want with us?
Usually the most we feared from humans was either running
into crazy slayer types or those who wanted to experiment on us. These seemed
like neither.
So what did they want? Why were we here? Over and
over, I imagined more awful, gruesome fates. The looks on my friends' faces
showed I wasn't the only one who could envision creative torments. The smell of
sweat and fear filled the room.
I lost track of time and was suddenly jolted out of my
imaginings when footsteps sounded on the stairs. The lead captor stepped into
the hall. The rest of the men straightened up, tension crackling around them.
Oh God. This was it, I realized. This was what we'd been waiting for.
"Yes, sir," I heard the leader say.
"They're in here, just like you wanted."
Finally, I realized. The person behind our kidnapping.
Panic shot through me. I had to escape.
"Let us out of here!" I yelled, straining at
my bindings. "Let us out of here, you son of a—"
I stopped. Something inside of me shriveled up. My
throat went dry. My heart wanted to stop. The guard had returned with a man and
a woman I didn't recognize. I did, however, recognize that they were …
…
Strigoi.
Real, live—well, figuratively speaking—Strigoi. It all
suddenly clicked together. It wasn't just the Spokane reports that had been
true. What we'd feared—Strigoi working with humans—had
come true. This changes everything. Daylight wasn't safe anymore. None
of us were safe anymore. Worse, I realized these must be the rogue Strigoi—the
ones who had attacked the two Moroi families with human help. Again, those
horrible memories came to me: bodies and blood everywhere. Bile rose in my
throat, and I tried to shift my thoughts from the past to the present
situation. Not that that was any more reassuring.
Moroi had pale skin, the kind of skin that blushed and
burned easily. But these vampires…their skin was white, chalky in a way that
made it look like the result of a bad makeup job. The pupils of their eyes had
a red ring around them, driving home what monsters they were.
The woman, actually, reminded me of Natalie—my poor
friend whose father had convinced her to turn Strigoi. It took me a few moments
to figure out what the resemblance was because they looked nothing alike. This
woman was short— probably human before becoming Strigoi—and had brown hair with
a bad highlighting job.
Then it hit me. This Strigoi was a new one, much as
Natalie had been. It didn't become obvious until I compared her with the
Strigoi man. The Strigoi woman's face had a little life in it. But his … his
was the face of death.
His face was completely devoid of any sort of warmth
or gentler emotion. His expression was cold and calculating, laced with
malicious amusement. He was tall, as tall as Dimitri, and had a slender frame
that indicated he'd been Moroi before changing over.
Shoulder-length black hair framed his face and stood out against the bright
scarlet of his dress shirt. His eyes were so dark and brown that without the
red ring, it would have been almost impossible to tell where pupil ended and
iris began.
One of the guards shoved me hard, even though I'd been
silent. He glanced up at the Strigoi man. "You want me to gag her?"
I suddenly realized I'd been hunching into the back of
my chair, unconsciously trying to get as far away from him as possible. He
realized this too, and a thin, toothless smile crossed his lips.
"No," he said. His voice was silky and low.
"I'd like to hear what she has to say." He raised an eyebrow at me.
"Please. Continue."
I
swallowed.
"No? Nothing to add? Well. Do feel free to pipe
up if something else comes to mind."
"Isaiah," exclaimed the woman. "Why are
you keeping them here? Why haven't you just contacted the others?"
"Elena, Elena," Isaiah murmured to her.
"Behave yourself. I'm not going to pass up the chance to enjoy myself with
two Moroi and …" He walked behind my chair and lifted my hair, making me
shudder. A moment later, he peered at Mason and Eddie's necks as well. "…three
unblooded dhampirs." He spoke those words with an almost happy sigh, and I
realized he'd been looking for guardian tattoos.
Strolling over to Mia and
Christian, Isaiah rested a hand on his hip as he studied them. Mia could only
meet his eyes for an instant before looking away. Christian's fear was
palpable, but he managed to return the Strigoi's scrutiny. It made me proud.
"Look at these eyes,
Elena." Elena walked over and stood beside Isaiah as he spoke. "That
pale blue. Like ice. Like aquamarines. You almost never get that outside of the
royal houses. Badicas. Ozeras. The occasional Zeklos."
"Ozera," said Christian, trying very hard
to sound fearless.
Isaiah tilted his head.
"Really? Surely not…" He leaned closer to Christian. "But the
age is right…and that hair…" He smiled. "Lucas and Moira's son?"
Christian said nothing, but
the confirmation on his face was obvious.
"I knew your parents.
Great people. Unparalleled. Their deaths were a shame… but, well… I daresay
they brought that on themselves. I told them they shouldn't have gone
back for you. Would have been wasteful to awaken you so young. They claimed
they were going to just keep you around and waken you when you were older. I
warned them that that would be a disaster, but, well…" He gave a delicate
shrug. "Awaken" was the term Strigoi used among themselves when they
changed over. It sounded like a religious experience. "They wouldn't
listen, and disaster met them in a different way."
Hatred, deep and dark,
boiled behind Christian's eyes. Isaiah smiled again.
"It's quite touching
that you should find your way to me after all this time. Perhaps I can realize
their dream after all."
"Isaiah," said the
woman—Elena—again. Every word out of her mouth seemed like a whine. "Call
the others—"
"Stop giving me
orders!" Isaiah grabbed her shoulder and shoved her away—except that the
push knocked her across the room and almost through the wall. She just barely
threw her hand out in time to stop the impact. Strigoi had better reflexes than
dhampirs or even Moroi; her lack of grace meant he'd completely caught her off
guard. And really, he'd barely touched her. The push had been light—yet it had
packed the force of a small car.
This further enforced my
belief that he was in another class altogether. His strength beat hers by
magnitudes. She was like a fly he could swat away. Strigoi power increased with
age— as well as through the consumption of Moroi blood and, to a lesser extent,
dhampir blood. This guy wasn't just old, I realized. He was ancient. And he'd
drunk a lot of blood over the years. Terror filled Elena's features, and
I could understand her fear. Strigoi turned against each other all the time. He
could have ripped her head off if he wanted.
She cowered, averting her eyes. "I… I'm sorry,
Isaiah."
Isaiah smoothed his
shirt—not that it had been wrinkled. His voice took on the cold pleasantness
he'd affected earlier. "You clearly have opinions here, Elena, and I
welcome you voicing them in a civilized manner. What do you think we should do
with these cubs?"
"You should—that is, I
think we should just take them now. Especially the Moroi." She was clearly
working hard not to whine again and annoy him. "Unless…you aren't going to
throw another dinner party, are you? It's a complete waste. We'll have to
share, and you know the others won't be grateful. They never are."
"I'm not making a
dinner party out of them," he declared loftily. Dinner party? "But
I'm not killing them yet either. You're young, Elena. You only think about
immediate gratification. When you're as old as me, you won't be so …
impatient."
She rolled her eyes when he wasn't looking.
Turning, he swept his gaze
over me, Mason, and Eddie. "You three, I'm afraid, are going to die.
There's no avoiding it. I'd like to say I'm sorry, but, well, I'm not. Such is
the way of the world. You do have a choice in how you die, however, and that
will be dictated by your behavior." His eyes lingered on me. I didn't
really get why everyone seemed to be singling me out as the troublemaker here.
Well, maybe I did. "Some of you will die more painfully than others."
I didn't need to see Mason
and Eddie to know their fear mirrored mine. I was pretty sure I even heard
Eddie whimper.
Isaiah abruptly turned on
his heels, military-style, and faced Mia and Christian. "You two,
fortunately, have options. Only one of you will die. The other will live on in
glorious immortality. I'll even be kind enough to take you under my wing until
you're a little older. Such is my charity."
I couldn't help it. I choked on a laugh.
Isaiah spun around and stared at me. I fell silent and
waited for him to throw me across the room like he had Elena, but he did
nothing else but stare. It was enough. My heart raced, and I felt tears brim in
my eyes. My fear shamed me. I wanted to be like Dimitri. Maybe even like my
mother. After several long, agonizing moments, Isaiah turned back to the Moroi.
"Now. As I was saying, one of you will be
awakened and live forever. But it will not be me who wakens you. You will
choose to be awakened willingly."
"Not likely," said Christian. He packed as
much snarky defiance as he could manage into those two words, but it was still
obvious to everyone else in the room that he was scared out of his mind.
"Ah, how I love the Ozera spirit," mused
Isaiah. He glanced at Mia, his red eyes gleaming. She shrank back in fear.
"But don't let him upstage you, my dear. There's strength in common blood,
too. And here's how it will be decided." He pointed at us dhampirs. His
gazed chilled me all over, and I imagined I could smell the stink of decay.
"If you want to live, all you have to do is kill one of these three."
He turned back to the Moroi. "That's it. Not unpleasant at all. Just tell
one of these gentlemen here you want to do it. They'll release you. Then you
drink from them and are awakened as one of us. Whoever does this first walks
free. The other will be dinner for Elena and me."
Silence
hung in the room.
"No," said Christian. "No way am I
killing one of my friends. I don't care what you do. I'll die first."
Isaiah waved a dismissive hand. "Easy to be brave
when you aren't hungry. Go a few days without any other sustenance … and yes,
these three will start to look very good. And they are. Dhampirs are
delicious. Some prefer them to Moroi, and while I myself have never shared such
beliefs, I can certainly appreciate the variety."
Christian
scowled.
"Don't believe me?" asked Isaiah. "Then
let me prove it." He walked back over to my side of the room. I realized
what he was going to do and spoke without fully thinking things through.
"Use
me," I blurted out. "Drink from me."
Isaiah's smug look faltered for a moment, and his
eyebrows rose. "You're volunteering?"
"I've done it before. Let Moroi feed off me, I
mean. I don't mind. I like it. Leave the rest of them alone."
"Rose!"
exclaimed Mason.
I ignored him and looked beseechingly at Isaiah. I
didn't want him to feed off me. The thought made me sick. But I had given
blood before, and I'd rather him take pints from me before he touched Eddie or
Mason.
I couldn't read his expression as he sized me up. For
half a second, I thought he might go for it, but instead he shook his head.
"No.
Not you. Not yet."
He walked over and stood before Eddie. I pulled
against my flex-cuffs so hard that they dug painfully into my skin. They didn't
give. "No! Leave him alone!"
"Quiet," snapped Isaiah, without looking at
me. He rested one hand on the side of Eddie's face. Eddie trembled and had gone
so pale, I thought he would faint. "I can make this easy, or I can make it
hurt. Your silence will encourage the former."
I wanted to scream, wanted to call Isaiah all sorts of
names and make all sorts of threats. But I couldn't. My eyes flicked around the
room, searching for exits, as I had so many times before. But there were none.
Just blank, bare white walls. No windows. The one precious door, always
guarded. I was helpless, just as helpless as I'd been from the moment they'd
pulled us into the van. I felt like crying, more from frustration than fear.
What kind of guardian would I be if I couldn't protect my friends?
But I stayed quiet, and a look of satisfaction crossed
Isaiah's face. The fluorescent lighting gave his skin a sickly, grayish hue,
emphasizing the dark circles under his eyes. I wanted to punch him.
"Good." He smiled at Eddie and held his face
so that the two made direct eye contact. "Now, you won't fight me, will
you?"
As I've mentioned, Lissa was good at compulsion. But
she couldn't have done this. In seconds, Eddie was smiling.
"No.
I won't fight you."
"Good," repeated Isaiah. "And you'll
give me your neck freely, won't you?"
"Of
course," replied Eddie, tilting his head back.
Isaiah brought his mouth down, and I looked away,
trying to focus on the threadbare carpet instead. I didn't want to see this. I
heard Eddie emit a soft, happy moan. The feeding itself was relatively quiet—no
slurping or anything like that.
"There."
I glanced back when I heard Isaiah speak again. Blood
dripped from his lips, and he ran his tongue across them. I couldn't see the
wound on Eddie's neck, but I suspected it was bloody and horrible too. Mia and
Christian stared wide-eyed, both with fear and fascination. Eddie gazed off in
a happy, drugged haze, high from both the endorphins and the compulsion.
Isaiah straightened up and smiled at the Moroi,
licking the last of the blood off his lips. "You see?" he told them,
moving toward the door. "It's just that easy."
We NEEDED AN ESCAPE PLAN, and we needed it fast.
Unfortunately, my only ideas called for things that really weren't under my
control. Like us being left completely alone so we could sneak off. Or having
stupid guards whom we could easily fool and slip away from. At the very least,
we should have been sloppily secured so that we could break free.
None of that was happening, though. After almost
twenty-four hours, our situations hadn't really changed. We were still
prisoners, still securely bound. Our captors stayed vigilant, almost as
efficient as any group of guardians. Almost.
The closest we got to freedom was heavily supervised—
and extremely embarrassing—bathroom breaks. The men gave us no food or water.
That was rough on me, but the human and vampire mix made dhampirs hardy. I
could handle being uncomfortable, even though I was fast reaching a point where
I would have killed for a cheeseburger and some really, really greasy french
fries.
For Mia and Christian…well, things were a little
harder. Moroi could go weeks without food and water if they were still getting
blood. Without blood, they could manage a few days before getting sick and
weak, so long as they still had other sustenance. That was how
Lissa and I had managed while living on our own, since I hadn't been able to
feed her every day.
Take away food, blood, and water, and Moroi endurance
dropped through the floor. I was hungry, but Mia and Christian were ravenous.
Already, their faces looked gaunt, their eyes almost feverish. Isaiah made
matters worse during his subsequent visits. Each time, he would come down and
ramble on in his annoying, taunting way. Then, before leaving, he'd take
another drink from Eddie. By the third visit, I could practically see Mia and
Christian salivating. Between the endorphins and lack of food, I was pretty
sure Eddie didn't even know where we were.
I couldn't really sleep under these conditions, but
during the second day, I started nodding off now and then. Starvation and
exhaustion will do that to you. At one point, I actually dreamed, surprising
since I didn't really think I could fall into a deep slumber under such insane
conditions.
In the dream—and I knew perfectly well that it was a
dream—I stood on a beach. It took me a moment to recognize just which beach it
was. It was along the Oregon coast— sandy and warm, with the Pacific unfolding
in the distance. Lissa and I had traveled out here once when we lived in
Portland. It had been a gorgeous day, but she couldn't handle being out in that
much sun. We'd kept the visit short as a result, but I'd always wished I could
have stayed longer
and basked in all that. Now I had all the
light and warmth I could want.
"Little
dhampir," said a voice behind me. "It's about time."
I turned around in surprise and found Adrian Ivashkov
watching me. He had on khakis and a loose shirt and—in a surprisingly casual
style for him—wore no shoes. Wind ruffled his brown hair, and he kept his hands
stuffed in his pockets as he regarded me with that trademark smirk of his.
"Still
got your protection," he added.
Frowning, I thought for a moment he was staring at my
chest. Then I realized his eyes were on my stomach. I had on jeans and a bikini
top, and once again, the little blue eye pendant dangled from my belly-button.
The chotki was on my wrist.
"And you're in the sun again," I said.
"So I suppose it's your dream."
"It's
our dream."
I wiggled my toes in the sand. "How can two
people share a dream?"
"People
share dreams all the time, Rose."
I looked up at him with a frown. "I need to know
what you mean. About there being darkness around me. What does it mean?"
"Honestly, I don't know. Everyone has light
around them, except for you. You have shadows. You take them from Lissa."
My
confusion grew. "I don't understand."
"I can't get into it right now," he told me.
"That's not why I'm here."
"You're here for a reason?" I asked, my eyes
wandering to the blue-gray water. It was hypnotic. "You aren't just…here
to be here?"
He stepped forward and caught my hand, forcing me to
look up at him. All amusement was gone. He was dead serious. "Where are
you?"
"Here,"
I said, puzzled. "Just like you."
Adrian shook his head. "No, that's not what I
mean. In the real world. Where are you?"
The real world? Around us, the beach suddenly blurred,
like a film going out of focus. Moments later, everything steadied itself. I
racked my brain. The real world. Images came to me. Chairs. Guards. Flex-cuffs.
"In a basement …" I said slowly. Alarm
suddenly shattered the beauty of the moment as everything came back to me.
"Oh God, Adrian. You've got to help Mia and Christian. I can't—"
Adrian's grip on my hand tightened. "Where?"
The world shimmered again, and this time it didn't refocus. He swore.
"Where are you, Rose?"
The world began to disintegrate. Adrian began to
disintegrate.
"A
basement. In a house. In—"
He was gone. I woke up. The sound of the room's door
opening startled me back to reality.
Isaiah swept in with Elena in tow. I had to fight a
sneer when I saw her. He was arrogant and mean and all-around evil. But he was
that way because he was a leader. He had the strength and power to back up his
cruelty—even if I didn't like it. But Elena? She was a lackey. She threatened
us and made snide comments, but most of her ability to do so came from being
his sidekick. She was a total suck-up.
"Hello,
children," he said. "How are we doing today?"
Sullen
glares answered him.
He strolled over to Mia and Christian, hands folded
behind his back. "Any changes of heart since my last visit? You're taking
an awfully long time, and it's upsetting Elena. She's very hungry, you see,
but—I suspect—not as hungry as you two."
Christian narrowed his eyes. "Fuck off," he
said through gritted teeth.
Elena
snarled and lunged forward. "Don't you dare—"
Isaiah waved her off. "Leave him alone. It just
means we wait a little longer, and really, it's an entertaining wait."
Elena's
eyes shot daggers at Christian.
"Honestly," continued Isaiah, watching
Christian, "I can't decide which I want more: to kill you or have you join
us. Either option offers its own amusements."
"Don't you get tired of hearing yourself
talk?" asked Christian.
Isaiah considered. "No. Not really. And I don't
get tired of this, either."
He turned around and walked
toward Eddie. Poor Eddie could barely sit upright in his chair anymore after
all the feedings he'd gone through. Worse, Isaiah didn't even need to use
compulsion. Eddie's face simply lit up with a stupid grin, eager for the next
bite. He was as addicted as a feeder.
Anger and disgust flooded through me.
"Damn it!" I yelled. "Leave him
alone!"
Isaiah glanced back at me.
"Be silent, girl. I don't find you nearly as amusing as I do Mr.
Ozera."
"Yeah?" I snarled.
"If I piss you off so much, then use me to prove your stupid point. Bite
me instead. Put me in my place, and show me what a badass you are."
"No!" exclaimed Mason. "Use me."
Isaiah rolled his eyes.
"Good God. What a noble lot. You're all Spartacus, aren't you?"
He strolled away from Eddie
and put a finger under Mason's chin, tilting his head up. "But you,"
Isaiah said, "don't really mean it. You only offer because of her."
He released Mason and walked in front of me, staring down with those black,
black eyes. "And you … I didn't really believe you at first either. But
now?" He knelt down so that he was at my height. I refused to look away
from his eyes, even though I knew that put me at risk of compulsion. "I
think you really mean it. And it's not all nobility, either. You do want
it. You really have been bitten before." His voice was magical. Hypnotic.
He wasn't using compulsion, exactly, but he definitely had an unnatural
charisma surrounding him. Like Lissa and Adrian. I
hung on his every word. "Lots of times, I'd guess," he added.
He leaned toward me, breath hot against my neck.
Somewhere beyond him, I could hear Mason shouting something, but all of my
focus was on how close Isaiah's teeth were to my skin. In the last few months,
I'd only been bitten once— and that was when Lissa had had an emergency. Before
then, she'd bitten me at least twice a week for two years, and I had only recently
come to realize how addicted to that I'd been. There is nothing—nothing—in
the world like a Moroi bite, like the flood of bliss it sends into you. Of
course, by all accounts, Strigoi bites were even more powerful….
I swallowed, suddenly aware of my own heavy breathing
and racing heart. Isaiah gave a low chuckle.
"Yes. You're a blood whore in the making.
Unfortunate for you—because I'm not going to give you what you want."
He backed away, and I slumped forward in my chair.
Without further delay, he returned to Eddie and drank. I couldn't watch, but it
was because of envy this time, not disgust. Longing burned inside of me. I
ached for that bite, ached for it with every nerve in my body.
When Isaiah finished, he started to leave the room,
then paused. He directed his words at Mia and Christian. "Don't
delay," he warned. "Seize your opportunity to be saved." He
tilted his head toward me. "You even have a willing victim."
He left. Across the room, Christian met my eyes.
Somehow, his face looked even gaunter than it had a couple of hours ago. Hunger burned in his gaze, and I knew I wore the
complementary one: a desire to sate that hunger. God. We were so screwed. I
think Christian realized it at the same time. His lips twisted into a bitter
smile.
"You never looked so good, Rose," he
managed, just before the guards told him to shut up.
I dozed a little throughout the day, but Adrian didn't
return to my dreams. Instead, while hovering just at the edge of consciousness,
I found myself slipping into familiar territory: Lissa's head. After all the
weirdness of these last two days, being in her mind felt like a homecoming.
She was in one of the lodge's banquet rooms, only it
was empty. She sat on the floor of the far side of it, trying to stay
inconspicuous. Nervousness filled her. She was waiting for something—or rather,
someone. A few minutes later, Adrian slipped in.
"Cousin," he said by way of greeting. He sat
down beside her and drew his knees up, unconcerned about his expensive dress
pants. "Sorry I'm late."
"It's
okay," she said.
"You
didn't know I was here until you saw me, did you?"
She shook her head, disappointed. I felt more confused
than ever.
"And
sitting with me … you can't really notice anything?"
"No."
He
shrugged. "Well. Hopefully it'll come soon."
"How does it look for you?" she asked,
burning with curiosity.
"Do
you know what auras are?"
"They're like … bands of light around people,
right? Some New Age thing?"
"Something like that. Everyone has a sort of
spiritual energy that radiates out from them. Well, almost everyone." His
hesitation made me wonder if he was thinking of me and the darkness I allegedly
walked in. "Based on the color and appearance, you can tell a lot about a
person…well, if anyone could actually see auras, that is."
"And you can," she said. "And you can
tell I use spirit from my aura?"
"Yours is mostly gold. Like mine. It'll shift
with other colors depending on the situation, but the gold always stays."
"How
many other people out there like us do you know?"
"Not many. I just see them every once in a while.
They kind of keep to themselves. You're the first I've actually ever talked to.
I didn't even know it was called 'spirit.' Wish I'd known about this when I
didn't specialize. I just figured I was some kind of freak."
Lissa held up her arm and stared, willing herself to
see the light shining around it. Nothing. She sighed and let the arm drop.
And
that's when I got it.
Adrian was a spirit user too. That was why he'd been
so curious about Lissa, why he'd wanted to talk to her and ask about the bond and her specialization. It also
explained a lot of other things—like that charisma I couldn't seem to escape
when I was near him. He'd used compulsion that day Lissa and I had been in his
room—that was how he'd forced Dimitri to release him.
"So,
they finally let you go?" Adrian asked her.
"Yeah.
They finally decided I really didn't know anything."
"Good," he said. He frowned, and I realized
he was sober for a change. "And you're sure you don't?"
"I already told you that. I can't make the bond
work that way."
"Hmm.
Well. You've got to."
She glared. "What, you think I'm holding back? If
I could find her, I would!"
"I know, but to have it at all, you must have a
strong connection. Use that to talk to her in her dreams. I tried, but I can't
hang on long enough to—"
"What did you say?" exclaimed Lissa.
"Talk to her in her dreams?"
Now he looked puzzled. "Sure. Don't you know how
to do that?"
"No!
Are you kidding? How is that even possible?"
My
dreams …
I remembered Lissa talking about unexplained Moroi
phenomena, how there might be spirit powers out there beyond healing, things no
one even knew about yet. It would appear that Adrian being in my dreams was no coincidence. He'd managed to get
inside my head, maybe in a way similar to how I saw Lissa's mind. The thought
made me uneasy. Lissa could barely even grasp it.
He ran a hand through his
hair and tipped his head back, staring at the crystal chandelier above as he
pondered. "Okay. So. You don't see auras, and you don't talk to people in
dreams. What do you do?"
"I … I can heal people.
Animals. Plants, too. I can bring dead things back to life."
"Really?" He
looked impressed. "Okay. You get credit for that. What else?"
"Um, I can use compulsion."
"We can all do that."
"No, I can really do
it. It's not hard. I can make people do anything I want—even bad things."
"So can I." His
eyes lit up. "I wonder what would happen if you tried to use it on me…."
She hesitated and absentmindedly
ran her fingers over the textured red carpet. "Well… I can't."
"You just said you could."
"I can—just not right
now. I take this prescription … for depression and other stuff…and it cuts me
off from the magic."
He threw his arms up in the
air. "How can I teach you to walk through dreams then? How else are we
going to find Rose?"
"Look," she said
angrily, "I don't want to take the meds. But when I was off them …
I did really crazy stuff. Dangerous stuff. That's what spirit does to
you."
"I don't take anything. I'm okay," he
said.
No, he wasn't, I realized. Lissa realized it too.
"You got really weird
that day when Dimitri was in your room," she pointed out. "You
started rambling, and you didn't make any sense."
"Oh, that? Yeah … it
happens now and then. But seriously, not often. Once a month, if that." He
sounded sincere.
Lissa stared at him,
suddenly reevaluating everything. What if Adrian could do it? What if he could
use spirit without pills and without any harmful side effects? It would
be everything she had been hoping for. Besides, she wasn't even sure if the
pills would keep working anymore….
He smiled, guessing what she was thinking.
"What do you say,
cousin?" he asked. He didn't need to use compulsion. His offer was plenty
tempting in its own right. "I can teach you everything I know if you're
able to touch the magic. It'll take a while for the pills to get out of your
system, but once they do …"
THIS WAS SO NOT WHAT I needed right now. I
could have handled anything else Adrian did: hitting on her, getting her to
smoke his ridiculous cigarettes, whatever. But not this. Lissa quitting those
pills was exactly what I'd wanted to avoid.
Reluctantly I pulled out of her head and returned to
my own grim situation. I would have liked to see what further developed with
Adrian and Lissa, but watching them would do no good. Okay. I really needed
a plan now. I needed action. I needed to get us out of here. But, glancing around
me, I found myself no closer to escape than I had been earlier, and I spent the
next few hours brooding and speculating.
We had three guards today. They looked a little bored
but not enough to slack off. Nearby, Eddie appeared unconscious, and Mason stared
blankly at the floor. Across the room, Christian glared at nothing in
particular, and I think Mia was sleeping. Painfully aware of how dry my throat
was, I almost laughed in recalling how I'd told her water magic was useless. It
might not do much in a fight, but I would have given anything for her to summon
up some—
Magic.
Why hadn't I thought of this before? We weren't
helpless. Not entirely.
A plan slowly coalesced in my mind—a plan that was
probably insane but was also the best we had. My heart thudded with
anticipation, and I immediately schooled my features to calmness before the
guards noticed my sudden insight. On the opposite side of the room, Christian
was watching me. He'd seen the brief flare of excitement and realized I'd
thought of something. He watched me curiously, as ready for action as I was.
God. How could we pull this off? I needed his help,
but I had no real way of letting him know what I had in mind. In fact, I wasn't
even sure if he could help me at all—he was pretty weak.
I held his gaze, willing him to understand that
something was going to happen. There was confusion on his face, but it was
paired with determination. After making sure none of the guards were looking
directly at me, I shifted slightly, giving a small tug at my wrists. I glanced
behind me as much as I could, then met Christian's eyes again. He frowned, and
I repeated the gesture.
"Hey," I said loudly. Mia and Mason both
jerked in surprise. "Are you guys really going to keep starving us? Can't
we at least have some water or something?"
"Shut up," said one of the guards. It was a
pretty standard answer whenever any of us spoke.
"Come
on." I used my best bitchy voice. "Not even like a sip of something?
My throat's burning. Practically on fire." My gaze flicked to
Christian as I said those last few words, then returned
to the guard who'd spoken.
As expected, he rose from his seat and lurched toward
me. "Do not make me repeat myself," he growled. I didn't know
if he'd really do anything violent, but I had no interest in pushing it just
yet. Besides, I'd accomplished my goal. If Christian couldn't take the hint,
there was nothing else to be done for it. Hoping I looked afraid, I shut up.
The guard returned to his seat, and after a while, he
stopped watching me. I looked at Christian again and gave the wrist tug. Come on, come on, I
thought. Put it together, Christian.
His eyebrows suddenly shot up, and he stared at me in
amazement. Well. He'd apparently figured out something. I just hoped it was
what I'd wanted. His look turned questioning, as though asking if I was really
serious. I nodded emphatically. He frowned in thought for a few moments and
then took a deep, steadying breath.
"All
right," he said. Everyone jumped again.
"Shut up," said one of the guards automatically.
He sounded weary.
"No,"
said Christian. "I'm ready. Ready to drink."
Everyone in the room froze for the space of a few
heartbeats, including me. This wasn't exactly what I'd had in mind.
The
guards' leader stood up. "Do not screw around with us."
"I'm not," said Christian. He had a
feverish, desperate look on his face that I didn't think was entirely faked.
"I'm tired of this. I want to get out of here, and I don't want to die.
I'll drink—and I want her." He nodded toward me. Mia squeaked in alarm. Mason called Christian something that would
have earned him a detention back at school.
This
definitely wasn't what I'd had in mind.
The other two guards looked to their leader
questioningly. "Should we get Isaiah?" asked one of them.
"I don't think he's here," said the leader.
He studied Christian for a few seconds and then made a decision. "And I
don't want to bother him anyway if this is a joke. Let him go, and we'll
see."
One of the men produced a pair of sharp pliers. He
moved behind Christian and leaned down. I heard the sound of plastic popping as
the flex-cuffs gave way. Grabbing a hold of Christian's arm, the guard jerked
him upright and led him over to me.
"Christian," exclaimed Mason, fury filling
his voice. He struggled against his constraints, shaking his chair a little.
"Are you out of your mind? Don't let them do this!"
"You guys have to die, but I don't," snapped
Christian, tossing his black hair out of his eyes. "There's no other way
out of this."
I didn't really know what was going on now, but I was
pretty sure I should be showing a lot more emotion if I was about to die. Two
guards flanked Christian on either side, watching warily as he leaned toward
me.
"Christian," I whispered, surprised at how easy
it was to sound afraid. "Don't do this."
His lips twisted into one of the bitter smiles he
produced so well. "You and I
have never liked each other, Rose. If I've got to kill someone, it might as
well be you." His words were icy, precise. Believable. "Besides, I
thought you wanted this."
"Not this. Please, don't—"
One of the guards shoved
Christian. "Get it over with, or get back to your chair."
Still wearing that dark
smile, Christian shrugged. "Sorry, Rose. You're going to die anyway. Why
not do it for a good cause?" He brought his face down to my neck.
"This is probably going to hurt," he added.
I actually doubted it would …
if he was really going to do it. Because he wasn't…right? I shifted uneasily.
By all accounts, if you got all your blood sucked out of you, you also got
enough endorphins pumped in during the process to dull most of the pain. It was
like going to sleep. Of course, that was all speculation. People who died from
vampire bites didn't really come back to report on the experience.
Christian nuzzled my neck,
moving his face under my hair so that it partially obscured him. His lips
brushed my skin, every bit as soft as I recalled from when he and Lissa kissed.
A moment later, the points of his fangs touched my skin.
And then I felt pain. Real pain.
But it wasn't coming from
the bite. His teeth only pressed against my skin; they didn't break it. His
tongue moved against my neck in a lapping motion, but there was no blood to
suck. If anything, it was more like some kind of weird, twisted kiss.
No, the pain came from my wrists. A burning pain.
Christian was using his magic to channel heat into my flex-cuffs, just as I had
wanted him to. He'd understood my message. The plastic grew hotter and hotter
as he continued his barely there drinking. Anyone who'd been looking closely
would have been able to tell he was half-faking it, but too much of my hair was
blocking the guards' view.
I knew plastic was hard to melt, but only now did I
really, really understand what that meant. The temperatures required to do any
damage were off the charts. It was like plunging my hands into lava. The
flex-cuffs seared my skin, hot and terrible. I squirmed, hoping I could relieve
the pain. I couldn't. What I did notice, however, was that the cuffs gave a
little when I moved. They were getting softer. Okay. That was something. I just
had to hold out a little longer. Desperately, I tried to focus on Christian's
bite and distract myself. It worked for about five seconds. He wasn't giving me
much in the way of endorphins, certainly not enough to combat that increasingly
horrible pain. I whimpered, probably making myself more convincing.
"I can't believe it," muttered one of the
guards. "He's actually doing it." Beyond them, I thought I heard the
sound of Mia crying.
The cuffs' burning increased. I'd never felt anything
so painful in my life, and I'd been through a lot. Passing out was rapidly
becoming a very real possibility.
"Hey,"
the guard suddenly said. "What's that smell?"
That smell was melting plastic. Or maybe my melting
flesh. Honestly, it didn't matter because the next time I moved my wrists, they
broke through the gooey, scalding cuffs.
I had ten seconds of surprise, and I used them. I
leapt out of my chair, pushing Christian backward in the process. He'd had a
guard on either side of him, and one still held the pliers. In a single motion,
I grabbed the pliers from the guy and plunged them into his cheek. He gave some
kind of gurgled scream, but I didn't wait to see what happened. My window of
surprise was closing, and I couldn't waste time. As soon as I let go of the
pliers, I punched the second guy. My kicks were stronger than my punches as a
general rule, but I still hit him hard enough to startle him and make him
stagger.
By then, the guards' leader was in action. As I'd
feared, he still had a gun, and he went for it. "Don't move!" he
yelled, aiming at me.
I froze. The guard I'd punched came forward and
grabbed my arm. Nearby, the guy I'd stabbed was moaning on the floor. Still
training the gun on me, the leader started to say something and then yelped in
alarm. The gun glowed faintly orange and fell from his hands. Where he'd held
it, the skin burned red and angry. Christian had heated the metal, I realized.
Yeah. We definitely should have been using this magic thing from the start. If
we got out of this, I was going to take up Tasha's cause. The Moroi anti-magic
custom was so instilled in our brains that we hadn't even thought to try this
sooner. It was stupid.
I turned on the guy holding me. I don't think he
expected a girl my size to put up so much of a fight, plus he was still kind of
stunned over what had happened to the other guy and the gun. I managed enough
room to get in a kick to his stomach, a kick that would have earned me an A in
my combat class. He grunted at the impact, and the motion propelled him back
into the wall. In a flash, I was on him. Grabbing a fistful of his hair, I
slammed his head against the ground hard enough to knock him out but not kill
him.
Immediately, I sprang up, surprised the leader hadn't
come after me yet. It shouldn't have taken him that long to recover from the
shock of the heated gun. But when I turned around, the room was quiet. The
leader lay unconscious on the ground—with a newly freed Mason hovering over him.
Nearby, Christian held the pliers in one hand and the gun in the other. It had
to still be hot, but Christian's power must have made him immune. He was aiming
at that man I'd stabbed. The guy wasn't unconscious, merely bleeding, but, like
I had, he froze beneath that barrel.
"Holy shit," I muttered, taking in the
scene. Staggering over to Christian, I held out my hand. "Give me that
before you hurt somebody."
I expected a biting remark, but he simply handed the
gun over with shaking hands. I shoved it into my belt. Studying him further, I
saw how pale he was. He looked like he could collapse at any moment. He'd done
some pretty major magic for someone who'd been starved for two days.
"Mase, get the cuffs," I said. Without
turning his back on the rest of us, Mason took a few steps back toward the box
where our captors had kept their stash of flex-cuffs. He pulled out three
strips of plastic and then something else. With a questioning glance at me, he
held up a roll of duct tape.
"Perfect,"
I said.
We bound our captors to the chairs. One had remained
conscious, but we knocked him out too and then put duct tape over all their
mouths. They'd eventually come to, and I didn't want them making any noise.
After releasing Mia and Eddie, the five of us huddled
together and planned our next move. Christian and Eddie could barely stand, but
at least Christian was aware of his surroundings. Mia's face was streaked with
tears, but I suspected she'd be able to take orders. That left Mason and me as
the most functional in the group.
"That guy's watch says it's morning," he
said. "All we've got to do is get outside, and they can't touch us. As
long as there are no more humans, at least."
"They said Isaiah was gone," said Mia in a
small voice. "We should just be able to leave, right?"
"Those men haven't left in hours," I said.
"They could be wrong. We can't do anything stupid."
Carefully, Mason opened the door to our room and
peered out into the empty hallway. "Think there's a way outside down
here?"
"That'd make our lives easier," I muttered.
I glanced back at the others. "Stay here. We're going to check
out the rest of the basement."
"What
if somebody comes?" exclaimed Mia.
"They won't," I assured her. I was actually
pretty sure there was no one else in the basement; they would have come running
with all that racket. And if anyone tried to come down the stairs, we would
hear them first.
Still, Mason and I moved cautiously as we scouted
around the basement, watching each other's backs and checking around corners.
It was every bit the rat's maze I remembered from our initial capture. Twisted
hallways and lots of rooms. One by one, we opened each door. Every room was
empty, save for the occasional chair or two. I shuddered, thinking that all of
these were probably used as prisons, just as ours had been.
"Not a goddamned window in this whole
place," I muttered when we'd finished our sweep. "We've got to go
upstairs."
We headed back toward our room, but before we got
there, Mason caught hold of my hand. "Rose …"
I
stopped and looked up at him. "Yeah?"
His blues eyes—more serious than I'd ever seen them—
looked down at me regretfully. "I really screwed things up."
I thought about all the events that had led to this. "We
screwed things up, Mason."
He sighed. "I hope … I hope when this is all
done, we can sit down and talk and figure things out. I shouldn't have gotten
mad at you."
I wanted to tell him that that wasn't going to happen,
that when he'd disappeared, I'd actually been on my way to tell him things
wouldn't be better between us. Since this didn't seem like the right time or
place to bring up a breakup, I lied.
I
squeezed his hand. "I hope so too."
He
smiled, and we returned to the others.
"All
right," I told them. "Here's how it's going to be."
We quickly hashed out a plan and then crept up the
stairs. I led, followed by Mia as she tried to support a reluctant Christian.
Mason brought up the rear, practically dragging Eddie.
"I should be first," Mason murmured as we
stood at the top of the stairs.
"You aren't," I snapped back, resting my
hand on the doorknob.
"Yeah,
but if something happens—"
"Mason," I interrupted. I stared at him
hard, and suddenly, I had a brief flash of my mother that day when the Drozdov
attack had broken. Calm and controlled, even in the wake of something so horrible.
They'd needed a leader, just like this group did now, and I tried as hard as I
could to channel her. "If something happens, you get them out of here. Run
fast and run far. Do not come back without a herd of guardians."
"You'll be the one who gets attacked first! What
am I supposed to do?" he hissed. "Leave you?"
"Yes.
You forget about me if you can get them out."
"Rose,
I'm not going to—"
"Mason."
I again envisioned my mother, fighting for that strength
and power to lead others. "Can you do this or not?"
We stared at each other for several heavy moments
while the others held their breaths.
"I can do this," he said stiffly. I nodded
and turned back around.
The basement door squeaked when I opened it, and I
grimaced at the sound. Scarcely daring to breathe, I stood perfectly still at
the top of the stairs, waiting and listening. The house and its eccentric
decorating looked the same as when we'd been brought in. Dark blinds covered
all of the windows, but along the edges, I could see bright light peeping in.
Sunshine had never tasted so sweet as it did at that moment. Getting to it
meant freedom.
There were no sounds, no movements. Looking around, I
tried to remember where the front door was. It was on the other side of the
house—really not far in the grand scheme of things but a gaping chasm at the
moment.
"Scout with me," I whispered to Mason,
hoping to make him feel better about bringing up the rear.
He let Eddie lean on Mia for a moment and stepped
forward with me to do a quick sweep of the main living area. Nothing. The path
was clear from here to the front door. I exhaled in relief. Mason took hold of
Eddie again, and we moved forward, all of us tense and nervous. God. We were
going to do this, I realized. We were really going to do this. I couldn't believe
how lucky we'd gotten. We'd been so close to disaster—and had just barely made
it through. It was one of those
moments that made you appreciate your life and want to turn things around. A
second chance you swear you won't let go to waste. A realization that—
I heard them move almost at
the same time I saw them step in front of us. It was like a magician conjured
Isaiah and Elena out of thin air. Only, I knew there was no magic involved this
time. Strigoi just moved that quickly. They must have been in one of the other
main floor rooms that we'd assumed were empty—we hadn't wanted to waste the
extra time looking. I raged at myself internally for not having checked out
every inch of the whole floor. Somewhere, in the back of my memory, I heard
myself taunting my mother in Stan's class: "It seems to me like you guys
messed up. Why didn't you scope out the place and make sure it was clear of
Strigoi in the first place? Seems like you could have saved yourself a lot of
trouble."
Karma's a real bitch.
"Children,
children," crooned Isaiah. "This isn't how the game works. You're
breaking the rules." A cruel smile played over his lips. He found us
amusing, no real threat at all. Honestly? He was right.
"Fast and far,
Mason," I said in low voice, never taking my eyes off the Strigoi.
"My, my … if looks
could kill …" Isaiah arched his eyebrows as something occurred to him.
"Are you thinking you can take us both on by yourself?" He chuckled.
Elena chuckled. I gritted my teeth.
No, I didn't think I could
take them both on. In fact, I was pretty sure I
was going to die. But I was also pretty sure I could provide one hell of a
distraction first.
I lunged toward Isaiah but pulled the gun on Elena.
You could get a jump on human guards—but not on Strigoi. They saw me coming
practically before I even moved. They didn't expect me to have a gun, though.
And while Isaiah blocked my attacking body with almost no effort whatsoever, I
still managed to get a shot off at Elena before he seized my arms and
restrained me. The gun's report rang loud in my ears, and she screamed in pain
and surprise. I'd aimed for her stomach but had been jostled into hitting her
thigh. Not that it mattered. Neither spot would kill her, but the stomach would
have hurt a lot more.
Isaiah held my wrists so hard, I thought he'd break
the bones. I dropped the gun. It hit the floor, bounced, and slid toward the
door. Elena shrieked in rage and clawed at me. Isaiah told her to control
herself and pushed me out of reach. All the while, I flailed as much as possible,
not so much to escape as to make a nuisance of myself.
And
then: the sweetest of sounds.
The
front door opening.
Mason had taken advantage of my distraction. He'd left
Eddie with Mia and sprinted around me and the grappling Strigoi to open the
door. Isaiah turned with that lightning-fast speed of his—and screamed as
sunlight poured over him. But even though he was suffering, his reflexes were
still fast. He jerked himself out of the patch of light into the living room, dragging Elena and me with him—her by the arm and me
by my neck.
"Get
them out!" I yelled.
"Isaiah—"
began Elena, breaking out of his grip.
He shoved me to the floor and spun around, staring at
his escaping victims. I gasped for breath now that his grip on my throat was
gone and peered back at the door through the tangle of my hair. I was just in
time to see Mason drag Eddie over the threshold, out into the safety of the
light. Mia and Christian were already gone. I nearly wept in relief.
Isaiah turned back on me with all the fury of a storm,
his eyes black and terrible as he loomed over me from his great height. His
face, which had always been scary, became something almost beyond
comprehension. "Monstrous" didn't even begin to cover it.
He jerked me up by my hair. I cried out at the pain,
and he brought his head down so that our faces were pressed up to one
another's.
"You want a bite, girl?" he demanded.
"You want to be a blood whore? Well, we can arrange that. In every sense
of the word. And it will not be sweet. And it will not be numbing.
It will be painful—compulsion works both ways, you know, and I will make sure
you believe you are suffering the worst pain of your life. And I will also make
sure your death takes a very, very long time. You will scream. You will cry.
You will beg me to end it all and let you die—"
"Isaiah," cried Elena in exasperation.
"Just kill her already. If you'd done it sooner like I
said, none of this would have happened."
He kept his grip on me but flicked his eyes toward
her. "Do not interrupt me."
"You're being melodramatic," she continued.
Yeah, she really was whiny. I never would have thought a Strigoi could do that.
It was almost comical. "And wasteful."
"Do
not talk back to me, either," he said.
"I'm
hungry. I'm just saying you should—"
"Let
her go, or I'll kill you."
We all turned at the new voice, a voice dark and
angry. Mason stood in the doorway, framed in light, holding my dropped gun.
Isaiah studied him for a few moments.
"Sure,"
Isaiah finally said. He sounded bored. "Try it."
Mason didn't hesitate. He fired and kept firing until
he'd emptied the entire clip into Isaiah's chest. Each bullet made the Strigoi
flinch a little, but otherwise, he kept standing and holding on to me. This was
what it meant to be an old and powerful Strigoi, I realized. A bullet in the
thigh hurt a young vampire like Elena. But for Isaiah? Getting shot in the
chest multiple times was simply a nuisance.
Mason realized this too, and his features hardened as
he threw down the gun.
"Get
out!" I screamed. He was still in the sun, still safe.
But he didn't listen to me. He ran toward us, out of
his protective light. I redoubled my struggles, hoping I'd pull Isaiah's
attention away from Mason. I didn't. Isaiah shoved me into Elena before Mason was halfway to us. Swiftly,
Isaiah blocked and seized hold of Mason, exactly as he'd done to me earlier.
Only, unlike with me, Isaiah didn't restrain Mason's
arms. He didn't jerk Mason upright by the hair or make long, rambling threats
about an agonizing death. Isaiah simply stopped the attack, grabbed Mason's
head with both hands, and gave a quick twist. There was a sickening crack.
Mason's eyes went wide. Then they went blank.
With an impatient sigh, Isaiah released his hold and
tossed Mason's limp body over toward where Elena held me. It landed before us.
My vision swam as nausea and dizziness wrapped around me.
"There," Isaiah said to Elena. "See if
that'll tide you over. And save some for me."
HORROR AND SHOCK CONSUMED
ME, so much so that I thought my soul
would shrivel, that the world would end right then and there—because surely, surely
it couldn't keep going on after this. No one could keep going on after
this. I wanted to shriek my pain to the universe. I wanted to cry until I melted.
I wanted to sink down beside Mason and die with him.
Elena released me, apparently deciding I posed no
danger positioned as I was between her and Isaiah. She turned toward Mason's
body.
And
I stopped feeling. I simply acted.
"Don't.
Touch. Him." I didn't recognize my own voice.
She rolled her eyes. "Good grief, you're
annoying. I'm started to see Isaiah's point—you do need to suffer before
dying." Turning away, she knelt down to the floor and flipped Mason over
onto his back.
"Don't touch him!" I screamed. I shoved her
with little effect. She shoved back, nearly knocking me over. It was all I
could do to steady my feet and stay upright.
Isaiah looked on with amused interest; then his gaze
fell to the floor. Lissa's chotki had fallen out of my coat pocket. He picked
it up. Strigoi could touch holy objects—the stories about them fearing crosses weren't true. They just
couldn't enter holy ground. He flipped the cross over and ran his fingers over
the etched dragon.
"Ah, the Dragomirs," he mused. "I'd
forgotten about them. Easy to. There's what, one? Two of them left? Barely
worth remembering." Those horrible red eyes focused on me. "Do you
know any of them? I'll have to see to them one of these days. It won't be very
hard to—"
Suddenly, I heard an explosion. The aquarium burst
apart as water shot out of it, shattering the glass. Pieces of it flew toward
me, but I barely noticed. The water coalesced in the air, forming a lopsided
sphere. It began to float. Toward Isaiah. I felt my jaw drop as I stared at it.
He watched it too, more puzzled than scared. At least
until it wrapped around his face and started suffocating him.
Much like the bullets, suffocation wouldn't kill him.
But it could cause him a hell of a lot of discomfort.
His hands flew to his face, desperately trying to
"pry" the water away. It was no use. His fingers simply slipped
through. Elena forgot about Mason and jumped to her feet.
"What is it?" she shrieked. She shook him in
an equally useless effort to free him. "What's happening?"
Again, I didn't feel. I acted. My hand closed around a
large piece of glass from the broken aquarium. It was jagged and sharp, cutting
into my hand.
Sprinting forward, I plunged the shard into Isaiah's
chest, aiming for the heart I'd worked so hard to find in practice. Isaiah emitted a strangled scream through the water
and collapsed to the floor. His eyes rolled back in his head as he blacked out
from the pain.
Elena stared, as shocked as I'd been when Isaiah had
killed Mason. Isaiah wasn't dead, of course, but he was temporarily down for
the count. Her face clearly showed she hadn't thought that was possible.
The smart thing at that point would have been to run
toward the door and the sun's safety. Instead, I ran in the opposite direction,
toward the fireplace. I grabbed one of the antique swords and turned back
toward Elena. I didn't have far to go, because she'd recovered herself and was
heading toward me.
Snarling with rage, she tried to grab me. I had never
trained with a sword, but I had been taught to fight with any makeshift weapon
I could find. I used the sword to keep distance between us, my motions clumsy
but effective for the time being.
White fangs flashed in her mouth. "I am going to
make you—"
"Suffer,
pay, regret I was ever born?" I suggested.
I remembered fighting with my mom, how I'd been on the
defensive the whole time. That wouldn't work this time. I had to attack.
Jabbing forward, I tried to land a blow on Elena. No luck. She anticipated my
every move.
Suddenly, from behind her, Isaiah groaned as he
started to come around. She glanced back, the smallest of motions that let me swipe the sword across her chest. It cut
the fabric of her shirt and grazed the skin, but nothing more. Still, she
flinched and looked down in panic. I think the glass going through Isaiah's
heart was still fresh in her mind.
And that
was what I really needed.
I
mustered all my strength, drew back, and swung.
The sword's blade hit the side of her neck, hard and
deep. She gave a horrible, sickening cry, a shriek that made my skin crawl. She
tried to move toward me. I pulled back and hit again. Her hands clutched at her
throat, and her knees gave way. I struck and struck, the sword digging deeper
into her neck each time. Cutting off someone's head was harder than I'd thought
it would be. The old, dull sword probably wasn't helping.
But finally, I gained enough sense to realize she
wasn't moving. Her head lay there, detached from her body, her dead eyes
looking up at me as though she couldn't believe what had happened. That made
two of us.
Someone was screaming, and for a surreal second, I
thought it was still Elena. Then I lifted my eyes and looked across the room.
Mia stood in the doorway, eyes bugging out and skin tinged green like she might
throw up. Distantly, in the back of my mind, I realized she was the one who'd
made the aquarium explode. Water magic apparently wasn't worthless after all.
Still a bit shaken, Isaiah tried to rise to his feet.
But I was on him before he could fully manage it. The sword sang out, wreaking blood and pain with each blow. I felt like an
old pro now. Isaiah fell back to the floor. In my mind, I kept seeing him break
Mason's neck, and I hacked and hacked as hard as I could, as though striking
fiercely enough might somehow banish the memory.
"Rose!
Rose!"
Through my hate-filled haze, I just barely detected
Mia's voice.
"Rose,
he's dead!"
Slowly, shakily, I held back the next blow and looked
down at his body—and the head no longer attached to it. She was right. He was
dead. Very, very dead.
I looked at the rest of the room. There was blood
everywhere, but the horror of it didn't really register with me. My world had
slowed down, slowed down to two very simple tasks. Kill the Strigoi. Protect
Mason. I couldn't process anything else.
"Rose," whispered Mia. She was trembling,
her words filled with fear. She was afraid of me, not the Strigoi. "Rose,
we have to go. Come on."
I dragged my eyes away from her and looked down at
Isaiah's remains. After several moments, I crawled over to Mason's body, still
clutching the sword.
"No," I croaked out. "I can't leave
him. Other Strigoi might come…."
My
eyes burned like I desperately wanted to cry. I couldn't say for sure. The
bloodlust still pounded in me, violence and rage the only
emotions I was capable of anymore.
"Rose, we'll come back for him. If other Strigoi
are coming, we have to get out."
"No," I repeated, not even looking at her.
"I'm not leaving him. I won't leave him alone." With my free hand, I
stroked Mason's hair.
"Rose—"
I jerked my head up. "Get out!" I screamed
at her. "Get out, and leave us alone."
She took a few steps forward, and I lifted the sword.
She froze.
"Get
out," I repeated. "Go find the others."
Slowly, Mia backed up toward the door. She gave me one
last, desperate look before running outside.
Silence fell, and I relaxed my hold on the sword but
refused to let it go. My body sagged forward, and I rested my head on Mason's
chest. I became oblivious to everything: to the world around me, to time
itself. Seconds could have passed. Hours could have passed. I didn't know. I
didn't know anything except that I couldn't leave Mason alone. I existed in an
altered state, a state that just barely kept the terror and grief at bay. I
couldn't believe Mason was dead. I couldn't believe I'd just summoned death. So
long as I refused to acknowledge either, I could pretend they hadn't happened.
Footsteps and voices eventually sounded, and I lifted
my head up. People poured in through the door, lots of them. I couldn't really
make out any of them. I didn't need to. They were threats,
threats I had to keep Mason safe from. A couple of them approached me, and I
leapt up, lifting the sword and holding it protectively over his body.
"Stay
back," I warned. "Stay away from him."
They
kept coming.
"Stay
back!" I yelled. They stopped. Except for one.
"Rose,"
came a soft voice. "Drop the sword."
My
hands shook. I swallowed. "Get away from us."
"Rose."
The voice spoke again, a voice that my soul would have
known anywhere. Hesitantly, I let myself finally become aware of my
surroundings, let the details sink in. I let my eyes focus on the features of
the man standing there. Dimitri's brown eyes, gentle and firm, looked down on
me.
"It's okay," he said. "Everything's
going to be okay. You can let go of the sword."
My hands shook even harder as I fought to hold on to
the hilt. "I can't." The words hurt coming out. "I can't leave
him alone. I have to protect him."
"You
have," said Dimitri.
The sword fell out of my hands, landing with a loud
clatter on the wooden floor. I followed, collapsing on all fours, wanting to
cry but still unable to.
Dimitri's arms wrapped around me as he helped me up.
Voices swarmed around us, and one by one, I recognized people I knew and
trusted. He started to tug me toward the door, but I refused to move just yet.
I couldn't. My hands clutched his shirt, crumpling
the fabric. Still keeping one arm around me, he smoothed my hair back away from
my face. I leaned my head against him, and he continued stroking my hair,
murmuring something in Russian. I didn't understand a word of it, but the
gentle tone soothed me.
Guardians were spreading throughout the house,
examining it inch by inch. A couple of them approached us and knelt by the
bodies I refused to look at.
"She
did that? Both of them?"
"That
sword hasn't been sharpened in years!"
A funny sound caught in my throat. Dimitri squeezed my
shoulder comfortingly.
"Get her out of here, Belikov," I heard a
woman say behind him, her voice familiar.
Dimitri squeezed my shoulder again. "Come on,
Roza. It's time to go."
This time, I went. He guided me out of the house,
holding onto me as I managed each agonizing step. My mind still refused to
really process what had happened. I couldn't do much more than follow simple
directions from those around me.
I eventually ended up on one of the Academy's jets.
Engines roared around us as the plane lifted off. Dimitri murmured something
about coming back shortly and left me alone in my seat. I stared straight
ahead, studying the details of the seat in front of me.
Someone sat beside me and draped a blanket over my shoulders. I noticed then
just how badly I was shivering. I tugged at the edges of the blanket.
"I'm cold," I said. "How am I so
cold?"
"You're in shock," Mia answered.
I turned and looked at her,
studying her blond curls and big blue eyes. Something about seeing her unleashed
my memories. It all tumbled back. I squeezed my eyes shut.
"Oh God," I
breathed. I opened my eyes and focused on her again. "You saved me—saved
me when you blew up the fish tank. You shouldn't have done it. You shouldn't
have come back."
She shrugged. "You shouldn't have gone for the
sword."
Fair point. "Thank
you," I told her. "What you did … I never would have thought of that.
It was brilliant."
"I don't know about
that," she mused, smiling ruefully. "Water isn't much of a weapon,
remember?"
I choked on a laugh, even
though I really didn't find my old words that funny. Not anymore.
"Water's a great
weapon," I said finally. "When we get back, we'll have to practice
ways to use it."
Her face lit up. Fierceness
shone out from her eyes. "I'd like that. More than anything."
"I'm sorry … sorry about your mom."
Mia simply nodded.
"You're lucky to still have yours. You don't know how lucky."
I turned and stared at the
seat again. The next words out of my mouth startled me: "I wish she was
here."
"She is," said Mia, sounding surprised.
"She was with the group that raided the house. Didn't you see her?"
I
shook my head.
We lapsed into silence. Mia stood up and left. A
minute later, someone else sat down beside me. I didn't have to see her to know
who she was. I just knew.
"Rose," said my mother. For once in my life,
she sounded unsure of herself. Scared, maybe. "Mia said you wanted to see
me." I didn't answer. I didn't look at her. "What…what do you
need?"
I didn't know what I needed. I didn't know what to do.
The stinging in my eyes grew unbearable, and before I knew it, I was crying.
Big, painful sobs seized my body. The tears I'd held back so long poured down
my face. The fear and grief I'd refused to let myself feel finally burst free,
burning in my chest. I could scarcely breathe.
My mother put her arms around me, and I buried my face
in her chest, sobbing even harder.
"I know," she said softly, tightening her
grip on me. "I understand."
THE WEATHER WARMED UP ON the day of my molnija ceremony.
In fact, it was so warm that a lot of the snow on campus began melting, running
down the sides of the Academy's stone buildings in slim, silvery streams.
Winter was far from being over, so I knew everything would just freeze up again
in a few days. For now, though, it felt as though the entire world was weeping.
I had walked away from the Spokane incident with minor
bruises and cuts. The burns from the melting flex-cuffs were the worst of my
injuries. But I was still having a hard time dealing with the death I'd caused
and the death I'd seen. I'd wanted little more than to go curl up in a ball
somewhere and not talk to anyone, except maybe Lissa. But on my fourth day back
at the Academy, my mother had found me and told me it was time to receive my
marks.
It had taken me several moments to grasp what she was
talking about. Then it occurred to me that in decapitating two Strigoi, I'd
earned two molnija tattoos. My first ones. The realization had stunned me.
All my life, in considering my future career as a guardian, I'd looked forward
to the marks. I'd seen them as badges of honor. But now? Mainly they were going
to be reminders of something I wanted to forget.
The ceremony took place in the guardians' building, in
a large room they used for meetings and banquets. It was nothing at all like
the great dining room at the resort. It was efficient and practical, like the
guardians were. The carpet was a bluish gray shade, low and tightly woven. The
bare white walls held framed black-and-white photos of St. Vladimir's through
the years. There were no other decorations or fanfare, yet the solemnity and
power of the moment were palpable. All the guardians on campus—but no
novices—attended. They milled around in the building's main meeting room,
hanging out in clusters but not talking. When the ceremony started, they fell
into orderly ranks without being told and watched me.
I sat on a stool in the corner of the room, leaning
forward with my hair hanging over the front of my face. Behind me, a guardian
named Lionel held a tattooist's needle to the back of my neck. I'd known him
the whole time I'd been at the Academy, but I'd never realized he was trained
to draw molnija marks.
Before he started, he had a murmured conversation with
my mother and Alberta.
"She won't have a promise mark," he said.
"She hasn't graduated."
"It happens," said Alberta. "She made
the kills. Do the molnijas, and she'll get the promise mark later."
Considering the pain I regularly put myself through, I
didn't expect the tattoos to hurt as much as they did. But I bit my lip and stayed silent as Lionel made the marks. The
process seemed to go on forever. When he finished, he produced a couple of
mirrors, and with some maneuvering, I was able to see the back of my neck. Two
tiny black marks sat there, side by side, against my reddened and sensitive
skin. Molnija meant "lightning" in Russian, and that's what
the jagged shape was meant to symbolize. Two marks. One for Isaiah, one for
Elena.
Once I'd seen them, he bandaged them up and gave me
some instructions about caring for them while they healed. Most of it I missed,
but I figured I could ask again later. I was still kind of shocked by it all.
After that, all the gathered guardians came up to me
one by one. They each gave me some sort of sign of affection—a hug, a kiss on
the cheek—and kind words.
"Welcome to the ranks," said Alberta, her
weathered face gentle as she pulled me into a tight embrace.
Dimitri didn't say anything when his turn came, but as
always, his eyes spoke legions. Pride and tenderness filled his expression, and
I swallowed back tears. He rested one hand gently on my cheek, nodded, and
walked away.
When Stan—the instructor I'd fought with the most
since my first day—hugged me and said, "Now you're one of us. I always
knew you'd be one of the best," I thought I'd pass out.
And then when my mother came up to me, I couldn't help
the tear that ran down my cheek. She wiped it away and then brushed her fingers
against the back of my neck. "Don't ever forget," she told me.
Nobody said, "Congratulations," and I was
glad. Death wasn't anything to get excited about.
When that was done, drinks and food were served. I
walked to the buffet table and made a plate for myself of miniature feta
quiches and a slice of mango cheesecake. I ate without really tasting the food
and answered questions from others without even knowing what I said half the
time. It was like I was a Rose robot, going through the motions of what was
expected. On the back of my neck, my skin stung from the tattoos, and in my
mind, I kept seeing Mason's blue eyes and Isaiah's red ones.
I felt guilty for not enjoying my big day more, but I
was relieved when the group finally started dispersing. My mother walked up to
me as others murmured their goodbyes. Aside from her words here at the
ceremony, we hadn't talked much since my breakdown on the plane. I still felt a
little funny about that—and a little embarrassed as well. She'd never mentioned
it, but something very small had shifted in the nature of our relationship. We
weren't anywhere near being friends…but we weren't exactly enemies anymore
either.
"Lord Szelsky is leaving soon," she told me
as we stood near the building's doorway, not far from where I'd yelled for her
on that first day we'd talked. "I'll be going with him."
"I know," I said. There was no question
she'd leave. That was how it was. Guardians followed Moroi. They came first.
She regarded me for a few moments, her brown eyes thoughtful. For the first time in a long time, I felt
like we were actually looking eye to eye, as opposed to her looking down on me.
It was about time, too, seeing as I had half a foot of height on her.
"You did well," she said at last.
"Considering the circumstances."
It was only half a compliment, but I deserved no more.
I understood now the mistakes and lapses of judgment that had led to the events
at Isaiah's house. Some had been my fault; some hadn't. I wished I could have
changed some of my actions, but I knew she was right. I'd done the best I could
in the end with the mess before me.
"Killing Strigoi wasn't as glamorous as I thought
it'd be," I told her.
She
gave me a sad smile. "No. It never is."
I thought then about all the marks on her neck, all
the kills. I shuddered.
"Oh, hey." Eager to change the subject, I
reached into my pocket and pulled out the little blue eye pendant she'd given
me. "This thing you gave me. It's a n-nazari" I stumbled over
the word. She looked surprised.
"Yes.
How'd you know?"
I didn't want to explain my dreams with Adrian.
"Someone told me. It's a protection thing, right?"
A pensive look crossed her face, and then she exhaled
and nodded. "Yes. It comes from an old superstition in the Middle East…Some
people believe that those who want to hurt you can curse you or give you 'the evil eye.' The nazar
is meant to counteract the evil eye … and just bring protection in general to
those who wear it."
I ran my fingers over the
piece of glass. "Middle East…so, places sort of like, um, Turkey?"
My mother's lips quirked.
"Places exactly like Turkey." She hesitated. "It was … a gift. A
gift I received a long time ago …" Her gaze turned inward, lost in memory.
"I got a lot of … attention from men when I was your age. Attention that
seemed flattering at first but wasn't in the end. It's hard to tell the
difference sometimes, between what's real affection and what's someone wanting
to take advantage of you. But when you feel the real thing…well, you'll
know."
I understood then why she
was so overprotective about my reputation—she'd endangered her own when she was
younger. Maybe more than that had been damaged.
I also knew why she'd given
the nazar to me. My father had given it to her. I didn't think she wanted to
talk anymore about it, so I didn't ask. It was enough to know that maybe, just
maybe, their relationship hadn't been all about business and genes after all.
We said goodbye, and I
returned to my classes. Everyone knew where I'd been that morning, and my
fellow novices wanted to see my molnija marks. I didn't blame them. If
our roles had been reversed, I would have been harassing me too.
"Come on, Rose,"
begged Shane Reyes. We were walking out of our morning practice, and he kept
swatting my ponytail. I made a mental note to wear my
hair down tomorrow. Several others followed us and echoed his requests.
"Yeah, come on. Let's see what you got for your
swordsmanship!"
Their eyes shone with eagerness and excitement. I was
a hero, their classmate who'd dispatched the leaders of the roving band of
Strigoi that had so terrorized us over the holidays. But I met the eyes of
someone standing at the back of the group, someone who looked neither eager nor
excited. Eddie. Meeting my gaze, he gave me a small, sad smile. He understood.
"Sorry, guys," I said, turning back to the
others. "They have to stay bandaged. Doctor's orders."
This was met with grumbles that soon turned into
questions about how I'd actually killed the Strigoi. Decapitation was one of
the hardest and rarest ways to kill a vampire; it wasn't like carrying a sword
was convenient. So I did my best to tell my friends what had happened, making
sure to stick to the facts and not glorify the killings.
The school day couldn't end a moment too soon, and
Lissa walked with me back to my dorm. She and I hadn't had the chance to talk
much since everything had gone down in Spokane. I'd undergone a lot of
questioning, and then there'd been Mason's funeral. Lissa had also been caught
up in her own distractions with the royals leaving campus, so she'd had no more
free time than me.
Being near her made me feel better. Even though I
could be in her head at any time, it just wasn't the same as
actually being physically around another living person who cared about you.
When we got to the door of my room, I saw a bouquet of
freesias sitting on the floor near it. Sighing, I picked up the fragrant
flowers without even looking at the attached card.
"What
are those?" asked Lissa while I unlocked the door.
"They're from Adrian," I told her. We walked
inside, and I pointed to my desk, where a few other bouquets sat. I put the
freesias down beside them. "I'll be glad when he leaves campus. I don't
think I can take much more of this."
She
turned to me in surprise. "Oh. Um, you don't know."
I got that warning twinge through the bond that told
me I wouldn't like what was about to come.
"Know
what?"
"Uh,
he isn't leaving. He's going to stay here for a while."
"He has to leave," I argued. To my
knowledge, the only reason he'd come back at all was because of Mason's
funeral, and I still wasn't sure why he'd done that, since he barely knew
Mason. Maybe Adrian had just done it for show. Or maybe to keep stalking Lissa
and me. "He's in college. Or maybe reform school. I don't know, but he
does something."
"He's
taking the semester off."
I
stared.
Smiling at my shock, she nodded. "He's going to
stay and work with me… and Ms. Carmack. All this time, he never even knew what
spirit was. He just knew he hadn't specialized but that he had these weird abilities. He just kept them
to himself, except for when he occasionally found another spirit user. But they
didn't know any more than he did."
"I should have figured it out sooner," I
mused. "There was something about being around him. … I always wanted to
talk to him, you know? He just has this … charisma. Like you do. I guess it's
all tied into spirit and compulsion or whatever. It makes me like him … even
though I don't like him."
"Don't
you?" she teased.
"No," I replied adamantly. "And I don't
like that dream thing, either."
Her jade eyes went wide with wonder. "That is
cool," she said. "You've always been able to tell what's going on
with me, but I've never been able to communicate with you the other way. I'm
glad you guys got away when you did…but I wish I could have figured out the
dream thing and helped find you."
"Not me," I said. "I'm glad Adrian
didn't get you to go off your meds."
I hadn't found that out until a few days after being
in Spokane. Lissa had apparently rejected Adrian's initial suggestion that
stopping the pills would let her learn more about spirit. She had admitted to
me later, however, that if Christian and I had stayed missing much longer, she
might have cracked.
"How are you feeling lately?" I asked,
recalling her concerns about the medication. "You still feel like the
pills aren't working?"
"Mmm…well, it's hard to explain. I still feel
closer to the magic, like maybe they aren't blocking me so much anymore. But
I'm not feeling any of the other mental side effects…not upset or
anything."
"Wow,
that's great."
A beautiful smile lit her face. "I know. It makes
me think there might be hope for me to learn to work the magic after all
someday."
Seeing her so happy made me smile back. I hadn't liked
seeing those dark feelings starting to return and was glad they'd vanished. I
didn't understand the how or the why, but as long as she felt okay—
Everyone has light around
them, except for you. You have shadows. You take them from Lissa.
Adrian's words slammed into my mind. Uneasily, I
thought about my behavior these last couple of weeks. Some of the angry
outbursts. My rebelliousness—unusual even for me. My own black coil of emotion,
stirring in my chest…
No, I decided. There were no similarities. Lissa's
dark feelings were magic-based. Mine were stress-based. Besides, I felt fine
right now.
Seeing her watching me, I tried to remember where we'd
left off in the conversation. "Maybe you'll eventually find a way to make
it work. I mean, if Adrian could find a way to use spirit and doesn't need meds
…"
She
suddenly laughed. "You don't know, do you?"
"What?"
"That
Adrian does medicate himself."
"He does? But he said—" I groaned. "Of
course he does. The cigarettes. The drinking. God only knows what else."
She nodded. "Yup. He's almost always got
something in his system."
"But probably not at night…which is why he can
poke his head into my dreams."
"Man,
I wish I could do that," she sighed.
"Maybe you'll learn someday. Just don't become an
alcoholic in the process."
"I won't," she assured me. "But I will
learn. None of the other spirit users could do it, Rose—well, aside from
St. Vladimir. I'll learn like he did. I'm going to learn to use it—and I won't
let it hurt me."
I smiled and touched her hand. I had absolute faith in
her. "I know."
We talked for most of the evening. When the time came
for my usual practice with Dimitri, I parted ways with her. As I walked away, I
pondered something that had been bothering me. Although the attacking groups of
Strigoi had had many more members, the guardians felt confident Isaiah had been
their leader. That didn't mean there wouldn't be other threats in the
future, but they felt it'd be a while before his followers regrouped.
But I couldn't help thinking about the list I'd seen
in the tunnel in Spokane, the one that had listed royal families by size. And
Isaiah had mentioned the Dragomirs by name. He knew
they were almost gone, and he'd sounded keen on being the one to finish them.
Sure, he was dead now…but were there other Strigoi out there with the same
idea?
I shook my head. I couldn't worry about that. Not
today. I still needed to recover from everything else. Soon, though. Soon I'd
have to deal with this.
I didn't even know if our practice was still on but
went to the locker room anyway. After changing into practice clothes, I headed
down into the gym and found Dimitri in a supply room, reading one of the
Western novels he loved. He looked up at my entrance. I'd seen little of him in
these last few days and had figured he was busy with Tasha.
"I thought you might come by," he said,
putting a bookmark between the pages.
"It's
time for practice."
He shook his head. "No. No practice today. You still
need to recover."
"I've got a clean bill of health. I'm good to
go." I pushed as much patented Rose Hathaway bravado into my words as I
could.
Dimitri wasn't falling for any of it. He gestured to
the chair beside him. "Sit down, Rose."
I hesitated only a moment before complying. He moved
his own chair close to mine so that we sat directly across from each other. My
heart fluttered as I looked into those gorgeous dark eyes.
"No one gets over their first kill…kills…easily.
Even with Strigoi…well, it's still
technically taking a life. That's hard to come to terms with. And after
everything else you went through …" He sighed, then reached out and caught
my hand in his. His fingers were exactly like I remembered, long and powerful,
calloused with years of training. "When I saw your face…when we found you
in that house…you can't imagine how I felt."
I swallowed. "How … how did you feel?"
"Devastated …
grief-stricken. You were alive, but the way you looked … I didn't think you'd
ever recover. And it tore me apart to think of that happening to you so
young." He squeezed my hand. "You will recover—I know that now, and
I'm glad. But you aren't there. Not yet. Losing someone you care about is never
easy."
My eyes dropped from his and
studied the floor. "It's my fault," I said in a small voice.
"Hmm?"
"Mason. Getting killed."
I didn't have to see
Dimitri's face to know compassion was filling it. "Oh, Roza. No. You made
some bad decisions…you should have told others when you knew he was gone…but
you can't blame yourself. You didn't kill him."
Tears brimmed in my eyes as
I looked back up. "I might as well have. The whole reason he went there—it
was my fault. We had a fight…and I told him about the Spokane thing, even
though you asked me not to…."
One tear leaked out of the
corner of my eye. Really, I needed
to learn to stop that. Just as my mother had, Dimitri delicately wiped the tear
off my cheek.
"You can't blame
yourself for that," he told me. "You can regret your decisions and
wish you'd done things differently, but in the end, Mason made his decisions
too. That was what he chose to do. It was his decision in the end, no matter
your original role." When Mason had come back for me, I realized, he'd let
his feelings for me get in the way. It was what Dimitri had always feared, that
if he and I had any sort of relationship, it would put us—and any Moroi we
protected—in danger.
"I just wish I'd been
able to … I don't know, do anything…"
Swallowing back further
tears, I pulled my hands from Dimitri's and stood up before I could say
something stupid.
"I should go," I
said thickly. "Let me know when you want to start practice again. And
thanks for … talking."
I started to turn; then I heard him say abruptly,
"No."
I glanced back. "What?"
He held my gaze, and
something warm and wonderful and powerful shot between us.
"No," he repeated. "I told her no.
Tasha."
"I …" I shut my
mouth before my jaw hit the floor. "But…why? That was a once-in-a-lifetime
thing. You could have had a baby. And she … she was, you know, into you…."
The ghost of a smile flickered on his face.
"Yes, she was. Is. And that's why I had to say no. I couldn't return that…couldn't
give her what she wanted. Not when…" He took a few steps toward me.
"Not when my heart is somewhere else."
I almost started crying
again. "But you seemed so into her. And you kept going on about how
young I acted."
"You act young,"
he said, "because you are young. But you know things, Roza. Things
people older than you don't even know. That day …" I knew instantly which
day he referred to. The one up against the wall. "You were right, about
how I fight to stay in control. No one else has ever figured that out— and it
scared me. You scare me."
"Why? Don't you want anyone to know?"
He shrugged. "Whether
they know that fact or not doesn't matter. What matters is that someone—that
you—know me that well. When a person can see into your soul, it's hard. It
forces you to be open. Vulnerable. It's much easier being with someone who's
just more of a casual friend."
"Like Tasha."
"Tasha Ozera is an amazing
woman. She's beautiful and she's brave. But she doesn't—"
"She doesn't get you," I finished.
He nodded. "I knew
that. But I still wanted the relationship. I knew it would be easy and that she
could take me away from you. I thought she could make me forget you."
I'd thought the same thing about Mason. "But
she couldn't."
"Yes. And, so … that's a problem."
"Because it's wrong for us to be
together."
"Yes."
"Because of the age difference."
"Yes."
"But more importantly because we're going to be
Lissa's guardians and need to focus on her—not each other."
"Yes."
I thought about this for a moment and then looked
straight into his eyes. "Well," I said at last, "the way I see
it, we aren't Lissa's guardians yet."
I steeled myself for the next response. I knew it was
going to be one of the Zen life lessons. Something about inner strength and
perseverance, about how the choices we made today were templates for the future
or some other nonsense.
Instead
he kissed me.
Time stopped as he reached out and cupped my face
between his hands. He brought his mouth down and brushed it against my lips. It
was barely a kiss at first but soon increased, becoming heady and deep. When he
finally pulled away, it was to kiss my forehead. He left his lips there for
several seconds as his arms held me close.
I wished the kiss could have gone on forever. Breaking
the embrace, he ran a few fingers through my hair and down my cheek. He stepped
back toward the door.
"I'll
see you later, Roza."
"At our next practice?" I asked. "We are
starting those up again, right? I mean, you still have things to teach
me."
Standing in the doorway, he looked over at me and
smiled. "Yes. Lots of things."