After Dark

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Authors: Nancy A. Collins

BOOK: After Dark
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After Dark

A Vamps Novel

Nancy A. Collins

In loving memory of Scrapple 1994–2008
“Mama’s Little Stinker”

Rarely do great beauty and great virtue dwell together.

—Petrarch,
De Remedies

Contents

 

Chapter 1

Cally had been to Rauhnacht parties before, but none as…

Chapter 2

Carmen Duivel smiled wanly as her escort, Sergei Savanovic, handed…

Chapter 3

As Carmen dodged the arrows raining down from the sky,…

Chapter 4

The first thing Cally noticed as she stepped out of…

Chapter 5

Cally sees herself walking barefoot across the beach, watching the…

Chapter 6

Cally anxiously looked around as she and Baron Metzger were…

Chapter 7

“That’s okay, Edgar!” Cally shouted over her shoulder as she…

Chapter 8

“Is it okay if I sit here?” Carmen asked, standing…

Chapter 9

Lilith could barely contain her glee as she hurried up…

Chapter 10

For the first time in her life Cally had access…

Chapter 11

“I’m sorry I’m late, Sis,” Cally said. “Getting set up…

Chapter 12

As the sun began to sink behind the towering skyscrapers,…

Chapter 13

As Cally stepped down off the stage, Lucky moved toward…

Chapter 14

Normally Lilith would have hung around for the reception after…

Chapter 15

“Here you go—door-to-door service,” Lucky said as his driver pulled…

Chapter 16

Lilith woke up feeling better than she had in a…

Chapter 17

Cally let out a long, slow breath of disbelief. Lilith…

 

C
ally had been to Rauhnacht parties before, but none as elaborate as this. The difference between how the New Bloods and Old Bloods celebrated the arrival of the Dark Season was the difference between a children’s Halloween party and the Carnival of Venice. Now that the opening waltz of the evening was over, the debutantes and their escorts were receiving congratulations from their parents’ friends and associates. Everywhere she looked, gorgeous women in glittering designer evening gowns and men in elegant dress mingled. The air was alive with laughter, live music, and the ring of fine crystal as the revelers toasted one another.

At the center of the ballroom was a huge fountain fashioned of hammered gold offering an endless supply of O positive blood. As Count Orlock’s guests milled about, chatting and laughing among themselves, they were free to fill their glasses from any of its fancy spigots. A small army of Orlock servants wearing classic footman gear also carried platters laden with wineglasses for those revelers who thirsted for less-common blood types.

The floor was open to whoever wished to dance the night away. Dozens of couples swirled about, moving in perfect time.

As the only daughter of a single mother, Cally had grown up far removed from the glitz and glamour of the jet-setting Old Bloods. Then, after sixteen years of anonymity, her biological father had suddenly taken an interest in her. The immediate transition from a low-rent New Blood high school to Bathory Academy had been jarring. Cally’s problem wasn’t the challenge of adapting to a new life of privilege and financial security—she was pretty sure she could figure that one out. She was more troubled by the fact that she had just been introduced to all of Old Blood society (at least those who mattered) under false pretenses.

Although Baron Karl Metzger claimed her as his daughter, Cally’s biological father was really Victor Todd, one of the world’s richest vampires and Baron Metzger’s lord and master. However, since Victor knew his wife, Irina, and his daughter Lilith would take a dim view of any pretender to the Todd bloodright, it was necessary for Cally to masquerade as another man’s child if she wanted to stay alive. The fact that Lilith knew the truth and was using it to blackmail Victor didn’t exactly make things easier. And as if that weren’t dicey enough, there was also the problem of Cally’s mother being a human.

“My dear, there’s someone here I want you to meet.”

Cally glanced up at Baron Metzger. “Who is it?”

“Just a friend of mine. Ah, there she is!” he said, pointing in the direction of a woman dressed in a midnight-blue silk crepe gown with matching lambskin opera gloves.

“Karl! By the Founders, it’s good to see you!” the woman said as she clasped Metzger’s hands, ritualistically kissing the air to either side of his cheeks. Her sleek, black hair was worn in a Cleopatra bob.

“You look fabulous as ever, darling!” Baron Metzger smiled. “I would like you to meet my daughter. Cally, this is my old friend—”

“Uh-uh-uh!” the woman said, wagging a finger in admonishment. “You
know
you’re not allowed to say the
O
word around me!”

“Excuse me,
liebchen
, I forgot!” Metzger chuckled. “Make that my very
dear
friend Sister Midnight.”

“Not
the
Sister Midnight?” Cally gasped in surprise.

Sister Midnight was the owner of the most exclusive vampire-only boutique in New York City, with equally successful branches in Beverly Hills, London, Paris, Moscow, and Tokyo. If Victor Todd was the vampire world’s equivalent of Bill Gates, Sister Midnight was its Martha Stewart.

“One and the same, I’m afraid,” she replied. “It’s nice to know my reputation precedes me, even among the younger generation.”

“It’s an honor to meet you, ma’am!”

“She
is
a lovely little thing, Karl!” Sister Midnight said, obviously pleased. “Where have you been hiding her all this time? I had no idea you had a daughter until I saw you coming down the stairs.”

“Cally’s mother was one of my concubines,” Metzger replied matter-of-factly. “Now that my dear wife, Adela, is no more, I am free to formally claim Cally as part of my family.”

Sister Midnight nodded her understanding, seeming to accept his explanation without batting an eye. “I can tell she’s inherited your fashion sense! I absolutely
love
that gown you have on, my child! Where did you get it? Who’s the designer?”

“Well, I, uh…” Although she was flattered by the praise, Cally was hesitant to admit what she was wearing was homemade.

“Come, now—there’s no point in being modest!” Baron Metzger said proudly. “She designed the gown on her own!”

Sister Midnight’s jaw dropped in surprise. “Cally, is your father telling me the truth?”

“Yes,” she replied, blushing. “I made it myself.”

“Do you have any more ‘originals’?”

“Yes, but most of them are packed away right now….” Cally caught herself before she could say any more. The moment the Grand Ball was over, she was headed to JFK International Airport, where her father had a private jet fueled and ready to fly her to Europe. No one was supposed to know she was leaving, especially Lilith, so she had to be extra careful about what she said during the course of the night.

Although she didn’t want to leave New York, she had agreed to the relocation out of concern for her mother’s safety and a desire to please her father. But she sensed that Victor’s sudden interest in her welfare had more to do with her having inherited a rare supernatural genetic trait known as the Shadow Hand than actual affection.

Sister Midnight reached into her satin purse, took out a business card, and handed it to Cally. “Come by the boutique in a couple of days. Bring along a few samples of your work. If I like what I see, perhaps we can make an arrangement for something later on?”

Cally blinked in disbelief. “Are you serious?”

“I’m
never
serious,” Sister Midnight said with a throaty laugh. “But I
do
mean what I say!” She turned and waved at someone across the room. “I’d love to chat, darling, but I just saw someone that I simply
must
talk to!”

Cally stared in awe at the business card. “I can’t believe that just happened,” she told the Baron. “I’ve always dreamed of getting a chance like this—but I never thought it would happen. It’s too bad I’m not in a position to take advantage of the situation.”

“Don’t let such things dampen your spirits, my dear. From here on, you’ll have plenty of opportunities,” the Baron said reassuringly. “Now that you are one of us, doors that were once closed are open. All you have to do is walk through them.”

As Cally mulled over Metzger’s words, Melinda Mauvais emerged from the crowd of expensively dressed partygoers.

“There you are!” Melinda said, heaving a sigh of relief. “I’ve been looking all over for you!”

“Who is this charming young lady?” Metzger asked, eyeing the other girl’s chic Valentino gown.

“Baron—I mean Dad,” Cally said, quickly correcting herself, “I’d like to introduce you to my good friend Melinda.”

“Pleased to meet you, sir,” Melinda said, offering him her hand.

Baron Metzger clicked his heels as he bowed at the waist. “The pleasure is all mine.”

“I’d like to borrow your daughter for a few minutes, Baron,” Melinda said, taking Cally by the arm. “My parents would like to meet her.”

Anton Mauvais was a handsome man with a slightly puffy, fretful face, who appeared to be in his late thirties. Standing beside him was his wife, Layla, a slender, stunningly beautiful woman with skin the color of mahogany. She was dressed in a backless gold lamé evening gown and she wore her hair close to her skull, dramatically highlighting her catlike black eyes.

“Mother? Father? I’d like you to meet my friend Cally Monture.”

“You’re the half-blood, am I right?” Anton Mauvais asked, his voice as blunt as a hammer.


Dad!
” Melinda groaned in embarrassment.

“There’s no need to be
rude
, Anton!” Layla said reproachfully.

“I’m
not
being rude, just truthful!” Mauvais snapped defensively. “The girl’s mother is a New Blood, is she not?”

Layla sighed wearily. “For once, I would like to go somewhere without you bringing caste into the conversation!”

Unsure how she should react, Cally was surprised to find her surrogate father suddenly at her elbow.

“Good evening, Anton,” Baron Metzger said flatly. “Congratulations on the debut of your lovely daughter.”

“Thank you, Karl. Congratulations to you as well. I was just asking your girl here a couple of questions about—”

“Yes, I know what you were doing,” Metzger said, cutting Mauvais off in mid-sentence. “She has been properly introduced to Old Blood society as my daughter. Should you have any further questions, ask them of me.”

“For someone who so proudly paraded his bastard for all to see, you seem to resent the term ‘New Blood,’” Mauvais said with a sneer.

“Save it for your fellow Purists,” Metzger replied coldly. “They have time for such drivel; I don’t.”

Mauvais’s face contorted, and for the space of a heartbeat, he became a snarling wolf from the neck up, fangs bared, eyes flashing with a murderous fire.


Anton
!”

Layla’s voice was like the crack of a whip. Mauvais’s wolf head disappeared as swiftly as it had materialized. He scowled at his wife but quickly averted his gaze on seeing her anger.

“I’m going to go freshen my drink,” he said sullenly.

Layla Mauvais placed a hand on Metzger’s arm. “I’m
so
terribly sorry about all that, Baron. Ever since Anton joined Count de Laval’s retinue as an adviser, he’s been insufferable! Purist this, Purist that!” She took a deep breath, forcing a smile onto her face. “But enough about my husband! So, Cally, you are the one who saved my daughter’s life? I owe you a great debt.” Layla threw her arms around Cally in an unexpected embrace. “You have a
very
brave daughter, Baron!”

“Is that so?” Metzger said, raising an eyebrow.

“Did she not tell you? She saved my Melinda from Van Helsings.”

Metzger’s surprise gave way to alarm. “She did
what?

“We were clubbing,” Melinda explained. “There was an ambush. We would have been staked if it hadn’t been for Cally. She killed all three of them using her stormgathering ability.”

Metzger turned to stare at Cally. “You killed
three
Van Helsings? All by yourself?”

“Kinda,” Cally replied uncomfortably.

The truth was, she hadn’t killed three Van Helsings on the pier that night. She hadn’t even killed two. Melinda herself had slain one of the vampire hunters, while she used her ability to control lightning to incapacitate the second. As for the third…well, the less said about him, the better.

“Brave
and
modest,” Layla Mauvais said admiringly. “My Melinda is
very
lucky to have a friend like you, my dear! Just as you are lucky to have such a fine father.”

“Yes, I guess I am.” Cally smiled and glanced across the room at Victor Todd, who was being congratulated on his daughter’s debut. As she watched, Victor put a fatherly arm around Lilith’s shoulders. The smile slipped from Cally’s face and she quickly looked away.

 

“Good evening, Mr. and Mrs. Todd.”

“Good evening, Jules.” Irina smiled. “You’re looking
very
handsome tonight.”

“And you look as splendid as ever, madam,” he replied, kissing Irina’s hand. “My father wishes to congratulate Lilith.”

“Of course, my dear boy!” Victor said, smiling indulgently. “Please take her to him!”

Lilith leaned over and whispered into her father’s ear, “Why can’t Count de Laval come over here and congratulate me himself? Why do
I
have to go to
him?

“Because he may very well be the next Lord Chamberlain, that’s why,” Victor growled back under his breath.

Lilith rolled her eyes and sighed, just to make her feelings clear. The moment they were safely out of earshot, Jules roughly grabbed her arm.

“What in the name of the Founders are you trying to pull?” he asked angrily.

“What do you mean?”

“I’m talking about Xander!” Jules snapped. “Why did you pick
him
to be your escort?”

“You’re one to talk!” she replied heatedly. “You
know
how much I hate Cally, and you didn’t even have the decency to tell me you’re her escort for the ball.”

“That’s different.”

“How so?”

Jules paused for a second as he tried to come up with a reason. When he couldn’t, he became angrier, as if that somehow proved his point. “It just
is
! Besides, we’re not bound yet. And even if we
were
, it’s not your place to tell me what to do.”

Lilith was about to tell Jules she knew about his affair with her now ex-friend Carmen Duivel but stopped when she realized she was standing in front of his father. Count Julian de Laval was an elegant man who looked like an older, jaded version of his son.

“Good evening, Your Excellency,” Lilith said, curtsying. “You wished to speak to me?”

“Indeed we do, my dear,” Count de Laval replied languidly. “We wish to confer our congratulations upon your introduction to the Old Blood.”

“I’m honored, Count de Laval.”

“We would also like to thank you for appointing our nephew as your escort.”

“Since your son could not serve in that capacity,” Lilith lied, shooting a sharp look at Jules, “I decided his closest male relative would be the next-best thing. Xander is an excellent dancer, by the way.”

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