Authors: Lucienne Diver
Tags: #Fiction, #Young Adult, #teen fiction, #teen, #Vampires, #Fantasy, #vamped, #teenager, #urban fantasy
I looked at each of them. Bella was staring at her toes. Lily was looking back at me, some kind of plea in her eyes, but I had no idea for what. I debated what to do. On the one hand, I was worried about Bram and up for any excuse to ditch class. On the other … at the rate I was going—or
not
going—to my classes, I might be kicked out of school before I had the chance to figure out what the heck was going on with these people. I didn’t think the Feds would look kindly on me flunking my first mission, and I wasn’t anxious to find out how they might go about terminating my services. Plus, there was the whole hospital-hives deal. I should probably stay behind.
Yeah, probably, but when had I ever done the smart thing? Besides, this might be my only chance to question the jerky jocks while they were stuck in hospital beds hopped up on pain meds. I just hoped they weren’t still upset about their butt-whupping. It’d just break my heart if they popped their stitches trying to get at me. Of course, a broken heart wasn’t exactly fatal in my line of work.
What would Kim Possible do?
I asked myself. Sadly, I knew the answer to that. Orderlies and antiseptic wouldn’t scare her. She’d follow the leads.
“I should probably make it to my afternoon classes at some point,” I waffled, one last time.
Lily let out a breath. “Good, you can stay here with—”
“But I think we should all stick together,” I finished.
“—me,” Lily trailed off. “What? Why?”
“In case there’s another attack,” I answered her. “Safety in numbers and all that.”
Ulric gave Lily a shark’s smile. “You’re outnumbered, Lil. Come on, time to face your fears.”
“Hospitals give me the heebie-jeebies,” she said as an aside to me.
“Oh, sing it, sister,” I answered. “But this is for Bram. Maybe hearing our voices will help somehow.”
“Bella’s anyway,” Ulric said. “Her voice could probably make the dead sit up and take notice.”
“Don’t say ‘dead,’” Bella ordered.
“What? I meant that in a good way.”
“Uh, guys, if we’re going to go, now would be the time.” Lily was looking past us down the hall. Instinctively, we all turned to see a woman in a pinstriped pants suit—the principal?—coming at us with two men who practically screamed
detective
.
“Well, they’ve got our names and faces. We might as well get it over with—” I started.
Bella bolted for the emergency door at the far end of the hall.
“Damn!” Lily and I cried.
We all took off running after her.
“Bella!” Ulric called, but she’d hit the push bar on the exit door and burst out into the sunlight before we could reach her.
We hit it seconds later, almost running into Bella, who now stood on the walkway looking lost.
“My car, this way,” I said, pretending to be winded like them.
We raced for the parking lot. My clunker was so old I had to use a key to let myself in and manually open the other locks. It cost us. The principal had stopped at the edge of the lot, but the cops were breathing down our necks one row away when I slammed the car into gear and backed out at ludicrous speed. Bella didn’t even have her door fully shut. It scraped against the much nicer car next to mine. I’d pay for it later—Agents Stick and Stuffed would, anyway. I wondered how they’d feel about me running from the law.
“Whoo hoo!” Ulric said as we shot out of the lot like a bat outta hell. “Way to go, Gen.”
I rolled my eyes at the rearview mirror. “Yeah, because running from the cops doesn’t make us look at all guilty. Bella, what were you thinking?”
“That it’s all my fault. I tried to get through the day, but I have to see Bram. To tell him I’m sorry.”
“Bella, we keep telling you it
isn’t
your fault. You want to blame someone, blame octo-jock,” I said.
“Octo-jock?” Ulric asked, amused.
“Yeah, too many tentacles.”
“I knew I liked you.”
I looked away from the warmth of his smile. I felt good and bad all at the same time. Part of me had the warm fuzzies about being part of a group again. I hadn’t realized how much I liked high school and my clique until they were taken away from me, but then I froze up at the remembrance that this was a role I was playing. I couldn’t afford friendships that could cloud my judgment, and I’d be moving on when all was said and done. The thought stung more than it should have. These weren’t my people, I told myself—no color palette, death poetry, so many piercings I wondered why they didn’t spring a leak. It didn’t help, but I might as well get used to it. I had an eternal lifetime of good-byes to look forward to.
“I don’t know what got into those guys,” Lily said. “I mean, Nat’s always been a putz, but Kevin’s usually pretty decent … for a jock.”
“Something in the water,” Ulric answered, joking, but I made a mental note. “A lot of weirdness going on. And I’m not just talking about Lily’s love life.”
“Bite me,
Toby
,” she snapped back. There was silence, and I felt like some kind of line had been crossed. Finally, Lily said, “Sorry.”
Ulric nodded tersely, and we sat in silence for the rest of the ride.
6
It was a straight shot up Route 9 and probably wouldn’t have taken long if it hadn’t been for the zillion traffic lights. We might not have hit them all, but we gave it our best shot. We passed two malls without even turning in, and that almost killed me all over again. I only managed because I was thinking of Bram, his perfect skull bashed in, lying in a coma. I wondered what a sip of vampire blood could do for him. But if we didn’t finish the ritual blood exchange, would it kill him? Or make him stronger? They hadn’t covered that in spy school. I doubted it was because they didn’t have the answer—they probably knew more about us than we did ourselves.
That was what held us, beyond the fact that the Feds knew our identities and could hunt us down if we chose to bolt instead of cooperate. They knew things they hadn’t yet shared. Things like the key to the sunscreen potion used in our bottled blood. Maybe even what Bobby’s dam, the wench Mellisande, had done to her own sire Alistaire to twist him nearly beyond recognition, and how to reverse it.
As Alistaire stood when I’d last seen him, as he stood
now
, he was a danger to everyone. A triple threat—psychic, unstoppable, and mad as a hatter—but I couldn’t forget that he’d let me live, temporarily anyway. He did sort of imply that all bets were off should our paths cross again. Maybe even that he was going to do his very best to make that happen.
“You think he’ll be okay, right?” Bella asked, and for a minute I couldn’t think who she was talking about, my thoughts had wandered so far. “And Gavin and Byron too?”
“Bram’s going to be fine,” I answered, with more certainty than I felt. I couldn’t imagine what the police could hold Byron and Gavin on, since neither had thrown a single punch.
“You don’t know that,” Bella said faintly.
“I have a strong premonition,” I said. I had to steer things back around to the arcane somehow. My investigation so far had only led me to more questions. No answers that I could use to barter with the Feds.
“You mean, like a vision?” Lily asked. “I get those sometimes.”
“Not as strong as all that, though I wish. Maybe you can work with me, teach me how to get more in touch with my powers.”
Lily’s eyes shown when I looked into them via the rearview mirror. “Absolutely. Maybe we can try a healing spell for Bram while we’re at it.”
Bingo
, I thought. I wondered if the zippy feeling I’d felt at Red Rock had anything to do with a spell. Hopefully, I’d know soon enough.
• • •
The lady at the hospital reception desk gave us the same look the woman in the school office had given me yesterday. I was tempted to stick out my tongue or cross my eyes, but I behaved myself. For once. After all, we needed her to give up Bram’s room number so we didn’t wander around aimlessly.
Ulric made the approach, hoping, I think, to charm her. He wore his most wolfish smile as he asked after Bram.
“I’ll need names and IDs,” the woman said, unimpressed by his charm. Of course, she was old enough to have been on duty the day of his birth, so that might have factored into it.
She directed us to a bank of elevators up to the fifth floor and handed us green visitor passes. They matched my eyes—the passes, not the elevators, which were an industrial gray color, stark against the white walls which were broken two-thirds of the way down by a wide strip of mustard yellow that was probably meant to be cheerful. Or to make the visitors look as jaundiced as the patients, so the latter didn’t feel so bad.
We were halfway to the elevators when I heard her pick up the phone and say into it, “Four for Thomkins on their way up.”
I didn’t think any of the others heard, since they didn’t have my vamped-out senses. I looked over my shoulder and found the reception lady staring back. “That’s right,” she said to the person on the other end of the line.
She replaced the receiver, and I knew we were screwed. I figured I could have another of my “premonitions,” about what awaited us at the other end of the elevator ride, but running again would only compound the police interest in us. Maybe I could learn something from the questioning, like the identity of the missing kids.
Sure enough, there was an armed officer waiting for us as the elevator doors opened on the fifth floor, though he wisely held off making himself known until the doors slid closed behind us. He
insisted
on escorting us to the visitors’ lounge and stood guard outside, promising that someone would be with us shortly. Oh joy, oh rapture.
“Damn it, damn it, damn it,” Ulric said, slapping the particleboard table in the midst of the 1970s Day-Glo orange chairs. “Trapped. Although,” he said slowly, “three girls, no waiting. I could do worse.”
“Dream on, loverboy,” Lily answered, with a slap to his arm.
“Go easy on him,” I said. “Every lounge needs a lizard.”
Ulric clutched his heart and fell, mock-wounded, into the closest chair. Only Bella wasn’t joining in. She slumped onto the couch, looking like guilt’s poster girl.
We cooled our heels for ten or twenty minutes that felt like a century before the door opened again, letting in the two officers we’d evaded at school. Oh yes, we were criminal masterminds.
I hadn’t gotten a good look at the detectives back at school, but now that I had … well, we had Hunky Cop and his partner Crinkly. Hunky Cop had a scar on his chin, very
Indiana Jones
. Without it, his fine features and long lashes might have hurled him past handsome and into pretty-boy territory. And no one wanted that.
Really. I swear.
His partner had the kind of brush-cut blond hair where you almost can’t see the gray. Almost. But you could tell his age from the crinkles—between the brows, up around the eyes, and bracketing the mouth. His face was like a map that had been refolded one too many times. I had supreme sympathy for the collagenically challenged. The old me would have said, “You poor thing, didn’t your mama ever teach you to moisturize,” but I bit down the urge. Hard. Blood flooded my mouth, and it was so, so wrong that it whetted my appetite for more. Seriously, macking on
myself
? I was officially a mutant.
“Well, kids, I guess you know you’re in a lot of trouble,” Crinkly Cop began.
“See,” said Ulric, slapping me like Lily’d slapped him. “I
told
you we shouldn’t have skipped fourth period.”
I rolled my eyes. They were getting quite the work-out.
Crinkly ignored him, like he hadn’t spoken. “I guess you know we’ve already talked to your friends. They had quite a lot to say.”
“I doubt it,” Lily mumbled.
Hunky turned to her. “What was that?”
“Look, they didn’t see the fight, okay?” she said vehemently.
“They were there,” Crinkly insisted. “We have witnesses.”
“No,” I said, drawing his attention. “It was all me. The jocks were beating on Bella, and I stepped in to help her. If the jerky jocks say otherwise, they’re lying.”
Both cops gave me the body check—up and down. I could see them mentally calculating my height and weight, trying to figure out how in the world I could have caused the damage they’d seen. Clearly, they didn’t want to discount a confession, but—
“We’d ask them, except one can’t say anything at all with his jaw wired shut. The other can’t remember.”
“Or so he says,” Hunky murmured to his partner. “Could be selective amnesia.”
“Why? Because I’m a
girl
?” I taunted. It gave away that I could hear him, but he hadn’t truly been whispering. Not effectively, anyway.
Hunky looked at me. Again, measuring. “No, because he’s got about fifty pounds on you
and
you’re a girl,” he answered.
“Sixty at least, but who’s counting?” I said. It just slipped out.
To his left, I could see Ulric smile … and then something else caught my attention. In the lounge window, which was blurry with fingerprints smudging the cheap glass, was a face, contorted in anger.
Rick’s
. But why? He stared at me, his glare almost hot enough to melt through the glass and scald me.
The officers, their backs to the door, blocking us in, couldn’t see him, though Hunky Cop turned to look at my sudden preoccupation.
Rick had disappeared.
“I have to pee,” I announced suddenly, thinking that maybe Rick was trying to give me some kind of message. Maybe I could find and talk to him.
Hunky Cop looked back at me suspiciously. “Right now?”
“I can probably wait until I get to the bathroom.”
Somehow, he didn’t appreciate my humor. “Fine. I’ll walk you there.”
“And they say chivalry is dead.”
He gestured me ahead of him. I looked right and left as we walked, hoping to catch sight of Rick waving me into one of the rooms, though I had no idea how I’d ditch my escort. I didn’t see him by the time we hit the rest room, and I didn’t see any choice but to go in. No sooner was I through the door than I was slammed up against it, an inch or so of solid wood between me and Hunky Cop outside, who suddenly didn’t seem like the enemy.
Hunky pounded on the door. “You okay in there?” he called.
“I just slipped,” I called back. “Sorry! Someone spilt water.”
I looked into Rick’s eyes, which were far too close and crazed. I wanted to thrust him back and demand to know what he thought he was doing, but he had back-up in the form of a redheaded jock in gray sweats and a wife-beater T-shirt. Resigned, I let Rick keep the flaming skull on my T-shirt twisted up in his fist.
“What the hell, dirtwad? This is the
ladies’ room
,” I said. Luckily, pissed fit both my cover and my mood.
“You put my guys in the hospital,” Rick growled. “Nat is eating through a
straw
.”
“Dude,
my
guy isn’t eating at all, so you can back the hell up.”
I’d never seen Rick like this. If he was acting, he was doing a helluva job at it, but I thought this was something more. There was something off, like the crazy violence last night at Red Rock. It had even gotten to me.
I’d broken somebody’s jaw
. Only I hadn’t felt angry, just … energized. I didn’t even know if the jerky jock had really deserved it or if it was some kind of drug or spell that was speaking through his fists.
Rick pulled me toward him and slammed me back against the door again. I heard a manly yelp from outside and knew that Hunky Cop had tried to push his way in during the millisecond my body wasn’t blocking the door.
“Police!” he yelled. “I’m coming in.”
“The police, man!” the redheaded sweat-child said, as if Rick couldn’t hear for himself.
“No worries,” Rick answered.
He grabbed me to him again with one hand and flung the door open with the other, pushing me into the shocked cop with enough force that I’d have fallen if he hadn’t caught me. Rick and Red made a break for it while the cop’s arms were full and his balance was off, bolting down the hall and dodging a gurney in their way. They were gone in a flash.
Hunky Cop twitched like he was priming to run after them, but I grabbed his arms and hugged him, as if I were a shaken little girl in need of reassurance. I didn’t know what Rick had been about, but there was no need to expose us both to the cops … for now.
Hunky held me for another second, until I pretended to stop shivering, then gripped my forearms gently and eased me far enough away to see my face.
“Who were those guys?”
“A couple of jocks,” I said. “Ticked off that I’d hurt their friends. I
told
you it was me.”
He looked stunned. “Do you know their names?”
I shook my head. “I’m new here. Outside of the goths, I don’t really know anyone.”
“So you fought for a girl you’ve just met?” he asked suspiciously.
“Wouldn’t you?”
He didn’t have an answer for that. He brought me back to his partner, and they questioned us for another twenty minutes or so, but in the end, with only my account of things and no one to cry foul or press charges, there wasn’t much they could do. Oh, there’d been beer bottles and whatnot all over the site, but it was too late to check our blood alcohol levels, and unless they fingerprinted us, which in any case would only prove we’d handled the bottles, not that we’d drunk out of them, they were out of luck. But they’d be watching. That was clear enough.