Read The Morganville Vampires Collection (The Morganville Vampires #1-4) Online
Authors: Rachel Caine
Claire came a step or two closer. ‘I have the notebooks,’ she said. ‘And…Myrnin must have left more stuff here I can read. You haven’t failed yet.’
Amelie shook her head, and a wisp of hair broke free from the coronet. It made her look young and very fragile. ‘I must have someone trusted to maintain the machines, or it will all fail, anyway. And only Myrnin could do that. I had hoped that you…but he told me only a vampire could. And there is no one else.’
‘Sam?’
‘Not old enough, and nowhere near powerful enough. It would have to be someone near my own age, and that would mean—’ Amelie looked at her sharply. ‘I can’t give such power to my enemy.’
Claire didn’t like the thought, either. ‘What else can you do?’
‘End it.’ Amelie’s voice was so soft Claire barely understood the words. ‘Let it all go. Destroy it.’
‘You mean…let everybody go?’
Amelie’s gaze locked with hers, and held. ‘No,’ she said. ‘That is not what I mean at all.’
Claire shuddered. ‘Then…why not let Oliver in? You’ve been fighting so hard to keep him out. Why not try this first? What do you really have to lose?’
Amelie’s pale eyebrows slowly rose. ‘Nothing. And everything, of course. But you should fear that we would succeed, Claire. Because if we do, if the vampire race is not doomed to die, where does that leave you? An interesting question, for another day, perhaps.’ She nodded at the notebooks in Claire’s hands. ‘If you intend to save the Morrell girl, you should hurry,’ she said. ‘Use the portal. I will send you directly to the hospital.’
There was a portal to the hospital? Claire blinked and looked back at the closed and locked door. ‘Um… are you sure it won’t open to—’
‘To below?’ Amelie shook her head. ‘I have no intention it should. If you do not, then it will do as we say. Myrnin could only make the doorway work to below, never back here. So only you and I have such abilities, for now.’
Claire thought about something, with a sickening wrench. ‘Are you sure?’
‘What do you mean?’ Amelie looked up, slowly, her eyes fierce and bright.
A rush of images flitted through Claire’s mind: Oliver, grabbing her in her own house. The dead girl in the basement. Jason appearing and disappearing from Monica’s party, and reappearing near Common Grounds.
Oh no.
‘Can you tell?’ Claire asked. ‘If somebody’s using the portal?’
‘Myrnin could, I suspect, but I cannot. Why?’ Amelie stood up, and this time the frown was definite. ‘What do you know?’
‘I think you’ve got a traitor,’ Claire said. ‘Somebody showed Oliver, and Oliver showed Jason. And Captain Obvious and his friends probably knew, too. Jason must have shown them—’
‘Impossible,’ Amelie interrupted with a flash of impatience. ‘My people are beyond suspicion.’
‘Then how did Jason bring a dead girl into
Michael’s house without permission? Because you said he’d have to be invited in. And he wasn’t.’
Amelie froze, and her eyes went cold and flat. ‘I see,’ she said, and then whirled towards the small door that led into the narrow, overstuffed library, and the door that Claire had once used to come in from the university. ‘You seem to be proven right. Someone’s coming in. Go, take the doorway.
Hurry
.’
Claire opened the door. Beyond it, air rippled, and shifted…her living room. A stranger’s house. A quiet white room with a stained-glass window.
‘Now!’ Amelie said sharply. ‘That’s the hospital.’
Claire stepped through. As she looked back, she saw Oliver walk into Myrnin’s lab, look around, and focus on Amelie. Jason was right behind him, grinning, clearly Oliver’s new pet. Or maybe, Oliver’s pet all along.
‘Interesting,’ Oliver said, and then turned his head to look at the open doorway, and Claire. ‘And unexpected.’
She slammed the door between them, heart pounding, and it vanished on her side. That didn’t mean it couldn’t reappear, but at least she was safe for the moment. She didn’t think Amelie would let Oliver follow her.
She hoped.
She flipped pages in the notebooks. Myrnin had
clawed them, but only the last one, and only at the back. The rest were intact.
She left the white room and found that she was standing in the hospital’s nondenominational chapel – more of a meditation room than anything else. It was empty, except for one person kneeling near the front.
Jennifer. She scrambled to her feet when she saw Claire, and blurted, ‘What are you doing here?’ Her eyes were red, and she sniffled and swiped angrily at her eyes, smearing mascara and ruining what was left of her make-up. She had freckles. Claire had never known that.
‘Saving your friend,’ Claire said. ‘I hope.’
It took three days for the lab to work out a counteragent, but once they did, Monica came off the ventilator within hours. Or so Claire heard from Richard Morrell, who dropped by on Wednesday night, as the four of them – Shane being finally released from the hospital – were sitting down to dinner.
‘I’m glad she’s going to be OK,’ Claire said. ‘Richard…I’m sorry. If I’d known—’
‘You’re lucky that stuff didn’t fry you, too,’ he said, but without any real heat. ‘Look, my sister isn’t the best person I’ve ever met, but I love her. Thanks for
helping.’
Claire nodded. Michael was nearby, seeming to be just lounging but, she knew, ready to step in if Richard went postal. Not that Richard would. So far, he was the best-adjusted Morrell she’d met.
‘Don’t come by the hospital,’ Richard continued. ‘I’m trying to convince her you weren’t out to kill her. If you show up, I may not be able to keep a lid on things. As it is—’ He shifted uncomfortably and looked away. ‘Just watch your back, Claire.’
‘She doesn’t need to,’ Eve said, and put her arm around Claire’s shoulders. ‘Tell your sister, if she messes with Claire, she messes with all of us.’
Richard’s expression went deliberately bland. ‘I’m sure that’ll terrify her,’ he said. ‘Night, Claire. Eve.’ He nodded to Michael. Shane hadn’t got up from the table, partly because hey, gut wound, but also he wasn’t about to put himself out for any Morrell, even Richard. Claire had the impression Richard was just as happy not to have to make nice.
Claire saw Richard out the door, locked it, and came back to fight over who would get the last taco. Which, of course, turned out to be Shane. ‘Wounded!’ was his new comeback, and it was one they couldn’t really argue with, at least for a couple of weeks. He happily loaded up his plate, and Claire sat back and felt, for the first time in days, a little of the tension
relax. Shane was even being civil to Michael again, especially after she’d explained to him how Michael had raced to her rescue. That mattered to Shane, in ways that other things didn’t.
When the knock came on the front door, the four of them froze, and Michael sighed. ‘Right. My turn to play doorman, I guess.’
Claire nabbed some meat off Shane’s plate. He pretend-stabbed her hand, and ended up licking Claire’s fingers for her, one at a time.
‘OK, that’s either gross or hot, but I’m thinking gross, so quit it,’ Eve said. ‘If you’re going to be licking each other, get a room.’
‘Good idea,’ Shane whispered.
‘Wounded!’ Claire shot back mockingly. ‘And anyway, I thought you wanted to play it safe.’
‘Dude, I live in Morganville. How exactly is that playing it safe?’
Michael came back down the hall with a very odd expression. ‘Claire,’ he said. ‘I think you should come.’
She pushed away from the table and went after him. He opened the door and stepped aside.
Her parents were standing on the step.
‘Mom! Dad!’ Claire threw herself into their arms. It was stupid to be so cheered by the sight of them, but for a second she enjoyed being stupid, through
and through.
And then the dread hit her, and she backed up and said, ‘What are you doing here?’
Please say you’re
dropping something off. Please.
Her mother – dressed in pressed blue jeans and a starched blue work shirt and a Coldwater Creek jacket, even in the heat of summer – looked taken aback. ‘We wanted to surprise you,’ she said. ‘Isn’t that all right? Claire, you
are
only sixteen—’
‘Nearly seventeen,’ Claire sighed, under her breath.
‘And really, we ought to be able to come see you when we want to, to be sure you’re safe and happy.’ Claire’s mom gave Michael a distracted, nervous smile. ‘All right, then, I’ll tell you the truth. We’ve been very worried about you, honey. First you had that trouble in the dorm; then you were attacked and ended up in the hospital…and someone told us about that party.’
‘What?’ She sent Michael a look, but he looked just as surprised as she felt. ‘Who told you?’
‘I don’t know. An email. You know I can never figure those things out; anyway, it was some friend of yours.’
‘Oh,’ Claire breathed, ‘I really don’t think it was. Mom, look, it was—’
‘Don’t tell us it was nothing, honey,’ her dad cut
in. ‘I read all about it. Drinking, drugs, fighting, destruction of property. Kids having sex. And you were at this party, weren’t you?’
‘I… No, Dad, not like—’ She couldn’t lie about it. ‘I was there. We were all there. But Shane wasn’t stabbed at the party; it was after, on the way home.’ She realised as soon as she said it that neither one of them had mentioned anything about Shane. And it was too late to take it back.
‘Stabbed?’ her mother echoed blankly, and covered her mouth with her hand. ‘Oh, that is just
it
. That’s the last straw!’
‘Let’s talk about all this inside,’ her father said. He looked so grim now. ‘We’ve decided we had to make a change.’
‘A change?’ Claire echoed.
‘We’re moving,’ he said. ‘We bought a nice house on the other side of town. Looks kind of like this one, maybe a little smaller. Even has the same layout to the place, I think. Good thing we did. Clearly, things are much worse than we thought.’
‘You’re—’ She could
not
have heard that right. ‘Moving
here
? To
this
town? You can’t! You can’t move here!’
‘Oh, Claire, I was so hoping you’d be happy,’ her mom said, in that tone that Claire dreaded. The
I’m-
so-disappointed-in-you
tone. ‘We’ve already sold our
old house. The truck with the furniture should get here tomorrow. Oh’ – she turned to Claire’s father – ‘did we remember to—’
‘Oh, for heaven’s sake…yes,’ he rumbled. ‘Whatever it is, yes, we remembered.’
‘Well, you don’t have to be—’
‘Mom!’ Claire interrupted desperately. ‘
You can’t
move here!
’
Michael put his hand on her shoulder. ‘Just a second,’ he said to her parents, and pulled Claire a few feet back. ‘Claire, don’t. It’s already too late. If the Council hadn’t wanted them here, they wouldn’t be here, and they wouldn’t have a Founder House. If it looks like this house and has the same layout, that’s what it is, a Founder House. That means Amelie wants it to happen. She probably made it happen.’
That didn’t exactly make her feel any better. She was shaking all over now. ‘But they’re my
parents
!’ she whispered fiercely. ‘Can’t you do something?’
He looked grim and shook his head. ‘I don’t know. I’ll try. But for now we’d better just make nice, OK?’
She didn’t want to. She wanted to drag her parents out to their car and
make
them go.
How could Amelie do this to her? No, that was obvious: it was easy. Her parents were just another way to force Claire to do whatever the vampires
needed. And now that she knew so much, now that she was their only hope of working with Myrnin on a cure, they’d never let her go.
‘Hello?’ Claire’s mom called. ‘Can we come in?’
Michael kept his expression blank and friendly. ‘Sure. Everybody inside.’ Because it was getting dark.
Claire’s mom and dad stepped over the threshold.
As Michael started to swing the door shut, a third person stopped the door from closing with an open hand and stepped through. Claire had no idea who he was. She’d never seen him before, and she was sure she’d have remembered. He had thick grey hair, a big grey moustache, and huge green eyes behind thick, fifties-style eyeglasses.
Michael froze, and Claire knew instantly that something was very, very wrong.
‘Oh,’ Claire’s mother said, as if she’d forgot all about him. ‘This is Mr Bishop. We met him on our way into town; his car was broken down.’
Mr Bishop smiled and tipped an invisible hat. ‘Thank you for the kind invitation to enter your home,’ he said. His voice was incredibly deep and smooth, with an inflection that sounded like Russian. ‘Although I really didn’t require one.’
Because he was a vampire.
Claire backed slowly away. Michael looked like
he couldn’t move at all as Bishop walked into the house.
‘I don’t want to upset your nice family,’ Bishop said in a lower tone, focusing on Claire, ‘but if Amelie isn’t here to talk to me in half an hour, I’ll kill everyone breathing in this house.’
Claire involuntarily looked after her parents, but they were already moving down the hall. They hadn’t heard.
‘No,’ Michael said. ‘You won’t touch anyone. This is my house. Get out now, or I’ll have to hurt you.’
Bishop looked him up and down. ‘Nice bark, puppy, but you don’t have the teeth. Get Amelie.’
‘Who are you?’ Claire whispered. There was menace boiling off this old man like fog. She could almost see it.
‘Tell her that her father’s come to visit,’ he said, and smiled. ‘Aren’t family reunions nice?’
Fast turnaround reading and commenting from
a select group of people, including (but probably
not limited to) Jackie, Sharon, Donna, and Lisa.
Especially Donna, who reminded me that if you put
a knife on the table in the first act, you’d better not
switch it to a gun in the third…thanks, Donna!