Authors: Alyxandra Harvey
Instead, the one closest to me whipped a handful of Hypnos at me before I could duck. It wouldn’t have mattered; the others threw their own Hypnos and the white powder dusted over me, stinging my eyes, catching in the back of my throat. It tasted sickly sweet, like wilted lilies, chocolate, and copper.
“Stop fighting,” the vampire who seemed to be the leader ordered.
Colors changed, as if I were in an overexposed photograph; too
much light here, too much dark there, and a strange acidic green to the pine trees. My fists unclenched, arms lowering. I was trapped inside a cloud of passive panic, aware of my surroundings, aware of my desperate need to put up a fight and utterly unable to do anything about it. I bared my fangs but it was all I could manage. I couldn’t even hiss.
I had a very uncomfortable moment of empathy for the guards Solange compelled. At least when she’d compelled me I was reasonably certain she wasn’t going to hurt me.
The leader nodded to the vampire on his right. “Leash him.”
The strange colors turned red as sour rage smoldered inside me. I tasted smoke over the lilies. They used the rope to knot my wrists together behind my back and a strip of cloth over my eyes to blindfold me. It was like looking through heavy fog. I could see faint shadows and the shifting of light, but not enough to be sure of my footing or my direction.
“Walk.” The order was accompanied by a shove to get me moving. Pain shot through my knee, blood dripping from a gash that would take some time to heal. I was still so young and and close enough to the bloodchange that only shallow scratches healed almost instantly. After a day’s sleep, I’d be fine. Assuming I made it through the day, of course.
They pushed me into a forced shuffle-walk, my muscles only barely cooperating. Try as hard as I could, I couldn’t fight the movement of my wounded knee, the forward momentum of my legs, the push of the Hypnos as it slid through me, finding every tiny secret place, like water. I slid down a steep incline, scattering pebbles. A hard hand on my shoulder shoved me back onto a trail.
“Come on, princeling,” he sneered. “We’ve got a gilded cage just for you.”
“Where are we going?” Useless to ask, impossible not to. I didn’t get a reply, of course.
We walked until the terrain changed underfoot to smooth rock. I stumbled again, was wrenched back into place. I’d hoped that enough falling and being pushed around would loosen the rope, but it held tight. I could tell by the smell of mildew and cold that we were nearing a cave of some kind. The darkness felt thicker, damp. There was another combination of scents underneath, rust and blood maybe. There were no dogs howling, and no drumming, so the Hounds weren’t nearby. They managed to find distant private caves no one had ever entered before; but clearly these weren’t them. I could smell humans and vampires both. I was jerked to a stop. I hunched my shoulders as the Hypnos began to wear off, expecting a stake in the back. Someone ripped off the blindfold.
I could never have imagined anything like this was even possible.
We were in a huge cavern, with fissures in every wall, blocked off with metal grates like homemade dungeons. Pale, wretched faces showed briefly at the bars. Someone wept in a dark crevice. Someone else grunted in pain. There were chains everywhere and the clank of iron. Torches burned in brackets drilled into the stone. The light flickered over the murky milk-gray water of a sinkhole, like a small pond. An arm bobbed to the surface. I couldn’t tell if it was attached to a body.
I was pushed toward long metal tables set against one corner,
under a string of battery-operated lights. Camping lanterns glowed with a clear unnatural light, glinting mercilessly off glass beakers, jars of strange liquids, test tubes, iron-tipped stakes, jagged daggers, and implements of torture I couldn’t look at without sweat breaking out on the back of my neck. We liked to tease Marcus that he was the mad scientist in the family, following in Uncle Geoffrey’s footsteps. But his laboratory was for the pursuit of knowledge, not pain.
Even at a glance, this place had no other purpose.
A half-dead vampire slumped unconscious, hanging on chains attached to her wrists. Blood ran in rivulets down her side, dripping off her elbows, her fingertips, her feet. It gathered in a narrow trench dug into the ground, clogged with water and bodily fluids. I gagged on the stench of old blood and festering wounds.
This wasn’t politics. This was something else entirely.
But I had no idea what.
I made an instinctive move toward her, though how I thought I’d free her with my hands tied behind my back, I had no idea. A boot kicked me in the back of my wounded knee and I toppled, my cheek hitting stone. I saw stars, jerked away from the trench.
Human guards stood at the edges. They looked like Huntsmen, though I thought I saw the glint of at least one Helios-Ra sun pendant. They didn’t even flinch when I sprawled at their feet. The four that captured me stood in a clump, grinning at a man wearing a leather apron smeared with blood and bits of flesh, like Dr. Frankenstein. Beside him, standing quietly alert, was a vampire wearing a familiar brown tunic I’d seen before.
On Montmartre and his Host. Right before he tried to abduct my sister.
I pushed to my feet, hissing, fangs extending so completely my gums bled. The Host flung a rusted iron spike, like a giant horseshoe nail. It slammed into my shoulder, knocking me back and pinning me against a wooden support beam hung with more chains. Pain bit down with jagged teeth. At least pinned to a post with convenient chains and splinters, I could work my hands free. The rope snagged on a sharp spike, and I bore down, fraying it into strings I snapped easily.
Frankenstein glanced at me. “I guess the Hypnos wore off.”
“Am I a hostage?” I forced myself to ask, choking as I yanked myself forward, pulling the spike out.
“You could say that,” my captor answered. “Hostage, test subject, prey. You’re whatever the hell we tell you to be.”
Frankenstein waved his hand. There was blood under his nails. “Do something with him.”
“Don’t you want a closer look?” The tone was smug and self-satisfied.
Frankenstein narrowed his eyes, circling me slowly. “And?”
“He’s a Drake.”
The Host vampire moved so fast it was no wonder humans thought we could fly. All I saw were fangs and fingers digging viciously into the wound in my shoulder. I jabbed out with my thumb and first two fingers in a claw shape, the way Duncan taught me. He fought dirty, even dirtier than Mom. I aimed for the windpipe. The Host gagged, taken by surprise. I went for the eyes next, but he’d recovered and had a stake pressing into my chest.
“Wait!” Frankenstein shouted. “Stop!”
The Host pressed the stake deeper, until it bit through my shirt and several layers of skin. His amber eyes flared, his fangs gleamed.
Frankenstein pushed the stake away from me, with effort. “Patience, or you’ll spoil the fun.”
Then he smiled slowly, as someone in the dungeon behind me started to whimper.
Monday night
“Are you sure you’re up for this?” I asked Kieran again, leaning forward between the seats. We were in his friend Eric’s car, driving to town. Jenna, Chloe, and a handful of the rest of the Black Lodge were following in one of the unmarked school vans. Kieran was in the passenger seat, a bandage taped on the side of his neck to cover Solange’s bite marks. “You did just have a blood transfusion, what, two days ago? Three? Shouldn’t you be on the couch watching bad TV or something?”
“It wasn’t a full transfusion,” he answered, staring stonily ahead. “I’m fine.” There was something hard about him now, something final and sad in his voice. I frowned. Beside me, Hunter nudged me and shook her head.
The fields narrowed and turned to lawns and parks until finally we were in the downtown quarter of Violet Hill. All three blocks of it. Cafés, health-food stores, and used bookshops were sprinkled between New Age stores selling everything from crystals to Tibetan prayer flags. We passed the shop my mom worked at, but it was closed. The only places open were restaurants and pubs and a bookstore behind the movie theaters.
Eric parked behind an abandoned glass factory. He grinned at me, white teeth gleaming in his dark face. He tossed me a messenger bag full of stakes and Hypnos-stuffed putty eggs. Apparently, he liked being snapped at, because after I got mad at him at the Black Lodge meeting, he was now treating me like an old friend.
Kieran just methodically checked the weapons strapped to his shirt under his jacket. The school van pulled up and the others spilled out of the doors. They were vibrating with contained excitement. Chloe shot us a thumbs-up, her curly hair exploding out of her ponytail.
“Follow the plan this time,” Hunter told her sternly. “I mean it. I’ll kick your ass.”
“Yeah, yeah.”
“What was that about?” I asked Hunter, when Chloe vanished back into the van for her knapsack.
“The last time we were here, she totally blew the plan, got stabbed, and Quinn had to bail us out.”
“Let it go, Wild,” Chloe called out.
Hunter made a face but didn’t say anything else. Instead she nudged me and stepped back out of earshot. “Keep an eye on
Kieran,” she said quietly. “He won’t pair me with him for the sweep.”
“How do you know?”
“Because I’m worried about him, and he thinks if he pretends he doesn’t know that, I’ll leave him alone.”
“He’s met you, right?”
She smiled but there was no humor in it. “Exactly. Like I’ll let him backslide.”
I blinked. “Backslide? Backslide to what?”
She took a deep breath, looking as uncertain as I’d ever seen her look. Usually she was quietly confident. “This is strictly confidential,” she murmured. “Okay?”
I nodded. “Okay.”
“After his dad died, Kieran went through a bad patch.”
“Understandable.”
“A really bad patch. I barely recognized him.”
I thought of Solange. “I’m beginning to know how that feels.”
“It sucks. He was bitter and hard and so focused on vengeance and finding his father’s killer that he dropped out of college.”
“The one in Scotland.” There was more to Kieran than met the eye, clearly. I wasn’t even sure if Solange knew this much about him. They hadn’t been going out for long, and with her pheromones, they weren’t exactly heavy on the philosophical debates lately.
“He basically didn’t show for orientation, and the Blacks have been going to that college for nearly as long as the Wilds. His mom fell apart and was no help whatsoever. Believe me when I tell you
that Solange saved him as much as he saved her. He needed his whole world put right side up again.”
“And now they’ve broken up.”
“Exactly.”
“Solange isn’t talking to me,” I admitted. I couldn’t save Solange from herself right now. So I’d damned well better save Kieran. “But he will.”
We exchanged grim conspiratorial nods just as a motorcycle pulled up and everyone tensed, except for Eric and Kieran.
“Easy,” Eric said. “It’s only Connoly.”
“Kieran’s friend,” Hunter explained before I could ask. “The three of them went through the academy together. They’re the reason one of the Common Room windows is nailed shut.”
“I definitely want to know
that
story.”
“If you girls are done with the whispering,” Kieran said blandly, “we can start.”
“I can both help and kick him in the ass, right?” I muttered to Hunter.
“In fact, I insist.”
Connoly took off his helmet and locked it in the seat of his bike. He had long hair and more tattoos than Bruno, and that was saying something. Bruno had been getting tattooed twenty years longer.
“Now that we’re all here, are we clear on the objective?” Kieran asked. “We’re looking for hot spots mostly, the ones vampires might be using to prey on the civs. They don’t necessarily know the town, so don’t assume it’s the usual areas. If you see a Huntsman,
don’t engage unless you have to.” We all nodded. He looked unyielding enough that I didn’t even tease him about sounding like James Bond. “No one goes alone. Chloe and Kyla—you’re with Eric, Connoly’s got Drew, Hunter’s got Noah, and I’ll take Lucy. Blend as much as you can. The townsfolk are getting nervous about all of these disappearances; they might be watching out their windows more carefully. Meet back here in two hours and keep the lines open.”
The groups went in different directions.
Kieran glanced at me. “Got your weapons?”
“Dude, who are you talking to? Of
course
I do.”
He nearly smiled. “I know this is a foreign concept to you, Hamilton, but you follow orders in the field. Period.”
“Yeah, yeah.”
He just stared at me.
“What? I said yes.”
“Mm-hmm.” He didn’t sound remotely convinced. He crossed the parking lot toward the sidewalk, his boots crunching through broken glass.
“So where are we headed?” I asked.
“We’ll go down Main Street and then check the alleys behind the movie theaters. I got intel that there’ve been some disturbances there in the last couple of days.”