2
There weren’t a lot of choices for late-night
dining in Morganville for those who weren’t of the fanged
persuasion, but there were a few places near the campus, most
notably a twenty-four-hour diner. They ended up in an uncomfortable
bunch around a table, the four of them plus Claire’s parents, after
an even more uncomfortably close ride in Michael’s big
vampire-tinted car.
The hamburgers were good, but Claire couldn’t
concentrate on the taste. She was too busy watching the people
outside the diner. Some were college students, laughing in groups
in the parking lot, ignoring the occasional pale-looking strangers
walking nearby. Claire was reminded of videos of lions pacing along
with antelopes as they grazed, waiting for one or two to fall
behind.
She wanted to warn those kids, and she couldn’t.
The gold bracelet on her wrist made sure of that.
Michael, predictably, had to bear the brunt of
parental conversation. He was just better at it, and he had a
soothing kind of presence that made everything seem . . . normal.
Claire’s parents didn’t exactly remember what had happened back at
the house; more of Mr. Bishop’s influence, Claire was sure. She
hated that he’d messed with their heads, but in a way she was
relieved, too. One less thing to have to worry about.
Her dad’s attitude with Shane was enough.
‘‘So,’’ Dad said, as he pretended to concentrate on
his pot roast, ‘‘how old are you again, son?’’
‘‘Eighteen, sir,’’ Shane said, in his most blandly
polite voice. They’d been over this. Repeatedly.
‘‘You know my daughter’s only—’’
‘‘Almost seventeen, yes sir, I know.’’
Dad frowned more deeply. ‘‘Sixteen, and
sheltered. I don’t like her living in a house with a bunch of
hormone-crazy teenagers—no offense, I’m sure you mean to do right,
but I was young myself once. Now that we’re in town, with a place
of our own, it’s probably better that Claire move in with
us.’’
Claire had not been expecting that. Not at
all. ‘‘Dad! You don’t trust me?’’
‘‘Honey, it’s not about trusting you. It’s about
trusting the two adult men you’re living with. Especially
one I can see you’re getting very close to, even though you know
that’s not very smart.’’
Fury burst open inside of her, and all she could
see beyond the haze of red was Shane, standing between her and Eve,
defending their lives while putting his own at risk.
Shane, turning away from her time after time
because he was better—better by far—than she was at
self-control.
Claire sucked in a deep breath and was about to let
it out in a torrent of words, at top volume, when Shane’s hand came
down over hers and gripped it.
‘‘Yeah,’’ he said. ‘‘You’re right about that. You
don’t know me, and what you do know you probably don’t much like.
I’m not really parent friendly. Not like Michael.’’ Shane jerked
his chin at Michael, who was trying to shake his head no, don’t
do it. ‘‘I think maybe you’re right. Maybe it would be better
if Claire moved back in with you for a while. Give you a chance to
get to know all of us, especially me.’’
‘‘What the hell are you doing?’’ Claire whispered
fiercely. She didn’t care that Dad could probably hear, and Michael
certainly could. ‘‘I don’t want to go anywhere!’’
‘‘Claire, he’s right. You’d be safer there.
Our house isn’t exactly a fortress, in case what happened today
didn’t sink in yet,’’ Shane replied. ‘‘Hell, between strangers
cruising in and out, my dad’s threat to come back and finish what
he started—’’
Claire threw down her fork. ‘‘Wait just a minute.
You’re telling me it’s for my own good, is that it?’’
‘‘Yes.’’
‘‘Michael? Jump in anytime!’’
Michael held up his hands in surrender. He’d had
enough, and Claire couldn’t really blame him.
Eve, though, cleared her throat and waded right
into the conversational swamp. ‘‘Mr. Danvers, honest, Claire’s
perfectly fine with us. We all look after her, and Shane’s not the
kind of guy who’d take advantage—’’
‘‘Wouldn’t say that,’’ Shane said, way too mildly.
‘‘I’m exactly that kind of guy, really.’’
Eve sent him a dirty look. ‘‘—and besides, he knows
we’d both kill him if he tried. But he wouldn’t do it. Claire’s
fine where she is. And she’s happy, too.’’
‘‘Yes,’’ Claire agreed. ‘‘I’m happy,
Dad.’’
Michael still hadn’t spoken. He was, instead,
watching Claire’s father with a strange kind of intensity; at first
she thought, He’s trying to put some kind of vampire whammy on
him, but then she changed her mind. It was more like Michael
was honestly puzzled, and trying to figure out what to say
next.
Her father hadn’t heard a word that anyone had
said. ‘‘I want you to move home, Claire, and that’s that. I don’t
want you staying in that house anymore. End of discussion.’’
Her mother wasn’t talking, which was unusual, too;
she just stirred her coffee slowly and tried to look interested in
the food on the plate in front of her.
Claire opened her mouth to shoot back a heated, not
very respectful reply, but Michael shook his head and put his hand
over hers. ‘‘Don’t waste your breath,’’ he said. ‘‘This isn’t their
idea. Bishop planted the suggestion.’’
‘‘What? Why would he do that?’’
‘‘No idea. Maybe he wants us separated. Maybe he
just likes messing with people. Maybe he wants to piss off Amelie.
But the important thing is, I don’t think you ought to let this get
to you—’’
‘‘Not get to me? Michael, my father is
saying I have to move!’’
‘‘You don’t,’’ Michael said. ‘‘Not if you don’t
want to.’’
Claire’s father, who’d been frowning, turned a
dark, unhealthy color of red in the face. ‘‘You damn well
do,’’ he snapped. ‘‘You’re my daughter, Claire, and until
you turn eighteen, you’ll do what I tell you. And you—’’ He
leveled a finger at Michael. ‘‘If I have to bring charges against
you—’’
‘‘For what?’’ Michael asked mildly.
‘‘For—look, don’t think I don’t know what’s going
on here. If I find out that my daughter’s been— been . . .’’ Dad
didn’t seem to be able to work up the words. Michael continued to
watch him steadily, with no sign of comprehension.
Claire cleared her throat.
‘‘Dad,’’ she said. She felt color blazing in her
cheeks, and her voice was barely steady. ‘‘If you’re asking if I’m
still a virgin, I am.’’
‘‘Claire!’’ Her mom’s voice cracked sharply across
the last of her sentence. ‘‘That’s enough.’’
Total silence at the table. Not even Michael seemed
to know where to take the conversation from there. Eve looked like
she was having a hard time deciding whether to laugh or wince, and
finally dug into her chocolate sundae as the best possible
response.
Michael’s cell phone rang. He opened it, spoke
softly, listened, and closed it without replying. He signaled the
waitress. ‘‘We have to go,’’ he said.
‘‘Where?’’
‘‘Back to the house. Amelie wants to see
us.’’
‘‘You’re coming home with us,’’ Dad said to Claire,
who shook her head. ‘‘Don’t argue with me—’’
‘‘I’m sorry, sir, but she has to come with us right
now,’’ Michael said. ‘‘If Amelie says it’s the right thing to do,
I’ll bring her to your house myself. But we’ll drop you off on the
way, and I’ll let you know as soon as possible.’’ It was said
respectfully, but without any room for argument, and there was
something about Michael in that moment that just couldn’t be
pushed.
Dad’s face set, still red, and very hard. ‘‘This
isn’t over, Michael.’’
‘‘Yes sir,’’ he said. ‘‘That much I know. We
haven’t even started yet.’’
The drive back was even more uncomfortable, and not
just physically; Claire’s father was livid, her mother embarrassed,
and Claire herself was so mad she could barely stand to look at
either of them. How could they? Even if Mr. Bishop had done
something to them, screwed with their heads, they’d bought into it
completely. They’d always said they trusted her, always said that
they wanted her to make her own decisions, but when it came right
down to it, they wanted her to be their helpless little girl, after
all.
Well, it wasn’t going to happen. She’d come too far
for that.
Michael pulled to a stop in front of her parents’
new house—another big Gothic-style house, looking almost exactly
like their own except for the landscaping out front. Her parents’
Founder House had a spreading live oak tree towering over the
property that rustled like dry paper in the evening breeze, and the
trim was painted what looked like, in the dark, a dull black.
Claire’s dad leaned in to give her one last look.
‘‘I expect to hear from you tonight,’’ he said. ‘‘I expect you to
tell me when you’re coming home. And by home, I mean here, with
us.’’
She didn’t answer. After extending the look for way
too long, her dad shut the car door, and Michael accelerated
smoothly away—not too quickly, but not slowly, either.
And they all breathed an audible sigh of relief
when the house faded into the darkness behind the car. ‘‘Wow,’’
Shane said. ‘‘Dude’s got a glare on him. Maybe he really does
belong here in Morganville.’’
‘‘Don’t say that,’’ Claire said. She was fighting
with all kinds of emotions—anger at her parents, frustration with
the situation, worry, outright fear. Her parents didn’t
belong here. They’d been just fine where they were, but Amelie had
to uproot them and bring them here. Having Claire’s parents where
she could control them gave her more leverage.
And now it gave Mr. Bishop leverage, too.
Shane took her hand. ‘‘Easy,’’ he said. ‘‘Like
Michael said, you don’t have to go if you don’t want to go. Not
that I wouldn’t feel better if you were someplace a hell of a lot
safer.’’
‘‘I don’t think the Danvers house will be safer,’’
Michael said. ‘‘They don’t understand the rules, or the
risks—they’re too new here. I think Bishop’s trying to play with
Amelie’s head, and whatever we think about her, he’s worse. I
guarantee it.’’
Claire shuddered. ‘‘Was it Amelie who called you at
the restaurant?’’
‘‘No,’’ Michael said, and there was a grim tone in
his voice. ‘‘That was Oliver. I have to admit, I’m not feeling real
good about this. Oliver’s never really been on her side—maybe he’s
taken Bishop’s. In which case we could be going home to a
trap.’’
‘‘Do we have a choice?’’ Shane asked.
‘‘Don’t think so.’’
‘‘Then screw it. I’m getting tired.’’ Shane yawned.
‘‘Let’s go get eaten. At least then I can get some sleep.’’
Nobody thought it was funny—least of all Shane,
Claire suspected—but they didn’t have any better ideas, and Michael
drove home. Morganville was silent outside the dark-tinted windows;
Claire could barely see dim gleams of lights, and they might have
been the few and far-between streetlamps, or the glow from house
porch lights. It was a lot like being in a space capsule, but with
better upholstery.
Michael parked and turned off the car. As Eve
reached for her door handle, he said, ‘‘Guys.’’ She waited. They
all waited. ‘‘I didn’t exactly get any instant upgrade on knowledge
when I—when I changed, but I’m damn sure of one thing. This Bishop,
he’s real trouble. Trouble like maybe we’ve never seen before. And
I’m worried. So watch each other’s backs. I’ll try—’’
He didn’t seem to know how to finish that. Eve
reached out to touch his face, and he turned toward her, lips
parted. The look that went between them was so naked it felt wrong
to see it. Shane cleared his throat.
‘‘We’re all on it, man,’’ he said. ‘‘We’ll be
okay.’’
Michael didn’t answer, but then, Claire figured
maybe there wasn’t much to say. He got out of the car, and the
others followed. The evening was getting cold, and the wind
fluttered around Claire’s hair and clothes, looking for skin to
chill. Finding it, too. She wrapped her jacket closer and hurried
after Michael toward the back door.
Inside, the kitchen was exactly as they’d left it—
messy. Pots and pans still on the stove, though thankfully they’d
remembered to turn off the burners before they’d left. The smell of
stale bacon grease and rubbery gravy hung heavy in the air, barely
cut by the aroma of old, overcooked coffee.
They didn’t stop. Michael led them straight through
the kitchen door, into the living room.
Bishop was gone. So were his two pretty hangers-on.
It was just Amelie and Oliver, sitting alone at the large wooden
table. They’d carelessly shoved aside plates and cups and glasses
into a tottering pile, and between them was a chessboard. Nothing
Claire recognized that belonged in the house; it looked old, and
well used. Beautiful, too.
Amelie was playing white. She ignored their entry
as she contemplated the chessboard. Across from her, Oliver leaned
back in his chair, crossed his arms, and sent the four of them an
unreadable look. He seemed right at home, which made Claire fume,
and she could only imagine how Michael felt about it. Oliver had
killed Michael—ripped away his human existence and trapped him in a
twilight state between human and vampire— right here in this house.
In fact, almost on this very spot. It had been brutal, and
murderous, and Michael had never for a second forgotten who and
what Oliver was, however he appeared.
Amelie had offered Michael the chance to escape
from that trap, and he’d taken it even at the cost of becoming a
true vampire. So far, he didn’t seem to regret it. Much.
‘‘You’re not welcome here,’’ Michael said to
Oliver, who raised his eyebrows and smiled.
‘‘Waiting for the house to evict me? Keep
waiting,’’ he said. ‘‘Amelie, you really should teach your pets
manners. Next thing you know, they’ll be clawing the carpet and
spraying the drapes.’’
She didn’t look up. ‘‘Do try to be civil,’’ she
replied. ‘‘You’re a guest in their house. My house.’’ She
moved a piece on the chessboard. ‘‘Be seated, all of you. I dislike
having people stand.’’
It had the force of royal command, and before she
could think about it, Claire was sliding into one of the
dining-table chairs, and Shane was settling in next to her. Eve
hesitated, then took a chair as far away from Oliver as
possible.
That left one empty chair, and it was next to
Oliver. Michael shook his head, crossed his arms over his chest,
and leaned against the wall.
Amelie gave him a glance, but didn’t force the
issue. ‘‘So you have met Mr. Bishop,’’ she said. ‘‘And he has most
assuredly met you. I wish this had not happened, but since it has,
we must find ways to guard you against him and his associates.’’
Oliver took one of her bishops and set it aside. She had no visible
reaction. ‘‘Otherwise, I fear this house will be in the market for
new tenants soon.’’
Oliver laughed. He stopped laughing when Amelie
made her next move, and concentrated on the chessboard with a
fierce, blank expression.
‘‘Who is Bishop?’’ Michael asked.
‘‘Exactly who he says he is. He has no reason to
lie.’’
‘‘So he’s your father?’’ Claire asked. There was a
long silence, one not even Oliver broke; Amelie raised her cool
gray eyes and focused on Claire’s face until Claire felt the urge,
not just to look away, but to run.
Amelie finally said, ‘‘In a sense, at least, as you
might understand such things. Both my human and immortal bloodlines
flow through him. Oliver, do hurry. I feel the need to go home
before the sun rises.’’
The sun wasn’t anywhere close to rising, which must
have been Amelie’s bone-dry idea of a joke. Oliver moved a pawn.
Amelie took it effortlessly.
Michael chimed in. ‘‘Maybe the better question is,
where is Mr. Bishop?’’
‘‘Gone,’’ Oliver said. ‘‘I packed him off in a nice
limousine with a driver. He’ll be staying at one of the Founder
Houses.’’
‘‘Which one?’’ Claire felt a sudden surge of
illness, one that got worse as neither of the vampires answered.
‘‘It isn’t my parents’ house, right? Right?’’
‘‘I’d rather you not be aware of his exact
location,’’ Amelie said, which wasn’t an answer, certainly not the
right answer. She moved her white queen in a long, deliberate
scrape down the chessboard. ‘‘Checkmate.’’
Oliver studied the board, then studied her with
equal annoyance as he tipped over his doomed black king. ‘‘We need
to discuss this,’’ he said. ‘‘Obviously.’’
‘‘Your tragic lack of strategic skills?’’ Amelie’s
frost-colored brows slowly rose. ‘‘I am deliberating what to do
about our guests. For now, go home, Oliver. And thank you for
coming.’’
She said it without a trace of irony—she could
dismiss him like a servant, but at least she thanked him. Oliver’s
eyes went even darker, but he got up without comment and walked out
into the kitchen. Claire heard the door slam behind him.
Amelie took in a deliberate breath, then let it
out. She rose to her feet and nodded to Michael. ‘‘I think you’ll
be safe enough here tonight,’’ she said. ‘‘Let no one enter, not
for any reason.’’ A quick, almost invisible flicker of a smile.
‘‘Except for me, of course. Me, you cannot stop.’’
‘‘What about Oliver?’’ Shane asked.
‘‘His invitation to enter has been revoked. He
won’t be able to bother you unless you do something foolish. ’’
Which, from the look Amelie gave him, she considered hardly
unlikely. ‘‘Bishop is my affair, not yours. Go about your business,
and stay out of this. All of you.’’
‘‘Wait, my parents—’’
Amelie didn’t wait. With silent grace, she left the
table and walked up the stairs, and as her luminous pale figure
disappeared at the top, Shane said, ‘‘Where the hell is she going?
There’s no door up there.’’
Claire knew. She knew all too well. ‘‘However she
does it, she’s gone.’’ They all looked at her, even Michael.
‘‘There must be some way out. What’s she going to do, bring her
pajamas and crash on the couch?’’
‘‘Do you think she has any?’’ Eve asked. ‘‘Because
I’m betting she sleeps in the nude.’’
‘‘Eve!’’
‘‘What? Come on. Can you really see her in flannel
footies? Bunny slippers?’’
Michael sank into the chair Amelie had vacated, and
stared at the chessboard. He slowly reset it, but Claire could tell
he wasn’t really thinking about the game. ‘‘Shane,’’ he said. ‘‘Go
make sure we’re locked up, would you?’’
Shane nodded and left, heading straight for the
kitchen first. Claire sat across from Michael, in the chair Oliver
had occupied. ‘‘You’re worried,’’ she said.
‘‘No,’’ Michael said, and picked up the white
knight, to turn it over and over in his pale fingers. ‘‘I’m scared.
If this guy’s got Amelie and Oliver nervous, we’re way out of our
league. Morganville is way out of its league.’’
He looked up at Eve, who didn’t respond except to
press her lips tighter together. Claire heard Shane’s footsteps as
he went toward the front door, checked the lock and dead bolt, and
then went on to test the windows.
‘‘We should get some rest,’’ Michael said. ‘‘Could
be a long day tomorrow.’’
As he got up, Eve’s hand grazed his, just a very
light caress, and the two of them locked stares for about a half
second.
‘‘Yeah,’’ Eve agreed. ‘‘I should rest, too.’’
Claire threw a stray magazine at her. ‘‘Get a
room.’’
‘‘Paying for one already,’’ Eve shot back. ‘‘And
I’m going to get my money’s worth, too.’’
She jogged up the stairs, pausing near the top to
throw a glance back down toward Michael, who had the most luminous
smile on his face. He shook his head, like he couldn’t believe what
was going through his mind, and cleared his throat when he saw
Claire watching him.
‘‘Discreet,’’ Claire said. ‘‘You guys ought to hang
a towel on the doorknob or something.’’
‘‘Quiet.’’ But Michael was smiling, and when he
smiled, her heart just soared. She loved seeing him happy. He was
usually so . . . focused. ‘‘If you need anything, you know where to
find me.’’
‘‘Yeah, you think?’’
He waved and followed Eve upstairs.
Shane came back from checking all the ground-floor
entry points, and dropped into the chair Michael had vacated.
‘‘Where’d they go?’’
She pointed straight up.
‘‘Oh.’’ He knew, all too well. ‘‘So. Want to play a
game?’’
‘‘I want to call my parents,’’ Claire said. ‘‘Do
you seriously think Amelie let Mr. Bishop stay in their
house?’’
‘‘I don’t know,’’ he said. ‘‘Call if you think
it’ll help.’’
She pulled her phone out of her pocket and dialed
information; her parents had a new listing, since they’d just
arrived in Morganville. While she waited for an answer, Shane
reached across the table and took her free hand in his, and the
warm touch of his skin made her feel a little less nervous.
Until her mom answered the phone, at least.
‘‘Claire! I didn’t expect you to call so soon. Are you ready to
come home?’’
She froze for a second, then said, as calmly as
possible, ‘‘No, Mom. I just wanted to make sure you were okay.
Everything all right?’’
‘‘Of course everything’s all right. Why wouldn’t it
be?’’
Claire squeezed her eyes shut. ‘‘No reason,’’ she
said. ‘‘I just wanted to check in and see how you were settling in.
How’s the house?’’
‘‘Well, it’s a fixer-upper, you know. Needs some
wiring, and an absolute mountain of decorating, but I’m looking
forward to that.’’
‘‘That’s great. And—so, you don’t have any guests
or anything?’’
‘‘Guests?’’ Her mother laughed. ‘‘Claire, honey, we
barely have sheets on our mattress right now. I’m not ready for
guests!’’
That, at least, was a relief. ‘‘Great. Well—Mom, I
have to go. Good night.’’
‘‘Good night, sweetheart. I’m looking forward to
having you home.’’
Claire hung up, and Shane slipped an arm around her
waist. ‘‘Hey,’’ he said. ‘‘They’re okay?’’
‘‘For now. But he could get to them, right? Anytime
he wants.’’
‘‘Maybe. But he could get to us just as easily.
Look, you can’t help them right now, but he’s got no good reason to
hurt them. It’ll be okay.’’
Shane was the optimist. That was how you
knew things were really bad. . . . Claire forced a smile, opened
her eyes, and tried to be a brave little toaster. ‘‘Yeah,’’ she
said. ‘‘Yeah, it’ll be fine. No problem.’’
His dark eyes searched hers, and she knew that he
could see she was lying. But he didn’t call her on it, probably all
too familiar with the concept of denial. ‘‘So,’’ he said. ‘‘Care
for a nice, civilized game of chess?’’
A thump, and the unmistakable sound of a muffled
giggle, drifted through the ceiling from the second floor.
Approximately where Eve’s room would be.
‘‘Hey!’’ Shane yelled up. ‘‘Turn down the porn
soundtrack! Trying to concentrate here!’’
More laughter, quickly stifled. Shane focused back
on Claire, and Claire felt her lips curling into a more genuine
kind of smile.
‘‘Chess,’’ she said. ‘‘Your move, tough
guy.’’
Another thump from upstairs. Shane shook his head
and tipped over his king. ‘‘What the hell. I surrender. Let’s hook
up a video game and kill some zombies.’’