4
Shane went straight to his room, and didn’t come
down again for the dinner that Eve made— spaghetti with meat sauce,
light on the garlic for the sake of the vampire at the table. It
was probably delicious, but Claire couldn’t taste a thing. She
couldn’t keep her mind off the white, rigid set of Shane’s face,
and the panic and loathing in his eyes. She didn’t understand what
had happened, and she knew he didn’t want to be asked. Not
now.
‘‘Well?’’ Eve twirled spaghetti around her fork as
she stared at Claire. ‘‘How is it?’’
‘‘Oh—fantastic,’’ Claire said, with so much
enthusiasm she knew nobody was fooled. She sighed. ‘‘I’m sorry.
It’s just—’’
Eve pointed above their heads. ‘‘The dean of the
drama department?’’
Michael looked up at her, and for a second Claire
saw the blue of his eyes flicker. ‘‘He’s got his reasons,’’ he
said. ‘‘Let it go, Eve.’’
‘‘Pardon me, but that boy can make a paper cut seem
like a mortal wound. . . .’’
‘‘I said let it go.’’ Michael snapped it this time,
and there was unmistakable command in his voice. Eve stopped
twirling spaghetti. Stopped doing everything except watching him
with narrowed, kohl-rimmed eyes.
‘‘Let’s review,’’ she said, and put the fork
carefully down on a napkin. ‘‘You got all diva and decided
you were too busy to go to the store. Next, Shane threw a tantrum
and stomped up to his room to put on a one-man pity party. And now
you’re ordering me around like you own me. Are we under a
testosterone storm warning?’’
‘‘Eve.’’
‘‘I’m not finished. You may think that growing a
pair of fangs makes you the boss around here, but you’d better
check your playlist. You’re on the seriously wrong track.’’
‘‘Eve.’’ Michael leaned forward, and Claire
caught her breath. His eyes were all wrong, his movements too fast,
and she caught a flash of teeth that were too white, too
sharp.
Eve pushed her chair back from the table, picked up
her bowl, and walked into the kitchen without a backward
glance.
Michael put his head in his hands. ‘‘Christ, what
just happened?’’
Claire swallowed. She tasted nothing but metal, as
if she’d tried to chew the fork instead of the food. Her whole body
felt cold, aching with the need to do . . . something.
She took Michael’s bowl, stacking it with her own.
‘‘I’ll clean up,’’ she said.
Michael’s hand closed around her wrist. She didn’t
dare look up at him. At close range, she didn’t want to see the
changes in his eyes, the ones Eve had seen so clearly.
‘‘I wouldn’t hurt any of you. You believe me,
right?’’
She heard the sudden doubt in his voice.
‘‘Sure,’’ she said. ‘‘It’s just—Michael, I don’t
think you really know what you are yet. What’s changing inside you.
Eve thinks that showing you our weakness is a bad idea. I don’t
think she’s wrong about that.’’
Michael was watching her as if he’d never actually
seen her before. As if she’d changed right before his eyes, from a
child to an equal.
She swallowed hard. That was a powerful look, and
it wasn’t the vampire part of him—it was the Michael part. The part
she admired, and loved.
‘‘No,’’ he said softly. ‘‘I don’t think she’s
wrong, either.’’ He touched Claire’s cheek gently. ‘‘What happened
to Shane?’’
‘‘You don’t think it was just another pity party,
like Eve?’’
Michael had never looked so serious, she thought.
‘‘No,’’ he said. ‘‘And I think he may need help. But I don’t think
he’d take it from me right now.’’
‘‘I’m not sure he’ll take it from me, either,’’
Claire said.
Michael took the plates from her. ‘‘Don’t
underestimate yourself.’’
Shane’s room was dark, except for the dim glow that
came in from the distant streetlights. Claire eased the door open
and, in the stripe of warm hallway light, saw his foot and part of
his leg. He was lying on the bed. She shut the door, took a slow,
calm breath, and walked to sit down next to him.
He didn’t move. As her eyes adjusted, she saw that
his eyes were open. He was staring at the ceiling.
‘‘You want to talk about it?’’ she asked. No
answer. He blinked; that was all. ‘‘She got to you, didn’t she?
Somehow, she got to you.’’
For a long few seconds, she thought he was just
going to lie there and ignore her, but then he said, ‘‘They get
inside your head, the really strong ones. They can make you—feel
things. Want things you don’t really want. Do things you’d never
do. Most of them don’t bother, but the ones that do—they’re the
worst.’’
Claire reached out in the darkness, and his hand
met hers midway—cool at first, then growing warm where their skin
touched.
‘‘I don’t want her, Claire,’’ he said. ‘‘But she
made me want her. You understand?’’
‘‘It doesn’t matter.’’
‘‘It does. Because now that she’s done it once,
it’s going to be easy for her to do it again.’’ His fingers
tightened on hers, hard enough to make her wince. ‘‘Don’t try to
stop her. Or me, if it comes to that. I have to handle this
myself.’’
‘‘Handle it how?’’
‘‘Any way I can,’’ Shane said. He shifted over on
the bed. ‘‘You’re shivering.’’
Was she? She honestly hadn’t realized, but the room
felt cold, cold and full of despair. Shane was the only bright
thing in it.
She stretched out facing him. Too close, she
thought, for her dad’s comfort, if he’d seen them, even though they
were only holding hands.
Shane reached down on the other side of the bed,
found a blanket, and threw it over both of them. It smelled
like—well, like Shane, like his skin and hair, and Claire felt a
rush of warmth go through her as she breathed it in. She moved
closer to him under the covers, partly to get warm, and
partly—partly because she needed to touch him.
He met her halfway, and their bodies pressed
together with every curve and hollow. Their intertwined fingers
curled in on one another. Even though they were close enough to
kiss, they didn’t—it was a kind of intimacy that Claire wasn’t used
to, being this close and just . . . being. Shane freed his hand
from hers and brushed stray locks of hair back from her eyes. He
traced her slightly parted lips.
‘‘You’re beautiful,’’ he said. ‘‘When I first saw
you, I thought—I thought you were too young to be on your own here,
in this town."
"Not now?"
‘‘You’ve made it through better than most of us.
But if I could get you to leave this place, I would.’’ Shane’s
smile was dim and crooked and a little broken, in the shadows. ‘‘I
want you to live, Claire. I need you to live.’’
Her fingers touched the warm fringe of his hair.
‘‘I’m not worried about me,’’ she said.
‘‘You never are. That’s my point. I worry
about you. Not just because of the vampires—because of Jason. He’s
still out there somewhere. And—’’ Shane paused for a second, as if
he couldn’t quite get the rest of it out. ‘‘And there’s me, too.
Your parents might be right. I might not be the best—’’
She moved her fingers to put them over his mouth,
over those soft, strong lips. ‘‘I won’t ever stop trusting you,
Shane. You can’t make me.’’
A shaky laugh out of the dark. ‘‘My point
exactly.’’
‘‘That’s why I’m staying here,’’ Claire said.
‘‘With you. Tonight.’’
Shane took in a deep breath. ‘‘Clothes stay
on.’’
‘‘Mostly,’’ she agreed.
‘‘You know, your parents really are right about
me.’’
Claire sighed. ‘‘No, they’re not. Nobody knows you
at all, I think. Not your dad, not even Michael. You’re a deep,
dark mystery, Shane.’’
He kissed her for the first time since she’d
entered the room, a warm press of lips to her forehead. ‘‘I’m an
open book.’’
She smiled. ‘‘I like books.’’
‘‘Hey, we’ve got something in common.’’
‘‘I’m taking off my shoes.’’
‘‘Fine. Shoes off.’’
‘‘And my pants.’’
‘‘Don’t push it, Claire.’’
Claire woke up drowsy and utterly peaceful, and it
took a slow second for her to realize that the heavenly warmth at
her back was radiating from someone else, in the bed, with
her.
From Shane.
She stopped breathing. Was he awake? No, she didn’t
think so; she could feel his slow, steady breaths. There was a
delicious, forbidden delight to this, a moment that she knew she’d
carry with her even when it was gone. Claire closed her eyes and
tried to remember everything—like the way Shane’s bare chest
touched her back, warm and smooth where their skin connected. She’d
negotiated for the removal of shirts, since she’d been wearing a
sleeveless camisole underneath, and Shane had wavered enough to let
it go. He’d insisted on keeping the pants, though.
She hadn’t mentioned that she’d gotten rid of the
bra, though she knew he’d noticed that right off.
Dangerous, some part of her said. You’re
going to take this too far. You’re not ready—Why not? Why
wasn’t she? Because she wasn’t seventeen? What was so magic about a
number, anyway? Who decided when she was ready except her?
Shane made a sound in his sleep—a deep, contented
sigh that vibrated through her whole body. I’ll bet if I turn
around and kiss him, I could convince him. . . .
Shane’s hand was resting on the inward curve just
above her hip, a warm loose weight, and that was how she knew when
he woke up—his hand. It went from utterly limp to careful, tensing
and relaxing but not moving from its spot.
She could feel each individual finger on her
skin.
She stayed very still, keeping her breathing slow
and steady. Shane’s hand slowly, gently moved up her side, barely
skimming, and then he moved away from her and sat up, facing away
toward the window. Claire rolled toward him, holding the blanket at
neck level.
‘‘Good morning,’’ she said. Her voice sounded
drowsy and slow, and she saw a slice of his face as he turned
slightly toward her. Sunlight glimmered warm on his bare skin, like
he’d been dusted in gold.
‘‘Good morning,’’ he said, and shook his head.
‘‘Man. That was stupid.’’
Not at all what she was thinking. Shane got
up, and she gulped at the way his blue jeans rode low on his hips,
the way his bones and muscles curved together and begged to be
touched—
‘‘Bathroom,’’ he blurted, and moved almost as fast
as a vampire getting out of there. Claire sat up, waiting, but when
he didn’t come back, she slowly began to assemble her clothes
again. Bra, clicked back into place. Camisole neat and demure, if
wrinkled. She’d kept her jeans on. Her hair looked like she’d
combed it with a blender—she was still messing with it when she
heard Eve’s trademark heavy shoes clopping down the hallway
outside, passing Shane’s door, going all the way to the end.
To Claire’s own room.
Oh, damn.
Eve hammered on the door. ‘‘Claire?’’
Claire slipped out of Shane’s room quietly, trying
not to look obvious about it, and made sure she was several steps
into neutral territory before she said, ‘‘What is it?’’
Eve, who’d opened up Claire’s door and was looking
inside, whirled so fast she almost overbalanced. She was ultra-Goth
today—deep purple dress with skull patterns, black-and-white
striped tights, a death’s-head choker. Her hair was up in one
scary-looking spiked ponytail, and her makeup was the usual rice
paper and dead black, with the addition of dark cherry
lipstick.
‘‘Where’d you come from?’’ she asked. Claire
gestured vaguely toward the staircase. ‘‘I just came from
there.’’
‘‘Bathroom,’’ Claire said. And got a frown, but Eve
let it go.
‘‘It’s Michael,’’ she said. ‘‘He’s gone.’’
‘‘Gone to work?’’
‘‘No, gone. As in, he took off in the middle
of the night and didn’t tell me where he was going, and he hasn’t
come back. I checked—he’s not at the music store. I’m worried,
especially—’’ Eve’s train of thought switched tracks, and her eyes
widened. ‘‘Oh my God, are you wearing the same thing you had
on yesterday? You’re not doing the walk of shame, are you? Because
I totally cannot face your parents if you are.’’
‘‘No, no, it’s not like that—’’ Claire felt a hot
blush work its way up from her neck to vividly light up her face.
‘‘I just—we were talking, and we fell asleep. I swear, we didn’t,
um—’’
‘‘Yeah, you’d better not have ummed, because
if you did, that would be—’’ Eve struggled not to smile. ‘‘That
would be bad.’’
‘‘I know, I know. But we didn’t. And we aren’t
going to until—’’ Until I can convince him it’s okay.
‘‘Whatever. About Michael—what do you want to do?’’
‘‘Go ask some questions. Common Grounds is a place
to start, much as I hate it; Sam’s probably there, or we can leave
a message for him. I heard he’s back out in public again.’’ Sam was
Michael’s grandfather— and a vampire. He’d nearly been staked dead,
and it had taken Amelie’s help to save him. But he’d been left
weak. Claire was glad to hear that he was better— Sam was, she
felt, one of the best of the vampires. One she could trust. ‘‘Well?
Are we going or what?’’
Shane still hadn’t come out of the bathroom. ‘‘Five
minutes,’’ Claire said, resigned. No chance of a hot shower, or
even clean clothes—the best she had available were cleanish, and
not slept in. She might be able to find that last-picked pair of
underwear hiding in a drawer. . . .
There was a knock downstairs at the front door. An
authoritative, urgent sort of knock. It was still early, and the
number of drop-in visitors in Morganville was generally pretty
small anyway; Claire dragged the least wrinkled of the two T-shirts
over her head, pulled on the fresh underwear and old jeans, and
hurried out into the hall still zipping up. Eve was ahead of her,
already going down the stairs, and as Claire passed the bathroom,
Shane opened the door and stuck his wet head out. ‘‘What’s going
on?’’
‘‘Don’t know!’’ she shot back, and hurried after
Eve.
What was going on was the delivery of an envelope,
which Eve had to sign for. As she turned it over, Claire made out
the name, neatly written in an antiquely beautiful hand: Mr.
Shane Collins. There was even a decorative little flourish
underneath his name. The envelope was heavy cream-colored paper. On
the back flap there was a gold seal with some kind of shield on
it.
Eve lifted it to her nose, sniffed, and raised her
eyebrows. ‘‘Wow,’’ she said. ‘‘Expensive perfume.’’
She waved it in Claire’s direction, and she caught
a hint of the dark, musky fragrance—full of promise and
danger.
Shane padded downstairs, barefoot and wearing only
his jeans except for the towel draped around his neck. He slowed as
they both turned toward him. ‘‘What?’’
Eve held up the envelope. ‘‘Mr. Shane
Collins.’’
He took it from her fingers, frowned at it, and
then ripped open the back flap. Inside was a folded card of the
same expensive cream paper, with raised black printing. Shane
looked at it for a long second, then put it back in the envelope
and handed it back to Eve. ‘‘Burn it,’’ he said.
And then he went upstairs.
Eve lost no time digging the card out, and since
she did, Claire didn’t feel too guilty about reading over her
shoulder.
You have been summoned to attend a masked ball
and feast to celebrate the arrival of Elder Bishop, on Saturday the
twentieth of October, at the Elders’ Council Hall at the hour of
midnight.
You will attend at the invitation of the lady
Ysandre, and are required to accompany her at her
pleasure.
‘‘Who’s Ysandre?’’ Eve asked.
Claire was too busy worrying about the phrase at
her pleasure.
They located Sam Glass at Common Grounds, sitting
and talking with two others Claire didn’t recognize, but Eve
clearly did, from the nods they exchanged. Humans, because they
were wearing bracelets. They said their good-byes and cleared the
chairs for Eve and Claire.
Sam looked a lot like Michael—a little older,
maybe, with a slightly wider chin. He had red hair to Michael’s
bright gold, but a similar build and height.
That had nearly gotten him killed, not so long ago,
when he’d taken a stake meant for Michael. He still looked drawn,
Claire thought—tired, too. But his smile was genuine as he nodded
his greeting. ‘‘Ladies, ’’ he said. ‘‘It’s good to see you. Eve, I
didn’t think you’d ever come in here again, not voluntarily.
’’
‘‘Believe me, if it wasn’t for you, I wouldn’t,’’
she said, and tapped dark purple fingernails on the scarred table
in agitation. ‘‘Do you know where Michael is?’’
Sam’s ginger eyebrows rose. ‘‘He’s not at
work?’’
‘‘He left last night, didn’t say where he was
going. We haven’t seen him, and he’s not at work. So?
Ideas?’’
‘‘Nothing good,’’ Sam said, and sat back in his
chair. ‘‘Does he have his car?’’
‘‘Yeah, as far as I know. Why?’’
‘‘GPS. All of our cars are trackable.’’
‘‘Wow, good to know in case I ever go into the
grand-theft-auto business around here,’’ Eve said. ‘‘Who’s got the
supersecret-spy tracking gear, and how do I get my hands on
it?’’
‘‘You don’t,’’ Sam said. ‘‘I’ll take care of
it.’’
‘‘Soon?’’
‘‘As soon as I can.’’
‘‘But I need to find him! What if he’s—’’ Eve
leaned even closer, dropping her voice to a whisper. ‘‘What if
someone has him?’’
‘‘Who?’’
‘‘Bishop!’’
Sam’s eyes widened, and all over the coffee shop,
other heads snapped up. Mostly vampires, Claire thought, who knew
the name, or at least knew of it. And who could hear a
whisper across a crowded room.
‘‘Quiet,’’ Sam said. ‘‘Eve, stay out of it. It’s
nothing for any of you to get involved in. It’s our
business.’’
‘‘It’s our business, too. The guy was in our
house. He threatened us, all of us,’’ Eve said. ‘‘Can’t you
find out right now? Because otherwise I’m going to call up Homeland
Security and tell them that we’ve got a whole bunch of terrorists
skulking around in the dark.’’
‘‘You wouldn’t.’’
‘‘Oh, I so would. With glee. And I’d tell them to
bring tanning beds and conduct interviews at noon out in the
parking lot.’’
Sam shook his head. ‘‘Eve—’’
Eve slammed her hand down on the table. It sounded
like a gunshot, and every head turned in their direction. ‘‘I’m not
kidding, Sam!’’
‘‘Yes, you are,’’ he said, deliberately quiet.
‘‘Because if you were serious, you would be making a threat against
people who control the destiny of your next heartbeat, and that
would be very, very stupid. Now, say you’ll let me handle
this.’’
Eve’s dark eyes didn’t blink. ‘‘Is this about
Bishop? Why is he here? What’s he doing? Why are you so scared of
him?’’
Sam stood up, and there was something remote and
cold about him just then. Something that reminded Claire, very
strongly, that he was a vampire first.
‘‘Go home,’’ he said. ‘‘I’ll find Michael. I doubt
he’s in any trouble, and I doubt it has anything to do with
Bishop.’’
Eve stood up, too, and for the first time, Claire
saw her as an adult—a woman, facing him on equal terms.
‘‘You’d better be right,’’ she said softly.
‘‘Because if anything happens to Michael, that won’t be the end of
it. I swear to that.’’
Sam watched them all the way out of the coffee
shop. So did everyone else. Some of them looked worried; some
looked gleeful. Some looked angry.
But nobody ignored the two of them as they left.
Nobody. And that was . . . unsettling.
They got in the car, and Eve started it up without
a word. Claire finally ventured a question. ‘‘Where are we
going?’’
‘‘Home,’’ Eve said. ‘‘I’m giving Sam a chance to
keep his word.’’
That, Claire thought, was going to involve Eve
chewing the corners off the walls and pacing holes in the floor.
And Claire had absolutely no idea what to do to help her.
But that was basically what friends were for . . .
to be there to keep you from doing the crazy.
They’d been home for exactly one hour when the
phone rang. Shane was sitting next to the phone— he’d appropriated
the place, because he was worried Eve would keep picking up the
receiver to check the line—and answered on the first chime. ‘‘Glass
House,’’ he said, and listened. Claire watched every muscle in his
body go tense and still. ‘‘Go screw yourself.’’
And he hung up.
Claire and Eve both gaped at him. ‘‘What the
hell—?’’ Eve blurted, and lunged for the phone. She flicked the
contact switch.
‘‘Star sixty-nine,’’ Claire suggested. ‘‘Shane—who
was it?’’
He didn’t answer. He crossed his arms over his
chest. Eve frantically punched in the code. ‘‘It’s ringing, ’’ she
said—and then, like Shane, she went still.
She sank down in a chair.
‘‘Should’ve left it alone,’’ Shane said.
Eve closed her eyes, and her shoulders slumped.
‘‘Yeah, I’m here,’’ she said tightly. ‘‘What is it, Jason?’’
Claire caught Shane’s look, and she must have
seemed suspiciously in the know, because he frowned at her. ‘‘Have
you seen him?’’ Shane asked.
Truth, or lie? ‘‘Yes,’’ Claire said, even though
that definitely wasn’t the path of least resistance. ‘‘I saw him
yesterday morning on the way to school. He said he wanted to talk
to Eve.’’
Oh, that look. It could have melted steel. ‘‘And
you forgot about chatting with the local serial killer? Sweet,
Claire. Very smart.’’
‘‘I didn’t forget. I—never mind.’’ There was no
explaining the vibe she had gotten from Jason, not to Shane, whose
most vivid memories of the little creep had to do with Jason
sinking a knife into his guts. ‘‘I’m sorry. I should have told
you.’’
Eve made a shushing motion at them and hunched over
the phone, listening hard. ‘‘He said what? You’re not
serious. You can’t be serious.’’
Apparently, he was. Eve listened another few
seconds, and then said, ‘‘Okay, then. No, I don’t know. Maybe.
Bye.’’
She put the phone back in the cradle and stared at
it. Her face looked frozen.
‘‘Eve?’’ Claire asked. ‘‘What is it?’’
‘‘My dad,’’ Eve said. ‘‘He’s—he’s sick. He’s in the
hospital. They don’t think—they don’t think he’s going to make it.
It’s his liver.’’
‘‘Oh,’’ Claire whispered, and leaned across the
table to take Eve’s right hand. ‘‘I’m sorry.’’
Eve’s fingers were cool and limp. ‘‘Yeah, well—he
asked for it, you know? My dad was an ugly drunk, and he—me and
Jason didn’t exactly have the greatest childhood.’’ She locked
gazes with Shane. ‘‘You know.’’
He nodded. He took her left hand and stared at the
table. ‘‘Our dads were drinking buddies sometimes,’’ he said. ‘‘But
Eve’s was worse. Lots worse.’’
Claire, having met Shane’s dad, couldn’t really
imagine that. ‘‘How long—?’’
‘‘Jason said a couple of days, maybe. Not long.’’
Eve’s eyes filled with tears that didn’t fall. ‘‘Son of a bitch.
What does he expect from me, anyway? To come running and sit there
and watch him die?’’
Shane didn’t answer. He didn’t lift his head. He
just . . . sat. Claire had no idea what to do, how to act, so she
followed his example. Eve’s hands suddenly closed on theirs,
hard.
‘‘He threw me out,’’ she said. ‘‘He told me that if
I didn’t let Brandon fang me, I couldn’t be his daughter. Well, so
he’s dying, boohoo. I don’t care.’’
Yes, you do, Claire wanted to say, but she
couldn’t. Eve was trying to convince herself, that was all, and in
about thirty seconds she shook her head, and the tears broke free
to run in dirty streaks down her pale face.
‘‘I’ll take you,’’ Shane said quietly. ‘‘That way,
you don’t have to stay unless you want to.’’
Eve nodded. She couldn’t seem to get her breath.
‘‘I wish—Michael—’’
Claire remembered, with a shock, that they were
still waiting for Sam’s call. ‘‘I’ll stay,’’ she said. ‘‘I’ll call
you when I hear from Sam. I’ll get Michael to come there,
okay?’’
‘‘Okay,’’ Eve said weakly. ‘‘I—need my purse, I
guess.’’
She swiped at her eyes and walked into the other
room. Shane looked at Claire, and she wondered what all this was
bringing up for him—memories of his father, of his dead mother and
sister, of a family he didn’t really even have anymore.
You’re a deep, dark mystery, she’d said to
him, and now, more than ever, that was true.
‘‘Take care of her,’’ Claire said. ‘‘Call me if you
need anything.’’
He kissed her on the lips, and in a few minutes she
heard the front door bang shut. Locks clicked. Claire sat by the
phone and waited.
She’d rarely felt so alone.
The phone rang after ten minutes. ‘‘He’s coming
home,’’ Sam said, and hung up. No explanation.
Claire gritted her teeth and settled in to
wait.
It took another twenty minutes for Michael’s car to
pull into the driveway. He crossed the short distance from garage
to back door in a few fast strides, covering his head with a black
umbrella he left by the steps. Even then, when he entered the
kitchen, Claire smelled a faint burned reek coming from him, and he
was shivering.
His eyes looked hollow and exhausted.
‘‘Michael? You okay?’’
‘‘Fine,’’ he said. ‘‘I need to rest, that’s
all.’’
‘‘I—where were you? What happened?’’
‘‘I was with Amelie.’’ He scrubbed his hands over
his face. ‘‘Look, there’s a lot going on. I should have left a note
for you guys. I’m sorry. I’ll try to keep you in the loop next
time—’’
‘‘Eve’s at the hospital,’’ Claire blurted. ‘‘Her
dad’s dying.’’
Michael slowly straightened. ‘‘What?’’
‘‘Something about his liver, I guess because of his
drinking. Anyway, they say he’s dying. She and Shane went to see
him.’’ Claire studied him for a few seconds. ‘‘I told her I’d call
when you got home. If you don’t want to go—’’
‘‘No. No, I’ll go. She needs—’’ He shrugged. ‘‘She
needs people who love her. It’s going to be hard, facing her
parents.’’
‘‘Yeah,’’ Claire agreed. ‘‘She seemed upset.’’ Of
course she was upset. What a stupid thing to say. ‘‘I think she’d
like it if you were there for her.’’
‘‘I will be.’’ Michael raised his eyebrows. ‘‘What
about you? You okay to stay here?’’
Claire glanced at the clock on the wall. ‘‘Could
you drop me off somewhere?’’
‘‘Where?’’
‘‘I need to see Myrnin. Sorry, but I
promised.’’
Not that visiting her crazy vampire mentor was
going to be any more pleasant than going to the hospital.