6
The Donation Center was still open, even though it
was getting dark. As Richard pulled his police cruiser to the curb,
two people Claire vaguely recognized came out, waved to each other,
and set off in separate directions. ‘‘Does everybody come here?’’
she asked.
‘‘Everybody who doesn’t use the Bloodmobile,’’
Richard answered. ‘‘Every human who’s Protected has to donate a
certain number of pints per year. Donations go to their Patron
first. The rest goes to whoever needs it. Vampires who don’t have
anyone to donate for them.’’
‘‘Like Michael,’’ Claire said.
‘‘Yeah, he’s our most recent charity project.’’
Richard got out and opened the back door for her and Shane. She
slid out. Shane, after a hesitation long enough to make her worry,
followed. He stuck his hands in his pockets and stared up at the
glowing red cross sign above the door. The Donation Center didn’t
look exactly inviting, but it was far less terrifying than the
Bloodmobile. For one thing, there were bright windows that offered
a clear view of a clean, big room. Framed posters on the wall—the
same kind you could find in any town, Claire thought—listed the
virtues of giving blood.
‘‘Does any of it get to other humans?’’ she asked
as Richard held the door open for Shane. He shrugged.
‘‘Ask your boyfriend,’’ he said. ‘‘They used quite
a few units on him after his stabbing, as I remember. Of course it
gets used for humans. It’s our town, too.’’
‘‘You’re dreaming if you really think that,’’ Shane
said, and stepped inside. As Claire followed, she felt a definite
change of atmosphere—not just the air, which was cool and dry, but
something else. A feeling, barely contained, of desperation. It
reminded her of the way hospital waiting areas felt—industrial,
impersonal, soaked with large and small fears. But it was still
clean, well lit, and full of comfortable chairs.
Nothing at all scary about the place. Not even the
motherly-looking older lady sitting behind the wooden desk at the
front, who gave them all the same bright, welcoming smile.
‘‘Well, Officer Morrell, it’s nice to see
you!’’
He nodded to the lady. ‘‘Rose. Got a truant for you
here.’’
‘‘So I see. Shane Collins, isn’t it? Oh, dear, I’m
so sorry to hear about your mother. Tragedy has come to your door
too often.’’ She was still smiling, but it was muted. Respectful.
‘‘Can I put you down for two pints today? To make up some of what
you’re behind?’’
Shane nodded. His jaw was clenched, his eyes
brilliant and narrowed. He was fighting for control, Claire
thought. She slipped her fingers in his where they were handcuffed
behind his back.
‘‘You remember me, don’t you?’’ Rose continued. ‘‘I
knew your mother. We used to play bridge together.’’
‘‘I remember,’’ Shane choked out. Nothing else.
Richard raised his eyebrows, got a mirrored look from Rose, and
tugged on Shane’s elbow to lead him away to one of the empty
chairs. They were all empty, Claire noticed. She’d seen a couple of
people leaving the building, but nobody coming inside.
One thing about the Donation Center, they were
better than most medical places about keeping their magazines
up-to-date. Claire found a brand-new edition of Seventeen
and began reading. Shane sat stiffly, in silence, and watched the
single wooden door at the end of the room. Richard Morrell chatted
with Rose at the desk, looking relaxed and friendly. Claire
wondered if he came here to donate his blood, or if he used the
Bloodmobile. She supposed that whatever he chose, the vampires
wouldn’t be crazy enough to hurt him—son of the mayor, respected
police officer. No, Richard Morrell was probably safer than just
about anybody in Morganville, Protected or not.
Easy for him to be relaxed.
The door at the end of the room opened, and a nurse
stepped through it. She was dressed in bright floral surgical
scrubs, complete to the cap over her hair, and like Rose, she had a
nice, unthreatening smile. ‘‘Shane Collins?’’
Shane took in a deep breath and struggled up out of
his chair. Richard turned him around and unfastened the handcuffs.
‘‘Good behavior, Shane,’’ he said. ‘‘Trust me, you don’t want to
start trouble here.’’
Shane nodded stiffly. He glanced at Claire, then
fixed his attention on the nurse who was waiting. He walked toward
her with slow, deliberate calm.
‘‘Can I go with him?’’ Claire asked, and Richard
looked at her in surprise.
‘‘Claire, they’re not going to hurt him. It’s just
like blood donation anywhere else. They stick a needle in your arm
and give you a squeezy ball. Orange juice and cookies at the
end.’’
‘‘So I can donate?’’
He looked to Rose for help.
‘‘How old are you, child?’’
‘‘I’m not a child. I’m almost seventeen.’’
‘‘There’s no legal requirement for anyone under the
age of eighteen to donate blood,’’ Rose said.
‘‘But is there a law against it?’’
She blinked, started to answer, and stopped
herself. She pulled open a drawer and retrieved a small book that
was titled Morganville Blood Donations: Regulations and
Requirements. After flipping a few pages, she shrugged and
looked at Richard. ‘‘I don’t think there is,’’ she said. ‘‘I’ve
just never had anyone donate voluntarily at the Donation Center.
Oh, we take the Bloodmobile to the university from time to time,
but—’’
‘‘Great,’’ Claire interrupted. ‘‘I’d like to donate
a pint, please.’’
Rose immediately became all business.
‘‘Forms,’’ she said, and thumped down a clipboard
and pen.
To say that Shane was surprised to see her was an
understatement.
To say he was pleased would have been a lie.
As she took the couch next to his, Shane hissed,
‘‘What the hell do you think you’re doing? Are you
crazy?’’
‘‘I’m donating blood,’’ she said. ‘‘I don’t have
to, but I don’t mind.’’ At least, she didn’t think she minded.
She’d never actually done it before, and the sight of the red tube
snaking out of Shane’s arm and down to the collection bag was a
little bit terrifying. ‘‘It doesn’t hurt, right?’’
‘‘Dude, they’re sticking a big-ass needle in your
vein—of course it hurts.’’ He looked pale, and she didn’t think it
was all from the fact that he was on his second pint. ‘‘You can
still say no. Just get up and tell them you changed your
mind.’’
The same friendly-looking nurse who’d called Shane
to the back rolled up a wheeled stool and a cart. ‘‘He’s right,’’
she said. ‘‘If you don’t want to do this, you don’t have to. I saw
your paperwork. You’re a little young.’’ The nurse’s bright brown
eyes focused beyond her, to Shane, and then back again. ‘‘Doing it
for moral support?’’
‘‘Kind of,’’ Claire admitted. Her fingers felt
ice-cold, and she shivered as the nurse took her hand. ‘‘I’ve never
done this before.’’
‘‘You’re in luck. I have. Now, I’m going to stick
your finger and run a quick test, and then we’ll get started.
Okay?’’
Claire nodded. Lying on the couch seemed to have
effectively sapped away her will to move. The finger stick came as
a sharp, bright flash, there and gone, and Claire lifted her head
from the pillow to see the nurse using a tiny glass pipette to
gather blood from her fingertip. It was about five seconds, and
then the stick was bandaged up. The nurse did some things with
items on her cart, nodded in satisfaction, and smiled at Claire. "O
negative,’’ she said. ‘‘Excellent.’’
Claire gave her a weak thumbs-up. The nurse took
her arm and fastened the rubber tourniquet above the elbow. ‘‘Talk
to your boyfriend,’’ she advised. ‘‘Don’t watch.’’
Claire turned her head. Shane was staring at her
with dark, intense eyes. He smiled slightly, just enough, and she
returned it.
‘‘So,’’ she asked, ‘‘come here often?’’
He laughed quietly. She felt something hot slip
into her arm, a jolt that faded to discomfort, and then tape being
applied. A ball was pressed into her hand, and the tight pressure
of the tourniquet snapped loose. ‘‘Squeeze,’’ the nurse said.
‘‘You’re good to go.’’
Surprised, Claire glanced down. She had a thing in
her arm, and a tube, and there was red running through it. . .
.
Her head fell back against the pillow, and she
couldn’t hear for the dark buzzing inside her skull. She thought
someone was calling her name, but for the moment that didn’t seem
very important. She tried to breathe, slowly and steadily, and
after what seemed like hours, the buzzing faded, and the world took
on edges and bright colors again. There was a poster on the ceiling
overhead, one of a kitten sitting in a tea-cup, looking adorable.
She fixed on it and tried not to think about the blood that was
draining out of her. This is what it’s like, she couldn’t
help but realize. This must be what Michael felt when Oliver was
draining his blood. This is what all those people feel when the
vampires kill them.
It was only a little piece of death, hardly enough
to matter.
The nurse slipped a warm blanket over her, smiled
down, and said, ‘‘It’s okay. You’re not the first to pass out.
That’s why the seats recline, honey.’’
Claire hadn’t passed out, not really, but she
wasn’t feeling her best, either. The nurse rolled her cart and
stool around to Shane.
‘‘Done,’’ she announced, and Claire tried to turn
her head that way, but she didn’t want to see the needle coming out
any more than she’d wanted to see it go in. Squeamish. She was
squeamish about needles, and she’d never realized that before.
Funny.
A warm hand covered hers, and when she opened her
eyes, she saw that Shane was standing next to her, pale and
hollow-eyed but upright.
‘‘Shane,’’ the nurse said. ‘‘Go get some
juice.’’
‘‘When she’s done,’’ he said.
The nurse must have realized there was no arguing
about it, because she kicked her wheeled stool over to him. ‘‘Then
at least sit down. I really don’t want to be picking you up off the
floor.’’
It probably took less time than it felt, but Claire
was desperately glad when the nurse came back to remove the needle
and apply bandages. She didn’t look at the blood bag. The nurse
said something nice, and Claire tried to respond in kind but wasn’t
absolutely sure what came out of her mouth. Shane led her to the
next room, which was a sitting area with a plasma television tuned
to a news channel, juice and sodas and water, and trays of crackers
and cookies and fruit. Claire took an orange and a bottle of water.
Shane went straight for the sugar shock—Coke and cookies.
Claire rubbed her fingers over the purple stretch
bandage around her elbow. ‘‘Is it always like that?’’
‘‘Like what?’’ Shane mumbled around a mouthful of
chocolate chips. ‘‘Scary? Guess so. They try to make it nice, but I
never forget whose mouth that blood ends up in.’’
She felt a surge of nausea, and stopped peeling her
orange. Suddenly, the thick pulpy smell was overwhelming. She
chugged some water instead, which went down cool and heavy as
mercury.
‘‘They use it for the hospitals, though,’’ she
said. ‘‘For accident victims and things like that.’’
‘‘Sure. Reusing the leftovers.’’ Shane crammed
another cookie into his mouth. ‘‘I hate this shit. I swore I’d
never do it, but here I am anyway. Tell me again why I stay in this
town?’’
‘‘They’ll hunt you down if you leave?’’
‘‘Good reason.’’ He dusted crumbs from his fingers.
She peeled the rest of her orange, broke loose a slice, and ate it
with methodical determination—not hungry, no sir, but well aware
she was still shaky. She ate three more slices, then passed Shane
the rest.
‘‘Wait,’’ she said. He paused in the act of biting
into the orange. ‘‘You’ve never done this before, have you? I mean,
you left town before you were eighteen, so you didn’t have to. And
then you’ve ducked it since coming back. Right?’’
‘‘Damn straight.’’ He finished the orange and
chugged the rest of his Coke.
‘‘So you’ve never been inside the
Bloodmobile.’’
‘‘I didn’t say that.’’ Shane got that grim look
again. ‘‘I went with my mother once—didn’t have to donate, but she
wanted me to get used to the idea. I was fifteen. They dragged in
this guy—he was crazy, out of his head. Strapped him down and
started draining him. They hustled the rest of us out of there, but
when we left, he was still there. I watched. They drove away with
him. Nobody ever saw him again.’’
Claire swallowed more water. She felt weak, but she
wanted out of here. The comfortable room felt like a trap, a
windowless, airless box. She tossed the rest of her water and the
orange peel in the trash. Shane three-pointed his Coke can and took
her hand.
‘‘Is Eve going to stay at the hospital?’’ she
asked.
‘‘Not all night. It’s pretty uncomfortable; her
dad’s sobered up, and he’s doing the amends thing.’’ Shane’s mouth
twisted. He clearly didn’t think much of that. ‘‘Her mom just sits
there and cries. She always was practically a bag of wet
tissues.’’
‘‘You don’t like them much.’’
‘‘You wouldn’t, either.’’
‘‘Any sign of Jason?’’
Shane shook his head. ‘‘If he’s showing up to do
his family duty, he’s sneaking around in the dead of night. Which,
come to think of it, would probably work for him. Anyway, Michael
said he’d bring Eve home. They’re probably already there.’’
‘‘I hope so. Did Michael say where he was, you
know, before?’’
‘‘When he was missing? Something about this damn
ball,’’ Shane said.
I should ask him about the invitation. She
almost did—she opened her mouth to do it—but then she remembered
how Shane had looked last night, how deeply Ysandre had shaken
him.
She didn’t want to see him look like that
again.
Maybe she ought to just leave it. He’d talk about
it when he wanted to talk.
There were two doors—one that said EXIT, one that
had nothing on it at all. Shane passed the unmarked door,
hesitated, and backed up.
‘‘What?’’ Claire asked. Shane took hold of the
handle and eased the door open.
‘‘Just a hunch,’’ he said. ‘‘Shhhh.’’
On the other side was another waiting area, and
there were people standing in line. This part of the Donation
Center was darker, with fewer overhead lights. Three people were
standing in front of a long white counter, like at a pharmacy, and
behind it stood a tall woman wearing a lab coat. She didn’t smile,
and she was about as warm as a flask of liquid nitrogen.
‘‘Oh crap,’’ Shane breathed, and about the same
time Claire realized that the blond guy first in line at the
counter was Michael. He wasn’t home. . . . He was
here.
He finished signing something and shoved the
clipboard back, and the woman handed him over a plastic bottle,
about the size of the bottled water Claire had been drinking.
This one didn’t hold water. Tomato juice,
Claire told herself, but it didn’t look at all like juice. Too
dark, too thick. Michael tilted it one way, then another, and his
face—he looked fascinated.
No, he looked hungry.
Claire wanted to look away, but she couldn’t.
Michael unscrewed the cap on the bottle as he stepped out of line,
put the blood to his lips, and began to drink. No, to guzzle.
Claire was distantly aware that Shane’s grip on her hand was so
tight it was painful, but neither of them moved. Michael’s eyes
were shut, and he tilted the bottle back and drank until it was
empty except for a thin red film on the plastic.
He licked his lips, sighed, and opened his eyes,
and looked straight at the two of them.
His eyes were a bright, brilliant, glowing red. He
blinked, and it went away, replaced by an eerie shine. Another
blink, and it was all gone, and he was back to being Michael
again.
He looked as horrified as Claire felt. Betrayed and
ashamed.
Shane shut the door and dragged Claire toward the
exit. They hadn’t reached it before Michael came barreling in after
them.
‘‘Hey!’’ he said. His skin had taken on a flush, a
faint pink tone, that Claire remembered seeing before. ‘‘What are
you doing here?’’
‘‘What do you think we’re doing? They hauled me
here in cuffs, man,’’ Shane snapped. ‘‘You think I’d be here if I
had a choice?’’
Michael stopped in his tracks, and his gaze flashed
down to the stretchy bandages on their arms. Recognition flashed,
and then he looked . . . sad, somehow. ‘‘I—I’m sorry.’’
‘‘What for? Not like we didn’t already know how
much you crave the stuff.’’ Still, Claire heard the betrayal in
Shane’s voice. The revulsion. ‘‘Just didn’t expect to see you
chugging it down like a drunk at happy hour, that’s all.’’
‘‘I didn’t want you to see it,’’ Michael said
quietly. ‘‘I drink it here. I only keep some at home for
emergencies. I never wanted you to watch—’’
‘‘Well, we did,’’ Shane said. ‘‘So what? You’re a
bloodsucking vampire. That’s not a news flash, Michael. Anyway,
it’s no big thing, right?’’
‘‘Yeah,’’ Michael agreed. ‘‘No big thing.’’ He
focused on Claire, and she couldn’t fit the two things
together—Michael with those terrifying red eyes, gulping down fresh
blood, and this Michael standing in front of her, with that sad
hope in his expression. ‘‘You okay, Claire?’’
She nodded. She didn’t trust herself to talk, not
even a word.
‘‘I’m taking her home,’’ Shane said. ‘‘Unless that
was your appetizer, and now you’re looking for the main
course.’’
Michael looked sick. ‘‘Of course not.
Shane—’’
‘‘It’s all right.’’ The fight dropped out of
Shane’s voice. He sounded resigned. ‘‘I’m okay with it.’’
‘‘And that bugs the crap out of you, doesn’t
it?’’
Shane looked up, startled. The two of them stared
it out, and then Shane tugged on Claire’s arm again. ‘‘Let’s go,’’
he said. ‘‘See you at home.’’
Michael nodded. ‘‘See you.’’
He was still holding the empty bottle, Claire
realized. There was a tiny trickle of blood left in the
bottom.
As the door shut between them, she saw Michael
realize what he had in his hand, and throw it violently in the
trash can.
‘‘Oh, Michael,’’ she whispered. ‘‘God.’’ In that
one gesture, she realized something huge.
He really did hate this. He really did, on some
level, hate what he’d become, because of what he saw in their
eyes.
How much did that suck?
The rest of the night passed quietly. The next
morning, they woke up to a ringing phone.
Eve’s dad was gone.
‘‘The funeral’s tomorrow,’’ Eve said. She wasn’t
crying. She didn’t look much like herself this morning— no makeup,
no effort at all put into what she’d thrown on. Her eyes were
veined with red, and her nose almost glowed. She’d cried all night;
Claire had heard her, but when she’d knocked on the door, Eve
hadn’t wanted company. Not even Michael’s.
‘‘Are you going?’’ Michael asked. Claire thought
that was a funny question—who wouldn’t go? But Eve just
nodded.
‘‘I need to,’’ she said. ‘‘They’re right about that
closure thing, I guess. Will you . . . ?’’
‘‘Of course,’’ he said. ‘‘I can’t do graveside,
but—’’
Eve shuddered. ‘‘So not going there, anyway. The
church is bad enough.’’
‘‘Church?’’ Claire asked, as she poured mugs of
coffee for the three of them. Shane, as usual, had slept through
the phone. ‘‘Really?’’
‘‘You’ve never met Father Joe, have you?’’ Eve
managed a weak smile. ‘‘You’ll like him. He’s— something.’’
‘‘Eve had the hots for him when she was twelve,’’
Michael said, and got a dirty look. ‘‘What? You did, and you know
it.’’
‘‘It was the cassock, okay? I’m over it.’’
Claire raised her eyebrows. ‘‘Is Father Joe a . . .
?’’ She did the teeth-in-neck mime. They both smiled.
‘‘No,’’ Michael said. ‘‘He’s just
nonjudgmental.’’
Eve got through the day without too much trouble;
she did the normal things—helping with the laundry, taking half the
cleaning jobs for the day. It was her day off from work. Claire had
a few classes, but she skipped three that she knew she’d already
built up enough momentum in, and attended only the one that seemed
critical. Michael didn’t go in to teach private guitar lessons,
either.
It was nice. It was like . . . family.
The funeral was held at noon the next day, and
Claire found herself trying to pick out what to wear. Party clothes
seemed too . . . festive. Jeans were too informal. She borrowed a
pair of Eve’s black tights and wore them with an also-borrowed
black skirt. Paired with a white shirt, it looked moderately
respectful.
She wasn’t sure how Eve planned to dress, because
at eleven a.m., Eve was still sitting in front of her vanity
mirror, staring at her reflection. Still in her black dressing
gown.
‘‘Hey,’’ Claire said. ‘‘Can I help?’’
‘‘Sure,’’ Eve said. ‘‘Should I do my hair
up?’’
‘‘It’d look nice that way,’’ Claire said, and
picked up the hairbrush. She brushed Eve’s thick black hair until
it shone, then twisted it into a knot and pinned it up at the back
of her head. ‘‘There.’’
Eve reached for her rice-powder makeup, then
stopped. She met Claire’s eyes in the mirror.
‘‘Maybe not the right time,’’ she said.
Claire didn’t say anything at all. Eve applied some
lipstick—dark, but not her usual shade—and began searching through
her closet.
In the end, she went with a black high-necked
dress, one long enough to hang to the tops of her shoes. And a
black veil. It was subdued, for Eve.
The four of them were at the church with fifteen
minutes to spare, and as Michael pulled into the parking garage,
Claire saw that several vampire-tinted cars were already present.
‘‘Is this the only funeral?’’ she asked.
‘‘Yeah,’’ he said, and turned off the engine. ‘‘I
guess Mr. Rosser had more friends than we thought.’’
Not that many, as it turned out; when they entered
the vestibule of the church, it was nearly empty, and there weren’t
many names noted in the register. Eve’s mother stood by the book,
waiting to pounce on anyone who came in the door.
True to Michael’s earlier description, Mrs. Rosser
couldn’t seem to stop crying; she was wearing all black, like Eve,
only it was much more theatrical— dramatic sweeps of black satin, a
big formal hat, gloves.
And, Claire reflected, when you were more
theatrical than Eve, you definitely had issues.
Mrs. Rosser had gone in heavy for mascara, and it
was in messy streams all down her cheeks. Her hair was dyed blond,
and straggling around her face. If she was going for the role of
Ophelia in the town production of Hamlet, Claire thought she
probably had it in the bag.
Eve’s mother threw herself on Claire like a wet
blanket, sobbing on her shoulder and smearing mascara on her white
shirt. ‘‘Thank you for coming!’’ she wailed, and Claire awkwardly
patted her on the back. ‘‘I wish you’d known my husband. He was
such a good man, such a hard life—’’
Eve stood there looking remote and a little sick.
‘‘Mom. Get off her. She doesn’t even know you.’’
Mrs. Rosser drew back, gulping back another sob.
‘‘Don’t be cruel, Eve, just because you didn’t love your
father—’’
Which was just about the coldest thing Claire had
ever heard. She exchanged a stricken look with Shane.
Michael got between mother and daughter, which was
damn brave of him. Maybe it was the vampire gene. ‘‘Mrs. Rosser.
I’m sorry about your husband.’’
‘‘Thank you, Michael, you’ve always been
such a good boy. And thank you for taking care of Eve when she went
out on her own.’’
Mrs. Rosser blew her nose, which was how she missed
Eve saying caustically, ‘‘You mean, when you threw my ass out on
the street?’’
‘‘Sign us in,’’ Michael said to Claire, and took
Eve’s arm and led her into the church. Claire hastily scribbled
their names in the book, nodded to Mrs. Rosser—who was staring
after her daughter with an expression that turned Claire’s
stomach—and grabbed Shane’s arm to follow.
She’d been in the church before. It was nice—not
overly fancy, but peaceful in its simplicity. No crosses anywhere
in sight, but just now, the focus was the big, black casket at the
end of the room. She was struck by the smooth curve of the wood,
and how much it reminded her of the Bloodmobile.
That made Claire shiver and grip Shane’s arm even
more tightly as they slid into the pew beside Michael and
Eve.
There were about fifteen people scattered through
the sanctuary, and more arrived as the minutes ticked by. A couple
of men in suits—from the funeral home, Claire supposed—set up more
floral displays on either side of the casket.
It somehow didn’t seem real. And the sounds of Mrs.
Rosser’s continued sobs and wails, responding to every mourner who
entered, made it even weirder.
Eve slid out of the pew and walked up to the
coffin. She stared down into it for a few long seconds, then bent
and put something in it and came back to take her seat. She had her
veil down, but even with the softening blur, her expression looked
frozen and hard.
‘‘He was a son of a bitch,’’ she said when she saw
Claire watching her. ‘‘But he was still my dad.’’
She leaned against Michael’s shoulder, and he put
his arm around her.
Mrs. Rosser finally entered the sanctuary and took
a seat in the front row, ahead of where the four of them were. One
of the funeral home attendants handed her an entire box of tissues.
She pulled out a handful and continued to sob.
And a tall, good-looking man in a black cassock and
white surplice, with a purple stole around his neck, came out from
behind the floral displays and knelt down next to her, patting her
hand. The fabled Father Joe, Claire supposed. He seemed nice—a
little earnest, and younger than she’d expected. Brown hair and
golden eyes that were very direct behind a pair of square
gold-rimmed spectacles. He listened to Mrs. Rosser’s ode to her
husband with a sympathetic, if distant, expression, nodding when
she paused. His glance flicked away once or twice, to the clock,
and he finally bent forward and whispered something to her. She
nodded.
More people had come in at the last minute, enough
to fill about half the church. Claire, turning, spotted familiar
faces: Detectives Joe Hess and Travis Lowe, who nodded in her
direction as they took their seats at the back of the room. She
recognized a few more people, including a total of four vampires in
dark suits and sunglasses.
One of them was Oliver, looking bored. Of course—
Eve’s family had been under Brandon’s Protection, and when Brandon
had died, they’d come under his superior’s authority. Oliver’s
appearance here had less to do with genuine feeling than public
relations.
Father Joe stepped to the pulpit and began
eulogizing a man Claire had never met, and one she doubted Eve
recognized; except for the facts and figures of his life, his
character seemed way better than anything his daughter had ever
mentioned. From the way Mrs. Rosser nodded and cried, she was
buying into the fiction wholesale.
‘‘What a load of crap,’’ Shane whispered to Claire.
‘‘Her dad hit her, you know. Eve.’’
Claire sent him a startled look.
‘‘Just keep that in mind,’’ he finished. ‘‘And
don’t shed any tears. Not for this.’’
Shane could, Claire thought, be one of the hardest
people she’d ever met. Not that he was wrong. Just—hard.
But it helped. The emotion swirling through, amped
higher by Eve’s mother, washed over her and away without doing more
than making her eyes sting. When Father Joe finished his eulogy,
the organ started, and Mrs. Rosser was the first to the
casket.
‘‘Oh, God,’’ Eve sighed under her breath as her
mother draped herself dramatically over the wood and screamed.
Bloodcurdling, theatrical screams. ‘‘I guess I’d better—’’
Michael went with her, and whether it was his male
presence or his angelic face or his vampire blood, he was able to
pry Mrs. Rosser away and lead her back to the pew, where she sat in
a complete collapse, blubbering.
Eve stood there at the casket for a few seconds,
back straight, head inclined, and then walked away.
Tears dripped from under her veil and pattered on
her black dress, but she didn’t make a sound.
Claire filed by, but gave Eve’s dad only a quick
glance; he looked—unnatural. Not disgusting, but clearly not alive.
She shivered and took Shane’s arm, and followed Eve as she passed
her mother without a word and headed for the exit.
Eve almost ran into her brother.
Jason had slipped in the back. As far as Claire
could tell, the kid hadn’t changed his clothes at all—ever— and the
unwashed smell of him was evident from three feet away.
He looked high, too. ‘‘Nice disguise, Sis,’’ he
smirked.
Eve stopped, staring at him, and scraped the veil
back from her face. ‘‘What are you doing here?’’
‘‘Mourning.’’ He laughed under his breath.
‘‘Whatev.’’
Eve deliberately looked to the side, where
Detectives Hess and Lowe were sitting. ‘‘I think you’d better go.’’
They hadn’t noticed him yet, but they would. All it would take
would be a raised voice, or Eve snapping her fingers.
‘‘He’s my dad, too.’’
‘‘Then show him some respect,’’ she said.
‘‘Leave.’’
She went around him. The rest of them followed,
though Shane slowed down, and Claire had to tug at his arm to keep
him moving.
Jason made a bring it motion. Shane shook
his head. ‘‘Really not worth the trouble,’’ he said.
And then they were out in the vestibule, away from
the choking smell of flowers and the subtle smell of death, and all
Claire could think was, How is that closure?
But Eve looked better, and that was what mattered.
‘‘Let’s go have a burger,’’ she said.
As ideas went, that one was popular, and Claire’s
spirits lifted as they walked out of the church and into the shaded
parking structure, heading for Michael’s car.
They were intercepted.
Michael sensed it first—he stopped dead in his
tracks, turning in a circle as if trying to pinpoint a sound the
rest of them couldn’t hear.
A lithe shadow leaped down from the concrete
rafters above, landed in a crouch, and grinned.
Ysandre. She rose with effortless grace and
strolled toward the four of them.
‘‘Get in the car,’’ Michael said. ‘‘Go.’’
‘‘Not leaving you,’’ Shane said. He didn’t take his
eyes off Ysandre.
‘‘Don’t be an idiot. She’s not after me.’’
Shane’s eyes flicked to Michael’s face.
‘‘Go.’’
Claire tugged on Shane’s arm. He let himself be
guided to the car. Michael tossed the keys.
Ysandre flashed across the open space and plucked
them out of the air. She tossed them carelessly up and down in her
palm, and the cool, metallic jingle was the only sound in the
garage.
‘‘Don’t get all paranoid,’’ she said. ‘‘I just
stopped by to say hello. It’s a free country.’’
‘‘It’s car theft if you keep my keys,’’ Michael
said. He held up his hand, and she shrugged and pitched them back.
‘‘What do you want?’’
‘‘Just wanted to make sure Mr. Shane got my
invitation, ’’ she said. ‘‘Did you, honey?’’
Shane didn’t move. Didn’t speak. As far as Claire
could tell, he wasn’t even breathing.
‘‘From the fast little beat of that heart, I guess
you did,’’ Ysandre said, and smiled. ‘‘See you on Saturday, then.
You-all have a good rest of the week.’’
She walked away, high-heeled boots tapping on the
pavement, and vanished into shadow.
Shane let out a slow breath.
None of them knew exactly what to say. Michael
unlocked the car, and the quiet ruled for at least five minutes,
until he stopped at Denny’s.
‘‘We still eating?’’ he asked.
‘‘I guess,’’ Shane said. ‘‘I’m not letting her ruin
my appetite.’’
There was a shade awning stretching from the
covered parking to the front door, which Claire had never thought
about before—apparently, the local Denny’s catered to vampires as
much as humans even in the daytime. There were local flyers taped
to the glass front doors, and Claire glanced at them on the way
inside. She stopped so suddenly Shane ran into her.
‘‘Hey! Walking here!’’
‘‘Look.’’ Claire pointed at the paper.
It said ONE NIGHT ONLY! and there was a
black-and -white photograph of a young man with blond hair cradling
a guitar.
Underneath it said Michael Glass returns to
Common Grounds, and the date on it was . . . tonight.
Shane ripped it off the door, grabbed Michael’s
shoulder, and held it up. ‘‘Hey,’’ he said. ‘‘Ring any bells? When
were you going to tell us?’’
Michael looked surprised, then embarrassed. ‘‘I—
wasn’t going to. Look, it’s just a tryout, okay? I wanted to see if
I could still—I don’t want you guys to come. It’s nothing.’’
Eve grabbed the flyer and stared at it. ‘‘Nothing?
Michael! You’re playing! In public!’’
‘‘That’s new?’’ Claire whispered to Shane.
‘‘He hasn’t played anywhere but our living room
since—’’ Teeth-in-neck mime. ‘‘You know. Oliver.’’
‘‘Oh.’’
Michael’s face was turning pink. ‘‘Just put it
back, okay? It’s not a big deal!’’
Eve kissed him. ‘‘Yes, it is,’’ she said. ‘‘And I
hate you for not telling me. Were you just going to sneak off or
something?’’
‘‘Absolutely,’’ Michael sighed. ‘‘Because if I
suck, I don’t want any of you hearing it firsthand.’’
Claire taped the flyer carefully back to the door.
‘‘You’re not going to suck.’’
‘‘Not at the guitar, anyway,’’ Shane said, deadpan.
Claire punched him in the arm. ‘‘Ow.’’