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BERKLEY TEEN PARANORMAL READS FREE SAMPLER 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_FM.indd 1 5/18/12 8:59 AM Published by Berkley and NAL, divisions of Penguin Group (USA) Inc., 375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014, USA Penguin Group (Canada), 90 Eglinton Avenue East, Suite 700, Toronto, Ontario M4P 2Y3, Canada (a division of Pearson Penguin Canada Inc.) Penguin Books Ltd., 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England Penguin Ireland, 25 St. Stephen’s Green, Dublin 2, Ireland (a division of Penguin Books Ltd) Penguin Group (Australia), 250 Camberwell Road, Camberwell, Victoria 3124, Australia (a division of Pearson Australia Group Pty. Ltd.) Penguin Books India Pvt. Ltd., 11 Community Centre, Panchsheel Park, New Delhi - 110 017, India Penguin Group (NZ), 67 Apollo Drive, Rosedale, North Shore 0632, New Zealand (a division of Pearson New Zealand Ltd.) Penguin Books (South Africa) (Pty.) Ltd., 24 Sturdee Avenue, Rosebank, Johannesburg 2196, South Africa Penguin Books Ltd., Registered Offices: 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England Excerpt from Almost Everything © Lyda Morehouse, 2012 Excerpt from Dreaming Awake © Gwen Hayes, 2012 Excerpt from Black Dawn © Roxanne Longstreet Conrad, 2012 Excerpt from Blood Fever © Veronica Wolff, 2012 Excerpt from The Farm © Emily McKay, 2012 First Printing, 2012 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Copyright 2012 All rights reserved [Berkley, NAL] REGISTERED TRADEMARKS—MARCAS REGISTRADAS Printed in the United States of America Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise), without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book. PUBLISHER’S NOTE This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental. The publisher does not have any control over and does not assume any responsibility for author or third-party Web sites or their content. If you purchased this book without a cover you should be aware that this book is stolen property. It was reported as “unsold and destroyed” to the publisher and neither the author nor the publisher has received any payment for this “stripped book.” The scanning, uploading, and distribution of this book via the Internet or via any other means without the permission of the publisher is illegal and punishable by law. Please purchase only authorized electronic editions, and do not participate in or encourage electronic piracy of copyrighted materials. Your support of the author’s rights is appreciated. 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_FM.indd 2 5/18/12 8:59 AM BERKLEY ALMOST EVERYTHING by Tate Hallaway 1 DREAMING AWAKE by Gwen Hayes19 BLACK DAWN by Rachel Caine39 BLOOD FEVER by Veronica Wolff71 THE FARM by Emily McKay95 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_FM.indd 3 5/18/12 8:59 AM 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_FM.indd 4 5/18/12 8:59 AM ALMOST EVERYTHING A Vampire Princess Novel Tate Hallaway Ever since her father banished the half-witch, half- vampire Ana Parker and vampire knight Elias from the court of the Northern vampires, Ana has been trying to live a normal life. But when the Prince of the Southern Region vampires informs Ana that they’re on the brink of war and she accidentally offers up Elias as a peace offering, the princess knows that she’s going to need some help to get out of this situation. With Ana’s boy drama meter hitting an all-time high, summer in St. Paul is heating up for all the wrong reasons . . . AVAILABLE NOW FROM NEW AMERICAN LIBRARY 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 1 5/18/12 9:00 AM 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 2 5/18/12 9:00 AM Chapter One Y ou’d think one of the perks of being half vampire would be a resistance to weather. No such luck. Or, considering that I, Anastasija Ramses Parker, am the vampire princess of St. Paul, you’d think a title like that would come with some supercute servant boys waving fans over my body and feeding me ice-cold bonbons. Again, this doesn’t seem to be happening. Instead, I’m melting because my college professor mother doesn’t believe in air-conditioning. Minnesota summers are surprisingly hot and humid. I kind of forget how awful it can be until the first ninety-degree day with eighty-percent humidity hits St. Paul. The oppressive stickiness in our house sent me out to the porch swing. At least there, with the brutal July sun finally sinking into brilliant orange and lavender streaks, there was a slight breeze. It was too warm to even read. I pressed the sweating glass of lemonade into the hollow between my breasts and pushed a strand of hair from my eyes. Other girls complained about how the weather made their hair frizzy and unmanageable, but for me the problem was sticky flatness. This morning I’d tried to pull my p ast- 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 3 5/18/12 9:00 AM 4 Tate Hallaway the-shoulders deep black hair into one of those fancy French braids, but by this point in the day, bits kept slipping out and clinging to my neck and face. A few gawker pedestrians strolled down the broad streets of my Cathedral Hill neighborhood, trying to act casual as they surreptitiously peered through the lighted windows into the Victorian-era mansions that lined our block. I guess our house, at least, suited my supernatural rank. With its ivy-covered brick and castlelike tower, it looked like the sort of place you might expect a vampire to live. I just hoped no one I knew came by, since I was sprawled limply in my shortest shorts and last year’s Hello Kitty tank top that had half the sequins missing. A bicyclist whizzed by, the tires clicking, and I wondered what kind of health-crazed nut could work up the enthusiasm to exercise on a day like this. I would have given him the finger out of spite, but I couldn’t muster the ambition to lift my hand. Even the flowers in the garden drooped. Tall stalks of lupine bent low, depressed by the humidity. Cicadas buzzed angrily in the trees as I pushed the swing with the tip of my toe to use as little energy as possible. Okay, so maybe it wasn’t the cicadas that were pissed off. I frowned darkly at the sunset. Mom was inside, setting a table for “tea” in the sitting room. I could hear the good china clattering through the open window, and the noise set my teeth on edge. In about an hour, maybe less now that the sun was setting, Elias would rouse himself from a dead sleep, and the farce—I mean the festivities—would begin. When I offered to let my ex‑betrothed vampire boyfriend crash in the basement, I kind of expected it would be short-term. I really thought my mom would object, first of all. Mom is the Queen of 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 4 5/18/12 9:00 AM ALMOST EVERYTHING5 Witches, and, even though I’m half vampire, witches and vampires don’t get along. In fact, they usually hate each other. A lot. I shifted the glass to let the cool droplets of condensation run onto my skin. It was pale, like that of my vampire father’s people. Even in the middle of summer, my legs stayed milky white. I didn’t even get freckles. I was envious of the girls I saw at Lake Josephine with their golden bronze skin and Norwegian natural blond hair. The only benefit I derived from inheriting my dad’s complexion seemed to be that I also rarely had to deal with acne. Even before I realized my dad was a vampire, I knew I didn’t look much like my mom. She was all hips and mousy blond curls, and she wore glasses. Despite my bookish bent, I’d never needed vision correction. Dishes clanked through the open window, and I heard the sound of a mixer grinding. I shook my head. I would never have imagined it would be like this. Not only was Mom putting up with Elias; she was cooking for him. For the past two months, I’d had to endure this increasingly bizarre evening ritual. Mom never used to cook for me. I mean, sure, she might open a can of this and mix in a can of that. On special occasions, like my birthday, she might pull out all the stops and make the one from-scratch meal she did well and burn me a cake, but lately it’d been like Rachael Ray around here, with food processors and clarifying butter. For instance, tonight she made some kind of freezer cheesecake that took her an hour and a half to prepare. And the result might actually be edible. And did I mention that Elias is a vampire? He doesn’t even need to eat. All this effort for a guy who doesn’t even eat! How weird is that? Wait—it gets stranger. 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 5 5/18/12 9:00 AM 6 Tate Hallaway After Elias gets up every night, we all sit around and . . . chat— in the nice room, with the good dishes and the straight-back chairs. It’s awful. I guess I hadn’t anticipated how much my mother needed the company of someone who could remember Kennedy’s assassination and other ridiculously old, antiquated stuff. I mean, at first, I was really happy that Mom seemed willing to sit down with a vampire at all. As I said, there’s been a war going on between vampires and witches since the beginning of time. But then Mom and Elias started getting all nostalgic and friendly. Pretty soon, I found myself pushing cranberry sauce around my plate while listening to enthusiastic debates about the women’s movement and economic busts and bubbles and other completely incomprehensible things that happened before I was born. Worse, when I tried to change the subject to something vaguely twenty-first century, I got shushed. Shushed! My mother and my kind‑of boyfriend shushed me as if I were some kind of annoying toddler. WTF!? Running my palm over my forehead, I wiped again at the sweat and that damn uncooperative hair. A car drove by, snippets of Prairie Home Companion blaring through its open windows. I heard something about powder-milk biscuits as it turned the corner. Goddess, could this day get more irritating? Especially given that two minutes ago, while letting me taste test the cheesecake, Mom admitted something I already suspected: she had a crush on Elias. Okay, what she actually said was, “I’m working on a way to keep Elias around permanently. It’s good having him here.” But for my mom, the I‑never-got-over-the-seventies, bra-burning feminist, that was pretty much a declaration of true love. 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 6 5/18/12 9:00 AM ALMOST EVERYTHING7 I so did not want to go back inside the sweltering house and pretend to enjoy cheesecake, knowing that my mom was trying to conceal googly eyes for my sort‑of boyfriend. Not that Elias has been particularly boyfriendy lately. Now that we aren’t officially betrothed and he lives in the basement, we don’t court. We used to have this wonderful weekly ritual where he’d come over and sit in the pine tree outside my window and we’d talk. Sometimes he’d bring flowers. Other times we might go up onto the roof and stare at the stars in companionable silence. He wrote me poetry. Then my dad called off the betrothal and exiled both of us for daring to stand up to him. You know those TV shows with all the crazy kings of England? That’s kind of my dad. Of course, it goes both ways. I did nearly put his eye out with a w hite-hot magical talisman later, but he was trying to kill m e—again. My family totally puts the dis in dysfunctional. I miss Elias’s attention. Now I’m lucky if he gives me a wave before he settles in to American History 101 with Mom. I think maybe he’s all broody because of the exile. But he should be over it by now. It’s been months. Jealous much? Yeah, totally. I guess you always want the one you can’t have, right? Because it’s not that I’m hurting for boy attention. I have two other guys texting me on a regular basis, trying to get me to commit to a date. First is my other ex, Nikolai Kirov. He’s got those classically smoldering looks you get when you’re half Russian, half Romany, and all rock star. Seriously, Nik’s band, Ingress, has been getting tons of local radio play. Yet I went down that road before, and let me tell you, it’s not easy being the dorky, h igh-school-age girlfriend of the lead singer in a popular college band. Talk about feeling 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 7 5/18/12 9:00 AM 8 Tate Hallaway shushed; only it’s more like being shut out completely when the gaggle of groupies descends. The ice in my glass clunked as it melted. The little air that stirred brought the sharp scent of lighter fuel burning on someone’s barbecue grill. I sighed. If I was being honest, a lot of the problems I’d had with Nikolai’s fame were my fault; I never felt cool enough to hang around with him. I felt most comfortable with people who made obscure references to Star Wars movies or Lord of the Rings novels, and people who got excited at the idea of new Doctor Who episodes and extra work in p recalculus—in other words, nerds. Nik was also the junior vampire slayer of the region, which gets messy given my title—you know, vampire princess. Yeah, me, a princess—lying here in my ragged, sweat-soaked clothes. You can see it, right? Glamour, thy name is Anastasija Parker. Anyway, trust me as far as me and N ik—it’s too complicated by far. Romeo and Juliet had it easier. Speaking of theater, the other guy vying for my attention is Matthew Thompson, former hockey star turned lead actor. See, ever since we did the spring play together, Thompson has been trying to get me to date him. He’s nice enough, I guess, though we come from different cliques at school. He’s a popular jock—the homecoming king type— and I’m . . . well, I’m a theater geek with two differently colored eyes and a reputation as a spooky witch, and I’m an honor student. Different worlds. Especially since Thompson is a mundane. If I told him I couldn’t bring him over to the house because a vampire lives in the basement and Mom practices True Magic, he’d think I was kidding. That made social situations kind of dicey. Oh, yeah, and 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 8 5/18/12 9:00 AM ALMOST EVERYTHING9 when I was discovering I was the vampire princess, I kind of licked blood off his face after a floor hockey accident in g ym—in front of everyone. Awkward. You wouldn’t think Thompson would be all that interested in me, given that particular moment in our history, but, thanks to the forget‑me spell Bea had cast, he remembered it as a kiss. He thought I’d been so sorry to see him hurt that I’d risked crossing our social cliques to peck him gently on the cheek. I still knew the truth, though. So, as far as I was concerned, my options were limited. And the least complicated one would rather talk ancient history with my mom. It sucks to be me. “Elias! Good to see you. Come sit.” I heard Mom’s singsong greeting through the window. Then she shouted to me, “Anastasija Ramses Parker, stop sulking! Time for tea!” The full-name treatment, eh? Just for that, I’d sit here for a few extra minutes. I crossed my arms in front of my chest and stared down the street. Three people were out walking, heading in my direction. I probably wouldn’t have given them any notice except that one of them was wearing a cloak. Did I mention it was ninety degrees in the shade? I sat up and watched the approaching trio with new interest. Was there a vampiric jaunt to their step? Who else would be so impervious to the weather? Because, even though I wasn’t, full vamps were. Draining the watery lemonade in a gulp, I set the empty glass underneath the porch swing. With the sun setting behind them, they presented only a shadowy silhouette. The cloak-wearing fig- 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 9 5/18/12 9:00 AM 10 Tate Hallaway ure was shorter, and I thought there was something protective and Praetorian G uard–like about the way the other two flanked him. Yes, they definitely trailed one precise step behind, their heads swiveling every so often to scan the area for threats. The streetlamps lining the boulevard flickered on. They were less than half a block away now, and I could make out more details. Dark, unruly curls framed the shockingly pale face of the leader. Despite the whiteness of his skin, his features suggested to me that he might be Latino. The guard on the left was black, though his flesh had that strangely drained hue of a vampire. A gold earring flashed in one ear, and he had thick, puffy hair and muttonchop sideburns that reminded me of Samuel L. Jackson in Pulp Fiction, that Quentin Tarantino movie. His partner was the palest of all three of them. His long straight hair was tied back neatly at the nape of his neck, but otherwise he bore no resemblance to John Travolta’s character in the same movie. In the artificial light, his auburn hair glowed almost bloodred, and his sharp, cruel expression reminded me of a gentleman pirate . . . or something much worse. I found myself the most wary of him. I stood up. “Ana, I’m about to cut the cake!” my mom shouted through the open window. I jumped. I’d been completely absorbed watching the strangers, who were now standing at the gate looking directly at me. “Are you coming in?” “In a minute,” I answered distractedly. I heard my mother clucking her tongue and making excuses for “moody teenagers” to Elias. I moved to the edge of the porch steps and peered nervously around a column at the men at the end of our sidewalk. The leader had his hands on the gate, but he didn’t push it open. I could see now that he looked to be close to my age or younger. There was the hint of stubble on his chin, but his cheeks still re- 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 10 5/18/12 9:00 AM ALMOST EVERYTHING11 tained a lot of baby fat—in a cute way. In fact, when he smiled at me, he looked downright charming. “Anastasija Ramses Parker?” Wow, I’d heard my full name twice in ten minutes. But why did I get the feeling that hearing it now meant I was in a whole lot of trouble? “Yes, that’s me,” I agreed cautiously. “Who are you?” It was the m ean-looking guard who answered. Even his silken, Cajun-accented voice gave me the creeping chills. “I present His Royal Highness, Luis David Montezuma, prince of the Southern Region.” A vampire prince? Oh crap. “Ana?” The screen door squeaked, and Elias stepped out onto the porch. “Your mother wants . . .” He stopped the moment he saw Prince Luis and his entourage at the end of the walk. I felt a breeze and, in a blink, Elias stood protectively in front of me. His movement made the redhead snicker. The prince shot his guard a dark look. To me, he put on that smile I’d found so charming a moment ago. However, now it seemed more like a politician’s—a bit oily and forced. “We have traveled some distance, Princess.” I got the hint, but I wasn’t sure I wanted to invite Luis and his goons in. Besides, why was he here with me and not in the underground cave courts of my father? I tried to catch Elias’s eye so I could ask him what to do, but he was busy staring menacingly at his counterparts. “For Goddess’ sake, what is going on out there?” my mother shouted. “Come in and have tea!” I knew that the stalemate had been broken with Elias’s soft curse and the chuckle of the goons, who reached around the gate to let themselves in. “Don’t mind if we do,” said Luis with a grin. 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 11 5/18/12 9:00 AM 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 12 5/18/12 9:00 AM Chapter Two A nd I thought tea was awkward before. Mom fumed over having accidentally invited three new vampires into her house. She’d tried to kick them out right away, but Elias had pulled her aside and whispered something about royalty and duty. It hadn’t calmed her much. She flounced off to the kitchen to get a few more plates and cups for tea. I could hear her angry mutterings about upping the wards as we directed the prince and his entourage into the sitting room. Luis swept the cloak off his shoulders and tucked it under his arm. The shirt he wore was a rich indigo color and clearly pure silk. His pants, more correctly classified as slacks, had been tailored to a perfect fit. Everything from his i vory-studded cufflinks to his polished black shoes smelled of old money. Meanwhile, I was acutely aware of the tiny holes in the threadbare, too-tight fabric of my tank top that, no doubt, showed off my contrasting-color sports bra. The tiny hairs I hadn’t shaved off my armpits this morning prickled in the heat. I bet Princess Kate never had days like this. She’d at least have some kind of awesome hat. Thank the Goddess for Elias. He swept in, took coats, and 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 13 5/18/12 9:00 AM 14 Tate Hallaway made everyone take places around the table. He pulled out my chair for me, which was nice, but it made me feel especially grubby. If I’d known visiting dignitaries would be dropping by, I’d at least have put on a better shirt. Or pants! At least no one would see my naked legs under the table. We now sat in the stuffy, dusty room staring silently at one another. I should probably have said something dignified and welcoming here, but all I could think of was that most of my “gilty pleasure” bronze nail polish was half-chipped and missing. So I took the opportunity to look around at anything other than Prince Luis and his looming goons. The room, at least, suited the prince. It was expansive, with oak flooring and pressed tin on the high ceiling. Unlike the rest of the house, this room was sparsely decorated and neat. It was like that because we almost never used it. Mom and I had inherited our house from my grandparents, and it was much too large for the two of us. Before the tea ritual with Elias started, we kept this room shuttered. It still had lace doilies and pale blue painted dishes on the plate rails that were vestiges of my grandparents’ lives. Odder still, there were no books anywhere in the room, not even a half- finished paperback tucked into the windowsill or resting open, spine-bent on a coffee table. That was damn near unnatural for a house with two word nerds like Mom and me. I always felt like a guest in this part of my own house. Having made their tour, my eyes returned to Luis, who was smiling patiently at me. Expensive cologne hung in the air, and I had to hold back the urge to sniff my underarms. I couldn’t even exchange glances with Elias since he refused to leave my side, even to sit. He stood behind my chair like a sentry. Though my back was to him, I could picture the formidable image Elias pre- 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 14 5/18/12 9:00 AM ALMOST EVERYTHING15 sented. Even in his simple black T‑shirt and jeans, he was lean, hard, and infinitely d angerous—even among his own kind. If he was angry or spoiling for a fight, his eyes would turn yellow and catlike, and his fangs would drop. Otherwise, he’d measure them with i ce-cold, utterly ruthless gray eyes. His black hair was cropped short, his face clean shaven, and everything about him was perfectly crisp and precise. The Samuel L. Jackson clone and r ed-haired guy likewise stood at attention behind Luis. Their eyes watched for any movement from Elias. The tension was thick. Mom, meanwhile, paced around like a caged animal, ostensibly setting cups and forks in front of the new guests’ places. I desperately wanted to know what Luis expected from me, but we seemed to be following some kind of protocol I didn’t know. Perhaps we would start talking when Mom finished fussing. Not knowing what else to do, I folded my hands in my lap and tried to think princesslike thoughts. That was hard since I was sweating in a very unladylike fashion. My hair had stuck to my face again, despite the fan’s humming from its perch on the windowsill. Occasionally, I’d feel a bit of night air on my forehead, but it disappeared too quickly to offer much relief. “Who are you, again?” Mom asked bluntly, plunking an extra plate down in front of the vampire prince and glaring at the two goons standing in her way. Mom, like me, wore as little as possible because of the heat. She had on a white spaghetti-strap top and cutoff jeans. “And why are you in my house?” “You invited them in,” Elias said quietly, though unnecessarily. Mom cast him a dark, angry look. “Well, I didn’t know they were out there, did I?” Luis raised his hand with a gentle smile. “It’s quite all right. 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 15 5/18/12 9:00 AM 16 Tate Hallaway The Queen Mother has every right to be properly introduced. My name is Luis Montezuma, and I am the prince of the Southern Region. I’ve come seeking restitution for a grave loss.” At this, Luis turned to stare pointedly at me, as if I should have some clue as to what he meant. Only I didn’t. Plus, I found myself struck dumb by the sudden revelation, in the low glow of the electric lamplight, that Luis had one green eye and one brown. He had two differently colored eyes. Just like me. Did that mean we were the same in other ways? I’d never met another half vampire. Were his differently colored eyes accidental or an indication that he was a dhampyr too? Luis cocked his eyebrow at my confusion. “Did you not release Khan from her betrothal, Your Highness?” Oh, um, who? Had I? I shook away my questions about Luis’s eye color and tried to remember. A vague memory surfaced of a vampire sneaking into my school last year and asking me to cancel her betrothness or whatever, and Elias and my dad telling me there’d be serious fallout for what seemed like such a c ommon- sense decision. Come to think of it, her name was Khan. “Uh, yeah,” I admitted hurriedly; I had a bigger question on my mind. “Hey, like, are you a dhampyr?” Everyone on Luis’s side of the table looked shocked, as if maybe I’d used some kind of racist slur. Luis’s cheeks colored. Since I couldn’t catch Elias’s eye, I shot a look at Mom. She shrugged. “Dhampyr” was the only word we knew for what I was: half vampire/half witch. “About Khan . . . ,” Luis prompted quietly. It was clear I was supposed to drop the subject. 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 16 5/18/12 9:00 AM ALMOST EVERYTHING17 So I did. I guessed being a dhampyr wasn’t something to be proud of in the Southern Region, if, in fact, that was what he was. I could feel myself blushing now too, but I managed to stammer out something I remembered about Khan. “She was in love with some other guy. What else was I supposed to say?” Luis gave me a highly skeptical look. “What does love have to do with confarreatio?” “I don’t know what that is.” Everyone on that side of the table looked completely stunned. Even the two otherwise immobile guards actually exchanged a look. I tried to look at Elias, but his gaze and expression remained unchanged. “What do you think betrothal ends in?” Luis asked. “Marriage?” Didn’t that seem like the obvious answer? “Oh, I see why you released Khan. You’re one of the modernists.” My mom snorted and started cutting the cheesecake. “We’re full of those up here. After our confarreatio, I made Ramses marry me in front of a judge.” She handed me the biggest slice with a wink. Luis shook his head, frowning deeply at my mother for a moment. Then he shook his head as if dismissing her from his thoughts. To me, he said, “Your foolishly romantic action has caused a great deal of strife for my captain here.” He indicated the mean-looking vampire—Captain Creepy, apparently. I suddenly understood Khan’s hesitation at the idea of hooking up with this guy. “The dissolution of the contract leaves the fate of our empires unresolved. Without the bond, peace cannot be guaranteed, you understand.” “Not really,” I admitted. Luis blinked at me. I don’t think he was used to someone ad- 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 17 5/18/12 9:00 AM 18 Tate Hallaway mitting this much stupidity in one meeting, but, seriously, I still had no real idea what he was talking about. “Let me put it simply,” he said. “There needs to be a marriage treaty, a confarreatio. You must provide a replacement suitor or there will be war.” 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 18 5/18/12 9:00 AM DREAMING AWAKE Gwen Hayes Haden Black changed Theia Alderson’s life when he appeared in her dreams. And to save Haden, Theia sacrificed everything. But the dangerous bargain she made could have lasting repercussions. Now Theia is susceptible to the same deadly hungers that Haden has long struggled with—and their return to Serendipity Falls could test their control. And someone from Haden’s past is determined to destroy Theia from the inside out, starting with those closest to her . . . “Twilight fans will be tripping over themselves to read Hayes’s new series.” —RT Book Reviews AVAILABLE NOW FROM NEW AMERICAN LIBRARY 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 19 5/18/12 9:00 AM 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 20 5/18/12 9:00 AM Homecoming D anger doesn’t always greet with bared fangs. Sometimes it seduces with a willowy caress, a sigh of pleasure, and then turns carnivorous with whipcrack intensity. Falling in love is the same. Love had seduced my heart and soul, changed me forever, and then, in one promise made under duress, jeopardized my very humanity. And yet I couldn’t regret it. These were my thoughts as I cartwheeled back through the supernatural veil that separated two worlds—the one I was supposed to live in and the one from which I was escaping. The place called Under. Existing on the other side of dreams, Under wasn’t a place a person could journey to and from freely. On this night, my course had been set by a demon-summoning spell. And it summoned me. Because now I had the blood of a demon running in my veins. Brilliant streaks of light flashed around me. I was neither here nor there. I was everything and nothing at the same time. Like a comet, I brushed past the whole world, painting it with light. The crash of my body onto a hard wooden floor jolted the part 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 21 5/18/12 9:00 AM 22 Gwen Hayes of me that still swam in the alterverse. Then came a sharp tug on the metaphysical line that tethered my spirit to my flesh and bones. I slammed into myself and drew in a harsh breath of oxygen. And just like that I was home. 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 22 5/18/12 9:00 AM Chapter One One week later S ometimes it seemed that nothing had changed since the night I saw the burning man fall from the sky. I stared out of my window into the cold, dark night. Behind me, my pink and ivory bedroom was reflected in the glass. A picture of a world that felt like a cage and a haven all at once. I tried to remember that everything was different now, that I was different now, but it felt like I’d stepped into a time warp. One that brought me once again to peer into the night and long for some unnamed freedom from being Theia Alderson—the perfect daughter, the perfect teen girl, the perfect ingénue from every gothic romance ever written. A doll in a box. But I wasn’t that girl anymore. Even if I was the only one who recognized it. I didn’t dare dwell on those thoughts for too long. There were shadows in my own heart and soul that I didn’t want to get to look at too closely. Best to keep them at bay since a small part of me was curious about the new darkness inside me. Too curious. I pushed away from the window and roamed my bedroom, 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 23 5/18/12 9:00 AM 24 Gwen Hayes brushing my fingers against the furnishings of my old life as if they were touchstones for keeping me earthbound. Tomorrow would be my first day back at school since my “return.” All of Serendipity Falls thought I had run away, including my father. I could hardly have told him I’d been held prisoner in Under, the realm where nightmares were born. He’d have had me sedated and carted off to the nearest mental ward if I’d explained that demons exist and that not only was I dating one, but his mother had turned me into some kind of a monster as well. So my father didn’t look deeper and accepted the fact that I had run away because of his overbearing rules and because I couldn’t handle learning the truth about my mother. He never recovered from losing her; neither of us had, really. My father was wrong about my running away, of course. When he was finally truthful with me about the circumstances of my mother’s death, a little of the ice around his heart began to thaw and I felt hope that we might be able to build a better relationship. He’d seemed to be realizing that he had tried so hard to keep me safe that the life of structure he had built around me often made me feel like a princess trapped in her castle turret. But then I was taken to Under, and now our relationship was strained in a completely different way. I closed my eyes and replayed the memory of returning home a few days ago. I hadn’t known what to expect. The counterfeit cheerfulness of the hulking Victorian house where I lived had never seemed so false as when I stood on the street in front of it working up the courage to go inside. It had never been a home to me, not the kind you remember with sentimentality. The way it rose too proudly from the well-manicured lawn and loomed over everything it saw reminded me too much of the way I’d felt about my father most of my life. 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 24 5/18/12 9:00 AM DREAMING AWAKE25 I’d knocked cautiously on my own front door. My breath had come in shallow puffs meant to imitate breathing but falling short. The door opened in slow motion, as if it was cracking an entryway into my fears. “Oh, thank Jesus!” Muriel, our housekeeper, had cried as she pulled me into the house and into her arms. She’d been baking and smelled like apples and brown sugar. “Mr. Alderson, she’s home! Theia is home!” Muriel patted me here and there, inspecting me for damage. She’d kept her red hair short and still wore appalling mom jeans and an embroidered sweatshirt. I loved every unfashionable stitch. She’d cooed and murmured comments about my being too skinny and too pale, but her eyes were filled with happy tears. I was glad she answered the door first, and not my father. She was a respite for me. She always had been. I’d felt it in my bones when my father saw me. The chill in the room became arctic. He’d aged ten years in the time I’d been gone. Deep lines framed his eyes and mouth and his hair seemed thinner and lighter. If I’d lost weight in Under, he’d lost more here. His normally impeccable clothes hung loosely on his frame, the fabric gathered in pleats where it should have been flat. His stern face was all the more frightening paired with his sunken eyes. I took a step towards him but stopped when he flinched. My lower lip trembled and tears formed and stung, but didn’t fall. “Daddy?” I’d whispered. I’d rarely called him that, even as a young girl. “Daddy, I’m sorry,” I cried. “I’m so, so sorry.” He didn’t hug me that day or since. In fact, we’d barely spoken. He didn’t ask where I’d been, if I was all right. He didn’t welcome me with open arms. “We’ll talk tomorrow” was all he said. 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 25 5/18/12 9:00 AM 26 Gwen Hayes Only tomorrow hadn’t come yet, despite the passing of many days. The nonreaction cut deeper into my heart than harsh words would have. His coldness covered my heart like freezer burn. I would have preferred a stern lecture or an angry tirade; instead, he’d sealed himself off from me once again. He hadn’t even talked to me himself about going back to school. His assistant called me after she made the necessary arrangements to reenroll me in my classes. School. I shook my head in disgust. My friends had convinced me that trying to get back into the routine of normal life was the best thing I could do, but I was not looking forward to returning to high school. Serendipity Falls is a small California town very different from my childhood home in England. Fitting in had been a problem even before I’d been cursed with demon blood. My British accent, overly strict father, and extreme introverted tendencies put a bull’s- eye on my back when Father moved us stateside and I enrolled at the small, cliquish school. Luckily, I made two friends that year who cared very little about fitting in and still cared very much about me. Donny and Amelia were my family. And now I had Haden too. I smiled to myself even as the fire-hot blush stroked my cheeks as it always did when I thought of Haden. He wasn’t the sort of boy a girl could easily bring home to meet the parents—even if she had normal parents and not an imposing, authoritarian father like mine. Haden, despite being half-human, had been raised in Under. He was unpredictable and wickedly handsome. He had the manners of a hero from a Jane Austen novel, but was equally at home in the high school cafeteria. As if he knew I was thinking of him, my phone buzzed and lit up with his name on the caller ID. “What are you wearing?” he asked as soon as I answered. 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 26 5/18/12 9:00 AM DREAMING AWAKE27 I smiled into the phone and looked down at my nightgown. “A clown suit with big red shoes.” Haden chuckled low, his voice tickling something deep inside me. “Liar. You hate clowns. Are you ready for your first day of school?” “As ready as I’ll ever be.” I slid into my sheets and turned off the light, my restlessness abated by the sound of Haden’s voice. “I just called to tell you good night. Get some sleep, Theia. Tomorrow is a big day.” “I would sleep much better if you were here.” As soon as the words spilled out of my mouth, I wanted to die of embarrassment. Haden and I were close, but we hadn’t gotten that close yet. “I mean . . . it’s just that when you’re near I’m not as agitated. Not that I want to sleep with you.” I needed to stop t alking—I was making it worse. “You don’t?” He was teasing now. “Now you’ve hurt my male pride.” “You know what I mean. Stop trying to fluster me.” We weren’t really ready for that yet—but I did think about what it would be like. I just didn’t want him to know I thought about it. “My greatest joy comes from flustering you. Your cheeks pinken so sweetly. I bet they’re warm right this very minute.” I brought my fingertips to my face. Scorching. “Not at all.” “Good night, Theia. Sweet dreams.” “Good night, Haden.” I never thought I’d fall asleep. As I approached the edge of it, despite knowing better, I let it welcome me back. It had been a long time since I’d awoken while dreaming. One moment, I’d been lying in bed drifting into slumber; the 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 27 5/18/12 9:00 AM 28 Gwen Hayes next, I was standing outside. Stars danced across the navy blue sky and the moon provided an ambient light. A blanket of red and black rose petals carpeted the ground beneath my bare feet, soft and delicate. Not far from where I stood, a small gazebo glowing with white lights that twinkled like stars on a string drew my gaze. It was breathtaking. In the center a small table was set for two. I looked down at my white cotton nightgown, chagrined to once again find myself in Under barely dressed. I should have been used to it. I also should have been afraid, but I wasn’t. A red petal floated past me and then another. Slowly, they began falling from the sky like unhurried snow. The black ones were interspersed lightly throughout, but when I put my hand out to catch one, it was heart shaped. I twirled in a slow circle, catching petals and wondering where they fell from with no clouds in the sky. They were fragrant whispers of delight, and I couldn’t help but kick at the pile under my feet as if I were a child playing in autumn leaves or in a puddle from the summer rain. I immersed myself in the ambience, letting the cool petals brush my skin as they settled around me. The atmosphere felt as decadent and lush as it did innocent and childlike. It seemed to fit my current state of mind—a crossroads between girl and woman, between human and demon. I continued to play in the flowers as they settled at my feet. I came across a thicket of silvery bushes that were dipped in glitter. I couldn’t resist touching the jeweled leaves. The branches were sturdy transparent tubes filled with a viscous red liquid and barbed with razor thorns. They parted on their own and revealed a center of three beating hearts. I shivered as the hearts squeezed and pumped their blood through the stalks. I stepped back in time to avoid a barbed vine reaching out to lash me. It was good 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 28 5/18/12 9:00 AM DREAMING AWAKE29 to remember that even the beauty of Under was laced with deadly terror. I went back to playing with the rose petals, though a little more cautiously, until I felt a cool sensation on the back of my neck and turned. Where there had been nothing, there was Haden. Theia was beautiful. The petals settled around her like she was the center of a snow globe and time seemed to slow. A few stray petals caught in her curls like unmelted snowflakes, and she reminded Haden of a forest nymph. Her cheeks were rosy and the way she caught the light dazzled him. He watched her frolic, charmed by her playfulness and how comfortable she felt here, despite everything she’d been through. He’d hoped she would enjoy the interlude he’d planned. He wanted to give her some relief from the intensity of the last few months. He’d brought so much drama with him, he wondered why she hadn’t severed ties with him the moment she found out what he was. It was time he gave her some joy to temper all the sorrow. She sensed him, the romantic bond they shared so powerful that it was hard to comprehend. A stronger person would let her go now, but he’d already tried that. Easing away from Theia was a challenge Haden was not built for. No, it was going to have to be enough that they grab what little happiness they could. He would savor these moments and put them away to relive in the future, because the future was one thing they would never have. Just like the night we first met, when he stole into my dreams and introduced me to Under, Haden cut the picture of a dashing 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 29 5/18/12 9:00 AM 30 Gwen Hayes rogue. He’d worn his dark suit with tails again, knowing I’d be in a nightdress. I scooped up a handful of petals and flung them at him, laughing as they stuck in his hair and in his cravat and starched collar. He wore his Victorian ensemble so elegantly, and yet the clothes didn’t conceal his real nature. As formal as his wardrobe and manners were, the effect was tempered by his black-painted fingernails and the very modern chain belt. Haden was always a mix of decorously proper and deliberately uncivilized. “Where are we? I don’t remember this place. Is it safe from Mara?” I asked as he shook the flowers off him. Mara, the demon queen, hadn’t let me go willingly. “You’re as safe as you ever can be if you’re mixed up with me.” He bowed deeply, a man from another time, but he seemed a little sad. As if to underscore his words, a pair of birds began a woeful call unlike any birdsong I’d ever heard. The sound seemed to chisel at my bones with its intensity. Their pitiful lament crescendoed from a moody song to a hysterical, deafening screech, but by the time I’d lifted my hand to my ears, all was silent again. Haden looked down at his feet. “There are places in Under even my mother can’t go, but that doesn’t mean they are safe.” “I feel safe with you. And you can make it rain roses,” I said, blowing a heart-shaped petal off my hand like a kiss to cheer him up. He smiled and closed the distance between us, reaching for my hand and pressing it against his lips. “I am full of tricks.” He brushed a stray petal from my hair. “You deserved a little break from real life. I know you’re worried about tomorrow.” “I’m dreading it. I’m not sure it’s a good idea, Haden. We still don’t know how Mara’s curse will affect me.” “I wish I could have stopped you from taking a blood oath with her. You shouldn’t have risked yourself like that for me.” 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 30 5/18/12 9:00 AM DREAMING AWAKE31 I touched his lips with my fingertips. “Your soul was at stake, Haden. I would do it again.” “Never say that, Theia. Don’t ever put yourself in danger for me again.” He paused. “I’m sorry. I invited you here to put you at ease and I’m not doing a very good job of it. You look beautiful.” Haden offered me his arm, and I tucked mine into his as we walked to the gazebo. “I feel very underdressed,” I admitted as he sat me at the small table. “I happen to enjoy your nightgowns more than words can say.” I rolled my eyes. “Yes, nothing is quite as tempting as a long cotton nightgown.” Haden’s expression turned warm, so warm I wondered if my skin was melting like butter under his gaze. “Theia, you have no idea how sexy it is or you would wear a suit of armor to bed.” A tremor of pleasure made me shiver slightly, but I held the eye contact and the tremor deepened into something so strong it ached. Haden looked away first, for a change, and a gentle pink dotted his cheeks. He lifted the silver dome in front of me to reveal an elegant chocolate mousse garnished with chocolate shavings, raspberries, and a mint leaf. The dish was a work of art. “One of the things I love the most about you is the way you react to chocolate.” Haden gestured to the spoon. “Wait until you taste it.” He was right. As soon as the frothy chocolate touched my tongue, I sighed. “This is what heaven tastes like.” Haden leaned across the table and stole a kiss, licking the corner of my mouth. “Yes,” he agreed. “Heaven.” He sat back, and my heart squeezed. He’d awoken someone new inside me, and something delicious and edging on wicked blurred the lines of who I used to be and who I wanted to become. 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 31 5/18/12 9:00 AM 32 Gwen Hayes The rich darkness in his eyes caught the glow from the candlelight and threatened to drown me in the surge of wonder that this perfect boy loved me. Me. But he wasn’t a boy. Haden Black was a dark mystery, a demon with a human soul. He embodied all that shouldn’t be in a glorious presentation of everything that was ideal. His chiseled features would have been too harsh on a mere mortal, but gave him a unique appearance—as if he was sprung from a well of dreams. I suppose he was. And he knew very well the effect he had on me. Haden didn’t feign ignorance about his sex appeal—he enjoyed the attention, courted the reaction. That’s not to say he was egotistical. He’d be the first to admit his failings. His smoldering appeal was just part of what made him Haden. Desire was a natural state of being in his world—using it, feeling it, receiving it was all the same to him. As if he knew what I was thinking, a slow grin eased across his face. So much of our courtship had been spent by me trying to cipher whether Haden had really wanted me or not. He had pushed me away every time he had drawn me close, and the seesaw of tumultuous emotions had been exhausting. I didn’t have to wonder now. When Haden looked at me, I no longer felt perplexed by his feelings. His heart beat strong and true, and there was nothing ambiguous about the desire I read in his eyes. He wove a spell over me, enticing me from the safe world I’d been sheltered in and into a place where I didn’t know my way but trusted that I would find it with him. Heat kindled the air between us. Nerves dashed throughout my body, making me aware with prickles and tingles that I was not just nervous—but also excited. 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 32 5/18/12 9:00 AM DREAMING AWAKE33 Haden said, “Your cheeks are pink.” I didn’t answer, but my skin felt too hot and tight and my lips were parched. I licked them and Haden inhaled sharply. Answering my questioning look, he said, “Sorry. I’m a little too focused on your mouth right now. Perhaps we should change the subject.” “I’m not sure we were talking about anything.” Was he blushing? It was nice to know that he was just as overwhelmed by his feelings. It made me feel like my lack of experience wasn’t as monumentally important—that we were both charting new waters. “Well, we should talk about something, then. Something normal couples talk about,” he said. Unfortunately, that would be easier said than done. “I have no idea what normal couples say to each other. I’ve never even been on a date before.” A wistful expression softened his features. “Me either. Someday, we should try for a really normal one. Maybe go to a movie or bowling.” “Bowling?” I laughed, imagining Haden in rented bowling shoes. “Okay.” Haden cleared his throat. “I have no idea what is wrong with the male population of Serendipity Falls, but I can’t tell you how much it means to me that I will be your first.” I glanced up sharply, but realized he meant first date, not first . . . lover. Still, the words hung between us as if suspended in a cloud. He realized what he’d said and his eyes widened. Suddenly his dessert plate became very interesting and he concentrated on his mousse. The part of me that wasn’t embarrassed loved that he bounced between dark, dangerous demon and slightly awkward boy. It made up for my mostly awkward girl moments. 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 33 5/18/12 9:00 AM 34 Gwen Hayes I pushed the spoon through the mousse, trying to think of small talk that would defuse the tension. I couldn’t think of anything to say that would qualify as inane chatter when there were so many things that needed to be discussed. Things we’d avoided since my return. I didn’t know what I was and I didn’t know what I was capable of anymore. Under had changed me in more ways than one and he was the only one who could understand. I looked up to find him watching me intently. “What is it?” he asked. “And don’t tell me ‘nothing’ because you are a horrible liar.” I bit my lip. “I have questions.” Haden leaned back casually, but there was something so ethereal about the way he moved sometimes that it didn’t seem as casual as he probably thought it was. “You know I’ll answer whatever I can, Theia.” I had to know. “The summoning spell our friends performed . . . the one that brought us both back from Under last week . . . it was a demon summoning, right?” Haden nodded, knowing where I was headed with my questions but letting me form them. “So, I’m a demon then . . . since it obviously worked on both of us?” “You have demon attributes because you made a pact with Mara using blood. You’re not a demon, though. Not technically.” I closed my eyes and relived the memory of almost stealing Haden’s essence while I was “not technically” a demon in Under. “She taught me things.” I couldn’t look at him. “Mara showed me how she steals souls from people in their sleep. She taught me how to be a mare demon—like her.” “Did you—?” 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 34 5/18/12 9:00 AM DREAMING AWAKE35 I shook my head. “I almost did, that one night . . .” The hunger I had felt that night would haunt me forever. It was like being possessed—like I was watching something else take over my body and mind while I stood in a corner unable to stop it. “I remember,” he said simply. Quietly. Of course he remembered the night I almost took his human soul. “But you stopped, Theia. You overcame it.” But would I be able to stop the next time? The unnatural desire had racked my body physically, but what it did to my mind was much, much worse. The primal urge to feed overcame everything and became who I was for those few hours. My entire sense of self boiled down to my needs and urges. The person I knew myself to be was an annoying gnat to demon blood trying to take over. I was weak and useless. I was a silent scream. A mare demon usually preys on human victims in their sleep. I didn’t know all the correct demon taxonomy, but as a species, humans tend to lump the mare together with sex demons like incubi and succubi. The myths say the demons visit the sleeping humans and feed them nightmares— sometimes erotic ones— while absorbing the essence, the soul, of their prey. What the myths don’t talk about is that mare demons can feed on souls that are awake as well—and the demons use their demon-given charms, called the Lure, to entice their prey into wanting to hand over their essence gladly, just to be near the mare demon. The demons absorb the human spirit through touching and kissing . . . and other, more intimate ways. “Have you ever fed on a person’s soul?” I asked, but wasn’t sure I wanted the answer. “I don’t need to feed to survive, because I’m half-human. I’ve never drained a soul completely—but I have to admit that I’ve swiped a bit of essence now and then. Does that bother you?” 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 35 5/18/12 9:00 AM 36 Gwen Hayes Well, it didn’t make me think of puppies and rainbows. “You’re a demon, Haden. There are things that I have to expect will make me uncomfortable.” “It doesn’t hurt them if you just take a bit. I know that isn’t an excuse, and I haven’t done it in a while. It’s not always easy to resist.” He didn’t look away from me, almost as if he was daring me to turn away from him. As if I had any right to judge. “I understand that it’s difficult.” I didn’t want to admit how difficult it had become. “I have these cravings that come and go. Fleeting, really,” I lied. “That night she showed me how to take your soul . . . it was so hard to stop myself. . . .” Haden covered my hand with his warm one and I instantly felt calmer. “If we can find a way to rid you of her curse, I swear I will do anything.” “I worry that we’ve made a horrible mistake bringing me back, Haden. I think everyone was safer when I was trapped in Under.” Sometimes during the last week, I even missed Under a little. It was dangerous, and yet there was an eerie, captivating beauty to it also. A string quartet began playing in the distance. I couldn’t see the musicians, but the haunting song reached into my soul, entwining around my memories and dreams, twisting, turning, and reliving them . . . making the melancholy sweet . . . turning the sweet arcane. My eyelids drifted shut and the sound washed over me. I hadn’t picked up my violin since I’d returned from Under. When I opened my eyes, I found my suitor standing in front of me, offering his hand and all of his old-world charm. “The way you catch the light takes my breath away, Theia.” Haden sent me a smoldering look, the kind that made me glad I was already sitting down, because my knees would have been 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 36 5/18/12 9:00 AM DREAMING AWAKE37 useless. He arched one brow, quite aware that he was undoing me with just a look and quite proud of himself for it. I placed my hand in his, sliding my palm across his until our fingers linked, and he pulled me out of my seat. He pressed an openmouthed kiss against the back of my hand, curling my toes with wicked pleasure. We began to dance in an elegant pattern of a waltz he’d taught me before we knew that our hearts would shatter a million times in our quest to be together. This time during the dance, Haden touched me, something he’d been unwilling to chance when we first met. The weight of his hand on my back was not as heavy as the gravity of his gaze. The twinkling lights danced in the reflection of his onyx eyes. I wanted to capture this moment like a firefly in a jar. We moved together as if we’d been dancing partners for centuries, when in fact I’d never danced until Haden taught me. I loved him more in that moment than I thought possible, but I felt a sadness seeping between us. We danced as if we had no worries, and yet we knew full well what torment might come. We twirled and dipped and the world raced around us to keep up. He scanned the horizon. “It’s almost time.” “So soon? It feels like I just got here.” Haden kissed my temple. “Good morning, Theia.” I blinked, and my bedroom was awash in the light of a brand- new day. 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 37 5/18/12 9:00 AM 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 38 5/18/12 9:00 AM BLACK DAWN A Morganville Vampires Novel Rachel Caine Ever since the draug—mysterious creatures that prey on vampires—took over Morganville, the lives of student Claire Danvers and her friends have been thrown into turmoil. Using the city’s water system to spread, the draug have rapidly multiplied and vampire Amelie—the town founder—has been infected by the master draug’s bite. Now, unless Claire and her friends figure out how to cure Amelie and defeat the draug, Morganville will become little more than a ghost town . . . “These books are addictive.” —Richelle Mead, author of the Vampire Academy series AVAILABLE NOW FROM NEW AMERICAN LIBRARY 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 39 5/18/12 9:00 AM 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 40 5/18/12 9:00 AM Introduction M organville, Texas, isn’t like other towns. Oh, it’s small, dusty, and ordinary in most ways, but the thing is, there are these . . . vampires. They own the town. They run it. And until now they’ve been the unquestioned ruling class. But now this dry, landlocked town has been flooded by unnatural rains, and the rains have brought something else . . . the predators who’ve hunted the vampires almost to extinction. The draug. They hide in the water. They feed on vampires by preference, humans if necessary, and even in a desert town, there’s no place safe now that they’ve arrived. Not for the vampires or for those few humans still standing beside them. So hold on tight. Because Morganville’s changed. And it’s a very dark new day. 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 41 5/18/12 9:00 AM 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 42 5/18/12 9:00 AM Chapter One Claire I t would have been better if he’d screamed. Michael Glass didn’t scream. Instead, he made a terrible keening noise in the back of his throat, arched his back, and began to flail violently inside his zipped-up sleeping bag. Fabric shredded under vampire strength, and insulation bulged out of the tears as he fought his way free, but even once it was off him he just kept . . . flailing. Across the room, Claire Danvers bolted straight to her feet, tripped over her own sleeping bag, and managed to catch herself against a wall just before she hit the floor face-first. Her heart was slamming too fast against her ribs, and she had the sour, helpless taste of panic in her mouth. They’re here was the only coherent thought in her head. She had to be ready to fight, to run, to react, but all she could think of was how utterly scared she was just now. And how helpless. There were things out there in the world, things that vampires feared, and now those things were here. She was only seconds out of a very light, fitful sleep, but she knew that the nightmares had 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 43 5/18/12 9:00 AM 44 Rachel Caine followed her effortlessly right into the real world. The draug. They weren’t vampires; they were something else, something that moved through water, formed out of it, dragged vampires down to a slow and awful death. A week ago, she’d have laughed something like that off as a bad joke, but then she’d seen them come for Morganville, Texas. Come with the rains that never fell in this desert-locked, sunbaked town where the vampires had, finally, made their last stand. Today she woke up with the blind and panicked knowledge that no matter how bad the world was with vampires in it, a world that held the draug was vastly worse. They’d come to Morganville, infiltrated stealthily, built their numbers until they were ready to fight . . . until they could sing their infinitely awful song that somehow, impossibly, was also beautiful and irresistible. To humans as well as to vamps. The strongest of Morganville’s vampires had gone up against it, and scored a few hits . . . but not without cost. Amelie, the ice- queen ruler of the town, had been bitten; without her, it was all going to get worse, fast. Michael was still thrashing and making that terrible sound, and it came to Claire gradually that instead of cowering here while her brain caught up, she should go to him. Help him. And then the lights brightened from dim to dazzling in the big carpeted room, and she saw her boyfriend, Shane Collins, standing in the doorway, looking first at her, then over at Michael, who was still desperately struggling against . . . nothing. Against his nightmare. Claire pulled in a deep breath, shut her eyes for a second, then made the OK sign to Shane; he nodded back and went to their friend’s side. Michael was tangled up in the shredded remains of his sleeping bag, still flailing and, as far as Claire could tell, still 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 44 5/18/12 9:00 AM BLACK DAWN45 dead asleep. Shane crouched down and, after a brief hesitation, reached out and put his hand on Michael’s shoulder. Michael came awake instantly—vampire speed. In one blurred second he was sitting up, one hand wrapped around Shane’s wrist, eyes open and blazing red, fangs down and catching the light on razor-sharp points and edges. Shane didn’t move, though he might have rocked back on his heels just a little. That was better than Claire could have done; she’d have fallen backward at the very least, and Michael would probably have broken her wrist—not intentionally, but sorry didn’t matter much when it came to shattered bones. “Easy,” Shane said in a low, calm voice. “Easy, man—you’re safe. You’re safe now. It’s over. Nobody’s going to hurt you here.” Michael froze. The red died down to embers in his eyes, and when he blinked it was gone, replaced by cool blue. He looked pale, but that was normal for him now. Claire saw his throat work as he swallowed, and then he shakily pulled in a breath and let go of Shane’s wrist. “God,” he whispered, and shook his head. “Sorry, man.” “No drama,” Shane said. “Bad one, right?” Michael didn’t respond to that immediately. He was staring off in the middle distance. She didn’t need to wonder what his nightmare had been about. . . . It would have been about being trapped in the Morganville Civic Pool, anchored to the bottom under that murky, poisoned water . . . being fed upon by the draug. Drained slowly, and alive, by creatures that found vampires as delicious as candy. Creatures that were, right now, invading and taking everything they could. Including every juicy vampire snack, straight to the bottom of whatever pool of filthy water they were hiding in. There were, Claire realized, still tiny red marks all over Michael’s skin, like pinpricks . . . fading, but not quite gone. He was 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 45 5/18/12 9:00 AM 46 Rachel Caine healing slower than usual—or he’d been hurt far more seriously than it had seemed. “Yeah,” he finally said. “I was dreaming I was still in the pool, and . . .” He didn’t go on, but he didn’t need to; Claire had been there, seen it. Shane had not only seen but felt it—he’d dived in, unbelievably, to save lives. Vampire lives, but lives all the same. The draug had attacked him, too, and his skin had the reddish tint of broken capillaries to prove it. Claire had a vivid, flashback-quality vision of the pool . . . that insanely creepy underwater garden of trapped vampires, tied down, stunned and helpless as the draug sucked away their strength and life. It had been one of the worst, most horrifying things she’d ever seen, and it had also outraged her on a very deep, primal level. Nobody deserved that. Nobody. “It was real bad.” Shane nodded in agreement with Michael. “And I wasn’t in there nearly as long. You hang in there, Mikey.” He reached out again and squeezed Michael’s shoulder briefly, then rose to a standing position. “You feel the need to scream like a girl, let it out, dude. No judging.” Michael groaned and rubbed his hand over his face. “Screw you, Shane. Why do I keep you around, anyway?” “Hey, you need somebody to keep you humble, rock star. Always have.” Claire smiled then, because Michael was starting to sound like his old self again. Shane could always do that, to any of them—a flip remark, a casual insult, and it was all okay again. Normal life. Even when nothing at all was normal. Nothing. Now that her panic was receding, she wondered what time it was—the room gave no real hint of whether it was day or night. They had evacuated to the Elders’ Council building, which—like most vampire buildings—didn’t much favor windows. What it did 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 46 5/18/12 9:00 AM BLACK DAWN47 have was plenty of sleeping bags, a few rollaway beds, and lots of empty space; the vampires, apparently, were all about disaster planning, which didn’t surprise her at all, really. They’d had thousands of years in which to learn how to anticipate trouble and what to have together to meet (or avoid) it. Right now, she, Michael, and Shane were the only ones sleeping in the room, which could have held at least thirty without feeling crowded. There was no sign of their fourth housemate, Michael’s girlfriend, Eve. Her sleeping bag, which had been near Michael’s, was kicked off to the side. “Shane,” Claire said, her fear getting another kick start. “Eve’s missing.” “Yeah, I know. She’s up,” he said, “organizing coffee, believe it or not. You can take the barista out of the shop, but . . .” That was, again, a tremendous feeling of relief. Shane made a profession of taking care of himself (and everybody else). Michael was a vampire, with all the fun advantages that came along with that in terms of self-defense. Claire was small, and not exactly a bodybuilder, but she defended herself pretty well . . . at least in being smart, careful, and having all the friends she could manage on her side. Eve was . . . Well, Eve liked to live on the edge, but she wasn’t exactly Buffy reincarnated. And in some ways her hard edges made her the most fragile of all of them. So Claire tended to worry at times like these. A lot. “Coffee?” Michael asked, still rubbing his head. His hair should have looked crazy, but he was one of those people who had a natural immunity to bed-head; his blond hair just fell exactly the way it should, in careless surfer-style curls. Claire averted her eyes when he threw the sleeping bag back and reached for his shirt, 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 47 5/18/12 9:00 AM 48 Rachel Caine because although he was always good to look at, he was seriously spoken for, and besides, Shane was standing right there. Shane. It came back to her in a dizzy rush, how he’d stopped her on the way into this place, in the faint dawn light. “I want you to promise me one thing. Promise me you’ll marry me. Not now. Someday.” And she had promised, even if it was just their private little secret. She felt that shivery, fragile, butterfly-flutter feeling in her chest again. It was a fierce ball of light, a tangle of joy and terror and excitement and most of all, love. Shane looked back at her with an intense, warm focus that made her suddenly feel like the only person in the world. She watched him walk toward her with a diffuse glow of pleasure. Michael was hot, no denying that, but Shane just . . . melted her. It was everything about him— his strength, his intensity, the off- center smile, the hunger in his eyes. There was something rare and fragile at the center of all that armor, and she felt lucky and privileged that he allowed her to see it. “You doing all right?” Shane asked her, and she looked up at him. His dark gaze had turned serious, and it saw . . . too much. She couldn’t hide how scared she was, not from him, but he was the last one to think it was a sign of weakness. He smiled a little and rested his forehead against hers for a second. “Yeah. You’re doing just fine, tough girl.” She shoved the fear back, took a deep breath, and nodded. “Damn right.” She ran her fingers through her tangled shoulder- length auburn hair—unlike Michael’s, hers had suffered from a night on the hard pillows—and looked down at her T-shirt and jeans. At least they didn’t wrinkle much . . . or if they did, it didn’t much matter. They were clean, even if they weren’t her own. It turned out there was a storehouse of clothing in the Elders’ Coun- 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 48 5/18/12 9:00 AM BLACK DAWN49 cil building basement, neatly packed in boxes, labeled with sizes. Some of it dated back to the Victorian age . . . hoop skirts and corsets and hats stowed carefully away in scented paper and cedar chests. Claire wasn’t sure she really wanted to know where all that clothing had come from, but she had her sinking suspicions. Sure, the older clothes looked like things the vampires themselves might have saved, but there were a lot of newer, more current styles that didn’t seem to fit that explanation. Claire couldn’t see Amelie, for instance, wearing a Train concert shirt, so she was trying hard not to think about whether they’d been scavenged from . . . other sources. Victim-y sources. “Did you have nightmares, too?” she asked Shane. His arm tightened around her, just for a moment. “Nothing I can’t handle. I’m kind of an expert at this whole bad dreams thing, anyway,” he said. And oh God, he really was. Claire knew only a little of how many bad things he’d seen, but even that was enough to spark a lifetime’s worth of therapy. “Still, yesterday was dire, and that’s not a word I bust out, generally. Maybe it’ll look better this morning.” “Is it morning?” Claire peered at her watch. “That depends on your definition. It’s after noon, so I guess technically not really. We slept for about five hours, I suppose. Or you did. Eve bounced about an hour ago, and I got up because . . .” He shook his head. “Hell. This place creeps me out. I can’t sleep too well here.” “It creeps you out more than what’s happening out there?” “Valid point,” he said. Because the world out there— Morganville, anyway—was no longer the semi-safe place it had been just a few days ago. Sure, there had been vampires in charge of the town. Sure, they’d been predatory and kind of evil—a cross 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 49 5/18/12 9:00 AM 50 Rachel Caine between old-school royalty and the Mafia—but at least they’d lived by rules. It hadn’t been so much about ethics and morals as about practicality. . . . If they wanted to have a thriving blood supply, they couldn’t just randomly kill people all the time. Though the hunting licenses were alarming. But now . . . now the vampires were in the food chain. They’d always been careful about human threats, but that wasn’t the issue, not anymore. The real vampire enemy had finally shown its incredibly disturbing face: the draug. All that Claire knew about them was that they lived in water and they could call vampires (and humans) with their singing, right to their deaths. For humans, it was fairly quick . . . but not for vampires. Vampires trapped at the bottom of that cold pool could live and live and live until the draug had drained every bit of energy from them. Live, and know it was happening. Eaten alive. The draug were the one thing vampires feared, really and truly. Humans they treated with casual contempt, but their response to the draug had been immediate mass evacuation, except for the few who’d chosen to stay and try to save the vampires already being consumed. They’d all tried—vampires and humans, working together. Even the rebellious human townies, who hated vamps, had taken a drive-by run at the draug. It had been a heart-stopping military operation of a battle, the most intense experience of Claire’s life, and she still couldn’t quite believe she’d survived it . . . or that anyone had. Even with all that effort, they’d saved only three vampires from the mildewed, abandoned pool—Michael, the elegant (and probably deadly) Naomi, and the very definitely deadly Oliver. Then things had gone from terrible to awful, and they’d had to leave everyone else. Except Amelie. They’d saved Amelie, the Founder of Morgan- 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 50 5/18/12 9:00 AM BLACK DAWN51 ville . . . sort of. And Claire was trying not to think about that, either. “Hey,” Shane said, and nudged her. “Coffee, remember? Eve’ll be all sad emo Goth face if you don’t drink some.” Again, Shane was the practical one, and Claire had to smile because he was completely right. No one needed sad, emo Goth Eve today. Especially Eve. “I could kill for a cup of coffee. If there’s, you know, cream. And sugar.” “Yes and yes.” “And chocolate?” “Don’t push it.” Michael had, by this time, gotten up and joined them. He still looked pale—paler than usual—and there was something a little wild in his eyes, as if he was afraid that he was still in the pool. Drowning. Claire took his hand. As always, it felt a little cooler than room temperature, but not cold . . . living flesh, but running on a much lower setting. Almost as tall as Shane, he looked down at her and smiled the rock-star smile that made all the girls melt in their shoes. She, however, was immune. Almost. She only melted a little, secretly. “What?” he asked her, and she shook her head. “Nothing,” she said. “You’re not alone, Michael. We won’t let that happen again. I promise.” The smile disappeared, and he studied her with a strange kind of intensity, almost as if he was seeing her for the first time. Or seeing something new in her. “I know,” he said. “Hey, remember when I almost didn’t let you into the house that first day you came?” She’d shown up on his doorstep desperate, bruised, scared, and way too young to be facing Morganville. He’d been right to have his doubts. “Yep.” “Well, I was dead wrong,” he said. “Maybe I never said that out 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 51 5/18/12 9:00 AM 52 Rachel Caine loud before, but I mean it, Claire. All that’s happened since . . . we wouldn’t have made it. Not me, not Shane, not Eve. Not without you.” “It’s not me,” Claire said, startled. “It’s not! It’s us, that’s all. We’re just better together. We . . . t ake care of each other.” He nodded again, but didn’t have a chance to reply because Shane reached in, took Claire’s hand from Michael’s, and said— not seriously, thank God—“Stop vamping up my girl, man. She needs coffee.” “Don’t we all,” Michael said, and smacked Shane on the shoulder hard enough to make him stagger. “Vamping up your girl? Dude. That’s low.” “Digging for China,” Shane agreed, straight-faced. “Come on.” Claire could follow the smell of brewing caffeine all the way to Eve, like a trail of dropped coffee beans. It gave the sterile, funereal, windowless Elders’ Council building a weirdly homey feel, despite the chilly marble walls and the thick, muffling carpets. The hallway opened into a wider circular area—the hub in the wheel—that held a huge round table in the center, which was normally adorned by an equally large fresh floral arrangement . . . adding to the funeral home vibe. But that had been pushed to the side, and a giant, shiny coffee dispenser had been put in its place, along with neat little bowls of sugar, spoons, napkins, cups, and saucers. Even cream and milk pitchers. It was surreal to Claire, as if she’d stepped out of a nightmare and into a fancy hotel without any transition. And there, emerging from another door that must have led to some sort of kitchen, came Eve, with a tray in her hands, which she slid onto the other side of the big table. 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 52 5/18/12 9:00 AM BLACK DAWN53 Claire stared, because although it was Eve, it didn’t really look like her. No Goth makeup. Her hair was down, loose around her face and falling in soft black waves; even without her rice-powder coverage, her skin was creamy pale, but it looked movie-star beautiful. Natural- look Eve was stunning, even wearing borrowed clothes . . . though she’d found a retro fifties black pouf-skirted dress that really suited her perfectly. She had a red scarf tied jauntily around her neck to hide the bites and bruises that Michael—starving and crazy from being dragged out of the pool—had inflicted on her. She, and this setup, all looked a little too perfect. Shane and Michael exchanged a look, and Claire knew they were communicating the same thought. Eve gave them a bright smile and said, “Good morning, campers! Coffee?” “Hey,” Michael said, in such a soft and tentative voice that Claire felt her stomach clench. “You should be resting.” He reached for her, and Eve flinched. Flinched. Like he’d tried to hit her. His hand dropped to his side, and Claire couldn’t look at his face. “Eve—” She spoke in a rush, running right over the moment. “We have hot coffee, all the good stuff—sorry I couldn’t get mocha up and running, but this place has a serious espresso deficiency . . . oh, and the croissants are hot out of the oven, have one.” “You baked?” Shane’s eyebrows threatened to levitate right off his face. “They were in one of those pop-open rolls, moron. Even I can bake those.” Eve’s smile wasn’t so much bright, Claire thought, as it was totally breakable. “I don’t think anybody ever used the kitchen in here, but at least it was stocked up. There’s even fresh butter and milk. Wonder who thought of that?” 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 53 5/18/12 9:00 AM 54 Rachel Caine “Eve,” Michael said again, and finally she looked directly at him. She didn’t say anything at all, only picked up a cup, filled it with hot, dark coffee, and handed it to him. He took it as he stared at her, then sipped—not as if he really wanted it, but as if it was something he was doing to please her. “Eve, can we just—” “No, we can’t,” she said. “Not right now.” And then she turned and walked back to the kitchen, stiff-armed the door, and let it swing shut behind her. The three of them stood there, only the sound of the door creaking on its hinges breaking the silence, until Shane cleared his throat, reached for a cup, and poured. “So,” he said. “Aside from the five-hundred-pound gorilla in the room that we’re not going to talk about, does anyone around here have half a plan on how we’re going to live through the day?” “Don’t ask me,” Michael said. “I just got up.” The words sounded normal, but not the tone. It was as odd as Eve’s had been, and just as strained. He put his coffee back down on the table, hesitated, then took a croissant and walked away, back toward the room where they’d been. Shane started to follow, but Claire grabbed his arm. “Don’t,” she said. “Nothing we can do about this, is there? Let him alone to think.” “It wasn’t his fault.” “I know. So does she. But she got hurt, and he did it, and that’s going to take time, all right?” She held Shane’s gaze this time, and he was the first one to look away. He’d hurt her before—more emotionally than anything else. And he hadn’t been in his right head-place, either. But sometimes explanations just didn’t matter as much as time. It was a hard lesson to learn, for both of them; it was going to be even harder for Michael and Eve. God, sometimes growing up sucked. “Okay, so it’s down to us, then. We still need a plan,” he said. 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 54 5/18/12 9:00 AM BLACK DAWN55 He drank coffee, and she fixed hers up and gulped down a hot, bitter, wonderful mouthful. Next was the croissant, still steaming inside from the oven, and it was heaven in bread form, melting in her mouth. “No, strike that. We need SEAL Team Six, but I’ll settle for a half-ass plan right now.” She swallowed. “Don’t talk with your mouth full.” He did exactly what any boy—no, man—his age would do: he showed her a mouthful of mashed croissant, which was gross, then drank more coffee and showed her again. Gone. “That is disgusting, and I will never kiss you again.” “Yes, you will,” he said, and proved it by pressing his lips to hers. She wanted to squirm away, just to prove the point, but God, she loved kissing him, loved that his mouth was so warm and sweet and bitter with coffee . . . loved being so close to him now, teetering on the edge of the end of . . . everything. “See?” “It wasn’t bad,” she said, and kissed him again. “But you really need to work on your technique.” “Liar. My technique is awesome. Want me to prove it?” Before she could protest, his lips touched hers, and he was right about the proof. She slipped her hands under the loose hem of his shirt, fingers gliding lightly over the tensing muscles of his stomach, up to the hard, flat planes of his chest. His skin was like warm velvet, but underneath, he was iron, and it took her breath away. Or so she thought, but when he skinned her Train T-shirt up and fitted his strong hands around her waist, pulling her to him even closer, she gasped against his mouth, moaned a little, and just . . . melted. The hot, golden moment was sliced cleanly by a cold voice saying, “I can bear a great many things, but this is not one of them. Not now.” Claire jumped back from Shane, guilty as a shoplifter. It was, 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 55 5/18/12 9:00 AM 56 Rachel Caine unmistakably, Oliver’s voice, and it was coming from behind her. She hated round rooms. Too many ways people could come at you, especially sneaky, cranky vampires. She turned and faced him as he stalked toward them— no, toward the coffee, since he brushed them aside and filled a cup. She’d never seen him drinking it, but of course, he would; he owned the local coffee shop, Common Grounds. Or at least he had when there was still a Morganville that was alive and kicking. Common Grounds, like everything else in town, was closed. Oliver had always taken pains to present himself as human . . . maybe because he, of all the vampires, seemed the farthest from it. He was cold, unfeeling, acerbic, and sarcastic, and that was on a good day. It clashed with his friendly-aging-hippie vibe of tie-dyed shirts and jeans that he wore at the coffee shop, but he’d dispensed with all that now. He’d donned clothing that suited him, in a sinister and scary way—black pants, a black coat that must have been about a hundred years old, and a white shirt with a ruby pin where a tie would usually have gone. Except for a top hat, he could have stepped out of the turn of the last century. These, Claire felt, were his own clothes. No hand-me-downs for Oliver. “I guess it’s pretty useless to say good morning,” Shane said. “Especially as it’s neither morning nor good, yes,” Oliver replied, just shy of a snap. “Don’t try to banter with me, Collins. I am far from in the mood.” Claire could make out the red mottling on his pale skin, like Michael’s, a souvenir of his time spent in that drowning pool. She wondered how he’d slept, if he’d slept. “As to plans, yes, I have one, and yes, it is under way.” “Mind if we ask—?” “Yes, of course I mind,” Oliver said, and this time it was a snap. There was a gleam of red in his eyes. He looked tired, Claire thought, and there was a flicker of something almost human in 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 56 5/18/12 9:00 AM BLACK DAWN57 him. “If you wish to be of use, go find Theo Goldman and bring him to me. Now.” “Theo?” Claire was startled, because she’d heard that Theo had gone missing, like many other vampires in Morganville . . . and she’d assumed he’d been in the pool. A casualty, when Amelie had resorted to throwing silver into it to kill the draug and their trapped victims with them. “Is he here?” “If he was here, I wouldn’t ask you to find him, would I?” Shane was doing that thing now, his posture getting stiff with challenge; he didn’t like it when Oliver treated her—or any of them—like idiots. But especially her. The last thing any of them needed today was to fight each other. They were working together— more or less—and that was how it had to be to survive this. So Claire put a hand on Shane’s arm to hold him back and said, in a very reasonable tone, “Do you have any idea where to look for him?” Oliver’s hand trembled, just slightly, but enough to make the cup rattle lightly on the saucer. He, like Michael, still felt weak. That should have made Claire feel reassured, because he was usually so intimidating, but instead it made her feel extra vulnerable. “No,” he said. “I do not. But I require his presence, so you will find him.” He let a second pass and then added, without looking at either of them, “For the sake of the Founder.” For Amelie. And there was a very slight change in his tone when he said it, something that almost seemed . . . softer. “She’s worse,” Claire said. Oliver turned and walked away without responding, so she looked at Shane. “She’s getting worse, right?” “Probably. Who knows with him?” But Shane had the same thought she did; she knew it. If Amelie died, they were at Oliver’s mercy. Not a good thing at all. He was a general, and when he fought wars, he liked them bloody—on both sides. “Maybe we 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 57 5/18/12 9:00 AM 58 Rachel Caine should have left town when we had the chance. Just picked up and run for it.” “And left Michael behind? And Eve? She wouldn’t have left him. You know that.” He didn’t answer. She knew that Shane wasn’t someone who ran away, but he couldn’t help thinking about it—Morganville’s version of living a rich fantasy life. After a moment, he shrugged and said, “Too late now anyway. Where do you think we should start, if we’re supposed to track down Goldman?” “No use looking at the hospital. It’s closed,” Claire said. “They moved all the patients out in ambulances and buses. And there are way too many places he could be. It’s not that big a town, but big enough to hide one vampire. He sent his family away, you know.” Theo, unlike most vamps Claire knew, actually had a family, and cared about them; it was very like him to be sure they were clear of the trouble, then stay behind himself. “Can’t go close to the hospital anyway,” Shane said. “The whole area’s a no-go zone; the singing starts when you come anywhere close.” The singing of the draug was not just eerie; it was deeply dangerous. It got hold of you, made you forget . . . and made you vulnerable to them. Claire nodded. “We’d better stay away from any water, too.” “Toilets? Please say you don’t mean toilets, because this is rapidly turning into no fun at all. I mean, I like peeing on a wall as much as the next drunken redneck, but—” “Chemical toilets,” she said. “Amelie had them brought over from some construction company. And please tell me you don’t pee on walls.” “Moi?” He put his hand over his heart and did his best wounded-innocent look. “You must be thinking of some other uncouth jackass. Which makes me jealous, by the way.” 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 58 5/18/12 9:00 AM BLACK DAWN59 She would have played along with that, but the idea of the tap water made her suddenly realize that she was drinking the coffee in the cup in her hand, and she resisted a sudden violent urge to gag. “Uh, the coffee . . . ?” “Made with the finest bottled water,” Eve said. She was back, and she’d brought cookies this time. “And these are sliced off a roll, so don’t think I’ve gone all Martha Stewart, Shane. The vamps stocked up on bottled water some time ago. I’m guessing it’s their version of survivalist training, if they’ve been worried about the draug for so long. All those plastic containers may be bad for the environment, but they’re really good for us right now. So . . . you’re looking for Theo?” “So says Oliver,” Shane said, and stuffed a whole cookie in his mouth. “Trust me, I work for Mr. Scary Guy in Charge, and you do not want to disappoint the man, even if you’re just pulling espresso shots. Especially not now. Besides, having Theo here would be a nice antidote to all this”—Eve gestured at the marble, carpet, dim lighting—“gloom. Theo’s cheerful, at least.” He was, mostly. Although Claire thought that like all vampires she’d ever met—except Michael, and his grandfather Sam—Theo was essentially concerned about his own survival first. Once you accepted that was how vamps saw the world, it was a whole lot easier to understand what they would do, and why. Morganville, for instance. It was pragmatic, having this isolated town, which they controlled for their own safety. They were cruel sometimes, but they saw it as self-defense. . . . Let the humans get the upper hand, and the vampires feared they’d be killed, sooner or later. Claire didn’t agree with it, but she understood it. Theo was . . . less pragmatic about that than most. Thankfully. And Eve was right. He would have a calming effect here, if he wasn’t floating somewhere in a pool of water being eaten alive. 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 59 5/18/12 9:00 AM 60 Rachel Caine Claire shuddered. “Want to come with?” Shane asked, licking melted chocolate from his lips. Which was a little bit mesmerizing, actually. Claire had a dizzying impulse to help him with that, but she shook it off. Time and place, Claire, time and place . . . “She can’t come with us,” Claire said, as Eve opened her mouth to agree. “Come on, Eve, you lost about two pints of blood last night. You’re not strong enough yet and you know it. You need rest.” Eve’s mouth closed without making a comment, but she gave Claire a steady, cool look, as if she’d let her down by even mentioning what had happened. Although it was pretty clear that Eve, and Michael, were thinking a lot about it. “Right,” Shane said in the silence. “That was awkward. Eve, you stay and . . . bake or something.” “The hell I will,” she snapped back, way too tense. “If you don’t want me with you, maybe I’ll just grab a couple of Amelie’s boys and take them shopping for more weapons. We need to arm up, and we need to do it fast. That okay with you, or should I change into my pearls and an apron and die like a good girl?” Shane held up his hands in surrender and took a step back. “I—have nothing to say.” Smart boy, Claire thought. “But if you go out, you take more than a couple of vampires with you, Eve. I mean it. Take Michael.” “Well, you know what they say: less is more,” Eve said. She didn’t even comment on the Michael issue, but there was a stubborn, wounded look to her, and she didn’t meet Shane’s eyes. “Right now, more is more, and much more is much better. You can’t dick around with these . . . things. You know that, right?” “Oh, I know,” Eve said. Her dark eyes were filled with shadows, windows in a haunted house. “I was just thinking that it would be 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 60 5/18/12 9:00 AM BLACK DAWN61 a good idea to start making weapons stockpiles around town. If we start a running fight, we need to be able to get to weapons when we need them.” That was . . . a very good idea, Claire realized, and she nodded without speaking. Shane even looked respectfully impressed, which was an odd look for him; he wasn’t impressed by much. “Get silver,” he said. “If you can, knock over a jewelry store and get all the silver chains. We can break them up into pieces. Makes a good grenade.” Silver hurt, or killed, both vampires and draug. Shane sounded practical about it, but then, he’d spent his high school years being dragged around with his vampire-hating father. He probably knew more about killing vampires than anyone else in town . . . except the vampires themselves, of course. “It’s about the only thing that does work on these bastards. Talk to Myrnin about making more shotgun shells, too.” Myrnin being Claire’s vampire boss— if a relationship that crazy could be called employer-employee, anyway. She was Igor to his Frankenstein. He had an underground lab and everything, which she’d managed to make a whole lot less creepy during her tenure with him . . . but not less chaotic. Myrnin was walking chaos, and a lot of the time that was fun. Sometimes, not so much. Eve rolled her eyes, now almost back to the old carefree girl Claire knew. “Yeah, Collins, I wouldn’t have thought of Myrnin ever. Of course I’ll talk to him. He’s the only one who had his crap together before we went out the first time.” “Hey!” “Present company excepted, supposedly.” “Better,” Shane said, and surprised her by suddenly enfolding her in a fierce hug. “Stay safe, all right?” “Safe.” Eve agreed, and then held him at arm’s length, studying 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 61 5/18/12 9:00 AM 62 Rachel Caine him with thoughtful intensity. “Huh. You don’t hug, you know. Unless you get hugged first.” “I don’t?” “Nope. Never ever.” Shane shrugged. “Guess everybody changes once in a while.” All of a sudden Claire was struck by how different they all were now. Eve had grown steadier, more thoughtful. Shane had taken his aggression in hand and was starting to understand it, channel it. Even open up a little more than he had. Michael . . . Michael’s changes were more unsettling, less easy to appreciate, but he’d definitely changed. He was struggling not to change even more—not to drift further away from his lost human life. As for Claire herself, she couldn’t say. She couldn’t tell, really. . . . She supposed she had more confidence, more courage, more insight, but it was hard to imagine herself from the outside like that. She just . . . was. More or less, she was still Claire. Eve waved good-bye, hugged Claire hard—that was a typical Eve gesture—and headed toward the room where they’d left their stuff. Michael was in there. Claire hoped they could work out their . . . Problems didn’t seem a strong enough word, and issues sounded too mundane. There wasn’t really a word for what was going on between her best friends, other than complicated. Claire grabbed coffee to go, wolfed down a couple of cookies— pre-mixed or not, they were hot, melty, and delicious—and followed Shane down another hallway. It might be, she thought, the one Oliver had used, but this place was confusing. If there were signs, they were visible only to vampires. But Shane took a right down an identical hallway, then a left, and then they were in another round room, this one with a massive barred door at one spoke of the wheel. 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 62 5/18/12 9:00 AM BLACK DAWN63 The door also had guards . . . lots of them. Amelie’s personal detail, Claire thought as she recognized some of them. They didn’t look as spotlessly turned out as she was used to seeing. The dark tailored suits were gone, and so were the sunglasses. Instead, they wore clothing from the same archival stores that she and her friends had scavenged . . . and she supposed that what they’d chosen at least indicated what period in history they were most comfortable with. The two guards at the door, for instance. The taller, thinner one with the light hazel eyes and close-cut blond hair . . . he was wearing a chunky black leather jacket with spikes and buckles, and skinny jeans. Very eighties. His friend with the sharply drawn cheekbones and narrow eyes had on the tightest polyester pants Claire had ever seen, and a square-cut jacket to match, with a tight buttoned shirt in a loud earth-toned pattern. “It’s like disco inferno up in here,” Shane muttered, and she smothered a laugh. Not that it mattered; vampires could hear that, and if they wanted to take offense, they would. But the seventies addict just smiled a little, showing the tips of his fangs, and the eighties dude couldn’t be bothered with that much response. There were more guards standing around the walls, still as statues. Most had chosen clothing that wasn’t so . . . retro, but one was wearing what looked like a gangster suit from the Prohibition era. Claire half expected him to be toting a violin case with a machine gun in it, just like in the movies. “No one goes into the armory,” Disco Inferno said. He was apparently the spokesman for the door. “Go back, please.” “Order from Oliver,” Claire said. “We’re to find Theo Goldman.” “Yesterday,” Shane put in helpfully. “And we’d like to not die. So. Armory it is.” 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 63 5/18/12 9:00 AM 64 Rachel Caine “No one goes into the armory,” the vampire repeated, sounding bored now and staring over the top of Shane’s head, which was quite a trick even for a tall guy. “Not without authorization.” “Which they have,” said a voice from behind the two of them. Claire turned quickly, which she tended to do now, when vampires talked behind her, and found that Amelie’s pretty blond vampire “sister”—not by family but by vampire blood, although she didn’t exactly get all of that relationship detail—Naomi was standing three feet behind them, having arrived in eerie silence. She smiled and bowed her head, just a little. She was still very formal, used to the manners beaten into her hundreds of years ago, but she at least was trying; it wasn’t a full curtsy or anything, not that such would have been practical with the khaki cargo pants and work shirt she was wearing. “I myself have spoken with Oliver. I am to accompany these two and help them locate Dr. Goldman.” That held some weight. Disco Inferno and his eighties counterpart—Billy Idol?—did some heavy lifting on what looked like solid steel bars, plus a complicated lock, and finally swung the doors open for them. Naomi passed the two of them and looked over her shoulder with that same charming, though slightly awkward smile. “I hope that you do not mind me accompanying you,” she said. She had a bit of an accent, antique and French, and Claire could see that it had an effect on men in general, even Shane, who was more than a little anti-vampire in any form. “Nah,” he said, “I’m good. Claire?” “Fine,” she said. She liked Naomi. She liked that the ancient vampire was trying so hard to be . . . modern. And she liked that Naomi wasn’t, after all, attracted to Michael, as they’d all thought at first. “Uh, Naomi, do you know how to actually . . . fight?” “But of course,” she said, and led the way inside. They entered a big square room, which was—and this, Claire thought, was no real 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 64 5/18/12 9:00 AM BLACK DAWN65 surprise—stacked floor to ceiling with racks of boxes. Vampire paranoia really did have no limits. Naomi stopped at the first one and opened the hinged top of it. There were shotguns inside. She removed one, broke it open, and snapped it shut again with a practiced flick of her wrist as she smiled. “All vampires can fight,” she said. “I am less familiar with modern weapons, but blades do not work so well on the draug, as we found to our horror long ago.” “What else did you use, the last time you fought them?” Claire asked. Naomi was opening another box. This one contained swords, and she shook her head sadly and let the lid fall shut. “Courage,” she said. “Desperation. And a good deal of luck. Silver is the best charm we have, but it burns us as well. We’ve found nothing else that will hurt them but fire, which is dangerous enough for us too. . . . Ah.” She flipped back the lid on yet another box and lifted out something that looked big, clumsy, and complicated, with tanks and a hose. Definitely a Myrnin invention, judging by the brass ornamentation on it, but beneath that it looked sleek and industrial. “As you see.” “What is it?” Claire asked, frowning. It looked a little like one of those rocket jet packs that the science fiction movies loved so much. “That,” Shane said, taking it from Naomi’s delicate hands, “is freaking awesome.” “Yeah, but what is it exactly?” Claire asked. “Flamethrower,” he said, and huffed with effort as he lifted it to his shoulders like a giant backpack. It had quick-release buckles that he did up around his chest and over his shoulders. “So this will work on the draug?” “Yes,” Naomi said. “But be very careful. The draug are not only hiding in water, they are liquid—and when you touch liquid with fire it becomes steam. They can survive in the steam, for a short 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 65 5/18/12 9:00 AM 66 Rachel Caine time. If you breathe it in, they will kill you very quickly from within. Even the touch of them on skin in any form is dangerous, to humans or vampires.” Shane’s enthusiasm for the flamethrower dimmed, but he didn’t take it off. That, Claire thought, was because there was something incredibly macho about walking around with flammable weapons that she would never quite understand. If she’d tried it, it would have just made her totally aware of how non-flame- retardant she was. “Right,” Shane said. “Keep it at a distance.” “And watch where you aim it, please,” Naomi responded coolly. “I believe I speak also for young Claire in that. Fire is no great friend to humans in battle, either.” Claire rejected the crossbows that she found in the next container—silver-tipped, but they wouldn’t do nearly enough damage. They’d just punch right through the draug, which had a body consistency somewhere between Jell-O and mud, except for the master draug, Magnus. He was plenty strong. Strong enough to snap necks, say—something Claire was horribly familiar with and tried hard not to think about. At all. “What about fire arrows?” Claire asked. “Would they work?” “Not very well. The draug’s nature will douse small fires. Only something on the order of what Shane is carrying will truly damage them. Even, say, bottles of gasoline and fire—” “We call those Molotov cocktails,” Shane said helpfully. Mr. Mayhem. Naomi gave him a blank look and continued. “These would not do much to slow them down. It would be as if you threw the bottle into water; most likely the flame would simply extinguish. Perhaps there might be some effect, but I doubt this is a time when you would prefer to experiment. There’s going to be little time to refine your techniques and tools in the heat of battle.” 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 66 5/18/12 9:00 AM BLACK DAWN67 “Well, I liked Myrnin’s shotgun shells,” Claire offered. “Has he made—” “More? Yeah. Found it,” Shane called, leaning over another open crate. He fished out a handful of shells and held them up. “Are you sure those aren’t just regular . . .” Shane silently flipped one to her. On the casing was drawn, in black marker, the alchemical symbol for silver. Definitely Myrnin, because only he would think to write a warning that nobody but the two of them could possibly read. “How do you know what this means?” Shane looked faintly injured. “I make it my business to know everything about silver. And I saw your notes. I study up on everything when it comes to your boss, anyway.” There was a flicker of jealousy about that, but she didn’t have time, or energy, to consider it very much. Not even whether she liked it. “There must be hundreds of shells in there,” Claire said wonderingly, as she leaned over the crate. Her hair, growing longer now, brushed over her face, and she impatiently pushed it back. It needed a wash, and that made her yearn for a shower, but cold bottled-water rinses were all she could look forward to for a while. “I thought he used everything he had during the battle last night.” “He’s worked straight through,” Naomi said. “Shut away in a room down the hall. He summoned guards to bring these here only an hour ago. I understand he has commandeered others to make these cartridges as well.” When Myrnin worked that feverishly, it meant one of two things: he was desperately afraid, or he was in a severely manic phase. Or both. Neither was good. When he was afraid, Myrnin was very unpredictable. When he was manic, he was inevitably going to crash, hard, and there was no time for that now. 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 67 5/18/12 9:00 AM 68 Rachel Caine As if she’d read her thoughts, Naomi said, “He does need looking after, but it can wait until we find Theo.” “Amelie’s that bad?” Shane asked. “Yes. She is that bad, I’m afraid. If I still had a heart, it would ache for her, my brave and foolish sister. She should never have come after us. The law is the law. Those caught by draug are already dead. Rescuing us put all others at risk.” Claire stopped loading shotgun shells into her messenger bag to stare. “She saved you. And Michael. And Oliver.” “It doesn’t matter who she saved. The point is that she allowed herself, our queen, to be put at risk for others, and that is foolish, and emotional. The time of Elizabeth in armor is long over. Queens have ever ruled far from the battles.” “News flash, lady. There are no queens anymore,” Shane said. He loaded shells in a shotgun and snapped it shut, then searched for a place to strap it on that didn’t interfere with the flamethrower. “No queens, no kings, no emperors. Not in America. Only CEOs. Same thing, but not so many crowns.” “Vampires will always have rulers,” Naomi said. “It is the order of things.” She said it like the sky was blue, a plain and obvious fact. Shane shrugged and gave Claire a look; she shrugged back. Vamp politics were so not their business. “Come. We must find the doctor.” Shane shook his head. “He’s the only one you have?” “No,” Naomi said, “but he is the best, and the only one we have who has moved somewhat beyond medieval techniques of bleeding and cupping.” She handed Claire a shotgun and gave her a doubtful look. “You can shoot?” Claire nodded as she loaded the cartridges. “Shane taught me.” Not that it was easy for someone her size; a shotgun packed a hard kick to the shoulder, and she’d always come away from practice 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 68 5/18/12 9:00 AM BLACK DAWN69 bruised and aching. Naomi was even more frail, but Claire was willing to bet that it would be nothing for her. Shane settled his flamethrower more comfortably on his shoulders. “Ladies? After you.” “Rude,” Claire said. “I was being polite!” “Not when you have a flamethrower.” 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 69 5/18/12 9:00 AM 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 70 5/18/12 9:00 AM BLOOD FEVER The Watchers Veronica Wolff It’s the start of the fall semester on the Isle of Night, and the bad news is Drew has been assigned a new roommate. The worse news? She likes her. But her roommate issues take a back seat when one body is found, and then another. Everything points to the existence of a rogue vampire. Now Drew has to find the killer—before the vampire she’s bonded to gets framed for the crime . . . “Dark, mysterious, and action-packed . . . definitely a series to watch!” —Mari Mancusi AVAILABLE AUGUST 2012 FROM NEW AMERICAN LIBRARY 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 71 5/18/12 9:00 AM 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 72 5/18/12 9:00 AM Chapter One H is mouth. Not quite full, not quite thin. Just the right shape for an easy smile. It hitched up at the corner when he got that look—the one that said he was thinking of doing something reckless. I’d move closer, and he’d part his lips. His eyes would drift to my— “Acari Drew.” The stern voice brought me back to myself. Crap. I was doing it again. Thinking about him. The vampire. My vampire. Carden McCloud. “Are you paying attention?” my teacher asked. Thankfully it was just Tracer Judge and not one of the vamps. Daydreaming in class when a vampire was your teacher was high up on the list of Stupid and Possibly Deadly Things To Do. Just after bonding with a vampire. Like I’d bonded with Carden McCloud. His mouth. A glimpse of fang, shimmering. I’d felt that fang, an accidental slip, a hot kiss . . . “Acari Drew?” 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 73 5/18/12 9:00 AM 74 Veronica Wolff “Yes, Tracer Judge,” I said automatically. I gave a quick shake to my head to clear it. Focus. I was in class. Combat Medicine. It was actually kind of cool. I wanted to focus. I wouldn’t call myself a teacher’s pet, but I was the smartest thing they had going around here. My brains were what made me stand out. But it’d been my abusive, deadbeat dad who’d hardened me, landed me here on the Isle of Night. Generally, every girl here had been an outcast in her former life. There were girls who’d called juvie home. Druggies and gang girls. Bad seeds. We were the sorts of girls who’d never be missed. Only the most elite eventually became Watchers, and so vampires recruited only the strongest, the most ruthless. The best among society’s bad girls. But training was lethal, and survival demanded more. Something extra. Something special. In the normal world, my genius IQ had made me a loser. A social reject. But here? Here it made me an object of fascination. Someone with possibilities. In a place that valued secrecy and cunning, smarts meant potential. We all had talents, but all too often these were things like a proclivity for knife play or an inability to feel pain. (My pyromaniac, maybe-dead/maybe-not former roomie-slash-nemesis, Lilac came to mind.) Roommate. Now there was a topic to consider. As in, where was mine? Fall classes began last week and still no sign of Lilac’s replacement. Rather than seeing the empty bed in my room as a good sign, it freaked me out. There was no way the vampires were letting me have a double room all to myself, and it didn’t bode well that something was holding up whoever this new roomie was. 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 74 5/18/12 9:00 AM BLOOD FEVER75 Had she already been selected? What would her gifts be? And would she view me as much of a freak as Lilac had? But most importantly, would I be able to hide my relationship with Carden from her? Because this blood bond was proving to be . . . immersive. I couldn’t get him out of my mind. And believe me, I tried. But I was drawn to him, his touch, his eyes. That mouth. Kissing that mouth, I’d tasted the vampire blood I’d been drinking since my arrival on the island. The difference was, from Carden, it hadn’t been some refrigerated dose in a shot glass. It was hot and pulsing from the source, ringing with his life essence. A tug of desire pulsed through my core, as though he were summoning me. I scrubbed my hands through my hair. Must focus. I would not think about Carden’s blood. His blood had done something to me, altered me in a way I didn’t understand. Things I didn’t understand made me intensely uncomfortable. And this was one thing I couldn’t ask anyone about. Carden’s warning echoed loudly in my head. Nobody could know about our bond. “Answer my question,” Tracer Judge said with a peculiar note in his voice. He sounded annoyed, testy. “Preferably sometime today.” I gritted my teeth and brightened my smile. A whoops-sorry-I- zoned-out sort of smile. “It’s a compelling question, Tracer Judge. Perhaps you’ll rephrase it for me.” Judge didn’t smirk, though. Normally he would’ve smirked. Tracers were hardcore enough, ruthless enough, to do what it took to find and retrieve girls like me to this bleak rock. Some of them were decent, though, deep down. And Tracer Judge fell into that category. 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 75 5/18/12 9:00 AM 76 Veronica Wolff He often let me stay after class to do independent studies. He taught topics in science—infiltration, forensics, combat medicine, the cool stuff that I loved. He was okay, for a Tracer. Except these days there was something fundamentally not okay about him. Not since his secret love, my Proctor Amanda, had been killed. Though killed was a pretty tame word for what’d happened to her. Ronan had given me details I was certain I wasn’t supposed to know. She’d been tortured. Dismembered. Flung from a cliff. I suspected Master Alcántara had been responsible for Amanda’s death. On our mission, I’d gotten a peek into the Spanish vampire’s interrogation techniques. They weren’t pretty. Amanda had been going to meet Judge so they could escape. Together. And I was sure I wasn’t supposed to know that bit. I have no idea what Judge would do if he found out I knew. Kill me? Who could guess? I’ve learned not to trust anyone on this island. People— and I use that term loosely— played for keeps around here. I still didn’t understand why Ronan had confided in me. For a Tracer who’d sneakily relied on his hypnotic, persuasive power of touch in order to get me here in the first place, he sure could act like a friend sometimes. But as I was constantly reminded, friends were a bad idea. Friends could die. Enemies, though. I had those crawling out of my ears. There were any number of girls, Acari as well as the older Initiates and Guidons, who wanted to see my ass in a sling. Especially Masha and her pal Trinity—they were Annelise Drew Enemies #1 and #2. Just the thought sent a chill creeping along my flesh. I’d wanted to escape. That could’ve been me . . . tortured, mangled, discarded. 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 76 5/18/12 9:00 AM BLOOD FEVER77 When I’d taken the assignment to go off the island for a mission with Alcántara, I’d thought it would be my chance to make a break for it. To run as far away from Eyja næturinnar, this Isle of Night, as I could get. Should I have tried to escape when I’d gotten the chance? There had been a moment, on our mission, when I could’ve fled. Would Carden have killed me if I’d tried? Somehow I knew he wouldn’t have. In the same way I knew I couldn’t go far from his side if I tried. All I’d wanted was to free myself, and yet I now found myself more entangled than ever. What I felt for Carden, this sensation in my body, it was beyond thirst. It was a yearning. An emptiness that only Carden could fill. And I didn’t want that—at all. Except, part of me really did. Want it. Want him. “Earth to Drew.” It was my pal, Yasuo, sitting next to me. A tall, cute vampire Trainee, he had the bluster that came with growing up in LA and the sensitivity that came from watching his Japanese gangster dad murder his mother. He sing-songed under his breath, “Drew and McCloud sitting in a tree—” Yas could be such a guy sometimes. At the moment, his real damage was probably that he’d overheard Emma—his girlfriend and my best friend—mention how cute Carden was. I stared ahead, hissing into my fist, “Shut up.” But I forgave him instantly. All I knew was that Yasuo had my back, and in a place like this, that was all that mattered. Tracer Judge silenced both of us. “Is there a problem?” He’d said it with uncharacteristic sternness. “No,” I told Judge quietly. “There’s no problem.” Ever since bonding with Carden, I’d been scattered. Fragmented. Unable to pay attention. Aware only of this itch I needed 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 77 5/18/12 9:00 AM 78 Veronica Wolff to scratch. It was like experiencing the surliness of PMS, a parched thirst, a fever chill, and a deep-down wiggly boy-wanting feeling all at the same time. I was off, and whenever I tuned into the feeling, asking what is my deal?, I’d remember: Carden. Master Carden McCloud, ancient Scottish vampire, was my ‘deal.’ I blamed him. But I could never admit to that, so instead I lied. “It’s my fault, Tracer Judge. I let my focus wander for a moment. I apologize.” My formality seemed to mollify him, and the glare in his tired eyes eased a bit. “I repeat: what is the basic difference between Combat Medicine and Emergency Medical Technique?” Inhaling deeply, I used my breath to sweep my mind clear of Carden. Any once and future roommates, all conceivable friends and enemies, Amanda and Judge, Ronan . . . I relegated the lot of them into a tiny corner of my brain. I sat straight in my chair, attentive Acari Drew once more. “The primary difference is that the EMT is the first responder, whereas, on a mission, if someone gets injured, the Watcher is the only respon—” The door opened, cutting me off. I was ready to scowl—I’d assembled quite the pretty little answer in my head. But then I saw who stood in the doorway. It was our Headmaster. Silence smothered the room, sudden and complete. Headmaster Claude Fournier rarely made an appearance in the classroom. This was unprecedented. Unheard of. He didn’t bother with niceties, he just dug right in. “A girl has been discovered,” he said, only a hint of his French accent detectable. “Just beyond the cove. A dead girl.” His tone was flat, but his quiet delivery told me just how furious he was. “Somebody killed 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 78 5/18/12 9:00 AM BLOOD FEVER79 her, anonymously and without permission. Someone on this island bled her dry.” I’d thought it was already silent—until we all held our breath. This was shocking news. Nobody on this island acted—or killed— without it being somehow sanctioned by the vampires in charge. Killing without permission. Did that mean someone had actually granted permission for Amanda’s death? I shuddered. Sure, deaths happened all the time. In a combat ring. During hazing. At the hand of a bored vampire merely wanting to teach a lesson. But random, anonymous slaughter? There was no such thing. Most of all, there were no abandoned bodies. Every corpse was repurposed for some other grisly means. Nobody killed and left the body to rot. Nobody crossed the Directorate. For Headmaster to stoop to a classroom visit meant this death had upset them. It meant this was a mystery. And then an even more frightening question popped into my head: why had he come to this class? Was he visiting all the classes? Why not just hold a general assembly? The hairs on the back of my neck prickled. I didn’t want to be in their sights, not even in their line of vision, considering my bond with Carden. Headmaster Fournier’s shuttered gaze scanned the room. “The question is, who among us would want to see Guidon Trinity dead?” He pinned that icy stare on me. My nerves became nausea. 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 79 5/18/12 9:00 AM 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 80 5/18/12 9:00 AM Chapter Two T here was a burst of sound as people turned in their seats. All eyes landed on me. I slid down in my chair, trying to hide. Because I knew who’d want Trinity dead. So did everyone else. The list was easy: 1. Emma, who’d suffered much at the hands of the redheaded Guidon. 2. By extension, Yasuo, her boyfriend. Duh. And 3? Number Three was the ringer. Number Three was the only one who would’ve been capable of seeing such a thing through. Number Three was the only person who’d want Trinity dead, and who also happened to come equipped with a new vampire buddy who operated just enough outside the official Eyja næturinnar ecosystem to do something like feed on an Initiate. Number Three was me. Headmaster Fournier asked who wanted Guidon Trinity dead, and the answer was: I did. I’d fantasized about the many ways in 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 81 5/18/12 9:00 AM 82 Veronica Wolff which I’d obliterate both her and Masha pretty much every day since day one. Headmaster glided to the doorway. When he spoke again it seemed his gaze was trained on everyone but me. “Keep your eyes open, Acari, Trainees. The student who discovers and reports the identity of the culprit will know great honor.” The moment he left, Acari Loren turned to me. She was one of the many girls who’d dance a jig if I were to come to a gruesome ending. “You knew Trinity, didn’t you Drew? Didn’t you hate Trinity?” Her tone was saccharin sweet. When I’d left on my mission, I’d been public enemy number one in everyone’s sights. But that I returned with a new—and let’s be honest—super-stud vampire? I was now under a microscope. If anyone discovered that Carden and I shared a bond and turned us in, it would garner them major brownie points. My sure and subsequent death would just be icing on the cake. Yas whispered under his breath, “Bitch.” His bemused, marveling tone was like armor for me. I consciously slowed my heartbeat enough to speak. “I seem to recall Trinity kicking your ass a time or two, Acari Loren. Easy enough with such a wide target.” The girl was built like a rock. Yasuo chuckled. “Snap.” I hated stooping to such ridiculously adolescent taunts, but sometimes you needed to speak the native tongue. I’d seen Loren in the locker room, noticed how she always stole a quick glance to make sure nobody was looking before she changed. I don’t know why she was self-conscious—she could probably bench press the lot of us with a solid strength that I envied—but who was I to understand? Girls and their stupid hang-ups were beyond me. “But it was you and your little friend who Trinity hated the 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 82 5/18/12 9:00 AM BLOOD FEVER83 most,” an Acari said from the back of the room. “How lucky for you that she’s out of the picture.” Nobody tried to hide their open stares, aimed at me. Another girl chimed in, “How convenient she shows up dead, just after you showed up with your new vampire pal.” Pal. So people had noticed me spending time with Carden. What else had they seen? Could they sense my obsession with him? Had they caught me casting longing stares whenever he was nearby? I had to stop. This had to stop. I had to figure out what this bond was so I could break it. In the meantime, I had to deal with the disrespect. I couldn’t let my fellow classmates sniff my vulnerability. I steeled myself. Looking over my shoulder, I said, “I didn’t realize you were in a position to accuse any of the vampires. Impressive. You should definitely bring your concerns to Master McCloud’s attention.” That shut people up. For now. But it wasn’t good enough. I’d thought my focus was shot before—I couldn’t pay attention the whole rest of class. Because who did kill Trinity? Girls died all the time, but not like that. There was ceremony around it. God forbid the vampires miss an excuse for a tournament, or a feast. Guidon Trinity had been a bully bent on tormenting and sabotaging me. She and Masha had both been overly curious about anything to do with me. Crap. Masha. I groaned to myself. Masha wouldn’t appreciate losing her friend to mysterious circumstances. She’d had it in for me before, 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 83 5/18/12 9:00 AM 84 Veronica Wolff but now she’d be laser focused, waiting for the chance to wrap that bullwhip of hers around my neck. She’d be watching me even more closely than she and Trinity had before. Watching. Waiting. Wanting to catch me in the act. Catch me breaking the rules. To catch me in a compromising situation—like sharing a secret blood bond with a renegade vampire. The other girls were right—Carden would’ve had every reason to want to remove Trinity from the picture. If she’d discovered our bond? The Directorate wouldn’t look too kindly on Carden secretly hitting on a first-year Acari. They killed for much less around here. I had much to think about as I walked back to the dorm. Thankfully Yas had to run off to some Trainee thing—more and more such mysterious events seemed to be claiming his attention this semester. But I was glad for the alone time. It didn’t last long. I felt Carden before I saw him. A vibrating power at my back. I felt those eyes consuming my body, boring into me. I imagined I even smelled him. Rich, heady, like earth and man. I wanted to turn and fling myself into him. To know a second kiss. But instead I balled my hands into fists and sped up my pace. I don’t know why. It was stupid. There was no running from McCloud. I didn’t understand our bond. For all I knew, he could read my every thought. He probably knew where I was going better than I did. I felt his presence even more strongly now. My skin turned hot, awareness pounding through me. I had silly impulses—to wonder what I looked like from behind, to slow my stride and sway my hips to match the low pulse in my belly. I fought my urges. 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 84 5/18/12 9:00 AM BLOOD FEVER85 He laughed, a low rumble behind me. “You can run, my pretty wee Acari . . .” I was being ridiculous. This was a chemical bond, pure and simple—like a drug addiction. I refused to act like a silly, lovesick girl. I sucked in a breath through my teeth. “I know, I can run but I can’t”—I stopped short to deliver the line. It’d been so sassy and careless in my head. But Carden was right behind me, and his body walked right up against mine, a hard, hot wall pressed at my back. “Hide?” I finished weakly. Lamely. “Aye, and best you accept it, young one.” He traced a single finger along my shoulder blade. I took a defiant step forward. “Just because you’ve got a few hundred years on me.” Determined not to cower, I planted my hands on my hips and turned to face him. “It’s not like you were so ancient when you became a vampire. You can’t have been much older than—what?—nineteen? Twenty, max?” He looked amused. “As you say, little Acari.” “I am not little.” He was grinning now, and my words hung in the air, preposterous. Because next to Carden, I was little. I was tiny and delicate and frail. It cast my mind back to when we first met. He hadn’t seemed so large, dying of thirst in a dark, dank cell, imprisoned by a bunch of evil vampire monks. He’d been dying, and all I’d known was that I couldn’t fail on my mission. I had to help him survive. And so I’d fed him. My blood had pumped into his body, engorging muscles and flesh until he regenerated into this strapping hunk of a man before me. Just the memory gave me a shiver. I had to stop thinking of him as a man. He was a vampire. 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 85 5/18/12 9:00 AM 86 Veronica Wolff “So?” I demanded. He raised his brows, looking aggravatingly amused. “So, what?” I scowled. “Don’t patronize me. So . . . how old were you?” “You had the right of it the first time,” he said. I rolled my eyes. “Can’t you just answer the damned question like a normal person?” He rubbed his thumb along my lower lip, stealing the breath from my lungs. “Careful, my wee dove. There are relics on this island who’d kill upon hearing such language.” “Dove?” “Oh, aye.” His laugh was easy, but the dark glint in his eyes made me shiver down deep. “And how I’d love to watch you fly.” He licked his lips. My body buzzed, the yearning for him pure anguish. My blood demanded more of his. My lips burned to kiss him once more. I had to fight to control my breath. “What have you done to me?” He ignored the question, answering a different one instead. “I was indeed nineteen when I was turned,” he said calmly. I thought my head might explode—the guy was impossible. “What are you doing even talking to me? You’re Vampire, I’m Acari. We’re not supposed to . . . how do you say it? . . . fraternize.” I shook my head. Since when could I not remember a simple word? I glared. “What did you do to me? What’s happening to me? I can’t think straight.” I lowered my voice to a hiss. “And who killed Guidon Trinity?” “Questions, questions.” He pinched my chin, studying me. “What I did to you,” he mused. “It’s what you did to me.” His pinch grew firmer. “You fed me, girl. And now we’re stuck with each other.” 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 86 5/18/12 9:00 AM BLOOD FEVER87 But then he let go, easy Carden once more. “You made the bed. And now we must sleep in it.” He winked. I flushed from head to toe. “Fine. Whatever. What about Trinity? You didn’t kill her, did you?” He parted his lips, revealing the barest glimmer of fang. “Yours is the only nectar I’ve a taste for.” Vertigo spun my brain as I began to fall into those eyes. They were golden brown, like honey. I gritted my teeth. I would not lose myself. I was Annelise Drew, and I was stronger than that. “Does that line generally work for you?” I turned from him, and it took everything I had. “Look, I’ve gotta go.” With a gentle hand on my shoulder he stopped me. “Little one.” “I told you not to call me that.” “Ah, but if you’d asked . . .” Maddening. Why didn’t he act less like a cocky guy and more . . . vampiric? “Fine,” I said. “Please don’t call me that.” “As you wish, my wee dove.” He pressed on before I could get out more than an outraged squeak. “But before you go, for the record, I do not savage young women.” He gave my shoulder a final squeeze. “At least, not without their consent.” I stormed off, the sound of his rumbling laugh at my back. All I wanted was peace and quiet, and I couldn’t get back to the dorm quickly enough. As much as Lilac’s empty bed creeped me out, at the moment, I was thrilled at the prospect of a single room. Carden’s scent lingered in my head. I exhaled sharply but couldn’t rid myself of his memory. He was branded into me. I jogged up the stairs, anxious to get back before I ran into 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 87 5/18/12 9:00 AM 88 Veronica Wolff anybody. I didn’t even want to see Emma. If I saw her, I’d have to pretend nothing was going on for me. I didn’t think I could do it. I passed her room without event. The hallway was oddly silent. Of course. It was lunch time. The thirst for Carden was so consuming, I hadn’t even realized I was missing a meal. His eyes were in my head, staring. One minute playful, the next minute smoldering. I knocked my head against the doorframe, resting it there as I slid the key in the lock. I actually shuddered with relief as I turned it. Almost there. I’d crumple onto my bed, roll into a ball, and wait for the throbbing in my belly to stop. I opened the door, and for one surreal moment, I thought I’d entered the wrong room. But no, it was Lilac’s bed, with its gray mattress ticking and neat stack of white and gray linens. Only now a slim figure sat at the edge. I registered a sheet of shining black hair. Slim shoulders. The figure turned. My new roommate. 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 88 5/18/12 9:00 AM Chapter Three D ammit to hell. She was here. My roommate. I’d known this day was coming. Was actually kind of relieved it had. But still, I made it a general rule not to trust girls on principle. As she turned, I sized her up. Asian. Pretty. Young looking. Younger than me. I tried to guess what flavor of badass she might be. I muttered, “How young do they take them now?” Even though she was new, part of me braced for her to pull a weapon on me. But nothing happened. Her cheeks were blotchy. Crap. “Are you crying?” She gave me a curt shake of her head. Perfectly cut layers swished into her eyes, and she swept them away again. “Oh, okay. Because it looked like you were crying.” She cleared her throat and said firmly, “I wasn’t crying.” “Fine. Got it. Not crying. I’m Drew.” I waited, but she just looked at me blankly. “Well? What’s your name?” “Mei-Ling.” I watched her slim throat convulse. There’d been some definite crying. “Mei-Ling Ho.” “Pretty name.” I slung my bag onto my desk. Making idle chatter was the last thing I felt like doing. 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 89 5/18/12 9:00 AM 90 Veronica Wolff Carden preoccupied my whole mind and body—I didn’t have time to deal with anyone else, much less some kid. I realized it was past time for her to speak. I probed, “Mei-Ling. That a Chinese name?” She nodded. I was getting impatient. “What’s it mean?” “Beautiful and delicate.” She turned her back on me. Great. “My advice, best change your name. What’s Chinese for ruthless and savage?” She ignored the question. Was she in shock? I thought she’d been crying when I came in, but she seemed utterly emotionless now. I watched her long fingers repeatedly smooth the sheets, the nervous gesture the only thing telling me she was in there somewhere. I could not deal with this right now. I had to sort out my bond with Carden. Carden. My breath caught, just remembering the feel of him. I fisted my hands and shook them out again. I needed to get a hold of myself. There was no way I could function in this place with all the obsessing I was doing. I had to figure this bond out before someone figured me out. Which meant I couldn’t trust anybody in the meantime. Especially not a new roommate, who could be in my face—and maybe even in my stuff—24/7. I looked at her, trying to figure out how to go about laying down the ground rules, and took a step closer. Was she even sixteen? “How old are you?” “I just turned fifteen.” “Damn.” No wonder she was proving hard to read. She must’ve come from a seriously messed up place to land here so young. “So you were in, what, ninth grade?” “I just started at the performing arts school,” she said in answer. “My parents relocated to Long Island so I could go.” 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 90 5/18/12 9:00 AM BLOOD FEVER91 “Fancy.” How I would’ve loved parents who supported me. What a different world I’d live in now. “Does that mean you’re some sort of prodigy?” To my surprise, she nodded. I wanted to snark that I was smart, too. On this island, special meant nothing. Special got you a shooter of blood and a knife in the back. “I’m a violinist,” she said, “but I can play a lot of things.” Was that why the vampires had placed her with me? Put the musical genius in with the genius-genius? Because my room wasn’t the only one with a sudden vacancy. “Well, now you’re an Acari. Fights to the death seem to be the only performative art we’ve got going around here.” She gave me a flat look. “When do we receive our syllabus?” “Our syllabus?” I choked back a little laugh. “Yes.” She looked at me like I was a moron. “Otherwise, how will I know where I need to go?” Oh God, the poor thing was being serious. She had no clue what she’d agreed to, and it dismayed me. “Don’t worry, they’ll let you know. The vamps go for drama. They’ll probably slide some ancient piece of parchment under the door at some ungodly hour, and if you can parse the old-school calligraphy, that’ll be your syllabus.” I watched her rifle through her stack of books, even though I was sure she’d done plenty of rifling before I came in. What weapon had she been assigned? Because surely there was a weapon hidden in one of her dresser drawers. Would Mei-Ling be a threat to me? Maybe smother me in my sleep? Most importantly, would she find out about me and Carden and narc on me? I had no clue, and knew I needed to get one fast. I rested my foot on my desk chair to unlace my boots and kick them off. “So 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 91 5/18/12 9:00 AM 92 Veronica Wolff why’d you wanna up and leave your fancy new school for a place like this?” “I didn’t want to leave,” she said. “Wait.” Surely I misheard. The vampires recruited us onto the island. Maybe they sometimes used little hypnotic tricks to persuade us, or seduced us with fancy private jets and hot Tracers, but they didn’t resort to outright kidnapping. “Back it up. What do you mean, you didn’t want to leave? You’re here, aren’t you?” Her jaw tightened. “He made me. He killed my boyfriend and said if I didn’t go with him he’d kill my parents and my sister, too.” I could say that I sat on the chair, but it was more like my knees gave out. I dropped and thankfully the seat was there to halt the progression of my butt onto the floor. “You didn’t come of your own will?” “I tried to fight back, but he was too large.” Her expression changed, and she looked at me like I’d just told her I drowned kittens as a hobby. “Why? Did you?” “Yeah.” Her tone had put me on the defensive. “The guy was pretty persuasive, though.” I thought back to that day—Ronan, sexy Ronan, in a Florida parking lot. He’d used his hypnotic touch to help convince me. But honestly, the guy was so good looking and my world had been such crap, it hadn’t taken much. I bristled at the memory. Suddenly, I felt eager to explain this to Mei-Ling and her judgmental eyes. “I had no place else to go. I had nothing but thirty bucks in my checking account and an abusive dad waiting for me at home.” She gave me a look that said she didn’t fully understand me, and worse, that she found me pathetic. My defenses locked even more firmly into place. It made me think with cold reason. “Hold on.” She was brought 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 92 5/18/12 9:00 AM BLOOD FEVER93 in against her will—which Tracer would do such a thing? “You said he made you come. He who?” She shrugged. “He . . . he had an accent.” “Scottish?” I held my breath. “Not like that,” she said. Not Ronan, then. I felt more relieved than was good for me. “You mean English was his second language? Could it have been a German accent?” She shrugged again. The one-sided interrogation was tiring me. “Blond?” Finally she nodded, and I said, “Sounds like Otto.” I could picture him doing it, too. He was the badass Tracer who’d been strong enough to bring my pal Yasuo in. Mei studied me, and it made me uncomfortable. She looked like she was evaluating me, and evaluations made me feel vulnerable. I struck out in defense and said, “If you were taken against your will, that means your parents are probably looking for you.” I regretted the words the moment they were out. An expression of acute misery flickered in her eyes then was gone again. “You’re right.” I’d noted the tiniest waver in her voice. “Damn,” I whispered, aghast. Why had they kidnapped this girl? This nice, normal, fifteen-year old girl? And, even better: Why on earth had they put her in a room with me? I felt bad for mentioning her parents and found myself volunteering, “You’re lucky. My dad wouldn’t have cared. And my mom is dead.” It took her a moment to roll with my topic change. “I—I’m sorry.” 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 93 5/18/12 9:00 AM 94 Veronica Wolff “Thanks,” I muttered, the response feeling rote. I should’ve felt relieved—I could definitely write off my concerns about what Mei would do if she were to find out about me and Carden. This girl didn’t know up from down. “But it’s not me you should worry about.” Mei-Ling wasn’t a runaway. She wasn’t a gang girl or a meth addict. She was a fifteen year-old musical prodigy from Long Island. She wouldn’t survive a day. I knew it meant that Carden and I would probably be safe from her prying eyes. But instead of feeling relief, it needled me. This poor kid. Bastards. The vampires abducted her against her will, which meant they wanted her here for a reason. A really big reason, if they were willing to risk kidnapping. What were they going to do to her? I went over and sat next to her on the bed. “Look, I’ll help you out. But you need to be strong.” She stiffened. “I am strong.” “No, I mean really strong.” Amanda had told me much the same when I’d arrived. The girls on this island, if they scented fear, like wolves killing the weakest member of the pack, they’d turn on you. And worse. “Because if you’re not, they’ll kill you.” 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 94 5/18/12 9:00 AM THE FARM Emily McKay Vampire monsters called Ticks are devouring humans in a swarm across America. The surviving young people have been rounded up and quarantined on farms—supposedly for their protection. Lily soon learns that a darker force is in control. Staging a daring escape with her autistic twin, Mel, Lily finds help from a familiar face—and learns a shocking secret about herself that could help save the human race. “Two thumbs up for Emily McKay’s captivating young adult saga. Equal parts Resident Evil and Hunger Games—and just as thrilling—The Farm is a gripping dystopian tale that pits humans against humans in the race for survival in her remarkable and haunting world. McKay has spun a web of vampires, love, sacrifice, and survival readers won’t want to escape. I can’t wait to sink my teeth into the next installment!” —Chloe Neill, New York Times bestselling author of Biting Cold AVAILABLE DECEMBER 2012 FROM BERKLEY 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 95 5/18/12 9:00 AM 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 96 5/18/12 9:00 AM Chapter One Lily S ome days, you just want to let the bad guys win. My mom, the pro bono lawyer, used to say that to me sometimes, back in the Before. That’s how you know you’re doing the right thing—it’s so hard you want to give up. I really hoped she was right, because today was one of those days. Of course, my mom lived in a world where the monsters were greed, ambition, and questionable ethics. That all ended when the Ticks swarmed across the southwest, eating every human in their path. My sister Mel and I live in a whole different world and the monsters here are less . . . metaphorical. And even if I sometimes wanted to give up, I knew I wouldn’t, because my twin, Mel, depended on me. Praying for the patience to deal with her, I said, “We’ve been over this. You can’t come with me today.” I reached for her hand, but she snatched it away. Okay, not a day for touching. She stood so close to me, I couldn’t even shut the door to the storage closet where we’d lived for the past five months. “Stay here.” 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 97 5/18/12 9:00 AM 98 Emily McKay She didn’t move. Since we’d arrived on the Farm, Mel had followed me everywhere. We hadn’t been apart even for a few minutes. But for what I had to do today, she had to stay behind in our room. She and I lived in an eight by twelve storage closet, tucked in the corner of one of the lab rooms in the science building. Every time I tried to leave, Mel was right on my heels. Lily’s little lamb, Mom had always called her. I pulled my cell phone out of my back pocket. There was never a signal, but I kept it charged because it was the only way to know what time it was without listening for the chimes. Three fifty two. I had five, six minutes tops to get out of here and down to Stoner Joe’s if I wanted to talk to him alone. Extending a single finger like a hook, I waved it past Mel’s face. “Look at me, Mel.” Mel kept her gaze locked on the shelf beside the door where our backpacks sat, crammed full of the food and clothes we’d need if we did escape from the Farm. The pink pack sat on top of the massively thick black-covered, CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics. Everything we needed was ready to go at a moment’s notice, everything except the stuff we didn’t have yet. Things I might be able to live without, but that Mel couldn’t. And if I didn’t leave the room now to go trade for them, my weeks of planning wouldn’t count for jack. I tried again, waving my hooked finger in front of her eyes like the occupational therapist had taught me do so many years ago. “Look at me, Mel.” Mel twitched, shifting her gaze from the backpacks to a box of lab supplies wedged onto the shelf of microscopes. I knew it bugged her, having all this crap in our room, but it was important. If a Collab happened to come by for an inspection, 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 98 5/18/12 9:00 AM THE FARM99 I wanted our room messy enough that he’d give up in disgust rather than search all our belongings. Again I waved my hand. “Look at me, Mel.” Mom would have told me to be patient. But Mom wasn’t here and I was out of time. I tried, but every time I tried and failed to get her attention, my tension ratcheted up a notch. When she still didn’t look at me, I reached out and gave her fingers a quick rap. “Damn it, Mel. This is important. Red Rover.” Mel’s gaze snapped to mine. Guess I should have lead with that. The phrase Red Rover, Red Rover was our code for the plan to escape the Farm and cross the Red River. That was one of the benefits of having a sister who spoke almost entirely in nursery rhymes. We could discuss our escape plans anywhere and no one would know what Red Rover meant. “When I leave, I want you to wedge the chair under the knob. That way you’ll be safe.” I swallowed, praying I wasn’t about to make a promise I couldn’t keep. “I won’t be gone long.” Mel just stood there mumbling her senseless distress. “When I come back, I’ll tap out Mary Had a Little Lamb on the door. Don’t open the door until then.” Mel’s gaze had shifted again. Maybe I should have kept trying, but if she didn’t know the plan now, we were probably screwed anyway. Even though I didn’t really expect an answer, I asked one last time, “Do you understand?” Mel bobbed her head, but I knew it wasn’t really an agreement. “Red rover, red rover, let Lil Lee come over.” “Yes,” I muttered. “That’s the plan.” I patted the pocket of my hoodie to make sure the slim box of pills was tucked inside. Then I let myself out the door. This time, 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 99 5/18/12 9:00 AM 100 Emily McKay Mel didn’t follow. A second later, I heard the sound of the chair being scraped across the floor and wedged under the knob. Okay, step one: leave Mel safely hidden while I go out to trade. Check. Step two: walk across campus, keep my head down, blend. As long as I didn’t give any of the Collabs a reason to stop me, no one would know what I had in my pocket. Not that many Collabs needed the excuse to harass a Green. The Collabs were all guys who’d been high school bullies back in the Before. The guys who’d been big, brutish and willing to betray their own species by collaborating with the Ticks. On the bright side, Collabs weren’t known for their keen intelligence and observational skills, so hopefully, none of them would notice when I didn’t walk into the dining hall with the rest of the Greens, but instead went into Stoner Joe’s to trade. The room Mel and I lived in was on the seventh floor and walking down six flights of stairs gave me plenty of time to think about what I was about to do. This time of day, all the Greens should be on their way to third meal. I should be able to talk to him alone. And if he wasn’t alone, well, then I’d just hang out until everyone else left. I wouldn’t think about Mel all alone in our room. I wouldn’t think about the clock ticking away the remaining minutes of mealtime. If Mel and I had to miss third meal, it wasn’t that big a deal. Technically, Greens could miss one meal a week. And I certainly wouldn’t think about the contents of my pocket. About those pills that would get me sent to the Dean’s office. That was a trip you didn’t come back from. Some people just disappeared up there, but most were dragged out at dusk and tied to stakes just beyond the electric fences that surrounded the Farm. The screams seemed to echo for days afterward. 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 100 5/18/12 9:00 AM THE FARM101 They liked to remind us that those fences were there to keep the Ticks out as much as to keep us in. As I left the building, the bitter February wind bit through the fleece of my jacket. I glanced around for any Collabs who might be nearby. Their bright blue uniforms made them easy to spot. They would have looked so cheerful if it hadn’t been for the tranq guns slung over their shoulders. A couple of them loitered over by the Admin building. Back in the Before, the Farm had been a prestigious private liberal arts college. For more than a hundred years, the college had sat nestled against the banks of the Red River, just south of the Texas/Oklahoma border, home to pampered students. The Admin building dominated the east side of the campus. Whatever its purpose had been back in the Before, now . . . now, it just creeped me out. There weren’t supposed to be any Ticks on the Farm, but sometimes horrible noises came from the Admin building and the shadows at the windows twisted and moved with inhuman speed. At the opposite end of campus was the dining hall, with its sleek modern architecture and massive, floor to ceiling windows. Between the two buildings stretched the open green space of the quad a smattering of dorms and academic buildings in between. Our science building was one of them. Four times a day, all the Greens shuffled out from their various hiding places and ambled over to the dining hall where we were scanned, prodded and fed. Yeah, we were treated like cows, except cows lived in the blissful oblivion of not knowing their future. They took weekly “donations” at the mobile blood bank. Calling it that was their way of making it seem voluntary. It wasn’t. On the Farm, we weren’t raising food; we were the food. When I was kid, my dad used to love showing me these cheesy sci-fi movies—my cultural education, he called it. His favorite was 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 101 5/18/12 9:00 AM 102 Emily McKay Soylent Green, this one where everyone finds out the perfect food is made out of people. For weeks after, we ran around yelling, “Soylent Green is people!” I thought it was so funny. It wasn’t funny anymore. Still, donating wasn’t so bad, once you got used to feeling weak all the time. It kept us contentedly placid. It allowed us to pretend there wasn’t something much worse that would happen if we dared to step out of line. I tried not to think of that as I made my way across campus. If you wanted to go anywhere on campus without attracting attention just before or just after meals was the time to do it. As always Breeders lounged around the edges of the quad, smugly serene and dressed in mini skirts and skimpy tops, despite the weather. They didn’t have to worry about eighteenth birthdays. Of course the ones who were pregnant had other things to worry about. Sometimes it was just easier not to think about the things looming over us. The Greens all kept their heads down, shuffling across the quad like placid cows and I moved quickly to join them. There was safety in numbers—or the illusion of it—and a little extra warmth, too. Normally I kept my head down and stayed as close to the center of the pack as possible. Any excuse to avoid looking between the buildings that lined the quad. The last thing you wanted to do while walking to meal was to glance up and accidentally catch sight of one of the body of some Green tethered out just beyond the fences. The worst, of course, was the few hours they were still alive between when they were brought out and sunset. If the Dean was in a benevolent mood, he kept them tranqed. If not, they were awake and alert. Waiting for sunset. It was excruciating listening to their attempts to escape from the chains that kept them tied to the 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 102 5/18/12 9:00 AM THE FARM103 street lamps. Even worse was the sight of their mangled bodies the next day. On days like that, even Mel wanted to walk in the crowd. But today, I made myself look out beyond the fence. Between the buildings, maybe fifty, seventy feet away, I could the street lamps where they tethered the Greens. It had been a nearly a week since anyone had broken the rules. The crumpled remains of decomposing bodies were almost hard to pick out in the watery afternoon sunlight. What had once been four people were now little more than dark spots on the sidewalk. But I remembered walking past them. One had been a girl. The guys tethered near her had been trying to cut their hands free, she’d just stood there, jangling her chain in quiet disinterest. Like Mel would have done. That had been the day I’d gone from merely thinking about escaping to packing for it. The memory of that girl made me wonder: what would happen to Mel if I didn’t come back? Would Mel eventually work up the courage to leave the closet and face life on the Farm without me to protect her, or would she stay in the eight by twelve room until she starved? No, she wouldn’t starve. She’d die of thirst first, wouldn’t she? How long could she live up there without water? Three days, right? Maybe four. And dying of thirst wasn’t such a bad death. Not when you thought about it. Not compared to what might happen if we didn’t escape. What would happen if we were caught. For a half-second—maybe less—I considered it. Entertained that wisp of a fantasy. Life without the brutal responsibility of caring for Mel: my twin, my sister. My burden, my other half. In that moment, my pace slowed. The crowd flowed past me like the water of the nearby Red River, rushing around a rock. The stream of people jostled against me before someone bumped into 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 103 5/18/12 9:00 AM 104 Emily McKay me hard enough that I broke free of my imagination and stumbled forward a step or two before tumbling down on one knee. The packet of pills fell out of my pocket as I landed. The pain ricocheting up my leg was nothing compared to my panic as the blue plastic box tumbled to the ground. It landed beside my hand, but before I could grab it, a flip-flop clad foot kicked it beyond my reach. I saw it disappear into the scuffle of feet. The most valuable thing we owned: gone. I scrambled, rabbit-like after the blue box, launching myself forward to catch it before someone else kicked it beyond my reach. When I saw it a few feet way, I threw myself toward it, but a hand reached down and snatched it off the ground mere seconds before I could grab it. My heart leapt into my throat, panic making me breathless, even as I felt someone helping me to my feet. “These must be yours.” I didn’t even glance at the guy holding the pills out to me. I wrenched them from his hand, quickly flipping the box over to make sure it was unharmed, even though it had only been out of my hand for minute. “Thanks,” I muttered, hoping he would just walk away. “Must be pretty important to you,” he said, even as I saw him turning to walk away out of the corner of my eye. “You should keep track of your stuff.” I shoved my hand deep into my pocket, still clenching the pills. Relief made me light headed. Or maybe the Collab who had taken my weekly donation had just taken too much off the top. They did that sometimes, if your blood was particularly “clean” that day. My head spun when I jerked it up to look for the guy who’d handed the pills back to me. He was impossible to miss, the grey of his hoodie standing out in a sea of scarlet sweatshirts. Among the thou- 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 104 5/18/12 9:00 AM THE FARM105 sands of Greens making their way to third meal, only a few weren’t wearing the colors of the college that the Farm had once been. Mindlessly my eyes followed his progress toward the dining hall. Why had he handed the pills back to me? Had he not recognized them? Maybe a guy wouldn’t have. Thank God. I clenched my hand around the rigid plastic tightly enough for the edges to bite into palm skin. But I had it. Thank God, I still had the box. When I looked again, the guy in the grey sweatshirt was gone, disappeared into the crowd of the Greens. 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 105 5/18/12 9:00 AM 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 106 5/18/12 9:00 AM Chapter Two Lily S toner Joe’s had once been a college convenience store tucked into the basement of the dining hall. I’d known Joe since we were both kids and I could trust him. He was a good guy, even if Greens, Collabs and Breeders all shopped in his store. It was like accorded neutral territory. The Collabs could have shut the place down, but for whatever reason, they let us have it. Left us this one small seed of independence. Maybe they knew we’d be happy with it. Maybe it was just too much trouble to squash every bit of spirit. The wind picked up as I headed down the steps into the shelter of the alcove and let myself into the store, which was unusually dark for this time of day. Before I had a chance to wonder where he was, I felt something cold and sharp press against the side of my neck. “Holy crap!” I gasped. The hand holding the blade to my throat slackened and then fell away from my skin all together. “Lily?” “Yeah!” I said, accusation in my voice. “What the hell, Joe?” I didn’t want to piss him off, but . . . “Seriously. What the hell?” 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 107 5/18/12 9:00 AM 108 Emily McKay “Sorry. I’ve been, like, way tense lately.” My eyes had begun to adjust to the dim lighting and I could see his sheepish smile. “Obviously.” “What’s with the new security measures?” I eyed the knife in his hand. It had a long stainless steel handle and a flat face that ended in a sharp, angled blade. If I had to guess, I’d say Joe had repurposed a spatula from the kitchen that shared his building. “Dark times, Lil. Dark times.” Joe nodded gravely and as he spoke, his voice fell back into its normal cadence, like there was a silent Dude at the end of every sentence. He extended his hand and clasp mine briefly before giving me a little fist bump. “What can I get you today?” I didn’t ask what he meant by dark times. I didn’t like the idea that things might be even worse than I knew. Just one more reason Mel and I had to get out of the Farm. “I’m here to trade,” I said. “Whatcha need, whatcha got?” he asked, crossing to the counter that bisected the room. He set the shiv down and propped his hands on the scuffed glass top. I couldn’t tear my gaze from the weapon. It seemed so out of character. He must have noticed, because he surreptitiously nudged it to the edge of the counter, slipping it between two card board displays that had once held packs of gum but now contained old music CD’s. I pushed the shiv from my mind and mustered my courage. This was it. Moment of truth and all that. Just as I had carefully planned, Joe and I were alone. But I choked. My laundry list of must haves for the trip north suddenly seemed so . . . risky. “I um . . .” I let my words trail off as I shoved my hand in my pocket, relaxing infinitesimally as my fingers brushed plastic. The pills were still there. Still risky, still highly illegal, but still mine. 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 108 5/18/12 9:00 AM THE FARM109 “What’s up, Lil?” “I’ll look around,” I muttered, not quite meeting Joe’s gaze. “See what I can find.” I didn’t linger by the shelves of grooming supplies. Mel and I managed to stay basically clean. It was mostly breeders who bothered to trade for crap like that. Joe would have thought it strange if I’d looked there. Listlessly I ran my forefinger down a stack of meticulously folded sweatshirts. Most were red and gold with the stylized kangaroo on the front, but a few sported the gray and blue of the Dallas Cowboys. I poked through them a bit, as if one of them would magically transform into the bulky winter coat I so desperately needed. The food and snack shelf was looking a little bare. They feed us four mandatory meals a day. You might expect that given how overfed we were, no one would bother to trade for food. But Joe had told me once that the opposite was true. He did most of his business in food. That and the pharmaceuticals that had given him his start back in high school, back long before we were moved to the Farm for our “protection.” The food Joe sold wasn’t so much about quantity. It was about selection. Freedom of choice. And, of course, nostalgia. My fingers hovered a few inches above a can wrapped in dull silver paper. Joe shuffled beside me, such the attentive shop keep, since the store was empty except for me. “Is today the day you’re finally going to buy those peas?” I jerked my hand back to my pocket and looked up. “No.” “Come on,” he coaxed. “You look at them every time you come in. Man, you must love peas.” I’d never known that I loved them, until I couldn’t have them anymore. 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 109 5/18/12 9:00 AM 110 Emily McKay “You should buy them,” he said softly. “I’ll give you a good deal, since you’re my friend. It’ll be like a—” he hesitated. “—a present.” He’d probably been about to say a birthday present. Or maybe that catch in his voice had been something else. Maybe he didn’t know how close Mel and I were to our eighteenth. To our doomsday. I stuck my hand into my jeans pocket and fingered the tiny pebbles I always kept there. I blurted out, “I need a coat.” “I just got in a couple of new hoodies the other day.” Joe rounded the shelf to a haphazard stack of clothes. I stopped him before he could pull any out. “No, I need a coat. Like the biggest, thickest coat you can get.” He just stared blankly at me, like he couldn’t understand why I’d be so desperate to trade for something like that. Here in Texas, even North Texas, there were only a few days a year it got cold enough to need a big heavy coat. “It’s for Mel,” I explained. “Oh, right.” He nodded sagely. “She has that thing about the cold.” That thing was an unwillingness—or perhaps, an inability—to tell others when she was cold. Me, I bitch endlessly when I’m cold. I break out my scarf when it’s sixty-five degrees. Mel, on the other hand, once stood out in the snow until she was hypothermic. I still remember sitting by the door in our bedroom, my ear pressed to the crack in the door as I listened to our parents argue about it, because Dad had been in charge and he hadn’t noticed how cold she was. She’s not a normal child, our mother had said. When are you going to accept that? Two weeks later, Dad had left and we were on our own, just the three of us. And now it was just Mel and me. There were so many things I had to leave to chance. Mel get- 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 110 5/18/12 9:00 AM THE FARM111 ting cold wasn’t one of them. She wasn’t normal. Dad may never have accepted that, but I had. If I could only have one thing, it was a coat. “I saw Tad Jackson with a pretty big coat the other day,” Joe said. “Looked like the kind if thing one of the maintenance workers would have used. He had gloves too.” “Perfect.” I hadn’t dared hope for gloves. We had neoprene gloves from the lab and I’d been hoping they’d be warm enough. “Any chance you can get a second pair of gloves?” “It might take a couple a days, but I’ll see what I can do. It won’t be cheap though.” “It’s not all I need.” I sucked in a breath. I rushed through the next bit. “I need sleeping bags. Two it you can find them.” Joe’s eyebrows shot up, but I kept talking. Hell, go big or go home, right? “And a lighter.” I think I expected him to argue then. I’d known all along that he would probably figure out what was up—after all, Joe wasn’t an idiot—and I’d already decided playing dumb was the best defense. I’d expected him to warn me off, to remind me what had happened to all the kids who had tried and failed, but instead, he just studied me. “It’s because of your eighteenth birthday is coming up, isn’t it?” “I . . .” my voice quavered and I cleared my throat. “I don’t know what you’re talking about.” “You don’t have to do this.” His tone was serious. “You could get pregnant. That would protect you.” “Yeah. For nine months. After that, who knows what happens. And have you thought about those babies? What happens to them?” “I don’t . . . I don’t know.” Joe’s skin suddenly looked a sickly green in the dim light of the store. 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 111 5/18/12 9:00 AM 112 Emily McKay “Exactly. No one knows.” The scorn in my voice barely concealed the fear beneath it. Yeah, I acted all self-righteous about the Collabs and Breeders—the kids who betrayed the rest of us to save their own lives—but who knows, if it had been just me, I might have ditched the last shreds of my indignation and bred like a freakin’ bunny. But that wouldn’t protect Mel. “Besides, Mel couldn’t . . . She doesn’t like it when I touch her. She couldn’t be a Breeder.” Joe’s gaze was suddenly glued to a empty spot on the counter. “Yeah, I guess not,” he said in a limp voice. He looked like he couldn’t decide if he wanted to throw up or burst into tears. He’d always been such a genuinely nice guy—sensitive too, and I could tell the thought of what happened to Breeders really bugged him. “Hey, don’t worry about Mel and me.” My need to reassure him surprised me. “I’ve got it figured out.” His gaze shot to mine. Hopeful, almost. “You do?” “Yeah, I—” I stopped just short of telling him that Mel had figured out how to get off the Farm. “We’re going to be okay.” He studied my face. “Yeah, you and Mel were always so smart. If anyone could get off the Farm it would be you.” He nodded slowly, like he’d reached some sort of decision. ”You don’t have enough credits for all that stuff. You know that, right?” I started pulling things from my bag to trade. “Two bottles of shampoo, both of them mostly full. A bottle of conditioner.” He looked unimpressed. I moved on to the things I’d been hoarding for months. “Two tooth brushes and a tube of toothpaste. New in their packages.” He considered and I could see in his frown that he wanted it to be enough, even though we both knew it wasn’t. He blew out a breath. “Those will cover the coat and gloves.” 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 112 5/18/12 9:00 AM THE FARM113 “What about the sleeping bags? And the lighter?” I asked, because maybe it would be safer, for all of us, if I didn’t have to show him that last thing I had to trade. Joe just shook his head. “If it was stuff I just had in the store, maybe. But I’ll have to go looking for this stuff. Ask around. Attract attention. That’s a lot of risk.” “But you could do it?” “Yeah. Sure. Anything for a price, right? I know a guy in Baker Hall whose ‘roommate’ ”—Joe made air quotes to indicate that by “roommate” he really meant the college student who had lived in the dorm room back in the Before—“had been into camping and stuff like that. I could get all kinds of things from him.” “So you could get it?” I pressed. “If I had the right thing to trade? If I had something really valuable?” “Sure, man. I can get anything.” I reached into my pocket then and pulled out the plastic box of pills. I had three prized possessions. The first was a pair of gardening shears I’d found in an unlocked maintenance closet seven weeks ago. The second was a single capsule of valium. In the Before, I used to carry a couple with me all the time, just in case Mel freaked out completely. I had one pill left. The third was the contents of this box. Hand trembling, I set the pills on the counter. My fingers seemed to clench of their own accord and I had to force myself to release the box and nudge it across the counter toward Joe. When he just stared blankly at it, I reached over and flicked it open. The box fanned open to reveal three separate compartments, each containing a foil packet of twenty-one tiny pink pills and seven white ones. Joe frowned as he stared at it. “Dude.” He drew the word out and then looked up at me. “Is that what I think it is?” 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 113 5/18/12 9:00 AM 114 Emily McKay “Yes.” “I thought they were all gone.” “These were overlooked.” When the Collabs had first been recruited out of the ranks of Greens, their first task had been to destroy all forms of birth control. “Whoa.” His gaze darted to mine, suddenly far more serious than he normally was. “Does anyone else know you have these?” I thought of the guy out on the quad who hadn’t just seen them, but had held them in his hand. I imagined I could still feel the heat of his hand on the plastic. “No,” I lied. “Don’t let anyone else see them.” He reached out a hand, a sort of reverence on his face. But instead of touching the pills, like I expected, he shoved them across the counter toward me. “Put them away. If someone came in now . . .” As if I needed to be told that. I shoved the pills deep into my pocket. Even though I felt better, having them so close, I still felt jumpy, too aware of them now and I found myself looking over my shoulder at the door to Joe’s even though I would have heard it open. “But they’ll be enough? For the things I need?” Joe sort of shook his head. “Man, I don’t know.” He ran a hand through his long, stringy hair. “But they’re valuable, right?” “Sure. But I’m not sure they’re worth the trouble. This kind of thing . . . Man, it’s—” Then he broke off abruptly, as if he’d either just thought of something or maybe decided not to tell me something. “It’s what?” “Nothing.” “What?” I pressed. “You were about to say something. It’s what?” 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 114 5/18/12 9:00 AM THE FARM115 He leaned forward across the counter, dropping his voice. “It’s the kind of thing people would trade.” “Yeah,” I said, feeling stupid. “That’s why I’m here, right?” “Sure. Yeah.” He answered quickly, though I could tell that wasn’t what he’d meant. “Right.” That was classic CYA if I’d ever seen it. “No,” I said, puzzling it through. “You didn’t mean trade with you. So trade with who? The Collabs?” I kept me eyes glued to his face, but the flicker of acknowledgment didn’t come quickly enough. “With the Dean’s Office?” I asked, not believing for a second that might actually be who he meant. But there it was in his eyes. That subconscious you- nailed-it look. “Shit,” I muttered. “They do that?” I had heard rumors, very vague rumors, of that sort of thing. Joe said nothing, his expression tight and unnaturally still like he’d given away far too much already. I didn’t think I was going to get any more from him, but I asked anyway. “But no one in the Dean’s Office would need these.” I tapped the top of the box. “These have no value to them. Why would they . . .” That’s when it hit me. “They wouldn’t want the pills. They’d want info about who had them. They’d reward someone willing to betray other Greens.” Disgust settled low on my belly. “Who would do that?” Before Joe could even open his mouth, I snapped. “Okay, I know. That sounded stupid.” “Not stupid,” Joe said “Just naïve. You and Mel, you’ve been like, completely isolated. You don’t know how bad it is. And something like this? This could buy someone a trip off the Farm.” “Seriously?” And for that flicker of a second, I considered how much easier it would be to purchase Mel’s freedom with my own life rather than to fight for it. Boy that was the ultimate cop out, wasn’t it? Trade my own life for Mel’s and I’d get to go to my death 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 115 5/18/12 9:00 AM 116 Emily McKay knowing I’d made the big sacrifice. I’d be completely absolved of the responsibility of taking care of her. It was a nice fantasy, even if it wasn’t a solution. “Will you get me the stuff I need?” I asked, because I couldn’t think any more about the politics on the Farm or the many ways people could betray one another. “Yeah. Sure. I can get it,” he said, only a trace of stoner-dude left in his voice. Joe’s sudden new gravity only ratcheted up my tension. I patted the box in my pocket. The pills rested right on top of that sick feeling of dread that knotted in my belly. “How much for the shiv?” I asked abruptly. Joe looked from the lump in my pocket back up to my eyes. Then he gave a sad little half smile as he pulled it from behind the CD’s and slid it across the counter. “I’ll throw it in for free. Try to lay low for a couple of days, okay?” “Mel and I always do.” I wrapped my hand around the handle of the shiv and the cool metal against my palm made me tremble. He nodded. “Come back in two days. I’ll have your stuff then.” He looked at my pocket again. As I walked toward the door, he added, “And be careful. You and Mel are more memorable than you think. A lot of people know where to find you.” Once I was outside of Stoner Joe’s, I climbed a few steps until I was able to peek over the wall of the alcove. I could hear the Greens around the corner. They wouldn’t notice me, huddled in the shadows. I pulled the pills from my pocket, slipped my hand under my sweatshirt and wedged the packet into my bra. Then I slipped the handle on the shiv through one of my belt loops. I turned the sharp edge away so it didn’t rub against my stomach before tugging the waistband of my sweatshirt low on my hips to hide the weapon. I was trembling before I even made it up the stairs and out of the 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 116 5/18/12 9:00 AM THE FARM117 alcove. The wind had died down and for the first time weeks, the sun peeked through the clouds, but its warmth didn’t seep through the fleece of my hoodie. Or past the frigid blanket of fear that had surrounded me. The quad was mostly empty now, with only a few Greens scuttling between buildings. I felt as vulnerable as they looked, the hairs on the back of my neck prickling with that being-watched feeling. I glanced over my shoulder back at Joe’s, wondering if he’d followed me out. He hadn’t, but I was being watched. A guy in a gray sweatshirt stood at the top stairs of the dining hall. With the sun at his back as he looked out across the quad, I couldn’t distinguish any of his features. Then he stilled, his gaze aimed toward me and I was sure he was the guy who’d picked up the pills that morning. I shivered in the sun, and picked up my pace, praying that Mel and I weren’t in serious trouble. Most Greens stuck to the dormitories. It wasn’t a rule or anything, just common sense. Greens were like those penguins you saw on nature shows, huddled on the packed ice, waiting for the ones on the edges to get knocked into the water and picked off by the elephant seals. Greens did everything together. Only a few had squatted other places. If Joe was right and these pills in my pocket were enough to buy someone’s freedom, then our little closet in the Science building wasn’t safe anymore. The guy in the grey sweatshirt could easily find us. Thank God our bags were packed and by the door. Mel and I could evacuate as soon as I got back to the room. I didn’t know yet where we would go. All I knew was I wanted to still be alive in two days so that I could keep that appointment with Joe. 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 117 5/18/12 9:00 AM 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 118 5/18/12 9:00 AM Chapter Three Mel M ost days Lily is the steady drumbeat. The rhythm of my heart. The repeating melody of the music in my head. But not today. Today she is a cacophony of dissonant notes. Bruno Mars singing Flight of the Bumblebees. Just wrong. A jumbled mess. Can’t listen. She’s out of rhythm. Trying to rush. Tempo’s all wrong. There’s no music in her today, only words. Talk, talk, talk, talk. That’s Lily. Never has a thought she doesn’t say aloud. Makes her feel the smart one. The normal one. As if I count less because I don’t jabber. Because I listen to the music instead of talking over it. I know I’m a burden. How twitchy it makes her, being the rhythm. Being the steady one. Twitchy and nervous. A rat-a-t at-t at. But we’re not ready. If we go now, we’ll be caught. Caught like Trickster’s bunnies. I know we’re not ready. Can’t make Lily hear it. All she hears is the clock. Tick tock, tick tock, tick tock. She doesn’t listen. All she does is talk. 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 119 5/18/12 9:00 AM 120 Emily McKay Talk, talk. Talk, talk. Tick tock, tick tock. Talk, talk. Talk, talk. I try to listen for the both of us, but I can’t hear over all her noise. Freedom sounds like Paganini, but the pianist is sitting on his hands. The orchestra too tinny and too loud by itself. Lily never understands that all the instruments have to play together to make music. Otherwise it’s just noise, noise, noise. By myself, I tap my head against the wall. Alone should be a blessing, but I’m haunted by the plan. My plan, Lily’s plan, the plan. It’s not about what’s missing, it’s what’s out of rhythm. I try to make the pianist play, try to hear why our plan won’t work, but the white noise of the room is in my ears, blocking out the music. All these things Lily has cluttered our room with. Everything has it’s own pitch if you listen for it. Most people don’t. Lily doesn’t listen for the rustling of a box of neoprene gloves or the steady hum of the eighteen microscopes. The high-pitched glassy squeal of the beakers and petri dishes. All of this stuff makes too much noise. I can’t hear the music. If I could, I’d know what’s missing. So I sort the things. Everything comes off the shelves. The big black book screamed beside the pink backpack. It slides into silence when I move it beside the twenty-four roll box of paper towels. The pink backpack, so jittery, quiets once I empty it and place beside the quilt. I do this, making sense of the chaos. If I can just isolate the melody—hear our escape plan—I’ll know what’s wrong. If I can’t make the piano play, the rhapsody won’t work. Lily might blame herself, but it’ll be both of us who die. Time is not on our side. Tick tock. Tick tock. Tick tock. Tick. Tick. Tick. 9783002005594_YoungAdultSa_TX.indd 120 5/18/12 9:00 AM WANT MORE? 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