Backing onto the sidewalk, then to the deserted street, I looked up at the townhome’s second-story windows. I hadn’t played any sports in school. I hadn’t been at all coordinated. I wasn’t sure I could do this. Desperation convinced me, however. I had to do this.

  All the strength my supernatural Wolf gave me, I poured into that throw. Pitch it hard, focus on the window right above the bay window of the parlor. I grunted as I let the stone fly.

  It hit the brick wall and rattled back to the sidewalk.

  I growled at myself and tried again, quickly. It wouldn’t do any good to have the soldiers come out on the front porch. I hefted the piece of metal this time and threw.

  With a spine-numbing crack, the window shattered. The tinkling glass was like music.

  To be on the safe side, I turned to the window above the front door and tried again. My whole body was shaking with adrenaline, but I must have had the knack of it this time. I hit the window—this one didn’t shatter, but it crunched and a network of cracks laced out like a spiderweb.

  This whole plan depended on them going upstairs to see what had broken the windows. I had to hope they wouldn’t come out the front door.

  Did all plans feel this stupid in the middle of the execution?

  I ran to the front door and opened it. Leaning in over the threshold, I took a deep breath of air and listened close. I smelled Alette’s house, but with an edge. People I didn’t recognize had been moving around in here. But I didn’t hear anything, no breathing, no footsteps. Except overhead—it sounded like someone was running on the floor above me.

  I went inside and shut the door behind me.

  The place was dark, empty feeling. I didn’t hear any breathing—but vampires didn’t breathe.

  I moved through the foyer, attempting silence, but the rubber soles of my sneakers squeaked on the hardwood.

  The parlor window faced east. The room was almost light, now. Gray and faded, but still light. In another half hour, the sun would pour in.

  The furniture had been shoved away to make a clear space on the floor, in front of the window. In the middle of this space, far enough back that I couldn’t have seen her from the sidewalk, Alette sat on a chair. She faced the window, like she waited for the sun to rise, like she planned on watching it. Like she planned to die.

  “Alette?”

  She didn’t move. I stepped closer and saw her hands tied behind her back, to the legs of the chair. Rope or cord alone wouldn’t have been enough to hold her; there were also chains with crosses on them. Her feet were secured to the chair legs in front. A gag bound her mouth.

  Crosses. Leo needed mortal humans to tie Alette up with crosses, which he couldn’t touch.

  “Alette.” I ran to her. Inside the room, the rug squished wetly. What had happened here?

  I pulled down the gag, a strip of cotton fabric. It snagged on a fang, but I got it loose.

  Her gaze was wild, desperate, rapidly searching me. “Kitty, are you well? What have they done to you?”

  I worked on the rest of the bindings. I started to toss the crosses away, then decided I might need them. I shoved them in a coat pocket. “Forced my national television debut. Don’t worry, I’m okay. I’m not hurt.” Physically . . .

  “And Bradley—where’s Bradley?”

  Dammit. I hadn’t wanted to be the one to tell her. This was terrible to think, but I’d hoped Leo had gloated. So at least she’d know.

  “I’m sorry, Alette. Leo moved so fast, and he wasn’t expecting it.”

  “No, I imagine he wasn’t. It was probably quick, painless?”

  “Broken neck.”

  “Kitty.” Her hands free now, she put them on my shoulders, gripping them. Free of the crosses, she was strong, very strong, and at the moment she forgot it. She squeezed, pinching, and all I could do was brace against it, so she wouldn’t topple me over. “They’re my children, do you understand? My children’s children, I’ve looked after my family all these years. I’ve provided for them, watched them grow and prosper. That’s all I wanted for them, to prosper. Do you understand?”

  I started to. Bradley was her great—dozens of great—grandson. And Tom, and Emma, who said her family had been with Alette for decades. Her contacts in the police department, in the government—also descendants. That loyalty came from ties of blood. Would the distance in relationship have made any difference in Alette’s mind? I thought of all those portraits in the dining room, the photographs in the hall, in the parlor, all of them were her children. She kept pictures of her family throughout the house, like any doting mother.

  “Alette, we have to hurry, they’ll be back downstairs any minute.” Not to mention the sun was rising right in front of her. I held her hands and tried to pull her from the chair.

  “Wait a moment, Kitty—”

  “Geez, did a pipe break?” I’d been kneeling on the wet carpet. My jeans were damp.

  “Holy water. I’m sitting in it. I can’t walk.”

  Her feet were bare. Not only that, they were burned, the flesh red and shining, rashlike. The red crawled up from her soles, touching every place that had gotten wet. Even if she’d been able to break free, she couldn’t walk anywhere. I scented a whiff of damaged flesh.

  She looked at me matter-of-factly, though the acidlike touch of holy water must have tortured her.

  “Well, that’s just great.” I looked around, trying to think. I hadn’t come this far to be defeated by a damp rug. “If they had this much of it why didn’t they just throw it on you?”

  “It might not have killed me.”

  And whoever did this wanted Alette to watch the approach of her own death, through the window, to torture her.

  Glancing back at the pale sky, her face was ashen. She set her expression in a stoic mask.

  I couldn’t just close the drapes. They weren’t open; they were gone, completely removed. I had to get her out of here. The footsteps continued upstairs, but the soldiers would be back down in moments.

  “I’ll carry you,” I said, kneeling by the chair. I thought she’d argue, muttering about dignity with her British accent and stiff upper lip. She didn’t. Silently, she put her arms around my shoulders and held on as I lifted, cradling her. She was far lighter than I expected. She felt dried up and hollow.

  I had no idea where to go with her. I couldn’t take her outside, not with daylight so close and no shelter handy. Frantically, I looked around.

  “There’s a storage space under the stairs. The door is there, it’s a hidden panel.”

  When she pointed to it, I saw the line that marked the door. Setting her down, I wrenched open the thin plywood door, wincing at how much noise I made. Quiet, had to be quiet.

  Alette leaned on me, unable to stand by herself. Together, we fell into the storage space. I pulled the door closed just as footsteps sounded on the stairs over our heads.

  We lay curled together against a pile of junk, holding our breaths. At least I held my breath. We stared at the door ahead of us as if we could see what was happening outside.

  Footsteps crossed the floor of the foyer and stopped at the entrance to the parlor. Another set of footsteps followed.

  “Shit,” a male voice said.

  “Maybe she’s already gone,” a second voice said. “Burned up.”

  “There’s not any ash. There should be ash. A burning smell. Something.”

  “You ever see one of them go in sunlight?”

  After a pause, the other said, “No.”

  “Look, even if she found a way to escape, it’s too close to dawn. She won’t get far—hell, she won’t even leave the house. We’ll look.”

  “You don’t suppose she turned into a bat or something, do you?”

  “Uh, no.”

  Footsteps crossed back and forth, moved to the back of the house, returned to the stairs. They didn’t come near the door to the storage space.

  The closet ran the entire length of the flight of stairs, narrowing at the end. Des
pite this, we didn’t have much room to move. In the faint light that seeped through the crack under the door, I could see that the place was crammed with boxes, cleaning equipment like brooms, mops, and buckets, old baby strollers, a high chair, a clothes rack stuffed with coats. Like any normal family’s storage space. I got the feeling Alette had clung to the model of a normal family life after becoming a vampire.

  I wondered how Leo fit into that.

  “My hero.” She looked at me and attempted a grim smile. Then, she slumped back, letting out a soft groan. If I didn’t know better I’d have said she fainted.

  I touched her, shook her shoulder. She was cold, stiff almost. Panicked, I almost shouted her name. I couldn’t lose her now.

  She touched her forehead, wincing, for all the world like a distraught lady in a Victorian novel. We needed a fainting couch.

  I hissed, trying to keep my voice to a whisper, “What’s wrong? What’s the matter? It’s the sun, isn’t it? It’s too close to dawn—”

  “I haven’t fed tonight,” she said.

  I stared at her, astounded. I was holding on to a starving vampire. Could I be any more stupid?

  “Never mind that,” she continued, trying to sit up. “Leo is still in the house. We’ve got to find him, I won’t have him destroying what I’ve built here.”

  “You’re not in any shape to go against Leo,” I said, thinking of her injured feet as well as her lack of food.

  “We can’t stay locked up here, cowering, all day.” She straightened, pulling herself out of my grip. She moved slowly, stiffly, like an arthritic old woman. “For good or ill, I must face him now. I don’t expect you to come along. This is my fight. I’m the one who didn’t see Leo’s true colors. I don’t believe it, almost two hundred years together and he picks now to stage a coup.”

  She wouldn’t last, not in her condition. I’d seen him move against Bradley.

  “Would it help?” I spoke quickly, before I lost my nerve. “If you took some of my blood, would it help you?”

  “Kitty, if you’re suggesting what I think you are, don’t—”

  “Because I’m not letting you go out there alone in your condition. And I can’t take on Leo by myself. Will it help you?”

  She hesitated a long, strained moment before saying, “Yes, it would.”

  “Then you have to.”

  God, my heart was pounding like a jackhammer. It overwhelmed thought. Lots of people, human servants, did this all the time. Nothing to it.

  Except she was predator, and I was suddenly prey. I had an urge to defend myself. Or run. Fight or flight.

  “Your wolf doesn’t like the idea much, does she?” Alette said.

  “No,” I said, my voice wavering. “She—I—I mean, we don’t much like feeling trapped. I’m sorry, it’s under control, it’s okay—”

  She spoke, gently, soothingly. “I understand. You’re being perfectly reasonable. You should be frightened of me.”

  “I’m not, not really.” But I was. I knew what she was, intellectually I’d always known. But this was the reality, that she could devour me and I wouldn’t be able to do anything about it.

  But she wouldn’t, she wasn’t like that, she was kind. If only the last week hadn’t completely eroded my faith in my ability to judge character.

  “Just a little. I promise,” she said. “A few seconds and it will be over. Is that all right?”

  I nodded. She touched my face. She was a ghost in the pale light. “I will not betray your trust. Do you understand?”

  “Yes.”

  “Are you left- or right-handed?”

  “Right,” I whispered.

  She took my left hand and moved toward me, leaning so she spoke close to my ear. Her voice had a rhythm, lulling. It ran along my nerves, soothing them, coaxing them from taut panic to calm. More than calm—I felt yearning.

  “Do not fear me. I would not have you come to me afraid.”

  She kissed my cheek, and I leaned into her. I let her hold me in her arms, let her do anything she wanted to me, because her touch reached deep inside me, into my gut. A warmth rose there; my body clenched in anticipation.

  Her breath caressed my neck. I might have moaned a little, because I felt so warm, burning up. She held me close, pulling that warmth into her.

  “Rest your head, my dear.” She guided my head to her shoulder. I shut my eyes and pressed my face against her.

  She pushed the coat sleeve up my left arm, past the elbow. She supported the arm—I couldn’t have, at that point. I felt like I was melting; I wanted to melt into her. She kissed the inside of my arm, firing all the nerves. I bit my lip, overwhelmed.

  She traced a line up my forearm with her tongue, tasting and kissing. My hand closed into a fist, which she braced. Her mouth closed over my wrist, but I didn’t feel anything except her attention, her caresses, her love.

  The skin pinched, the bite. By then, I wanted it.

  When she drew away, I felt like a veil had fallen, or that I’d woken from a dream.

  I needed a cold shower. Very cold.

  “It’s over,” she said. And it was. She straightened, pulling away from me. I didn’t know where I’d been, but suddenly I was back in the closet under Alette’s stairs, in the dark, wrapped in a trenchcoat. “Are you all right?”

  “Um, yeah. I mean, I think . . . wow.” It made sense, really. All part of that vampire seduction gambit: lure the prey to you, give it a reason to open its veins. Sure cut down on that messy struggling. “Just so you know, I’m straight. Totally straight. As an arrow.”

  Her voice held a smile. “So am I.”

  I smelled a touch of blood on her breath. My blood.

  She no longer sounded tired, defeated, like she had a moment ago. She sat straight without effort, and the glint in her eye had returned. She seemed ready for battle.

  Two sets of footsteps pounded across the foyer, right outside our hiding place. Alette looked out at the sound, frowning. Then, she pushed at the door.

  “No—” I grabbed for her but missed. She slipped through the opening before I could reach her.

  What could I do but follow?

  Outside, in the foyer, she stood tall on her injured feet—except they didn’t seem quite as injured. The redness seemed to have faded, just as her face now seemed flushed and lively.

  Before her, two black-clad soldiers held handguns pointed at her. They clutched the guns in two-handed grips, straight-armed, sighting down the barrels.

  “You don’t want to do that,” Alette said, her voice like honey, music, seduction, passion, all together. “You’d like to put your weapons down now.”

  Calmly, she looked back and forth between them. I couldn’t see Alette’s eyes at this moment. I didn’t want to—her gaze focused intently on the soldiers. The men didn’t shoot, they didn’t say anything. One of them—his arms were trembling, causing the gun to waver.

  “I know you’re both reasonable gentlemen. You deserve a rest. You’re very calm. Very quiet. That’s right.”

  They both lowered their arms slowly, hypnotically, until they were hanging loose at their sides. After that, they didn’t twitch a muscle. They didn’t shiver, they didn’t blink. They stood like statues, caught in Alette’s gaze. Their breathing was slow and rhythmic, as if they slept, but their eyes were open. One of the guys’ jaw hung open a little. He wasn’t quite drooling.

  Alette pulled the guns out of their hands and gingerly put the weapons in the closet. She closed the door. She left the soldiers standing motionless in the foyer.

  How did vampires do that?

  I crept past them, hardly believing they wouldn’t reach out to grab me.

  She went to the back of the foyer, to the hallway that led to the kitchen. “Leo will be downstairs by this hour.”

  Her gaze narrowed. The hunter had found her trail.

  She walked confidently down the hallway, which opened to a modern, impressively furnished kitchen—stainless-steel counters, pots hanging ab
ove an island workstation. It seemed to be equipped to prepare and serve state dinners. Who was I to say it hadn’t? Alette passed it all by, heading for a door on the far side, by the fridge.

  She paused, hand on the doorknob, tilting her head to listen. So, that was the door to the basement, where the vampires spent their days in darkness and safety. Leo might be stretching out for a nap, thinking he was safe.

  Or he might have been waiting for us, armed with machine guns.

  “Alette, this isn’t—”

  She opened the door.

  Common sense didn’t play any part in her current motivation. Revenge probably had a big part in it, along with a liberal dose of blind rage. She didn’t wait to see if I’d follow or not.

  I followed.

  The glow of soft lighting cast an aura up the carpeted stairs. Soundlessly, Alette stepped down.

  The basement room was as Victorian in decoration as the rest of the house. Brocade wallpaper, plush carpet, antique lamps. It was a bedroom. No coffins, but a king-sized four-poster bed sat in the back, along with dressers and wardrobes, and a vanity table without the mirror.

  Leo sat on the edge of the bed, leaning over the body of a young woman. Her brown hair lay loose over her shoulders, and her hands were folded over her stomach. She wore a college logo sweatshirt and faded jeans.

  “It’s Emma,” I whispered.

  “He used her as a hostage. That was how he overcame me. He promised to keep her safe,” she said, sharp as steel, biting off the words.

  Emma seemed asleep. I hoped she was just asleep.

  Leo looked up. He wiped his mouth with the back of his hand—an ominous gesture, though I didn’t see what he wiped away. A snarl curled his lips. He stood, clenching his hands, and took a step toward us. He faced Alette across the room.

  “You’re supposed to be dead,” Leo said, his voice low, tight with emotion.

  “I’ve been dead for quite some time, my dear.”

  I left the stairs and moved from behind her, my back hunched like hackles rising, glaring warily.

  His gaze met mine and narrowed. “Flemming set you loose, did he? He’s too soft for the game he’s playing.”