“I don’t understand,” I whispered to the marble, my lips so close to its cool surface I was almost kissing it. “Why me? I don’t know what I can do to change the world . . . to stop evil like this. I’m still a child. I’m still in your shadow.”
I heard a rustling above me and looked up in time to see several crisp, brown autumn leaves swaying from side to side, gradually falling in miniature cyclones until they were suddenly caught by a bitter draft, scattering across the tomb and turning my world brown for a second.
I shivered. Outside, the first few flakes of snow were beginning to fall.
The icy chill was cleansing, and I wanted to stay and freeze—it was better than thinking about Tee. But Infanta was outside, and she wasn’t as keen on the cold and wet as I was.
I reached up and gripped the rim of the tomb. “I’ll get revenge for you, Grandmother, and for Tee, too. I don’t know how . . . but I’ll have Nathan’s blood on my hands, I promise. I’ll make you proud, as a duchess and a Heroine. Watch me break from your shadow. Watch me grow.”
I hoisted myself up, careful not to knock over any of the flowers, and slowly made my way back down the aisle toward Edmund, who weakly smiled and said, “Ready?”
I nodded. For much more than you can ever know.
Together we plunged back out into the December air.
Child, one day I will be dead, and you will have to walk alone. The day you learn to do that will be an important day. It is the day I will cease to call you “child.”
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CHAPTER THIRTY-SEVEN
Autumn
I sorted out all the riding gear myself when we returned to the stables, happy to delay returning to the palace for as long as possible. I was calm. Really calm, or maybe just numb.
After I led Infanta back into her stable, I hung around in the entrance to the building, leaning against a post and staring out at the strange mix of the pink sky and the falling snow. It was eerily empty, and quiet, until from behind the wings of the palace several tiny dark figures emerged, running so fast they all blurred into a group. I squinted and then cast a vision-enhancing spell.
It was Kaspar Varn, his younger brother, the American, Felix, and Charity Faunder, all in dark clothing and sprinting at their incredible vamperic speed along the road that led to the east gate. Each carried a small backpack, and they were unguarded.
As they disappeared out of sight, I felt my heart sink, and was bombarded with confusion and pain as Violet tuned in live to my sight.
I can’t look after you, not tonight, I thought. My friend was murdered.
She didn’t withdraw—she couldn’t—but she threw a few angry thoughts my way and faded a little.
“They’re going hunting,” someone said from behind me. It was Fallon.
I half turned but didn’t uncross my arms. I was too cold and too numb to do anything about it.
“I figured you would still be out here,” he continued, pulling me into him so my cheek rested against his warm chest. He reached down to unfold my arms.
“Your hands are like popsicles,” he murmured, waving his hand and casting a jacket into them, which he wrapped around my shoulders. He then lit a small flame that hovered between us, instantly defrosting my hands. “It’s December. You need to wear more layers,” he gently chided, fussing with my damp, frizzy hair so it parted neatly down the middle.
“I like the cold,” I whispered, peering up at him through my snow-adorned lashes as a flurry of the stuff blew into the stable.
He chuckled. “It fits your name. Cold to the touch, but fire to look at.”
My lips attempted a smile but only managed a flat line. “I think my grandmother looked into my eyes and saw my whole life mapped out ahead of me when she named me. I think she knew all of this.” I sidled into him, pushing the flame aside, and slotted myself in below his armpit so my back was half-pressed against his chest. He wrapped both arms around me and rested his chin on my shoulder. It felt safe.
“We’ll never know,” he whispered, squeezing me.
“We might. Violet sees the dead vamperic queen.”
He stilled, lifting his head up again. “Autumn, we don’t know enough about her powers yet to get hopes like those up.” He began gently rubbing my arms. “Don’t let yourself be hurt again. Let her go.”
“I have,” I assured him, doubting the statement myself.
“Good.”
The snow was definitely getting heavier, and though it wasn’t yet settling, I could see sludgy melt dripping from the gutter but never reaching the ground as it turned to ice right before my eyes.
“I want to go back for Tee’s funeral,” I said after a while. “It’s the least we can do.”
“I’m not sure we’ll be allowed, but yes, let’s try.”
“Tammy . . . Tammy will hate us. W-we let this happen,” I stuttered, feeling like I was actually going to cry. After everything she had done to help me . . .
He whirled me around and, with a finger, tilted my chin up toward him. “No, don’t play the blame game. The only evil in all this are the Extermino, and we won’t let them go unpunished. Tammy will understand.”
He kissed each cheek right below my eye, catching the first tears as they started to fall. Then he moved to my lips and caught them.
He suddenly pulled away and reached into his pocket. “I got you another charm for your bracelet.”
He unfurled his fingers to reveal a circle of gold threaded with black, about the size of a ring, and hanging from it a tiny black butterfly. Picking it up I could see there were tiny red roses engraved into its wings.
“Thank you,” I breathed, as astounded by the intricacy as I had been when I first received the bracelet.
He took it back from me and fiddled about, attaching it to one of the links of the bracelet I never took off.
“You’ve metamorphosed; left your chrysalis. That’s why I chose a butterfly. Sometimes I can’t even remember how you were once a caterpillar,” he muttered as he finally got the clip to catch on a ring.
I lifted my wrist into the light of the stable. “Is that a pick-up line?” I asked, admiring my new charm.
“If it works, it is,” he retorted smugly. “But you’re an adult now, that’s the point.”
I lowered my wrist and took hold of his hands, wrapping them around my neck so he pulled me closer. “Can . . . I come back to your room, tonight?”
He narrowed his eyes and tilted his head slightly to the side. “What are you after?”
“Nothing,” I whispered, reaching up to kiss him but he got there first, placing a finger between our lips.
“You’re lying. Don’t lie to me.”
I nodded, moving his finger aside, and finally pressed my lips to his. Then I tore myself away and headed out into the snow, turning my back to the palace so that I could face him as I walked.
“Everything, Your Highness. I want everything.”
One side of his lips curled upward into a smirk, and with a click of his fingers, the lights in the stables dimmed. He pushed off from the wall and I whirled to walk in the direction of the servants’ entrance, hands outstretched to catch the snow, pursued by the prince in the chilly, December, Athenean air.
He was still asleep when I woke up the next morning. I didn’t know how long I had slept—judging by the effort it took to sit up, not enough—but Tee’s bloody face, hanging behind my eyelids, had woken me. She’d been gone, the evening before, as gone from my mind as she was dead, but at night, when his arms weren’t around me, she came back.
I pushed my hair out of my eyes and examined him, splayed out across the very edge of his huge bed, toes curled around the rails at the end, sheets thrown off his naked body so they double-layered me. He was breathing heavily, so I eased myself very slowly out of bed and took the pure white sheet with me, wrapping it arou
nd myself like a towel. It was crude coverage, but I was hot and sweating, and I needed the cool air outside.
I opened the door to his balcony just as carefully and shut it again once both feet were on the snowy stone. It was freezing, painfully so, and I danced across the paving until I found a patch that was relatively clear to stand on.
Athenea was blanketed in white. The woods to my right had been frosted, the lake in the distance was frozen, the mountains were now snow cones, and the plains were covered in snow so deep and untouched I felt the wild urge to jump from the balcony and sink into it, to see if it was as soft as it looked.
It was magical—there never was much snow in London or Torbay—and even though the birds were still singing their chorus, I longed to get dressed and play.
Just as I went to turn away, a flash of light caught my eye. It flickered in and out of existence, right at the peak of the nearest mountain, and then suddenly grew, a bright orange flame against the white. Within a minute it looked like the whole mountain peak was on fire.
There was no mistaking it. It was a beacon; the last beacon, only ever lit after all twelve burned in the dimension. They were only ever lit in times of crisis . . .
The time of the Heroines had come, and the Extermino were making their move to drive a wedge between us and the humans . . . and Violet and I were the only forces stopping them.
I swallowed hard, and stared as an all-too-familiar stab shot through my temples. Like an arrow passing through, it didn’t stop hurting; it got worse, working its way up toward excruciating. I tried to scream for Fallon, but moving my jaw sent the pain spiraling down my neck and into my chest. All I could do was grip the railings as my body sank toward the ground and my vision tunneled to a focus on the beacon.
Inside, a clock struck the hour.
“It was a vision . . . of a girl,” chri’dom breathed. He lay splayed out across the floor, fragments of a shattered glass scattered in a puddle of red liquid near his hand. “Fetch Crimson and Pierre. Quickly!” he ordered his advisors. They fled the room, but he called his protégé back.
“Is it done? Is one of her school fellows dead?”
The protégé nodded.
chri’dom mustered the little strength he had to take the man’s hand. “Your loyalty to me is proved in blood. Fate did indeed choose you well. Now, help me stand, for the quest begins this day for the third Heroine of the Damned. I have seen her, Nathaniel; I have seen her, and she is human.”
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
My thanks go first to my (still) long-suffering parents. To my multitalented mother, for assuming the role of personal assistant; accountant; tax-explainer; house-buyer; interior designer; social-networking; fan-connecting, question-answering whiz woman; and general roadblock between my university-going self and the outside world when things became too hectic. My dad, for chauffeuring me and the kitchen sink from Devon to Oxford and back every eight weeks, and for mastering the Botley Road like a local.
Thank you to my agent, Scott Mendel, for continuing to do a superb job in spite of my slight tendency to leave foreign-translation contracts piled up on my printer beneath Beowulf for quite a lot of weeks.
Thank you to my U.K. editor, Amy McCulloch, for all of her great work on Autumn Rose while launching her debut novel and writing herself. (I think you must have a time-turner. Can I borrow it?)
Many thanks to my U.S. editor, Erika Tsang, and the William Morrow team over in the U.S., not just for their work on this novel but for their launch and love for The Dark Heroine: Dinner with a Vampire in March 2013.
To the various publishing houses working on translations of the Dark Heroine series across the world: thank you for taking my stories and characters to places and people I never dared to think would be touched by my words.
ALL of the thanks to the “Oxonian ’nillas” and certain other wonderful people of the university and city: for midnight coffee to get through the next essay crisis, chocolate-on-demand during Fifth Week Blues, the many drinks I probably owe you, wax play by candlelight at Formal Hall, and lots and lots of hugs—but mainly for ensuring I maintained some sanity when even the doctor said I’d lost most of it.
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Abigail Gibbs was born and raised in deepest, darkest Devon, England. She is currently studying for a B.A. in English at the University of Oxford and considers herself a professional student, as the real world is yet to catch up with her. Her greatest fear is blood and she is a great advocate of vegetarianism, which logically led to the writing of her first novel, Dinner with a Vampire. At age fifteen, she began posting serially online under the pseudonym Canse12, and after three years in the Internet limelight, set her sights toward total world domination. She splits her time between her studies, stories, and family, and uses coffee to survive all three.
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ALSO BY ABIGAIL GIBBS
The Dark Heroine: Dinner with a Vampire
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COPYRIGHT
This book is a work of fiction. The characters, incidents, and dialogue are drawn from the author’s imagination and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
AUTUMN ROSE. Copyright © 2014 by Abigail Gibbs. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the nonexclusive, nontransferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse-engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins ebooks.
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data has been applied for.
EPUB Edition OCTOBER 2013 ISBN 978006224863
ISBN 978-0-06-224875-6
14 15 16 17 18 DIX/XXX 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
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Abigail Gibbs, Autumn Rose
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