Secret Vampire
or Marilyn Marlow,
a marvel of an agent.
And with thanks to Jeanie Danek
and the other wonderful nurses like her.
Chapter 1
It was on the first day of summer vacation that Poppy
found out she was going to die.
It happened on Monday, the first real day of vacation
(the weekend didn’t count). Poppy woke up feeling
gloriously weightless and thought, No school. Sunlight was
streaming in the window, turning the sheer hangings around
her bed filmy gold. Poppy pushed them aside and jumped
out of bed—and winced.
Ouch. That pain in her stomach again. Sort of a gnawing,
as if something were eating its way toward her back. It helped
a little if she bent over.
No, Poppy thought. I refuse to be sick during summer
vacation. I refuse. A little power of positive thinking
is what’s
needed here.
Grimly, doubled over—think positive, idiot!—she made her
way down the hall to the turquoise-and-gold-tiled bathroom.
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L.J. Smith
At first she thought she was going to throw up, but then the
pain eased as suddenly
as it had come. Poppy straightened and
regarded
her tousled reflection triumphantly.
“Stick with me, kid, and you’ll be fine,” she whispered
to
it, and gave a conspiratorial wink. Then she leaned forward,
seeing her own green eyes narrow in suspicion. There on her
nose were four freckles. Four and a half, if she were completely
honest, which Poppy North usually was. How childish, how—
cute! Poppy stuck her tongue out at herself and then turned
away with great dignity, without bothering to comb the wild
coppery curls that clustered over her head.
She maintained the dignity until she got to the kitchen,
where Phillip, her twin brother, was eating Special K. Then she
narrowed her eyes again, this time at him. It was bad enough
to be small, slight, and curly-haired—to look, in fact, as much
like an elf as anything she’d ever seen sitting on a buttercup
in a children’s picture book—but to have a twin who was tall,
Viking-blond, and classically handsome . . . well, that just
showed a certain deliberate malice in the makeup of the universe,
didn’t it?
“Hello, Phillip,” she said in a voice heavy with menace.
Phillip, who was used to his sister’s moods, was unimpressed.
He lifted his gaze from the comic section
of the L.A.
Times for a moment. Poppy had to admit that he had nice eyes:
questing green eyes with very dark lashes. They were the only
thing the twins had in common.
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Secret Vampire
“Hi,” Phillip said flatly, and went back to the comics.
Not many kids Poppy knew read the newspaper, but that was
Phil all over. Like Poppy, he’d been a junior at El Camino
High last year, and unlike Poppy, he’d made straight A ’s
while starring on the football team, the hockey team, and
the baseball team. Also serving as class president. One of
Poppy’s greatest joys in life was teasing him. She thought he
was too straitlaced.
Just now she giggled and shrugged, giving up the menacing
look. “Where’s Cliff and Mom?” Cliff Hilgard was their
stepfather of three years and even straighter-laced than Phil.
“Cliff ’s at work. Mom’s getting dressed. You’d better eat
something or she’ll get on your case.”
“Yeah, yeah . . .” Poppy went on tiptoe to rummage
through
a cupboard. Finding a box of Frosted Flakes, she thrust a hand
in and delicately pulled out one flake. She ate it dry.
It wasn’t all bad being short and elfin. She did a few dance
steps to the refrigerator, shaking the cereal box in rhythm.
“I’m a . . . sex pixie!” she sang, giving it a foot-stomping
rhythm.
“No, you’re not,” Phillip said with devastating calm. “And
why don’t you put some clothes on?”
Holding the refrigerator door open, Poppy looked down
at herself. She was wearing the oversize T-shirt she’d slept in. It
covered her like a minidress. “This is clothes,” she said serenely,
taking a Diet Coke from the fridge.
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L.J. Smith
There was a knock at the kitchen door. Poppy saw who it
was through the screen.
“Hi, James! C’mon in.”
James Rasmussen came in, taking off his wraparound
Ray-Bans. Looking at him, Poppy felt a pang—as always. It
didn’t matter that she had seen him every day, practically, for
the past ten years. She still felt a quick sharp throb in her chest,
somewhere between sweetness and pain, when first confronted
with him every morning.
It wasn’t just his outlaw good looks, which always reminded
her vaguely of James Dean. He had silky light brown hair, a subtle,
intelligent face, and gray eyes that were alternately intense and
cool. He was the handsomest boy at El Camino High, but that
wasn’t it, that wasn’t what Poppy responded to. It was something
inside him, something mysterious and compelling and always just
out of reach. It made her heart beat fast and her skin tingle.
Phillip felt differently. As soon as James came in, he stiffened
and his face went cold. Electric dislike flashed between
the two boys.
Then James smiled faintly, as if Phillip’s reaction amused
him. “Hi.”
“Hi,” Phil said, not thawing in the least. Poppy had the
strong sense that he’d like to bundle her up and rush her out
of the room. Phillip always overdid the protective-brother bit
when James was around. “So how’s Jacklyn and Michaela?” he
added nastily.
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James considered. “Well, I don’t really know.”
“You don’t know? Oh, yeah, you always drop your girlfriends
just before summer vacation. Leaves you free to maneuver,
right?”
“Of course,” James said blandly. He smiled.
Phillip glared at him with unabashed hatred.
Poppy, for her part, was seized by joy. Goodbye, Jacklyn;
goodbye Michaela. Goodbye to Jacklyn’s elegant long legs and
Michaela’s amazing pneumatic
chest. This was going to be a
wonderful summer.
Many people thought Poppy and James’s relationship
platonic.
This wasn’t true. Poppy had known for years that she
was going to marry him. It was one of her two great ambitions,
the other being to see the world. She just hadn’t gotten around
to informing
James yet. Right now he still thought he liked
long-legged girls with salon fingernails and Italian
pumps.
“Is that a new CD?” she said, to distract him from his stare
out with his future brother-in-law.
James hefted it. “It’s the new Ethnotechno release.”
Poppy cheered. “More Tuva throat singers—I can’t wait.
Let’s go listen to it.” But just then her mother walked in.
Poppy’s mother was cool, blond, and perfect, like an Alfred
Hitchcock heroine. She normally wore an expression of
effortless efficiency. Poppy, heading out of the kitchen, nearly
ran into her.
“Sorry—morning!”
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L.J. Smith
“Hold on a minute,” Poppy’s mother said, getting hold
of Poppy by the back of her T-shirt. “Good morning, Phil;
good morning, James,” she added. Phil said good morning and
James nodded, ironically
polite.
“Has everybody had breakfast?” Poppy’s mother asked,
and when the boys said they had, she looked at her daughter.
“And what about you?” she asked, gazing into Poppy’s
face.
Poppy rattled the Frosted Flakes box and her mother
winced. “Why don’t you at least put milk on them?”
“Better this way,” Poppy said firmly, but when her mother
gave her a little push toward the refrigerator, she went and got
a quart carton of lowfat milk.
“What are you planning to do with your first day of freedom?”
her mother said, glancing from James to Poppy.
“Oh, I don’t know.” Poppy looked at James. “Listen
to
some music; maybe go up to the hills? Or drive to the beach?”
“Whatever you want,” James said. “We’ve got all summer.”
The summer stretched out in front of Poppy, hot and
golden and resplendent. It smelled like pool chlorine
and
sea salt; it felt like warm grass under her back. Three whole
months, she thought. That’s forever.
Three months is forever.
It was strange that she was actually thinking this when it
happened.
“We could check out the new shops at the Village—”
she
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Secret Vampire
was beginning, when suddenly the pain struck and her breath
caught in her throat.
It was bad—a deep, twisting burst of agony that made her
double over. The milk carton flew from her fingers and everything
went gray.
Chapter 2
Poppy!” Poppy could hear her mother’s voice, but she
couldn’t see anything. The kitchen floor was obscured
by dancing black dots.
“Poppy, are you all right?” Now Poppy felt her mother’s
hands grasping her upper arms, holding her anxiously. The
pain was easing and her vision was coming back.
As she straightened up, she saw James in front of her. His face
was almost expressionless, but Poppy knew him well enough to
recognize the worry in his eyes. He was holding the milk carton,
she realized. He must have caught it on the fly as she dropped
it—amazing reflexes, Poppy thought vaguely. Really amazing.
Phillip was on his feet. “Are you okay? What happened?”
“I—don’t know.” Poppy looked around, then shrugged,
embarrassed. Now that she felt better she wished they weren’t
all staring at her so hard. The way to deal with the pain was to
ignore it, to not think about it.
“
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Secret Vampire
“It’s just this stupid pain—I think it’s gastrowhatchmacallit.
You know, something I ate.”
Poppy’s mother gave her daughter the barest fraction
of
a shake. “Poppy, this is not gastroenteritis. You were having
some pain before—nearly a month ago, wasn’t it? Is this the
same kind of pain?”
Poppy squirmed uncomfortably. As a matter of fact, the
pain had never really gone away. Somehow, in the excitement
of end-of-the-year activities, she’d managed to disregard it, and
by now she was used to working around it.
“Sort of,” she temporized. “But—”
That was enough for Poppy’s mother. She gave Poppy a
little squeeze and headed for the kitchen telephone. “I know
you don’t like doctors, but I’m calling Dr. Franklin. I want him
to take a look at you. This isn’t something we can ignore.”
“Oh, Mom, it’s vacation. . . .”
Her mother covered the mouthpiece of the phone. “Poppy,
this is nonnegotiable. Go get dressed.”
Poppy groaned, but she could see it was no use. She beckoned
to James, who was looking thoughtfully
into a middle distance.
“Let’s at least listen to the CD before I have to go.”
He glanced at the CD as if he’d forgotten it, and put down
the milk carton. Phillip followed them into the hallway.
“Hey, buddy, you wait out here while she gets dressed.”
James barely turned. “Get a life, Phil,” he said almost
absently.
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L.J. Smith
“Just keep your hands off my sister, you deve.”
Poppy just shook her head as she went into her room. As
if James cared about seeing her undressed. If only, she thought
grimly, pulling a pair of shorts out of a drawer. She stepped
into them, still shaking her head. James was her best friend,
her very best friend, and she was his. But he’d never shown
even the slightest desire to get his hands on her. Sometimes
she
wondered if he realized she was a girl.
Someday I’m going to make him see, she thought, and
shouted out the door for him.
James came in and smiled at her. It was a smile other people
rarely saw, not a taunting or ironic grin, but a nice little smile,
slightly crooked.
“Sorry about the doctor thing,” Poppy said.
“No. You should go.” James gave her a keen glance. “Your
mom’s right, you know. This has been going on way too long.
You’ve lost weight; it’s keeping
you up at night—”
Poppy looked at him, startled. She hadn’t told anybody
about how the pain was worse at night, not even James. But—
sometimes James just knew things. As if he could read her
mind.
“I just know you, that’s all,” he said, and then gave her a mischievous
sideways glance as she stared at him. He unwrapped
the CD.
Poppy shrugged and flopped on her bed, staring at the
ceiling. “Anyway, I wish Mom would let me have one day of
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Secret Vampire
vacation,” she said. She craned her neck to look at James speculatively.
“I wish I had a mom like yours. Mine’s always worrying
and trying to fix me.”
“And mine doesn’t really care if I come or go. So which is
worse?” James said wryly.
“Your parents let you have your own apartment.”
“In a building they own. Because it’s cheaper than hiring
a manager.” James shook his head, his eyes on the CD he was
putting in the player. “Don’t knock your parents, kid. You’re
luckier than you know.”
Poppy thought about that as the CD started. She and James
both liked trance—the underground electronic
sound that had
come from Europe. James liked the techno beat. Poppy loved
it because it was real music, raw and unpasteurized, made by
people who believed in it. People who had the passion, not
people
who had the money.
Besides, world music made her feel a part of other places.
She loved the differentness of it, the alienness.
Come to think of it, maybe that was what she liked about
James, too. His differentness. She tilted her head to look at him
as the strange rhythms of Burundi
drumming filled the air.
She knew James better than anyone, but there was always
something, something about him that was closed off to her.
Something about him that nobody could reach.
Other people took it for arrogance, or coldness, or aloofness,
but it wasn’t really any of those things. It was just—
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L.J. Smith
differentness. He was more different than any of the exchange
students at school. Time after time, Poppy felt she had almost
put her finger on the difference, but it always slipped away.
And more than once, especially late at night when they were
listening to music or watching the ocean, she’d felt he was
about to tell her.
And she’d always felt that if he did tell her, it would be
something important, something as shocking
and lovely as
having a stray cat speak to her.
Just now she looked at James, at his clean, carven profile
and at the brown waves of hair on his forehead,
and thought,
He looks sad.
“Jamie, nothing’s wrong, is it? I mean, at home, or anything?”
She was the only person on the planet allowed to call
him Jamie. Not even Jacklyn or Michaela had ever tried that.
“What could be wrong at home?” he said, with a smile
that didn’t reach his eyes. Then he shook his head dismissively.
“Don’t worry about it, Poppy. It’s nothing important—just a
relative threatening to visit. An unwanted relative.” Then the
smile did reach his eyes, glinting there. “Or maybe I’m just
worried about you,” he said.
Poppy started to say, “Oh, as if, ” but instead she found
herself saying, oddly, “Are you really?”
Her seriousness seemed to strike some chord. His smile
disappeared, and Poppy found that they were simply looking
at each other, without any insulating humor between them.
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Secret Vampire
Just gazing into each other’s eyes. James looked uncertain,
almost vulnerable.
“Poppy—”
Poppy swallowed. “Yes?”
He opened his mouth—and then he got up abruptly and
went to adjust her 170-watt Tall-boy speakers. When he turned
back, his gray eyes were dark and fathomless.
“Sure, if you were really sick, I’d be worried,” he said lightly.
“That’s what friends are for, right?”
Poppy deflated. “Right,” she said wistfully, and then gave
him a determined smile.
“But you’re not sick,” he said. “It’s just something you
need to get taken care of. The doctor’ll probably give you
some antibiotics or something—with a big needle,” he added
wickedly.
“Oh, shut up,” Poppy said. He knew she was terrified
of
injections. Just the thought of a needle entering
her skin . . .
“Here comes your mom,” James said, glancing at the door,
which was ajar. Poppy didn’t see how he could hear anybody
coming—the music was loud and the hallway was carpeted.
But an instant later her mother pushed the door open.
“All right, sweetheart,” she said briskly. “Dr. Franklin says
come right in. I’m sorry, James, but I’m going to have to take
Poppy away.”
“That’s okay. I can come back this afternoon.”
Poppy knew when she was defeated. She allowed her
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L.J. Smith
mother to tow her to the garage, ignoring James’s miming of
someone receiving a large injection.
An hour later she was lying on Dr. Franklin’s examining
table, eyes politely averted as his gentle fingers
probed her
abdomen. Dr. Franklin was tall, lean, and graying, with the
air of a country doctor. Somebody
you could trust absolutely.
“The pain is here?” he said.
“Yeah—but it sort of goes into my back. Or maybe I just
pulled a muscle back there or something. . . .”
The gentle, probing fingers moved, then stopped. Dr.
Franklin’s face changed. And somehow, in that moment,
Poppy knew it wasn’t a pulled muscle. It wasn’t an upset
stomach; it wasn’t anything simple; and things were about to
change forever.
All Dr. Franklin said was, “You know, I’d like to arrange for a
test on this.”
His voice was dry and thoughtful, but panic curled through
Poppy anyway. She couldn’t explain what was happening inside
her—some sort of dreadful premonition, like a black pit opening
in the ground in front of her.
“Why?” her mother was asking the doctor.
“Well.” Dr. Franklin smiled and pushed his glasses up.
He tapped two fingers on the examining table. “Just as part of
a process of elimination, really. Poppy says she’s been having
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Secret Vampire
pain in the upper abdomen, pain that radiates to her back,
pain that’s worse at night. She’s lost her appetite recently,
and she’s lost weight. And her gallbladder is palpable—that
means I can feel that it’s enlarged. Now, those are symptoms
of a lot of things, and a sonogram will help rule out some
of them.”
Poppy calmed down. She couldn’t remember what a
gallbladder did but she was pretty sure she didn’t need it.
Anything involving an organ with such a silly name couldn’t
be serious. Dr. Franklin was going on, talking about the
pancreas and pancreatitis and palpable livers, and Poppy’s
mother was nodding as if she understood. Poppy didn’t
understand, but the panic was gone. It was as if a cover had
been whisked neatly over the black pit, leaving no sign that
it had ever been there.
“You can get the sonogram done at Children’s Hospital
across the street,” Dr. Franklin was saying. “Come back here
after it’s finished.”
Poppy’s mother was nodding, calm, serious, and efficient.
Like Phil. Or Cliff. Okay, we’ll get this taken care of.
Poppy felt just slightly important. Nobody she knew had
been to a hospital for tests.
Her mother ruffled her hair as they walked out of Dr.
Franklin’s office. “Well, Poppet. What have you done to yourself
now?”
Poppy smiled impishly. She was fully recovered from her
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L.J. Smith
earlier worry. “Maybe I’ll have to have an operation and I’ll
have an interesting scar,” she said, to amuse her mother.
“Let’s hope not,” her mother said, unamused.
The Suzanne G. Monteforte Children’s Hospital was a
handsome gray building with sinuous curves and giant picture
windows. Poppy looked thoughtfully
into the gift shop as they
passed. It was clearly a kid’s gift shop, full of rainbow Slinkys
and stuffed animals that a visiting adult could buy as a lastminute
present.
A girl came out of the shop. She was a little older than
Poppy, maybe seventeen or eighteen. She was pretty, with an
expertly made-up face—and a cute bandanna which didn’t
quite conceal the fact that she had no hair. She looked happy,
round-cheeked, with earrings dangling jauntily beneath the
bandanna—
but Poppy felt a stab of sympathy.
Sympathy . . . and fear. That girl was really sick. Which
was what hospitals were for, of course—for really sick people.
Suddenly Poppy wanted to get her own tests over with and get
out of here.
The sonogram wasn’t painful, but it was vaguely disturbing.
A technician smeared some kind of jelly over Poppy’s
middle, then ran a cold scanner over it, shooting sound waves
into her, taking pictures of her insides. Poppy found her mind
returning to the pretty girl with no hair.
To distract herself, she thought about James. And for some
reason what came to mind was the first time she’d seen James,
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Secret Vampire
the day he came to kindergarten.
He’d been a pale, slight boy
with big gray eyes and something subtly weird about him that
made the bigger boys start picking on him immediately. On
the playground they ganged up on him like hounds around a
fox—until Poppy saw what was happening.
Even at five she’d had a great right hook. She’d burst into
the group, slapping faces and kicking shins until the big boys
went running. Then she’d turned to James.
“Wanna be friends?”
After a brief hesitation he’d nodded shyly. There had been
something oddly sweet in his smile.
But Poppy had soon found that her new friend was strange
in small ways. When the class lizard died, he’d picked up the
corpse without revulsion and asked Poppy if she wanted to
hold it. The teacher had been horrified.
He knew where to find dead animals, too—he’d shown her
a vacant lot where several rabbit carcasses lay in the tall brown
grass. He was matter-of-fact about it.
When he got older, the big kids stopped picking on him.
He grew up to be as tall as any of them, and surprisingly
strong and quick—and he developed a reputation for being
tough and dangerous. When he got angry, something almost
frightening shone in his gray eyes.
He never got angry with Poppy, though. They’d remained
best friends all these years. When they’d reached junior high,
he’d started having girlfriends—all the girls at school wanted
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L.J. Smith
him—but he never kept any of them long. And he never
confided in them; to them he was a mysterious, secretive bad
boy. Only Poppy saw the other side of him, the vulnerable,
caring
side.
“Okay,” the technician said, bringing Poppy back to the
present with a jerk. “You’re done; let’s wipe this jelly off you.”
“So what did it show?” Poppy asked, glancing up at the
monitor.
“Oh, your own doctor will tell you that. The radiologist
will read the results and call them over to your doctor’s office.”
The technician’s voice was absolutely
neutral—so neutral that
Poppy looked at her sharply.
Back in Dr. Franklin’s office, Poppy fidgeted while her
mother paged through out-of-date magazines. When the nurse
said “Mrs. Hilgard,” they both stood up.
“Uh—no,” the nurse said, looking flustered. “Mrs. Hilgard,
the doctor just wants to see you for a minute—
alone.”
Poppy and her mother looked at each other. Then, slowly,
Poppy’s mother put down her People magazine
and followed
the nurse.
Poppy stared after her.
Now, what on earth . . . Dr. Franklin had never done that
before.
Poppy realized that her heart was beating hard. Not fast,
just hard. Bang . . . bang . . . bang, in the middle of her chest,
shaking her insides. Making her feel unreal and giddy.
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Don’t think about it. It’s probably nothing. Read a magazine.
But her fingers didn’t seem to work properly. When she
finally got the magazine open, her eyes ran over the words
without delivering them to her brain.
What are they talking about in there? What’s going on? It’s
been so long. . . .
It kept getting longer. As Poppy waited, she found herself
vacillating between two modes of thought. 1) Nothing
serious
was wrong with her and her mother was going to
come out and laugh at her for even imagining there was,
and 2) Something awful was wrong with her and she was
going to have to go through some dreadful treatment to get
well. The covered
pit and the open pit. When the pit was
covered, it seemed laughable, and she felt embarrassed for
having
such melodramatic thoughts. But when it was open,
she felt as if all her life before this had been a dream, and
now she was hitting hard reality at last.
I wish I could call James, she thought.
At last the nurse said, “Poppy? Come on in.”
Dr. Franklin’s office was wood-paneled, with certificates
and diplomas hanging on the walls. Poppy sat down in a
leather chair and tried not to be too obvious about scanning
her mother’s face.
Her mother looked . . . too calm. Calm with strain underneath.
She was smiling, but it was an odd, slightly unsteady
smile.
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L.J. Smith
Oh, God, Poppy thought. Something is going on.
“Now, there’s no cause for alarm,” the doctor said, and
immediately Poppy became more alarmed. Her palms stuck to
the leather of the chair arms.
“Something showed up in your sonogram that’s a little
unusual, and I’d like to do a couple of other tests,” Dr. Franklin
said, his voice slow and measured,
soothing. “One of the tests
requires that you fast from midnight the day before you take it.
But your mom says you didn’t eat breakfast today.”
Poppy said mechanically, “I ate one Frosted Flake.”
“One Frosted Flake? Well, I think we can count that as
fasting. We’ll do the tests today, and I think it’s best to admit
you to the hospital for them. Now, the tests are called a CAT
scan and an ERCP—that’s short for something even I can’t
pronounce.” He smiled. Poppy just stared at him.
“There’s nothing frightening about either of these tests,”
he said gently. “The CAT scan is like an X ray. The ERCP
involves passing a tube down the throat, through the stomach,
and into the pancreas. Then we inject into the tube a liquid
that will show up on X rays . . .”
His mouth kept moving, but Poppy had stopped hearing
the words. She was more frightened than she could remember
being in a long time.
I was just joking about the interesting scar, she thought. I
don’t want a real disease. I don’t want to go to the hospital, and
I don’t want any tubes down my throat.
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She looked at her mother in mute appeal. Her mother
took her hand.
“It’s no big deal, sweetheart. We’ll just go home and pack a
few things for you; then we’ll come back.”
“I have to go into the hospital today?”
“I think that would be best,” Dr. Franklin said.
Poppy’s hand tightened on her mother’s. Her mind was a
humming blank.
When they left the office, her mother said, “Thank you,
Owen.” Poppy had never heard her call Dr. Franklin by his
first name before.
Poppy didn’t ask why. She didn’t say anything as they
walked out of the building and got in the car. As they drove
home, her mother began to chat about ordinary things in a
light, calm voice, and Poppy made herself answer. Pretending
that everything was normal, while all the time the terrible
sick feeling raged inside her.
It was only when they were in her bedroom, packing
mystery
books and cotton pajamas into a small suitcase, that she
asked almost casually, “So what exactly does he think is wrong
with me?”
Her mother didn’t answer immediately. She was looking
down at the suitcase. Finally she said, “Well, he’s not sure anything
is wrong.”
“But what does he think? He must think something.
And
he was talking about my pancreas—I mean, it sounds like he
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L.J. Smith
thinks there’s something wrong with my pancreas. I thought
he was looking at my gallbladder or whatever. I didn’t even
know that my pancreas was involved in this. . . .”
“Sweetheart.” Her mother took her by the shoulders,
and
Poppy realized she was getting a little overwrought.
She took
a deep breath.
“I just want to know the truth, okay? I just want to have
some idea of what’s going on. It’s my body, and I’ve got a right
to know what they’re looking for—don’t I?”
It was a brave speech, and she didn’t mean any of it. What
she really wanted was reassurance, a promise
that Dr. Franklin
was looking for something trivial.
That the worst that could
happen wouldn’t be so bad. She didn’t get it.
“Yes, you do have a right to know.” Her mother let a
long breath out, then spoke slowly. “Poppy, Dr. Franklin was
concerned
about your pancreas all along. Apparently things
can happen in the pancreas that cause changes in other
organs, like the gallbladder
and liver. When Dr. Franklin
felt those changes, he decided to check things out with a
sonogram.”
Poppy swallowed. “And he said the sonogram was—
unusual. How unusual?”
“Poppy, this is all preliminary. . . .” Her mother saw her
face and sighed. She went on reluctantly. “The sonogram
showed that there might be something
in your pancreas.
Something that shouldn’t be there. That’s why Dr. Franklin
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wants the other tests; they’ll tell us for sure. But—”
“Something that shouldn’t be there? You mean . . . like
a tumor? Like . . . cancer?” Strange, it was hard to say the
words.
Her mother nodded once. “Yes. Like cancer.”
Chapter 3
All Poppy could think of was the pretty bald girl in the
gift shop.
Cancer.
“But—but they can do something about it, can’t they?”
she said, and even to her own ears her voice sounded very
young. “I mean—if they had to, they could take my pancreas
out. . . .”
“Oh, sweetheart, of course.” Poppy’s mother took Poppy in
her arms. “I promise you; if there’s something
wrong, we’ll do
anything and everything to fix it. I’d go to the ends of the earth to
make you well. You know that. And at this point we aren’t even sure
that there is something wrong. Dr. Franklin said that it’s extremely
rare for teenagers to get a tumor in the pancreas. Extremely rare.
So let’s not worry about things until we have to.”
Poppy felt herself relax; the pit was covered again. But
somewhere near her core she still felt cold.
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“I have to call James.”
Her mother nodded. “Just make it quick.”
Poppy kept her fingers crossed as she dialed James’s apartment.
Please be there, please be there, she thought. And for
once, he was. He answered laconically,
but as soon as he heard
her voice, he said, “What’s wrong?”
“Nothing—well, everything. Maybe.” Poppy heard herself
give a wild sort of laugh. It wasn’t exactly a laugh.
“What happened?” James said sharply. “Did you have a
fight with Cliff ?”
“No. Cliff ’s at the office. And I’m going into the hospital.”
“Why?”
“They think I might have cancer.”
It was a tremendous relief to say it, a sort of emotional
release. Poppy laughed again.
Silence on the other end of the line.
“Hello?”
“I’m here,” James said. Then he said, “I’m coming
over.”
“No, there’s no point. I’ve got to leave in a minute.”
She
waited for him to say that he’d come and see her in the hospital,
but he didn’t.
“James, would you do something for me? Would you find out
whatever you can about cancer in the pancreas? Just in case.”
“Is that what they think you have?”
“They don’t know for sure. They’re giving me some tests. I
just hope they don’t have to use any needles.” Another laugh,
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L.J. Smith
but inside she was reeling. She wished James would say something
comforting.
“I’ll see what I can find on the Net.” His voice was unemotional,
almost expressionless.
“And then you can tell me later—they’ll probably let you
call me at the hospital.”
“Yeah.”
“Okay, I have to go. My mom’s waiting.”
“Take care of yourself.”
Poppy hung up, feeling empty. Her mother was standing
in the doorway.
“Come on, Poppet. Let’s go.”
James sat very still, looking at the phone without seeing it.
She was scared, and he couldn’t help her. He’d never been
very good at inspirational small talk. It wasn’t, he thought
grimly, in his nature.
To give comfort you had to have a comfortable view of
the world. And James had seen too much of the world to have
any illusions.
He could deal with cold facts, though. Pushing aside a pile
of assorted clutter, he turned on his laptop
and dialed up the
Internet.
Within minutes he was using Gopher to search the National
Cancer Institute’s CancerNet. The first file he found was listed
as “Pancreatic cancer___Patient.” He scanned it. Stuff about
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what the pancreas did, stages of the disease, treatments. Nothing
too gruesome.
Then he went into “Pancreatic cancer___Physician”—a
file meant for doctors. The first line held him paralyzed.
Cancer of the exocrine pancreas is rarely curable.
His eyes skimmed down the lines. Overall survival rate . . .
metastasis . . . poor response to chemotherapy, radiation
therapy and
surgery . . . pain . . .
Pain. Poppy was brave, but facing constant pain would
crush anyone. Especially when the outlook for the future was
so bleak.
He looked at the top of the article again. Overall survival
rate less than three percent. If the cancer had spread, less than
one percent.
There must be more information. James went searching
again and came up with several articles from newspapers and
medical journals. They were even worse than the NCI file.
The overwhelming majority of patients will die, and die
swiftly, experts say. . . . Pancreatic cancer is usually inoperable,
rapid, and debilitatingly painful. . . . The average survival if the
cancer has spread can be three weeks to three months. . . .
Three weeks to three months.
James stared at the laptop’s screen. His chest and throat
felt tight; his vision was blurry. He tried to control it, telling
himself that nothing was certain yet. Poppy was being tested;
that didn’t mean she had cancer.
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L.J. Smith
But the words rang hollow in his mind. He had known for
some time that something was wrong with Poppy. Something
was—disturbed—inside her. He’d sensed that the rhythms of
her body were slightly off; he could tell she was losing sleep.
And the pain—he always knew when the pain was there. He
just hadn’t realized how serious it was.
Poppy knows, too, he thought. Deep down, she knows that
something very bad is going on, or she wouldn’t have asked me
to find this out. But what does she expect me to do, walk in
and tell her she’s going to die in a few months?
And am I supposed to stand around and watch it?
His lips pulled back from his teeth slightly. Not a nice
smile, more of a savage grimace. He’d seen a lot of death
in seventeen years. He knew the stages of dying, knew the
difference between the moment breathing stopped and the
moment the brain turned off; knew the unmistakable ghostlike
pallor of a fresh corpse. The way the eyeballs flattened
out about five minutes after expiration. Now, that was a detail
most people weren’t familiar with. Five minutes after you die,
your eyes go flat and filmy gray. And then your body starts to
shrink. You actually get smaller.
Poppy was so small already.
He’d always been afraid of hurting her. She looked so
fragile, and he could hurt somebody much stronger if he
wasn’t careful. That was one reason he kept a certain distance
between them.
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One reason. Not the main one.
The other was something he couldn’t put into words, not
even to himself. It brought him right up to the edge of the
forbidden. To face rules that had been ingrained in him since
birth.
None of the Night People could fall in love with a human.
The sentence for breaking the law was death.
It didn’t matter. He knew what he had to do now. Where
he had to go.
Cold and precise, James logged off the Net. He stood,
picked up his sunglasses, slid them into place. Went out into
the merciless June sunlight, slamming his apartment door
behind him.
Poppy looked around the hospital room unhappily. There was
nothing so awful about it, except that it was too cold, but . . . it
was a hospital. That was the truth behind the pretty pink-andblue
curtains and the closed-circuit TV and the dinner menu
decorated with cartoon characters. It was a place you didn’t
come unless you were Pretty Darn Sick.
Oh, come on, she told herself. Cheer up a little. What happened
to the power of Poppytive thinking? Where’s Poppyanna
when you need her? Where’s Mary Poppy-ins?
God, I’m even making myself gag, she thought.
But she found herself smiling faintly, with self-deprecating
humor if nothing else. And the nurses were nice here, and the
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L.J. Smith
bed was extremely cool. It had a remote control on the side
that bent it into every imaginable position.
Her mother came in while she was playing with it.
“I got hold of Cliff; he’ll be here later. Meanwhile, I think
you’d better change so you’re ready for the tests.”
Poppy looked at the blue-and-white striped seersucker
hospital robe and felt a painful spasm that seemed to reach
from her stomach to her back. And something in the deepest
part of her said, Please, not yet. I’ll never be ready.
James pulled his Integra into a parking space on Ferry Street
near Stoneham. It wasn’t a nice part of town. Tourists visiting
Los Angeles avoided this area.
The building was sagging and decrepit. Several stores were
vacant, with cardboard taped over broken windows. Graffiti
covered the peeling paint on the cinder-block walls.
Even the smog seemed to hang thicker here. The air itself
seemed yellow and cloying. Like a poisonous miasma, it darkened
the brightest day and made everything look unreal and ominous.
James walked around to the back of the building. There,
among the freight entrances of the stores in front, was one
door unmarked by graffiti. The sign above it had no words.
Just a picture of a black flower.
A black iris.
James knocked. The door opened two inches, and a skinny
kid in a wrinkled T-shirt peered out with beady eyes.
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“It’s me, Ulf,” James said, resisting the temptation to kick
the door in. Werewolves, he thought. Why do they have to be
so territorial?
The door opened just enough to let James in. The skinny
kid glanced suspiciously outside before shutting
it again.
“Go mark a fire hydrant or something,” James suggested
over his shoulder.
The place looked like a small café. A darkened room with
little round tables crammed in side by side, surrounded by
wooden chairs. There were a few scattered people sitting down,
all of them looking like teenagers. Two guys were playing pool
in the back.
James went over to one of the round tables where a girl was
sitting. He took off his sunglasses and sat down.
“Hi, Gisèle.”
The girl looked up. She had dark hair and blue eyes.
Slanted, mysterious eyes which seemed to have been outlined
in black eyeliner—ancient-Egyptian style.
She looked like a witch, which was no coincidence.
“James. I’ve missed you.” Her voice was soft and husky.
“How’s it going these days?” She cupped her hands around the
unlit candle on the table and made a quick motion as if releasing
a captive bird. As her hands moved away, the candle wick
burst into flame.
“Still as gorgeous as ever,” she said, smiling at him in the
dancing golden light.
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L.J. Smith
“That goes for you, too. But the truth is, I’m here on
business.”
She arched an eyebrow. “Aren’t you always?”
“This is different. I want to ask your . . . professional
opinion on something.”
She spread her slender hands, silver fingernails glowing in
the candle’s flame. On her index finger was a ring with a black
dahlia. “My powers are at your disposal. Is there someone you
want cursed? Or maybe you want to attract good luck or prosperity.
I know you can’t need a love charm.”
“I want a spell—to cure a disease. I don’t know if it needs to
be specific to the disease, or if something
more general would
work. A—general health spell . . .”
“James.” She chuckled lazily and put a hand on his, stroking
lightly. “You’re really worked up, aren’t you? I’ve never seen
you like this.”
It was true; he was experiencing a major loss of control. He
worked against it, disciplining himself into perfect stillness.
“What particular disease are we talking about?” Gisèle
asked, when he didn’t speak again.
“Cancer.”
Gisèle threw back her head and laughed. “You’re telling me
your kind can get cancer? I don’t believe it. Eat and breathe all
you want, but don’t try to convince me the lamia get human
diseases.”
This was the hard part. James said quietly, “The person
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with the disease isn’t my kind. She’s not your kind, either. She’s
human.”
Gisèle’s smile disappeared. Her voice was no longer husky or
lazy as she said, “An outsider? Vermin? Are you crazy, James?”
“She doesn’t know anything about me or the Night World.
I don’t want to break any laws. I just want her well.”
The slanted blue eyes were searching his face. “Are you sure
you haven’t broken the laws already?” And when James looked
determined not to understand this, she added in a lowered
voice, “Are you sure you’re not in love with her?”
James made himself meet the probing gaze directly.
He
spoke softly and dangerously. “Don’t say that unless you want
a fight.”
Gisèle looked away. She played with her ring. The candle
flame dwindled and died.
“James, I’ve known you for a long time,” she said without
looking up. “I don’t want to get you in trouble.
I believe you
when you say you haven’t broken any laws—but I think we’d
both better forget this conversation. Just walk out now and I’ll
pretend it never happened.”
“And the spell?”
“There’s no such thing. And if there was, I wouldn’t help
you. Just go.”
James went.
There was one other possibility that he could think of.
He drove to Brentwood, to an area that was as different from
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the last as a diamond is from coal. He parked in a covered
carport by a quaint adobe building with a fountain. Red and
purple bougainvillaea climbed up the walls to the Spanish tile
on the roof.
Walking through an archway into a courtyard, he came
to an office with gold letters on the door. Jasper R. Rasmussen,
Ph.D. His father was a psychologist.
Before he could reach for the handle, the door opened and
a woman came out. She was like most of his father’s clients,
forty-something, obviously rich, wearing a designer jogging
suit and high-heeled sandals.
She looked a little dazed and dreamy, and there were two
small, rapidly healing puncture wounds on her neck.
James went into the office. There was a waiting room, but
no receptionist. Strains of Mozart came from the inner office.
James knocked on the door.
“Dad?”
The door opened to reveal a handsome man with dark
hair. He was wearing a perfectly tailored gray suit and a shirt
with French cuffs. He had an aura of power and purpose.
But not of warmth. He said, “What is it, James?” in the same
voice he used for his clients: thoughtful, deliberate, confident.
“Do you have a minute?”
His father glanced at his Rolex. “As a matter of fact, my
next patient won’t be here for half an hour.”
“There’s something I need to talk about.”
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His father looked at him keenly, then gestured to an overstuffed
chair. James eased into it, but found himself pulling
forward to sit on the edge.
“What’s on your mind?”
James searched for the right words. Everything depended
on whether he could make his father understand. But what
were the right words? At last he settled for bluntness.
“It’s Poppy. She’s been sick for a while, and now they think
she has cancer.”
Dr. Rasmussen looked surprised. “I’m sorry to hear that.”
But there was no sorrow in his voice.
“And it’s a bad cancer. It’s incredibly painful and just about
one hundred percent incurable.”
“That’s a pity.” Again there was nothing but mild surprise
in his father’s voice. And suddenly James knew where that came
from. It wasn’t surprise that Poppy was sick; it was surprise that
James had made a trip just to tell him this.
“Dad, if she’s got this cancer, she’s dying. Doesn’t that mean
anything to you?”
Dr. Rasmussen steepled his fingers and stared into the
ruddy gloss of his mahogany desk. He spoke slowly and
steadily. “James, we’ve been through this before. You know that
your mother and I are worried about you getting too close to
Poppy. Too . . . attached . . . to her.”
James felt a surge of cold rage. “Like I got too attached to
Miss Emma?”
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L.J. Smith
His father didn’t blink. “Something like that.”
James fought the pictures that wanted to form in his mind.
He couldn’t think about Miss Emma now; he needed to be
detached. That was the only way to convince his father.
“Dad, what I’m trying to say is that I’ve known Poppy just
about all my life. She’s useful to me.”
“How? Not in the obvious way. You’ve never fed on her,
have you?”
James swallowed, feeling nauseated. Feed on Poppy? Use
her like that? Even the thought of it made him sick.
“Dad, she’s my friend,” he said, abandoning any pretense
of objectivity. “I can’t just watch her suffer. I can’t. I have to do
something about it.”
His father’s face cleared. “I see.”
James felt dizzy with astonished relief. “You understand?”
“James, at times one can’t help a certain feeling of . . .
compassion for humans. In general, I wouldn’t encourage it—
but you have known Poppy a long while. You feel pity for her
suffering. If you want to make that suffering shorter, then, yes,
I understand.”
The relief crashed down around James. He stared at his
father for a few seconds, then said softly, “Mercy killing? I
thought the Elders had put a ban on deaths in this area.”
“Just be reasonably discreet about it. As long as it seems
to be natural, we’ll all look the other way. There won’t be any
reason to call in the Elders.”
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There was a metallic taste in James’s mouth. He stood and
laughed shortly. “Thanks, Dad. You’ve really helped a lot.”
His father didn’t seem to hear the sarcasm. “Glad to do it,
James. By the way, how are things at the apartments?”
“Fine,” James said emptily.
“And at school?”
“School’s over, Dad,” James said, and let himself out.
In the courtyard he leaned against an adobe wall and stared
at the splashing water of the fountain.
He was out of options. Out of hope. The laws of the Night
World said so.
If Poppy had the disease, she would die from it.
Chapter 4
Poppy was staring without appetite at a dinner tray of
chicken nuggets and trench fries when Dr. Franklin
came in the room.
The tests were over. The CAT scan had been all right, if
claustrophobic, but the ERCP had been awful. Poppy could
still feel the ghost of the tube in her throat every time she
swallowed.
“You’re leaving all this great hospital food,” Dr. Franklin
said with gentle humor. Poppy managed a smile for him.
He went on talking about innocuous things. He didn’t
say anything about the test results, and Poppy had no idea
when they were supposed to come in. She was suspicious of
Dr. Franklin, though. Something
about him, the gentle way
he patted her foot under the blanket or the shadows around
his eyes . . .
When he casually suggested that Poppy’s mother might
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want to “come for a little walk down the hall,” Poppy’s suspicion
crystallized.
He’s going to tell her. He’s got the results, but he doesn’t
want me to know.
Her plan was made in the same instant. She yawned and
said, “Go on, Mom; I’m a little bit sleepy.” Then she lay back
and shut her eyes.
As soon as they were gone, she got off the bed. She watched
their retreating backs as they went down the hall into another
doorway. Then, in her stocking feet, she quietly followed
them.
She was delayed for several minutes at the nursing station.
“Just stretching my legs,” she said to a nurse who looked
inquiringly at her, and she pretended to be walking at random.
When the nurse picked up a clipboard and went into one of
the patients’ rooms, Poppy hurried on down the corridor.
The room at the end was the waiting room—she’d seen
it earlier. It had a TV and a complete kitchen setup so relatives
could hang out in comfort. The door was ajar and Poppy
approached it stealthily. She could hear the low rumble of
Dr. Franklin’s voice, but she couldn’t hear what he was saying.
Very cautiously Poppy edged closer. She chanced one look
around the door.
She saw at once that there was no need for caution.
Everyone
in that room was completely occupied.
Dr. Franklin was sitting on one of the couches. Beside
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him was an African-American woman with glasses on a chain
around her neck. She was wearing the white coat of a doctor.
On the other couch was Poppy’s stepfather, Cliff. His
normally perfect dark hair was slightly mussed, his rocksteady
jaw was working. He had his arm around her mother.
Dr. Franklin was talking to both of them, his hand on her
mother’s shoulder.
And Poppy’s mother was sobbing.
Poppy pulled back from the doorway.
Oh, my God. I’ve got it.
She’d never seen her mother cry before. Not when Poppy’s
grandmother had died, not during the divorce
from Poppy’s
father. Her mother’s specialty was coping with things; she was
the best coper Poppy had ever known.
But now . . .
I’ve got it. I’ve definitely got it.
Still, maybe it wasn’t so bad. Her mom was shocked,
okay, that was natural. But it didn’t mean that Poppy was
going to die or anything. Poppy had all of modern medicine
on her side.
She kept telling herself this as she edged away from the
waiting room.
She didn’t edge fast enough, though. Before she got out of
earshot, she heard her mother’s voice, raised in something like
anguish.
“My baby. Oh, my little girl.”
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Poppy froze.
And then Cliff, loud and angry: “You’re trying to tell me
there’s nothing?”
Poppy couldn’t feel her own breathing. Against her will,
she moved back to the door.
“Dr. Loftus is an oncologist; an expert on this sort of
cancer. She can explain better than I can,” Dr. Franklin was
saying.
Then a new voice came—the other doctor. At first Poppy
could only catch scattered phrases that didn’t seem to mean
anything: adenocarcinoma, splenic venous occlusion, Stage
Three. Medical jargon. Then Dr. Loftus said, “To put it simply,
the problem is that the tumor has spread. It’s spread to the
liver and the lymph nodes around the pancreas. That means it’s
unresectable—we can’t operate.”
Cliff said, “But chemotherapy . . .”
“We might try a combination of radiation and chemotherapy
with something called 5-fluorouracil. We’ve had
some results with that. But I won’t mislead
you. At best it
may improve her survival time by a few weeks. At this point,
we’re looking at palliative measures—ways to reduce her pain
and improve the quality of the time she has left. Do you
understand?”
Poppy could hear choking sobs from her mother, but she
couldn’t seem to move. She felt as if she were listening to some
play on the radio. As if it had nothing to do with her.
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L.J. Smith
Dr. Franklin said, “There are some research protocols
right here in southern California. They’re experimenting
with
immunotherapy and cryogenic surgery. Again, we’re talking
about palliation rather than a cure—”
“Damn it!” Cliff ’s voice was explosive. “You’re talking about
a little girl ! How did this get to—to Stage Three—without anybody
noticing? This kid was dancing all night two days ago.”
“Mr. Hilgard, I’m sorry,” Dr. Loftus said so softly that
Poppy could barely pick up the words. “This kind of cancer
is called a silent disease, because there are very few symptoms
until it’s very far advanced. That’s why the survival rate is so
low. And I have to tell you that Poppy is only the second teenager
I’ve seen with this kind of tumor. Dr. Franklin made an
extremely acute diagnosis when he decided to send her in for
testing.”
“I should have known,” Poppy’s mother said in a thick
voice. “I should have made her come in sooner. I should
have—I should have—”
There was a banging sound. Poppy looked around the
door, forgetting to be inconspicuous. Her mother was hitting
the Formica table over and over. Cliff was trying to stop her.
Poppy reeled back.
Oh, God, I’ve got to get out of here. I can’t see this. I can’t
look at this.
She turned and walked back down the hall. Her legs
moved. Just like always. Amazing that they still worked.
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And everything around her was just like always. The nursing
station was still decorated for the Fourth of July. Her suitcase
was still on the padded window seat in her room. The
hardwood floor was still solid underneath her.
Everything was the same—but how could it be? How
could the walls be still standing? How could the TV be blaring
in the next room?
I’m going to die, Poppy thought.
Strangely enough, she didn’t feel frightened. What she felt
was vastly surprised. And the surprise kept coming, over and
over, with every thought being interrupted
by those four words.
It’s my fault because (I’m going to die) I didn’t go to the
doctor’s sooner.
Cliff said “damn” for me (I’m going to die). I didn’t know
he liked me enough to swear.
Her mind was racing wildly.
Something in me, she thought. I’m going to die because of
something that’s inside me, like that alien in the movie. It’s in
me right now. Right now.
She put both hands to her stomach, then pulled up
her T-shirt to stare at her abdomen. The skin was smooth,
unblemished. She didn’t feel any pain.
But it’s in there and I’m going to die because of it. Die
soon. I wonder how soon? I didn’t hear them talk about that.
I need James.
Poppy reached for the phone with a feeling that her
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hand was detached from her body. She dialed, thinking,
Please be there.
But this time it didn’t work. The phone rang and rang.
When the answering machine came on, Poppy said, “Call me
at the hospital.” Then she hung up and stared at the plastic
pitcher of ice water by her bedside.
He’ll get in later, she thought. And then he’ll call me. I just
have to hang on until then.
Poppy wasn’t sure why she thought this, but suddenly
it
was her goal. To hang on until she could talk to James. She
didn’t need to think about anything
until then; she just had
to survive. Once she talked to James, she could figure out
what she was supposed to be feeling, what she was supposed
to do now.
There was a light knock at the door. Startled, Poppy looked
up to see her mother and Cliff. For a moment all she could
focus on was their faces, which gave her the strange illusion
that the faces were floating in midair.
Her mother had red and swollen eyes. Cliff was pale, like a
piece of crumpled white paper, and his jaw looked stubbly and
dark in contrast.
Oh, my God, are they going to tell me? They can’t ; they
can’t make me listen to it.
Poppy had the wild impulse to run. She was on the verge
of panic.
But her mother said, “Sweetie, some of your friends are
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here to see you. Phil called them this afternoon
to let them
know you were in the hospital, and they just arrived.”
James, Poppy thought, something springing free in her
chest. But James wasn’t part of the group that came crowding
through the doorway. It was mostly girls from school.
It doesn’t matter. He’ll call later. I don’t have to think now.
As a matter of fact, it was impossible to think with so many
visitors in the room. And that was good. It was incredible that
Poppy could sit there and talk to them when part of her was
farther away than Neptune,
but she did talk and that kept her
brain turned off.
None of them had any idea that something serious was
wrong with her. Not even Phil, who was at his brotherly best,
very kind and considerate. They talked about ordinary things,
about parties and Rollerblading and music and books. Things
from Poppy’s old life, which suddenly seemed to have been a
hundred
years ago.
Cliff talked, too, nicer than he had been since the days
when he was courting Poppy’s mother.
But finally the visitors left, and Poppy’s mother stayed. She
touched Poppy every so often with hands that shook slightly.
If I didn’t know, I’d know, Poppy thought. She isn’t acting like
Mom at all.
“I think I’ll stay here tonight,” her mother said. Not
quite managing to sound offhand. “The nurse said I can sleep
on the window seat; it’s really a couch for parents. I’m just
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trying to decide whether I should run back to the house and
get some things.”
“Yes, go,” Poppy said. There was nothing else she could
say and still pretend that she didn’t know. Besides,
her mom
undoubtedly needed some time by herself, away from this.
Just as her mother left, a nurse in a flowered blouse and
green scrub pants came in to take Poppy’s temperature and
blood pressure. And then Poppy was alone.
It was late. She could still hear a TV, but it was far away.
The door was ajar, but the hallway outside was dim. A hush
seemed to have fallen over the ward.
She felt very alone, and the pain was gnawing deep inside
her. Beneath the smooth skin of her abdomen, the tumor was
making itself known.
Worst of all, James hadn’t called. How could he not call?
Didn’t he know she needed him?
She wasn’t sure how long she could go on not thinking
about It.
Maybe the best thing would be to try to sleep. Get unconscious.
Then she couldn’t think.
But as soon as she turned out the light and closed her eyes,
phantoms swirled around her. Not images of pretty bald girls;
skeletons. Coffins. And worst of all, an endless darkness.
If I die, I won’t be here. Will I be anywhere? Or will I just
Not Be at all?
It was the scariest thing she’d ever imagined, Not-Being.
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And she was definitely thinking now, she couldn’t help it. She’d
lost control. A galloping fear consumed her, made her shiver
under the rough sheet and thin blankets. I’m going to die, I’m
going to die, I’m going to—
“Poppy.”
Her eyes flew open. For a second she couldn’t identify the
black silhouette in the darkened room. She had a wild idea that
it was Death itself coming to get her.
Then she said, “James?”
“I wasn’t sure if you were asleep.”
Poppy reached for the bedside button that turned on the
light, but James said, “No, leave it off. I had to sneak past the
nurses, and I don’t want them to throw me out.”
Poppy swallowed, her hands clenched on a fold of blanket.
“I’m glad you came,” she said. “I thought you weren’t going to
come.” What she really wanted was to throw herself into his
arms and sob and scream.
But she didn’t. It wasn’t just that she’d never done anything
like that with him before; it was something about him that
stopped her. Something she couldn’t put her finger on, but that
made her feel almost . . . frightened.
The way he was standing? The fact that she couldn’t see
his face? All she knew was that James suddenly seemed like a
stranger.
He turned around and very slowly closed the heavy door.
Darkness. Now the only light came in through the
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window. Poppy felt curiously isolated from the rest of the
hospital, from the rest of the world.
And that should have been good, to be alone with James,
protected from everything else. If only she weren’t having this
weird feeling of not recognizing him.
“You know the test results,” he said quietly. It wasn’t a
question.
“My mom doesn’t know I know,” Poppy said. How could
she be talking coherently when all she wanted to do was
scream? “I overheard the doctors telling her. . . . James, I’ve
got it. And . . . it’s bad; it’s a bad kind of cancer. They said
it’s already spread. They said I’m going to . . .” She couldn’t
get the last word out, even though it was shrieking through
her mind.
“You’re going to die,” James said. He still seemed quiet and
centered. Detached.
“I read up on it,” James went on, walking over to the window
and looking out. “I know how bad it is. The articles said
there was a lot of pain. Serious pain.”
“James,” Poppy gasped.
“Sometimes they have to do surgery just to try to stop
the pain. But whatever they do, it won’t save you. They can
fill you full of chemicals and irradiate you, and you’ll still die.
Probably before the end of summer.”
“James—”
“It will be your last summer—”
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“James, for God’s sake!” It was almost a scream. Poppy was
breathing in great shaking gulps, clinging to the blankets.
“Why are you doing this to me?”
He turned and in one movement seized her wrist, his
fingers closing over the plastic hospital bracelet. “I want you
to understand that they can’t help you,” he said, ragged and
intense. “Do you understand that?”
“Yes, I understand,” Poppy said. She could hear the mounting
hysteria in her own voice. “But is that what you came here
to say? Do you want to kill me?”
His fingers tightened painfully. “No! I want to save you.”
Then he let out a breath and repeated it more quietly, but with
no less intensity. “I want to save you, Poppy.”
Poppy spent a few moments just getting air in and out of
her lungs. It was hard to do it without dissolving
into sobs.
“Well, you can’t,” she said at last. “Nobody can.”
“That’s where you’re wrong.” Slowly he released her wrist
and gripped the bed rail instead. “Poppy, there’s something I’ve
got to tell you. Something about me.”
“James . . .” Poppy could breathe now, but she didn’t know
what to say. As far as she could tell, James had gone crazy. In
a way, if everything else hadn’t been so awful, she might have
been flattered. James had lost his consummate cool—over her.
He was upset enough about her situation to go completely
nonlinear.
“You really do care,” she said softly, with a laugh that
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was half a sob. She put a hand on his where it rested on the
bed rail.
He laughed shortly in turn. His hand flipped over to grasp
hers roughly; then he pulled away. “You have no idea,” he said
in a terse, strained voice.
Looking out the window, he added, “You think you know
everything about me, but you don’t. There’s something very
important that you don’t know.”
By now Poppy just felt numb. She couldn’t understand
why James kept harping on himself, when she was the one
about to die. But she tried to conjure up some sort of gentleness
for him as she said, “You can tell me anything. You know
that.”
“But this is something you won’t believe. Not to mention
that it’s breaking the laws.”
“The law?”
“The laws. I go by different laws than you. Human laws
don’t mean much to us, but our own are supposed
to be
unbreakable.”
“James,” Poppy said, with blank terror. He really was losing
his mind.
“I don’t know the right way to say it. I feel like somebody
in a bad horror movie.” He shrugged, and said without
turning, “I know how this sounds, but . . . Poppy, I’m a
vampire.”
Poppy sat still on the bed for a moment. Then she groped
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out wildly toward the bedside table. Her fingers
closed on a
stack of little crescent-shaped plastic basins and she threw the
whole stack at him.
“You bastard !” she screamed, and reached for something
else to throw.
Chapter 5
James dodged as Poppy lobbed a paperback book at him.
“Poppy—”
“You jerk! You snake! How can you do this to me?
You spoiled, selfish, immature—”
“Shhh! They’re going to hear you—”
“Let them! Here I am, and I’ve just found out that I’m
going to die, and all you can think of is playing a joke on me.
A stupid, sick joke. I can’t believe this. Do you think that’s
funny?” She ran out of breath to rave with. James, who had
been making quieting motions with his hands, now gave up
and looked toward the door.
“Here comes the nurse,” he said.
“Good, and I’m going to ask her to throw you out,” Poppy
said. Her anger had collapsed, leaving her near tears. She had
never felt so utterly betrayed and abandoned. “I hate you, you
know,” she said.
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The door opened. It was the nurse with the flowered
blouse and green scrub pants. “Is anything the matter here?”
she said, turning on the light. Then she saw James. “Now,
let’s see; you don’t look like family,” she said. She was smiling,
but her voice had the ring of authority about to be
enforced.
“He’s not, and I want him out of here,” Poppy said.
The nurse fluffed up Poppy’s pillows, put a gentle hand on
her forehead. “Only family members are allowed to stay overnight,”
she said to James.
Poppy stared at the TV and waited for James to go. He
didn’t. He walked around the bed to stand by the nurse, who
looked up at him while she continued straightening Poppy’s
blankets. Then her hands slowed and stopped moving.
Poppy glanced at her sideways in surprise.
The nurse was just staring at James. Hands limp on the
blankets, she gazed at him as if she were mesmerized.
And James was just staring back. With the light on, Poppy
could see James’s face—and again she had that odd feeling of
not recognizing him. He was very pale and almost stern looking,
as if he were doing something that required an effort. His
jaw was tight and his eyes—his eyes were the color of silver.
Real silver, shining in the light.
For some reason, Poppy thought of a starving panther.
“So you see there’s nothing wrong here,” James said to the
nurse, as if continuing a conversation they’d been having.
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The nurse blinked once, then looked around the room as
if she’d just awakened from a doze. “No, no; everything’s fine,”
she said. “Call me if . . .” She looked briefly distracted again,
then murmured, “If, um, you need anything.”
She walked out. Poppy watched her, forgetting to breathe.
Then, slowly, moving only her eyes, she looked at James.
“I know it’s a cliché,” James said. “An overused demonstration
of power. But it gets the job done.”
“You set this up with her,” Poppy said in a bare whisper.
“No.”
“Or else it’s some kind of psychic trick. The Amazing
Whatshisname.”
“No,” James said, and sat down on an orange plastic
chair.
“Then I’m going crazy.” For the first time that evening
Poppy wasn’t thinking about her illness. She couldn’t think
properly about anything; her mind was a whirling, crashing
jumble of confusion. She felt like Dorothy’s house after it had
been picked up by the tornado.
“You’re not crazy. I probably did this the wrong way; I said
I didn’t know how to explain it. Look, I know how hard it
is for you to believe. My people arrange it that way; they do
everything they can to keep humans not believing. Their lives
depend on it.”
“James, I’m sorry; I just—” Poppy found that her hands
were trembling. She shut her eyes. “Maybe you’d better
just—”
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“Poppy, look at me. I’m telling you the truth. I swear it.”
He stared at her face a moment, then let out a breath. “Okay.
I didn’t want to have to do this, but . . .”
He stood, leaning close to Poppy. She refused to flinch, but
she could feel her eyes widening,
“Now, look,” he said, and his lips skinned back from his
teeth.
A simple action—but the effect was astonishing. Transforming.
In that instant he changed from the pale but fairly
ordinary James of a moment ago—into something Poppy had
never seen before. A different species of human being.
His eyes flared silver and his entire face took on a predatory
look. But Poppy scarcely noticed that; she was staring at
his teeth.
Not teeth. Fangs. He had canines like a cat’s. Elongated
and curving, ending in delicate, piercing points.
They were nothing like the fake Vampire fangs sold at
novelty stores. They looked very strong and very sharp and
very real.
Poppy screamed.
James clapped a hand over her mouth. “We don’t want that
nurse back in here.”
When he lifted the hand, Poppy said, “Oh, my God; oh,
my God. . . .”
“All those times when you said I could read your mind,”
James said. “Remember? And the times when I heard things
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you didn’t hear, or moved faster than you could move?”
“Oh, my God.”
“It’s true, Poppy.” He picked up the orange chair and
twisted one of the metal legs out of shape. He did it easily,
gracefully. “We’re stronger than humans,”
he said. He twisted
the leg back and put the chair down. “We see better in the
dark. We’re built for hunting.”
Poppy finally managed to capture an entire thought. “I
don’t care what you can do,” she said shrilly. “You can’t be a
vampire. I’ve known you since you were five years old. And
you’ve gotten older every year, just like me. Explain that.”
“Everything you know is wrong.” When she just stared
at him, he sighed again and said, “Everything you think you
know about vampires, you’ve picked up from books or TV.
And it’s all written by humans, I’ll guarantee that. Nobody
in the Night World would break the code of secrecy.”
“The Night World. Where’s the Night World?”
“It’s not a place. It’s like a Secret society—for vampires
and
witches and werewolves. All the best people.
And I’ll explain
about it later,” James said grimly. “For now—look, it’s simple.
I’m a Vampire because my parents are vampires. I was born that
way. We’re the lamia.”
All Poppy could think of was Mr. and Mrs. Rasmussen
with their luxury ranch-style house and their gold Mercedes.
“Your parents?”
“Lamia is just an old word for vampires, but for us it
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means the ones who’re born that way,” James said, ignoring
her. “We’re born and we age like humans—except that we can
stop aging whenever we want. We breathe. We walk around in
the daylight. We can even eat regular food.”
“Your parents,” Poppy said again faintly.
He looked at her. “Yeah. My parents. Look, why do you
think my mom does interior decorating? Not because
they
need the money. She meets a lot of people that way, and so
does my dad, the society shrink. It only takes a few minutes
alone with somebody, and the human never remembers it
afterward.”
Poppy shifted uncomfortably. “So you, um, drink people’s
blood, huh?” Even after everything she’d seen, she couldn’t say
it without half-laughing.
James looked at the laces of his Adidas. “Yes. Yes, I sure do,”
he said softly. Then he looked up and met her gaze directly.
His eyes were pure silver.
Poppy leaned back against the pile of pillows on her bed.
Maybe it was easier to believe him because the unbelievable
had already happened to her earlier today. Reality had already
been turned upside down—so, honestly, what did one more
impossibility
matter?
I’m going to die and my best friend is a bloodsucking
monster, she thought.
The argument was over, and she was out of energy.
She
and James looked at each other in silence.
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“Okay,” she said finally, and it meant everything she’d
just realized.
“I didn’t tell you this just to get it off my chest,” James said,
his voice still muted. “I said I could save you, remember?”
“Vaguely.” Poppy blinked slowly, then said more sharply,
“Save me how?”
His gaze shifted to empty air. “The way you’re thinking.”
“Jamie, I can’t think anymore.”
Gently, without looking at her, he put a hand on her
shin under the blanket. He shook her leg slightly, a gesture of
affection. “I’m gonna turn you into a vampire, kid.”
Poppy put both fists to her face and began to cry.
“Hey.” He let go of her shin and put an awkward arm
around her, pulling her to sit up. “Don’t do that. It’s okay. It’s
better than the alternative.”
“You’re . . . freaking . . . crazy,” Poppy sobbed. Once
the tears had started, they flowed too easily—she couldn’t
stop them. There was comfort in crying, and in being
held by James. He felt strong and reliable
and he smelled
good.
“You said you had to be born one,” she added blurrily,
between sobs.
“No, I didn’t. I said I was born one. There are plenty
of the other kind around. Made vampires. There would be
more, but there’s a law against just making any jerk off the
street into one.”
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“But I can’t. I’m just what I am; I’m me. I can’t be—like
that.”
He put her gently away so he could look into her face.
“Then you’re going to die. You don’t have any other choice. I
checked around—even asked a witch. There’s nothing else in
the Night World to help you. What it comes down to is: Do
you want to live or not?”
Poppy’s mind, which had been swamped in confusion
again, suddenly fixed on this question. It was like a flashlight
beam in a pitch-black room.
Did she want to live?
Oh, God, of course she did.
Until today she’d assumed it was her unconditional right
to live. She hadn’t even been grateful for the privilege. But now
she knew it wasn’t something to take for granted—and she also
knew it was something
she’d fight for.
Wake up, Poppy! This is the voice of reason calling. He
says he can save your life.
“Wait a minute. I’ve got to think,” Poppy said tightly to
James. Her tears had stopped. She pushed him away completely
and stared fiercely at the white hospital blanket.
Okay. Okay. Now get your head straight, girl.
You knew James had a secret. So you never imagined
it was
anything like this, so what? He’s still James. He may be some
godawful undead fiend, but he still cares about you. And there’s
nobody else to help you.
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L.J. Smith
She found herself clutching at James’s hand without
looking
at him. “What’s it like?” she said through clenched teeth.
Steady and matter-of-fact, he said, “It’s different. It’s not
something I’d recommend if there was another
choice, but . . .
it’s okay. You’ll be sick while your body’s changing, but afterward
you’ll never get any kind of disease again. You’ll be strong and
quick—and immortal.”
“I’d live forever? But would I be able to stop aging?” She
had visions of herself as an immortal crone.
He grimaced. “Poppy—you’d stop aging now. That’s
what happens to made vampires. Essentially, you’re dying as
a mortal. You’ll look dead and be unconscious for a while.
And then . . . you’ll wake up.”
“I see.” Sort of like Juliet in the tomb, Poppy thought. And
then she thought, Oh, God . . . Mom and Phil.
“There’s another thing you should know,” James was
saying. “A certain percentage of people don’t make it.”
“Don’t make it?”
“Through the change. People over twenty almost never
do. They don’t ever wake up. Their bodies can’t adjust to the
new form and they burn out. Teenagers usually live through
it, but not always.”
Oddly enough, this was comforting to Poppy. A qualified
hope seemed more believable than an absolute
one. To live, she
would have to take a chance.
She looked at James. “How do you do it?”
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“The traditional way,” he said with the ghost of a smile.
Then, gravely: “We exchange blood.”
Oh, great, Poppy thought. And I was afraid of a simple
shot. Now I’m going to have my blood drawn by fangs. She
swallowed and blinked, staring at nothing.
“It’s your choice, Poppy. It’s up to you.”
There was a long pause, and then she said, “I want to live,
Jamie.”
He nodded. “It’ll mean going away from here. Leaving
your parents. They can’t know.”
“Yeah, I was just realizing that. Sort of like getting a new
identity from the FBI, huh?”
“More than that. You’ll be living in a new world, the Night
World. And it’s a lonely world, full of secrets.
But you’ll be
walking around in it, instead of lying in the ground.” He
squeezed her hand. Then he said very quietly and seriously,
“Do you want to start now?”
All Poppy could think of to do was shut her eyes and brace
herself the way she did for an injection. “I’m ready,” she said
through stiff lips.
James laughed again—this time as if he couldn’t help it.
Then he folded the bed rail down and settled beside her. “I’m
used to people being hypnotized when I do this. It’s weird to
have you awake.”
“Yeah, well, if I scream you can hypnotize me,” Poppy said,
not opening her eyes.
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Relax, she told herself firmly. No matter how much it
hurts, no matter how awful it is, you can deal with it. You
have to. Your life depends on it.
Her heart was thumping hard enough to shake her body.
“Right here,” James said, touching her throat with cool
fingers as if feeling for a pulse.
Just do it, Poppy thought. Get it over with.
She could feel warmth as James leaned close to her, taking
her carefully by the shoulders. Every nerve ending in her skin
was aware of him. Then she felt cool breath on her throat, and
quickly, before she could recoil, a double sting.
Those fangs, burying themselves in her flesh. Making
two
little wounds so he could drink her blood . . .
Now it’s really going to hurt, Poppy thought. She couldn’t
brace herself anymore. Her life was in the hands of a hunter.
She was a rabbit trapped in the coils of a snake, a mouse under
the claws of a cat. She didn’t feel like James’s best friend, she
felt like lunch. . . .
Poppy, what are you doing? Don’t fight it. It hurts when you
resist.
James was speaking to her—but the warm mouth on her
throat hadn’t moved. The voice was in her head.
I’m not resisting, Poppy thought. I’m just ready for it to
hurt, that’s all.
There was a burning where his teeth pierced her. She
waited for it to get worse—but it didn’t. It changed.
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Oh, Poppy thought.
The feeling of heat was actually pleasant. A sensation
of
release, of giving.
And closeness. She and James were getting closer and
closer, like two drops of water moving together until they
merged.
She could sense James’s mind. His thoughts—and his feelings.
His emotions flowed into her, through her.
Tenderness . . . concern . . . caring. A cold black rage at
the disease that was threatening her. Despair that there was no
other way to help her. And longing—
longing to share with her,
to make her happy.
Yes, Poppy thought.
A wave of sweetness made her dizzy. She found herself
groping for James’s hand, their fingers intertwining.
James, she thought with wonder and joy. Her communication
to him a tentative caress.
Poppy. She could feel his own surprise and delight.
And all the time the dreamy pleasure was building. Making
Poppy shiver with its intensity.
How could I have been so stupid ? Poppy thought. To be
afraid of this. It isn’t terrible. It’s . . . right.
She had never been so close to anybody. It was as if they
were one being, together, not predator and prey, but partners
in a dance. Poppy-and-James.
She could touch his soul.
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Strangely enough, he was afraid of that. She could sense it.
Poppy, don’t—so many dark things—I don’t want you to see . . .
Dark, yes, Poppy thought. But not dark and terrible.
Dark
and lonely. Such utter loneliness. A feeling of not belonging
in either of the two worlds he knew. Not belonging anywhere.
Except . . .
Suddenly Poppy was seeing an image of herself. In his
mind she was fragile and graceful, an emerald-eyed spirit of
the air. A sylph—with a core of pure steel.
I’m not really like that, she thought. I’m not tall and beautiful
like Jacklyn or Michaela. . . .
The words she heard in answer didn’t seem directed
toward her—she had the feeling they were something James
was thinking to himself, or remembering
from some longforgotten
book.
You don’t love a girl because of beauty. You love her because she
sings a song only you can understand. . . .
With the thought came a strong feeling of protectiveness.
So this was how James felt about her—she knew at last. As if
she were something precious, something to be protected at all
costs. . . .
At all costs. No matter what happened to him. Poppy tried
to follow the thought deeper into his mind, to find out what it
meant. She got an impression
of rules—no, laws . . .
Poppy, it’s bad manners to search somebody’s mind when you’re
not invited. The words were tinged with desperation.
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Poppy pulled back mentally. She hadn’t meant to pry. She
just wanted to help. . . .
I know, James’s thought came to her, and with it a rush of
warmth and gratitude. Poppy relaxed and simply enjoyed the
feeling of oneness with him.
I wish it could last forever, she thought—and just then
it stopped. The warmth at her neck disappeared, and James
pulled away, straightening.
Poppy made a sound of protest and tried to drag him back.
He wouldn’t let her.
“No—there’s something else we have to do,” he whispered.
But he didn’t do anything else. He just held her, his lips against
her forehead. Poppy felt peaceful and languid.
“You didn’t tell me it would be like that,” she said.
“I didn’t know,” James said simply. “It never has been
before.”
They sat together quietly, with James gently stroking
her hair.
So strange. Poppy thought. Everything is the same—but
everything’s different. It was as if she’d pulled herself up on
dry land after almost drowning in the ocean. The terror that
had been pounding inside
her all day was gone, and for the
first time in her life she felt completely safe.
After another minute or so James shook his head, rousing
himself.
“What else do we have to do?” Poppy asked.
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For an answer, James lifted his own wrist to his mouth. He
made a quick jerking motion with his head, as if tearing a strip
of cloth held in his teeth.
When he lowered the wrist, Poppy saw blood.
It was running in a little stream down his arm. So red it
almost didn’t look real.
Poppy gulped and shook her head.
“It’s not that bad,” James said softly. “And you have to do
it. Without my blood in you, you won’t become a vampire
when you die, you’ll just die. Like any other human victim.”
And I want to live, Poppy thought. All right, then. Shutting
her eyes, she allowed James to guide her head to his wrist.
It didn’t taste like blood, or at least not like the blood she’d
tasted when she bit her tongue or put a cut finger in her mouth.
It tasted—strange. Rich and potent.
Like some magic elixir, Poppy thought dizzily. And once
again she felt the touch of James’s mind. Intoxicated
with the
closeness, she kept drinking.
That’s right. You’ve got to take a lot, James told her. But his
mental voice was weaker than it had been. Instantly Poppy felt
a surge of alarm.
But what will it do to you?
“I’ll be all right,” James said aloud. “It’s you I’m worried
about. If you don’t get enough, you’ll be in danger.”
Well, he was the expert. And Poppy was happy to let the
strange, heady potion keep flowing into her. She basked in the
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glow that seemed to be lighting her from the inside out. She
felt so tranquil, so calm. . . .
And then, without warning, the calm was shattered.
A
voice broke into it, a voice full of harsh surprise.
“What are you doing ?” the voice said, and Poppy looked
up to see Phillip in the doorway.
Chapter 6
James moved fast. He picked up the plastic tumbler on
the bedside table and handed it to Poppy. She understood.
Feeling giddy and uncoordinated, she took a
healthy swig of water and licked her lips to wash any traces
of blood away.
“What are you doing ?” Phillip repeated, striding into the
room. His eyes were fixed on James, which was good, because
Poppy was trying to position herself
to hide the side of her
neck that James had bitten.
“None of your business,” she said, and in the same instant
she knew it was a mistake. Phillip, whose middle name was
Stability, was looking distinctly unstable
tonight.
Mom told him. Poppy thought.
“I mean, we aren’t doing anything,” she amended. It
didn’t help. Phil was clearly in a mood to see everything
in
the world as a threat to his sister. And Poppy couldn’t really
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blame him—he’d walked in on the two of them in a strange
embrace on a rumpled hospital bed.
“James was comforting me because I was scared,” she said.
She didn’t even try to explain why James had been cradling her
head to his arm. But she glanced at James’s arm surreptitiously
and saw that the wound there was already closed, the mark
fading.
“Everything’s all right, you know,” James said, standing to
fix a mesmerizing silver gaze on Phillip. But Phil hardly gave
him a glance. He was staring at Poppy.
It’s not working, Poppy thought. Maybe Phil’s too mad to
be hypnotized. Or too stubborn.
She looked a question at James, which he answered
with a
barely discernable shake of his head. He didn’t know what the
problem was, either.
But they both knew what it meant. James was going to
have to leave. Poppy felt cheated and frustrated.
All she wanted
was to talk with James, to revel in their new discovery of each
other—and she couldn’t. Not with Phil here.
“How come you’re here, anyway?” she asked him irritably.
“I drove Mom here. You know she doesn’t like driving at
night. And I brought this.” He swung her boom box up onto
the bedside table. “And these.” He put a black CD case beside
it. “All your favorite music.”
Poppy felt her anger draining away. “That was sweet,” she
said. She was touched, especially since Phil hadn’t said “All
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your favorite weird music,” which was usually how he referred
to it. “Thank you.”
Phil shrugged, shooting a glare at James.
Poor Phil, Poppy thought. Her brother actually looked
disheveled. And his eyes were swollen.
“Where’s Mom?” she was starting to say, when her mother
walked in.
“I’m back, sweetie,” her mother said, with a very creditable
cheery smile. Then she looked surprised. “James—it was nice
of you to come.”
“Yeah, but he was just leaving,” Phil said significantly.
“I’ll
show him the way out.”
James didn’t waste energy on a fight he couldn’t win. He
turned to Poppy and said, “I’ll see you tomorrow.”
There was a look in his gray eyes—gray, not silver now—
that was just for her. A look that had never been there before
in all the years she’d known him.
“Goodbye, James,” she said softly. “And—thank you.” She
knew he understood what she meant.
It wasn’t until he was out the door, with Phillip on his heels
like a bouncer after a rowdy customer, that a thought occurred
to her.
James had said that she would be in danger if she didn’t
get enough of his blood. But they’d gotten interrupted
almost
immediately after that. Had Poppy gotten enough? And what
would happen if she hadn’t ?
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She herself had no idea, and there was no way to ask
James.
Phil stayed right behind James all the way out of the hospital.
Not tonight, James thought. He just couldn’t deal with
Phillip North tonight. His patience was gone, and his mind
was occupied in calculating whether Poppy had taken enough
of his blood to be safe. He thought she had—but the sooner she
got more, the better.
“You’ll ‘see her tomorrow’—well, you’re not going to see her
tomorrow,” Phil said abruptly as they walked into the garage.
“Phil, give me a break.”
Instead, Phillip stepped in front of him and stopped dead,
forcing James to stop, too. Phillip was breathing quickly, his
green eyes burning.
“Okay, bud,” he said. “I don’t know what you think you’re
doing with Poppy—but it’s all over now. From now on you
stay away from her. Understand ?”
Visions of breaking Phillip’s neck like a new pencil danced
in James’s head. But Phil was Poppy’s brother, and his green
eyes were surprisingly like hers.
“I would never hurt Poppy,” he said wearily.
“Give me a break. Are you going to stand there and tell me
you don’t want to move in on her?”
James couldn’t come up with an answer immediately.
Yesterday he could have truthfully said no, he didn’t want
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to move in on Poppy. Because it would have meant a death
sentence for him and Poppy both. It was only when Poppy
had received a death sentence of her own that he’d allowed
himself to look at his feelings.
And now . . . now he’d been close to Poppy. He’d touched
her mind, and had found that she was even braver and more
gallant than he’d thought; even more compassionate—and
more vulnerable.
He wanted to be that close to Poppy again. He cared
about her in a way that made his throat ache. He belonged with
Poppy.
He also realized that that might not be enough.
Sharing blood forged a powerful bond between two
people. It would be wrong of him to take advantage of that
bond—or of Poppy’s gratitude to him. Until he was sure that
Poppy’s mind was clear and her decisions were her own, he
should keep a little distance.
It was the only honorable thing
to do.
“The last thing I want to do is hurt her,” he repeated.
“Why can’t you believe that?” He made a half-hearted attempt
to capture Phil’s gaze as he said it. It failed, just as it had in the
hospital. Phillip seemed to be one of those rare humans who
couldn’t be influenced by mind control.
“Why can’t I believe it? Because I know you. You and
your—girlfriends.” Phil managed to make the word sound
like a curse. “You go through six or seven a year—and when
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you’re through with them, you dump them like trash.”
James was distracted briefly by amusement, because
Phil
was dead on. He needed six girlfriends a year. After two months
the bond between them became
dangerously strong.
“Poppy’s not my girlfriend and I’m not going to dump
her,” he said, pleased at his own cleverness. He’d avoided an
outright lie—Poppy wasn’t his girlfriend
in any normal sense.
They’d merged their souls, that was all—they hadn’t talked
about dating or anything.
“So you are telling me you’re not gonna try to put the
moves on her. Is that it? Because you’d better be sure.” As he
spoke, Phil did what was probably the most dangerous thing
he’d ever done in his life. He grabbed James by the front of
the shirt.
You stupid human, James thought. He briefly considered
breaking every bone in Phil’s hand. Or picking
Phil up
and throwing him across the garage into somebody’s windshield.
Or . . .
“You’re Poppy’s brother,” he said through his teeth. “So I’m
going to give you a chance to let go.”
Phil stared into his face a moment, then let go, looking
slightly shaken. But not shaken enough to keep quiet.
“You have to leave her alone,” he said. “You don’t understand.
This disease she’s got—it’s serious. She doesn’t need anything
messing up her life right now. She just needs . . .” He
stopped and swallowed.
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Suddenly James felt very tired. He couldn’t blame Phil for
being upset—Phil’s mind was full of crystal-clear pictures of
Poppy dying. Usually James got only general images about
what humans were thinking, but Phillip was broadcasting so
loud it nearly deafened
him.
Half-truths and evasions hadn’t worked. It was time for
Outright Lies. Anything to satisfy Phil and get James away
from this.
“I know that what Poppy has is serious,” he said. “I found
an article about it on the Net. That’s why I was here, okay? I
feel sorry for her. I’m not interested in Poppy except as a friend,
but it makes her feel better if I pretend that I like her.”
Phillip hesitated, looking at him hard and suspiciously.
Then he shook his head slowly. “Being friends is one thing,
but it’s wrong to mix her up. In the end, pretending isn’t going
to do her any good. I don’t even think it makes her feel better
now —she looked pretty bad in there.”
“Bad?”
“Pale and shaky. You know Poppy; you know how she
gets overexcited about things. You shouldn’t be fooling around
with her emotions.” He narrowed his eyes and said, “So maybe
you’d better stay away from her for a while. Just to make sure
she hasn’t got the wrong idea.”
“Whatever,” James said. He wasn’t really listening.
“Okay,” Phillip said. “We have a deal. But I’m warning
you, if you break it, you’re in trouble.”
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James wasn’t listening to that, either. Which was a
mistake.
In the darkened hospital room Poppy lay and listened
to her
mother’s breathing.
You’re not asleep, she thought, and I’m not asleep. And
you know I’m not, and I know you’re not. . . .
But they couldn’t talk. Poppy wanted desperately to let her
mother know that everything was going to be all right—but
how? She couldn’t betray James’s secret. And even if she could,
her mother wouldn’t believe her.
I have to find a way, Poppy thought. I have to. And then a
great wave of drowsiness overtook her. It had been the longest
day in her life, and she was full of alien blood already working
its strange magic in her. She couldn’t . . . she just couldn’t . . .
keep her eyes open.
Several times during the night a nurse came in to take her
vital signs, but Poppy never really woke up. For the first time
in weeks, no pain interrupted her dreams.
She opened her eyes the next morning feeling confused
and weak. Black dots swarmed through her vision when she
sat up.
“Hungry?” her mother asked. “They left this breakfast tray
for you.”
The smell of hospital eggs made Poppy feel nauseated.
But
because her mother was watching her anxiously,
she played with
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the food on the tray before she went to wash up. In the bathroom
mirror she examined the side of her neck. Amazing—there
was no trace of a mark.
When she came out of the bathroom, her mother was
crying.
Not floods of tears, not sobbing. Just dabbing her eyes on
a Kleenex. But Poppy couldn’t stand it.
“Mom, if you’re worried about telling me . . . I know.”
The whole sentence was out before Poppy could even
think about it.
Her mother’s head jerked up in horror. She stared at Poppy
with more tears spilling. “Sweetheart—you know . . . ?”
“I know what I’ve got and I know how bad it is,” Poppy
said. If this was the wrong strategy, it was too late now. “I listened
when you and Cliff were talking to the doctors.”
“Oh, my Lord.”
What can I say ? Poppy wondered. It’s okay, Mom, because
I’m not going to die; I’m going to become a vampire. I hope. I
can’t be sure, because sometimes you don’t make it through the
transformation. But with any luck, I should be sucking blood
in a few weeks.
Come to think of it, she hadn’t asked James exactly how
long it would take to change her.
Her mother was taking deep, calming breaths. “Poppy,
I want you to know how much I love you. Cliff and I will
do anything—anything—we can to help you. Right now he’s
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looking into some clinical protocols—those are experimental
studies where they test new ways of treating people. If we can
just . . . buy time . . . until a cure . . .”
Poppy couldn’t stand it. She could feel her mother’s pain.
Literally. It came in palpable waves that seemed to echo through
her bloodstream, making her dizzy.
It’s that blood, she thought. It’s doing something to me—
changing me.
Even as she thought it, she went to her mother. She wanted
to hug her, and she needed help standing
up.
“Mom, I’m not scared,” she said, muffled against her
mother’s shoulder. “I can’t explain, but I’m not scared. And I
don’t want you to be unhappy over me.”
Her mother just held on fiercely, as if Death might try to
snatch Poppy out of her arms that minute. She was crying.
Poppy cried, too. Real tears, because even if she wasn’t
going to die truly, she was going to lose so much. Her old life,
her family, everything familiar. It felt good to cry over it; it was
something she needed to do.
But when it was done, she tried again.
“The one thing I don’t want is for you to be unhappy
or
worry,” she said, and looked up at her mother. “So could you
just try not to? For my sake?”
Oh, God, I’m coming off like Beth in Little Women, she
thought. Saint Poppy. And the truth is, if I were really dying,
I’d go kicking and screaming all the way.
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Still, she’d managed to comfort her mother, who drew back
looking tearstained but quietly proud. “You’re really something,
Poppet,” was all she said, but her lips trembled.
Saint Poppy looked away, horribly embarrassed—until
another wave of dizziness saved her. She allowed
her mother to
help her back into bed.
And it was then that she finally found a way to pose the
question she needed to ask.
“Mom,” she said slowly, “what if there was a cure for me
somewhere—like in some other country or something—and
I could go there and get better, but they wouldn’t ever let me
come back? I mean, you’d know I was okay, but you wouldn’t
ever be able to see me again.” She looked at her mother intently.
“Would you want me to do it?”
Her mother answered instantly. “Sweetheart, I’d want
you cured if you had to go to the moon. As long as you were
happy.” She had to pause a moment,
then resumed steadily.
“But, honey, there isn’t such a place. I wish there were.”
“I know.” Poppy patted her arm gently. “I was just asking.
I love you, Mom.”
Later that morning Dr. Franklin and Dr. Loftus came by. Facing
them wasn’t as horrible as Poppy expected, but she felt like
a hypocrite when they marveled over her “wonderful attitude.”
They talked about quality time, and the fact that no two cases
of cancer were the same, and about people they’d known who’d
beaten the percentages. Saint Poppy squirmed inside, but she lis-
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tened and nodded—until they began to talk about more tests.
“We’d like to do an angiogram and a laparotomy,” Dr.
Loftus
said. “Now an angiogram is—”
“Tubes stuck in my veins?” Poppy said before she could
help herself.
Everyone looked startled. Then Dr. Loftus gave a rueful
smile. “Sounds like you’ve been reading up on it.”
“No, I just—I guess I remember it from somewhere,”
Poppy said. She knew where she was getting the images—from
Dr. Loftus’s head. And she probably
should cover her tracks
instead of talking anymore,
but she was too distressed. “And a
laparotomy’s an operation, right?”
Dr. Loftus and Dr. Franklin exchanged glances. “An
exploratory
operation, yes,” Dr. Franklin said.
“But I don’t need those tests, do I? I mean, you already
know what I’ve got. And the tests hurt.”
“Poppy,” her mother said gently. But Dr. Loftus was
answering slowly.
“Well, sometimes we need the tests to confirm a diagnosis.
But in your case . . . no, Poppy. We don’t really need them.
We’re already sure.”
“Then I don’t see why I have to have them,” Poppy said
simply. “I’d rather go home.”
The doctors looked at each other, then at Poppy’s mother.
Then, without even trying to be subtle about it, the three
adults went out into the corridor to deliberate.
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When they came back, Poppy knew she’d won.
“You can go home, Poppy,” Dr. Franklin said quietly.
“At
least until you develop any further symptoms.
The nurse will
tell your mother what to look out for.”
The first thing Poppy did was call James. He answered
on
the first ring and said, “How do you feel?”
“Dizzy. But pretty good,” Poppy said, whispering because
her mother was outside talking to a nurse. “I’m coming home.”
“I’ll come over this afternoon,” James said. “Call me when
you think you’ll have an hour or so alone. And, Poppy . . . don’t
tell Phil I’m coming.”
“Why not?”
“I’ll explain later.”
When she actually got home, it was strange. Cliff and Phil
were there. Everybody was unusually nice to her, while still
trying to pretend that nothing unusual was going on. (Poppy
had heard the nurse tell her mother that it was good to try and
maintain a normal routine.)
It’s like my birthday, Poppy thought dazedly. Like some
terribly important birthday and graduation rolled into one.
Every few minutes the doorbell would ring as another flower
arrangement arrived. Poppy’s bedroom looked like a garden.
She felt badly for Phil. He looked so stricken—and so
brave. She wanted to comfort him the way she’d comforted her
mother—but how?
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“Come here,” she ordered, opting for direct action. And
when he obeyed, she hugged him tightly.
“You’ll beat this thing,” he whispered. “I know you will.
Nobody’s ever had as much will to live as you do. And nobody’s
ever, ever been as stubborn.”
It was then that Poppy realized just how terribly she was
going to miss him.
When she let go, she felt light-headed.
“Maybe you’d better lie down,” Cliff said gently. And
Poppy’s
mother helped her to the bedroom.
“Does Dad know?” she asked as her mother moved around
the bedroom, straightening things.
“I tried to get hold of him yesterday, but the people
at the
station said he’d moved to somewhere in Vermont. They don’t
know where.”
Poppy nodded. It sounded like her dad—always on the
move. He was a DJ—when he wasn’t being an artist or a stage
magician. He’d split up with her mom because he wasn’t very
good at being any of those things—or at least not good enough
to get paid much.
Cliff was everything Poppy’s father wasn’t: responsible,
disciplined,
hardworking. He fit in perfectly with Poppy’s mom
and Phil. So perfectly that sometimes Poppy felt like the odd
one out in her own family.
“I miss Dad,” Poppy said softly.
“I know. Sometimes I do, too,” her mother said, surprising
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her. Then she said firmly, “We’ll find him, Poppy. As soon as
he hears, he’ll want to come.”
Poppy hoped so. She didn’t suppose she’d get a chance to
see him—after.
It wasn’t until an hour or so before dinnertime, when Phil
and Cliff were out doing errands, and her mother was taking a
nap, that Poppy got the chance to call James.
“I’ll come right over,” he said. “I’ll let myself in.” Ten
minutes
later he walked into Poppy’s bedroom.
Poppy felt strangely shy. Things had changed between
her
and James. They weren’t simply best friends anymore.
They didn’t even say “Hi” to each other. As soon as he
came in, their eyes caught and met. And then, for an endless
moment, they just looked at each other.
This time, when Poppy felt the quick pang in her chest
that always came when she saw James, it was a throb of pure
sweetness. He cared about her. She could see it in his eyes.
Wait a minute, hang on, her mind whispered. Don’t jump
the gun here. He cares about you, yes, but he didn’t say he was
in love with you. There’s a difference.
Shut up, Poppy told her brain soberly. Aloud, she said,
“How come you didn’t want Phil to know you were here?”
James threw his light windbreaker over a chair and sat
down on Poppy’s bed. “Well—I just didn’t want to be interrupted,”
he said with a gesture of dismissal.
“How’s the pain?”
“It’s gone,” Poppy said. “Isn’t that weird? It didn’t wake me
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up at all last night. And there’s something else. I think I’m
starting to—well, read people’s thoughts.”
James smiled slightly, just one corner of his mouth up.
“That’s good. I was worried—” He broke off and went to turn
Poppy’s CD player on. Plaintive Bantu wailings emerged.
“I was worried you didn’t get enough blood last night,”
James said quietly, resuming his seat. “You’ll have to take more
this time—and so will I.”
Poppy felt something tremble inside her. Her revulsion
was gone. She was still afraid, but that was only because of the
consequences of what they were going to do. It wasn’t just a
way to get closer or to feed James. They were doing it to change
Poppy.
“The only thing I don’t understand is why you never bit
me before.” Her tone was light, but as she spoke the words, she
realized that there was a serious question behind them.
“I mean,” she said slowly, “you did it with Michaela and
Jacklyn, didn’t you? And with other girls?”
He looked away but answered steadily. “I didn’t exchange
blood with them. But I fed on them, yes.”
“But not me.”
“No. How can I explain?” He looked up at her. “Poppy,
taking blood can be a lot of different things—and the Elders
don’t want it to be anything but feeding. They say all you
should feel is the joy of the hunt. And that’s all I ever have
felt—before.”
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Poppy nodded, trying to feel satisfied with this. She didn’t
ask who the Elders were.
“Besides, it can be dangerous,” James said. “It can be done
with hatred, and it can kill. Kill permanently,
I mean.”
Poppy was almost amused by this. “You wouldn’t kill.”
James stared at her. Outside, it was cloudy and the light in
Poppy’s bedroom was pale. It made James’s face look pale, too,
and his eyes silver.
“But I have,” James said. His voice was flat and bleak. “I’ve
killed without exchanging enough blood, so the person didn’t
come back as a vampire.”
Chapter 7
Then you must have had a reason,” Poppy said
flatly. When he looked at her, she shrugged. “I know
you.” She knew him in a way she’d never known
anyone.
James looked away. “I didn’t have a reason, but there were
some . . . extenuating circumstances. You could say I was set
up. But I still have nightmares.”
He sounded so tired—so sad. It’s a lonely world, full of
secrets, Poppy thought. And he’d had to keep the biggest secret
of all from everyone, including her.
“It must have been awful for you,” she said, hardly aware
that she was speaking out loud. “I mean, all your life—holding
this in. Not telling anybody. Pretending . . .”
“Poppy.” He gave a shiver of repressed emotion. “Don’t.”
“Don’t sympathize with you?”
He shook his head. “Nobody’s ever understood before.”
“
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After a pause he said, “How can you worry about me ? With
what you’re facing?”
“I guess because—I care about you.”
“And I guess that’s why I didn’t treat you like Michaela or
Jacklyn,” he said.
Poppy looked at the sculpted planes of his face, at the wave
of brown hair falling over his forehead like silk . . . and held
her breath. Say “I love you,” she ordered mentally. Say it, you
thickheaded male.
But they weren’t connected, and James didn’t give the
slightest sign of having heard. Instead he turned brisk and
businesslike. “We’d better get started.” He got up and drew the
window curtains shut. “Sunlight inhibits all Vampire powers,”
he said in a guest lecturer
voice.
Poppy took advantage of the pause to go to the CD player.
The music had changed to a Dutch club song, which was
fine for doing the Netherlands skippy dance to, but not very
romantic. She punched a button
and a velvety Portuguese
lament began.
Then she twitched the sheer hangings around the bed closed.
When she sat down again, she and James were in their own little
world, dim and secluded, enclosed in misty eggshell white.
“I’m ready,” she said softly, and James leaned in close to
her. Even in the semidarkness Poppy felt mesmerized by his
eyes. They were like windows to some other place, someplace
distant and magical.
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The Night World, she thought, and tilted her chin back as
James took her in his arms.
This time the double sting at her neck hurt good.
But best was when James’s mind touched hers. The feeling
of oneness, of suddenly being whole—it spread through her
like starshine.
Once again she had the sense that they were melting
together, dissolving and merging everywhere they touched.
She could feel her own pulse echoing through him.
Closer, closer . . . and then she felt a pulling-back.
James? What’s wrong?
Nothing, he told her, but Poppy could sense that it wasn’t
quite true. He was trying to weaken the growing
bond between
them . . . but why?
Poppy, I just don’t want to force you into anything. What we’re
feeling is—artificial. . . .
Artificial? It was the realest thing that she’d ever experienced.
Realer than real. In the midst of joy, Poppy felt a surge
of hurt anger at James.
I don’t mean it like that, he said, and there was desperation
in the thought. It’s just that you can’t resist the blood-bond. You
couldn’t resist it if you hated me. It isn’t fair. . . .
Poppy didn’t care about fair. If you can’t resist it, why are
you trying? she asked him triumphantly.
She heard something like mental laughter, and then they were
both clinging together as a wave of pure emotion swept them.
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The blood-bond, Poppy thought when James raised his
head at last. It doesn’t matter if he won’t say he loves me—we’re
bonded now. Nothing can change that.
And in a moment or so she would seal that bond by taking
his blood. Try and resist that she thought, and was startled
when James laughed softly.
“Reading my mind again?”
“Not exactly. You’re projecting—and you’re very good at
it. You’re going to be a strong telepath.”
Interesting . . . but right now Poppy didn’t feel strong. She
suddenly felt kitten-weak. Limp as a wilting
flower. She needed . . .
“I know,” James whispered. Still supporting her, he started
to lift one wrist to his mouth.
Poppy stopped him with a restraining hand. “James? How
many times do we have to do this before I—change?”
“Once more, I think,” James said quietly. “I took a lot
this time, and I want you to do the same. And the next time
we do it . . .”
I’ll die, Poppy thought. Well, at least I know how long I
have left as a human.
James’s lips slid back to reveal long, delicate fangs, and
he struck at his own wrist. There was something snakelike in
the motion. Blood welled up, the color of syrup in a can of
cherry preserves.
Just as Poppy was leaning forward, lips parted, there was a
knock at the door.
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Poppy and James froze guiltily.
The knock came again. In her muddled and weakened
state,
Poppy couldn’t seem to make herself move. The only thought that
resounded in her brain was Oh, please. Please don’t let it be . . .
The door opened.
. . . Phil.
Phillip was already speaking as he poked his head in.
“Poppy, are you awake? Mom says—”
He broke off abruptly, then lunged for the lightswitch on
the wall. Suddenly the room was illuminated.
Oh, terrific. Poppy thought in frustration. Phil was peering
through the filmy draperies around the bed. Poppy peered
back at him.
“What—is going—on?” he said in a voice that would have
gotten him the lead role in The Ten Commandments.
And then,
before Poppy could gather enough wits to answer, he leaned in
and grabbed James by the arm.
“Phil, don’t,” Poppy said. “Phil, you idiot . . .”
“We had a deal,” Phil snarled at James. “And you broke it.”
James was gripping Phil’s arms now, as ungently as Phil
was grasping him. Poppy had the dismayed feeling that they
were going to start head-butting each other.
Oh, Lord, if she could only think straight. She felt so
brainless.
“You’ve got the wrong idea,” James said to Phil through
clenched teeth.
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“The wrong idea? I come in here and find the two of you
in bed, with all the curtains drawn, and you’re telling me I’ve
got the wrong idea?”
“On the bed,” Poppy interjected. Phil ignored her.
James shook Phil. He did it quite easily and with an
economy of movement, but Phil’s head snapped back and
forth. Poppy realized that James was not at his most rational
right now. She remembered the meted chair leg and decided
it was time to intervene.
“Let go,” she said, reaching in between the two boys to grab
for hands. Anybody’s hands. “Come on, you guys!” And then,
desperately, “Phil, I know you don’t understand, but James is
trying to help me—”
“Help you? I don’t think so.” And then to James: “Look
at her. Can’t you see that this stupid pretending
is making her
sicker? Every time I find her with you, she’s white as a sheet.
You’re just making things worse.”
“You don’t know anything about it,” James snarled in
Phil’s face. But Poppy was still processing something several
sentences back.
“Stupid? Pretending?” she said. Her voice wasn’t very loud
but everything stopped.
Both boys looked at her.
Everyone made mistakes then. Later, Poppy would realize
that if any of them had kept their heads, what happened next
could have been avoided. But none of them did.
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“I’m sorry,” Phil said to Poppy. “I didn’t want to tell
you—”
“Shut up,” James said savagely.
“But I have to. This—jerk—is just playing with you. He
admitted it to me. He said he felt sorry for you, and he thinks
that pretending he likes you makes you feel better. He’s got an
ego that would fill Dodger Stadium.”
“Pretending?” Poppy said again, sitting back. There was a
buzzing in her head and an eruption gathering in her chest.
“Poppy, he’s crazy,” James said. “Listen—”
But Poppy wasn’t listening. The problem was that she
could feel how sorry Phil was. It was much more convincing
than anger. And Phillip, honest, straightforward, trustworthy
Phillip, almost never lied.
He wasn’t lying now. Which meant . . . that James must be.
Eruption time.
“You . . .” she whispered to James. “You . . .” She couldn’t
think of a swear word bad enough. Somehow
she felt more hurt,
more betrayed than she had ever felt before. She had thought she
knew James; she had trusted him absolutely. Which made the
betrayal
all the worse. “So it was all pretending? Is that it?”
Some inner voice was telling her to hold on and think.
That she was in no state to make crucial decisions.
But she was
also in no state to listen to inner voices. Her own anger kept
her from deciding if she had any good reason to be angry.
“You just felt sorry for me?” she whispered, and suddenly
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all the fury and grief that she’d been suppressing
for the last day
and a half flooded out. She was blind with pain, and nothing
mattered except making James hurt as much as she hurt.
James was breathing hard, speaking rapidly. “Poppy—this
is why I didn’t want Phil to know—”
“And no wonder,” Poppy raged. “And no wonder you
wouldn’t say you loved me,” she went on, not even caring that
Phillip was listening. “And no wonder
you would do all that
other stuff, but you never even kissed me. Well, I don’t want
your pity—”
“What other stuff ? All what other stuff ?” Phil shouted. “I’m
gonna kill you, Rasmussen!”
He tore free of James and swung at him. James ducked so
that the fist just grazed his hair. Phil swung again and James
twisted sideways and grabbed him from behind in a headlock.
Poppy heard running footsteps in the hall. “What’s happening?”
her mother gasped in dismay, regarding the scene in
Poppy’s bedroom.
At almost the same instant Cliff appeared behind Poppy’s
mother. “What’s all the shouting?” he asked, his jaw particularly
square.
“You’re the one who’s putting her in danger,” James was
snarling in Phillip’s ear. “Right now.” He looked feral. Savage.
Inhuman.
“Let go of my brother!” Poppy yelled. All at once her eyes
were swimming with tears.
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“Oh, my God—darling,” her mother said. In two steps
she was beside the bed and holding Poppy. “You boys get out
of here.”
The savagery drained out of James’s expression, and he
loosened his hold on Phillip. “Look, I’m sorry. I have to stay.
Poppy . . .”
Phillip slammed an elbow into his stomach.
It might not have hurt James as much as it would a human,
but Poppy saw the fury sweep over his face as he straightened
from doubling up. He lifted Phil off his feet and threw him
headfirst in the general
direction of Poppy’s dresser.
Poppy’s mother let out a cry. Cliff jumped in between
Phil
and James.
“That’s enough!” he roared. Then, to Phil: “Are you all
right?” And to James: “What’s this all about?”
Phil was rubbing his head dazedly. James said nothing.
Poppy couldn’t speak.
“All right, it doesn’t matter,” Cliff said. “I guess everybody’s
a little jumpy right now. But you’d better
go on home,
James.”
James looked at Poppy.
Poppy, throbbing all over like an aching tooth, turned her
back on him. She burrowed into her mother’s embrace.
“I’ll be back,” James said quietly. It might have been meant
as a promise, but it sounded like a threat.
“Not for a while, you won’t,” Cliff said in a military
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command voice. Gazing over her mother’s arm, Poppy could
see that there was blood on Phillip’s blond hair. “I think everybody
needs a cooling-off period. Now, come on, move.”
He led James out. Poppy sniffled and shivered, trying
to
ignore both the waves of giddiness that swept over her and
the agitated murmuring of all the voices in her head. The
stereo went on blasting out madcore stomping music from
England.
In the next two days James called eight times.
Poppy actually picked up the phone the first time. It was
after midnight when her private line rang, and she responded
automatically, still half-asleep.
“Poppy, don’t hang up,” James said.
Poppy hung up. A moment later the phone rang again.
“Poppy, if you don’t want to die, you’ve got to listen to me.”
“That’s blackmail. You’re sick,” Poppy said, clutching
the
handset. Her tongue felt thick and her head ached.
“It’s just the truth. Poppy, listen. You didn’t take any blood
today. I weakened you, and you didn’t get anything in exchange.
And that could kill you.”
Poppy heard the words, but they didn’t seem real. She
found herself ignoring them, retreating into a foggy state where
thought was impossible. “I don’t care.”
“You do care, and if you could think, you’d know that.
It’s the change that’s doing this. You’re completely
messed up
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mentally. You’re too paranoid and illogical and crazy to know
you’re paranoid and illogical
and crazy.”
It was suspiciously like what Poppy had realized earlier.
She was aware, dimly, that she was acting the way Marissa
Schaffer had after drinking a six-pack of beer at Jan Nedjar’s
New Year’s party. Making
a ranting fool of herself. But she
couldn’t seem to stop.
“I just want to know one thing,” she said. “Is it true that
you said that stuff to Phillip?”
She heard James let his breath out. “It’s true that I said
it. But what I said wasn’t true. It was just to get him off my
back.”
By now Poppy was too upset to even want to calm down.
“Why should I believe somebody whose whole life is a lie?”
she said, and hung up again as the first tears spilled.
All the next day she stayed in her state of foggy denial.
Nothing seemed real, not the fight with James, not James’s
warning, and not her illness. Especially
not her illness. Her
mind found a way to accept the special treatment she was getting
from everyone
without dwelling on the reason for the
treatment.
She even managed to disregard her mother’s whispered
comments to Phil about how she was going downhill so fast.
How poor Poppy was getting pale, getting weak, getting worse.
And only Poppy knew that she could now hear conversations
held in the hallway as clearly as if they were in her own room.
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All her senses were sharpened, even as her mind was dulled.
When she looked at herself in the mirror, she was startled by
how white she was, her skin translucent as candle wax. Her
eyes so green and fierce that they burned.
The other six times James called, Poppy’s mother told him
Poppy was resting.
Cliff fixed the broken trim on Poppy’s dresser. “Who would
have thought the kid was that strong?” he said.
James flipped his cellular phone shut and banged a fist on the
Integra’s dashboard. It was Thursday afternoon.
I love you. That’s what he should have said to Poppy. And
now it was too late—she wouldn’t even talk to him.
Why hadn’t he said it? His reasons seemed stupid now.
So he hadn’t taken advantage of Poppy’s innocence
and
gratitude . . . well, bravo. All he’d done was tap her veins
and break her heart.
All he’d done was hasten her death.
But there wasn’t time to think about it now. Right now he
had a masquerade to attend.
He got out of the car and gave his windbreaker a twitch as
he walked toward the sprawling ranch-style house.
He unlocked and opened the door without calling to
announce his presence. He didn’t need to announce
it; his
mother would sense him.
Inside, it was all cathedral ceilings and fashionably bare
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walls. The one oddity was that every one of the many skylights
was covered with elegant custom-made drapes. This made the
interior seem spacious but dim. Almost—cavernous.
“James,” his mother said, coming from the back wing. She
had jet-black hair with a sheen like lacquer and a perfect figure
that was emphasized rather than disguised by her silver-andgold
embroidered wrap. Her eyes were cool gray and heavily
lashed, like James’s. She kissed the air beside his cheek.
“I got your message,” James said. “What do you want?”
“I’d really rather wait until your father gets home. . . .”
“Mom, I’m sorry, but I’m in a hurry. I’ve got things to
do—I haven’t even fed today.”
“It shows,” his mother said. She regarded him for a moment
without blinking. Then she sighed, turning toward the living
room. “At least, let’s sit down. . . . You’ve been a little agitated,
haven’t you, these last few days?”
James sat on the crimson-dyed suede couch. Now was the
test of his acting ability. If he could get through the next minute
without his mother sensing the truth, he’d be home free.
“I’m sure Dad told you why,” he said evenly.
“Yes. Little Poppy. It’s very sad, isn’t it?” The shade of the
single treelike floor lamp was deep red, and ruby light fell
across half his mother’s face.
“I was upset at first, but I’m pretty much over it now,”
James said. He kept his voice dull and concentrated
on sending
nothing—nothing—through his aura. He could feel his
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mother lightly probing the edges of his mind. Like an insect
gently caressing with an antenna, or a snake tasting the air with
its black forked tongue.
“I’m surprised,” his mother said. “I thought you liked her.”
“I did. But, after all, they’re not really people, are they?” He
considered a moment, then said, “It’s sort of like losing a pet. I
guess I’ll just have to find another one.”
It was a bold move, quoting the party line. James willed
every muscle to stay relaxed as he felt the thought-tendrils
tighten suddenly, coiling around him, looking for a chink in
his armor. He thought very hard—about Michaela Vasquez.
Trying to project
just the right amount of negligent fondness.
It worked. The probing tendrils slipped away from his
mind, and his mother settled back gracefully and smiled.
“I’m glad you’re taking it so well. But if you ever feel that
you’d like to talk to someone . . . your father knows some very
good therapists.”
Vampire therapists, she meant. To screw his head on
straight about how humans were just for feeding
on.
“I know you want to avoid trouble as much as I do,” she
added. “It reflects on the family, you see.”
“Sure,” James said, and shrugged. “I’ve got to go now. Tell
Dad I said hi, okay?”
He kissed the air beside her cheek.
“Oh, by the way,” she said as he turned toward the door.
“Your cousin Ash will be coming next week. I think he’d like to
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stay with you at the apartment—
and I’m sure you’d like some
company there.”
Over my unbreathing body, James thought. He’d forgotten
all about Ash’s threat to visit. But now wasn’t the time to
argue. He walked out feeling like a juggler with too many balls
in the air.
Back in his car he picked up the cellular phone, hesitated, then
snapped it shut without turning it on. Calling wasn’t any good.
It was time to change his strategy.
All right, then. No more half measures. A serious offensive—
aimed where it would do the most good.
He thought for a few minutes, then drove to McDonnell
Drive, parking just a few houses away from where Poppy lived.
And then he waited.
He was prepared to sit there all night if necessary, but he
didn’t have to. Just around sunset the garage door opened and
a white Volkswagen Jetta backed out. James saw a blond head
in the driver’s seat.
Hi, Phil. Nice to see you.
When the Jetta pulled away, he followed it.
Chapter 8
When the Jetta turned into the parking lot of
a 7-Eleven, James smiled. There was a nice
isolated area behind the store, and it was
getting dark.
He drove his own car around back, then got out to watch
the store entrance. When Phil came out with a bag, he sprang
on him from behind.
Phil yelled and fought, dropping the bag. It didn’t matter.
The sun had gone down and James’s power was at full
strength.
He dragged Phil to the back of the store and put him facing
the wall beside a Dumpster. The classic police frisking
position.
“I’m going to let go now,” he said. “Don’t try to run away.
That would be a mistake.”
Phil went tense and motionless at the sound of his voice.
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“I don’t want to run away. I want to smash your face in,
Rasmussen.”
“Go ahead and try.” James was going to add, Make my
night, but he reconsidered. He let go of Phil, who turned
around and regarded him with utter loathing.
“What’s the matter? Run out of girls to jump?” he said,
breathing hard.
James gritted his teeth. Trading insults wasn’t going to do
any good, but he could already tell it was going to be hard to
keep his temper. Phil had that effect on him. “I didn’t bring
you out here to fight. I brought you to ask you something. Do
you care about Poppy?”
Phil said, “I’ll take stupid questions for five hundred,
Alex,”
and loosened his shoulder as if getting ready for a punch.
“Because if you do, you’ll get her to talk to me. You were
the one who convinced her not to see me, and now you’ve got
to convince her that she has to see me.”
Phil looked around the parking lot, as if calling for somebody
to witness this insanity.
James spoke slowly and clearly, enunciating each word.
“There is something I can do to help her.”
“Because you’re Don Juan, right? You’re gonna heal her
with your love.” The words were flippant, but Phil’s voice was
shaky with sheer hatred. Not just hatred for James, but for a
universe that would give Poppy cancer.
“No. You’ve got it completely wrong. Look, you think
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I was making out with her, or trifling with her affections or
whatever. That’s not what was going on at all. I let you think
that because I was tired of getting the third degree from you—
and because I didn’t want you to know what we were doing.”
“Sure, sure,” Phil said in a voice filled with equal measures
of sarcasm and contempt. “So what were you doing? Drugs?”
“This.”
James had learned something from his first encounter
with
Poppy in the hospital. Show and tell should be done in that
order. This time he didn’t say anything; he just grabbed Phil by
the hair and jerked his head back.
There was only a single light behind the store, but it was
enough to give Phil a good view of the bared fangs looming
over him. And it was more than enough for James, with his
night vision, to see Phillip’s
green eyes dilate as he stared.
Phillip yelled, then went limp.
Not with fear, James knew. He wasn’t a coward. With the
shock of disbelief turning to belief.
Phillip swore. “You’re a . . .”
“Right.” James let him go.
Phil almost lost his balance. He grabbed at the Dumpster
for support. “I don’t believe it.”
“Yes, you do,” James said. He hadn’t retracted his fangs, and
he knew that his eyes were shining silver. Phil had to believe it
with James standing right in front of him.
Phil apparently had the same idea. He was staring at James
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as if he wanted to look away, but couldn’t. The color had
drained out of his face, and he kept swallowing as if he were
going to be sick.
“God,” he said finally. “I knew there was something
wrong
with you. Weird wrong. I could never figure out why you gave
me the creeps. So this is it.”
I disgust him, James realized. It’s not just hatred anymore.
He thinks I’m less than human.
It didn’t augur well for the rest of James’s plan.
“Now do you understand how I can help Poppy?”
Phil shook his head slowly. He was leaning against the wall,
one hand still on the Dumpster.
James felt impatience rise in his chest. “Poppy has a disease.
Vampires don’t get diseases. Do you need a road map?”
Phillip’s expression said he did.
“If,” James said through his teeth, “I exchange enough
blood with Poppy to turn her into a vampire, she won’t have
cancer anymore. Every cell in her body will change and she’ll
end up a perfect specimen:
flawless, disease-free. She’ll have
powers that humans don’t even dream of. And, incidentally,
she’ll be immortal.”
There was a long, long silence as James watched this sink
in with Phillip. Phil’s thoughts were too jumbled and kaleidoscopic
for James to make anything
of them, but Phil’s eyes got
wider and his face more ashen.
At last Phil said, “You can’t do that to her.”
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It was the way he said it. Not as if he were protesting
an
idea because it was too radical, too new. Not the knee-jerk
overreaction that Poppy had had.
He said it with absolute conviction and utmost horror. As
if James were threatening to steal Poppy’s soul.
“It’s the only way to save her life,” James said.
Phil shook his head slowly again, eyes huge and trancelike.
“No. No. She wouldn’t want it. Not at that cost.”
“What cost?” James was more than impatient now, he was
defensive and exasperated. If he’d realized
that this was going
to turn into a philosophical debate, he would have picked
somewhere less public. As it was, he had to keep all his senses
on the alert for possible intruders.
Phil let go of the Dumpster and stood on his own two feet.
There was fear mixed with the horror in his eyes, but he faced
James squarely.
“It’s just—there are some things that humans think are
more important than just staying alive,” he said. “You’ll find
that out.”
I don’t believe this, James thought. He sounds like a
junior space captain talking to the alien invaders in a B
movie. You won’t find Earth people quite the easy mark you
imagine.
Aloud, he said, “Are you nuts? Look, Phil, I was born in
San Francisco. I’m not some bug-eyed monster
from Alpha
Centauri. I eat Wheaties for breakfast.”
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“And what do you eat for a midnight snack?” Phil asked,
his green eyes somber and almost childlike. “Or are the fangs
just for decoration?”
Walked right into that one, James’s brain told him.
He looked away. “Okay. Touché. There are some differences.
I never said I was a human. But I’m not some kind of—”
“If you’re not a monster, then I don’t know what is.”
Don’t kill him, James counseled himself frantically. You
have to convince him. “Phil, we’re not like what you see at
the movies. We’re not all-powerful. We can’t dematerialize
through walls or travel through time, and we don’t need to
kill to feed. We’re not evil, at least not all of us. We’re not
damned.”
“You’re unnatural,” Phillip said softly, and James could feel
that he meant it from his heart. “You’re wrong. You shouldn’t
exist.”
“Because we’re higher up on the food chain than you?”
“Because people weren’t meant to . . . feed . . . on other
people.”
James didn’t say that his people didn’t think of Phillip’s
people as people. He said, “We only do what we have to do to
survive. And Poppy’s already agreed.”
Phillip froze. “No. She wouldn’t want to become like you.”
“She wants to stay alive—or at least, she did, before
she
got mad at me. Now she’s just irrational because she hasn’t got
enough of my blood in her to finish changing her. Thanks to
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you.” He paused, then said deliberately, “Have you ever seen a
three-week-old corpse, Phil? Because that’s what she’s going to
become if I don’t get to her.”
Phil’s face twisted. He whirled around and slammed a fist
into the metal side of the Dumpster. “Don’t you think I know
that? I’ve been living with that since Monday night.”
James stood still, heart pounding. Feeling the anguish Phil
was giving off and the pain of Phil’s injured
hand. It was several
seconds before he was able to say calmly, “And you think that’s
better than what I can give her?”
“It’s lousy. It stinks. But, yes, it’s better than turning
into
something that hunts people. That uses people.
That’s why all
the girlfriends, isn’t it?”
Once again, James couldn’t answer right away. Phil’s problem,
he was realizing, was that Phil was far too smart for his
own good. He thought too much. “Yeah. That’s why all the
girlfriends,” he said at last, tiredly. Trying not to see this from
Phil’s point of view.
“Just tell me one thing, Rasmussen.” Phillip straightened
and looked him dead in the eye. “Did you”—he stopped and
swallowed—“feed on Poppy—before she got sick?”
“No.”
Phil let out his breath. “That’s good. Because if you had,
I’d have killed you.”
James believed him. He was much stronger than Phil,
much faster, and he’d never been afraid of a human before. But
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just at that moment he had no doubt that Phil would somehow
have found a way to do it.
“Look, there’s something you don’t understand,” he said.
“Poppy did want this, and it’s something we’ve already started.
She’s only just beginning to change; if she dies now, she won’t
become a vampire. But she might not die all the way, either.
She could end up a walking corpse. A zombie, you know?
Mindless. Body rotting, but immortal.”
Phil’s mouth quivered with revulsion. “You’re just saying
that to scare me.”
James looked away. “I’ve seen it happen.”
“I don’t believe you.”
“I’ve seen it firsthand !” Dimly James realized he was yelling
and that he’d grabbed Phil by the shirt-front. He was out of
control—and he didn’t care. “I’ve seen it happen to somebody
I cared about, all right?”
And then, because Phil was still shaking his head: “I was
only four years old and I had a nanny. All the rich kids in San
Francisco have nannies. She was human.”
“Let go,” Phil muttered, pulling at James’s wrist. He was
breathing hard—he didn’t want to hear this.
“I was crazy about her. She gave me everything my mom
didn’t. Love, attention—she was never too busy. I called her
Miss Emma.”
“Let go.”
“But my parents thought I was too attached to her. So they
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took me on a little vacation—and they didn’t let me feed. Not
for three days. By the time they brought me back, I was starving.
Then they sent Miss Emma up to put me to bed.”
Phil had stopped fighting now. He stood with his head
bowed and turned to one side so he wouldn’t have to look at
James. James threw his words at the averted face.
“I was only four. I couldn’t stop myself. And the thing is,
I wanted to. If you’d asked me who I’d rather have die, me
or Miss Emma, I’d’ve said me. But when you’re starving, you
lose control. So I fed on her, and all the time I was crying and
trying to stop. And when I finally could stop, I knew it was
too late.”
There was a pause. James suddenly realized that his fingers
were locked in an agonizing cramp. He let go of Phil’s shirt
slowly. Phil said nothing.
“She was just lying there on the floor. I thought, wait, if
I give her my own blood she’ll be a vampire, and everything
will be okay.” He wasn’t yelling anymore. He wasn’t even really
speaking to Phillip, but staring out into the dark parking lot.
“So I cut myself and let the blood run into her mouth. She
swallowed some of it before my parents came up and stopped
me. But not enough.”
A longer pause—and James remembered why he was telling
the story. He looked at Phillip.
“She died that night—but not all the way. The two different
kinds of blood were fighting inside her. So by morning she
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was walking around again—but she wasn’t Miss Emma anymore.
She drooled and her skin was gray and her eyes were flat
like a corpse’s. And when she started to—rot—my dad took
her out to Inverness and buried her. He killed her first.” Bile
rose in James’s throat and he added almost in a whisper,
“I
hope he killed her first.”
Phil slowly turned around to look at him. For the first time
that evening, there was something other than horror and fear
in his face. Something like pity, James thought.
James took a deep breath. After thirteen years of silence
he’d finally told the story—to Phillip North, of all people. But
it was no good wondering about the absurdity. He had a point
to drive home.
“So take my advice. If you don’t convince Poppy to see
me, make sure they don’t do an autopsy on her. You don’t want
her walking around without her internal organs. And have a
wooden stake ready for the time when you can’t stand to look
at her anymore.”
The pity was gone from Phil’s eyes. His mouth was a hard,
trembling line.
“We won’t let her turn into . . . some kind of half-alive
abomination,” he said. “Or a vampire, either. I’m sorry about
what happened to your Miss Emma, but it doesn’t change anything.”
“Poppy should be the one to decide—”
But Phillip had reached his limit, and now he was simply
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shaking his head. “Just keep away from my sister,” he said.
“That’s all I want. If you do, I’ll leave you alone. And if you
don’t—”
“What?”
“I’m going to tell everybody in El Camino what you are.
I’m going to call the police and the mayor and I’m going to
stand in the middle of the street and yell it.”
James felt his hands go icy cold. What Phil didn’t realize
was that he’d just made it James’s duty to kill him. It wasn’t just
that any human who stumbled on Night World secrets had to
die, but that one actively threatening to tell about the Night
World had to die immediately, no questions asked, no mercy
given.
Suddenly James was so tired he couldn’t see straight.
“Get out of here, Phil,” he said in a voice drained of emotion
and vitality both. “Now. And if you really want to protect
Poppy, you won’t tell anybody anything.
Because they’ll trace
it back and find out that Poppy knows the secrets, too. And
then they’ll kill her—after bringing her in for questioning. It
won’t be fun.”
“Who’re ‘they’? Your parents?”
“The Night People. We’re all around you, Phil. Anybody
you know could be one—including the mayor. So keep your
mouth shut.”
Phillip looked at him through narrowed eyes. Then he
turned and walked to the front of the store.
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James couldn’t remember when he’d felt so empty. Everything
he’d done had turned out wrong. Poppy was now in more
kinds of danger than he could count.
And Phillip North thought he was unnatural and evil. What
Phil didn’t know was that most of the time James thought the
same thing.
Phillip got halfway home before he remembered that he’d
dropped the bag with Poppy’s cranberry juice and wild cherry
Popsicles. Poppy had hardly eaten in the last two days, and
when she did get hungry, it was for something weird.
No—something red, he realized as he paid for a second
time at the 7-Eleven. He felt a sick lurch in his stomach. Everything
she wanted lately was red and at least semiliquid.
Did Poppy realize that herself ?
He studied her when he went into her bedroom to give her
a Popsicle. Poppy spent most of the time in bed now.
And she was so pale and still. Her green eyes were the only
alive thing about her. They dominated her face, glittering with
an almost savage awareness.
Cliff and Phil’s mother were talking about getting roundthe-
clock nurses to be with her.
“Don’t like the Popsicle?” Phil asked, dragging a chair to
sit beside her bed.
Poppy was eyeing the thing with distaste. She took a tiny
lick and grimaced.
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Phillip watched her.
Another lick. Then she put the Popsicle into an empty
plastic cup on her nightstand. “I don’t know . . . I just don’t
feel hungry,” she said, leaning back against the pillows. “Sorry
you had to go out for nothing.”
“No problem.” God, she looks sick, Phil thought. “Is there
anything else I can do for you?”
Eyes shut. Poppy shook her head. A very small motion.
“You’re a good brother,” she said distantly.
She used to be so alive, Phil thought. Dad called her Kilowatt
or Eveready. She used to radiate energy.
Without in the least meaning to, he found himself saying,
“I saw James Rasmussen today.”
Poppy stiffened. Her hands on the bedspread formed not
fists, but claws. “He’d better keep away from here!”
There was something subtly wrong about her reaction.
Something not-Poppy. Poppy could get fierce, sure, but Phil
had never heard that animal tone in her voice before.
A picture flashed through Phil’s mind. A creature from
Night of the Living Dead, walking even though its intestines
were spilling out. A living corpse like James’s Miss Emma.
Was that really what would happen if Poppy died right
now? Was she that much changed already?
“I’ll scratch his eyes out if he comes around here,” Poppy
said, her fingers working on the spread like a cat kneading.
“Poppy—he told me the truth about what he really is.”
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Strangely, Poppy had no reaction. “He’s scum,” she said.
“He’s a reptile.”
Something about her voice made Phillip’s flesh creep. “And
I told him you would never want to become something like
that.”
“I wouldn’t,” Poppy said shortly. “Not if it meant hanging
around with him for eternity. I don’t want to see him ever
again.”
Phil stared at her for a long moment. Then he leaned back
and shut his eyes, one thumb jammed against his temple where
the ache was worst.
Not just subtly wrong. He didn’t want to believe it, but
Poppy was strange. Irrational. And now that he thought about
it, she’d been getting stranger every hour since James had been
thrown out.
So maybe she was in some eerie in-between state. Not a
human and not a vampire. And not able to think clearly. Just
as James had said.
Poppy should be the one to decide.
There was something he had to ask her.
“Poppy?” He waited until she looked at him, her green
eyes large and unblinking. “When we talked, James said that
you’d agreed to let him—change you. Before you got mad at
him. Is that right?”
Poppy’s eyebrows lifted. “I’m mad at him,” she confirmed,
as if this was the only part of the question she’d processed.
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“And you know why I like you? Because you’ve always hated
him. Now we both hate him.”
Phil thought for a moment, then spoke carefully. “Okay.
But when you weren’t mad at him, back then, did you want to
turn into—what he is?”
Suddenly a gleam of rationality showed in Poppy’s eyes.
“I just didn’t want to die,” she said. “I was so scared—and I
wanted to live. If the doctors could do anything for me, I’d try
that. But they can’t.” She was sitting up now, staring into space
as if she saw something terrible there. “You don’t know what it
feels like to know you’re going to die,” she whispered.
Waves of chills washed over Phillip. No, he didn’t know
that, but he did know—he could suddenly picture vividly—
what it was going to be like for him after Poppy died. How
empty the world was going to be without her.
For a long time they both sat in silence.
Then Poppy fell back onto the pillows again. Phillip could
see pastel blue smudges under her eyes, as if the conversation
had exhausted her. “I don’t think it matters,” she said in a faint
but frighteningly cheerful voice. “I’m not going to die anyway.
Doctors don’t know everything.”
So that’s how she’s dealing with it, Phillip thought. Total
denial.
He had all the information he needed, though. He had a clear
view of the situation. And he knew what he had to do now.
“I’ll leave so you can get some rest,” he said to Poppy, and
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patted her hand. It felt very cool and fragile, full of tiny bones
like a bird’s wing. “See you later.”
He slipped out of the house without telling anyone where
he was going. Once on the road, he drove very fast. It only
took ten minutes to reach the apartment
building.
He’d never been to James’s apartment before.
James answered the door with a cold, “What are you doing
here?”
“Can I come in? I’ve got something to say.”
James stood back expressionlessly to let him in.
The place was roomy and bare. There was a single chair beside
a very cluttered table, an equally cluttered
desk, and a square
unbeautiful couch. Cardboard boxes full of books and CDs were
stacked in the corners. A door led to a spartan bedroom.
“What do you want?”
“First of all, I have to explain something. I know you can’t
help being what you are—but I can’t help how I feel about
it, either. You can’t change, and neither can I. I need you to
understand that from the beginning.”
James crossed his arms over his chest, wary and defiant.
“You can skip the lecture.”
“I just need to make sure you understand, okay?”
“What do you want, Phil?”
Phil swallowed. It took two or three tries before he could
get the words out past the blockage of his pride.
“I want you to help my sister.”
Chapter 9
Poppy shifted on her bed.
She was unhappy. It was a hot, restless unhappiness
that seemed to swarm underneath her skin.
Coming from her body instead of from her mind. If she
hadn’t been so weak, she would have gotten up and tried to
run the feeling off. But she had spaghetti for muscles now
and she wasn’t running anywhere.
Her mind was simply cloudy. She didn’t try to think
much anymore. She was happiest when she was asleep.
But tonight she couldn’t sleep. She could still taste the wild
cherry Popsicle in the corners of her mouth. She would have
tried to wash the taste away, but the thought of water made her
feel vaguely nauseated. Water’s no good. Not what I need.
Poppy turned over and pressed her face into the pillow.
She didn’t know what she needed, but she knew she wasn’t
getting it.
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A soft sound came from the hallway. Footsteps. The footsteps
of at least two people. It didn’t sound like her mother and
Cliff, and anyway they’d gone to bed.
There was the lightest of knocks at her door, then a fan of
light opened on the floor as the door cracked. Phil whispered,
“Poppy, you asleep? Can I come in?”
To Poppy’s slowly rising indignation, he was coming
in,
without waiting for an answer. And someone was with him.
Not just someone. The one. The one who had hurt Poppy
worst of all. The betrayer. James.
Anger gave Poppy the strength to sit up. “Go away! I’ll
hurt you!” The most primitive and basic of warning-off messages.
An animal reaction.
“Poppy, please let me talk to you,” James said. And then
something amazing happened. Even Poppy, in her befuddled
state, recognized that it was amazing.
Phil said, “Please do it, Poppy. Just listen to him.”
Phil siding with James?
Poppy was too confused to protest as James came and knelt
by her bedside.
“Poppy, I know you’re upset. And it’s my fault; I made a
mistake. I didn’t want Phil to know what was really going on,
and I told him I was just pretending
to care for you. But it
wasn’t true.”
Poppy frowned.
“If you search your feelings, you’ll know it’s not true. You’re
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turning into a telepath, and I think you already have enough
power to read me.”
Behind James, Phil stirred as if uneasy at the mention
of telepathy. “I can tell you it’s not true,” he said, causing
both Poppy and James to look at him in surprise. “That’s one
thing I found out from talking to you,” he added, speaking
to James without looking at him. “You may be some kind of
monster, but you really do care about Poppy. You’re not trying
to hurt her.”
“Now you finally get it? After causing all this—?” James
broke off and shook his head, turning back to Poppy. “Poppy,
concentrate. Feel what I’m feeling. Find the truth for yourself.”
I won’t and you can’t make me, Poppy thought. But the part
of her that wanted to find out the truth was stronger than the
irrational, angry part. Tentatively
she reached for James—not
with her hand, but with her mind. She couldn’t have described
to anyone
how she did it. She just did it.
And she found James’s mind, diamond-bright and burning
with intensity. It wasn’t the same as being one with him, the
way she had been when they shared blood. It was like looking
at him from the outside, sensing his emotions from a distance.
But it was enough. The warmth and longing and protectiveness
he had for her were all clear. So was the anguish: the pain he
felt to know that she was hurting—and that she hated him.
Poppy’s eyes filled. “You really do care,” she whispered.
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James’s gray eyes met hers, and there was a look in them
Poppy couldn’t remember seeing before. “There are two cardinal
rules in the Night World,” he said steadily. “One is not to
tell humans that it exists. The other is not to fall in love with a
human. I’ve broken both of them.”
Poppy was aware, vaguely, that Phillip was walking out of
the room. The fan of light contracted as he half-shut the door
behind him. James’s face was partly in shadow.
“I could never tell you how I felt about you,” James said. “I
couldn’t even admit it to myself. Because
it puts you in terrible
danger. You can’t imagine
what kind of danger.”
“And you, too,” Poppy said. It was the first time she’d really
thought about this. Now the idea emerged from her muddled
consciousness like a bubble
in a pot of stew. “I mean,” she said
slowly, puzzling
it out, “if it’s against the rules to tell a human
or love a human, and you break the rules, then there must be
some punishment for you. . . .” Even as she said it, she sensed
what the punishment was.
More of James’s face went into shadow. “Don’t you worry
about that,” he said in his old voice, his cool-guy voice.
Poppy never took advice, not even from James. A surge of
irritation and anger swept through her—an animal surge, like
the feverish restlessness. She could feel her eyes narrow and her
fingers claw.
“Don’t you tell me what to worry about!”
He frowned. “Don’t you tell me not to tell you—” he
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began, and then broke off. “What am I doing? You’re still sick
with the change and I’m just sitting here.” He rolled up a sleeve
of his windbreaker and drew a fingernail along his wrist. Where
the nail cut, blood welled up.
It looked black in the darkness. But Poppy found her eyes
fixing on its liquid beading in fascination. Her lips parted and
her breath came faster.
“Come on,” James said, and held his wrist in front of her.
The next second Poppy had pounced and fixed her mouth on
it as if she were trying to save him from a snakebite.
It was so natural, so easy. This is what she’d needed when
she was dispatching Phil to get Popsicles and cranberry juice.
This sweet, heady stuff was the real thing and nothing else was
like it. Poppy sucked avidly.
It was all good: the closeness, the rich, dark-red taste; the
strength and vitality that flooded through her, warming her to
her fingertips. But best, better than any mere sensation, was
the touch of James’s mind. It made her giddy with pleasure.
How could she ever have mistrusted him? It seemed ridiculous
now that she could feel, directly, how he felt about her. She
would never know anyone
the way she knew James.
I’m sorry, she thought to him, and felt her thought
accepted, forgiven, cherished. Held gently by the cradling
of
James’s mind.
It wasn’t your fault, he told her.
Poppy’s mind seemed to be clearing with every second
that
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went by. It was like waking up out of a deep and uncomfortable
sleep. I don’t ever want this to end, she thought, not really
directing it at James, just thinking it.
But she felt a reaction in him—and then felt him bury the
reaction quickly. Not quickly enough. Poppy had sensed it.
Vampires don’t do this to each other.
Poppy was shocked. They would never have this glory
again after she changed? She wouldn’t believe that; she refused.
There must be a way. . . .
Again, she felt the beginning of a reaction in James, but just
as she was chasing it, he gently pulled his wrist back. “You’d
better not take any more tonight,” he said, and his real-world
voice sounded strange to Poppy’s ears. It wasn’t as much James as
his mental voice, and now she couldn’t really feel him properly.
They were two separate beings. The isolation was awful.
How could she survive if she could never touch his mind
again? If she had to use words, which suddenly seemed as
clumsy as smoke signals for communication?
If she could never
feel him fully, his whole being open to her?
It was cruel and unfair and all vampires must be idiots if
they settled for anything less.
Before she could open her mouth to begin the clumsy process
of verbally explaining this to James, the door moved. Phillip
looked around it.
“Come on in,” James said. “We’ve got a lot to talk about.”
Phil was staring at Poppy. “Are you . . .” He stopped and
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swallowed before finishing in a husky whisper. “Better?”
It didn’t take telepathy to sense his disgust. He glanced
at her mouth, and then quickly away. Poppy realized what
he must be seeing. A stain as if she’d been eating berries. She
rubbed at her lips with the back of her hand.
What she wanted to say was, it isn’t disgusting. It’s part of
Nature. It’s a way of giving life, pure life. It’s Secret and beautiful.
It’s all right.
What she said was, “Don’t knock it till you’ve tried it.”
Phillip’s face convulsed in horror. And the weird thing was
that on this subject James was in perfect agreement with him.
Poppy could sense it—James thought sharing blood was dark
and evil, too. He was filled with guilt. Poppy heaved a long,
exasperated sigh, and added, “Boys.”
“You’re better,” Phil said, cracking a faint smile.
“I guess I was pretty bizarre before,” Poppy said. “Sorry.”
“Pretty is not the word.”
“It wasn’t her fault,” James said shortly to Phil. “She was
dying—and hallucinating, sort of. Not enough blood to the
brain.”
Poppy shook her head. “I don’t get it. You didn’t take that
much blood from me the last time. How could I not have
enough blood to the brain?”
“It’s not that,” James said. “The two kinds of blood react
against each other—they fight each other. Look, if you want a
scientific explanation, it’s something like this. Vampire blood
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destroys the hemoglobin—the red cells—in human blood.
Once it destroys enough of the red cells, you stop getting the
oxygen you need to think straight. And when it destroys more,
you don’t have the oxygen you need to live.”
“So Vampire blood is like poison,” Phil said, in the tones of
someone who knew it all along.
James shrugged. He wasn’t looking at either Poppy or Phil.
“In some ways. But in other ways it’s like a universal cure. It
makes wounds heal fast, makes flesh regenerate. Vampires can
live on very little oxygen
because their cells are so resilient.
Vampire blood does everything—except carry oxygen.”
A light went on in Poppy’s brain. Dawning revelation—
the mystery of Count Dracula explained. “Wait a minute,” she
said. “Is that why you need human blood?”
“That’s one of the reasons,” James said. “There are some . . .
some more mystical things human blood does for us, but keeping
us alive is the most basic one. We take a little and that carries
oxygen through our system until our own blood destroys it. Then
we take a little more.”
Poppy settled back. “So that’s it. And it is natural. . . .”
“Nothing about this is natural,” Phil said, his disgust
surfacing
again.
“Yes, it is; it’s like whatdoyoucallit, from biology class.
Symbiosis—”
“It doesn’t matter what it’s like,” James said. “We can’t sit
here and talk about it. We’ve got to make plans.”
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There was an abrupt silence as Poppy realized what kind
of plans he was talking about. She could tell Phil was realizing
it, too.
“You’re not out of danger yet,” James said softly, his eyes
holding Poppy’s. “It’s going to take one more exchange of
blood, and you should have it as soon as possible. Otherwise,
you might relapse again. But we’re going to have to plan the
next exchange carefully.”
“Why?” Phil said, at his most deliberately obstructive.
“Because it’s going to kill me,” Poppy said flatly before
James could answer. And when Phil flinched, she went on
ruthlessly, “That’s what this is all about, Phil. It’s not some
little game James and I are playing. We have to deal with the
reality, and the reality is that one way or another I’m going to
die soon. And I’d rather die and wake up a Vampire than die
and not wake up at all.”
There was another silence, during which James put his hand
on hers. It was only then that Poppy realized
she was shaking.
Phil looked up. Poppy could see that his face was drawn,
his eyes dark. “We’re twins. So how’d you get so much older
than me?” he said in a muted voice.
A little hush, and then James said, “I think tomorrow
night
would be a good time to do it. It’s Friday—do you think you
can get your mom and Cliff out of the house for the night?”
Phil blinked. “I guess—if Poppy seems better, they might
go out for a little while. If I said I’d stay with her.”
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“Convince them they need a break. I don’t want them
around.”
“Can’t you just make them not notice anything? Like you
did with that nurse at the hospital?” Poppy asked.
“Not if I’m going to be concentrating on you,” James said.
“And there are certain people who can’t be influenced by mind
control at all—your brother, here, is one of them. Your mom
could be another.”
“All right; I’ll get them to go out,” Phillip said. He gulped,
obviously uncomfortable and trying to hide it. “And once
they’re gone . . . then what?”
James looked at him inscrutably. “Then Poppy and I do
what we have to do. And then you and I watch TV.”
“Watch TV,” Phil repeated, sounding numb.
“I’ve got to be here when the doctor comes—and the
people
from the funeral home.”
Phil looked utterly horrified at the mention of the funeral
home. For that matter, Poppy didn’t feel too cheerful about it
herself. If it weren’t for the rich, strange blood coursing inside
her, calming her . . .
“Why?” Phillip was demanding of James.
James shook his head, very slightly. His face was expressionless.
“I just do,” he said. “You’ll understand
later. For now,
just trust me.”
Poppy decided not to pursue it.
“So you guys are going to have to make up tomorrow,”
she
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said. “In front of Mom and Cliff. Otherwise it’ll be too weird
for you to hang out together.”
“It’ll be too weird no matter what,” Phil said under his
breath. “All right. Come over tomorrow afternoon
and we’ll
make up. And I’ll get them to leave us with Poppy.”
James nodded. “I’d better go now.” He stood. Phil stepped
back to let him out the door, but James hesitated
by Poppy.
“You gonna be all right?” he asked in a low voice.
Poppy nodded staunchly.
“Tomorrow, then.” He touched her cheek with his fingertips.
The briefest contact, but it made Poppy’s heart leap and it
turned her words into the truth. She would be all right.
They looked at each other a moment, then James turned
away.
Tomorrow, Poppy thought, watching the door close behind
him. Tomorrow is the day I die.
One thing about it, Poppy thought—not many people
were
privileged to know exactly when they were going to die. So
not many people had the chance to say goodbye the way she
planned to.
It didn’t matter that she wasn’t really dying. When a caterpillar
changes into a butterfly it loses its caterpillar
life. No
more shinnying up twigs, no more eating leaves.
No more El Camino High School, Poppy thought. No
more sleeping in this bed.
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She was going to have to leave it all behind. Her family, her
hometown. Her entire human life. She was starting out into
a strange new future with no idea of what was ahead. All she
could do was trust James—and trust her own ability to adapt.
It was like looking at a pale and curving road stretching in
front of her, and not being able to see where it went as it disappeared
into the darkness.
No more Rollerblading down the boardwalk at Venice
Beach, Poppy thought. No more slap of wet feet on concrete at
the Tamashaw public pool. No more shopping at the Village.
To say goodbye, she looked at every corner of her room.
Goodbye white-painted dresser. Goodbye desk where she had
sat writing hundreds of letters—as proven by the stains where
she’d dropped sealing wax on the wood. Goodbye bed, goodbye
misty white bed curtains that had made her feel like an
Arabian princess in a fairy tale. Goodbye stereo.
Ouch, she thought. My stereo. And my CDs. I can’t leave
them; I can’t. . . .
But of course she could. She would have to.
It was probably just as well that she had to deal with the
stereo before she walked out of her room. It built her up to
start dealing with the loss of people.
“Hi, Mom,” she said shakily, in the kitchen.
”Poppy! I didn’t know you were up.”
She hugged her mother hard, in that one moment aware of
so many little sensations: the kitchen tile under her bare feet,
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the faint coconut smell that clung to her mother’s hair from
her shampoo. Her mother’s arms around her, and the warmth
of her mother’s body.
“Are you hungry, sweetie? You look so much better.”
Poppy couldn’t stand to look into her mother’s anxiously
hopeful face, and the thought of food made her nauseated. She
burrowed back into her mother’s
shoulder.
“Just hold me a minute,” she said.
It came to her, then, that she wasn’t going to be able to say
goodbye to everything after all. She couldn’t tie up all the loose
ends of her life in one afternoon. She might be privileged to
know that this was her last day here, but she was going out just
like everyone else—unprepared.
“Just remember I love you,” she muttered into her mother’s
shoulder, blinking back tears.
She let her mother put her back to bed, then. She spent
the rest of the day making phone calls. Trying to learn a little
bit about the life she was about to exit, the people she was supposed
to know. Trying to appreciate it all, fast, before she had
to leave it.
“So, Elaine, I miss you,” she said into the mouthpiece,
her
eyes fixed on the sunlight coming in her window.
“So, Brady, how’s it going?”
“So, Laura, thanks for the flowers.”
“Poppy, are you okay?” they all said. “When are we going
to see you again?”
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Poppy couldn’t answer. She wished she could call her dad,
but nobody knew where he was.
She also wished she had actually read the play Our Town
when she’d been assigned it last year, instead of using Cliff
Notes and quick thinking to fake it. All she could remember
now was that it was about a dead girl who got the chance to
look at one ordinary day in her life and really appreciate it. It
might have helped her sort out her own feelings now—but it
was too late.
I wasted a lot of high school, Poppy realized. I used my
brains to outsmart the teachers—and that really wasn’t very
smart at all.
She discovered in herself a new respect for Phil, who actually
used his brain to learn things. Maybe her brother wasn’t
just a pitiful straitlaced grind after all. Maybe—oh, God—he’d
been right all along.
I’m changing so much, Poppy thought, and she shivered.
Whether it was the strange alien blood in her or the cancer
itself or just part of growing up, she didn’t know. But she was
changing.
The doorbell rang. Poppy knew who it was without leaving
the room. She could sense James.
He’s here to start the play, Poppy thought, and looked at
her clock. Incredible. It was almost four o’clock already.
Time literally seemed to be flying by.
Don’t panic. You have hours yet, she told herself, and
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picked up the phone again. But it seemed only minutes later
that her mother came knocking on the bedroom door.
“Sweetie, Phil thinks we should go out—and James has
come over—but I told him I don’t think you want to see him—
and I don’t really want to leave you at night. . . .” Her mother
was uncharacteristically
flustered.
“No, I’m happy to see James. Really. And I think you should
take a break. Really.”
“Well—I’m glad you and James have made up. But I still
don’t know. . . .”
It took time to convince her, to persuade her that Poppy
was so much better, that Poppy had weeks or months ahead of
her to live. That there was no reason
to stick around on this
particular Friday night.
But at last Poppy’s mother kissed her and agreed. And
then there was nothing to do but say goodbye to Cliff.
Poppy got a hug from him and finally forgave him for not
being her dad.
You did your best, she thought as she disengaged from
his crisp dark suit and looked at his boyishly square jaw. And
you’re going to be the one to take care of Mom—afterward. So
I forgive you. You’re all right, really.
And then Cliff and her mom were walking out, and it was
the last time, the very last time to say goodbye. Poppy called it
after them and they both turned and smiled.
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When they were gone, James and Phil came into Poppy’s
room. Poppy looked at James. His gray eyes were opaque,
revealing nothing of his feelings.
“Now?” she said, and her voice trembled slightly.
“Now.”
Chapter 10
Things have to be right,” Poppy said. “Things have to be
just right for this. Get some candles, Phil.”
Phil was looking ashen and haggard. “Candles?”
“As many as you can find. And some pillows. I need lots of
pillows.” She knelt by the stereo to examine
a haphazard pile
of CDs. Phil stared at her briefly, then went out.
“Structures from Silence . . . no. Too repetitious,” Poppy
said, rummaging through the pile. “Deep Forest
—no. Too
hyper. I need something ambient.”
“How about this?” James picked a CD up. Poppy looked
at the label.
Music to Disappear In.
Of course. It was perfect. Poppy took the CD and met
James’s gaze. Usually he referred to the haunting soft strains of
ambient music as “New Age mush.”
“You understand,” she said quietly.
“
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“Yes. But you’re not dying, Poppy. This isn’t a death scene
you’re setting up.”
“But I’m going away. I’m changing.” Poppy couldn’t
explain exactly, but something in her said she was doing the
right thing. She was dying to her old life. It was a solemn occasion,
a Passage.
And of course, although neither of them mentioned
it, they
both knew she might die for good. James had been very frank
about that—some people didn’t make it through the transition.
Phil came back with candles, Christmas candles, emergency
candles, scented votive candles. Poppy directed
him to
place them around the room and light them. She herself went
to the bathroom to change into her best nightgown. It was
flannel, with a pattern
of little strawberries.
Just imagine, she thought as she left the bathroom. This is
the last time I’ll ever walk down this hall, the last time I’ll push
open my bedroom door.
The bedroom was beautiful. The soft glow of candlelight
gave it an aura of sanctity, of mystery. The music was unearthly
and sweet, and Poppy felt she could fall into it forever, the way
she fell in her dreams.
Poppy opened the closet and used a hanger to bat a tawny
stuffed lion and a floppy gray Eeyore down from the top shelf.
She took them to her bed and put them beside the mounded
pillows. Maybe it was stupid, maybe it was childish, but she
wanted them with her.
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She sat on the bed and looked at James and Phillip.
They were both looking at her. Phil was clearly upset,
touching his mouth to stop its trembling. James was upset,
too, although only someone who knew him as well as Poppy
did would have been able to tell.
“It’s all right,” Poppy told them. “Don’t you see? I’m all
right, so there’s no excuse for you not to be.”
And the strange thing was, it was the truth. She was all
right. She felt calm and clear now, as if everything
had become
very simple. She saw the road ahead of her, and all she had to
do was follow it, step by step.
Phil came over to squeeze her hand. “How does this—how
does this work?” he asked James huskily.
“First we’ll exchange blood,” James said—speaking
to
Poppy. Looking only at her. “It doesn’t have to be a lot; you’re
right on the border of changing already. Then the two kinds
of blood fight it out—sort of the last battle, if you see what I
mean.” He smiled faintly and painfully, and Poppy nodded.
“While that’s happening you’ll feel weaker and weaker.
And then you’ll just—go to sleep. The change happens while
you’re asleep.”
“And when do I wake up?” Poppy asked.
“I’ll give you a kind of posthypnotic suggestion about that.
Tell you to wake up when I come to get you. Don’t worry
about it; I’ve got all the details figured out. All you need to do
is rest.”
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Phil was running nervous hands through his hair, as if he
was just now thinking about what kind of details he and James
were going to have to deal with. “Wait a minute,” he said in
almost a croak. “When—when you say ‘sleep’—she’s going to
look . . .”
“Dead,” Poppy supplied, when his voice ran out.
James gave Phil a cold look. “Yes. We’ve been over this.”
“And then—we’re really going to—what’s going to happen
to her?”
James glared.
“It’s okay,” Poppy said softly. “Tell him.”
“You know what’s going to happen,” James said through
clenched teeth to Phillip. “She can’t just disappear.
We’d have
the police and the Night People after us, looking for her. No,
it’s got to seem that she died from the cancer, and that means
everything’s got to happen exactly the way it would if she had
died.”
Phil’s sick expression said he wasn’t at his most rational.
“You’re sure there isn’t any other way?”
“No,” James said.
Phil wet his lips. “Oh, God.”
Poppy herself didn’t want to dwell on it too much. She
said fiercely, “Deal with it, Phil. You’ve got to. And remember,
if it doesn’t happen now it’s going to happen in a few
weeks—for real.”
Phil was holding on to one of the brass bedposts so hard
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that his knuckles were pale. But he’d gotten the point, and
there was no one better than Phil at bracing himself. “You’re
right,” he said thinly, with the ghost of his old efficient manner.
“Okay, I’m dealing with it.”
“Then let’s get started,” Poppy said, making her voice
calm and steady. As if she were dealing with everything effortlessly
herself.
James said to Phil, “You don’t want to see this part. Go out
and watch TV for a few minutes.”
Phil hesitated, then nodded and left.
“One thing,” Poppy said to James as she scooted to the
middle of the bed. She was still trying desperately
to sound
casual. “After the funeral—well, I’ll be asleep, won’t I? I won’t
wake up . . . you know. In my nice little coffin.” She looked up
at him. “It’s just that I’m claustrophobic, a little.”
“You won’t wake up there,” James said. “Poppy, I wouldn’t
let that happen to you. Trust me; I’ve thought of everything.”
Poppy nodded. I do trust you, she thought.
Then she held her arms out to him.
He touched her neck, so she tilted her chin back. As the
blood was drawn from her, she felt her mind drawn into his.
Don’t worry, Poppy. Don’t be afraid. All his thoughts were
ferociously protective. And even though it only confirmed
that there was something to be afraid of, that this could go
wrong, Poppy felt peaceful. The direct sense of his love made
her calm, flooded her with light.
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She suddenly felt distance and height and depth—
spaciousness. As if her horizons had expanded almost to
infinity in an instant. As if she’d discovered a new dimension.
As if there were no limits or obstacles to what she
and James could do together.
She felt . . . free.
I’m getting light-headed, she realized. She could feel herself
going limp in James’s arms. Swooning like a wilting flower.
I’ve taken enough, James said in her mind. The warm animal
mouth on her throat pulled back. “Now it’s your turn.”
This time, though, he didn’t make the cut at his wrist. He
took off his T-shirt and, with a quick, impulsive
gesture, ran a
fingernail along the base of his throat.
Oh, Poppy thought. Slowly, almost reverently, she leaned
forward. James’s hand supported the back of her head. Poppy
put her arms around him, feeling his bare skin under the
flannel
of her nightgown.
It was better this way. But if James was right, it was another
last time. She and James could never exchange blood again.
I can’t accept that, Poppy thought, but she couldn’t concentrate
on anything for very long. This time, instead
of clearing
her brain, the wild, intoxicating Vampire blood was making
her more confused. More heavy and sleepy.
James?
It’s all right. It’s the beginning of the change.
Heavy . . . sleepy . . . warm. Lapped in salty ocean waves.
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She could almost picture the Vampire blood trickling through
her veins, conquering everything in its path. It was ancient
blood, primeval. It was changing
her into something old, something
that had been around since the dawn of time. Something
primitive and basic.
Every molecule in her body, changing . . .
Poppy, can you hear me? James was shaking her slightly.
Poppy had been so engrossed in the sensations
that she hadn’t
even realized she wasn’t drinking
any longer. James was cradling
her.
“Poppy.”
It was an effort to open her eyes. “I’m all right. Just . . .
sleepy.”
His arms tightened around her, then he laid her gently on
the mounded pillows. “You can rest now. I’ll get Phil.”
But before he went, he kissed her on the forehead.
My first kiss. Poppy thought, her eyes drifting shut again.
And I’m comatose. Great.
She felt the bed give under weight and looked up to see
Phil. Phil looked very nervous, sitting gingerly, staring at
Poppy. “So what’s happening now?” he asked.
“The Vampire blood’s taking over,” James said.
Poppy said, “I’m really sleepy.”
There was no pain. Just a feeling of wanting to glide away.
Her body now felt warm and numb, as if she were insulated by
a soft, thick aura.
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“Phil? I forgot to say—thank you. For helping out. And
everything. You’re a good brother, Phil.”
“You don’t have to say that now,” Phil said tersely. “You
can say it later. I’m still going to be here later, you know.”
But I might not be. Poppy thought. This is all a gamble.
And I’d never take it, except that the only alternative
was to
give up without even trying to fight.
I fought, didn’t I? At least I fought.
“Yes, you did,” Phil said, his voice trembling. Poppy hadn’t
been aware she was speaking aloud. “You’ve always been a
fighter,” Phil said. “I’ve learned so much from you.”
Which was funny, because she’d learned so much from him,
even if most of it was in the last twenty-four hours. She wanted to
tell him that, but there was so much to say, and she was so tired.
Her tongue felt thick; her whole body weak and languorous.
“Just . . . hold my hand,” she said, and she could hear that
her voice was no louder than a breath. Phillip took one of her
hands and James the other.
That was good. This was the way to do it, with Eeyore and
her lion on the pillows beside her and Phil and James holding
her hands, keeping her safe and anchored.
One of the candles was scented with vanilla, a warm and
homey smell. A smell that reminded her of being a kid. Nilla
wafers and naptime. That was what this was like. Just a nap in
Miss Spurgeon’s kindergarten, with the sun slanting across the
floor and James on a mat beside her.
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So safe, so serene . . .
“Oh, Poppy,” Phil whispered.
James said, “You’re doing great, kiddo. Everything’s
just
right.”
That was what Poppy needed to hear. She let herself
fall
backward into the music, and it was like falling
in a dream,
without fear. It was like being a raindrop falling into the ocean
that had started you.
At the last moment she thought, I’m not ready. But she
already knew the answer to that. Nobody was ever ready.
But she’d been stupid—she’d forgotten the most important
thing. She’d never told James she loved him. Not even
when he’d said he loved her.
She tried to get enough air, enough strength to say it. But
it was too late. The outside world was gone and she couldn’t
feel her body any longer. She was floating in the darkness and
the music, and all she could do now was sleep.
“Sleep,” James said, leaning close to Poppy. “Don’t wake up
until I call you. Just sleep.”
Every muscle in Phil’s body was rigid. Poppy looked so
peaceful—pale, with her hair spread out in coppery curls on the
pillow, and her eyelashes black on her cheeks and her lips parted
as she breathed gently. She looked like a porcelain baby doll. But
the more peaceful she got, the more terrified Phil felt.
I can deal with this, he told himself. I have to.
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Poppy gave a soft exhalation, and then suddenly she was
moving. Her chest heaved once, twice. Her hand tightened on
Phil’s and her eyes flew open—but she didn’t seem to be seeing
anything. She simply looked astonished.
“Poppy!” Phil grabbed at her, getting a handful of flannel
nightgown. She was so small and fragile inside
it. “Poppy!”
The heaving gasps stopped. For one moment Poppy was
suspended in air, then her eyes closed and she fell back on the
pillows. Her hand was limp in Phil’s.
Phil lost all rationality.
“Poppy,” he said, hearing the dangerous, unbalanced
tone
in his own voice. “Poppy, come on. Poppy, wake up!”—on a
rising note. His hands were shaking violently, scrabbling at
Poppy’s shoulders.
Other hands pushed his away. “What the hell are you
doing?” James said quietly.
“Poppy? Poppy?” Phil kept staring at her. Her chest wasn’t
moving. Her face had a look of—innocent
release. The kind of
newness you only see in babies.
And it was—changing. Taking on a white, transparent
look. It was uncanny, ghostlike, and even though Phil had
never seen a corpse, he knew instinctively
that this was the
death pallor.
Poppy’s essence had left her. Her body was flat and toneless,
no longer inflated by the vital spirit. Her hand in Phil’s
was slack, not like the hand of a sleeping person. Her skin
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had lost its shine, as if somebody had breathed on it softly.
Phil threw back his head and let out an animal sound. It
wasn’t human. It was a howl.
“You killed her!” He tumbled off the bed and lurched
toward James. “You said she was just going to sleep, but you
killed her! She’s dead!”
James didn’t back away from the attack. Instead, he grabbed
Phil and dragged him out into the hallway.
“Hearing is the last sense to go,” he snarled in Phillip’s ear.
“She may be able to hear you.”
Phil wrenched free and ran toward the living room. He
didn’t know what he was doing, he only knew that he needed
to destroy things. Poppy was dead. She was gone. He grabbed
the couch and flipped it over, then kicked the coffee table over,
too. He snatched up a lamp, yanked its cord out of the socket,
and threw it toward the fireplace.
“Stop it!” James shouted over the crash. Phil saw him and
ran at him. The sheer force of his charge knocked James backward
into the wall. They fell to the floor together in a heap.
“You—killed her!” Phil gasped, trying to get his hands
around James’s throat.
Silver. James’s eyes blazed like the molten metal. He grabbed
Phil’s wrists in a painful grip.
“Stop it now, Phillip,” he hissed.
Something about the way he said it made Phil stop. Almost
sobbing, he struggled to get air into his lungs.
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“I’ll kill you if I have to, to keep Poppy safe,” James said,
his voice still savage and menacing. “And she’s only safe if you
stop this and do exactly what I tell you to. Exactly what I tell
you. Understand?” He shook Phil hard, nearly banging Phil’s
head into the wall.
Strangely enough, it was the right thing to say. James was
saying he cared about Poppy. And weird as it might sound,
Phil had come to trust James to tell the truth.
The raging red insanity in Phil’s brain died away. He took
a long breath.
“Okay. I understand,” he said hoarsely. He was used to
being in charge—both of himself and of other people. He
didn’t like James giving him orders. But in this case there was
no help for it. “But—she is dead, isn’t she?”
“It depends on your definition,” James said, letting go and
slowly pushing himself off the floor. He scanned the living
room, his mouth grim. “Nothing went wrong, Phil. Everything
went just the way it was supposed to—except for this. I
was going to let your parents come back and find her, but we
don’t have that option now. There isn’t any way to explain this
mess, except the truth.”
“The truth being?”
“That you went in there and found her dead and went
berserk. And then I called your parents—you know what restaurant
they’re at, don’t you?”
“It’s Valentino’s. My mom said they were lucky to get in.”
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“Okay. That’ll work. But first we have to clean up the bedroom.
Get all the candles and stuff out. It’s got to look as if she
just went to sleep, like any other night.”
Phil glanced at the sliding glass door. It was just getting
dark. But then Poppy had been sleeping a lot these last few days.
“We’ll say she got tired and told us to go watch TV,” he said
slowly, trying to conquer his dazed feeling and be clearheaded.
“And then I went in after a while and checked on her.”
“Right,” James said, with a faint smile that didn’t reach
his eyes.
It didn’t take long to clear out the bedroom. The hardest
thing was that Phil had to keep looking at Poppy, and every
time he looked, his heart lurched. She looked so tiny, so delicatelimbed.
A Christmas angel in June.
He hated to take the stuffed animals away from her.
“She is going to wake up, isn’t she?” he said, without
looking
at James.
“God, I hope so,” James said, and his voice was very tired.
It sounded more like a prayer than a wish. “If she doesn’t you
won’t have to come after me with a stake, Phil. I’ll take care of
it myself.”
Phil was shocked—and angry. “Don’t be stupid,” he
said brutally. “If Poppy stood for anything—if she stands
for anything—it’s for life. Throwing your life away would
be like a slap in her face. Besides, even if it goes wrong now,
you did your best. Blaming yourself is just stupid.”
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James looked at him blankly, and Phil realized they’d
managed to surprise each other. Then James nodded slowly.
“Thanks.”
It was a milestone, the first time they’d ever been on precisely
the same wavelength. Phillip felt an odd connection
between them.
He looked away and said briskly, “Is it time to call the
restaurant?”
James glanced at his watch. “In just a few minutes.”
“If we wait too long they’re going to have left by the time
we call.”
“That doesn’t matter. What matters is that we don’t have
any paramedics trying to resuscitate her, or taking her to the
hospital. Which means she’s got to be cold by the time anybody
gets here.”
Phil felt a wave of dizzy horror. “You’re a cold-blooded
snake after all.”
“I’m just practical,” James said wearily, as if speaking
to a
child. He touched one of Poppy’s marble-white hands where it
lay on the bedspread. “All right. It’s time. I’m going to call. You
can go berserk again if you want to.”
Phil shook his head. He didn’t have the energy anymore.
But he did feel like crying, which was almost
as good. Crying
and crying like a kid who was lost and hurt.
“Get my mom,” he said thickly.
He knelt on the floor beside Poppy’s bed and waited.
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L.J. Smith
Poppy’s music was off and he could hear the TV in the family
room. He had no sense of time passing
until he also heard a car
in the driveway.
Then he leaned his forehead against Poppy’s mattress.
His
tears were absolutely genuine. At that moment
he was sure he’d
lost her forever.
“Brace yourself,” James said from behind him. “They’re
here.”
Chapter 11
The next few hours were the worst of Phil’s life.
First and foremost was his mother. As soon as
she walked in, Phil’s priorities changed from wanting
her to comfort him to wanting to comfort her. And of
course there wasn’t any comfort. All he could do was hold
on to her.
It’s too cruel, he thought dimly. There ought to be a way
to tell her. But she would never believe it, and if she did,
she’d be in danger, too. . . .
Eventually the paramedics did come, but only after Dr.
Franklin had arrived.
“I called him,” James said to Phil during one of the interludes
when Phil’s mom was crying on Cliff.
“Why?”
“To keep things simple. In this state, doctors can issue a
death certificate if they’ve seen you within the last twenty days
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and they know the cause of death. We don’t want any hospitals
or coroners.”
Phil shook his head. “Why? What’s your problem with
hospitals?”
“My problem,” James said in a clipped, distinct voice, “is
that in hospitals they do autopsies.”
Phil froze. He opened his mouth but no sound came out.
“And in funeral homes they do embalming. Which is why
I need to be around when they come to pick up the body. I
need to influence their minds not to embalm her, or sew her
lips shut, or—”
Phil bolted for the bathroom and was sick. He hated
James again.
But nobody took Poppy to the hospital, and Dr. Franklin
didn’t mention an autopsy. He just held Phil’s mother’s hand and
spoke quietly about how these things could happen suddenly,
and how at least Poppy had been spared any pain.
“But she was so much better today,” Phil’s mother whispered
through tears. “Oh, my baby, my baby. She’d been getting
worse, but today she was better.”
“It happens like that sometimes,” Dr. Franklin said. “It’s
almost as if they rally for a last burst of life.”
“But I wasn’t there for her,” Phil’s mom said, and now there
weren’t any tears, just the terrible grating sound of guilt. “She
was alone when she died.”
Phil said, “She was asleep. She just went to sleep and
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never woke up. If you look at her, you can see how peaceful
it was.”
He kept saying things like that, and so did Cliff and so did
the doctor, and eventually the paramedics went away. And sometime
after that, while his mother was sitting on Poppy’s bed and
stroking her hair, the people from the mortuary came.
“Just give me a few minutes,” Phil’s mother said, dry-eyed
and pale. “I need a few minutes alone with her.”
The mortuary men sat awkwardly in the family room,
and James stared at them. Phil knew what was going on.
James was fixing in their minds the fact that there was to be
no embalming.
“Religious reasons, is that it?” one of the men said to Cliff,
breaking a long silence.
Cliff stared at him, eyebrows coming together. “What are
you talking about?”
The man nodded. “I understand. It’s no problem.”
Phil understood, too. Whatever the man was hearing,
it
wasn’t what Cliff was saying.
“The only thing is, you’ll want to have the viewing right
away,” the other man said to Cliff. “Or else a closed casket.”
“Yes, it was unexpected,” Cliff said, his face straightening
out. “It’s been a very short illness.”
So now he wasn’t hearing what the men were saying.
Phil
looked at James and saw sweat trickling down his face. Clearly
it was a struggle to control three minds at once.
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At last Cliff went in and got Phil’s mother. He led her to the
master bedroom to keep her from seeing what happened next.
What happened was that the two men went into Poppy’s
room with a body bag and a gurney. When they came out,
there was a small, delicate hump in the bag.
Phil felt himself losing rationality again. He wanted to knock
things down. He wanted to run a marathon to get away.
Instead, his knees started to buckle and his vision grayed out.
Hard arms held him up, led him to a chair. “Hang on,”
James said. “Just a few more minutes. It’s almost
over.”
Right then Phil could almost forgive him for being a
bloodsucking monster.
It was very late that night when everyone finally went to
bed. To bed, not to sleep. Phil was one solid ache of misery
from his throat down to his feet, and he lay awake with the
light on until the sun came up.
The funeral home was like a Victorian mansion, and the room
Poppy was in was filled with flowers and people. Poppy herself
was in a white casket with gold fittings, and from far away she
looked as if she were sleeping.
Phil didn’t like to look at her. He looked instead at the
visitors who kept coming in and filling the viewing room and
the dozens of wooden pews. He’d never realized how many
people loved Poppy.
“She was so full of life,” her English teacher said.
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“I can’t believe she’s gone,” a guy from Phil’s football
team said.
“I’ll never forget her,” one of her friends said, crying.
Phil wore a dark suit and stood with his mother and Cliff.
It was like a receiving line for a wedding. His mother kept saying,
“Thank you for coming,” and hugging people. The people
went over and touched the casket gently and cried.
And in the process of greeting so many mourners, something
strange happened. Phil got drawn in. The reality of
Poppy’s death was so real that all the vampire
stuff began to
seem like a dream. Bit by bit, he started to believe the story
he was acting out.
After all, everybody else was so sure. Poppy had gotten
cancer, and now she was dead. Vampires were just superstition.
James didn’t come to the viewing.
Poppy was dreaming.
She was walking by the ocean with James. It was warm and
she could smell salt and her feet were wet and sandy. She was
wearing a new bathing suit, the kind that changes color when
it gets wet. She hoped James would notice the suit, but he
didn’t say anything
about it.
Then she realized he was wearing a mask. That was strange,
because he was going to get a very weird tan with most of his
face covered up.
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“Shouldn’t you take that off ?” she said, thinking he might
need help.
“I wear it for my health,” James said—only it wasn’t
James’s voice.
Poppy was shocked. She reached out and pulled the mask
away.
It wasn’t James. It was a boy with ash blond hair, even
lighter than Phil’s. Why hadn’t she noticed his hair earlier? His
eyes were green—and then they were blue.
“Who are you?” Poppy demanded. She was afraid.
“That would be telling.” He smiled. His eyes were violet.
Then he lifted his hand, and she saw that he was holding a
poppy. At least, it was shaped like a poppy, but it was black. He
caressed her cheek with the flower.
“Just remember,” he said, still smiling whimsically. “Bad
magic happens.”
“What?”
“Bad magic happens,” he said and turned and walked
away. She found herself holding the poppy. He didn’t leave any
footprints in the sand.
Poppy was alone and the ocean was roaring. Clouds were
gathering overhead. She wanted to wake up now, but she
couldn’t, and she was alone and scared. She dropped the flower
as anguish surged through her.
“James!”
• • •
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Phil sat up in bed, heart pounding.
God, what had that been? Something like a shout—in
Poppy’s voice.
I’m hallucinating.
Which wasn’t surprising. It was Monday, the day of
Poppy’s funeral. In—Phil glanced at the clock—about four
hours he had to be at the church. No wonder he was dreaming
about her.
But she had sounded so scared. . . .
Phil put the thought out of his mind. It wasn’t even hard.
He’d convinced himself that Poppy was dead, and dead people
didn’t shout.
At the funeral, though, Phil got a shock. His father was
there. He was even wearing something resembling
a suit,
although the jacket didn’t match the trousers and his tie was
askew.
“I came as soon as I heard. . . .”
“Well, where were you?” Phil’s mother said, the fine lines of
strain showing around her eyes, the way they always did when
she had to deal with Phil’s father.
“Backpacking in the Blue Ridge Mountains. Next time,
I swear, I’ll leave an address. I’ll check my messages.
. . .” He
began to cry. Phil’s mom didn’t say anything else. She just
reached for him, and Phil’s heart twisted at the way they clung
to each other.
He knew his dad was irresponsible and hopelessly behind
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in child support and flaky and a failure. But nobody had ever
loved Poppy more. Right then, Phil couldn’t disapprove of
him, not even with Cliff standing
there for comparison.
The shock came when his dad turned to Phil before the
service. “You know, she came to me last night,” he said in a low
voice. “Her spirit, I mean. She visited me.”
Phil looked at him. This was the kind of weird statement
that had brought on the divorce. His father had always talked
about peculiar dreams and seeing things that weren’t there. Not
to mention collecting articles about astrology, numerology, and
UFOs.
“I didn’t see her, but I heard her calling. I just wish she
hadn’t sounded so frightened. Don’t tell your mother, but I got
the feeling she’s not at rest.” He put his hands over his face.
Phil felt every hair on the back of his neck stand up.
But the spooky feeling was drowned almost immediately
in the sheer grief of the funeral. In hearing things like “Poppy
will live on forever in our hearts and memories.” A silver hearse
led the way to Forest Park cemetery, and everyone stood in the
June sunshine
as the minister said some last words over Poppy’s
casket. By the time Phil had to put a rose on the casket, he was
shaking.
It was a terrible time. Two of Poppy’s girlfriends collapsed
in near-hysterical sobs. Phillip’s mother doubled over and had
to be led away from the casket. There was no time to think—
then or at the potluck at Phil’s house afterward.
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But it was at the house that Phil’s two worlds collided.
In
the middle of all the milling confusion, he saw James.
He didn’t know what to do. James didn’t fit into what was
going on here. Phil had half a mind to go over and tell him to
get out, that the sick joke was over.
Before he could do anything, James walked up and said
under his breath, “Be ready at eleven o’clock tonight.”
Phil was jolted. “For what?”
“Just be ready, okay? And have some of Poppy’s clothes
with you. Whatever won’t be missed.” Phil didn’t say anything,
and James gave him an exasperated
sideways look.
“We have to get her out, stupid. Or did you want to leave
her there?”
Crash. That was the sound of worlds colliding. For a moment
Phil was spinning in space with his feet on neither one.
Then with the normal world in shards around him, he
leaned against a wall and whispered, “I can’t. I can’t do it.
You’re crazy.”
“You’re the one who’s crazy. You’re acting like it never
happened. And you have to help, because I can’t do it alone.
She’s going to be disoriented at first, like a sleepwalker. She’ll
need you.”
That galvanized Phil. He jerked to stand up straight and
whispered, “Did you hear her last night?”
James looked away. “She wasn’t awake. She was just
dreaming.”
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“How could we hear her from so far away? Even my dad
heard it. Listen.” He grabbed James by the lapel of his jacket.
“Are you sure she’s okay?”
“A minute ago you were convinced she was dead and gone.
Now you want guarantees that she’s fine. Well, I can’t give you
any.” He stared Phil down with eyes as cold as gray ice. “I’ve
never done this before, all right? I’m just going by the book.
And there are always things that can go wrong. But,” he said
tersely when Phil opened his mouth, “the one thing I do know
is that if we leave her where she is, she’s going to have a very
unpleasant awakening. Get it?”
Phil’s hand unclenched slowly and he let go of the jacket.
“Yeah. I’m sorry. I just can’t believe any of this.” He looked up
to see that James’s expression had softened slightly. “But if she
was yelling last night, then she was alive then, right?”
“And strong,” James said. “I’ve never known a stronger
telepath. She’s really going to be something.”
Phil tried not to picture what. Of course, James was a vampire,
and he looked perfectly normal—most of the time. But
Phil’s mind kept throwing out pictures of Poppy as a Hollywood
monster. Red eyes, chalky skin, and dripping teeth.
If she came out like that, he’d try to love her. But part of
him might want to get a stake.
Forest Park cemetery was completely different at night. The
darkness seemed very thick. There was a sign on the iron gate
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that said, “No visitors after sunset,”
but the gate itself was
open.
I don’t want to be here, Phil thought.
James drove down the single lane road that curved around
the cemetery and parked underneath a huge and ancient
gingko tree.
“What if somebody sees us? Don’t they have a guard or
something?”
“They have a night watchman. He’s asleep. I took care of it
before I picked you up.” James got out and began unloading an
amazing amount of equipment from the backseat of the Integra.
Two heavy duty flashlights. A crowbar. Some old boards. A
couple of tarps. And two brand-new shovels.
“Help me carry this stuff.”
“What’s it all for ?” But Phil helped. Gravel crunched under
his feet as he followed James on one of the little winding paths.
They went up some weathered wooden stairs and down the
other side and then they were in Toyland.
That was what somebody at the funeral had called it. Phil
had overheard two business friends of Cliff ’s talking about it.
It was a section of the cemetery where mostly kids were buried.
You could tell without
even looking at the headstones because
there were teddy bears and things on the graves.
Poppy’s grave was right on the edge of Toyland. It didn’t
have a headstone yet, of course. There was only a green plastic
marker.
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James dumped his armload on the grass and then knelt to
examine the ground with a flashlight.
Phil stood silently, looking around the cemetery. He was
still scared, partly with the normal fear that they’d get caught
before they got finished, and partly with the supernatural fear
that they wouldn’t. The only sounds were crickets and distant
traffic. Tree branches and bushes moved gently in the wind.
“Okay,” James said. “First we’ve got to peel this sod off.”
“Huh?” Phil hadn’t even thought about why there was
already grass on the new grave. But of course it was sod.
James had found the edge of one strip and was rolling it up
like a carpet.
Phil found another edge. The strips were about six feet
long by one and a half feet wide. They were heavy, but it wasn’t
too hard to roll them up and off the foot of the grave.
“Leave ’em there. We’ve got to put them on again afterward,”
James grunted. “We don’t want it to look as if this place
has been disturbed.”
A light went on for Phil. “That’s why the tarps and stuff.”
“Yeah. A little mess won’t be suspicious. But if we leave dirt
scattered everywhere, somebody’s going to wonder.” James laid
the boards around the perimeter of the grave, then spread the
tarps on either side. Phil helped him straighten them.
What was left where the sod had been was fresh, loamy
soil. Phil positioned a flashlight and picked up a shovel.
I don’t believe I’m doing this, he thought.
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But he was doing it. And as long as all he thought about was
the physical work, the job of digging a hole in the ground, he
was okay. He concentrated on that and stepped on the shovel.
It went straight into the dirt, with no resistance. It was easy
to spade up one shovelful of dirt and drop it onto the tarp. But
by about the thirtieth shovelful, he was getting tired.
“This is insane. We need a backhoe,” he said, wiping
his
forehead.
“You can rest if you want,” James said coolly.
Phil understood. James was the backhoe. He was stronger than
anyone Phil had ever seen. He pitched up shovelful after shovelful
of dirt without even straining. He made it look like fun.
“Why don’t we have you on any of the teams at school?”
Phil said, leaning heavily on his shovel.
“I prefer individual sports. Like wrestling,” James said
and grinned, just for a moment, up at Phil. It was the kind of
locker-room remark that couldn’t be misunderstood from one
guy to another. He meant wrestling with, for instance, Jacklyn
and Michaela.
And, just at that particular moment, Phil couldn’t help
grinning back. He couldn’t summon up any righteous disapproval.
Even with James, it took a long time to dig the hole. It
was wider than Phil would have thought necessary.
When his
shovel finally chunked on something solid, he found out why.
“It’s the vault,” James said.
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“What vault?”
“The burial vault. They put the coffin inside it so it doesn’t
get crushed if the ground collapses. Get out and hand me the
crowbar.”
Phil climbed out of the hole and gave him the crowbar. He
could see the vault now. It was made of unfinished concrete
and he guessed that it was just a rectangular box with a lid.
James was prying the lid off with the crowbar.
“There,” James said, with an explosive grunt as he lifted
the lid and slid it, by degrees, behind the concrete box. That
was why the hole was so wide, to accommodate the lid on one
side and James on the other.
And now, looking straight down into the hole, Phil could
see the casket. A huge spray of slightly crushed yellow roses
was on top.
James was breathing hard, but Phil didn’t think it was with
exertion. His own lungs felt as if they were being squeezed flat,
and his heart was thudding hard enough to shake his body.
“Oh, God,” he said quietly and with no particular
emphasis.
James looked up. “Yeah. This is it.” He pushed the roses
down toward the foot of the casket. Then, in what seemed like
slow motion to Phillip, he began unfastening latches on the
casket’s side.
When they were unfastened, he paused for just an instant,
both hands flat on the smooth surface of the casket. Then he
lifted the upper panel, and Phillip could see what was inside.
Chapter 12
Poppy was lying there on the white velvet lining, eyes
shut. She looked very pale and strangely beautiful—
but
was she dead?
“Wake up,” James said. He put his hand on hers. Phillip had
the feeling that he was calling with his mind as well as his voice.
There was an agonizingly long minute while nothing
happened.
James put his other hand under Poppy’s
neck, lifting
her just slightly. “Poppy, it’s time. Wake up. Wake up.”
Poppy’s eyelashes fluttered.
Something jarred violently in Phillip. He wanted to give
a yell of victory and pound the grass. He also wanted to run
away. Finally he just collapsed by the graveside, his knees giving
out altogether.
“Come on, Poppy. Get up. We have to go.” James was
speaking in a gentle, insistent voice, as if he were talking to
someone coming out of anesthesia.
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Which was exactly how Poppy looked. As Phil watched
with fascination and awe and dread, she blinked and rolled her
head a little, then opened her eyes. She shut them again almost
immediately, but James went on talking to her, and the next
time she opened them they stayed open.
Then, with James urging her gently, she sat up.
“Poppy,” Phil said. An involuntary outburst. His chest was
swelling, burning.
Poppy looked up, then squinted and turned immediately
from the beam of the flashlight. She looked annoyed.
“Come on,” James said, helping her out of the open half of
the casket. It wasn’t hard; Poppy was small. With James holding
her arm, she stood on the closed half of the casket, and Phil
reached into the hole and pulled her up.
Then, with something like a convulsion, he hugged her.
When he pulled back, she blinked at him. A slight frown
puckered her forehead. She licked her index finger and drew
the wet finger across his cheek.
“You’re filthy,” she said.
She could talk. She didn’t have red eyes and a chalky face.
She was really alive.
Weak with relief, Phil hugged her again. “Oh, God, Poppy,
you’re okay. You’re okay.”
He barely noticed that she wasn’t hugging him back.
James scrambled out of the hole. “How do you feel, Poppy?”
he said. Not a politeness. A quiet, probing
question.
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Poppy looked at him, and then at Phillip. “I feel . . . fine.”
“That’s good,” James said, still watching her as if she were
a six-hundred-pound schizophrenic gorilla.
“I feel . . . hungry,” Poppy said, in the same pleasant,
musical
voice she’d used before.
Phil blinked.
“Why don’t you come over here, Phil?” James said, making
a gesture behind him.
Phil was beginning to feel very uneasy. Poppy was . . . could
she be smelling him? Not loud, wet sniffs, but the delicate little
sniffs of a cat. She was nosing around his shoulder.
“Phil, I think you should come around over here,” James
said, with more emphasis. But what happened next happened
too quickly for Phil even to start moving.
Delicate hands clenched like steel around his biceps.
Poppy
smiled at him with very sharp teeth, then darted like a striking
cobra for his throat.
I’m going to die, Phil thought with a curious calm. He
couldn’t fight her. But her first strike missed. The sharp teeth
grazed his throat like two burning pokers.
“No, you don’t,” James said. He looped an arm around
Poppy’s waist, lifting her off Phil.
Poppy gave a disappointed wail. As Phil struggled to his
feet, she watched him the way a cat watches an interesting
insect. Never taking her eyes off him, not even when James
spoke to her.
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“That’s your brother, Phil. Your twin brother. Remember?”
Poppy just stared at Phil with hugely dilated pupils. Phil
realized that she looked not only pale and beautiful
but dazed
and starving.
“My brother? One of our kind?” Poppy said, sounding
puzzled. Her nostrils quivered and her lips parted. “He doesn’t
smell like it.”
“No, he’s not one of our kind, but he’s not for biting,
either. You’re going to have to wait just a little while to feed.”
To Phillip, he said, “Let’s get this hole filled in, fast.”
Phillip couldn’t move at first. Poppy was still watching
him in that dreamy but intense way. She stood there in the
darkness in her best white dress, supple as a lily, with her hair
falling around her face. And she looked at him with the eyes
of a jaguar.
She wasn’t human anymore. She was something other.
She’d said it herself, she and James were of one kind and Phil
was something different. She belonged to the Night World
now.
Oh, God, maybe we should just have let her die, Phil
thought, and picked up a shovel with loose and trembling
hands. James had already gotten the lid back on the vault. Phil
shoveled dirt on it without looking at where it landed. His
head wobbled as if his neck were a pipe cleaner.
“Don’t be an idiot,” a voice said, and hard fingers closed on
Phil’s wrist briefly. Through a blur, Phil saw James.
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“She’s not better off dead. She’s just confused right now.
This is temporary, all right?”
The words were brusque, but Phil felt a tiny surge of comfort.
Maybe James was right. Life was good, in whatever form.
And Poppy had chosen this.
Still, she’d changed, and only time would tell how much.
One thing—Phil had made the mistake of thinking that
vampires were like humans. He’d gotten so comfortable
with
James that he’d almost forgotten their differences.
He wouldn’t make that mistake again.
Poppy felt wonderful—in almost every way.
She felt Secret and strong. She felt poetic and full of possibility.
She felt as if she’d sloughed off her old body like a snake
shedding its skin, to reveal a fresh new body underneath.
And she knew, without being quite sure how she knew,
that she didn’t have cancer.
It was gone, the terrible thing that had been running
wild
inside her. Her new body had killed it and absorbed it somehow.
Or maybe it was just that every cell that made up Poppy
North, every molecule, had changed.
However it was, she felt vibrant and healthy. Not just better
than she had before she’d gotten the cancer,
but better than
she could remember feeling in her life. She was strangely aware
of her own body, and her muscles and joints all seemed to be
working in a way that was sweet and almost magical.
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The only problem was that she was hungry. It was taking
all her willpower not to pounce on the blond guy in the hole.
Phillip. Her brother.
She knew he was her brother, but he was also human and
she could sense the rich stuff, lush with life, that was coursing
through his veins. The electrifying
fluid she needed to
survive.
So jump him, part of her mind whispered. Poppy frowned
and tried to wiggle away from the thought. She felt something
in her mouth nudging her lower lip, and she poked her thumb
at it instinctively.
It was a tooth. A delicate curving tooth. Both her canine
teeth were long and pointed and very sensitive.
How weird. She rubbed at the new teeth gently, then
cautiously explored them with her tongue. She pressed them
against her lip.
After a moment they shrank to normal size. If she thought
about humans full of blood like berries, they grew again.
Hey, look what I can do!
But she didn’t bother the two grimy boys who were filling
in the hole. She glanced around and tried to distract herself
instead.
Strange—it didn’t really seem to be either day or night.
Maybe there was an eclipse. It was too dim to be daytime, but
far too bright for nighttime. She could see the leaves on the
maple trees and the gray Spanish moss hanging from the oak
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trees. Tiny moths were fluttering around the moss, and she
could see their pale wings.
When she looked at the sky, she got a shock. There was
something floating there, a giant round thing that blazed with
silvery light. Poppy thought of spaceships, of alien worlds,
before she realized the truth.
It was the moon. Just an ordinary full moon. And the reason
it looked so big and throbbing with light was that she had
night vision. That was why she could see the moths, too.
All her senses were keen. Delicious smells wafted by her,
the smells of small burrowing animals and fluttering dainty
birds. On the wind came a tantalizing
hint of rabbit.
And she could hear things. Once she whipped her head
around as a dog barked right beside her. Then she realized that
it was far away, outside the cemetery. It only sounded close.
I’ll bet I can run fast, too, she thought. Her legs felt tingly.
She wanted to go running out into the lovely, gloriouslyscented
night, to be one with it. She was part of it now.
James, she said. And the strange thing was that she said it
without saying it out loud. It was something she knew how to
do without thinking.
James looked up from his shoveling. Hang on, he said the
same way. We’re almost done, kiddo.
Then you’ll teach me to hunt?
He nodded, just slightly. His hair was falling over his forehead
and he looked adorably grubby. Poppy felt as if she’d never
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really seen him before—because now she was seeing him with
new senses. James wasn’t just silky brown hair and enigmatic
gray eyes and a lithe-muscled body. He was the smell of winter
rain and the sound of his predator’s heartbeat and the silvery
aura of power she could feel around him. She could sense his
mind, lean and tiger-tough but somehow gentle and almost
wistful at the same time.
We’re hunting partners now, she told him eagerly, and he
smiled an acknowledgment. But underneath she felt that he
was worried. He was either sad or anxious about something,
something he was keeping from her.
She couldn’t think about it. She didn’t feel hungry anymore
. . . she felt strange. As if she was having trouble getting
enough air.
James and Phillip were shaking out the tarps, unrolling
strips of fresh sod to cover the grave. Her grave. Funny she
hadn’t really thought about that before. She’d been lying in a
grave—she ought to feel repulsed or scared.
She didn’t. She didn’t remember being in there at all—
didn’t remember anything from the time she’d fallen asleep in
her bedroom until she’d woken up with James calling her.
Except a dream . . .
“Okay,” James said. He was folding up a tarp. “We can go.
How’re you feeling?”
“Ummm . . . a little weird. I can’t get a deep breath.”
“Neither can I,” Phil said. He was breathing hard and
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wiping his forehead. “I didn’t know grave digging
was such
hard work.”
James gave Poppy a searching look. “Do you think you can
make it back to my apartment?”
“Hmm? I guess.” Poppy didn’t actually know what he was
talking about. Make it how? And why should going to his
apartment help her to breathe?
“I’ve got a couple of safe donors there in the building,”
James said. “I don’t really want you out on the streets, and I
think you’ll make it there okay.”
Poppy didn’t ask what he meant. She was having trouble
thinking clearly.
James wanted her to hide in the backseat of his car. Poppy
refused. She needed to sit up front and to feel the night air on
her face.
“Okay,” James said at last. “But at least sort of cover your
face with your arm. I’ll drive on back roads. You can’t be seen,
Poppy.”
There didn’t seem to be anyone on the streets to see her.
The air whipping her cheeks was cool and good, but it didn’t
help her breathing. No matter how she tried, she couldn’t seem
to get a proper breath.
I’m hyperventilating, she thought. Her heart was racing,
her lips and tongue felt parchment-dry. And still she had the
feeling of being air-starved.
What’s happening to me?
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Then the pain started.
Agonizing seizures in her muscles—like the cramps she
used to get when she went out for track in junior high. Vaguely,
through the pain, she remembered something the P.E. teacher
had said. “The cramps come when your muscles don’t get enough
blood. A charley horse is a clump of muscles starving to death.”
Oh, it hurt. It hurt. She couldn’t even call to James for
help, now; all she could do was hang on to the car door and
try to breathe. She was whooping and wheezing, but it wasn’t
any good.
Cramps everywhere—and now she was so dizzy that she
saw the world through sparkling lights.
She was dying. Something had gone terribly wrong. She
felt as if she were underwater, trying desperately to claw her
way to oxygen—only there was no oxygen.
And then she saw the way.
Or smelled it, actually. The car was stopped at a red light.
Poppy’s head and shoulders were out the window by now—
and suddenly she caught a whiff of life.
Life. What she needed. She didn’t think, she simply acted.
With one motion she threw the car door open and plunged out.
She heard Phil’s shout behind her and James’s shout in
her head. She ignored both of them. Nothing
mattered except
stopping the pain.
She grabbed for the man on the sidewalk the way a drowning
swimmer grabs at a rescuer. Instinctively. He was tall and
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strong for a human. He was wearing a dark sweatsuit and a
bomber jacket. His face was stubbly and his skin wasn’t exactly
clean, but that wasn’t important. She wasn’t interested in the
container,
only in the lovely sticky red stuff inside.
This time her strike was perfectly accurate. Her wonderful
teeth extended like claws and stabbed into the man’s throat.
Puncturing him like one of those old-fashioned bottle openers.
He struggled a little and then went limp.
And then she was drinking, her throat drenched in coppersweetness.
Sheer animal hunger took over as she tapped his veins.
The liquid filling her mouth was wild and raw and primal and
every swallow gave her new life.
She drank and drank, and felt the pain disappear. In its
place was a euphoric lightness. When she paused to breathe,
she could feel her lungs swell with cool, blessed air.
She bent to drink again, to suck, lap, tipple. The man had
a clear bubbling stream inside him, and she wanted it all.
That was when James pulled her head back.
He spoke both aloud and in her mind and his voice was
collected but intense. “Poppy, I’m sorry. I’m sorry. It was my
fault. I shouldn’t have made you wait so long. But you’ve had
enough now. You can stop.”
Oh . . . confusion. Poppy was peripherally aware of Phillip,
her brother Phillip, looking on in horror. James said she could
stop, but that didn’t mean she had to. She didn’t want to. The
man wasn’t fighting at all now. He seemed to be unconscious.
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She bent down again. James pulled her back up almost
roughly.
“Listen,” he said. His eyes were level, but his voice was
hard. “This is the time you can choose, Poppy. Do you really
want to kill?”
The words shocked her back to awareness. To kill . . . that
was the way to get power, she knew. Blood was power and life
and energy and food and drink. If she drained this man like
squeezing an orange, she would have the power of his very
essence. Who knew what she might be able to do then?
But . . . he was a man, not an orange. A human being.
She’d been one of those once.
Slowly, reluctantly, she lifted herself off the man, James let
out a long breath. He patted her shoulder and sat down on the
sidewalk as if too tired to stand up right then.
Phil was slumped against the wall of the nearest building.
He was appalled, and Poppy could feel it. She could even
pick up words he was thinking—words like ghastly and amoral.
A whole sentence that went something like “Is it worth it to
save her life if she’s lost her soul?”
James jerked around to look at him, and Poppy could feel
the silver flare of his anger. “You just don’t get it, do you?” he
said savagely. “She could have attacked you anytime, but she
didn’t, even though she was dying. You don’t know what the
bloodlust feels like. It’s not like being thirsty—it’s like suffocating.
Your cells start to die from oxygen starvation, because your
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own blood can’t carry oxygen to them. It’s the worst pain there
is, but she didn’t go after you to make it stop.”
Phillip looked staggered. He stared at Poppy, then held out
a hand uncertainly.
“I’m sorry. . . .”
“Forget it,” James said shortly. He turned his back on Phil
and examined the man. Poppy could feel him extend his mind.
“I’m telling him to forget this,” he said to Poppy. “All he needs
is some rest, and he might as well do that right here. See, the
wounds are already healing.”
Poppy saw, but she couldn’t feel happy. She knew Phil still
disapproved of her. Not just for something she’d done, but for
what she was.
What’s happened to me? she asked James, throwing herself
into his arms. Have I turned into something awful?
He held her fiercely. You’re just different. Not awful. Phil’s
a jerk.
She wanted to laugh at that. But she could feel a tremor
of sadness behind his protective love. It was the same anxious
sadness she’d sensed in him earlier. James didn’t like being
a predator, and now he’d made Poppy one, too. Their plan
had succeeded brilliantly—
and Poppy would never be the old
Poppy North again.
And although she could hear his thoughts, it wasn’t exactly
like the total immersion when they’d exchanged blood. They
might not ever have that togetherness again.
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“There wasn’t any other choice,” Poppy said stoutly, and
she said it aloud. “We did what we had to do. Now we have to
make the best of it.”
You’re a brave girl. Did I ever tell you that?
No. And if you did, I don’t mind hearing it again.
But they drove to James’s apartment building in silence,
with Phil’s depression weighing heavily in the backseat.
“Look, you can take the car back to your house,” James
said as he unloaded the equipment and Poppy’s
clothes into his
carport. “I don’t want to bring Poppy anywhere near there, and
I don’t want to leave her alone.”
Phil glanced up at the dark two-story building as if something
had just struck him. Then he cleared his throat. Poppy
knew why—James’s apartment was a notorious place, and she’d
never been allowed to visit it at night. Apparently Phil still had
some brotherly concern for his Vampire sister. “You, uh, can’t
just take her to your parents’ house?”
“How many times do I have to explain? No, I can’t take
her to my parents, because my parents don’t know she’s a vampire.
Right at the moment she’s an illegal vampire, a renegade,
which means she’s got to be kept a Secret until I can straighten
things out—somehow.”
“How—” Phil stopped and shook his head. “Okay. Not
tonight. We’ll talk about it later.”
“No, ‘we’ won’t,” James said harshly. “You’re not a part
of this anymore. It’s up to Poppy and me. All you need to
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do is go back and live your normal life and keep your mouth
shut.”
Phil started to say something else, then caught himself. He
took the keys from James. Then he looked at Poppy.
“I’m glad you’re alive. I love you,” he said.
Poppy knew that he wanted to hug her, but something
kept both of them back. There was an emptiness
in Poppy’s
chest.
“Bye, Phil,” she said, and he got in the car and left.
Chapter 13
He doesn’t understand,” Poppy said softly as James
unlocked the door to his apartment. “He just hasn’t
grasped that you’re risking your life, too.”
The apartment was very bare and utilitarian. High ceilings
and spacious rooms announced that it was expensive, but
there wasn’t much furniture. In the living room there was a
low, square couch, a desk with a computer, and a couple of
Oriental-looking pictures on the wall. And books. Cardboard
boxes of books stacked in the corners.
Poppy turned to face James directly. “Jamie . . . I understand.”
James smiled at her. He was sweaty and dirty and tired-
looking.
But his expression said Poppy made it all worthwhile.
“Don’t blame Phil,” he said, with a gesture of dismissal.
“He’s actually handling things pretty well. I’ve never broken
cover to a human before, but I think most of them would
“
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run screaming and never come back. He’s trying to cope,
at least.”
Poppy nodded and dropped the subject. James was tired,
which meant they should go to sleep. She picked up the duffel
bag that Phil had packed with her clothes and headed for the
bathroom.
She didn’t change right away, though. She was too fascinated
by her own reflection in the mirror. So this was what a
vampire Poppy looked like.
She was prettier, she noted with absent satisfaction.
The
four freckles on her nose were gone. Her skin was creamy-pale,
like an advertisement for face cream. Her eyes were green as
jewels. Her hair was wind-blown into riotous curls, metalliccopper.
I don’t look like something that sits on a buttercup anymore,
she thought. I look wild and dangerous and exotic. Like
a model. Like a rock star. Like James.
She leaned forward to examine her teeth, poking at the
canines to make them grow. Then she jerked back, gasping.
Her eyes. She hadn’t realized. Oh, God, no wonder Phil
had been scared. When she did that, when her teeth extended,
her eyes went silvery-green, uncanny.
Like the eyes of a hunting
cat.
All at once she was overcome by terror. She had to cling to
the sink to stay on her feet.
I don’t want it, I don’t want it. . . .
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Oh, deal with it, girl. Stop whining. So what did you
expect to look like, Shirley Temple? You’re a hunter now. And
your eyes go silver and blood tastes like cherry preserves. And
that’s all there is to it, and the other choice was resting in
peace. So deal.
Gradually her breathing slowed. In the next few minutes
something happened inside her; she did deal. She found . . .
acceptance. It felt like something giving
way in her throat and
her stomach. She wasn’t weird and dreamy now, as she’d been
when she had first awakened in the cemetery; she could think
clearly about her situation. And she could accept it.
And I did it without running to James, she thought suddenly,
startled. I don’t need him to comfort me or tell me it’s
okay. I can make it okay, myself.
Maybe that was what happened when you faced the very
worst thing in the world. She’d lost her family and her old life
and maybe even her childhood,
but she’d found herself. And
that would have to do.
She pulled the white dress over her head and changed
into a T-shirt and sweatpants. Then she walked out to James,
head high.
He was in the bedroom, lying on a full-sized bed made up
with light brown sheets. He was still wearing
his dirty clothes,
and he had one arm crooked over his eyes. When Poppy came
in, he stirred.
“I’ll go sleep on the couch,” he said.
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“No, you won’t,” Poppy said firmly. She flopped on the
bed beside him. “You’re dead tired. And I know I’m safe
with you.”
James grinned without moving his arm. “Because I’m
dead tired?”
“Because I’ve always been safe with you.” She knew that.
Even when she’d been a human and her blood must have
tempted him, she’d been safe.
She looked at him as he lay there, brown hair ruffled,
body
lax, Adidas unlaced and caked with soil. She found his elbows
endearing.
“I forgot to mention something before,” she said. “I only
realized I forgot when I was . . . going to sleep. I forgot to
mention that I love you.”
James sat up. “You only forgot to say it with words.”
Poppy felt a smile tugging at her lips. That was the amazing
thing, the only purely good thing about what had happened to
her. She and James had come together. Their relationship had
changed—but it still had everything she’d valued in their old
relationship. The understanding, the camaraderie. Now on top
of that was the new excitement of discovering each other as
more than best friends.
And she’d found the part of him that she had never been
able to reach before. She knew his secrets,
knew him inside out.
Humans could never know each other that way. They could
never really get into another person’s head. All the talking in
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the world couldn’t even prove that you and the other person
both saw the same color red.
And if she and James never merged like two drops of water
again, she would always be able to touch his mind.
A little shy, she leaned against him, resting on his shoulder.
In all the times they’d been close, they’d never kissed or
been romantic. For now, just sitting here like this was enough,
just feeling James breathe and hearing his heart and absorbing
his warmth. And his arm around her shoulders was almost too
much, almost too intense to bear, but at the same time it was
safe and peaceful.
It was like a song, one of those sweet, wrenching songs that
makes the hair on your arms stand up. That makes you want to
throw yourself on the floor and just bawl. Or fall backward and
surrender to the music utterly. One of those songs.
James cupped her hand, brought it to his lips, and kissed
the palm.
I told you. You don’t love somebody because of their looks or
their clothes or their car. You love them because they sing a song
that nobody but you can understand.
Poppy’s heart swelled until it hurt.
Aloud she said, “We always understood the same song,
even when we were little.”
“In the Night World there’s this idea called the soulmate
principle. It says that every person has one soulmate out there,
just one. And that person is perfect
for you and is your destiny.
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The problem being that almost nobody ever finds their soulmate,
just because
of distance. So most people go through their
whole lives feeling not complete.”
“I think it’s the truth. I always knew you were perfect
for me.”
“Not always.”
“Oh, yes. Since I was five. I knew.”
“I’d have known you were perfect for me—except that
everything I’d been taught said it was hopeless.” He cleared his
throat and added, “That is why I went out with Michaela and
those other girls, you know. I didn’t care about them. I could
get close to them without breaking the law.”
“I know,” Poppy said. “I mean—I think I always knew
it was something like that, underneath.” She added, “James?
What am I now?” Some things she could tell instinctively; she
could feel them in her blood. But she wanted to know more,
and she knew James understood why. This was her life now.
She had to learn the rules.
“Well.” He settled against the headboard, head tilted
back as she rested under his chin. “You’re pretty much like
me. Except for not being able to age or have families, made
vampires are basically like the lamia.” He shifted. “Let’s see.
You already know about being able to see and hear better than
humans. And you’re a whiz at reading minds.”
“Not everybody’s mind.”
“No Vampire can read everybody’s mind. Lots of times all I
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get is a sort of general feeling for what people are thinking. The
only certain way to make a connection is to—” James opened
his mouth and clicked his teeth. Poppy giggled as the sound
traveled through her skull.
“And how often do I have to—?” She clicked her own
teeth.
“Feed.” She felt James getting serious. “About once a day
on average. Otherwise you’ll go into the bloodlust. You can eat
human food if you want, but there’s no nutrition in it. Blood
is everything for us.”
“And the more blood, the more power.”
“Basically, yes.”
“Tell me about power. Can we—well, what can we do?”
“We have more control over our bodies than humans.
We
can heal from almost any kind of injury—except from wood.
Wood can hurt us, even kill us.” He snorted. “So there’s one
thing the movies have right—a wooden stake through the heart
will, in fact, kill a vampire. So will burning.”
“Can we change into animals?”
“I’ve never met any Vampire that powerful. But theoretically
it’s possible for us, and shapeshifters and werewolves do
it all the time.”
“Change into mist?”
“I’ve never even met a shapeshifter who could do that.”
Poppy thumped the bed with her heel. “And obviously
we
don’t have to sleep in coffins.”
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“No, and we don’t need native earth, either. Myself,
I prefer
a Sealy Posturepedic, but if you’d like some dirt . . .”
Poppy elbowed him. “Um, can we cross running water?”
“Sure. And we can walk into people’s homes without
being
invited, and roll in garlic if we don’t mind losing friends. Anything
else?”
“Yes. Tell me about the Night World.” It was her home
now.
“Did I tell you about the clubs? We have clubs in every big
city. In a lot of small ones, too.”
“What kind of clubs?”
“Well, some are just dives, and some are like cafés, and some
are like nightclubs, and some are like lodges—those are mostly
for adults. I know one for kids that’s just a big old warehouse
with skate ramps built in. You can hang out and skateboard.
And there are poetry slams every week at the Black Iris.”
Black iris, Poppy thought. That reminded her of something.
Something unpleasant . . .
What she said was, “That’s a funny name.”
“All the clubs are named for flowers. Black flowers are the
symbols of the Night People.” He rotated his wrist to show her
his watch. An analog watch, with a black iris in the center of
the face. “See?”
“Yeah. You know, I noticed that black thing, but I never
really looked at it before. I think I assumed it was Mickey
Mouse.”
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He rapped her lightly on the nose in reproof. “This is
serious business, kid. One of these will identify you to other
Night People—even if they’re as stupid as a werewolf.”
“You don’t like werewolves?”
“They’re great if you like double-digit IQs.”
“But you let them in the clubs.”
“Some clubs. Night People may not marry out of their
own kind, but they all mix: lamia, made vampires,
werewolves,
both kinds of witches . . .”
Poppy, who had been playing at intertwining their fingers
in different ways, shifted curiously. “What’s both kinds
of witches?”
“Oh . . . there’s the kind that know about their heritage
and have been trained, and the kind that don’t. That second
kind are what humans call psychics.
Sometimes they just have
latent powers, and some of them aren’t even psychic enough to
find the Night World, so they don’t get in.”
Poppy nodded. “Okay. Got it. But what if a human walks
into one of those clubs?”
“Nobody would let them. The clubs aren’t what you’d call
conspicuous, and they’re always guarded.”
“But if they did . . .”
James shrugged. His voice was suddenly bleak. “They’d be
killed. Unless somebody wanted to pick them up as a toy or
pawn. That means a human who’s basically brainwashed—who
lives with vampires
but doesn’t know it because of the mind
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control. Sort of like a sleepwalker. I had a nanny once . . .” His
voice trailed off, and Poppy could feel his distress.
“You can tell me about it later.” She didn’t want him ever
to be hurt again.
“M’m.” He sounded sleepy. Poppy settled herself more
comfortably against him.
It was amazing, considering her last experience going to
sleep, that she could even shut her eyes. But she could. She was
with her soulmate, so what could go wrong? Nothing could
hurt her here.
Phil was having trouble shutting his eyes.
Every time he did, he saw Poppy. Poppy asleep in the casket.
Poppy watching him with a hungry cat’s gaze. Poppy lifting
her head from that guy’s throat to show a mouth stained as
if she’d been eating berries.
She wasn’t human anymore.
And just because he’d known all along that she wouldn’t be
didn’t make it any easier to accept.
He couldn’t—he couldn’t—condone jumping on people and
tearing up their throats for dinner. And he wasn’t sure that it was
any better to charm people
and bite them and then hypnotize them
to forget
it. The whole system was scary on some deep level.
Maybe James had been right—humans just couldn’t deal
with the idea that there was somebody higher on the food
chain. They’d lost touch with their caveman ancestors, who
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knew what it was like to be hunted. They thought all that
primal
stuff was behind them.
Could Phillip tell them a thing or two.
The bottom line was that he couldn’t accept, and Poppy
couldn’t change. And the only thing that made it bearable was
that somehow he loved her anyway.
Poppy woke in the dim, curtained bedroom the next day
to find the other half of the bed empty. She wasn’t alarmed,
though. Instinctively she reached out with her mind, and . . .
there. James was in the kitchenette.
She felt . . . energetic. Like a puppy straining to be let
loose in a field. But as soon as she walked into the living room,
she felt that her powers were weaker. And her eyes hurt. She
squinted toward the painful brightness of a window.
“It’s the sun,” James said. “Inhibits all Vampire powers,
remember?” He went over to the window and closed the
curtains—
they were the blackout type, like the ones in the bedroom.
The midafternoon sunshine
was cut off. “That should
help a little—but you’d better stay inside today until it gets
dark. New vampires are more sensitive.”
Poppy caught something behind his words. “You’re going
out?”
“I have to.” He grimaced. “There’s something I forgot—
my cousin Ash is supposed to show up this week. I’ve got to get
my parents to head him off.”
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“I didn’t know you had a cousin.”
He winced again. “I’ve got lots, actually. They’re back East
in a safe town—a whole town that’s controlled
by the Night
World. Most of them are okay, but not Ash.”
“What’s wrong with him?”
“He’s crazy. Also cold-blooded, ruthless—”
“You sound like Phil describing you.”
“No, Ash is the real thing. The ultimate vampire. He
doesn’t care about anybody but himself, and he loves to make
trouble.”
Poppy was prepared to love all James’s cousins for his sake,
but she had to agree that Ash sounded dangerous.
“I wouldn’t trust anyone to know about you just now,”
James said, “and Ash is out of the question. I’m going to tell
my parents he can’t come here, that’s all.”
And then what do we do? Poppy thought. She couldn’t
stay hidden forever. She belonged to the Night World—but
the Night World wouldn’t accept her.
There had to be some solution—and she could only hope
that she and James would find it.
“Don’t be gone too long,” she said, and he kissed her
on the forehead, which was nice. As if it was getting to be
a habit.
When he was gone, she took a shower and put on clean
clothes. Good old Phil—he’d slipped in her favorite jeans.
Then she made herself putter around the apartment, because
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she didn’t want to sit and think. Nobody should have to think
on the day after their own funeral.
The phone sat beside the square couch and mocked her.
She found herself resisting the impulse to pick it up so often
that her arm ached.
But who could she call? Nobody. Not even Phil, because
what if somebody overheard him? What if her mother
answered?
No, no, don’t think about Mom, you idiot.
But it was too late. She was overwhelmed, suddenly,
by a
desperate need to hear her mother’s voice. Just to hear a “hello.”
She knew she couldn’t say anything herself. She just needed to
establish that her mom still existed.
She punched the phone number in without giving herself
time to think. She counted rings. One, two, three . . .
“Hello?”
It was her mother’s voice. And it was already over, and it
wasn’t enough. Poppy sat trying to breathe, with tears running
down her face. She hung there, wringing the phone cord,
listening to the faint buzz on the other end. Like a prisoner in
court waiting to hear her sentence.
“Hello? Hello.” Her mother’s voice was flat and tired. Not
acerbic. Prank phone calls were no big deal when you’d just lost
your daughter.
Then a click signaled disconnection.
Poppy clutched the earpiece to her chest and cried,
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rocking slightly. At last she put it back on the cradle.
Well, she wouldn’t do that again. It was worse than not
being able to hear her mother at all. And it didn’t help her with
reality, either. It gave her a dizzy Twilight
Zone feeling to think
that her mom was at home, and everybody was at home, and
Poppy wasn’t there. Life was going on in that house, but she
wasn’t part of it anymore. She couldn’t just walk in, any more
than she could walk into some strange family’s
house.
You’re really a glutton for punishment, aren’t you? Why
don’t you stop thinking about this and do something
distracting?
She was snooping through James’s file cabinet when the
apartment door opened.
Because she heard the metallic jingle of a key, she assumed
it was James. But then, even before she turned, she knew it
wasn’t James. It wasn’t James’s mind.
She turned and saw a boy with ash blond hair.
He was very good looking, built about like James, but a
little taller, and maybe a year older. His hair was longish. His
face had a nice shape, clean-cut features, and wicked slightly
tilted eyes.
But that wasn’t why she was staring at him.
He gave her a flashing smile.
“I’m Ash,” he said. “Hi.”
Poppy was still staring. “You were in my dream,” she said.
“You said, ‘Bad magic happens.’”
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“So you’re a psychic?”
“What?”
“Your dreams come true?”
“Not usually.” Poppy suddenly got hold of herself. “Listen,
um, I don’t know how you got in—”
He jingled a key ring at her. “Aunt Maddy gave me these.
James told you to keep me out, I bet.”
Poppy decided that the best defense was a good offense.
“Now, why would he tell me that?” she said, and folded her
arms over her chest.
He gave her a wicked, laughing glance. His eyes looked
hazel in this light, almost golden, “I’m bad,” he said simply.
Poppy tried to plaster a look of righteous disapproval—
like Phil’s—on her face. It didn’t work very well. “Does James
know you’re here? Where is he?”
“I have no idea. Aunt Maddy gave me the keys at lunch,
and then she went out on some interior decorating job. What
did you dream about?”
Poppy just shook her head. She was trying to think. Presumably,
James was wandering around in search of his mother right
now. Once he found her he’d find out that Ash was over here, and
then he’d come back fast. Which meant . . . well, Poppy supposed
it meant she should keep Ash occupied until James arrived.
But how? She’d never really practiced being winsome
and
adorable with guys. And she was worried about talking too
much. She might give herself away as a new vampire.
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Oh, well. When in doubt, shut your eyes and jump right in.
“Know any good werewolf jokes?” she said.
He laughed. He had a nice laugh, and his eyes weren’t hazel
after all. They were gray, like James’s.
“You haven’t told me your name yet, little dreamer,” he
said.
“Poppy,” Poppy said and immediately wished she hadn’t.
What if Mrs. Rasmussen had mentioned that one of James’s
little
friends called Poppy had just died? To conceal her nervousness,
she got up to close the door.
“Good lamia name,” he said. “I don’t like this yuppy thing
of taking on human names, do you? I’ve got three sisters, and
they all have regular old-fashioned names. Rowan, Kestrel,
Jade. My dad would burst a blood vessel if one of them suddenly
wanted to call herself ‘Susan.’”
“Or ‘Maddy?’” Poppy asked, intrigued despite herself.
“Huh? It’s short for Madder.”
Poppy wasn’t sure what madder was. A plant, she thought.
“Of course I’m not saying anything against James,” Ash
said, and it was perfectly clear from his voice that he was saying
something against James. “Things are different for you
guys in California. You have to mix more with humans; you
have to be more careful. So if naming yourself after vermin
makes it easier . . .” He shrugged.
“Oh, yeah, they’re vermin all right,” Poppy said at random.
She was thinking, He’s playing with me. Isn’t he playing with me?
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She had the sinking feeling that he knew everything.
Agitation
made her need to move. She headed for James’s
stereo center.
“So you like any vermin music?” she said. “Techno? Acid
jazz? Trip-hop? Jungle?” She waved a vinyl record at him. “This
is some serious jump-up jungle.” He blinked. “Oh, and this
is great industrial noise. And this is a real good acid house
stomper with a sort of madcore edge to it. . . .”
She had him on the defensive now. Nobody could stop
Poppy when she got going like this. She widened her eyes at
him and blathered on, looking as fey as she knew how.
“And I say freestyle’s coming back. Completely underground,
so far, but on the rise. Now, Euro-dance, on the other hand . . .”
Ash was sitting on the square couch, long legs stretched out
in front of him. His eyes were deep blue and slightly glazed.
“Sweetheart,” he said finally, “I hate to interrupt. But you
and I need to talk.”
Poppy was too clever to ask him what about. “. . . these
sort of eternal void keys and troll groaning sounds that make
you want to ask, ‘Is anybody out there?’” she finished, and then
she had to breathe. Ash jumped in.
“We really have to talk,” he said. “Before James gets back.”
There was no way to evade him now. Poppy’s mouth was
dry. He leaned forward, his eyes a clear blue-green like tropical
waters. And, yes, they really do change color, Poppy thought.
“It’s not your fault,” he said.
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“What?”
It’s not your fault. That you can’t shield your mind. You’ll learn
how to do it, he said, and Poppy only realized halfway through
that he wasn’t saying it out loud.
Oh . . . spit. She should have thought of that. Should have
been concentrating on veiling her thoughts. She tried to do
it now.
“Listen, don’t bother. I know that you’re not lamia. You’re
made, and you’re illegal. James has been a bad boy.”
Since there was no point in denying it, Poppy lifted her
chin and narrowed her eyes at him. “So you know. So what are
you going to do about it?”
“That depends.”
“On what?”
He smiled. “On you.”
Chapter 14
You see, I like James,” Ash said. “I think he’s a little soft
on vermin, but I don’t want to see him in trouble. I
certainly don’t want to see him dead.”
Poppy felt the way she had last night when her body was
starving for air. She was frozen, too still to breathe.
“I mean, do you want him dead?” Ash asked, as if it were
the most reasonable question in the world.
Poppy shook her head.
“Well, then,” Ash said.
Poppy got a breath at last. “What are you saying ?” Then,
without waiting for him to answer, she said, “You’re saying
that they’re going to kill him if they find out about me.
But they don’t have to find out about me. Unless you tell
them.”
Ash glanced at his fingernails thoughtfully. He made a face
to show that this was as painful for him as it was for her.
“
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“Let’s go over the facts,” he said. “You are, in fact, a former
human.”
“Oh, yeah, I was a vermin, all right.”
He gave her a droll look. “Don’t take that so seriously. It’s
what you are now that counts. But James did, in fact, change
you without clearing it with anybody.
Right? And he did, in
fact, break cover and tell you about the Night World before
you were changed. Right?”
“How do you know? Maybe he just changed me without
telling me a thing.”
He shook a finger. “Ah, but James wouldn’t do that. He’s
got these radical permissive ideas about humans having free
will.”
“If you know all about it, why ask me?” Poppy said tensely.
“And if you’ve got a point—”
“The point is that he’s committed at least two capital
offenses. Three, I bet.” He flashed the wild, handsome
smile
again. “He must have been in love with you to have done the
rest.”
Something swelled in Poppy like a bird trapped in her rib
cage and trying to get out. She blurted, “I don’t see how you
people can make laws about not falling in love! It’s insane.”
“But don’t you see why? You’re the perfect example.
Because
of love, James told you and then he changed you. If he’d had
the sense to squash his feelings for you in the beginning, the
whole thing would have been nipped in the bud.”
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“But what if you can’t squash it? You can’t force people to
stop feeling.”
“Of course not,” Ash said, and Poppy stopped dead. She
stared at him.
His lips curved and he beckoned to her. “I’ll tell you a secret.
The Elders know they can’t really legislate
how you feel. What
they can do is terrorize you so that you don’t dare show your
feelings—ideally, so you can’t even admit them to yourself.”
Poppy settled back. She’d seldom felt so at a loss. Talking
to Ash made her head whirl, made her feel as if she were too
young and stupid to be sure of anything.
She made a forlorn and helpless gesture. “But what do I do
now? I can’t change the past. . . .”
“No, but you can act in the present.” He jumped to his feet
in a lovely, graceful motion and began pacing. “Now. We have
to think fast. Presumably everyone here thinks you’re dead.”
“Yes, but—”
“So the answer is simple. You have to get out of the area
and stay out. Go someplace where you won’t be recognized,
where nobody will care if you’re new or illegal. Witches. That’s
it! I’ve got some cross-cousins in Las Vegas that will put you
up. The main thing is to leave now.”
Poppy’s head wasn’t just whirling, it was reeling. She felt
dizzy and physically sick, as if she’d just stepped off Space
Mountain at Disneyland. “What? I don’t even understand
what you’re talking about,” she said feebly.
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“I’ll explain on the way. Come on, hurry! Do you have
some clothes you want to take?”
Poppy planted her feet solidly on the floor. She shook
her head to try and clear it. “Look, I don’t know what you’re
saying, but I can’t go anywhere right now. I have to wait for
James.”
“But don’t you see?” Ash stopped his whirlwind pacing and
rounded on her. His eyes were green and hypnotically brilliant.
“That’s just what you can’t do. James can’t even know where
you’re going.”
“What?”
“Don’t you see ?” Ash said again. He spread his hands and
spoke almost pityingly. “You’re the only thing putting James in
danger. As long as you’re here, anybody can look at you and
put the pieces together. You’re circumstantial evidence that he’s
committed a crime.”
Poppy understood that. “But I can just wait and James can
go away with me. He would want that.”
“But it wouldn’t work,” Ash said softly. “It doesn’t matter
where you go; whenever you’re together, you’re a danger
to him. One look at you and any decent Vampire can sense
the truth.”
Poppy’s knees felt weak.
Ash spoke soberly. “I’m not saying that you’ll be much
safer yourself if you leave. You bring your own danger with
you, because of what you are. But as long as you’re away from
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James, nobody can connect you with him. It’s the only way to
keep him safe. Do you see?”
“Yes. Yes, I see that now.” The ground seemed to have disappeared
beneath Poppy. She was falling, not into music, but
into an icy dark void. There was nothing to hold on to.
“But, of course, it’s a lot to expect, to ask you to give him
up. You may not want to make that kind of sacrifice—”
Poppy’s chin came up. She was blind and empty and giddy,
but she spoke to Ash with utter contempt, spitting out the words.
“After everything he sacrificed for me? What do you think I am?”
Ash bowed his head. “You’re a brave one, little dreamer. I
can’t believe you were ever human.” Then he looked up and
spoke briskly. “So do you want to pack?”
“I don’t have much,” Poppy said, slowly, because moving
and speaking hurt her. She walked toward the bedroom as if
the floor was covered with broken glass. “Hardly anything. But
I have to write a note for James.”
“No, no,” Ash said. “That’s the last thing you want to do.
Well, after all,” he added as she swiveled slowly to look at him,
“James being so noble and lovestruck and everything—if you
let him know where you’re going, he’ll come right after you.
And then where will you be?”
Poppy shook her head. “I . . . okay.” Still shaking her head,
she stumbled into the bedroom.
She wasn’t going to argue with him anymore, but she
wasn’t going to take his advice, either. She shut the bedroom
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door and tried as hard as she could to shield her mind. She
visualized a stone wall around her thoughts.
Stuffing her sweat pants and T-shirt and white dress into
the duffel bag took thirty seconds. Then she found a book
under the nightstand and a felt-tip pen in the drawer. She tore
the flyleaf out of the book and scribbled rapidly.
Dear James,
I’m so sorry, but if I stay to explain this
to you, I know you’ll try to stop me. Ash
has made me understand the truth—that
as long as I stick around I’m putting your
life in danger. And I just can’t do that.
If something happened to you because of
me, I would die. I really would.
I’m going away now. Ash is taking me
somewhere far away where you won’t
find me. Where they won’t care what
I am. I’ll be safe there. You’ll be safe
here. And even if we’re not together,
we’ll never really be apart.
I love you. I’ll love you forever. But I
have to do this.
Please tell Phil goodbye.
Your soulmate, Poppy.
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She was dripping tears onto the paper as she signed it.
She put the flyleaf on the pillow and went out to Ash.
“Oh, there, there,” he said. “Don’t cry. You’re doing the
right thing.” He put an arm around her shoulders. Poppy was
too miserable to shrug it off.
She looked at him. “One thing. Won’t I be putting you in
danger if I go with you? I mean, somebody might think you
were the one who made me an illegal
vampire.”
He looked at her with wide, earnest eyes. They happened
to be blue-violet at the moment.
“I’m willing to take that risk,” he said. “I have a lot of
respect for you.”
James took the stairs two at a time, sending probing
thoughts
ahead of him and then refusing to believe
what his own senses
told him.
She had to be there. She had to be. . . .
He pounded on the door at the same time as he was thrusting
the key into the lock. At the same time as he was shouting
mentally.
Poppy! Poppy, answer me! Poppy!
And then, even with the door flung open and his own
thoughts ricocheting off the emptiness in the apartment, he
still didn’t want to believe. He ran around, looking in every
room, his heart thudding louder and louder in his chest. Her
duffel bag was gone. Her clothes were gone. She was gone.
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He ended up leaning against the glass of the living room
window. He could see the street below, and there was no sign
of Poppy.
No sign of Ash, either.
It was James’s fault. He’d been following his mother’s trail
all afternoon, from decorating job to decorating
job, trying to
catch up with her. Only to find, once he did catch up, that Ash
was already in El Camino, and had, in fact, been sent over to
James’s apartment hours ago. With a key.
Putting him alone with Poppy.
James had called the apartment immediately. No answer.
He’d broken all speed limits getting back here. But he was
too late.
Ash, you snake, he thought. If you hurt her, if you put one
finger on her . . .
He found himself roving over the apartment again, looking
for clues as to what had happened. Then, in the bedroom,
he noticed something pale against the light brown of
the pillowcase.
A note. He snatched it up and read it. And got colder and
colder with every line. By the time he reached the end, he was
made of ice and ready to kill.
There were little round splashes where the felt-tip pen
had run. Tears. He was going to break one of Ash’s bones for
each one.
He folded the note carefully and put it in his pocket. Then
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he took a few things from his closet and made a call on his cellular
phone as he was walking down the stairs of the apartment
building.
“Mom, it’s me,” he said at the beep of an answering
machine.
“I’m going to be gone for a few days. Something’s come up. If
you see Ash, leave me a message. I want to talk with him.”
He didn’t say please. He knew his voice was clipped and
sharp. And he didn’t care. He hoped his tone would scare her.
Just at the moment he felt ready to take on his mother
and father and all the Vampire Elders in the Night World. One
stake for all of them.
He wasn’t a child anymore. In the last week he’d been through
the crucible. He’d faced death and found love. He was an adult.
And filled with a quiet fury that would destroy everything
in its path. Everything necessary to get to Poppy.
He made other phone calls as he guided the Integra swiftly
and expertly through the streets of El Camino. He called the
Black Iris and made sure that Ash hadn’t turned up there. He
called several other black flower clubs, even though he didn’t
expect to find anything. Poppy had said Ash was going to take
her far away.
But where?
Damn you, Ash, he thought. Where?
Phil was staring at the TV without really seeing it. How could
he be interested in talk shows or infomercials when all he could
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think about was his sister? His sister who was maybe watching
the same shows and maybe out biting people?
He heard the car screech to a stop outside and was on his
feet before he knew it. Weird how he was absolutely certain
of who it was. He must have come to recognize the Integra’s
engine.
He opened the door as James reached the porch. “What’s up?”
“Come on.” James was already heading for the car. There
was a deadly energy in his movements, a barely controlled
power, that Phil had never seen before.
White-hot fury, leashed
but straining.
“What’s wrong ?”
James turned at the driver’s side door. “Poppy’s missing!”
Phil threw a wild glance around. There was nobody on
the street, but the door to the house was open. And James was
shouting as if he didn’t care who heard.
Then the words sank in. “What do you mean, she’s—” Phil
broke off and jerked the door to the house shut. Then he went
to the Integra. James already
had the passenger door open.
“What do you mean, she’s missing?” Phil said as soon as
he was in the car.
James gunned the engine. “My cousin Ash has taken her
someplace.”
“Who’s Ash?”
“He’s dead,” James said, and somehow Phillip knew he
didn’t mean Ash was one of the walking dead. He meant
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Ash was going to be dead, completely dead, at some point
very soon.
“Well, where’s he taken her?”
“I don’t know,” James said through his teeth. “I have no
idea.”
Phil stared a moment, then said, “Okay. Okay.” He didn’t
understand what was going on, but he could see one thing.
James was too angry and too intent on revenge to think logically.
He might seem rational, but it was stupid to drive around
at fifty-five miles an hour through a residential zone with no
idea of where to go.
It was strange that Phil felt comparatively calm—it seemed
as if he’d spent the last week being wacko while James played
the cool part. But having someone
else be hysterical always
made Phil go levelheaded.
“Okay, look,” he said. “Let’s take this one step at a time.
Slow down, okay? We might be going in exactly
the wrong
direction.” At that, James eased up on the gas pedal slightly.
“Okay, now tell me about Ash. Why’s he taking Poppy
somewhere? Did he kidnap her?”
“No. He talked her into it. He convinced her that it was
dangerous for me if she stuck around here. It was the one thing
guaranteed to make her go with him.” One hand on the wheel,
James fished in his pocket and handed a folded piece of paper
to Phil.
It was a page torn out of a book. Phillip read the note
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and swallowed. He glanced at James, who was staring straight
ahead at the road.
Phil shifted, embarrassed at having intruded on private
territory, embarrassed at the sting in his eyes. Your soulmate,
Poppy? Well. Well.
“She loves you a lot,” he said finally, awkwardly. “And I’m
glad she said goodbye to me.” He folded the note carefully and
tucked it under the emergency brake handle. James picked it
up and put it in his pocket again.
“Ash used her feelings to get her away. Nobody can push
buttons and pull strings like he can.”
“But why would he want to?”
“First because he likes girls. He’s a real Don Juan.” James
glanced at Phil caustically. “And now he’s got her alone. And
second because he likes to play with things. Like a cat with a
mouse. He’ll fool around with her for a while, and then when
he gets tired of her, he’ll hand her over.”
Phillip went still. “Who to?”
“The Elders. Somebody in charge somewhere who’ll realize
she’s a renegade vampire.”
“And then what?”
“And then they kill her.”
Phil grabbed the dashboard. “Wait a minute. You’re telling
me that a cousin of yours is going to hand Poppy over to be
killed?”
“It’s the law. Any good Vampire would do the same. My
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own mother would do it, without a second thought.” His voice
was bitter.
“And he’s a vampire. Ash,” Phil said stupidly.
James gave him a look. “All my cousins are vampires,”
he
said with a short laugh. Then his expression
changed, and he
took his foot off the gas.
“What’s the—hey, that was a stop sign!” Phil yelped.
James slammed on the brakes and swung into a U-turn in
the middle of the street. He ran over somebody’s
lawn.
“What is it?” Phil said tightly, still braced against the
dashboard.
James was looking almost dreamy. “I’ve just realized
where
they’ve gone. Where he’d take her. He told her someplace
safe, where people wouldn’t care what she was. But vampires
would care.”
“So they’re with humans?”
“No. Ash hates humans. He’d want to take her someplace
in the Night World, someplace where he’s a big man. And
the nearest city that’s controlled by the Night World is Las
Vegas.”
Phil felt his jaw drop. Las Vegas? Controlled by the Night
World? He had the sudden impulse to laugh. Sure, of course
it would be. “And I always thought it was the Mafia,” he
said.
“It is,” James said seriously, swerving onto a freeway
on-ramp.
“Just a different mafia.”
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“But, look, wait. Las Vegas is a big city.”
“It’s not, actually. But it doesn’t matter anyway. I know
where they are. Because all my cousins aren’t vampires. Some
of them are witches.”
Phil’s forehead puckered. “Oh, yeah? And how did you
arrange that?”
“I didn’t. My great-grandparents did, about four hundred
years ago. They did a blood-tie ceremony with a witch family.
The witches aren’t my real cousins;
they’re not related. They’re
cross-cousins. Adopted family. It probably won’t even occur
to them that Poppy might not be legal. And that’s where Ash
would go.”
“They’re cross-kin,” Ash told Poppy. They were driving in
the Rasmussens’ gold Mercedes, which Ash insisted his aunt
Maddy would want him to take. “They won’t be suspicious of
you. And witches don’t know the signs of being a new vampire
the way vampires
do.”
Poppy just stared at the far horizon. It was evening now,
and a lowering red sun was setting behind them. All around
them was a weird alien landscape: not as brown as Poppy
would have expected a desert to be. More gray-green, with
clumps of green-gray. The Joshua trees were strangely beautiful,
but also the closest thing to a plant made up of tentacles
as she’d ever seen.
Most everything growing had spikes.
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It was oddly fitting as a place to go into exile. Poppy felt as
if she were leaving behind not only her old life, but everything
she’d ever found familiar about the earth.
“I’ll take care of you,” Ash said caressingly.
Poppy didn’t even blink.
Phillip first saw Nevada as a line of lights in the darkness ahead.
As they got closer to the state line, the lights resolved into signs
with blinking, swarming,
flashing neon messages. Whiskey
Pete’s, they announced.
Buffalo Bill’s. The Prima Donna.
Some guy with a reputation for being a Don Juan was taking
Poppy in this direction?
“Go faster,” he told James as they left the lights behind and
entered a dark and featureless desert. “Come on. This car can
do ninety.”
“Here we are. Las Vegas,” Ash said as if making Poppy a
present of the whole city. But Poppy didn’t see a city, only a
light in the clouds ahead like the rising moon. Then, as the
freeway curved, she saw that it wasn’t the moon, it was the
reflection of city lights. Las Vegas was a glittering pool in a
flat basin between the mountains.
Something stirred in Poppy despite herself. She’d always
wanted to see the world. Faraway places. Exotic
lands. And this
would have been perfect—if only James had been with her.
Up close, though, the city wasn’t quite the gem it looked
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from a distance. Ash got off the freeway, and Poppy was thrown
into a world of color and light and movement—and of tawdry
cheapness.
“The Strip,” Ash announced. “You know, where all the
casinos are. There’s no place like it.”
“I bet,” Poppy said, staring. On one side of her was a
towering black pyramid hotel with a huge sphinx in front.
Lasers were flashing out of the sphinx’s eyes. On the other
side was a sleazy motor inn with a sign saying “Rooms $18.”
“So this is the Night World,” she said, with a twinge of
cynical amusement that made her feel very adult.
“Nah, this is for the tourists,” Ash said. “But it’s good business
and you can do some fairly serious partying. I’ll show you
the real Night World, though. First, I want to check in with
my cousins.”
Poppy considered telling him that she didn’t really care to
have him show her the Night World. Something
about Ash’s
manner was beginning to bother her. He was acting more
as if they were out on a date than as if he were escorting her
into exile.
But he’s the only person I know here, she realized with
a dismayed sinking in her stomach. And it’s not as if I have
any money or anything—not even eighteen
dollars for that
crummy motel.
There was something worse. She’d been hungry for some
time now, and now she was starting to feel breathless. But she
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wasn’t the dazed, unthinking animal
she’d been last night. She
didn’t want to attack some human on the street.
“This is the place,” Ash said. It was a side street, dark and
not crowded like the Strip. He pulled into an alley. “Okay, just
let me see if they’re in.”
On either side of them were high buildings with cinderblock
walls. Above, tiers of power lines obscured the sky. Ash
knocked at a door set in the cinder block—a door with no
knob on the outside. There was no sign on the door, either,
just some crudely spray-painted graffiti. It was a picture of a
black dahlia.
Poppy stared at a Dumpster and tried to control her breathing.
In, out. Slow and deep. It’s okay, there’s air. It may not feel
like it, but there’s air.
The door opened and Ash beckoned to her.
“This is Poppy,” Ash said, putting an arm around her
as Poppy stumbled inside. The place looked like a shop—
a shop with herbs and candles and crystals. And lots of other
weird things that Poppy didn’t recognize.
Witchy-looking
supplies.
“And these are my cousins. That’s Blaise, and that’s Thea.”
Blaise was a striking girl with masses of dark hair and lots of
curves. Thea was slimmer and blond. They both kept going
out of focus as Poppy’s vision blurred.
“Hi,” she said, the longest greeting she could manage.
“Ash, what’s wrong with you? She’s sick. What have you
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been doing to her?” Thea was looking at Poppy with sympathetic
brown eyes.
“Huh? Nothing,” Ash said, looking surprised, as if noticing
Poppy’s state for the first time. Poppy guessed he wasn’t the
type to worry about other people’s
discomfort. “She’s hungry, I
guess. We’ll have to run out and feed—”
“Oh, no, you don’t. Not around here. Besides, she’s not
going to make it,” Thea said. “Come on, Poppy, I’ll be a donor
this once.”
She took Poppy by the arm and led her through a bead
curtain into another room. Poppy let herself be towed. She
couldn’t think anymore—and her whole upper jaw was aching.
Even the word feed sharpened her teeth.
I need . . . I have to . . .
But she didn’t know how. She had a vision of her own face
in the mirror, silvery eyes and savage canines.
She didn’t want
to be an animal again and jump on Thea and rip her throat.
And she couldn’t ask how—that would give her away as a new
vampire
for sure. She stood, trembling, unable to move.
Chapter 15
Come on, it’s okay,” Thea said. She seemed to be about
Poppy’s age, but she had a gentle, sensible air that gave
her authority. “Sit down. Here.” She set Poppy on a
shabby couch and extended her wrist. Poppy stared at the wrist
for an instant and then remembered.
James, giving her blood from his arm. That was how to do
it. Friendly and civilized.
She could see pale blue veins under the skin. And that
sight blasted away the last of her hesitation. Instinct
took over
and she grabbed Thea’s arm. The next thing she knew she was
drinking.
Warm salty-sweetness. Life. Relief from pain. It was so
good that Poppy could almost cry. No wonder vampires hated
humans, she thought dimly. Humans didn’t have to hunt for
this marvelous stuff; they were full of it already.
But, another part of her mind pointed out, Thea wasn’t
“
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a human. She was a witch. Strange, because her blood tasted
exactly the same. Poppy’s every sense confirmed it.
So witches are just humans, but humans with special
powers, Poppy thought. Interesting.
It took an effort to control herself, to know when to stop.
But she did stop. She let go of Thea’s wrist and sat back, a
little embarrassed, licking her lips and teeth. She didn’t want
to meet Thea’s brown eyes.
It was only then that she realized she’d been keeping
her
thoughts shielded during the entire process. There had been no
mental connection as there had been when she shared blood
with James. So she’d mastered one Vampire power already.
Faster than James or Ash had expected.
And she felt good now. Energetic enough to do the Netherlands
skippy dance. Confident enough to smile at Thea.
“Thank you,” she said.
Thea smiled back, as if she found Poppy odd or quaint,
but nice. She didn’t seem suspicious. “It’s okay,” she said, flexing
her wrist and grimacing gently.
For the first time Poppy was able to look around her. This
room was more like a living room than part of a shop. Besides
the couch there was a TV and several chairs. At the far end was
a large table with candles and incense burning.
“This is the teaching room,” Thea said. “Grandma does
spells here and lets the students hang out.”
“And the other part is a store,” Poppy said, cautiously
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because she didn’t know what she was supposed
to know.
Thea didn’t look surprised. “Yes. I know you wouldn’t think
there’d be enough witches around here to keep us in business,
but actually they come from all over the country. Grandma’s
famous. And her students buy a lot.”
Poppy nodded, looking properly impressed. She didn’t
dare ask more questions, but her chilly heart had warmed just
a tiny bit. All Night People weren’t harsh and evil. She had the
feeling she could be friends with this girl if given the chance.
Maybe she could make it in the Night World after all.
“Well, thanks again,” she murmured softly.
“Don’t mention it. But don’t let Ash get you run down like
that, either. He’s so irresponsible.”
“You wound me, Thea. You really do,” Ash said. He was
standing in the doorway, holding the bead curtain open with
one hand. “But come to think of it, I’m feeling a little run
down myself. . . .” He raised his eyebrows insinuatingly.
“Go jump in Lake Mead, Ash,” Thea said sweetly.
Ash looked innocent and yearning. “Just a little bite.
A nibble. A nip,” he said. “You have such a pretty white
throat. . . .”
“Who does?” Blaise said, pushing her way through the
other half of the bead curtain. Poppy had the feeling she was
only speaking to focus attention on herself. She stood in the
center of the room and shook back her long black hair with the
air of a girl used to attention.
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“You both do,” Ash said gallantly. Then he seemed to
remember Poppy. “And, of course, this little dreamer has a
pretty white everything.”
Blaise, who had been smiling, now looked sour. She stared
at Poppy long and hard. With dislike—and something else.
Suspicion. Dawning suspicion.
Poppy could feel it. Blaise’s thoughts were bright and sharp
and malicious, like jagged glass.
Then suddenly Blaise smiled again. She looked at Ash, “I
suppose you’ve come for the party,” she said.
“No. What party?”
Blaise sighed in a way that emphasized her low-cut blouse.
“The Solstice party, of course. Thierry’s giving a big one. Everybody
will be there.”
Ash looked tempted. In the dim light of the teaching
room
his eyes gleamed dark. Then he shook his head.
“No, can’t make it. Sorry. I’m going to show Poppy the
town.”
“Well, you can do that and still come to the party later. It
won’t really get going until after midnight.” Blaise was staring
at Ash with an odd insistence. Ash bit his lip, then shook his
head again, smiling.
“Well, maybe,” he said. “I’ll see how things go.”
Poppy knew he was saying more than that. Some unspoken
message seemed to be passing between him and Blaise. But it
wasn’t telepathic, and Poppy couldn’t pick it up.
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“Well, have a good time,” Thea said, and gave Poppy a
quick smile as Ash piloted her away.
Ash peered ahead at the Strip. “If we hurry we can watch
the volcano erupting,” he said. Poppy gave him a look, but
didn’t ask.
Instead, she said, “What’s a Solstice party?”
“Summer solstice. The longest day of the year. It’s a holiday
for the Night People. Like Groundhog Day for humans.”
“Why?”
“Oh, it always has been. It’s very magical, you know. I’d
take you to the party, but it would be too dangerous. Thierry’s
a Vampire Elder.” Then he said, “Here’s the volcano.”
It was a volcano. In front of a hotel. Waterfalls crashed down
its sides, and red lights shone from the cone. Ash double-parked
across the street.
“You see, we’ve got a great view right here,” he said. “All
the comforts of home.”
The volcano was emitting rumbling sounds. As Poppy
watched in disbelief, a pillar of fire shot out of the top. Real
fire. Then the waterfalls caught fire. Red and gold flames spread
down the sides of the black rock until the entire lake around
the volcano was ablaze.
“Inspiring, isn’t it?” Ash asked, very close to her ear.
“Well—it’s . . .”
“Thrilling?” Ash inquired. “Stimulating? Rousing?” His
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arm was creeping around her, and his voice was sweetly
hypnotic.
Poppy didn’t say anything.
“You know,” Ash murmured, “you can see a lot better if
you get over here. I don’t mind crowding.” His arm was urging
her gently but inevitably closer. His breath ruffled her hair.
Poppy slammed an elbow into his stomach.
“Hey!” Ash yelped—in genuine pain, Poppy thought.
Good.
He’d dropped his arm and now he was looking at her with
aggrieved brown eyes, “What did you do that for?”
“Because I felt like it,” Poppy said smartly. She was tingling
with new blood and ready for a fight. “Look, Ash, I don’t know
what gave you the idea that I’m your date here. But I’m telling
you right now that I’m not.”
Ash tilted his head and smiled painfully. “You just don’t
know me well enough,” he offered. “When we get to know
each other—”
“No. Never. I’m not interested in other guys. If I can’t have
James . . .” Poppy had to stop and steady her voice. “There’s
nobody else I want,” she said finally, flatly. “Nobody.”
“Well, not now, maybe, but—”
“Never.” She didn’t know how to explain. Then she had an
idea. “You know the soulmate principle?”
Ash opened his mouth and then shut it. Opened it again.
“Oh, no. Not that garbage.”
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“Yes. James is my soulmate. I’m sorry if it sounds stupid,
but it’s true.”
Ash put a hand to his forehead. Then he started to laugh.
“You’re serious.”
“Yes.”
“And that’s your final word.”
“Yes.”
Ash laughed again, sighed, and cast his eyes upward.
“Okay.
Okay. I should have known.” He chuckled in what seemed like
self-derision.
Poppy was relieved. She’d been afraid he’d be disgruntled
and huffy—or mean. Despite his charm, she could always
feel something cold running below the surface in Ash, like
an icy river.
But now he seemed perfectly good-humored. “Okay,” he
said. “So if romance isn’t on the menu, let’s go to the party.”
“I thought you said it was too dangerous.”
He waved a hand. “That was a little fib. To get you alone,
you know.” He glanced sideways at her. “Sorry.”
Poppy hesitated. She didn’t care about a party. But she
didn’t want to be alone with Ash, either.
“Maybe you should just take me back to your cousins’
place.”
“They won’t be there,” Ash said. “I’m sure they’ve gone to
the party by now. Oh, come on, it’ll be fun. Give me a chance
to make things up to you.”
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Thin curls of uneasiness were roiling inside Poppy. But
Ash looked so penitent and persuasive . . . and what other
choice did she have?
“Okay,” she said finally. “For just a little while.”
Ash gave a dazzling smile. “Just a very little while,” he said.
“So they could be anywhere on the Strip,” James said.
Thea sighed. “I’m sorry. I should have known Ash was up
to something. But hijacking your girlfriend . . .” She lifted her
hands in a what-next gesture. “For what it’s worth, she didn’t
seem very interested in him. If he’s planning to put the moves
on her, he’s going to get a surprise.”
Yes, James thought, and so is she. Poppy was only useful
to Ash as long as Ash thought he could play with her. Once he
realized he couldn’t . . .
He didn’t want to think about what would happen then. A
quick visit to the nearest Elder, he supposed.
His heart was pounding, and there was a ringing in his ears.
“Did Blaise go with them?” he asked.
“No, she went to the Solstice party. She tried to get Ash
to go, but he said he wanted to show Poppy the town.” Thea
paused, raising a finger. “Wait—you might check at the party.
Ash said he might stop in later.”
James spent a moment forcing himself to breathe. Then he
said, very gently, “And just who is giving this party?”
“Thierry Descouedres. He always has a big one.”
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“And he’s an Elder.”
“What?”
“Nothing. Never mind.” James backed out of the shop.
“Thanks for the help. I’ll be in touch.”
“James . . .” She looked at him helplessly. “Do you want to
come in and sit down? You don’t look very well. . . .”
“I’m fine,” James said, already out the door.
In the car he said, “You can get up now.”
Phillip emerged from the floor of the backseat where he’d
been hiding. “What’s happening? You were gone a long time.”
“I think I know where Poppy is.”
“You just think?”
“Shut up, Phil.” He didn’t have energy for exchanging
insults. He was entirely focused on Poppy.
“Okay, so where is she?”
James spoke precisely. “She is either now, or she will be
later, at a party. A very large party, filled with vampires. And at
least one Elder. The perfect place to expose her.”
Phil gulped. “And you think that’s what Ash is going to do?”
“I know that’s what Ash is going to do.”
“Then we’ve got to stop him.”
“We may be too late.”
The party was strange. Poppy was amazed at how young most
of the people were. There were a few scattered adults, but far
more teenagers.
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“Made vampires,” Ash explained obligingly. Poppy remembered
what James had said—made vampires remained forever
the age of their death, but lamia could stop aging anytime.
She supposed that meant that James could get as old as he
wanted, while she would be stuck at sixteen eternally. Not that
it mattered.
If she and James were going to be together, they
could both stay young—but apart, maybe he’d want to age.
But it was odd to see a guy who looked about nineteen
talking earnestly with a little kid who looked about four. The
kid was cute, with shiny black hair and tilted eyes, but there
was something at once innocent and cruel in his expression.
“Let’s see, now that’s Circe. A witch of renown. And that’s
Sekhmet, a shapeshifter. You don’t want to get her mad,” Ash
said genially. He and Poppy were standing in a little anteroom,
looking down a level into the main room of the house. Of
the mansion,
rather. It was the most opulent private residence
Poppy had ever seen—and she’d seen Bel Air and Beverly
Hills.
“Okay,” Poppy said, looking in the general direction
he
was pointing. She saw two tall and lovely girls, but she had no
idea which was which.
“And that’s Thierry, our host. He’s an Elder.”
An Elder? The guy Ash was indicating didn’t seem older
than nineteen. He was beautiful, like all the vampires, tall and
blond and pensive. Almost sad-looking.
“How old is he?”
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“Oh, I forget. He got bitten by an ancestress of mine a long
time ago. Back when people lived in caves.”
Poppy thought he was joking. But maybe not.
“What do the Elders do, exactly?”
“They just make rules. And see that people keep them.”
An odd smile was playing around Ash’s lips. He turned to look
directly at Poppy.
With the black eyes of a snake.
That was when Poppy knew.
She backed away rapidly. But Ash came after her, just as
rapidly. She saw a door on the other side of the anteroom and
headed for it. Got through it. Only to find herself on a balcony.
With her eyes, she measured the distance to the ground.
But before she could make another move, Ash had her arm.
Don’t fight yet, her mind counseled desperately. He’s
strong. Wait for an opportunity.
She made herself relax a fraction and met Ash’s dark gaze.
“You brought me here.”
“Yes.”
“To hand me over.”
He smiled.
“But why ?”
Ash threw back his head and laughed. It was lovely, melodious
laughter, and it made Poppy sick.
“You’re a human,” he said. “Or you should be. James should
never have done what he did.”
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Poppy’s heart was racing, but heir mind was oddly clear.
Maybe she’d known all along that this was what he was going
to do. Maybe it was even the right thing to do. If she couldn’t
be with James and she couldn’t be with her family, did the rest
really matter? Did she want to live in the Night World if it was
full of people like Blaise and Ash?
“So you don’t care about James, either,” she said. “You’re
willing to put him in danger to get rid of me.”
Ash considered, then grinned, “James can take care of himself,”
he said.
Which was obviously Ash’s entire philosophy. Everybody
took care of themselves, and nobody helped anybody else.
“And Blaise knew, too,” Poppy said. “She knew what you
were going to do and she didn’t care.”
“Not much gets past Blaise,” Ash said. He started to say
something else—and Poppy saw her chance.
She kicked—hard. And twisted at the same time. Trying to
get over the balcony rail.
“Stay here,” James said to Phil before the car had even
stopped. They were in front of a huge white mansion fringed
with palm trees. James threw the door open, but took the
time to say again, “Stay here. No matter what happens, don’t
go in that house. And if somebody besides me comes up to
the car, drive away.”
“But—”
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L.J. Smith
“Just do it, Phil! Unless you want to find out about death
firsthand—tonight.”
James set out at a dead run for the mansion. He was
too intent to really notice the sound of a car door opening
behind him.
“And you looked like such a nice girl,” Ash gasped. He had
both of Poppy’s arms behind her back and was trying to get out
of the range of her feet. “No—no, quit that, now.”
He was too strong. There was nothing Poppy could do.
Inch by inch he was dragging her back into the anteroom.
You might as well give up, Poppy’s mind told her. It’s useless.
You’re done.
She could picture the whole thing: herself being dragged
out in front of all of those sleek and handsome
Night People
and revealed. She could picture their pitiless eyes. That pensivelooking
guy would walk up to her and his face would change
and he wouldn’t look pensive anymore. He’d look savage. His
teeth would grow. His eyes would go silvery. Then he’d snarl—
and strike.
And that would be the end of Poppy.
Maybe that wasn’t the way they did it, maybe they executed
criminals some other way in the Night World. But it wouldn’t
be pleasant, whatever it was.
And I won’t make it easy for you! Poppy thought. She
thought it directly at Ash, throwing all of her anger and grief
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and betrayal at him. Instinctively. Like a kid shouting in a temper
tantrum.
Except it had an effect shouting usually didn’t.
Ash flinched. He almost lost his grip on her arms.
It was only a momentary weakening, but it was enough for
Poppy’s eyes to widen.
I hurt him. I hurt him!
She stopped struggling physically in that same instant.
She
put all her concentration, all her energy, into a mental explosion.
A thought-bomb.
LET GO OF ME, YOU ROTTEN Vampire CREEP!
Ash staggered. Poppy did it again, this time making her
thought a fire hose, a high-power Jetstream bombardment.
LET GOOOOOOOOOOOO!
Ash let go. Then, as Poppy ran out of steam, he tried in a
fumbling way to reach her again.
“I don’t think so,” a voice as cold as steel said. Poppy looked
into the anteroom and saw James.
Her heart lurched violently. And then, without consciously
being aware of moving, she was in his arms.
Oh, James, how did you find me?
All he kept saying was, Are you all right?
“Yes,” Poppy said finally, aloud. It was indescribably
good
to be with him again, to be held by him. Like waking up from
a nightmare to see your mother smiling. She buried her face
in his neck.
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L.J. Smith
“You’re sure you’re all right?”
“Yes. Yes.”
“Good. Then just hang on a moment while I kill this guy
and we’ll go.”
He was absolutely serious. Poppy could feel it in his
thoughts, in every muscle and sinew of his body. He wanted
to murder Ash.
She lifted her head at the sound of Ash’s laugh.
“Well, it ought to be a good fight, anyway,” Ash said.
No, Poppy thought. Ash was looking silky and dangerous
and in a very bad mood. And even if James could beat him,
James was going to get hurt. Even if she and James fought him
together, there was going to be some damage.
“Let’s just go,” she said to James. “Quick.” She added
silently, I think he wants to keep us around until somebody from
the party gets here.
“No, no,” Ash said, in gloatingly enthusiastic tones. “Let’s
settle this like vampires.”
“Let’s not,” said a breathless familiar voice. Poppy’s head
jerked around. Climbing over the railing of the balcony, dusty
but triumphant, was Phil.
“Don’t you ever listen?” James said to him.
“Well, well,” Ash said. “A human in an Elder’s house.
What are we going to do about that?”
“Look, buddy,” Phil said, still breathless, brushing off his
hands. “I don’t know who you are or what horse you rode in
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on. But that’s my sister there you’re messing with, and I figure
I’ve got the first right to knock your head off.”
There was a pause while Poppy, James, and Ash all looked
at him. The pause stretched. Poppy was aware of a sudden,
completely inappropriate impulse to laugh. Then she realized
that James was fighting desperately not to crack a smile.
Ash just looked Phil up and down, then looked at James
sideways.
“Does this guy understand about vampires?” he said.
“Oh, yeah,” James said blandly.
“And he’s going to knock my head in?”
“Yeah,” Phil said, and cracked his knuckles. “What’s so
surprising about that?”
There was another pause. Poppy could feel minute tremors
going through James. Choked-back laughter. At last James said,
admirably sober, “Phil really feels strongly about his sister.”
Ash looked at Phil once more, then at James, and finally at
Poppy. “Well . . . there are three of you,” he said.
“Yes, there are,” James said, genuinely sober now. Grim.
“So I guess you do have me at a disadvantage. All right, I
give up.” He lifted his hands and then dropped them. “Go on,
scram. I won’t fight.”
“And you won’t tell on us, either,” James said. It wasn’t a
request.
“I wasn’t going to anyway,” Ash said. He had on his
most innocent and guileless expression. “I know you think I
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brought Poppy here to expose her, but I really wasn’t going to
go through with it. I was just having fun. The whole thing was
just a joke.”
“Oh, sure,” Phil said.
“Don’t even bother lying,” James said.
But Poppy, oddly, wasn’t as certain as they were. She looked
at Ash’s wide eyes—his wide violet eyes—and felt doubt slosh
back and forth inside her.
It was hard to read him, as it had been hard all along. Maybe
because he always meant everything he said at the time he said
it—or maybe because he never meant anything he said. No
matter which, he was the most irritating, frustrating, impossible
person she’d ever met.
“Okay, we’re going now,” James said. “We’re going to
walk very quietly and calmly right through that little room
and down the hall, and we’re not going to stop for anything—
Phillip. Unless you’d rather go back down the way you came
up,” he added.
Phil shook his head. James gathered Poppy in his arm
again, but he paused and looked back at Ash.
“You know, you’ve never really cared about anyone,”
he
said. “But someday you will, and it’s going to hurt. It’s going
to hurt—a lot.”
Ash looked back at him, and Poppy could read nothing in
his ever-changing eyes. But just as James turned again, he said,
“I think you’re a lousy prophet. But your girlfriend’s a good
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one. You might want to ask her about her dreams sometime.”
James stopped. He frowned. “What?”
“And you, little dreamer, you might want to check out your
family tree. You have a very loud yell.” He smiled at Poppy
engagingly. “Bye now.”
James stayed for another minute or so, just staring at his
cousin. Ash gazed serenely back. Poppy counted heartbeats
while the two of them stood motionless.
Then James shook himself slightly and turned Poppy
toward the anteroom. Phil followed right on their heels.
They walked out of the house very quietly and very calmly.
No one tried to stop them.
But Poppy didn’t feel safe until they were on the road.
“What did he mean with that crack about the family tree?”
Phil asked from the backseat.
James gave him an odd look, but answered with a question.
“Phil, how did you know where to find Poppy in that
house? Did you see her on the balcony?”
“No, I just followed the shouting.”
Poppy turned around to look at him.
James said, “What shouting?”
“The shouting. Poppy shouting. ‘Let go of me, you rotten
vampire creep.’”
Poppy turned to James. “Should he have been able to hear
it? I thought I was just yelling at Ash. Did everybody at the
party hear?”
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“No.”
“But, then—”
James cut her off. “What dream was Ash talking about?”
“Just a dream I had,” Poppy said, bewildered. “I dreamed
about him before I actually met him.”
James’s expression was now very peculiar. “Oh, did you?”
“Yes. James, what’s this all about? What did he mean, I
should check my family tree?”
“He meant that you—and Phil—aren’t human after all.
Somewhere among your ancestors there’s a witch.”
Chapter 16
You have got to be kidding,” Poppy said.
Phil just gaped.
“No. I’m perfectly serious. You’re witches of the
second kind. Remember what I told you?”
“There are the kind of witches that know their heritage
and get trained—and the kind that don’t. Who just have
powers. And humans call that kind—”
“Psychics!” James chorused with her. “Telepaths. Clairvoyants,”
he went on alone. There was something
in his voice
between laughing and crying. “Poppy, that’s what you are.
That’s why you picked up on telepathy so quickly. That’s why
you had clairvoyant dreams.”
“And that’s why Phil heard me,” Poppy said.
“Oh, no,” Phil said. “Not me. Come on.”
“Phil, you’re twins,” James said. “You have the same ancestors.
Face it, you’re a witch. That’s why I couldn’t control your mind.”
“
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“Oh, no,” Phil said. “No.” He flopped back in his seat.
“No,” he said again, but more weakly.
“But whose side do we get it from?” Poppy wondered.
“Dad’s. Of course.” The voice from the backseat was very
faint.
“Well, that would seem logical, but—”
“It’s the truth. Don’t you remember how Dad was always
talking about seeing weird things? Having dreams about things
before they happened? And, Poppy, he heard you yell in your
dream. When you were calling for James. James heard it, and I
heard it, and Dad heard it, too.”
“Then that settles it. Oh, and it explains other things about
all of us—all those times we’ve had feelings
about things—
hunches, whatever. Even you have hunches, Phil.”
“I had one that James was creepy, and I was right.”
“Phil—”
“And maybe a few others,” Phil said fatalistically. “I knew
it was James driving up this afternoon. I thought I just had a
fine ear for car engines.”
Poppy was shivering with delight and astonishment,
but
she couldn’t quite understand James. James was absolutely
beaming. Filled with unbelieving
elation that she could feel
like streamers and fireworks in the air. “What, James?”
“Poppy, don’t you see?” James actually pounded the steering
wheel in joy. “It means that even before you became a
vampire, you were a Night Person. A Secret witch. You have
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every right to know about the Night World. You belong there.”
The world turned upside down and Poppy couldn’t
breathe. At last she whispered. “Oh . . .”
“And we belong together. Nobody can separate us. We
don’t have to hide.”
“Oh . . .” Poppy whispered again. Then she said, “James,
pull the car over. I want to kiss you.”
When they were in motion once more, Phil said, “But where
are you two going to go now? Poppy can’t come home.”
“I know,” Poppy said softly. She had accepted that. There
was no going back for her; the old life was over. Nothing to do
but build a new one.
“And you can’t just wander around from place to place,”
Phil said, doggedly persistent.
“We won’t,” Poppy said calmly. “We’ll go to Dad.”
It was perfect. Poppy could feel James think, Of course.
They would go to her father, the always-late, alwaysimpractical,
always-affectionate parent. Her father the witch
who didn’t know he was a witch. Who probably thought he
was crazy when his powers acted up.
He’d give them a place to stay, and that was all they needed,
really. That and each other. The whole Night World would be
open to them, whenever they wanted to explore it. Maybe they
could come back and visit Thea sometime. Maybe they could
dance at one of Thierry’s parties.
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“If we can find Dad, that is,” Poppy said, struck by sudden
alarm.
“You can,” Phil said. “He flew out last night, but he left an
address. For the first time.”
“Maybe somehow he knew,” James said.
They rode for a while, and then Phil cleared his throat and
said, “You know, I just had a thought. I don’t want any part of
the Night World, you understand—
I don’t care what my heritage
is. I just want to live like a human—and I want everybody
to be clear on that. . . .”
“We’re clear, Phil,” James interrupted. “Believe me. Nobody
in the Night World is going to force you in. You can live like
a human all you want as long as you avoid Night People and
keep your mouth shut.”
“Okay. Good. But here’s my thought. I still don’t approve
of vampires, but it occurs to me that maybe they’re not as completely
bad as they seem. I mean, vampires don’t treat their
food any worse than humans
do. When you think of what we
do to cows . . . at least they don’t breed humans in pens.”
“I wouldn’t bet on it,” James said, suddenly grim. “I’ve
heard rumors about the old days. . . .”
“You always have to argue, don’t you? But my other thought
was that you’re part of Nature, and Nature just is what it is. It’s
not always pretty, but . . . well, it’s Nature, and there it is.” He
wound up glumly, “Maybe that doesn’t make any sense.”
“It makes sense to me,” James said, entirely serious.
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“And—thanks.” He paused to look back at Phil in acknowledgment.
Poppy felt a sting behind her eyes. If he admits
we’re part of Nature, she thought, then he doesn’t believe
we’re unnatural anymore.
It meant a lot.
She said, “Well, you know, I’ve been thinking, too. And
it occurs to me that maybe there are other choices for feeding
besides just jumping on humans when they don’t expect
it. Like animals. I mean, is there any reason their blood won’t
work?”
“It’s not the same as human blood,” James said. “But it’s
a possibility. I’ve fed on animals. Deer are good. Rabbits are
okay. Possums stink.”
“And then there must be some people who’d be willing
donors. Thea was a donor for me. We could ask other
witches.”
“Maybe,” James said. He grinned suddenly. “I knew a
witch back home who was very willing. Name of Gisèle. But
you couldn’t ask them to do it every day, you know. You’d have
to give them time to recover.”
“I know, but maybe we could alternate. Animals one day and
witches the next. Hey, maybe even werewolves on weekends!”
“I’d rather bite a possum,” James said.
Poppy socked him in the arm. “The point is, maybe we
don’t have to be horrible bloodsucking monsters. Maybe we can
be decent bloodsucking monsters.”
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L.J. Smith
“Maybe,” James said quietly, almost wistfully.
“Hear, hear,” Phil said very seriously from the back.
“And we can do it together,” Poppy said to James. He took
his eyes off the road to smile at her. And there was nothing wistful
about his gaze. Nothing cool or mysterious or secretive, either.
“Together,” he said out loud. And mentally he added, I
can’t wait. With that telepathy of yours—you realize what we can
do, don’t you?
Poppy stared, then felt an effervescent rush that almost
shot her out of the car. Oh, James—do you think?
I’m certain. The only thing that makes exchanging blood
so special is that it enhances telepathy. But you don’t need any
enhancement—you little dreamer.
Poppy sat back to try and still her heart.
They would be able to join their minds again. Anytime
they wanted. She could imagine it, being swept into James’s
mind, feeling him surrender his thoughts to hers.
Merging like two drops of water. Together in a way that
humans could never know.
I can’t wait, either, she told him. I think I’m going to like
being a witch.
Phil cleared his throat. “If you guys want some privacy . . .”
“We can’t have any,” James said. “Not with you around.
Obviously.”
“I can’t help it,” Phil said through his teeth. “You’re the
ones who’re yelling.”
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“We’re not yelling. You’re snooping.”
“Both of you give it a rest,” Poppy said. But she felt warm
and glowing all over. She couldn’t resist adding to Phil, “So,
if you’re willing to give us some privacy, that means you trust
James alone with your sister. . . .”
“I didn’t say that.”
“You didn’t have to,” Poppy said.
She was happy.
It was very late the next day. Almost midnight, in fact. The
witching hour. Poppy was standing in a place she’d thought
she’d never see again, her mother’s
bedroom.
James was waiting outside with a carload of stuff, including
one large suitcase of Poppy’s CDs, smuggled for them by
Phil. In a few minutes James and Poppy would be heading for
the East Coast and Poppy’s father.
But first, there was something Poppy had to do.
She glided quietly toward the king-size bed, making
no
more noise than a shadow, not disturbing either
of the sleepers.
She stopped by her mother’s still form.
She stood looking down, and then she spoke with her
mind.
I know you think this is a dream, Mom. I know you don’t
believe in spirits. But I had to tell you that I’m all right. I’m all
right, and I’m happy, and even if you don’t understand, please try
to believe. Just this once, believe in what you can’t see.
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L.J. Smith
She paused, then added, I love you, Mom. I always will.
When she left the room, her mother was still asleep—and
smiling.
Outside, Phil was standing by the Integra. Poppy hugged
him and he hugged back, hard.
“Goodbye,” she whispered. She got into the car.
James stuck his hand out the window toward Phil. Phil
took it without hesitation.
“Thank you,” James said. “For everything.”
“No, thank you.” Phil said. His smile and his voice were
both shaky. “Take care of her . . . and of yourself.”
He stepped
back, blinking.
Poppy blew him a kiss. Then she and James drove off
together into the night.
w or s b ire Dia
Don’t miss:
THE NIGHT WORLD...
Love has never been so dangerous.
from simon pulse | published by simon & schuster
From the New York Times bestselling author of The Vampire Diaries
l.j.Smith