It looked like the sort of night that one would plan on meeting a vampire. Everything was damp mist and white snow and wan light from a moon lost somewhere in the silver fog. Luckier people were probably telling stories before warm fires or tucked away in blanketed beds, not freezing as they crossed a rickety bridge and reached an isolated cemetery where dogs howled like wolves and a vampire lord hid his underground court.
Evangeline shivered, and Jacks watched her, but he offered absolutely no comfort as a gust of wind tore through the fog and posters with her likeness flapped against gnarled gates and trees.
MISSING: Princess Evangeline Help us find her!
Evangeline wanted to ask how the signs had been made and put up so quickly, but now that she and Jacks were on the outskirts of the city, where it felt safer to finally speak, she wanted to use her questions wisely.
âTell me about the vampires.â
Jacksâs mouth twisted distastefully. âDonât let them bite you.â
âI already know that. What else can you share? Maybe something helpful.â
âThereâs nothing helpful about vampires,â Jacks grunted. âI know the stories make them sound brooding and beautiful, but theyâre parasitic bloodsuckers.â
Evangeline side-eyed Jacks, wishing the night werenât as dark or that he werenât walking so far from her so that she could have a clearer view of his face. Earlier, sheâd sensed he wasnât overly fond of vampires, but heâd not been this annoyed, and heâd defended Chaos to LaLa.
âAre you jealous?â Evangeline asked.
âWhy would I be jealous?â
âBecause Iâm so curious.â
Jacks answered with an acerbic laugh.
Evangeline felt her cheeks go hot, but she wasnât sure she believed his dismissal. Jacks was used to being the most interesting wherever he went. He was the most powerful, the most unpredictable, and until now, heâd always made Evangeline the most curious. âIf youâre not jealous, then what do you have against them? This was your idea, and itâs not as if you donât have a thing for blood.â
âI also like the sun and being in control of my own life. But vampires will always be ruled by their hunger for blood. Their every desire is dominated by bloodlust. So try not to cut yourself while weâre inside. And donât look in their eyes.â
âWhat will happen if I look in their eyes?â
âJust donât do it.â
âWhy not? Does the mighty Prince of Hearts know so little about vampires that all he can do is warn me not toââ
Jacks moved before she could finish. He suddenly stood so close that for a pounding heartbeat she could only see his cruel face. His brilliant eyes shone in the dark, and his predatory smile could have belonged to a vampire had his teeth been just a little sharper. âThereâs a reason no one ever talks about them.â His voice became low and lethal. âI can tell you that theyâre soulless monsters. I can warn you that if you look into a vampireâs eyes, theyâll take it as an invitation to rip into your throat faster than you can scream the word no. But none of this will scare you away. Their stories are cursed, but instead of warping the truth, they manipulate the way people feel. No matter what I tell you about vampires, youâre going to be intrigued instead of horrified. Your kind always wants to be bitten or changed.â
âNot me,â Evangeline argued.
âBut youâre curious,â Jacks challenged.
âIâm curious about a lot of things. Iâm curious about you, but I donât want you to bite me!â
The corner of Jacksâs mouth twitched. âIâve already done that, Little Fox.â
His cold fingers found her wrist and slipped underneath the edge of her glove to stroke the last remaining broken heart scar. âLucky for you, no matter how many times I bite you, youâll never turn into what I am. But sometimes all it takes from a vampire is one look, and youâre theirs.â
Jacks eyed the bare stretch of skin that went from her chest to her neck. And before she could read the look on his face, he dropped her wrist and stalked off into a dark kingdom of crypts and tombstones.
They walked in near silence until Jacks found a broad mausoleum covered in vines of demonâs bittercress and guarded by two sad stone angels. One angel mourned over a pair of broken wings while the other played a harp with broken strings.
Jacks idly plucked at one of the damaged strings. After strumming several soundless notes, the door to the mausoleum slid open.
There normally might have been a gate to separate visitors from the coffins, but instead there was another door. Old and wooden with a touch of iron scrollwork, it resembled a number of the doors sheâd seen at Wolf Hallâexcept for the glowing keyhole. Honey-thick light poured through the little curving shape, gleaming brighter the closer they drew to the door, flickering and promising, and far more inviting than the door to Jacksâs church had been. That door didnât want to be opened, but this one did.
Come in from out of the cold, it whispered. Iâll keep you warm.
Jacks speared her with a quicksilver glare. âDonât be dazzled. Youâre useless to me as a vampire.â
âWell, letâs hope I donât decide Iâd rather be a vampire than be useful to you.â
Jacksâs eyes turned into daggers.
Evangeline fought the urge to flash him a gloating smile, but a corner of it snuck out. She knew she couldnât become too comfortable with taunting Jacks, but just because she liked a door didnât mean she was going to step through and bare her throat for a vampire. She was also feeling emboldened by the knowledge that she was not as replaceable as heâd tried to make her believe. He needed her for his precious Valory Arch, which wasnât entirely reassuring, but sheâd worry about that later, after she found Apolloâs real killer and cleared her name of suspicion. âInstead of telling me what I shouldnât do, you should make more of an effort to do things that make me want to continue working with you.â
âSuch as saving your life?â
âYou did that for yourself.â
âBut I still did it. If it werenât for me, your story would be over.â Jacks ended the conversation by hitting his knuckles against the door and saying, âWeâre here to see Chaos.â
âThe master is not accepting visitors tonight,â said a voice like a heavy rain, musical and enthralling.
Jacks rolled his eyes. âTell your master that the Prince of Hearts is here, and he owes me an unforgiven debt.â
The door opened immediately.
Jacks clenched his jaw, almost as if he wished his words hadnât worked.
It would have been easy for Evangeline to anger Jacks further by making a show of being bewitched. The vampire who opened the door was exactly what sheâd expected. He looked like the son of a warrior demigodâor someone who just had really excellent bone structure. Dressed like an elegant assassin in a fitted black leather tunic and a high-collared coat that had thick cuffs that folded up to his muscled forearms and revealed skin so flawless it glowed.
She remembered not to look in the vampireâs eyes. But she could feel the heat pouring off him. His gaze hungrily raked over her form-fitting corset with a smile that was all sharp fangs.
Her heart raced.
His fangs grew longer.
Relax. Jacksâs voice in Evangelineâs head. Fear only excites them, Little Fox.
Her blood continued to rush. You still canât control me, she thought back. And you told me you wouldnât try.
I was only trying to warn you, Jacks silently replied.
And then, as if he werenât a monster as well, Jacks slid an arm underneath her cape and wrapped it around Evangelineâs waist, holding her possessively tight as he drawled, âStop flashing your fangs. Iâm the only one who gets to bite her.â
Jacks nipped at Evangelineâs ear, cold and sharp. She felt the sting of it everywhere, covering her with gooseflesh, which somehow turned to blush when it reached her cheeks.
No matter how many times I bite you, youâll never turn into what I am, heâd said. And now he was doing it, just to prove that he could.
Evangeline started to pull away.
Donât. Jacks spread his fingers and tightened his grip on her waist. Humans donât have power here. If he thinks I canât control you, heâll do it, and I guarantee youâll enjoy that even less.
You still didnât have to bite me, Evangeline thought. And she would have shaken him off, but she wasnât there to fight with Jacks. She was there because Apollo was dead and she needed to find out whoâd killed him.
So instead of battling Jacks, she gritted her teeth as he released her waist and took hold of her hand.
Without another word, their vampire guide led them forward.
At first the wide hallways and the dramatic stone staircases were not so different from the oldest parts of Wolf Hall. The walls were covered with works of art, ancient shields, and steel blades that took on a bronze tint beneath the heavy rings of candle-covered chandeliers.
The stairs took them deeper and deeper underground, where the air once again turned to frost, and Evangeline found herself fighting the urge to lean into Jacks. So far, there were no coffins or corpses, but she heard several rattling noises that sounded like chains. A few steps later, she might have caught the coppery scent of blood. And were those shackles hanging between a pair of portraits?
After another flight of stairs, their guide directed them into an indoor courtyard full of limestone columns and night-blooming flowers, where it was impossible to miss all the shackles. They gleamed against the walls and columns, polished and ready to use. Manacles for wrists and ankles and necks were proudly displayed above game tables set with black-and-white chessboards.
The seats were all empty, but Evangeline had horrible flashes of vampires lounging in leather chairs and playing with pawns and rooks while their bleeding human captives writhed against their restraints.
Her discomfort increased as she and Jacks were led from the indoor courtyard into a banquet room. It was also similar to the ones in Wolf Hall, with rich wine-red rugs and an enormous table. But here, there were human-size cages dangling in between the chandeliers, and instead of silver plates and cloth napkins, the tables were set with more chains and shackles that attached to the wood.
Evangeline felt sick.
Thankfully, all the constraints were unoccupied. But the emptiness of everything unsettled her as well. Where was everyone? And where exactly was their guide taking them?
âStill curious about vampires?â Jacks murmured.
âWhy is this place so vacant?â Evangeline said under her breath. âWhereââ
She froze as their guide disappeared. He moved quicker than an arrow being shot from a bow. One moment he was a few feet in front of them, and then he was gone. He darted through a door at the end of the room with preternatural speed, leaving them alone. âWhere did he just go?â
âThis is why I hate vampires.â Jacks worked his jaw as his eyes darted from the door their guide had just gone through to the cages hanging above. âI think we might need to get out of here.â
âIâm disappointed, my friend,â said a voice like smoke and velvet, gritty and slightly hypnotic. âYouâre the one who taught me how useful cages can be.â
Evangeline didnât even see this vampire enter. He was just there, slowly walking toward them. He wore no coat or cloak, just sinuous leather armor and a vicious bronze helm that concealed his face, save his eyes and the slash of his cheekbones.
âItâs you,â Evangeline breathed. âYouâre the soldier from the party, and the spires.â
âNot actually a soldier, princess.â His voice was softer when he spoke to her, pure velvet without the smoke. âIâm Chaos. Welcome to my home.â