Late one afternoon, I was crossing through the hall when one of the front doors opened. Darius came in. If Iâd been slightly more observant, I might have realized that the vampire was dragging a bit. His pace was slower than normal, he didnât look up or greet me as he came in, the top button on his shirt was undone, and his tie was loosened by a standard-shattering half inch. But with me being me, the only thing I noticed was that he had a bunch of letters in his hand and two packages under his arm.
I lunged at him. âAre any of those for me?â
Count Vasil jumped back and dropped half the letters. For a hundredth of a second, I saw a flash of his fangs. Then he relaxed, one hand on his chest, his eyes closed, while I stared, wide-eyed and grinning.
âDid I startle you?â I asked, my voice high with disbelief.
Darius sighed and rubbed his eyes.
âHow could I possibly startle you?â I insisted. âShouldnât you have heard me coming?â
âItâs been a long week, Emerra.â
We both squatted to pick up the scattered mail.
âWell,â I said, âwelcome home. Do we get to keep you for a while?â
He shook his head. âIâm here to sleep for thirty-six hours, then I have to go back to work.â
Judging by the way he said that and how tired he looked, he probably meant that heâd be catching up on his sleep debt by napping for thirty-six hours straight.
My grin faded into a sympathetic smile. âHavenât caught them yet?â
âNot yet.â
âIs it normal for the FBI to help catch a burglar?â
âI get called in whenever they suspect magic is being used.â
âIs magic being used?â
His eyes narrowed, and he pointed at me with the corner of an envelope. âI will let you know as soon as I do.â
We stood up. Darius started flipping through the envelopes. âMost of these are for Olivia.â
âWhat about the packages? Iâm waiting for some workout clothes.â
When he looked up at me, the normally flat plane of his cheek was bent by the demure, closed-lip smile he used because it kept his fangs hidden. âIs Conrad still teaching you how to fight?â
âHa! The only thing heâs taught me is that I couldnât win a fight to save my life. Literally.â
âHow inspiring.â
âIt is. When it comes to training as a runner, my motivation is through the roof.â
The countâs subtle smile became a lot less subtle.
I couldnât blame him. It was funny.
Even in a place as big as the Noctis mansion, staying inside for too long made me restless. The snow had started on the first of December, and by New Years, I was getting cagey. One bitterly cold January morning, when I couldnât talk myself into post-holing it over the four new inches of snow in order to take my morning stroll, I decided to check out the gym that occupied half of our oversized garage.
Back in ye olden days, the garage had been built as a combination stable and carriage house for the mansion. It was supposed to be big. But we only had three cars, so there was plenty of room left over. Someoneâprobably Dariusâhad turned it into a gym. We had weights, machines, a small fighting ring, and a line of punching bags.
Conrad worked out there most mornings. The first time I went in, I told him that I was only there for the treadmillâand I was! But, I meanâ¦punching bags! Who could resist the temptation to wallop one of those bad boys?
A few days later, when I arrived early enough I was sure Iâd be alone, I picked out the biggest, heaviest looking punching bag in the whole line.
I nearly broke my wrist.
And, it turned out, I wasnât alone. Conrad had snuck in just in time to see me embarrass myself andâaccording to himâour entire pack. Thatâs when he told me he was going to teach me how to fight.
A two-hundred-and-seventy-pound wolfman versus a ninety-eight-pound revived cancer victim. What could go wrong?
Darius glanced at the packages. âBoth are for Iset, Iâm afraid.â
I sighed.
The vampire eyed me. âIâm surprised you havenât tried to use your lack of workout clothes as an excuse to get out of your lessons.â
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âI did try. Conrad said that if I was ever in a real fight, Iâd be in my jeans anyway.â
âHe has a point, you know.â
âHe also says that my only hope of winning is if Iâm armed with a forty-five-caliber pistol.â
âTwo points. If you ever want trainingââ
âNo thanks!â
I didnât mind guns in theory. What bothered me was how heavy they were, and the almighty loud BANG! â¦and, if Iâm being honest, the idea that I would have the power to kill someone.
I shivered.
When I looked up, Darius was watching me. His eyes were knowing and sympathetic.
I gave his arm a shove. âGo on, you blood-sucker. Give Iset her packages. Iâm sure sheâd like to say hello.â
âAre you offering to take Olivia her letters?â
That hadnât been my intentionâOlivia and I were barely civil to each otherâbut if Darius had only a few minutes of consciousness left, Iâd rather he spend that time in the library with Iset.
I had a soft spot for my favorite undead pair.
âOh, fine,â I said. âHand them over.â
He passed me the top three letters, then started digging through the rest.
âWhy is she getting so much mail?â I asked.
âItâs cultural,â Darius said. âThere are still some letters witches prefer to send through the mail. Birthday greetings are one of them.â
âItâs her birthday?â
âIt will be soon.â
He handed me a heavy envelope of cream-colored parchment sealed with wax. The stamp in the wax looked like some kind of leafy branch.
âFancy,â I observed.
Darius glanced at the letter in my hands. âAh. Yes. Be careful with that one. Itâs important.â
I flipped it over to look at the return address. The script was so ornate, I couldnât read it. âWhoâs it from?â
âHer coven.â
âWhat is it?â
âAs itâs Oliviaâs private mail, Iâll let you ask her that.â He passed me some more letters. âThatâs all of them.â
I started toward the front stairs but turned back when Darius called my name.
âAbout that fancy letter,â he said.
âYeah?â
âWhen Olivia tells you to throw it away, remember it canât be recycled because of the wax.â
With that, he set off toward the library.
I went upstairs. Olivia wasnât in her room, so I went over to Isetâs private study. In the nearly four months Iâd lived at the Noctis mansion, the only person Iâd ever seen using that room was Olivia. I suspected that the only reason it was called âIsetâs private studyâ was because, if you were on the second floor, you had to walk through Isetâs room to get to it.
I knocked on the study door. Barging in on that particular witch, mid-spell, could be bad for your health.
Oliviaâs voice came from behind the door. âYes?â
I peeked inside. When she saw it was me, she frowned slightly, like someone gazing at a smelly fish.
âDid you want something?â she asked.
It was a sign of how much our relationship had improved that she hadnât said, âWhat do you want?â
Ever since Iâd arrived at the mansion, fresh from my casket, Olivia seemed to have it out for me. She was varying levels of caustic to almost everyone, but I must have occupied a special, venom-filled space in her shriveled heart. Iset had said that she was jealous of my âtalentsââmeaning, my abilities as a seer (whatever those were worth)âbut it was probable that Olivia also found my personality irritating.
I decided to make the best of it by enjoying her irritation.
I bounced into the room. âMail time!â
She put down her pen and shut her notebook. âYou donât have to shout, Emerra. Iâm right here.â
I held out everything but the big, heavy, mysterious, wax-sealed envelope. âI hear itâs your birthday soon.â
Olivia took the letters. âYes.â
âYouâre going to be seventeen?â
âThatâs usually the number that follows sixteen.â
She pulled over a nearby trash can and started going through the letters. One glance at the return address was enough to consign most of them to the garbage, unopened. The indifference in how she tossed away all those hand-addressed envelopes bothered me. I wasnât sure what emotion I was feelingâall I knew was that it felt like someone was rubbing fine-grit sandpaper over my soul.
âArenât those from your friends?â I asked.
âNot most of them.â She dropped another letter.
I dragged my eyes away from the garbage can. They were her letters, it was her business.
âWhenâs the big day?â I asked.
âIf youâre trying to ask what day is my birthday, itâs tomorrow.â
A grin broke over my face. âYou were born on Valentineâs Day?â
âAnd Iâm sure you think thatâs cute.â
âWrong. I think itâs adorable.â
She scoffed. âMaybe if you like pink.â
Olivia did not like pink. Her entire wardrobe was black.
âAll those candy hearts must be why youâre so sweet,â I said.
When she stopped to glare at me, she noticed the parchment envelope still in my hands. She nodded to it. âIs that from the coven?â
âWhat? This shabby thing?â I waved it around. âAs a matter of fact, it is.â
She turned back to the desk with the only two letters that had survived the culling. âThrow it away.â
She reached for her silver dagger and slit open the first letter.
I gazed at the poor envelope still in my hands. It looked so neglected.
âDonât you want to know whatâs in it?â I asked.
The witch didnât even stop reading to answer. âI already know whatâs in it.â
âBut itâs got a wax seal!â
âYes. Self-important people often use those.â
The nerve of that girl! How many times in my life would I get a big, heavy letter, all fancied up with a wax seal like some fairy-tale invitation to a ball?
Zero. Thatâs how many.
âIf Prince Charming gets away,â I said, âyouâll have nobody to blame but yourself.â
That made her look up. âWhat are you dribbling on about?â
âLook, can I open it?â
She rolled her eyes, passed me the dagger, and went back to reading her letter.
I felt a small thrill as I slit open the envelope. The letter inside was equally fancy and made out of the same heavy cream-colored paper. After setting my brain to decipher-cursive mode, I read over the first few lines.
âIt is an invitation,â I said.
âLet me guess,â Olivia said, âIâm formally invited to present myself, with my master, before the mistress of the coven to demonstrate my progress in the arts.â
Dang. Sheâd almost gotten it word for word.
âAre you sure this isnât important, Olivia?â
âItâs not required, so itâs not important.â She added with a faint sneer, âItâs nothing but a chance to show off.â
âHow is itâ¦not required?â
âNot required. If I donât show up, they canât kick me out of the coven. The only report I have to give is the one at the end of my apprenticeship. Then Iâm done.â
I was looking right at her when she said that. Her face went stony at the word âdone.â
I was still watching her when all the color drained from her cheeks. She pushed back the chair and rose to her feet. Her eyes were locked on the letter in her hand.
âOlivia?â I said.
She folded the paper and turned to the spiral staircase in the corner of the room. It led down to the library. âI have to make a call.â
She was halfway to the stairs by the time I said, âWhat do you want me to do with the invitation?â
âThrow it away!â she yelled without looking back.
I gave the invitation one last sad glance before letting it slide from my hand to join the other letters that Olivia had deemed ânot important.â