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Authors: Rachel Caine

Midnight Alley (5 page)

BOOK: Midnight Alley
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‘‘Hey,
watch it,
bitch!'' Monica snapped, and then did a double take. ‘‘Claire? Oh, hi. Cute shirt!''
Claire looked down at herself, mystified. It wasn't. She didn't really own any clothes she'd classify as cute, and even the best of them would never match Monica's standards, which were much higher.
‘‘You on your way to class?'' Monica continued brightly. ‘‘Too bad, I'd buy you a mocha or something.''
‘‘I—uh—yeah, I've got class.'' Claire edged around and tried to descend the steps, but Monica got in her way. Monica's smile was friendly, but it didn't really warm up her big, pretty eyes. ‘‘I'll be late.''
‘‘One thing,'' Monica said, and lowered her voice. It occurred to Claire that it was almost the first time she'd seen Monica alone, not flanked by Gina and Jennifer, not trailing an entourage of the Popular. ‘‘I'm having a party on Friday night. Can you come? It's at my parents' house. Here's the address.'' Before Claire could react, Monica pressed a slip of paper into her hand. ‘‘Keep it quiet, all right? I'm asking only the best people. Oh, and wear something nice; it's formal.''
And then Monica was gone, breezing by her up the steps, where she fell in with a group of girls and went into the UC's glass atrium, chatting and laughing.
The best people?
Claire eyed the slip of paper, thought about throwing it away, and then shoved it in her pocket.
Maybe this was a golden opportunity to convince Monica that she wasn't ever going to be anything like a friend.
She headed out for class, moving quickly, but keeping her eyes peeled. When she spotted the guys she was looking for, she veered off the sidewalk and onto the grass.
Gamers. Nerds. They sat around outside most of the afternoon moving counters around on complicated-looking boards and rolling dice. She'd seen them every day for weeks, and in all that time she'd never seen any kind of girl with them, or even approach them. In fact, when she cleared her throat they stared at her as though she were an alien from one of the planets on their game board.
‘‘Hi,'' she said, and thrust out the slip of paper. ‘‘My name's Monica. I'm having a party on Friday night. If you guys want to come. Tell your friends.''
One of them reached out and gingerly took the slip of paper. Another snatched it away from him, read it, and said, ‘‘Wow. Really?''
‘‘Really.''
‘‘Mind if we invite some other people?''
‘‘Knock yourself out.''
Claire headed off to class.
 
‘‘Claire Danvers?''
Last class of the day, and Claire, startled, looked up from writing the date in her notebook. The professor didn't usually take roll. In fact, he seemed pretty much indifferent to who showed up, which was sometimes next to nobody. Like today—she was one of about twelve people. Showing up was really kind of useless in this particular course, since Professor What's-His-Name lectured from PowerPoint slides, bullet by bullet, and then made them available on his Web site right after the lecture. No wonder most people skipped.
She raised her hand, wondering what was going on. She had a guilty flash of handing over the party invitation to the Nerd Squad, but no, how could they find out so soon? And besides, who'd care, besides Monica?
The professor—gray, wrinkled, tired, and unenthusiastic—stared at her for a second without recognition, then said, ‘‘You're wanted in Administration, room three-seventeen. Go now.''
‘‘But—'' Claire started to ask what was going on, but he'd already dismissed her and turned back to his PowerPoint, droning on in a monotone. She stuffed books into her bag, wondered again what was going on, and left without much regret.
She'd been in the Administration Building exactly three times—once to register, once to file the official paperwork to move off campus, once to do add/drop. It looked just like any administration building at any school—grubby and utilitarian, with tired, crabby employees and desks piled high with file folders. She avoided the first-floor Registrar's Office and went up the steps. The second floor was quieter, but still full of people talking, keys clicking on computers, printers running.
The third floor was whisper-quiet. Claire started down the hallway, and the silence sank deeper. She couldn't even hear sounds from outside the windows, although she could clearly see people out there walking and talking, and cars tooling around the street below. Room 317 was at the end of the hall. All of the glossy wooden doors were firmly closed.
She knocked on 317, and thought she heard someone say ‘‘Come in,'' so she turned the knob and stepped inside . . . into darkness. Complete, velvety darkness that disoriented her immediately. The knob slipped out of her hand and the door clicked shut, and she couldn't find it again. Her hand moved over what felt like a featureless, smooth wall.
A light bloomed behind her and she turned to see the flare of a match, and a candle wick catching fire. In the glow, Amelie's face shone like perfect ivory.
The elder vampire looked exactly the same as before: cool, queenly, pale, with her white-blond hair twisted back in an elegant updo that must have required servants to achieve. She was wearing a white silk suit, and her skin was flawless. If she wore makeup, Claire couldn't tell. Her eyes were eerie in the near-dark . . . luminous and not quite human, and very beautiful.
‘‘My apologies for the dramatics,'' Amelie said, and smiled at her. It was a very nice smile, cool and polite. Claire's mother had always loved the Hitchcock movie
Rear Window
, and Claire was struck by the thought that if Grace Kelly had ended up a vampire, this was how she'd have looked. Icy and perfect. ‘‘Don't bother looking for the door. It's gone until I wish it to be there again.''
Claire's heartbeat sped up, and she knew Amelie could tell, though the vampire didn't comment on it; she just shook out the match and dropped it in a silver dish on the table next to the candle. Claire's eyes adjusted gradually to the dimness. She was standing in a fairly small room, some kind of library crammed with books.
Crammed
was an understatement—the books were double-stacked on the shelves, leaning in towers on the top of the bookcases, filling the corners in untidy ziggurats. So many books that the whole room smelled like ancient paper. There wasn't any wall space, except where Claire had come in, that wasn't blocked up by packed, groaning shelves.
‘‘Hi,'' Claire said awkwardly. She hadn't seen Amelie since signing the Protection papers and putting them, as instructed, in the mailbox outside. She'd expected some kind of visit, but . . . nothing. ‘‘Um— what should I call you?''
Amelie's delicate brows rose, pale on pale. ‘‘I know that the concept of manners has declined, but I should think you would know at least some polite form of address that would be appropriate.''
‘‘Ma'am,'' Claire stammered. Amelie nodded.
‘‘That will do.'' She lit another candle. The light strengthened, flickering but casting a warm and welcome glow. Claire spotted another door in the shadows, small and fitted with an antique-style doorknob. There was a big skeleton key in the massive lock.
Nobody else in the room, just she and Amelie.
‘‘I have called you to discuss your studies,'' Amelie said, and sat down in a chair on the other side of the table. There wasn't any seat on Claire's side, so she stood there, awkwardly. She put her backpack down and folded her hands.
‘‘Yes ma'am,'' she said. ‘‘Aren't my grades okay?'' Because usually a 4.0 GPA was okay by most standards.
Amelie dismissed it with a wave. ‘‘I did not say classes; I said studies. No doubt you are finding the local college beneath your abilities. You are said to be quite exceptional.''
Claire didn't know what to say to that, so she didn't say anything. She wished she had a chair. She wished she could say something nice and get back to class and never, ever see Amelie again, because as superficially polite and kind as the old vampire was, there was something ice-cold about her. Something unsettlingly
not human
.
‘‘I would like you to study privately with a friend of mine,'' Amelie said. ‘‘For credit, of course.'' She looked around, smiling very slightly. ‘‘This is his library. Mine is far more orderly.''
Claire's throat felt tight and uncomfortable. ‘‘A . . . uh . . . vampire friend?''
‘‘Is that an issue?'' Amelie folded her white hands together on the table. The candlelight flickered in her eyes.
‘‘N-no ma'am.''
Yes.
God, she couldn't imagine what Shane was going to say.
‘‘I believe you will find him most interesting, Claire. He is indeed one of the most brilliant minds I have ever encountered in my long life, and he has learned so much through his lifetime that he could never teach it all. Still, he has much to pass along. I have been seeking the right pupil, one who can quickly grasp the discoveries he has made, and assist him in his research.''
‘‘Oh,'' Claire whispered faintly.
So
. . . an old vampire. Her experience wasn't so good with the older ones. Like Amelie, they were cold and strange, and most of them were cruel, too. Like Oliver. Oh God, she wasn't talking about Oliver, was she? ‘‘Who—?''
Amelie looked down. Just for an instant, and then she met Claire's eyes and smiled. ‘‘You have not met,'' she said. ‘‘Not formally, at any rate. His name is Myrnin. He is one of my oldest friends and allies. Understand, Claire, that your actions since you came to Morganville, including your agreement with me, have won my trust. I would not grant this honor to any but those I found worthy.''
Flattery. Claire recognized it, and knew the slight warmth in Amelie's voice was probably calculated, but it still worked. It made her feel less scared. ‘‘Myrnin,'' she repeated.
‘‘It is an old name,'' Amelie agreed, in response to the question in Claire's tone. ‘‘Old and forgotten, now. But once he was a great scholar, known and revered. His works should not be forgotten as well.''
There was something strange in that, but Claire was too nervous to figure out what Amelie could be trying to say. Or not say. She was working hard to swallow a lump in her throat, but it was about the size of a poisoned apple and seemed to be growing larger. She could only nod.
Amelie smiled. It looked kind of artificial, like an expression she'd practiced in a mirror rather than learned as a child. Smiling was something her face just didn't naturally do, Claire decided. And sure enough, the smile was gone in seconds, without a trace.
‘‘If you're ready . . . ?''
‘‘Now?'' Claire cast an involuntary, helpless look at the blank wall behind her. There wasn't a door, and that meant there was no way to retreat. So she didn't really have a choice.
Amelie wasn't waiting for her answer, anyway. The ice queen stood up and walked—oh so very undead Grace Kelly
—
to another small, low doorway with the key in the lock. She turned the key, withdrew it, and looked down at it for a moment before holding it out to Claire. ‘‘Keep it,'' she said. ‘‘Leave your book bag here, please. I shouldn't want you to forget it. You will leave through the same door that brought you.''
Claire's fingers closed around the key, registering rough, cold, heavy metal. She shoved it in the pocket of her blue jeans as Amelie swung open the door, and leaned her backpack against a convenient bookcase.
‘‘Myrnin?'' Amelie's voice was low and gentle. ‘‘Myrnin, I've brought the girl I told you about. Her name is Claire.''
Claire knew that tone of voice. You used it with old, sick people, people who didn't really understand what was happening anymore. People you didn't think were really going to be around for long. Coming from Amelie, it was really odd, because she could also hear the love in that low voice. Could vampires love? Well, sure, she guessed; Michael could, right? So why not Amelie, too?
Claire stepped out from behind Amelie at the vampire's imperative gesture, and anxiously scanned the room. It was big, full of the weirdest mixture of equipment and junk she'd ever seen. A brand-new wide-screen laptop computer with a shimmying belly dancer as a screen saver. An abacus. A chemistry set that looked straight out of some old Sherlock Holmes movie. More books, carelessly piled around as trip hazards, leaning in columns on every table. Lamps— some electric, some oil. Candles. Bottles and jars and shadows and angles and . . .
And a man.
Claire blinked, because she was expecting an old, sick person; expecting it so much she looked around again, trying to find him. But the only man in the room sat in a chair, peacefully reading a book. He marked the spot with a finger, closed it, and looked up at Amelie.
He was young, or at least he looked it. Shoulder-length curly brown hair, big, dark puppy-dog eyes, flawless, faintly golden skin. Frozen at the age of maybe twenty-five, just enough for creases to be forming at the corners of his eyes. Also, he was really, really . . .
pretty.
And he didn't look sick. Not at all.
‘‘Ah, good, I've been waiting for you,'' he said. He spoke English, but with some kind of accent, nothing that Claire could identify. It sounded a little bit like Irish, a little bit like Scottish, but more . . . liquid, somehow. Welsh? ‘‘Claire, is it? Well, come forward, girl, I won't bite.'' He smiled, and unlike Amelie's cool attempt, it was a warm, genuine expression, full of merriment. Claire took a couple of steps toward him. She sensed Amelie tensing behind her, and wondered why. Myrnin seemed okay. Seemed more okay than any vampire she'd seen so far, except maybe Sam, Michael's grandfather—and Michael, the youngest vampire in Morganville.
BOOK: Midnight Alley
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