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"Open your eyes!" Coach Knorrig yelled. "Monture, open your eyes!"
The moment Cally's eyes .ew open, the black ecto-plasm disappeared, reabsorbed into her body. Her arm dropped limply to her side as she looked around at her surroundings, slightly dazed.
"I'm sorry, Coach," she said. "The wolf ran away. Do you want me to try again?"
"That's okay, Monture," Coach Knorrig replied as she scribbled notes on her clipboard. "I think I've seen enough."
Chapter 12.
I.
t was very late by the time Cally started home. As if having to deal with students who hated her guts and faculty who thought she was trash wasn't bad enough, the commute to and from her new school was a b.i.t.c.h and a half.
She stood on the platform in Williamsburg for a long moment and stared after the taillights of the departing J train. She looked around, hoping to catch sight of Peter, then shook her head, chiding herself for being so stupid. Getting involved with a Van Helsing was the last thing she needed. It made as much sense as a mongoose falling for a cobra or a mermaid longing for a .sherman. Nothing good could possibly come of it.
Cally could still remember when she was four years old and fell off the top of the jungle gym at the playground and broke her arm. She had cried for a minute, more in surprise than from the pain, then jumped up and started playing again as if nothing had happened.
Her grandmother, who was watching from the sidelines, quickly hurried Cally away, explaining to the other adults that she was rus.h.i.+ng her grandchild to the nearest emergency room. Instead of going to the hospital, they took a cab back home, where Granny sat her down at the kitchen table and explained the differences between Cally and other children.
"You have to be careful when you're playing with humans, little one," her grandmother said. "They look the same as you, but they're very different. When they fall down and hurt themselves, humans can't get better right away like you do. You have to understand this. If you hurt yourself in public, you can never let them see you get better. You have to pretend you're still hurt and get away as fast as you can.
"If the humans .nd out what you are, they'll take you away from me and your mother. No matter how nice they seem, it's very, very important that you never reveal what you really are to anyone, especially to humans."
Her grandmother's warning still ringing in her ears, Cally slung her Diesel book bag over her shoulder and headed down the metal stairs that led to the streets below. Even though it was late, she needed to pick up a few things for herself and her mom before returning to the apartment. On reaching the bottom of the stairway, she jogged across the street and into the all-night market on the corner.
She grabbed one of the shopping baskets stacked just inside the door and set about .nding what she needed: toilet paper, .ngernail polish, a box of cup-cakes, a bottle of Yoo-hoo, and, lastly, a bouquet of fresh-cut .owers. As he packed her things, the cas.h.i.+er eyed her school blazer, pleated skirt, and penny loafers with open interest.
"So-are you just dressed up like a naughty Catholic schoolgirl or are you the real thing?" He grinned sala-ciously.
"Get bent, sicko," Cally said, .ipping him off as she s.n.a.t.c.hed up the plastic grocery bag and marched out the door, swinging the bouquet of . owers in one hand. Cally had just one more errand to run before she could return home for the night.
Surrounded on all sides by businesses and apartment buildings, Rest Haven Cemetery had originally been laid out in the 1830s. A wrought-iron gate, its top lined with forbidding metal spikes, allowed pa.s.sersby a brief glimpse of the cool green lawns, shade trees, and weather-worn monuments on the other side. Heavy-duty chains were wrapped about the locked gate like a chrome python, protecting the dead behind its walls from vandals, drunks, and junkies looking for a place to sleep it off.
After checking up and down the street to make sure she wasn't being watched, Cally took a running jump, landing solidly atop the wall. She paused for a second to make sure nothing had fallen out of her grocery bag before dropping to the gra.s.s on the other side.
She had always loved how Rest Haven seemed to be so far removed from the grime and noise of the city. With its birds, squirrels, and old oak trees, the half acre reminded her more of Granny's summer cabin in the country than a graveyard.
She silently wound her way through the moonlit headstones to the graves of her grandparents, which were covered by a blanket of scarlet leaves from a nearby hawthorn tree. Their granite headstone was shaped like two hearts linked by a descending dove.
Although the name on the left-hand side of the monument had undergone two decades of exposure to the elements, it was still perfectly legible: cyril monture, 19251988. The inscription on the other side was far more recent: sina osterberg monture, 19312006.
"Hi, Granny; hi, Grandpa. I brought you some new . owers," Cally said as she removed the withered snapdragons from the memorial vase and put in the fresh bouquet.
As she swept the leaves from her grandmother's grave with her hand, she caught a familiar scent on the wind. Cally looked over her shoulder at a large mon-ument carved in the shape of a weeping angel collapsed in grief over the bier of a loved one.
"Why are you here? Who's with you?" she asked.
A shadow separated itself from one of the angel's wings and stepped into the dim light re. ected from the street. "There's no need to be scared," Peter Van Helsing said, reaching toward her. "I'm here alone."
"This is getting ridiculous!" Cally unexpectedly found herself wanting to cry. "It was weird enough that you tracked me to the club-but how could you have known I would be here, of all places?"
"What can I say? I was raised to be a stalker." He shrugged apologetically. "You were so upset last night, you left before I could explain things to you. I don't want to see you hurt, Cally Monture."
"That's funny-you were trying to kill me when we .rst met." She snorted. "Wait a minute-I never told you my last name."
"I know a lot about you and your family, Cally."
"Why should I believe a word you say?"
"I realize you have every reason not to trust me. But maybe you'll believe your own eyes." Peter reached inside his jacket pocket and took out an old photo-graph, its edges slightly foxed with age. "I slipped this out of one of my father's . les. If he knew I had it, he'd kick my a.s.s. It's a picture of your grandmother with my father, Christopher Van Helsing, and his then-protege, Ike Grainger."
Cally stared in stunned disbelief at the picture Peter handed her. The woman looking out at her was younger than she could remember her grandmother ever being, but there was no mistaking her smile and the gleam in her eyes. She was standing in between a tall, handsome man with wavy, auburn hair not unlike Peter's and a heavyset African American youth who she recognized as the older vampire hunter she'd fried in the park.
"When was this taken?"
"About thirty years ago," Peter replied. "Not long after my father took over the Inst.i.tute from my grand-father."
"I still don't understand," Cally said in a puzzled voice. "What was Granny doing with your father?"
"Don't you see? She was one of the Elites-those who are trained to use the supernatural in order to hunt vampires. According to my father, Sina was one of the best."
"This has to be bogus!" Cally said hotly, shoving the picture back into his hands. "I bet you Photoshopped it! You're crazy! My grandmother wasn't a vampire hunter-"
"Your grandmother was a witch, Cally," Peter said . rmly, grabbing her wrist. "She was a white witch who used her powers to .ght for the greater good, but she was a witch nonetheless. More importantly, she was a human. As is your mother."
"That's it-I'm not going to listen to any more of this garbage!" Cally snapped as she picked up the sack of groceries at her feet. "You are insane, do you know that? Now leave me alone!"
"No! I'm not letting you go until you listen to me!" Peter said, pus.h.i.+ng her back so that he pinned her against the hawthorn tree. The grocery sack fell to the ground, its contents spilling across a nearby grave.
Although she could have easily broken free of his grip, Cally couldn't bring herself to. She stared up into Peter's face. She could feel his breath on her cheek as the ripe, warm smell of him .lled her senses. She looked up into his eyes and saw herself re.ected in them, as if she was somehow trapped inside his head.
"Why are you doing this?" she asked.
"Because I want to help you."
She gave a bitter laugh. "Since when do Van Helsings want to help vampires?"
"Because you're not a vampire, Cally. No vampire would have sicced a rat on a human and then turned around and tried to save him the way you did. And since when do vampires eat junk food?" He pointed to the snack cakes lying on the ground. "How long have you been trying to pa.s.s, Cally? Six months? A year?"
Cally's .rst instinct was to lie to Peter as she had lied to every other human in her life. From that day she'd fallen in the playground, her grandmother had drummed into her that she must never tell the truth about herself to others, no matter what. Lying was a re.ex action. She opened her mouth to deny his accusations but found herself saying: "Almost two years."
Cally was shocked by how good it felt to actually admit the truth. Since her grandmother's death, she hadn't been able to truly talk to anyone, but she dared to try to tell Peter.
"The junk food's for my mom, not me. I started metabolizing blood three years ago. Granny began weaning me off solid food after she found out about her cancer. She knew I could drink only blood if I was going to pa.s.s for one of them after she died."
Cally gripped his hand more tightly. "I won't lie to you, Peter-sometimes I get so tired of pretending to be something that I'm not, I want to just chuck it all."
"You don't have to keep living a lie, Cally. You can come with me to the Inst.i.tute. I'll see to it that your mother's properly taken care of. You won't have to worry about looking after her anymore."
"You want me to become a Van Helsing?" Cally was shocked. "I could never do something like that!"
"You're a hybrid, Cally. How long do you think you can continue pa.s.sing for a true-born now that you're at Bathory Academy? They're bound to . nd out the truth about your parentage sooner or later."
"How do you know about the school?" she gasped.
"Come on; give me some credit, will you?" Peter smiled crookedly. "I know the uniform when I see it. My ancestor burned down the original school, after all. You don't have to worry about accidentally betraying its location to me. The Inst.i.tute's known about it for decades. Besides, it's too heavily forti. ed now for us to try anything like that again . . . not to mention it's really hard to explain driving stakes through the hearts of teenage girls to the police."
She looked over her shoulder at her grandmother's gravestone, gleaming like a diadem in the pale moon-light. "But if what you say about my grandmother is true, she had her reasons for keeping me away from the Inst.i.tute. As much as I want to be with you-I can't do what you're asking of me."
Peter took a deep breath and let it out again. "I suspected that would be your answer." He handed her a card. "Here, take my number. If you want to reach me, all you have to do is call."
"Thanks." Cally smiled, slipping the card into the pocket of her blazer.
"My father is a great man," Peter said, an uneasy look crossing his face. "But he is also driven. He's been looking for you for a long time, Cally. Hybrids make the best vampire hunters because they can pa.s.s among vampires as one of their own. My ancestor was proof of that. My father wants to use you as a weapon against his enemies.
"But now all I know is that I don't want to see you hurt by anyone-and that includes my father." He looked down into her face, his eyes br.i.m.m.i.n.g with anguish. "Do you understand that I would betray every-thing and everyone I've ever known for you?"
Even though she knew it was the worst thing she could possibly do, Cally reached up and cupped Peter's face in her pale hands, pulling his mouth to hers in a deep, sensuous kiss. After a time, with his strong arms embracing her, Peter ground his hips against hers, their breathing growing deeper with each gyration.
As their pa.s.sion grew, so did Cally's hunger, tor-menting her with its raging thirst. She broke free of Peter's questing tongue and pressed her trembling lips against his throat. She could taste the sweat that beaded his skin like mercury and feel the throb of his jugular vein as it pulsed against her fangs. She was tempted to take just the tiniest nip. Just a love bite, really. After all, she probably couldn't turn him into one of the undead even if she wanted to. The real danger lay in her getting carried away and drinking too long and too deep. . . .
"No!" Cally cried out as she abruptly tore herself free of the embrace. "I'm sorry, I can't do this." She quickly gathered up her dropped groceries. "I have to go. I'll call you later."
Peter watched in perplexed silence as Cally effort-lessly scaled the wall surrounding the graveyard. As she disappeared over the side to the pavement below, he heard a dry, .uttering sound and saw a moth batter-ing itself against the streetlight outside the gate. He frowned and quickly looked away.
Sheila Monture was snoring lightly in front of the .at screen by the time Cally got home. Cally picked up the half-eaten container of Chinese food and empty bottle of Ancient Age lying on the chaise lounge and tossed them in the kitchen trash. Then she took her grandmother's old afghan blanket out of the front closet and carefully draped it over her mother's sleeping form.
She bent over and placed a kiss on Sheila's upturned cheek, then headed back to the bathroom and turned on the shower.
She stood with her eyes closed under the pulsing jet spray for a half hour, but no matter how hard she tried, she couldn't banish the image of her grandmother smiling into the camera as she stood next to the sworn enemy of the vampire race. Meanwhile Peter's words echoed over and over inside her head: You don't have to keep living a lie.
Chapter 13.
" Winged .ight is our heritage and our destiny."
Coach Knorrig kept her hands clasped behind her back as she addressed the second-period aerial exercises cla.s.s. "But there is more to . ying than .apping your wings and avoiding low-. ying aircraft.
Fluttering around in the open sky is one thing; learning to use echolocation so you can .y in tight, cramped s.p.a.ces is something else altogether."
Standing on a high, wide ledge a hundred feet above the .oor of the grotto, Cally was glad that several girls were between her and Lilith, who was eyeing her dangerously.
As Coach Knorrig continued her speech on the importance of close-quarters aerial skills, Cally moved nearer to the edge for a better view. From here it was been made, not created naturally. The stalagmites on the . oor far below reminded her of the hedgerows in a garden maze.
Looking down, she was overcome by a burst of vertigo and quickly stepped back. She glanced up and saw the Todd girl staring at her like something she'd sc.r.a.ped off the bottom of her shoe. It would be too ridiculous to plummet head.rst to her death. Then again, Cally wouldn't put it past any of her cla.s.smates, especially Lilith, to give her a shove over the ledge when she wasn't looking.
The coach consulted her ever-present clipboard and said, "Maledetto, you're . rst."
At .rst Cally thought the twin who stepped forward was Bella, who had been in her shapes.h.i.+fting cla.s.s the night before. Then she realized the ribbons the girl was removing from her hair were red, not blue.
"Could you keep these for me?" Bette Maledetto asked timidly, holding the hair ribbons out to Lilith. She was used to having her twin sister's help with such things, but the administration was placing them into separate cla.s.ses in an attempt to foster independence.
"What do I look like? Your body servant?" Lilith sniffed, eyeing the satin ribbons with distaste.
Seeing a chance to make a much-needed ally, Cally quickly stepped forward. "I'll look after them for you."
"Thanks," Bette said.
Bette walked up to the very edge of the precipice and lifted her arms high up over her head, her . n-gers shooting rapidly outward while her thumbs crooked into huge claws. As the bones of her hands warped themselves into a strange new geometry, the skin between her .ngers and along her arms expanded and grew into a membranous cape. The tip of her nose pushed upward and back, exposing the nostrils, while her lips peeled back to reveal pearly white fangs. The pointed tips of her ears quadrupled in size while moving to the top of her skull, and her hair was replaced by dark gray fur as soft as moleskin. Her neck retracted, pulling her head in tight between her shoulders, while her chest widened to accommodate a longer reach. The toes of her feet elongated until they were all the same length, the nails curving into ebony talons. Within seconds Bette was leaning forward on transformed legs, the knees of which now bent backward, chittering anxiously to herself as she peered down at the jagged forest of stone below her.
Cally was astounded at how quickly Bette had meta-morphosed from a cute, baby-faced teenage girl into a monstrous humanoid bat. The whole transformation, from start to .nish, hadn't taken more than a few heartbeats. The thought of having to accomplish the same feat made her own heart drop like a coin down a subway grate.
"Don't be nervous, Maledetto," Coach Knorrig said in a cajoling voice. "You can do it."
Bette contracted her pectoral muscles, bringing her wings down to her sides. Flexing her huge mutated thumbs, she .ung herself into the abyss. Her cla.s.smates surged forward, jostling one another for the best view as she plunged toward the rocks. Suddenly Bette's arms snapped open as if they were spring-loaded and, cupping her wings against the air rus.h.i.+ng past her body, she began to make a vigorous rowing motion. The skin of her wings instantly billowed outward, gen-erating lift that pulled her up and away from the rapidly approaching cave . oor.
"Good job, Maledetto! You're doing great!" Coach Knorrig called after her. "Now .nd a rock and stick to it!"
Bette .uttered over and anch.o.r.ed herself to a stalac-t.i.te, hanging upside down by her hooked thumbs and clawed feet.
"I hope the rest of you saw what Maledetto did to launch herself," Coach Knorrig said. "Mortimer: I see you've got your hand raised," she said, pointing at Bianca. "What is it?"