him. He taught you to ride when you were six.”
“Truly?”
“Yes, you were afraid of horses, and my father understands fear. We probably should have switched places. You loved it at Cliffbracken, and I always felt stifled.”
“I can’t imagine being afraid of horses.”
“No, you’ve changed. Tragic, really. Your father would worship you now.” He paused and frowned. “You’re certainly full of words tonight. I haven’t seen you this coherent since before Angelo turned you.”
“I have things on my mind.”
“What mind?” Julian snorted coldly.
“John and I rode into town a few nights ago, and he . . .”
Julian turned away from the window. “He what?”
“He used one of his mind tricks to make a whore forget him, forget he had fed upon her, and he left her alive.”
Julian fell still, gazing at Philip through the darkness. “Has he or Angelo ever done that to you? Tried to enter your mind? Tried to make you obey ? Or tried to make you forget something?”
“What?” This turn in the conversation startled Philip. “No. Of course not.”
“How would you know,” Julian whispered, his dark eyes glittering, “if they’d already made you forget?” He stepped closer. “We have no defense at all. Do you understand what that means? They could make us think anything, do anything . . . and even make us forget . . . and as we have no such power, we could do nothing to stop them.”
Philip fidgeted in his chair. “What is wrong with you these past nights?”
“We have no defense against them . . . against any of them.”
“Stop saying that!” Philip snapped.
Julian fell silent, turning back and staring out the window into space.
“Oh, please, Julian,” Philip begged. “Can’t we do something, anything—riding, hunting? We could even practice fencing if you like. One more moment in this house and I’ll die.”
“No,” his undead brother whispered. “You won’t die.”
A few nights later, Julian vanished, and Philip had no idea where he’d gone.
Several weeks passed, and then one night, Philip came home an hour before dawn to find his master and John in the library, deep in whispered conference.
“Telling secrets?” Philip asked, smiling. “About me?”
Angelo Travare, Earl of Scurloc, rested in a stone chair. He was a slender Norman creature who told stories of crusades and knights with swords, his flesh long since grown so preternaturally pale he scarcely passed as human. Dim candlelight exposed deep lines of strain now marring his milky forehead.
Two thick pieces of parchment lay on the oak table before him.
“Sit down, son,” Angelo said.
“What’s wrong?” Philip asked.
“Our time this winter is over. You must return to Gascony.”
“But it’s not even January yet. We have months to go.”
“How many vampires do you know?”
“How many? You, John, Julian, Maggie, and John’s servant, Edward. What does it matter?”
“Do you ever wonder if there are others like yourself, beyond your circle?”
“No.”
“There are, Philip. Nearly thirty others in Europe alone.”
“Like us?”
“Just like us,” Angelo said. “But tonight, we’ve learned that three of them are dead.” He pointed down to the parchment letters.
“Dead?” Philip repeated. “We can’t die. We’re immortal.”
“Of course we can. I’ve explained this. ‘Undead’ does not mean your body can’t be destroyed. Fire, sunlight, and decapitation will end your existence. Now, listen to me carefully. Do you know why Maggie has no psychic powers?”
Philip frowned without answering.
“Because you were not able to teach her,” Angelo said.
John leaned forward in his chair, nodding, dark blond hair falling across his eyes. “And neither does my Edward because I chose not to teach him yet, and he has no contact with others of our kind.”
Their manner annoyed Philip, speaking to him in short, slowly spoken words. “I’m not simple! I’m not a half-wit, but I don’t care about psychic powers.” He motioned to the parchments. “And what does any of that have to do with us? A few vampires we’ve never met have flown off to the great beyond. Why do you care?”
“Because they were murdered,” Angelo said flatly. “Decapitated by Julian.”
“By Jul- . . . some kind of fight?”
Angelo always had seemed ancient to him, but tonight was the first time his master looked old and fragile.
“No, Philip, not a fight. Julian has left us. He has become an enemy to his own kind and is destroying vampires who possess psychic power.”
“What? Who told you that?”
“It is the truth. His gift has turned back in upon itself, and he now fears what he does not possess . . . to a degree that has sickened his mind.” Angelo paused as if gauging