hands along the far shelving unit. “Here, this one seems looser than the others. Grab the other end.”
I took hold of the shelf and, on the count of three, pulled. The shelf didn’t move. I walked to the nearest shelf and began examining it, the first wave of disappointment having given way to resolution. Maybe I had been mistaken about this room, but I wasn’t leaving until I was certain of that.
I poked and pried at the shelf but it didn’t budge. On to the next one.
“That one’s firmly fastened,” Cassandra said as she inspected the remaining shelf. “It doesn’t so much as quiver.”
I stopped yanking on the shelf and instead ran my fingers along both sides, where the unit fastened to the wall. It was rammed so tight against the wall that I couldn’t even squeeze a fingernail into the gap. I crouched to examine the underside of the lower shelves.
On the second-to-bottom shelf, I found a nail sticking out near the corner. I prodded it. The nail slid into the wood and the shelf snapped hard against my hands.
“A catch,” Cassandra said. “Well done again.”
Before I could pull it open, my vision clouded.
“Not again,” I muttered. “My perimeter spell, with flawless timing.”
Cassandra checked her watch. “Aaron and Lucas.”
“Or so I hope. I’ll check. You go on in.”
I scooted up the ladder and out the cabin door. Lucas and Aaron were picking their way through the brambles. I hailed them with a shout.
“Hear you found Edward’s hidey-hole,” Aaron called as they drew closer. “Way to go.”
“We haven’t had a chance to look inside yet,” I said. “We ran into a few complications.”
When they caught up, Lucas’s hand brushed mine, then gave it a squeeze.
“Oooh, would that be one of those complications?” Aaron said, jerking his chin toward the fallen artist. “Or just a late-afternoon snack?”
“Both, I think,” I said.
“Is she in a better mood now?”
“Actually, now that I think about it, a much better mood.”
Aaron’s laugh rang out through the quiet meadow. “Oh, yeah, same old Cassandra. I thought that might be the problem. She gets pretty damned testy when she hasn’t eaten. That’s one big drawback to socializing with nonvamps. Nobody wants to hear you say, ‘I’m just popping out for a bite.’ If she ever gets bitchier than usual, that’s a good time to send her out on a late-night coffee run. Best way to cheer her up.” He grinned. “Well, there are other ways, but you don’t want to hear about those.”
We circled past the artist and headed into the cabin.
A Strange Place to Take a Bath
I LED LUCAS AND AARON TO THE SECRET ROOM. AS I looked around, my first thought was, “That makes sense, and that makes sense, and…what the hell is that for?”
The room was just slightly larger than the fake cold cellar, maybe eight feet square. Along one wall was a bookcase, filled with ancient reference books and experimentation journals. The shelves on the opposite wall held vials, beakers, jars, and other scientific equipment. All this was exactly what I expected to see in a quester’s laboratory. What I couldn’t understand, though, was the claw-footed bathtub that took up a quarter of the floor space.
“I like to read in the bath, too,” I said. “But that seems a bit extreme.”
“Especially with no running water,” Aaron said.
“I would assume it’s used as a mixing basin,” Lucas said. “Though it seems rather large for the purpose and it would likely have required removing the cabin floor to get it down here. Perhaps it has a greater significance, a relic of some sort.”
Cassandra looked up from the journal she’d been reading. “You’re both right. It would be used for mixing a compound, then bathing in it. Ingestion is the most common way to take immortality potions, but immersion is also popular.”
“Find anything?” Aaron said, looking down over her shoulder. “At least it’s not in code.”
“It would be better if it was,” she said. “A code can be deciphered and broken. Instead, what they’ve done is put in only enough detail to remind themselves what they did.”
“Huh?”
She lifted the book closer to my light-ball. “‘March seventh, 2001. Tried variation B again with fresher source material type Hf. No change. April twelfth, 2001. Expanded variation A to include source material type Hm, subtype E. No change.’”
“Shit,” Aaron muttered. “Is it all like that?”
Cassandra nodded.
“What’s the date on the last entry?” Lucas asked.
“June of this year.”
“A month or two before Natasha left him,” I said. “Any idea what