“What’s going to happen to you?”
“They will hurt me,” Amelie said flatly. “I will fight them, but they will take me. Don’t interfere. You can’t save me. I thank you for the gift of your blood, Claire, and I will honor it. But you must honor me as well now.”
It came to Claire in a blinding flash that there was one possi- bility that Amelie hadn’t thought about— a dangerous one. Poten- tially fatal.
But maybe, just maybe, one that could work.
“If you get out of here, can you hide?” Claire asked her. “Is there someplace you can go?”
“Morley has promised me safety in the town of Blacke, if I can reach the borders of Morganville,” Amelie said. “From there, per- haps we can find a way to strike at Fallon. But it’s of no use to speculate. I will never leave this attic except in their hands.”
This, Claire thought, was going to require two things: preci- sion timing and a whole lot of luck. The house was on her side, though; she could feel it anxiously waiting for any chance to help. And Shane would be armed and dangerous and looking for her, very soon.
She heard the shriek of metal warping and being ripped apart, and waited another few seconds, staring at Amelie. She couldn’t hear these creatures, because they moved like ghosts, but in her pe-ripheral vision she saw one of them on the stairs. As it reached the top, she saw the blur of the second one close behind it.
“Sorry,” Claire said. “I’m not giving up on you just yet.”
She rushed forward, and before Amelie could stop her, she wrapped the Founder of Morganville in a hug.
It was weird and nauseating. The blood from Amelie’s dress squelched wetly between them, smearing Claire, and beneath the garment the vampire felt like a cold marble statue, stiffly unyielding. It lasted only a second, and then Amelie’s shock cracked, and she shoved Claire backward. “What are you doing?” she demanded, but there wasn’t time to explain, because the hellhounds were coming.
Claire threw herself sideways, across the couch, knocked over the lamp, and jumped the low railing to land awkwardly on the steps below. She lost her footing and fell, tumbling down the rest of the way, and caught herself just before she would have rolled into a nasty jagged metal mess that used to be the hidden panel’s door.
Claire shoved it out of the way, panting with fear and adrena- line, and saw one of the monsters leap down behind her on the stairs. It sniffed the air, and those yellow eyes widened, fixed straight on her, and took on an unholy shimmer as it opened its mouth to snarl.
Then it let out a howl that froze her bones, and Claire didn’t wait to see if it was going to give chase.
She just left Amelie behind, and ran.
Seven
She was halfway to the stairs when the creature burst out of the door, still giving that eerie, wailing howl, and Claire plunged the rest of the way at a dead run. She couldn’t let it catch her. It was following the scent of Amelie’s blood on her, and it would treat her like a vampire— it would rip her to shreds, assuming that she would heal.
But she wouldn’t, of course. If it caught her, it was all over. Her calculated risk would have failed. She’d thought that if Amelie had only one of these things to deal with, she might be able to fight her way free. That was Claire’s theory, anyway. She hoped she hadn’t just sacrificed herself for nothing.
“Shane!” Claire yelled as she reached the stairs and began rac- ing down them. She didn’t feel the scrapes and bruises and muscle strains she was sure she’d earned with that first tumble down the hidden room’s steps. She’d pay for it later, but for now her panic was overriding all the normal responses. Nothing was broken, at least; she could still put her weight equally on both legs. That was all that mattered.
Shane was at the bottom of the stairs, standing there with the heavy duffel bag of weapons, staring up at her. He wasn’t moving.
He looked . . . odd.
“Shane!” she called again, and looked back over her shoulder.
She saw the monster coming into view, all yellow eyes and gleam- ing claws and that ridiculous sundress. “Shane, I need a weapon!”
She didn’t even care what it was, not yet. There wasn’t time to be scientific just now.
But Shane wasn’t moving. No. Now he was, to drop the duffel with a crash to the wood floor.
Something was happening to him. His eyes . . .
He was changing.
No. She’d forgotten in the crush of events, forgotten what the effect could be if he came face- to- face with a vampire . . .
. . . or someone who smelled like one.
He closed his eyes and when they opened, they gleamed acid yellow, with pupils that shrank into vertical slits.