Ghost Town Page 0,102
think I have a better question. What are they doing in my house? And where are my parents?"
"Long story," Shane said. "You guys had better sit down."
In the end, Claire was pretty sure Eve believed it, and Michael really didn't; he seemed firmly set on denial of everything that didn't fit his sixteen-year-old-logic framework, including the fact that he was a vampire. He also couldn't get used to the idea that his parents had moved away, or that his grandfather was . . . gone. Shane had adjusted pretty fast, but Michael . . . not so much. Claire wondered if that had something to do with their personal histories; Shane had grown up adapting to whatever mood his father might have been in, learning to be on his own, learning not to assume that everything was as it seemed. Michael must have had just the opposite kind of life--stable, quiet, with parents who loved him.
Oddly, that seemed to hurt, not help, when it all got taken away from him. Claire was afraid that it was going to drive him crazy, like some of the other vampires, if they didn't fix this soon.
"Wicked crazy stuff you're telling us, you know," Eve finally said, sipping her Coke. "Not that I don't believe you. Morganville's always running on Standard Insane Time. So. What do you want us to do, exactly?"
"Ah . . . nothing?"
"Nothing? Oh, come on, you're going to go all Mission: Impossible and I don't even get to wear a fake face or pose as a spy or anything? This plan sucks. I am not the friend who holds the purses." Eve leaned forward. For Eve, she was dressed kind of plainly--a black, tight T-shirt, a silver skull necklace, the silver choker that matched the one Claire was wearing, and some temporary tattoos of roses that ran up her arms. Plain black jeans and heavy boots. "Look, I'm all Action Goth! Give me a job! I live here, too, you said. Don't I? Doesn't that mean I have as much to lose as anybody else?"
"Uh . . . yeah, you do. Okay, you come with me and Shane. But remember--the idea is to distract Myrnin, not kill him. And don't put yourself in more danger than you have to."
"If she's going, I'm going," Michael said. Eve looked at him, surprised. "What? I'm not letting you girls have all the fun."
"Hey!" Shane said. "Shut up, Goldilocks."
"I'm going," Michael snapped back. "If this needs doing, my family's always been the ones around here to step up and get things done. If . . . if there's nobody else, then it's just me. So I'll help."
"Just don't vamp out on me, man."
"I'm not a fucking vampire, Shane!"
That argument had been going on for about an hour, and evidently, Frank was really tired of it. He walked out of the living room and into the parlor, pulled the knife from his belt, and sliced Michael across the arm.
Eve screamed, and Shane jumped up and shoved his dad back. Michael stared down at his arm in shock. It was a big, ugly cut, and it bled . . . and then it stopped.
And then it slowly closed up.
Eve sat down so suddenly it was as if she'd fainted, except her eyes were still open. Shane froze, staring at Michael's arm as it healed up.
Michael looked like he'd seen a ghost. His own ghost. "No," he said. "No, it's not . . . I'm not--"
"Oh, shut up," Frank snapped. "You're a vampire. Get over it, kid. Move on. Claire, if you want to get this done, let's go. Seems like most people who forget things do it overnight. We can't wait for tomorrow. Chances are, some of us standing here won't remember what the hell we're supposed to be doing by then. We can have your therapy session later."
He put his knife back in the sheath and stalked away. Claire cleared her throat. "Michael? You all right?"
He ran his fingers over the smooth skin where the cut had been, wiping away the blood. Then, as if in a dream, he put his fingers in his mouth. "It tastes good," he said. "Eve, it--"
"Yeah, I get it; you're a vampire," she said. "Creepy. And okay, a little hot, I admit."
"You don't mean that."
"Come on. I still like you, you know, even if you . . . crave plasma."
Michael blinked and looked at her as if he'd never seen her before. "You what?"
"Like. You." Eve enunciated slowly, as