as you're told." Sam could move vampirequick when he wanted to, and he was gone almost before the words hit Claire's ears--a blur, heading for the exit.
"So much for trying to figure out where she is from where he goes," Shane said. "Unless you've got light speed under the hood of that car, Eve."
Michael looked after him with a strange expression on his face--anger, regret, sorrow. Then he hugged Eve closer and kissed the top of her head.
"Well, I guess my family's no more screwed up than anybody else's," he said.
Eve nodded. "Let's recap. My dad was an abusive jerk--"
"Mine, too." Shane raised his hand.
"Thank you. My brother's a psycho backstabber--"
Shane said, "You don't even want to talk about my dad."
"Point. So, in short, Michael, your family is awesome by comparison. Bloodsucking, maybe. But kind of awesome."
Michael sighed. "Doesn't really feel like it at the moment."
"It will." Eve was suddenly very serious. "But Shane and I don't have that to look forward to, you know. You're our only real family now."
"I know," Michael said. "Let's go home."
Chapter Eleven
Home was theirs again. The refugees were all out now, leaving a house that badly needed picking up and cleaning-- not that anybody had gone out of their way to trash the place, but with that many people coming and going, things happened. Claire grabbed a trash bag and began clearing away paper plates, old Styrofoam cups half full of stale coffee, crumpled wrappers, and papers. Shane fired up the video game, apparently back in the mood to kill zombies. Michael took his guitar out of its case and tuned it, but he kept getting up to stare out the windows, restless and worried.
"What?" Eve asked. She'd heated up leftover spaghetti out of the refrigerator, and tried to hand Michael a plate first. "Do you see something?"
"Nothing," he said, and gave her a quick, strained smile as he waved away the food. "Not really hungry, though. Sorry."
"More for me," Shane said, and grabbed the plate. He propped it on his lap and forked spaghetti into his mouth. "Seriously. You all right? Because you never turn down food."
Michael didn't answer. He stared out into the dark.
"You're worried," Eve said. "About Sam?"
"Sam and everybody else. This is nuts. What's going on here--" Michael checked the locks on the window, but as a kind of automatic motion, as though his mind wasn't really on it. "Why hasn't Bishop taken over? What's he doing out there? Why aren't we seeing the fight?"
"Maybe Amelie's kicking his ass out there in the shadows somewhere." Shane shoveled in more spaghetti.
"No. She's not. I can feel that. I think--I think she's in hiding. With the rest of her followers, the vampires, anyway."
Shane stopped chewing. "You know where they are?"
"Not really. I just feel--" Michael shook his head. "It's gone. Sorry. But I feel like things are changing. Coming to a head."
Claire had just taken a plate of warm pasta when they all heard the thump of footsteps overhead. They looked up, and then at each other, in silence. Michael pointed to himself and the stairs, and they all nodded. Eve opened a drawer in the end table and took out three sharpened stakes; she tossed one to Shane, one to Claire, and kept one in a whiteknuckled grip.
Michael ascended the stairs without a sound, and disappeared.
He didn't come back down. Instead, there was a swirl of black coat and stained white balloon pants tucked into black boots; then Myrnin leaned over the railing to say, "Upstairs, all of you. I need you."
"Um . . ." Eve looked at Shane. Shane looked at Claire.
Claire followed Myrnin. "Trust me," she said. "It won't do any good to say no."
Michael was waiting in the hallway, next to the open, secret door. He led the way up.
Whatever Claire had been expecting to see, it wasn't a crowd, but that was what was waiting upstairs in the hidden room on the third floor. She stared in confusion at the room full of people, then moved out of the way for Shane and Eve to join her and Michael.
Myrnin came last. "Claire, I believe you know Theo Goldman and his family."
The faces came into focus. She had met them--in that museum thing, when they'd been on the way to rescue Myrnin. Theo Goldman had spoken to Amelie. He'd said they wouldn't fight.
But it looked to Claire like they'd been in a fight anyway. Vampires didn't bruise, exactly, but she could see torn clothes and smears of