about quests. Not completing them meant serious consequences.
“Oh!” At the head of their procession through the slayer bar, Tilda turned and clapped her hands twice. “I almost forgot. The vampires have brought you all a gift.” She sent a handful of dancing sparks over Tucker’s head, blowing and twisting their way toward Roksana. “The traitor slayer is all yours. I could tell you to be firm yet fair, but I’d rather save my breath. Paint the walls with her blood, if you must, just keep the noise down.” She added in a whisper, “Mary is sleeping upstairs.”
With that, the slayers converged on Roksana.
Predictably, Elias lost his ever-loving shit, dropping the pretense of being Roksana’s captor and roaring loud enough to shake the rafters, his fangs dropping into view, glinting ominously in the red bar light. But the threat of violence didn’t stop one of the slayers from grabbing Roksana’s arm and yanking her into the angry mob, their laughter gleeful.
Tucker pushed through the teeming pack of slayers at high speed, searching for blonde hair. Roksana being in danger was a serious problem, considering Elias had the ability to wield fire and this place was definitely not up to code—
“Mother?”
At the sound of the small, sleepy voice, Tucker’s progress ground to a dramatic halt. Everything inside him paused, really, which was odd since none of his innards actually worked anymore. In the matter of a split second, however, his entire being turned vulnerable. Sensitive. He felt a dust mote land on his shoulder, an electrical current pass through him, head to toe. Almost as if he’d stuck his finger in a light socket.
Had everyone in Enders stopped moving, too, or was he caught in a time rift?
Tucker turned and saw her.
A young woman in an old-fashioned nightgown, messy, dark red hair. Barefooted.
Holding a broomstick.
Light seemed to swarm and cling to her, illuminating sensual features, innocent curiosity—and Tucker’s mouth went dry as a desert. The nightgown she wore was extremely thin, and despite his best effort, he couldn’t help tracing the top line of her panties through the cotton, his gums beginning to tingle, signaling the imminent dropping of his fangs. If his palms still had the ability to perspire, it would have been necessary to wipe them on his pant legs. Who…was this girl? Why was someone so visibly fragile in the midst of such ugliness?
Protectiveness ripped up the sides of his throat and held, choking off his breath.
Hunger, too, surprisingly. That rushing whisper of vitality that seemed to caress his ears and slip down his throat, enticing him to drink…was her blood doing that?
He didn’t know. This level of hunger hadn’t struck him in so long, maybe ever, and he barely recognized it. Suppressed the need with all his willpower.
She was so far beyond beautiful to him, it almost defied description.
Celestial. Not of this place. Too divine. Crafted with extra care by a higher power.
If she was a day over nineteen or twenty, he’d be shocked…and that made him a sicko, right? For noticing her so…thoroughly? He’d lost track of his age, but although he had the body of a twenty-six-year-old, he must be nearing goddamn forty in vampire years.
Did her head cock in his direction or was he dreaming?
“Mother?” called the young woman again.
“Mary, you’re supposed to be sleeping!” Tilda scolded the girl, hurrying in her direction. “Go on back up to bed now. Mummy is working.”
Mary.
Mary the Mad?
No. No, that was impossible. This girl could never earn a nickname like that.
Mary the Harmless, maybe. Mary the Stunning.
“Oh, I’m sorry.” The girl stared in Tucker’s direction, looking right past him. He was used to that—the opposite sex staring through him to the other side—so it didn’t strike him as odd, until he realized she was using the broom to feel her way forward.
Blind? Was she…blind?
“Is it the marriage decree?” Mary asked anxiously. “Have you found it?”
“Yes, dear. Yes.” Tilda patted the girl’s arm, attempting to pull her back toward the staircase, in the direction of the rear office where they’d been headed before the chaos broke out. Tucker’s hackles rose at the display of force, well-meaning though it seemed, and he took an involuntary step forward. “I told you I would take care of everything, didn’t I?” Tilda added.
“Yes, but…” Mary’s breath came faster, as if she was in distress, and Tucker experienced that panic in the deepest regions of his chest. No one moved. Everyone stared at her in quiet veneration. Tucker was caught in a state of