He takes another big gulp, then looks at the mug as if trying to decode its delicious secrets. He’s probably been drinking this coffee every night, but I can tell Dr. Jameson appreciates his wonder.
“You always did make a good cup, Marjorie,” he says.
She’s about to reply when the door opens again.
“Someone coming down the road, George,” the man announces. “In a car.”
My heart jumps. Victor!
“A car?” George asks. “Must be one of those freelance vampire hunters. Not many people can afford a car these days.”
“It’s not a vampire hunter,” I assure them, my joy evident. “It’s my friends.”
The man at the door studies me, then turns to George.
“Well,” George says, “roll out the red carpet for ’em. This little lady here says they’re her friends, so we’ll treat them as such until they prove otherwise.”
The man nods and leaves.
“Thank you so much,” I say, not completely sure what I’m thanking them for. But before the door even shuts, I’m outside, George and the doctor right behind me.
In the distance, the dust is kicked up, flying into the night sky. The door behind me squeaks open one more time and Michael emerges.
“Who is it?” he asks, groggily rubbing his head.
“Victor and Jeff.”
The car fishtails to a stop in front of us, the dust catching up to it and swirling around the headlights, creating mystic shadow puppets that stretch across the town square. Jeff steps out of the passenger’s side, and Victor quickly emerges from the driver’s side.
In spite of our audience, Victor and I race toward each other. I collapse against him, wrapping my arms tightly around his neck as he brings me nearer. I’m overwhelmed with a sense of relief at being this close to him again. His warmth, his solidity offer reassurance. Even though I was just with him in my dream, being with him in the flesh is so much more satisfying. I think of where I am: in the middle of nowhere, Sin just behind us, and a deeper night still to come. Yet it doesn’t matter, because I’m with Victor.
“I was so worried about you,” he whispers, and I feel his breath ruffling my hair as he holds me tightly.
“I know, but we’re okay now.”
Loosening our embrace, Victor looks me squarely in the eyes. I could stand here forever, relishing this moment. More breadth of wonder rests in his blue eyes than in the vast skies above us.
When Jeff finishes shaking Michael’s hand and giving him a pat on the shoulder, he turns to me. “Hey, sunshine. Good to see you.”
I smile, release a tiny laugh as I hug him. In addition to serving as a bodyguard for the Agency, he’s been dating my guardian and mentor, Rachel Goodwin. He’s become as special to me as she’s always been.
I introduce them to George and Dr. Jameson, give a brief accounting of all they’ve done for us.
“Thank you for taking them in,” Victor says. “I know trust is a rarity in places like this.”
“That it is. But even more rare is an Old Family vampire showing up,” George says, an eyebrow raised.
Victor gives a wry smile and looks at me. Old Family vampires are elegant, suave, sophisticated. Comfortable with what they are. Humans who are turned—Lessers—never quite achieve that beauty. Victor may be dressed in jeans, a black long-sleeve T-shirt, and a leather duster, but there is something regal in his bearing. Confidence oozes off him. And if I’m honest with myself, he is quite simply gorgeous in a way that’s impossible to hide.
“I hope that isn’t a problem,” Victor says.
“It doesn’t have to be,” George says. “So long as you understand we ain’t under your jurisdiction.”
“I’d never dream of it,” Victor says.
“Well, that’s settled, then. I can tell you’re itchin’ to have a talk with your little lady. When you’re ready, come inside and we’ll have a sit-down.”
He heads back into Dr. Jameson’s house. The doctor, Michael, and Jeff follow him.
The townsfolk have come over to examine Victor’s car. They run their hands over the smooth surface and make noises of appreciation. Since the war, cars are rare and no doubt a curiosity for them.
Putting some distance between them and us, Victor guides me over to the side of the road and cradles my face. “I was so scared, Dawn.”
Lowering his head, he kisses me tenderly.
The world falls away, and it’s just us and the stars above in this desolate place. We stand like a pair of wildflowers that somehow grew in this dry sand, and we breathe together, and move together, and entangle ourselves around each other.
Pulling back, he skims his knuckles over my cheek. “This is so much better than what we shared in the dreams.” He shakes his head. “But there I could stay. In the real world, I have to walk away.”
Victor said before I left Denver that we couldn’t be together. That I’m the weakness his enemies will exploit. But it’s too late.
“Walking away won’t protect either of us now. Sin wants me to kill you.”
His jaw tightens.
I continue, “It’s the price I have to pay to keep everyone else I care about safe.”
Victor stares at me, perhaps wondering if I would actually take Sin up on the offer. Not because I’m afraid, but because of how much I care for all my friends.
“I told him to shove it,” I say quickly, and Victor laughs. “Maybe not in those exact words, but I think the message was clear.”
I put my hand on Victor’s heart, as though protecting it from any stake that would dare strike him.
“But what about Faith?” Victor asks. “And Richard. Does Sin have them?”
“No, no,” I rush to assure him. Faith is Victor’s sister. He sent her and his best friend, Richard Carrollton, to watch over me when I journeyed to Los Angeles to find out what I could about the Thirst and Sin. “They escaped using the engine of the Night Train. Along with Tegan”—my best friend—“and Ian Hightower.”
“Hightower?”
I sense his alarm. Ian Hightower is the most famous and deadly vampire hunter to ever live. More recently, he’s been the guardian of the Night Train.
“Don’t worry. We formed an alliance with Ian,” I tell him.
“That must have taken some convincing.”
“Richard was quite persuasive, and his killing some of the Infected who got on board the train didn’t hurt. They’re probably back in the city by now, don’t you think?”
“Probably.” I can sense him taking comfort in the knowledge that everyone should be safe. “If they made it out, what happened to you? How did Sin manage to capture you?”
I tell him about Los Angeles, how the outer ring of the city is nothing but weak and hopeless humans and the inner ring is overrun with Sin’s Day Walkers. He was waiting for us. I explain that we tried to kill him, but he was too powerful and his followers too many. While the others escaped, I wasn’t so lucky. I couldn’t get to the train in time. Michael came back for me, but Sin’s legions surrounded us.
“Why didn’t Faith and Richard stay back with you?” Victor asks, accusation in his voice. He told them that I was more important than anything else, even their own lives.
“They couldn’t,” I say. “What we learned was too important. If they hadn’t made it, no one would know about Sin’s army.”
Victor nods, swallowing his anger, washing it away with reason and sense. “Then tell me about the mountain. The throne. The ash. When I got there with Jeff, I had no idea what I was even looking at or why Sin would take you to a place like that. What did it all mean?”
I’m not ready to go there yet. “It was nothing,” I lie. “Just a—”
A thunderous sound echoes around me. The ground beneath my feet begins to tremble.
Victor and I spin toward the commotion. I didn’t realize how far we’d wandered. We’re standing at the edge of town. People are starting to gather at its center. The door to the doctor’s house bursts open and George rushes out with Dr. Jameson and Jeff on his heels. Michael is striving to catch up, but he’s still weak from his wounds.