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Shadows in shadows

He watches through

dreams

Wings black as Africa

Body strong as stone

Done waiting

The ravens call.

Jack gasped as he read it for the first time.

“Oh, Goddess!” I heard Erik say under his breath as he, too, read the poem.

“That’s easy. It’s the last one I wrote—just yesterday. I was…” Her words ran out as she understood our reactions. “Shit! It’s ’bout him!”

CHAPTER 8

“What made you write it?” I asked, still staring at the black words.

Kramisha had sat down heavily on her bed, all of a sudden looking almost as exhausted as Stevie Rae. She was shaking her head back and forth, back and forth, making her orange and black hair dance against her smooth cheeks. “It just come to me, like all the stuff I write do. Things just come into my head, and then I write it down.”

“What did you think it meant?” Jack asked, patting her arm gently, a lot like he patted Duchess (she was curled up by his feet).

“I didn’t really think ’bout it. It come to me. I write it. That’s all.” She paused, glanced up at the poster board, and then looked quickly away, as if what she saw scared her.

“Are these all poems you’ve written in the days since Stevie Rae Changed?” I shifted my attention to the other poems. There were several haiku.

Eyes watching always

Shadows in shadows they wait

A black feather falls

First accepted, loved

Then betrayed—spit in the face

Vengeance sweet like dots

“Sweet, blessed Nyx.” Erik’s shocked voice came from behind me, kept low for my ears alone to hear. “They’re all about him.”

“What does ‘sweet like dots’ mean?” Jack was asking Kramisha.

“You know—dippin’ dots. I love me some dippin’ dots,” she said.

Erik and I moved around Kramisha’s room. The more I read, the tighter the knot my stomach curled into.

They done

Wrong

Like ink from a busted pen

Thrown away ’cause of someone else

Used up

But he come back

Dressed in night

Fine as a king

With his queen

The wrong

Made right

So right

“Kramisha, what were you thinking about when you wrote this one?” I asked her, pointing at the last one I’d read.

She shrugged that one shoulder again. “I guess I thought ’bout how we out of the House of Night, but we shouldn’t be. I mean, I know it’s best for us underground, but it just don’t feel right that only Neferet know about us. She a wrong kind of High Priestess.”

“Kramisha, would you do me a favor and copy down all of these poems?”

“You think I messed up, don’t you?”

“No. I do not think you messed up,” I assured her, hoping I was being guided correctly by my instincts and wasn’t just chasing bats in the darkness again. “I think you’ve been given a gift from Nyx. I just want to be sure we use your gift in the right way.”

“I think she’s Vamp Poet Laureate material, and a major improvement over our last one,” Erik said.

I looked up at him sharply, and he shrugged and grinned. “It was just a thought, that’s all.”

Okay, even though it made me uncomfortable to think about Loren, especially when Erik had been the one to bring him up, I felt the rightness of what he was saying down deep in my gut, which said more about Kramisha’s true nature than my exhausted guessing and my apparently overactive imagination were telling me. Nyx obviously had her hand on this kid. What the hell. I’m the only High Priestess we have. I can make a proclamation. “Kramisha, I’m going to make you our first Poet Laureate.”

“Whaaaaat?! Are you kiddin’? You kiddin’, ain’t ya?”

“I’m not kidding. We’re a new kind of vamp group. We’re a civilized new kind of vamp group, and that means we need a Poet Laureate. You’re it.”

“Um, I agree and everything with you, Z, but doesn’t the council have to vote on a new Poet Laureate?” Jack said.

“Yep, and I have my Council down here with me.” I realized Jack had been talking about the Council of Nyx, the one Shekinah had been head of that ruled all vampyres. But I had a Council also, a Prefect Council, acknowledged by the school, made up of me, Erik, the Twins, Damien, Aphrodite, and Stevie Rae.

“Kramisha has my vote,” Erik said.

“See, it’s practically official,” I said.

“Yea!” Jack cheered.

“It’s a crazy idea, but I like it.” Kramisha beamed.

“So, write those poems down for me before you go to sleep, ’kay?”

“Yeah, I can do that.”

“Come on, Jack. Our Poet Laureate needs to get her sleep,” Erik said. “Hey, congratulations, Kramisha.”

“Yeah, big congrats!” Jack said, giving Kramisha a hug.

“Y’all go on now. I got work to do. Then I gotta get my rest. A Poet Laureate do have to look her best,” Kramisha said primly, finishing up with a couplet.

Erik and I followed Jack and Duchess out of Kramisha’s room and down the tunnel.

“Was that poem really about Kalona?” Jack said.

“I think they all were,” I said. “Do you?” I asked Erik.

He nodded grimly.

“Ohmigod! What’s that mean?” Jack said.

“I don’t have a clue. Nyx is at work, though. I can feel it. The prophecy came to us in poem form. Now this? It can’t be a coincidence.”

“If it’s the work of the Goddess, then there must be some way we can use it to help us,” Erik said.

“Yeah, that’s what I think, too.”

“We just have to figure out how,” Erik said.

“That’s gonna take someone with more brains than me,” I said.

There was a short pause, and then the three of us spoke together, “Damien.”

Spooky shadows, bats, and my worries about the red fledglings temporarily forgotten, I hurried down the tunnel with Erik and Jack.

“The door to the depot’s over here.” Jack led us through the surprisingly homelike kitchen to a side room that was obviously a pantry, though I’d bet what used to be stored there was more liquid than the bags of chips and boxes of cereal it now held. All along one wall, rolled neatly, piled side by side and on top of each other, were a bunch of puffy sleeping bags and pillows.

“So is that the way into the depot?” I pointed to a wooden pull-down staircase in the corner of the storage closet that led up to an open door.

“Yeah, that’s it.” Jack said.

Jack went first and I followed him, poking my head up into the supposedly abandoned building. My first impression was of darkness and dust, fragmented every few minutes by what looked like a strobe-light effect of flashes of sudden brightness leaking through the boarded-up windows and door. When I heard the rumble of thunder, I understood and remembered what Erik had said about a major thunderstorm going on, which wouldn’t be unusual for Tulsa, even in early January.

But this wasn’t a normal day, and I couldn’t help but believe this also wasn’t a normal thunderstorm.

Before I did any looking around I pulled my cell phone out of my purse. I opened it. No service.

“Mine hasn’t worked, either. Not since we got here,” Erik said.

“Mine’s charging down in the kitchen, but I know Damien checked his when we got up here, and he didn’t have any service, either.”

“You know bad weather can knock the towers out,” Erik said in response to what I’m sure was my sickeningly worried expression. “Remember that big storm a month or so ago? My cell didn’t work for three entire days.”