“The first part is simple because it’s not just any building. It’s this building. There’re two round towers up there, all nicey-nice with decoration and crap when this place was actually something, back in the day. They’re open to the sky ’cause it’s the roof. We found a big metal grill we can chain over the top of one of them. No way can she get out. She’s strong, but she can’t break metal. Plus, all the way up there there’s no earth for her to reach. She’ll be trapped, and when the sun comes up she’ll fry like a hamburger.”
“Why would she be on the roof, even if it is the roof of this building?”
“That’s even simpler. She’ll be there ’cause you’re gonna get her up there.”
Rephaim didn’t speak until he could control his shock, and then he chose his words carefully. “You think I can make the Red One come to the roof of a building near dawn? Why would I be able to do that? I’m not strong enough to overpower and carry her,” he said, sounding more bored than curious.
“You won’t need to. She saved you. And she had to do it without telling anyone. To me that says you mean something to her. Maybe even a bunch of something.” Nicole scoffed at the thought. “Stevie Rae’s pathetic. Always thinking she can save the world and shit like that. That’s why she’s stupid enough to come back here close to dawn. She thinks she can save us. Well, we don’t want to be saved!” Nicole started laughing and as the laughter overtook her, Rephaim saw the inklike shadow of Neferet slide across her eyes and taint her expression so that she appeared close to hysteria.
“Why would she want to save you?”
Rephaim’s question ended Nicole’s laughter as if he had slapped her across the face.
“What? You don’t think we deserve saving?” Quick as an envious thought, she moved to the bed and grabbed his uninjured arm by the wrist. “How about I see what you do think?”
She stared at him as his arm radiated the heat of her psychic violation, and as that heat spread throughout his body and soul, Rephaim concentrated on one thing: his anger.
Nicole dropped his wrist and took a step back from him. “Wow,” she chuckled uncomfortably. “You’re really pissed. What’s that about?”
“It issss about being wounded and left behind to deal with children and their petty gamesssss!”
Nicole stepped back into his personal space and snarled, “This isn’t petty! We’re getting rid of Stevie Rae so that we can do the shit we need to do, just like we told Neferet we would. So are you going to make nice and help us trap her, or do we leave you out of this and go with Plan B?”
Rephaim didn’t hesitate. “What is it you want me to do?”
Nicole’s smile reminded him of a lizard. “We’ll show you the stairs that go up to the tower—the one on the opposite side of the roof from that stupid tree. I’m not taking the chance that she can figure out some way to pull it over to her and have it shield her enough so she lives. So you’ll go to the other tower and wait. Be all crumpled up like we dragged you there after beating the shit outta you and draining you almost dry of blood. Which is exactly what I’m gonna tell Stevie Rae we did, but I’ll make sure she knows you’re still alive. Barely.”
“She’ll go up there to save me,” Rephaim said in a perfectly emotionless voice.
“Again. Yeah. We’re counting on it. Once she climbs into the tower with you, just stay hunkered down. We’ll smack the grate over the top and chain it in place. The sun’ll come up. Stevie Rae will burn up. Then we’ll let you out. See, simple.”
“It will work,” Rephaim stated.
“Yeah, and check this out. If you decide at the last minute you’re not with us after all, Kurtis or Starr will shoot your feathered ass and we’ll throw you into the tower anyway. That’ll work for us, too. ’Cause, see, you are Plan A and Plan B. You’re just deader in one than the other.”
“As I said to you before, my father commanded me to bring the Red One to him.”
“Yeah, but I don’t see your daddy around here anywhere.”
“I do not know why you play this game with me. You have already admitted you know my father has not abandoned me. He will return for his favorite son. When he does I will have the Red One for him.”
“And it’s cool with you that she’ll be charbroiled?”
“The state of her body does not concern me as long as I am in possession of it.”
“Well, you can definitely have it. I don’t want to eat her, so I don’t want her body.” She cocked her head to the side and gave him an appraising look. “I saw inside that birdbrain of yours, and I know you’re pissed, but I could also tell that you’re guilty as hell. What’s that about?”
“I should be at my father’s side. Anything else is unacceptable.”
Her bark of laughter lacked humor. “You are your father’s son, aren’t you?” She started to duck out of the blanket that was the door to the room. As she left she called back, “Get some sleep. You have a few hours before she’ll be here. And if you need anything, Kurtis will be out here with his big gun. He’ll get it for you. You just stay in there until I call. Got it?”
“Yesssss.”
The red fledging left and Rephaim curled back up in the nest he’d made of Stevie Rae’s bed. Before he fell into another healing sleep his single thought was that he wished the Red One had let him die under that tree.
CHAPTER 34
Zoey
When we landed at the Venice airport I’d only been awake about a nanosecond. I swear I slept the entire way, and the only dream I’d had had been about me and that giant beaver from the weird sleep medicine commercials playing Scrabble (which I don’t play) and me winning like a bazillion pairs of designer shoes from him (and he doesn’t really have feet). The dream had been odd, but harmless, and I’d slept like a kid on summer vacation.
Most of the rest of my gang were wiping tears from their eyes and blowing their noses.
“What the heck is wrong with everyone?” I asked Stark as we taxied to our gate. Sometime during the flight he’d moved to the seat right across the aisle from me.
He jerked his chin over his shoulder at everyone behind us, including Heath, who was even looking kinda misty-eyed. “They just got done watching Milk. It made them all bawl like babies.”
“Hey, that’s a good movie. And it’s super-sad, too,” I said.
“Yeah, I saw it when it came out, but I wanted to keep my manly calm, so I decided to move up here and read.” He lifted the book in his lap, which I noticed was called My Losing Season by a guy named Pat Conroy.
“You really do read, don’t you?”
“Yep. I really do.”
“A losing season? How come he wrote about that?”
“You really want to know?”
“Yeah, of course I do,” I said.
“He wrote the book to show that suffering can be a source of strength.”
“Huh,” I said, not so brilliantly and book-smartish.
“He’s my favorite author,” Stark said, a little shyly.
“I’ll have to check him out.”
“He doesn’t write chick books,” Stark said.
“That’s a terrible ste reo type!” I began, and was getting ready to launch into my lecture about the misogynistic (a word I learned from Damien while we read The Scarlet Letter in lit class) idea that manly books are for guys and frilly, pointless, fluffy books are for girls when the plane gave a little lurch and came to a halt.
We all kinda gawked around at each other, not sure what to do, but in just a second or so the door to the cockpit opened and the vampyre copilot stepped out with a smile.
“Welcome to Venetia,” she said. “I know at least one of you has special needs, so we’ve pulled directly into our private hangar.” I could hear the Twins snickering about Stark being “special needs/special services,” but we ignored them. “Erce is meeting you here. She will be your escort to San Clemente Island. Be sure you take all your carry-ons off with you, and blessed be.” Then she moved to the front door and, with a few flips of some levers, opened the plane. There was some noise, and then she said, “You may deplane.”