At Grave's End (Page 14)

"I’ll remember that," he said, each word bitten off.

So many emotions were surging in me. Relief, delayed panic, anger, exhilaration, and the urge to clutch Bones and babble about how thrilled I was to evensee him again. But there wasn’t time for a meltdown, so I stuffed those feelings back.Get it together, Cat. Can’t have you turn into a mass of psychological goo, there’s too much to do.

My mother was in the backseat. She’d refused to go to the compound, even though she wouldn’t have been there long. Don was moving everyone out. Max had found my mother’s house, so it was an easy guess to make that he knew where the compound was, too. Don wasn’t taking any chances that Max had told other vampires where to find it. Don’s operation had killed enough of them that some might decide to pay it a visit.

So my mother was leaving with Bones and me now, and Don would get her set up with another place to live later. Once he finished relocating our entire team.

"I’m sorry, Catherine," she mumbled, not meeting my eyes. "I didn’t want to call you. I heard myself saying the words, but I couldn’t seem to stop."

I sighed. "It’s not your fault. Max used mind control. You couldn’t help what you were saying."

"Demon power," she whispered.

"No," Bones said firmly. "Max is the one who told you all vampires were demons, right? You think he’s capable of telling the truth, even after this?"

"Whatever Max told you back then," I added, "you would have been compelled to believe, just like you were compelled to call me before. Vampires are another species, Mom, but they’re not demons. If they are, why are you still alive? You’ve tried twice to get Bones killed, but today he saved you instead of letting you hang."

Her face was twisted with emotion. Being confronted with the reality that what she’d fervently believed for twenty-eight years might be wrong was a hard thing for anyone to swallow.

"I lied to you about your father," she said at last, so soft I could barely hear her. "That night, he didn’t…but I didn’t want to believe Icould have let him, not after I saw he wasn’t human…"

My eyes closed for a moment at her admittance. I’d suspected that the night I was conceived wasn’t rape, but here was confirmation at last. Then I met her gaze.

"You were eighteen. Max had you believing you were giving birth to a modern-day version of Rosemary’s baby, just because he thought it was funny to tell you all vampires were demons. Doesn’t make him any less of an ass**le. Speaking of that…" I pulled the IV out of my arm, then put on the jacket Cooper had kindly left for me, since my own shirt had been cut open and was sopping with blood. When I was covered, I hopped out of the car. No more horizon-tilting dizziness. It was amazing the difference vampire blood and three bags of plasma could make. I didn’t even have a mark on me anymore, whereas by rights, I should be in a body bag.

"What are you doing?" Bones asked, lightly holding my arm.

"Saying goodbye to my father," I replied, walking over to where the capsule sat like a huge silver egg in the driveway.

"Open it," I said to Cooper, who was standing guard until it could be loaded into our specialized van.

Cooper unsealed the outer locks. He didn’t look away when the capsule’s door slid open and Max was revealed, so I figured he’d swigged some vampire blood on the way here. That was the only thing that could inoculate a human from falling victim to nosferatu mind control, even if it did have other side effects.

My father was pronged in several places with silver. The hooked end of those spikes made it impossible for him to pull himself free without shredding his heart, not to mention several other choice pieces of him. Once the door closed, he couldn’t even wiggle, because the inner structure prevented movement while the spikes continued to drain the blood and strength out of him. I knew all this, because I designed it.

Bones’s gaze sizzled into Max. "Go on, mate, say one word, see what it gets you," he urged him in a voice smooth as silk-and frightening as the grave.

"Right now, Daddy dearest, ‘I told you so’ doesn’t even begin to cover it," I said grimly to Max. "So I’ll repeat what you said to me earlier: You should have killed me when you had the chance."

Then I turned to Bones. "Why are we taking him anywhere? I’d just as soon kill him now and not have to worry about him again."

"Youdon’t need to fret about him," Bones said in that same icy, neck-ruffling tone. "Ever. But he doesn’t get off that easily."

Bones reached out and touched Max’s face. It was a light stroke, but Max flinched as if Bones had sliced his cheek open with a knife.

"I’ll be seeing you soon, mate. I can’t wait."

Annette came over. Her champagne-colored eyes considered Max from a face lightly lined with age. Annette had been thirty-six when Bones changed her. Times were different in the seventeen hundreds, so she looked around forty-five, but she made it look good. Unlike her normal impeccable appearance, her strawberry-blond hair had half-fallen out of her chignon, and her navy tailored suit looked a lot worse for wear.

"I say, it’s been quite the day already," she remarked.

I stifled a snort. How like Annette to describe an afternoon of torture as calmly as "quite the day."

"Seal him back up," I said to Cooper, not wanting to look at my father anymore. Or ever again.

Cooper complied, and the capsule’s door slid into place with a series of locks clicking back together. Even as it did, a frightening thought occurred to me.

"What happened to Calibos? There was another vampire here besides Max."

"His head’s over there," Bones said, nodding by the trees, "but the rest of him’s farther back."

I felt a cold satisfaction at that. "How’d you know to come here?"

"The airline lost Annette’s luggage." Bones sounded almost bemused. "I rang you twice to tell you we’d be late, that we were stopping off to fetch her some new togs. You didn’t answer. You always answer, so I drove straight here. About a mile away, I heard you scream. I pulled off, and Annette and I circled round the house on foot. We found the one bloke. Didn’t know how many more might be inside, so we smashed through the windows at the same time."

A bark of laughter escaped me. My mother and I owed our lives to Annette’sluggage being lost? How ironic.

"Bet you wish you’d carried on," I couldn’t help but quip to Annette.

A ghost of a smile flitted across her lips. "Not quite, darling. I just rang Ian," she continued, more to Bones than me now. "He was furious to hear what Max did. He’s formally cutting Max off from his line."