Dark Reunion (Page 11)
Leaving Elena holding the bag, Bonnie thought grimly, looking down into the rectangular hole that led to the crypt. Iron rungs disappeared into darkness.
Even with the help of Meredith’s flashlight it was hard to climb down into that underground room. Inside, it was dank and silent, the walls faced with polished stone. Bonnie tried not to shiver.
"Look," said Meredith quietly.
Matt had the flashlight trained on the iron gate that separated the anteroom of the crypt from its main chamber. The stone below was stained black with blood in several places. Looking at the puddles and rivulets of dried gore made Bonnie feel dizzy.
"We know Damon was hurt the worst," Meredith said, moving forward. She sounded calm, but Bonnie could hear the tight control in her voice. "So he must have been on this side where there’s the most blood. Stefan said Elena was in the center. That means Stefan himself must have been… here." She bent down.
"I’ll do it," Matt said gruffly. "You hold the light." With a plastic picnic knife from Meredith’s car he scraped at the encrusted stone. Bonnie swallowed, glad she’d had only tea for lunch. Blood was all right in the abstract, but when you were actually confronted with so much of it-especially when it was the blood of a friend who’d been tortured…
And then, thought Bonnie, she faked her own death to get Stefan and Damon to stop fighting over her. But it didn’t work. They hated each other more than ever, and she hated both of them for that. She’d gone back to the vampire who made her, and over the years she’d turned as evil as he was. Until at last all she wanted to do was destroy the brothers she had once loved. She’d lured them both to Fell’s Church to kill them, and this room was where she’d almost succeeded in doing it. Elena had died stopping her.
"There," Matt said, and Bonnie blinked and came back to herself. Matt was standing with a paper napkin that now held flakes of Stefan’s blood in its folds. "Now the hair," he said.
They swept the floor with their fingers, finding dust and bits of leaves and fragments of things Bonnie didn’t want to identify. Among the detritus were long strands of pale gold hair. Elena’s-or Katherine’s, Bonnie thought. They had looked much alike. There were also shorter strands of dark hair, crisp with a slight wave. Stefan’s.
It was slow, finicky work sorting through it all and putting the right hairs in another napkin.
Matt did most of it. When they were through, they were all tired and the light sifting down through the rectangular opening in the ceiling was dim blue. But Meredith smiled tigerishly.
"We’ve got it," she said. "Tyler wants Stefan back; well, we’ll give him Stefan back."
And Bonnie, who had been only half paying attention to what she was doing, still lost in her own thoughts, froze.
She’d been thinking about other things entirely, nothing to do with Tyler, but at the mention of his name something had winked on in her mind. Something she’d realized in the parking lot and then forgotten afterward in the heat of arguing. Meredith’s words had triggered it and now it was suddenly all clear again. How had he known! she wondered, heart racing.
"Bonnie? What’s the matter?"
"Meredith," she said softly, "did you tell the police specifically that we were in the living room when everything was going on upstairs with Sue?"
"No, I think I just said we were downstairs. Why?"
"Bonnie, if you’re trying to suggest Tyler was the murderer, it just won’t wash. He’s not smart enough to organize a killing spree, for one thing," Meredith said.
"But there’s something else. Meredith, last year at the Junior Prom, Tyler touched me on my bare shoulder. I’ll never forget it. His hand was big, and meaty, and hot, and damp." Bonnie shivered at the recollection. "Just like the hand that grabbed me last night."
But Meredith was shaking her head, and even Matt looked unconvinced.
"Elena’s sure wasting her time asking us to bring back Stefan, then," he said. "I could take care of Tyler with a couple of right hooks."
"Think about it, Bonnie," Meredith added. "Does Tyler have the psychic power to move a Ouija board or come into your dreams? Does he?"
He didn’t. Psychically speaking, Tyler was as much a dud as Caroline. Bonnie couldn’t deny it. But she couldn’t deny her intuition, either. It didn’t make sense, but she still felt Tyler had been in the house last night.
"We’d better get moving," Meredith said. "It’s dark, and your father’s going to be furious."
They were all silent on the ride home. Bonnie was still thinking about Tyler. Once at her house they smuggled the napkins upstairs and began looking through Bonnie’s books on Druids and Celtic magic. Ever since she’d discovered that she was descended from the ancient race of magic workers, Bonnie had been interested in the Druids. And in one of the books she found a ritual for a summoning spell.
"We need to buy candles," she said. "And pure water-better get some bottled," she said to Meredith. "And chalk to draw a circle on the floor, and something to make a small fire in. I can find those in the house. There’s no hurry; the spell has to be done at midnight."
Midnight was a long time coming. Meredith bought the necessary items at a grocery store and brought them back. They ate dinner with Bonnie’s family, though no one had much of an appetite. By eleven o’clock Bonnie had the circle drawn on the hardwood floor of her bedroom and all the other ingredients on a low bench inside the circle. On the stroke of twelve she started.
With Matt and Meredith watching, she made a small fire in an earthenware bowl. Three candles were burning behind the bowl; she stuck a pin halfway down the one in the center. Then she unfolded a napkin and carefully stirred the dried flakes of blood into a wineglass of water. It turned rusty pink.