The Fury (Page 30)

She stopped when she was a yard from where he sat on the ground and knelt there, looking into his face.

"Hello," she said.

He was still holding his wrist. "Hello," he said, and gulped.

Elena glanced back at Meredith and then looked at Alaric again. Yes, he was scared. And with his hair in his eyes that way, he looked young. Maybe four years older than Elena, maybe five. No more than that.

"We’re not going to hurt you," she said.

"That’s what I’ve been telling him," Meredith said quietly. "I explained that whatever he’s seen before, whatever stories he’s heard, you’re different. I told him what you told me about Stefan, how he’s been fighting his nature all those years. I told him about what you’ve been going through, Elena, and how you never asked for this."

But why did you tell him so much? Elena thought. She said to Alaric, "All right, you know about us. But all we know about you is that you’re not a history teacher."

"He’s a hunter," Damon said softly, menacingly. "A vampire hunter."

"No," said Alaric. "Or at least, not in the sense that you mean it." He seemed to come to some decision. "All right. From what I know of you three-" He broke off, looking around the dark room as if suddenly realizing something. "Where’s Stefan?"

"He’s coming. In fact, he should be here by now. He was going to stop by the school and bring Caroline," Elena said. She was unprepared for Alaric’s reaction.

"Caroline Forbes?" he said sharply, sitting up. His voice sounded the way it had when she’d overheard him talking with Dr. Fein’ berg and the principal, hard-edged and decisive.

"Yes. She sent him a note today, said she wanted to apologize or something. She wanted to meet him at school before the party."

"He can’t go. You’ve got to stop him." Alaric scrambled to his feet and repeated urgently, "You’ve got to stop him."

"He’s gone already. Why? Why shouldn’t he?" Elena demanded.

"Because I hypnotized Caroline two days ago. I’d tried it earlier with Tyler, with no luck. But Caroline’s a good subject, and she remembered a little of what happened in the Quonset hut. And she identified Stefan Salvatore as the attacker."

"Don’t you understand? You’re not just dealing with high school students anymore," Alaric said. "It’s gone too far. Caroline’s father knows about it, and Tyler’s father. They’re concerned for the safety of the town-"

"Hush! Be quiet!" Elena was casting about with her mind, trying to pick up some hint of Stefan’s presence. He’s let himself get weak, she thought, with the part of her that was icy calm amid the whirling fear and panic. At last she sensed something, just a trace, but she thought it was Stefan. And it was in distress.

"Something’s wrong," Damon confirmed, and she realized he must have been searching, too, with a mind much more powerful than hers. "Let’s go."

"Wait, let’s talk first. Don’t just go jumping into this." But Alaric might as well have been talking to the wind, trying to rein in its destructive power with words. Damon was already at the window, and the next moment Elena let herself drop out, landing neatly by Damon in the snow. Alaric’s voice followed them from above.

"We’re coming, too. Wait for us there. Let me talk to them first. I can take care of it…"

Elena scarcely heard him. Her mind was burning with one purpose, one thought. To hurt the people who wanted to hurt Stefan. It’s gone too far, all right, she thought. And now I’m going to go as far as it takes. If they dare to touch him… images flashed through her mind, too quickly to count, of what she would do to them. At another time, she might have been shocked at the rush of adrenaline, of excitement, that coursed up at the thoughts.

She could sense Damon’s mind beside her as they raced over the snow; it was like a blaze of red light and fury. The fierceness inside Elena welcomed it, glad to feel it so near. But then something else occurred to her.

"I’m slowing you down," she said. She was scarcely out of breath, even from running through unbroken snow, and they were making extraordinary time. But nothing on two legs, or even four, could match the speed of a bird’s wings. "Go on," she said. "Get there as fast as you can. I’ll meet you."

She didn’t stay to watch the blur and shudder of the air, or the swirling darkness that ended in the rush of beating wings. But she glanced up at the crow that soared up and she heard Damon’s mental voice.

Good hunting, it said, and the winged black shape arrowed toward the school.

Good hunting, Elena thought after him, meaning it. She redoubled her speed, her mind fixed all the while on that glimmer of Stefan’s presence.

Stefan lay on his back, wishing his vision wasn’t so blurred or that he had more than a tentative hold on consciousness. The blur was partly pain and partly snow, but there was also a trickle of blood from the three-inch wound in his scalp.

If only he could collect his thoughts enough to call for help… but the weakness that had allowed these men to overcome him so easily prevented that, too. He’d scarcely fed since the night he’d attacked Tyler. That was ironic, somehow. His own guilt was responsible for the mess he was in.

I should never have tried to change my nature, he thought. Damon had it right after all.

Everyone’s the same-Alaric, Caroline, everyone. Everyone will betray you. I should have hunted them all and enjoyed it.

He hoped Damon would take care of Elena. She’d be safe with him; Damon was strong and ruthless. Damon would teach her to survive. He was glad of that.

But something inside him was crying.

The crow’s sharp eyes spotted the crossing shafts of headlight below and dropped. But Damon didn’t need the confirmation of sight; he was homing in on the faint pulsation that was Stefan’s life-force. Faint because Stefan was weak and because he’d all but given up.