Destiny Rising (Page 26)

She couldn’t wait to see Alaric.

As if that thought had conjured him up, there was Alaric’s little gray Honda turning down the road toward campus at last. Meredith waved to him as he parked, and started to run toward the car, aware that she was grinning like an idiot but not caring.

"Hey," she said, coming up to him as Alaric stretched and got out of the car, and then she kissed him hard. She knew they needed to strategize and plan – that with luck, Alaric had found something in his research that could help them fight Klaus. But for now, she just treasured the feeling of Alaric solid and real in her arms, his lips soft on hers, the smell of him that was made up of leather and soap and something sort of herbal and just essential Alaric.

"I’ve missed you," he said, resting his forehead against hers for a moment after they finally broke the kiss. "Talking on the phone isn’t the same."

"Me too," Meredith said, and she had, so much. "I love your freckles," she told him inconsequentially, and brushed her lips across the golden spots on his cheek.

They headed into the campus, holding hands as they walked. Meredith pointed out sites of interest: the library, the cafeteria, the student center, her dorm. The few people they passed hurried by in groups, heads down, not making eye contact.

When they came to the gym, Meredith hesitated before stopping in front of it. "This is where I train. It’s hard . . . I used to come here with Samantha," she told Alaric. "She was so competitive and smart. She pushed me, in a really good way." She leaned against Alaric for a moment, and felt him drop a kiss on the top of her head.

They walked on, but Meredith couldn’t stop thinking about Samantha. Before Samantha, Meredith had never met anyone else from a family of hereditary vampire hunters. Her parents had left the hunter community behind. Because Samantha’s parents had been killed when she was young, she hadn’t really known any other hunters either.

They had taught each other so much. Meredith loved Elena and Bonnie – they were her best friends, her sisters – but no friend had ever understood as much about Meredith as Samantha had.

And then Ethan and the Vitale vampires had killed her. Meredith had been the one to find Samantha’s body. She had been ripped apart so violently that her room had been soaked in blood.

Meredith felt her face twist, and her voice came out thick and fierce. "Sometimes I feel like it’s never going to stop," she told Alaric. "There’s always more monsters. And now Klaus is back, even though we killed him. He should be gone."

"I know," Alaric said. "I wish I could make things better. Klaus destroyed your family, and you defeated him. You’re right, this should have ended then." They paused by a bench underneath a clump of trees, and he sat, pulling Meredith down beside him. Taking her hand, he looked into her eyes, his face filled with love and concern. "Tell me the truth, Meredith," he said. "Klaus destroyed your family. How are you feeling?"

Meredith caught her breath, because that fact was exactly what she had been avoiding ever since Klaus stepped out of the fire.

Klaus had attacked Meredith’s grandfather and driven him into madness. He had kidnapped her twin brother, Cristian, and made him into a vampire. And he had made Meredith herself into a living half vampire, something every hunting family had a right to loathe.

And then the Guardians had changed everything, making a reality out of what would have happened if Klaus had never come to Fell’s Church. Cristian was a human now – Meredith didn’t remember ever meeting him, but he had grown up with her in this reality – and in army boot camp in Georgia. Their grandfather was happy and sane, living in a retirement village down in Florida. And Meredith didn’t need blood, didn’t have sharp kitten teeth. But she and her friends still remembered the way things used to be. No one else in her family remembered, but she did.

"I’m terrified," Meredith confessed. She twisted her hand around, playing with Alaric’s fingers. "There’s nothing Klaus wouldn’t do, and knowing that he’s out there somewhere, waiting, planning something, is . . . I don’t know what to do with that."

She clenched her jaw and looked up, meeting Alaric’s eyes. "He has to die," she said softly. "He can’t start over, not now."

Alaric nodded. "Okay," he said, shifting from sympathetic to businesslike. "I have some good news, I think." He unzipped the black messenger bag he’d been carrying over his shoulder and pulled out his notebook, flipping over a few pages until he found the information he wanted. "We know that white ash wood is the only wood deadly to Klaus, right?" he asked.

"That’s what they say," Meredith told him. "Last time, we made Stefan a weapon of white ash, but it didn’t turn out to be that useful." She remembered Klaus tearing the white ash spear out of Stefan’s hand, breaking it, and using it to stab at Stefan himself. Stefan’s screams as a thousand deadly splinters had torn into him had been . . . unforgettable. He had almost died.

Damon had wounded Klaus with the spear of white ash after that, but in the end, Klaus had managed to pull the bloody wood out of his own back and had stood triumphant, still powerful, still able to bring Stefan and Damon to their knees.

And this time, we don’t even have Damon, Meredith thought bleakly. She’d given up on asking Elena and Stefan where Damon was. He’d always been unpredictable.

"Well," said Alaric with a little smile, "there’s an Appalachian folk legend I found in my research that says a white ash tree planted at the full moon under certain conditions is more powerful against vampires than any other wood. A white ash with that kind of magic in its origins ought to pack a real punch against Klaus."