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she suspected was not very convincing. But what was she supposed to do?

The truth was that Bonnie had absolutely no chance of winning a duel of wits with

Damon—and she knew it.

Damon wanted to say, “Hurting? To a vampire, a human fleabite like that was…”

But unfortunately he was a human too. And it did hurt.

Not for long, he promised himself, looking at Bonnie.

“I thought you never wanted to see me again,” she said, chin trembling. It almost

seemed too cruel to make use of a vulnerable little redbird. But what choice did he

have?

I’ll make it up to her somehow, someday—I swear it, he thought. And at least I

can make it pleasant now.

“That wasn’t what I said,” he replied, hoping that Bonnie wouldn’t remember

exactly what he had said. If he could just Influence the trembling woman-child

before him…but he couldn’t. He was a human now.

“You told me you would kill me.”

“Look, I’d just been knocked down by a human. I don’t suppose you know what

that means, but it hasn’t happened to me since I was twelve years old, and still an

original human boy.”

Bonnie’s chin kept trembling, but the tears had stopped. You are bravest when

you’re scared, Damon thought.

“I’m more worried about the others,” he said.

“Others?” Bonnie blinked.

“In five hundred years of life, one tends to make a remarkable amount of

enemies. I don’t know; maybe it’s just me. Or maybe it’s the simple little fact of

being a vampire.”

“Oh. Oh, no!” Bonnie cried.

“What does it matter, little redbird? Long or short, life seems all too brief.”

“But—Damon—”

“Don’t fret, kitten. Have one of Nature’s remedies.” Damon pulled out of his

breast pocket a small flask that smelled unquestionably of Black Magic.

“Oh—you saved it! How clever of you!”

“Try a taste? Ladies—strike that—young women first.”

“Oh, I don’t know. I used to get awfully silly on that.”

“The world is silly. Life is silly. Especially when you’ve been doomed six times

before breakfast.” Damon opened the flask.

“Oh, all right!” Clearly thrilled by the notion of “drinking with Damon,” Bonnie took

a very dainty sip.

Damon choked to cover a laugh. “You’d better take bigger swigs, redbird. Or it’s

going to take all night before I get a turn.”

Bonnie took a deep breath, and then a deep draft. After about three of those,

Damon decided she was ready.

Bonnie’s giggles were nonstop now. “I think…Do I think I’ve had enough now?”

“What colors do you see out here?”

“Pink? Violet? Is that right? Isn’t it nighttime?”

“Well, perhaps the Northern Lights are paying us a visit. But you’re right, I should

get you into bed.”

“Oh, no! Oh, yes! Oh, no! Nonono yes!”

“Shh.”

“SHHHHHH!”

Terrific, Damon thought; I’ve overdone it.

“I meant, get you into a bed,” he said firmly. “ Just you. Here, I’ll walk you to the

first-floor bedroom.”

“Because I might fall on the stairs?”

“You might say that. And this bedroom is much nicer than the one you share with

Meredith. Now you just go to sleep and don’t tell anyone about our rendezvous.”

“Not even Elena?”

“Not even anybody. Or I might get angry at you.”

“Oh, no! I won’t, Damon: I swear on your life!”

“That’s—pretty accurate,” Damon said. “Good night.”

Moonlight cocooned the house. Fog misted the moonlight. A slender, hooded dark

figure took advantage of shadows so skillfully that it would have passed unnoticed

even if someone had been watching out for it—and no one was.

B onnie was in her new first-floor bedroom, and was feeling very bewildered. Black

Magic always made her feel giggly, and then very sleepy, but somehow tonight her

body refused to sleep. Her head hurt.

She was just about to turn the bedside light on, when a familiar voice said, “How

about some tea for your headache?”

“Damon?”

“I made some from Mrs. Flowers’s herbs and I decided to make you a cup as

well. Aren’t you the lucky girl?” If Bonnie had been listening closely, she might have

heard something almost like self-loathing behind the light words—but she wasn’t.

“Yes!” Bonnie said, meaning it. Most of Mrs. Flowers’s teas smelled and tasted

good. This one was especially nice, but grainy on her tongue.

And not only was the tea good, but Damon stayed to talk to her while she drank it

all. That was sweet of him.

Strangely, this tea made her feel not exactly sleepy, but as if she could only

concentrate on one thing at a time. Damon swam into her field of view. “Feeling

more relaxed?” he asked.

“Yes, thank you.” Weirder and weirder. Even her voice sounded slow and

dragging.

“I wanted to make sure nobody was too hard on you for the silly mistake about

Elena,” he explained.

“They weren’t, really,” she said. “Actually everybody was more interested in

seeing you and Matt fight—” Bonnie put a hand over her mouth. “Oh, no! I didn’t

mean to say that! I’m so sorry!”

“It’s all right. It should heal by tomorrow.”

Bonnie couldn’t imagine why anyone would be so afraid of Damon, who was so

nice as to pick up her mug of tea and say he’d put it in the sink. That was good

because she was feeling as if she couldn’t get up to save her life. That cozy. That

comfy.

“Bonnie, can I ask you just one little thing?” Damon paused. “I can’t tell you why,

but…I have to find out where Misao’s star ball is kept,” he said earnestly.

“Oh…that,” Bonnie said fuzzily. She giggled.

“Yes, that. And I am truly sorry to ask you, because you’re so very young and

innocent…but I know you’ll tell me the truth.”

After this praise and comfort, Bonnie felt she could fly. “It’s been in the same

place all the time,” she said with sleepy disgust. “They tried to make me think they’d

moved it…but when I saw him chained and going down to the root cellar I knew they

hadn’t really.” In the dark, there was a short shake of curls and then a yawn. “If they

were really going to move it…they should have sent me away or something.”

“Well, maybe they were concerned for your life.”

“Wha’?…” Bonnie yawned again, not sure what he meant. “I mean, an old, old

safe with a combination? I told them…that those old safes…could be…really be…

easy to…to…” Bonnie let out a sound like a sigh and her voice stopped.

“I’m glad we had this talk,” Damon murmured in the silence.

There was no answer from the bed.

Pulling Bonnie’s sheet up as high as it would go, he let it drift down. It covered

most of her face. “Requiescat in pace,” Damon said softly. Then he left her room,

not forgetting to take the mug.

Now… “him chained and going down to the root cellar.” Damon mused as he

washed out the mug carefully and put it back in the cupboard. The line sounded

strange but he had almost all the links now, and it was actually simple. All he needed

were twelve more of Mrs. Flowers’s sleeping cachets and two plates heaped with

raw beef. He had all the ingredients…but he’d never heard of a root cellar.

Shortly thereafter, he opened the door to the basement. Nope. Didn’t match the

criteria for “root cellar” he’d looked up on his mobile. Irritated and knowing that any

moment someone was likely to wander downstairs for something, Damon turned

around in frustration. There was an elaborately carved wooden panel across from

the basement, but nothing else.

Curse it, he would not be thwarted at this point. He would have his life as a

vampire back, or he didn’t want any life at all!

To punctuate the sentiment, he slammed a fist against the wooden panel in front

of him.

The knock sounded hollow.

Immediately all frustration vanished. Damon examined the panel very carefully.

Yes, there were hinges at the very edge, where no sane person would expect

them. It wasn’t a panel but a door—undoubtedly to the root cellar where the star ball

was.

It didn’t take long for his sensitive fingers—even his human fingers were more

sensitive than most—to find a place that clicked—and then the whole door swung

open. He could see the stairs. He tucked his parcel under one arm and

descended.

By the illumination of the small flashlight he’d taken from the storage room, the

root cellar was just as described: a damp, earthy room to store fruit and vegetables

before refrigerators had been invented. And the safe was just as Bonnie had said:

an ancient, rusty combination safe, which any whiz cracker could have opened in

about sixty seconds. It would take Damon about six minutes, with his stethoscope

(he’d heard once that you could find anything in the boardinghouse if you looked

hard enough and it seemed to be true) and every atom of his being concentrating

on hearing the tumblers quietly click.

First, however, there was the Beast to conquer. Saber the black hellhound had

unfolded, awake and alert from the moment the secret door had opened.

Undoubtedly, they had used Damon’s clothes to teach him to howl madly at his

scent.

But Damon had his own knowledge of herbs and had ransacked Mrs. Flowers’s

kitchen to find a handful of witch hazel, a small amount of strawberry wine, aniseed,

some peppermint oil, and a few other essential oils she had in stock, sweet and

sharp. Mixed, this created a pungent lotion, which he had gingerly applied to

himself. The concoction formed for Saber an impossible tangle of strong smells.

The only thing the now-sitting dog knew was that it was surely not Damon sitting on

the steps and tossing him hearty balls of hamburger and delicate strips of filet

mignon—each of which he gulped down whole. Damon watched with interest as the

animal devoured the mix of sleeping powder and raw meat, tail whisking on the

floor.

Ten minutes later Saber the hellhound was sprawled out happily unconscious.

Six minutes after that, Damon was opening an iron door.

One second later he was pulling a pillowcase out of Mrs. Flowers’s antique safe.

In the glow of the flashlight he found that he did indeed have a star ball, but that it

was just a little more than half full.

Now what did that mean? There was a very neat hole drilled and corked at the

top so that not one precious droplet more need be wasted.

But who had used the rest of the fluid—and why? Damon himself had seen the

star ball brimful of opalescent, shimmering liquid just days ago.

Somehow between that time and now someone had used about a hundred

thousand individuals’ life energy.

Had the others tried to do some remarkable deed with it and failed, at the cost of

burning so much Power? Stefan was too kind to have used so much, Damon was

certain of that. But…

Sage.

With an Imperial Summons in his hand, Sage was likely to do anything. So,

sometime after the sphere had been brought into the boardinghouse, Sage had

poured out almost exactly half the life force from the star ball and then,

undoubtedly, left the rest behind for Mutt or someone to cork.

And such a colossal amount of Power could only have been used for…opening

the Gate to the Dark Dimensions.

Very slowly, Damon let out his breath and smiled. There were only a few ways to

get into the Dark Dimensions, and as a human he obviously could not drive to

Arizona and pass through a public Gateway as he had the first time with the girls.

But now he had something even better. A star ball to open his own private

Gateway. He knew of no other way to cross, unless one was lucky enough to hold

one of the almost-mythical Master Keys that allowed one to roam the dimensions at

will.

Doubtless, someday in the future, in some nook, Mrs. Flowers would find another

thank-you note: this time along with something that was literally invaluable—

something exquisite and priceless and probably from a dimension quite far from

Earth. That was how Sage operated.

All was quiet above. The humans were relying on their animal companions to

keep them safe. Damon gave the root cellar a single look around and saw nothing

more than a dim room completely empty except for the safe, which he now closed.

Dumping his own paraphernalia into the pillowcase, he patted Saber, who was

gently snoring, and turned toward the steps.

That was when he saw that a figure was standing in the doorway. The figure then

stepped smoothly behind the door, but Damon had seen enough.

In one hand the figure had been holding a fighting stave almost as tall as it was.

Which meant that it was a hunter-slayer. Of vampires.

Damon had met several hunter-slayers—briefly—in his time. They were, in his

consideration, bigoted, unreasonable, and even more stupid than the average

human, because they’d usually been brought up on legends of vampires with fangs

like tusks who ripped out the throats of their victims and killed them. Damon would

be the first to admit that there were some vampires like that, but most were more

restrained. Vampire hunters usually worked in groups, but Damon had a hunch that

this one would be alone.

He now ascended the steps slowly. He was fairly certain of the identity of this

hunter-slayer, but if he was wrong he was going to have to dodge a stave launched

straight down at him like a javelin. No problem—if he were still a vampire. Slightly

more difficult, unarmed as he was and at a severe tactical disadvantage.

He reached the top of the stairs unharmed. This was really the most dangerous

part of climbing steps, for a weapon of just the right length could send him crashing

all the way back down. Of course a vampire wouldn’t be permanently injured by that,

but—again—he was no longer a vampire.

But the person in the kitchen allowed him to climb all the way out of the root cellar

unhindered.

A killer with honor. How sweet.

He turned slowly to measure up his vampire hunter. He was immediately

impressed.

It wasn’t the obvious strength that allowed the hunter to be able to whip off a

figure eight with the fighting stave that impressed him. It was the weapon itself.

Perfectly balanced, it was meant to be held in the middle, and the designs picked

out in jewels around the handhold showed that its creator had had excellent taste.

The ends showed that he or she had a sense of humor as well. The two ends of the

stave were made of ironwood for strength—but they were also decorated. In

shape, they were made to resemble one of humankind’s oldest weapons, the flinttipped

spear. But there were tiny spikes extruding from each of these “spear

flakes,” set firmly into the ironwood. These tiny spikes were of different materials:

silver for werewolves, wood for vampires, white ash for Old Ones, iron for all

eldritch creatures, and a few that Damon couldn’t quite work out.

“They’re refillable,” the hunter-slayer explained. “Hypodermic needles inject on

impact. And of course different poisons for different species—quick and simple for

humans, wolfsbane for those naughty puppies, and so on. It really is a jewel of a

weapon. I wish I had found it before we met Klaus.”

Then she seemed to shake herself back into reality.

“So, Damon, what’s it going to be?” asked Meredith.

D amon nodded thoughtfully, glancing back and forth between the fighting stave and

the pillowcase in his hand.

Hadn’t he suspected something like this for a long time? Subconsciously? After

all, there had been that attack on the grandfather, which had failed to either kill him

or to erase his memory completely. Damon’s imagination could fill in the rest: her

parents seeing no reason to blight their tiny daughter’s life with this gruesome

business—a whole new change of scenery—and then giving up the practice in the

provincial, protected little town of Fell’s Church.

If they had only known.

Oh, doubtless they had made sure that Meredith had had self-defense and

various martial arts training since she was a child, while swearing her to absolute

secrecy—even from her best friends.

Well, now, Damon thought. The first of Shinichi’s riddles was already solved.

“One of you has a lifetime secret kept from everyone.” I always knew there was

something about this girl…and this is it. I’d bet my life that she’s a black belt.

There had been a long silence. Now Damon broke it.

Your ancestors were hunters too? he asked, as if she were telepathic. He

waited a moment—still silence. Okay—no telepathy. That was good. He nodded at

the magnificent stave. “That was certainly made for a lord or lady.”

Meredith wasn’t stupid. She spoke without glancing away from his eyes. She was

ready, at any instant, to go into killing mode. “We’re just ordinary folk, trying to get a

job done so innocent humans will be safer.”

“By killing the odd vampire or two.”

“Well, so far in recorded history saying ‘Naughty, naughty, Mama spank’ has

failed to convert a single vampire to vegetarianism.”

Damon had to laugh. “Pity you weren’t born early enough to convert Stefan. He

could have been your grand triumph.”

“You think that’s funny. But we do have converts.”

“Yes. People will say anything while you’re holding a pointed stick at them.”

“People who feel that it’s wrong to Influence other people into believing they’re

getting something for nothing.”

“That’s it! Meredith! Let me Influence you!”

This time it was Meredith who laughed.

“No, I’m serious! When I’m a vampire again, let me Influence you not to be so

much afraid of a bite. I swear I won’t take more than a teaspoon. But that would

give me time to show you—”

“A nice big house of candy that never existed? A relative who died ten years ago

and who would have abhorred the thought of you taking my memory of her and

using it as a lure? A dream of ending world hunger that doesn’t put food into one

mouth?”

This girl, thought Damon, is dangerous. It’s like a Counter-Influence that they’ve

taught to their members. Wanting her to see that vampires, or ex-vampires, or

Once and Future Vampires had some good qualities—like courage—he let go of

the pillowcase and grasped the end of the fighting stave with both hands.

Meredith raised an eyebrow. “Did I not just recently tell you that a number of

those spikes you’ve just driven into your flesh are poisonous? Or were you not

listening?”

She had automatically grabbed the stave as well, above the dangerous zone.

“You told me,” he said inscrutably—he hoped.

“I particularly said ‘poisonous to humans as well as to werewolves and other

things’—recall it?”

“You told me that, too. But I’d rather die than live as a human, so: Let the games

begin.” And with that, Damon began to push the two-headed stave toward

Meredith’s heart.

She immediately clamped down on the stave as well, pushing it back toward him.

But he had three advantages, as they both soon realized. He was slightly taller and

more strongly muscled even than lithe, athletic Meredith; he had a longer reach

than hers; and he had taken up a much more aggressive position. Even though he

could feel poisoned little spikes biting into his palms, he thrust forward and up until

the killing point was once again near her heart. Meredith pushed back with an

amazing amount of strength and then suddenly, somehow, they were even again.

Damon glanced up to see how that had happened, and saw, to his shock, that

she also had grasped the stave in the killing zone. Now her hands were dripping

blood onto the floor just as his were.

“Meredith!”

“What? I take my job seriously.”

Despite her gambit, he was stronger. Inch by inch, he forced his torn palms to

hang on, his arms to exert pressure. And inch by inch she was forced backward,

refusing to quit—until there was no more room to back up.

And there they stood, the entire length of the stave between them, and the

refrigerator flat against Meredith’s back.

All Damon could think of was Elena. If he somehow survived this—and Meredith

did not—then what would those malachite eyes say to him? How would he live with

what they said?

And then, with infuriating timing, like a chess player knocking over her own king,

Meredith let go of the spear, conceding Damon’s superior strength.

After which, seeming to have no fear of turning her back on him, she took a jar

full of salve from a kitchen cupboard, scooped out a dollop of the contents, and

motioned for Damon to hold out his hands. He frowned. He’d never heard of a

poison that got into the blood that could be cured by external measures.

“I didn’t put real poison in the human needles,” she said calmly. “But your palms

will be torn and this is an excellent remedy. It’s ancient, passed down for

generations.”

“How kind of you to share,”—at his most sharply ironic.

“And now what are we going to do? Start all over again?” he added as Meredith

calmly began to rub salve into her own hands.

“No. Hunter-slayers have a code, you know. You won the sphere. I assume

you’re planning to do what Sage seems to have done. Open the Gate to the Dark

Dimension.”

“Open the Gate to the Dark Dimensions,” he corrected. “Probably I should have

mentioned—there’s more than one. But all I want is to become a vampire again.

And we can talk as we go, since I see we’re both wearing our cat burglar

costumes.”

Meredith was dressed much as he was, in black jeans and a lightweight black

sweater. With her long shining dark hair she looked unexpectedly beautiful. Damon,

who had considered running her through with the stave, just as his obligation to

vampire-kind, now found himself wavering. If she gave him no trouble on his way to

the Gate, he would let her go, he decided. He was feeling magnanimous—for the

first time he had faced down and conquered the fearsome Meredith, and besides,

she had a code as he did. He felt a sort of kinship with her.

With ironic gallantry, he waved her on before him, retaining possession of the

pillowcase and the fighting stave himself.

As Damon quietly shut the front door he saw that dawn was about to break.

Perfect timing. The stave caught the first rays of light. “I have a question for you,”

he said to Meredith’s long, silky dark hair. “You said that you didn’t find this

gorgeous stave until after Klaus—that wicked Old One—was dead. But if you’re

from a hunter-slayer family you might have been more help in getting him

dispatched. Like mentioning that only white ash could kill him.”

“It was because my parents didn’t actively pursue the family business—they

didn’t know. They were both from hunter families, of course—you have to be, to

keep it out of the tabloids and—”

“—police files—”

“Do you want me to talk, or can you do your stand-up routine alone?”

“Point taken”—hefting the extremely pointed stave. “I’ll listen.”

“But even though they chose not to be active, they knew that a vampire or

werewolf might decide to pick on their daughter if they found out her identity. So

during school, I took ‘harpsichord lessons’ and ‘riding lessons’ one day a week

each—have done since I was three. I’m a Black Belt Shihan, and a Taekwondo

Saseung. I might start Dragon Kung Fu—”

“Point taken once more. But then how exactly did you find that gorgeous killing

stick?”

“After Klaus was dead, while Stefan was babysitting Elena, suddenly Grandpa

started talking—just single words—but it made me go look in our attic. I found this.”

“So you really don’t know how to use it?”

“I’d just started practicing when Shinichi turned up. But, no, I don’t really have a

clue. I’m pretty good with a bo staff, though, so I just use it like that.”

“You didn’t use it like a bo staff on me.”

“I was hoping to persuade you, not kill you. I couldn’t think of how to explain to

Elena that I’d broken all your bones.”

Damon kept himself from laughing—barely.

“So how did a couple of inactive hunter-slayers end up moving to a town on top

of a few hundred crossing ley lines?”

“I’m guessing they didn’t know what a line of natural Power was. And Fell’s

Church looked small and peaceful—back then.”

They found the Gateway just as Damon had seen it before, a neat rectangular

piece sliced out of the earth, about five feet deep.

“Now sit down there,” he adjured Meredith, putting her on the opposite corner

from where he lay the stave.

“Have you given a thought—even the briefest—as to what will happen to Misao if

you pour out all the liquid in there?”

“Actually, not one. Not one microsecond’s worth,” Damon said cheerfully. “Why?

Do you think she would for me?”

Meredith sighed. “No. That’s the problem with both of you.”

“She’s certainly your problem at the moment, although I may stop by sometime

after the town’s destroyed to have a little tête-à-tête with her brother about the

concept of keeping an oath.”

“After you’ve gotten strong enough to beat him.”

“Well, why don’t you do something? It’s your town they’ve devastated, after all,”

Damon said. “Children attacking themselves and each other, and now adults

attacking children—”

“They’re either scared to death or possessed by those malach the foxes are still

spreading everywhere—”

“Yes, and so fear and paranoia keep spreading too. Fell’s Church may be little by

the standards of other genocides they’ve caused, but it’s an important place

because it’s sitting on top—”

“Of all those ley lines full of magical power—yes, yes, I know. But don’t you care

at all? About us? Their future plans for us? Doesn’t any of it matter to you?”

Meredith demanded.

Damon thought of the still, small figure in the first-floor bedroom and felt a sick

qualm. “I told you already,” he snapped. “I’m coming back for a talk with Shinichi.”

After which, carefully, he began to pour liquid from the uncorked star ball at one

corner of the rectangle. Now that he was actually at the Gate, he realized he had

no idea what he should do. The proper procedure might be to jump in and pour out

the star ball’s entire liquid in the middle. But four corners seemed to dictate four

different places to pour, and he was sticking to that.

He expected Meredith to try to foul things up somehow. Make a run for the

house. Make some noise, at least. Attack him from behind now that he had

dropped the stave. But apparently her code of honor forbade this.

Strange girl, he thought. But I’ll leave her the stave, since it really belongs to her

family, and, anyway, it’s going to get me killed the instant I land in the Dark

Dimension. A slave carrying a weapon—especially a weapon like that—won’t have

a chance.

Judiciously, he poured out almost all of the liquid left into the final corner and

stepped back to see what would happen.

SSSS-bah! White! Blazing white light. That was all his eyes or his mind could

take in at first.

And then, with a rush of triumph he thought: I’ve done it! The Gateway is open!

“The center of the upper Dark Dimension, please,” he said politely to the blazing

hole. “A secluded alley would probably be the best, if you don’t mind.” And then he

jumped into the hole.

Except that he didn’t. Just as he was starting to bend his knees, something hit

him from the right. “Meredith! I thought—”

But it wasn’t Meredith. It was Bonnie.

“You tricked me! You can’t go in there!” She was sobbing and screaming.







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