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Now
I wait.
The music from Evonne’s
computer filled the room. Her distractions had been limited to her room
and kitchen. Everything outside had continued to remain well out of
her reach. It was her punishment. Her father didn’t verbally state
the new grounds of her punishment, it was assumed that she would be
grounded until she turned fifty.



Zachary
relaxed in the corner of his cell, his eyes closed as he tried to sense
beyond the walls, searching for the hunters. He was impressed with the
magnitude of his father’s new home. The house in Virginia seemed like
a guesthouse in comparison. SEVEN was another accomplishment he had
become impressed with. Alexander had been busy.
Zachary
heard noise of something falling onto the floor. He opened his eyes
and found a bag of medical blood in the middle of the cell. He looked
up to see a man in his late twenties standing by the door. With his
clean cut hair and nicely pressed clothes, this man was the brains of
Eden.
Kill
the head and the body will die.
This
was David.
“I
don’t drink human blood,” said Zachary.
David
kept his emotions in check as he spoke. “If you want to help us, then
you’ll need your strength.”
“So,”
he began, deciding to play his game, “my father chose not to feed
me himself. You know, if he really wanted me to double my strength,
then he should sacrifice one of his hunters. I would need fresh blood
and plenty of it. Perhaps that Pax fellow is willing to take one for
the team.”
“You
wanted to speak with Evonne?” David asked.
“If
he doesn’t mind.”
David
placed his hands in his pockets as he began to think. “It’s not
if Alex minds, it’s if she’s willing to speak with you.”
Zachary
kept to his game. “You’re David, my father’s little errand-boy.
Tell me, how is it to stand by his side, always asking, ‘How high?’
”
He ignored
him. “Who is the vampire after Evonne?”
“Did
Alexander put you up to this?”
David
crossed his arms. “This is my question.”
“Just
some vampire,” he answered, shrugging. “Nothing special.”
“Why
does he want her?”
“I
don’t know. Maybe he has a taste for unattainable virgins locked away
in castles. Or maybe he wants someone to play gin rummy with on Friday
nights.”
“Is
he dangerous?”
A small
grin crept on Zachary’s lips. “Aren’t all vampires dangerous?”
“Where
can we find him?”
He closed
his eyes and sighed. “I don’t know.”
“Don’t
know or won’t say?”
“Quid
pro quo,” toyed Zachary. “I would like to speak with Evonne first.”
David
weighed his options and came to a decision that disgusted him. He walked
back down the hall. “Eat up,” he called back.
Even
though it was mid afternoon, she had only been up for three hours. Her
schedule of sleeping late had returned.
The
old computer game she played was an addictive one. Building roller coasters
and amusement parks had become a fun distraction. She always wanted
to go to a theme park, to ride all of the rides and eat cotton candy
until her stomach ached. She even wondered what a funnel-cake tasted
like. “Stringy, fried pancakes covered in powdered sugar,” Pax once
told her. “Best invention ever!”
Quietly
opening her door, David entered the room. He crossed the floor and took
a seat on the edge of her bed. There was no leading up to his question.
He just had to ask her. Time wasn’t on his side.
“How
would you like to come downstairs with me,” he asked.
“Why?”
she said, remaining preoccupied with her game.
David
reiterated, “I mean the downstairs.”
She
hot him a curious look. “Explain.”
“Someone’s
here who wants to speak with you. I’m not too comfortable with the
idea, but he is in one of our holding cells.”
“Who
is it?” she asked. For a fraction of a second, she imagined Keelan
being captured by the hunters.
“Your
brother,” he said. “He wants to talk with you before he answers
any of our questions.”
Evonne
thought on this. “I’m not… I
mean, is it all right with my father?”
She wasn’t too sold on his explanation. She was forbidden to enter
the lower levels, grounded or not. And to have her father send David
after her, it was a little suspicious.
David
replied cryptically, “What he doesn’t know…”
“Oh.
Uh, sure. Why not.” She stood and slipped on her house shoes.
David
led her down the staircase and toward the far end of the house, all
the while keeping an eye out for Alex or Marie. The final hall they
came to was the last section of house she was able to venture near as
a child. Even then, he father didn’t like her playing too close to
the elevator doors.
They
said nothing as the elevator sent them to the first level. It wasn’t
until the doors opened that Evonne became nervous. What they were doing
was completely against her father’s rules. But as she looked upon
the first level, she realized David’s hastiness in getting her to
follow. All of the hunters were gone.
“Is
it always this empty?” she whispered.
“They
are on Level 3, preparing,” David replied.
“Preparing?”
“For
the possible attack.” He took hold of her hand and guided her past
a thick steel door.
On the
floor, in the middle of the hallway, Evonne spotted an empty blood bag.
She approached the discarded bag and looked into the cell.
Sitting
against a wall was her brother, Zachary.
His
eyes opened, landing on her. “I want to apologize again for our first
meeting. I was rude and I am sorry.”
Evonne
kept her cool. “Is that all?”
Zachary
stood and walked over to the cell door. He looked at David. “Excuse
us, please.”
David
exchanged glances with Evonne then stepped away to wait by the wall.
Lowering
his voice, Zachary urgently spoke. “When he comes for you, leave with
him.”
“Keelan?”
she whispered.
“Tell
no one of his name, if you haven’t already. He will come for you before
the attack. Leave with him and you’ll be safe.”
She
was confused by his order. “Why do you trust him now?”
“I
don’t,” he admitted, “but he’ll keep you safe.”
She
began to ask him something but stopped when she heard the hallway door
open. She turned to see her father, Jonathan, and Marie enter. Her stomach
dropped.
As they
approached, David cursed under his breath.
“What
is she doing here?” Alex demanded. He kept his voice calm but David
knew better than to believe the facade.
David
nervously began, “I can explain—”
“I
asked to see him,” interrupted Evonne. She took a step away from the
cell to properly face her father.
Alex
looked at his daughter. “If you wanted to see him, then you should
have asked me.” He paused, reading further into the scene. “How
did you know he was here?”
“I
told her,” David said.
Alex
gave a him a cold glance. “Take her back upstairs.”
He nodded
and grabbed Evonne’s wrist, escorting her out of the hallway.
“What
were you two talking about?” Alex asked Zachary as he stood before
the cell door. He was annoyed before entering the hall, but became aggravated
upon seeing Evonne speaking with him. It was his hopes that she would
have remained ignorant to the fact that Zachary was here.
The
vampire backed away from the door and sat down. “You, of course. But
if you want to know the details, I asked if you continue to blame yourself
for what happened to me. Because honestly, it was your fault.”
He closed his eyes. “Have you told your hunters about me? It wouldn’t
be a bright idea. If the spy gets wind of a traitor amongst them, then
who is to say how they will retaliate.”
“To
them,” Alex advised, “you were sent here from SEVEN to help in case
this battle does take place.”
“Don’t
be so hard on Evonne,” Zachary quietly said. “When I look at her,
I see who I use to be. And if that says anything, it should be that
you haven’t changed in over two-hundred years.”
“And
you have?” replied Alex sarcastically.
“Oh,
I have changed plenty. But even as much as I’ve changed, you are still
that demanding father who has the same regard for emotions as he does
for the creatures he hunts.” Zachary opened his eyes to stare at him.
“The battlefield isn’t as bloody from your roost in these mountains.
It is easier that way, is it not, father?”
“Don’t
call me ‘father.’ ”
Zachary
tilted his head. “Why, father? Does it annoy you? Do I disgust you
even still?”
“You
are not my son.”
The
vampire leaned forward, keeping his eyes on the weak man. “I still
carry my blood in these veins, your blood. I am your son.”
He looked away, his voice lowering. “When this is finished, I will
leave. And perhaps this time I will keep my promise and never return.”
Alex
said nothing as he turned from the cell and left the hallway with Jonathan
and Marie.
Zachary
sat in silence. His father was playing right into the plan. Predictable
as ever. He leaned back and closed his eyes, trying to feel the weight
of the sun.
Only
a few more hours.



