On the other hand, she needed to find some way to prove her love so the curse would lift. It was her duty to try everything she could think of, but this ... She wasn’t sure she was ready for this. The fairies said she’d know how to prove her love, but she didn’t feel sure about marriage at all.
She needed to talk to her mother. She shot to her feet, remembering that she’d not read her mother’s letter when she got up last evening, or replied. “I’ve got to go up to the tower. I need to be alone—to think.”
“Lucette.” Tristan stood and pulled her into a hug. “Forget I brought it up. I’m sorry.”
“Don’t be sorry.” She pulled away. “Really. I understand why you brought it up, I do, and want to marry you ... someday. Just let me think for a bit.” She dried her palms on her slacks. “Come up to the tower in ten minutes and we’ll talk again, okay?”
He nodded, and she left the room.
When she stepped into the corridor, Alex turned away quickly and leaned against the balcony railing. It made her think he’d been listening, but she was glad he didn’t make eye contact or try to talk to her. Right now, she needed to talk to her mother, and since that was impossible, she’d do the next best thing and read her mother’s latest letter.
Lucette shifted quickly through the letters that had been shoved through the slot in the glass cell. Even though everyone knew she no longer lived in the cell, its slot had become a mailbox. In her recent letters to her mother, she’d been asking for ideas about proving her love. Most of the answers so far had been vague, like “Trust yourself” and “The proof will come with time,” but Lucette hoped that tonight’s letter held more practical advice.
She found the right letter and opened it quickly. But it was no help at all, just more generalities and vague assurances that she should let her love for Tristan develop. Before she fell asleep, she’d write a note to her mother asking her advice about marriage, point-blank. Tristan would have to wait for his answer until tomorrow.
Nerves soured her stomach. She loved Tristan—she did—so why did the idea of marriage make her so nervous? She wanted to be married ... someday ... and to Tristan, but not yet.
Suddenly, Lucette heard a noise on the stairs. Someone was coming. Had it been ten minutes already? Would Tristan officially propose? If so, what would he say if she asked him to wait for her answer? Her palms started to sweat.
But instead of Tristan, six hulking vampires burst into the room. Lucette backed toward the glass wall and reached to her back for a stake... only then remembering that she’d taken off her weapons and dropped them near the door.
Six vampires? Lucette doesn’t have a chance!
To find out what happens next, turn to section 9: At War (page 291).
Section 8
A LEAP OF FAITH
Lucette’s insides twisted like they had every time her parents wedged her between them. She looked at Alex. He’d helped her so much, but now his behavior felt petulant and demanding, insisting she send Tristan away without any regard to what she wanted and forcing her to choose.
She turned to Tristan, who was leaning back against the balcony railing and didn’t look worried at all. He smiled, appearing very sure of himself. The combination of his confidence and grin revived the buzzing in her body, and she knew for sure. Even if Tristan made her nervous, even if he rejected her, even if he’d never love her the way she hoped he would, she couldn’t send him away. Not after he’d been so brave and risked his life to come to Xandra. But she didn’t want Alex to leave, either, and she hoped his threat had been hollow. It had to be.
“Alex, I can’t ask Tristan to leave. With three of us, it will be easier to cover more ground. Besides, even though you’ve been a huge help—so much—you won’t fight vampires, not really. What would I do if vampires attacked both my mother’s and father’s rooms at the same time? I can’t be in two places at once. I need Tristan here.” She turned to Tristan. “That is, assuming he wants to stay.” She felt a flush rise on her cheeks.
“I would never leave you,” Tristan promised.
Lucette heard a thump and turned to see that Alex had kicked his chair over.
“Fine, I’ll go then.” Alex was breathing quickly and his nostrils flared. “I can see when I’m not wanted.” He turned to Lucette, his eyes full of hurt. “I thought we had a real chance.” He stepped over the fallen chair. “But if you’re not interested in lifting the curse, I guess I’ll go tell my mother’s generals that I support her now. That I think vampires should drink human blood. That Xandrans are evil murderers slaying innocent vampires. That Sanguinia should invade Xandra.” He narrowed his eyes. “We’ll conquer you easily.”
She sucked in a sharp breath. “You wouldn’t do that.” Alex was just angry and hurt. Raised by such a cruel mother, it was a wonder he didn’t have outbursts like this more often.
Alex shifted slightly and looked to the side for a second, then back to her. “Just watch me.”
He ran down the stairs and then, moments later, she heard splintering wood as he broke out of the palace.
Lucette stood, dumbfounded, fighting tears, and Tristan stepped up behind her and put his hands on her shoulders.“We’re better off without him.”
His hands were so warm and comforting and strong, but she shrugged them off. “Leave me alone.”
Alex had been nothing but kind, her only support since the curse had fallen, and because of Tristan, she’d sent him away.
Two nights later, Lucette woke in her glass case to find Tristan bent over the top, looking down at her.
She banged her palms up against the glass and he jumped back.
“Don’t do that!” she yelled. “It creeps me out when you watch me sleep.”
He nodded, hands behind his back.“I’m sorry. Really.” His voice was muted through the glass. “It’s just you’re so peaceful when you’re sleeping, I can’t resist.” He cleared his throat. “But mostly I feel I can keep you safer if I’m nearby.”
She slid down, pushed open the panel at her feet, and slithered out of the display case into the glass cell. Putting her hands on her hips, she turned back to Tristan.“I’m not buying the ‘keep me safe’ line, so don’t even try it. I’m perfectly safe inside that horrid glass coffin. Or back here.”
“Out there,” she continued, “you’re the one who’s vulnerable after dark. Plus, you’ve been bitten—twice—so you’re taking the bigger risk. Where’s your neck protector?”
Lifting a hand to his bare neck, he gestured behind him with his head.“It’s not like the vampires can’t bite me on another part of my body. We’ve seen that.”
“Yes.” She dropped her hands to her sides. “But why make it easy for them to go for their favorite vein?”
A mischievous grin took over his face, and he put his lips against the air holes in the glass separating them.“Why, Princess, if I didn’t know better, I might think you cared.”
He looked at her with such intensity, her skin burned, and she turned away, yelling back, “I need to get changed. Did you bring my clothes up?”
He nodded and picked up the small pile. They’d decided that since he could smuggle her slayer clothes up here at nightfall, there was no sense in her changing in the library anymore.
“Can you pass them in and turn away, please?” She had a privacy screen behind the glass partition, but didn’t like how her body tingled when she knew Tristan was looking in her direction while she changed.
Tristan slipped the clothes through the small opening at the bottom of the glass wall, and then Lucette disappeared behind her screen to change. It had only been two days, but she missed Alex. She’d grown accustomed to his bright, yellow-specked green eyes, his flaming red hair, his pale skin, and his sense of humor.
“Any sign of Alex?” she asked as she changed.
“No,” Tristan replied. “Do you think he meant what he said? Do you think he’d betray you to his mother?”
Dressed, she stepped out from behind her scree
n and was pleased to see that Tristan’s back was still turned. “I’m decent,” she said.
He turned and smiled. “More than decent, if you ask me.”
Blushing, she climbed back through her glass coffin into the outer part of the tower room. As he helped her out, the warmth of his hands on her made her feel dizzy, so she stepped out of his arms to clear her head, and remembered he’d asked her a question about Alex.
She cleared her throat. “I’m sure Alex wouldn’t turn on me. Not after all this time.” She bit her lip. “He was just upset, don’t you think?”
“And jealous of me,” Tristan said. “I’d be hurt, too, if you chose him.”
She felt herself blush and pulled on her hood so she could hide her pink cheeks. She wanted to press Tristan to say more about how he felt, but lacked the courage. If he rejected her again, she couldn’t face him every night, and she certainly didn’t want to face being alone.
After picking up her weapons, she motioned for Tristan to follow her down the tower stairs and into the main entry hall of the palace.
“How’s the night look?” she asked. “Any action yet?” The entered the foyer and she scanned the large, tiled room with its high vaulted ceiling.
“Quiet, so far.” Tristan’s eyes looked as if he had a secret. “And I’ve got a surprise.”
“Really? What?”
He pushed a dark rolling screen aside to reveal a meal—roasted duck, vegetables, gravy, and two goblets of wine—set on a table adorned with candles. “I thought we could have a nice dinner together.”
“A date?” Lucette’s heart raced, and she wanted to gobble the word back. Her cheeks burned.
“Sure,” Tristan said. “We can call it a date.”
Relief flooded her and her body started to feel a bit like jelly. Then he pulled out a chair for her, and she felt so grown-up. That thought made her laugh to herself. She was responsible for defending herself, defending her parents, defending her entire kingdom against vampire attacks—how could she not feel grown-up?
But she often did feel like a kid, and Tristan treating her this way added another whole dimension to adulthood—one she hoped she was ready for. Without true love, the curse wouldn’t break.
He poured her a glass of wine before taking his chair, then held his goblet toward her.
She lifted hers, too, but paused. “We shouldn’t drink much wine. What if vampires show up?”
“Lucette”—he made and held eye contact—“just for the few minutes it takes us to enjoy this meal, please, let’s pretend there are no vampires and no curse. Let’s pretend we have nothing to fear.”
His voice was comforting, so Lucette nodded and took a tiny sip of the wine. As the flavor filled her mouth, she gazed at Tristan for so long that she grew embarrassed and looked down to her food.
“Thank you,” she said as she gestured over the table, “for all this.”
“My pleasure.” He offered her a duck leg. “You deserve a little something normal in your life.”
As he served them, she asked, “What’s Judra like? Do you have brothers and sisters? What are your parents like? Before you came here to the academy, where did you go to school?”
He started to laugh.
“Sorry.” Lucette smiled. “I just realized that even with all the time we spent together training, I hardly know anything about you. And since you’ve been back, it’s been all about vampires and stakes—and who’s covering which of my parents’ bedrooms.”
Tristan reached across the table, but instead of going for a bread roll as she’d assumed he would, he took her hand.
She fought her first instinct to yank her hand back, and instead drew a long, deep breath. The temperature in the room seemed to have risen several degrees, and she hoped her palm wouldn’t start to sweat. That would be embarrassing.
Just then, something crashed in the hall.
They sprang to their feet, grabbed their weapons, and slung crossbows and quivers of arrows and stakes on their backs. As they raced up the stairs, they put on their masks and hoods, and kept close to the wall, alert to any movement in the corridor above them.
Working together silently and confidently, they used the hand signals and nods he’d taught her to determine that Tristan would round the corner at the top of the stairs first.
Lucette followed on Tristan’s direction, climbing the stairs and stopping in the open corridor above the foyer. The crash of splintering wood came from the right, where her father’s bedchamber lay, and the smash of breaking glass came from the direction of her mother’s.
Yet again, she had to choose between her parents, but at least she could decide objectively this time. Tristan was closer to her father’s room; she was closer to her mother’s.
Before he left, Tristan squeezed her arm and sent her a reassuring look through the slit in his mask.
Lucette’s heart pinched. What if he were bitten again tonight? What if this were the last time she saw him? They’d never even discussed what he’d want her to do if he did get that fatal third bite. Would he want her to rush him to Sanguinia so vampire surgeons could convert him? Or would he rather die? She had no idea.
Creeping silently, Lucette approached the bend in the hall that led to her mother’s bedchamber and peeked around the corner. In front of her mother’s door stood a single vampire, but a big one, and he looked crazed. He slashed and banged at the door with his fingers and fists, as if he thought he could claw through the wood. His fingernails, illuminated by a beam of light, were so long and sharp they looked liked claws. He’d gouged deep scratches in the door, and his fingers were bleeding.
Snarling like a mad dog, he dropped his hands, stepped back, and then rammed his shoulder into the door. “Come on, Queenie!” he snarled. “I know you’re in there!”
This particular vampire did not appear to be the brightest candle in the castle, but clearly he’d been told where to find the queen’s room, and that thought chilled Lucette. These vampires knew so much about the palace, knew where to find her parents, and she wondered how. But she couldn’t believe it was Alex. In spite of his threats, she felt sure he wouldn’t side with his evil mother.
Spotting no roses to use as a defense, she took the crossbow off her back, pulled an arrow from her quiver, and then loaded and cocked it. The vampire seemed too unpredictable for her to attack with a stake, or even a rose, if she had one. Better to keep well out of range of those fingernails.
Raising the crossbow, she took aim for the vampire’s shoulder, and hoped that if she wounded him, he’d flee. Holding the bow ready, she waited. He pulled away from the door and granted Lucette a clean shot. She fired, and the arrow struck right where she’d aimed.
The vampire screamed a high-pitched screech that had Lucette fighting not to cover her ears. Then he yanked the arrow from his flesh and stared at it, confused about how it had gotten there. He caught a glimpse of Lucette in the shadows, and his confusion turned to anger. With snarling lips, yellow teeth, and sharp fangs, he staggered toward her. No time to load another arrow.
Lucette pulled out a stake and ran toward the vampire. Jumping, she planted her heavy boot into his chest, and the vampire stumbled back.
Roaring in anger, he advanced again. Adrenaline pumped through Lucette as she ducked out of his way, then she spun, jumped onto a table at the side of the corridor, leaped off, and kicked the vampire in the head before landing back on the stone floor.
The vampire clutched the side of his head, but he still wasn’t down, and certainly wasn’t deterred. Most vampires gave up their quest for blood once they were challenged. Not this one. Baring his fangs, he lunged for her neck. Seeing his fangs up close and personal, she wasn’t confident that the metal-threaded fabric of her neck protector was strong enough to stop them, so she dodged under him and rolled to the other side of the corridor.
Patiently, she waited in a crouch, stake ready. He dove for her again, and Lucette stood up, thrust her stake forward, and drove it into his ches
t.
The vampire wailed. Pain and anguish took control of his face, and then he fell to the floor. Lucette turned to the wall, confident she’d hit his heart and not wanting to watch him die. Even though this vampire had seemed intent on killing her, killing him didn’t feel any better than her first kill.
Trembling and panting, she bent over and tried to force his death from her mind. What she wouldn’t give to be back at that romantic dinner with Tristan.
A hand landed on her shoulder and, pulling another stake from her quiver, she spun.
Tristan. She dove into his arms, but he grabbed her shoulders and shoved her back. “Never turn your back on a vampire until you’re sure it’s dead!” He glared at her and then went over to the vampire, studied it, and pulled out her stake. “And never leave your stake behind. You might need it later.”
“I killed him,” she said, her voice hard and forceful.
Tristan pulled off his hood and handed her the stake. “Yeah, but that doesn’t mean you should ignore proper battle protocols. What if you’d missed its heart? What if another vampire arrived? You can’t let your guard down after a kill. I taught you better than that.”
Her cheeks burned under her masked hood and she fumbled to pull it off. “You’re not my teacher anymore.” She slammed her hood to the floor. “I have more experience defending myself against vampires than you do. And how can you be so cold about it? That vampire might have been insane, but he was a living, breathing, thinking creature, just like you and me.”
Tristan’s expression hardened. “Your dad’s safe, by the way. I killed my vampire, too. No thanks necessary.”
She glared at him. “We don’t have to kill them! Not unless there’s no other way.”
“Was that your idea or Alex’s? Ever think he might have been protecting them?”
“Alex had good reasons for not wanting them dead. I already told you that.”
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