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The Dark Reunion

Page 15

by L. J. Smith


  But Mrs. Flowers just looked without saying anything. As they neared the house, though, she called after them, “A package came for you, boy.”

  Stefan turned his head, the branch still on his shoulder. “For me?”

  “It had your name on it. A package and a letter. I found them on the front porch this afternoon. I put them upstairs in your room.”

  Bonnie looked at Meredith, then at Matt and Stefan, meeting their bewildered, suspicious gazes in turn. The anticipation in the air heightened suddenly, almost unbearably.

  “But who could it be from? Who could even know you’re here—” she began as they climbed the stairs to the attic. And then she stopped, dread fluttering between her ribs. Premonition was buzzing around inside her like a nagging fly, but she pushed it away. Not now, she thought, not now.

  But there was no way to keep from seeing the package on Stefan’s desk. The boys propped the white ash branch against the wall and went to look at it, a longish, flattish parcel wrapped in brown paper, with a creamy envelope on top.

  On the front, in familiar crazy handwriting, was scrawled Stefan.

  The handwriting from the mirror.

  They all stood staring down at the package as if it were a scorpion.

  “Watch out,” Meredith said as Stefan slowly reached for it. Bonnie knew what she meant. She felt as if the whole thing might explode or belch poisonous gas or turn into something with teeth and claws.

  The envelope Stefan picked up was square and sturdy, made of good paper with a fine finish. Like a prince’s invitation to the ball, Bonnie thought. But incongruously, there were several dirty fingerprints on the surface and the edges were grimy. Well—Klaus hadn’t looked any too clean in the dream.

  Stefan glanced at front and back and then tore the envelope open. He pulled out a single piece of heavy stationery. The other three crowded around, looking over his shoulder as he unfolded it. Then Matt gave an exclamation.

  “What the … it’s blank!”

  It was. On both sides. Stefan turned it over and examined each. His face was tense, shuttered. Everyone else relaxed, though, making noises of disgust. A stupid practical joke. Meredith had reached for the package, which looked flat enough to be empty as well, when Stefan suddenly stiffened, his breath hissing in. Bonnie glanced quickly over and jumped. Meredith’s hand froze on the package, and Matt swore.

  On the blank paper, held tautly between Stefan’s two hands, letters were appearing. They were black with long downstrokes, as if each were being slashed by an invisible knife while Bonnie watched. As she read them, the dread inside her grew.

  Stefan—

  Shall we try to solve this like gentlemen? I have the girl. Come to the old farmhouse in the woods after dark and we’ll talk, just the two of us. Come alone and I’ll let her go. Bring anyone else and she dies.

  There was no signature, but at the bottom the words appeared: This is between you and me.

  “What girl?” Matt was demanding, looking from Bonnie to Meredith as if to make sure they were still there. “What girl?”

  With a sharp motion, Meredith’s elegant fingers tore the package open and pulled out what was inside. A pale green scarf with a pattern of vines and leaves. Bonnie remembered it perfectly, and a vision came to her in a rush. Confetti and birthday presents, orchids and chocolate.

  “Caroline,” she whispered, and shut her eyes.

  These last two weeks had been so strange, so different from ordinary high school life that she had almost forgotten Caroline existed. Caroline had gone off to an apartment in another town to escape, to be safe—but Meredith had said it to her in the beginning. He can follow you to Heron, I’m sure.

  “He was just playing with us again,” Bonnie murmured. “He let us get this far, even going to see your grandfather, Meredith, and then …”

  “He must have known,” Meredith agreed. “He must have known all along we were looking for a victim. And now he’s checkmated us. Unless—” Her dark eyes lit with sudden hope. “Bonnie, you don’t think Caroline could have dropped this scarf the night of the party? And that he just picked it up?”

  “No.” The premonition was buzzing closer and Bonnie swatted at it, trying to keep it away. She didn’t want it, didn’t want to know. But she felt certain of one thing: this wasn’t a bluff. Klaus had Caroline.

  “What are we going to do?” she said softly.

  “I know what we’re not going to do, and that’s listen to him,” Matt said. “‘Try to solve it like gentlemen’—he’s scum, not a gentleman. It’s a trap.”

  “Of course it’s a trap,” Meredith said impatiently. “He waited until we found out how to hurt him and now he’s trying to separate us. But it won’t work!”

  Bonnie had been watching Stefan’s face with growing dismay. Because while Matt and Meredith were indignantly talking, he had been quietly folding up the letter and putting it back in its envelope. Now he stood gazing down at it, his face still, untouched by anything that was going on around him. And the look in his green eyes scared Bonnie.

  “We can make it backfire on him,” Matt was saying. “Right, Stefan? Don’t you think?”

  “I think,” said Stefan carefully, concentrating on each word, “that I am going out to the woods after dark.”

  Matt nodded, and like the quarterback he was, began to chart out a plan. “Okay, you go distract him. And meanwhile, the three of us—”

  “The three of you,” Stefan continued just as deliberately, looking rig ht at him, “are going home. To bed.”

  There was a pause that seemed endless to Bonnie’s taut nerves. The others just stared at Stefan.

  At last Meredith said lightly, “Well, it’s going to be hard to catch him while we’re in bed unless he’s kind enough to come visiting.”

  That broke the tension and Matt said, drawing a long-suffering breath, “All right, Stefan, I understand how you feel about this—” But Stefan interrupted.

  “I’m dead serious, Matt. Klaus is right; this is between him and me. And he says to come alone or he’ll hurt Caroline. So I’m going alone. It’s my decision.”

  “It’s your funeral,” Bonnie blurted out, almost hysterically. “Stefan, you’re crazy. You can’t.”

  “Watch me.”

  “We won’t let you—”

  “Do you think,” Stefan said, looking at her, “that you could stop me if you tried?”

  This silence was acutely uncomfortable. Staring at him, Bonnie felt as if Stefan had changed somehow before her eyes. His face seemed sharper, his posture different, as if to remind her of the lithe, hard predator’s muscles under his clothes. All at once he seemed distant, alien. Frightening.

  Bonnie looked away.

  “Let’s be reasonable about this,” Matt was saying, changing tactics. “Let’s just stay calm and talk this over—”

  “There’s nothing to talk over. I’m going. You’re not.”

  “You owe us more than that, Stefan,” Meredith said, and Bonnie felt grateful for her cool voice. “Okay, so you can tear us all limb from limb; fine, no argument. We get the point. But after all we’ve been through together, we deserve more of a thorough discussion before you go running off.”

  “You said it was the girls’ fight too,” Matt added. “When did you decide it wasn’t?”

  “When I found out who the killer was!” Stefan said. “It’s because of me that Klaus is here.”

  “No, it isn’t!” Bonnie cried. “Did you make Elena kill Katherine?”

  “I made Katherine go back to Klaus! That’s how this got started. And I got Caroline involved; if it wasn’t for me, she would never have hated Elena, never have gotten in with Tyler. I have a responsibility toward her.”

  “You just want to believe that,” Bonnie almost yelled. “Klaus hates all of us! Do you really think he’s going to let you walk out of there? Do you think he plans to leave the rest of us alone?”

  “No,” Stefan said, and picked up the branch leaning against the wall. He
took Matt’s knife out of his own pocket and began to strip the twigs off, making it into a straight white spear.

  “Oh, great, you’re going off for single combat!” Matt said, furious. “Don’t you see how stupid that is? You’re walking right into his trap!” He advanced a step on Stefan. “You may not think that the three of us can stop you—”

  “No, Matt.” Meredith’s low, level voice cut across the room. “It won’t do any good.” Stefan looked at her, the muscles around his eyes hardening, but she just looked back, her face set and calm. “So you’re determined to meet Klaus face to face, Stefan. All right. But before you go, at least be sure you have a fighting chance.” Coolly, she began to unbutton the neck of her tailored blouse.

  Bonnie felt a jolt, even though she’d offered the same thing only a week earlier. But that had been in private, for God’s sake, she thought. Then she shrugged. Public or private, what difference did it make?

  She looked at Matt, whose face reflected his consternation. Then she saw Matt’s brow crease and the beginning of that stubborn, bullheaded expression that used to terrify the coaches of opposing football teams. His blue eyes turned to hers and she nodded, thrusting out her chin. Without a word, she unzipped the light wind-breaker she was wearing and Matt pulled off his T-shirt.

  Stefan stared from one to another of the three people grimly disrobing in his room, trying to conceal his own shock. But he shook his head, the white spear in front of him like a weapon. “No.”

  “Don’t be a jerk, Stefan,” Matt snapped. Even in the confusion of this terrible moment something inside Bonnie paused to admire his bare chest. “There’s three of us. You should be able to take plenty without hurting any one of us.”

  “I said, no! Not for revenge, and not to fight evil with evil! Not for any reason. I thought you would understand that.” Stefan’s look at Matt was bitter.

  “I understand that you’re going to die out there!” Matt shouted.

  “He’s right!” Bonnie pressed her knuckles against her lips. The premonition was getting through her defenses. She didn’t want to let it in, but she didn’t have the strength to resist anymore. With a shudder, she felt it stab through and heard the words in her mind.

  “No one can fight him and live,” she said painfully. “That’s what Vickie said, and it’s true. I feel it, Stefan. No one can fight him and live!”

  For a moment, just a moment, she thought he might listen to her. Then his face went hard again and he spoke coldly.

  “It isn’t your problem. Let me worry about it.”

  “But if there’s no way to win—” Matt began.

  “That isn’t what Bonnie said!” Stefan replied tersely.

  “Yes, it is! What the hell are you talking about?” Matt shouted. It was hard to make Matt lose his temper, but once lost it wasn’t easily gotten back. “Stefan, I’ve had enough—”

  “And so have I!” Stefan shot back in a roar. In a tone Bonnie had never heard him use before. “I’m sick of you all, sick of your bickering and your spinelessness—and your premonitions, too! This is my problem.”

  “I thought we were a team—” Matt cried.

  “We are not a team. You are a bunch of stupid humans! Even with everything that’s happened to you, deep down you just want to live your safe little lives in your safe little houses until you go to your safe little graves! I’m nothing like you and I don’t want to be! I’ve put up with you this long because I had to, but this is the end.” He looked at each of them and spoke deliberately, emphasizing each word. “I don’t need any of you. I don’t want you with me, and I don’t want you following me. You’ll only spoil my strategy. Anyone who does follow me, I’ll kill.”

  And with one last smoldering glance, he turned on his heel and walked out.

  14

  “He’s gone round the bend,” Matt said, staring at the empty doorway through which Stefan had disappeared.

  “No, he hasn’t,” said Meredith. Her voice was rueful and quiet, but there was a kind of helpless laugh in it too. “Don’t you see what he’s doing, Matt?” she said when he turned to her. “Yelling at us, making us hate him to try and chase us away. Being as nasty as possible so we’ll stay mad and let him do this alone.” She glanced at the doorway and raised her eyebrows. “‘Anyone who does follow me, I’ll kill’ was going a bit overboard, though.”

  Bonnie giggled suddenly, wildly, in spite of herself. “I think he borrowed it from Damon. ‘Get this straight, I don’t need any of you!’”

  “‘You bunch of stupid humans,’” Matt added. “But I still don’t understand. You just had a premonition, Bonnie, and Stefan doesn’t usually discount those. If there’s no way to fight and win, what’s the point of going?”

  “Bonnie didn’t say there was no way to fight and win. She said there was no way to fight and survive. Right, Bonnie?” Meredith looked at her.

  The fit of giggles dissolved away. Startled herself, Bonnie tried to examine the premonition, but she knew no more than the words that had sprung into her mind. No one can fight him and live.

  “You mean Stefan thinks—” Slow, thunderous outrage was smoldering in Matt’s eyes. “He thinks he’s going to go and stop Klaus even though he gets killed himself? Like some sacrificial lamb?”

  “More like Elena,” Meredith said soberly. “And maybe—so he can be with her.”

  “Huh-uh.” Bonnie shook her head. She might not know more about the prophecy, but this she knew. “He doesn’t think that, I’m sure. Elena’s special. She is what she is because she died too young; she left so much unfinished in her own life, and—well, she’s a special case. But Stefan’s been a vampire for five hundred years, and he certainly wouldn’t be dying young. There’s no guarantee he’d end up with Elena. He might go to another place or—or just go out. And he knows that. I’m sure he knows that. I think he’s just keeping his promise to her, to stop Klaus no matter what it costs.”

  “To try, at least,” Matt said softly, and it sounded as if he were quoting. “Even if you know you’re going to lose.” He looked up at the girls suddenly. “I’m going after mm.”

  “Of course,” said Meredith patiently.

  Matt hesitated. “Uh—I don’t suppose I could convince you two to stay here?”

  “After all that inspiring talk about teamwork? Not a chance.”

  “I was afraid of that. So …”

  “So,” said Bonnie, “we’re out of here.”

  They gathered what weapons they could. Matt’s pocketknife that Stefan had dropped, the ivoryhilted dagger from Stefan’s dresser, a carving knife from the kitchen.

  Outside, there was no sign of Mrs. Flowers. The sky was pale purple, shading to apricot in the west. Twilight of the solstice eve, Bonnie thought, and hairs on her arms tried to lift.

  “Klaus said the old farmhouse in the woods—that must mean the Francher place,” Matt said. “Where Katherine dumped Stefan in the abandoned well.”

  “That makes sense. He’s probably been using Katherine’s tunnel to get back and forth under the river,” Meredith said. “Unless Old Ones are so powerful they can cross running water without harming themselves.”

  That’s right, Bonnie remembered, evil things couldn’t cross running water, and the more evil you were, the harder it was. “But we don’t know anything about the Originals,” she said aloud.

  “No, and that means we’ve got to be careful,” Matt said. “I know these woods pretty well, and I know the path Stefan will probably use. I think we should take a different one.”

  “So Stefan won’t see us and kill us?”

  “So Klaus won’t see us, or not all of us. So maybe we’ll have a chance of getting to Caroline. Somehow or other we’ve got to get Caroline out of the equation; as long as Klaus can threaten to hurt her he can make Stefan do anything he wants. And it’s always best to plan ahead, to get a jump on the enemy. Klaus said meet there after dark; well, we’ll be there before dark and maybe we can surprise him.”

  Bonnie w
as deeply impressed by this strategy. No wonder he’s a quarterback, she was thinking. I would have just rushed in, yelling.

  Matt picked out an almost invisible path between the oak trees. The undergrowth was especially lush this time of year, with mosses, grasses, flowering plants, and ferns. Bonnie had to trust that Matt knew where he was going, because she certainly didn’t. Above, birds were giving one last burst of song before seeking out a roost for the night.

  It got dimmer. Moths and lacewings fluttered past Bonnie’s face. After stumbling through a patch of toadstools covered with feeding slugs, she was intensely grateful that this time she’d worn jeans.

  At last Matt stopped them. “We’re getting close,” he said, his voice low. “There’s a sort of bluff where we can look down and Klaus might not see us. Be quiet and careful.”

  Bonnie had never taken so much trouble placing her feet before. Fortunately the leaf litter was wet and not crackly. After a few minutes Matt dropped to his stomach and gestured for them to follow. Bonnie kept telling herself, fiercely, that she didn’t mind the centipedes and earthworms her sliding fingers dug up, that she had no feelings one way or another about cobwebs in the face. This was life and death, and she was competent. No dweeb, no baby, but competent.

  “Here,” Matt whispered, his voice barely audible. Bonnie scooted on her stomach up to him and looked.

  They were gazing down on the Francher homestead—or what was left of it. It had crumbled into the earth long ago, taken back by the forest. Now it was only a foundation, building stones covered with flowering weeds and prickly brambles, and one tall chimney like a lonely monument.

  “There she is. Caroline,” Meredith breathed in Bonnie’s other ear.

  Caroline was a dim figure sitting against the chimney. Her pale green dress showed up in the gathering dark, but her auburn hair just looked black. Something white shone across her face, and after a moment Bonnie realized it was a gag. Tape or a bandage. From her strange posture—arms behind her, legs stretched straight out in front—Bonnie also guessed she was tied.

 

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