by L. J. Smith
These women stood in stark contrast to the serving girl who seemed in charge of the entire room. She couldn’t have been older than sixteen or seventeen, and skinny as a jaybird, but every time I saw her, her arms were laden with plates and pint glasses. At one point, I watched her hurry toward the kitchen, but before she got there, she paused to clear the plates from a nearby table. All that remained on one plate were a few scraps of meat, some potatoes, and a half-eaten roll. She stared hard at the plate, before cautiously grabbing the meat and slipping it into her pocket. Then, she crammed the roll into her mouth, her cheeks puffing like a chipmunk’s, before scurrying back to the kitchen.
I closed my eyes. I’d long ago given up praying, and I didn’t think any sort of God would want to hear my requests, but I did wish that no matter what happened, that this helpless seventeen-year-old would stay far, far away from Dutfield Park. Or, for that matter, any bloodthirsty vampire.
“Lookin’ for a good time, love?” A woman with blond curled hair and crooked teeth perched on the wooden seat opposite me. Her white bosom was overflowing from her bodice.
“No. Sorry,” I said roughly, waving my hand away. A memory from New Orleans flooded back to me. It had been in my first few weeks as a vampire, when I’d been bloodthirsty and bullheaded, and had dragged Damon to a house of ill repute. There, I’d feasted on a young girl, sure that no one would notice or care that she’d disappeared. I couldn’t even remember her name now, and I wondered if I’d ever even bothered to learn it in the first place. It was details like those that would cause me to sink into the depths of misery, and here, in this dank tavern, I couldn’t escape these split-second flashbacks. All of them were reminders that no matter what I did, and no matter who I helped, I’d never do enough good deeds to wash away all the blood I was responsible for—and would be for eternity—off my hands. All I could do was try. And I would do anything to ensure that these women would not die at the hands of a demon.
I glanced back down at the paper, now creased and smudged from my hands. I could almost recite every word of the article, and none of it seemed to make sense. Why had the killer just left her like that? It was almost as if he’d wanted her to be found. But if the killer had wanted her to be found, he had to be very, very careful to cover his own tracks.
“What would you like to eat, love?” a lilting voice asked. I looked up to see the skinny, wide-eyed serving girl. She was wearing a tattered and stained rose-colored dress that was covered by a filthy white apron. She had wide blue eyes and long auburn hair that hung in a single braid down her back. A smattering of freckles dusted her angular face, and her skin was as smooth and pale as ivory. She kept nervously biting her lips, a habit that reminded me a bit of Rosalyn, my fiancée back in Virginia. But even Rosalyn’s extreme caution hadn’t prevented her from getting killed by a vampire. My heart went out to this girl.
“Whatever you recommend,” I said, putting down the paper. “Please,” I added. My stomach was growling, but what I most wanted wasn’t on any menu.
“Well, a lot of people have ordered the fish . . .” she said, trailing off. Even from where I was sitting, I could hear her heart beating, as fast and lightly as a swallow’s.
“That sounds fine,” I said. I tried not to think of the dwindling coins in my pocket.
“Yes, sir,” the girl said, turning quickly on her heel.
“Wait!” I called.
“Yes?” she asked, concern in her eyes. She looked so much like Oliver when he was worried that Mrs. Duckworth would scold him. There was something about the deliberate way she spoke, her ultra-cautious movements, and those wide, seeking eyes that made me feel she’d seen or heard something in connection to the murder. It was more than just an air of teenage self-consciousness.
She seemed haunted.
“Yes?” she asked again, her eyes furrowing. “You don’t have to order the fish if you don’t like. We also have steak-and-kidney pie . . .”
“No, fish is fine,” I said. “But may I ask you a question?”
She glanced at the bar. Once she saw Alfred was deep in conversation with a patron, she tiptoed a few steps closer.
“Sure.”
“Do you know Count DeSangue?” I asked steadily.
“Count DeSangue?” she repeated. “We don’t get counts here, no.”
“Oh,” I said, disappointed. Of course they didn’t. She kept glancing between me and Alfred.
“Did you know . . . the girl who was murdered?” I asked. I felt like I was at a church social in Mystic Falls, wondering which cousin of Clementine’s knew which cousin of Amelia’s.
“Mary Ann? No.” The girl set her mouth in a tight line and took a step away from me. “I’m not like that.”
“Violet?” Alfred called from the bar.
“Yes, sir!” Violet squeaked. “He don’t have to eat my head off,” she murmured under her breath. She pulled a pad of paper from her pocket and hastily scribbled on it, as if she were taking down an order. Then, she put the paper on the table and hurried away.
Are you the police? My sister is gone. Cora Burns. Please help. I think she may have been killed.
I shuddered as I read the words.
Moments later, the girl reemerged from the kitchen, a steaming plate in her hand.
“Here’s your food, sir,” she said, curtseying as she placed the plate on the table. A grayish slab of fish was covered in heavy gelatinous cream.
“I’m not the police,” I said, staring into her eyes.
“Oh. Well, I thought you might have been. You were just asking so many questions, you see,” the girl said, color appearing high on her cheekbones. “I’m sorry, I shouldn’t have troubled you.” She took a few suspicious steps away from me, and I realized she probably thought I was just like the other louts who frequented the bar, who only offered initial kindness and interest in order to have their way with her later.
“Wait!” I said. “I might be able to help you. But can we talk?”
“I don’t know,” she said. Her eyes darted nervously around the tavern.
“Have a seat,” I said.
Nervously, she perched on the stool. I nudged the plate over toward her. “Would you like it?” I asked, locking eyes with her. I could hear her heart beating faster against her rib cage. She must have been starving. “Here,” I added encouragingly, pushing the plate closer to her.
“I don’t need charity,” she said insistently, a hint of pride in her voice. Still, I noticed her eyes continue to dart from my dinner to me.
“Please take it. You look hungry, and I’d like you to have it.”
She eyed the plate suspiciously. “Why?”
“Because I’m not hungry anymore. And it sounds like you’re having a hard day,” I said gently. “My name’s Stefan. And you are . . . ?”
“V-V-Violet,” she said finally. She picked up a fork and took one bite, then another, of the fish. Catching me staring, she picked up a napkin and shyly dabbed her mouth. “You’re a good man, Stefan.”
“I try to be.” I shrugged as I gave her a small smile. She was quieter than Callie had been, but had far more spunk than Rosalyn did. I’d inwardly cheered when she told Alfred off under her breath. She had pluck, and I just knew that, more than anything else, would save her. “So about Cora—”
“Shhh!” Violet interrupted me.
I turned over my shoulder and saw Alfred storm out from around the bar toward our table. Before I could react, he’d grabbed Violet’s long hair and yanked it, causing her to yelp.
“What are you doing, girl?” he growled, his face showing none of the earlier jocularity he’d had behind the bar. “Begging for food like a mongrel?”
“No, sir, let her go. I invited her to dine with me!” I said, quickly standing up. I clenched my hands into fists and stared into Alfred’s beady eyes.
“She’s not good enough to dine with my customers. Out on the street is where you belong,” Alfred yelled, his voice rising as he ignored my protests. �
�You’re worse than them ladies over there,” he said, jutting his chin at the trio of women who still seemed to be surveying the crowd. “At least they’ve got something to offer,” he said, his face turning red.
“Please, sir!” Violet said, her entire frame shaking. Alfred loosened his grip on her hair, but his mouth was still set in a firm line. “I’ll do anything. Please don’t take away my job.”
“What job? Your sister doesn’t come in, so she sends you. You’re too small to lift anything and not pretty enough to keep the customers coming back. So I give you one task. Take the orders and bring them to the cook. And you can’t even do that!” Alfred boomed.
“Please!” I interjected desperately, placing a hand on his arm. I’d only meant for the gesture to stop him from grabbing Violet again, but in the moment, I’d forgotten my strength. His arm flew back, propelling him away from Violet.
I watched as he staggered backward into the table. The plate of fish landed upside down on the floor with a clatter. Violet looked terrified and I realized that the normal din had quieted to a churchlike hush. All eyes were on us.
Alfred scowled at me, rubbing his arm, as if debating whether or not to start a fight. “Well,” he said, clearing his throat.
“I apologize, but she wasn’t doing anything wrong. I asked her to join me. I offered her my meal,” I said in a smooth, low voice. I was furious, but I needed to control my temper. “Do you understand me?” I asked.
“Yes,” Alfred said, jerking his gaze away. He turned toward Violet.
“That true, girl?” he asked roughly.
“Yes,” Violet said in a small voice. “And I said no, but you say the customer is always right, and I thought that you’d want me to do what he said, so . . .”
Alfred raised his hand to cut her off and turned toward me. “Now I don’t know what you were trying to do, but Violet is not on offer,” Alfred said stiffly, still rubbing his arm. “If you wish to meet a lady, there are ones I’d be delighted to introduce to you. I know you’re not from around here, but this is my bar and my rules. Are we agreed? Now you,” he said, turning to Violet. “Out!” He pointed toward the door.
“Love, I can keep you warm tonight, if you know what I mean!” one of the bar patrons yelled as he reached to pinch her rear end. Another man followed suit, pawing at her. But she stared straight ahead, even as tears fell down her cheeks, and walked toward the front door.
“It’s for the best,” Alfred said roughly, crossing his beefy arms over his chest as the door closed with a thud. “You don’t run this bar. I do. And she was bothering you.”
“She wasn’t bothering me!” I said, angrily throwing a few shillings on the table before stepping menacingly toward him. A flicker of fear registered in Alfred’s face. I considered taking my frustrations out on him, but it was no use. Violet was gone. And every second she was outside meant she was in danger.
I stormed out of the bar without a second glance and walked into darkness. Only a few stars peeked through the tattered gray blanket of the London evening. I pulled out my pocket watch, a gift from Winfield Sutherland back in New York. After all those years, it still worked. It was nearly midnight. The witching hour.
A sliver of a moon hung high in the sky, and a layer of fog, so thick I could feel dewy condensation on my skin, swirled around the dilapidated buildings surrounding me. I cocked my head like a hunting dog. I could hear laughter emanating from the tavern, but no matter how hard I tried, I couldn’t hear the ba-da-bump, ba-da-bump gallop of Violet’s heartbeat.
I’d lost her.
I glanced around, trying to get my bearings. Even though the tavern had been bustling, the rest of the area seemed desolate. It reminded me a bit of some of the towns I’d seen when I’d taken a train from New Orleans to New York City—places so decimated by the war that no one was left.
I walked through the maze of streets, unsure of where I was going. I wanted to find Violet. I had some money from my wages, and I was sure I could settle the price of a rooming house for her. But how could I find her in an unfamiliar city with streets and alleys that seemed to number in the millions? It was impossible.
After a few moments, I came to a park. Or rather, I came to a patch of greenery that at one point might have been a park. Now, the grass was yellowed, the trees were sickly, paint was peeling from the wrought-iron benches, and none of the gas lamps were lit. I shivered. If this was Dutfield Park, then it was the ideal place for a murder.
I tilted my head. I could hear heartbeats—of rabbits, and squirrels, and even a fox—but then I heard it: ba-da-bump, ba-da-bump.
“Violet!” I called, my voice cracking. I easily jumped over the peeling fence and ran toward the woods in the center of the park. “Violet!” I called again, the ba-da-bump getting closer.
And then, a shriek pierced the air, followed by deafening silence.
“Violet!” I yelled, my fangs bulging. I pelted through the trees as if my feet were running on air, not gravel, expecting to see Damon feasting on Violet’s neck. Damon, turning toward me with blood dripping down his chin. Damon arching his eyebrow and greeting me with the one word that made my brain almost explode with anger . . .
“Help!” a girl’s voice screamed.
“Violet!” I called, tearing through the trees, in one direction, then another, listening wildly for the ba-da-bump, ba-da-bump of her heart. And then I saw her, standing shakily near a dark streetlight. Her face was as white as her apron, but she was alive. There was no blood.
“Violet?” I asked, slowing down to a walk. My feet crunched against the dry underbrush. The path in the woods had obviously, in happier times, been designed for a Sunday afternoon stroll. A small brick building, most likely a groundskeeper’s cottage, long since abandoned, stood at the crest of a gentle hill. Violet was staring at it, her mouth formed into an O of horror.
I followed her gaze, the sliver of the moon providing just enough light that I could see red letters written on the side of the building, each oxidized character standing out against the muted brick as if it were illuminated from behind by candlelight:
SALVATORE—I SHALL HAVE MY REVENGE
I glanced at the words, feeling as though the wind had been knocked out of me. This was a challenge, as real as if I’d been dealt a blow by an unseen hand. Someone was after us. And that someone wasn’t Damon. Worse still, what if Damon was the one in trouble? I wouldn’t put it past my brother to find himself at the center of a deadly vampire disagreement. After all, that’s what had happened in New York.
I blinked. I’d only seen a gruesome message like that once in my infinite lifetime—at the Sutherlands’ in New York, when Lucius, Klaus’s minion, was fulfilling the Original’s desire for vengeance against me and my brother. Twenty years ago, we’d just narrowly escaped him. Could he be back for more?
If Klaus had returned, I owed it to my brother to warn him. Suddenly everything—my terrifying dreams, my unsettled feelings—made sense. Damon was in trouble. And like it or not, I’d heard the message and come running. No matter what, my connection to the murder was no longer just a hunch—I was a part of this now. There was no going back.
“Help! Anyone!” Violet shrieked. She was starting to panic, her eyes wide.
I ran toward her and clapped my hand over her mouth to keep her from crying out again. I may have been hunting Damon, but now I was being hunted. Together, we were just two foxes, desperately darting through the city, unsure whether the hunter in charge of our fates was in front of us or behind us or lying in wait, ready to strike when we least expected it.
Chapter 5
In that moment, staring at the bloody message, time stood still. Or rather, time flew backward, back twenty years and across the ocean, until I was in the formal drawing room of the Sutherlands’ Central Park mansion, surrounded by carnage, gazing at a similarly garish, violent message.
Damon had been by my side back then, and it was at that moment I realized that the two of us were truly just babes in t
he woods, boys masquerading as monsters. When we saw the message written in the Sutherlands’ blood, we’d finally grasped that evil beyond our imaginations existed.
And it had only gotten worse. When Lucius, the minion of Klaus, had found and captured Damon and me, he’d entombed us in a mausoleum as if we were buried alive, heedless of our cries. Klaus and his ilk were Originals, creatures straight from hell who didn’t even have the smallest memory of human kindness, and, as such, there was no end to their evil. And now one of them was after me.
But for a moment, I felt something else inside me. It was a flickering sensation, so subtle and foreign I barely noticed it. Until I realized what it was. It was hope.
This time, I wasn’t unprepared. I was older, wiser, stronger. I could stop them.
I would make sure of that.
“Violet!” I said sharply, my hand still firm against her mouth. She stared at me with wild, unseeing eyes.
“I’m Stefan. From the bar. You can trust me. You have to trust me,” I said urgently. The edge of the park was only a hundred yards away. It would only take a few seconds to get out using vampire speed. I felt unsafe here. I didn’t feel much safer in London’s claustrophobic streets, but at least there, with pedestrians nearby, the killer would be less likely to strike. “We need to leave.”
She took a deep breath, but continued to struggle against my grip. “Violet, listen to me,” I said, summoning my Power. I heard a snap of a twig in the forest and I jumped. We had no time. Klaus could be anywhere. “Violet, trust me. You will be quiet, and you will listen to me. Is that understood?”
I felt my thoughts reach her mind, and I sensed the moment when her brain seemed to yield. I nodded to try to speed the process.