by Smith, L. J.
What she didn’t expect was that they would run, not out into the street, but down toward the cells. She ought to have, of course, but she hadn’t. And then she felt herself and Sage and Damon going down, down the way they had last night…
But was it really the right way? Elena clamped one hand over the other and saw, judging by foxlight, that they needed to head off to the right.
“WHAT ARE THOSE CELLS TO THE RIGHT OF US? HOW DO WE GET THERE?” she shouted to the young vampire gentleman next to her.
“That’s Isolation and Mentally Disturbed,” the vampire gentleman shouted back. “Don’t go that way.”
“I have to! Do I need a key?”
“Yes, but—”
“Do you have a key?”
“Yes, but—”
“Give it to me now!”
“I can’t do that,” he wailed in a way that reminded her of Bonnie at her most difficult.
“All right. Sage!”
“Madame?”
“Send Talon back to peck this man’s eyes out. He won’t give me the key to Stefan’s ward!”
“As good as done, Madame!”
“W-wait! I cha-changed my mind. Here’s the key!” The vampire fished through a ring of keys and handed one to her.
It looked like the other keys on his ring. Too much alike, Elena’s suspicious mind said.
“Sage!”
“Madame!”
“Can you wait till I pass with Saber? I want him to tear the you-know-what off this guy if he’s lied to me.”
“Of course, Madame!”
“W-w-w-wait,” gasped the vampire. It was clear that he was completely terrified. “I may—may have given you the wrong key—in this—this light—”
“Give me the right key and tell me anything I need to know or I’ll have the dog backtrack you and kill you,” Elena said, and at that moment, she meant it.
“H-here.” This time the key didn’t look like a key. It was round, slightly convex, with a hole in the middle. Like a donut that’s been sat on by a police officer, part of Elena’s mind said, and began laughing hysterically.
Shut up, she told her mind sharply.
“Sage!”
“Madame?”
“Can Talon see the man I’m holding by the hair?” She had to go on tiptoe to grasp him.
“But of course, Madame!”
“Can she remember him? If I can’t find Stefan I want her to show him to Saber so he can track him.”
“Uh…ah…got it, Madame!”
A hand, dripping blood from the wrist, lifted a falcon high, at the same time as there was a serendipitous crash from the top of the building.
The vampire was almost sobbing. “Turn r-right at the n-next right. Use the k-key in the slot at h-head height to g-get into the corridor. There m-may be guards there. But…if—if you don’t have a key to the individual cell you want—I’m sorry, but—”
“I do! I have the cell key and I know what to do after that! Thank you, you’ve been very kind and helpful.”
Elena let go of the vampire’s hair.
“Sage! Damon! Bonnie! Look for a corridor, locked, going right. Then don’t get swept away. Sage, hold Bonnie and have Saber bark like crazy. Bonnie, hold on to Meredith in front of the guys. The corridor leads to Stefan!”
Elena never knew how much any one of her allies heard of this message, sent by voice and telepathy. But ahead she heard a sound that to her was like choirs of angels singing.
Saber was barking madly.
Elena would never have been able to stop by herself. She was in a raging river of people and the raging river was taking her right around the barrier made by four people, a falcon, and a mad-seeming dog.
But eight hands reached out to her as she was swept by—and a snarling, snapping muzzle leaped ahead of her to divide the crowd. Somehow she was being run into, bruised, cradled, shoved, and, grasped and grasping, forced all the way to the right wall.
But Sage was looking at that same wall in despair. “Madame, he tricked you! There is no keyhole here!”
Elena’s throat went raw. She prepared to shout, “Saber, heel,” and go after the vampire.
But then, just below her, Bonnie’s voice said, “Of course there is. It’s shaped like a circle.”
And Elena remembered.
Smaller guards. Like imps or monkeys. Bonnie’s size.
“Bonnie, take this! Shove it into the hole. Be careful! It’s the only one we’ve got.”
Sage immediately directed Saber to stand and snarl just ahead of Bonnie in the tunnel, to keep the stream of panicked demons and vampires from jostling her.
Carefully, solemnly, Bonnie took the large key, examined it, cocked her head, turned it in her hands—and placed it in the wall.
“Nothing’s happening!”
“Try turning or pushing—”
Click.
The door slid open.
Elena and her group more or less fell into the corridor, while Saber stood between them and the herd pounding by, barking and snapping and leaping.
Elena, lying on the ground, legs entwined with who-knew-who-else’s, cupped a hand around her ring.
The fox eyes shone straight ahead and a bit to the right.
They were shining into a cell ahead.
41
“Stefan!” Elena screamed and knew that she sounded like a madwoman when she screamed it.
There was no answer.
She was running. Following the light. “Stefan! Stefan!”
An empty cell.
A yellowed mummy.
A pyramid of dust.
Somehow, subconsciously, she suspected one of these things. And any one would have caused her to run out to fight Bloddeuwedd with her bare hands.
Instead, when she reached the right cell, she saw a weary young man, whose face showed that he had given up all hope. He lifted a stick-thin arm, rejecting her utterly.
“They told me the truth. You were exported for aiding a prisoner. I’m not susceptible to dreams anymore.”
“Stefan!” She fell to her knees. “Do we have to go through this every single time?”
“Do you know how often they re-create you, bitch?”
Elena was shocked. More than shocked. But the next moment the hatred had faded from his face.
“At least I get to look at you. I had…I had a picture. But they took that, of course. They cut it up, very slowly, making me watch. Sometimes they made me cut it. If I didn’t cut it, they would—”
“Oh, darling! Stefan, darling! Look at me. Listen to the prison. Bloddeuwedd is destroying it. Because I’ve stolen the other half of your key from her nest, Stefan, and I am not a dream. Do you see this? Did they ever show you this?” She held out the hand with the double fox ring on it. “Now—now—where do I put it?”
“You are warm. The bars are cold,” Stefan said, clutching her hand and speaking as if reciting out of a children’s book.
“Here!” Elena cried triumphantly. She didn’t need to take the ring off. Stefan was holding her other hand, and this lock worked like a seal ring. She placed it straight into a circular depression in the wall. Then, when nothing happened, she turned it right. Nothing. Left.
The cell bars slowly began to lift into the ceiling.
Elena couldn’t believe it and for an instant thought she was hallucinating. Then when she turned sharply to look at the ground she saw that the bars were already at least a foot above it.
Then she looked at Stefan, who was standing again.
Both of them fell back to their knees. They would have both gotten down and wriggled like snakes if necessary, the need to touch was so great. The horizontal struts on the bars made it impossible for them to hold hands as the bars lifted.
Then the bars were over the top of Elena’s head and she was holding Stefan—she was holding Stefan in her arms!—appalled to feel bones under her hands, but holding him, and no one could tell her he was a hallucination or a dream, and if she and Stefan had to d
ie together, then they would die together. Nothing mattered but that they not be separated again.
She covered the unfamiliar, bony face with kisses. Strange, no half-grown, gone-to-the-wild beard, but vampires didn’t grow beards unless they had them when they became vampires.
And then there were other people in the cell. Good people. People laughing and crying and helping her create a makeshift litter out of stinking blankets and Stefan’s pallet and no one screamed when lice jumped on them because everyone knew that Elena would have turned and ripped their throat out like Saber. Or rather, like Saber, but as Ms. Courtland had always said, with feeling. To Saber it was just a job.
Then somehow—things had begun to become disconnected—Elena was watching Stefan’s beloved face and gripping his litter, and running—he didn’t weigh anything—up a different corridor than the one she’d fought and shouldered and pushed and floundered in on her way in. Apparently all the Shi no Shi’s salmon had chosen the other corridor to swim up. Undoubtedly there was a safe place for them at the end on that side.
And even as Elena wondered how a face could be so pure, and handsome, and perfect, even when it looked almost like a skull, she was thinking, I can run and stoop. And she bent over Stefan and her hair made a shield around them, so that it was just the two of them inside it. The entire outside world was shut out, and they were alone, and she said in his ear: “Please, we need you to be strong. Please—for me. Please—for Bonnie. Please—for Damon. Plea—”
She would have gone on naming all of them, and probably some over and over, but it was too much already. After his long deprivation, Stefan was in no mood to be contrary. His head darted up and Elena felt more than the usual pain because he was at the wrong angle, and Elena was glad because Stefan had struck a vein down its length and blood was flowing into his mouth in a steady stream.
They had to go a little more slowly now, or Elena would have tripped and colored Stefan’s face maroon like a demon’s, but they were still jogging. Someone else was guiding them.
Then, very suddenly they stopped. Elena, eyes shut, mind locked on to Stefan’s, would not have looked up for the world. But in a moment they were moving again, and there was a feeling of spaciousness all around Elena and she realized that they were in the lobby and she had to make sure everyone knew.
It’s on the left side of us now, she sent to Damon. It’s close to the front. It’s a door with all sorts of symbols above.
I believe I’m familiar with the species, Damon sent back dryly, but even he couldn’t hide two things from her. One was that he was glad, actually glad to feel Elena’s elation, and to know that it was he, in the main part, that had brought it about.
The other was simple. That if there was a choice between the life of himself and the life of his brother, he would give his own life. For Elena’s sake, for his own pride.
For Stefan.
Elena didn’t dwell on these secret things she had no right to know. She simply embraced them, let Stefan feel them in all their raw vibrancy, and made sure there was no feedback to tell Damon that Stefan knew. Angels were singing in heaven for her. Black Magic rose petals were scattering around her body. There was a release of doves and she felt their wings. She was happy.
But she was not safe.
She only learned it as she entered the lobby, but they were very lucky that the Dimensional Door was on the side it was. Bloddeuwedd had methodically destroyed the other side until it had collapsed into a mound that was nothing but splintered wood. Elena and Bloddeuwedd’s feud might have started out as a quarrel between a hostess who thought her guest had broken the house rules and a guest who just wanted to run away, but it had become a war to the death. And given the way vampires, werewolves, demons, and other folk down here in the Dark Dimension reacted, it had created a sensation. The Guardians had their hands full keeping people out of the building. Dead bodies lay strewn on the street.
Oh, God, the people! The poor people! Elena thought, as this at last came into her field of view. As for the Guardians, who were keeping this place clear and fighting Bloddeuwedd on her behalf—God bless you for that, Elena thought, envisioning a standing-room-only lobby as they tried to race with Stefan across the floor. As it was, they were alone.
“Now we need your key again, Elena,” Damon’s voice, just above her, said.
Elena gently pried Stefan off her throat. “Just for a moment, my darling. Just for a moment.”
Looking at the door, Elena was confounded for several moments. There was a hole, but nothing happened when she put the ring in it and pushed, jammed, or twisted left or right. Out of the corner of her eye she saw some dark shadow above her, dismissed it as irrelevant, and then had it come screaming at her like a dive-bomber, steel talons reaching for her.
There was no roof. Bloddeuwedd’s talons had methodically ripped it away.
Elena knew it.
Because somehow Elena suddenly saw the whole of the situation, not just her part in it, but as if she were someone outside her body, who understood many more things than puny little Elena Gilbert did.
The Guardians were here to prevent collateral damage.
They could or would not stop Bloddeuwedd.
Elena knew that, too.
All the people running down the other corridor had been doing what an owl’s prey normally does. They had been dashing for the bottom of their burrow. There was an enormous safe room there.
Somehow, Elena knew it.
But now, blurrily but definitely, Bloddeuwedd saw the ones she had been after in the first place, the nest robbers, the ones who had forever put out one of her huge round orange far-seeing eyes, and cut her so deeply that the other eye was filling with blood.
Elena could feel it.
Bloddeuwedd could see they were the ones who had caused her to smash her beak. The criminals, the savages, the ones she would tear to pieces slowly, slowly, a limb at a time, switching from one to another as she clutched five or six in one set of claws, or as she watched them, unable to run from lack of limbs, writhing beneath her.
Elena could sense it.
Beneath her.
Right now…they were directly beneath Bloddeuwedd.
Bloddeuwedd dove.
“Saber! Talon!” shouted Sage, but Elena knew that there would be no distraction now. There would be nothing but killing and tearing, slowly, and screams echoing off the single lobby wall.
Elena could picture it.
“It won’t open, damn it,” shouted Damon. He was manipulating Elena’s wrist to move the key in the hole. But no matter how he pulled or pushed, nothing happened.
Bloddeuwedd was almost upon them.
She accelerated, throwing telepathic images before her.
Sinew stretching, joints cracking, bone splintering…
Elena knew—
NOOOOO!
Elena’s cup of rage ran over.
Suddenly she saw everything she needed to know in one great sweeping epiphany. But it was too late to get Stefan inside the door, so the first thing she shouted was “Wings of Protection!”
Bloddeuwedd, barely six feet away, slammed into a barrier that a nuclear missile could not have harmed. She slammed into it at the speed of a racing car and with the mass of a medium-sized airplane.
Horror exploded beak first against Elena’s wings. They were clear green at the top, dotted with flashing emeralds, and shading into a dawn pink covered with crystals at the bottom. The wings enwrapped all six humans and two animals—and they did not move by one millimeter when Bloddeuwedd smashed into them.
Bloddeuwedd had made herself roadkill.
Shutting her eyes, and trying not to think of the maiden who had been made of flowers (and who had killed her husband! Elena told herself desperately) with dry lips, and wetness trickling down her cheeks, Elena turned back to the door. Put the ring in. Made sure it was flush.
And said, “Fell’s Church, Virginia, USA, Earth. Near the boardinghouse, please.”
It was we
ll after midnight. Matt was sleeping on the bunker’s cot, while Mrs. Flowers slept on the couch, when they were suddenly wakened by a thump.
“What on earth?” Mrs. Flowers got up and stared out the window, which should have been dark.
“Be careful, ma’am,” Matt said automatically, but couldn’t help adding, “What is it?”—as always, expecting the worst and making sure the revolver with the blessed bullets was ready.
“It’s…light,” Mrs. Flowers said helplessly. “I don’t know what else to say about it. It’s light.”
Matt could see the light, throwing shadows on their bunker floor. There was no sound of thunder, and hadn’t been since he woke up. Hastily he ran to join Mrs. Flowers at the window.
“Did you ever…?” exclaimed Mrs. Flowers, lifting her hands and dropping them again. “Whatever could it mean?”
“I don’t know, but I remember everybody talking about ley lines. Lines of Power in the ground.”
“Yes, but those run along the surface of the earth. They don’t point upward, like—like a fountain!” Mrs. Flowers said.
“But I heard that wherever three ley lines come together—I think Damon said—they can form a Gate. A Gate to where they were going.”
“Dear me,” said Mrs. Flowers. “You mean you think one of those Gateway things is out there? Maybe it’s them, coming back.”
“It couldn’t be.” The time Matt had spent with this particular old woman had made him not only respect her, but love her. “But I don’t think we should go outside, anyway.”
“Dear Matt. You are such a comfort to me,” Mrs. Flowers murmured.
Matt didn’t really see how. It was all her stored food and water they were using. Even the fold-up cot was hers.
If he had been on his own he might have investigated this…extraordinary thing. Three spotlights shining out of the ground at an angle so that they met just about at the height of a human being. Bright lights. And getting brighter every minute.