Part 22 (1/2)

”Maybe it's the genetics,” she continued, apparently unwilling to abandon the argument. ”Maybe it's the person he's asking you to be. We both have different lives now, bigger lives, than we did a few months ago. But the Merit I knew wouldn't push this boy away. Not this boy. Think about that.”

The phone went dead.

The winds.h.i.+eld wipers slapped against the gla.s.s as I drove, the summer night wet and humid, fast-moving clouds whipping through the sky below a darker, ominous ma.s.s that pulsed with branching threads oflightning. I parked directly in front of the architecturally austere building that held the gym where I trained with Catcher, and ran inside to avoid the falling rain.

Catcher was already there. He stood in the middle of the blue gymnastics mat that filled the training room, wearing a T-s.h.i.+rt and warm-up pants. His head was bowed, eyes closed, hands pressed together prayerfully.

”Take a seat,” he said, without opening his eyes.

”Good evening to you, too, sensei.”

He opened a single eye, and the look he gave me left no doubt about how unfunny he'd found the retort.

”Take a seat, Merit.” This time his words were biting.

I arched a brow back at him, but stripped off my track jacket and took a seat in one of the orange plastic chairs near the door.

Catcher remained in his pose of quiet concentration for a few minutes, finally rolling his shoulders and opening his eyes.

”Done with meditation?” I lightly asked.

He didn't respond, but strode forcefully toward me, enough malevolence in his gaze to speed my heart.

”Is there a problem?” I asked him.

”Shut it.”

”Excuse me?”

”Shut. It.”Catcher stepped before me, pulled a hand across his jaw, then put his hands on the arms of the chair. He leaned forward. His torso arched over mine, I hunched back into the chair.

”She is my top priority.”

I didn't need to ask who ”she” was. Obviously, Mal had called Catcher.

”She is unhappy.” He paused, pale green eyes tracking back and forth across my face. ”She's having a difficult time. And I get that you're having a difficult time, Merit. Jesus knows, we all get it. You had problems adjusting to the transition from human to vampire, and now you appear to have trouble remembering your humanity.”

He leaned incrementally forward. My heart began to thud, warmth flowing through my body as anxiety and adrenaline pulled the vampire from slumber, pushed her closer to the surface.

Not now, I begged her.Not now . He'd see, he'd know, and he'd handle me. Nothing good could come from that. For a split second, I thought he knew, his brow knitting as he leaned over me. I closed my eyes, counted backward, tried to push her down even as I felt him above me, the bulk of his body perched over my chair, the faint sizzle of latent magic electrifying the air.

Slowly, one drop at a time, I felt her recede.

”She's having trouble adjusting, Merit, just like you did. And she was there for you. It's time for you to be there for her. Cut her a little slack. I know she said some . . . regrettable things. And believe me, she knows it.”

I opened my eyes, kept my gaze on his T-s.h.i.+rt and nodded, a little.

With a creak of plastic, he straightened, took a step backward, and looked down at me, arms crossed.

This time his expression bore a hint of sympathy. His voice was softer, too. ”I know you're trying to help Ethan. Trying to get him access, trying to do your job. I get that. And maybe that's the problem here, maybe it isn't. Frankly, that's your business, not mine. But before you alienate everyone who cares about you, Mallory or Morgan or whoever, remember who you were before this happened, before you were changed. Try to find some balance. Try to find a place in your life for the things that mattered before he changed you.” He started to turn away, but apparently thought better of it. ”I know you have limited time today, but you better be willing to bust your a.s.s. If you're going to stand Sentinel, then you will d.a.m.n well be prepared for it.”

I shook my head, irritated that he'd a.s.sumed it was a lack of effort, of trying, that kept me from being the fighter he wanted when, in fact, it was the opposite. ”You don't get it,” I told him.

His eyebrows lifted, surprise obvious on his face. ”Then enlighten me.”

I looked at him, and for a long, quiet moment I nearly did tell him. I nearly trusted him, trusted myself, enough to ask him about it, to tell him that I was broken-that my vampire was broken. Separate,somehow. But I couldn't bring myself to do it. I'd tried to broach the subject once; he'd shaken off my concern. So I shook my head, lowered it.

”I don't know what you know,” he said, ”or what you've seen, or what you think you've done. But I advise you to find someone you can trust, and spill those beans.Capiche? ”

Silently, I nodded.

”Then let's get to work.”

We did. He wouldn't allow me to spar, given what he'd deemed my subpar effort two days ago. It was a punishment in his eyes, but a moral victory for me, allowing me to put my effort into movement and speed rather than holding back the predatory instinct that threatened to overwhelm me. And besides-since we hadn't been sparring, and thus didn't risk damaging the blades, he let me practice with my katana.

We worked through the first seven Katas for nearly an hour. While the movements of each Kata lasted only a few seconds, Catcher made me repeat the steps-over and over and over again-until he was satisfied with my performance. Until the moves became rote, until my movements were mechanically precise, until I could move so quickly through them that the gestures were blurred by speed. That fast, the Katas lost some of their tradition, but they made up for it in dance. Unfortunately, as Catcher pointed out, if I needed to use a sword in a fight, it would likely be against a vampire who was moving as quickly as I was.

After he'd taught me the basic movements of a second set of Katas, these using only one hand on the sword, he released me.

”I'm seeing some improvement,” he said, when we'd settled on the blue mat, a spread of katana-cleaning implements before us.

”Thanks,” I told him, sliding a piece of rice paper along the sword's sharpened edge.

”The interesting question is, why don't I see the same kind of effort when you're sparring?”

I glanced over at him, saw that his gaze was still on his sword. He clearly didn't understand that I'd been working double time to help him. And I'd already decided not to tell him, so I didn't answer the question.

We were silent for a moment, both of us wiping down our blades, me refusing to answer.

”No answer?” he finally asked.

I shook my head.

”You are as stubborn as she is, I swear to G.o.d.”

Without comment, although I agreed, I slid my sword into its sheath.

CHAPTER FIFTEEN.

I COULD HAVE DANCED ALL NIGHT.

Back at the House, I showered and arranged undergarments, then slipped on my thigh holster and strappy heels. I opted for an updo tonight, twisting my hair into a knot at the back of my neck. All the basics accomplished, I slithered carefully into the dress. Short timing or not, the fit was exquisite. The dress was exquisite. Pale skin, dark hair, glossy lips, black dress. I looked like an exotic princess. A vampire princess.

But the lingering sting of my fight with Mallory lessened a little of the fairy tale.

As ready as I could be, I grabbed my clutch and scabbard and went downstairs, where Mallory's devil waited.