Part 15 (1/2)

”Not so much. Aside from a stint at UCLA for a few months, I'm not exactly the studious type.”

”Good to know.” Breisi veered off toward the 4Runner, leaving Dawn and Kiko to go to his small car.

Dawn sent one last look at their tech geek as she disappeared into a shadow of twilight dimming the sky. Stymied, she shrugged, not knowing what the h.e.l.l to make of Breisi.

Meanwhile, from a car parked two s.p.a.ces away, a pair of eyes watched Dawn with their own intense scrutiny.

With the desperation of an obsession.

TWELVEBELOW,PHASETWO.

LATER, Sorin watched a contingent of Groupies readying themselves to journey Above via the deep canyon caves that had once been used as a rock quarry and were now forgotten. The young vampires were dressed in what was known as their ”Gothic”

finery, primed to blend with humans as well as any other ghouls and stray, non-Underground vampires who wandered the city.

The leader, who called herself Galatea, came to the front of the black-clad crowd. As she faced Sorin, her eyes held the silver tint of all Groupies-vampires who had joined the society for the honor of providing food and amus.e.m.e.nt for the Elites. Above, they would hide their preternatural appearances and abilities, just as chameleons would camouflage themselves in drab surroundings with far less spectacular colors.

As the young vampire bowed her head, a thicket of dark, braided hair fell around her moon-white face. Her high cheekbones were decorated with slashes of blue paint, warlike. She wore a blackened Native American bone hairpipe breastplate that showed a hint of her small b.r.e.a.s.t.s, tight leather pants with knee-high boots and spurs. Holding her fingers to her forehead, she saluted Sorin.

”Protect your home,” he said. It was an order.

With the arrogance of one who has not lived more than a century, the beautiful creature smiled. ”Don't worry, Master. We'll fit right in at Bava.” She winked. ”We always do.”

Accompanied by the faint jingle of her spurs, she left him, disappearing with her flock into the darkness of a tunnel where the lights forever stayed black.

Sorin had a.s.signed Galatea and the Groupies to go Above based on what he had gleaned from the spywork he had convinced the real Master to initiate last night-spywork that troubled him more than it a.s.suaged his concerns. But there was no contradicting his parent, especially after the work had confirmed that Dawn Madison and her investigator friends had been visiting the Pennybaker residence on a clue hunt. Evidently, they wished to discover a reason for Robby Pennybaker's appearance in that ghostly film clip.

And, since Sorin must also admit that their spywork had already led them to Bava tonight, he would tolerate the Master's plans until he had the leverage to protest.

Bava was a bar where Groupies and Servants occasionally gathered, their ident.i.ties blurred by the fine Goth line between imagination and reality. Like most haunted bars in L.A., one of the Underground Servants was already employed there. He functioned well as a spy who reported back to Sorin.

Tonight, the Groupies would take spywork even a step further, masquerading in human form, focusing on Dawn Madison's group from anonymous positions in the crowd. They would use their mild mind powers in casual conversation to gather whether the Guard killers were garden-variety mercenaries or indeed connected to a more powerful individual, as Sorin feared.

He hated having to depend on the Groupies, who were normally fun-loving beings who served in the Underground of their own free will. But since they were dedicated to keeping their vow of secrecy when they mingled and fed among humans, Sorin had agreed to a.s.sign them to this important work. They loved the Underground as much as he did, so he would trust them.

In any case, it was imperative that the humans not uncover any information about the Underground; unless the Groupies were compromised, the scheme required mere reconnaissance. Pa.s.sive intelligence. That was all.

With a cynical growl, he turned around, his presence needed elsewhere. He meant to visit the Master in person, mainly to persuade him to rethink their strategy, yet also to do business.

As a stream of wind howled through the tunnel and gathered Sorin in its embrace, his dark clothing chopped around him.

Night wind, he thought, and it was drenched with the scent of humanity.He s.h.i.+vered in hunger but moved on, knowing a meal-a Servant who voluntarily offered blood without the expectation of exchanging it-awaited him after he took care of his Master.

All the same, he kept his mind where it should be: on security. Vampire secrecy was prized above all else-it was essential to living in peace among the humans-so Sorin had also sent a patrol of Guards Above to quietly resume the hunt for their quarry.

Sorin would do anything andeverythingto find out if the Underground should risk revealing more of itself in order to stamp out a possible threat. But the threat had to be valid to take such a serious risk. Neutralizing Dawn Madison and her friends now could be costly, especially if other humans noticed their absence and took up the search for their missing loved ones, peeling back the layers of carefully cultivated vampire myth and mystery, one by one.

Like a lighted pathway home, Sorin's Awareness of his maker-their lifeline between a vampire and the child he had created- led him to a hidden room off the east tunnel. He scratched at the stone, coaxing open a slab, which allowed him to surrept.i.tiously slip through and enter the room.

There, he found a sight that chilled his blood.

In the darkness, he could see the red-hazed outline of his Master. Yet now, instead of a black void filling the inside of his body, a burst of color-violet, green, white, a menagerie of shades-swirled inside the ancient vampire. A hushed sound, much like the whispers of a million voices crying into one, filled the room, emanating from the Master.

He was indulging again.

Sorin could hear his parent's breath coming in gasps, could only imagine how his body was shaking and shuddering in ecstasy. In sheer, wracking pain.

Had the Master not been expecting him?

Seized by a mixture of mortification, curiosity, and-was it also thirst?-at witnessing this private moment, Sorin bowed his head, waited for the Master to finish.

Yet, a morbid fascination riveted his lowered gaze to the vampire.

As the colors pushed against the old creature's outline, seeking escape with an urgency that increased by the second, he stirred, moaned. Then, when the colors grew in frantic intensity, the Master grunted, cried out, and gripped the table.

Without warning, the colors ripped out of him in a scream of terror, circling overhead, darting with an ear-shattering sucking groan into the vial that Sorin knew was waiting, open, on the table. A tiny screech wept out of the container, sounding every bit as traumatized as a victim who was cowering from whatever was stalking him.

Weakened, the head vampire collapsed, his red-neon outline fizzing out, lacking energy while he grasped the table as if it could keep him afloat. His breath rasped out of him, yet Sorin kept his peace, knowing from experience that the Master would not want pity or aid.

Even if Sorin feared for his parent's safety, he knew silence and lack of worry was prudent. Instead, he moved forward, then corked the vial, keeping the contents inside.

Keeping the soul contained for the Master's future use.

”Sorin...” the other vampire uttered while cras.h.i.+ng to the ground.

The younger vampire did not answer. He wanted no part of feeding this addiction beyond cleaning up after the mentor he had so admired over the centuries.

By now, he could hear the Master's breath rattling as he recovered from imbibing one of those souls in his extensive collection. In the dark, Sorin's vampire sight caught the gleam of a hundred more vials stored in boxes on the wall's shelves.

He asked no questions, because he knew precisely what had transpired. His Master was a Soul Taker, feasting on the only tie to humanity he possessed anymore. Souls mattered more than blood now-it was a rush for the Master, the drinking of them making him feel temporarily alive. And if Sorin had not believed that this was one of the only ways to keep the Master interested in existing, he would have campaigned for a stop to it long ago.

”My sh.e.l.l of a body...” the Master said, his breath catching. ”It never fails to reject what I need the most.”

”A soul is foreign to you,” Sorin said, feeling as if this were a vicious resurrection replayed week by week, the words frayed and useless from too much repet.i.tion. ”You lost your own when you took the oath, Master. There is no reclaiming it.”

The older vampire's teeth chattered. It was the only sound hitting the stone walls.

Sorin often wondered if the souls so violently departed from the Master because he had not earned the right to one.

”None of us has them anymore,” Sorin added stoically. ”It is the price we paid.” He eased toward his parent, unable to withstand the suffering. ”In spite of your greater powers, you are no different from the rest of your brood in that matter.”

”Sorin.” It was painfully uttered, yet still an ecstatic command. ”A...moment...more.”

Hands clasped behind his back, Sorin obeyed, allowing the other vampire to wallow in his anguish. A m.a.s.o.c.h.i.s.tic luxury.

”Innocence...” The Master heaved out a long breath. ”This one had such...innocence...before it was corrupted. Remember what that was like, Sorin?”