1
The instant the phone rang at the Glass House,
Claire knew with a psychic flash that it had to be her
mother.
Well, it wasn’t so much a psychic flash as simple
logic. She’d told Mom that she would call days ago, which she
hadn’t, and now, of course, it could only be her mother calling at
the most inopportune moment.
Hence: had to be a call from Mom.
‘‘Don’t,’’ her boyfriend—she couldn’t believe she
could actually call him that, boyfriend, not a boy
friend—Shane murmured without taking his mouth off of hers.
‘‘Michael will get it.’’ And he was giving her a very good argument
in favor of ignoring the phone, too. But somewhere in the back of
her mind that little voice just wouldn’t shut up.
She slid off of his lap with a regretful sigh,
licked her damp, tingling lips, and dashed off in the direction of
the kitchen door.
Michael was just rising from the kitchen table to
head for the phone. She beat him to it, mouthing a silent apology,
and said, ‘‘Hello?’’
‘‘Claire! Oh my goodness, I’ve been worried sick,
honey. We’ve been trying to call you on your cell for days,
and—’’
Crap. Claire rubbed her forehead in
frustration. ‘‘Mom, I sent you guys an e-mail, remember? My cell
got lost; I’m still working on getting another one.’’ Best not to
mention how it had gotten lost. Best not to mention anything about
how dangerous her life had become since she’d moved to Morganville,
Texas.
‘‘Oh,’’ Mom said, and then, more slowly, ‘‘Oh.
Well, your father forgot to tell me about that. You know, he’s the
one who checks the e-mail. I don’t like computers.’’
‘‘Yes, Mom, I know.’’ Mom really wasn’t that
bad, but she was notoriously nervous with computers, and for good
reason; they had a tendency to short out around her.
Mom was still talking. ‘‘Is everything going all
right? How are classes? Interesting?’’
Claire opened the refrigerator door and retrieved a
can of Coke, which she popped open and chugged to give herself time
to think what, if anything, to tell her parents. Mom, there was
a little trouble. See, my boyfriend’s dad came to town with some
bikers and killed people, and nearly killed us, too. Oh, and the
vampires are angry about it. So to save my friends, I had to sign a
contract, so now I’m basically the slave of the most badass vampire
in town.
Yeah, that wouldn’t go over well.
Besides, even if she said it, Mom wouldn’t
understand it. Mom had been to Morganville, but she hadn’t really
seen. People usually didn’t. And if they did, they either
never left town or had their memories wiped on the way out.
And if by some chance they started to remember, bad
things could happen to them. Terminally bad things.
So instead, Claire said, ‘‘Classes are great, Mom.
I aced all my exams last week.’’
‘‘Of course you did. Don’t you always?’’
Yeah, but last week I had to take my exams while
worrying that somebody was going to stick a knife in my back. It
could have had an effect on my GPA. Stupid to be proud of that
. . . ‘‘Everything’s fine here. I’ll let you know when I get the
new cell phone, okay?’’ Claire hesitated, then asked, ‘‘How are
you? How’s Dad?’’
‘‘Oh, we’re fine, honey. We miss you is all. But
your father’s still not happy about your living in that place, off
campus, with those older kids. . . .’’
Of all the things for Mom to remember, she had to
remember that. And of course Claire couldn’t tell her
why she was living off campus with eighteen-year-olds,
especially when two of them were boys. Mom hadn’t gotten around to
mentioning the boys yet, but it was just a matter of time.
‘‘Mom, I told you how mean the girls were to me in
the dorm. It’s better here. They’re my friends. And really, they’re
great.’’
Mom didn’t sound too convinced. ‘‘You’re being
careful, though. About those boys.’’
Well, that hadn’t taken long. ‘‘Yes, I’m being
careful about the boys.’’ She was even being careful about Shane,
though that was mostly because Shane never forgot that Claire was
not quite seventeen, and he was not quite nineteen. Not a huge age
difference, but legally? Huger than huge, if her parents got upset
about it. Which they definitely would. ‘‘Everybody here says hello,
by the way. Ah, Michael’s waving.’’
Michael Glass, the second boy in the house, had
settled down at the kitchen table and was reading a newspaper. He
looked up and gave her a wide-eyed, no-you-don’t shake of
his head. He’d had a bad enough time of it with her parents the
last time, and now . . . well, things were even worse, if that was
possible. At least when he’d met them, Michael had been
half-normal: fully human by night, an incorporeal ghost by day, and
trapped in the house twenty-four/ seven.
For Morganville, that was half-normal.
In order to help get Shane out of trouble, Michael
had made a terrible choice—he’d gained his freedom from the house
and obtained physical form at the time, but now he was a vampire.
Claire couldn’t tell if it bothered him. It had to, right? But he
seemed so . . . normal.
Maybe a little too normal.
Claire listened to her mother’s voice, and then
held out the phone to Michael. ‘‘She wants to talk to you,’’ she
said.
‘‘No! I’m not here!’’ he stage-whispered, and made
waving-off motions. Claire wiggled the phone insistently.
‘‘You’re the responsible one,’’ she reminded him.
‘‘Just try not to talk about the—’’ She mimed fangs in the
neck.
Michael shot her a dirty look, took the phone, and
turned on the charm. He had a lot of it, Claire knew; it wasn’t
just parents who liked him, it was . . . well, everybody. Michael
was smart, cute, hot, talented, respectful . . . nothing not to
love, except the whole undead aspect. He assured her mother that
everything was fine, that Claire was behaving herself—his eye roll
made Claire snort cola up her nose—and that he was watching out for
Mrs. Danvers’s little girl. That last part was true, at least.
Michael was taking his self-appointed older-brother duties way too
seriously. He hardly let Claire out of his sight, except when
privacy was required or Claire slipped off to class without an
escort—which was as often as possible.
‘‘Yes ma’am,’’ Michael said. He was starting to
look a little strained. ‘‘No ma’am. I won’t let her do that. Yes.
Yes.’’
Claire had pity on him, and reclaimed the phone.
‘‘Mom, we’ve got to go. I love you both.’’
Mom still sounded anxious. ‘‘Claire, are you sure
you don’t want to come home? Maybe I was wrong about letting you go
to MIT early. You could take the year off, study, and we’d love to
have you back home again. . . .’’
Weird. Usually she calmed right down, especially
when Michael talked to her. Claire had a bad flash of Shane telling
her about his own mother, how her memories of Morganville had
started to surface. How the vampires had come after her to kill her
because the conditioning didn’t stick.
Her parents were in the same boat now. They’d been
to town, but she still wasn’t sure just how much they really knew
or understood about that visit—it could be enough to put them in
mortal danger. She had to do everything she could to keep them
safe. That meant not following her dreams to MIT, because if she
left Morganville—assuming she could even get out of town—the
vampires would follow her, and they’d either bring her back or kill
her. And the rest of her family, too.
Besides, Claire had to stay now, because
she’d signed a contract pledging herself directly to Amelie, the
town’s Founder. The biggest, scariest vampire of them all, even if
she rarely showed that side. At the time, she’d been Claire’s only
real hope to keep herself and her friends alive.
So far signing the contract hadn’t meant a whole
lot—no announcements in the local paper, and Amelie hadn’t shown up
to collect on her soul or anything. So maybe it would just pass by
. . . quietly.
Mom was still talking about MIT, and Claire didn’t
want to think about it. She’d dreamed of going to a school like MIT
or CalTech her whole life, and she’d been smart enough to do it.
She’d even gotten early acceptance. It was drastically unfair that
she was stuck in Morganville now, like a fly in a spider’s web, and
for a few seconds she let herself feel bitter and angry about
that.
Nice, the brutally honest part of her
mocked. You’d sacrifice Shane’s life for what you want, because
you know that’s what would happen. Eventually, the vampires would
find an excuse to kill him. You’re not any better than the vampires
if you don’t do everything you can to prevent that.
The bitterness left, but regret wasn’t following
bitterness any time soon. She hoped Shane never knew how she felt
about it, deep down.
‘‘Mom, sorry, I’ve got to go; I have class. I love
you—tell Dad I love him, too, will you?’’
Claire hung up on her mother’s protests, heaved a
sigh, and glanced at Michael, who was looking a little
sympathetic.
‘‘That’s not easy, talking to the folks,’’ he
offered. ‘‘Sorry.’’
‘‘Don’t you ever talk to your parents?’’ Claire
asked, and slid into the chair at the small breakfast table across
from him. Michael had a cup of something; she was afraid it was
blood for a second, but then she smelled coffee. Hazelnut. Vampires
could, and did, enjoy food; it just didn’t sustain them.
Michael looked suspiciously good this morning—a
little color in his face, an energy to his movements that hadn’t
been there last night.
He’d had more than coffee this morning. How did
that happen, exactly? Did he sneak off to the blood bank? Was there
some kind of home delivery service?
Claire made a mental note to check into it.
Quietly.
‘‘Yeah, I call my folks sometimes,’’ Michael said.
He folded the newspaper—the local rag, run by vampires—and picked
up a smaller, rolled bundle of letter-sized pages secured by a
rubber band. ‘‘They’re Morganville exiles, so they have a lot to
forget. It’s better if I don’t keep in contact too much; it could
make trouble. I mostly write. The mail and e-mail get read before
they’re sent; you know that, right? And most of the phone calls get
monitored, especially long-distance.’’
He stripped off the rubber band and unfolded the
cheap pages of the second newspaper. Claire read the masthead
upside down: The Fang Report. The logo was two stakes at
right angles making up a cross. Wild.
‘‘What’s that?’’
‘‘This?’’ Michael rattled the paper and shrugged.
‘‘Captain Obvious.’’
‘‘What?’’
‘‘Captain Obvious. That’s his handle. He’s been
doing these papers every week for about two years now. It’s an
underground thing.’’
Underground in Morganville had a lot of meanings.
Claire raised her eyebrows. ‘‘So . . . Captain Obvious is a
vampire?’’
‘‘Not unless he’s got a serious self-image
problem,’’ Michael said. ‘‘Captain Obvious hates vampires. If
somebody steps out of line, he documents it—’’ Michael froze,
reading the headline, and his mouth opened, then closed. His face
set like stone, and his blue eyes looked stricken.
Claire reached over and took the newspaper from his
hands, turned it, and read.
NEW BLOODSUCKER IN TOWN
Michael Glass, once a rising musical star with too
much talent for this twisted town, has fallen to the Dark Side.
Details are sketchy, but Glass, who’s been keeping to himself for
the past year, has definitely joined the Fang Gang.
Nobody knows how or where it happened, and I doubt
Glass will be talking, but we should all be worried. Does this mean
more vamps, fewer humans? After all, he is the first newly risen
undead in generations.
Beware, boys and girls: Glass may look like an
angel, but he’s got a demon inside now. Memorize the face, kibbles.
He’s the newest addition to the Better-Off-Dead club!
‘‘The Better-Off-Dead club?’’ Claire repeated aloud, horrified. ‘‘He’s kidding, right?’’ There was Michael’s picture, probably directly out of the Morganville High yearbook, inset as a graphic into a tombstone.
With crudely drawn-in fangs.
‘‘Captain Obvious never comes out and tells anyone
to kill,’’ Michael said. ‘‘He’s pretty careful about how he phrases
things.’’ Her friend was angry, Claire saw. And scared. ‘‘He’s got
our address listed. And all your names, too, though at least he
points out none of you are vampires. Still. That’s not good.’’
Michael was getting past the shock of seeing himself outed in the
paper, and was getting worried. Claire was already there.
‘‘Well . . . why don’t the vampires do something
about him? Stop him?’’
‘‘They’ve tried. They’ve arrested three people in
the last two years who said they were Captain Obvious. Turned out
they didn’t know anything. The captain could teach the CIA a thing
or two about running a secret operation.’’
‘‘So he’s not that obvious,’’ Claire said.
‘‘I think he means it in the ironic sense.’’
Michael swallowed a quick gulp of coffee. ‘‘Claire, I don’t like
this. Not like we didn’t have enough trouble without this kind
of—’’
Eve slammed in through the kitchen door, which hit
the wall with a thunderous boom, startling both of them. She
clomped across the kitchen floor and leaned on the breakfast table.
She wasn’t very Goth today; her hair was still matte-black, but it
was worn back in a simple ponytail, and the plain knit shirt and
black pants didn’t have a skull anywhere in view. No makeup,
either. She almost looked . . . normal. Which was so
wrong.
‘‘All right,’’ she said, and slapped down a second
copy of The Fang Report in front of Michael. ‘‘Please tell
me you have a snappy comeback for this.’’
‘‘I’ll make sure the three of you are safe.’’
‘‘Oh, so not what I was looking for! Look,
I’m not worried about us! We’re not the ones Photoshopped into
tombstones!’’ Eve looked at the picture again. ‘‘Although yes,
better dead than that hairdo . . . God, was that your prom
photo?’’
Michael grabbed the paper back and put it facedown
on the table. ‘‘Eve, nothing is going to happen. Captain Obvious
just loves to talk. Nobody’s going to come after me.’’
‘‘Right,’’ a new voice said. It was Shane. He’d
come in behind Eve, clearly wanting to watch the fireworks, and now
he leaned against the wall next to the stove and crossed his arms.
‘‘By all means, let’s keep on shoveling the bull,’’ he said. ‘‘It’s
trouble, and you know it.’’ Claire waited for him to come over to
the table and join the three of them, the way things used to
be.
He didn’t. Shane hadn’t willingly stayed long in
the same room with Michael since . . . the change. And he wouldn’t
look at him, except in angles and side glances. He’d also taken to
wearing one of Eve’s silver crosses, although just now it was
hidden beneath the neck of the gray T-shirt he was wearing. Claire
found her eyes fixing on its just-visible outline.
Eve ignored Shane; her big, dark eyes were fixed on
Michael. ‘‘You know they’ll all be gunning for you now, right? All
the would-be Buffys?’’ Claire had seen Buffy the Vampire
Slayer, but she had no idea how Eve had managed; it was
contraband in Morganville, along with every other movie or book
featuring vampires. Or vampire killing, more to the point. Internet
downloads were strictly controlled, too, though no doubt there was
a hot black market in those kinds of things that Eve had tapped
into.
‘‘Like you?’’ Michael said. He still hadn’t
forgotten the arsenal of stakes and crosses that Eve kept hidden in
her room. In the old days, that had seemed like good sense, living
in Morganville. Now, it seemed like a recipe for domestic
violence.
Eve looked stricken. ‘‘I’d never—’’
‘‘I know.’’ He took her hand gently in his. ‘‘I
know.’’
She softened, but then she shook it off and went
back to frowning at him. ‘‘Look, this is dangerous. They
know you’re an easier target than those other guys, and they’re
going to hate you even more, because you’re one of us. Our
age.’’
‘‘Maybe,’’ Michael said. ‘‘Eve, come on, sit. Sit
down.’’
She did, but it was more like a collapse, and she
didn’t stop jittering her heel up and down in agitation, or
drumming her black-painted fingernails on the table. ‘‘This is
bad,’’ she said. ‘‘You know that, right? Nine point five on the ten
point scale of make-me-yak.’’
‘‘Compared to what?’’ Shane asked. ‘‘We’re already
living with the enemy. What does that score? Not to mention you
probably get extra points for banging him—’’
Michael stood up so fast his chair tipped and hit
the floor with a clatter. Shane straightened, ready for trouble,
fists clenched.
‘‘Shut up, Shane,’’ Michael said, deathly quiet.
‘‘I mean it.’’
Shane stared past him at Eve. ‘‘He’s going to bite
you. He can’t help it, and once he starts, he won’t stop; he’ll
kill you. But you know that, right? What is that, some
freak-ass Goth idea of romantic suicide? You turning into a
fang-banger?’’
‘‘Butt out, Shane. What you know about Goth culture
you got from old episodes of The Munsters and your Aryan
Brotherhood dad.’’ Great, now Eve was angry, too. That left
Claire the only sane one in the room.
Michael made an effort to dial it back. ‘‘Come on,
Shane. Leave her alone. You’re the one hurting her, not
me.’’
Shane’s gaze snapped to Michael and focused. Hard.
‘‘I don’t hurt girls. You say I do, and you’d better back it up,
asshole.’’
Shane pushed away from the wall, because Michael
was taking steps in his direction. Claire watched, wide-eyed and
frozen.
Eve got between them, hands outstretched to hold
both of them back. ‘‘Come on, guys, you don’t want to do
this.’’
‘‘Kinda do,’’ Shane said coolly.
‘‘Fine. Either hit each other or get a room,’’ she
snapped, and stepped out of the middle. ‘‘Just don’t pretend it’s
all about protecting the itty-widdle girl, because it isn’t. It’s
about the two of you. So get it together, or leave; I don’t care
which.’’
Shane stared at her for a second, eyes gone wide
and oddly hurt, then looked at Claire. She didn’t move.
‘‘I’m out,’’ he said. He turned and walked through
the kitchen door. It swung shut behind him.
Eve let out a little gasp. ‘‘I didn’t think he’d
go,’’ she said, so unsteadily that for a second Claire thought she
was going to cry. ‘‘What a freaking idiot.’’
Claire reached over and took her hand. Eve
squeezed, hard, and then leaned back into Michael’s embrace.
Vampire or not, the two of them seemed happy, and anyway, this was
Michael. She just couldn’t understand Shane’s anger. It
seemed to bubble up when she least expected it, for no reason at
all.
‘‘I’d better . . .’’ she ventured. Michael
nodded.
Claire slipped out of her chair and went to find
Shane. Not like it was difficult; he was slumped on the couch,
staring at the PlayStation screen and working the controls on yet
another zombie-killing adventure. ‘‘You taking his side?’’ Shane
asked, and splattered the head of an attacking undead
monster.
‘‘No,’’ Claire said and settled in carefully next
to him, with enough open space between so he didn’t feel pressured.
‘‘Why are there sides, anyway?’’
‘‘What?’’
‘‘Michael’s your friend; he’s our housemate. Why do
there have to be sides?’’
He snapped his fingers. ‘‘Um, wait, I’ve got this
one . . . because he’s a bloodsucking, night-crawling leech who
used to be my friend?’’
‘‘Shane—’’
‘‘You think you know, but you don’t. He’s going to
change. They all change. Maybe it’ll take time, I don’t know. Right
now, he thinks he’s just human plus, but that’s not what it is.
He’s human minus. And you’d better not forget it.’’
She stared at him, a little bit stunned and a whole
lot saddened. ‘‘Eve’s right. That sounds like your father
talking.’’
Shane flinched, paused the game, and threw the
controller down. ‘‘Low, Claire.’’ He wasn’t exactly his dad’s
biggest fan at the best of times—he couldn’t be, with the number of
cruel things his dad had done to him.
‘‘No, it’s just true. Look, it’s Michael.
Can’t you give him the benefit of the doubt? He hasn’t hurt
anybody, has he? And you have to admit, having a vampire on our
side, really on our side, couldn’t hurt. Not in
Morganville.’’
He just glared at the screen, jaw set. Claire was
trying to think of another way to get through to him, but she was
derailed by the ringing of the doorbell. Shane didn’t move. ‘‘I’ll
get it,’’ she sighed, and went down the hall to open the front
door. It was safe enough—midmorning, sunny, and relatively mild.
Summer was finally starting a slide toward fall, now that it had
burned all the green out of the Texas landscape.
Claire squinted against the brilliance. For a
second she thought that there was something deeply wrong with her
eyes.
Because her archenemy, Queen Bitch Monica Morrell,
flanked by her ever-present harpies Gina and Jennifer, was standing
on the doorstep. It was like seeing Barbie and her friends, blown
up life-sized and dressed like Old Navy mannequins. Tanned, toned,
and perfect, from lip gloss to toenail polish. Monica had on a
forced, pleasant expression. Gina and Jennifer were trying, but
they looked like they were smelling something rotten.
‘‘Hi!’’ Monica said brightly. ‘‘Got plans today,
Claire? I was thinking we could hang.’’
That’s it, Claire thought. I’m dreaming.
Only this is a nightmare, right? Monica pretending to be my friend?
Definitely a nightmare.
‘‘I—what do you want?’’ Claire asked, because her
relationship with Monica, Gina, and Jennifer had started with being
pushed down the stairs at the dorm, and hadn’t improved since. She
was a crawling bug to the Cool Girls. At best. Or . . . a tool.
Was this about Michael? Because his status had changed from
‘‘hermit musician’’ to ‘‘hottie vampire’’ in one night, and Monica
was definitely a fang-banger, right? ‘‘You want to talk to
Michael?’’
Monica gave her an odd look. ‘‘Why would I want to
do that? Can he go shopping in broad daylight?’’
‘‘Oh.’’ She had no idea what else to say to
that.
‘‘I thought a little retail therapy, and then we
all go study,’’ Monica said. ‘‘We’re going to check out that new
place, not Common Grounds. Common Grounds is so last century. Like
I want to be under Oliver’s thumb all the time. Now that
he’s taken over as Protector for our family, he’s been all
hands-on, wanting to see my grades. Sucks, right?’’
‘‘I—’’
‘‘C’mon, save my life. I really need help with
economics, and these two are boneheads.’’ Monica dismissed her two
closest friends with an offhand wave. ‘‘Seriously. Come with.
Please? I could really use your brainpower. And I think we should
get to know each other a little better, don’t you? Seeing as how
things have changed?’’
Claire opened her mouth, then closed it without
saying anything. The last two times she’d gone anywhere with
Monica, she’d been flat on her back on the floor of a van, getting
beaten and terrorized.
She managed to stammer, ‘‘I know this is going to
sound rude, but—what the hell are you doing?’’
Monica sighed and looked—how weird was this?—
contrite. ‘‘I know what you’re thinking. Yes, I was a bitch to you,
and I hurt you. And I’m sorry.’’ Gina and Jennifer, her constant
Greek chorus, nodded and repeated sorry in whispers. ‘‘Water
under the bridge, all right? All is forgiven?’’
Claire was, if anything, even more mystified. ‘‘Why
are you doing this?’’
Monica pursed her glossy lips, leaned forward, and
dropped her voice to a low, confidential tone. ‘‘Well . . . all
right, yeah, it’s not like I had a head injury or something and
woke up thinking you were cool. But you’re different now. I can
help. I can introduce you around to all the people you really need
to know.’’
‘‘You’re kidding. I’m different how?’’
Monica leaned even closer. ‘‘You signed.’’
So . . . this wasn’t about Michael. Claire had just
become . . . popular. Because she’d become Amelie’s property.
And that was terrifying.
‘‘Oh,’’ she managed, and then, more slowly,
‘‘Oh.’’
‘‘Trust me,’’ Monica said. ‘‘You need somebody in
the know. Somebody to show you the ropes.’’
If the only other person left on the planet was
Jack the Ripper, Claire would have trusted him first. ‘‘Sorry,’’
she said. ‘‘I have plans. But—thank you.
Maybe some other time.’’
She shut the door on Monica’s surprised face, then
locked it. She jumped when she turned to find Shane standing right
behind her, staring at her as though he’d never seen her
before.
‘‘Thank you?’’ he mimicked. ‘‘You’re
thanking that bitch? For what, Claire? For beating you? For trying
to kill you? For killing my sister? Christ. First Michael, then
you. I don’t know any of you anymore.’’
In true Shane fashion, he just took off. She
listened to the heavy tread of his footsteps cross the living room
and then go up the stairs. Heard the familiar slam of his
door.
‘‘Hey!’’ she shouted after him. ‘‘I was just being
polite!’’