Page 80
Story: The Scarlet Veil
It caws again in response, sounding strangely urgent as I climb higher into the gloom. As thedrip,drip,dripof water grows louder. “You’re making a terrible racket, you know. No wonder that merchant got rid of you.” The bird’s only answer is to caw and attack the bars of its cage. I hesitate beside the agitated creature.
There are other birds,betterbirds, that could deliver my letter, yet I feel an inexplicable kinship withthisone.
“Stop that,” I tell it firmly, extracting the folded parchment and poking its beak with the tip. “You’re going to hurt yourself, and I have a job for you.”
Though it pecks my letter in irritation, it also seems to understand my words, growing still and quiet on its perch. Watching me.Studyingme. “Right.” I eye it apprehensively before sticking the silver stake back in my décolletage. “I am going to unlock your cage now, and you arenotgoing to attack me. Do we agree?”
“This should be good,” D’Artagnan says.
“Ignore him,” I tell the bird.
It ruffles its wings with some importance.
Interpreting that asyes, I lift the latch and swing the door open. When the bird doesn’t move, I loose a breath of relief. “See? It’s quite easy to be civil. Now”—I slip the letter into the pouch around its foot—“I need you to deliver this to Cosette Monvoisin.” The bird tilts its head. “La Princesse Rouge? You can find her at7 Yew Lane in Cesarine—or at the castle,” I add, feeling stupider by the second. If witches and mermaids andvampirescan exist, however, surely this bird can deliver a letter. “She often stays with His Majesty there. Or—or she could also be up past Amandine. Have you heard of Chateau le Blanc? I don’tthinkshe’ll be there this time of year, but just in case—”
The birdcaw! caw! caw!s to put me out of my misery, and before I can duck, it hurtles past my face and out the nearest window. I watch it go with a mingled sense of triumph and unease. Something isn’t quite right about that bird—and I don’t just mean its extra eye. Indeed, something isn’t quite right about thisplace.
I try to shake the feeling, climbing to the window and forcing myself to appreciate the view. Because I did it.I did it.With any luck, the bird will find Coco quickly, and my friends will heed my warning. I’ve procured a silver stake to end Michal’s evil reign, and I’ll soon be rowing home to Cesarine. Everything will end perfectly. Everyone will live happily ever after, just like in the fairy stories Pip and I read as children.We’ll all be fine.
As the three-eyed crow disappears, however, my sense of hope refuses to return. A peculiar sense of awareness settles over my skin instead. The longer I stand here, the stronger it grows. My gaze flicks to the owls on either side of the window. Though their wings quiver, they stand wholly and totally still on their perches. Shouldn’t animals—even birds—make more noise than this? And where is Odessa? Shouldn’t she have found me by now? “Come on,” I whisper to D’Artagnan, turning toward the stairs. “We should go back to Monsieur Marc....”
But a gentle lapping sound has joined the steadydrip,drip,dripof water. Frown deepening, I glance down at my feet, whereD’Artagnan crouches, licking up a pool of...
My entire body goes rigid.
A pool of blood.
Unbidden, my head snaps upward to find the source, and—from the darkness of the ceiling—the wide eyes of a corpse stare back at me. For the span of a single heartbeat, my mind refuses to accept the scene overhead: the corpse’s limbs tangled in chains, his throat torn open, his mouth twisted in agony andfear. Then a drop of his blood hits my cheek. My eyelid, mylips—
The reality of the situation crashes over me, and I choke, stumbling away from him, crashing into the cages along the walls. The owls shriek with terror. They catch my cloak in their talons, my hair in their beaks, but I cannot feel the sting, cannot feelanything, because the corpse’s blood—it’s in my mouth. It’s on mytongue, and I can taste its bitter tang. I can—I—
I crash to my knees, heaving, but there is blood here too. It coats my palms as I push to my feet once more. It seeps across my vision and paints the aviary red as my eyes instinctively return to the man.
No.
Behind him—just visible in the shadows—a vampire clings to the ceiling, his body, hishead, contorted unnaturally to watch me.Just because my family has treated you with kindness does not meanvampiresare kind. If you stumble across the wrong sort...
A jagged grin stretches across the vampire’s face. Bits of the man still remain in his teeth, and blood pours down his chin in a dark wash of crimson.
This is the wrong sort.
My knees unlock, and I seize D’Artagnan, turning and sprintingdown the staircase. “What are youdoing?” He twists wildly in my arms, hissing and spitting indignantly. “Unhand me thisinstant—”
“Don’t bestupid—”
Though I fumble for the stake in my corset, I only manage to cut my chest before the vampire lands in front of me on silent feet. His pale eyes glint with hunger at the line of blood on my décolletage, and he licks his lips greedily, dragging his gaze back to mine in a slow, wicked taunt. That simple movement—the sight of his lust, histongue—sends me reeling backward, near delirious with panic. “I will not be quick,” he promises, his voice guttural and deep. And I believe him. OhGod, I believe him, and I should’ve listened to Mila—to D’Artagnan, to Odessa and Dimitri, even toMichal.
Do you understand how unpleasant it is to die?
When he lunges, I don’t stop to think.
I simply jump.
The floor rises swiftly to meet me, but I bend my knees, pressing my feet together to brace for impact. Jean Luc taught me how to fall during training. He taught me to relax my muscles, to angle toes first, to do a hundred other things that I forget the instant my feet hit the ground. Pain explodes up my legs, and I pitch forward, rolling and landing hard on my elbow. The bone shatters instantly. Yowling, D’Artagnan leaps from my arms and bolts through the open door. Though the vampire’s cruel laughter echoes above, I drag myself upright, the ground pitching and swaying beneath my feet.
My elbow is broken. My left ankle too. The force of the collision pushed the stake deeper into my breast, and blood pours freely down my bodice. By some miracle, however, I’m still alive; Isurvived. Leaning against the basin of fire, I wrench the stake from my skin with my good arm. I cannot run, but I will not die here.Not yet.“Where would you like it, monsieur?” I ask him through gritted teeth, lifting the stake. Black spots bloom in my vision. I taste blood in my mouth. “Eyes, ears, nose, or groin?”
He drops to the ground by the basin. Though I prepare for his attack, it never comes.
There are other birds,betterbirds, that could deliver my letter, yet I feel an inexplicable kinship withthisone.
“Stop that,” I tell it firmly, extracting the folded parchment and poking its beak with the tip. “You’re going to hurt yourself, and I have a job for you.”
Though it pecks my letter in irritation, it also seems to understand my words, growing still and quiet on its perch. Watching me.Studyingme. “Right.” I eye it apprehensively before sticking the silver stake back in my décolletage. “I am going to unlock your cage now, and you arenotgoing to attack me. Do we agree?”
“This should be good,” D’Artagnan says.
“Ignore him,” I tell the bird.
It ruffles its wings with some importance.
Interpreting that asyes, I lift the latch and swing the door open. When the bird doesn’t move, I loose a breath of relief. “See? It’s quite easy to be civil. Now”—I slip the letter into the pouch around its foot—“I need you to deliver this to Cosette Monvoisin.” The bird tilts its head. “La Princesse Rouge? You can find her at7 Yew Lane in Cesarine—or at the castle,” I add, feeling stupider by the second. If witches and mermaids andvampirescan exist, however, surely this bird can deliver a letter. “She often stays with His Majesty there. Or—or she could also be up past Amandine. Have you heard of Chateau le Blanc? I don’tthinkshe’ll be there this time of year, but just in case—”
The birdcaw! caw! caw!s to put me out of my misery, and before I can duck, it hurtles past my face and out the nearest window. I watch it go with a mingled sense of triumph and unease. Something isn’t quite right about that bird—and I don’t just mean its extra eye. Indeed, something isn’t quite right about thisplace.
I try to shake the feeling, climbing to the window and forcing myself to appreciate the view. Because I did it.I did it.With any luck, the bird will find Coco quickly, and my friends will heed my warning. I’ve procured a silver stake to end Michal’s evil reign, and I’ll soon be rowing home to Cesarine. Everything will end perfectly. Everyone will live happily ever after, just like in the fairy stories Pip and I read as children.We’ll all be fine.
As the three-eyed crow disappears, however, my sense of hope refuses to return. A peculiar sense of awareness settles over my skin instead. The longer I stand here, the stronger it grows. My gaze flicks to the owls on either side of the window. Though their wings quiver, they stand wholly and totally still on their perches. Shouldn’t animals—even birds—make more noise than this? And where is Odessa? Shouldn’t she have found me by now? “Come on,” I whisper to D’Artagnan, turning toward the stairs. “We should go back to Monsieur Marc....”
But a gentle lapping sound has joined the steadydrip,drip,dripof water. Frown deepening, I glance down at my feet, whereD’Artagnan crouches, licking up a pool of...
My entire body goes rigid.
A pool of blood.
Unbidden, my head snaps upward to find the source, and—from the darkness of the ceiling—the wide eyes of a corpse stare back at me. For the span of a single heartbeat, my mind refuses to accept the scene overhead: the corpse’s limbs tangled in chains, his throat torn open, his mouth twisted in agony andfear. Then a drop of his blood hits my cheek. My eyelid, mylips—
The reality of the situation crashes over me, and I choke, stumbling away from him, crashing into the cages along the walls. The owls shriek with terror. They catch my cloak in their talons, my hair in their beaks, but I cannot feel the sting, cannot feelanything, because the corpse’s blood—it’s in my mouth. It’s on mytongue, and I can taste its bitter tang. I can—I—
I crash to my knees, heaving, but there is blood here too. It coats my palms as I push to my feet once more. It seeps across my vision and paints the aviary red as my eyes instinctively return to the man.
No.
Behind him—just visible in the shadows—a vampire clings to the ceiling, his body, hishead, contorted unnaturally to watch me.Just because my family has treated you with kindness does not meanvampiresare kind. If you stumble across the wrong sort...
A jagged grin stretches across the vampire’s face. Bits of the man still remain in his teeth, and blood pours down his chin in a dark wash of crimson.
This is the wrong sort.
My knees unlock, and I seize D’Artagnan, turning and sprintingdown the staircase. “What are youdoing?” He twists wildly in my arms, hissing and spitting indignantly. “Unhand me thisinstant—”
“Don’t bestupid—”
Though I fumble for the stake in my corset, I only manage to cut my chest before the vampire lands in front of me on silent feet. His pale eyes glint with hunger at the line of blood on my décolletage, and he licks his lips greedily, dragging his gaze back to mine in a slow, wicked taunt. That simple movement—the sight of his lust, histongue—sends me reeling backward, near delirious with panic. “I will not be quick,” he promises, his voice guttural and deep. And I believe him. OhGod, I believe him, and I should’ve listened to Mila—to D’Artagnan, to Odessa and Dimitri, even toMichal.
Do you understand how unpleasant it is to die?
When he lunges, I don’t stop to think.
I simply jump.
The floor rises swiftly to meet me, but I bend my knees, pressing my feet together to brace for impact. Jean Luc taught me how to fall during training. He taught me to relax my muscles, to angle toes first, to do a hundred other things that I forget the instant my feet hit the ground. Pain explodes up my legs, and I pitch forward, rolling and landing hard on my elbow. The bone shatters instantly. Yowling, D’Artagnan leaps from my arms and bolts through the open door. Though the vampire’s cruel laughter echoes above, I drag myself upright, the ground pitching and swaying beneath my feet.
My elbow is broken. My left ankle too. The force of the collision pushed the stake deeper into my breast, and blood pours freely down my bodice. By some miracle, however, I’m still alive; Isurvived. Leaning against the basin of fire, I wrench the stake from my skin with my good arm. I cannot run, but I will not die here.Not yet.“Where would you like it, monsieur?” I ask him through gritted teeth, lifting the stake. Black spots bloom in my vision. I taste blood in my mouth. “Eyes, ears, nose, or groin?”
He drops to the ground by the basin. Though I prepare for his attack, it never comes.
Table of Contents
- Page 1
- Page 2
- Page 3
- Page 4
- Page 5
- Page 6
- Page 7
- Page 8
- Page 9
- Page 10
- Page 11
- Page 12
- Page 13
- Page 14
- Page 15
- Page 16
- Page 17
- Page 18
- Page 19
- Page 20
- Page 21
- Page 22
- Page 23
- Page 24
- Page 25
- Page 26
- Page 27
- Page 28
- Page 29
- Page 30
- Page 31
- Page 32
- Page 33
- Page 34
- Page 35
- Page 36
- Page 37
- Page 38
- Page 39
- Page 40
- Page 41
- Page 42
- Page 43
- Page 44
- Page 45
- Page 46
- Page 47
- Page 48
- Page 49
- Page 50
- Page 51
- Page 52
- Page 53
- Page 54
- Page 55
- Page 56
- Page 57
- Page 58
- Page 59
- Page 60
- Page 61
- Page 62
- Page 63
- Page 64
- Page 65
- Page 66
- Page 67
- Page 68
- Page 69
- Page 70
- Page 71
- Page 72
- Page 73
- Page 74
- Page 75
- Page 76
- Page 77
- Page 78
- Page 79
- Page 80
- Page 81
- Page 82
- Page 83
- Page 84
- Page 85
- Page 86
- Page 87
- Page 88
- Page 89
- Page 90
- Page 91
- Page 92
- Page 93
- Page 94
- Page 95
- Page 96
- Page 97
- Page 98
- Page 99
- Page 100
- Page 101
- Page 102
- Page 103
- Page 104
- Page 105
- Page 106
- Page 107
- Page 108
- Page 109
- Page 110
- Page 111
- Page 112
- Page 113
- Page 114
- Page 115
- Page 116
- Page 117
- Page 118
- Page 119
- Page 120
- Page 121
- Page 122
- Page 123
- Page 124
- Page 125
- Page 126
- Page 127
- Page 128
- Page 129
- Page 130
- Page 131
- Page 132
- Page 133
- Page 134
- Page 135
- Page 136
- Page 137
- Page 138
- Page 139
- Page 140
- Page 141
- Page 142
- Page 143
- Page 144
- Page 145
- Page 146
- Page 147
- Page 148
- Page 149
- Page 150
- Page 151
- Page 152
- Page 153
- Page 154
- Page 155
- Page 156
- Page 157
- Page 158
- Page 159
- Page 160