Chapter Eighteen

I fled with vampire speed, urged on by the predawn light fading the darkness from the sky. My feet flew over pavements, leapt over barriers, careened round corners, buildings distorted before my eyes and the discordant sounds of early morning traffic buzzed in my ears. Half-seen pedestrians blurred as I passed them by, silent and unheeded.

Like Gazza, I was running home.

Had I wounded Malik enough to kill him? My knife was silver and I’d struck for his heart, but had I pierced it? Counting the landmarks that meant I was nearly home, I sprinted past the Law Courts on my right and Somerset House to my left—but I hadn’t felt the life leave his body—I turned off the Strand and headed for Covent Garden—not like the last time I’d killed a vampire—I darted between St Paul’s Church and the Apple Market, feet still flying, tiny wings of hope fluttering inside me. Why they should be was something I chose not to think about too closely.

I reached the ladder in the church’s garden and sprang up, closing my hand round the cold metal rung. I concentrated on climbing. I had to get to the top before the sun hit the horizon, before the spell reverted, leaving me dead while the new day started. Halfway up my heart thudded, then went silent. I stopped, leaned my forehead against the ladder and closed my eyes. It was a long way back down, nearly thirty feet, and I couldn’t risk falling, couldn’t risk being found. Closing my eyes, I willed my heart to start again. I needed it to beat now. I needed to get home. It stuttered inside my chest, weak and irregular. I lifted my hand and staring fixedly at the brown brick wall, I climbed.

The wall disappeared.

Confusion made me sway and my fingers clutched the metal rungs painfully hard. I gazed across the gravel in front of me, then the soft scents of lavender and rosemary and lemon balm greeted me and I realised I’d reached the top: this was my roof.

I crawled over the ledge, the sharp stones digging into my hands and knees, and collapsed, too tired to go any further. A bright yellow caterpillar concertinaed past my fingertips, flashing his black inner body. Footsteps crunched in the gravel.

My heart stopped.

I lifted my head and gazed towards the east where the sun stretched pale fingers above the horizon. A shadow fell over me, tall and broad, then as it crouched down and the risen sun spilled over my skin, the fires of the dawn consumed me.

The scent of gardenias drifted over me. I had fallen asleep on the floor, my head pillowed on my building bricks and their sharp edges were digging into my cheek. A hand touched my shoulder, gentle and familiar. I hugged my favourite toy, a grey towelling elephant, and tried to snuggle deeper into dreamland.

‘Genevieve, moy angelochek.’ Hands lifted me into the air and Matilde, my stepmother settled me onto her hip. ‘You must wake now.’

I was dreaming of a time when my world was simpler. I knew that time was long-gone, but still I burrowed my face into Matilde’s gardenia-scented neck and curled my fingers into her long golden hair.

‘Why do you lie on the floor like a peasant, moy malish?’ Her hand patted my back. ‘Is the bed your father gave you not comfortable enough?’

I stuck my thumb in my mouth and mumbled, ‘Tired.’

‘Too much playtime, I’ll guess.’ She hitched me higher. ‘But now we have a surprise for you, your father and I.’

‘Like surprises,’ I murmured.

‘First we must make you presentable.’ She plucked at my brown cord dungarees. ‘Little girls should wear pretty dresses, and have ribbons in their hair.’

I took my thumb out of my mouth and gazed sleepily into her large blue eyes. ‘Bessie says I get mucky.’

‘Mucky.’ Matilde mimicked the nursemaid’s northern tones and then smiled. ‘A bath will wash away the muck.’

I reached up to pat her face and smiled. ‘Surprise first, Tildy?’

She laughed open-mouthed, her fangs white and sharp and her eyes sparkling like sapphires. ‘No, no, moy malish, you will have your bath first. Save your charms for your father’—she kissed me on the lips—‘for I am wise to them.’

‘Not want bath,’ I pouted.

‘I do not want a bath,’ she corrected me, sounding out the words.

I stroked her neck, rubbing my fingers over the tender swollen bite there. ‘I do not want a bath, Tildy.’

‘Very good,’ she smiled, and carried me out of the room that was my nursery.


Matilde held me by the hand as she led me down the hall towards my father’s study. With each skip I took, I could see my new shiny black-patent leather shoes decorated with their green satin bows, dancing along beneath the flounces of my new green dress. I bobbed my head in time with the tap, shuffle, tap sounds that bounced back at me from the grey stone walls.

We stopped outside the dark oak door. Hundreds of candles in wall brackets flickered like fireflies on either side of the doorway.

Matilde slowly crouched down and balancing carefully on her high heels, smoothed the green Alice-band that tied back my hair. ‘Your hair is so beautiful, moy angelochek, the colour of fresh blood cascading over our beloved golden domes.’

I leaned in, kissed her pale powdered cheek. ‘At the Kremlin, Tildy?’

She smiled, though I could still see the sadness in her face. ‘Yes, like my so—beautiful home in Moskva.’ Moisture tinted the whites of her eyes with pink. ‘One day we shall travel to see it. You and I. Teram Palace, the Cathedral of the Assumption—’

‘Ivan the big bell,’ I giggled.

She rubbed her nose against mine. ‘Da, da, moy malish.’ Then her expression turned serious. She touched a finger to my eyes, my ears, my mouth and my heart. ‘Your father has a guest, Genevieve. You must be very much the young lady and remember the manners I have taught to you.’

I touched the black opals that collared her neck. ‘What about the surprise?’

Her fingers twitched at my dress, dusted a nonexistent smudge from my shoe. ‘You shall have your surprise later, little one.’


We were marooned in an empty acre of grey flagstoned floor, lit by the red glare of a fire I couldn’t see. My father, tall and blond and aristocratic, was dressed in his special black suit with the satin lining, the one that matched Matilde’s sapphire-blue eyes.

His guest, a stranger to me, stood opposite. The firelight left him alone, as if not wanting to encroach the darkness that surrounded him. I gazed at him, curious to see this new vampire visitor, but his face was hidden by shadows that fell from nowhere.

Matilde gently pushed me forward until I stood between the two vampires.

The stranger’s low voice came out of the darkness. ‘Is this the child, Alexandre?’

A shiver ran down my spine.

‘Greet our guest, Genevieve.’ My father’s hand pressed down on my shoulder.

I stuck out my black patent toe, clutched the slippery green satin of my dress and bent my knee in a trembling curtsey.

Cold fingers gripped my chin, lifting my face. ‘The eyes are truly sidhe fae,’ he murmured.

I stared up, but still couldn’t see him through the darkness.

He turned my face from side to side. ‘Her profile certainly has a look of you about her, Alexandre.’

‘She is my daughter.’ My father sounded unexpectedly anxious. ‘This was reported to your Master at her birth.’

‘An achievement indeed.’ The stranger was faintly mocking as he released me.

Matilde swept her arm around me, holding me close and I looked up at her. She was staring at my father’s guest, and her eyes were wide and scared.

Why was she frightened? Why was my father not happy? My heart pitter-pattered in my chest, and all three vampires turned their attention to me.

‘Control yourself, Genevieve.’ There was an edge of fear in my father’s voice I’d never heard before.

I bit down on my lip, closed my eyes and counted under my breath, ‘One elephant ... two elephants ... three elephants ...’ My pulse started to slow.

‘Impressive in one so young.’ The stranger clapped, the sharp noise interrupting my counting.

‘... five elephants ...’ I opened one eye and glared up at him.

‘You have taught her the old ways well.’

‘... seven elephants ...’

‘She is satisfactory.’ The shadows shifted and then settled. ‘I am sure my Master will be pleased.’

Matilde’s hold on me relaxed.

‘... ten elephants ...’

‘All that is left is to confirm the contract. I am to take a sample.’

Niet.’ Matilde spat out the word.

My father hissed, ‘It is but a taste, Matilde; no harm will come to the child.’

‘... thirteen elephants ...’

Her fingers dug into my arm, but after a moment she acquiesced and let me go.

‘My apologies.’ My father offered the stranger a low bow. ‘You have the knife?’

‘... f—fifteen elephants ...’

The man knelt on one knee and held up a thin blade. ‘Forged by the northern dwarves from cold iron and silver,’ he said, as the knife gleamed red in the firelight. ‘Tempered in dragon’s breath. The handle is carved from a unicorn’s horn.’ Pale light bled from between his fingers. ‘And set with a dragon’s tear.’ An oval of clear amber winked against his palm.

‘... s—seventeen elephants ...’

A cold hand circled my left wrist and my arm went numb.

‘... e—eighteen ...’

The blade traced an icy-hot slash down my inner arm.

‘... n—n—nineteen ...’

Blood ran in thin rivulets to pool on the flagstone floor.

‘Stop him, Alexandre.’ Matilde’s voice was shrill. ‘He’s wasting it.’

I looked up at the stranger and the shadows fled from his face. He reversed the knife, placed its handle in my palm and clasped his hands round mine to hold it straight and true. His obsidian eyes stared into mine as he pulled on my arms and the thin silver blade stabbed into his chest and plunged into his heart.

‘... t—t—twenty ...’

* * *

Malik stood as he had in the alley, arms outstretched, the pearl-handled knife shining pale against the blackness of his body.

‘Genevieve.’ Sorrow lanced in his voice. ‘See what you have done.’

Matilde and my father stood on either side of Malik, mirroring his stance as blood ran from the gaping wounds in their own chests.

A sharp pain—grief—struck my own heart. I whispered their names.

‘Genevieve . . .’ Their voices echoed like ghosts in my mind.

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