The Eternal Tomb (20 page)

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Authors: Kevin Emerson

BOOK: The Eternal Tomb
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“Okay.” Oliver sat and dug into the sugary dish. After a couple bites, he looked up to find Phlox peering at him. “What?”

She glanced up at the ceiling, then back to him, and nodded.

Oliver nodded back. Half-Light had installed listening devices throughout the house. The Nocturnes hadn't objected, knowing it would do no good. Now they just had to be careful.

“We're having the cousins over for Longest Night,” said Phlox, eating from her own bowl of frosting. “I've invited the Aunders as well.”

“Cool,” Oliver replied.

“I should get to the office,” said Sebastian. As he stood, there was another clinking of metal. On his ankle was a thin silver ring: a tracking device. Phlox and Oliver had them as well. If any of them tried to go somewhere other than school, work, or Central Council, the anklet notified Half-Light. Trips to the Underground, even Harvey's, required escorts. “Have a good night at school, Ollie,” said Sebastian, rubbing Oliver's hair as he swept out of the room.

“You should get ready,” said Phlox.

“Yeah.” Oliver sighed at the thought of school. In many ways, their situation was worse now than ever: Half-Light watching their every move, Bane gone, Emalie gone…

And yet, in one small but important way, things had changed for the better: he and his parents were finally united on the same team. They might not be his human parents, but they were his family. There was no more uncertainty over how they felt about him.

They loved him. They had chosen him over prophecy and eternity. And that was all the difference in the world.

Oliver headed downstairs. As he readied for school, his thoughts drifted. Would tonight be the night? Would he learn something of the Triad of Finity? Or…
Will she come back?

Emalie
…

The answer to both questions was likely no, and yet, as Oliver slung his heavy backpack over his shoulder, put up his sweatshirt hood, and emerged from a sewer tunnel into a night of cold, steady rain, his slight smile formed for just a moment.

It probably wouldn't happen, but it
might
. Oliver felt that little surge of nervous energy, the one that a year ago he wouldn't have understood, but that now he was lucky enough to know:

It was hope.

Turn the page to continue reading from the Oliver Nocturne series

Chapter 1

The Menteur's Heart

NIGHT FALLS PLEASANTLY EARLY
in Seattle in November. The days are brief, cloudy, barely ever seeming brighter than twilight. On the rare afternoons when the sun even appears, it cowers in the far corner of the sky, pale, fleeting. The mountains gather their first blankets of snow, the ocean cools to gray, the last leaves fall. Humans wrap themselves tightly in coats and scarves. They retreat into their homes earlier, huddling in the warmth and light to celebrate their harvest. And beyond their closed window shades, the city's other inhabitants enjoy the long, dark hours.

This November had been exceptionally rainy, and that put a spring in the lurking steps of all who woke at dusk, with the notable exception of a certain vampire family, who rose one Thursday evening with a foreboding event on their calendar.

Mr. Crevlyn was scheduled to arrive promptly at eight.

“This sucks,” said Oliver Nocturne as he entered the kitchen and slouched down on a stool at the center island.

“Now, now,” said Phlox from across the kitchen, where she worked over the gleaming titanium forge, her back to him. “It will be fine.”

Oliver dropped his heavy backpack to the polished stone floor with a thud and leaned on his elbows. He brushed his hair from his eyes—he'd been letting it grow the last few months, and had even put a green streak in the front—and took a sip from the lead goblet before him. He was glad for the sweet, slightly citrusy taste of kangaroo blood. It was one of his favorites. Still, it wasn't enough to change his current mood. “It's not going to be fine,” he muttered.

“Well,” said Phlox, turning around with a steaming skillet in one hand and a spatula in the other, “there's nothing we can do except endure it.” She was dressed smartly as usual, her platinum hair wrapped up in a severe bun.

Oliver rolled his eyes. How many times had Phlox said that lately? “Why do we have to endure it? How about we tell them
no
, for once, and then—”

Phlox's eyes flared from their usual hazel to a brilliant turquoise. “Charles,” she began—but stopped.

Oliver looked away. It rarely happened anymore, but sometimes, when she was flustered, Phlox still slipped. Oliver didn't feel mad at his mom for this. Instead, he felt a surge of … weird. It only happened when he was acting defiant or insolent, like his older brother Bane used to, before he'd been slain to dust. Actually, Oliver was maybe proud of that, of being able to channel his brother now and then. Except it made him miss Bane, too. Right about now, Bane would have come sauntering up the stairs, probably slapped Oliver on the back of the head before dropping down beside him. … Instead, the kitchen was silent.

“Sorry,” said Phlox quietly. She slid a trio of deep-fried dumplings onto a cast-iron plate. “Oliver,” she began again, “you have to understand …” Her eyes, no longer glowing, arched toward the ceiling. This was Phlox's now well-understood reminder that everything they said was being monitored by hidden microphones.

Oliver sighed. “I know,” he said dejectedly, “but, sometimes I just …” He shook his head. “Whatever.” He reached for the plate and Phlox's delicate ivory hand fell atop his. He felt the reassuring cool of her skin, the razor scratch of her burgundy-painted fingernails.

“It will be okay,” she said.

Oliver nodded, but that was getting harder to believe. He slid the plate over and took a bite of a still-sizzling fritter, his taste buds delighting, in spite of his mood, at the burst of molten chocolate inside, spiced with habañero concentrate and especially sweet with the addition of extracted lynx adrenaline, which not only tasted like mint but was known to have relaxing properties. Like the kangaroo blood, this was another rare treat that Phlox surely intended to counteract the ordeal Oliver was about to endure.

Footsteps clicked up the stone staircase and Sebastian swept into the kitchen. “Hey Ollie,” he said, rubbing Oliver's hair as he passed. He was dressed in a sleek black suit. He picked up a goblet at the far end of the island, took a long swig, then traded it for a stone mug of coffee which had been sitting on a small warming plate on the counter, bubbling away. Vampires liked their coffee hot, preferably boiling. He tapped a dash of cayenne pepper into it before drinking.

“Any updates about our guest?” Phlox asked as she opened the refrigerator. Its silver door rose upward to the ceiling with a hiss.

“Nothing new,” said Sebastian. “Same as the other visits, as far as I've been told.”

“You know,” said Phlox thinly as she arranged the clear plastic bags of blood hanging on racks in the fridge, “Mother told me that Mr. Crevlyn's not even technically a physician anymore. Apparently he was formally stripped of his license for
questionable
practices. That's why he took the job at the Asylum Colony. They have looser standards.” Oliver's grandparents lived in Morosia, the underworld beneath Europe.

“Sounds like the perfect person to be the new head of Half-Light,” said Sebastian grimly.

Phlox turned to him and her mouth curled skeptically.

“What did he do, anyway?” Oliver asked. “To lose his license?”

“Well,” Phlox began, “it's all confidential, but Mother says the word in Morosia is that at the Asylum Colony, Mr. Crevlyn was in charge of the demosapien alchemy division.”

“What's that?”

“The mixing of demons with living humans,” said Sebastian gruffly, checking his watch, “and it's nothing we need to discuss further.”

Oliver was fine with ending the talk. Humans and demons … it reminded him of something he didn't want to think about, anyway: the
other
thing he had to do before school tonight.

“Or maybe we should be asking someone,” Phlox began, and she raised her head so that the listening devices would hear her loud and clear, “whether it's appropriate for our son to be in the company of someone with that kind of background.”

Sebastian looked at her and shrugged, a gesture of powerlessness that Oliver hated to see. Mr. Crevlyn was the new head of operations at the powerful Half-Light consortium, Sebastian's employer, and he'd personally put himself in charge of examining Oliver, to determine his “mental state.”

Oliver understood why: He was, after all, the key figure in Half-Light's plot to open the Nexia Gate, thereby freeing all the vampires from Earth and remaking the universe, which, as a consequence, would also destroy Earth and everything in it. Half-Light had been planning this for decades, maybe even centuries, according to a prophecy which stated that a sired but demonless vampire child could open the Gate. Oliver was that child. And now that the Anointment had been completed, there was no turning back. Only, it was more complicated than that, for a number of reasons, but mainly because of …
don't think about
—Oliver tried to warn himself, but a strong and painful memory arrived anyway:

Emalie.

Oliver felt a moment of fuzziness, like a wave had washed over his mind. He was brought back to his senses by a thudding knock on the sewer door downstairs.

“That's him,” said Sebastian. He headed for the stairs, his lips pursed.

Oliver stuffed the troubling thoughts away. He needed to focus to make it through what was about to happen. He finished his fritters and listened as the door opened, greetings were exchanged, and footsteps returned to the kitchen.

Sebastian entered first. “Mr. Crevlyn is here.”

He strolled in wearing a bright grin, the kind that was too wide, as if it had been practiced often. He wasn't much older than Phlox and Sebastian—Oliver would have guessed about three hundred — but was uncharacteristically wide and soft around the middle for a vampire. And that was the oddity of his face, too: its breadth, its tendency to shine too brightly around those gleaming, peach-colored irises, without care for the other sources of light in its sphere. Neither Mr. Crevlyn's suit—a dour, mulch-colored tweed—nor his accessories—conservatively striped tie, modest watch and briefcase—gave away his true nature, but his smiling face revealed a disquieting confidence, that self-assured comfort in oneself that seemed to be most apparent in the most dangerous figures.

“Good evening, Nocturnes,” said Mr. Crevlyn smoothly.

He stepped into the kitchen and moved aside. There was a sound of shuffling metal and another figure entered. The crimson-robed form had to hunch to fit into the kitchen. Its shackled wrists and ankles jangled. Its face was hidden by a hood. A Codex, from Half-Light's private library.

“And how are we tonight, Oliver?” Mr. Crevlyn asked. The smile widened, the cheeks contorting, creating extra folds.

Oliver looked away. “Fine.”

“Well then, shall we?” He looked to Phlox. “Coffee would be lovely,” he said, as if she'd offered. “Spiked, if you don't mind.”

Phlox nodded slightly, her mouth a thin, tight line. “Of course.”

Oliver slumped off the stool and headed for the living room, where he dropped onto one of the leather couches. Phlox and Sebastian sat on the other, to his left. Mr. Crevlyn spread himself on the edge of a high-backed chair across from him.

The Codex lowered to the floor, sitting cross-legged on a pillow. Its black, skeletal hands produced a small mortar made of flecked stone. There was a pinch of dried brown incense in the bowl. The Codex struck a match and lit it. A thin trail of gray smoke slithered up into the room.

Mr. Crevlyn flipped open his briefcase and removed a bundle of black velvet. He placed this on the table and unwrapped it, revealing a long, pink crystal shard. “
Veritesssch
,” he whispered, and the crystal began to glow. Oliver knew it well enough: a Menteur's Heart, similar to a human lie detector, though quite a bit more powerful and accurate, as demons and vampires were much more skilled at deception than a creature with a soul could ever be.

Oliver felt like the Heart was barely necessary in his case. He didn't bother lying anymore. It never worked out.

“Well now,” said Mr. Crevlyn. He looked at Oliver, eyes bright. “How are we feeling these days?”

“Fine,” muttered Oliver.

“And how is school?”

“Okay.”

“Good,” said Mr. Crevlyn. “All right, then, just for the sake of clarity, let's review: If I'm correct, this all began when you met the Orani girl. She invaded your home, and yet due to your Human Sympathizing Syndrome—an unfortunate consequence of your sired origins that we know is not your fault—you let her live and befriended her.”

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