Authors: L. J. Smith
“I’m thinking. Does this solution have anything to do with coincidence?”
“Nope.” Bonnie relaxed and smiled slightly, grimly. Meredith had it now. “Not a thing to do with coincidence. It’s more a case of history repeating itself. Deliberately repeating itself, if you see what I mean.”
“Yes,” Meredith said. She sounded as if she were recovering from a shock, and no wonder. “You know, I think you just may be right. But there’s still the matter of persuading—this person—to actually help us.”
“You think that may be a problem?”
“I think it could. Sometimes people get very rattled—about a test. Sometimes they even kind of lose their minds.”
Bonnie’s heart sank. This was something that hadn’t occurred to her. What if he
couldn’t
tell them? What if he were that far gone?
“All we can do is try,” she said, making her voice as optimistic as possible. “Tomorrow we’ll have to try.”
“All right. I’ll pick you up at noon. Good night, Bonnie.”
“Night, Meredith.” Bonnie added, “I’m sorry.”
“No, I think it may be for the best. So that history doesn’t continue to repeat itself forever. Good-bye.”
Bonnie pressed the disconnect button on the handset, clicking it off. Then she just sat for a few minutes, her finger on the button, staring at the wall. Finally she replaced the handset in its cradle and picked up her diary again. She put a period on the last sentence and added a new one.
We are going to see Meredith’s grandfather tomorrow.
“I’m an idiot,” Stefan said in Meredith’s car the next day. They were going to West Virginia, to the institution where Meredith’s grandfather was a patient. It was going to be a fairly long drive.
“We’re all idiots. Except Bonnie,” Matt said. Even in the midst of her anxiety Bonnie felt a warm glow at that.
But Meredith was shaking her head, eyes on the road. “Stefan, you couldn’t have realized, so stop beating up on yourself. You didn’t know that Klaus attacked Caroline’s party on the
anniversary of the attack on my grandfather. And it didn’t occur to Matt or me that Klaus could have been in America for so long because we never saw Klaus or heard him speak. We were thinking of people he could have attacked in Europe. Really, Bonnie was the only one who
could
have put it all together, because she had all the information.”
Bonnie stuck out her tongue. Meredith caught it in the rearview mirror and arched an eyebrow. “Just don’t want you getting too cocky,” she said.
“I won’t; modesty is one of my most charming qualities,” Bonnie replied.
Matt snorted, but then he said, “I still think it was pretty smart,” which started the glow all over again.
The institution was a terrible place. Bonnie tried as hard as she could to conceal her horror and disgust, but she knew Meredith could sense it. Meredith’s shoulders were stiff with defensive pride as she walked down the halls in front of them. Bonnie, who had known her for so many years, could see the humiliation underneath that
pride. Meredith’s parents considered her grandfather’s condition such a blot that they never allowed him to be mentioned to outsiders. It had been a shadow over the entire family.
And now Meredith was showing that secret to strangers for the first time. Bonnie felt a rush of love and admiration for her friend. It was so like Meredith to do it without fuss, with dignity, letting nobody see what it cost her. But the institution was still terrible.
It wasn’t filthy or filled with raving maniacs or anything like that. The patients looked clean and well cared for. But there was something about the sterile hospital smells and the halls crowded with motionless wheelchairs and blank eyes that made Bonnie want to run.
It was like a building full of zombies. Bonnie saw one old woman, her pink scalp showing through thin white hair, slumped with her head on the table next to a naked plastic doll. When Bonnie reached out desperately, she found Matt’s hand already reaching for hers. They followed Meredith that way, holding on so hard it hurt.
“This is his room.”
Inside was another zombie, this one with white hair that still showed an occasional fleck of black like Meredith’s. His face was a mass of wrinkles and lines, the eyes rheumy and rimmed with scarlet. They stared vacantly.
“Granddad,” Meredith said, kneeling in front of his wheelchair. “Granddad, it’s me, Meredith. I’ve come to visit you. I’ve got something important to ask you.”
The old eyes never flickered.
“Sometimes he knows us,” Meredith said quietly, without emotion. “But mostly these days he doesn’t.”
The old man just went on staring.
Stefan dropped to his heels. “Let me try,” he said. Looking into the wrinkled face he began to speak, softly, soothingly, as he had to Vickie.
But the filmy dark eyes didn’t so much as blink. They just went on staring aimlessly. The only movement was a slight, continuous tremor in the knotted hands on the arms of the wheelchair.
And no matter what Meredith or Stefan did, that was all the response they could elicit.
Eventually Bonnie tried, using her psychic
powers. She could sense
something
in the old man, some spark of life trapped in the imprisoning flesh. But she couldn’t reach it.
“I’m sorry,” she said, sitting back and pushing hair out of her eyes. “It’s no use. I can’t do anything.”
“Maybe we can come another time,” Matt said, but Bonnie knew it wasn’t true. Stefan was leaving tomorrow; there would never be another time. And it had seemed like such a good idea…. The glow that had warmed her earlier was ashes now, and her heart felt like a lump of lead. She turned away to see Stefan already starting out of the room.
Matt put a hand under her elbow to help her up and guide her out. And after standing for a minute with her head bent in discouragement, Bonnie let him. It was hard to summon up enough energy to put one foot in front of the other. She glanced back dully to see whether Meredith was following—
And
screamed.
Meredith was standing in the center of the room, facing the door, discouragement written on her face. But behind her, the figure in the wheelchair had stirred at last. In
a silent explosion of movement, it had reared above her, the rheumy old eyes open wide and the mouth open wider. Meredith’s grandfather looked as if he had been caught in the act of leaping—arms flung out, mouth forming a silent howl. Bonnie’s screams rang from the rafters.
Everything happened at once then. Stefan came charging back in, Meredith spun around, Matt grabbed for her. But the old figure didn’t leap. He stood towering above all of them, staring over their heads, seeming to see something none of them could. Sounds were coming from his mouth at last, sounds that formed one ululating word.
“Vampire! Vampüüre!”
Attendants were in the room, crowding Bonnie and the others away, restraining the old man. Their shouts added to the pandemonium.
“Vampire! Vampire!”
Meredith’s grandfather caterwauled, as if warning the town. Bonnie felt panicked—was he looking at Stefan? Was it an accusation?
“Please, you’ll have to leave now. I’m sorry, but you’ll have to go,” a nurse was saying. They were being whisked out. Meredith fought as she
was forced out into the hall.
“Granddaddy—!”
“Vampire!” that
unearthly voice wailed on.
And then: “White ash wood! Vampire! White ash wood—”
The door slammed shut.
Meredith gasped, fighting tears. Bonnie had her nails dug into Matt’s arm. Stefan turned to them, green eyes wide with shock.
“I
said
, you’ll have to leave now,” the harassed nurse was repeating impatiently. The four of them ignored her. They were all looking at each other, stunned confusion giving way to realization in their faces.
“Tyler said there was only one kind of wood that could hurt him—” Matt began.
“White ash wood,”
said Stefan.
“We’ll have to find out where he’s hiding,” Stefan said on the way home. He was driving, since Meredith had dropped the keys at the car door. “That’s the first thing. If we rush this, we could warn him off.”
His green eyes were shining with a queer mixture of triumph and grim determination,
and he spoke in a clipped and rapid voice. They were all on the ragged edge, Bonnie thought, as if they’d been gulping uppers all night. Their nerves were frayed so thin that anything could happen.
She had a sense, too, of impending cataclysm. As if everything were coming to a head, all the events since Meredith’s birthday party gathering to a conclusion.
Tonight, she thought. Tonight it all happens. It seemed strangely appropriate that it should be the eve of the solstice.
“The eve of what?” Matt said.
She hadn’t even realized she’d spoken aloud. “The eve of the solstice,” she said. “That’s what today is. The day before the summer solstice.”
“Don’t tell me. Druids, right?”
“They celebrated it,” Bonnie confirmed. “It’s a day for magic, for marking the change of the seasons. And …” She hesitated. “Well, it’s like all other feast days, like Halloween or the winter solstice. A day when the line between the visible world and the invisible world is thin. When you can see ghosts, they used to say. When things happen.”
“Things,” Stefan said, turning onto the main highway that headed back toward Fell’s Church, “are going to happen.”
None of them realized how soon.
Mrs. Flowers was in the back garden. They had driven straight to the boardinghouse to look for her. She was pruning rosebushes, and the smell of summer surrounded her.
She frowned and blinked when they all crowded around her and asked her in a rush where to find a white ash tree.
“Slow down, slow down now,” she said, peering at them from under the brim of her straw hat. “What is it you want? White ash? There’s one just down beyond those oak trees in back. Now, wait a minute—” she added as they all scrambled off again.
Stefan ringed a branch of the tree with a jack-knife Matt produced from his pocket. I wonder when he started carrying
that?
Bonnie thought. She also wondered what Mrs. Flowers thought of them as they came back, the two boys carrying the leafy six-foot bough between them on their shoulders.
But Mrs. Flowers just looked without saying anything. As they neared the house, though, she called after them, “A package came for you, boy.”
Stefan turned his head, the branch still on his shoulder. “For
me?”
“It had your name on it. A package and a letter. I found them on the front porch this afternoon. I put them upstairs in your room.”
Bonnie looked at Meredith, then at Matt and Stefan, meeting their bewildered, suspicious gazes in turn. The anticipation in the air heightened suddenly, almost unbearably.
“But who could it be from? Who could even know you’re here—” she began as they climbed the stairs to the attic. And then she stopped, dread fluttering between her ribs. Premonition was buzzing around inside her like a nagging fly, but she pushed it away. Not now, she thought, not now.
But there was no way to keep from seeing the package on Stefan’s desk. The boys propped the white ash branch against the wall and went to look at it, a longish, flattish parcel wrapped in brown paper, with a creamy envelope on top.
On the front, in familiar crazy handwriting, was scrawled
Stefan.
The handwriting from the mirror.
They all stood staring down at the package as if it were a scorpion.
“Watch out,” Meredith said as Stefan slowly reached for it. Bonnie knew what she meant. She felt as if the whole thing might explode or belch poisonous gas or turn into something with teeth and claws.
The envelope Stefan picked up was square and sturdy, made of good paper with a fine finish. Like a prince’s invitation to the ball, Bonnie thought. But incongruously, there were several dirty fingerprints on the surface and the edges were grimy. Well—Klaus hadn’t looked any too clean in the dream.
Stefan glanced at front and back and then tore the envelope open. He pulled out a single piece of heavy stationery. The other three crowded around, looking over his shoulder as he unfolded it. Then Matt gave an exclamation.
“What the … it’s blank!”
It was. On both sides. Stefan turned it over and examined each. His face was tense,
shuttered. Everyone else relaxed, though, making noises of disgust. A stupid practical joke. Meredith had reached for the package, which looked flat enough to be empty as well, when Stefan suddenly stiffened, his breath hissing in. Bonnie glanced quickly over and jumped. Meredith’s hand froze on the package, and Matt swore.
On the blank paper, held tautly between Stefan’s two hands, letters were appearing. They were black with long downstrokes, as if each were being slashed by an invisible knife while Bonnie watched. As she read them, the dread inside her grew.
Stefan
—
Shall we try to solve this like gentlemen? I have the girl. Come to the old farmhouse in the woods after dark and we’ll talk, just the two of us. Come alone and I’ll let her go. Bring anyone else and she dies.
There was no signature, but at the bottom the words appeared:
This is between you and me.
“What girl?” Matt was demanding, looking from Bonnie to Meredith as if to make sure they
were still there. “What girl?”
With a sharp motion, Meredith’s elegant fingers tore the package open and pulled out what was inside. A pale green scarf with a pattern of vines and leaves. Bonnie remembered it perfectly, and a vision came to her in a rush. Confetti and birthday presents, orchids and chocolate.
“Caroline,” she whispered, and shut her eyes.
These last two weeks had been so strange, so different from ordinary high school life that she had almost forgotten Caroline existed. Caroline had gone off to an apartment in another town to escape, to be safe—but Meredith had said it to her in the beginning.
He can follow you to Heron, I’m sure.
“He was just playing with us again,” Bonnie murmured. “He let us get this far, even going to see your grandfather, Meredith, and then …”