Adam stopped next to me. He picked up my hands—which did look better—and gave Stefan a short, sharp nod. He tucked my hand around his upper arm, then returned with me to the wolves.
I could feel in the pounding of his heart, in the tightness of his arm, that he was on the edge of losing it. So I dropped my head against his arm to muffle my voice. Then I said, “That was all aimed at Marsilia.”
“When we get home,” said Adam, not bothering to speak quietly, “you will allow me to enlighten you about how something can accomplish more than one purpose at the same time.”
Marsilia waited until we were seated with the rest of the wolves before she continued her program for the evening.
“And now for you,” she said to Stefan. “I hope you have not reconsidered your cooperation.”
In answer, Stefan sat in the thronelike chair, raised both hands over the sharp thorns, and slammed them down with such force that I could hear the chair groan from where I stood.
“What do you wish to know?” he asked.
“Your feeder told us that I killed your former menagerie,” she said. “How do you know it to be true?”
He lifted his chin. “I felt each of them die, by your hand. One a day until they were no more.”
“Truth,” agreed Wulfe in a tone I hadn’t heard from him before. It made me look. He sat with Estelle collapsed at his feet, Lily leaning against one side, and Bernard sitting stiffly on the other. Wulfe’s face was somber and ... sad.
“You are no longer of this seethe.”
“I am no longer of this seethe,” Stefan agreed coolly.
“Truth,” said Wulfe.
“You were never mine, really,” she told him. “You had always your free will.”
“Always,” he agreed.
“And you used that to hide Mercy from me. From justice.”
“I hid her from you because I judged her no risk to you or the seethe.”
“Truth,” murmured Wulfe.
“You hid her because you liked her.”
“Yes,” agreed Stefan. “And because there would be no justice in her death. She had not killed one of us—and would not, except that you set that task to her.” For the first time since he sat in the chair, he looked directly at her. “You asked her to kill the monster you could not find—and she did it. Twice.”
“Truth.”
“She killed
Stefan smiled sourly at her. “Because there was no choice. We left her no choice—you, I, and Andre.”
“Truth.”
“You chose her over
“You
“Not anymore,” said Stefan. “I do not belong to you.”
“Truth,” snapped Wulfe, suddenly coming to his feet. “That is fair truth—you felt it yourself.”
Across from us, high in the bleachers, a vampire stood up. He had soft features, wide-spaced eyes, and an upturned nose that should have made him look something other than vampire. Like Wulfe and Estelle’s human, he strode down the seats. But there was no bounce to his step or hesitation. His path might as well have been straight and paved for all it impeded him. He landed on the floor and walked to Wulfe.
He wore a tuxedo and a pair of dark-metal gauntlets. Hinged metal on the top and chain link below. He flexed his fingers and blood dripped from the gloves to the floor.
No one made any move to clean it up.
He turned, and in a light, breathy voice, he said, “Accepted. He is no man of yours, Marsilia.”
I had no idea who he was, but Stefan did. He froze where he sat, all of his being focused on the vampire in the bloody gauntlets. Stefan’s face was blank, as if the whole world had tilted from its axis.
Marsilia smiled. “Tell me. Did Bernard approach you to betray me?”
“Yes,” Stefan said, without expression.
“Did Estelle do the same?”
He took a deep breath, blinked a couple of times, and relaxed in the chair. “Bernard seemed to have the seethe’s best interest at heart,” he said.
“Truth,” Wulfe said.
“But Estelle, when she asked me to join her against you, Estelle just wanted power.”
“Truth.”
Estelle shrieked and tried to get to her feet, but she couldn’t move away from Wulfe.
“And what did you tell them?” she asked.
“I told them I wouldn’t make a move against you.” Stefan sounded utterly weary, but somehow his words carried over the noise Estelle was making.
“Truth,” declared Wulfe.
Marsilia looked at the gauntlet-wearing vampire, who sighed and bent to Estelle. He petted her hair a couple of times until she quieted. We all heard the crack when her neck broke. He took his time separating her head from her body. I looked away and swallowed hard.
“Bernard,” Marsilia said, “we believe it would be good if you return to your maker until you learn the habit of loyalty.”