realized, with a sudden shock of jealousy. She didn't hate Matt or want to kill him, because he posed no threat to Damon. She was fond of Matt.
Stefan let her take as much as was safe and then intervened.
'She needs to rest now,' Damon said. 'I'm taking her someplace where she can do it safely.' He wasn't asking Stefan; he was telling him.
As they left, his mental voice added, for Stefan's ears alone,
Stefan stared after them. He'd noted how Elena's eyes remained locked on Damon, how she followed him without question. But she was out of danger now; Matt's blood had given her the strength she needed. That was all Stefan had to hang on to, and he told himself it was all that mattered.
He turned to take in Matt's dazed expression. The human boy had sunk into one of the plastic chairs and was gazing straight ahead.
Then his eyes lifted to Stefan's, and they regarded each other grimly.
'So,' Matt said. 'Now I know.' He shook his head, turning away slightly. 'But I still can't believe it,' he muttered. His fingers pressed gingerly at the side of his neck, and he winced. 'Except for this.' Then he frowned. 'That guy—Damon. Who is he?'
'My older brother,' Stefan said without emotion. 'How do you know his name?'
'He was at Elena's house last week. The kitten spat at him.' Matt paused, clearly remembering something else. 'And Bonnie had some kind of psychic fit.'
'She had a precognition? What did she say?
'She said—she said that Death was in the house.'
Stefan looked at the door Damon and Elena had passed through. 'She was right.'
'Stefan, what's going on?' A note of appeal had entered Matt's voice. 'I still don't understand. What's happened to Elena? Is she going to be like this forever? Isn't there anything we can do?'
'Be like what?' Stefan said brutally. 'Disoriented? A vampire?'
Matt looked away. 'Both.'
'As for the first, she may become more rational now that she's fed. That's what Damon thinks anyway. As for the other, there's only one thing you can do to change her condition.' As Matt's eyes lit with hope, Stefan continued. 'You can get a wooden stake and hammer it through her heart. Then she won't be a vampire anymore. She'll just be dead.'
Matt got up and went to the window.
'You wouldn't be killing her, though, because that's already been done. She drowned in the river, Matt. But because she'd had enough blood from me'—he paused to steady his voice—'and, it seems, from my brother, she changed instead of simply dying. She woke up a hunter, like us. That's what she'll be from now on.'
With his back still turned, Matt answered. 'I always knew there was something about you. I told myself it was just because you were from another country.' He shook his head again self-deprecatingly. 'But deep down I knew it was more than that. And something still kept telling me I could trust you, and I did.'
'Like when you went with me to get the vervain.'
'Yeah. Like that.' He added, 'Can you tell me what the hell it was for, now?'
'For Elena's protection. I wanted to keep Damon away from her. But it looks as if that's not what
Matt turned. 'Don't judge her before you know all the facts, Stefan. That's one thing I've learned.'
Stefan was startled; then, he gave a small humorless smile. As Elena's exes, he and Matt were in the same position now. He wondered if he would be as gracious about it as Matt had been. Take his defeat like a gentleman.
He didn't think so.
Outside, a noise had begun. It was inaudible to human ears, and Stefan almost ignored it—until the words penetrated his consciousness.
Then he remembered what he had done in this very school only a few hours ago. Until that moment, he'd forgotten all about Tyler Smallwood and his tough friends.
Now that memory had returned; shame and horror closed his throat. He'd been out of his mind with grief over Elena, and his reason had snapped under the pressure. But that was no excuse for what he had done. Were they all dead? Had he, who had sworn so long ago never to kill, killed six people today?
'Stefan, wait. Where are you going?' When he didn't answer, Matt followed him, half running to keep up, out of the main school building and onto the blacktop. On the far side of the field, Mr. Shelby stood by the Quonset hut.
The janitor's face was gray and furrowed with lines of horror. He seemed to be trying to shout, but only small hoarse gasps came out of his mouth. Elbowing past him, Stefan looked into the room and felt a curious sense of deja vu.
It looked like the Mad Slasher room from the Haunted House fundraiser. Except that this was no tableau set up for visitors. This was real.
Bodies were sprawled everywhere, amid shards of wood and glass from the shattered window. Every visible surface was spattered with blood, red-brown and sinister as it dried. And one look at the bodies revealed why: each one had a pair of livid purple wounds in the neck. Except Caroline's: her neck was unmarked, but her eyes were blank and staring.
Behind Stefan, Matt was hyperventilating. 'Stefan, Elena didn't—she didn't—'
'Be quiet,' Stefan answered tersely. He glanced back at Mr. Shelby, but the janitor had stumbled over to his cart of brooms and mops and was leaning against it. Glass grated under Stefan's feet as he crossed the floor to kneel by Tyler.
Not dead. Relief exploded over Stefan at the realization. Tyler's chest moved feebly, and when Stefan lifted the boy's head his eyes opened a slit, glazed and unfocused.
But he wouldn't. Not as long as Elena was here.
He gathered the unconscious minds of the other victims into his mental grasp and told them the same thing, feeding it deep into their brains.
As he did, he felt his mental Powers tremble like overfatigued muscles. He was close to burnout.
Outside, Mr. Shelby had found his voice at last and was shouting. Wearily, Stefan let Tyler's head slip back through his fingers to the floor and turned around.
Matt's lips were peeled back, his nostrils flared, as if he had just smelled something disgusting. His eyes were the eyes of a stranger. 'Elena didn't,' he whispered. 'You did.'
'You did it, didn't you?' Matt had followed Stefan out to the field. His voice said he was trying to understand.
Stefan rounded on him. 'Yes, I did it,' he snarled. He stared Matt down, concealing none of the angry menace in his face. 'I told you, Matt, we're hunters. Killers. You're the sheep; we're the wolves. And Tyler has been asking for it every day since I came here.'
'Asking for a punch in the nose, sure. Like you gave him before. But—that?' Matt closed in on him, standing eye to eye, unafraid. He had physical courage; Stefan had to give him that. 'And you're not even sorry? You don't even regret it?'
'Why should I?' said Stefan coldly, emptily. 'Do you regret it when you eat too much steak? Feel sorry for the cow?' He saw Matt's look of sick disbelief and pressed on, driving the pain in his chest deeper. It was better that Matt stay away from him from now on, far away. Or Matt might end up like those bodies in the Quonset hut. 'I am what I am, Matt. And if you can't handle it, you'd better steer clear of me.'