“If we get out of this alive, I’m going to have to apologize to my mother,” I said, making quick work of the bandaging. “And I’m going to have to thank her.”
“For what?”
“For this,” I pulled an unlit glowstick from my pocket. “She sent it in my last care package.”
Antonio put away his pack of matches and cracked the glowstick alight. “I will thank her too.”
“So, what’s the game plan?” I asked, as ready to move into the confines of the cave as I would ever be.
Antonio led the way, and I followed him, forcing my eyes to stay on the glowstick in his hand.
“We have to find a way to take the vampires out without exposing ourselves.”
“And hope that they are tracking some of the others, right?”
“We won’t be so lucky.”
“Why?” I asked, scrambling to stay directly behind him and within eyesight of the light.
He hesitated. When he finally spoke his voice was tense. “There’s something I probably should have told you before.”
So, I wasn’t the only one keeping secrets. The revelation gave me a sense of relief and something else to focus on besides the fact that the cave walls seemed to be getting closer.
“What is it?”
“I am known to the vampires, and I have made many enemies.”
I waited for him to continue. Nothing he had said came as any real surprise to me. The silence stretched between us and finally he went on.
“I believe they will try to find us before they go after the others.”
There was something he wasn’t telling me. I thought about calling him on it, but I was still reeling under the weight of my own guilty secret. Where was Jack? Would we be bumping into him soon?
A sudden rustling sound ahead caused us both to freeze in our tracks. I had my hand on Antonio’s arm, and I could feel the play of his muscles beneath the skin. He shifted slightly so he could press his back against the cave wall and I did the same, my heart beating uncontrollably.
I shook my head, trying to clear it.
I heard a soft whooshing sound and then a bat flew right by us, its wing brushing the tip of my nose. I jerked, slamming my head against the cave wall. All the stories I had ever heard about vampires when I was a kid flooded my mind.
“Vampire!” I gasped.
Antonio laughed, low and deep, and the sound cut through my terror. “You know vampires can’t change into bats.”
And he was right. I did know that. I had spent the last two years studying vampires, not the fictional kind, but the real, just-as-soon-kill-you-as-seduce-you kind.
We continued moving forward, slightly faster now, which was a relief because it required more attention on my part not to twist an ankle. We wove through several different tunnels, which branched off into smaller and smaller corridors until I knew I could never find my way back.
“You know I love you,” Antonio said, breaking the silence that had once again fallen between us.
I didn’t know how to respond. It was a statement, not a question, like there could be no doubt that I knew he loved me. I had managed to avoid the topic for two months. As I contemplated how to sidestep it now though, a couple of things occurred to me. First, I’d much rather talk about it than think about the caves we were walking through. Second, one or both of us would likely die before morning. Suddenly talking about it seemed like a really good idea.
“I’m not sure that I actually knew that,” I said, grimacing. I was grateful he couldn’t see my face. It was my intention to let him down easy. Still, there was a part of me that had actually wanted to hear him say the words.
“I don’t know how I could have been more clear. I love you, Jenn.”
All girls dream of having a guy say that to them. When I was younger, I spent countless hours imagining hearing those words, visualizing who would say them, where we would be, how I would feel. But in my wildest dreams, I couldn’t have pictured a guy quite like Antonio. And although at least once or twice I had thought I might hear those words one New Year’s Eve, I could never have anticipated hearing them in the middle of a cave while engaged in a battle with vampires. And I certainly had never anticipated having such a mixed reaction to the words themselves.
The moment he said them out loud I knew that I still had feelings for Antonio. I had so wanted to keep my heart shut up and stay detached, but maybe that was unrealistic. “I didn’t let myself care for you in that way because it seemed pretty obvious to me that there was no chance,” I admitted.
“It was … important … for me to stay focused on why we were here.”
“I know that vampires killed your whole family. I thought that revenge was all you wanted.”
He laughed, a hard, bitter laugh so different from the one before. “Yes, you’re right, revenge
“And now?”
“I’ve already told you I love you.”
“I think … I’m in love with Jack,” I admitted. There, I’d said it. I held my breath, afraid of what his response would be.
“No, you aren’t,” he said so softly I barely heard him.
That was one response I hadn’t expected. “Why would you say that?”
“He’s a vampire.”
“That doesn’t mean that I can’t love him.”
“I’m not saying you can’t love a vampire, just that you don’t love that one.”
“I’m not following you,” I said in frustration.
“He’s mesmerized you.”
I stopped dead in my tracks. Antonio took a few more steps before turning around. The light from the glowstick threw shadows around the cave in bizarre patterns, and they danced across his face. I wanted to tell him that he was wrong, that it was a lie. Somehow I asked instead, “How do you know?”
“I just do. Stop and search your soul. You know it, too.”
Everything seemed to slow down, like in a nightmare. Where my obsession with Jack had flamed and burned, something icy and cold walked over my grave.
I gasped. I hadn’t been myself. He had used me.
As awareness rushed in, I began to shake and cry. In two years, I hadn’t shed a tear for the dead, or the pain. Now it all seemed determined to be released at once.
“What’s happened to me?” I asked Antonio.
When he pulled me close and held me, he was shaking too. “I think Jack mesmerized you to get at me,” he whispered. “I’m so, so sorry. Just remember that as long as you’re aware of it, his mesmerism is broken.”
I pulled away and wiped my eyes on my sleeve. But … but it had been so real. And now—just another vampire lie. They hadn’t come in peace. Jack didn’t come for love.
“Jenn,” Antonio said. “I
“We should keep moving,” I said stonily. “We’ve got vampires to kill.”
He nodded and took my hand. As our fingers interlaced, I felt a peace I had not known for years. He turned and began to move through the caves at a half run. I kept up with him, grateful to be doing something at last.
Winding through the caves, I lost track of time. When we finally emerged from them, I was surprised to see the moon directly overhead. We scrambled up a rocky slope for about a hundred yards before emerging in a clearing.
The vampires were already there. The sick feeling in my gut told me that they had been waiting for us.
And there was Jack. He stretched out his hand toward me exactly as I had pictured him doing the last several, sleepless nights. His grin was wide, no longer as playful as I remembered it, but simply arrogant. His eyes