split, it was glowing — radiant.”
“So this can be stopped?” he asked me, sounding more hopeful than I.
“But at what cost?” I asked him. “I don’t want to spend the rest of eternity needing the red stuff. I don’t want to hurt anyone.”
“Who says that you have to hurt anyone?” He asked me.
“Something tells me that your blood won’t always be enough,” I told him. “Like any addiction, it grows and grows and you just need more and more.”
“How do you mean?” he frowned.
“Take your cigarette habit,” I started to explain. “Have you always smoked so much? You didn’t start smoking sixty or seventy cigarettes a day like you do now. You started with just one or two, I bet. But soon that wasn’t enough to satisfy your need. Soon you needed more and more. That’s what an addiction is — you just want it — even when you know it’s killing you — you just want more. Well I don’t want to live my life like that, because there is only so much of your blood that I can have — and what then? I turn to humans and we all know what happens then…”
“Vampires,” Potter said.
“Vampires,” I nodded and looked away. “We can’t ever go back to that or our deaths would have meant nothing.”
“There’s got to be an answer to everything that has happened, not only to us but the world since we came back,” Potter said.
“And I intend to find it,” I told him. “It feels like I’m being punished by the Elders for not making that decision back in The Hollows. It’s like they are making me suffer.”
“But all suffering has to end,” Potter said. “It can’t go on forever.”
“But I guess it’s
“So what’s the plan?” he asked me, running his fingers through my hair.
“I don’t believe we are the only ones who have been pushed, as you call it,” I said, leaning in close to him again. “Kayla and Isidor have gone to place some adverts around the nearby towns to see if anyone comes forward.”
Then, there was a crack of lightning from outside and the rain began to fall heavier against the roof and the side of the summerhouse. “We should get back to the manor, Kayla and Isidor might be back by now.”
“Let’s wait until the rain eases up,” he said, pulling me close. The temperature inside the summerhouse had grown cold, and gooseflesh had covered my naked body. Potter wrapped his arms about me, his body felt warm as he held me against him.
Then, placing his face next to mine, he said, “Whatever happens, Kiera, we’ll find a way through this.”
I closed my eyes and kissed him, those intense feelings that I had for him started to wash over me. “We should be getting back,” I whispered, half of me knowing that Kayla and Isidor would be waiting for me but the other half wanting Potter again.
“Let’s just stay a while longer,” he smiled, easing me back onto the floor of the summerhouse.
“Until the rain stops,” I whispered, hearing it lash against the window to my right. And as Potter ran his hand up the inside of my leg, I turned my head slightly to look at the rain streaking down the window pane. It was then that I screamed.
Chapter Fourteen
The statue stared through the window. Even though it had no facial features, I knew that it was watching us. Lightning split the night sky open in a blue shock of light, illuminating the blank face that peered in through the window at us.
“What’s wrong?” Potter asked me.
“Look at the window,” I gasped, gathering up my clothes and covering myself with them.
“What’s wrong with the window?” Potter asked getting up and striding to the window buck naked.
“That statue is watching us,” I told him, throwing on my shirt and pulling on my jeans.
“What statue?”
“The one from outside,” I said, wedging my feet into my boots and going to the window.
“There isn’t any statue at the window,” he said, cupping his hands around his eyes and peering out into the dark.
“It was there, I’m telling you,” I breathed, standing next to him.
“Well it’s not there now,” he sighed, stepping back from the window and staring at me. He stood before me naked, his chest and muscles looking taught beneath his pale flesh.
I glanced back at the window as another streak of lightning cut the night in two. The sky lit up in a flash of blue and white and I could see that the statue was no longer at the window.
“It was there,” I insisted.
“Are you sure it wasn’t your imagination?” he asked, snaking his arm around my waist.
“Give me a break,” I groaned. “I know what I saw. Put your clothes on, we should be heading back to the manor.”
Without saying another word, Potter picked up his trousers and boots from where they lay strewn across the floor. As he put them on, I went to the door. I opened it a fraction and peered into the dark. The rain came down hard and beat off the wooden steps that led away from the summerhouse. The sky fizzed with electricity again, washing the area in light. Then, I saw it. The statue wasn’t at the window, but I knew that it had been. Although it was back on the grass, it was no longer facing the summerhouse. It had turned, as if running away. I ran down the wooden steps and out into the rain. The rain was so heavy that within seconds I was soaked through and it ran done my hair and face. I knocked the water from my eyes and stood before the statue.
“Why were you watching us?” I demanded.
The statue didn’t say anything. It didn’t move. It just stood solid and heavy-looking in the rain. But it had just turned its back to the summerhouse. The way its arms and legs were now positioned, it looked as it had been in the act of running away at great speed when it had become frozen again.
“What’s going on here?” Potter suddenly asked from beside me.
“I don’t know,” I whispered, unable to take my eyes from the statue of the girl. Then, in another bolt of lightning, something glistened around the statue’s neck. It was Murphy’s crucifix. It was no longer fastened in the girl’s hand.
“Do you see it?” I whispered, reaching for the cross.
“See what?” Potter hissed.
“Murphy’s cross,” I said back, taking it from over the girl’s head.
“Maybe you should leave it,” Potter said.
“Why?” I asked him, but then I saw something that told me that perhaps he was right. It could have been just the rain, or just my imagination, but as I lifted the cross away, tears seemed to roll from the part of the statue’s face where its eyes should have been.
With the tip of one finger, Potter wiped away what looked like tears and held his finger up. “Put the cross back,” he whispered over the distant rumble of thunder. “They ain’t tears — they’re drops of blood.”
“The statue’s bleeding?” I asked him, quickly replacing the crucifix. “But that’s impossible, right?”
Then looking at me, Potter said, “Yeah and we’re dead. Like I keep trying to tell you, Kiera, this isn’t the world that we left — everything has been pushed.”
We made our way back to the manor in silence. The only sound was the rain slicing through the treetops overhead. Potter carried the holdall with my belongings. I had tucked my police badge into the back pocket of my jeans. I didn’t know if it would be of any use in the future, but I was glad I had it back all the same.
Before we had left the summerhouse, I had asked Potter not to say anything to Kayla or Isidor about the