knife, but . . . it wasn’t enough.” He swallowed hard, and his gaze glistened. When he spoke again, his voice was low. “I ran. I ran until I couldn’t hear the screaming anymore.”

The hair lifted on my arms. “They didn’t follow you?”

“They tried. But I stumbled, inadvertently, into a place they couldn’t catch me.”

“Where?” My brows knit together.

“An old family burial plot. A farmer’s cemetery. Not more than six or seven graves, no larger than a small room. It was marked off by unkempt grass, no fence . . . but they couldn’t go in. I passed in and out of consciousness. They circled me all night, like wolves, until they slunk away before dawn.”

I wasn’t sure whether or not to believe him. “They left you alone?”

“It wasn’t me. It was the cemetery. It was holy ground. Vampires aren’t supposed to be able to cross into it. Someone must have still believed in it. I found the skeletons of wildflowers there . . . I imagined that there was maybe a child who still visited the place, left flowers on those Civil War–era stones.”

“And you found your way here?”

“I don’t remember much after that.” He touched the wound on his temple.

He saw me looking at him with dubious, fearful eyes.

“I’m not infected,” he insisted.

I backed away, allowed the sunshine that had warmed my back to strike him in the face. He squinted through it quizzically, unlike the creatures I’d seen at the Laundromat.

“I’m not,” he said. I don’t know if he was trying to convince me or convince himself. He reached into the light, let the dust motes and sunlight drift over his fingers.

“It doesn’t matter, anyway,” I said. “They’re in town.”

He looked at my disheveled appearance. “They found you.”

“I escaped.” I shook my head. “It won’t be long before they find us.”

“They probably already know. Like I said, they seem to be pretty intelligent.”

“Then why haven’t they eaten us alive?”

“If I had to guess . . . your community is holy ground. Like the cemetery.”

“Holy ground?”

“Well, yeah.” He stared up at the barn. “If I recall my comparative religions courses, you Amish are pretty strict about the sacredness of the everyday, right?”

Ja. I guess so.” I’d never heard it put like that.

“Prayer services rotate from house to house, not held in a central church?”

“Of course.”

“Your land may be holy enough to keep them away. You may just have the last fortress against the Undead. Right here.”

I sat back against the wall of the barn, hard. “We’re safe?” For the first time since the attack in the Laundromat, I began to feel the warmth of certainty again. Much like having God’s favor made tangible.

“Well . . . if I’m right. As long as you don’t do anything stupid.”

“Like going outside the gate,” I whispered. The Elders had known, on some visceral level.

“And don’t invite them in. They can’t get in any other way.”

Chapter Ten

I took my time returning to the house, absorbing everything I had seen and heard. I felt numb, unable to process all the information. My mother saw me crossing the backyard to the water pump, where I washed my hands until they were red and raw.

“Katie! What happened to you?” she cried at my filthy appearance.

“I . . . one of the bulls knocked me down. He didn’t mean it. He just didn’t see me.” I bit my lip down on the lie.

She grabbed my shoulders. “Are you hurt?”

“No. Just a bit shook up.” The smear of blood had dried brown, indistinguishable from mud.

She put her arm around me. “Come and wash up. You’ll feel better when you’re clean.”

My mother sat me down at the kitchen table and gave me a glass of fresh milk while she carried wood to the basement to heat the water for a bath.

I stared into the milk for what seemed like a long time before lifting it to my lips. It tasted cold, rich, and pure. It grounded me, brought me back to myself.

My mother returned to take me to the spring room in the basement beside the root cellar, leading me by one hand. The other held a small kerosene lamp. We had a spring on our property, which was a blessing, but no natural gas well. Many Plain folk were able to jerry-rig a system that provided hot water with a natural gas well, but we relied on a wood stove in the corner of the spring room to heat water for the scarred clawfooted bathtub in the center of the floor. I remembered bathing in it since I was a child, feeling the cold porcelain under my hands and chin.

My mother began to untie my bonnet, but my fingers wrapped around hers. “No. I’ll do it.”

She nodded and turned her back to give me privacy while she poured a kettle of hot water into the tub. The boiling water steamed as it hit the cooler spring water. My mother topped the bathtub off from the hand pump in the floor, dipped her fingers in to check the temperature, as if I were a little girl. She’d even laid out a clean dress for me on a table against the wall we used for folding laundry. The one she picked she knew was my favorite: dark blue like the sky after sunset.

A lump rose in my throat at her kindness. It was Saturday, and bath day, anyway, but she was still trying to care for me.

She patted and kissed my cheek. “I’ll be up in the kitchen. Let me know if you need anything.”

I swallowed. I needed a lot of things. I needed to tell her what I’d learned, what I’d heard and seen with my own eyes. I needed her reassurance that all was unfolding according to God’s will, that we would be protected.

But all I could do was nod and look away.

My mother took that for modesty and left, closing the door of the spring room behind her. She left the little lamp behind to cast its yellow glow on the earthen walls. Red embers emanated from the belly of the stove, crackling with the last of the wood my mother had burned for the water. The heat caused sweat to prickle from my skin, even though my flesh was still covered in goose bumps.

I ripped the bonnet off my head, cast it on the floor. I peeled out of my filthy dress and my underclothes, kicked my shoes into a dark corner of the room where I couldn’t see them. A sob caught in my throat. I wadded up my clothes into a ball and walked to the stove. I tugged open the cast-iron door with a potholder and stuffed the bundle into it. The fire sparked and sputtered, as if trying to reject the awful, blood-spattered knowledge I shoved into its gullet. Finally, the dress caught and curled, burning brightly.

I shut the door on it, tears blurring my vision. I climbed into the bathtub, hissing as the hot water licked my skin.

I grabbed a washcloth and a bar of homemade lye soap and began to scrub, hard. I scrubbed until I was red and raw, as if I could scrape my own skin off and remove all the terrible things I’d learned today that had somehow become a part of me.

Eventually, I stopped, the water cloudy with the residue of soap. I stared up at the wooden floor joists of the ceiling in the dim, flickering light.

Was Alex right? Were we safe here, safe from those terrible creatures? I had a difficult time accepting that they were vampires, though my logic could find no other way out of the forest of the problem. Was God still watching over us? Had he chosen the Amish to be safe, here in our little community? For how long? How long until we ran out of kerosene and patience?

And what could I say . . . what should I say? I wanted to tell my parents what I’d seen, what Alex had told me. But I knew that, no matter how much they loved me, they would not defy the Elders on my behalf. No one in our community ever did, not even for their own children.

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