Vamps, p.13

Vamps, page 13

 

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  “Is it bad?” Bette squeaked fearfully, clutching her red ribbons to her chest.

  “No, not at all. You just need a little push in the right direction so you can finish the transformation, that’s all. There’s something called a reversal potion that will solve your problem. Unfortunately, Coach Munn keeps his supply under lock and key. However, I’ve been studying the formula in my potions class, and I think I can safely replicate it.”

  “That’s great!” Cally said excitedly. “See, Bette? I told you everything would be all right! All Exo has to do is go whip up a batch of reversal potion and bring it back here so you can drink it!”

  “Yeahhhh. About that,” Xander said uneasily as he rubbed the back of his neck. “The reversal potion actually has a very short half-life and requires a special binding agent in order for it to be bottled and transported. The problem is that the only person who has access to the binding agent is Professor Frid. By the time I make the potion, put it in a vial, and bring it back from the lab at my school, it will be useless. In order for it to work, it must be consumed within a minute or two of being concocted.”

  “So that means—?”

  “We have to smuggle her into Ruthven’s.”

  “What—?” Bette’s voice made both Cally and Xander wince. “Are you crazy? Bathory students caught on the Ruthven campus without a chaperone are automatically expelled! The same goes for Ruthven students coming onto Bathory property! As a matter of fact, if someone walked in on us right now, we’d all be tossed out!”

  “Would you rather I go and report your condition to Madame Nerezza?” Cally asked.

  “No,” Bette admitted.

  “Then Xander has to smuggle you into the boys’ school—and out again.”

  Bette’s mutated upper lip began to quiver and tears welled in her beady red eyes. “I’m scared, Cally! I’m not used to doing stuff without Bella.”

  “If it’ll make you feel better, I’ll go with you.”

  “You will? Oh, thank you, Cally!” Bette squeaked, throwing her arms around the other girl’s neck. “Thank you! Thank you! Thank you! But aren’t you afraid of getting into trouble?”

  “The way things are going, I seriously doubt I’m going to be attending Bathory Academy much longer anyway.” Cally shrugged. “The way I look at it, what do I have to lose?”

  “Wow, so this is what it’s like in the boys’ school,” Bette whispered in awe as they hurried along the corridor that connected the grotto to Ruthven’s School for Boys. Where the corridor leading to the grotto on Bathory Academy’s side had been fashioned of natural rock and boasted a barrel-vaulted ceiling, Ruthven’s resembled the enclosed walkway of a Gothic monastery.

  “We’ve got to hurry. The grotto and laboratory are normally deserted during mealtime, but there’s still a chance we’ll be spotted,” Xander explained. He pushed the call button for the elevator. “I could try and cast an obscuration spell around the two of you, but that’s only of use against being seen by clots.”

  “What about the elevator operator?” Cally asked. “Aren’t you worried about him seeing us?”

  “What operator?” Xander asked with a puzzled frown as the doors pinged open, revealing a modern push-button elevator.

  Like Bathory, the classrooms for Ruthven’s School for Boys were situated underground on three subterranean levels, the third of which was the grotto, which it shared with its sister school. The Gothic architectural look was continued on the second level with an impressive ribbed vault ceiling and pointed arch doorways.

  “Here we are,” Xander whispered over his shoulder as he opened the door to the potions lab. “Luckily, our master chymist, Professor Frid, is a man of very rigid habits. We have a good fifteen minutes before he returns from lunch.”

  The floor at the center of the room was covered with strange symbols and half-melted candles, and the walls were lined with stone tables. Xander hurried over to a table in the far corner covered in a jumble of vials, flasks, and tools, including a macabre mortar and pestle fashioned from a human skull and arm bone. He shrugged out of his school blazer and slipped on a stained leather apron. Quickly measuring out liquids and powders from various containers, he poured them into a glass beaker suspended over a small gas flame burner, which he then lit.

  “Are you absolutely sure this is going to work?” Bette asked anxiously as she watched him mix black hellebore and powdered mandrake into the madly bubbling mix.

  “I’m positive!” he said, giving her a reassuring wink. “We Orlocks have a knack for such things, you know.”

  Suddenly the lab door opened and slammed shut.

  “Someone’s here!” Xander whispered, a look of dread on his face. “Quick! Hide!”

  Cally nodded her understanding and grabbed Bette by the hand, dragging her along behind her as she ducked under a nearby table.

  “Hey—Exo! Is that you?”

  Xander turned to see his cousin Jules ambling toward him, a surprised look on his handsome face.

  “Yeah, it’s me,” Xander replied, nervously rubbing his palms against his lab apron.

  “What are you doing here?” Jules asked.

  “I was about to ask you the same thing.”

  “I forgot my formula workbook,” Jules explained, holding up a battered leather volume bound with metal clasps. “My dad’s still holding that trip to Vail over my head if I don’t get my grades up. Why are you here?”

  “Just putting in a little extra-credit work, that’s all.”

  “You’re such a spod, Orlock.” Jules chuckled.

  “Well, it’s not like I can get by on my good looks, like some people I know,” Xander said with a crooked smile.

  “So…you wanna come hang after school? Sergei’s having a bunch of the guys over. His parents are out in the Hamptons.”

  “I don’t think so,” Xander said. “That’s not really my scene. Like you said, I’m a spod. Besides, I get the feeling Lilith’s uncomfortable with me hanging around.”

  “I haven’t told Lilith about the party yet,” Jules said, looking down at his shoes.

  “Are you going to?”

  “I dunno. Maybe.” He shrugged. “It’s just that she’s been acting so strange lately, you know? Ever since Tanith got, you know, she’s done nothing but obsess about that girl at her school, the New Blood.”

  “Lilith and Tanith were friends, Jules,” Xander said pointedly. “She probably misses her. Maybe fixating on the New Blood takes her mind off it.”

  “Yeah, I guess so,” Jules admitted halfheartedly. “I just wish she’d be more like her old self again.”

  “If that’s the case, why don’t you try and do something to get her mind off Tanith?” Xander suggested. “Something romantic.”

  “That’s not a bad idea,” Jules said as he rubbed his chin. “For someone who’s never been on a date, you sure seem to understand women.”

  “My mom has all these subscriptions to Cosmo and stuff like that,” Xander said with a laugh. “I read them when my dad’s not looking.”

  “I better be going,” Jules said. “Thanks for the suggestion, Cuz! I think it might actually work!”

  “Later,” Xander called out as his cousin exited the room.

  “Who was that?” Cally whispered as she climbed out from under the lab table.

  “My cousin Jules.”

  “Your cousin?” Cally exclaimed, unable to hide her surprise.

  “Couldn’t you tell from the family resemblance?” Xander said dryly.

  “I didn’t mean it like that, Exo.”

  “That’s okay.” Xander sighed as he returned to his work on the potion. “I’m used to it. Jules is a babe magnet and I’m a babe anti-magnet. I know it, you know it, and the whole world knows it.”

  “You shouldn’t talk that way about yourself,” Cally chided, placing her hand on his arm.

  Xander paused to flash her a sad smile. “You’re a very sweet girl, Cally, but there’s no point in deluding myself. The Orlocks might be one of the oldest, richest, and most powerful families in the world—but if there’s one thing we’re not, it’s easy on the eyes. Hell, most of us can barely pass for human. I know that I’ll never be handsome, and I’ve come to accept that. I’m comfortable with myself, which is more than a lot of people—vampires included—can say. Now watch out; when I add the final ingredient to the potion, it’s gonna fizz like Diet Coke and Mentos.”

  Xander picked up an unmarked vial and tapped a small measure of powder into the bubbling beaker. The mixture began to foam wildly while changing every color of the spectrum. When it got to lavender, Exo snatched the dripping beaker from the burner, poured out the liquid into a glass, and handed it to Bette.

  “Drink it quickly, before it stops bubbling.”

  Bette sniffed the mixture apprehensively with her upturned bat’s nose. “It smells like unwashed gym socks.”

  “I didn’t say it would smell good,” Xander replied testily. “I just said it would work.”

  Summoning her courage, Bette closed her eyes and knocked back the contents of the beaker in one gulp. “Ugh! It tastes even nastier than it smells!” she said with a grimace as she wiped the residue from her mouth.

  “I didn’t say anything about it tasting good, either,” Xander reminded her. “How do you feel?”

  “Okay, I guess,” Bette said as the fur receded from her face and her features returned to their former appearance. “It’s kind of weird, though. It’s like someone’s massaging my face from the inside out.”

  “I can’t believe it!” Cally gasped. “It really worked!”

  “Of course it did,” Xander said, a hint of pride in his voice. “But you two need to get out of here. The midnight meal will be over any minute now. That means the halls are gonna be full of students and faculty headed back to their classrooms.”

  “Thank you, Exo,” Bette said sincerely. “I won’t forget what you did for me. C’mon, Cally—let’s go!”

  As Cally moved to follow her schoolmate out the door, she suddenly turned back and planted a quick kiss on the side of Xander’s cheek. “Thanks for everything, Exo,” she whispered in his pointed ear. “You’re a great guy, you know that?”

  Xander stood there, his mouth hanging open like a fish, one hand cupped over his kissed cheek as if it had just been slapped as he watched Cally hurry out the door and down the hall.

  “Orlock, you’re such a spod,” he groaned.

  Jules de Laval stood in the students’ second-floor lavatory, staring down into the sink while he washed his hands. Exo was right about what he needed to do. Then again, Xander had always been the smart one in the family.

  If he wanted to get Lilith back to her old self, he needed to keep her mind off the New Blood girl. But how? He remembered what Exo had said about Aunt Juliana’s fashion magazines. His own mother had several subscriptions as well, which got him thinking.

  Maybe he would place a call between classes and get one of the servants to look through his mother’s magazines and find something romantic for him to do. He was deciding to make that his plan of action for the night when he stepped out of the restroom and instantly collided with someone running down the hall.

  Jules staggered backward and was about to curse whoever it was for being a clumsy bastard when he realized he was staring not at a fellow Ruthven’s student but at a girl.

  He stood there in surprise, not simply because Bathory Academy students were forbidden inside Ruthven’s, but because the girl standing before him was the New Blood from the park, up close and beautiful.

  With her glittering green eyes, moonflower-white skin, and short, strangely cut hair, the girl standing before him was the exact opposite of Lilith and all the other pampered Old Blood girls he had ever known. The red terry-cloth gym suit fit her in all the right places, hugging her boobs and her taut, toned ass, showing off her long, well-shaped legs.

  Jules looked past the beauty standing before him and saw, farther down the corridor, Bette Maledetto, dressed in full Bathory uniform. She was leaning out of the elevator, motioning to the New Blood as she kept the doors of the car from closing.

  “What in the name of the Founders—?” he managed to sputter.

  The girl in the gym suit lifted a finger to her lips. “Please don’t say anything!” she pleaded. “If we get in trouble, your cousin does too!”

  “How did you get in here? And how do you know who my cousin is?”

  “Because Exo smuggled us into the alchemy lab. We were hiding in there when you came to get your homework,” she explained.

  “I knew Exo was up to something!” Jules said. “I just didn’t think it involved, you know, girls.”

  Jules looked around to make sure no one else was in the hall before grabbing the girl’s hand. His heart began to beat faster as he felt her smooth skin beneath his fingers.

  “Tell Bette to follow us,” he whispered. “Using the elevator to get back to the grotto is too dangerous now. There’s an old stairway on this floor that leads to where you need to go. Not many students know about it, and it’s rarely used anymore. It should be safe.”

  Cally turned and waved for Bette to hurry. Jules led them down a hallway off the main corridor to a small wooden door fitted with a brass handle. The door creaked open easily, revealing a set of tightly winding stairs that led downward into darkness.

  “Thank you for helping us.” Cally smiled. “I think we can take it from here.”

  Jules shook his head. “No, it’s safer if I go with you,” he said. “I can run interference if someone’s down there.”

  As Cally and Bette stepped inside the stairway after him, the door closed behind them on its own. They followed the stairs down, pushing their way through cobwebs. After a few minutes they arrived at another narrow door.

  “This opens onto a section of the grotto roughly a couple of hundred yards from the Ruthven’s entrance tunnel,” Jules explained. “I’ll go first to make sure the coast is clear.”

  He stepped out and looked around for signs of students or faculty but saw none. He reopened the door and signaled for the girls to join him.

  “Once again, thank you for your help,” the girl in the gym suit said, teasing him with a smile. “It was very gallant of you.”

  “It was nothing, Miss…?” he said, responding to her flirting tone.

  “Cally.”

  Jules stepped forward and took Cally’s hands in his, bowing slightly at the waist as his lips brushed lightly against the curve of her fingers. “Enchanté, Cally.” Jules smiled.

  “The pleasure is mutual, monsieur,” she replied, affecting an exaggerated curtsy.

  Delighted with their play, Jules and Cally started laughing, but when they heard Bette giggle, Cally blushed. “We better be going,” she said, letting go of his hands.

  “Au revoir.” Jules smiled.

  Jules paused to watch the girls dash back to their side of the grotto. He told himself he was only making sure they got back safely, but in reality he just wanted to admire Cally’s butt.

  CHAPTER 15

  When Bathory Academy was originally founded, there was no such thing as a school cafeteria. But as Victor Todd’s blood-banking scheme grew more and more accepted by the population, that eventually changed. Now there was a large room set aside for the students and faculty to take their meals, filled with tables and chairs straight out of Ikea. At the back of the cafeteria was a large, triple-door blood bank refrigerator set into the wall.

  As Lilith stepped to the head of the line, she had an unobstructed view of the racks of stainless steel drawers stocked with plastic bags full of human blood.

  The undead servant in cafeteria whites smiled in greeting and asked, “What will it be tonight, dearie?”

  “I think I still have some of my private stock banked on reserve,” Lilith replied.

  “Indeed you do, Miss Todd.” The lunch lady opened one of the doors of the refrigerator and reached inside a drawer, withdrawing a blood bag, which she then placed on a plastic cafeteria tray. On the front of the bag was a label marked with a large AB- along with the HemoGlobe corporate logo: a single drop of bright red blood superimposed over a world silhouetted in white.

  Lilith took her tray and sat down at the nearest available table. Within a minute or two all her friends had joined her. After all, no matter where she sat, it was the popular table.

  “Have you seen Annabelle Usher tonight?” Carmen asked as she sat down opposite Lilith, the corner of her mouth pulled into a smirk. She nodded in the direction of a short, pale girl with a round face and dark hair cut in a blunt bob, with what looked like a pair of upside-down Us drawn in place of eyebrows. “She’s such an utter spod! And look at how dingy her clothes are—doesn’t she have more than one skirt and blouse to wear to school?”

  Lilith shook her head in disgust. “If a legacy student’s family is so hard up they can’t provide a dresser for their child, she has no business attending Bathory.” She paused and looked around the room. “Speaking of which, where’s the newbie?”

  “You mean Cally?” Bianca Mortimer asked, missing the point as usual. “I haven’t seen her since flight class. Why? Do you want to talk to her?”

  “Did I mention she had the gall to try and lay some pathetic ‘why can’t we all just get along’ speech on me last night? I told her to kiss my ass.”

  “Lilith’s right,” Carmen agreed. “We’ve got enough half-bloods and legacies ruining things for the rest of us here—we don’t need a New Blood making things worse.”

  “I think you’re making a mistake,” Melinda said suddenly.

  The chatter at the table fell abruptly quiet as the other girls turned to stare at Lilith, who was glaring at Melinda like an angry eagle. When she finally spoke, her voice was surprisingly calm.

  “What was that?”

  “I just think maybe you shouldn’t be in such a hurry to make an enemy out of her, that’s all,” Melinda replied cautiously. “She’s not some mousy little spod. You’ve seen what she can do.”

 

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