"He brought two people with him. Ysandre and Fran?ois."
Myrnin said something soft and vicious under his breath. "I know them both. What's happened since his arrival? What does Amelie say?"
"She said we should stay out of it. So do Sam and Oliver, for that matter."
"Has she made any public announcements? Is she planning any public events?"
"Shane got an invitation," she said. "To some kind of ball. He - it says he has to go as Ysandre's escort."
"Jesu," Myrnin said. "She's doing it. She's acknowledging his status with a welcome feast."
"What does that mean?"
Myrnin suddenly rattled the bars. "Let me out. Now."
Claire swallowed. "I - can't, I'm sorry. You know how this works. The first time we test a new formulation you have to stay - "
"Now," he snarled, and his eyes took on that terrifying vampire sheen. "You have no idea what's happening out there, Claire! We can't afford to be cautious."
"Then tell me what's going on! Please! I want to help!"
Myrnin visibly controlled himself, let go of the bars, and sat down on the bed. "All right. Sit down. I'll try to explain."
Claire nodded. She pulled over a steel industrial chair - left over from this facility's use as a prison, she thought - and took a seat herself. "Tell me about Bishop."
"You've met him?" Claire nodded. "Then you already know all you need to know. He's not like the vampires you've met here, Claire, not even the worst of us. Amelie and I are modern predators, tigers in the jungle. Bishop is from a far colder, harder time. A Tyrannosaurus rex, if you will."
"But he really is Amelie's father?"
Myrnin's turn to nod. "He was a warlord. A murderer on a scale that you would find it difficult to fathom. I - thought he was dead, many years ago. The fact that he's come here, now - it's very bad, Claire. Very bad indeed."
"Why? I mean, if he's Amelie's father, maybe he just wants to see her - "
"He's not here for happy memories," Myrnin said. "In all likelihood, he's here to have his revenge."
"On you?"
Myrnin slowly shook his head. "I'm not the one who tried to kill him," he said.
Claire's breath caught. "Amelie? Not - she couldn't. Not her own father."
"It's best you don't ask any more questions, little one. All you need to know is that he has reason to hate Amelie - reason enough to bring him here and for him to try to destroy everything she has worked for and accomplished."
"But - she's trying to save vampires. To stop the sickness. He has to understand that. He wouldn't - "
"You have no idea what he wants, or what he would do." He leaned forward, elbows on his knees, the picture of earnestness. "Bishop comes from a time before there were concepts among vampires of cooperation and self-sacrifice, and he'll have nothing but contempt for them. As you would say, he's old-school evil, and all that matters to him is his own power. He won't tolerate Amelie having her own."
"Then what do we do?"
"First, you let me out of here," he said. "Amelie is going to need her friends around her."
Claire slowly shook her head. The minutes were ticking by, and Myrnin seemed stable, but she had to abide by the rules.
"Claire."
She looked up. Myrnin's face was still and sober, and he seemed utterly in control of himself. This was a Myrnin she rarely saw - not as charming as the manic version, not as terrifying as the angry one. A real, balanced person.
"Don't let yourself be drawn into this," he said. "Humans don't exist for Bishop except as pawns, or food."
"I didn't think we did for too many of you," she said. Myrnin's eyes widened, and he smiled.
"You do have a point. As a species, we do have an - empathy gap," he replied. "But at least we're trying. Bishop and his friends won't bother."
The formula was much, much better than the last one - Myrnin's stability lasted for nearly four long hours, a score that delighted him almost as much as it did her. But once he'd tired, and begun sliding back into confusion and anger, Claire stopped the clock, made her notes, and checked the massive refrigerator in the center of the prison. She thought it had probably been built as central storage for the kitchens - kitchens that had gotten ripped out long ago - but it had the feeling of a giant, stainless-steel morgue.
Someone had forgotten to restock the supplies of blood inside. Claire made a note as she retrieved supplies for Myrnin, and tossed the blood packs into his cell. She didn't wait to watch him rip into them.
That always made her sick.
The other vampires were mostly beyond conversation - silent, reduced to basic survival instincts. She loaded up a cart and made the rounds delivering the last of the blood. Some of them had enough control left to nod a silent thanks to her; some only stared with mad, empty eyes, seeing her as just a giant, walking version of the blood bag.
It always gave her the creeps, but she couldn't stand to see them starve. It was somebody else's responsibility to feed them and keep the cells clean - but she wasn't sure that somebody did a very good job.
By the time she was done, it was late afternoon. Claire walked to the shimmering door in the prison wall, concentrated, and formed the portal back to Myrnin's lab. It was empty. She was tired and upset about what Myrnin had said about Bishop, and considered resetting the portal to take her directly to the Glass House . . . but she didn't like using it; it took too much out of her. She also didn't want to explain to the others about why she was stepping out of a blank wall, either.