Crossbow. She liked that. It was one of the small, light ones, easy to aim and with surprising power, and she grabbed the bolts that went with it.
“Can I interest you in an honest- to- God army flak jacket?” he asked, and kicked the bottom drawer. “Guaranteed effective, but it’d probably be way too big for you. Plus, it’s not exactly easy to get up if you go down. Sort of the overturned- turtle problem.
Matching helmet, though, so at least you look cool while you’re flopping around helplessly getting murderated.”
She shook her head. He stepped forward, took her head be- tween his big, warm hands, and tilted her chin up so that their eyes met. “You need to figure out how to stop her from doing this, you know?”
“I know,” she said. “I’d just rather be fully armed while I do it.
In case.”
He kissed her, very gently. “I’ve got your back. Way back, obvi- ously. Just— don’t ask me to go too close to the vamps right now, okay? Including Michael. I don’t want to hurt him.” He meant that, she knew it— for all that had happened between them, all the strangeness, he and Michael were at heart brothers and best friends, and always would be.
Without Shane, Claire knew that stopping Eve— not to men- tion protecting her— would be severely challenging; Eve was a madwoman when she was determined about something, and she was never more determined about anything than about Michael.
They were going to need help. Without Hannah on their side, and with the vampires out of reach, Claire tried to imagine who might be willing and able to jump . . . and failed, at least until she felt a small shiver of air press by her and was reminded of something.
“Shane,” she said, “have you seen Miranda since we got back?”
The Glass House was complicated. It wasn’t just a house, and hadn’t been for a long time. It had a certain power to it, a certain sentience that Claire couldn’t explain, except that it must have come from what Myrnin did to the town to make it safe for the vampires. The thirteen original Founder Houses had all been linked— a kind of active transportation and defensive network that Claire couldn’t define, still, as anything but magical. Few of those remained now, but the Glass House was the first, and still the strongest. It had the capability of doing crazy stuff, but the most striking was that it could choose to save people who died within its walls. Michael, at first. Then Claire, briefly. And most recently, teen psychic Miranda, who had sacrificed herself so that Claire could live.
But Miranda, already psychic before her death, had powers that the rest of them didn’t have; her abilities allowed her to go outside of the walls of the house, and sustain herself in real human form out there, too. But she still lived here— was trapped here, in a very real sense, because she couldn’t stay away indefinitely.
Shane was shaking his head. “No. Haven’t seen the kid, which is weird. Should have thought about her earlier, but she just kind of keeps to herself.”
“I think she might be useful,” Claire said. “And besides, she’s probably lonely, don’t you think?”
“Lonely isn’t the worst problem someone in Morganville can have. But check the third floor. She made that her space up there after you left.”
The third floor didn’t exist. Shane was referring to a secret room in the attic— one with a hidden door off the main second- floor hall. A room Claire hadn’t been in for some time . . . but it made sense that Miranda would find it cozy. After all, she could, when she wanted, ghost in and out without making any sound at all— and it was a cool, if creepy, place. Just the thing for a teen who was more than a little creepy herself at the best of times.
“Be right back,” she said, and went to the area of the wall out- side his room where the secret door was concealed. She knew how to open it, and after a couple of false starts, she got the paneling to move. It creaked, of course. That was almost certainly required.
“Miranda? Mir, are you there?”
A light was shining at the top of the steep, narrow steps lead- ing up. As the door swung shut behind her, Claire ascended, and as she got to the top she came out into a room she hardly recognized.
The Victorian furniture was still in place, and all the stained- glass heavy lamps, but the walls had been covered over with posters— movies, bands, games (and most of it Claire wouldn’t be ashamed to have on her own walls). The old rugs had been rolled up and put away, and the floor was a shining, polished brown now. There was a brand- new table on the far side of the room, with a flat- screen TV hooked up to a game console. And an antique chest that Claire thought must have been dragged out of storage in the attic; it was open, and clothes spilled out of it, mostly dark in color and old in style.
Miranda was on the couch, hands folded on her stomach as she stared up at the ceiling. She was a small, thin girl, dressed in black that echoed Eve’s clothing choices. And to be honest, she looked more dead than alive.
Claire frowned and stopped where she was. “Miranda? Are you okay?”
“Go away,” Miranda said.
That wasn’t normal. “You’re not okay.”
Miranda cracked one eye to stare at her. “I’m bored. Do you know what’s going on?”
“Um . . . I’m not sure. There are a lot of things that could fit that definition.”
“Here! In Morganvil e!” Miranda sat up and swung her legs down to glare full force. “They rounded up the vampires and put them in a prison. Did you know? Where have you been? Everybody took off and left me and I didn’t know what to do! I didn’t even know if I was supposed to do anything at all!”
“I’m sorry,” Claire said. She sat down next to Miranda and put her arm around the girl; Mir felt solid, warm, alive, and well. She wasn’t, of course, but she could seem eerily real within the Glass House. “I’m sorry. We didn’t mean to abandon you. It’s just— things happened.”
“They happened here, too. It’s like people just— went crazy, you know? First the vampires just . . . I don’t know, it was like they just surrendered, and then Morganville changed. It wasn’t safe out there anymore for me. These people, these Daylight people, they— they scare me.” Miranda shivered harder, and Claire rubbed her arm in a futile attempt to make her feel better. “I’m scared to leave the house. It all feels so wrong out there. It’s so quiet.”
“Well, we’re back,” Claire said. “And trust me, it’s not going to be quiet much longer. Have you been up here the whole time?”
“Mostly,” Miranda said. “The Daylighters tried to come inside while you were gone. I kept them out, and then Father Joe from the church came to warn me. He told me to stay off the streets.
They were hunting down anything that wasn’t strictly, completely human— that’s where the vampires went. I can vanish, but he was worried they might still be able to get to me.” She shook her head.
“Claire, when they were in the house— I heard one of them say that if they wanted to really cleanse the town, they needed to de- stroy all the Founder Houses. There was an argument, but it sounded like he was winning when they left. Do you think they’d do that? Try to destroy us?”
If the Daylighters really wanted to get rid of all of the non- human, supernatural elements of Morganville, then they were go- ing to have to go after the Founder Houses. Claire was a little surprised she hadn’t already thought about it. The house could defend against most intruders, but it couldn’t defend itself against fire, or wrecking crews. And that made her feel frantic, deep down inside. No, you won’t, she thought fiercely. You won’t destroy our home.
“When did Father Joe come to see you?”
“I don’t know. It’s hard to tell.” Miranda, it was true, didn’t pay much attention to days and nights, and certainly not if she’d been hiding out here in Amelie’s safe room with no windows or clocks.
“A few days, maybe?”
“When did they come into the house to search it?” Claire asked. “Please, think!”
“Yesterday,” Miranda said. “Yesterday early. I felt the sun com- ing up.” As ghosts did. Their lives were tied to sunrises and sun- sets.