Ophelia stared at me for a few seconds. My clothes were bloodstained, my hands chalk-white. Her smile evaporated. “Good Lord,” she gasped. “What happened here?”
Before I could answer, Charlie stepped onto the stoop behind me. Ophelia saw him. Concern mixed with relief.
“Charlie? Thank heavens!”
I would have said something, but I was too busy staring at the revolver in her hand. It was like the kind you see in old gangster movies.
“Forgive me.” She set it on a small table that was just inside the door. “I wasn’t expecting company. I’ve been terribly worried about you two.”
She hadn’t noticed Mr. Entwistle. His back was against the brick wall beside the door.
“What happened?” she asked again. “Are you okay?”
I said I was fine, even though I wasn’t. She moved aside so I could slip past. Charlie followed. Then Mr. Entwistle stepped out from his hiding place. Ophelia paused for just an instant, then tried to slam the door shut. Mr. Entwistle stopped it with his hand and forced it open, pushing her backward. She reached for the gun on the table, but he was faster.
“Excuse me,” he said, “but I’ve been shot enough tonight.”
I waited for Ophelia to say something, but she didn’t. Instead, she stood there stunned while he examined the weapon. He opened the chamber, looked down the barrel, flicked it shut, then raised the hammer and gave the wheel a spin. “You’ve looked after this well.” He switched his grip so that he was holding it by the barrel. Ophelia reached out and grabbed the handle. Her hand was a bit unsteady. He didn’t let go until she met his gaze. Neither spoke.
Something odd was happening. Was this just the way it was when two vampires met for the first time—awkward, tense, uncomfortable? Then I remembered that the two had seen each other before. Just briefly the night Mr. Entwistle had crashed through the doors of the Nicholls Ward on that stolen police cycle. The police had been there, so he didn’t stick around long, just enough to tell her to get me out of there. I don’t know how much he knew about her, or she of him, but something wasn’t right. I could feel it. I’d never seen her scared before. Not like this. When she pulled the gun away, her hand was still shaking, the barrel quivering slightly. She kept it pointed in his general direction, as if she wasn’t sure if she should start shooting or not. I tried to see him as she would. Hair matted. Whiskers. Oversize boots and fingerless gloves. Weathered face. Intense eyes. Like a refugee from the Apocalypse. He took off his top hat and tucked it inside his coat. I wondered if he wanted her to see the armor he was wearing underneath. If this was a poker game, he was laying his cards down on the table, one at a time.
“How did I fail to notice?” he said. “But it makes perfect sense that it would be you.”
Again she said nothing, but I thought something must have passed between them, because he nodded and a deep hum buzzed in his throat.
“The only relevant question is, what will you do now?” he asked.
Ophelia’s hand was still shaking, and when she spoke it was with a quaver in her voice. “I appreciate that you’ve brought them back.”
I couldn’t remember ever seeing her this way before. Afraid. Uncertain. In the past, even when she was undecided about something and needed more time to think, there was a kind of certainty in her doubt, a confidence that she could work through the problem. Now she just seemed lost.
“It wasn’t my intention to disturb you,” he said. “I was told you were at your apartment on Clonsilla.”
Ophelia stiffened. Her voice went cold. “How did you know about that?”
He reached into his coat and removed his flattened top hat. It looked like a black Frisbee. He started spinning it in his hands. “I’ve been very busy. Little happens in this city now that I don’t find out about.” He snapped his wrist and the top of his hat popped out. “I wouldn’t impose on your hospitality, but I don’t want to leave without some assurance that you can look after these boys.”
“We’ve always managed.”
“Things have changed. And they will only get worse. You know this.”
Ophelia looked at the floor, then at me, then at Charlie. Mr. Entwistle went on, “The Underground has been compromised. It’s unstable. You can’t depend on it. It’s happening across the globe. The Coven has fractured. It is warring with itself. But they haven’t lost interest in any of you. They sent an assassin to kill these two. If I hadn’t shown up, they’d both be dead. And there is a creature out there killing vampires. It is intelligent and determined.”
He stepped forward. Normally when he moved, it made me think of a wolf. He sort of loped. But now he was standing at his full height. I was surprised how tall he was, and how intimidating. Had I not known him better, I would have thought he was the King of Mean. Ophelia was holding a gun in her hand, but I sensed, as she must have, that the weapon was irrelevant.
“I am the oldest vampire in the West,” he said. “Veteran of the Balkan Crusades, the Wars of the Roses, of World War II, and everything in between. I have never met anyone, man or beast, who was my equal in a fight. Not your husband. Not Maximilian. Not anyone—until now. This thing, the one I call Mr. Hyde, is positively lethal.”
Ophelia glanced at me quickly. She must have understood that Mr. Entwistle was the vampire from my dream. The one who had fought—and lost. The corners of his mouth turned up just slightly. It was almost a smile. Then his face flattened out and he spoke with unusual seriousness.
“I understand that you don’t want me here. But how, in my absence, will you protect them?”
Ophelia’s eyes were busy—alert. Her voice was quiet, but there was anger in it. “You are reckless. If you care about Zachary at all, about us, you’ll turn around, walk out the door, and leave us alone.”
Mr. Entwistle took a step forward so that the hall light was directly above him. It cast his face in shadow. His eyes looked like two empty holes. “I have left you alone. And since my little adventure last year with your ward, I have been traveling on my own, seeking answers to important questions. You know who the boy is. Now is not the time to isolate yourselves. Everything I have read and heard and felt and seen is consistent in this one regard—we are balanced on the head of a nail. One false move and we’re finished. Now that Vlad is gone, a long-predicted war has arrived. The End of Days. And the boy has a part to play. We cannot lose him now. You know the price for all of us if that happens.”
I was starting to feel like an extra in my own life story. Nothing Mr. Entwistle said was making sense to me. I looked at Charlie. He seemed as nervous and unsure as I did. As if the floor were falling out from under us.
“You have more problems than you can contend with. The Coven won’t be in shambles forever. Once a new order is established, they’ll come in force. For all of you. Not one assassin. An army. They don’t approve of child vampires, or those who shelter them. And you’ve a more immediate problem—Mr. Hyde. Who else can help you? I’m your last best hope.”
“No.” Ophelia’s voice had a tremor. “I’ll take them away. We’ll hide.”
Mr. Entwistle’s head tipped sideways just a hair. Pity was in his expression. “You can run, that’s true. But where? And for how long? Sooner or later they’ll find you. Then they’ll kill him, and his friends. Unless Hyde devours them first. He exists only to kill our kind. We have to make a stand. As time goes on, the situation here will only get worse.”
Get worse? Unless we moved up north where there were twenty-four hours of daylight at a stretch, I couldn’t imagine how things could get worse.
Ophelia was still holding the gun. She looked as if she might set it down, but she didn’t. “You are asking me to trust you, and I don’t. You might have changed your name and your clothes, but you are who you have always been.” More certainty was in her manner as she spoke, but she was still a long way from the indomitable person who showed up to save my friends and me from Vlad.
Mr. Entwistle pressed his lips together and turned them up in a smile that had no humor or mirth. It expressed loss and disappointment. “Trust is irrelevant, Ilona. You can’t protect him. There is only me.”
Ilona. I’d never heard the name. But Ophelia’s expression changed when she heard it. Her fear remained, and there was sadness, too. And what else? She was so practiced at hiding everything, I couldn’t tell.
“Like you, I have reinvented myself. I am John Entwistle now. And I walk in the light. Well—in a manner of speaking.”
Ophelia looked at me. Her expression softened. I smiled. Then she looked back at Mr. Entwistle. Her face could be an iron mask when she wanted, but not tonight. She was still shaken.
“I am not a trusting person. This is not a habit I plan to change. If you are being honest, time will bear you out. But until I am certain, I will not have you here.”
Mr. Entwistle placed his top hat on his head. “I suggest you tell the boys everything. Now is not a time for secrets. Or for us to be isolated. Alone, the Beast will destroy us, one after the other.” He nodded in farewell, then turned and walked out the door. I heard his footsteps on the back step, then the soft grass. A moment later he had vanished.
I glanced at Ophelia. Much of their conversation had been over my head, but it didn’t change the fact that I owed him my thanks. If not for him, I’d still be stuck behind bars with the charming Officer Lumsden for company. This felt wrong. He shouldn’t have left. My instincts told me he was right, and that we needed to stick together.
Ophelia must have sensed what I was thinking. “Let him go, Zachary.”
“Why can’t he stay here?”
“Give it a night. We can discuss matters. The situation is more complicated than you know.”
Only because you never tell me anything, I thought to myself. I should have screamed it in her ear. But I couldn’t. I was a bit old for tantrums. “I think you’re wrong about him.”
She let go of my arm. “He isn’t who you think he is.”
She wiped her eyes again, then took a deep breath. “It is a common thing for a vampire to change his name.”
“Is that why he called you Ilona?”
She looked at Charlie, then at me. “It was a name I used once, a long time ago, but it was never really mine.”
I thought she might say more, but she didn’t.
“Why don’t you trust him?”
She looked at me, then at the floor, then pinched her forehead between her fingers and thumb and began massaging her temples. “Things are worse than you can imagine.”
Since I could imagine the sun exploding and destroying all life on earth, this was saying quite a bit. “Then shouldn’t we accept Mr. Entwistle’s help?”
“Well, that’s the rub, isn’t it? Mr. Entwistle isn’t really Mr. Entwistle.”
“What does that mean?”
She fixed me with a sad stare. “When I knew him, his name was John Tiptoft. He had many titles. Earl of Worcester, Treasurer of the Exchequer, Deputy of Ireland, Constable of England.”
A constable. Wasn’t that like a police officer? It didn’t sound so bad. None of it did. Ophelia must have sensed my doubt because she finished with a whopper.
“As a constable, he was essentially an executioner. The people hated him for his cruelty. They called him the Butcher of England.”