His impenetrable mask dropped, leaving defiance and resolve flowing over Mencheres’s features.
“Yes, I took Cat from Gregor twelve years ago in order to have her power for my people instead of his. More than that, it was I who gave you the tip that sent you to that bar in Ohio the night you first met her, Bones. Do you find that too manipulative? I don’t. Thousands of people in my line rely on me to protect them, which has to mean more to me than your feeling of betrayal right now. If you survive as long as I have, you’ll learn that being cold and manipulative is necessary, even with those you love.”
Bones snorted in a manner as bitter as I felt. “You claim to love me? It’s obvious I am nothing more than a pawn to you.”
Mencheres’s dark gaze didn’t waver. “I’ve always loved you. Like a son, in fact.”
Bones walked over to Mencheres. He was still wearing the same outfit from earlier, making Bones covered in blood, soot, and dirt…and a few remaining silver knives.
Mencheres didn’t move or blink, nor did a hint of his tremendous power leak out, even when Bones pulled out a knife.
“Are you so certain of yourself?” Bones said, tracing the tip of the knife on Mencheres’s chest. “So convinced you could stop me, before I twisted this blade through your heart?”
I wanted to jump up and stand between them. Not out of concern for Mencheres, but because if Bones attacked and Mencheres decided to defend himself, that knife might end up in Bones’s heart. But my legs still wouldn’t work.
“I could stop you, but I won’t.” Mencheres’s voice was very weary. “If you must do this to avenge what I did, then do it. I’ve already lived more than long enough as it is.”
“Bones,” I whispered, not really knowing if I was urging him to drop the knife—or use it.
Bones’s hand tightened on the knife. Mencheres still didn’t move. I waited, feeling like I was holding my breath even though I didn’t breathe anymore.
His hand flashed and the knife buried back in its slot on his belt. “I deserved death from you once, Mencheres, yet you let me live. Now I’m letting you live, so we’re squared. But lie to me, or use me or her again, and that will change.”
Bones stepped back. I thought Mencheres sagged a little, in relief or in surprise, I wasn’t sure. Then Bones sat next to me, placing a hand on my still-useless leg.
“No more secrets. How does she have this power? She’s too young, and she didn’t inherit it from me, so how is it possible?”
Mencheres ran a hand through his long dark hair before answering. “Vampires drink human blood to absorb the life from mortals that vampires no longer have. She doesn’t drink mortal blood, however, because she isn’t really dead.”
My mouth dropped. Bones didn’t react. “Go on.”
“Her heart beats when her emotions run high,” Mencheres continued. “Proof that life still clings in her. Because of this life, her body rejects human blood, since she doesn’t need the life in it. But what her body does need to exist is power. Just as a dying human absorbs the power in vampire blood to change over, she, being perpetually near death, absorbs undead power every time she feeds from other vampires.”
But I’d only fed from Bones—no, wait. Vlad.
I’d fed from Vlad, and he was pyrokinetic. Was it truly possible I’d absorbed Vlad’s power over fire from drinking his blood? It had to be. Nothing else could explain the fireworks shooting from my hands, and I’d already noticed that every time I fed from Bones, I grew stronger. Far stronger than any new vampire should be.
I gulped. “Does Gregor know how I have this power?”
“Gregor’s visions aren’t as strong or as frequent as mine. All he saw was your power. He didn’t know its source. He probably thought you needed time to grow into it, or he would have changed you into a vampire at sixteen.”
Knowing Gregor, I believed that. It also explained why Gregor hadn’t been afraid of me using any of these borrowed abilities on him before. He didn’t think I’d get them so soon.
“Are these powers permanent? Or will they, you know, fade, if I don’t drink from vampires with special gifts anymore?”
Mencheres glanced away. “I don’t know,” he said. “I told you; I can’t see the future anymore. About you…or anyone else.”
Since there was nothing more that could be done about my “condition,” as I thought of it, I went to see my mother. She’d been through worse than hell in the past two weeks. In order to get over my body’s refusal to move, however, I drank from Bones, noting with a sense of unease how quickly it made me feel better. I’d been so proud of my progress, but turns out, none of my progress had really been mine. I’d gone from being a half-breed to being a mostly dead power leech. I felt like a fraud as a vampire, or more accurately, an even bigger freak.