“Ohm—” Layla starts and finishes with a shriek as Marty’s head pops right back through. “Someone has to hold Layla’s hand because, well, it’s not her fault she’s all human.”
Layla scowls at him. I reach for her hand, but she grabs Kurt’s instead. He’s standing closer to her, I guess.
Marty looks to me. “Knock once, wait for the knock back. A headless monkey could do it.” He disappears.
“Here goes everything.” I knock. The wait seems even longer than when Marty did it. Or maybe it’s because I’m afraid it’s not going to work for me. What if half of me gets stuck because I’m half human? And if so, which parts—
Then I hear it. The knock back. Only I can’t seem to make myself move. I feel someone’s hands push me forward at the same time I take a step in. For a moment, I feel weightless and cold. Two heartbeats later, the warmth rushes back. I stumble and trip down the steps. At least I land on my back and not my face.
Marty’s talking with a guy who’s almost seven feet tall. His red spikes graze the ceiling. He glances at me with a set of red eyes and a nose that looks like he gets into a lot of fights. “More convenient than a buzzer,” I go.
The red-haired giant looks away, bored.
“Tristan, that’s Ignacio.” Marty nods at the red-haired giant. “And this is Lisbit, my future wife.” He leans against the wooden podium toward a girl with a slender pale face. Everything about her is pointy, from her chin to the upturned tip of her nose to the black points she’s painted over her eyelids.
“The little merman,” she says. Her voice is deep and smooth. “It is wonderful to meet you. Hang on.” A second knock echoes in the room. It feels like it’s coming from everywhere all at once. She opens a silver box in front of her and pushes the red button. I stand aside, waiting for the tumble that never comes. Kurt takes one step in, balancing perfectly at the top of the steps. He holds on to Layla’s hands as she passes through. I can see her shiver with the sudden coldness of the metal door. She gasps when she looks down the short steps. She pulls herself up straight and they stand facing each other, holding hands.
“How did you know not to fall down the steps?” I say, unsuccessfully keeping the annoyance from my voice.
He shrugs. “It’s only logical not to rush right into unfamiliar territory.”
Naturally.
Lisbit’s eyes flare as she stares at Kurt. She glances at Layla, who lets go of Kurt’s hands and stuffs them in her back pockets. Layla looks from Ignacio to Lisbit’s gold shorts to the lights floating all about. They’re like the ones on the island but smaller. She reaches out and touches one, then pulls her finger back with a jerk. “Ouch, they’re hot.”
The corners of Lisbit’s plum-painted lips lift in a sly smile. “Curiosity killed the human girl. Be careful you don’t go doing that in there.”
Ignacio unlocks the door behind him. This one does have a knob. He steps aside. I hold on to the knob, tense at the thought that my hand might go right through.
I turn it.
I push it.
The music blares.
First thing’s the stage. Red velvet curtains are draped open to frame the band. Hundreds of floating lights cluster above a four-girl band. They are red and black and white versions of the Beach Boys—but girls. In skin-tight polka-dot dresses, they ohhh and ahhh to the swaying crowd. Their logo, “The Vampirettes,” is centered on their bass drum, enclosed by a set of red lips with two glossy fangs.
“Are they really vampires?” I hear Layla ask behind me. Her voice is a mixture of wonder and dread.
“What do you think?” Marty answers suggestively.
To the left are seating areas of couches and tall circular tables with barstools made of a curling black metal. To the right there’s a bar with hundreds of glass bottles in all heights and shapes. None of them have labels on them. Some are full of a familiar fizzy green liquid. A thin green girl with paper-thin wings retracted against her shoulder blades pours a goopy red liquid and what must be champagne into a tall, skinny flute glass and slides it to a girl about my age.
“That’s a bloody mimosa.” Marty puts an arm around me. “That’s Rhine, the bartender. She’s a pixie. The guy bartender, Adam, is just human. He’s part of the Coney freak show upstairs.” He points to a guy covered in tattoos, from the top of his bald head, down his shirtless torso, and down to the tips of his fingers.
We weave across the dance floor. Behind me, a girl with feathery wings and owl eyes is bouncing around and twirling Layla under her arm in that cute way girls do when they dance together. Kurt hunches and scowls more and more with everyone who bumps into him.
Layla dances around me now. We’re on the outside of the dance floor. Something slimy brushes against my hand, but it’s too dark to really make out anything that isn’t right in front of my face. I feel a pinch on my butt. “Hey, now.” But my insides are bursting because it’s Layla. She cocks her head to the side, moving her shoulders up and down to the poppy guitar rock. She traces her finger along my cheek, and I can’t help it: I wrap my hands around her waist. Maybe it’s the atmosphere, or maybe she sneaked something to drink while I wasn’t looking, but she laughs in my ear.
Then something in my gut turns. I breathe in her hair, and it doesn’t smell like anything. It smells clean, like air conditioner. I hold her face, and a grin that is very un-Layla spreads on her face. Her eyes aren’t the honey I’m used to. I look around. What if something is possessing her? Behind me, Layla and Kurt finally pull through the jam-packed dance floor.
The Layla in front of me cackles in a way that sounds so wrong coming from her pretty face. The Layla behind me stares, eyes wide. She closes the gap between the three of us so that the two of them stand facing each other in front of me. I grab the other Layla’s ponytail and bring it to my nose. Lavender.
“What the—”
Layla touches un-Layla’s nose. “Does my nose really do that when I smile?”
The un-Layla starts stretching, her hair shortening and darkening, jaw squaring, shoulders broadening until Marty’s form returns. I jump back.
“Surprised?” Marty the shape-shifter asks me.
“Dude, you pinched my ass.”
“You’ve got that whole merman prince thing going for you. What can I say? I’m a social climber.” He walks backward down the tight table aisles. “I’ve got some people I want you to meet.”
“Is the seer going to be one of them?” Kurt asks, all business all the time. I’m having fun down here. I can’t remember the last time I felt fun. Like reliable Tristan Hart who’d take any dare, who could get any girl. Me. Fun. Before the storm, those two things were supposed to be synonymous.
“One thing at a time,” I say, following Marty and letting my friends fall in line.
•••
In a corner where there are not twinkling floating lights, but brass gas lamps fastened on the walls, is a group of guys who look like they should be on the cover of one of my dad’s ’80s rock records. They have the long tousled hair, the leather, the ripped jeans, and the perpetual look of amused boredom. I feel awkward here, the uninvited kid at the party who just stands there. I have never been that kid until right now, and it sucks.
Marty walks up to a tall blond guy who wears a white undershirt and a black leather vest. They talk to a guy who looks about my age, maybe eighteen. Although that doesn’t mean much in a place like this if Kurt is 103. The second guy has brown hair that comes to his shoulders. He wears a Hawaiian shirt and has a predatory slouch. The sunny outfit contrasts with his pale skin, and my senses scream—vampire.
“Why does everyone seem so serious?” Layla asks.
Marty shrugs. “You try being immortal. You get to be seventeen and human, and your problems are bad enough. Then when you’re seventeen forever, you have bigger things to worry about.”
/>
The vampire in the Hawaiian shirt focuses on me. His eyes aren’t exactly a spectacular color. I’d think they’d be red or super black, but other than the pale skin and dark circles under his eyes, I’d figure he was just a really white kid who never slept.
He lifts his chin at me and holds out his hand. It’s like grabbing something out of the freezer.
“Frederik Stig Nielsen,” he says with a slight accent. Not British, but from somewhere over there. “I heard your grandfather liked my asphodels.”
I look to Marty with my best what-the-fuck-is-he-talking-about face.
Marty pats Frederik on the back. “You found a name you liked! Good for you, buddy.”
Frederik shoots a menacing look at Marty. Then again, his pronounced brow makes him look like he’s always scowling.
“Oh, yeah, he thought they were awesome.” I’m not exactly lying. He did seem interested in them, but what else am I supposed to say to him? Hey, is there any Type O on tap?
Frederik points to the tall blond guy watching us with bemusement. His eyes twinkle in the kind of way that musicians’ do. “How rude of me. This is Röaan Recklit.”
We shake hands. Good grip, good grip.
“Sorry,” he says, releasing my hand. “I forget my own strength.”
“Tristan,” Frederik starts, “the boy today at the beach, the disappearing boys around the city. It’s not human-related, but it has nothing to do with us either. I don’t want the alliance hurt because there is no Sea King until the next full moon. I don’t know anything about you, but Marty deems your character worthy. I trust him implicitly.” He turns to Marty with a grave face. “You forgot my order of Andes Picante.”
“Bro, there was a mangled human body on the boardwalk. We can go back for it, but Tristan’s looking for someone right now.”
“My teacher, Olivia Pippen.”
Marty rolls his eyes when Frederik shrugs. “You know, the seer who can read voices? She has the decade of bereavement at Thorne Hill? Is it too much to ask that you pay attention to my ex-girlfriends?”
“Oh her. I saw her dancing a minute ago. She doesn’t like me much.”
“How come?” Since you’re such a charmer.
“Because she can’t read me.”
And hopefully also not a mind reader. “Why?” I feel like I’m two again.
“I’m a man of few words.”
Right, glad I asked.
I turn to plead with Marty once again. “Do you know where she would’ve gone?” He holds his hands up, and I know what he’s going to say. I’m neutral. My heart beats a little faster. I’m fucking this up utterly. “Kurt, let’s try—”
“Kurt’s gone,” Layla says.
“What do you mean, Kurt is gone?”
She shrugs. “I mean, he was standing right behind me, and now he’s not there anymore. He’s gone.”
I scan the crowds for him, but it’s so dark. Where would he have gone? Why now? I mean, I know I’m a little hard to get along with, since he’s all serious merman guy, but come on. I thought we were getting past that.
The Vampirettes have put away their instruments and are walking toward us, shaking hands with some people. They smile with ruby-red lips and fangs that glisten in the gaslight.
“Frederik,” one says in her high soprano voice. “You up for some moonbathing?”
Frederik shrugs. “Sure.”
Two of the girls jump up and clap their hands. “Röaan, you coming?”
“Nah, I have some scouting for next Friday’s show.” Röaan turns to me. “I hope everything works out. We’re playing next Friday. My band’s Low Key. I’ll introduce you to some smokin’ hot Valkyries. Oh, and”—I brace against his hand, slapping my chest in what he probably considers a friendly pat, and I consider a heavy beating—“bring some of those sea princesses I heard were in town.”
As he strides back to his table with the confidence of a rock god, two guys stand and give up their seats for him. Must be nice to be so in command.
The Vampirettes look bored. “Well, the moon isn’t going to stay at its peak forever. I think those stupid lights gave me a bit of a tan. What do you think?”
“You look great, really icy pale,” I say, and she gives me a girlish smile.
Frederik looks past my shoulder and, for a second, arches his eyebrow. I never thought I’d meet someone with even less of an emotional range than Kurt. He exchanges glances with Marty as Kurt walks through the crowd holding on to a girl. From far away they look like friends holding hands. Then you notice how white their fingers are from him squeezing. That and the pallor that replaces her usually blushed cheeks during class. She’s in a tight black dress with her hair gathered all on one side. She does her best to keep her cool, but even though I can’t seem to smell other supernatural beings, the fear is in her eyes.
Marty leans in close to me to whisper, “You need to take this outside, bro.”
“Ms. Pippen, I only want to talk.”
Her smile is hard, bitter. Not that I blame her. “Really? You hardly ever talk in my class.”
The lead singer of the Vampirettes claps her hands. “The beach?”
Frederik walks past us slowly, casually. There’s something soothing about his presence, considering he could drain you dry if he wanted. I’d like to be that calm and collected during any situation. He motions straight ahead, leading the way out. “The beach.”
Right, a man of few words.
I think you left Lisbit aching for you, bro,” Marty tells Kurt, walking backward through Luna Park.
“She’s not my type,” Kurt says, leaving me to wonder what his type could possibly be.
He holds on to Ms. Pippen’s arm as the Vampirettes frolic through the Coney Island night with faces tilted toward the sliver of moon. One takes a pink cotton candy from a cart and keeps walking. They tear puffs in greedy bunches and let the sugar melt on their tongues.
Marty slings his arm around my shoulder. “Ooo, candied apples.” He stops and pays for one and bites into the hard red shell. I wonder how he can be so nonchalant all the time considering the things he knows, the things he must see. Maybe his shifting isn’t just physical. Maybe it applies to his feelings too, because I don’t see how he can walk around eating candy at Luna Park as we take my English teacher practically hostage. I hope one day I can learn to fix my feelings like him and Kurt.
“The Vampirettes, they’re, like, housebroken, right?”
He takes a smaller bite, making yummy faces that rival the group of little girls not too far from us eating chocolate-covered Oreos. Suddenly I wish we hadn’t put him in this situation. “Technically, New York is a safe zone. Once this is all over, and you’re Sea King, I’ll have to explain it to you. Right now, you have to think about your mission. If you’re worried about the vampires, don’t be. Frederik doesn’t drink human blood. Well, not for, like, two hundred years.”
“What about the girls?”
“The girls might bite, but they don’t kill. Vampire killings are easy to find, because after they feed on human blood they’re basically euphoric and are pretty sloppy about cleaning up the bodies.”
“Good to know.”
We’re the last to follow down the ramp and onto the sand. Up ahead the girls pull their polka-dot dresses over their heads and wave them in the air like flags. They dip their toes in the cold water and shriek. Frederik picks a spot where the tide won’t hit, sits, and then leans back on his elbows.
I follow his stare at the speckles of stars. Suddenly I wonder, “Aren’t you guys supposed to, like, sparkle or something?” And immediately wish I hadn’t.
Frederik stands up so quickly that he doesn’t disturb the sand. He grabs the front of my shirt and growls—his eyes are black as the night sky along the horizon, and red veins fray against
the white of his eyes. His sharp canines are exposed.
“I. Don’t. Sparkle.”
He lets go of me and becomes regular bored Frederik again, no fangs, no bloodshot eyes. Just a dude sitting on the beach at night.
Marty shakes his head all, Yeah, I should’ve warned you about that.
“Tristan.” Kurt calls me. He holds my English teacher farther away from us. I make my way to them, trying to slow my racing heartbeat.
He breaks his grip on her, but says, “I won’t go far.”
Ms. Pippen screams in frustration. The wind undoes her hair from its neat little tie and blows it all around her. “What? What do you want?”
“You mean you can’t see the answer to that?”
“Funny. You really are smarter than you look, Tristan. You never talk in my class, so I had no idea what you are.”
“Welcome to my pretty exclusive club.”
“You know, isn’t it enough that I’m punished by having to teach in that school for a human decade? I also have to get dragged out here by your mermaid lackey?”
“It’s merman, lady. And what do you mean by punished?”
She pushes her hair away from her face, the moonlight casting a silvery light on her cheekbones.
“My grandfather, the Sea King, gave me a shiny, sharp present. Don’t make me use it.”
She straightens her back and crosses her arms over her chest. I look away. “You have to tell me what you want first.”
“I want you to tell me if there are any oracles in New York City.”
“If I don’t, are you going to kill me?”
I hadn’t thought about that. “I—”
“I don’t want to get involved in your politics.”
“You’re already involved.”
“You don’t get it.” She shakes her head. “You may be half fish, but you’re still so human.”
“You sit in class making us read aloud and what do you do? You see our futures. You keep those secrets to yourself. What else have you seen that could make a difference?”
Vicious Deep Page 23