Betrayed Read online

Page 9


  Grandma sounded sleepy when she answered the phone, but as soon as she realized it was me she perked up.

  "Oh, Zoeybird! It's so nice to wake up to your voice," she said.

  I smiled into the phone. "I miss you, Grandma.”

  "I miss you, too, sweetheart.”

  "Grandma, the reason I called is kinda weird, but you're just going to have to trust me.”

  "Of course I trust you," she replied without hesitation. She's so different than my mom that sometimes I wonder how they could be related.

  "Okay, later today you're planning on coming into Tulsa to do some shopping, right?”

  There was a brief pause, and then she laughed. "I guess it's going to be hard to keep birthday surprises from my vampyre grand­daughter.”

  "I need you to promise me something, Grandma. Promise that you won't go anywhere today. Don't get in your car. Don't drive anywhere. Just stay home and relax.”

  "What's this about, Zoey?”

  I hesitated, not sure how to tell her. Then with her lifelong ability to understand me, she said softly, "Remember, you can tell me anything, Zoeybird. I'll believe you.”

  I hadn't realized that I'd been holding my breath until that in­stant. On my let out breath I said, "The bridge on I-40 that goes over the Arkansas River by Webber's Falls is going to collapse. You were supposed to be on it, and you would have died." I said the last part softly, almost whispering.

  "Oh! Oh, my! I'd better sit down.”

  "Grandma, are you okay?”

  "I suppose I am now, but I wouldn't be if you hadn't warned me, which is why I'm feeling light-headed." She must have picked up a magazine or something because I could hear her fanning herself. "How did you find out about this? Are you having vi­sions?”

  "No, not me. It's Aphrodite.”

  "The girl who used to be leader of the Dark Daughters? I didn't think you two were friends.”

  I snorted. "We're not. Definitely not. But I found her having a vision and she told me what she saw.”

  "And you trust this girl?”

  "No way, but I do trust her power, and I saw her, Grandma. It was like she was there, with you. It was awful. She saw you crash, and those little kids die ..." I had to stop and breathe. The truth had suddenly caught up with me: my grandma could have died today.

  "Wait, there were more people in the crash?”

  "Yeah, when the bridge collapses a bunch of cars go into the river.”

  "But what about the other people?”

  "I'm going to take care of that, too. You just stay home."

  "Shouldn't I go to the bridge and try to stop them?”

  "No! Stay away from there. I'll make sure no one gets hurt—I promise. But I have to know that you're safe," I said.

  "Okay, sweetheart. I believe you. You don't have to worry about me. I'll be safe and sound at home. You take care of what ever you need to do, and if you need me, call. Anytime."

  "Thanks, Grandma. I love you.”

  "I love you, too, u-we-tsi a-ge-hu-tsa.”

  After I hung up I spent a little while just sitting there, willing myself to stop shaking, but only a little while. A plan was already brewing in my head, and I didn't have time to freak out. I needed to get busy.

  CHAPTER TEN

  "So why can't we tell Neferet about this mess? All she'd have to do is make a few calls, like she did last month when Aphrodite had a vision about that plane going down at the Denver airport," Damien said, careful to keep his voice low. I'd hurried back to the dorm, huddled my group together, and given them the short ver­sion of Aphrodite's vision.

  "She made me promise I wouldn't go to Neferet. The two of them are having some kind of weird fight.”

  "It's about time Neferet started seeing her as the bitch she is," Stevie Rae said.

  "Hateful cow," Shaunee said.

  "Hag from hell," Erin agreed.

  "Yeah, well, what she is doesn't really matter. It's her visions and the people who are in danger of dying that matter," I said.

  "I heard that her visions aren't really believable anymore be­cause Nyx has withdrawn her favor from Aphrodite," Damien said. "Maybe that's why she made you promise not to go to Nef­eret, because this is all something she made up and she wants you to freak out and do something that will either embarrass you and make you look bad, or get you in trouble.”

  "I'd think that too if I hadn't watched her having the vision. She wasn't faking it, I'm sure of that.”

  "But is she telling you the whole truth?" Stevie Rae asked.

  I thought about that for a second. Aphrodite had already ad­mitted to me that she could withhold parts of her visions from Neferet. What made me think she wasn't doing that with me, too? Then I remembered the whiteness of her face, the way she had gripped my hand, and the fear in her voice as she joined my grandma in her death. I shivered.

  "She was telling me the truth," I said. "You guys will just have to trust that my intuition is right." I looked at my four friends. None of them were happy about this, but I knew that each of them trusted me and that I could count on them. "So, here's the deal, I've already called my grandma. She won't be on that bridge, but a bunch of other people will. We need to figure out a way to save those other people.”

  "Aphrodite said that a bargelike boat hit the bridge causing it to collapse?" Damien asked.

  I nodded.

  "Well, you could pretend to be Neferet and do what she does, call whoever's in charge of the barge and tell them one of your students has had a vision of a tragedy. People listen to Neferet; they're scared not to. It's a well-known fact that her information has saved lots of human lives.”

  "I already thought about that, but it won't work because Aphrodite didn't see the boat clearly. She wasn't even sure it was a barge. So I have no way of knowing how to even begin contacting anyone about stopping it. And I can't pretend to be Neferet. It feels way wrong. I mean, talk about asking to get in trouble. You can't tell me that whoever I call won't call back with some kind of follow-up report to Neferet. Then all hell would break loose.”

  "Ugly scene," Shaunee said.

  "Yeah, Neferet would find out that the hag had another vision, so your promise to keep it quiet would be broken," Erin said.

  "Okay, so stopping the boat is out, and pretending to be Nef­eret is out. That leaves closing the bridge as our only option," Damien said.

  "That's what I thought, too," I said.

  "Bomb threat!" Stevie Rae said suddenly. We all looked at her. "Huh?" Erin asked.

  "Explain," Shaunee said.

  "We call whoever those freaks who make bomb threats call.”

  "That could actually work," said Damien. "When there's a bomb threat in a building they always evacuate it. So it figures that if there's a bomb threat about a bridge, the bridge will be closed, at least until they find out the bomb threat is fake.”

  "If I call from my cell phone they won't be able to tell who I am, will they?" I asked.

  "Oh, please," Damien said, shaking his head like I was a total moron. "Of course they can trace cell phones. This isn't the nineties.”

  "Then what do I do?”

  "You can still use a cell. It just has to be a disposable one," Damien explained.

  "You mean like a disposable camera?”

  "Where have you been?" Shaunee asked.

  "Who doesn't know about disposable cells?" Erin said.

  "I don't," Stevie Rae said.

  "Exactly," the Twins said together.

  "Here"—Damien pulled a big dorky looking Nokia out of his pocket—"use mine.”

  "Why do you have a disposable?" I studied the phone. It looked fairly normal.

  "I got it after my parents freaked about me being gay. Until I was Marked and came here it felt like they were grounding me for life from life. I mean, not that I really expected them to lock me in a closet somewhere, but it's good to be prepared. Since then I've made sure I always have one.”

  None of us knew what to say. It really sucked t
hat Damien's parents were so psycho about him being gay.

  "Thanks, Damien," I finally said.

  "No problem. When you're done making the call be sure you turn it off and then give it back to me. I'll destroy it.”

  "Okay.”

  "And be sure you tell them that the bomb's planted under the waterline. That way they'll have to close the bridge long enough for them to send in divers to check it out.”

  I nodded. "Good idea. I'll tell them that the bomb's going to explode at three fifteen, which is the exact time Aphrodite saw on my grandma's dashboard clock when she crashed.”

  "I don't know how long these things take, but you should prob­ably call about two thirty, that sounds like enough time for them to get out there and close the bridge, but not so much that they'll have time to figure out it's a fake threat, and let cars back on the bridge too soon," Stevie Rae said.

  "Uh, guys," Shaunee said. "Who are you gonna call?”

  "Hell, I don't know." I was feeling the stress settle around my shoulders and knew I was going to have a major headache very soon.

  "Google it," Erin said.

  "No," Damien said quickly. "We don't want any kind of com­puter trail. You just need to call the local branch of the FBI. That'll be in the phone book. They'll do whatever it is they do when freaks call.”

  "Like track them down and put them in jail for the rest of eter­nity," I muttered gloomily.

  "No, they're not going to catch you. You're not leaving any kind of a trail. They'll have no reason to think it's any of us. Call at about two thirty. Tell them you've planted a bomb under the bridge because …" Damien hesitated.

  "Because of pollution!" Stevie Rae chirped.

  "Pollution?" Shaunee said.

  "I don't think it should be because of pollution. I think it should be because you're sick and tired of government interfer­ence in the private sector's lives," Erin said.

  I just blinked at her. What the hell did she just say?

  "Excellent point, Twin," Shaunee said.

  Erin grinned. "I sounded just like my dad when I said that. He'd be proud. Well, not about the pretending to blow up a bridge part, but the other stuff, yeah.”

  "We understand, Twin," Shaunee said.

  "I still like saying that it's because you're tired of pollution. Pollution's a real problem," Stevie Rae said stubbornly.

  "Okay, how about I say it's because of government interference and pollution in our rivers? That'll be the reason the bomb's on a bridge." They looked at me with blank expressions. I sighed. "Be­cause of pollution in the river.”

  "Ohhh," they said.

  "We'd make dorky terrorists," Stevie Rae said with a giggle.

  "I think that's actually a good thing," Damien said.

  "So we're in agreement? I call the FBI, and we all keep our mouths shut about Aphrodite's vision.”

  They nodded.

  "Good. Okay. Guess I'll find a phone book and look up the number for the FBI, and then—”

  A movement caught at the corner of my vision, and I glanced up to see Neferet escorting two men in suits into the dorm. Everyone went instantly silent, and I heard a whisper of "They're human ... " begin to buzz through the room. Then I didn't have time to think or to listen, because it was obvious that Neferet and the two human men were walking directly over to me.

  "Ah, Zoey, there you are." Neferet smiled at me with her usual warmth. "These gentlemen need to speak with you. I believe we can step into the library. This shouldn't take more than a mo­ment." Neferet regally gestured for the suits and me to follow her as she swept from the big main room (with everyone gawking openmouthed at us) to the little side room we called the dorm library, but was actually more of a computer room with some comfortable chairs and a few shelves filled with paperbacks. There were only two girls at the row of computers, and with a quick command Neferet got rid of them. They scurried out and she closed the door behind them, then she turned to face us. I glanced at the clock over the computer. It was 7:06 A.M. on Satur­day morning. What was going on?

  "Zoey, this is Detective Marx"—she pointed at the taller of the two men—"and Detective Martin from the homicide division of the Tulsa Police Department. They wanted to ask you a few ques­tions about the human boy who was killed.”

  "Okay," I said, wondering what kind of questions they could possibly want to ask me. Hell, I didn't know anything. I hadn't even known him that well.

  "Miss Montgomery," Detective Marx began, but he was cut neatly off by Neferet.

  "Redbird," she said.

  "Ma'am?”

  "Zoey legally changed her last name to Redbird when she be­came an emancipated minor upon entrance to our school last month. All of our students are legally emancipated. We find it helpful with the unique nature of our school.”

  The cop gave a short nod. I couldn't tell whether he was an­noyed or not, but I guessed by the way he kept looking at Neferet the answer was not.

  "Miss Redbird," he continued, "we have received information that you are acquainted with Chris Ford and Brad Higeons. Is this true?”

  "Yeah, I mean yes," I hastily corrected. Clearly this wasn't a good time to sound like a silly teenager. "I know … well, knew both of them.”

  "What do you mean by knew?" Detective Martin, the shorter cop, said sharply.

  "Well, I mean that I don't hang out with human teenagers any­more, but even before I was Marked I didn't see Chris or Brad much." I wondered what he was so uptight about, and then I real­ized that because Chris was dead and Brad was missing that my talking about them in the past tense probably sounded really bad.

  "When was the last time you saw the two boys?" Marx asked.

  I chewed my lip, trying to remember. "Not for months—since the beginning of football season, and then I just went to maybe two or three parties and they were there, too.”

  "So you weren't with either boy?”

  I frowned. "No. I was kinda dating the Broken Arrow quarter­back. That's the only reason I knew any of those Union guys.” I smiled, trying to lighten things up. "People think Union players hate BA players. It's not really true. Most of them grew up to­gether. A bunch of them are still friends.”

  "Miss Redbird, you've been at the House of Night for how long?" the short cop asked as if I hadn't tried to be pleasant.

  "Zoey has been with us for almost exactly one month," Neferet answered for me.

  "And in that month did either Chris or Brad visit you here?”

  Totally surprised, I said, "No!”

  "Are you saying no human teenagers have visited you here at all?" Martin fired the question quickly.

  Caught off guard I sputtered like a moron and I'm sure looked completely guilty. Thankfully, Neferet saved me.

  "Two friends of Zoey's did see her during her first week here, although I do not believe you'd call it an official visit," she said with a smooth, adult smile aimed at the detectives that clearly said kids will be kids. Then she nodded encouragement at me. "Go ahead and tell them about your two friends who thought it'd be fun to scale our walls.”

  Neferet's green eyes locked on mine. I'd told her all about Heath and Kayla climbing the wall with the ridiculous idea of busting me out. Or at least that had been Heath's idea. Kayla, my ex-best friend, had just wanted me to see that she'd staked a claim on Heath. I'd told Neferet all of that, and more. How I'd kinda accidentally tasted Heath's blood—until Kayla had caught me and totally lost her mind. Staring into Neferet's eyes I knew as sure as if she'd said the words aloud that I was to keep the little blood-tasting incident to myself, which was more than okay with me.

  "There really wasn't much to it, and it was a whole month ago. Kayla and Heath thought they'd sneak in and bust me out." I paused to shake my head like I thought they were totally crazy, and the tall cop jumped in with, "Kayla and Heath who?”

  "Kayla Robinson and Heath Luck," I said. (Yeah, Heath's last name really is Luck, but the only thing he was particularly lucky about is not getting picked up DUI.) "A
nyway, Heath is kinda slow sometimes, and Kayla, well, Kayla's really good at shoes and hair, but not so good at common sense. So they hadn't really thought out the whole `Hey, she's turning into a vampyre and if she leaves the House of Night she'll die' issue. So I explained to them that not only did I not want to leave, I couldn't leave. And that was about it.”

  "Nothing unusual happened when you saw your friends?"

  "You mean when I went back to the dorm?”

  "No. Let me rephrase the question. Nothing unusual hap­pened when you saw Kayla and Heath?" Martin said.

  I swallowed. "No." Which wasn't actually a lie. Apparently it's not unusual for fledglings to experience a vampyre's bloodlust. I shouldn't so early in my Change, but my Mark shouldn't be filled in and I shouldn't have the added decorative tattooing of an adult vamp either. Not to mention the fact that no other fledgling or vamp had ever been Marked on the shoulder and back like I had. Okay, I'm not exactly a normal fledgling.

  "You didn't cut the boy and drink his blood?" The short cop's voice was like ice.

  "No!" I cried.

  "Are you accusing Zoey of something?" Neferet said, stepping closer to me.

  "No, ma'am. We're simply questioning her to try and get a clearer idea of the dynamics of the friends of Chris Ford and Brad Higeons. There are several aspects of the case that are rather unusual and …" The short cop rambled on and on while my mind raced.