All in all, itâs not the most auspicious of starts.
In the week following my arrival, I spend an unhealthy amount of time mentally slapping myself over the way I handled the kerfuffle with Max. I donât care whether the Weres think Iâm a deranged monster, but I do mind that whatever crumb of freedom they might have been inclined to give me has been swiftly vacuumed up.
Iâm escorted everywhere: as I take a stroll by the lake; to grab a blood bag from the fridge; when I sit in the garden at dusk, just to experience something thatâs not my en suite. I am but a cornucopia of regret. Because weâre all bad bitchesâtill a scowling Were stands outside the bathroom door while weâre washing our hair.
Till we lose our chance to snoop around.
So much time on my hands, and so little to spend it on. Itâs the Collateral life Iâm familiar with, just with significantly fewer Serenas to keep me busy. I should be bored to death, but the truth is, this is not too different from my routine in the Human world. I have no friends, no hobbies, and no real purpose aside from earning enough money to pay rent in order to . . . exist, I guess.
Itâs like youâreâI donât know, suspended. Untethered from everything around you. I just need to see you go toward something, Misery.
There might be something stunted about me. After the Collateral term was over, Serena and I were free to venture into the outside world, to be with people who werenât our tutors or our caregivers, to fall in love and make friends. Serena jumped right into that, but I could never bring myself to. Partly because the closer Iâd let someone get to me, the harder itâd be to hide who I was. Or maybe spending the first eighteen years of my life becoming acquainted with the cruelty of all species didnât quite set me up for a bright future.
Who knows.
So I sleep during the day, and spend my nights napping. I take long baths, first for Loweâs sake, then because I grow to truly enjoy them. I watch old Human movies. I walk around my room, marveling at how pretty it is, wondering who the hell thought of this beamed ceiling, sophisticated and cozy and stunning at once.
I do miss the internet. There is a concern that I might want to moonlight as a spy, and to prevent me from transferring classified and confidential information I could come across while in Were territory, I donât really have access to technologyâwith the exception of my weekly check-in call with Vania, which is heavily monitored and lasts just long enough for her to sneer at me as she ascertains that Iâm still alive. Of course, this is not my first rodeo, and I did try to smuggle in a cell phone, plus a laptop and a bunch of pen testing gadgets.
Your honor, I got caught. Whoever went through my stuff had the gall to confiscate half of itâand to pluck out all the antenna points and Wi-Fi cards from the rest. When I realized it, I lay on the floor for two hours, like a thwarted jellyfish beached in the sun.
Lowe is rarely around, and never within sight, although sometimes Iâll feel his low voice vibrate through the walls. Firm orders. Long hushed conversations. Once, memorably, right as I slid into my closet for my midday rest, a deep laugh followed by Anaâs delighted screams. I drifted asleep moments later, second-guessing what I heard.
On the fifth evening, someone knocks on my door.
âHi, Misery.â Itâs Mickâthe older Were who was talking with Lowe at the ceremony. I like him a lot. Mostly because, unlike my other guards, he doesnât seem to want me to go stand outside and get struck by lightning. I love to think that we bonded when he took his first night shift: I noticed him slumping against the wall, pushed my rolling chair into the hallway, and bamâinstantly BFFs. Our three-minute conversation about water pressure was the apogee of my week.
âWhatâs up, friendly neighborhood warden?â
âThe politically correct name is âprotective detail.âââ There is something off about his heartbeatâsomething dull, a slight drag thatâs almost despondent. I wonder if itâs related to the big scar on his throat, but I might be imagining it altogether, because he smiles at me in a way that turns his eyes into a web of crowâs feet. Why canât everyone be this nice? âAnd thereâs a video call for you, from your brother. Come with me.â
Any hope I have that Mick will take me to Loweâs office and leave me alone to snoop around dies when we head for the sunroom.
âReady to come back?â Owen says before âHi.â
âI donât think thatâs an option, if we want to avoid . . .â
âPissing off Father?â
âI was thinking full-on war.â
Owen waves his hand. âAh, yes. That, too. Howâs marital life?â
Iâm very aware of Mick sitting across from me, intently monitoring everything I say. âBoring.â
âYou got hitched to a guy who could kill you any second of any day. How are you bored?â
âTechnically, anybody could kill anybody, anytime. Your obnoxious friends could pull out a garrote on you tonight. I could have poured triazolopyrimidines in your blood bags a million times over in the past twenty years.â I tap my chin. âAs a matter of fact, why did I not?â
Something flickers in his eyes. âAnd to think that we used to like each other,â he murmurs darkly. Heâs not wrong. Before I left for Human territory, every Vampyre child who chose to be a dick about my soon-to-be Collateralship tended to encounter curiously karmic events. Mysterious bruises, spiders crawling in backpacks, mortifying secrets bared to the community. Iâd always suspected it was Owenâs doing. Then again, maybe I was wrong. When I returned home at eighteen, he seemed less than happy to see me, and he certainly didnât want to associate with me in public.
âCan you please just be terrified to be living among the Weres?â he asks.
âSo far, Humans are worse. They do shit like burning the Amazon rainforest or leaving the toilet seat up at night. Anyway, anything you need from me?â
He shakes his head. âJust making sure youâre still alive.â
âOh.â I wet my lips. I doubt he gives a fuck about whether I continue to exist on this metaphysical plane, but this is a good opportunity. âIâm so glad you called, because . . . I miss you so much, Owen.â
A stutter of incredulity flashes on his grainy face. Then understanding dawns on him. âYeah? I miss you, too, honey.â He leans back in his chair, intrigued. âTell me what ails you.â
Every Vampyre in the Southwest knows that we are twins, if only because our arrival was originally celebrated as a dazzling source of hope (âTwo babies at once! In the prestigious Lark family! When conception has been so difficult, and so few of our young come by! All hail!â) and later briskly swept under a thick rug of truculent stories (âThey murdered their own mother during a two-night labor. The boy weakened her, and the girl dealt the final blowâMisery, they named her. More blood flowed on that bed than during the Aster.â). Serena had known, too, when I first introduced her to him after she pestered me to meet âThe guy who could have been my roomie for years, if youâd played your cards better, Misery.â Theyâd surprisingly hit it off, bonding over their love for roasting my appearance, my clothes, my taste in music. My general vibe.
And yet, even Serena wasnât able to shut up about how unbelievable it was that Owen, with his dark complexion and already receding hairline, was even related to me. Itâs because where I take after Father, he . . . well, I suppose he looks like Mother. Hard to say, since no pictures seem to have survived her.
But whatever the differences between Owen and me, those months sharing a womb must have left some mark on us. Because despite growing up with fewer interactions than a pair of pen pals, we do seem to understand each other.
âRemember when we were children?â I ask. âAnd Father would take us to the forest to watch the sun set and feel the night begin?â
âOf course.â Neither Father nor the army of nannies who looked after us ever did anything like it. âI think of it often.â
âIâve been reminiscing about the things Father would say. Like: That thing I lost. Do you have any news about it?â I shift smoothly between English and the Tongue, making sure not to change intonation. Mickâs eyes glance up from his phone, more curious than suspicious.
âAh, yes. You used to laugh for minutes and say, I have not. She hasnât returned to her apartmentâIâll be alerted if she does.â
âBut then youâd get mad because Father and I werenât paying attention to you, and wander off on your own, grumbling about the oddest things. Let me know if that changes. Have you been talking with the Were Collateral? Has she mentioned anything about Loyals?â
He nods and sighs happily. âI know youâll never believe it, but I always say: I have no contact with her. But Iâll see what I can do. Father always loved you best, darling.â
âOh, darling. I think he loves us equally.â
Back in my room, I pull out my computer, wondering if I could pilfer a Wi-Fi chip off someoneâs phone. I fuck around a bit, writing a flexible script to scour Were servers that I might never be able to use. Like always while coding, I lose track of time. When I look up from my keyboard, the moon is high, my room is dark, and a small, creepy creature stands in front of me. Itâs wearing owl leggings with a chiffon tutu, and stares at me like the ghost of Christmas past.
I yelp.
âHi.â
Oh my God. âAna?â
âHello.â
I clutch my chest. âWhat the fuck?â
âAre you playing?â
âI . . .â I glance down at my laptop. Iâm building a fuzzy logic circuit seems like the wrong kind of answer. âSure. How did you get in here?â
âYou always ask the same questions.â
âAnd you always get in here. How?â
She points at the window. I stride there with a frown, bracing myself against the sill to look out. Iâve explored it before, in my desperate quest for some unsupervised espionage. The bedrooms are on the second floor, and Iâve checked multiple times whether I could climb down (no, unless I got bit by a radioactive spider and developed suction cups on my fingers) or jump out (not without breaking my neck). It never occurred to me to look . . . up.
âThrough the roof?â I ask.
âYes. They took away my key.â
âDoes your brother know youâve been climbing like a spider monkey?â
She shrugs. I shrug, too, and go back to my bed. Itâs not like Iâm gonna tattle her out. âWhich one is it?â she asks.
âWhat?â
âA spider monkey. Is it a spider that looks like a monkey, or a monkey that looks like a spider?â
âHmm, not sure. Let me google andââ I pull my computer onto my lap, then remember the Wi-Fi situation. âFuck.â
âThatâs a bad word,â Ana says, giggling in a delighted, tickled way that has me feeling like an improv genius. Sheâs flattering company. âWhatâs your name?â
âMisery.â
âMiresy.â
âMisery.â
âYes. Miresy.â
âThatâs not . . . whatever.â
âCan I play with you?â She eyes my laptop eagerly.
âNo.â
Her pretty mouth curves into a pout. âWhy?â
âBecause.â What are we even going to do? Long division?
âAlex lets me play.â
âAlex? The blond guy?â I havenât seen him since the Max incident. Iâm assuming it was filed as âunder his watch,â and got him plucked out of jailer rotation.
âYes. We steal cars and talk with the beautiful ladies. But Alex says that Juno isnât supposed to know.â
âYou play Grand Theft Auto with Alex?â
She shrugs.
âIs that appropriate for a . . . three-year-old?â
âIâm seven,â she declares haughtily. Holding up six fingers.
I let that slide. âNot gonna lie, pretty proud that it was within my range of estimation.â
Another shrug, which seems like her default response. Relatable, honestly. She settles on the bed next to me and Iâm briefly worried that she might pee on it. Does she have a diaper? Is she housebroken? Should I burp her? âI want to play,â she repeats.
Iâm not a soft person. After living the first eighteen years of my life in function of a long list of very nebulous others, I perfected assertiveness. I have no issue with producing a firm, final no and never revisiting a request again. So I must be suffering a major cerebral event when I sigh, and pull up my editor, and quickly use JavaScript to whip up a Snake-like game.
âIs this edu . . . Edu . . . ?â she asks, after Iâm done explaining how it works. âEdutacional?â
âEducational.â
âJuno says itâs important that the games are edu . . .â
âI donât know if it is, but at least no major felonies are involved.â
There is something disarming about the way she leans against me, soft and trusting, as though our people havenât been hunting each other for sport in the last couple of centuries. Her tongue sticks out between her teeth as she tries to snatch apples, and when a dark curl slips in front of her right eye, I catch myself with my fingers hovering right there, tempted to fold it behind her ear.
âShit,â I mutter, pulling back my hand.
âWhat?â
âNothing.â I trap my arms between my back and the wall, horrified.
It feels like the middle of the night when Ana yawns and decides itâs time to go back to her room. âMy cat is waiting for me, anyway.â
Wait. âYour cat?â
She nods.
âDoes your cat happen to be gray? Long hair? Smushed face?â
âYes. Her name is Sparkles.â
Oh, fuck. âFirst of all, heâs a boy.â
She blinks at me. âHis name is Sparkles, then.â
âNo, his name is Serenaâs damn fucking cat.â
Anaâs expression is pitying.
âAnd heâs actually my cat.â Serenaâs. Whatever.
âI donât think so.â
âYou do realize that he arrived when I did.â
âBut he sleeps with me.â
Ah. So thatâs where he disappears to all the time. âThatâs just because he hates me.â
âThen maybe heâs not your cat,â she says, with the delicate somberness of a therapist whoâs letting me know that I donât have a diagnosable disorder, Iâm just a bitch.
âYou know what? I donât care. Itâs between you and Serena.â
âWhoâs Serena?â
âMy friend.â
âYour best friend?â
âI only have the one, so . . . yeah?â
âMy best friend is Misha. She has red hair, and sheâs the daughter of my brotherâs best friend, Cal. And Juno is her aunt. And she has a little brother, his name is Jackson, and a little sister, and her nameââ
âThis is not The Brothers Karamazov,â I interrupt. âI donât need the family tree.â
ââis Jolene,â she continues, undeterred. âWhere is Serena?â
âShe . . . Iâm trying to find her.â
âMaybe my brother can help you? Heâs real good at helping people.â
I swallow. I just canât with children. âMaybe.â
She studies me for several seconds. âAre you like Lowe?â
âIâm not sure what you mean, but no.â
âHe doesnât sleep, either.â
âI do sleep. Just during the day.â
âAh. Lowe doesnât sleep. At all.â
âNever? Is it a Were thing? An Alpha thing?â
She shakes her head. âHe has pneumonia.â
Seriously? When did he get it? He seemed healthy to me. Maybe for Weres, pneumonia is not a bigâ âWait!â I call when I see Ana heading for the window. âHow about you go through the door?â
She doesnât even stop to say no.
âIt would be more fun. You could stop by Loweâs room on your way,â I offer. Because if this child dies, itâs on me. âSay hi. Hang out.â
âHeâs not here. Heâs gone to deal with the lollipops.â
I trail after her. âWith the lollipops.â
âYes.â
âThereâs no way he is dealing withâ Do you mean the Loyals?â
âYes. The lollipops.â Sheâs already climbing upward, and spider monkey doesnât even begin to describe how agile she is. But still.
âDonât. Come back! I . . . forbid you from continuing.â
She keeps scaling. âYouâre a Vampyre. I donât think you can tell me what to do.â She sounds more matter-of-fact than bratty, and all I can think of replying is:
âShit.â
I follow her progress, terrified, wondering if this is motherhood: anxiously picturing your child with her skull cracked open. But Ana knows exactly what sheâs doing, and when she has hoisted herself on top of the roof and disappeared from my view, Iâm left alone with two separate pieces of knowledge:
Iâm befuddlingly invested in the survival of this tiny pest of a Were.
And Lowe, my husband, my roomie, is gone for the night.
I slip inside the bathroom, find one of my hairpins, and do what I have to do.