“And of course you knew this all along,” I said through gritted teeth.
There was no need to scare you. I never thought we’d end up here.
I angrily shook my head, but now was not the time to scold Max over his continuing duplicity. I needed information. “What did she offer them?” I whispered.
Tigers.
I screwed my face up. “What?”
Tigers. You know: rawr.
“But . . . ” Thinking about the headdress that drummer wore, I didn’t finish.
For some reason, tigers are immune to their touch. They think the giant fur balls are gifts from their fire god, so they surround themselves with tigers.
My eyes roamed the clearing, looking for the presence of these animals. “I don’t see any.”
Oh, they’re there. Look harder.Behind the huts.
I followed his direction, squinting into the shadows. There. A pair of glowing feline eyes. A few feet away, I saw another set. And another. Just beyond the huts, a ring of tigers surrounded us, watching. A shiver ran down my spine.
A male scream whipped my head from the tigers to Julian, now conscious, his teeth bared as he struggled to break free from the constraints around his wrists and ankles as the gloved woman inserted several bone-colored needles into his wound. The tribesmen holding Julian leaned in with their weight on the long poles, tightening their grip, securing Julian’s limbs before he accidentally grazed a bare leg. Now unable to move, he seethed, face contorted with pain as he watched the woman accept a steaming bowl of something. Leaning forward, she poured the hot clear liquid over his wound. Julian roared in agony.
“No!” I cried out, making to move forward. A spear jabbed the air dangerously close to my chest, stopping me.
My cry caught the attention of Featherman, who towered over the operation with his arms crossed over his chest. At a casual wave of his hand, four tribesmen turned and marched toward us, spears leveled. They prodded us, herding Max and me away from the scene. Farther and farther back we went, until we were forced through the narrow entrance of a tiny hut. A cloth door dropped, closing us in. Crouching, I peeked under the bottom of the door, and spotted heels. The tribesmen were on guard. I rose and turned to survey the hut, which held nothing but a wooden bowl and a reed mat in the corner, illuminated by the firelight shining through a tiny window near the ceiling.
I ran to the window. First on tiptoes, then jumping, I tried to reach the bottom sill so I could pull myself up and see outside. It was too high. “Max. Come here,” I hissed. In three steps, he was beside me. “Stand right here.” I pushed him up against the wall. “And stay still.” Throwing my arms over his neck, I hoisted myself up onto his back.
So this is what a horse feels like, he grumbled.
“Shut up, Max!” I retorted. “You owe me, after all of your lies!” I kicked off my winter boots. With my hands pressed against the cool, hard mud wall of the hut for balance, I stood on Max’s back and peered out the window.
I had a prime view of the bonfire and Julian, who lay unmoving, eyes closed, his face now pallid. They had stripped off the rest of his clothing and covered his entire body in what looked like soggy green leaves. The four women still encircled him, their hands linked, their eyes closed, their mouths moving in unison as they chanted softly.
“Is he going to be okay?” I whispered to Max.
I don’t know, Evangeline. I’m sorry. By his tone, I knew the big dog was being genuine.
The woman with the gloves stood to accept another large bowl. Walking around Julian, she carefully poured a clear liquid over the leaf covering. At a snap of her fingers, someone handed her a burning stick. My jaw clenched as I watched, my apprehension growing as the burning stick approached Julian’s still body. The chanting women grew louder and more boisterous, until they were all shrieking at the top of their lungs like a bunch of lunatics.
“No . . . ” I moaned, gripping the base of the window and watching wide-eyed as, with just a pass of the tiny brand, Julian’s entire body went up in flames. “No!” I screamed, at the same time that Julian let out a skin-peeling shriek, his back arching severely.
I lost my balance and tumbled. Max, moving with his lighting speed, dove underneath me to cushion my fall before I could hit the hard ground. Lying on top of the massive werebeast with my heart pounding in my ears, I began to cry. I didn’t stop for a long time, weeping openly into Max’s side, my anger with Sofie and Leo for sending us to such a horrific place growing with each minute. This was worse than the mountains, way worse. And now they were burning Julian alive and I would be alone. “Why would they abandon us to these monsters, Max?” I asked through my sobs.
Max responded with a nuzzle to my cheek. Leo was protecting you from Ursula, remember?
I sat up, using the sleeve of my coat to wipe my eyes. “Well, where is Leo? Why didn’t he come too?” Silence met my question. “Max?” My voice wavered with uncertainty.
My brothers took Ursula down. She’s gone.
“And Leo? He’s okay, right?” No answer. “Max!”
I’m sorry, Evangeline. Whatever life he had left in him, he used to send us here. He’s with Maeve now.
Leo . . . dead? The news brought a fresh round of tears. I fell back to lean against the cool wall, a large, painful lump forming in my throat. Everyone was dying around me—because of me. Leo; probably Julian; next it could be Max or Sofie. When would this all end? When the necklace came off, I realized. I looked down at the thing, resting on the outside of my parka, and the sudden urge to rip it off my body overwhelmed me.
Don’t you dare, Max warned as if reading my mind. It stayed my hand. For now.
After staring at motionless heels for what seemed like hours, I saw the guards’ feet shift. A clawed hand curled around the edge of the curtain to pull it back. Squeezing through the narrow opening, four men carried Julian in on a simple stretcher of wood and cloth. They set him down gently, then turned and walked out without a word or glance in our direction. A woman from the circle entered behind them, placing a bowl and a neatly folded stack of clothes in a corner. As she left, her eyes skimmed over Max, but she said nothing.
Now alone, I crawled over on my hands and knees. “Julian?” I whispered. He didn’t answer. Discouraged, I inspected his upper body to see that it appeared unscathed by the fire that had engulfed him not long ago. The women had removed all of the green, leafy substance and covered him from the waist down with a small hemp blanket. A patch of that gray paste, now dry, covered his wound. I peered at his face. It was still ghostly pale, though slightly less pallid than before. A sheen of sweat covered his forehead and several drops rolled down his cheek. I didn’t know if it was due to his body fighting infection, or the oppressive heat.
So swept up by the activities of the tribe and Julian, I hadn’t had time to feel the drastic temperature change. Now that I gave it a second’s thought, I realized I was drenched in sweat. No wonder—I was dressed for temperatures at least a hundred degrees colder. If I didn’t get out of these layers soon, I’d likely pass out.
I began peeling off my winter gear, beginning with my hat, until I was in nothing but my gray long johns. Even those were too much. I crawled over to the pile of clothes in the corner. Julian’s things, torn and bloodied, lay on top. Underneath them was a two-piece set of clothing that matched what the women in the tribe wore—whatever that was called. Glancing over at Julian to make sure he was still unconscious, I ordered Max to turn around. He obliged, and I quickly pulled off the long johns and slipped on the outfit. Thank the heavens they aren’t one of those topless tribes, I silently celebrated, looking down at the skirt and the strip of cloth meant to be a shirt.
“Julian?” I whispered again, sliding back over to him. Nothing.
He needs to rest, Max said. As do you.
In answer, I balled up my coat and, placing it under my head, lay down next to Julian’s still body, reaching out to hold his hand. It would be a long time before sleep finally came to me.
I awoke to sunlight streaming in through the tiny window. Beads of sweat ran down my cheek; the hot, muggy air was uncomfortable even with the little that I wore. Max was stretched out on one side of me, unmoving, his eyes closed. I knew he wasn’t sleeping, though. He didn’t sleep. The previous day’s nightmare flashed in my mind then. I bolted upright and spun around.
Julian’s eyes were open a crack.
“Julian!” I exclaimed, throwing myself on him without thinking, earning a groan. “Sorry!” I quickly sat back up to gaze at him. “How are you feeling?”
Julian licked his lips several times. “Water . . . ” he finally croaked, reaching up to paw the air with a weak hand.
There’s water in the bowl in the corner, Max instructed.
I scurried over to grab it and bring it back to Julian’s side. “Can you sit up?” I asked softly, sliding my hand behind his neck to help him get up to his elbows. I held the bowl up to his mouth. He gulped the entire contents down.
“Thank you.”
I shifted my makeshift pillow under his head and eased him back.
“What happened? The last thing I remember was snowshoeing . . . and the wolf.”
I swallowed, not sure where to begin. “We went back to the chalet after . . . ” I hesitated. “After Max figured out that Valentina had been possessed by Ursula.”
Julian’s brow knit as he searched his memory. “Oh, right. She was—”
“A witch. A bad one.”
“Right.” He paused, thinking. “What happened after that? How did we get here?”
“Leo—” I choked; saying his name pulled at the already gaping wound in my heart. “He sent us to another safe location.” The giant lump in my throat was unmovable by this point.
“And my sister?” His head rolled slowly from side to side as he looked around the hut. For Valentina, no doubt.
How did I tell him that she had been torn apart by Max’s brothers? “Valentina has been gone for weeks, Julian,” I said instead, my voice quiet.
He frowned, trying to comprehend what I was saying. Realization finally clouded those brown eyes. Tears welled. “My sister’s dead.”
Max was on his feet and heading over to the door to nose aside the curtain and peer outside. This was too much for him to handle. It was too much for me, as well. “I’m so sorry, Julian,” I said, a fresh batch of tears rolling down my cheeks, the pain of watching my closest friend lose his entire family agonizing.
Julian rolled onto his side, away from me, likely to hide his tears. The action shifted the hemp blanket covering him, revealing his entire bare backside. Feeling my cheeks flush, I was about to avert my eyes when something caught my eye.
A small cross-like tattoo on his hip.
I gasped. “You’re—”
Despite his grave injury, Julian’s body stiffened and he quickly rolled back, realizing what he had just revealed: the mark that branded him part of the People’s Sentinel. But why was it not on his hand, like all the others?
Max was by my side in an instant. What’s wrong?
“You’re—” I started again but stopped to swallow, realizing that as soon as the words came out of my mouth, Julian was as good as dead. He was the enemy. Max would destroy him, regardless of whether he had saved my life.
Recognizing the situation, Julian pleaded silently with his teary eyes.
But why? How? How was the son of Viggo’s beard family part of the enemy without Viggo knowing? It explained his hatred for vampires. But . . . how? A flood of questions entered my mind then and I knew I would never get answers with Max hovering. “Probably still thirsty,” I told Max, grabbing the bowl and thrusting it toward him. “Can you go fetch some more water?”
Do not use the word ‘fetch’ with me, Max responded crisply. And have you noticed I don’t have opposable thumbs?
“You’ll figure it out, Max,” I said, trying to sound casual, but failing. “Unless you want me to go out there while you stay here and comfort Julian.”
With a grunt, Max plucked the bowl out of my hand with his teeth and pushed the curtain aside, practically running out of the hut.
I crawled over and peeked around the curtain to watch him as he sauntered among the huts, staggering slightly. He must be starving by now. The place was deserted. The remnants of the bonfire smoldered in the center of the clearing. In daylight, I could see the place clearly for what it was—a tribal village in a dense jungle. At least thirty huts formed the perimeter of the clearing. Two tigers sat outside each hut door as if on guard, their tails swirling back and forth as they watched the mammoth dog traipse through their village. Across the way, opposite our hut, sat a much larger hut than all the others. Four tigers guarded it. That had to be the Featherman’s hut. I guessed he was the chief.
When I thought Max was out of earshot, I turned and dove toward Julian, my hands landing on either shoulder, pinning him roughly to the ground.