Elena revolved slowly before the full-length mirror in Aunt Judithโs bedroom. Margaret sat at the foot of the big four-poster bed, her blue eyes large and solemn with admiration.
โI wish I had a dress like that for trick-or-treat,โ she said.
โI like you best as a little white cat,โ said Elena, dropping a kiss between the white velvet ears attached to Margaretโs headband. Then she turned to her aunt, who stood by the door with needle and thread ready. โItโs perfect,โ she said warmly. โWe donโt have to change a thing.โ
The girl in the mirror could have stepped out of one of Elenaโs books on the Italian Renaissance. Her throat and shoulders were bare, and the tight bodice of the ice-blue dress showed off her tiny waist. The long, full sleeves were slashed so that the white silk of the chemise underneath showed through, and the wide, sweeping skirt just brushed the floor all around her. It was a beautiful dress, and the pale clear blue seemed to heighten the darker blue of Elenaโs eyes.
As she turned away, Elenaโs gaze fell on the old-fashioned pendulum clock above the dresser. โOh, noโitโs almost seven. Stefan will be here any minute.โ
โThatโs his car now,โ said Aunt Judith, glancing out the window. โIโll go down and let him in.โ
โThatโs all right,โ said Elena briefly. โIโll meet him myself. Good-bye, have a good time trick-or-treating!โ She hurried down the stairs.
Here goes, she thought. As she reached for the doorknob, she was reminded of that day, nearly two months ago now, when sheโd stepped directly into Stefanโs path in European History class. Sheโd had this same feeling of anticipation, of excitement and tension.
I just hope this turns out better than that plan did, she thought. For the last week and a half, sheโd pinned her hopes to this moment, to this night. If she and Stefan didnโt come together tonight, they never would.
The door swung open, and she stepped back with her eyes down, feeling almost shy, afraid to see Stefanโs face. But when she heard his sharp indrawn breath, she looked up quicklyโand felt her heart go cold.
He was staring at her in wonder, yes. But it was not the wondering joy sheโd seen in his eyes that first night in his room. This was something closer to shock.
โYou donโt like it,โ she whispered, horrified at the stinging in her eyes. He recovered swiftly, as always, blinking and shaking his head. โNo,
no, itโs beautiful. Youโre beautiful.โ
Then why are you standing there looking as if youโd seen a ghost? she thought. Why donโt you hold me, kiss meโsomething!
โYou look wonderful,โ she said quietly. And it was true; he was sleek and handsome in the tux and cape heโd donned for his part. She was surprised heโd agreed to it, but when sheโd made the suggestion heโd seemed more amused than anything else. Just now, he looked elegant and comfortable, as if such clothes were as natural as his jeans.
โWeโd better go,โ he said, equally quiet and serious.
Elena nodded and went with him to the car, but her heart was no longer merely cold; it was ice. He was further away from her than ever, and she had no idea how to get him back.
Thunder growled overhead as they drove to the high school, and Elena glanced out of the car window with dull dismay. The cloud cover was thick and dark, although it hadnโt actually begun to rain yet. The air had a charged, electric feel, and the sullen purple thunderheads gave the sky a nightmarish look. It was a perfect atmosphere for Halloween, menacing and otherworldly, but it woke only dread in Elena. Since that night at Bonnieโs, sheโd lost her appreciation for the eerie and uncanny.
Her diary had never turned up, although theyโd searched Bonnieโs house top to bottom. She still couldnโt believe that it was really gone, and the idea of a stranger reading her most private thoughts made her feel wild inside. Because, of course, it had been stolen; what other explanation was there? More than one door had been open that night at the McCullough house; someone could have just walked in. She wanted toย killย whoever had done it.
A vision of dark eyes rose before her. That boy, the boy sheโd almost given in to at Bonnieโs house, the boy whoโd made her forget Stefan. Was he the one?
She roused herself as they pulled up to the school and forced herself to smile as they made their way through the halls. The gym was barely organized chaos. In the hour since Elena had left, everything had changed. Then, the place had been full of seniors: Student Council members, football players, the Key Club, all putting the finishing touches on props and scenery. Now it was full of strangers, most of them not even human.
Several zombies turned as Elena came in, their grinning skulls visible through the rotting flesh of their faces. A grotesquely deformed hunchback limped toward her, along with a corpse with livid white skin and hollow eyes. From another direction came a werewolf, its snarling muzzle covered with blood, and a dark and dramatic witch.
Elena realized, with a jolt, that she couldnโt recognize half these people in their costumes. Then they were around her, admiring the ice- blue gown, announcing problems that had developed already. Elena waved them quiet and turned toward the witch, whose long dark hair flowed down the back of a tight-fitting black dress.
โWhat is it, Meredith?โ she said.
โCoach Lymanโs sick,โ Meredith replied grimly, โso somebody got Tanner to substitute.โ
โMr.ย Tanner?โย Elena was horrified.
โYes, and heโs making trouble already. Poor Bonnieโs just about had it.
Youโd better get over there.โ
Elena sighed and nodded, then made her way along the twisting route of the Haunted House tour. As she passed through the grisly Torture Chamber and the ghastly Mad Slasher Room, she thought they had almost builtย tooย well. This place was unnerving even in the light.
The Druid Room was near the exit. There, a cardboard Stonehenge had been constructed. But the pretty little druid priestess who stood among the rather realistic-looking monoliths wearing white robes and an oak-leaf garland looked ready to burst into tears.
โBut youโveย gotย to wear the blood,โ she was saying pleadingly. โItโs part of the scene; youโre a sacrifice.โ
โWearing these ridiculous robes is bad enough,โ replied Tanner shortly. โNo one informed me I was going to have to smear syrup all over myself.โ
โIt doesnโt really get onย you,โย said Bonnie. โItโs just on the robes and on the altar. Youโre a sacrifice,โ she repeated, as if somehow this would
convince him.
โAs for that,โ said Mr. Tanner in disgust, โthe accuracy of this whole setup is highly suspect. Contrary to popular belief, the druids did not build Stonehenge; it was built by a Bronze Age culture thatโโ
Elena stepped forward. โMr. Tanner, that isnโt really the point.โ
โNo, it wouldnโt be, to you,โ he said. โWhich is why you and your neurotic friend here are both failing history.โ
โThatโs uncalled for,โ said a voice, and Elena looked quickly over her shoulder at Stefan.
โMister Salvatore,โ said Tanner, pronouncing the words as if they meantย Now my day is complete.ย โI suppose you have some new words of wisdom to offer. Or are you going to giveย meย a black eye?โ His gaze traveled over Stefan, who stood there, unconsciously elegant in his perfectly tailored tux, and Elena felt a sudden shock of insight.
Tanner isnโt really that much older than we are, she thought. He looks old because of that receding hairline, but Iโll bet heโs in his twenties. Then, for some reason, she remembered how Tanner had looked at Homecoming, in his cheap and shiny suit that didnโt fit well.
Iโll bet he never even made it to his own Homecoming, she thought.
And, for the first time, she felt something like sympathy for him.
Perhaps Stefan felt it, too, for although he stepped right up to the little man, standing face-to-face with him, his voice was quiet. โNo, Iโm not. I think this whole thing is getting blown out of proportion. Why donโtโฆโ Elena couldnโt hear the rest, but he was speaking in low, calming tones, and Mr. Tanner actually seemed to be listening. She glanced back at the crowd that had gathered behind her: four or five ghouls, the werewolf, a gorilla, and a hunchback.
โAll right, everythingโs under control,โ she said, and they dispersed. Stefan was taking care of things, although she was not sure how, since she could see only the back of his head.
The back of his headโฆย For an instant, an image flashed before her of the first day of school. Of how Stefan had stood in the office talking to Mrs. Clarke, the secretary, and of how oddly Mrs. Clarke had acted. Sure enough, when Elena looked at Mr. Tanner now, he wore the same slightly dazed expression. Elena felt a slow ripple of disquiet.
โCome on,โ she said to Bonnie. โLetโs go up front.โ
They cut straight through the Alien Landing Room and the Living Dead Room, slipping between the partitions, coming out in the first room
where visitors would enter and be greeted by a werewolf. The werewolf had taken his head off and was talking to a couple of mummies and an Egyptian princess.
Elena had to admit that Caroline looked good as Cleopatra, the lines of that bronzed body frankly visible through the sheer linen sheath she wore. Matt, the werewolf, could hardly be blamed if his eyes kept straying downward from Carolineโs face.
โHowโs it going here?โ said Elena with forced lightness.
Matt started slightly, then turned toward her and Bonnie. Elena had scarcely seen him since the night of Homecoming, and she knew that he and Stefan had drawn apart, too. Because of her. And though Matt could hardly be blamed forย that,ย either, she could tell how much it hurt Stefan.
โEverythingโs fine,โ said Matt, looking uncomfortable.
โWhen Stefan finishes with Tanner, I think Iโll send him up here,โ Elena said. โHe can help bring people in.โ
Matt lifted one shoulder indifferently. Then he said, โFinishes what with Tanner?โ
Elena looked at him in surprise. She could have sworn heโd been in the Druid Room a minute ago to see it. She explained.
Outside, thunder rumbled again, and through the open door Elena saw a flash light the night sky. There was another, louder clap of thunder a few seconds later.
โI hope it doesnโt rain,โ Bonnie said.
โYes,โ said Caroline, who had been standing silent while Elena spoke to Matt. โIt would be such aย pityย if nobody came.โ
Elena glanced at her sharply and saw open hatred in Carolineโs narrow, catlike eyes.
โCaroline,โ she said impulsively, โlook. Canโt you and I call it quits?
Canโt we forget whatโs happened and start over?โ
Under the cobra on her forehead, Carolineโs eyes widened and then slitted again. Her mouth twisted, and she stepped closer to Elena.
โI willย neverย forget,โ she said, and then she turned and left.
There was a silence, Bonnie and Matt looking at the floor. Elena stepped over to the doorway to feel cool air on her cheeks. Outside she could see the field and the tossing branches of the oak trees beyond, and once again she was overcome with that strange feeling of foreboding. Tonightโs the night, she thought wretchedly. Tonightโs the night when it all happens. But what โitโ was, she had no idea.
A voice sounded through the transformed gym. โAll right, theyโre about to let the line in from the parking lot. Cut the lights, Ed!โ Suddenly, gloom descended and the air was filled with groans and maniacal laughter, like an orchestra tuning up. Elena signed and turned.
โBetter get ready to start herding them through,โ she told Bonnie quietly. Bonnie nodded and disappeared into the darkness. Matt had donned his werewolf head, and was turning on a tape deck that added eerie music to the cacophony.
Stefan came around the corner, his hair and clothing melting into the darkness. Only his white shirtfront showed up clearly. โEverything worked out with Tanner,โ he said. โIs there anything else I can do?โ
โWell, you could work here, with Matt, bringing people inโฆ.โ Elenaโs voice trailed off. Matt was bent over the tape deck, minutely adjusting the volume, not looking up. Elena looked at Stefan and saw his face was tight and blank. โOr you could go into the boysโ locker room and be in charge of coffee and things for the workers,โ she finished tiredly.
โIโll go to the locker room,โ he said. As he turned away, she noticed a slight faltering in his step.
โStefan? Are you all right?โ
โFine,โ he said, recovering his balance. โA little tired, thatโs all.โ She watched him go, her chest feeling heavier every minute.
She turned to Matt, meaning to say something to him, but at that moment the line of visitors reached the door.
โShowโs on,โ he said, and crouched in the shadows.
Elena moved from room to room, troubleshooting. In years before, she had enjoyed this part of the night the most, watching the gruesome scenes being acted out and the delicious terror of the visitors, but tonight there was a feeling of dread and tension underlying all her thoughts. Tonightโs the night, she thought again, and the ice in her chest seemed to thicken.
A Grim Reaperโor at least that was what she supposed the hooded figure in black robes wasโpassed by her, and she found herself absent- mindedly trying to remember if she had seen it at any of the Halloween parties. There was something familiar about the way the figure moved.
Bonnie exchanged a harassed smile with the tall, slender witch who was directing traffic into the Spider Room. Several junior high boys were
slapping at the dangling rubber spiders and shouting and generally making a nuisance of themselves. Bonnie hustled them on into the Druid Room.
Here the strobe lights gave the scene a dreamlike quality. Bonnie felt a grim triumph to see Mr. Tanner stretched out on the stone altar, his white robes heavily stained with blood, his eyes glaring at the ceiling.
โCool!โ shouted one of the boys, racing up to the altar. Bonnie stood back and grinned, waiting for the bloody sacrifice to rear up and scare the wits out of the kid.
But Mr. Tanner didnโt move, even when the boy plunged a hand into the pool of blood by the sacrificeโs head.
Thatโs strange, Bonnie thought, hurrying up to prevent the kid from grabbing the sacrificial knife.
โDonโt do that,โ she snapped, so he held up his gory hand instead, and it showed red in every sharp flash of the strobe. Bonnie felt a sudden irrational fear that Mr. Tanner was going to wait until she bent over him and then make her jump. But he just kept staring at the ceiling.
โMr. Tanner, are you okay? Mr. Tanner? Mr. Tanner!โ
Not a movement, not a sound. Not a flicker of those wide white eyes. Donโt touch him, something in Bonnieโs mind told her suddenly and urgently. Donโt touch him donโt touch him donโt touch โฆ
Under the strobe lights she saw her own hand move forward, saw it grasp Mr. Tannerโs shoulder and shake it, saw his head flop bonelessly toward her. Then she saw his throat.
Then she began to scream.
Elena heard the screams. They were shrill and sustained and unlike any other sounds in the Haunted House, and she knew at once that they were no joke.
Everything after that was a nightmare.
Reaching the Druid Room at a run, she saw a tableau, but not the one prepared for visitors.
Bonnie was screaming, Meredith holding her shoulders. Three young boys were trying to get out of the curtained exit, and two bouncers were looking in, blocking their way. Mr. Tanner was lying on the stone altar, sprawled out, and his face โฆ
โHeโs dead,โ Bonnie was sobbing, the screams turning into words. โOh, God, the bloodโs real, and heโs dead. Iย touchedย him, Elena, and heโs dead, heโs really deadโฆ.โ
People were coming into the room. Someone else began screaming and it spread, and then everyone was trying to get out, pushing each other in panic, knocking into the partitions.
โGet the lights on!โ Elena shouted, and heard the shout taken up by others. โMeredith, quick, get to a phone, in the gym and call an ambulance, call the policeโฆ. Get those lightsย on!โ
When the lights snapped on, Elena looked around, but she could see no adults, no one entitled to take charge of the situation. Part of her was ice-cold, her mind racing as it tried to think what to do next. Part of her was simply numb with horror. Mr. Tanner โฆ She had never liked him, but somehow that only made it worse.
โGet all the kids out of here. Everybody but staff out,โ she said.
โNo! Shut the doors! Donโt letย anybodyย out until the police get here,โ shouted a werewolf beside her, taking off his mask. Elena turned in astonishment at the voice and saw that it was not Matt, it was Tyler Smallwood.
Heโd been allowed back in school only this week, and his face was still discolored from the beating he had taken at Stefanโs hands. But his voice had the ring of authority, and Elena saw the bouncers close the exit door. She heard another door close across the gym.
Of the dozen or so people crowded into the Stonehenge area, Elena recognized only one as a worker. The rest were people she knew from school, but none she knew well. One of them, a boy dressed as a pirate, spoke to Tyler.
โYou mean โฆ you think somebody in here did it?โ
โSomebody in here did it, all right,โ said Tyler. There was a queer, excited sound to his voice, as if he were almost enjoying this. He gestured to the pool of blood on the rock. โThatโs still liquid; it canโt have happened too long ago.
And look at the way his throatโs cut. The killer must have done it with that.โ He pointed to the sacrificial knife.
โThen the killer might be here right now,โ whispered a girl in a kimono.
โAnd itโs not hard to guess who it is,โ said Tyler. โSomebody who hated Tanner, who was always getting in arguments with him. Somebody
who was arguing with him earlier tonight. I saw it.โ
Soย youย were the werewolf in this room, thought Elena dazedly. But what were you doing here in the first place? Youโre not on staff.
โSomebody who has a history of violence,โ Tyler was continuing, his lips drawing back from his teeth. โSomebody who, for all we know, is a psychopath who came to Fellโs Church just to kill.โ
โTyler, what are you talking about?โ Elenaโs dazed feeling had burst like a bubble. Furious, she stepped toward the tall, husky boy. โYouโre crazy!โ
He gestured at her without looking at her. โSo says his girlfriendโbut maybe sheโs a little prejudiced.โ
โAnd maybeย youโreย a little prejudiced, Tyler,โ said a voice from behind the crowd, and Elena saw a second werewolf pushing his way into the room. Matt.
โOh, yeah? Well, why donโt you tell us what you know about Salvatore? Where does he come from? Whereโs his family? Where did he get all that money?โ Tyler turned to address the rest of the crowd. โWho knowsย anythingย about him?โ
People were shaking their heads. Elena could see, in face after face, distrust blossoming. The distrust of anything unknown, anything different. And Stefan was different. He was the stranger in their midst, and just now they needed a scapegoat.
The girl in the kimono began, โI heard a rumorโโ
โThatโs all anybodyโs heard, rumors!โ Tyler said. โNo one reallyย knowsย a thing about him. But thereโs one thing Iย doย know. The attacks in Fellโs Church started the first week of schoolโwhich was the week Stefan Salvatore came.โ
There was a swelling murmur at this, and Elena herself felt a shock of realization. Of course, it was all ridiculous, it was just a coincidence. But what Tyler was saying was true. The attacks had started when Stefan arrived.
โIโll tell you something else,โ shouted Tyler, gesturing at them to be quiet. โListen to me! Iโll tell you something else!โ He waited until everyone was looking at him and then said slowly, impressively, โHe wasย inย the cemetery the night Vickie Bennett was attacked.โ
โSure he was in the cemeteryโrearranging your face,โ said Matt, but his voice lacked its usual strength. Tyler grabbed the comment and ran with it.
โYes, and he almost killed me. And tonight somebodyย didย kill Tanner.
I donโt know whatย youย think, butย Iย think he did it. I think heโs the one!โ โBut where is he?โ shouted someone from the crowd.
Tyler looked around. โIf he did it, he must still be here,โ he shouted. โLetโs find him.โ
โStefan hasnโt done anything! Tylerโโ cried Elena, but the noise from the crowd overrode her. Tylerโs words were being taken up and repeated.ย Find him โฆ find him โฆ find him.ย Elena heard it pass from person to person. And the faces in the Druid Room were filled with more than distrust now; Elena could see anger and a thirst for vengeance in them too. The crowd had turned into something ugly, something beyond controlling.
โWhere is he, Elena?โ said Tyler, and she saw the blazing triumph in his eyes. Heย wasย enjoying this.
โI donโt know,โ she said fiercely, wanting to hit him.
โHe must still be here! Find him!โ someone shouted, and then it seemed everyone was moving, pointing, pushing, at once. Partitions were being knocked down and shoved aside.
Elenaโs heart was pounding. This was no longer a crowd; it was a mob. She was terrified of what they would do to Stefan if they did find him. But if she tried to go warn him, she would lead Tyler right to him.
She looked around desperately. Bonnie was still staring into Mr. Tannerโs dead face. No help there. She turned to scan the crowd again, and her eyes met Mattโs.
He was looking confused and angry, his blond hair ruffled up, cheeks flushed and sweaty. Elena put all her strength of will into a look of pleading.
Please, Matt, she thought. You canโt believe all this. You know it isnโt true.
But his eyes showed that heย didnโtย know. There was a tumult of bewilderment and agitation in them.
Please, thought Elena, gazing into those blue eyes, willing him to understand. Oh, please, Matt, only you can save him. Even if you donโt believe, please try to trust โฆ please โฆ
She saw the change come over his face, the confusion lifting as grim determination appeared. He stared at her another moment, eyes boring into hers, and nodded once. Then he turned and slipped into the milling,
hunting crowd.
Matt knifed through the crowd cleanly until he got to the other side of the gym. There were some freshmen standing near the door to the boysโ locker room; he brusquely ordered them to start moving fallen partitions, and when their attention was distracted he jerked the door open and ducked inside.
He looked around quickly, unwilling to shout. For that matter, he thought, Stefan must have heard all the racket going on in the gym. Heโd probably already cut out. But then Matt saw the black-clad figure on the white tile floor.
โStefan! What happened?โ For a terrible instant, Matt thought he was looking down on a second dead body. But as he knelt by Stefanโs side, he saw movement.
โHey, youโre okay, just sit up slowly โฆ easy. Are you all right, Stefan?โ
โYes,โ said Stefan. He didnโt look okay, Matt thought. His face was dead white and his pupils were dilated hugely. He looked disoriented and sick. โThank you,โ he said.
โYou may not thank me in a minute. Stefan, youโve got to get out of here. Canโt you hear them? Theyโre after you.โ
Stefan turned toward the gym, as if listening. But there was no comprehension on his face. โWhoโs after me? Why?โ
โEverybody. It doesnโt matter. What matters is that youโve got to get out before they come in here.โ As Stefan continued simply to stare blankly, he added, โThereโs been another attack, this time on Tanner, Mr. Tanner. Heโs dead, Stefan, and they think you did it.โ
Now, at last, he saw understanding come to Stefanโs eyes. Understanding and horror and a kind of resigned defeat that was more frightening than anything Matt had seen tonight. He gripped Stefanโs shoulder hard.
โIย knowย you didnโt,โ he said, and at that moment it was true. โTheyโll realize that, too, when they can think again. But meanwhile, youโd better get out.โ
โGet out โฆ yes,โ said Stefan. The look of disorientation was gone, and there was a searing bitterness in the way he pronounced the words. โI will โฆ get out.โ
โStefan โฆโ
โMatt.โ The green eyes were dark and burning, and Matt found he could not look away from them. โIs Elena safe? Good. Then, take care of her. Please.โ
โStefan, what are you talking about? Youโre innocent; this will all blow overโฆ.โ
โJust take care of her, Matt.โ
Matt stepped back, still looking into those compelling green eyes.
Then, slowly, he nodded.
โI will,โ he said quietly. And watched Stefan go.