THE MASTER
“Just coffee, please.”
The waitress raised her penciled eyebrows. “You don’t want anything to eat?” she asked.
Her accent was thick, her attitude disappointed.
Simon Lewis couldn’t blame her; she’d probably been hoping for a better tip than the one
she was going to get on a single cup of coffee. But it wasn’t his fault vampires didn’t eat.
Sometimes, in restaurants, he ordered food anyway, just to preserve the appearance of
normalcy, but late Tuesday night, when Veselka was almost empty of other customers, it
didn’t seem worth the bother. “Just the coffee.”
With a shrug the waitress took his laminated menu and went to put his order in. Simon sat
back against the hard plastic diner chair and looked around. Veselka, a diner on the
corner of Ninth Street and Second Avenue, was one of his favorite places on the Lower
East Side—an old neighborhood eatery papered with black-and-white murals, where they
let you sit all day as long as you ordered coffee at half-hour intervals. They also served
what had once been his favorite vegetarian pierogi and borscht, but those days were
behind him now.
It was mid-October, and they’d just put their Halloween decorations up—a wobbly sign
that said TRICK-OR-BORSCHT! and a fake cardboard cutout vampire nicknamed Count
Blintzula. Once upon a time Simon and Clary had found the cheesy holiday decorations
hilarious, but the Count, with his fake fangs and black cape, didn’t strike Simon as quite
so funny anymore.
Simon glanced toward the window. It was a brisk night, and the wind was blowing leaves
across Second Avenue like handfuls of thrown confetti. There was a girl walking down
the street, a girl in a tight belted trench coat, with long black hair that flew in the wind.
People turned to watch her as she walked past. Simon had looked at girls like that before
in the past, idly wondering where they were going, who they were meeting. Not guys like
him, he knew that much.
Except this one was. The bell on the diner’s front door rang as the door opened, and
Isabelle Lightwood came in.
She smiled when she saw Simon, and came toward him, shrugging off her coat and
draping it over the back of the chair before she sat down. Under the coat she was wearing
one of what Clary called her “typical Isabelle outfits”: a tight short velvet dress, fishnet
stockings, and boots. There was a knife stuck into the top of her left boot that Simon
knew only he could see; still, everyone in the diner was watching as she sat down,
flinging her hair back.
Whatever she was wearing, Isabelle drew attention like a fireworks display.
Beautiful Isabelle Lightwood. When Simon had met her, he’d assumed she’d have no
time for a guy like him. He’d turned out to be mostly right. Isabelle liked boys her
parents disapproved of, and in her universe that meant Downworlders—faeries,
werewolves, and vamps. That they’d been dating regularly for the past month or two
amazed him, even if their relationship was limited mostly to infrequent meetings like this
one. And even if he couldn’t help but wonder if he’d never been changed into a vampire,
if his whole life hadn’t been altered in that moment, would they be dating at all?
She tucked a lock of hair behind her ear, her smile brilliant. “You look nice.”
Simon cast a glance at himself in the reflective surface of the diner window. Isabelle’s
influence was clear in the changes in his appearance since they’d been dating. She’d
forced him to ditch his hoodies in favor of leather jackets, and his sneakers in favor of
designer boots. Which, incidentally, cost three hundred dollars a pair. He was still
wearing his characteristic word shirts—this one said EXISTENTIALISTS DO IT
POINTLESSLY—but his jeans no longer had holes in the knees and torn pockets. He’d
also grown his hair long so that it fell in his eyes now, covering his forehead, but that was
more necessity than Isabelle.
Clary made fun of him about his new look; but, then, Clary found everything about
Simon’s love life borderline hilarious. She couldn’t believe he was dating Isabelle in any
serious way. Of course, she also couldn’t believe he was also dating Maia Roberts, a
friend of theirs who happened to be a werewolf, in an equally serious way. And she really
couldn’t believe that Simon hadn’t yet told either of them about the other.
Simon wasn’t really sure how it had happened. Maia liked to come to his house and use
his Xbox—they didn’t have one at the abandoned police station where the werewolf pack
lived—and it wasn’t until the third or fourth time she’d come over that she’d leaned over
and kissed him good-bye before she’d left. He’d been pleased, and then had called up
Clary to ask her if he needed to tell Isabelle. “Figure out what’s going on with you and
Isabelle,” she said. “Then tell her.”
This had turned out to be bad advice. It had been a month, and he still wasn’t sure what
was going on with him and Isabelle, so he hadn’t said anything. And the more time that
passed, the more awkward the idea of saying something grew. So far he’d made it work.
Isabelle and Maia weren’t really friends, and rarely saw each other.
Unfortunately for him, that was about to change. Clary’s mother and her longtime friend,
Luke, were getting married in a few weeks, and both Isabelle and Maia were invited to
the wedding, a prospect Simon found more terrifying than the idea of being chased
through the streets of New York by an angry mob of vampire hunters.
“So,” Isabelle said, snapping him out of his reverie. “Why here and not Taki’s? They’d
serve you blood there.”
Simon winced at her volume. Isabelle was nothing if not unsubtle. Fortunately, no one
seemed to be listening in, not even the waitress who returned, banged down a cup of
coffee in front of Simon, eyed Izzy, and left without taking her order.
“I like it here,” he said. “Clary and I used to come here back when she was taking classes
at Tisch. They have great borscht and blintzes—they’re like sweet cheese dumplings—
plus it’s open all night.”
Isabelle, however, was ignoring him. She was staring past his shoulder. “What is that?”
Simon followed her glance. “That’s Count Blintzula.”
“Count Blintzula?”
Simon shrugged. “It’s a Halloween decoration. Count Blintzula is for kids. It’s like Count
Chocula, or the Count on Sesame Street.” He grinned at her blank look. “You know. He
teaches kids how to count.”
Isabelle was shaking her head. “There’s a TV show where children are taught how to
count by a vampire?”
“It would make sense if you’d seen it,” Simon muttered.
“There is some mythological basis for such a construction,” Isabelle said, lapsing into
lecturey Shadowhunter mode. “Some legends do assert that vampires are obsessed with
counting, and that if you spill grains of rice in front of them, they’ll have to stop what
they’re doing and count each one. There’s no truth in it, of course, any more than that
business about garlic. And vampires have no business teaching children. Vampires are
terrifying.”
“Thank you,” Simon said. “It’s a joke, Isabelle. He’s the Count. He likes counting. You
know. ‘What did the Count eat today, children? One chocolate chip cookie, two chocolate
chip cookies, three chocolate chip cookies . . .’”
There was a rush of cold air as the door of the restaurant opened, letting in another
customer. Isabelle shivered and reached for her black silk scarf. “It’s not realistic.”
“What would you prefer? ‘What did the Count eat today, children? One helpless villager,
two helpless villagers, three helpless villagers . . .’”
“Shh.” Isabelle finished knotting her scarf around her throat and leaned forward, putting
her hand on Simon’s wrist.
Her big dark eyes were alive suddenly, the way they only ever came alive when she was
either hunting demons or thinking about hunting demons. “Look over there.”
Simon followed her gaze. There were two men standing over by the glass-fronted case
that held bakery items: thickly frosted cakes, plates of rugelach, and cream-filled
Danishes. Neither of the men looked as if they were interested in food, though. Both were
short and painfully gaunt, so much so that their cheekbones jutted from their colorless
faces like knives. Both had thin gray hair and pale gray eyes, and wore belted slatecolored
coats that reached the floor.
“Now,” Isabelle said, “what do you suppose they are?”
Simon squinted at them. They both stared back at him, their lashless eyes like empty
holes. “They kind of look like evil lawn gnomes.”
“They’re human subjugates,” Isabelle hissed. “They belong to a vampire.”
“‘Belong’ as in . . . ?”
She made an impatient noise. “By the Angel, you don’t know anything about your kind,
do you? Do you even really know how vampires are made?”
“Well, when a mommy vampire and a daddy vampire love each other very much . . .”
Isabelle made a face at him. “Fine, you know that vampires don’t need to have sex to
reproduce, but I bet you don’t really know how it works.”
“I do too,” said Simon. “I’m a vampire because I drank some of Raphael’s blood before I
died. Drinking blood plus death equals vampire.”
“Not exactly,” said Isabelle. “You’re a vampire because you drank some of Raphael’s
blood, and then you were bitten by other vampires, and then you died. You need to be
bitten at some point during the process.”
“Why?”
“Vampire saliva has . . . properties. Transformative properties.”
“Yech,” said Simon.
“Don’t ‘yech’ me. You’re the one with the magical spit. Vampires keep humans around
and feed on them when they’re short on blood—like walking snack machines.” Izzy
spoke with distaste. “You’d think they’d be weak from blood loss all the time, but
vampire saliva actually has healing properties. It increases their red blood cell count,
makes them stronger and healthier, and makes them live longer. That’s why it’s not
against the Law for a vampire to feed on a human. It doesn’t really hurt them. Of course
every once in a while the vampire will decide it wants more than a snack, it wants a
subjugate—and then it will start feeding its bitten human small amounts of vampire
blood, just to keep it docile, to keep it connected to its master. Subjugates worship their
masters, and love serving them. All they want is to be near them. Like you were when
you went back to the Dumont. You were drawn back to the vampire whose blood you had
consumed.”
“Raphael,” Simon said, his voice bleak. “I don’t feel a burning urge to be with him these
days, let me tell you.”
“No, it goes away when you become a full vampire. It’s only the subjugates who worship
their sires and can’t disobey them. Don’t you see? When you went back to the Dumont,
Raphael’s clan drained you, and you died, and then you became a vampire. But if they
hadn’t drained you, if they’d given you more vampire blood instead, you would
eventually have become a subjugate.” would eventually have become a subjugate.”
“That’s all very interesting,” Simon said. “But it doesn’t explain why they’re staring at
us.”
Isabelle glanced back at them. “They’re staring at you. Maybe their master died and
they’re looking for another vampire to own them. You could have pets.” She grinned.
“Or,” Simon said, “maybe they’re here for the hash browns.”
“Human subjugates don’t eat food. They live on a mix of vampire blood and animal
blood. It keeps them in a state of suspended animation. They’re not immortal, but they
age very slowly.”
“Sadly,” Simon said, eyeing them, “they don’t seem to keep their looks.”
Isabelle sat up straight. “And they’re on their way over here. I guess we’ll find out what
they want.”
The human subjugates moved as if they were on wheels. They didn’t appear to be taking
steps so much as gliding forward soundlessly. It took them only seconds to cross the
restaurant; by the time they neared Simon’s table, Isabelle had whipped the sharp stilettolike
dagger out of the top of her boot. It lay across the table, gleaming in the diner’s
fluorescent lights. It was a dark, heavy silver, with crosses burned into both sides of the
hilt. Most vampire-repelling weapons seemed to sport crosses, on the assumption, Simon
thought, that most vampires were Christian. Who knew that following a minority religion
could be so advantageous?
“That’s close enough,” Isabelle said, as the two subjugates paused beside the table, her
fingers inches from the dagger. “State your business, you two.”
“Shadowhunter.” The creature on the left spoke in a hissing whisper. “We did not know
of you in this situation.”
Isabelle raised a delicate eyebrow. “And what situation would that be?”
The second subjugate pointed a long gray finger at Simon. The nail on the end of it was
yellowed and sharp. “We have dealings with the Daylighter.”
“No, you don’t,” Simon said. “I have no idea who you are. Never seen you before.”
“I am Mr. Walker,” said the first creature. “Beside me is Mr. Archer. We serve the most
powerful vampire in New York City. The head of the greatest Manhattan clan.”
“Raphael Santiago,” said Isabelle. “In that case you must know that Simon isn’t a part of
any clan. He’s a free agent.”
Mr. Walker smiled a thin smile. “My master was hoping that was a situation that could be
altered.”
Simon met Isabelle’s eyes across the table. She shrugged. “Didn’t Raphael tell you he
wanted you to stay away from the clan?”
“Maybe he’s changed his mind,” Simon suggested. “You know how he is. Moody.
Fickle.”
“I wouldn’t know. I haven’t really seen him since that time I threatened to kill him with a
candelabra. He took it well, though. Didn’t flinch.”
“Fantastic,” Simon said. The two subjugates were staring at him. Their eyes were a pale
whitish gray color, like dirty snow. “If Raphael wants me in the clan, it’s because he
wants something from me. You might as well tell me what it is.”
“We are not privy to our master’s plans,” said Mr. Archer in a haughty tone.
“No dice, then,” said Simon. “I won’t go.”
“If you do not wish to come with us, we are authorized to use force to bring you.”
The dagger seemed to leap into Isabelle’s hand; or at least, she barely seemed to move,
and yet she was holding it. She twirled it lightly. “I wouldn’t do that if I were you.”
Mr. Archer bared his teeth at her. “Since when have the Angel’s children become the
bodyguards for rogue Downworlders? I would have thought you above this sort of
business, Isabelle Lightwood.”
“I’m not his bodyguard,” said Isabelle. “I’m his girlfriend. Which gives me the right to
kick your ass if you bother him. That’s how it works.”
Girlfriend? Simon was startled enough to look at her in surprise, but she was staring
down the two subjugates, her dark eyes flashing. On the one hand he didn’t think Isabelle
had ever referred to herself as his girlfriend before. On the other hand it was symptomatic
of how strange his life had become that that was the thing that had startled him most
tonight, rather than the fact that he had just been summoned to a meeting by the most
powerful vampire in New York.
“My master,” said Mr. Walker, in what he probably thought was a soothing tone, “has a
proposition to put to the Daylighter—”
“His name is Simon. Simon Lewis.”
“To put to Mr. Lewis. I can promise you that Mr. Lewis will find it most advantageous if
he is willing to accompany us and hear my master out. I swear on my master’s honor that
no harm will come to you, Daylighter, and that should you wish to refuse my master’s
offer, you will have the free choice to do so.”
My master, my master. Mr. Walker spoke the words with a mixture of adoration and awe.
Simon shuddered a little inwardly. How horrible to be so bound to someone else, and to
have no real will of your own.
Isabelle was shaking her head; she mouthed “no” at Simon. She was probably right, he
thought. Isabelle was an excellent Shadowhunter. She’d been hunting demons and
lawbreaking Downworlders—rogue vampires, blackmagic-practicing warlocks,
werewolves who’d run wild and eaten someone—since she was twelve years old, and
was probably better at what she did than any other Shadowhunter her age, with the
exception of her brother Jace.
And there had been Sebastian, Simon thought, who had been better than them both. But
he was dead.
“All right,” he said. “I’ll go.”
Isabelle’s eyes rounded. “Simon!”
Both subjugates rubbed their hands together, like villains in a comic book. The gesture
itself wasn’t what was creepy, really; it was that they did it exactly at the same time and
in the same way, as if they were puppets whose strings were being yanked in unison.
“Excellent,” said Mr. Archer.
Isabelle banged the knife down on the table with a clatter and leaned forward, her shining
dark hair brushing the tabletop. “Simon,” she said in an urgent whisper. “Don’t be stupid.
There’s no reason for you to go with them. And Raphael’s a jerk.”
“Raphael’s a master vampire,” said Simon. “His blood made me a vampire. He’s my—
whatever they call it.”
“Sire, maker, begetter—there are a million names for what he did,” Isabelle said
distractedly. “And maybe his blood made you a vampire. But it didn’t make you a
Daylighter.” Her eyes met his across the table. Jace made you a Daylighter. But she
would never say it out loud; there were only a few of them who knew the truth, the whole
story behind what Jace was, and what Simon was because of it. “You don’t have to do
what he says.”
“Of course I don’t,” Simon said, lowering his voice. “But if I refuse to go, do you think
Raphael is just going to drop it? He won’t. They’ll keep coming after me.” He snuck a
glance sideways at the subjugates; they looked as if they agreed, though he might have
been imagining it. “They’ll bug me everywhere. When I’m out, at school, at Clary’s —”
“And what? Clary can’t handle it?” Isabelle threw up her hands. “Fine. At least let me go
with you.”
“Certainly not,” cut in Mr. Archer. “This is not a matter for Shadowhunters. This is the
business of the Night Children.”
“I will not—”
“The Law gives us the right to conduct our business in private.” Mr. Walker spoke stiffly.
“With our own kind.”
Simon looked at them. “Give us a moment, please,” he said. “I want to talk to Isabelle.”
There was a moment of silence. Around them the life of the diner went on. The place was
getting its late-night rush as the movie theater down the block let out, and waitresses were
hurrying by, carrying steaming plates of food to customers; couples laughed and
chattered at nearby tables; cooks shouted orders to each other behind the counter. No one
looked at them or acknowledged that anything odd was going on. Simon was used to
glamours by now, but he couldn’t help the feeling sometimes, when he was with Isabelle,
that he was trapped behind an invisible glass wall, cut off from the rest of humanity and
the daily round of its affairs.
“Very well,” said Mr. Walker, stepping back. “But my master does not like to be kept
waiting.”
They retreated toward the door, apparently unaffected by the blasts of cold air whenever
someone went in or out, and stood there like statues. Simon turned to Isabelle. “It’s all
right,” he said. “They won’t hurt me. They can’t hurt me. Raphael knows all about . . .”
He gestured uncomfortably toward his forehead. “This.”
Isabelle reached across the table and pushed his hair back, her touch more clinical than
gentle. She was frowning.
Simon had looked at the Mark enough times himself, in the mirror, to know well what it
looked like. As if someone had taken a thin paintbrush and drawn a simple design on his
forehead, just above and between his eyes. The shape of it seemed to change sometimes,
like the moving images found in clouds, but it was always clear and black and somehow
dangerous-looking, like a warning sign scrawled in another language.
“It really . . . works?” she whispered.
“Raphael thinks it works,” said Simon. “And I have no reason to think it doesn’t.” He
caught her wrist and drew it away from his face. “I’ll be all right, Isabelle.”
She sighed. “Every bit of my training says this isn’t a good idea.”
Simon squeezed her fingers. “Come on. You’re curious about what Raphael wants, aren’t
you?”
Isabelle patted his hand and sat back. “Tell me all about it when you get back. Call me
first.”
“I will.” Simon stood, zipping up his jacket. “And do me a favor, will you? Two favors,
actually.”
She looked at him with guarded amusement. “What?”
“Clary said she’d be training over at the Institute tonight. If you run into her, don’t tell
her where I went. She’ll worry for no reason.”
Isabelle rolled her eyes. “Okay, fine. Second favor?”
Simon leaned over and kissed her on the cheek. “Try the borscht before you leave. It’s
fantastic.”
Mr. Walker and Mr. Archer were not the most talkative of companions. They led Simon
silently through the streets of the Lower East Side, keeping several steps ahead of him
with their odd gliding pace. It was getting late, but the city sidewalks were full of
people—getting off a late shift, hurrying home from dinner, heads down, collars turned
up against the stiff cold wind. At St. Mark’s Place there were card tables set up along the
curb, selling everything from cheap socks to pencil sketches of New York to smoky
sandalwood incense. Leaves rattled across the pavement like dried bones. The air smelled
like car exhaust mixed with sandalwood, and underneath that, the smell of human
beings—skin and blood.
Simon’s stomach tightened. He tried to keep enough bottles of animal blood in his
room—he had a small refrigerator at the back of his closet now, where his mother
wouldn’t see it—to keep himself from ever getting hungry. The blood was disgusting.
He’d thought he’d get used to it, even start wanting it, but though it killed his hunger
pangs, there was nothing about it that he enjoyed the way he’d once enjoyed chocolate or
vegetarian burritos or coffee ice cream. It remained blood.
But being hungry was worse. Being hungry meant that he could smell things he didn’t
want to smell—salt on skin; the overripe, sweet smell of blood exuding from the pores of
strangers. It made him feel hungry and twisted up and utterly wrong. Hunching over, he
jammed his fists into the pockets of his jacket and tried to breathe through his mouth.
They turned right onto Third Avenue, and paused in front of a restaurant whose sign said
CLOISTER CAFÉ.
GARDEN OPENALLYEAR.Simonblinked up at the sign. “What are we doing here?”
“This is the meeting place our master has chosen.” Mr. Walker’s tone was bland.
“Huh.” Simon was puzzled. “I would have thought Raphael’s style was more, you know,
arranging meetings on top of an unconsecrated cathedral, or down in some crypt full of
bones. He never struck me as the trendy restaurant type.”
Both subjugates stared at him. “Is there a problem,Daylighter?” asked Mr.Archer finally.
Simon felt obscurely scolded. “No. No problem.”
The interior of the restaurant was dark, with a marble-topped bar running along one wall.
No servers or waitstaff approached them as they made their way through the room to a
door in the back, and through the door into the garden.
Many New York restaurants had garden terraces; few were open this late into the year.
This one was in a courtyard between several buildings. The walls had been painted with
trompe l’oeil murals showing Italian gardens full of flowers. The trees, their leaves
turned gold and russet with the fall, were strung with chains of white lights, and heat
lamps scattered between the tables gave off a reddish glow. A small fountain plashed
musically in the center of the yard.
Only one table was occupied, and not by Raphael. A slim woman in a wide-brimmed hat
sat at a table close to the wall. As Simon watched in puzzlement, she raised a hand and
waved at him. He turned and looked behind him; there was, of course, no one there.
Walker and Archer had started moving again; bemused, Simon followed them as they
crossed the courtyard and stopped a few feet from where the woman sat.
Walker bowed deeply. “Master,” he said.
The woman smiled. “Walker,” she said. “And Archer. Very good. Thank you for bringing
Simon to me.”
“Wait a second.” Simon looked from the woman to the two subjugates and back again.
“You’re not Raphael.”
“Dear me, no.” The woman removed her hat. An enormous quantity of silvery blond hair,
brilliant in the Christmas lights, spilled down over her shoulders. Her face was smooth
and white and oval, very beautiful, dominated by enormous pale green eyes. She wore
long black gloves, a black silk blouse and pencil skirt, and a black scarf tied around her
throat. It was impossible to tell her age—or at least what age she might have been when
she’d been Turned into a vampire. “I am Camille Belcourt. Enchanted to meet you.”
She held out a black-gloved hand.
“I was told I was meeting Raphael Santiago here,” said Simon, not reaching to take it.
“Do you work for him?”
Camille Belcourt laughed like a rippling fountain. “Most certainly not! Though once
upon a time he worked for me.”
And Simon remembered. I thought the head vampire was someone else, he had said to
Raphael once, in Idris, it felt like forever ago.
Camille has not yet returned to us, Raphael had replied. I lead in her stead.
“You’re the head vampire,” Simon said. “Of the Manhattan clan.” He turned back to the
subjugates. “You tricked me. You told me I was meeting Raphael.”
“I said you were meeting our master,” said Mr. Walker. His eyes were vast and empty, so
empty that Simon wondered if they had even meant to mislead him, or if they were
simply programmed like robots to say whatever their master had told them to say, and
were unaware of deviations from the script. “And here she is.”
“Indeed.” Camille flashed a brilliant smile toward her subjugates. “Please leave us,
Walker, Archer. I need to speak to Simon alone.” There was something about the way she
said it—both his name, and the word “alone”— that was like a secret caress.
The subjugates bowed and withdrew. As Mr. Archer turned to walk away, Simon caught
sight of a mark on the side of his throat, a deep bruise, so dark it looked like paint, with
two darker spots inside it. The darker spots were punctures, ringed with dry, ragged flesh.
Simon felt a quiet shudder pass through him.
“Please,” said Camille, and patted the seat beside her. “Sit. Would you like some wine?”
Simon sat, perching uncomfortably on the edge of the hard metal chair. “I don’t really
drink.”
“Of course,” she said, all sympathy. “You’re barely a fledgling, aren’t you? Don’t worry
too much. Over time you will train yourself to be able to consume wine and other
beverages. Some of the oldest of our kind can consume human food with few ill effects.”
Few ill effects? Simon didn’t like the sound of that. “Is this going to take a long time?”
he inquired, gazing pointedly down at his cell phone, which told him the time was after
ten thirty. “I have to get home.”
Camille took a sip of her wine. “You do? And why is that?”
Because my mom is waiting up for me. Okay, there was no reason this woman needed to
know that. “You interrupted my date,” he said. “I was just wondering what was so
important.”
“You still live with your mother, don’t you?” she said, setting her glass down. “Rather
odd, isn’t it, a powerful vampire like yourself refusing to leave home, to join with a
clan?”
“So you interrupted my date to make fun of me for still living with my parents. Couldn’t
you have done that on a night I didn’t have a date? That’s most nights, in case you’re
curious.”
“I’m not mocking you, Simon.” She ran her tongue over her lower lip as if tasting the
wine she had just drunk. “I want to know why you haven’t become part of Raphael’s
clan.”
Which is the same as your clan, isn’t it? “I got the strong feeling he didn’t want me to be
part of it,” Simon said. “He pretty much said he’d leave me alone if I left him alone. So
I’ve left him alone.”
“Have you.” Her green eyes glowed.
“I never wanted to be a vampire,” Simon said, half-wondering why he was telling these
things to this strange woman. “I wanted a normal life. When I found out I was a
Daylighter, I thought I could have one. Or at least some approximation of one. I can go to
school, I can live at home, I can see my mom and sister—”
“As long as you don’t ever eat in front of them,” said Camille. “As long as you hide your
need for blood. You have never fed on someone purely human, have you? Just bagged
blood. Stale. Animal.” She wrinkled her nose.
Simon thought of Jace, and pushed the thought hastily away. Jace was not precisely
human. “No, I haven’t.”
“You will. And when you do, you will not forget it.” She leaned forward, and her pale
hair brushed across his hand.
“You cannot hide your true self forever.”
“What teenager doesn’t lie to their parents?” Simon said. “Anyway, I don’t see why you
care. In fact, I’m still not sure why I’m here.”
Camille leaned forward. When she did, the neckline of her black silk blouse gaped open.
If Simon had still been human, he would have blushed. “Will you let me see it?”
Simon could actually feel his eyes pop out. “See what?”
She smiled. “The Mark, silly boy. The Mark of the Wanderer.”
Simon opened his mouth, then closed it again. How does she know? Very few people
knew of the Mark that Clary had put on him in Idris. Raphael had indicated it was a
matter for deadly secrecy, and Simon had treated it as such.
But Camille’s eyes were very green and steady, and for some reason he wanted to do
what she wanted him to do.
It was something about the way she looked at him, something in the music of her voice.
He reached up and pushed his hair aside, baring his forehead for her inspection.
Her eyes widened, her lips parting. Lightly she touched her fingers to her throat, as if
checking the nonexistent pulse there. “Oh,” she said. “How lucky you are, Simon. How
fortunate.”
“It’s a curse,” he said. “Not a blessing. You know that, right?”
Her eyes sparked. “‘And Cain said unto the Lord, My punishment is greater than I can
bear.’ Is it more than you can bear, Simon?”
Simon sat back, letting his hair fall back into place. “I can bear it.”
“But you don’t want to.” She ran a gloved finger around the rim of her wineglass, her
eyes still fixed on him. “What if I could offer you a way to turn what you regard as a
curse into an advantage?”
I’d say you’re finally getting to the reason you brought me here, which is a start. “I’m
listening.”
“You recognized my name when I told it to you,” Camille said. “Raphael has mentioned
me before, has he not?”
She had an accent, very faint, that Simon couldn’t quite place.
“He said you were the head of the clan and he was just leading them while you were
gone. Stepping in for you like —like a vice president or something.”
“Ah.” She bit gently on her lower lip. “That is, in fact, not quite true. I would like to tell
you the truth, Simon. I would like to make you an offer. But first I must have your word
on something.”
“And what’s that?”
“That everything that passes between us this night, here, remains a secret. No one can
know. Not your redheaded little friend, Clary. Not either of your lady friends. None of
the Lightwoods. No one.”
Simon sat back. “And what if I don’t want to promise?”
“Then you may leave, if you like,” she said. “But then you will never know what I
wished to tell you. And that will be a loss you will regret.”
“I’m curious,” Simon said. “But I’m not sure I’m that curious.”
Her eyes held a little spark of surprise and amusement and perhaps, Simon thought, even
a little respect. “Nothing I have to say to you concerns them. It will not affect their safety,
or their well-being. The secrecy is for my own protection.”
Simon looked at her suspiciously. Did she mean it? Vampires weren’t like faeries, who
couldn’t lie. But he had to admit he was curious. “All right. I’ll keep your secret, unless I
think something you say is putting my friends in danger. Then all bets are off.”
Her smile was frosty; he could tell she didn’t like being disbelieved. “Very well,” she
said. “I suppose I have little choice when I need your help so badly.” She leaned forward,
one slim hand toying with the stem of her wineglass.
“Until quite recently I led the Manhattan clan, happily. We had beautiful quarters in an
old prewar building on the Upper West Side, not that rat hole of a hotel Santiago keeps
my people in now. Santiago—Raphael, as you call him—was my second in command.
My most loyal companion—or so I thought. One night I found out that he was murdering
humans, driving them to that old hotel in Spanish Harlem and drinking their blood for his
amusement.
Leaving their bones in the Dumpster outside. Taking stupid risks, breaking Covenant
Law.” She took a sip of wine. “When I went to confront him, I realized he had told the
rest of the clan that I was the murderer, the lawbreaker. It was all a setup. He meant to
kill me, so that he might seize power. I fled, with only Walker and Archer to keep me
safe.”
“So all this time he’s claimed he’s just leading until you return?”
She made a face. “Santiago is an accomplished liar. He wishes me to return, that’s for
certain—so he can murder me and take charge of the clan in earnest.”
Simon wasn’t sure what she wanted to hear. He wasn’t used to adult women looking at
him with big tear-filled eyes, or spilling out their life stories to him.
“I’m sorry,” he said finally.
She shrugged, a very expressive shrug that made him wonder if perhaps her accent was
French. “It is in the past,” she said.“Ihave beenhiding out in Londonall this time,looking
for allies,biding mytime.ThenIheard about you.”
She held up her hand. “I cannot tell you how; I am sworn to secrecy. But the moment I
did, I realized that you were what I had been waiting for.”
“I was? I am?”
She leaned forward and touched his hand. “Raphael is afraid of you, Simon, as well he
should be. You are one of his own, a vampire, but you cannot be harmed or killed; he
cannot lift a finger against you without bringing down God’s wrath on his head.”
There was a silence. Simon could hear the soft electrical hum of the Christmas lights
overhead, the water plashing in the stone fountain in the center of the courtyard, the buzz
and hum of the city. When he spoke, his voice was soft. “You said it.”
“What was that, Simon?”
“The word. The wrath of—” The word bit and burned in his mouth, just as it always did.
“Yes. God.” She retracted her hand, but her eyes were warm. “There are many secrets of
our kind, so many that I can tell you, show you. You will learn you are not damned.”
“Ma’am—”
“Camille. You must call me Camille.”
“I still don’t understand what you want from me.”
“Don’t you?” She shook her head, and her brilliant hair flew around her face. “I want you
to join with me, Simon.
Join with me against Santiago. We will walk together into his rat-infested hotel; the
moment his followers see that you are with me, they will leave him and come to me. I
believe they are loyal to me beneath their fear of him. Once they see us together, that fear
will be gone, and they will come to our side. Man cannot contend with the divine.”
“I don’t know,” Simon said. “In the Bible, Jacob wrestled an angel, and he won.”
Camille looked at him with her eyebrows arched.
Simon shrugged. “Hebrew school.”
“‘And Jacob called the name of the place Peniel: for I have seen God face to face.’ You
see, you are not the only one who knows your scripture.” Her narrow look was gone, and
she was smiling. “You may not realize it, Daylighter, but as long as you bear that Mark,
you are the avenging arm of heaven. No one can stand before you.
Certainly not one vampire.”
“Are you afraid of me?” Simon asked.
He was almost instantly sorry he had. Her green eyes darkened like thunderclouds. “Me,
afraid of you?” Then she collected herself, her face smoothing, her expression lightening.
“Of course not,” she said. “You are an intelligent man. Iam convinced you will see the
wisdom ofmyproposaland joinwithme.”
“And what exactly is your proposal? I mean, I understand the part where we face down
Raphael, but after that? I don’t really hate Raphael, or want to get rid of him just to get
rid of him. He leaves me alone. That’s all I ever wanted.”
She folded her hands together in front of her. She wore a silver ring with a blue stone in it
on her left middle finger, over the material of her glove. “You think that is what you
want, Simon. You think Raphael is doing you a favor in leaving you alone, as you put it.
In reality he is exiling you. Right now you think you do not need others of your kind.
You are content with the friends you have—humans and Shadowhunters. You are content
to hide bottles of blood in your room and lie to your mother about what you are.”
“How did you—”
She went on, ignoring him. “But what about in ten years, when you are supposed to be
twenty-six? In twenty years?
Thirty? Do you think no one will notice that as they age and change, you do not?”
Simon said nothing. He didn’t want to admit he hadn’t thought ahead that far. That he
didn’t want to think ahead that far.
“Raphael has taught you that other vampires are poison to you. But it does not need to be
that way. Eternity is a long time to spend alone, without others of your kind. Others who
understand. You befriend Shadowhunters, but you can never be of them. You will always
be other and outside. With us you could belong.” As she leaned forward, white light
sparked off her ring, stinging Simon’s eyes. “We have thousands of years of knowledge
we could share with you, Simon. You could learn how to keep your secret; how to eat
and drink, how to speak the name of God.
Raphael has cruelly hidden this information from you, even led you to believe it doesn’t
exist. It does. I can help you.”
“If I help you first,” Simon said.
She smiled, and her teeth were white and sharp. “We will help each other.”
Simon leaned back. The iron chair was hard and uncomfortable, and he suddenly felt
tired. Looking down at his hands, he could see that the veins had darkened, spidering
across the backs of his knuckles. He needed blood.
He needed to talk to Clary. He needed time to think.
“I’ve shocked you,” she said. “I know. It is a great deal to take in. I would be happy to
give you as much time as you needed to make up your mind about this, and about me.
But we don’t have much time, Simon. While I remain in this city, I am in danger from
Raphael and his cohorts.”
“Cohorts?” Despite everything, Simon grinned slightly.
Camille seemed baffled. “Yes?”
“Well, it’s just . . . ‘Cohorts.’ It’s like saying ‘evildoers’ or ‘minions.’” She stared at him
blankly. Simon sighed.
“Sorry. You probably haven’t seen as many bad movies as I have.”
Camille frowned faintly, a very fine line appearing between her brows. “I was told you
would be slightly peculiar.
Perhaps it is just that I don’t know many vampires of your generation. But that will be
good for me, I feel, to be around someone so . . . young.”
“New blood,” said Simon.
At that she did smile. “Are you ready, then? To accept my offer? To begin to work
together?”
Simon looked up at the sky. The strings of white lights seemed to blot out the stars.
“Look,” he said, “I appreciate your offer. I really do.” Crap, he thought. There had to be
some way to say this without him sounding like he was turning down a date to the prom.
I’m really, really flattered you asked, but . . . Camille, like Raphael, always spoke stiffly,
formally, as if she were in a fairy tale. Maybe he could try that. He said, “I require some
time to make my decision. I’m sure you understand.”
Very delicately, she smiled, showing only the tips of her fangs. “Five days,” she said.
“And no longer.” She held out her gloved hand to him. Something gleamed in her palm.
It was a small glass vial, the size that might hold a perfume sample, only it appeared to be
full of brownish powder. “Grave dirt,” she explained. “Smash this, and I will know you
are summoning me. If you do not summon me within five days I will send Walker for
your answer.”
Simon took the vial and slipped it into his pocket. “And if the answer is no?”
“Then I will be disappointed. But we will part friends.” She pushed her wineglass away.
“Good-bye, Simon.”
Simon stood up. The chair made a metallic squeaking sound as it dragged over the
ground, too loud. He felt like he should say something else, but he had no idea what. For
the moment, though, he seemed to be dismissed. He decided that he’d rather look like one
of those weird modern vampires with bad manners than risk getting dragged back into the
conversation. He left without saying anything else.
On his way back through the restaurant, he passed Walker and Archer, who were
standing by the big wooden bar, their shoulders hunched under their long gray coats. He
felt the force of their glares on him as he walked by and wiggled his fingers at them—a
gesture somewhere between a friendly wave and a kiss-off. Archer bared his teeth —
flathumanteeth—and stalked pasthim toward the garden, Walker on his heels.
Simonwatched as theytook their places in chairs across from Camille; she didn’t look up
as they seated themselves, but the white lights that had illuminated the garden went out
suddenly—not one by one but all at the same time—leaving Simon staring at a
disorienting square of darkness, as if someone had switched off the stars. By the time the
waiters noticed and hurried outside to rectify the problem, flooding the garden with pale
light once again, Camille and her human subjugates had vanished.
Simon unlocked the front door of his house—one of a long chain of identical brickfronted
row houses that lined his Brooklyn block—and pushed it open slightly, listening
hard.
He had told his mother he was going out to practice with Eric and his other bandmates for
a gig on Saturday.
There had been a time when she simply would have believed him, and that would have
been that; Elaine Lewis had always been a relaxed parent, never imposing a curfew on
either Simon or his sister or insisting that they be home early on school nights. Simon
was used to staying out until all hours with Clary, letting himself in with his key, and
collapsing into bed at two in the morning, behavior that hadn’t excited much comment
from his mother.
Things were different now. He had been in Idris, the Shadowhunters’ home country, for
almost two weeks. He had vanished from home, with no chance to offer an excuse or
explanation. The warlock Magnus Bane had stepped in and performed a memory spell on
Simon’s mother so that she now had no recollection that he had been missing at all. Or at
least, no conscious recollection. Her behavior had changed, though. She was suspicious
now, hovering, always watching him, insisting he be home at certain times. The last time
he had come home from a date with Maia, he had found Elaine in the foyer, sitting in a
chair facing the door, her arms crossed over her chest and a look of barely tempered rage
on her face.
That night, he’d been able to hear her breathing before he’d seen her. Now he could hear
only the faint sound of the television coming from the living room. She must have waited
up for him, probably watching a marathon of one of those hospital dramas she loved.
Simon swung the door closed behind him and leaned against it, trying to gather his
energy to lie.
It was hard enough not eating around his family. Thankfully his mother went to work
early and got back late, and Rebecca, who went to college in New Jersey and only came
home occasionally to do her laundry, wasn’t around often enough to notice anything odd.
His mom was usually gone in the morning by the time he got up, the breakfast and lunch
she’d lovingly prepared for him left out on the kitchen counter. He’d dump it into a trash
bin on his way to school. Dinner was tougher. On the nights she was there, he had to push
his food around his plate, pretend he wasn’t hungry or that he wanted to take his food into
his bedroom so he could eat while studying. Once or twice he’d forced the food down,
just to make her happy, and spent hours in the bathroom afterward, sweating and retching
until it was out of his system.
He hated having to lie to her. He’d always felt a little sorry for Clary, with her fraught
relationship with Jocelyn, the most overprotective parent he’d ever known. Now the shoe
was on the other foot. Since Valentine’s death, Jocelyn’s grip on Clary had relaxed to the
point where she was practically a normal parent. Meanwhile, whenever Simon was home,
he could feel the weight of his mother’s gaze on him, like an accusation wherever he
went.
Squaring his shoulders, he dropped his messenger bag by the door and headed into the
living room to face the music. The TV was on, the news blaring. The local announcer
was reporting on a human interest story—a baby found abandoned in an alley behind a
hospital downtown. Simon was surprised; his mom hated the news. She found it
depressing. He glanced toward the couch, and his surprise faded. His mother was asleep,
her glasses on the table beside her, a half-empty glass on the floor. Simon could smell it
from here—probably whiskey. He felt a pang. His mom hardly ever drank.
Simon went into his mother’s bedroom and returned with a crocheted blanket. His mom
was still asleep, her breathing slow and even. Elaine Lewis was a tiny, birdlike woman,
with a halo of black curling hair, streaked with gray that she refused to dye. She worked
during the day for an environmental nonprofit, and most of her clothes had animal motifs
on them. Right now she was wearing a dress tie-dye printed with dolphins and waves,
and a pin that had once been a live fish, dipped in resin. Its lacquered eye seemed to glare
at Simon accusingly as he bent to tuck the blanket around her shoulders.
She moved, fitfully, turning her head away from him. “Simon,” she whispered. “Simon,
where are you?”
Stricken, Simon let go of the blanket and stood up. Maybe he should wake her up, let her
know he was okay. But then there would be questions he didn’t want to answer and that
hurt look on her face he couldn’t stand. He turned and went into his bedroom.
He had thrown himself down onto the covers and grabbed for the phone on his bedside
table, about to dial Clary’s number, before he even thought about it. He paused for a
moment, listening to the dial tone. He couldn’t tell her about Camille; he’d promised to
keep the vampire’s offer a secret, and while Simon didn’t feel he owed Camille much, if
there was one thing he had learned from the past few months, it was that reneging on
promises made to supernatural creatures was a bad idea. Still, he wanted to hear Clary’s
voice, the way he always did when he’d had a tough day. Well, there was always
complaining to her about his love life; that seemed to amuse her no end.
Rolling over in bed, he pulled the pillow over his head and dialed Clary’s number.
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