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It's gonna be really dark. Sorry 'bout that, but I don't have time to get a lamp for you. Are you okay in the dark? He nodded. I have long preferred the night. Good. Follow this tunnel until you come to the place where it changes from dirt to cement walls. Then turn to your right. It's gonna be confusing 'cause the closer you get to the depot, the more tunnels there are. But stay in the main one. It'll be lit--or at least I hope it's still lit. Either way, if you keep goin', you'll find lanterns and food and rooms with beds and everything. And there are dark fledglings. He didn't phrase it as a question, but Stevie Rae answered him. Yeah, there are. While the other red fledglings and I were livin' there, they stayed away from the main tunnels and our rooms and such. I don't know what they're doin' now that we're not there and I honestly don't know what they'll do with you.
I don't think they'll want to eat you--you don't smell right. But I can't tell for sure. They're-- she paused, searching for the right words. They're different than I am-- than the rest of us. They are of the darkness. As I said, I am well acquainted with that. All right. Well, I'm just gonna believe you'll be okay. Stevie Rae paused again, not knowing what to say and finally blurting out, So, I guess I'll see ya around sometime. He stared at her and said nothing. Stevie Rae fidgeted. Rephaim. You gotta go. Now. It's not safe here. As soon as you're down the tunnel a ways, I'm gonna collapse this part so that no one can follow you from here, but you still gotta hurry. I do not understand why you would betray your people to save me, he said. I'm not betraying anyone; I'm just not killing you! she yelled, and then lowered her voice and continued.
Why does letting you go have to mean I betrayed my friends? Can't it just mean that I choose life over death? Look, I chose good over evil. How is me lettin' you live any different than that? Did you not consider that choosing to save me was making a choice for what you would call evil? Stevie Rae looked at him for a long time before she answered. Then let that be on your conscience. Your life is what you want it to be. Your daddy's gone. The rest of the Raven Mockers are gone, too. My mamma used to sing a kinda silly song to me when I was a kid and I'd messed up and gotten myself hurt. She'd sing that I needed to pick myself up, dust myself off, and start all over again. And that's what you need to do. I'm just givin' you a chance to do it. Stevie Rae stuck out her hand. So, here's hoping that next time we meet, we're not enemies. Rephaim looked from her outstretched hand to her face, and back to her hand. Then slowly, almost reluctantly, he grasped it. Not in a modern handshake, but in the traditional vampyre greeting of clasping forearms. I owe you a life, Priestess. Stevie Rae's cheeks felt hot. Just call me Stevie Rae. I don't feel much like a Priestess right now. He bowed his head. Then it is to Stevie Rae that I owe a life. Do the right thing with yours and I'll consider myself paid up, she said.
Merry meet, marry part, and merry meet again, Rephaim. She tried to pull her arm from his grasp, but he didn't let her go. Are they all like you? All of your allies? he asked. She smiled. Nah, I'm weirder than most of the others. I'm the first red vamp, and sometimes I think that makes me kinda an experiment. Still gripping her arm he said, I was the first of my father's children. Though he held her gaze steadily, she couldn't read his expression. All she saw in the dim light of the tunnel was the human shape of his eyes and their unearthly red glow--the same red glow that haunted her dreams and sometimes overwhelmed her own vision, tainting everything with scarlet and anger and darkness. She shook her head, and more to herself than to him said, Being the first can be hard. He nodded and finally released her arm. Without another word, he turned and hobbled away into the darkness. Stevie Rae counted slowly to one hundred, then she raised her arms. Earth, I need you again. Instantly her element responded, filling the tunnel with the scents of a springtime meadow.
She breathed in deeply before continuing. Collapse the ceiling. Fill up this part of the tunnel. Close the hole you made for me; plug it up; make it solid again, so that nobody can pass here. She stepped back as the dirt in front and above her started to move, and then it rained down, shifting and solidifying until there was nothing but a solid wall of earth in front of her. Stevie Rae, what the hell are ya doing? Stevie Rae whirled around, pressing her hand over her heart. Dallas! You scared the livin' daylights right outta me! Dang, I think you 'bout gave me a heart attack for real. Sorry. You're so hard to sneak up on I thought you knew I was standing here. Heart pounding even harder, Stevie Rae searched Dallas's face, trying to find a sign that he had even a hint that she hadn't been alone, but he didn't look suspicious or mad or betrayed--he just looked curious and kinda sad.