Harkerâs shone blue. But if her father was an ox, Sloan was a wraith, the dark bones of his skeleton just visible through the thin vellum of his skin. With his pallor, Sloan looked sick. No , thought Kate. He looked dead . Like a corpse on a cold day.
An H was branded into the monsterâs cheek, just below his left eye, the letter the size and shape of acollege ring. (Her father wore it on his left hand, above his wedding band.)
Sloanâs thin lips drew back to reveal sharp teeth, like a sharkâs, each filed to a point.
Malchai, Malchai, sharp and sly ,
S mile and bite and drink you dry .
Sloan was saying something, but she couldnât hear his words over the blaring music. She didnât want to hear them. Sloanâs voice was all wrong, not a rattle or a growl, but something soft and cloying. She had never seen the Malchai feed, but she could imagine him, covered in gore, his voice still sickly sweet.
I canât hear you, she mouthed, hoping he would go away. But Sloan was too patient. He reached out and touched a panel on the wall with a single sharp nail, and the beat collapsed, plunging them back into silence.
Kate didnât lower the gun. She wondered what kind of rounds were loaded. Silver? Iron? Lead? Something that would make a dent.
âHome for less than a week,â he said, his voice so low in the wake of the music that she had to strain to hear, âand youâve already found the weapons.â
Kate smiled grimly. âWhat can I say?â
âDo you plan to shoot me?â he asked, taking a prowling step closer, red eyes bright with interest, as if it were a game.
âIâve considered it,â she said, but she didnât fire, and then she felt a weight on the gun, and looked down to see Sloanâs hand resting casually on the weaponâs barrel. She hadnât even seen him move. That was the way with Malchai, slow until they struck.
Sloan clicked his tongue against his sharp teeth. âMy dear Kate,â he said. âIâm not your enemy.â
His fingers slid forward, brushing hers, cold and slick, almost reptilian , and she jerked away, surrendering the gun. He set it on the counter between them. âNo problems today, I assume.â
Kate gestured to herself. âHome in one piece.â
âAnd the school?â As if he cared.
âStill standing.â The temperature in the kitchen was falling, as if Sloan were sucking all the heat out of the room. Kate crossed her arms. âYouâre up early.â
âA vampire joke. How original.â He never cracked a smile, but Sloan had her fatherâs dry humor. Only the Corsai were truly nocturnal, allergic to the light of day. The Malchai drank blood and drew their strength from the night, but they werenât vampires, didnât shrink away from crosses, wouldnât catch fire in the sun. A piece of pure metal through the heart, though, that would still take them down.
Kate watched Sloan eye the stack of medallions on the counter and recoil ever so slightly before he turnedtoward the floor-to-ceiling windows and the thinning light.
She had a theory about Sloan, that he wasnât just Harkerâs servant, but his Malchai. The product of some awful crime, an aftermath, just like those Corsai in the clip sheâd watched. Something that slithered out of Harkerâs wake. But who had he killed to gain a creature like Sloan? And how long had the Malchai been there, at her fatherâs side when Kate wasnât ? The question made her want to put a silver bullet through the monsterâs eye.
Her gaze flicked to the brand on the Malchaiâs cheek. âTell me something, Sloan.â
âHmm?â
âWhat did you do to become my fatherâs favorite pet ?â The Malchaiâs face stiffened, as if freezing into place. âHave you learned any tricks since I left? Can you sit? Lie down? Play fetch?â
âI only have one