able to find out what Azazel was trying to accomplish. Wherever he’s gone, Azazel is going to try to finish what he started, and that can’t mean anything good.”
“Madeline is correct. We should at least investigate before we leave this place,” Nathaniel said.
Jude grumbled something under his breath but he went into the hall. Nathaniel and I followed. Jude collected the notebooks on the floor and slung them under his arm.
“Which way?” he asked Nathaniel.
“The best way is to return to the ballroom and then enter the basement stairs at the rear, behind Azazel’s throne.”
We backtracked down the stairs toward the ballroom. Jude kept sneezing and blowing air out of his nose.
“What’s the problem?” I asked.
“There’s too much death in that room. I can still smell it. And if I can still smell the corpses, then I can’t smell anything else that might sneak up on us,” he said, exhaling air through his nose again.
My own sense of smell had been almost completely deadened by the stench in that room, and my nose wasn’t even a fraction as sensitive as Jude’s. It must feel like being blind for a werewolf to be unable to smell.
Jude and I walked side by side, Nathaniel trailing behind. We reached the ballroom, and the snake on my palm twitched just as I pushed the doors open.
For the second time that day, I wished I had left a door closed.
The room was filled with vampires.
Not a few to help Azazel with his vile project. Hundreds.
“Gods above and below,” Nathaniel said. “Where did they all come from?”
The vampires had turned as one silent entity to face us when we’d opened the door. The majority of the creatures stood in shadow, but a few were touched by the weak beams of winter sun that came through the windows. Their dead flesh smoldered where the sun touched, but instead of fleeing from the solar rays, the creatures stood and burned.
The vampires watched us, but made no move to approach. It was as if they waited for an order.
Beside me Jude transformed into a wolf. The binders clattered to the floor.
“We can’t fight them all,” I hissed. “So don’t do anything foolish.”
Jude barked at me, but I couldn’t tell if his reply was agreement or argument. I hoped he would restrain his natural impulse toward aggression until we got free of this mess.
The vampires stood silent and still. They were acting so weird, so un-vampire-like. I took a step backward, and Nathaniel mirrored me. I would have felt safer with my sword in my hand, but I didn’t want the vamps to construe that as aggression and attack us. Jude reluctantly followed Nathaniel and me while growling low in his throat.
We had gone about five paces when the vampires suddenly surged forward as one body.
“Run!” I said, but Jude leapt at the first vampire to approach him, tearing at its throat.
The vamp fell to the ground, wounded but not terminated, and I cursed as I ran to help the stubborn wolf.
“Get out of the way!” I shouted, and swung the sword to separate the fallen vamp’s head from its neck. It started flaking into dust immediately.
Nathaniel blasted a vamp with nightfire and it burst into flame.
There are three ways to kill a vampire—stake it, decapitate it or burn it. Anything else will slow the monster down but won’t kill it.
Jude attacked another vampire and I swung the sword at any creature that came near me. I dusted quite a few of them, but they kept coming, endlessly, relentlessly, unconcerned about the possibility of damage or death. They weren’t behaving like vampires at all, but zombies.
I don’t know how long we stood in front of those doors, hacking and burning, but there was suddenly a lull in the never-ending tide. My eyes were tearing from all the dust in the air, and it was hard to breathe without coughing. I wiped my eyes with my sleeve and saw several of the vampires were bottlenecked in the door.
“Now’s our chance,” I shouted, backing down the hallway.
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