sleepy butt. Youâve got school tomorrow.â
She stretched and yawned. âSo do you!â
âYeah, but Iâm in charge, so I get to stay up. Go on.â
âYou suck, Shane.â
âDo not make me come over there.â
She made a show of being too tired to run up the stairs, and crawled up them on her hands and knees, which was funny and odd, and as soon as she was gone, Shane picked up his cell and told Michael about Monica.
Michael was worried. Yeah, he was, too, kinda. Plus, Alyssa was probably rightâhis Myspace page was going to be a mess.
Shane decided to worry about that in the morning. For now, there were language, violence, and nudity warnings on HBO.
Sweet.
â¢Â   â¢Â   â¢
He fell asleep on the couch, just like Alyssa had. When he woke up, HBO was running boxing, and it was really late. Mom and Dad still werenât home. Shane yawned, considered watching boxing, and decided to wander upstairs instead.
That was when he smelled smoke, halfway up the stairs.
For a second he thought,
Somebodyâs barbecuing
, and then, stupidly,
What, at midnight?
And then he smelled more smoke, and saw it, a pale white haze in the air, and the smoke detectors started going off with loud whooping shrieks upstairs.
Oh God.
Shane ran the rest of the stairs. The smoke was thicker at the top, choking and rancid; it tasted like burning plastic, and before he knew it, he was on his hands and knees, crawling instead of running. The air was better there. He could hear something crackling now, and that had to be the fire, fireâAlyssa was in her room and he had to get to her. . . .
âLyss!â He banged on her closed door, yelling and coughing, then rose up to his knees to try to open it. He couldnât. The knob burned his hand, and the paint on the door was blistering, smoke pouring out from underneath like water on a sinking ship. âLyssa!â
He had to try. He had to save her.
Shane fell onto his back, gasping for air, coughing constantly, and pulled both his legs back for a last effort at a kick. He hit the doorknob, and the whole door shuddered, then flew back on its hinges.
A ball of flame erupted out at him, and he rolled, feeling his clothes catch fire. He had to keep rolling to put it out, and then he crawled back. Alyssaâs door was open. He had to get toâ
Somebody grabbed him by the feet and started dragging him backward. âNo!â he screamed, or tried to; he couldnât breatheâit felt like his lungs were stuffed with wet cotton. âNo, Lyssaââ
It was his father. Frank Collins dragged him out to the stairs, then collapsed in a coughing heap, sucking whatever air remained near the floor, and rolled Shane down the steps. Shane barely felt any of it. The world was taking on dark, glittering edges, and his chesthurt, and none of it meant anything because he had to get to his sister. . . .
His mother was there, too, grabbing his arms and dragging. His dad made it down and helped.
They dragged Shane outside, and suddenly there was all this air, and he began coughing and vomiting black stuff and shaking and crying, and oh my God, Lyssa. . . .
His dad grabbed him and shook him. âWhy didnât you get her?â he yelled, right in Shaneâs face. âShe was your responsibility!â He was slurring his words, so drunk he could hardly stand up.
Shane couldnât help it. He laughed. There was something terrible about it. Something broken.
His mother was trying to go inside. The firefighters and cops were there now, and they stopped her and brought her back. She sat down on the wet grass with Shane and rocked him back and forth as their house turned into an orange, flickering bonfire against the cold black sky, as their Morganville neighborsâand even some of the vampiresâcame out to watch.
And then Shane looked up, and he saw Monica Morrell and her two
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