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OCTOBER
My father only pulled me out of school for one reason: to hunt down the dead. So, when he showed up at the door of my firearms class, beckoning to me, I got up from my seat without a word.
Chairs scraped against the floor as the other students rose. Everyone stood at attention and thumped their right fists over their hearts, our teacher included. Saluting. Like all of the Helsing Corpsâ commanders in chief, Dad won the respect of his reapers and cadets through his killer instinct and the novelâs worth of scar stories carved into his skin. As for me, my father gave me purpose, direction. Zeal.
Hunting the undead gave us Helsings reason to live.
âYou too, McCoy,â Dad said to my best friend and training partner, Ryder. âAs for the rest of you, at ease.â Students folded into their chairs, sitting straight and sharp as razors. Showing off for my father, of course. Not more than thirty seconds before, the slackers were dozing through a lecture on the Colt M1911 handgun.
Grabbing our backpacks, Ryder and I headed to the front of the classroom. I wondered if he sensed our classmatesâ gazes at his back as keenly as I did. Probably notâRyder was better liked than me and had more tolerance for suck-ups. Which is to say, more than my zero.
The two of us were a study in extreme contrasts: At sixteen, Ryder stood six-foot-one, whereas I barely topped five-three. The other students called us Yin and Yang behind our backs, thanks to our coloringâhe was dusky, like heâd slathered himself in his native Australian sun; I was pale, having inherited my motherâs platinum-blond hair, bleached-bone skin, and her brilliant tetrachromatic blue eyes.
The things we shared? My fatherâs favor. A passion for triggers and lead. ISTJ Myers-Briggs profiles. And George Romero zombie movies.
âWahlberg,â Dad said to our instructor, âthese two wonât be returning to class tonight. Inform the attendance office.â
âYes, sir.â
Dad hustled Ryder and me into the hallway. To my surprise, six of my fatherâs black-jacketed Harker Elite guards waited outsideâreapers trained to crew with and protect Helsing family members in the field. The men saluted me with murmurs of âMiss Helsing.â My self-consciousness over being pulled out of class slipped back; a large Harker presence meant Dad wasnât taking Ryder and me out for a practice hunt.
Weâre going after a reaper-killer. The thought corseted my breath like a Kevlar vest and sliced my nerves to threads. âWhatâs going on?â I asked, looking at Dad, forgetting to slap the obligatory âsirâ on at the end. âThere are too many Harkers here for a simple training mission.â
Dadâs gaze slid away and tacked itself to a point beyond my shoulder. âThis isnât a training mission, Micheline.â The Harkers shifted their weight and refused to meet my eyes, tombstone stoic.
I glanced at Ryder, who told me he shared my conclusion with nothing more than his clenched, tendon-corded fists. All cadets started hunting necrotic monsters in their fourth year, but never anything tough enough to shock our best reapers into silence. Iâd taken down a handful of necros in the fieldâall of them slow, stupid, and none of them killers.
âWhoâs dead?â Ryder asked, his trap muscles bunching.
âWeâll see.â Dad started down the hall, his people turning to accompany him. âLetâs move outâLieutenant Carroll will brief us once we reach the dead zone.â
âYou know Iâm supposed to hunt with Mom tonight, right?â I called to Dadâs back. My voice skidded off the hallwayâs matte-black lockers, echoing. âSheâll be pissed if I donât show up for the exorcism at the Orpheum.â
My words didnât even slow my fatherâs stride.
âDad?â
âForget
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