A moment later, two smaller wolves come bounding into the field, descending upon the vampires who aren’t expecting them. They work together, one crouching under a vampire’s feet, the other launching into his chest so he topples over, face-first, into the ground.
Olivia and Rosa bound around, getting the vampires on the ground so the men can finish them off and generally causing enough of a distraction and chaotic element to hopefully give the rest of us the upper hand.
The entire time I’m fighting, I keep thinking that if Percy dies, I will die.
And if I die, this baby will die before I ever get the chance to tell Percy about them.
I’m not going to let that happen.
Chapter 28 - Percy
Rafael appears, as though from out of nowhere, spinning through the battle like a dancer weaving his way through the dance floor, and he is lighting the vampires on fire.
In one hand, he has a jug of gasoline, and in the other, a knife that must be hexed against vampires, because it makes them sizzle and cry and scream for help. After hitting them with the knife, he douses them in the gasoline, which lights up a moment later. It’s mesmerizing to watch, and I have to remind myself to pay attention to my fight, the one happening with Veronica at my back.
My entire body is thrumming with the need to protect her. Tell her to get out of here and that I’ll take care of it. Especially because I know about the baby she carries—and I would rather die than let anything happen to it.
Then, the reason for her fighting at my side dawns on me—if I die, so does she, and so does our baby. The thought is so painful, it fills me with a terrible loathing for the vampires we’re fighting, always taking more and more and more and never being satisfied with what they have. I pass a knife to Veronica, and she moves with it like she’s been doing it her whole life.
I make a note to thank Bigby for training her later. Right now, I focus on slicing and cutting, dodging those poisonous fangs, not wanting them to get another chunk out of me. The last one has just fully healed, even the scars disappearing from my skin, and I don’t want a repeat of that.
I’m shocked when I see Olivia and Rosa appear in the field, and can feel Bigby sending to her again and again, telling her to leave, and her sending back that he should go to hell, that she’s having fun.
When the last vampire falls to the ground, his head rolling off his shoulders from where Bryon sliced it with his sword, a new addition to his usual cast of knives, I’m breathing heavily, and Veronica is too, her back sweating against mine.
“Percy,” she says, turning and dropping her knife, crushing her body to mine, taking my face in her hands. My entire body lights on fire, and I have to remind myself that we’re around other people, that I need to temper my reaction to this, to her touching me for the first time since that meeting with Paul Smith.
Paul Smith—who must be dead now. You can’t break a life-pact without sacrificing your life, and he must have sacrificed himself for the vampires to have a chance at taking Veronica.
Suddenly, I get the feeling that there’s a lot she’s not telling me, but I don’t want to hash it out here, in the woods, where anything could be waiting to pounce at us.
“Let’s get out of here,” I say to her, starting to pull her away, but she grabs my face, bringing me back.
“Percy,” she says, gasping, “I have to tell you now.”
I look at her, at that long, dark hair, still glossy despite everything we’ve been through tonight. Those big, dark eyes, her smooth skin, the freckles dusting across her skin, everything I’ve ever loved about her, inside and out, collected here in the moonlight like a reminder of how she’s precious to me.
“Honey,” I say, “you can tell me—”
“I’m pregnant,” she says, laughing a little after she says it. “I should have told you sooner, Percy, but I was so scared. I’m not scared anymore—I wasn’t scared of these assholes, so why should I be scared of a little baby?”
“I don’t know,” Rosa says, stepping out from behind a tree, wearing a shirt from Ado, who didn’t shift. Olivia is wearing Byron’s and studiously avoiding looking at his chest. “Babies are pretty darn scary.”
“There’s something else I was scared of,” Veronica says, standing and addressing everyone. There’s sweat on her face and blood on her clothes, and she has never looked more beautiful to me than she is at this moment.
“I was scared to tell you all that. Basically, my mom was bitten by a vampire when she was pregnant with me. She died in childbirth, but I didn’t. Which means I’m basically a vampire without the blood-thirst. And if you have anything to say about that—if you’re going to treat me or this baby any differently because of that, tell me now so I can choose somewhere else to raise my kid.”
“Veronica,” Aris says, shaking his head and stepping toward her. “I was willing to make peace with the vampires. There are no paranormals who are inherently bad, just like people. I’ve never been a believer in that kind of ideology. All paranormal beings are worthy of consideration and kindness.”
“Except water sprites,” Bigby grumbles, from his place behind a bush, where he’s standing to hide his modesty. “Also, we should really think about bringing clothes when we do this kind of stuff. I ruined a perfectly good costume.”
“There’s always next year,” Rosa says, clapping her hand on Veronica’s shoulder. “Right?”
***
The second Veronica and I step back into my apartment together, I have her against the wall, and I kiss her deeply, like I’ve wanted to for the past few weeks.
“Please,” I say against her lips, “never be afraid to tell me something like that again. Never be afraid to tell me anything. I love you, Veronica. I always have, I just realized it the first time I saw you.”