Prologue
Vi and Hailey
“Think you bought enough cereal?”
Hailey stood in the kitchen of their small apartment, unloading brown bag after brown bag of the groceries her sister had brought home that morning: three boxes of cereal—two sugary, one healthy—three loaves of bread (pop two in the freezer), three gallons of milk, which apparently she would have to drink until she died…
“You love cereal,” Vi responded. “You can eat it for every meal.” But she wasn’t really paying attention. Her domestic duties fulfilled, she had already turned her attention to the more important matters at hand: loading weapons into a gray duffel.
Hailey reached into another grocery bag and pulled out handfuls and handfuls of wieners.
“Four packs of hot dogs, Vi? Seriously?”
“You love hot dogs,” Vi replied. “You can eat them for every meal.”
“Maybe I can dip them in milk,” Hailey muttered. It was like this every three months. Before every Slayerfest (that was their name for the regular gatherings of all the remaining slayers—which usually included the legendary Buffy Summers), Vi would go into hyper-overdrive-abandonment-mom mode. She’d load Hailey down with food both healthy and junk, and triple-check all the locks on the windows and door of their cramped two-bedroom apartment on the outskirts of The Dalles, Oregon. Even though nothing—absolutely nothing—ever went down in The Dalles, Oregon. Vi had to drive all the way to Portland to do any decent slaying, and even then she said the vamps were weird: They took their dogs everywhere and chased victims down on pedal bikes, and half of them would only eat vegans.
Hailey sighed. Pacific Northwest vamps were one of a kind.
She turned and watched her older sister stuff the duffel with stakes, knives, crosses, and plastic bottles full of holy water. It was mostly a waste. The meetings were for training and shoptalk. The who-died-this-quarter roll call and the candlelight vigil circle for whoever did,
or whatever. Hailey didn’t know for certain. She’d never been allowed to go, even though she’d asked to constantly in the beginning, when she first came to live with Vi after their parents died six years ago. Well… her parents. She and Vi were half sisters. Hailey was their dad’s from his second marriage. There wasn’t much of a family resemblance—Vi was slim-hipped and narrow-chested, Hailey happily curvaceous. Vi had a thin, frowning mouth, while Hailey’s lips were made for deep reds and sarcastic curling. She’d never really known Vi before the car accident, and when Vi came to pick Hailey up after the accident, Hailey’d thought there’d been a mistake. Until Vi had bent down and looked her in the eyes. Both girls had their father’s eyes.
So off they went, two sisters against the world. Always on their own, and that had always been enough. Vi’s mom was still around somewhere, but Vi kept her hidden, for her own safety. Vi liked to hide things for their own safety.
“Don’t you think you should pack other things?” Hailey asked. “Like underwear and socks?”
Vi stopped and put her hands on her hips. Already she looked less like Vi and more like Vi the Slayer. Vi was lanky and pale. She walked with a slight hunch and had guarded eyes and a kind smile. Vi the Slayer was lithe as a cat. She didn’t walk—she ran. She leapt. Her eyes were hard and focused.
She cocked her head at her much younger sister and smiled. “Clothes and stuff are in my backpack.” She circled the room and surveyed the whole apartment—final mental checks before she’d dash out the door. “Are you all set? Food? Beverages? The internet’s paid up for the next month, so I don’t want to hear any excuses about falling behind like last time—”
“Last time was summer vacation.” Hailey went to high school online. Which was a weird way of putting it. She didn’t “go” to high school anywhere. She did high school from the middle cushion of their couch.
“Either way, I don’t want you sitting around doing nothing but reading your comics the whole time, or traipsing around with those delinquent friends of yours….” Her voice trailed off. Before the Slayerfests, she couldn’t even focus long enough to nag properly.
“Comics are a valid form of literature with highly developed themes, characterization, and story arcs,” Hailey said. “And those delinquents have names.”
“Huh?”
“Never mind. Where is this quarter’s fest anyway?”
“Halifax.”
“Halifax?”
“Well, we fly into Halifax. The actual meeting is at this remote resort. Cabins in trees or something.”
Hailey cocked an eyebrow. The meetings were starting to sound less like training and more like retreats. Every slayer in the world hanging out in a tree house wearing a flannel robe and a mud mask. But her only comment was: “Long flight.”
“Some of us are portaling in,” said Vi. “Most of the internationals. With Andrew and the other Witchers.”
“You know, he can’t just call them that because they’re Watchers with magic. They lack the abs. And the white hair.”
Vi snorted. “I’ll tell him you said so.” She held her arm out. “Come here, kid.”
Hailey groaned—she was sixteen, not a kid—but she went and hugged her sister tight. It hadn’t been easy between them at first; Hailey’d been an angry ten-year-old, and scared. And Vi—Vi had been a young slayer, not even thirty yet, with enough on her hands trying to keep herself alive. It had taken time to figure things out. To become a real family, and a team.
“Don’t answer the door without looking to see who it is first.”
“Duh, I never do.”
“Don’t go anywhere after dark.”
“Nothing ever happens here after dark.”
“Don’t spend all our money at the bookstore.”
Hailey grinned. “Okay, I promise.”
Vi let go of her and stared at her for so long that it started to get weird.
“What?” Hailey asked, and went back to the couch. “You’re only going to be gone for a few days. I don’t know why you think you have to feed me for two months.” Except she did know why. Vi always stocked her up. Just in case she didn’t make it back.
“Well,” Vi said. “The way you eat…” She slung her backpack over her shoulders and reached down for her duffel bag. When she bent, the red roots of her hair stood out in a bright line, growing out under the dark brown dye. Hailey laughed.
“We should have dyed our hair again before you left.”
“Oh, yeah?” Vi touched her head.
“Yeah. You look like a rooster or something.” Hailey’s own hair was black naturally, inherited from her mom, who’d been Canadian and mixed-race Saulteaux First Nations. Hailey considered it a gift—it made her Goth aesthetic one step easier.
Vi put her hand on the doorknob.
“I don’t know why you have to go to these anymore anyway,” Hailey said. “Haven’t slayers ever heard of teleconferencing?”
“Too easy to hack,” Vi said quietly. “Don’t you watch the news?”
“I read the news, Luddite. But even I know that demons can’t hack.” What had Vi told her? Most demons and vamps were terrible with gadgets. Need to figure out if your new boyfriend is a demon? FaceTime him. If all you get is thirty seconds of his forehead and a lot of saying What? then call your big sister to take him out.
“You’re a smart kid, Hailey.”
“I’m not a kid. But yeah, I know.”
“I’ll see you Monday.”
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