Eph took a deep breath. “I think something’s happened to her.”
“What do you mean ‘something’? Talk.”
“When I got back here, she was gone. Her mother, too.”
“Gone where?”
“I think they got rousted from here and left. I haven’t heard from her since. If you haven’t either, then something’s happened.”
Fet stared, stunned. “And you figured the best thing to do was stay here and dissect a fucking vamp?”
“To stay here and wait for one of you two to get in touch with me, yes.”
Fet scowled at Eph’s attitude. He felt like slapping the guy—slapping him and telling him what a waste of time he was. Eph had it all and Fet had nothing, and yet Eph repeatedly squandered or overlooked his good fortune. He would have liked to slap the guy a couple of times alright. But instead he sighed heavily and said, “Take me through this.”
Eph walked him upstairs, showed him the overturned chair and Nora’s abandoned lamp, clothes, and weapons bag. He watched Fet’s eyes, saw them burning. Given Fet’s and Nora’s deception, Eph had thought it might feel good to see Fet suffer—but it didn’t. Nothing about this felt good. “It’s bad,” said Eph.
“Bad,” said Fet, turning toward the windows looking out at the city. “That’s all you got?”
“What do you want to do?”
“You say that as though we even have a choice. We have to go get her.”
“Ah. Simple.”
“Yes! Simple! You wouldn’t want us to go after you?”
“I wouldn’t expect it.”
“Really?” said Fet, turning to him. “I guess we have fundamentally different ideas about loyalty.”
“Yes, I guess we do,” said Eph with enough edge on his words to make them stick.
Fet didn’t respond, but he didn’t back down either. “So you think she was grabbed. But not turned.”
“Not here. But how can we know for sure? Unlike Zack, she has no Dear One to go after. Right?”
Another jab. Eph couldn’t help himself. The computer containing their intimate correspondence was right there on the desk.
Fet understood now that Eph at least suspected something. Maybe he was daring Eph to come right out and make an open accusation, but Eph would not give him the satisfaction. So, instead of answering Eph’s insinuations, Fet countered as usual, attacking Eph’s vulnerable spot. “I assume you were at Kelly’s house again instead of here to meet Nora at the appointed time? This obsession with your son has warped you, Eph. Yes, he needs you. But we need you too. She needs you. This isn’t just about you and your son. Others are relying on you.”
“And what about you?” said Eph. “Your obsession with Setrakian. That’s what your trip to Iceland was. Doing what you think he would have done. Did you figure out all the secrets in the Lumen? No? I thought not. You could have been here as well, but you chose to follow in the old man’s shoes, his self-appointed disciple.”
“I took a chance. We have to get lucky sometime.” Fet stopped himself, throwing up his hands. “But—forget all that. Focus on Nora. She’s our only problem right now.”
Eph said, “Best-case scenario, she’s in a heavily guarded blood camp. If we guess right on which one, then all we have to do is get ourselves inside, find her, and get back out again. I can think of easier ways to commit suicide.”
Fet began packing up Nora’s things. “We need her. Pure and simple. We can’t afford to lose anyone. We need all hands on deck if we’re gonna have any chance of digg
ing ourselves out of this mess.”
“Fet. We’ve seen two years of this. The Master’s system has taken root. We are lost.”
“Wrong—just because I might have struck out on the Lumen doesn’t mean I came back empty-handed.”
Eph tried to figure out that one. “Food?”
“That too,” said Fet.