Holly Black - The Coldest Girl in Coldtown

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Tana lives in a world where walled cities called Coldtowns exist. In them, quarantined monsters and humans mingle in a decadently bloody mix of predator and prey. The only problem is, once you pass through Coldtown's gates, you can never leave.
One morning, after a perfectly ordinary party, Tana wakes up surrounded by corpses. The only other survivors of this massacre are her exasperatingly endearing ex-boyfriend, infected and on the edge, and a mysterious boy burdened with a terrible secret. Shaken and determined, Tana enters a race against the clock to save the three of them the only way she knows how: by going straight to the wicked, opulent heart of Coldtown itself.
The Coldest Girl in Coldtown

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Maybe that was what happened. The message got confused. Marisol had misunderstood. Pearl wasn’t really here.

But in her heart, Tana knew she was.

The white crow cawed, looking over with sinister eyes. Find Pearl , Tana wanted to command, but she knew Gremlin wouldn’t understand and, anyway, he’d only listen to Jameson. No, she was going to have to get away from Lucien first, then figure out what to do from there.

What will you do? she chided herself. Are you going to find her and then, hungry as you’re going to get, what next? Drink her blood quick, before someone else does?

Tana’s eyes burned as she knelt down and reached for the box under Elisabet’s bed. She strapped one of the wooden knives to her thigh, tying it down with two boot laces. Then she tucked the guard’s keys into the fist of one of her hands and picked up a crossbow from the locker underneath Elisabet’s bed—each bolt made of polished rosewood and thorn—for Marisol. “Okay, you point that thing at me, and hopefully everyone will think I’m some prisoner you’re marching through the estate.”

It really said something about what it must be like to live with Lucien Moreau that all Elisabet’s weapons were the sort one used against other vampires. This must be a very different place when all the cameras were off.

And for some reason that thought made her realize, with horrible certainty, that she knew where Pearl would be headed once she crossed the threshold into Coldtown. She’d go right to Lucien. He was Pearl’s favorite celebrity vampire, after all, and she’d said she was going to be on TV. Tana closed her eyes, and for the first time since she’d woken up among corpses in Lance’s farmhouse, for the first time since the scrape of teeth against her leg, she let go of the hope that she was going to make it. Maybe she could find Pearl in time and give her the marker, but there was no way out for Tana.

There was only what she did before she died.

Marisol gave her an appraising look, as though something in Tana’s whole manner had changed. Frowning, she walked to the door, her movements fluid as she turned the ornate knob. Barefoot, Tana padded down the stairs with Marisol.

The scent of blood and sweat was sharp in her nose and sharper still once the door to the basement opened. No one seemed to notice them passing, especially when Marisol’s hand clamped tight around Tana’s upper arm. “Act like a prisoner,” the vampire said, hauling her along like a piece of baggage, a crossbow bolt pressed into her back in a way that suddenly felt all too realistic.

At the bottom of the stairs, she saw the cages, lit by a dim bulb in the center of the room. Valentina sat against the back wall, next to a boy in smudged white pants and black suspenders over no shirt, and the dark-haired girl Tana had spoken with before. They pushed themselves to their feet. Valentina slipped her fingers around the bars, squinting into the gloom. Tana could see perfectly. She could hear the prisoners’ hearts speed, too, could hear the warm tide of their blood lapping against the edges of her mind. She thought of the crowd of people standing in the theater in front of Gavriel, all the people he’d bitten, and wondered if hunger like hers could ever be sated.

“Tana, you found her!” said Valentina, looking at Marisol. “It’s her ! How did you—”

“This is Jameson’s mom ,” Tana said quickly, ignoring her red vision, ignoring the answering drum of her own heart. “And she’s going to help get us out of here.”

Marisol frowned, clearly confused by the emphasis Tana had put on the word mom .

Valentina stared at Marisol and couldn’t seem to stop staring.

Tana knelt down and slid one of the keys into each lock, jiggling it around. After a moment, it turned with a heavy metallic clank.

“Hey,” one of the prisoners, a hollow-chested boy, said. “What are you doing? You’re not supposed to do that!”

As Tana fumbled to fit the second key in, someone started down the stairs.

“Who’s there?” a guard called. “What’s going on?”

“They’re letting us out,” called one of the girls before Valentina grabbed hold of her, pressing a hand against her mouth.

Tana leaned back against the wall, slipping Elisabet’s long wooden dagger into her hand. She could picture the way it would sink into the guard’s skin if he came down the stairs, the way she would rip it through his heart. Killing Midnight had been hard, but she thought of the other vampire she’d stabbed in this very place and wasn’t sure it would ever be hard again. Her lips pulled back from her teeth in a silent snarl.

Marisol gazed up the stairs at him, tossing back her hair and smiling. “I’m taking a few of the prisoners out back to hose them down. You can’t expect Lucien to serve them up covered in dirt.”

Tana looked at Marisol’s smile. She was disturbingly good at faking her feelings. Tana wondered what had happened that had made Marisol abandon her son years before? Was it that she was afraid she’d drain him? Turn him? Was it easier to glut herself on blood and give up on everything else?

I have a friend who lives in Lucien’s house , Jameson had said. He hadn’t called her his mother, not once, not even in the note telling Tana to trust her.

They’re not human, Tana reminded herself. I am not wholly human anymore.

The guard seemed to swallow the explanation, but he took another step closer. “Need some help?” he called to Marisol.

Tana braced to swing. She tried to concentrate on the place to one side of his breastbone where his heart would be.

“No,” Marisol said. “But find me someplace to put them upstairs. Couches or—I don’t know—a table that’s long enough to display them lying across it.”

“Sure, okay,” he said. “But we’re supposed to be out of here before the Spider arrives. Lucien wants just a skeleton crew—servers and a guard or two. Charles is going to be the only one manning the cameras. So, if you’re going to get them ready, you don’t have a lot of time.”

“Time is the only thing any of us do have,” Marisol said with a shrug.

“Suit yourself,” the guard told her, and Tana heard his footsteps retreating. A skeleton crew? Lucien had promised Gavriel that his people would be there to take down the Spider’s Corps des Ténèbres . Not only must he have been lying, but it seemed clear that everyone in the house knew Gavriel was being set up. Even Marisol must have known it.

Tana wanted to slam the wooden knife into Lucien’s heart, wanted to watch the bubbling of deep blue blood. How was she going to warn Gavriel?

And what was Gavriel thinking, letting Lucien chain him and drag him back before the monster who’d imprisoned him for a decade? Did he think that nothing could touch him now? Did he believe in the power of his own madness to carry him through? Was his head so foggy with poems and plans that he had no room for doubts?

She had to tell him before the Spider got there, before it was too late.

Marisol turned the second key, swinging open the door and regarding the prisoners, smiling a fanged smile. “You’ll come with me like good little boys and girls, won’t you?”

The humans looked at one another with shadowed eyes.

“Come along,” Marisol told the prisoners. “That was just a story I made up for the big bad guard. Anyway, wouldn’t it be easier to escape from outside? Don’t you want to come with me?”

“No,” one of them said, the thin boy with his ribs sticking out and liquid eyes the color of weak tea. “I knew you were lying. Lucien is keeping us safe. We’re earning our place.”

Marisol shrugged thin shoulders and smiled in Tana’s direction. “We offered. You can’t ask for more than that.”

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