Hence, her newfound love of whiskey.
“Sure, why not,” she told the waitress. It wasn’t like it was going to get her drunk. Although Oliver looked like he was well on his way. He’d come into the habit of fortifying himself with alcohol whenever they got together. Sure, he wasn’t drunk when they were together at school—but those abrupt reunions were so brief it didn’t matter. But she noticed whenever they spent a substantial amount of time together, he was always a little buzzed.
The waitress returned with two cocktail glasses filled to the brim. It was way past midnight, and the only people left in the place were groggy-eyed clubkids getting breakfast after a late night spent at velvet-rope champagnalias, or groggy-eyed clubkids getting breakfast before an early-morning stint at after-hours lounges where no alcohol was served and the clientele preferred their highs to be chemical ones.
Oliver sipped his cocktail through a red straw. She found it endearing how he liked sweet things. Oliver hated beer and all the usual trappings of what he called “el jocko-Americano.” Somehow the girly drinks made him more manly, in Schuyler’s eyes. He wasn’t afraid to be himself.
It was so nice to finally hang out with Oliver in public. She couldn’t very well sink her fangs into him with other people around. Lately, whenever they were alone, it hovered in the air, an expectation on his part, and Schuyler had missed their easy friendship. She relaxed in his company.
“Why do you drink so much around me?” she asked, trying to keep her voice light.
“I’m offended. You think I’m a lush?”
“A little.”
“I don’t know.” He looked up at the ceiling instead of looking at her directly. “Dude, you scare me sometimes.”
Schuyler wanted to laugh. “I scare you?”
“Yeah, you’re all—vampire superwoman. You could have really done some damage to him, you know.” Oliver grinned, although Schuyler knew he was more troubled than he let on.
“He’s fine,” she snapped. She didn’t really want to dwell on what could have happened back there. She had had Dylan in her grasp. She had felt his mind bowing to hers. Had felt all his memories screaming to be let free. And she had wanted nothing more than to crush all of them—silence all their voices. She’d had it in her power to do so. It was a sobering thought, so she took another sip of her drink.
“He’s not fine,” Oliver said. “You know we have to tell Lawrence about him, don’t you? They’ll have to do something about it. He’s showing classic signs of corruption. Delusions, hysteria, mania.”
A busboy cleared their table and gave them the eye. Schuyler knew they should leave, the staff was ready to go home. But she wanted to linger with Oliver just a while longer. “How do you know all this?”
“I did my reading. You know, the stuff Lawrence told us to look up?”
Right. Schuyler felt guilty. She had been remiss on her vampire lessons. Lawrence had been using Oliver to keep her abreast on her studies. She should be concentrating on refining her strengths, on sharpening her skills, but instead she’d been distracted. The Perry Street apartment . . .
“Do you think Dylan was lying to us?” she asked.
“No, I think he thought he was telling us the truth, as much as he knew. But he’s obviously been manipulated.” Oliver cracked ice cubes in his mouth. “I don’t know if I believe he ever really got away from them. I think they let him go.”
Schuyler became silent. They had let him go so that he could finish the job he’d failed at before. Dylan had attacked her—twice—before he’d suddenly disappeared. They’d chosen him because he was close to her, was one of her best friends. She couldn’t deny it: someone wanted her killed. She wanted to share this realization with Oliver, but kept it to herself. He worried about her enough.
Oliver glanced at the bill and put down his credit card. “So, how are things over at the Death Star?”
“The same.” Schuyler smiled, although she felt sick enough to throw up. It was hard to see Oliver and not hate herself because of what she was doing to him.
“So . . .” Oliver sighed. Schuyler knew where this was going and wished once again that she hadn’t made him her familiar.
“So?”
The waitress returned with the credit-card slip and hinted that if they stayed any longer they’d have to leave through the back entrance.
Oliver pocketed his card and tried to take another gulp of his already empty drink. “I was on my way to meet you at the Mercer when Bliss called. She said you were down here, on Perry Street. I thought that was kind of odd, since we’d agreed we’d meet at the Mercer, as usual, but she said she was positive you’d be there. What were you doing in that building anyway?”