
Other times, she would be wan and sullen, cursing Stefanovich’s betrayal, lamenting their plight. One sunrise, as he’d drifted off to sleep, he’d heard her mumble, “Now we sleep with livestock, and I must drink from the flesh. . . .”
Ivana slowed, jerking her head around.
“Are they following us, Mother?” Humans from the last town had been more hostile than in any other, trailing after them, even into the wilderness.
“I don’t believe so. The snow covers our tracks so quickly.” She trudged on, saying, “It’s time for your lessons.”
During each night’s journey, she instructed him on everything from how to survive among humans—“drink from them only if starving, and never to the death”—to Dacian etiquette: “outbursts of emotion are considered the height of rudeness, so naturally I offended my share.”
And always she extracted vows for the future, as if she thought she’d soon die?
“What must you do when you are grown, my prince?”
“Avenge this treachery against us. I will destroy Stefanovich and take his throne.”
“When?”
“Before he finds his Bride.”
“Why?”
Lothaire dutifully answered, “Once his fated female bloods him, he’ll become more powerful, even more difficult to kill. And he will father a legitimate heir on her. The Vampire Horde will never follow Stefanovich’s bastard while his true successor lives.”
“You must be utterly certain that the Horde will swear fealty to you. If your effort to claim the crown is unsuccessful, they will annihilate you. Wait until you are at your most powerful.”
“Will I have to go red-eyed to fight him?”
She stopped, tilting her head. “What do you know of such matters?”
“When a vampire kills his prey as he drinks, he becomes more powerful, but blood stains his eyes.”
