The mattresses in the back of the van were thin, but sufficient. Andy stretched out, and waited; he supposed he could have run, while Steve was busy and Lorraine was hiding her car, but he had serious doubts about his ability to escape from a pair of werewolves, and that was before he considered the fact that his maker appeared to be hunting for him. Plus he was hungry again, and that feeling of hollow emptiness that seemed to be his current form of grief had deepened.
Yeah. It was cool to be able to see in the dark when he wanted to, or to sprout claws when he needed them, but he still felt those things acutely as a loss. They took him further from the life the wight had stolen from him, carried him further into being a wight himself.
I'm not a fool, Andy told himself. I know there's no way back. He couldn't help wanting one, though, even if it was hopeless. I was going to graduate next year. I'd just found Amy. I hadn't even tried alcohol yet. Or sex. They'd been fooling around, but they were both new to it, and cautious. It was one of the things he'd liked most about Amy: in addition to being pretty and smart, she wasn't in any more of a hurry than he was.
They'd both thought they'd have a future.
Steve slid back into the driver's seat and opened the garage door; a moment later, Veronica slid into the passenger seat and buckled her seat belt. "You all right back there?" she asked.
Andy nodded. "Yeah, I'll... I'll have my nervous breakdown later, when nobody's chasing us."
Veronica shot him a look of concern, but Steve just said, "Good man," and started the motor.
They pulled out into the night.
"Andy?" asked Veronica.
He twisted around, looked up at her.
"Listen, the original plan was to keep you tied down until you learned how to feed without hurting anybody, then introduce you to some other things, and then move you to one of the training centers. The plan..." She hesitated. "...has kind of gone to shit. You've already figured out how to do some things that you would have been trained on at the center, and you seem to have a decent handle on feeding. Plus, you're being hunted by your maker, and we don't know why. So, since we seem to be speed-running the usual process, I'm going to bring you up to speed on some stuff we'd usually introduce more slowly."
Andy nodded. "All right."
Veronica offered an encouraging smile, then said: "Your maker isn't the only danger you need to watch out for. Sunlight will burn you, but moonlight is safe. Silver and fire will hurt you more than they would an ordinary mortal."
"Silver bullets," Andy said. "I remember you saying that."
Veronica nodded. "You won't age. If you keep yourself fed and don't get killed, you could potentially live for... well, millennia is about as long as it seems to get before sheer, dumb luck catches up with you. That won't be true of us, by the way -- werewolves tend to have fairly normal human lifespans, unlike spirits and undead."
Andy considered that. "Will I be able to pass as human?" he asked.
Veronica swallowed, which was probably all the answer he needed. He waited, though, as her jaw worked.
"Probably not. Very few wights can, at least not without extensive tattoos or makeup -- and that tends to hit an uncanny valley effect too. Even if you're fully fed, you'll still have thin, grayish skin and white hair that won't hold a dye to save your life. You'll be strong, fast, and tough, but you'll still look like a mummified corpse."
Andy nodded absently. So much for college. And probably for ever seeing my family again. Well, he'd wanted honesty from the hunters; it was his own fault if he didn't like what they had to say.
Veronica hesitated, then said: "You can learn to ask questions of the dead, or bring them back as zombies, at least temporarily. Some wights learn to create more long-lasting zombies, but that's ritual magic and they sacrifice a lot of control in doing that."
"Nope," said Andy. "Not doing that."
Steve chuckled. "Don't write it off entirely. Once the Authority is sure you're not a public menace, you'll have some opportunities. You might be able to take an ordinary job, work from home or wear a mask... but very few wights become hunters, and if you did then being able to question the dead would be invaluable." He glanced back at Andy through the rear-view mirror. "Pretty much a guaranteed job opportunity."
"The third possibility is that you go to one of the reservations," Veronica put in, "but I don't think I'd want that for you. They can be beautiful, but they can also be brutal. I'm not saying you couldn't do it, mind you. It's just that I think you have the potential to do more than that."
Andy nodded, then rolled over onto his side. "Okay," he said. "That's enough for now. Wake me up when we get there."
"It's going to be a couple of hours," Steve told him. "We'll see if we can't arrange for you to feed once we get there."
Andy gave him a vague thumbs-up, then rolled himself up in the light blanket and let himself go. He was, to put it mildly, overwhelmed.