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"It's true. The appeals have been rejected," Lawrence said, his head bowed low. "Charles, I did not realize you would insist on this. I'm sorry, Schuyler. I'll continue to fight it, but for now, you're going to have to live with the Forces. Charles, there is no need to send for Schuyler. I will drop her off myself."

Mimi glared at Schuyler, while Jack only looked shocked. Live with them?

Were they crazy?

Schuyler looked from one twin to the other, and realized she had just survived the blood trial only to find herself facing a new and more complicated challenge.


Coming back home to her stepmother's Penthouse des R?ves was a bit of a letdown after the pampering at Dr. Pat's clinic. Bliss had finally been discharged after several weeks, after being kept in observation to make sure she had stabilized and displayed no signs of corruption. She wondered what they were waiting for her to do attack them? Slash her wrists? The nurses at the clinic acted as if they were afraid to come too near, lest something happen.

It was the first day of ski week, and usually the family would be on a plane to Gstaad by now, but Conclave matters had called her father to Venice. BobiAnne had gone with him, but only so she could hit the shops on Via Condotti in Rome. Jordan had accompanied their parents as well, since it was decided she was too young to be left behind. While Bliss was still recovering, she was left in the care of the household staff. Bliss had been at home during Mimi's trial and sentencing, but she was certain Mimi would come to no harm. It was just too easy to imagine a life without Mimi Force's dictatorial ways, and there was no way the universe would be so kind as to get rid of her.

Bliss was bored and alone in the apartment and decided to clean out her closet for want of something better to do. Maybe perform that spring-cleaning ritual women's magazines always advised: throw out clothes you hadn't worn in two years, or those that were too shabby or didn't fit any more--that sort of thing.

She was pulling out an old cable-knit sweater when a long velvet box tumbled to the floor and a necklace fell out of it.

It was the emerald. She had forgotten to return it to her father for safekeeping in the vault after the Four Hundred Ball. Bliss picked it up, still feeling wary at the story behind the jewel. Lucifer's Bane indeed. As she tucked it back into the box, a picture slipped out from underneath the velvet pillow.

Bliss reached down to pick it up, studying it. It was a picture of her father, looking young and slim in a hunting jacket and boots, with a woman at his side whom Bliss had always assumed was her mother. Her father kept a faded copy of the picture in his wallet. This one was more well preserved. Bliss noted her mother's long blond hair and large, doelike eyes. Bliss's eyes, her father always said. You have your mother's eyes. Her mother's eyes were green, like hers, as green as the emerald she held in her hand. Bliss turned over the picture.

Forsyth Llewellyn and Allegra Van Alen, 1982. Allegra Van Alen?

Wasn't that Schuyler's mother?

It must be a mistake. Her mother's name was Charlotte Potter.

What was that all about?

Bliss was still puzzling over the strange inscription when there was a crash at the window. Glass shattered at her feet and Bliss ran over to see what had happened.

The boy was shivering in the corner, his feet bleeding from the cut glass. He was wearing the same T-shirt and jeans she had last seen him in. His dark hair was wet and matted, but he looked at her with the same sad, hangdog eyes.

Dylan! It was truly him. He was alive.

He glanced up, his breathing shallow and ragged.

She ran toward him, still holding the emerald in her hand.

Dylan looked at Bliss, then flinched when he saw what she held aloft, almost as if it had hurt him.

"You're alive!" Bliss said joyfully. "But you're hurt-- let me help you."

Dylan shook his head. "There's no time for that now. I know who the Silver Blood is."

New York Herald

Archives

NOVEMBER 23, 1872

MISSING HEIRESS FOUND DEAD IN THE RIVER

New York police discover the body of Maggie Stanford two years after she was first reported missing. A suspicion of foul play. Corpse found then missing again.

THE BODY OF A WELL-DRESSED and pretty woman was found this morning floating in the Hudson River. Policeman Charles Langford discovered the body at six o'clock this morning and reported the matter to the Tenth Precinct. The body was taken from the water and carried to the station house. There were marks on her head and body, which led the police to believe that the woman was foully dealt with. She had red hair, green eyes, and was dressed in a white silk ball gown trimmed with pink ribbons. In their efforts to establish the identity of the woman, the police found a white linen handkerchief which bore the initials "M.S." in the pocket of the dress.

The body was subsequently identified as that of Maggie Stanford, the daughter of deceased oil baron Tiberius Stanford and Dorothea Stanford, who passed away two months ago from dementia resulting from her daughter's disappearance. The clothes Maggie Stanford had reportedly worn to the Patrician Ball the night she went missing match the description of the ball gown worn by the dead woman. The body was inordinately well preserved, with almost no sign of decomposition. The body was sent to the hospital for further examination, but the next day it was reported missing from the morgue. The police continue to be baffled by this strange case. Acknowledgments

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