Chapter 13
The next day wasn’t much better. No one was available to drive us around town, and
no one showed up to give us orders or any hints as to what we should do next. Sara
and I met in the kitchen around noon, and we took some time to consider our next move.
Though I didn’t like the idea very much, I thought it might be best to get Analie’s
gift for her caretaker out of my hands first thing. After that, we could pay a visit
to the other vampire master, Jimmy Thrane, to see if he might have any information
on our necromancer friend or his zombie sidekicks.
Sara and I spent some time plotting out our route for the evening while Florencia
cooked for us. The kitchen smelled awesome, and we both thoroughly enjoyed the meal
of tacos and fajitas she made for us. The meat for the tacos was incredibly tender,
more so than any steak I could remember having before.
“Florencia, that was great,” I told her as Sara and I helped her clear dishes from
the table. “What was that meat you used for the tacos?” I wondered if it was a local
thing, or maybe a cut of meat I could request from the local delis at home.
“Lengua,” she said, smiling.
“Cow tongue,” Sara translated for me.
I did my best to keep my expression neutral and managed not to barf once it really
settled in.
Note to self: Ask about the ingredients before eating anything else in this town.
After we cleaned up, Sara and I hung out outside for a while, taking in some sun.
The light was nearly blinding, but I didn’t mind. The heat and fresh air were welcome.
Inside that air-conditioned house felt claustrophobic and a little too much like I
was constantly under watch. Something to do with the security cameras hidden all over
the house, no doubt.
With little else to do after I put Analie’s letter and care package near the front
door, we spent the remainder of our time until sundown watching bad daytime TV. We
had no computers to surf the Internet and no books to keep us occupied, but the old
school Godzilla movie marathon on some cable channel kept us from going completely
bonkers while we waited for Trinity to come get us for our next round of Find-the-Necromancer.
Once she arrived and we told her where we wanted to go, she started laughing at us.
She kept right on laughing until she realized I was serious.
“You’re insane,” Trinity told me. “Completely unbalanced if you think I’m going to
take you into the heart of Goliath territory.”
“Then give us the keys and let us do it ourselves,” I said, holding out my hand.
“Oh, no. Clyde would kill me if I let you two run off somewhere without someone to
keep an eye on you.
“Then take us. Your choice. You can take us, give us the keys, or we’ll call a cab.
We have a job to do, and I’m not going to let your cowardice stop us.”
That made Trinity’s eyes gleam with irritation. “If you had even the slightest idea
what you were getting into—”
“How do you know we don’t? Look, make your choice before I make it for you. I’ll be
happy to tell Clyde you’re preventing us from following up on a lead—”
She growled, a deep, threatening sound that never should have come from a human throat.
With a sharp gesture, she indicated we should follow her.
What a great way to start the night. Expelling a breath I hadn’t realized I’d been
holding, I picked up the letter and package and fell into step behind the vampire,
taking Sara’s hand when I felt her groping at my wrist.
I kept forgetting that she wasn’t used to dealing with the bluster the monsters dished
out. And I needed to remember that I no longer had the belt to give me tips and an
extra physical boost if it came down to a fight. Whatever might happen, whether Trinity
or some other monster took it into his or her head to beat the crap out of me or turn
me into dinner, I would need to be a little more careful. There was no one here to
save me if I bit off more than I could chew, and I had no superhuman strength or speed
to help me. Hell, I didn’t even have my guns or stakes or anything else to protect
myself if I ended up in a fight.
The car ride was tense and silent, no one interested in talking about where we were
going or what we would do once we got there.
Once Trinity pulled off the freeway, she took us down some side streets and beyond
a number of apartment buildings and small shops until we were in what I suppose could
be considered suburbia. The houses were a lot like the ones around my parents’ house
on Long Island, albeit with a lot more cacti and palm trees.
When we pulled onto Gavin’s street, Trinity parked the car at least four or five blocks
from the address we were looking for.
“Go do whatever the hell it is you came here to do. I’ll wait. If you’re not back
in time for me to get to shelter by sunrise, you can stay here and rot.”
I shook my head and slid out of the car, not bothering to dignify her snarky comment
with an answer. Sara followed my lead. With any luck, I’d drop off the box and be
out of this part of town within the hour.
I tucked it under my arm and stalked down the street. Though Sara was taller than
me, with much longer legs, she had to lengthen her stride to keep up with me.
“So,” she said, arms swinging at her sides, “when this is over, are you writing a
new and improved version of How to Win Friends and Influence People?”
My lips quirked. Sara always knew the right thing to say to defuse my anger. “Yeah,
yeah. Sorry, I know I haven’t been doing a good job of managing my temper.”
“It’s not me you need to apologize to. Though I can’t say that she wasn’t asking for
it. . . .”
“Okay, I’ll say something when we get back to the car. Let’s just get this over with,
shall we?”
She nodded. I kept an eye on the numbers on the houses. It didn’t take very long to
find the house; it had some plastic toys on the postage stamp-sized lawn and a light
on over the front door. Paint was chipped and peeling in places, but it was clean,
and the lights were all on. A carefully tended flower bed ran along the front of the
house. Even from the street, I could hear the sound of cartoons coming from inside.
Sara stayed a few steps behind me while I went up to the door and knocked.
Then knocked again. Louder.
After the third time, my fist was stinging, and a little kid who couldn’t have been
more than six or seven years old opened the door, blinking up at me with wide blue
eyes from under a fan of shaggy, dirty-blond tendrils.
“Hi,” I said. “Is Gavin—”
“Gavin! Someone for you!”
Man, that little boy had a set of lungs on him. He turned around and raced off in
bare feet, disappearing around a corner.
I stood in the open door, shuffling my weight from foot to foot. When I looked over
my shoulder at Sara, her expression betrayed just as much confusion as I felt. So
I turned my attention back to the hallway with child-height crayon scrawl all over
the walls and waited.
Then the Viking came into view.
I don’t toss out that word lightly. He was wearing nothing but a towel around his
waist—oh, my—and every last inch of what was visible was covered in hard, ropy muscle. His blond
hair was even more of a shaggy mess than the kid’s, wild and untamed, framing a chiseled
face that had the ghost of a beard emphasizing a sharp jawline and killer cheekbones.
Then his blue eyes flashed gold, and his mouth was full of fangs as he stalked forward.
If there is one reaction I have perfected these last few months, it’s not to freeze
when danger rears its head. Instead, I dropped the box, scrambling back to the street
and grabbing at Sara to drag her with me as he stopped in the doorway, fingernails
that had grown into talons biting into the wood.
“Vampire’s whore! What are you doing here? Get off my property!”
Sara and I both started babbling and pointing at the box. I don’t think either of
us made any sense, and to this day, I’m not even sure what came out of my mouth. Something
along the lines of “oh-my-God-please-don’t-hurt-me-the-box-the-box-the-box,” I think.
His growl was thunderously loud, and it was at that moment that I realized all other
sounds on the street had ceased.
Oh, there might have been traffic from a few blocks away, but all of the TVs had turned
off, no dishes clanked, and no murmur of voices could be heard. Even the kid’s cartoons
were off. Like the whole block was holding its breath, waiting to see what would happen.
He kept his eyes on us as he crouched down, touching the top of the box. I wasn’t
about to tell him that he was flashing us, and most likely the neighbors across the
street could see, too, considering his impressive . . . um. You get the picture.
His talon-tipped fingers found and slightly tore the letter on top. He picked it up,
raising it near eye-level, and started to read it, every once in a while his eyes
flicking back to us.
Then I think he must have realized it was from Analie. He stopped looking at us and
hunched over the paper, clutching it in both hands, his gaze devouring her scrawl.
I thought I might have detected tears at the corners of his gold-colored eyes, but
I couldn’t be sure.
Still holding the letter, he used one of those claws to slice open the tape holding
the top of the box together. The kid—I hadn’t even heard him creep up behind the guy—leaned
around Gavin’s impressively muscled arm to peer at the box. “What’s that, Gavin? Are
those cookies?”
“Yeah—yes. Analie sent them for us. Go back inside, Jo-Jo. I’ll bring them to you
in a minute.”
The kid clapped his hands and bounced back, saying Analie’s name in singsong as he
rushed back into the house, racing some invisible opponent.
The Viking lifted his head and stared at Sara and me with wet eyes, taking a moment
to focus as if he had just recalled we were there. The gold color faded into an icy,
pale blue, his fangs retracting and—you know, I can’t be sure, but I would swear that
his hair stopped bristling quite so much around his face, too.
“You brought this all the way from New York? For me?”
Sara and I both nodded. We were still clutching at each other, and I wasn’t sorry
for that at all.
“From Analie.”
It was a statement, not a question, but we nodded again.
He didn’t say anything. He just crouched there, clutching the letter, staring at us.
I cleared my throat. “I guess we’ll—ah—we’ll just be going—”
“No.”
Ha, that was funny. For a second there, I thought he said no.
“Come inside. I want to talk to you.”
Oh. I hadn’t imagined it.
The Viking stood up, towering in the doorway, his towel slipping lower on his hips.
Feeling a tad ill, I lifted my hands, not quite sure if it was meant to be a negative
gesture or a please-don’t-hurt-me supplication. Sara and I stumbled back, fetching
up against a big oak tree shading the yard and some of the street. He moved toward
us, and the bark cracked under my fingertips as I clutched at the tree.
He stopped when he was close enough to touch, both of us gaping up at him like we
were staring down Death come to claim us.
Then he engulfed us in a hug. I’m pretty sure I left a chunk of skin behind on that
tree when he pulled us away. I didn’t start screaming and flailing because, much like
Analie, he didn’t seem to have any concept of his own strength when he crushed us
against him.
The only reason I knew I wasn’t about to die was because the six-foot-plus terrifying
werewolf warrior wearing nothing but a towel was crying all over us.
Goddamn, my life was getting weirder by the day.