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He nodded. He finished his coffee and sat the mug in the middle of the table. “I will do whatever is necessary to finish this job.”

“I never doubted that,” I said. He was talking about torturing me for information. He sounded almost regretful, but that wouldn’t stop him. One of Edward’s primary rules was “Always finish a job.”

He wouldn’t let a little thing like friendship ruin his perfect record.

“You saved my life, and I saved yours,” he said. “It doesn’t buy you anything now. You understand that?”

I nodded. “I understand.”

“Good.” He stood up. I stood up. We looked at each other. He shook his head. “I’ll find you tonight, and I’ll ask again.”

“I won’t be bullied, Edward.” I was finally getting a little mad. He had come in here asking for information; now he was threatening me. I let the anger show. No acting needed.

“You’re tough, Anita, but not that tough.” His eyes were neutral, but wary, like those of a wolf I’d seen once in California. I’d just walked around a tree and there it had been, standing. I froze. I had never really understood what neutral meant until then. The wolf didn’t give a damn if it hurt me or not. My choice. Threaten it, and the shit hit the fan. Give it room to run, and it would run. But the wolf didn’t care; it was prepared either way. I was the one with my pulse in my throat, so startled that I’d stopped breathing. I held my breath and wondered what the wolf would decide. It finally loped off through the trees.

I’d relearned how to breathe and gone back down to the campsite. I had been scared, but I could still close my eyes and see the wolf’s pale grey eyes. The wonder of staring at a large predator without any cage bars between us. It had been wonderful.

I stared up at Edward now and knew that this, too, was wonderful in its way. Whether I had known the information or not, I wouldn’t have told him. No one bullied me. No one. That was one of my rules.

“I don’t want to have to kill you, Edward.”

He smiled then. “You kill me?” He was laughing at me.

“You bet,” I said.

The laughter seeped out of his eyes, his lips, his face, until he stared at me with his neutral, predator eyes.

I swallowed and remembered to take slow, even breaths. He would kill me. Maybe. Maybe not.

“Is the Master worth one of us dying?” I asked.

“It’s a matter of principle,” he said.

I nodded. “Me, too.”

“We know where we stand, then,” he said.

“Yeah.”

He walked towards the door. I followed, and unlocked the door for him. He paused in the doorway. “You’ve got until full dark tonight.”

“The answer will be the same.”

“I know,” he said. He walked out without even glancing back. I watched him until he disappeared down the stairs. Then I shut the door and locked it. I stood leaning my back against the door and tried to think of a way out.

If I told Jean-Claude, he might be able to kill Edward, but I didn’t give humans to the monsters. Not for any reason. I could tell Edward about Jean-Claude. He might even be able to kill the Master. I could even help him.

I tried picturing Jean-Claude’s perfect body riddled with bullets, covered in blood. His face blown away by a shotgun. I shook my head. I couldn’t do it. I didn’t know why exactly, but I couldn’t hand Jean-Claude over to Edward.

I couldn’t betray either of them. Which left me ass-deep in alligators. So what else was new?

Chapter 11

I stood on the shore under a black fringe of trees. The black lake lapped and rolled away into the dark. The moon hung huge and silver in the sky. The moonlight made glittering patterns on the water. Jean-Claude rose from the water. Water was streaming in silver lines from his hair and shirt. His short black hair was in tight curls from being wet. The white shirt clung to his body, making his nipples clear and hard against the cloth. He held out his hand to me.

I was wearing a long, dark dress. It was heavy and hung around me like a weight. Something inside the skirt made it stick out to either side like a tiny malformed hoop. A heavy cloak was pushed back over my shoulders. It was autumn, and the moon was harvest-full.

Jean-Claude said, “Come to me.”

I stepped off the shore and sank into the water. It filled the skirt, soaking into the cloak. I tore the cloak off, letting it sink out of sight. The water was warm as bath water, warm as blood. I raised my hand to the moonlight, and the liquid that streamed down it was thick and dark and had never been water.

I stood in the shallows in a dress that I had never imagined, by a shore I did not know, and stared at the beautiful monster as he moved towards me, graceful and covered in blood.

I woke gasping for air, hands clutching at the sheets like a lifeline. “You promised to stay out of my dreams, you son of a bitch,” I whispered.

The radio clock beside the bed read 2:00 P.M. I’d been asleep for ten hours. I should have felt better, but I didn’t. It was as if I’d been running from nightmare to nightmare, and hadn’t really gotten to rest. The only dream I remembered was the last one. If they had all been that bad, I didn’t want to remember the rest.

Why was Jean-Claude haunting my dreams again? He’d given his word, but maybe his word wasn’t worth anything. Maybe.

I stripped in front of the bathroom mirror. My ribs and stomach were covered in deep, nearly purple bruises. My chest was tight when I breathed, but nothing was broken. The burn on my chest was raw, the skin blackened where it wasn’t covered in blisters. A burn hurts all the way down, as if the pain burrows from the skin down to the bone. A burn is the only injury where I am convinced I have nerve endings below skin level. How could it hurt so damn bad, otherwise?

I was meeting Ronnie at the health club at three. Ronnie was short for Veronica. She said it helped her get more work as a private detective if people assumed she was male. Sad but true. We would lift weights and jog. I slipped a black sports bra very carefully over the burn. The elastic pressed in on the bruises, but everything else was okay. I rubbed the burn with antiseptic cream and taped a piece of gauze over it. A man’s red t-shirt with the sleeves and neck cut out went over everything else. Black biker pants, jogging socks with a thin red stripe, and black Nike Airs completed the outfit.

The t-shirt showed the gauze, but it hid the bruises. Most of the regulars at the health club were accustomed to my coming in bruised or worse. They didn’t ask a lot of questions anymore. Ronnie says I was grumpy at them. Fine with me. I like to be left alone.

I had my coat on, gym bag in hand, when the phone rang. I debated but finally picked it up. “Talk to me,” I said.

“It’s Dolph.”

My stomach tightened. Was it another murder? “What’s up, Dolph?”

“We got an ID on the John Doe you looked at.”

“The vampire victim?”

“Yeah.”

I let out the breath I’d been holding. No more murders, and we were making progress; what could be better?

“Calvin Barnabas Rupert, friends called him Cal. Twenty-six years old, married to Denise Smythe Rupert for four years. No children. He was an insurance broker. We haven’t been able to turn up any ties with the vampire community.”

“Maybe Mr. Rupert was just in the right place at the wrong time.”

“Random violence?” He made it a question.

“Maybe.”

“If it was random, we got no pattern, nothing to look at.”

“So you’re wondering if I can find out if Cal Rupert had any ties to the monsters?”

“Yes,” he said.

I sighed. “I’ll try. Is that it? I’m late for an appointment.”

“That’s it. Call me if you find out anything.” His voice sounded positively grim.

“You’d tell me if you found another body, wouldn’t you?”

He gave a snort of laughter. “Make you come down and measure the damn bites, yeah. Why?”