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Larry’s blood flowed over the vampire’s hand. Sticky and warm like barely solid Jell-O. The vampire didn’t react to the blood. Iron self-control. I stared into his nearly black eyes and felt the pull of centuries like monstrous wings unfolding in his eyes. The world swam. The inside of my head was sinking, expanding. I reached out to touch something, anything to keep from falling. A hand gripped mine. The skin was cool and smooth. I jerked back, falling against the car.

“Don’t touch me! Don’t ever touch me!”

The vampire stood uncertainly, Larry’s throat gripped in one blood-streaked hand, holding his other hand out towards me. It was a very human gesture. Larry’s eyes were bugging out.

“You’re choking him,” I said.

“Sorry,” the vampire said. He released him.

Larry fell to his knees, gasping. His first breath was a hissing scream for air.

I wanted to ask Larry how he was, but I didn’t. My job was to get us out of here alive, if possible. Besides, I had an idea how Larry felt. Hurt. No need to ask stupid questions.

Well, maybe one stupid question. “What do you want?” I asked.

Alejandro looked at me, and I fought the urge to look at his face while I talked to him. It was hard. I ended up staring at the hole my bullet had made in the side of his chest. It was a very small hole, and had already stopped bleeding. Was he healing that fast? Shit. I stared at the wound as hard as I could. To fight the urge for eye contact. It’s hard to be tough when you’re staring at someone’s chest. But I’d had years of practice before Jean-Claude decided to share his “gift” with me. Practice makes… well, you know.

The vampire hadn’t answered me, so I asked again, voice steady and low. I didn’t sound like someone who was afraid. Bully for me. “What do you want?”

I felt the vampire look at me, almost as if he’d run a finger down my body. I shivered and couldn’t stop. Larry crawled to me, head hanging, dripping blood as he moved.

I knelt beside him. And before I could stop myself, the stupid question popped out. “Are you all right?”

His eyes raised to me through a mask of blood. He finally said, “Nothing a few stitches wouldn’t cure.” He was trying to make a joke. I wanted to hug him and promise the worst was over. Never make promises you can’t keep.

The vampire didn’t exactly move, but something brought my attention back to him. He stood knee-deep in autumn weeds. My eyes were on a level with his belt buckle, which made him about my height. Short for a man. A white, Anglo-Saxon, twentieth-century man. The belt buckle glinted gold and was carved into a blocky, stylized human figure. The carving, like the vampire’s face, was straight out of an Aztec calendar.

The urge to look upward and meet his eyes crawled over my skin. My chin had actually risen an inch or so before I realized what I was doing. Shit. The vamp was messing with my mind, and I couldn’t feel it. Even now, knowing he had to be doing something to me, I couldn’t sense it. I was blind and deaf just like every other tourist.

Well, maybe not every tourist. I hadn’t been munched on yet, which probably meant they wanted something more than just blood. I’d be dead otherwise, and so would Larry. Of course, I was still wearing blessed crosses. What could this creature do once I was stripped of crosses? I did not want to find out.

We were alive. It meant they wanted something that we couldn’t give them dead. But what?

“What in the hell do you want?”

His hand came into view. He was offering his hand to help me stand. I stood without help, putting myself a little in front of Larry.

“Tell me who your master is, girl, and I won’t hurt you.”

“Who else will, then?” I asked.

“Clever, but I swear you will leave here in safety if you give me the name.”

“First of all, I don’t have a master. I’m not even sure I have an equal.” I fought the urge to glance at his face, see if he got the joke. Jean-Claude would have gotten it.

“You stand before me, making jokes?” His voice sounded surprised, nearly outraged. Good, I think.

“I don’t have a master,” I said. Master vampires can smell truth or lies.

“If you truly believe that, you are deluding yourself. You bear two master signs. Give me the name and I will destroy him for you. I will free you of this… problem.”

I hesitated. He was older than Jean-Claude. A lot older. He might be able to kill the Master of the City. Of course, that would leave this master vampire in control of the city. He and his three helpers. Four vampires, one less than were killing people, but I was willing to bet there was a fifth vamp around here somewhere. You couldn’t have that many rogue master vampires running around one medium-size city.

Any master that was slaughtering civilians would be a bad thing to have in charge of all the vampires in the area. Just call it a feeling.

I shook my head. “I can’t.”

“You want free of him, do you not?”

“Very much.”

“Let me free you, Ms. Blake. Let me help you.”

“Like you helped the man and woman you murdered?”

“I did not murder them,” he said. His voice sounded very reasonable. His eyes were powerful enough to drown in but the voice wasn’t as good. There was no magic to the voice. Jean-Claude’s was better. Or Yasmeen’s, for that matter. Nice to know that not every talent came equally with time. Ancient wasn’t everything.

“So you didn’t strike the fatal blow. So what? Your flunkies do your will, not their own.”

“You’d be surprised how much free will we have.”

“Stop it,” I said.

“What?”

“Sounding so damn reasonable.”

There was laughter in his voice. “You would rather I rant and rave?”

Yes, actually, but I didn’t say it out loud. “I won’t give you the name. Now what?”

There was a rush of wind at my back. I tried to turn, to face the wind. The woman in white rushed at me. Fangs straining, hands clawing, spattered with other people’s blood, the vampire smashed into me. We fell backwards into the weeds with her on top. She darted towards my neck like a snake. I shoved my left wrist into her face. One cross brushed her lips. A flash of light, the stench of burning flesh, and the vampire was gone, screaming into the darkness. I had never seen any vampire move that fast. Had it been mind-magic? Had she tricked me that badly even with a blessed cross? How many over-five-hundred-year-old vamps can you have in one pack? Two, I hoped. Any more than that and they’d have us outnumbered.

I scrambled to my feet. The master vampire was on his hands and knees beside the remains of my car. Larry was nowhere in sight. A flutter of panic clawed at my chest; then I realized Larry had crawled underneath the car so the vampire couldn’t make him a hostage again. When all else fails, hide. It works for rabbits.

The vampire’s blistered back was bent at a painful angle as he tried to pull Larry out from under the car. “I will pull this arm out of its socket, if you do not come here!”

“You sound like you’ve got a kitten under the bed,” I said.

Alejandro whirled around. He flinched, like it hurt. Great.

I felt something move behind me. I didn’t argue with the sensation. Say it was nerves; I turned, crosses ready. Two vampires behind me. One was the pale-haired female. I guess the shot had missed her spine; pity. The other vampire could have been her male twin. They both hissed and cowered from the crosses. Nice to see someone was bothered.

The master came at me from the back, but I heard him. Either the burn was making him clumsy, or the crosses were helping me. I stood halfway between the three vampires, crosses sort of pointed at both groups. The blonds peered over their arms, but the crosses had them well and truly scared. The master never hesitated. He came in a rushing burst of speed. I backpedaled, tried to keep the crosses between us, but he grabbed my left forearm. With the crosses dangling inches from his flesh, he held on.