“No. I will take steps, ma petite. We will at least give him a fight.” He hung up.
Larry was staring at me with wide eyes. “What the hell is happening, Anita?”
“Not now, Larry.” I fished Edward’s card out of my bag. I didn’t have another quarter. “Do you have a quarter?”
“Sure.” He handed it to me without any more questions. Good man.
I dialed the number. “Please, be there. Please, be there.”
He answered on the seventh ring.
“Edward, it’s Anita.”
“What’s happened?”
“How would you like to take on two master vampires older than Nikolaos?”
I heard him swallow. “I always have so much fun when you’re around. Where should we meet?”
“The Circus of the Damned. You got an extra shotgun?”
“Not with me.”
“Shit. Meet me out front ASAP. The shit’s going to really hit the fan tonight, Edward.”
“Sounds like a great way to spend Halloween.”
“See you there.”
“Bye, and thanks for inviting me.” He meant it. Edward had started out as a normal assassin, but humans had been too easy, so he went for vamps and shapeshifters. He hadn’t met anything he couldn’t kill, and what was life without a little challenge?
I looked at Larry. “I need to borrow your car.”
“You’re not going anywhere without me. I’ve heard just your side of the conversations, and I’m not getting left out.”
I started to argue, but there wasn’t time. “Okay, let’s do it.”
He grinned. He was pleased. He didn’t know what was going to happen tonight, what we were up against. I did. And I wasn’t happy at all.
Chapter 46
I stood just inside the door of the Circus staring at the wave of costumes and glittering humanity. I’d never seen the place so crowded. Edward stood beside me in a long black cloak with a death’s-head mask. Death dressed up as death; funny, huh? He also had a flamethrower strapped to his back, an Uzi pistol, and heaven knew how many other weapons secreted about his person. Larry looked pale but determined. He had my derringer in his pocket. He knew nothing about guns. The derringer was an emergency measure only, but he wouldn’t stay in the car. Next week, if we were still alive, I’d take him out to the shooting range.
A woman in a bird costume passed us in a scent of feathers and perfume. I had to look twice to make sure that it was just a costume. Tonight was the night when all shapeshifters could be out and people would just say, “Neat costume.”
It was Halloween night at the Circus of the Damned. Anything was possible.
A slender black woman stepped up to us wearing nothing but a bikini and an elaborate mask. She had to step close to me to be heard over the murmur of the crowd. “Jean-Claude sent me to bring you.”
“Who are you?”
“Rashida.”
I shook my head. “Rashida had her arm torn off two days ago.” I stared at the perfect flesh of her arm. “You can’t be her.”
She raised her mask so I could see her face, then smiled. “We heal fast.”
I had known lycanthropes healed fast, but not that fast, not that much damage. Live and learn.
We followed her swaying hips into the crowd. I grabbed hold of Larry’s hand with my left hand. “Stay right with me tonight.”
He nodded. I threaded through the crowd holding his hand like a child or a lover. I couldn’t stand the thought of him getting hurt. No, that wasn’t true. I couldn’t stand the thought of him getting killed. Death was the big boogeyman tonight.
Edward followed at our heels. Silent as his namesake, trusting that he’d get to kill something soon.
Rashida led us towards the big, striped circus tent. Back to Jean-Claude’s office, I supposed. A man in a straw hat and striped coat said, “Sorry, the show’s sold out.”
“It’s me, Perry. These are the ones the Master’s been waiting for.” She hiked her thumb in our direction.
The man drew aside the tent flap and motioned us through. There was a line of sweat on his upper lip. It was warm, but I had the feeling it wasn’t that kind of sweat. What was happening inside the tent? It couldn’t be too bad if they were letting the crowd in to watch. Could it?
The lights were bright and hot. I started to sweat under the sweatshirt, but if I took it off, people would stare at my gun. I hated that.
Circular curtains had been rigged to the ceiling, creating two curtained-off areas in the large circus ring. Spotlights surrounded the two hidden areas. The curtains were like prisms. With every step we took, the colors changed and flowed over the cloth. I wasn’t sure if it was the cloth or some trick of the lights. Whatever, it was a nifty effect.
Rashida stopped just short of the rail that kept the crowd back. “Jean-Claude wanted everybody to be in costume, but we’re out of time.” She pulled at my sweater. “Lose the jacket and it’ll have to do.”
I pulled my sweater out of her hand. “What are you talking about, costumes?”
“You’re holding up the show. Drop the jacket and come on.” She did a long, lazy leap over the railing and strode barefoot and beautiful across the white floor. She looked back at us, motioning for us to follow.
I stayed where I was. I wasn’t going anywhere until somebody explained things. Larry and Edward waited with me. The audience near us was staring intently, waiting for us to do something interesting.
We stood there.
Rashida disappeared into one of the curtained circles. “Anita.”
I turned, but Larry was staring at the ring. “Did you say something?”
He shook his head.
“Anita?”
I glanced at Edward, but it hadn’t been his voice. I whispered, “Jean-Claude?”
“Yes, ma petite, it is I.”
“Where are you?”
“Behind the curtain where Rashida went.”
I shook my head. His voice had resonance, a slight echo, but otherwise it was as normal as his voice ever got. I could probably talk to him without moving my lips, but if so, I didn’t want to know. I whispered, “What’s going on?”
“Mr. Oliver and I have a gentleman’s agreement.”
“I don’t understand.”
“Who are you talking to?” Edward asked.
I shook my head. “I’ll explain later.”
“Come into my circle, Anita, and I will explain everything to you at the same time I explain it to our audience.”
“What have you done?”
“I have done the best I could to spare lives, ma petite, but some will die tonight. But it will be in the circle with only the soldiers called to task. No innocents will die tonight, whoever wins. We have given our words.”
“You’re going to fight it out in the ring like a show?”
“It was the best I could do on such short notice. If you had warned me days ago, perhaps something else could have been arranged.”
I ignored that. Besides, I was feeling guilty.
I took off the sweatshirt and laid it across the railing. There were gasps from the people near enough to see my gun.
“The fight’s going to take place out in the ring.”
“In front of the audience?” Edward said.
“Yep.”
“I don’t get it,” Larry said.
“I want you to stay here, Larry.”
“No way.”
I took a deep breath and let it out slowly. “Larry, you don’t have any weapons. You don’t know how to use a gun. You’re just cannon fodder until you get some training. Stay here.”
He shook his head.
I touched his arm. “Please, Larry.”
Maybe it was the please, or the look in my eyes—whatever, he nodded. I could breathe a little easier. Whatever happened tonight, Larry wouldn’t die because I’d brought him into it. It wouldn’t be my fault.
I climbed over the railing and dropped to the ring. Edward followed me with a swish of black cape. I glanced back once. Larry stood gripping the rail. There was something forlorn about him standing there alone, but he was safe; that was what counted.
I touched the shimmering curtain, and it was the lights. The cloth was white up close. I lifted it to one side, and entered, Edward at my back.