Nick Charles offered me an Albino Vampire at the bar, but I declined. Didn't need any high-octane oral stimulants tonight.
Snow showed up in black this time: slacks, jacket, silk shirt, and sunglasses. Maybe he homed in on my silver accessory, which still sported buttoned lip charms. Like his lips were sealed. Right.
Snow gathered me into a half-time rumba. He'd been expecting me. So I got right to the point.
"Why do you do it?" I asked.
"Dance?"
"Snow all those women."
"Because I can?"
"So. You're a human drug."
"Who says I'm human?"
"I wish you were."
"Why?"
"I might like you. A little."
He stepped back and stood apart from me, holding my hands in the extravagant open posture of a dance that had frozen in time. "I like you. A little."
"Then we're even."
"No. Never even." He smiled and swept me into a Dancing with the Stars gallop around the dance floor. I felt quite breathless, but then I always felt breathless with Snow.
"Are you Christopher?" I asked in hard inquiring reporter mode.
"Who is Christopher?"
"A saint."
"No."
"A sinner?"
"Sometimes."
"A user?"
"Even you say I'm a drug. Not a user."
He was too right. I tried another tack.
"I'm searching for a killer."
"You're a hunter. And a victim. And a-"
He stopped speaking. I really wanted to know what his third evaluation of me was. I wanted to know as badly as any Snow groupie wanted a Brimstone Kiss. So of course I couldn't let on.
And I was…a woman who needed answers. To puzzles, to people, to unhumans.
"Snow. You both hinder and help me. Why?"
"Perhaps you need both."
"That answer stinks!"
"Then why are you here?"
"I need to know what Las Vegas vampire got it on with a werewolf mob boss's daughter in the late forties."
"You want me to just give it to you?"
"Ah, what are we discussing?"
"Your perennial caution flatters me. What I'm saying is, you don't want to work for it. You don't want to cheat me out of it, you just want me to hand it to you."
"I don't want that. I need that. I don't have time for games."
"Want and need. Interesting concepts. Close, but very different, after all. What if I said that I needed you to beg for what you want?"
"I'd say, Styx it!"
He laughed. "You're clever, if lazy. Your blundering investigation happens to have hit upon the moment when the werewolves won the Werewolf-Vampire War. Neither side will thank you for exposing that long-buried secret."
"I don't like either side."
"I'm sure the feeling is mutual and will become even more intense, given time. All right. You have knocked over all my defenses. I am helpless. I'll give you what you want, although it most certainly will not be…what you need."
Somehow this easy, even indolent, capitulation got my pulses throbbing in all the wrong places, as it was intended to.
"I know who she was, the dead girl in Sunset Park," I added. Fiercely.
The fact was, I cared about who she was. And I cared about who she could have been had someone not decided to staple her sternum with silver bullets. Even if she had been a werewolf. Everything alive started out as innocent and trusting and helpless and deserving as any human baby. Even wolves. Maybe even me.
Not Snow.
"You know who she was," Snow repeated, sounding interested and alert. Obviously, he didn't, and wanted to. "Can you prove it?"
Dammit, no. But…soon. "Yes."
"Then you need to have proof of her partner in crime, and punishment. Of a sort."
I nodded.
Snow turned and strode through the tourist-clogged casino.
I trotted behind to catch up. Interesting. No one reacted to him. Onstage he was instant opium. Offstage, mingling with the hoi polloi, he was invisible. Except to me.
He didn't take me to his office, but to a private bullet elevator to the sky.
Could you say Hyatt? The elevator was all glass outside and all mirrors inside. The sight of Snow reflected into eternity unnerved me more than visions of Lilith and me repeated into infinity. I exercised my new mirror magic and turned the surface to a golden autumnal color with falling leaves and lots of golden Lhasa apsos and taffy-colored spaniels capering.
Snow saw that and touched my arm. "Delilah. No need to fight me. I'm giving you what you want."
He'd made me think that I was a sell-out. I felt tears as hard as amber forming.
"My quarters," he said, preceding me out of the elevator.
What a Snow groupie wouldn’t give for this moment! I thought about what I was giving up by relying on his inner knowledge of Las Vegas. I'd rather be working this out with Ric. I should have told him where I was going, what I was doing. But Lilith's trail was my own particular obsession, and Snow understood obsession, at least from being the object of it.
The double doors to his domain were white-mirrored Plexiglas, in which he was a looming black-and-white presence and I was the humble goose girl. The white tiger from his office sat on its huge haunches before the door.
"Grizelle, my guest and I need privacy and a couple of your best Albino Vampires."
The tiger's growl almost deafened me, but its stripes became narrow and then vertical and the huge green eyes tilted and shrank. A black woman over six feet tall with snow-white hair and emerald eyes stood before us, her ebony skin tattooed with charcoal stripes like watered silk and barely covered by a high-fashion black leather miniskirt and halter-top outfit, probably Thierry Muglar and about eight thousand dollars. But maybe she had mugged the hot European designer for it.
"Sure, boss," the were-tiger bitch said, eyeing me like an invading ant she'd like to use to spice her cocoa.
Beyond the doors everything was white except for the black nightview from a wall of windows. Whereas the Paris restaurant window's framed a view of the Bellagio's dancing fountains, this penthouse looked down on the periodically exploding artificial volcano at Steve Wynn's Treasure Island setup. Fire, flame. Orange and crimson damnation. A roar like a pep squad of distant lions, or tigers.
Snow's Man in Black outfit made him the central attraction even in his colorless color scheme. His shirts always opened to the brink of his hip-slung belt and I noticed with surprise for the first time that his chest was hair-free, but was emblazoned by a vertical and horizontal slash of feathered scarring, as if a lightning bolt or Jack Frost had struck him cold dead.
Were these the scars from the finger of God casting him from Heaven to Hell? Adam on the Sistine Chapel ceiling had been lounging, languid, and an easy mark for the touch of the energized forefinger of God.
Lucifer would have been active. Aggressive. All pride and archangel flight against the light. It would have taken a divine body blow to send him down, down, spiraling into Hell, or into Hell on earth. He would bear divine scars for his rebellion.
I was unaccountably curious about those marks, but they were not my mission here and now.
Grizelle, indeed lean and lanky in her human form, brought in a silver tray with two Albino Vampires on it. I didn't reflect in the tray, and she smirked as I observed that. Were my powers muted here? Or did she just want me to think so?
Like Madrigal's familiars, Snow's right-hand assistants didn't like me.
But then, whoever had, and I'd survived them all.
"You found the chip designs in my office," Snow noted, sitting and sipping like any busy chief executive taking five.
"Right. The Inferno has a history in Las Vegas. It was just…cut short."
"The founding father disappeared. You were right. He was a vampire. I find it hard to believe he ever became the lover of a naive werewolf girl, a mixed-blood Mafia princess-"