“Donner is a Weir, but the collar prevents him from changing.” Alex leaned as close as he was comfortable with, and saw that Donner wore a heavy collar that appeared to be made of a tarnished silver metal. The Weir gave him another warning growl, then stalked away to curl up around Anastasia’s feet, behind the desk. Anastasia nodded to Renton, who moved a chair in front of the desk, and gestured for Alex to take a seat. “Blitzen should be nearby. And, no, before you ask, I did not name them. You can thank my little sisters for that.”
“Okay, whatever,” Alex said, sitting down, clutching his damaged arm protectively, though it didn’t hurt at all. “What’s so important that it couldn’t wait until after I got patched up?”
“You must realize, Alex, that I have a great many responsibilities,” Anastasia said broadly, with barely disguised glee. “With so many things for me to worry over, your safety and security can no longer be among those concerns, I’m afraid.”
“Well, that’s a relief.”
“Don’t be obnoxious,” Anastasia scolded. “You have no idea the lengths I have gone to, in order to keep you safe. In any case, I am handing over the responsibility to someone else. As you know, I found myself one bodyguard short of the quota required for me by cartel bylaw.”
“Yeah,” Alex said, still raw from the experience, his voice catching, “I’m sorry about that, you know. About what happened to Edward.”
“It happens,” Anastasia said, shrugging.
“No one is interested in your apologies,” Renton said contemptuously.
“Hey,” Alex objected, turning toward him and glaring. “What does that mean?”
Renton’s expression was unreadable, hidden behind his plastic smile and his permafrost eyes. Alex had known him for months, spoken to him daily, and he still did not understand him at all. Edward hadn’t talked enough while he was alive to make it clear whether he was Renton’s friend or his coworker, so Alex couldn’t tell if he actually resented him, or if he was simply giving him a hard time for the hell of it.
“Enough,” Anastasia said mildly, her eyes snapping over to Renton in an obvious chastisement, and then returning tiredly to Alex. “I am very tired. Let me finish what I have to say, and then you can go to the hospital and I can have some tea before I go to bed. As I was saying, because you are an idiot, taking care of you is a full-time job.”
“Could you lay off, Anastasia? My arm hurts.”
“No, it doesn’t, but it could. Or, I could just kill him and then hide the body,” Renton suggested. “I’m certain no one would care.”
“Since I already have a fulltime job, as does Renton, and as I am currently short one bodyguard, I decided to kill two birds with one stone.” Anastasia stopped, considering. “Or, perhaps it would be simultaneously killing two birds with two stones. It doesn’t matter. One of our subsidiary cartels, Kiev Oblast, paid tribute to the Black Sun years ago, in the form of the two youngest children of the cartel head pledged to our service. I have transferred them over from Mr. Cole’s class. The boy will take Edward’s place. I have no use for his sister at the moment,” Anastasia said frankly. “So she will be looking after you. She is my second-cousin, incidentally, so try to be nice to her.”
“Hold up, just slow the fuck down. What are you talking about, Anastasia? I don’t need a bodyguard.”
“No?” Anastasia asked, looking surprised. “The last time you went on a date you needed a great many, as I recall. Moreover, my dress was ruined in the process. I am being proactive this time around. Besides, I think you will like her. Renton, would you go get Katya for me?”
Renton nodded and left the room, leaving Alex glaring at Anastasia, and Anastasia completely ignoring him. After a while, he gave up. It was like water off a duck’s back, anyway.
“I don’t need a bodyguard,” Alex repeated sullenly, crossing his arms, and then flinching when he remembered his painless injury.
“Katya won’t be one, then,” Anastasia reassured him. “Think of her as a caretaker.”
“What does that even mean?” Alex complained. “I think I like that idea even less.”
Anastasia shrugged, scratching the great black wolf behind one of its ears as it lay its head on her lap, its black eyes still locked on Alex with a definite malevolence. He shuddered at a number of memories that he would have preferred to stay suppressed.
“Like it or not, I can’t just let you run around kicking things over to see what happens,” Anastasia said firmly. “Besides, she is multi-talented. I think you will find having her around to be very beneficial. In any number of ways. And I will tell her to be discreet,” Anastasia promised. “She won’t act like Renton does, making puppy-dog eyes and following you around everywhere.”
“Hey,” Renton objected as he walked back into the room, looking hurt.
The girl beside him was almost as tall as Renton, with short auburn hair and lightly tanned skin. She kept her eyes modestly on the ground, and her school uniform was fitted and pressed, but she didn’t seem particularly humble or nervous to Alex.
“This Katya Zharova,” Anastasia said, gesturing for the girl to join them, Renton hurrying over with another chair. The girl bowed her head to Anastasia modestly, and then sat down in the chair next to Alex, giving him a perfunctory smile that he was in no mood to return, even if she was somewhat cute. “Katya, this is Alex Warner. We have already discussed your instructions. You will be looking after Alex for the foreseeable future. Please keep him safe, and try not to let the complaining bother you. It’s a character flaw that must be tolerated, for now.”
Katya gave her a short, serious nod.
“When do I start, Ana?”
Anastasia stood up, and Renton hustled over the door to open it for her.
“Immediately, I think. Mr. Warner here has a rather pressing desire to go to the hospital.”
Alex opened his mouth to argue, to say any of the dozens of things he’d come up with while sitting there, fuming and ignored. But Renton choose that exact moment to turn the pain in his arm back on, so instead he ended up doubled over, clutching his forearm and wishing aloud for an unpleasant death for Renton, Anastasia, and the whole human race.
4
There didn’t seem to be a single street in Shanghai that wasn’t crowded. Margot had been walking through the city for hours; broad, neon lit avenues packed with cars and bicycles giving way to claustrophobic alleys where vendors lined the walls, towered over by the concrete towers that hid the night sky. Everything seemed to be in motion, in a frantic race with no obvious goal, a consuming hunger for change, for profit, for the new world that they were building out of concrete and dreams and exports to the fading western world. She imagined that New York must have felt this way, once, back when the skeletons of the skyscrapers were first being erected by an army of immigrants, all hustling for their part of the new prosperity. It gave her a headache.
“Any luck, Margot?”
Alistair’s voice in her head, something else that she did not appreciate about her new situation. Back at the Academy, even Renton hadn’t had the balls to try to violate the privacy of her own well-shielded mind. Vampires had an innate resistance to psychic interference, one that most telepaths found insurmountable. Apparently, however, that did not apply to Alistair.
“None whatsoever. My feet hurt, my head hurts, and I am getting very cranky. Thus far, I haven’t seen a single Caucasian, much less the people we are looking for. I suppose that, if you’re asking me, then the others have come up empty as well?”
Margot knew that the delay meant Alistair was debating what to tell her, and she took that to mean that she was right. She felt a certain satisfaction at guessing the motives of the Chief Auditor.
“That’s not exactly true, Margot. Xia reported something a minute ago; we’re just not sure what to make of it…”