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 “Maybe. But where? Any place private is too expensive.”

 “Yeah.” I looked over at Marc, who was tenderly touching Jessica's nose and murmuring to her. She in turn had just finished telling him a heartwarming Grandpa Joe story she had previously heard from me, probably the one involving grenades and the minister. “Listen, I've got an idea about that. My roommate, Marc, has a—”

 “Oh, that clever doctor. Did I tell you I met the perfect man for him? He's a grad student, getting his doctorate in Japanese literature—”

 “Yeah, that sounds really fun and useful. Listen, his father has this place—they must have some like it up where Joe is, but if not, maybe we could move him down here…”

 “What kind of place?”

 I told her. And that was how I ended up with my Grandpa Joe living four miles away from my vampire-​infested house. Which may or may not, now that I look back, have been a greater hazard to my health than having my heart temporarily blown up by holy water.

 I never did find out who had popped in for a surprise visit. Which was fine with me. More surprises, I so did not need.

 Chapter 22

 “You realize of course that, once he gets transferred down here, you'll have to visit him. When he was a four-​hour drive away, that was one thing, but now you could walk there in ten minutes.”

 “Shut up,” I moaned, “shut up, shutup .”

 “I have to admit,” Jessica went on cheerfully—why wouldn't she be cheerful, the swelling had gone down andher grandparents were dead. “I'm amazed he's still alive. Didn't they tell youlast year that he had only months to live?”

 “Three months,” I remembered. “They gave him three months.”

 “Wow. And now here he's going to be living with Marc's father!”

 “Yes, it's all a rich tapestry of horror and survival. Where's a perfectly made rainbow drink when you need one?”

 “Marc's sleeping,” she said, “and you can't blame him. Guy finally gets a day off, and spends it taking care of his roommates.”

 “Finally, having a doctor in the house pays off.”

 “I know I'm feeling better—how about you?”

 “Fine.” Which was true. When I'd risen that afternoon, it was like nothing happened. If not for the ruined T-​shirt and sports bra in the garbage, I'd guess nothing had happened.

 Sinclair had seen for himself, pulling off my bra the minute our bedroom door had closed, going over my chest and back inch by inch. Which had turned into him going over my crotch inch by inch. Repeat as needed. The evening had turned out so terrific, it made it almost—

 No, I didn't mean that. It wasn't worth it no matter how much sex I'd had. I didn't mind getting shot nearly as much as I minded Jessica and Delk getting hurt.

 And oh, boy, the look on Delk's face in the kitchen as everything dawned on him. That was one I'd take to my grave. Assuming I ever went there for any other reason than to visit the currently premature tombstone.

 “Delk will be back,” Jessica said, trying to cheer me up.

 “Yeah, I know. That's what I'm worried about.”

 The phone rang, and I gave the wall extension an ugly look. It rang again. Jessica got up and said, “I know, you're not here. It might be about your grandpa's transfer… hello?”

 I stirred my tea, and simmered next to it. Like Korben Dallas inThe Fifth Element , I was sure all communications were ultimately bad news. Why hasten it by cutting out the middle man?

 “Uh-​huh,” Jessica was saying. “I'm not sure that's—uh-​huh… yeah… yeah, but—listen, I'm just not sure if—let me just ask her, okay? She's right—hello?”

 Jessica hung up and looked at me.

 “Hours later or a day late?”

 “Your stepmother won't be able to get the baby for another couple of hours.” Jessica looked at the clock on the wall. “It's still early. I guess she—uh—lost track of—look, this doesn't prove your stupid telephone theory, okay?”

 I could hear BabyJon's fretful squealing getting closer and closer. Then the kitchen door opened and Sinclair poked his head in. “The baby wants you,” he called, and the door swung shut. Then I saw the door open again as Sinclair held the port-​a-​crib in his arms. It was a little too wide, fully open and extended, to go through the door, so Sinclair squished it a little and it popped through.

 I leaped to my feet as Jessica cracked up. “You carried the whole crib down here? Stop that, you'refolding him up in it!”

 “He has plenty of room on all sides,” Sinclair said, louder, to be heard over BabyJon's escalating wails.

 “Just pick him up! Or leave him there and come and get me, jeez.” I picked him up and he quieted. “Don't blame you for that one, yes, Uncle Sinclair is a big poopie-​head, isn't he?”

 “I am not his uncle,” he replied, making a beeline for the liquor cabinet, “and if I was, it would be Uncle Eric.”

 “It's Uncle Schmuck right now, bud! I can't believe you just dragged the whole thing down here, all unfolded and everything…”

 “He seems fine,” Sinclair said, dumping a shot of brandy into an empty teacup, which he then filled with hot water from the kettle.

 “We're out of English Breakfast, so ha.”

 “I will struggle along.” He gave the baby a look. “You are expecting your stepmother presently, yes?”

 “She's running late.”

 “Hours late or a day late?”

 How well they were coming to know the Ant! It was enough to make me want to cry. No, that was the smell BabyJon's diaper was giving off. “Hours,” I said, nearly choking.

 “I think that kid does have supernatural powers,” Jessica observed as I gagged and looked around wildly for the diaper bag. “Powers in his pants.”

 “You guys. He's just a baby, doing what all babies do.” I could hear the resonant chime of our front door bell. “Maybe that's the Ant!”

 Sinclair called something out to me, but I didn't hear it. Okay, wasn't listening. Anyway, I practically galloped through the rooms and the halls that led to the front door. All would be forgiven if I could get out of changing this one sinister diaper.

 I swung open the door.

 “Majesty,” the strange but familiar vampire said. She had a calm center that resembled Alonzo's. Had she been with the European delegation? Yes, I believed she had. Her small stature and close-​cropped carroty red hair jogged my memory along. “I beg your indulgence in coming by without an appointment.”

 “Uh.” I shifted BabyJon to my other arm. “That's okay. Uh—”

 “Carolina.”

 “Right. Carolina. What's up.”

 “I was just—” She looked around on the front step.

 “Oh! Sorry, come in.”

 “Thank you, Majesty.” She followed me in and swung the big door shut. “I will not keep you long. I was only wondering if you had decided Alonzo's fate.” She seemed perfectly calm, but she couldn't have been. Unless she saw me as no threat whatsoever, and decided to swing by the mansion on the way to Caribou Coffee.

 “You were? Wondering, I mean?”

 “Yes, ma'am. We all are. Alonzo most of all, of course, but he has surprisingly little to say about you, which is frustrating for the rest of us, as you can imagine.” She gave me a small, hopeful smile as if to say,Isn't all this just so silly ?

 “Well, it's nice of you to check in.”

 She shrugged. “He is my cousin.”

 “Oh! I didn't know that.”

 She looked puzzled, and rubbed her nose for a moment. Then rubbed it again. Maybe she was trying to get rid of the freckles. “We were introduced.”

 “Right, right. Well, about that—I'm sorry you guys are sort of stuck there waiting—you don't have to—” I realized what I was saying and stopped. Of course, they had to. She in particular, if they were family. Family! Real honest to God family; here I'd thought I was the only vampire with blood relatives. And what were the others supposed to do while this little Sophie/Alonzo/Liam triangle was resolved? Blow town and leave their buddy to swing?