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Detective Sams had gotten to the murder scene a couple of minutes before I did. He met me in the hallway outside the upstairs bedroom where the killing had taken place. The interior of the place had fine detailing on almost every surface — ceilings, banisters, moldings, doors. The owner had cared about the house, and also about Mardi Gras. Feathers and beads, colorful masks, and costumes were tacked up on most of the walls.

"This is bad, even worse than we thought," Sams said. "She's a detectivenamed Maureen Cooke. She's in Vice, but she was helping out on Daniel and Charles. Most of the department is pitching in."

Sams led me into the detective's bedroom. It was small but attractive, with a sky blue ceiling. Someone had once told me that color was supposed to keep winged insects from nesting there.

Maureen Cooke was a redhead, tall and thin, probably in her early thirties. She had been hung by her bare feet from a chandelier. Her nails were painted red. The detective was naked except for a delicate silver bracelet on her wrist.

Blood streaks were all over her body, but there was no sign of blood pooling on the floor or anywhere else.

I walked up close to her. "Sad," I whispered under my breath. A human life gone — just like that. Another detective dead.

I looked at Mitchell Sams. He was waiting for me to talk first.

"This might not have been done by the same killers," I said, and shook my head. "The bite wounds look different to me. They're superficial. Something's changed."

I stepped back from the body of Maureen Cooke and took in her bedroom. There were photographs that I recognized as part of E. J. Bellocq's study of Storyville prostitutes.

Strange, but fitting for a vice detective. A couple of Asian fans had been framed over the bed — which looked as if it had been slept in. Or possibly the bed hadn't been made the previous day.

My cell phone rang. I hit a button with my thumb. I felt out of it. Numb. I needed sleep.

"Did you find her yet, Dr. Cross? What do you think? Give me your best guess on how to stop these terrible murders. You must have it figured out by now."

The Mastermind was on the line. How did he know?

Suddenly I was yelling into the phone. "I'm going to take you down. I've figured that much out, asshole!"

I hung up on him, then I shut the phone off. I looked around the bedroom. Kyle Craig was watching me from the doorway.

"Are you all right, Alex?" he whispered.

Chapter 79

When I got back to the Dauphine Hotel it was ten-thirty in the morning. I was too tired and too worked up to sleep. My heart was still racing. There was a message for me: Inspector Hughes had called from San Francisco.

I stretched out on the bed and called Jamilla back. I shut my eyes. I wanted to hear a friendly voice, especially hers.

"I might have something good for you," she said when I reached her at home. "In my spare time, ha-ha, I've been taking a close look at Santa Cruz. Why Santa Cruz? you might ask. There have been several unsolved disappearances there. Too many. I plotted them out myself. Alex, something is happening down there. It fits in with the rest of this case."

"Santa Cruz was on our original list," I said. I was trying to focus on what she had just told me. I couldn't remember exactly where Santa Cruz was located.

"You sound tired. Are you all right?" she asked.

"I just got back to the hotel a few minutes ago. Long night."

"Alex, go to sleep! This can wait. Good night."

"No, I can't sleep anyway. Tell me about Santa Cruz. I want to hear it."

"All right. I talked to Lieutenant Conover with the Santa Cruz PD. Interesting conversation. Annoying too. They're aware of the disappearances, of course. They've also noted house pets and livestock disappearing in the past year. Lot of ranches in the area. Nobody believes in vampires, of course. But — Santa Cruz has a certain reputation. The kiddies call it the vampire capital of the U.S. Occasionally, the kids are right."

"I need to see what you have so far," I told her. "I'm going to try and get a little sleep. But I want to read whatever Santa Cruz sends you. Can you send it to me?"

"My friend Tim at the Examinerpromised to send me the relevant files. Meanwhile, today's my day off. I might just take a ride."

I opened my eyes wide. "If you go, bring somebody along. Bring Tim. I mean it." I told her about the murder of the vice detective, Maureen Cooke, here in New Orleans. "Don't go there alone. We still don't know what we're dealing with."

"I'll take somebody along," she promised, but I didn't know if I could believe her.

"Jamilla, be careful. I don't have a good feeling about this."

"You're just tired. Get some sleep. I'm a big girl."

We talked for a few more minutes, but I wasn't sure if I had gotten through to her. Like most good homicide detectives, she was stubborn.

I shut my eyes again, and started to drift away, then I was gone.

Chapter 80

Jamilla was remembering a line from a favorite Shirley Jackson novel, The Haunting of Hill House, which had been made into a really disappointing movie. "Whatever walked there, walked alone," Jackson had written. That pretty much summed up how she felt about the murder case. And maybe even about her life lately.

She drove her trusty, dusty Saab toward Santa Cruz. She gripped the steering wheel a little too firmly most of the way, and her hands felt numb. The kink in her neck was getting worse. This was a disturbing case, and she just couldn't let it go. The killers were out there somewhere. They were going to keep murdering until somebody stopped them. So maybe she should stop them.

She had tried to get her current boyfriend to go with her, but Tim was covering a bicyclists' protest for the Examiner. Besides, she wasn't sure that she wanted to spend the whole day with him. Tim was sweet, but, well, he wasn't Alex Cross. So here she was getting off Route 1, entering Santa Cruz all by her lonesome. All by her damn lonesome again.

At least she had alerted Tim that she was going to Santa Cruz, and of course she was a big girl, and armed to the teeth. Ugh, teeth, she thought. She cringed at the thought of fangs, and the horrible deaths of all those who had been bitten.

She had always liked Santa Cruz, though. Maybe because it was practically the epicenter of the Loma Prieta earthquake back in '89 — 6.9 on the Richter scale, sixty-three dead — but then the area had come back. The gutsy little town and the people there had refused to fold. Lots of earthquake-proof construction, nothing higher than two stories. Santa Cruz was pure California, the best.

As she drove, she watched a big blond surfer climb out of a VW with a surfboard strapped to the roof. He was finishing off a drippy slice of pizza, heading into the Bookshop Santa Cruz. Pure California.

There was quite a mix of people here — post-hippies, high-tech start-up folks, transients, surfers, college kids. She liked it an awful lot. So where were the goddamn vampires hiding? Were they here? Did they know she was here in Santa Cruz, looking for their gnarly asses? Were they among the surfers and post-hippies she was passing on the street?

Her first stop was the town's police department. The lieutenant, Harry Conover, was totally surprised to see her in the flesh. She guessed he couldn't imagine any detective going out of his or her way on the job.