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Kitty and the Midnight Hour

Page 32

   


In the right subculture, a vampire could find willing-enough volunteers to play blue-plate special. Psalm 23 was dark, stylish, played edgy music, and Arturo was a silent partner.
I had to dress up; they'd have turned me away at the door if I'd shown up in jeans. I wore black slacks, a black vest, and a choker. Understated. I didn't want to draw attention to myself.
Outside, I could hear the music, something retro and easy to slink to. The doorman let me in without a problem, but I hadn't gotten three feet inside when an incredibly svelte woman with skin so pale her diamond pendant looked colorful fell into step behind me.
I stopped. So did she, close enough that her breath brushed my neck when she spoke.
"I know you," she said. "You're not welcome here."
"Then you should have stopped me at the door," I said without turning around. "I already paid my cover."
"You're here without invitation. You're trespassing."
I stopped myself before saying something stupid. Like fuck territory. Any territory marking that was done was done by Carl, and I was on the outs with him right now. I didn't want to go so far as to say that.
I turned. "Look, I'm not interested in facing off with anybody. I need to find Rick; is he here?"
Her gaze narrowed; her lips parted, showing the tips of fangs. "I might ask for an additional cover charge from you." She ran her tongue along her teeth, between the fangs.
"You won't get it." Werewolf blood was apparently some kind of delicacy among vampires. Like thirty-year-old scotch or something.
"You're in our territory now. If you want to stay, you will follow our rules."
I backed away, bracing to run. I didn't want to fight. Maybe it had been a mistake coming here. Maybe I thought I could handle it on my own, and maybe I was wrong. I kept testing those boundaries and I kept falling on my ass, didn't I?
I'd never meant to cause trouble with any of this.
Someone stepped beside me, interposing himself between me and the woman. It was Rick. "Stella, Ms. Norville is my guest this evening and is under my protection."
She stepped back from him, gaping like a fish. "When Arturo finds out she was here—"
"I'll tell him myself and take responsibility for the consequences. I'll also make sure she doesn't cause trouble. Like start a fight with an aggressive hostess." He touched my arm and gestured me to a quiet section of the bar. The woman, Stella, stalked off with a huff. I let out the breath I'd been holding.
"Thanks for the save," I said as we took seats.
"You're welcome. Drink?" he said as the bartender drifted over.
Tequila, straight up? "Club soda. Thanks."
"The question remains—what are you doing here? It's not exactly safe for you."
"I wanted to let you know, I got a tip that Elijah Smith is coming back to this area in a week or so, probably out toward Limon. I found that on the Web so take it with a grain of salt. But it's the best I've got right now."
"It's more than I have. Thanks."
"I'll tell you when I get more. Maybe you could leave me a phone number for next time?"
He had the gall to laugh.
"I take it you don't like phones," I said.
"Why don't I come see you at your office in a week instead?"
"Damned inconvenient," I muttered. It would have been nice to have someone agree with my suggestion for once.
He looked thoughtfully at me. "No one gets that put out over not getting a phone number."
A seething pit of frustrated intentions, that was me. I frowned. "Could you give me some advice?"
He blinked, surprised. "Well. I thought you had all the answers."
I ignored that, glancing back at where the monochrome Stella had gone to harass someone else. "You must be in pretty tight with Arturo, to toss around his name like that."
"Don't tell anyone, but I'm nearly as old as he is. Nearly as powerful. The only difference is I don't want to be Master of a Family. I don't want that kind of… responsibility. He knows this, knows I'm not a rival. We have an understanding about other things."
"Ah. Why are you even here at all? Why even follow him?" This was touching on what I wanted to talk to him about. He'd been around for a long time—he'd just admitted as much. He had answers I didn't.
He sat back, smiling like he knew what I was really asking and why I was asking. "Being part of a Family has its advantages. Finding sustenance is easier. There's protection. A guarded place to sleep out the days. These things are harder to find alone."
Dejected, I propped an elbow on the bar. Those were all the things I needed Carl for. What was I supposed to do if I couldn't stand him anymore?
Rick continued. "I spent about fifty years on my own, around the end of the nineteenth century. I… angered a few dangerous elements, so I set up a place in one of the Nevada boomtowns during the Comstock Lode silver rush. You wouldn't believe how well the mining operations in a place like Virginia City kept away a certain kind of riffraff."
I grinned, drawn into the story in spite of myself. "You pissed off a pack of werewolves."
"You didn't come to hear stories. You mentioned advice. Though this seems a strange place to find it."
"I'm running out of friends."
"Nonsense. You have half a million listeners who adore you."
I shot him a glare. "Someone asked me recently who I went to when I needed advice. And I couldn't answer. I didn't know."
"You still haven't told me what you need advice about."
I asked him because he was old and presumably experienced. And, ironically, he'd never given me a reason to be afraid of him.
"I don't understand what's happening. I don't know why Carl and Meg are acting the way they are. I don't know why I can't make them understand why I feel the way I do. I wish—I wish they'd leave me alone, but then I'm not sure I want them to. Especially Carl." There, I thought I'd gotten it all out.
"You're not looking for advice. You're looking for affirmation."
And I wasn't getting it from the people I most wanted it from. God, he made it sound so obvious. If someone had called in with this problem, I'd have been able to rattle off that answer.