it is.â
I did know. Jean-Claude owned Willie lock, stock, and soul. âItâs okay, Willie, itâs not your fault.â
âThanks, Anita.â His voice sounded cheerful, like a puppy who expected a kick and got patted instead.
Why had I comforted him? Why did I care whether a vampire got its feelings hurt, or not? Answer: I didnât think of him as a dead man. He was still Willie McCoy with his penchant for loud primary-colored suits, clashing ties, and small, nervous hands. Being dead hadnât changed him that much. I wished it had.
âTell Jean-Claude Iâll be there.â
âI will.â He was quiet for a minute, his breath soft over the phone. âWatch your back tonight, Anita.â
âDo you know something I should know?â
âNo, but . . . I donât know.â
âWhatâs up, Willie?â
âNuthinâ, nuthinâ.â His voice was high and frightened.
âAm I walking into a trap, Willie?â
âNo, no, nuthinâ like that.â I could almost see his small hands waving in the air. âI swear, Anita, nobodyâs gunninâ for you.â
I let that go. Nobody he knew of was all he could swear to. âThen what are you afraid of, Willie?â
âItâs just that thereâs more vampires around here than usual. Some of âem ainât too careful who they hurt. Thatâs all.â
âWhy are there more vampires, Willie? Where did they come from?â
âI donât know and I donât want to know, ya know? I got ta go, Anita.â He hung up before I could ask anything else. There had been real fear in his voice. Fear for me, or for himself? Maybe both.
I glanced at the radio clock on my bedstand: 6:35. I had to hurry if I was going to make the appointment. The covers were toasty warm over my legs. All I really wanted to do was cuddle back under the blankets, maybe with a certain stuffed toy penguin I knew. Yeah, hiding sounded good.
I threw back the covers and walked into the bathroom. I hit the light switch, and glowing white light filled the small room. My hair stuck up in all directions, a mass of tight black curls. Thatâd teach me not to sleep on it wet. I ran a brush through the curls and they loosened slightly, turning into a frothing mass of waves. The curls went all over the place and there wasnât a damn thing I could do with it except wash it and start over. There wasnât time for that.
The black hair made my pale skin look deathly, or maybe it was the overhead lighting. My eyes were so dark brown they looked black. Two glittering holes in the pastiness of my face. I looked like I felt; great.
What do you wear to meet the Master of the City? I chose black jeans, a black sweater with bright geometric designs, black Nikes with blue swooshes, and a blue-and-black sport bag clipped around my waist. Color coordination at its best.
The Browning went into its shoulder holster. I put an extra ammo clip in the sport bag along with credit cards, driverâs license, money, and a small hairbrush. I slipped on the short leather jacket Iâd bought last year. It was the first one Iâd ever tried on that didnât make me look like a gorilla. Most leather jackets were so long-sleeved, I could never wear them. The jacket was black, so Bert wouldnât let me wear it to work.
I only zipped the jacket halfway up, leaving room so I could go for my gun if I needed to. The silver cross swung on its long chain, a warm, solid weight between my breasts. The cross would be more help against vampires than the gun, even with silver-coated bullets.
I hesitated at the door. I hadnât seen Jean-Claude in months. I didnât want to see him now. My dream came back to me. Something that lived in blood and darkness. Why the nightmare? Was it Jean-Claude interfering in my dreams again? He had promised to stay out of my dreams. But was his word worth anything? No