THE WEREWOLF IN RED
…I feel the touch of his consciousness inside mine. But that’s not where I want his touch. More po...
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THE WEREWOLF IN RED
…I feel the touch of his consciousness inside mine. But that’s not where I want his touch. More potent is the physical feel of him. Warm flesh under my palms, hot breath on my face… If I lean forward an inch, I could kiss him. “The whole planet is in danger, and you’re thinking of sex?” he growls. “Yeah. Bad me.” I flash him a wolfish grin. “It couldn’t possibly have anything to do with the fact you’re naked, could it?” And it seems like years since we’ve made love. “Only a few weeks,” he corrects. But he’s weakening, I see it in his eyes. “That long?” I stroke my hands down his bare back, and his growl becomes a groan. “Too long,” he rasps out. I’m glad we agree on something. “So…what do you want to do about it?” I ask, my voice going husky. He groans again. “Nothing. There isn’t time. We have to find Vlad and stop him before he strikes.” “Bullshit. The kind of seeds he’s planted won’t sprout overnight. You don’t think he’s going to take over anything in the next five minutes, do you?” I punctuate the question by grazing my lips over Hunter’s. “Um…probably not,” he concedes on a hoarse breath. “Good, then we have time for a quickie before we go after him.” “You’re a real pain in the ass,” Hunter grumbles, but doesn’t resist when I push him backward onto the seat and straddle his thighs…
ALSO BY MIMI RISER The Adventures Of Cassie Nova, Book I: Rebel Queen Can’t Fight The Feeling The Cowboys And The Courtesan Cymric’s Rose Dungeons & Dirty Dreams My Knightly Adventures, Books I – III Pirates & Other Wicked Pleasures Pirates Do It With Passion Playing Pirates Return To The Burn Romeo’s Revenge Samantha White And The Seven Dwarves Saving Sally Savoy Sherwood Charade Thunderball Tina Takes A Tumble Wicked Comes The Beast Your Cheatin’ Heart
THE WEREWOLF IN RED BY MIMI RISER
AMBER Q UILL PRESS, LLC http://www.AmberQuill.com
THE WEREWOLF IN R ED AN AMBER QUILL PRESS BOOK This book is a work of fiction. All names, characters, locations, and incidents are products of the author’s imagination, or have been used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, locales, or events is entirely coincidental. Amber Quill Press, LLC http://www.AmberQuill.com All rights reserved. No portion of this book may be transmitted or reproduced in any form, or by any means, without permission in writing from the publisher, with the exception of brief excerpts used for the purposes of review. Copyright © 2010 by Mimi Riser ISBN 978-1-61124-034-4 Cover Art © 2010 Trace Edward Zaber
PUBLISHED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
This story is dedicated to our beautiful Earth, with the fervent prayer that, somehow, we can all learn to stop fouling the nest and keep our planet beautiful.
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PROLOGUE Like a spider in its web, Prince Vlad sat in his lair, watching the rest of the world. For years he’d watched, in all directions, and the view had only grown worse. Wherever he looked he saw civil unrest and bureaucratic nonsense. Poverty, crime, disease… Humanity was going to hell in a handbasket, and Vlad knew why. The laws were too lenient, and so were those who enforced them—not like in his day. The feudal system was a good one and should never have been abandoned. Most people were cattle and needed a strong hand to keep them in line, whip them into shape— literally—but too few understood that in this cowardly modern age. People today made a mockery of true order, which Vlad truly loved. And missed. Everyone had become soft and weak and lazy. 1
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No one wanted to work anymore. No one knew how to rule! Except him. He intended to fix all this, of course. Soon.
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CHAPTER 1 All the world’s a stage… Once upon a time—like last night—two mismatched lovers locked horns over a simple little jaunt, an impromptu spring fling one of them wanted to take. And the other didn’t. The battle ended when the lover who was definitely in the wrong—but refused to admit it—stalked off in a sullen huff, telling his much-maligned partner to take a flying fling at the moon. I drove to Philadelphia instead. So there. I won. I think. This trip is what the fight was about in the first place. I’m exactly where I wanted to be, right? Philadelphia is one of my old 3
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stomping grounds. I have friends and family here I wanted to visit. Now if only I could remember why. Right foot, left foot…right, left… Just a couple more blocks and I can end the family part of the visit and move on to the fun stuff. A night of gaudy décor and bawdy entertainment at the Red Banana Revue, Philly’s très gay answer to the Moulin Rouge. With a Scottish kilt flapping about my knees, I steer a determined course across Rittenhouse Square, one hand holding the leash of a basset hound, the other towing a seven-year-old Attila the Hun. Frankly, the kid oughta be on a leash, too. I hear squirrels in the overhead tree branches snickering at us. Damn rodents. How do I get myself into these things? Oh, right. I’m me. Hello, world! Sylver Starr is the name, constant mishap is my game. Really. I never go looking for trouble, but somehow it always finds me anyway. Sigh. At least it’s a pretty night for a walk. A light wind rustles the leaves, and full moon energy fills the air. Classic springtime, soft and moist, ripe with the odors of humanity and fresh green growth, the contradictory smells of a city park—especially pungent to a nose like mine. Blame it on heredity. Over two centuries ago, my Carpathian ancestors, fleeing persecution in Europe, immigrated to America and ended up in rural west Texas where most of my clan still live. A few of us, however, have branched out to other parts of the country. That’s how I happen to have a cousin in Philadelphia. Bruno Starrvoski, Junior, son of Bruno, Senior, my dad’s brother. 4
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Junior and his wife Zelda are off on a spring fling of their own this week. Which made it an excellent time to visit. I get the use of their townhouse without having to endure them. Unfortunately, their son Irving came with the deal. They left him behind in the care of a babysitter. I understand why. I’m tempted to leave him somewhere, too. But his nervous sitter would have a feathered fit if I lost him on her, and I can’t risk that, now can I? I tighten my grip on his hand as he tries to yank free. Irving has been interrogating me about our mutual strange heritage and how it affects him personally. Last year Junior taught him the basics of what it means to be a Starrvoski. I haven’t told Irving anything he didn’t know, but I think he was hoping for a different slant on things from me. “No, I don’t wanna wait till I’m older!” He digs in his heels, jerking us to a halt. “I wanna be a wolf noooww…” I wince at his volume. He’s already got a howl like a wolf, I’ll grant him that. God help us all when he gains the fur and fangs to go with it. Luckily, that shouldn’t be for several more years. Rarely do our clan’s inbred powers manifest before puberty. An elderly couple on a nearby park bench chuckle. “Your little boy is cute as a bug,” the old man tells me. Yeah. A tarantula comes to mind. The woman squints at my costume. “Are you Scottish?” Hardly. I just like wearing skirts is all—and with a slender build and silver-blond hair, I do it very well. I used to be a professional drag queen, the star attraction of the Red Banana, in fact. But drag and seven-year-olds don’t mix, so I’ve been playing it straight today. A kilt is perfectly acceptable masculine attire, yet still gives me the…um, theatrical feeling I enjoy. “Uh-uh, he’s from Texas, ’cept he lives in Massachusetts now,” 5
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Irving answers for me. “This is my cousin Sylvester, but we call him Sylver. He’s a werewolf. I’m a werewolf, too. Grrr!” He bares teeth and growls. The gray haired pair chuckle again. “My, he has quite an imagination,” Grandma says. Nope, just a very big mouth. But ordinary humans never believe him when he spouts off, so I’m not worried. I join the amused laughter and release Irving’s hand to ruffle his mop of brown hair. Ow. The brat bit me. “Feisty, ain’t he?” Grandpa shoots the boy a wink and leans forward to pet the basset hound by our feet. “What’s your doggie’s name, sonny?” “Freddy Duke.” Irving pouts, disappointed the man hasn’t fled in terror. “But he’s not my dog. He’s Sylver’s butler. Freddy’s a lunar-shifter. He’s only a dog when the moon’s full.” “That so?” Gramps cackles with fresh merriment. I grab a pudgy little forearm. “Come along, Irving. It’s getting late, and we’ve bothered these nice people long enough.” “Oh, it was no bother at all,” Grandma calls as I drag Irving down the path with my basset-butler trotting at my heels. “Enjoy him while he’s young. Children grow up much too fast.” Twilight Zone music plays in my head. Her words prickle my back hairs. A premonition? Of what? I realize she didn’t intend the comment as a warning, but that’s how it sounded to me. Why, I’m not sure. I only know I’ve been having a lot of uneasy feelings lately, a strange sense of impending doom… It’s with great relief that I reach the townhouse and return Irving to his Irish babysitter, a large, motherly woman named 6
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Hennie. There’s a reason for that. “I was viciously pecked in me youth by a were-chicken,” she confided in me earlier today. “Such a horror it was!” I can imagine. Ever since, she’s had the bothersome tendency to shift without warning into a Rhode Island Red. But it only happens when she’s upset. Stress seems to trigger the metamorphosis. As a result, Hennie’s never far from a whiskey bottle. “Me nerve medicine,” she calls it. So, okay, the woman’s a bit of a lush, but she’s got good reason. If you worked for a family of werewolves, would you want to risk turning into a chicken? Of course not. She also has a kind heart and is clearly devoted to Irving. Someone has to be, I suppose. Tipsy or not, she watches him closely and moves fast when needed. I’m impressed. And bruised. The kid just kicked me in the shin. “That’ll be enough of that.” Hennie scoops him up against her ample bosom before he can aim another blow. “Thanks,” I mutter, hopping on one foot. “It’s beddy-bye for you, me fine bucko,” she clucks. “Behave yourself, and I’ll tell you the story of Little Red Riding Hood.” “Only if the wolf wins this time.” Irving peers over her shoulder as she bustles him from the room. “Wolves should always win ’cuz they’re big and bad and strong!” He sticks out his tongue at me. I resist the urge to show him just how big and bad a wolf can be. Freddy, seated by my feet, whimpers in canine sympathy. ::I’m tempted to give the little nipper a nip myself,:: he says telepathically, the way shifters usually communicate when in animal form. ::He’s pulled my tail a dozen times since we got here. 7
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Once more, and I’m not sure I’ll be able to control my bestial instinct.:: But he will, I know. Whether on two legs or four, when he’s on duty, Frederick Duke is a paragon of solemn dignity and impeccable manners, the perfect English butler—and basset hound during the full moon. Off duty, it’s a different story. Give him a free night, and Freddy becomes another kind of beast. A party animal. But that goes with the territory of weredom. Shifters, by nature, are hotblooded, sensual creatures. Oversexed, some might say. Not that we consider this a problem. I lean over to give him a comforting pat and remove his collar and lead, which were only needed because of the city’s leash laws. “Oh, shit,” a startled voice says from behind me. A voice I recognize, but didn’t expect. Tossing the collar and leash onto a chair, I turn to meet an equally startled stare. A plain young woman with short, mousy brown hair and a dowdy dark gray dress stands framed by the living room doorway. An overstuffed canvas grocery bag hangs from each arm, pulling her into a stoop-shouldered slouch. “I…I’m sorry,” she stammers. “Junior mentioned you might be using the house while they were away, but I forgot, or I’d have been here sooner to fix dinner for you.” I’m sorry, too, though not about dinner. I knew my cousin and his heiress wife employed more help than a babysitter. Hennie told me when I arrived today that the domestic staff was out but would be home this evening. She just neglected to say who the “staff” was. The young woman sets her bags on the floor and extends a hand in greeting. “Cindy Ellis,” she introduces herself. 8
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Unnecessarily. I can’t help thinking the name sounds an awful lot like Cinderella. With the emphasis on awful. “We met once before, at Zel and Junior’s wedding,” she adds. “But you probably don’t remember me. No one ever does.” A tiny, wry grin underscores the statement. I return it with a full-beamed smile, bypass the handshake, and give her a hug. Hell, she’s family. Almost. “Of course I remember you. How could I forget the only one there who was willing to talk to a guy in a pink taffeta dress? We sat together at the reception, didn’t we? You’re Zelda’s sister.” And servant, apparently. What did I say about Cinderella? “Stepsister,” she corrects. I rest my case. Cindy shrugs. “My mom married Zel’s dad when we were both babies, then died a few years later. I hardly remember her. I knew the man who raised me wasn’t my birth father, but he treated me like his own. I got on with him better than Zel did, actually.” The wry grin glimmers again. “I was the good girl, you see, his little princess. She was his wild child.” Yeah, she would’ve had to be to have married my wolfish cousin, to let him bite her and turn her into a werewolf, too. Shifting is a scary thing if you’re not born to it, but Zelda took to the power like a bird to the air. She’s a natural bitch, and Junior thinks it’s “cute.” No wonder their son is a pintsized terror. His parents are a couple of real shitty role models. ::The lad ought to be raised in a pack environment. That’d give him the balance he needs,:: Freddy pipes up—and right on target—although I’m the only one who can hear him. 9
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Cindy is a normal human, albeit an unusually savvy one. Being related to a were-clan through her stepsister’s marriage, she knows as few others do that there’s a secret subculture of magical creatures who live hidden among humanity. I remember discussing it with her at Junior and Zelda’s wedding. But having never met Freddy before, Cindy can’t know the watchful hound seated by our feet is quite a ladies’ man when he’s not serving tea or chasing rabbits. She can’t know he’s a man, period. Unless I tell her. ::Don’t you dare!:: Freddy warns in a sudden, agitated burst of emotion. How very uncharacteristic of him. And very interesting. Hmm… Cindy stoops down to scratch him behind the ears, and his tail thumps the floor with canine delight. ::Pure reflex action,:: he protests. ::A dog’s head is connected by his spine to his tail, right? Pet one end, and the other automatically wags.:: ::Along with something in the middle?:: ::I’ll pretend I didn’t hear that,:: he answers me, retreating behind his usual shield of iron dignity. I suppress a chuckle. “What a cute pooch,” Cindy says, rising to her feet. “He seems to like you,” I suggest. Innocently. Freddy whimpers. Cindy laughs. “Animals always do.” She glances downward to pick an invisible speck of lint off her skirt. “It’s men I have trouble with.” Uh-huh. 10
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She said that last so softly, I don’t think she intended me to hear it, but a werewolf’s senses are sharp—all six of them, the standard five plus an inbred psychic sense. And in my case, it’s more like seven because I have an awesome fashion sense, too. Which this girl doesn’t. Seriously, that housekeeper outfit is butt ugly. It makes her look like a cow. Cinderella needs a prince, does she? Well, she ain’t gonna find one if she dresses like a drudge. She needs a fairy godmother first. Fortunately for her, I know where to find a whole flock of ’em. Afterward, I wonder if she’d settle for a duke instead of a prince… Freddy whimpers again. ::Aw, no. Please, Mr. Sylver, you’re just going to stir up all kinds of trouble.:: So what else is new? I grab Cindy’s hands. “Hey, hon, what am I, chopped liver? I’m a man, and I like you.” “You’re also gay,” she points out. Details, details. Cindy tugs free from my grasp and reaches for the grocery bags. “Zel’s never forgiven you for looking prettier than she did at her wedding.” “Zelda’s a bitch.” Grinning, I take the bags and lead the way down the hall. Just because I’m a gay cross-dresser doesn’t mean I can’t be a gentleman, too. ::Better you than me right now,:: Freddy Duke grouses. But I notice his tail never stops wagging as he follows Cindy and me to the kitchen. “Sit,” I order her. “I’ll unpack.” Then I have a little excursion in mind—but I’m saving that for a surprise. With a sigh, my unknowing protégé sinks into a chair, props 11
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elbows on the kitchen table, and plants her chin in her hands. “Thanks. My feet are killing me. I had the day off, but it was such gorgeous weather, I decided to do the week’s shopping. Ended up walking all the way to the Italian Market and back.” “So I see.” A heady blend of aromas wafts out of the bags along with the food. Exotic cheeses, plump sausages, fresh herbs, and… My nostrils twitch. I smell something else. Something I sensed with Cindy’s arrival but wasn’t certain of until now. A delicate scent, undetectable to a normal human nose, but not an animal’s or shifter’s. Ovulation. Or, in baser terminology, a female in heat. The fragrance has no affect on me, but I’m sure it’s straining Freddy’s control. A less dignified dog might be inspired to hump the lady’s leg. ::Don’t think I’m not tempted,:: he mentally mutters. ::Reflex action is hell.:: Well, I’ll be damned. This situation is bigger than I suspected. ::Something’s getting big all right. But it doesn’t mean what you think, Mr. Sylver.:: ::Oh, no?:: I lower my gaze to see him lying under the table with his snout between Cindy’s feet. ::Then why are you trying to peek up her skirt, huh? Where are your manners?:: ::The same place my wits must be. Let’s face it, she seems a nice lass, but she’s bland as egg custard. I like spicier dishes.:: Like, yes. Love, however, is a whole other matter. Werewolves believe that for everyone there is a heavenly appointed life-mate. The tricky part is it rarely turns out to be who you’d expect. My mate and I are proof of that. But I don’t want to think about us right now. If I do, I’ll start feeling as dejected as Cindy looks. The sad truth is my life-mate, 12
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lover, and legally wedded spouse is no longer on this Earth. I stand here alone and bereft. Breaks your heart, doesn’t it? ::Crimey, Mr. Sylver, he’s only up in orbit on the Steele Star space station. To hear you think it, one would assume Mr. Hunter was dead.:: Wishful thinking, actually. Scarcely a day goes by when I don’t want to kill Hunter. You’ve heard of interracial marriages? Well, ours is interspecies. Canine and feline. Imagine. Of all the heavenly powers at work in the universe, which one’s brilliant idea was that? And how do I sue for damages? If our animal forms were the same weight class—if Hunter were a lion-shifter, for instance—it might make a little sense. But, oh no, he’s just a back-alley variety tomcat. I’m able to become a huge white wolf, and I get stuck with a mate who morphs into a twelve pound black furball. Go figure. To complicate matters, he’s also the founder and chief of an underground organization dubbed Earth Guardians, Inc. Which is exactly what it sounds like, a covert corps of special agents dedicated to defending this planet, by fair means or foul, from all threats inner and outer. I’m one of those agents. Damn it. But that’s a particular sore spot with me, so we won’t probe it right now. ::Thanks, because I hear enough about it at home,:: Freddy says, even though my thoughts weren’t aimed at him. ::You and Mr. Hunter are always arguing about how you want to quit the Earth Guardians, and he won’t let you.:: Shit, we argue about everything. It’s pretty hard not to, given our conflicting genetic codes. Besides which, we’re from polar opposite social and economic strata. I grew up in poverty while Hunter was raised in the lap of luxury. 13
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I am, in fact, married by divine decree, backed up by Massachusetts state law, to a tall, sexy-as-sin billionaire with ebony hair and amber eyes. The incongruous Hunter Steele, corporate king in public, super hero in secret—Catman as opposed to Batman—a hard-hitting business tycoon who’s also an ecology freak and patron saint of numerous worthy charities. ::You left out “Celebrity Darling of the Decade,”:: Freddy interjects. ::With his money and looks, he’s always in the news. The paparazzi love him. According to the media, he’s the world’s most photographed man.:: Yeah, and according to me, he’s the most aggravating. Although a nosy basset-butler is running a close second at the moment. It’s bad enough when Hunter invades my thoughts— which he always does when we’re together. I’ve got to deal with it from Freddy now, too? Can’t I have any privacy? ::If you don’t want other telepaths to read your mind, you should take better care to shield it.:: Getting testy, are we? ::So should you,:: I retort. But neither of us can. Being classic canine, such mental subterfuge is beyond both Freddy and me. Hunter is infuriatingly adept at guarding his thoughts. Peer into his head and all you see is a smokescreen. Feline nature, they’re an inscrutable breed. By comparison, wolves and dogs are flashing neon signs you can read a mile away. It’s the pack psychology. We’re bred for teamwork, which requires instant, clear communication. Meaning, if Freddy can read me, I can just as easily read him. ::No, you can’t,:: he’s over-quick to deny. ::What I’m feeling is merely a temporary biological reaction, the heterosexual male response to female fertility. It’ll pass, you know it will. There’s no 14
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way I’m falling for a Plain Jane Cinderella.:: Sounds kinda like a pop science show, doesn’t he? Methinks the laddie doth protest too much. ::Think what you like. You’re wrong. I’m not in love. No way, no how.:: Yeah, that’s what I said the first time I met Hunter. But we never know when or where Cupid’s arrows will strike, and for shifters they strike especially hard and fast. The inner call of one’s predestined life-mate is impossible to ignore. Heh, heh. I chuckle inwardly with devilish glee. Can’t help myself. Suddenly I feel so…so romantic. Ain’t love grand? Well, maybe not my love life, but the phenomenon is way fun to watch in others. Misery adores company, you know. ::It’s not funny.:: A doggy whine underscores the complaint. Freddy wriggles out from under the table, shoots me a baleful look, and slinks out of the kitchen with his tail between his legs. Cindy glances up from her weary slouch. “What’s wrong with your pooch? I hope I didn’t accidentally kick him.” Only in the heart, hon. However, it’s not my place to inform her she’s just met the love of her life. Especially when the lover himself refuses to admit it. Yet. “Nah, he’s okay. Don’t worry about it. Basset hounds always look morbid.” I shove the last of the groceries into the fridge, pull out a chair, and sit opposite her at the table. “So what’s your excuse?” “Excuse?” Cindy blinks. I lean forward. “Why so glum, sugarplum? Besides the apparent fact you were cut out of your stepfather’s will. And are 15
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now forced by economic need to cook and clean for the one who did inherit?” I phrased it as a question, but I’m pretty sure I’m correct. Her laughter surprises me. “You don’t mince words, Sylver, do you?” “Not often.” I hold her gaze for a long moment, wondering what’s going on behind those blue eyes. Pretty eyes, really, her best feature. Granted, a bit of mascara would help; her lashes are too pale. But such things are easily remedied, and will be soon. I could read her thoughts even easier—humans are no match for shifters in that area—except that would be taking unfair advantage. Besides, I’d rather she tell me herself. With a small sigh of surrender, she finally does. “Well, you’re half right. I don’t have a dime I haven’t worked for. But that’s how it should be. I don’t want anything I haven’t honestly earned. I like supporting myself.” “Admirable. I feel the same way,” I have to confess. Maybe that’s why I stick with the Earth Guardians, even though I regularly threaten to quit. I don’t much enjoy playing secret agent. The hours suck, and people are always trying to kill you. It’s an excessively nerve-wracking gig. But it also pays an excessively large salary, gives me a solid income of my own so I’m not financially dependent on Hunter. Unfortunately, Hunter, as the head of Earth Guardians, Inc. is the one who pays my hard-earned salary—and never lets me forget it—which rather dampens the independent feeling and keeps me tied to his purse strings any way you slice it. It’s a pain in the ass being married to your boss. If I wanted real independence, I’d return to my first love. The stage. And, yes, I have been 16
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considering that. Cindy stares across the table at me as though she were the telepath and trying to read my mind. Why not? Everyone else does. The ghost of a grin haunts her lips as she speaks. “You got it backward, actually. I inherited everything, the whole frickin’ estate. Zel’s the one who was cut out.” My brows arch up. Hers knit together in a pensive frown. “Well, it was no surprise—Dad had warned her—but it still seemed harsh. Zel was crushed. And I felt partly responsible, like my virtuous behavior had made hers look worse by comparison. She doesn’t mean to be difficult. She’s just…not real bright. But we grew up together, and she’s the only family I have left. I can’t help loving her.” God, I know that feeling. It sucks, too. “So you signed over all the money?” I want to make sure I have this story straight. Cindy nods. “How could I live with myself if I didn’t?” “I don’t know, hon, but most people would’ve given it the old college try. Or split the estate down the middle with half for each of you?” She shakes her head. “Dad was rich, but he made some bad investments in his last years. By the time he died, his fortune was much less. With her expenses, Zel needs every penny of what’s left—a lot more than I do.” “And she repaid you by making you her housekeeper?” I hate my cousin’s wife. Come to think of it, I’ve never liked my cousin either. “It’s not that bad.” Cindy’s chin tilts up with a trace of stubborn denial. “And it’s not like I’m suited for much else. 17
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Neither Zel nor I were raised to have any career beyond ‘homemaking,’ as Dad put it. He was old-fashioned that way. But at least I can cook, clean, organize…simple stuff, but way over Zel’s head. I’ve spent most of my life helping her. Nothing’s really changed. Except I get paid for it now.” “Out of the money you gave her.” She frowns. “You think I’m a fool, don’t you?” “Yep, but I wish there were more fools like you. Unselfishness is a scarce commodity. You deserve a halo, hon. I’m just thinking you’re too nice for your own good.” “Not that nice. Lucky, maybe?” Irony twists her frown into a small smile. “If I looked like Zel, I might’ve been a wild child, too. But it’s easy to be virtuous when men never give you a second glance. No temptation, no trouble.” No shit. It’s her day off, and what does she do? Grocery shopping. How fucking boring is that? I’d love to tell her Fate has a studly surprise in store for her—except you can’t be truly happy with another until you’re happy with yourself. Cindy feels unattractive, so she acts the part. Silly girl. There are really very few natural beauties. Glamour is a façade, crafted in part by the flash of outer trappings, but even more from inner confidence. As the Bard said, “All the world’s a stage, and her men and women merely players.” Or something like that. The cool thing is we can switch roles with a costume change. Cindy rises from the table, signaling the subject closed—she thinks. Turning her back on me, she pulls a paper towel from the roll above the sink and starts polishing the counters. Which are already spotless. She’s a compulsive neat freak, I realize. Freddy’s one, too. He’d deny it, but I swear shining silverware gives him a 18
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hard-on. Y’know, the more I consider this, the more I decide they’re perfect for each other. A housekeeper and a butler. A Cinderella and a…well, not a prince, but Freddy is quite charming when he wants to be. Overall, it seems the heavenly powers do know what they’re doing with these life matches. So how the hell did they fuck up mine? Never mind, don’t answer that. I came here to forget the problems Hunter and I are having. He’s been more inscrutable than usual lately—withdrawn, distant—more difficult than ever. I know something is going on in that feline mind, but he refuses to tell me what. Does he think I’m too frivolous to comprehend, or just too stupid? He treats me like an idiot. Even so, I can’t help worrying about him…about us. I wonder what he’s doing now up in orbit on his fabulous Steele Star space station. Wining and dining his jet-set friends, making billion-dollar business deals over cocktails and canapés? Or maybe he’s holed up deep in the bowels of the station—the hidden headquarters of Earth Guardians, Inc.—playing James Bond hatching daring plots to save the world. How about saving our marriage? Is that too daring to ask? I hope Cindy and Freddy will realize that even finding your one true life-mate doesn’t guarantee happiness. Love’s fire burns hot, but no fire burns without fuel. Once you and your mate are together, you still have to work at it—both of you—to stay together. I’m sick of doing more than my share on that score. Cindy turns back to me, a faint smile on her lips, a look of quiet resignation in her eyes—the complete opposite of what I’m feeling. I’m rarely the resigned sort, and never quiet about it. “I’ve been a lousy hostess, letting you sit there with nothing to 19
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eat. It’s almost nine. You must be hungry.” Ravenous. But not for anything she can offer. Some have suggested that for Hunter and me, arguing is a perverse form of foreplay. Some may well be correct. I was all cranked up last night for a post-fight fuck—wrestling match lovemaking where the winner takes all, and the loser thoroughly enjoys it—the way our conflicts always end. Well, almost always. This time he walked out before we hit the mat, left me high, dry, and horny as hell. And, no, wanking off later in the bathtub didn’t help. I damn near got stuck when I tried to fuck the faucet. Don’t laugh. It may happen to you someday. The point is I’m still horny. And sore. And growing ever more suspicious about what’s going on with Hunter. He walked out in the middle of a fight, for godssake. He’s never done that before. I did—once—but I had damn good reason. I’d caught him tomcatting around. And I don’t mean in fur. I left him for almost two months, and it took an alien invasion to bring us back together. Hunter seemed to turn over a new leaf after that, at least as far as the fidelity issue was concerned. But now? I can’t figure why he’s been acting so strange. Unless he’s cheating on me again. I hate this line of thought, don’t you? It’s making me consider something I’ve never done before, something very contrary to wolf nature. Unlike tomcats, we’re into love for the long haul, rigidly faithful. Wolves mate for life, for better or worse. Still, if it ends up the latter, and the worse gets bad enough… Well, hell, I’m a man, too, aren’t I? If Hunter’s doing me wrong, could anyone really blame me for seeking a little extracurricular 20
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comfort? “How about some dinner?” Cindy asks. “I don’t know about you, but I could go for a couple of big juicy sausages.” I feel a grin steal onto my lips. “Sounds good to me.” “Great. What do you want with them?” “Hot sauce and buns, what else?” Except I doubt we’re envisioning the same kind of sausage. Her brow wrinkles. “Damn, I think we’re out of hot sauce. Wish I’d remembered to buy some today.” “No problem. I know where we can find it by the bucketful.” I push away from the table. “Besides, there’s no way I’m letting you cook on your day off. I’m taking you out to dinner. Just give me a few minutes to change clothes.” “Well, thank you, what a nice treat.” She glances down at her frumpy frock. “Where are we going? Do I need to change, too?” My grin broadens. “Don’t worry, you will after we get there. Ever hear of a club called the Red Banana?” “Oh, shit,” she says. I think that means yes.
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CHAPTER 2 The writing on the wall… Hunter Steele stared at the decorative mirror in his foyer—a big billboard of a mirror that stretched from floor to ceiling and spanned the length of the room. A note scribbled on the reflective surface, in garish purple lipstick in a bold flourishing hand, stared back at him. “Dear Hunter,” it began. “Have taken Freddy and driven to Philadelphia. As intended.” The intended was underlined for emphasis. “Will return next week. Maybe.” The maybe was underlined, too. “In the interim, I have given the rest of the house staff a vacation. Working for you, they need one. Also, as I hated to think of any foodstuffs spoiling in everyone’s absence, I invited 22
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Cook to take the contents of the fridge with her. She did. There may, however, be a few cans of tuna left in the larder, should you return home before anyone else and find yourself hungry. Or you could shift and catch a mouse. Or eat shit. I suggest the latter. Love, Sylver.” A crude drawing of a fist with the middle finger extended straight up punctuated the message. Hunter said a naughty word. Several of them. It was nine-thirty at night. He was tired and tormented by the headache from hell. He’d had a very bad day, possibly the worst day of his life. But he’d seen the bad coming from a long way off, so he wasn’t quite as suicidal as he might have been if disaster had struck without warning. In any case, being a shape-shifter, his body was made of incredibly durable stuff. Killing himself would’ve required much time and energy, and he had little of either to spare. Far better he save his strength for killing someone else. No, not Sylver. Although that idea had crossed Hunter’s mind once or twice since arriving home to an empty house. Where was his back-up support when he needed it? Fuck. Sylver was a headache for sure, but not the current one. And Hunter was feline stock, he reminded himself. He could handle this alone. Cats are resourceful creatures who generally land on their feet. “Not this time, lover,” the real headache said—and, yes, it really was from hell, though it spoke with a slight Hungarian accent. It stood behind Hunter, panting cold, foul breath down the back of his neck. “How the mighty have fallen.” Hunter’s spine stiffened at the taunting response to his 23
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thoughts. He sometimes probed others’ minds without invitation— and without apology—but very few had the ability to read him. He didn’t appreciate being telepathically reamed. “Get used to it, lover. I’ve been reading minds a lot longer than you have.” Centuries longer. To sensitive feline nostrils, the speaker smelled like grave rot and ancient agony. Hunter studied the mirror, seeing nothing but Sylver’s message and his own grim expression. The woman behind him, Countess Erzsébet Báthory, who’d approached him on the Steele Star and teleported down with him, cast no reflection. Vampires never did. But only the evil or insane ones stank. “How very ungallant. If I’d just lost my fortune, I’d be thinking nice things about the one who has offered me aid. I’m the only one who can help. I do hope you know that…lover.” This was becoming monotonous. Hunter turned to face his companion—a dark haired, pale skinned enchantress in a gossamer gown—who did look better than she smelled, but who had offered nothing yet beyond a sly suggestion they join forces to defeat a dire threat to the world. How had barely been hinted at. The why was a little uncertain, too. Vampires in general weren’t big on altruism. Hungry creatures, mercenary by nature, they made powerful allies if you could meet their price, but their services never came cheap, and this one knew he couldn’t pay her. With money. The global economy was in flux, and Hunter’s golden touch had deserted him, it seemed. Sinking sales, rising costs, bad luck… Add treachery, and you had a recipe for ruin. Few knew of his trouble yet—God knew he’d fought hard to forestall it—but like a line of dominoes going down, his corporate empire had collapsed. 24
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As of today, for the first time in his life, Hunter’s expenses exceeded his income. His pockets were virtually empty. “But not your pants, eh? You still have some…assets.” A hooded gaze slid over his body. “And I have information you need. I know who’s behind your recent bad luck, and he’s very bad indeed. I’m sure we can negotiate a mutually satisfying trade agreement. Your virility is famous, lover.” “But not available for barter, countess. You requested a private meeting with me, and I’m giving you one, but let’s get something straight. Whatever deal you have in mind, sex won’t be part of it. I’m not your lover.” “Yet.” Erzsébet grinned. Cat-like, so did Hunter. “Never. You’re a beautiful creature, but you’re not my type. No offense intended.” “None taken. Your preference for men is also famous. I’ve no quarrel with that. Should you wish to indulge such desires after our alliance, I shan’t stop you.” She fluttered her lashes. “Provided you allow me the same privilege. I well understand the appeal of one’s own gender.” Too well, perhaps. If the legends about her were correct, she had, during her human lifetime in the sixteenth century, tortured to death hundreds of serving girls in sadomasochistic orgies, then bathed in their blood to preserve her beauty. “Legends?” Anger flashed in her dark eyes. “Lies! Grotesque exaggerations of the truth fabricated by traitors who wished to discredit me for their own selfish aims. My accusers were far more interested in my wealth than they were my so-called crimes. I never bathed in anyone’s blood. How disgusting. Anyhow, I’ve since learned it works much better if you drink it.” She giggled at her joke. 25
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Cute. Hunter scented the taint of madness in her, a volatile temper. “Which you would be wise to not provoke. The truth is, the king of Poland owed me money he was disinclined to repay. So he had me charged with murder and witchcraft, then walled up in a tower of my own castle. Those who remained true to me were tortured, mutilated, then burned alive. And history calls me the monster. Hmph.” She gave a haughty sniff. “Yes, I took a firm hand with the serving staff, but they were my serfs. I could do with them as I pleased—as did most land barons of the day. It was our right, and we exercised it. I was no worse than the rest, and better than some.” Hmm… Possibly. Medieval serfs were considered property more than people. It wasn’t a good time to be born poor. “No time is, Hunter. But a lowly birth is not our curse. My family produced princes and kings. And your secret cat-clan dates back thousands of years, I’ve heard. An illustrious linage. The blood of emperors and ancient gods flows in your veins.” She leaned forward, slowly, her gaze fixed on his throat. He angled to the side, a half step beyond her reach. “I’d like to keep it in my veins, too, if you don’t mind.” “Suit yourself.” Erzsébet shrugged. “I’m more interested in its color than its nutritional value. Were you not a blueblood like myself, I couldn’t possibly marry you. Class hierarchy, you understand. I’m a product of my era and follow the old rules in such matters.” Hunter was glad one of them followed something. He could barely follow this conversation. Marry? What was she thinking? Erzsébet had the advantage, shamelessly invading his mind while blocking access to hers. All 26
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his forays in that direction met a mental brick wall. Hell, he might have to pull out the old battering ram, after all, just to break through her defenses. He wouldn’t enjoy it, but desperate times called for desperate measures. Hunter knew who’d caused his downfall—and why—but not the bastard’s location. To discover that, he’d dance with the devil if he had to. And being what she was, Erzsébet could no doubt point him in the right direction… Fuck, he wasn’t really thinking of seducing her, was he? Sylver would be furious. Hunter was none too pleased either. He knew when his brain was being dicked with. Her lips curled in a sardonic sliver of a smile. “It’s the vampiric allure. To feed ourselves, my kind are bisexual by necessity, if not natural inclination—and, as such, irresistible to all. Few can long withstand our power, though I’ll admit you’ve managed better than most. You have a strong mind yourself. What better way to join forces than marriage? You think love is a requirement for such a union?” With a flick of her fingers, she dismissed such a silly notion. “Consider it a business deal. We’d make a good match, Hunter. We both understand power and how to wield it. We were born to rule. In my day, I oversaw great estates, negotiated with the Ottoman Empire. I spoke four languages and have learned many others since. With me at your side you could defeat all foes and regain your fortune.” How did one reason with a crazy vamp? Hunter heaved an inward sigh. “An interesting offer, countess, but aren’t you forgetting one little thing?” Besides the fact he was gay, he meant, as that seemed not to faze her. “I’m already married.” “To a peasant werewolf? My people ruled the Carpathians 27
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while his crept through the mountains on all fours.” Her nose wrinkled with disdain. “Oh, I’d let you keep him as a pet if you wished. But that’s out of my hands. Your bad luck isn’t through with you yet—and since you know his name, I may as well use it. Having stolen your gold, Vlad now intends to steal your Sylver.” Erzsébet chuckled. She did enjoy her own jokes, didn’t she? “He wants a hostage to insure you will not challenge him again. But you will, of course, with my help.” Or more preferably without it. With supporters like Erzsébet Báthory, Hunter didn’t need enemies. “Think carefully before you refuse,” she warned. “It takes a vampire to fight a vampire, and in this fight, I’m your best ally. Vlad and I share similar roots. We were born in the same general region a mere century apart. I understand his medieval mindset better than anyone.” “You ought to since you seem to share it.” Hunter said what he thought—she’d read it in his mind regardless—but braced for a blast in case her temper exploded. “Even more, you’re his creature, aren’t you? According to legend, Prince Vlad is your master, the one who turned you vampire. Which makes your offer now a little suspect, if you’ll forgive me for mentioning it. Only a very stupid or very suicidal vamp rebels against her maker.” Then again, an insane one might try it, too. Her expression darkened. “I told you, the legends are lies.” “Not this one. It’s only hinted at in the human histories, but it’s listed as fact in the vampiric records. I’ve seen your society’s Who’s Who of the Undead. As the head of Earth Guardians, Inc., it was my business to read such documents. When I recruited a vampire into my service, I had to know their origins in order to know how far I could trust them. I hope you won’t take this the 28
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wrong way, countess, but I don’t think I can trust you.” Hunter met her scowl without blinking. “Your name appears under the listing on Prince Vlad III of Wallachia, also known as Vlad the Impaler—or more commonly by his surname, Dracula. I’ve heard that in his native tongue dracul can be translated as either dragon or devil. Since you’re so good with languages, which do you think it is?” “Both! As you’ll discover for yourself if you try to fight him alone. Believe me or not, but I hate Vlad as much as you do. In his lifetime he butchered tens of thousands. Even the worst slander about me mentions no more than several hundred deaths. Yet in Vlad’s country he’s regarded as a war hero for guarding his borders against the Ottomans. I did the same through peaceful negotiation”—she spat out the words—“and they call me the Monster of Hungary.” “Truly, there’s no justice in the world.” Hunter shook his head in sympathy. Erzsébet glowered. “Mock me at your peril, Catman. I’m the only hope you have. Your Earth Guardians are gone, aren’t they? Dismissed. I read it in your mind. You closed the organization today because you can no longer afford to fund it. Who else do you think will help you now? Your peasant wolf? He’s gone, too. Vlad himself went to trap that prize—with his lustful self as the bait. He has a special fondness for blonds.” “Bully for Vlad.” Hunter wasn’t worried. “And good luck to him. Sylver’s no easy target.” “And whoever Vlad goes after, he gets.” Erzsébet sounded very sure of that. Hunter still wasn’t worried. “Not tonight he won’t. Sylver’s utterly faithful to me. That’s the one thing you can be certain of 29
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with wolves—peasant or not—they never cheat.” “Nothing in this world is certain—except Vlad’s unholy powers of seduction.” A sneer exposed the tips of pearly white fangs. “No doubt he’s impaling your lowborn lover even as we speak.” “Then I’d better hurry if I want to rescue him, hadn’t I?” “And hurry straight to your doom. Fool! Your wolf is Vlad’s prisoner by now, and Vlad will use him against you if you try to save him. For your own safety you must forget Sylver Starr. He’s already lost to you.” “I’ve often wished I could lose him. But somehow he always finds his way home again.” Hunter chuckled while Erzsébet looked ready to snort steam. “Seriously, he’s quite capable of taking care of himself. I was referring to the prince. If he’s targeted Sylver, Vlad is the one in trouble. But I did say if I wanted to rescue him, which I don’t. I just wanted to know where he is. Now I do. Thank you, countess, you’ve been most helpful—” A hand struck out, curled like a claw, fingers tipped with blood red talons. Hunter caught it in midair a few inches from his face. And displayed gallant self-restraint, he thought, in not snapping it off at the wrist. Vampires far outclass normal humans in strength. But pound for pound, so do cats, as anyone who’s ever seen one leap from the floor to the top of a refrigerator can testify. Expand that natural feline force into a six-foot-two muscular frame, and you have a rock crusher. Hunter squeezed just hard enough to drive that point home. Erzsébet gave up the battle. She might have been mad, but she wasn’t stupid. Gently, Hunter released her. “I wasn’t mocking you before, countess. I pity you. Those 30
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lying legends also say you suffered from severe seizures, and that’s where the truth may hide. I suspect you were born with a form of epilepsy that manifested in sudden violent rage. You couldn’t control yourself. But you were also born into a brutal era and what was very much a man’s world. Many women got a far worse deal than they deserved. Many people of both sexes were victimized and oppressed.” “All will be victims if Vlad Dracula gains control of the world.” Erzsébet’s voice lowered to an icy whisper. The voice of doom. “You think I’m mad? Vlad sees himself as a savior on a mission to purge humanity of its ills, to rid the world of poverty, crime, and disease. And he will, given the chance. By herding together all the sick and the poor and killing them in mass executions. He’s very good at that, you know. During his reign of Wallachia, Prince Vlad was notorious for the forests he planted—made from thousands of stakes, each one with a body impaled upon it. Men, women, young and old, rich and poor alike.” She gave a hollow laugh. “Vlad rules with an iron fist, but his tyranny is quite democratic. He penalizes all equally with no regard for rank or circumstance, and the smallest mistake is punished as savagely as a major offense. He’s the worst kind of despot. A self-righteous one.” Hunter stared at her a long moment, pondering a paradox. For some reason she didn’t smell that bad anymore. Had Erzsébet changed, or just his perception of her? If odors could be assigned colors, with muddy black the worst and clean white the sweetest, Erzsébet smelled… Gray? Neither evil nor good but a blend of both, like most creatures, he supposed. Hell, even Vlad might have a few favorable features buried somewhere—but one would need a bulldozer to unearth them. 31
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“You really do want to see him stopped, don’t you?” he said. “Yes. Surprised?” Irony tinged her tone. “I’m not so crazy I’d rather see the whole world ruined instead. With Vlad in charge, no one will be safe. Even the vampire community fears him. His new reign of terror will make the Holocaust look like a garden party. He must be stopped before it begins. Afterward will be too late. There will be nothing left worth saving.” Hunter knew she was right. Dead right. That’s why he intended to destroy Vlad Dracula once and for all. Tonight. Erzsébet’s brows rose a fraction in question. “How?” That she had to ask spoke volumes in one word. She couldn’t read the answer in his mind because Hunter had no answer yet. A sneak attack? Open combat? The man in him preferred the latter; the cat counseled stealth. Creep up on the quarry, then pounce at the last instant. But with Vlad’s psychic sensors, it would be difficult to take him unawares. And if Hunter missed his first chance, he might not get another… He shrugged off the worry. “I’m not sure, but I figure I’ll decide on something once I sight him. You’d better stay here, countess. Just in case. If Vlad senses you near me, he’ll make your undead existence a living hell.” “It already is,” she murmured. Deep in his plotting, Hunter scarcely heard her. He fingered a small shiny rectangle clipped to his belt. A transistorized teleporter, top-secret, created by EG’s tech team. The Earth Guardians might be kaput, but not the equipment they’d used. With a mere thought, holding the image of a destination in his mind, the device would transport him anywhere he wished to go. The Red Banana? That was where Sylver must be. And, according to Erzsébet, 32
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wherever he found Sylver, that’s where he’d also find history’s most dangerous and demonic vampire—a creature famous for his fatally seductive force. It was a good thing werewolves were equally famous for fidelity. Sylver would be the absolute last person to fall prey to such force. Wasn’t he?
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CHAPTER 3 Catch a falling Starr… The legendary Moulin Rouge of Paris sports a big windmill on its roof. The front of Philly’s Red Banana features a—what else— giant neon banana. So, okay, it looks more like a giant dick, but that’s the whole point. When they named the club the Red Banana, you didn’t think they were referring to a tropical fruit, did you? Well, not unless we count Velveeta Cucaracha, a tall, tan queen from Key West, who impersonates Carmen Miranda. Among the revue’s other performers are Kandy Korn, Cherry Jubilee, and Hotdog Hannah. Makes you hungry, doesn’t it? “Oh. My. God.” Cindy skids to a halt and latches on to the doorframe with a white-knuckled grip as we enter the club. 34
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Chuckling, I pry her fingers loose and guide her forward into a ballroom-sized space of elegance gone haywire—velvet upholstery, satin drapes, garish gilt trim, and gleaming crystal. A fancy carved wood bar fills one end of the crowded room; a raised stage and small orchestra pit dominate the other. In between, sit tables and chairs occupied by rowdy patrons, with a row of plush private booths snuggled up against the dimly lit back wall. That’s what they’re there for, too. Snuggling. And cozier endeavors. Beneath the savory smells of French and Italian cuisine—a mouthwatering montage of aromas—I detect the equally spicy scent of clandestine sex. My cock twitches in response. I’ve mentioned I’m horny, right? Still, there’s no rush. The night is young yet. The big clock over the bar reads nine-thirty, and the stage stands empty, as the revue doesn’t start till ten, but the band in the pit is playing a Dixieland jazz tune to heat things up. Laughter and loud talk, the clink of glasses and clatter of dishes mix with the music. It’s not easy, really, to describe the Red Banana. Call it a combination dinner theater, nightclub, and popular pick-up palace for the area’s large gay population. “So what do you think?” I ask my wide-eyed companion. “This looks like a nineteenth century French cathouse on acid.” By God, I think she’s nailed it. “Sylver!” a shrill cry rings out. “Brace yourself,” I warn Cindy. A second later I’m knocked backward by a flying tackle hug from a mile-high copper skinned apparition in a ruffled brassiere, sarong skirt, and turban-style headdress decorated with kumquats, limes, and feathers. 35
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Meet Velveeta Cucaracha, six-eight in her stocking feet—with the turban, over seven. She used to be a he, Vincent Carr, a pro basketball player, before surrendering to her true calling. “Holy shit,” Cindy mutters. For a nice lass, she swears rather a lot, doesn’t she? With a broad smile, Velveeta waves an arm in the air, beckoning the troops, her brass bangle bracelets tinkling like chimes. “Hey, girls, look what the cat dragged in!” Wham… That fast we’re mobbed by the Folies Bergère. Plump, sassy Kandy Korn, who sings bump and grind Sophie Tucker songs to raucous applause. Cherry Jubilee, dressed as Scarlett O’Hara. Southern comfort drips from her drawl. And Hotdog Hannah in black leather corset and stiletto heeled boots. She does a dominatrix act, selecting eager victims from members of the audience. Gee, it’s just like old home week. I’m jostled and squeezed, kissed and hugged, laughed and cried over. The bandleader, Buddy Knickerbocker, pokes his head out of the pit, sees me, and the band breaks into a rousing rendition of “The Lady In Red.” My signature song. They remembered. Sniffle. A salty mist blurs my vision. Through the haze, I see someone inching toward the exit. Whoa. I grab Cindy by the wrist and reel her back. Kandy eyes her up and down. “Who’s this supposed to be?” “Cinderella,” I answer. “She needs a fairy godmother.” “She needs somethin’,” Cherry drawls. “One hardly knows where to begin.” 36
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“Honey, you’re doing it all wrong,” Hannah chides Cindy. “You gotta put some pizzazz into it. Stand up straight, throw your chest out—and find a decent dress, for chrissake. No one will ever believe you’re a woman in that sorry-ass sack.” “Sylver…” Cindy shoots me an aggrieved and dangerous look. It’s obvious to both of us my friends think she’s another drag queen. And not a very adept one. Cough. I clear my throat. “She is a woman. She just needs a few lessons in how to dress and act like one.” And who better to teach her than those who had to learn the same things themselves? People whose careers depend upon the fine art of feminine glamour, and who have made an in-depth professional study of the subject. “Well, why didn’t you say so?” Velveeta rolls her eyes. Hands on hips, she struts a slow circle around Cindy, viewing her from all angles. “Could be worse,” she finally decides. “We can handle this. Right, girls?” “Sure. I love a challenge.” Kandy flutters inch-long false lashes and beams Cindy an impish grin. “Look at it this way, Cinderella, if you got real tits without having to take hormones, you’re already a step ahead of the game. Everything else we can fix.” “Oh, shit—” Cindy bolts for the door. Not fast enough. Giggling and smirking, her four fairy godmothers corral her and lead her toward the dressing rooms hidden beyond the stage. “Relax, sugah, you’re safe with us,” Cherry comforts her. “We’re gonna give you a brand new look. You’ll love it.” “Nothing too campy,” I call after them. “Keep it tasteful, okay?” 37
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“Sylver, chill,” Velveeta Cucaracha calls back. “We know what we’re doing.” As if in answer, a bass-baritone chuckle rumbles from behind me. “So true. If you want a job done right, go to the experts, eh?” “Count Poopsie!” I spin about to meet the merry gaze of a stocky man in a salt-and-pepper Van Dyke beard, pearl gray tux and ruffled shirt. The club’s owner, Count Claudio Barilla— Poopsie to his friends—son of an Italian aristocrat and a gypsy fortune-teller from France. “Why didn’t you tell me you were coming? Never mind, you’re here now, and that’s all that matters. You look ravishing!” he declares all in one breath, then gives me a resounding kiss on each cheek, continental style. Well, I do look good. I’m wearing a ruby red dress with a fitted bodice and full skirt puffed out by frilly white petticoats. Black stockings and my dance shoes complete the ensemble. It’s one of my old costumes. I’m hoping to join the revue this evening, for nostalgia if nothing else. The highlight of the Red Banana’s show is the same dance the Moulin Rouge is famous for. Of course, we put our own special spin on it here. I strike a theatrical pose, embellished by my dazzling stage smile. “Thanks, Poopsie. Got room for me in tonight’s cancan?” “Sylver, for you there is always room. Just say the word, and I’ll put your name back on the marquee. Your old job is yours whenever you want it, you know that.” He crushes me against his chest in a rib-cracking bear hug. Oof… “Ah, my friend, how we have missed you!” he booms. “Likewise,” I strain out, struggling for oxygen in his burly 38
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embrace. The guy’s so demonstrative. You have no idea how strong he is. And I had no idea till I pushed open the door tonight just how much I have missed this club—its sights, its sounds, its smells. Its people. There aren’t many places where a gay cross-dresser of arcane origins can really feel at home. Here is one of them. Here I’m accepted, appreciated, applauded. “But of course. We are your friends. We understand you.” Claudio breaks the hug. I suck in a big gulp of air. Whew, it’s great to be able to breathe again. He grips my shoulders and steps back, holding me at arm’s length, staring into my eyes. And, yes, he just read my mind. Doesn’t everyone? But, no, he’s not a telepathic shifter. Not exactly. Before he opened the Red Banana, Claudio was a stage magician and hypnotist, except not all his tricks were done with mirrors. He has extraordinary psychic ability, inherited from his Romany mother, and he knows there’s more to the world than meets the average eye. In the old days in Europe, some Romany caravans used trained bears in their traveling shows. However, not all those bears wore fur all the time. Unbeknownst to the crowds who tossed coins to see them perform, some were, in reality, shape-shifters. Claudio’s mother was descended from such a clan, but a genetically diluted one where the power to change form faded a little with each generation. Claudio inherited only a portion of it. Physically, he’s built like a bear and wields the animal’s great strength, but he can’t morph into one. A curious enigma, Count Claudio Barilla. Not quite human, not 39
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quite shifter, he walks a shadowy line between the two camps. “So”—he leans in and lowers his voice—“shall you tell me what troubles you, or must I dig it out of your skull? I know you are here for more than the cancan, eh?” I force a laugh. “It’s that obvious, huh?” “Only to me, my friend. I see the worry you hide behind a smile. I smell your frustration. And I notice Hunter is not with you tonight.” He leaves the comment hanging, like a worm on the end of a hook, waiting for me to take the bait. Should I bite? I do appreciate him fishing for answers when it would be easier for him to suck them out telepathically. He’s got a mind like a Hoover. The answers, however, aren’t easy at all. Hunter and I fight like cats and dogs—big surprise—but I love him regardless. Always have, always will, no doubt about it. I’m just not sure anymore that love is enough. “Poopsie, for the past few weeks, Hunter hasn’t shown much interest in being with me any night. If you want the truth, I’m worried we’re headed for a…parting of the ways,” I say, amazed I got the answer out without choking on it. “Impossible.” Bushy brows pull together in a frown. “You’re life-mated.” “Tell that to Hunter. Sometimes I think he’s mated to his business more than to me.” Though it’s not really his business affairs that bother me so much. Just affairs in general. “I also think he’s cheating on me.” “Again? Merde,” Claudio mutters. Raised in Europe, he speaks several languages, but for some obscure reason, swears exclusively in French. “You’re sure?” “With Hunter you can never be sure of anything, but he’s been 40
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gone an awful lot lately—and barely there when he is home.” “How so?” How not? “Silent, secretive…sullen and distracted. When I ask what’s wrong, he mumbles ‘nothing,’ then tells me to shut up and quit bugging him. His appetite’s been off, too, and we’re not talking food,” I say meaningfully. “Hunter?” Claudio’s jaw drops. “Could he be ill? No, of course not, full-blood shifters are immune to most disease,” he answers himself. “There’s still the possibility of hairballs, I suppose…” He strokes his beard, thinking. “Perhaps a financial deal went sour? He’s depressed over money?” Fat chance. The hairball theory conjures up some fun images, though. One could only hope. I shake my head. “Money matters never bother Hunter. Everything he touches turns to gold. He attracts wealth like a magnet.” “And spends it with equal aplomb. Easy come, easy go, eh? The world market is unstable, my friend, and no one is immune to bad luck. In my life, I’ve made and lost several fortunes already, so I know how quickly the tables can turn. And if Hunter’s income is great, so are his expenses. All those public charities he supports…and his private endeavors? What does it cost him to run Earth Guardians, Inc.?” “A lot, but he can afford it. Hunter has investments all over. Even if some sink, the others will keep him afloat.” Right? A sudden chill of uncertainty stirs the hairs on my arms. Or maybe someone just turned up the air-conditioning… Claudio’s barrel chest heaves with a sigh. “No doubt you’re 41
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correct. I was merely seeking a simple explanation for his behavior.” “There is a simple explanation. He’s a tomcat. And a hotshot celebrity on top of it. People throw themselves at him, and he doesn’t have it in him to refuse.” “Ah, but he tries, Sylver. You and I both know the inbred animal impulses are difficult to override, yet out of many choices, you are the man he married. For one of his breed to even attempt such a commitment says much, yes?” I’m not sure who Claudio is trying to convince, me or himself. He’s known Hunter and me longer than we’ve known each other. Claudio’s the one who brought us together—right here in this club, five years ago tonight. Yeah, it’s the anniversary of Hunter’s and my first meeting. Ironic, huh? Sentimental idiot that I am, that’s why I suggested the damn trip here in the first place—the suggestion that started last night’s argument. What was I thinking, that a joint return to the scene of the crime would stimulate his appetite, so to speak? Nope, I was hoping the argument itself would. But we know how that worked out, don’t we? All of which brings me to what I’m thinking now. “You’re not!” Claudio stares in shock. “You can’t. Your breed isn’t wired that way. Such behavior is beyond your ability.” Merde. “Poopsie, are you reading my mind?” “No, your expression. I know that look in your eye, my friend, and it always means trouble. What are you planning, to fight fire with fire? You’re going to get your ass burnt.” “If I’m lucky,” I quip. Sexual burn is what I’m after, and the hotter the better. “Call it an experiment. It may not work, but I 42
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figure if I do manage to override my nature, Hunter should be able to override his. Then if he doesn’t, I’ll know for sure it’s because he won’t, not because he can’t. And I’ll have a godawful decision to make.” “Whether to leave him or not?” “Hell, no. I left him once before, and it was an utter flop, remember? Wolves are bound to their lovers for life. Divorce isn’t an option for us—only death. That’s a part of my heritage I’ll never be able to circumvent. I meant I’ll have to decide who to kill. Hunter or myself?” Claudio makes a strangling noise in his throat. “You’ll forgive me, I hope, if I don’t wish you luck with either endeavor. I need a drink,” he grumbles. Me, too. And I’ve just spotted the one I want, a long draught of sizzle and sin seated at the end of the bar. The guy’s not as handsome as Hunter—no one is—but he draws your eye and holds it. Dark hair, solid build, and a way sexy Count Dracula style cape slung back off his shoulders. I adore a dramatic fashion flair. “Excuse me, Poops, science calls.” Stepping past him, I move closer to my experiment. But not too close—yet. I stop when I reach the open strip of floor that separates the bar from the dining area. From here I’m standing about twelve feet away, and I have a clear profile view. I catch a whiff of his scent. Interesting. Very. Another scent tickles my nostrils—abrupt and unexpected, yet discreet. A sudden, subtle tension permeates the air. I ignore it. I have to. The Red Banana caters mainly to a human crowd, but Claudio being who he is, the club also attracts a few patrons from the 43
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shadow side of society. Shifters, feys, vampires… Now that I know what I’m looking at, my thirst for him grows. An evil appetite awakens, passed down to me from my ancestors. My inner beast wants to ravage him, devour him, engage him in carnal combat. Which is pretty much what the man in me wanted to do, too. It’ll just be a juicier event now. Tougher, rougher, laden with blood and lust—an exciting combo to my kind. A wicked, sharp thrill knifes deep into my gut. My dick stiffens and points the way into battle, like a spear. Out of the corner of my eye, I see Claudio skirting the edge of the room, approaching the opposite end of the bar. He was right, how quickly the tables can turn. The game has changed, but I still intend to play. I don’t have a choice, do I? I’m enthralled by that sexy cape and the figure in it. He angles toward me, and our eyes meet—staring—two predators sizing each other up. Do we like what we see? I do. I have his full attention. It’s a heady, intense moment. Intoxicating. Pregnant with raunchy possibilities. I see hunger in his gaze. I’m not surprised. We’re playing a game I know well. I lick my lips, provocatively, to show him I’m hungry, too. His eyes half close, and he smiles. Lazy and lascivious. Devil on the make. Ooooh, baby… This is getting good. Or bad, which is even better. There’s something very compelling about him. Something dark, sinister. Demonic? Definitely dangerous. I like that in a lover. Yeah, I’m a little twisted. So? I may dress like a girl, but if you think that makes me sugar and spice or anything nice, think again. 44
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On four feet I possess savage strength and monstrous fangs, and I know how to use them. In human form, I look smaller and weaker, but I’m not. I’m a red-blooded, hot-to-trot werewolf straight out of your kinkiest nightmares. A walk with me is a walk on the wild side, babe. ::A walk with you is a fast trip to the funny farm. You’re fuckin’ nuts,:: a telepathic voice growls in my head. Guess who? ::Well, it ain’t Wendell Willkie, that’s for sure. Surprised to see me?:: No, because I smelled him when he sneaked into the club a minute ago. He’s been hiding under a barstool. It would be nice to think he’s stalking me, but I know what he’s really after because I smelled that, too. EG agents are always on call. In the war against evil, shit happens fast. One learns to shift gears at the drop of a hat—or flap of a cape. I’ve figured out quite a lot in the past few moments. Except for one thing. Who the hell is Wendell Willkie? ::Forget it. A better question is what the hell kind of game did you think you were playing?:: Hunter demands. You guessed it was him, right? He’s in cat form, by the way. ::And you’re in deep shit, whitey.:: We all are. I was distracting his quarry for him. But he’s ruined it, the idiot, by making contact with me. The quarry has been probing my mind, so he must realize we’re on to him now. ::Not yet. But I will be on him in a second—like flies on garbage. You were fantasizing about fucking him is what you were doing.:: Of course. That was the distraction. 45
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It worked, too. ::So I noticed. You got hard just thinking about him!:: Well, excuse me for trying to help trap an enemy. What he’s up to—why we want to trap him—I don’t know, but it doesn’t much matter. I recognized our quarry by his scent and know enough about the bastard to lacerate him on general principle. To hold his attention, I had to make my interest in him look real, didn’t I? ::Not that real. As soon as I kick his ass, I’m going to kick yours, you mangy cheat.:: Cheat? Hah. Look who’s talking. Go ahead, everyone else is. Hunter’s just morphed into man form—minus his clothes, which never go with one when shapeshifting. I do believe anger has made him incautious. Not that naked bodies are anything new at the Red Banana, but rarely does one see a body like Hunter’s anywhere. A round of applause rings out as he lunges forward to tackle Mr. Tall-Dark-and-Demonic. At the same instant, I hear a bear-like snarl. Claudio races the length of the bar, heading straight for the same target. Hunter must have telepathically contacted him before he did me and arranged for a joint attack. I can hardly bare to watch. Crash! Hunter and Claudio collide with each other and land on the floor in a tangle of limbs. I knew that would happen. The second they hit, their target disappeared in a puff of smoke between them. Gray tendrils of sulfurous fumes snake toward the ceiling. A breathless hush falls over the club. As the enraptured crowd stares, the smoke reforms into a… 46
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Flying iguana? How innovative. I was expecting a vampire bat. Its eyes glow blood red. Lizard lips curl in an almost human sneer, displaying needle sharp fangs. The thing hovers above me, out of reach, leathery wings fanning the air. Malicious laughter sounds in my mind. ::Too bad, werewolf. I liked your heat. If you’d pleased me, I wouldn’t have hurt you. Much. I need an insurance policy, and you’d have made a good one. Now I’ll have to find another.:: On that cryptic note, he vanishes. Poof! The audience goes wild—cheering, clapping, stamping feet. Claudio’s reputation as a stage magician is well known to the club’s patrons. He still performs his old act here sometimes. They think all this was just one of his grandiose tricks. Clever old bear that he is, the count doesn’t dissuade them. “Thank you, thank you!” Wearing a cavalier smile that disguises much, he hauls upright, dusts himself off, and bows to the dinner crowd. “I’m glad you enjoyed our surprise show. At the Red Banana you never know what you’ll find, eh? Here we specialize in the unique, the fantastic, the—” “Oh, wow, check out the nude dude!” someone yells from the center of the room. “That’s Hunter Steele, isn’t it?” “No, Wendell Willkie,” I shout, quick on the draw. But it doesn’t stop the sudden stampede forward. Shit. This happens wherever Hunter goes. Unless he slips into a place incognito and stays undercover, he always gets mobbed. The price of fame. He’s an outspoken advocate of gay rights, animal rights, and green living, but he puts his money where his mouth is, and is widely praised for his charity work. Really, he’s very easy to 47
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admire. Until you get to know him. And right now, of course, he’s anything but undercover, not even a fig leaf to hide behind. “Fuck,” he curses and dives over the bar, vanishing from view for a second. A moment later, I see a black cat streaking toward the exit, but everyone else seems too busy celebrity hunting to notice it. Leaving Claudio to deal with the mob—it is his club, after all—I follow the furball. Hunter has a lot of explaining to do. In his present state, he’ll also need me to open the door for him. We reach it at almost the same time and escape out onto the sidewalk. Then I lead the way across the street to where I parked my little red sports coupe. Once we’re safe inside, hidden in the shadows of the backseat, he quickly returns to human form but retains a feral edge. Hot, hard, naked man, bristling with anger. He’s not the only one. My temper’s been simmering for days. And this is a compact car, not much space between us back here… Can anyone guess where this is leading? His nostrils flare as he leans close, amber eyes glowing like embers in the dark, his breath like steam on my face. “What I needed was for you to be home tonight. You picked a hell of a time to disappear on me.” “Disappear, my ass. I left you a note. Illustrated, no less.” “Yeah, very funny.” “I thought it was pretty artistic myself.” I smirk. Hunter doesn’t. “Let’s not forget who disappeared first,” I add. “I had business to attend to.” He leans closer, cramming me 48
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into a corner of the seat. “Do you have any idea what I’ve been up against?” Duh. “How could I, when you never tell me a goddamned thing?” His gaze goes sullen. “I didn’t want to worry you.” “Worry?” My smirk turns to a snarl. “I thought you were cheating on me!” “So you were going to return the favor tonight?” Do I detect a note of jealousy? Good. “I might have been considering it. If I was, you drove me to it, pussycat. Payback’s a bitch, ain’t it?” “Since when do two wrongs make a right?” A low growl rumbles in his throat. I feel its vibration as much as hear it. We’re almost in each other’s laps, squashed together chest to chest and nose to nose. I feel his body heat, smell the smoky tang of rage. Or is that lust? With us it’s difficult to separate the two. As though they have a mind of their own, my hands clutch his ribcage. “Then you confess you have been cheating on me again?” “No.” His fingers bite into my shoulders. “I’ve been fighting a financial conspiracy—and losing. I had to disband the Earth Guardians today, shut down the whole friggin’ force because the grand corporation that paid for it went belly-up. All I have left is the Steele Star, and it may be hitting the auction block soon. I’m broke.” “Oh?” I blink. “Is that all?” If I sound sarcastic, it’s only because I am. He’s gotta be kidding. Hunter glares. “Isn’t that enough?” 49
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He’s serious. Damn. I guess this means I’m out of a job, huh? It’s a good thing I can get my old one back. God knows I’ll need it as it appears I suddenly have a spouse to support. What a switch. And, no, I’m not without sympathy for him. Just trying to look on the bright side. We both know how I’ve wanted to quit the Earth Guardians. “I’m glad you’re taking it so well,” Hunter grits out through clenched teeth, spying on my mental musings. He’s so sexy in the throes of fury. And nosy. “I hate to burst your bubble, whitey, but there’s also a megalomaniac vampire poised to take over the world.” “The guy in the Dracula cape?” Who happens to be Dracula— the original. “Hey, pussycat, it’s not my fault you let him escape. I did everything I could to help catch him.” “Everything except letting me know you realized who he is.” “Hell, if I’d let you know, it would have alerted him, too. He was probing my mind. I had to concentrate on distracting him, and keep all other thoughts out of my head.” Didn’t I already explain this back at the club? Whatever. I’ll admit I didn’t recognize Vlad at first, but I knew him the second I smelled him. His odor is ingrained in my genes. A sensory, racial memory. An inherited hatred. I’d have attacked him on my own if Hunter hadn’t shown up when he did. Prince Vlad Dracula is an ancient enemy of my clan. Generations ago in the Carpathian Mountains, my ancestors fought him and almost destroyed him. I refuse to be intimidated by him now. Vampires may have fangs, but so do werewolves. And ours are bigger. “Yeah, but this vampire’s got his fangs buried deep in the 50
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world’s fuel lines. I discovered his plot and tried to defuse it by hitting him in the bank account. He hit back and cleaned me out instead.” Un-fucking-believable. In a business war, I’d have bet every penny I have that Hunter would’ve won. “I did bet everything. That’s how I lost it. He outbid, undercut, and sabotaged me at every turn. Vlad had just a little more capital to work with than I did.” And far fewer scruples, I imagine. “You got that right. He’s had centuries to amass a huge fortune, and for the last several decades has put all his money into oil—all over the globe.” Figures. Oil is a demonic investment from an ecological standpoint. Stupid, too, since it’s a finite substance that will run out someday, and it’s not like there aren’t alternatives. Hunter’s house in Massachusetts runs on solar power. So does the custom-built car we’re sitting in. If you ask me, we all should have switched to smarter, cleaner energy sources years ago. But no one did ask me. Some regions might manage without it, but too much of the world is still way too dependent on fossil fuels—for transportation, commercial shipping, and to generate electrical power. Without it, our communications network could collapse. Cities would go black, and people would go hungry because when the stores ran out of food there’d be no ready way to bring in fresh supplies. Just for openers. Thus, at this point in time, whoever controls the Earth’s oil could conceivably control the Earth. “Exactly. Which is where Vlad plans to start. With a financial takeover of the fuel industry. He intends to corner the market—and 51
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everything else with it.” “Create a worldwide energy crisis? What then?” “He’s already planted some of his mind-controlled minions in government positions here and abroad. They’ve been lurking behind the scenes so far. Once panic sets in, they’ll step forward to ‘save the world’—with Vlad behind them, pulling their strings,” Hunter says, tightlipped and seething. I feel the touch of his consciousness inside mine. But that’s not where I want his touch. More potent is the physical feel of him. Warm flesh under my palms, hot breath on my face… If I lean forward an inch, I could kiss him. “The whole planet is in danger, and you’re thinking of sex?” he growls. “Yeah. Bad me.” I flash him a wolfish grin. “It couldn’t possibly have anything to do with the fact you’re naked, could it?” And it seems like years since we’ve made love. “Only a few weeks,” he corrects. But he’s weakening, I see it in his eyes. “That long?” I stroke my hands down his bare back, and his growl becomes a groan. “Too long,” he rasps out. I’m glad we agree on something. “So…what do you want to do about it?” I ask, my voice going husky. He groans again. “Nothing. There isn’t time. We have to find Vlad and stop him before he strikes.” “Bullshit. The kind of seeds he’s planted won’t sprout overnight. You don’t think he’s going to take over anything in the next five minutes, do you?” I punctuate the question by grazing my lips over Hunter’s. 52
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“Um…probably not,” he concedes on a hoarse breath. “Good, then we have time for a quickie before we go after him.” “You’re a real pain in the ass,” Hunter grumbles, but doesn’t resist when I push him backward onto the seat and straddle his thighs. “There’s not enough room back here.” “Bitch, bitch, bitch. So we’re jammed together like sardines. This is a problem?” “It is if you want to fuck. I’m too cramped to move. And your skirts are in the way.” “Ah, but that’s the beauty of skirts. You just have to lift them to provide easy access to the fun stuff.” I demonstrate by hiking my petticoats to reveal I’m wearing nothing beneath but black stockings and red garters. My erect cock juts forward like the bowsprit of a sailing ship. Anchors away! “Sylver, for godssake, this is a public street. Anyone could walk by and look in the windows.” “In that case, we’d better give ’em a good show, hadn’t we?” What can I say, I’m an exhibitionist. It’s why I belong on the stage. “You belong in a cage, you pervert.” “Or purr-vert? Takes one to know one, pussycat. Keep it up, flattery will get you everywhere.” Growling, I fall on Hunter like a hungry wolf—which I am, even if outwardly I’m in cancan-clad human form. When desire calls, my inner beast answers. Animal instinct rules the night. Rowrrr… If I could, I’d start at his hairline and eat my way down to his toenails. But he’s right, there’s not much space to maneuver in here. 53
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Then again, how much space do we need? It occurs to me we’re in a perfect position right now to slick leg it. I bunch my skirts around my waist and grind our groins together—skin to skin, man to man—rub my dick against Hunter’s. Damn, that feels good. With a guttural moan, he surrenders to rising fever, and that feels even better. He digs a hand between us, fists both rods in one firm grip, and squeezes. Lightning crackles. The windows steam. If we could bottle him, it would solve the world’s energy woes. Talk about generating electricity. I comb fingers through his silky black hair and attack his lips—kissing, nipping, sucking—ravenous for the taste of him. A little salty, a little sweet, all red-hot spicy…mmm… While Hunter pumps our cocks, I tongue-fuck his mouth. I’d rather fuck his ass, but I’ll take what I can get. Considering the close quarters—or maybe because of them—we’re doing pretty damn good, I think. “Better than I expected,” he pants out, dragging his lips off mine. Luminous with lust, his eyes blaze up at me. “If you slide forward a little, I’ll bet I could fuck your ass.” “Terrific. We’ll try that next. But if you stop the hand action now, I’ll rip your balls out by the roots.” My own balls burn with anticipation. A volcanic pressure fills me. I’m almost ready to erupt— Tap, tap. Someone raps on the windshield. Do they have a death wish? “Shit,” Hunter and I curse in unison. I drop my skirts, covering his lower half and mine, as the driver’s side door opens. A feminine figure in a white gown slides onto the front seat, then swivels around to stare. I stare back, 54
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seeing dark hair, dark eyes, a flawless ivory complexion, and full red lips. Who is this, Snow White? “No, just a deaf vamp.” Hunter scowls at her. “Erzsébet, didn’t you hear me back at the house? I thought I told you to wait there— for your own safety. I’m not used to having my instructions ignored.” “Yes he is. I ignore them all the time,” I tell her, and am rewarded with a smile, fanged but gracious, the sort of smile a queen might give a humble peasant who’s pleased her. Except I’m the queen. She’s a countess. The Blood Countess, history has labeled her, the Monster of Hungary. I recognize her now from old portraits I’ve seen. The ruins of her castle still stand in the Carpathian Mountains not far from where werewolves once roamed. My clan never had any direct dealings with her, but we know her story. Along with other legends of our ancestral territory, I grew up hearing the grim tale of Erzsébet Báthory. It always raised my hackles, too. Her accusers charged her with witchcraft and murder, but never allowed her to appear at her own trial, and all the testimonies against her were either hearsay or extracted under torture. It’s my guess she was railroaded, more victim than villain, just another casualty of the witch-hunts that plagued Europe for hundreds of years. My clan lost many to those hunts, too, so I sympathize. “Köszönöm,” she thanks me in whispered Hungarian. “We monsters have to stick together,” I answer in the same language. At least, I hope that’s what I said. My ancestors spoke Hungarian and Romanian. Me, I speak enough of the old tongues to often make a fool of myself in the attempt. But we understand each other, Erzsébet and I. Our minds touch, and I glimpse the 55
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shadow of a once human soul, tired and tragic. Damn, I’m afraid she does have a death wish. ::Why not?:: she asks. A rhetorical question, and silent. ::My children, my friends, all those that I loved are centuries gone from me, resting peacefully in their graves. Should I not wish to follow? It’s extremely tedious this undead unending existence. And I have Vlad to thank for it, the imperious old dragon. He’s the real monster.:: And she hates him, both for turning her vampire and just being his sweet tyrannical self. But as he’s her master, she hasn’t the power to destroy him on her own. That, I see, is why she contacted Hunter today. I see a lot in mere seconds. Thoughts travel faster than light speed, and Erzsébet is surprisingly open with me. Hunter glances from my expression to hers. “You let him read your mind? You wouldn’t let me read it.” His frown deepens. I shoot him a smug grin. “Maybe she thinks I’m nicer than you. I’m sympathetic. You pissed her off. She doesn’t like arrogant males.” “She liked me enough to propose marriage.” He returns my smirk. The man loves to live dangerously. “Only as a political alliance. That’s how they worked things in her day.” I shove my nose in his face. “She told me all about your meeting. It’s lucky for you that you refused her proposal. I’d have had to dismember you otherwise.” “And gotten your ass whipped for trying.” His lips curl in a snarl. Erzsébet heaves an aggravated sigh and levels a stern stare at him. “A temporary mind-link was the quickest way to enlighten 56
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your wolf. If he is to help you defeat Vlad, Sylver needs to know all we discussed. I’ve just spared you a long, difficult explanation.” She waves the matter aside with a fisted hand, then opens her fingers to display a small metal box balanced on her palm. “I also rescued your teleporter for you.” Her gaze slants to mine. “Vampires don’t need such toys. We can turn to smoke and travel the winds almost as fast as this device works. I trailed Hunter from the house and arrived here in time to see him shift and creep into the club. He left his clothes in the alley behind the building. I found an old drunk pawing them, poor peasant. I let him keep the clothes, for his own were rags, but he wouldn’t have known what to do with this.” “Thanks,” Hunter mumbles, chagrinned, as she drops the teleporter into his hand. “I thought you’d approve.” She chuckles. “I’ve heard much about your philanthropic donations. It’s said you’d give the shirt off your back if needed. Now you have.” And I suddenly feel sick, reminded of all the charities Hunter has funded. Food banks, schools, medical clinics, children’s homes, animal shelters… What will happen to those organizations without his financial support? For myself, I don’t care about his corporate collapse. I’ve been poor before so I know we’ll manage. I’ve often thought we might be happier with a simpler life. It’s always been Hunter I loved, not his money. But now I realize how badly the loss of his fortune will impact needy people the world over. “It won’t matter if Vlad wins. They’ll all be dead,” Erzsébet predicts in a voice like dry ice. “Those who cannot provide for themselves will be eliminated, for he tolerates none but productive people in his domain. That was how he ruled Wallachia.” 57
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So I’ve heard. He ran a tight ship back then. There’s a wellknown story about him leaving a gold cup out in the open merely to prove that no one in his principality would dare steal it. And no one did. The penalties were too frightening. To give the devil his due, Vlad’s brand of rulership might actually make a more orderly world. It just wouldn’t be a world I’d care to live in. “Few would. Which is why he must be destroyed. Nothing less will stop him.” Erzsébet’s stare returns to Hunter. “I don’t imagine you’ll accept any further aid from me, but there is one last thing I should tell you before I leave. Vlad is still in the area. Where, specifically, I can’t pinpoint, but I sense his presence—not close, but not too far either. He hasn’t left the city yet. Why is another question… Perhaps he’s paused to feed?” She slides out of the car and stands on the curb, gazing at the entrance to the Red Banana. “I could use a drink myself.” Not from anyone I know, I hope. “Don’t push your luck, peasant. I like you, but not that much. Just tend to your business and do try not to let Vlad escape again.” A predator on the prowl, she crosses the street and enters the club. “Don’t worry,” Hunter says. “I’ve researched her in the vampiric records. Despite her proposal, she really prefers women to men, and virgins in particular. Think she’ll find either in there?” “Smart-ass. The Red Banana is famous for its all girl revue.” None of them are virgins, though. “The last I looked, they all had dicks, too,” he replies. “Screw it. We’ve got worse things to worry about and a whole fuckin’ city to search.” He flattens palms on my chest, struggling in scant space to push me off him and sit up. The movement mashes our nether 58
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regions together. Breath hitches. We both gasp at a sudden resurgence of pulse-pounding pressure. Speaking of dicks… What had deflated with Erzsébet’s interruption, instantly swells with renewed arousal, grows hot and hard. Hungry. If Hunter wants to “screw it,” I’m oh-so ready to pick up where we left off, and so is he, gauging by the feel of the steel rod jam-packed against mine. “What about Vlad?” he growls. But it’s his horny growl as opposed to his angry one—not that there’s much difference between the two. “Vlad who?” I shove him backward and fall on him again, launch a fresh attack with lips and teeth and tongue. My hands roam wild, exploring warm curves and plains, velvet skin, taut muscle… Never let it be said I don’t have my priorities straight. Fuck first, then save the world. The latter depends on the former. This isn’t for me but the Earth. It’s pure altruism. Honest. We’ve got a stiff opponent to vanquish, right? Well, guess what, I’m stiffer. If I don’t get rid of this boner, I won’t be able to walk, let alone fight! “Okay, okay, you’ve convinced me. But we better make it fast. Got any lube?” There may be some in the glove compartment, but I’ll be damned if I’m going to pause now to check. Animals don’t use lube, and shifters manage quite well without it, too. Our bodies are built for tough treatment. We like it that way. The friction of a rough entry adds to the heat. “Lube is for sissies,” I say on a snarl. “Suit yourself.” Hunter flashes me an evil grin. “It’s your ass.” “My ass? What about yours?” “I called dibs first.” “When?” 59
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“Just now.” He grapples my petticoats aside, grips my butt, and spreads my cheeks. Electric shudders course through me. Sweat beads on my skin. “Lift up a little,” he orders. I’m beyond arguing. Next time I’ll get him… With a bit of joint wriggling we’re almost ready to roll. The head of a battering ram, satin smooth and wickedly solid, bumps my back door. A metallic hum vibrates against my sternum. Shit. Hunter freezes, his gaze wary, fixed on my chest. “Your boobs are buzzing.” No, my cell phone. I’ve got it stashed in my bodice, between my foam rubber falsies. Muttering dire curses, I fish it out and squint at the caller ID. Freddy? “Can’t be. Not on a full-moon night,” Hunter says, reading my mind. As usual. “Dogs don’t have the hands to use phones.” True, but it suddenly strikes me that a chicken could peck out a phone number with her beak. Psychic prickles sting me like nettles. I’ve got a godawful feeling about this. Hoping I’m wrong— knowing I’m right—I answer the call. “Hello?” Frantic clucking fills my ear. Behind it, I hear the howl of a wolf pup, shrill and furious. Figures. All Starrvoskis have the same inborn instincts; all can recognize the scent of a hereditary bloodenemy. And every once in a great while, if danger threatens and the need to shift becomes vital, one of them comes into his power earlier than usual. 60
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In my mind’s eye, I see the whole sinister scenario, which means Hunter sees it, too. He utters a feral feline hiss. “Vlad.” Yep, poor schmuck. I almost feel sorry for him. Almost. Since I didn’t work out as a hostage, it appears Vlad has decided, instead, to nab my nearest kin here in the city. I wonder if he’s ever read The Ransom of Red Chief, by O. Henry? It’s about a couple of would-be kidnappers who target the wrong kid. In this case, Irving. “Your cousin’s son? He may be a werewolf, but he’s only a puppy!” Hunter’s never met Irving, or he wouldn’t sound so anxious. Me, I’m more worried about Freddy. Squawks and howls pour out my cell, but no barks from a basset hound, and I can’t get a mental image of Freddy either. Where the fuck is he? “We’ll find out as soon as I locate my teleporter.” With one hand, Hunter feels around on the floor. “I think you dropped it on the seat when you grabbed my ass. It’s probably buried under my skirts.” “Right. Here it is.” Me and my big mouth. I don’t trust sci-fi gizmos, never have, though we used a lot in the Earth Guardians—one of many reasons I wanted to quit. I hate teleporting. I did, however, enjoy Hunter groping between my legs just now. Too bad what he was searching for wasn’t what I hoped he’d find. “Hey, I already know what you’ve got down there, whitey, and the faster we deal with Vlad, the faster we can get back to it. Okay? What I’m a little unclear on is our current destination. You’re more familiar with your cousin’s house than I am, so 61
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you’re going to have to visualize it with me to make sure we land in the right place. You think you can keep sex out of your head long enough to do that? Huh?” Party pooper. I don’t see why I can’t visualize both. In fact, I don’t see how I can avoid it. Hunter’s teleporter is a “single,” made for transporting one at a time. We’ve discovered it’ll transport more, but only if the travelers hold each other very, very close… His arms wrap around me, locking us together. I flatten against him, soaking up his heat, hanging on hard—getting hard. Again. Groan. “You see? There is a bright side to teleportation,” he whispers. I hate to tell him, but that throaty purr does not help me focus on business. “I thought you wanted me to think about the townhouse, damn it.” “I thought so, too. You’re a bad influence on me.” “Hah. You wrote the book on bad.” “And you love me just the way I am, whitey.” “No, I love you in spite of it, pussycat.” To prove it, I lay a lip-lock on him, a big, fat, juicy smackeroo— Pop! At the same instant, the car disappears. Or, rather, we do. Teleportation works in the blink of an eye, not like it does on Star Trek, no dissolving and reforming involved. One second we’re wedged into a small backseat, the next we’re lying on…what? Something broad…flat…soft… A mattress? We seem to have landed in Junior and Zelda’s second-floor guestroom. My room for the week. You can tell by the colorful apparel scattered about. 62
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I wish to God we could stay here. It’s damned difficult to hit a bed with Hunter and not take full advantage of the situation. But I know we’ve got a job to do, and fast. I’m worried about Freddy. And Hennie. Hell, I’ll admit it, I’m worried about Irving, too. The kid has a way of growing on you, y’know? Like fungus or mold. He and Hennie sound besieged—on the third-floor. I hear puppy growls and hysterical clucks coming from the room above us. “Then what are you waiting for?” In one lithe motion, Hunter rolls off the bed and onto his feet. “Come on, move it!” Buck naked, he charges the door. You think he’s forgotten something? Two things, actually. “Whoa”—snatching my bathrobe from the bottom of the bed, I zoom past him and block his exit—“letting it all hang out was one thing at the Red Banana, but don’t push it. Hennie’s a respectable chicken, and she’s already panicked. You barge in like that, you’ll give her a heart attack on top of everything else.” Lord knows the buff sight of him always makes my heart race. Pant. “Quick, put this on.” I thrust the robe at him. He stares at it. “It’s pink.” And fuzzy. And Hunter is utterly butch. But he’s also the taller of us and outweighs me. This is the only article of my travel trousseau that’ll fit him well enough to cover his naughty bits. Unless he’d rather try my Hawaiian muumuu? “I’ll take the bathrobe.” I figured he would. Myself, I intend to wear fur. While he yanks on the robe, I shed my costume with the speed of a quick-change artist. Even faster, I drop to all fours and “turn,” 63
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as my clan calls it. Now I’m the larger, thirty pounds heavier than Hunter, and eighty pounds more than my human state. It’s a paradox, that. As a man, I’m a slender five-eight. In animal form, I’m a giant, double the size of an ordinary wolf—big even for my magical breed—the largest wolf of my clan, and the only white one. Fanged fury in a silver coat. But inside it’s still me, which is the real paradox. With a snap of my jaws, I can sever a man’s head from his neck. I’d rather not, though. There lies my embarrassing secret. My howl is worse than my bite. As an agent for EG, I was sometimes forced to kill in the line of duty, but I’ve never enjoyed it. I think I may make an exception to that for Vlad, however. “Only after I get through with him. You can have what’s left,” Hunter says, somehow managing to look dangerous and domineering even in pink fuzz. Bossiness just comes naturally to some people. But this is the other thing he’s forgotten. ::Get in line,:: I answer telepathically. ::I hate to rub salt into a recent wound, but with EG closed, you’re not my boss and not calling the shots anymore. We’re equal partners now. I’m working with you, not for you.:: And this is my fight more than his. If my ancestors had done the job properly when they rebelled against Vlad centuries ago, we wouldn’t have him to worry about now. The thing is, they did defeat Vlad the man. Who knew he’d return as something else? Historians claim he died in battle, but admit they don’t know how exactly. Some speculate it wasn’t the opposing army but his own people who killed him. Other accounts mention the howling of wolves near the battlefield. Put the two 64
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together and you get a glimpse of the truth. Some of Vlad’s abused subjects were werewolves in secret—not the kind of subjects you want to piss off. Where my forefathers fucked up was leaving his corpse behind. It should have been destroyed. Instead, it was found and entombed, which allowed him to resurrect as a vampire. How is a mystery. Some believe he was just too much of a stinker to stay dead. Heaven wouldn’t take him, and hell couldn’t hold him. “Works for me,” Hunter mutters. “Thanks for the tip. I wouldn’t want to make the same mistake your ancestors did.” Pushing past me, he darts into the hall, covers the staircase to the third floor in two bounds, and kicks open the door at the top. Showoff. I don’t think he heard a word I said about him not being the boss anymore. It’s a cat thing. They were worshipped as gods by the ancient Egyptians, and expect the rest of us to follow suit. Screw that. I chase after him, cover the stairs in one leap—hah—and lunge into Irving’s room, forgetting it has an uncarpeted vinyl tile floor because the kid’s always spilling stuff. Ever wonder how much traction fast-moving wolf paws have? On a slick surface, none. Legs flailing, I skid across the floor and slam into the wall opposite the door. Bam! My legs crumple under me and I land on a conveniently located cushion. Splat. Now I know what happened to Freddy. He must have heard the commotion up here, charged in…and forgot about the vinyl tiles, too. This is why I couldn’t detect his consciousness before. Because 65
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he doesn’t have any at the moment. He’s the cushion. Knocked cold. If the same had happened to me, I’d be a man again. My kind shift by will, and if we pass out in animal form, we automatically revert to human. But Freddy, as a lunar-shifter, is at the mercy of the full moon. Awake or not, he’ll be a dog till dawn. Whereas Hennie, whose shifting is sort of an allergic reaction to stress, will be a chicken until she calms down. Some people break out in hives when they get nervous. She breaks out in feathers. “Cluck, cluck—squawk!” Wings flapping, she’s running a tight circle in a corner of the room, like the proverbial you-know-what with its head off. Except hers is still attached. Hunter, on the other hand, is about to lose his. Fuck. He was squaring off with Vlad, then careened backward. My bad. I bumped him on my way to the wall. But, hey, I thought feline breeds were supposed to be more surefooted. I also had no idea Vlad knew manifestation-magic. He just raised his hand, and something zapped into it. I guess when you’ve been around as long as he has, you pick up a lot of tawdry tricks. Whoosh— ::Look out!:: I warn Hunter. He dodges to the side as cold iron slices the air near his neck. You wouldn’t think a vampire would need a sword, would you? “I don’t. Not for you two buffoons,” Vlad scoffs. “I’m just nostalgic. Sucking blood gets boring after a few hundred years. When I want to really savor the thrill of killing, I do it the oldfashioned way.” Of course. I should have guessed that, too. Prince Vlad was a 66
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fierce warrior of his medieval day, bred for battle. Whatever else he is, he’s no coward. Neither is our wayward wolf pup. Hackles raised, snarling and snapping, he crouches in defensive posture near Hennie, keeping her corralled in the corner. Keeping himself between her and harm? Well, bust my furry britches, he’s trying to protect her, putting another’s interests ahead of his own. It happens that way in rare cases—the act of turning, itself, triggers a new level of maturity— but I’ve never seen it happen in one so young. A curious sensation swells my chest. Family pride? There may be hope for Irving yet. “Depends on what you’re hoping for. I’m going to chain him to a tree and flog him twice a day until he learns obedience,” Vlad threatens. “The little wretch bit me. Before he turned.” ::He tasted like shit, too,:: Irving broadcasts. Hennie squawks at him. I suspect that’s chicken for “Mind your language, me fine bucko.” She’s really not thinking clearly. “Neither are you, dimwit,” Hunter gripes. “Are you going to join the show or just watch it?” Decisions, decisions… I do have an entertaining view from this vantage point. Pink poetry in motion, all fluid feline grace, Hunter ducks, dives, jumps and twists to avoid a swashbuckling array of sword thrusts. This is better than watching Errol Flynn and Basil Rathbone go at it in Robin Hood. I wish I had some popcorn. He throws me a scorcher of a glare. “I’ll pop you if you don’t get your ass in gear.” And do what, pray tell? I thought I was supposed to wait my turn. Wasn’t that the deal Hunter declared, that he’d get the glory of the combat, and I’d get the leftovers? I bat innocent wolfy eyes. ::Oh no, pussycat, Vlad’s all yours, 67
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remember? I wouldn’t dream of intruding on your fun. Go right ahead and amuse yourself. Don’t let me disturb you. I’ll just sit here quietly and—:: Ack! Irving has decided to help Hunter. Full of his new sense of chivalry—a little too full—he whizzes forward like a fluffy cannonball and sinks puppy teeth into Vlad’s right calf. ::Yuck,:: he complains while hanging on and growling, ::the old fart still tastes rotten.:: Vlad bellows Romanian invectives. Don’t ask me to translate; what he’s saying is quite rude. His sword arcs up and down—a strike aimed to slice Irving in two. Hunter leaps at him, striving to block the blow. I leap faster and send all three of them flying. Irving lands in the corner with Hennie, who promptly sits on him as though he needs to be hatched. Hunter lands where I was beside Freddy, who grunts, rouses a bit, then passes out again. And I land exactly where I’ve planned to be all along. On top of Vlad. With my jaws clamped around his neck. And not a second to spare. A wooden stake through the heart is the traditional way to destroy a vampire. Barring that, decapitation also works. Just remember to do it fast, before your target escapes in a cloud of smoke. Crunch! Vlad’s head rolls off, and he crumbles into dust instead. Gag. That ends that problem. He never had a chance—hadn’t a clue I was plotting an attack. No one did because I focused on the view in 68
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front of me and shoved all other thoughts aside, just like at the club. I’m getting good at this game. I can’t say I’ve learned to enjoy it, though. In a word, killing sucks. So, okay, that’s two words, but you get the idea. I think I’m going to be sick.
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CHAPTER 4 Drink to me only… “You did what you had to do,” Hunter says with feline pragmatism. It’s an hour after the ugly event, but this is the first chance we’ve had to discuss it. Other tasks took priority over a postmortem. Like vacuuming up Vlad and scraping Hennie off the ceiling. A chicken sized dose of whiskey restored her to human form. A pint of the same turned out to be Freddy’s real problem. Apparently, she spilled a bottle of her “nerve medicine” tonight, and he lapped it up before she could find a mop. Why, I don’t know—he’s not normally a drunk—but a weird little niggle tells me I should know… 70
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Regardless, he’s sleeping it off. We sent Hennie home in a taxi, and finally got Irving bedded down. He’d been more scared than he wanted to admit and took a while to settle. However, he’s physically unharmed, and shifter kids are resilient. I think he’ll be fine by morning. Which is more than I can claim for myself. I just spent ten minutes puking my guts out while Hunter held my head to keep me from falling into the commode. “You feel better now, though,” he tells me. Actually, no. But it’s not for lack of his trying. We’re back in the guestroom, in bed, loosely spooned together with his groin grazing my butt and his chest hair tickling my shoulder blades. “Let me rephrase that.” He sidles in closer, breathing steam on the nape of my neck, his voice a husky purr. “You feel good to me.” His arms snake around my middle, drawing me snug against him. His cock nestles lengthwise in the crease of my ass. I’d respond if I had the strength. I’m caught in the curve of his body, surrounded by sizzle, the atmosphere so muggy it might be midsummer instead of early spring. But inside I’m Old Man Winter, weary and cold. I just want to sleep, but I can’t even manage that. My mind keeps replaying the crunch of Vlad’s vertebrae in my jaws, the way he disintegrated into grave dust beneath me. I’ve never destroyed a vampire before. Do they all turn to dust, I wonder, or only the ancient ones? Given my heritage, I oughta know stuff like that. Maybe I did once and forgot it? I keep thinking I’ve forgotten something… “Yeah. How to relax. You need to stop thinking, period. And so do I.” 71
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Hunter exhales. A sultry sigh stirs my hair. He’s had a difficult day, too, going from billionaire to broke. I remember that, at least. He must be exhausted, but on him fatigue looks and sounds sexy. Some guys can wear anything. I twist around in his hold to face him. “I should be the one comforting you, shouldn’t I?” “I think the idea is we’re supposed to comfort each other. Isn’t that how love and marriage work?” Gasp. I’ve always thought so, but I never thought I’d live long enough to hear him say it. Am I on Candid Camera? “Hell, part of my trouble I brought on myself by trying to handle too much alone. What’s that they say about pride going before a fall? I’ve made a lot of mistakes these past weeks, Sylver, but the worst was not leveling with you sooner.” Yeah, but I can guess why he didn’t. Hunter’s not the sort to ask for help, even if he needs it. “I’ve never had to ask for help. I’ve always been able to pay for it.” And very well. This time, however, all his funds must have been tied up in the business war with Vlad. “I thought I could end the matter right there, without bloodshed—clean out his coffers so he couldn’t instigate his plot. If I’d sent the Earth Guardians against Vlad at the beginning, he’d have raised his own army in retaliation, and we’d have had a real war on our hands between EG and the vampire community.” Not a pretty picture, I agree. “By the time I realized I’d taken a wrong turn, it was too late to backtrack. Too late for anything but what happened tonight. I’m sorry. I threw you into a bad situation with no warning—and you 72
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came through with flying colors. Just like you always do…partner. There was a time I could have rewarded you with a big fat bonus. Now all I can give you is my thanks. And a promise to try to improve? Hubris is a hard habit to break, but if I can learn monogamy, maybe I can learn to be a better team player, too?” Honeyed waves of warmth flood me even as I paste incredulity onto my face. Don’t tell me he’s finally figuring out how an honest, supportive relationship works. Who is this man, and what has he done with Hunter Steele? “Grrr…” With a noise between a growl and a chuckle, he pushes me onto my back and rolls on top. “Whatever I know about love and support, I’ve learned from you, whitey.” His weight presses me into the mattress, and his lips hover over mine. “I told you you’re a bad influence on me.” Smart-ass. “Oh, shut up and kiss. Are we gonna talk love or make it?” I cup his face in my hands and claim his mouth in a long, luscious oral mating—unhurried, seductive. Succulent and rich. A feast in itself. An appetizer for more. Thoughts blur while flesh molds to flesh. The temperature spirals from balmy to bone-deep burn. Tongues tangle and heart rates speed, yet time seems to slow. Movements grow heavy with sensual purpose. Hands wander, limbs twine, and minutes stretch into infinity. I’m lost in languid limbo, a sponge soaking up sensation. His tantalizing scent, taste…the silken scorch of his skin, the solid feel of masculine meat… I melt into the moment, needing nothing else. Okay, I need an orgasm, maybe…definitely…but I can wait. So rarely do Hunter and I take the scenic route to satisfaction. So often our lovemaking happens in a hot-tempered rush, all fire 73
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and fury as we race to a blistering climax, ravage each other in a feral feeding frenzy. Tonight an unspoken truce tempers the pace. There’s no fast food on the menu, no battle-of-wills to be won, no alpha egos to flaunt. Nothing to prove but our own pleasure. We dine more meticulously, sip and savor, floating together in a dreamy pool of liquid passion. Cat-like, Hunter rubs himself against me. A velvet purr vibrates low in his throat, but the body it emanates from is all man. His lips slide off mine and onto my jaw…down the side of my neck…over my shoulder… Flames lick me as his kisses cover my chest…stomach… Lower and lower he slides, leaving a trail of smoke in his wake. Blood surges south. Muscles clench. What was only semi-erect till now, basking in his inner glow, springs to instant rigid attention. It knows where he’s headed, what he’s hungry for. I have a sudden, powerful craving for the same dish. “You are the dish.” The tip of his tongue flicks out and dips into the slit of my cock, tasting. “Mmm…my favorite brand of hot sauce.” And I’m the sausage it tops. So why does that image send an icy shiver through me? “I don’t know. I’m doing my best to warm you.” Lazy-eyed and smug with sexual confidence, Hunter cups my sac in one hand and squeezes with a pressure that borders on pain—the good kind. An electric jolt crackles through me. My shaft swells to brave new proportions. He curls thumb and forefinger around its base, like a cock-ring, angles it toward him, and sucks me deep into the slick heat of his mouth. Bong, bong, bong… The grandfather clock in the living room 74
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below tolls the hour. Midnight. Bad news if you’re Cinderella at the ball. Or me. Fuck. On the twelfth stroke my mind splits open like an overripe pumpkin, spewing out memories instead of seeds. Hunter almost chokes. His lazy gaze snaps wide awake, and he shoves off me onto his side, bracing up on an elbow. “Sylver, for godssake, you didn’t.” I wish. But we both know I did. Much worse, we know why I’d forgotten it. Hunter reads my thoughts almost before I think them. Panic constricts my chest. Exasperation roughens his tone. “You took an innocent young woman to the Red Banana and left her there?” “Well, hell, it seemed like a good idea at the time.” I was trying to help her. Under normal circumstances, Cindy would have been perfectly safe at the club with my…bosom buddies. “But not in the clutches of a crazy countess thirsty for the blood of female virgins. Erzsébet must have sensed a nearby prize as soon as she arrived, even before she interrupted us. Vampires have built-in radar that points them straight toward their favorite type of prey.” Tell me something I don’t know. Like what to do about it? Erzsébet must also have seen in my mind that her prey was my friend. So she psychically inserted a temporary memory-block in my brain during our little tête-à-tête in the car. She didn’t want me 75
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thinking of Cindy, or Hunter discovering anything about the girl too soon. “Obviously. She didn’t want us standing between her and her next meal. I knew I shouldn’t trust her.” Hunter vents spleen with an angry cat hiss. I think I’m going to be sick again. “I’d join you if I thought it would help matters.” He punches the mattress in frustration. Which doesn’t help either. We both know it’s too late to save Cindy. The venom of old Carpathian vampires works especially fast. One bite from a member of that elite club, and you’re dead. Then a little while later, you’re not. Cindy’s probably a vamp herself by now, bound by ancient code and a mystical blood-tie to her maker. And she was destined for weredom and Freddy, damn it. “They could still marry. There’s no law against a shifter-vamp union.” True, which is, I presume, why Erzsébet thought she could marry Hunter. But Erzsébet was also counting on the destruction of her master, Vlad. Barring that, no vampire can marry anyone without their maker’s formal consent and a complex metaphysical ceremony to dissolve the master-slave bond between them. Vampires aren’t intrinsically evil, but having all been natural born men and women once, they’re more…shall we say, human than other magical breeds—which is almost as bad. Vampire society is governed by set rules, stiff, stubborn, and hierarchical. “And Erzsébet is utterly mired in that medieval muck.” Yeah, that was my impression, too. I can’t envision her releasing Cindy for such a “silly” reason as romantic love. “Me neither, but it’s worth a try. I’ll find her and talk to her, 76
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Sylver, give her two choices. Either she allows Cindy and Freddy the chance to fulfill their destiny together…” “Or?” I stare into Hunter’s eyes. The Grim Reaper stares back at me. “I’ll stake her to the floor with a mallet and wooden spike. Shit, I may have to anyway. I sensed she had a hidden agenda, and her trick with the memoryblock proves it. In fact, I’m not so sure she didn’t put one in me, too. I’ve just remembered something. Under vampire law, Erzsébet, due to her age and aristocratic origins, stands first in line to inherit her master’s estate.” “Including his people?” A chill slithers down my spine. Hunter pushes up to a sitting position and rakes fingers through his hair. “Those he made vampire after he turned Erzsébet will answer to her now. I think that’s the way their pecking order works.” Marvy. I’d been wondering about the puppets Vlad planted in government positions, but hoping his demise cut their strings. Without a mastermind to coordinate their actions, they’d be relatively harmless. “Unless Erzsébet plans to use them. That’s the big question. Did she rebel against Vlad to save the world from him…or save it for herself? The latter, I’m guessing. That vamp has some serious control issues.” Which Hunter knows all about, of course, despite his promise to improve in that area. Ah well, I didn’t expect overnight miracles. Cats are independent creatures. “Where’s my teleporter?” He turns his back on me to rummage through the clutter of my cosmetics on the bedside table. While he’s distracted, I dive out of bed and into red sweatpants, white tennies, and a black T-shirt with a silver star emblazoned on 77
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the front—my unisex look, which oughta suit for wherever I end up. One, he ain’t gonna beam anywhere naked, not again. Two, there will be no more killing tonight, not if I have anything to say about it. And I do. Because, three… I’ve got his teleporter. It was on the floor by the bed, but in my hand now. “Give me that!” Hunter grabs for it. I dance beyond his reach. “Sylver, you barely know how that thing functions. You hate teleporting.” “With a vengeance. But Cindy is my responsibility, and I’m the best one to negotiate for her release. Erzsébet and my people grew from the same soil. I understand her background, speak her language. She’ll listen to me.” I hope. “Okay, we’ll both go. Happy now?” “No. Since we sent Hennie home, one of us has to stay here with Irving. You can’t leave a seven-year-old on his own.” “He’s not on his own. Freddy’s here.” “Hunter, Freddy is in dog form.” And drunk as a skunk. “Then you stay. Let me go after Erzsébet and Cindy. You’ve never teleported alone before.” A growl rumbles out. Muscles tense for a pounce. “You don’t even know where they are.” “Like you do?” “I don’t have to. I know the intricacies of my own damn device. It not only transports, it tracks. If I haven’t a specific place to aim for, the teleporter can hone in on a distinctive sound or smell—and Erzsébet’s smell is one I’ll never forget. If I focus on 78
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that, it should beam me to her.” Really? You learn something new every day. I’d intended to start at the club and search outward from there, but his way is faster. Wouldn’t it work better, though, if I focus on Erzsébet and Cindy? I grip the teleporter and inhale, filling my lungs with air and my mind with their remembered scents. “No! If they’re not close together, you could split yourself in two—” Now he tells me. His roar reverberates through the house. I hear it from the sofa in the living room. Where I’ve just landed. And where two figures are entering via the street door, one supporting the other. The first looks like she just stepped off the cover of Vogue. Brava, fairy godmothers. They did a great job. With little more magic than a mascara wand and a chic dress, a wallflower has blossomed into beauty. Her companion withers before my eyes, shaky and weak, shrouded by long gray hair. Erzsébet? She leans heavily on Cindy, who struggles to guide her forward. I bolt off the sofa to help and lift Erzsébet in my arms. Keen cat ears in the room above hear our movements, evidently. Footsteps fly down the stairs, down the hall, and Hunter bursts in. At least he took a second to cover himself. He’s wearing my robe again—but doesn’t appear overly enthused about it. “Why didn’t you call me?” he demands. “I just got here myself,” I remind him. Erzsébet giggles, a dry, scratchy sound. “Pink really isn’t your color,” she rasps as he takes her from me, like a broken doll, and 79
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crosses the floor. Her lips part in the shadow of a smile, and I notice something missing. Her fangs. Inexplicably, she’s aged years since we last saw her. Two hours ago? Her gown is the same, but the body beneath it has shrunk. She looks old and fragile, very vulnerable. Very human. My heart wrenches. With a gentleness that belies his gruff tone, Hunter lowers her onto the couch and kneels beside it, by her head. “What in the hell happened?” “You destroyed Vlad…and me with him.” Dark eyes sunk deep in their sockets glance from his face to mine. “Vlad’s creatures, it seem, return to mortal once the blood-tie is severed, to wherever they stood on their life-path before being turned. If they were healthy young humans then, they will be again… Not myself. I stood at the end of my road when he took me, but a short step from eternal rest. So close. Yet so long denied… “Köszönöm,” she thanks me. “I wasn’t sure it would work this way, but I hoped… I’m grateful…” A death rattle cuts off the words. She’s gone. Quietly and quickly at the last, with an expression of pure peace. A strange sense of loss grips me. Good or bad, the lady was a legend I grew up with, a mystery for my boyhood brain to ponder. A haunting riddle. Have I finally solved it? Honestly, I’m not certain. Will I miss her? For sure. I say a silent prayer, bidding her goodbye, wishing her spirit 80
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well. Hunter was right, Erzsébet did have a hidden agenda. “Her own release from the undead,” he murmurs. “She’s free now.” In seconds, while we watch, her still form shrivels to a dry husk, then bare bones…then nothing, not even dust. Just a soft glow that sparkles the air for an instant and suddenly evaporates. “Ooooh…” Cindy half swoons, but I’m right beside her and catch her before she falls. She blinks like a sleepwalker awakening from a trance as I settle her into an overstuffed armchair. “How did I get home?” Confusion clouds her gaze. “The last I remember, I was at the club and…and someone was gliding toward me. Beautiful…all in white. I thought I was dreaming. Or seeing a ghost. She looked like my m—” Her eyes widen, staring at a thick plume of smoke curling into the room from a crack under the front door. Now what? A noxious odor stings my nostrils. Cough. I’m working harder tonight than I did as an Earth Guardian. Hunter springs to his feet, poised for attack if needed. “I smell vampire, the kind who doesn’t knock. And stinks.” But at least it’s not Cindy. I checked her neck when I sat her in the chair. Not a bite mark on her. In the interest of keeping her that way, I plant myself between her and the smoke, which is coalescing into a column. “Sit tight,” I tell her. “You may not realize it, but somehow you’ve already dodged a bullet tonight. Hunter and I will protect you from any more.” “Hunter? The Hunter, the one you married? He’s here? When? Where?” She peeks around me. “Oh my God, that is him, corporate king Hunter Steele!” 81
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“Pleased to meet you.” He flashes her a taut grin, one eye on the smoke column. “But it’s ex-king. I’ve recently been dethroned. The royal treasury is bare.” “I-I’m sorry to hear that,” she stammers. “You did a lot of good work.” She gulps and grabs my arm, like a lifeline, when the column sprouts a…bowler hat? A dour faced fellow in a sedate brown suit forms beneath it. “Oh, for pity’s sake”—she relaxes in relief—“well, he looks real frickin’ dangerous.” “I trust you’re joking, Ms. Ellis.” He tips his hat. “You’ve just spent an hour with me, signing papers, and come to no harm. My chauffer drove you and the countess home in my Rolls. I promised I’d follow with your copies of the registered documents. Don’t you recall?” “No.” Her brow furrows. “Ah, perhaps you were still mesmerized by the countess at the time. Her powers began to fade a short while after the termination of her maker, but the spell she wove about you prior to that would have taken a while to unravel.” He shrugs. “Allow me to refresh your memory.” I see a vulture peering out of his eyes. An ominous leather briefcase hangs from his right hand. He shifts it to his left, reaches into a pants pocket, and offers Cindy a business card. I intercept it. “Mervin T. Gatsby, attorney,” I read aloud. “Why not?” Hunter mutters to himself. “Most lawyers are vampires of one sort or another.” Mervin wrinkles his nose and sneezes. “You couldn’t ask them to leave, could you, Ms. Ellis? I’m allergic to cats and dogs.” 82
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I quirk one eyebrow upward. “Color me skeptical, Merv, but shouldn’t being turned have cured all your mortal maladies?” “That shows how much you know, Fido.” He sniffs. “You don’t even know what you destroyed tonight, do you?” “But you intend to explain everything, right, Merv? And fast— before I decide to beat it out of you.” “A mind-probe would be less messy,” Hunter suggests. “But not nearly as much fun.” I step toward Mervin, who clutches his briefcase in front of his chest, like a shield, and retreats backward. A little intimidation goes such a long way. In this case, it backs Mervin straight into a waiting grasp. One-handed, Hunter snags him by the collar and hoists him off his feet, dangling him in vertical suspension a few inches off the floor. “How’s that?” “That’s teamwork, pussycat.” I shoot him a wink. “All right, I’ll talk! But I can’t explain everything,” Mervin strangles out, kicking air. “All I know is what the countess told me. She felt Prince Vlad’s destruction the moment it happened and called me to put her affairs in order while she still could. My firm handles all the big cases. We hold top ranking in the Undead Law Registry.” How nice for him. He stretches his spine and points his toes, straining to touch a tangible base. “Just put me down, will you? You’re choking me—I can’t breathe!” “You can’t perish from suffocation either. Or escape into smoke from this position.” Hunter hoists him an inch higher. “Vampires need to ground their energy before pulling that stunt, which requires contact with a solid surface.” “Which makes me wonder how Vlad was able to vanish at the 83
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club while airborne,” I interject. “Care to start by explaining that, Merv?” “And why Vlad’s creatures reverted to human with his end?” Hunter adds. “That’s not the way it usually works with vampires and those they’ve turned.” “Because Vlad Dracula wasn’t your usual member of the undead. He resurrected as a vampire because he never was a mortal man to begin with,” Mervin sputters. “You know what Dracula translates to?” “Literally, Son of the Dragon,” I answer. “But you didn’t know it was literal, did you? I didn’t. Until tonight, even the countess only suspected his secret. We searched the official records, and there’s no mention of it there either. Then I hacked into the restricted archives, and that’s where we found it. Prince Vlad carried genes from shape-shifter stock of the oldest, most magical order. Ancient dragon blood flowed in his veins— not enough to make him one, but enough to give him the breed’s manifestation and regenerative powers.” Hah. So, like Claudio, Vlad straddled the line between super and natural. That does explain a lot. It also means no rest for the weary, no solace for the sexually frustrated. We’ve got a vacuum cleaner bag full of dragon dust on our hands, which will have to be very carefully disposed of—and very soon—or Vlad might resurrect again. Did you ever have one of those nights? Mervin gasps. “If you want to hear more, you’ll have to release me. I may not need air to survive, but I need it to talk, don’t I?” “Oh, I don’t know, you’ve been managing fine so far,” Hunter says. “And I can hold you like this for as long as it takes you to cough up the rest.” 84
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“Or I can.” I chuckle. Not pleasantly. Hunter echoes it. “Just grab his briefcase. That’ll lighten the load. There’s a very heavy document in there.” I knew it, he’s been probing Mervin’s mind—a simple trick with the vampire off balanced and a few key questions to unlock guarded thoughts. I’ll confess I’ve been burglarizing his brain, too. Easy pickings. “Erzsébet’s last will and testament, huh, Merv?” His eyes blaze fire as I relieve him of his burden. “With all those big cases your firm handles, I’ll bet you don’t get many this big. The undead haven’t much call for wills, period, do they? You thought you were going to make a real killing.” And I do mean real. “You thought you’d gain Erzsébet’s estate by putting the bite on her heir.” Hunter gives him a shake. “As Cindy’s master, you’d have controlled her fortune.” “My what?” Cindy jerks bolt upright, wary and worried. “I don’t have a fortune. I gave it to Zel.” “I know, hon. We’re talking about a different inheritance, umpteen times larger. Never mind the details for now,” I soothe. “Suffice it to say the world’s wealthiest vampire cashed in his chips tonight. Under their law, his estate automatically transferred to another—who hung on to her vamp status just long enough to bequeath everything to someone outside their community. That’s why it took so much paperwork. It wouldn’t have been allowed at all if she hadn’t been able to prove a blood-tie to her chosen heir.” “Not a vampire blood-tie, a natural one,” Hunter elaborates. “If Mervin’s memory banks are accurate regarding what he learned tonight, your mother was Hungarian, right? And descended from old nobility?” 85
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“Supposedly. That’s why Dad called me his little princess.” Her wary expression softens into wistful. “He called Mama his rose. There was a portrait of her in his study. I used to stare at it and ache because I didn’t look anything like her. She was beautiful.” “So is her daughter. Some flowers just take longer to bloom.” I smile. Mervin grimaces. “This is all very touching, I’m sure, but now that you’ve gotten what you want, do you think you might possibly let me go?” “That depends. Do you think you might believe I’ll crack your nuts open if you ever target Cindy again?” I waggle my brows at him. He gulps. “I think he believes,” Hunter says, then crosses the room with him and dropkicks Mervin out the door. “You can pass on that message to the rest of your firm,” he calls as a parting shot. “This girl is off bounds.” The door shuts with a decisive click. Sigh. Poor ol’ Merv, we were awfully hard on him, but it had to be done or every undead gold-digger in the area would be trying to sink fangs into Cindy. Some of the less mercenary ones, too. Three things attract vampires. Warm blood, cold cash, and innocence. Cindy is prime prey. The faster Freddy sobers up and claims her, the safer she’ll be. Hunter dusts off his hands. “Well, that was real.” Turning away from the door, he strides back across the room to face Cindy. “I have one last question for you.” Cindy looks like she has a hundred, but waits for his. 86
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“Do you remember your mother’s maiden name?” She pauses a moment in puzzlement, then… “Báthory. Her first name was Elizabeth.” Or Erzsébet, if you prefer the Hungarian version. Perhaps named for one whose tragic beauty she wore? A poignant legacy to bear. “She died of a brain seizure when I was four,” Cindy adds softly. “Some rare form of epilepsy, I think. Dad was afraid it might be congenital, so he had me checked and double-checked, dragged me to a dozen different specialists, but I tested clear on all counts. No resemblance to her inside or out.” Her tiny, wry grin appears. “I always figured I didn’t inherit anything from my mother’s side.” “Just several centuries worth of accumulated wealth,” Hunter says. He has the subtlety of a bulldozer sometimes. “Your Báthory blood has made you the richest woman in the world.” Huge thanks to serendipity. Without the Báthory addition, her blood might have made her something else. Dinner, for starters. From Erzsébet’s demeanor as she left the car—not to mention the memory-block—I’m pretty sure she scented a meal first and only on closer inspection detected the underlying aroma of a distant descendant. ::Oh, no, I felt she was kin at once. Smelled it like a bittersweet breath of the past,:: a ghostly voice whispers in my mind—in Hungarian. Say what? ::I entered the club merely to drink in the sight of her…then drown my melancholy at the bar. I’d heard they serve a superb Bloody Mary there.:: They do, and for the undead cliental, the bartender uses real 87
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blood. Claudio buys it on the sly from a local blood bank to keep his vampire patrons happy—and his other patrons safe from them. ::Wrapped in shadows I watched, like a fond grandmother, not daring to approach. Then the weight of destruction hit. Vlad’s. Mine. A grave new concern. Suddenly I held the world’s biggest buck, with little time to pass it, and only two choices as to where. An established member of the vampire ranks, one made long ago from their blood? Or someone born naturally from my own… I entranced the girl to protect her from Mervin Gatsby while he handled the legalities for me. If I hadn’t put her in my thrall, he’d have tried to ensnare her in his, the greedy old lecher. And for the record, peasant, it was Vlad who inserted your memory-block. He wished to lure you from the club quickly and feared you’d hesitate if you remembered you’d left the girl there.:: Makes sense, but how does she know for sure? ::I’m dead. I know everything now. Almost.:: I glance to the side, seeing nothing, yet sensing Erzsébet’s shade hovering by me. My skin crawls, an involuntary reaction. I deal with the arcane every day—I’m part of it—but ghosts are a class unto themselves. Most are harmless. Some are quite friendly. But they always have a slight edge on you, y’know? Hunter seems blissfully unaware of the spectral voice. He and Cindy stand across the room, where he’s been briefing her on what’s happened, while Erzsébet weirds me out with her whisper. “Your ancestress hated being a vamp, hated the one who turned her,” Hunter says, “and, I suspect, hated the whole undead community.” ::Distrust is a better word. With my exit, and the rest of Vlad’s creatures returned to human, his wealth would have fallen to the whim of the vampire courts. Yet while I hung on to my status, the 88
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estate was mine—they had to follow their own written code—and I hung on with the proverbial death grip.:: No mean feat. ::Ah, but old training is supposed to die hard. I was a powerful woman in my day, used to giving orders and having them obeyed. My vampiric allure fast faded tonight, but my Báthory backbone carried me through. A legal process that could have taken days was settled in record time with a bit of prodding. Mervin proved most easy to intimidate.:: She noticed that, too, huh? ::Granted, he also saw opportunity for himself in the deal. But I trusted you’d defend the girl after my passing. You might be a peasant, wolf, but you’re staunch old Carpathian stock. We’re a tough breed, eh? I lasted long enough for the proper papers to be signed, sealed, and registered. Long enough to leave a dangerous fortune in safe hands, I hope.:: “The countess left everything to you,” Hunter tells Cindy. Her face freezes. “How much is ‘everything’?” “A lot. More than I ever had.” Which sorta says it all. “Aw, shit.” She collapses back into her chair. “Why does everyone leave me their money? I don’t need it, and so many others do. I like earning my keep. I like simple. And, frankly, I have no interest in high finance. I’ve got one credit card, a little savings account, and that’s plenty. I wouldn’t know what to do with any more.” But she’s suddenly thought of something. I can almost see the light bulb click on in her mind. It shines out through her eyes in a crafty beam focused on Hunter. “Wait a minute…yes I do.” A triumphant smile adds sparkle to 89
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her gaze. “I’ll give the whole frickin’ fortune to you. It’ll replace the one you lost, so you can keep your charities going. I know you’ll do good with the money. It’s the best way for me to spread it around to those who need it most.” Hunter blanches, speechless for a few seconds. Will wonders never cease? His mouth opens. Closes. Opens again. Hoarse words trickle out, like air being forced through a clogged hose. “Um…that’s incredibly magnanimous, but I can’t let you—” “You can’t stop me either,” Cindy cuts him off. “I’ve already given away one fortune. It’s no big deal to ditch another.” Her chin tilts up, and she stares him in the eye, stubborn blue boring into stunned amber. “Listen, I was raised rich, so I know what I’m giving up, but the truth is I’ve never cared much for material things. Don’t let the makeup and fancy dress fool you, Mr. Steele. Underneath I’m a Plain Jane with plain tastes, and I’ve discovered I’m okay with that. Being ‘fixed-up’ tonight just made me realize I wasn’t ‘broken’ to begin with.” In which case, the endeavor was a success, because all I really wanted to fix was her self-image. Where I saw dull resignation before, I see the glow of confidence now. She aims a quick grin in my direction. “Don’t get me wrong. Your friends were super nice. Once I relaxed, it was fun trying on a new look. But it wasn’t me. If there is a prince out there waiting to fit a glass slipper on my foot, he’s gonna have to take me just the way I am, without any extra trimmings.” ::And be lucky to get her.:: A gleeful giggle vibrates my skull. ::She’s done the right thing. This is all I wished to know. The money is in good hands. And so is the Báthory bloodline. I can rest in peace now.:: 90
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A sudden breeze sweeps the room, stirring the draperies. “Köszönöm,” a voice says, audible to all. Then utter stillness. Hunter’s expression goes carefully blank. His gaze slants to mine. “Was that who it sounded like?” “Ahem”—I clear my throat—“yeah. She wanted to see how things worked out with the will. She’s happy now. And gone.” “And EG is back, thanks to her heir.” Hunter gives Cindy his warmest smile, the one that charms everybody—then gives me the one he stole from Jack the Ripper. “I only began the dissolution process today. It would’ve taken a week to complete, and I can stop it. As such, your service contract still stands. You’re reinstated in the force. Effective immediately.” Gee, I’m so thrilled.
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CHAPTER 5 All’s well that ends… The grandfather clock in the living room tolls one—bong—as I exit the house into the streetlamp lit night. Was it only several hours ago I walked out this door with Cindy, en route to the Red Banana? The world’s been upended and re-righted since then. Vlad is dust, and Hunter’s my employer again. You win some, you lose some. Life is almost back to normal. For whatever that’s worth. Just one last task to perform and we can call the case closed. Behind me, a brawny figure fills the doorway—a recent arrival in a baseball cap emblazoned with a feed store logo. My Texas born, farm raised cousin Junior, who proves the adage you can take 92
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the boy out of the country, but not the country out of the boy. I could play the same act, if I wanted, having grown up in the sticks with him. Except there’s not much call for drag queens at the Grand Ol’ Opry. When I left home for the stage, I left my western twang behind. Junior flaunts his with gusto. To each his own. He and Zelda cut short their trip and burned rubber to get here. Their werewolf psychic senses warned them something was amiss, so they raced home to protect their pup. Who’s fine, sound asleep on the third floor. Cindy, however, may still need a measure of protection. They can guard her while Hunter and I complete our job. “Don’t worry none,” Junior drawls. “If any more vampires come callin’, I’ll show ’em some real fangs. An’ if that don’t work, I’ll sick Zel on ’em.” He snickers as the door bangs shut. “Y’all just do what you gotta do,” he hollers through it. “Take your time. I ain’t goin’ nowhere. We’ll see ya when we see ya.” Not soon, I hope, though I’m grateful he resisted the urge to make any snide comments about my costume. Canines read each other so well, and for members of the same family pack it’s even easier. I’m sure he knows I’ve more than business on my mind. The commotion of the past hour has reenergized me. For werewolves—and nightclubs—it’s the shank of the evening. I’ve been a good little hero tonight, saving the world while putting my own needs on the backburner. I deserve a reward now—and not the financial kind. Screw money. Better yet, screw me. It’s not healthy to be horny for so long without release. My balls could turn blue or something. And then where would I be? I did come to Philly to party. It is Hunter’s and my anniversary. Five years ago tonight we met. He seems to have forgotten that, 93
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but I haven’t. I remember how it happened, too. I just can’t think about it right now. He waits for me on the sidewalk, his well-known hunky form hidden under baggy coveralls and baseball cap borrowed from Junior. “Agent 007 reporting for duty!” I click my heels together and throw him a jaunty salute. A wiggle of hips rustles frilled petticoats. Hunter responds with a sour look and yanks down the brim of the cap, masking his face in shadow. He’s far more the James Bond type than I, but when he first recruited me for the Earth Guardians I refused to join unless I could pick my own spy number. I wanted the most famous one. Otherwise, why bother? Besides, as head of the corps, Hunter doesn’t need a number. Most EG agents call him chief or boss…Mr. Big…Your Majesty… I sometimes call him mein fuhrer, but only because he hates it. He’s not real keen on returning to the Red Banana tonight either, but I doubt anyone will recognize him disguised as a dork. “We wouldn’t need to return if you’d remembered to deactivate the teleporter,” he bitches. “You have to cut its juice after each trip or the power-pack drains.” “Oh sure, everything’s always my fault. You forgot to deactivate it, too.” “I’m not the one who last used it.” “Yeah, well, no one’s gonna use it till it’s recharged. Shit happens. We still have to do something with this.” I wave a vacuum cleaner bag under his nose. Vlad’s remains, powdered but potent. Claudio has a magically reinforced money vault at the club where the dust will be safe until we can transport it to the Steele Star. 94
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“And from there, out into space. It’s too dicey to be disposed of down here. Some dragons can rise from their ashes like a phoenix. Can Vlad do the same from his dust?” Hunter shrugs. “Since he was a half-breed, there’s no way of telling for sure, but we know he regenerated once. If he does it again, I don’t want it happening anywhere on Earth.” He glances skyward, then starts walking, chewing up the pavement with long strides, setting a brisk pace. I fall into step beside him. We both know our way around Philly, and the club’s not far, just below South Street, on Bainbridge, several city blocks away. I drove there earlier only out of deference to Cindy’s tired feet. She’d already hiked through the savory chaos of the food filled Italian Market and back. All of which reminds me I haven’t eaten since lunch—and my car’s parked in front of the Red Banana. Securely, I trust. Fueled by solar charged electric batteries, it starts differently from the standard gasoline models, making it tricky to steal. As for the other concern… With perfect timing, my empty stomach rumbles as we turn left onto Bainbridge and spot the neon banana, marking our destination. “Okay,” Hunter says, taking the hint but sounding grumpy about it. “We’ll grab a quick bite at the club before we drive back to your cousin’s. But you’ll have to pay for it. What little cash I had left in my pockets this evening went to the wino Erzsébet gave my clothes to.” I knew that, of course, and know he didn’t begrudge the donation either, even though he was a pauper himself at the time. He’s that kinda guy. Charming when he wants to be, a pain in the ass when he doesn’t. Generous and demanding in the same breath, a complex blend of compassion and aggression. Satin and steel. 95
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Fire and ice. You love him or you hate him. I do both. It keeps life interesting. “Ditto,” he grumbles, and halts by the neon lit entrance while I lag behind. “Are you coming?” God, I hope so. But not the way he means. “In a sec.” I cross the street to check my car, sitting safe and sound where I left it, and focus on how glad I am to see it intact. I usually keep a fifty-dollar bill hidden under the dashboard for emergencies, but I forget about that. “Well, damn,” I mutter as I rejoin Hunter, “I didn’t think to bring anything but Vlad’s dust and my keys. I don’t have any cash with me either.” His eyes narrow, and I feel him probing my mind, which I fill with visions of the haute cuisine Claudio’s kitchen serves. You can smell the club’s five-star fare all up and down the block. Equally delicious, the opening strains of The Galop sound from beyond the door. Food for the ears. The classic, quick tempo piece is from Jacques Offenbach’s Orpheus in the Underworld. Music by a French-German composer mixes with the seductive aroma of French-Italian cooking, adding sensory depth to my mental images. Hunter swallows, obviously tempted, almost salivating. “Claudio’s an old friend. He’ll probably insist on feeding us for free. He always does.” “Yeah, and we never let him. It’s not fair to impose on friendship that way. This club is his livelihood. We could pay with something besides money, though. He loves to barter.” Nonchalantly, I push open the door and step inside. “I guess I’ll have to sing for our supper, won’t I?” Or dance. The Red Banana presents two ninety-minute extravaganzas a 96
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night, one starting at ten, the other at midnight, both ending with a bang. I’ve made it here right on time to join the second show’s grand finale cancan. Heh, heh. Hunter grips my arm, his amber eyes blazing from beneath the shadow of his cap brim. He knows what a Red Banana style cancan means. “You planned this, you sneak.” “Damn straight.” Then I buried the plan in the back of my brain where it wouldn’t be noticed till now. “Why did you think I wore my costume, huh?” “I thought you were just being you.” “That, too.” Jerking loose, I thrust the bag of dust at him, dash through the audience, and do a flying grand écart—a magnificent jump-split—sailing over the orchestra pit and onto the stage. Ta-da! Applause rings out. Dancers shriek with delight. I’m swept into the thick of a ruffled chorus line, all of us in black stockings, white petticoats, and gaudy gowns. All spinning and high kicking to Jacques’s famous tune while we pepper the air with war whoops. You gotta yell when you cancan. It’s visual and audio exuberance, a cacophony of color and motion. Twirling skirts of bright blue, yellow, green…orange stripes and pink polka dots. And smack in the center, a whirling dervish in red. That’s me. We clash like hell, but we’re having a heap of fun. I’m home, and it’s as though I never left. Beside me, Kandy executes a risqué rond de jambe, a quick rotary movement of her lower right leg with the knee raised and her skirt hiked. Velveeta demonstrates the port d’armes, pivoting on one foot while grasping her other leg by the ankle and 97
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stretching it up to her ear. Not to be outdone, I turn three cartwheels across the front of the stage. “Brava! More!” a deep voice booms, egging me on. Claudio. I hear his bass-baritone laughter over the music, see him hug Hunter. They exchange a few hushed words, then Claudio takes custody of Vlad’s dust, ushers Hunter to a private booth and leaves him there. Watching out the corner of my eye, I mentally mark the spot—as I did once before. Memories swamp me. In my mind I time-warp back to five years ago. Then, as now, I was onstage, scanning the audience, sizing up my prospects… The cancan at the Red Banana always ends with the dancers leaping out into the crowd to play naughty-and-bawdy—mingle— embarrass and entice. We sashay around, sit on laps, tease and flirt. It rarely goes further than a few laughs. We’re not whores; we just act like it for the general amusement. That’s entertainment. We view it as a social service, too, and devote merciless attention to those who need it most. The shy guys with one foot still in the closet. They’re easy to recognize and fluster so adorably when you publicly proposition them. Then they come back the next night for another dose. We show them there’s room in the world for all kinds, and you’re allowed to celebrate what you are. Some of them end up working here. That’s how former basketball star Vincent Carr became Velveeta Cucaracha. That’s how a corporate king found a queen. Or vice-versa. *
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I saw what appeared to be the shyest of the shy enter the club 98
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that night. He slipped into a pool of shadow against the wall, as though hoping no one would notice him. Too late, because I already had. Then Claudio hurried forward and greeted him like an old friend. The plot thickened. So did something under my skirts. Discreetly, the stranger was concealed in a private booth. Oh, the wicked possibilities that presented. I almost drooled. My head whirled faster than my dancing feet. I hadn’t been long off the farm and didn’t know he was a celebrity. Not much news penetrates Turnville, Texas, a boil on the backside of beyond, an insular community of werewolves almost as hidden as the Earth Guardians. I didn’t realize Claudio had told Hunter of a new star at the Red Banana—a shifter—that Hunter had arrived to check me out as a possible recruit for EG, that I’d shortly be shanghaied into secret service. Who caught whom? All I cared about in that instant was “staking my claim.” Werewolves have a built-in sense that alerts them when they meet their life-mate. The moment I spied him, I knew. The next moment, I smelled cat and thought what the fuck? I balked, cursed, fought a furious fast war with myself—and lost stupendously. The damage was done. You can’t escape fate, however fickle it may seem. Love hit like a dump truck. Wham! I went flying. Knocked for a loop. Head over heels. The cancan reached its crescendo. Dancers vaulted off the stage. I rocketed past them all and crash-landed on top of Hunter in his booth. Body-slammed him to the bench. Flattened him. “Hey, sailor, buy me a drink?” I said, nose to nose. 99
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It was the first and last time I’ve ever seen him blush. “Do you have any idea who I am?” he demanded. “Yeah,” I answered. “Mine.” Then I kissed him. *
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::And for some ridiculous reason, I kissed you back.:: His telepathic voice rumbles in my head, snapping me back to the present. ::I plead temporary insanity. It was a moment of complete madness.:: Yeah, sure. We both know it was because I’m utterly irresistible. ::You’re something all right. What, has yet to be determined. If you’re through making a spectacle of yourself, get your cute little ass over here.:: Was that an invitation or an order? ::Both. We’ve got a new fight on our hands. The battle of the bulge. Claudio just sent us a banquet. Champagne and caviar, coq au vin, and pommes frites with crème fraîche. Dessert’s on the way.:: Closer than he realizes. You know what coq means, don’t you? A male chicken. So, literally, coq au vin translates to “cock with wine.” Think about it. In a replay of history, the cancan climaxes—and me with it, almost. Dancers catapult into the audience, yours truly in the lead. Is there anything sexier than French food? Yes. French food with a big juicy side dish of Hunter. I bound off the stage and into the booth, pinning him to the bench again. 100
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“Hey, sailor, buy me a drink?” “You’re a real pain in the ass,” he grumbles. “And you love me just the way I am.” His lips twitch. He’s trying not to laugh. “No, I love you in spite of it. Now get off me so we can eat.” Ain’t twisted déjà vu fun? He’s really very romantic, he just hides it well. Or so I keep telling myself. Reluctantly, I push back, allowing him to sit up and face the table. Except he’s still facing me because I haven’t vacated his lap yet. Straddling his thighs, I’ve got him locked in a back corner of the booth. “Sylver, how am I supposed to reach the food?” “Where there’s a will there’s a way. Think creatively.” I peer over my shoulder to survey the fare. Wow, so many options… Functional and decorative, on snowy linen, sits a polished pewter ice bucket holding a champagne bottle, and beside it, a translucent ruby glass tray dotted with black caviar on golden toast points. Savory sin on a platter. Flanking the appetizers stand two long-stemmed crystal glasses, filled to the brim with bubbly, a bowl of thick white crème fraîche for dipping, and two plates heaped high with coq au vin and pommes frites. Basically, braised chicken with mushrooms and French fries, but it sounds more elegant en français. In any language, the meal looks tempting as hell and smells like a slice of heaven. Hunger gnaws me inside, but its main force hits south of my stomach. There’s more on the menu than what I see spread out on the immaculate tablecloth. Our booth is one of a row nestled against the wall. Beyond, in the main dining area, public rowdiness continues. Within the 101
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cubicles, semi-cloistered comfort dwells. Built for pleasure— dining and otherwise—each booth features a long table between two wide benches, plush-padded and velvet upholstered. Enclosed on three sides, each booth is also equipped with a brocade curtain that can be drawn across the open end for added privacy (if people care to respect it). But where’s the sport in that? Anyway, I can’t reach the curtain from where I’m sitting. On Hunter. I stretch out an arm and grab a glass of champagne, instead. Whoops, I just spilled it all over him. Clumsy me. “You did that on purpose,” he accuses. I’m too busy to respond either verbally or mentally. Fingers flying, I unbutton the front of his borrowed coveralls. We’ve got to get him out of these wet clothes before he catches cold. “How about getting yourself into a new brain before the warranty on the old one expires? Shifters are immune to most illness, you idiot. We never catch cold.” “There’s a first time for everything,” I tell him. “Why take chances?” Swiftly, I strip the top half of the coveralls off his shoulders and drag it down his arms, baring him to the navel. Now I’m confronting a delectable display of hard muscled chest dusted with downy dark curls that taper to a narrow line—a provocative path that bisects six-pack abs and points the way into the pants of the garment. As if I needed directions. Hah. I pause a moment to ogle the trail, notice tiny sparkles freckling his skin, jewel-like beads of champagne mixed with his own sultry essence. He’s starting to sweat. One taunting drop clings to the nub 102
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of a flat, brown nipple, begging to be licked off. How can I refuse? Hunter stifles a groan as I lean in and trap a taste of ambrosia on the tip of my tongue. What a wicked tease when I’m famished for so much more. “That makes two of us, but I want dinner before dessert—and more privacy than we have here. You’re going to blow my cover, whitey.” No, I’m going to blow him. But dinner’s part of the plan. Who says we can’t do both? Eat while we eat? Call it multitasking. “All that needs cover is your famous face. Keep the cap pulled low, and you’re safe.” From everyone but me. I yank down the brim for him, then do the same with the six-inch zipper at the coverall’s fly. Something a good bit longer than six inches pops out the opening. A club, thick and stiff. If it were detachable, you could bludgeon a person to death with it. His lips may protest, but his dick appreciates my attention. “The rest of me would, too, if we were home. What is it with you and public places?” “I’m a pervert. Hasn’t that already been established?” Although, really I’m just free spirited and spontaneous. Also diligent. Never put off till later what you can do right now. “You could at least draw the drapes.” “And draw an audience? In this place, that’s tantamount to hanging out a sign that screams, ‘Hey, guys, we’re in here fucking!’ It’s less conspicuous and less of a challenge to the voyeurs to leave the curtain open. If we stick to the back of the booth, no one will notice us.” Probably. I twist around and pull the plates and champagne closer so I 103
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have everything within easy reach in one corner, all the edibles. Including Hunter. My artistic dilemma is how to combine them for optimum effect. “If you’re asking me, I vote for covering you with caviar, then licking you clean,” he suggests. Pant… Is it Christmas? Suddenly my Yule log’s burning and my chestnuts are roasting over the fire. He’s finally getting into the swing of things. “No, I’m that hungry. Whatever it takes to get food in my stomach, I’ll do.” Uh-huh. Without thinking about it—pure reflex action so he has no warning—I scoop up a big handful of coq au vin and smoosh it in his face. “Eat that, pussycat.” Moist chunks of chicken and plump little mushrooms tumble down his front. Wine sauce splatters us both. Food fights have started for less. “Grrr…” Hunter pushes me off him, seizes the bowl of crème fraîche, and dumps it on top of my head. I’m half blinded. It runs into my eyes, my nose, my mouth… Wow, it’s delicious! I must share. “Here, I don’t wanna be selfish, you take some.” I scrape off as much as I can and finger-paint it all over him. “You’re supposed to eat it with the potatoes.” He bares teeth in a snarl of a grin and pitches a fistful of pommes frites at me. I duck, and they fly out of the booth in a scattershot, landing who knows where. I don’t bother to check; I’m gathering up toast points. “Hell, crème fraîche is fabulous on anything. Try it with these.” 104
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Splat! I hit him in the chest with a cannonball of caviar canapés that explodes on impact. He flings another serving of frites. I retaliate with more coq au vin. There’s something sexy about this. The air temperature soars. Thirst strikes. I’m parched. “Me, too.” Together we lunge for the champagne and wrestle on the table for custody of the bottle—drain it in a few greedy guzzles. The pewter bucket tips over. Crushed ice spills everywhere. The little avalanche does nothing to cool us. The booth’s beginning to look like a Jackson Pollock painting, and so are we—dripping with sauce and rich cream, speckled with continental cuisine, wallowing in gooey extravagance. We’re sticky and flushed, breathing hard, pumped up and hot with battle fever. Hot with hunger, hot with excitement. Hot for food and each other. A major mess is escalating into a major turn-on. Plates and glasses topple off the tablecloth, shoved aside to make more room. Silverware clatters to the floor. Throwing caution to the winds of chance, Hunter kicks out of his coveralls. I rip free from my costume. Like animals we attack the remains of the dinner—on us—sucking sauce off skin, searching for tasty morsels, and finding them in the most interesting places. He gives me a raspy tongue-bath, cat style, growling with epicurean ecstasy. I lap up crème fraîche and caviar while exploring his torso. A button mushroom sits nested in his navel. How appropriate. A fragment of chicken clings to the base of his coq. Even better. 105
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I lick it off, then nibble my way up the underside of a meaty drumstick, using tiny sharp bites that send noticeable quivers through him. When I reach the top, a big juicy mouthful, purple tinted and smooth as a plum, I wrap my lips around it. And pause. Hunter gasps—tenses—holds his breath. Expecting me to devour him, swallow him whole? I’m seriously considering it… Nah, not yet. He groans as I reverse direction to sample his balls instead. Drunk on champagne, I dig hands beneath him and squeeze his muscular ass, bury my face in kinky dark curls, inhale his musk. He boils my blood and fries my circuits. Dizzy with desire, I torment one testicle, then the other, nuzzling, nipping— “Ow, watch the teeth.” Oops. Sorry, I lost control. “I didn’t know you had any.” He should talk. A warm grip captures my head, and Hunter hauls me up his body. His arms clamp around me, like a vise, and he rolls, pinning me beneath him. I’m trapped between hard table and harder man. Not that I’m complaining. Amber eyes blaze down at me, a feral expression half hidden by the shade of his cap brim. Amazingly, he’s still wearing it, but it’s been knocked a bit crooked. How rakish, in a down-home country sort of way. He looks like a lusty farm boy, dirty and sweaty from a day in the fields. I knew a few of those back in Texas, but not as well as I wished. None of them were gay. I was a lonely and lone wolf till I hit the bright lights of the city—bored out of my gourd—starved for love, ravenous for action. “Now you’re ravenous only for me, and we’re going to keep it 106
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that way, aren’t we? No more tests,” he whispers, a husky hint of warning in his tone. “What would you have done tonight if Vlad hadn’t turned out to be an enemy, and I hadn’t shown up?” Very little, probably. It was just an experiment, after all, born of anger, and likely would have failed. I’m a hopeless romantic at heart, not a…um, scientist. His question, however, charms me to the core. Hunter so rarely shows his jealous side, I often forget he has one. Such moments must be savored. “Well, he was, and you did, so I guess we’ll never know for sure, will we?” I answer. The devil made me say it. Yeah, I’m also an evil tease. Sue me. Hunter growls. “No more cancans either. The Earth Guardians do damned important work, and you’re my best agent. EG needs you more than any stage show does.” Translation: he doesn’t want others ogling me. I’ve got his number now. Isn’t he cute when he goes possessive? He makes a strangling noise and squashes his nose against mine. “You drive me nuts, you know that, don’t you?” No, but God knows I’m trying to. I rake fingers down his back and grasp his hips, wiggle against him and bump our goodies together. “If you wanna fight, how about a round of dueling dicks? You pick the worst times to talk business. Can’t we discuss EG later? You’re killing the mood.” “I’ll kill you if you ever again think of experimenting with anyone but me.” Okay, now I’m mad. At least all I did was think about it. Hunter’s actually committed the crime. “Not nearly as much as you’ve accused, and not anytime recently. That’s long behind me. You might appreciate the effort I’ve made, if nothing else. Marriage is natural for your kind. I had 107
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to learn it—but I have. I’m sick of being blamed for past behavior that’s as alien to me today as monogamy was to me back then. Some leopards can change their spots.” “You’re not a leopard. You’re a hypocritical housecat.” “And you’re a pigheaded son of a bitch.” “Let’s leave my mother out of this, shall we?” “Fuck you.” Duh. “Well, hell, I have been waiting! Fish or cut bait, for godssake. Go for it, pussycat.” “Whatever you say, whitey. Just remember you asked for it.” Snarling, all jealous anger and lust, he grips me under the thighs and shoves my knees up to my shoulders. A heavy-duty, passion powered jackhammer nails me to the table. I swear I hear cheers. Finally! Handel’s “Hallelujah Chorus” sounds in my head. Our French meal morphs to Turkish. I’m shish kabob. Hunter skewers my ass, stretches my passage, rams his dick in up to my tonsils. Now we’re cookin’. I’m spitted and roasting on his coals—ain’t nothin’ hotter. Inferno heat floods me, bonfire burn. I smell the smoke. My own dick swells to near bursting. My ass already is. He pulls out and rams in again—and again—three sharp thrusts in rapid succession. Three strikes and I’m out. He’s heading for a homerun. The stadium crowd goes crazy— “Your mental images are crazy,” he pants out, never missing a 108
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beat. “Reading your mind is like riding a schizophrenic roller coaster. How did we go from food to sports?” Good question. It must have something to do with the baseball cap. I straighten its crooked brim for him and clench inner muscles, goading him into high gear. He responds with a long, hard line-drive straight down centerfield. The impact almost tosses us off the table. I clutch its edge to anchor us in place, hang on for dear life while he runs my bases…slides into home plate…and explodes like dynamite. Pow! Chest heaving with exertion, he collapses on top of me. “Did I win the Pennant?” Nope, something better. The game isn’t over yet. And it’s my turn at bat. Craftily, I squirm out from under him, which leaves him facedown. Very tempting. Before he can move, I’m all over him, kissing his back, nipping his neck. I burrow an arm beneath him and fist his spent cock. Even soft, it’s a handful. I squeeze, and it regains lost ground, grows fat and firm in my grasp. That’s one of the things I love about Hunter. It doesn’t take much to restart his engine. “And it’s impossible to turn yours off.” “Is that a complaint, pussycat? You want me to stop?” “Hell, no.” That’s what I figured. He muffles a moan against the table as I mount him and sandwich my meat in the crack of his scrumptious buns. “Oh, great. We’re back to food imagery?” Why not? What’s a ballgame without hotdogs? I slide mine up and down lengthwise, teasing his opening. His 109
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breath hitches. My heart hammers my ribs. I can’t stand anymore. Ready or not, here I come— “Not too soon, I hope.” “Oh, shut up,” I tell him, and spear deep into his sweet ass. That ends that discussion. I’m engulfed in satin flames, caught tight in a silky hot vise. All my nerve endings blaze alight. All my consciousness seems centered at the base of my belly. I’ve sometimes thought my dick had a brain of its own. I’m sure of that now. It sets a fevered pace, pumping in and out and pulling me along with it. “And pounding me into raw hamburger,” Hunter groans. “Is that a complaint?” I ask again. “You want to stop?” “Hell, no!” “All right already. Then quit bitchin’.” Geez, why do we always have to cover the same territory over and over? Pant, gasp, pant— “Because you’re nuts?” he rasps out in labored breaths. “One definition of insanity is repeating the same action ad nauseam, hoping for a different result.” “Brilliant deduction, Sherlock.” I punctuate the answer with an inward thrust. “I did marry you, after all. That’s hardly the act of a rational person.” “So what does that make me? I married you,” he parries. “If the shoe fits…” Bump, grind, hump— Somewhere in the middle of all this we die. The French call orgasm “the little death.” An understatement. There’s nothing little about it. With a blinding blast, in rocky unison, Hunter and I climax. 110
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Grandly. Gloriously. Like a double helix, we spiral headlong into heaven. And the devil take any disputes. It is crazy, but it’s the way our love works. Our hearts follow their own agenda regardless of what we think or say. Our lovemaking melts bones and shatters souls, then binds the pieces back together. I hear angels singing. Or is that snickering? I hear laughter and applause, actually, but I can’t see its source. We’ve been facing the back wall, drunk on champagne and each other. “Shit.” Hiding behind his cap brim, Hunter rolls me off him, scrambles off the table and into the shadowed corner of a bench. Naked and unabashed, I sit up and turn around to confront the booth’s open end. I’ve never been the shy type, and it’s too late to start now. Remember those cheers I thought I heard earlier? Well, it appears they were real. A kaleidoscope of smiling faces stares into the booth. We’ve attracted quite an audience. Arms rise out of the crowd, waving. Multiple hands give me the thumbs-up sign. I’m tempted to take a bow. “You would,” Hunter grumbles. Some people have no sense of humor. Others are irrepressible. In the front row, gaudy and grinning, stand Velveeta, Kandy, Cherry, and Hannah, each holding a white card with a big black number scribbled on it, the way some athletic competitions are judged. I quickly tally our overall score. “We got a nine-point-two,” I inform Hunter. He curses again. “Shit, I’d have given us a nine-point-three at least.” 111
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Smart-ass. Now you know why I love him. And hopefully can explain it to me.
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EPILOGUE The morning after… I awake to the soft light of dawn. I always do. It’s a curse that comes from having grown up on a farm. No matter how late I go to bed, my internal alarm clock is set for sunrise. Hunter’s still asleep, curled up in a ball under the covers, like a cat. Quietly, so as not to disturb him, I slip into my red sweatpants and star T-shirt, and pad barefoot down to the kitchen. I smell coffee brewing and hear a strange voice… Ah, it’s a radio newscaster, announcing the day’s headlines. Freddy stands at the counter, preparing a breakfast tray while he listens, a strapping figure in his butler suit, with a hangdog expression on his handsome face. 113
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Well, he did have a difficult night. Hung over and lovesick, are we? Ready to surrender to Fate? “Never in a million years,” he answers the thought—still stuck in denial, I see, though he has a new excuse for it. “I’m worried about Mr. Hunter.” He points to the radio. “They’re saying he’s ruined, bankrupt. It’s all over the news. What’ll happen to his charities, all the good work he’s done? I’m bloody well sick about it.” I’m suddenly a bit queasy myself. Yes, Hunter has another fortune now, but he got it from Cindy. Who got it from vampires. It’s not like he can publicly explain how his charitable coffers refilled. We didn’t think he’d need to. If the story hadn’t come out this morning, there’d have been no story to report. He would’ve been back in action before the general populace realized he’d been gone. “Crimey, then don’t explain!” Freddy spouts. “Just say the news reports jumped the gun—that he had a run of bad luck, but pulled himself out and is stronger than ever.” An intense gaze bores into mine—a gaze gone wild, searching. “He is, isn’t he? It’s true what I see in your mind? Miss Cindy came into a bloody big bunch of money and gave it to Mr. Hunter? Why?” His voice cracks on the word. He pauses, swallows. “You…you don’t think the lass is dimwitted, do you?” “Nope, just generous. She wanted the money to go to the people who need it most, and figured Hunter was the best one to distribute it.” I suppress a smirk. “The real question, of course, is what you think. Cindy’s fortune would have been her husband’s, too, if she’d kept it.” Freddy coughs and looks away, hoisting his dignity up by its bootstraps. Feigning disinterest, he glances at the open doorway. 114
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Right on cue, Cindy appears in it. Ain’t it amazing how these things work? She wears a ratty, tatty terrycloth bathrobe. Her hair is tousled, and her eyes are bleary. Her face is puffy and blotched from sleep. Freddy’s expression freezes, then crumbles into complete capitulation. “My God, you’re gorgeous!” he declares, strides forward, and sweeps her into a long, passionate kiss. I guess that answers my question. Cindy hangs limp in his arms when he surfaces for air. Panting for breath, she peers over his shoulder. Her eyes seek out mine. “Sylver, who is this man?” “Yours, hon.” Grinning from ear to ear, I collect the tray off the counter and pad back up the stairs to my own life-mate. ::Wake up, pussycat, it’s time for breakfast in bed.:: For starters, we’ve got cream cheese and marmalade, and I know just where to spread them…
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M IMI RISER
Mimi Riser has been an actress, model, clown, belly-dancer, jewelry designer, editor and publisher, but her first and foremost love is writing. She specializes in offbeat tales where laughter reigns and good always triumphs—but she makes her characters really work for their happy endings. Her books have been said to read like a snowball rolling downhill, gathering size and speed as it goes. But if you think her stories are crazy, you should see her life. Once devout city people, she and her husband exchanged the hustle and bustle of Philadelphia a lifetime or two ago for the natural, rugged splendor of the rural southwest. They were looking for a simpler way of life. They got it. It ended up being so “natural and rugged,” they spent their first six and a half years there in a hand-built house with dirt floors, no electricity and no plumbing. This has proved helpful for her historicals as she can now write about the “olden days” from personal experience. They have since rejoined the 21st century and enjoy life on the open range with a house full of eccentric cats and a large, wacky dog who thinks she’s a cat, too. Mimi has had five novels published to date along with numerous articles and short stories. Her historical romance, I Do, was a “Top Ten Finisher” in the mammoth Preditors & Editors Readers Poll of 2003, and her contemporary comedy, Every Jack Needs His Jil, won the poll the following year for the “Best Mainstream Novel of 2004.” Samantha White and The Seven Dwarves is her first erotic-romance and was one of the winners in Amber Quill’s 2007 Heat Wave contest.
To learn more about Mimi and her writing, please visit her website: http://www.mimiriser.com *
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Don’t miss Your Cheatin’ Heart by Mimi Riser, available at AmberAllure.com!
For Sylver Starr, it’s not easy being a cross-dressing werewolf, a secret agent for Earth Guardians, Inc., and also being married to one of the richest men in the world, a billionaire who just happens to be a cat-shifter. Yep, canine and feline, a match made in heaven. Not! The problem is, wolves mate for life, and we all know about tomcats when it comes to fidelity, right? Add to Sylver’s trouble a homophobic deputy sheriff and an alien invasion of Crocodoids from the satellite galaxy Draco Dwarf, and… Well, let’s just say Sylver Starr, werewolf and secret agent extraordinaire, is about to have a very interesting night.
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