CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
DEVIL IN A BLUE DRESS
Celina slowly turned to face me. She wore a
one-piece, royal blue jumper with ankle boots, her hair in a
ponytail. Her eyes widened in apparent shock.
Okay, now I was confused. Why did she look
surprised to see me?
Her arm still in my hand, she moved a step closer.
“If you’re smart, child, you’ll let go of my hand while you still
have yours to use.”
“I was told you wanted to meet me,” I informed her.
“By a mutual friend.”
Almost instantaneously, her expression changed. Her
eyes narrowed, her nostrils flared, and her magic rose in an angry,
peppery cloud. The humans still moved past with fair food and
plastic cups of beer in hand, completely oblivious to the magical
reactor who was throwing off enough power to light the Loop.
“That little shit,” she muttered, followed by a few
choice curses.
I assumed she meant Paulie, but if she hadn’t been
expecting me . . .
“Who did you think you were meeting?”
Her expression went haughty. “As you are well
aware, and as the GP has reminded you, my life is none of your
concern.”
“Chicago is my concern. Cadogan House is my
concern.”
She scoffed. “You’re a vampire in a fourth-rate
House. And sleeping with its Master isn’t exactly a coup.”
I resisted the urge to do the nail raking and hair
pulling I’d complained about only a few days ago. Instead, I gave
back the same pretentious look she gave me. It wasn’t that I was
naïve about Celina or her power—or the damage she could do to me.
But I was tired of being afraid. And if the GP was going to act
like she wasn’t a threat, then I was, too.
“My life is none of your concern, either,” I
countered. “And I don’t care how well you’ve managed to convince
the GP you’re a good citizen and have nothing to do with the havoc
in this city right now. I know it’s bullshit, and I am not afraid
of you. Not anymore. I’m also not afraid of the GP, so I’m going to
give you one chance to answer this question.” I pressed my nails
into the flesh of her arm. “Did you put V on the streets?”
Celina looked around, seemed to realize that the
people around us were beginning to stare. And of all the reactions
I might have imagined, the one she handed back wasn’t even on the
list.
“Maybe I did,” she said, loud enough for all to
hear. “Maybe I helped put V on the streets. So what?”
My mouth opened in shock. Celina had just announced
to a few thousand humans that she’d helped put V on the street. It
was a coup for me, but there was no way she’d make that kind of
announcement if she didn’t think she had an out. What was her
game?
The humans around us stopped, now staring full out.
A couple of them popped out phones and were taping the scene.
“What’s your connection to Paulie Cermak? I know
you talked to him at Navarre House.”
She barked out a laugh. “Paulie Cermak is a little
worm. He’s got a warehouse in Greektown that houses the V, and he’s
been handling the distribution from there. That’s why there wasn’t
any V in his house.” She gave me an appraising gaze. “What’s more
interesting is how you learned about it. Morgan told you, no?” She
looked me up and down. “Did you offer yourself for a little
information?”
In addition to feeling disgusted by the suggestion,
I felt a little sympathy for Morgan. Celina’s craziness didn’t
excuse the fact that Morgan wasn’t reliable, but it sure did
explain why he wasn’t trustworthy. If he’d learned to be a Master
by following in Celina’s footsteps, there’d probably been no hope
for him.
“And the raves?”
“The raves were the linchpin,” she said. “The key
to the entire system. They were means to get V—and humans—into the
hands of vampires.”
Celina looked around, realized she had a captive
audience of humans who’d recognized who she was—and the fact that
she was supposed to be locked away in England, not standing in the
middle of Street Fest confessing to crimes against the citizens of
Chicago.
If I’d been in her position, I would have balked.
I’d have lowered my head and ducked through the crowd, seeking
escape. But Celina wasn’t your average vampire. With nothing close
to regret or fear in her eyes—and while I stared at her, shocked at
her audacity—she began to address the crowd.
“For too long, I bought into the notion that humans
and vampires could simply coexist. That being vampire meant tamping
down certain urges, working in communion with humans, leading
humans.”
She began to turn in a circle, offering her sermon
to the crowd. “I was wrong. Vampires should be vampires. Truly,
completely vampires. We are the next evolution of humans. V reminds
us who we are. And you, too—all of you—could have our strength. Our
powers. Our immortality!”
“You killed humans!” shouted one of the humans.
“You deserve to die.”
Celina’s smile faltered. She’d changed positions in
a second attempt to ingratiate herself with humans, and it still
hadn’t worked. She opened her mouth to counter the assertion, but
the next words weren’t hers.
Four uniformed CPD officers stepped around her.
Three pointed weapons; the fourth grabbed her wrists and cuffed
them behind her back.
“Celina Desaulniers,” he said, “you have the right
to remain silent. Anything you say could be used against you in a
court of law. You have the right to an attorney. If you cannot
afford one, one will be appointed to you. Do you understand the
rights I’ve read to you?”
Celina struggled once, and she was strong enough
that the man who’d cuffed and restrained her had to fight to keep
her on the ground. But after a moment she stopped, her expression
going pleasantly blank.
That wasn’t a good sign.
“She’ll try to glamour you,” I warned. “Stay
focused, and fight through it. She can’t make you do anything;
she’ll just try to lower your inhibitions. You might want to have
the Ombudsman meet you at the station. He’s got staff who can help
you.”
Three of the cops ignored me, but the fourth nodded
with appreciation. It couldn’t have been easy to get a lecture from
a skinny vamp with a ponytail.
“There’s no need to glamour them,” Celina said, her
blue-eyed gaze on me. “I’ll be out before you can warn your lover
that you found me here. Oh, and enjoy your conversation with
Darius. I’m sure he’ll be thrilled to find out about this.”
She went willingly. After a moment, the crowd
completely dissipated, leaving no evidence of Celina’s recapture or
the proselytizing speech she’d just given.
That gave me a minute to focus on the bigger
question: What the hell had just happened?
I stood there for a moment, still trying to wrap
my mind around Celina’s confession and arrest.
Long story short: I had to be missing something.
The entire thing was way too easy and felt like a giant setup.
Celina clearly didn’t know she was going to meet me, but she’d
nevertheless confessed to the entire crowd that she’d been helping
Paulie distribute drugs and arrange the raves. And then she tried
to convince them to join the vampire bandwagon.
How did that make sense?
It simply didn’t. While I wasn’t unhappy Celina was
off the streets and back in the hands of the CPD, I couldn’t figure
out her angle. She had to have one. There was no way a woman as
egotistical as Celina makes a confession without thinking she’ll
get something out of it. Maybe that was it. Did she think she could
get out of it? Did she think she was immune from trouble because
she had GP protection? Unfortunately, that possibility wasn’t
entirely unrealistic.
I didn’t know what game she was playing, but I knew
this wasn’t the end of the story. Vampire drama rarely wrapped up
so easily.
I sighed and pulled out my phone, preparing to give
Ethan a quick update before I searched for a cab. I’m not sure what
made me glance up or over, but there he was—right in front of me.
Paulie sat at a small, plastic café table inside a beer tent. Two
empty plastic cups sat on the table in front of him, and a third,
half-full cup was in his hand. He lifted it to me, a toast to my
participation in whatever con he was running.
At least to Paulie, this had been a game. He’d set
up Celina, but why? To get her out of the way? So he could lose the
vampire middleman—the woman bringing unwanted drama to the entire
operation—and gain access to her share of the profits?
I shifted my body weight forward to launch myself
toward him. But before I could move, I was stopped by the same
thing that had kept McKetrick from me—humans.
This time, a family moved in front of me. Mother
and a double stroller of sleeping children in the lead; father with
a sleeping infant on his hip pulling a red wagon that held a third
sleeping toddler. The entire family was tethered together with
ribbon. It was a wagon train of family.
By the time they’d moved their caravan out of the
way and I looked up again, Paulie was gone.