6
Lopez was sitting slumped in a stiff-backed
chair next to the makeup table. His face was turned away from me,
but I could see it clearly reflected in the brightly lit mirror
that ran the length of the table. His legs were stretched out in
front of him, his arms and ankles crossed, his chin resting on his
chest. His eyes were closed and his long, dark lashes lay against
his cheeks in peaceful repose.
He was ... dozing? Here?
He flinched and lifted his head abruptly when
Leischneudel, hot on my heels as he unlaced the back of my costume,
bumped into my suddenly immobile body, inadvertently smashed his
pert nose against the back of my head, and exclaimed, “Ow!”
“Oops!” I said.
Lopez’s dazed gaze flew to us as he sat up,
blinking in startled surprise. I stepped through the doorway and
turned to face Leischneudel, whose hand was clasped over his nose
while his eyes watered.
“I’m sorry! I’m so sorry. You should get danger pay
for working with me tonight. Is it bleeding?” I said in a rush,
more flustered by the sight of Lopez than of my fellow thespian
staggering backward in pain (again) because of me. “Come on, Daemon
might not be far behind us. Get in here before he sees it.” After
what had just happened, I wasn’t as certain as I used to be that
Daemon’s appetite for hemoglobin was just an act.
I dragged Leischneudel into my dressing room,
slammed the door behind us, and tried to pry his hand away from his
face.
“Let me see it,” I said, using the firm tone I
often found it expedient to employ with him.
He removed his hand and gave a little sniff as he
reached for the pocket of his elegant Regency waistcoat.
“It’s not bleeding,” I said with relief. Unlike a
certain D-list celebrity who reveled in his gothic antics (my neck
was really smarting, and I knew there’d be a telltale mark there by
tomorrow), I had no desire to see my colleagues’ blood.
Behind me, I heard Lopez rise to his feet and shove
the chair away.
Leischneudel pulled out a neatly folded
handkerchief and used it to dab at his eyes. “It’s all right. It
just really hurt for a second there.” He sniffed again and shook
his head. “I thought things like this wouldn’t happen
anymore.”
“Things like walking into me?” I said.
“Pain.”
“I’m sorry,” I said again. “I forgot you were right
behind me.”
He stuffed his handkerchief back into his pocket,
touched his nose tenderly, and said, “I’m fine. It feels better
already. And it’s a lot easier to get this thing off you when
you’re standing still, anyhow.” He put his hand on my shoulder to
turn me slightly as he shifted position to get his hands on the
back of my dress again. That’s when he saw Lopez.
“Oh!” Leischneudel froze in surprise, his hands on
the laces of my gown, as he stared at the strange man in my
dressing room.
Taking in the detective’s uncharacteristically
grubby appearance tonight, I suddenly realized how disreputable
Lopez looked. Even intimidating. Particularly to someone who had no
idea who he was or what he was doing here.
Come to think of it... “What are you doing here?” I
blurted.
“You know him?” Leischneudel asked anxiously.
“We need to talk,” Lopez said to me.
“We do?”
“Right away,” he said, his gaze riveted on the
sheer foundation garment exposed by my half-undone laces. Then his
blue eyes shifted coldly to Leischneudel. “Hi.”
“Er . . . hello,” the actor replied, obviously
wondering why Lopez looked ready to kill him.
My heart pounded with mixed emotions.
I had struggled with my desires but had remained
resolute and strong since the last time we’d seen each other, that
stormy night in Harlem more than two months ago. Why did Lopez have
to come here now and make this even harder for me?
I had missed him so much. Why hadn’t he come
sooner, damn him?
Wow, he came! He couldn’t stay away from me.
Okay, stop, I thought.
Recognizing the awkward silence that was filling
the room as I stared in smitten fascination at Lopez while he and
Leischneudel eyed each other, I realized that I should make
introductions.
I said to Lopez, “This is Leischneudel Drysdale,
one of the actors in the show.”
Calling on his good manners, Leischneudel released
my laces and stepped forward to offer Lopez a courteous
handshake.
I said, “Leischneudel, this is—”
“Hector,” Lopez said, giving Leischneudel’s hand a
quick, curt shake. “Hector Sousa. I’m a friend of Esther’s.”
I gaped at Lopez, stunned by his use of a phony
name and having no idea what to say next.
Leischneudel looked down at his hand with a slight
frown, rubbing his fingers together as if trying to remove an
unpleasant substance.
This caused Lopez to rub his own hand
self-consciously down the front of his sweatshirt. “Um,
sorry.”
Always the gentleman, Leischneudel quickly said,
“No, no, not at all.” But since the cat was out of the bag, he
pulled out his handkerchief again and wiped his hand. I noticed
that the white fabric came away darkly smeared, which would make
Fiona even crankier than usual.
I glanced at Lopez’s hands and noticed that they
were rather dirty, as if smeared with crude oil. Like everything
else about his appearance this evening, that was unusual for him.
While not fastidious, he was generally a clean, tidy guy. Tonight,
though, he looked like a street thug. Or, alternately, like a
laborer at the end of a long, hard overtime shift.
An NYPD detective assigned to the Organized Crime
Control Bureau, Connor Lopez (who didn’t look like a “Connor”) was
in his early thirties, slightly under six feet tall, and lithe and
lean, like a soccer player. The youngest of three sons, he had
inherited rich blue eyes from his Irish-American mother; and maybe
his lush, full lips had been another of her hereditary gifts to
him. Otherwise, he (I had always assumed) resembled his Cuban-born
father; his straight, shiny hair was coal black, his skin was a
burnished golden olive hue, and his facial features were strong and
distinct.
When on duty, he usually wore conservative,
budget-conscious suits (I suspected he was a regular customer of
Banana Republic). Off-duty, I had mostly seem him dressed like any
regular guy trying not to scare off a woman: casual, but not
sloppy.
Tonight, though, he was in a hooded gray sweatshirt
that had seen better days. There was an odd yellow stain around the
bottom hem, a hole in one elbow, dark smudges all over the sleeves,
and more smudges on his chest and stomach, as if he’d wiped his
dirty hands there a number of times before now. The rounded
neckline of a T-shirt was visible above the zipped-up V-neck of the
sweatshirt, and I could see, even with this limited view, that the
garment was ragged and old. His legs were covered by slightly baggy
military khakis—the kind of bilecolored trousers that have lots of
pockets and pouches. He wore lace-up work boots that came up to his
shins. They looked waterproof, sturdy, and well-made; but like the
clothing, they, too, appeared to have been in his life a long time
and subjected to hard use.
Lopez looked very tired, and his eyes were
bloodshot. He also needed a haircut and a shave. If not for the
rolled-up bandana around his head that was holding his hair off his
face, it would be hanging in his eyes; and he looked as if he
hadn’t used a razor in at least three days. The heavy shadow of
facial hair made me notice something else: he was unusually pale.
The last time I had seen him, in late summer, he’d been tan and
sun-kissed. Now he looked rather sallow, as if he hadn’t been
outdoors in weeks.
Wondering at the changes in him in the months since
I had last seen him, a horrible thought struck me. Had he been
kicked off the police force—which I felt sure would devastate
him—because of me? Or because of what happened that night in
Harlem? Did unemployment and depression explain his grubby, unkempt
appearance?
I was appalled. I had given up Lopez because I
didn’t want to ruin his life—along with the far more pressing
concern of not wanting to get him killed. Had I ruined his life
anyhow?
Oh, no.
“What’s happened to you?” I asked in
despair.
Both men looked startled by my tone.
“Is something wrong?” Leischneudel asked
uncertainly.
“He never looks like this,” I said, shaking my
head.
“No?” Leischneudel said.
“No, of course not,” I replied. Lopez normally
looked like the sort of man you could bring home to your mother, if
your mother weren’t Jewish.
“Oh. But it’s kind of a good look for him, don’t
you think?” Leischneudel said generously. “Sort of . . . the Jersey
docks meet the Meatpacking District.”
“Maybe when it was a meatpacking area,” I
said dismissively. “But not now, all trendy nightclubs and gay
bars.”
“Well, yes, the grime might be a little much for
the club scene,” Leischneudel conceded. “Even for rough
trade.”
“You do know I’m standing right here?” Lopez said
to us.
“Oh, I’m sorry!” Leischneudel giggled nervously.
“Esther and I talk about makeup and costume so much, I guess it’s
become an unconscious habit. We didn’t mean to be rude.”
“I’m not in cos . . .” A faint look of surprise
crossed Lopez’s face, then he smiled wryly. “That’s okay.”
“Are you all right?” I asked him. “I mean ... you
haven’t been kicked off—”
“I’m fine. Everything’s fine with me. Okay? It’s
you I’m worried about.” Lopez brushed self-consciously at his ratty
clothes. “I just didn’t have time to clean up before I came
here.”
“So this look isn’t a whole new lifestyle for you?”
I said in relief.
“Not exactly. I was in a hurry.”
“And you rushed to the theater at three o’clock in
the morning from where?” I prodded. “A wildman wilderness camp near
an oil refinery?”
He smiled again. “Good guess.”
I frowned and started to say, “Lop—”
“I needed to talk to you.” He glanced at
Leischneudel, then gave me a meaningful look. “It’s important. I
didn’t think it should wait for a shower and a change of
wardrobe.”
“Why? What’s wrong?” Leischneudel asked in
concern.
We both looked at him.
“Oh!” Leischneudel giggled nervously again. I
thought he was blushing, but the heavy stage makeup made it hard to
tell. He started backing toward the door. “That was my cue, wasn’t
it? Sorry. I’ll leave you two alone to talk.” He opened the door
and backed into the hallway. “Take your time.”
“Thanks. We will.” The moment the door closed,
Lopez said tersely to me, “Why was he taking off your
clothes?”
There was a soft knock and the door reopened. Lopez
looked at Leischneudel with an expression of exaggerated patience
as the actor stuck his head back into the room.
“Er, Esther. I’ll wait for you in my dressing
room?”
“Okay,” I said.
“You won’t leave without me?” Leischneudel prodded,
his face briefly twisting into an expression of hunted dread at the
prospect of facing the vamparazzi alone tonight.
“Of course not,” I said.
As soon as the door closed again, I said to Lopez,
“Why did you give him a fake name?”
“Let’s get back to my question. Are you
sleeping with that guy?”
“With Leischneudel?” I felt like he’d just
asked me if I was sleeping with Bambi or Winnie-the-Pooh. “Of
course not.”
“Then why were his hands all over you?”
“He was helping me with this costume.” I gestured
with irritation to the laces on my back. “It’s so authentic, I
can’t get out of it by myself.”
Lopez choked on a startled laugh. When I gave him
an exasperated look, he tried to stop.
“Sorry.” He cleared his throat and said again,
“Sorry.” Then he ruined his apology by laughing some more.
“Very funny,” I said sourly. “You’re not the one
who has to get into and out of this gown six nights a week.”
“Speaking of your costume—”
“No, now we do my question. Why did you use
a phony name when I introduced you to Leischneudel?”
He was about to respond when we heard Daemon’s
voice in the hall right outside my dressing room. “Is she in there?
Ah, good!”
“But she’s got a visitor, and they don’t want . .
.” Leischneudel protested as the door was flung open and banged
against the wall. “. . . to be disturbed.”
“What?” Daemon sashayed through the door as he
casually shook off Leischneudel’s awkward attempt to restrain him.
I turned to face Daemon, annoyed by the intrusion. He came to an
abrupt halt when he saw Lopez. “Oh! A visitor? Oh.” Daemon’s
glance flicked past me for a moment, then he met my eyes and
smirked. I felt a slight draft on my back and realized he could see
in the mirror that my gown was half-unlaced. Obviously concluding
that he had interrupted my visitor in the middle of undressing me,
Daemon now included Lopez in his smirk. “Ohhhh . . .”
I said to my companion, “Meet Daemon Ravel, the
vampire onstage.”
“And offstage, too,” Daemon added, always quick to
present his creature-of-the-night credentials.
Lopez folded his arms across his chest. “I trust
you have a good reason for barging into a lady’s dressing room
without knocking?”
“Ooh!” Daemon grinned lasciviously at me. “You’ve
found a spicy one.”
“If whatever you want isn’t really, really
important,” I said to Daemon, “then it’ll have to wait until
tomorrow.”
“And rugged,” Daemon added, giving Lopez an
appraising look. “But maybe a touch overdone on the
gutter-rat theme.”
“What do you want?” I asked wearily.
“Just returning your earring, darling.” He held up
the dangling object up for me to see. I touched my earlobes and
realized one earring was indeed missing. Daemon said, “It came off
when I bit you.”
With my attention divided between playing my role,
wanting to gut Daemon for the way he was taking advantage of me
onstage, and physical pain as he actually bit and sucked, I hadn’t
noticed the earring falling off—go figure.
“Thanks. If there’s nothing else . . .” I nodded
toward the door as I took the earring from him.
All three men watched me put it on. Then Lopez
frowned, came closer, and touched the sore spot on my neck. The
skin was tender, and I flinched a little.
“What happened here?” Lopez asked me as he cast a
dark glare at the two men.
Realizing he could see it, I turned around and went
to look at the hickey in the mirror. Sure enough, the welt wasn’t
waiting until tomorrow to become visible. It was already mottled
and pink, the skin inflamed and irritated, with little dots of
purple bruising starting to appear, thanks to Daemon’s teeth.
“Goddamn it, Daemon. Do you know how much makeup
I’m going to have to put on this tomorrow?” I said. “Not to mention
how much it hurts.”
“Did I get a little too carried away?” Daemon asked
with sultry amusement. “Sorry. You bring out my hunger,
Esther.”
“He did that to you?” Lopez said to
me.
“You bit her?” Leischneudel exclaimed,
scandalized. “That’s what happened out there tonight? Daemon! You
shouldn’t really bite her.”
“He did that to you in the play?” Lopez
said.
I nodded. “And if he does it again, I’m going to
castrate him.” In the mirror, I met Daemon’s gaze with a cold
glare.
“Surely you’re not going to pretend you didn’t
enjoy it even a little?” the vampire icon purred. “The
audience certainly liked it. And I must admit, so did I.”
“Out,” said Lopez. “Now.”
Daemon said, “It’s that warm, pulsing jugular vein
right under my mouth that I just can’t resist when we’re—”
“That’s her carotid artery.” Lopez shoved Daemon
through the door.
“Wait, I knew that,” said Daemon, stumbling
backward.
“And if your teeth ever touch it again,” Lopez
said, “I’ll remove them all. Are we clear?”
Daemon staggered into Leischneudel, who was asking
if I was all right as Lopez slammed the door in their faces.
“This show is really taking its toll,” I grumbled,
studying my reflection. “I’ve got a black eye, too, under all this
makeup. One of Daemon’s crazed fans attacked me last night.”
“Yeah, I heard.”
“You heard?” I said in surprise.
“And to think my mom worried that police work would
be dangerous,” he said dryly. “I guess she should just be glad that
none of her sons became actors.”
“Hmph.”
Lopez crossed the room to stand behind me and look
at my welt while I studied it in the mirror. “He didn’t break the
skin. But disinfect it when you get home, anyhow,” he said. “I
doubt that guy’s had all his shots.”
“You should have punched him,” I said grumpily. “He
should be punched.”
“He should be,” Lopez agreed, meeting my eyes in
the mirror. “But the cops will make him plenty miserable tonight
without my help. And if we can avoid it, I’d rather they didn’t
know I was here. If I break his nose, well, word might get
out.”
“The cops?” I turned around to look at him
directly, disquieted again. “Are you still a cop?”
“Of course.” His surprised expression changed as
realization dawned. “Oh. I get it. You thought I’d lost my
job and become a derelict? Do I really look that bad?” When
I nodded, he grinned. It made him look a lot more like his usual
self. He gazed over my shoulder, assessing his reflection in the
mirror. “I guess I’ve gotten so used to it, I didn’t
realize.”
“What’s going on?” I demanded. “Why do you look so
scruffy? Why are you using a phony name? Why can’t the cops know
you were here tonight? Why ... Oh! Oh. Oh, my God.” I had
seen enough episodes of Crime and Punishment to make an
educated guess. “You’re working undercover?”
He nodded. “And I shouldn’t tell you. So let’s not
tell anyone else. Understood?”
I had also watched enough episodes of
C&P to know that working undercover was dangerous—and
being exposed while working undercover was particularly
dangerous.
“I won’t tell anyone,” I assured him. “So you’re
still a cop. But in theory, you’re not a cop right
now?”
“In theory, I’m also not even here right now.” He
picked up a makeup sponge that was lying on the table, examined it
briefly, then took it over to the sink in the corner, where he
turned on the water.
I turned to look at my welt again in the mirror,
wondering just how much trouble it would be to conceal it for
tomorrow’s performance.
As Lopez rinsed the sponge under the running tap,
he said, “So don’t talk to your, um, colleagues here about me. If
they ask, just say I’m an old friend and then change the subject.
Okay?”
“I don’t understand,” I said as he returned to my
side with the damp sponge and started dabbing gently at the welt on
my neck. “If you’re not here, then what are you doing here?” I drew
in a sharp breath at the feel of the cold water on my tender
skin.
“This will be all right,” he said soothingly. I
felt the warm clasp of his hand on my other shoulder, steadying me.
The heat of his body warmed the flesh of my half-naked back as he
stood close behind me. “But it’ll hurt for a couple of days.”
“Uh-huh.”
“Does he do this to you eight shows a week?” Lopez
asked darkly.
“No. I mean, he likes to push his luck a little.” I
sighed and half-closed my eyes, guiltily enjoying the touch I had
missed. “But tonight he went way out of bounds.”
“You’re right,” he said. “I should have punched
him.”
I could feel his breath on my neck.
I said, “He was . . .”
“Was . . . ?” he murmured.
“Was feeling his oats tonight ... But most shows,
he just . . . just . . .”
Lopez heard the breathless distraction in my voice,
and our eyes met in the mirror. My chest rose and fell with sudden
vigor inside my push-up corset. His gaze drifted down to the
low-cut bodice of my gown, and I felt a flush of pleasure warm my
whole body as his hands tightened on me—until the pressure of the
cold sponge against my welt made me wince, startling him.
“Ouch.”
“Sorry.” He gentled his touch, dabbing tentatively
again. “I, uh . . .”
I think we both remembered in that moment that I
had told him we shouldn’t see each other any more, and that I
hadn’t returned his last phone call, the one asking me to meet him
so we could talk. At any rate, I felt awkward and self-conscious
now, and he didn’t look at my cleavage again. After a couple of
more cold dabs at my neck, he put down the sponge and said
matter-of-factly, “After you disinfect it, maybe put some ice on it
for a while.”
“I will.”
“Make sure you tell the cops how you got that,” he
added. “They’ll be interested.”
“The cops?” I said blankly.
“Yeah. I’d rather they didn’t find out I was here,
so don’t volunteer anything about me.”
“The cops?” I repeated.
“But I don’t want you to lie to them when
they question you. Do you understand? If they ask you about
me, tell the truth. Just don’t talk about me in front of the other
people being questioned. I’ll deal with—”
“Whoa! Back up a step. Why are the cops going to
question me?”
“It’s all right,” he said. “You’re not under
suspicion.”
“Of what?”
“Murder.”
“Murder?” I bleated. “Someone’s been
murdered?”
Lopez blinked. “Oh. I didn’t tell you that part
yet, did I?”
“No,” I snapped. “You left that part out while
giving me first aid advice.”
“I’m sorry. I meant to explain this to you in an
orderly, unalarming way.”
“Why am I going to be alarmed?” I asked
suspiciously.
“But I’m a little tired, and this has been kind of
a confusing conversation so far, what with Licenoodle—”
“Leischneudel.”
“—the Vampire Ravel, your earring, your neckline.
Er, I mean, your neck.” He repeated with emphasis, “Your
neck.”
“Uh-huh.”
Lopez sighed and ran a dirty hand over his
beardshadowed face. “This is not going the way I intended.” He
glared at me. “Which is par for the course when I’m with
you.”
“Who’s been murdered?” Fear seized me. “Oh, my God!
Not Max?”
“No. Not Max,” he said firmly. “This has
nothing to do with Max.”
“Oh, thank God.” I took a steadying breath. “No, I
suppose not. I mean, I just spoke to him tonight.”
“So you still see him regularly?”
“Yes, of course. But I haven’t stopped by his place
lately, even though it’s near here. The show’s been kind of
exhausting.”
“I’ll bet.”
“He’s coming to see it tomorrow night.”
“Oh? Good.”
I looked at him in surprise. Lopez had always
disapproved of my friendship with Max.
In response to my expression, he said, “It might
not be a . . . a completely terrible idea if . . .” He took
a breath and concluded with obvious difficulty, “If Max kept an eye
on you for a while.”
“Really?” I blurted. “Wow. That’s a sea change.”
When he didn’t respond, I prodded, “I was ... surprised when he
told me that you went to him for help when I was missing during the
blackout this summer.”
“Uh-huh.”
“What changed your mind about him?”
“Nothing. But when I suspected you might be trapped
with a killer, I was desperate.” Lopez avoided my gaze. “I’d have
gone to Satan for help, let alone Max.”
“That’s an absurd compar—”
“And when he and I talked, I realized that,
whatever else I may think about him, I could count on him to step
in front of a moving train to protect you.”
“Well, yes.” Actually, although Max and I had
become close friends, I knew he would risk his life for most
people, not just me. That was his calling—protecting people from
Evil.
Realizing the weight of what Lopez had just
acknowledged, though, I smiled and said warmly, “So you finally
approve of him?”
“No, of course not,” he said, spoiling the mood. “I
think he probably leads you into trouble a lot more often than he
protects you from it.”
“That’s not tr . . .” Well, there might be a
little truth in that. So I changed the subject by pointing
out, “He saved your life that night in Harlem.”
“I have a lot of questions about what
happened.”
“You sound so ungrateful!” I said critically.
“Of course I was grateful. I thanked Max very
nicely, and I overlooked a bunch of things I could have
arrested him for.”
“Arrested? But—”
“I also bent over backward to keep both of your
names out of what happened that night.”
“Oh?” I had suspected as much, since no cops ever
contacted me about it. “Thank you.”
“That doesn’t mean I don’t have questions about
whatever did happen. A lot of questions.”
“You wouldn’t like the answers,” I said morosely.
Lopez and I had waded through that kind of discussion before.
Multiple times. It never went well.
“You’re probably right.” His shoulders slumped, and
he suddenly looked exhausted.
I recalled that it was the middle of the night, I’d
just done two shows, and he was so tired he’d dozed off while
waiting here for me.
And he’d mentioned murder.
“Why are you here?” I asked. “What’s going
on?”
“We got off track again, didn’t we?” he said wryly.
“Sorry. Look, there’s something you need to know, and I wanted to .
. . to . . .” He paused and frowned in distraction as the
stentorian echo of Mad Rachel’s voice penetrated the closed door of
the dressing room.
“You didn’t call me after the first show, Eric!”
she shrieked. “How can I trust someone who doesn’t even call me
WHEN HE SAYS HE WILL?”
Lopez stared at the door with a bemused expression
as Rachel’s voice approached this room. He asked me, “What is
that?”
“Mad Rachel,” I said wearily. “The other actress in
the play.”
The door opened and Rachel entered the room, still
in makeup and costume, bellowing into her cell phone, “Fuck you,
Eric! That is not what you said today!”
“This is unbelievable.” Lopez flung himself into a
chair, crossed his arms over his chest again, and said to me,
“Don’t you have any privacy in this place?”
“It’s a public theater,” I pointed out. “What were
you expecting?”
Rachel paused momentarily in her tirade when she
saw Lopez, then said into the phone, “A strange man is in my
dressing room. Yes! Right now! Where am I? In my dressing
room, Eric.”
“I thought,” Lopez said to me, “that the
‘public’ nature of the place would stop at the door of your
dressing room. A room where you—you know—undress.”
It was a reasonable assumption in the normal world.
But in the theatrical world, dressing rooms tend to be pretty
public places, and actors lose most of our modesty pretty early in
our training. I had worked on any number of shows where actors and
actresses all shared a large communal dressing room and had very
few physical secrets left after the first few days. I had also
worked various venues and gigs where I changed clothes in public
rest rooms or utilities closets. When doing Shakespeare in the rain
one summer, I had made my changes behind a curtain, so that the
audience couldn’t see me, but where I was nonetheless in plain view
of anyone who happened to be spying on us from the woods behind our
set.
“I don’t know who he is, Eric.” Mad
Rachel gestured to Lopez and said to me, “Do you know this
guy?”
“Yes. It’s fine. He’s an old friend of mine.” After
a pregnant pause, I said to Lopez, “I can’t remember your
name.”
He sighed in exasperation. “Hector Sousa.”
“Well, this is my dressing room, too,
Esther, and I don’t appreciate finding a strange man hanging around
in here,” Rachel said. “We share this space, you know. You
need to be more considerate.”
“What?”
“You shouldn’t always be thinking about just
yourself,” she said primly.
“What?” I’d had enough for one night. This
was a bridge too far! “What did you say to me?”
Lopez muttered, “Fire in the hole.”
“You have the nerve—the utter unmitigated
gall—to lecture me about being considerate?” I
snarled. “You shrieking, whiny, loud—”
Lopez slid off his chair, seized my elbow, and
started dragging me toward the door. “We’re getting sidetracked
again.”
“You shrill, nagging, noisy—”
“I don’t know,” Rachel said into her cell phone.
“Esther’s having a cow about something. Esther Diamond. You know,
that actress who they put in my dressing room.”
“Your dressing room? Yours? Why you
little b—”
Lopez clapped a dirty hand over my mouth, hauled me
forcibly out of the dressing room, and dragged me some distance
down the hallway. He didn’t let go of me until after I stopped
struggling.
I was panting hard, my blood heated with rage. He
kept his hands on my arms, as if afraid I might bolt.
“Take a deep breath,” he said. “And another. That’s
good. Keep breathing.”
“Sorry,” I said. “Sorry. I guess I snapped. It was
just one thing too many, you know?”
“I get it.” After a moment, he asked, “Eric is her
husband ?”
I shook my head. “Boyfriend.”
“Wow. Imagine what the fights will be like when
they’re married.”
I remembered that, as a cop, he sometimes thought
of marriage in terms of domestic violence statistics. “You think
they’d ever get married?” I said doubtfully.
“Sure. People just like them get married all the
time,” he said. “Ain’t love grand?”
“Okay, I’m better now. Really.” I sighed. “She just
gets on my last nerve.”
“I can see why.” He smiled. “But I’ll bet people in
the very last row can hear every word she utters in the
play.”
I gave a puff of laughter and nodded.
“Let’s just hope she doesn’t turn up dead,” he said
seriously. “If anyone besides me knows how you feel about her, it
won’t look good.”
Recalling what we had been talking about before Mad
Rachel interrupted us, I said, “Lopez, you’re scaring me. Who
has turned up dead? What’s going on?”
“Okay, here it is.” He paused, then warned me,
“This is disturbing stuff.”
“Go on.” I braced myself.
“The body of Adele Olson was found this
afternoon.”
“Who?” I said blankly.
“In the, uh, vampire community, she’s known as
Angeline.”
I shook my head. “I don’t think I know anyone named
Angeline or Adele Olson.”
“She’s the fan who attacked you outside the theater
last night.”
“What?” When he nodded, I said, “Jane’s been
murdered?”
He frowned. “You knew her as Jane?”
“Huh? Oh. No. I didn’t know her at all.” I briefly
explained about the Janes. “So that’s what I call anyone who
dresses up like my character.”
“Exactly like your character.” He looked me
over. “Right down to the shoes, earrings, and hair. She didn’t have
quite the same build as you, and I don’t think her face looked
anything like yours—then again, I never saw her when she was
alive.”
“You mean you’ve seen her dead?”
“No, I’ve seen some postmortem photos.”
“Oh.” That sounded grisly, too.
He continued, “But despite the differences, to a
casual observer, she was pretty much a ringer for you. When you’re
both in costume, I mean.”
Seeing how troubled he looked, I realized why he’d
come to the theater in the wee hours to speak to me, evidently
against orders, and without pausing to clean up first. Appalled by
what I suspected was on his mind, I said slowly, with great
reluctance, “You think the resemblance is significant.”
“It might have nothing to do with you,” he said.
“Initial investigation suggests she was a mixed-up girl with
dangerous tastes and not much sense.”
Recalling the way she had attacked me, I wasn’t
inclined to argue with that description.
“So maybe she just ran into some fatal trouble last
night. But, well, yeah, I’m a little worried,” he admitted,
“Someone who hung around this theater, who superficially resembled
you, and who dressed exactly like you when you’re onstage
has been murdered.” He nodded. “The possible implications bother
me.”
I shivered. “This is your attempt not to
alarm me?”
“Sorry. This all went much better in my head than
it’s going in person.”
“Ah,” I said. “That never happens to
me.”
He smiled briefly, then got serious again as he
said, “There’s something else I need to tell you about this.
Something . . . a little weird.”
“Oh, goody.”
“You’re going to hear about it, one way or another.
So I’d rather you hear it from me.”
“Because you’re so good at not alarming me?”
“Okay, if you’d rather learn about it from
the tabloids . . .” Lopez said a little crankily.
“The tabloids?” I repeated with dread.
“The department won’t be able to keep this quiet.”
He gave a disgusted sigh. “That would’ve been for the best, but too
many people already know. If it’s not on the Internet yet, it will
be any minute now.”
“What?” I asked anxiously.
“The victim was exsanguinated.” He added, as if
thinking that I might not be familiar with the term, “Drained of
all her blood.”
I gaped at him in horrified astonishment. “You mean
she was killed by a vampire?”