19
At my insistence, Leischneudel and I
arrived at the theater unusually early the next evening. I was
determined to be ready for the curtain tonight in plenty of
time, without any of the panic-stricken rushing I’d wound up doing
last night. I also wanted additional time to concentrate on my
makeup, given that I was still black, blue, pink, and
mottled.
My injured hand was a little stiff and sore, but I
thought I would get by without needing stitches, as long as I was
careful with it. I’d gone shopping today and found a brand of
sturdy adhesive bandages that matched my skin tone; and the cut was
on my palm, after all. So, although the bandage was anachronistic
for a Regency-era play, very few audience members would see
it.
Mindful of Daemon’s allergies, I had also purchased
hypoallergenic antibiotic ointment and muscle balm. They were too
expensive, but spending the money was certainly better than living
through a repeat of yesterday’s performance.
Leischneudel was a wreck by the time we got inside
the theater, and I was very grateful for the protection of the
Caped Crusaders and my vampire posse. They hadn’t been sufficient,
though. We had also needed several policemen to help our cab get
through the agitated crowds, as well as several more to deal with
unruly vamparazzi while we made a mad dash from the taxi to the
stage door, surrounded by our vampire bodyguards.
Now, as planned, I was all made-up and dressed,
well ahead of curtain time. This had a calming effect on my nerves,
which was a blessing, all things considered. I was almost ready to
go ask Leischneudel to lace me up when there was a knock at my
door.
“Come in.”
Tarr entered the dressing room. I ground my teeth
together and wished I had bothered going to the door, so I could
have kept him out of the room. He waltzed in now and flung himself
into a chair as if he were a regular and welcome visitor
here.
“I heard you got here early today,” he said. “You
look great. I love that dress.”
I tugged the neckline up, unsuccessfully trying to
minimize the way it exposed my breasts to his gaze. “What do you
want?”
“Man, those crowds are crazy today, aren’t
they? It’s insane out there! I really think they might start
rioting when Daemon gets here.”
I glared at him. “Gosh, and who do we think might
be responsible for that, Al?”
“What?” he asked innocently. “You think this is
my fault?”
“You’ve certainly stirred the pot.”
“Hey, just doing my job,” he said cheerfully.
I shook my head and continued putting the finishing
touches on my hair, ignoring the reporter.
I loathed Daemon, and even I was appalled by
Tarr’s treatment of him in the “updated and expanded” account of
the murder that was in today’s Exposé. Oozing with sleazy
innuendo and unfounded speculation, it created the emphatic
impression that Daemon had murdered Angeline, and it barely stopped
short of calling on fans to commit vigilante justice before he
killed again.
I thought that Daemon ought to sue Tarr and the
Exposé . Thack had also read the piece and agreed that they
damn well deserved to be sued; but he said he suspected a lawsuit
might be fruitless. He thought the article was so shrewdly written
that the Exposé’s lawyers had probably approved it. Besides,
the story was selling so many copies of the rag and getting so much
exposure, the Exposé might even, Thack suggested cynically,
have run a profit-and-loss calculation and decided that paying
Daemon a settlement would be worth what they gained from smearing
him like this.
Thack hadn’t called me to gossip about the
tabloids, though—all of which were spewing variations on the
depiction of Daemon Ravel as a vampire gone bad. He had called to
update me on the Lithuanian situation.
The Council of Gediminas, convinced that Benas
Novicki had fallen in battle against a rogue vampire, was sending a
crack specialist from Vilnius to clean up the mess here.
“I gather they rousted him out of bed for a
briefing right after hearing from my uncle and then put him on the
first available flight out of Vilnius. His name is Edvardas
Froese,” Thack had said when we talked earlier today. “It sounds as
if he’s a combination of Dirty Harry, D’Artagnan, and the
Terminator, all rolled into one Lithuanian vampire hunter.”
However, the Dirty D’Artagnanator, as I thought of
him, had one slight handicap: He didn’t speak English. So Uncle
Peter was flying in from Wisconsin and would meet him at JFK
Airport, acting as his guide and interpreter in our fair
city.
“And then I guess we’ll get our next update,” Thack
said.
I had relayed the information to Max. That was
several hours earlier, and we were still awaiting more news. Now
that the Exposé was encouraging vigilante violence and the
natives were restless, the Vilnius vampire hunter couldn’t arrive
soon enough, as far as I was concerned.
Although many things under heaven would have been a
welcome distraction from my thoughts at the moment, Tarr’s speaking
again was not one of them.
Especially not when he said: “You smell really
good.”
“I’m not supposed to smell at all,” I said
prosaically. “I’m wearing all hypoallergenic stuff today.”
Tarr’s nostrils flared. “I think you smell
good.”
“Hmph. I’ll need to see Daemon as soon as he gets
in. If he can smell this stuff, I might have to wash it all off.”
That would be quite a setback to my whole “be ready early” strategy
today.
“If he gets in.” Tarr grinned wolfishly.
“Sure, I know, half the babes out there still want to sleep with
him—even after everything that’s happened. What is it about
that guy? Me, I just don’t see it. But by now, the other half of
the loonies out there are ready to tear him apart.”
Based on the volatile behavior of the crowd when
Leischneudel and I had arrived, I thought Tarr was right—the
vamparazzi might well go berserk when Daemon got here.
I was repelled by the way the reporter was gloating
about it; and even more revolted when I realized he was delighted
that his “work” was playing a significant role in inciting the
mob.
I said, “I really don’t think this is what
Thomas Jefferson envisioned when he argued in favor of a free
press, Al.”
“Spin is a beautiful thing.” Tarr ogled my back,
where my gown flapped open. “And so are you, kiddo.”
“Don’t call me—never mind. Why are you here, Al?”
Realizing that gave him an opening to ask me out again, I hastily
amended, “I mean, at the Hamburg? You shouldn’t be here when Daemon
arrives. All things considered, the sight of you today might
actually turn him into a murderer. Are you willing to be
strangled just for the sake of another headline?”
“I found out who Danny Ravinsky is.” Tarr’s toothy
grin broadened. “I thought he might want to talk about it before I
file my story.” When I didn’t rise to the bait, he prodded, “Aren’t
you curious?”
“No. And I’d like you to leave me alone now so I
can—”
There was another knock on the door, which Tarr had
left open. My gaze flew eagerly to the doorway. Attila the Hun
would be a welcome visitor now, if it meant I wouldn’t be alone
with Tarr anymore.
“Victor!” I said, seeing the bald, anxious
assistant hovering there. “Come in. I’m glad you’re here.” Aware of
Tarr’s eyes following me everywhere, I said, “Could you lace me
up?”
“Pardon?”
Tarr said, “Hey, I’ll do that.”
“No, Victor’s got it.” I presented my
half-naked back to the befuddled assistant. “It pretty much works
like shoelaces.”
“I’m wondering whether to phone Daemon,” Victor
said anxiously as he started working on my laces. “What do you
think, Esther? The mood of the crowd out there is so ugly, I feel I
should warn him. But at the same time, I don’t want to distress him
unnecessarily. And, after all, it’s not as if he can skip work
tonight. The show must go on.”
“Well, he’ll have to come through that crowd,
anyhow, Victor. So maybe telling him about it ahead of time won’t
help or change anything.” As the assistant finished tying my laces,
I added doubtfully, “Though if he wanted to avoid attention
tonight, I suppose he could try coming through the fire exit on the
other side of the stage.”
“The way he left,” Tarr said with an amused
snicker, “when the cops hauled him away for questioning.”
“There’s not as much police presence near that
door,” I said, “but there usually aren’t many vamparazzi hanging
out around there, either.”
“Vampa-what?” Victor asked.
Tarr guffawed. “I get it! Good one!”
“That door doesn’t open from the outside,” Victor
said.
“So wait by the door and let him in when he pounds
on it, genius,” Tarr said rudely.
I gave Tarr a cold glance. “It might not be such a
good idea, after all, Victor.”
“No, I think it is. I’ll call Daemon and suggest
it.” Victor pulled out his cell and hit the speed dial. “He can
phone me as his car pulls up, and I can be waiting right by the
door to let him in.” He held the phone to his ear, then said a
moment later in disappointment, “It’s going to voice mail.” He
glanced at me. “Well, I’ll leave you to finish preparing. Thank
you, Esther.”
“No, don’t go,” I said to his retreating back,
unwilling to be abandoned alone with Tarr.
Victor didn’t hear me. He was leaving a message for
Daemon, suggesting my plan.
“That guy gives me the creeps,” Tarr said to me.
“No life of his own at all. Just exists to cater to Daemon’s every
whim, twenty-four-seven, and is grateful for the
‘privilege.’ I swear, I think he’s in love with Daemon.” Tarr
leaned forward and confided, “Between you and me, I think Victor
leans the other way, you know what I mean?”
“Your keen insight into human nature is always a
revelation, Al,” I said coldly.
“God, I love your zingers!” he said with a
chuckle.
I sighed. Why me?
I went back to my makeup table, privately
considering Tarr’s comment more seriously than I was willing to let
him see. If Angeline’s killer was someone obsessed with Daemon,
that didn’t preclude the person being someone Daemon knew—even
someone close to him. Where was Victor when the girl had
been murdered? I had no idea. No one had ever said.
Admittedly, I found it difficult to picture the
high-strung, effeminate assistant as a rogue vampire prowling
through the dirty, dark, spooky tunnels beneath the city, preying
on other victims and also slaying an experienced vampire hunter in
combat.
Then again, what did I know about rogue
vampires? I supposed if you were endowed with mystical power and
driven by your homicidal blood addiction, being high-strung and
effeminate were probably just minor eccentricities.
“Oh, my God, I can’t believe what it’s like out
there today!” Mad Rachel boomed, coming into the dressing room. “I
swear it took me twenty minutes for my cab to get from the corner
to the theater! People aren’t even staying behind the police
barricades anymore!”
I was packing up my makeup. Tarr was watching me. A
moment of blessed silence descended on the room.
Then Rachel said, “What am I, invisible? Are
you two even listening to me?”
We both looked at her in surprise. My jaw dropped
when I realized that she had been speaking to us.
Tarr voiced my thoughts. “Where’s your phone,
Rachel?”
“In my bag. Why?” She dumped her hold-all on the
counter and continued, “The cops have not got that situation
under control. Something bad is going to happen out there. I can
feel it!” Noticing that I was still staring openmouthed at her, she
said, “What?”
“I’m just not used to seeing you without a phone
glued to your ear,” I admitted.
“Me, neither,” said Tarr.
“Whatever. Oh! I read your story today, Al,”
Rachel said. “And I’m so glad you’re here.”
“You are?” I blurted.
“I have a lot of questions.” She pulled up a
chair and sat down close to Tarr, which obviously startled him. “Do
you really think we’re working with a killer? Because if Daemon’s
murdered someone, then I’m calling Equity. I don’t think I should
have to share the stage with him, do you?”
I noticed the open, partially empty bottle of
champagne I had left sitting here the night before, and I seized on
it as an excuse to flee the room. “I have to go put this in
Daemon’s fridge. Bye!”
Tarr said, “Wait a minute, toots. I wanted
to—”
“I’ll be right back,” I lied.
I made my escape, pleased to realize I wouldn’t
have to go back in there before intermission, when I’d need to do a
quick touch-up to my face. For now, my make up, hair, and costume
were all ready. I’d go wait in Daemon’s room until he arrived, when
I’d ask him to sniff my hypoallergenic self and make sure we were
good to go. Then I’d go hang out in Leischneudel’s room until
curtain. This strategy would also have the advantage of making it
harder for Fiona to find me, if she were around. She hadn’t
cornered me yet about the stain on my hem, and she might make the
effort tonight.
Halfway down the hall, I realized I had left my
cell in my dressing room, which meant that I wouldn’t be able to
check for an update from Thack. Oh, well. I certainly didn’t want
to go back in there to fetch it. Besides, I should be
thinking about the show for the next few hours. The latest update
on the Lithuanian connection could wait until I was finished with
work.
I saw Bill approaching from the other direction,
looking frazzled. I remembered my promise to Lopez and decided I’d
better speak to the stage manager now about that door that led into
the tunnel system.
“Um, Bill, I have kind of a strange—”
“It is a madhouse outside,” he said heavily. “I
swear, it’s gone from crazy to dangerous.”
“I know. It’s pretty bad tonight. Listen, there’s
something I need to—”
“The cops really have their hands full. And I don’t
know how we’re going to manage to open the house and get
people seated,” Bill continued morosely. “The house manager says
they’re about to have a riot in the lobby.”
I frowned. “Seriously?”
“People are trying to break in to the
theater out front,” he said. “And, actually, I think people
have broken in back here. I’ve just called the cops and told
them we need some of them inside tonight. We might have intruders
backstage.”
“What? How?”
Bill held up a finger as his cell phone rang. “Just
a minute, Esther.”
I thought through the possibilities while he
answered his call, which seemed to be a follow-up on his request
for assistance inside the building. The only ways into the
backstage area were through the front-of-house, which was still
closed (but apparently under siege); via the unloading area, which
was always securely locked if the crew wasn’t moving sets and
equipment; via the backstage fire exit, which could only be opened
from the inside; and the stage door, which was guarded.
My stomach sank as I realized there was one more
way to get in here—via the underground tunnels.
Oh, no. Had I waited too long to follow
Lopez’s instructions? Had the killer infiltrated the theater from
below? Was he stalking the cast and crew even now, preparing to
pounce, slay, and feast?
Bill ended the call with a demoralized sigh. “The
cops understand our concern about the intruders, but they can’t
spare anyone from duty outside the theater. Things are too out of
hand out there, as it is. They’re going to try to shift more
officers from other duties to the Hamburg, but that’ll take a
while.”
“Somebody has broken in backstage?” I prodded in
alarm. “From the basement?”
“The basement?” he repeated with a puzzled frown.
“No, I think someone’s come in through the roof.”
“The roof?”
“There’s an old ventilation shaft way at the back
of the stage. We’ve just found a couple of rappelling ropes
dangling down from it. They weren’t there when we reset the show
last night, I know that much.”
“Whoa.” The ceiling there must be thirty feet high.
“You’re saying that someone climbed onto the roof and rappelled
down to the stage?”
“I know. Even for these people, it’s crazy, isn’t
it?”
“How did they get up there?” I wondered.
“I have no idea. But it’s been dark for well over
an hour, so I guess they were able to do it without being spotted.”
Bill added, “That’s a long fall to the floor if someone doesn’t
really know what they’re doing. I hope they chickened out and went
away after dropping the ropes down.”
“So do I.”
“But I’ll feel better when we get a cop or two
patrolling back here.”
“Me, too.”
Bill said, “Look, if you see Daemon before I do,
please warn him about this. If someone has broken in, then he’s
bound to be the person they’re trying to see—or to harass.”
“Of course.” I started to add, “By the way, there
is another way to get into . . .” But Bill was already halfway down
the hall—and much too busy and stressed for me to show him the
tunnel door right now, anyhow.
Hoping that Daemon would get here soon, I walked to
his door, opened it, entered the room—and came to a surprised halt
when I saw Leischneudel standing in front of Daemon’s little
refrigerator, with the door open, revealing its empty interior. He
was drinking a bottle of ruby red liquid.
He flinched guiltily, lowered the bottle, and gaped
at me in openmouthed alarm.
My first thought was that he was so stressed-out by
the hysterical vamparazzi tonight that he was filching Daemon’s
last bottle of Nocturne, despite being a nondrinker. I started to
hold up my open bottle of lukewarm, flat champagne, to offer it as
an alternative . . .
But then I realized that wasn’t a Nocturne bottle
he was now trying to conceal behind his back. It was one of the
decorative little bottles in which Daemon kept his own blood.
I also saw, with a horrified chill that raced
straight to the pit of my stomach, that the sticky red liquid
clinging to Leischneudel’s lips and teeth wasn’t wine cooler.
“Oh, my God!” I dropped my champagne bottle as I
gaped at him. It hit the floor with a heavy thud and spilled tepid
bubbly all around my feet.
“It’s not what you think,” he said quickly.
His mouth was bright red with blood. I uttered a
horrified gurgle of disgusted fear when he unconsciously licked and
smacked his lips while staring at me in quivering, guilt-ridden
anxiety and trying to think of what to say.
“You’re a vampire?” I cried.
“Oh.” Leischneudel blinked. “Well. Yes, then maybe
it is what you think.”
“A vampire?”
“Keep your voice down,” he said anxiously. He set
down the bottled blood and glanced into the hall to see if anyone
had heard me. “Close the door.”
Taking all factors into account, I let out a
bloodcurdling scream—which stuck ineffectually in my
terror-constricted throat—and turned to flee. I slipped on the
spilled champagne and flailed madly in the doorway, trying to get
traction.
“Esther!” He was on me in flash, his arms around me
as he dragged me back into the room, faster and stronger than I had
expected.
“No!” I screeched. “No!”
Leischneudel slammed the dressing room door, shoved
me against it, and pinned my arms to my sides when I tried to fight
him.
“Esther! Listen! Listen to me.”
I looked at his reddened lips and teeth, and I
screwed up my face in disgust. “Oh, my God! You’re the
killer! You murdered that girl! It’s you! How could .
. . umph nnng!” My voice was reduced to panicky grunting when he
covered my mouth with his hand and pressed hard, trying to silence
me.
“The killer?” he blurted, clearly horrified.
“Oh, my God! How could you think that?”
Panting frantically through my nose, I grunted out
my answer beneath the pressure of his hand.
“Well, yes, I’m a vampire,” he said. “But I’m not a
psychopath. All right, I have to drink a little blood now
and then. But I certainly don’t go around killing
people.”
I stared at him, my heart pounding, caught off
guard by how normal he seemed—well, except for the blood on his
mouth. I grunted inquisitively.
“No, of course not! How could you possibly .
. .” His expression was shocked and hurt. “I don’t even kill
spiders! You know that ... Well, okay, there was that one
time—but it was really big and hairy, and it was in my tub, and it
scared me.”
I was still breathing hard, torn between frightened
suspicion of this newly exposed vampire and a desire to believe my
friend. “Ung oong imayay?”
“What? Oh. Sorry.” He removed his hand from my
mouth. “I guess I freaked out for a minute there. I was afraid you
were going to run all over the theater screaming that I’m a
vampire.”
“Well, I was.” I winced and touched my cheek, which
was still tender and slightly inflamed beneath my makeup.
“Oh, I’m sorry. Did I hurt you?” He leaned closer
to inspect my skin.
“Stay back!” I snapped, seeing that bloody mouth
coming within range of my jugular vein. “Don’t come near me!”
His eyes misted with tears. “See? This is exactly
why I never tell anyone.”
“Where were you on the night of the murder?”
“I was with you until four o’clock,” he
said.
“Oh. Right. And then?”
“You know where I was! Home in bed. Mimi woke me at
six thirty, and we were at the twenty-four-hour clinic by seven.
You can call and ask them!”
I stared at him in consternation. “Are you
Lithuanian?”
“No.” His eyes widened. “You know about
Lithuanians?”
“You’re made, then?”
Based on what I had learned from Max about made
vampires, I now recalled various revealing moments during the three
months I had known Leischneudel—none of which had ever before
struck me as noteworthy. In particular, I thought of his uncannily
acute hearing.
He hesitated to answer my question, then let out
his breath and nodded. “Yes, I’m a made vampire. And if you know
about Lithuanians, then you know you mustn’t tell anyone, Esther!
It’s very dangerous. They’d kill me!”
“You didn’t get a permit?” When he shook his head,
I said, “What were you thinking?”
“I didn’t know what was going to happen!” he
said defensively.
“What did happen?” I demanded.
He gave a weary sigh. “Well . . . you remember my
telling you that I was very sickly growing up, right?”
“Yes.” I put a hand over my pounding heart and
tried to steady my breathing.
“I was born with a congenital immunodeficiency
disease. And the older I got, the more things went wrong with me.
In college, I couldn’t even complete the second semester of my
sophomore year. I wound up dropping out of out school. I even broke
up with Mary Ann. It was a very dark time for me, Esther.” He
glanced hungrily at the bottle of blood on the other side of the
room, and said, “And I began ... experimenting.”
“With vampirism?”
“No, with alcohol. Cigarettes. Marijuana. I
even tried . . .” Shamefaced, he blurted, “Magic mushrooms.”
“Leischneudel!” I said in surprise.
“I know it’s no excuse, but I was very depressed
and angry. Anyhow, one night, I got really drunk with this guy I
hardly knew, and one thing led to another . . .”
He looked so uncomfortable, I decided to just say
it for him. “And you had sex.”
“No, he convinced me to drink some of his
blood.”
“Oh!”
“He told me it would heal me. Change me. Make me
strong, and healthy. He was ... very persuasive.” Leischneudel
paused. “You know how some things seem like a really good idea when
you’ve had way too much to drink, but then you wake up the
next day and wonder what you could possibly have been
thinking?”
“Oh, that’s never happened to
me.”
“At the time, I was just worried about AIDS,” he
said. “It wasn’t until a couple of weeks later, when I noticed I
had become obsessed with everybody’s blood, not just the
blood I had drunk, that I realized something weird was happening to
me. So I knew I had to face this guy again and find out exactly
what he had done to me.”
“Was he Lithuanian?”
Leischneudel nodded. “It turned out he was even
more appalled than I was the morning after, when he woke up sober
and realized what he had done. He was also terrified. He told me he
wasn’t allowed to do this without special dispensation, and if
anyone found out, we’d both be killed.”
“Oh, Leischneudel,” I said in sympathy.
“I was really shaken up at first,” he admitted.
“Almost suicidal. But, of course, as soon as I went to Mary Ann in
despair and confessed everything, she straightened me out.”
“Oh?” How did a girl straighten out her boyfriend
after finding out he had just accidentally become a
vampire?
“She made me see what was important. What actually
mattered.”
“Which was?”
“The transformation did heal me!” he said.
“It did make me strong and healthy. It completely changed my life!
I got back together with Mary Ann and could be a real boyfriend to
her. I also returned to college, finished my degree, graduated, and
moved to New York to become an actor. I’ll be able to marry Mary
Ann, be a good father to her children, and grow old with her while
I spend my senior years doing character roles.”
Leischneudel’s blood-sticky smile was glowing with
grateful happiness as he recognized his blessings anew. “And
now I’ve got a major role in a sold-out Broadway show. Okay,
it’s a show about an evil vampire who kills people, which is a
little disturbing for me . . . And we’re mauled nightly by
vamparazzi, which I find a pretty stressful.”
“Uh-huh.”
“But I think of myself as the luckiest guy in the
world!” he said. “And if the price for all this is that I have to
drink a glass of blood every week or two, I think that’s a fair
bargain, even if I didn’t originally know what I was getting
into.”
I glanced at the bottle he had pilfered from
Daemon’s refrigerator. “Leischneudel, before you started stealing
blood from Daemon’s stash, how did you get your—”
“I didn’t!” He flushed guiltily and amended. “Well,
just this once. I shouldn’t have done it. But when you opened that
bottle the other night and I smelled his blood, even before you
took a sip—”
“You knew it was his blood?” I
blurted.
“Oh, of course. It smells just like him.” Seeing my
expression, he added, “Well, to a vampire, anyhow.”
“You could have told me,” I said irritably.
“I was worried all night that—”
“I know. I wanted to tell you. Just like I wanted
to tell the cops that the blood in those bottles was Daemon’s, not
the murder victim’s. But then I would have to explain how I knew .
. . And, well, how could I?” He gave me an apologetic look, then
continued, “Anyhow, when I realized those bottles really did have
blood in them, I stole one.”
I recalled that he had been transfixed for a few
moments by the site of the stuff spilling onto the carpet, his eyes
wide, his nostrils quivering. At the time, I thought he was just
shocked, as I was, by our discovery.
“It was very wrong of me,” he said. “I was just so
hungry . Mary Ann and I originally thought she’d visit this
weekend, and she had left enough blood at my place to last until
then.”
“Ah, so Mary Ann is your source,” I said.
“Of course! We . . . we, uh . . .” He blushed
furiously.
“It’s part of your sex life?” I guessed.
He nodded, too embarrassed to say more.
Thinking of Lopez, I said, “Man, you straight arrow
guys are full of surprises.”
He sighed. “She was really stressing out about this
research paper she’s got to finish, and I knew I wouldn’t be able
to spend much time with her if she came here, anyhow . . . So I
lied and told her I still had some of her blood left over, and I’d
be fine if she didn’t come.”
“That didn’t work out so well, I gather?”
“Daemon’s refrigerator was just too tempting,” he
said. “Those bottles of blood right there. I thought Daemon
wouldn’t notice if just one was missing. So that night,
while he was onstage and no one was around, I snuck into his
dressing room and stole this bottle.”
“I don’t understand,” I said. “If you stole it
then, what are you doing here now?”
“That was the same night the police came—and
confiscated the remaining bottles. So I was terrified after that. I
had stolen something the police were treating as evidence in a
murder case.” He admitted to me, “That’s why I couldn’t sleep that
night, and why I called Mary Ann so early Sunday morning. I didn’t
know what to do.”
“What did Mary Ann say?”
“She was very disappointed in me,” he said sadly.
“I had lied to her, and I had stolen. We had a pretty
serious talk.”
“I’ll bet.”
“We decided there would be too many complications
for me if I turned the bottle over to the police.”
“True.”
“But Mary Ann didn’t think I should drink
stolen blood. So I promised I would return it to Daemon’s
refrigerator as soon as I could find an opportunity.”
I looked at the open bottle I had caught him
drinking. “I guess you had a crisis of willpower at the very last
ditch?”
“I’m just so hungry,” he said again. “And
Mary Ann won’t be here until the weekend.”
“Then for God’s sake, Leischneudel, finish the
bottle.”
His eyes widened. “You really think I
should?”
“Yes. Quickly, too, before Daemon gets here. Go on.
Start drinking.”
“Now? With you here?”
“Yes.” I decided not to spoil his appetite by
telling him that a crack Lithuanian vampire hunter was headed our
way. I’d wait until he was done drinking. “You should never have
brought that bottle back here. You should have drunk the blood and
disposed of the evidence. Mary Ann is admirably moral and obviously
very supportive, but she’s not very pragmatic.”
Leischneudel took several greedy glugs of the
bottle, then sighed luxuriantly through blood-soaked lips. “Oh,
God, I was hungry.”
“There’s something that still doesn’t add up.” I
frowned, thinking it over. “There should have been more bottles
when the cops confiscated them.”
He paused before his next sip. “I thought so, too.
There were four bottles left when I took this one. I remember
because, well, to be perfectly honest, that was why I took
only one. I thought more than that would be noticed.”
“And you never stole a bottle before that?” I
asked.
He shook his head. “Mary Ann and I always, um,
extract enough blood for me to get by between her visits. This
weekend was just ... a mistake. One I won’t make again.”
“When he caught me drinking his blood,” I said,
remembering now, “Daemon said something about how his supply was
being pilfered.”
“You mean you weren’t the first person to raid
Daemon’s fridge?” Leischneudel asked.
“And you weren’t the last one to raid it
before the cops got here and took what was left.”
Our eyes met.
“Esther . . .” Leischneudel said slowly. “Are we
saying there’s another vampire in this building besides
me?”