"All funds required for our activities are wired from a Swiss bank account," Father Markus explained.
"Ah, the Swiss," Tina muttered. "Accommodating financiers to Nazis, third-world dictators, and vampire killers."
Nobody said anything to that.
Father Markus cleared his throat. "All our instructions and intel arrive via anonymous e-mails."
"Intel?" I smirked. Someone’s been watching too many Alias reruns.
"Devo is our computer expert, but even he has been unable to trace the e-mails."
"Oh, you bothered to try?" Sinclair asked politely. Even seated, he dwarfed everyone at the table. "I thought you had just taken your marching orders and off you went like good little meat puppets."
"Sinclair!" I gasped. Meat puppets? Where had he picked that up?
"So who’s a suspect?" Jessica asked quickly. She got up to pace, which was always annoying; but she’d been doing it for fifteen years and wasn’t likely to stop now. "I mean, assuming you guys are interested in finding out."
"Of course we are," Father Markus said, offended.
"Why?" Tina challenged. "We’re still vampires. You’re still our food."
"I am not, young lady," Father Markus said sternly, which was a laugh, because Tina had about ninety years on him. "And it’s one thing to assume you’re doing the Lord’s work, and another to find out you’re being used and you don’t know why, or by whom."
Tina actually looked chastened; Sinclair mostly looked amused.
"What, find out?" Marc shook his head. "You always knew you were being used. You just didn’t care until an upstanding citizen pointed it out."
Father Markus shrugged, but his color was high, like he was embarrassed but didn’t want to say anything else.
"So, we think it’s a vampire," Jessica said, crunching crumbs into the carpet as she got up to pace. Dammit! "Well, there’s a pretty good suspect right here in this room."
"Who?" I asked, surprised.
"Me," Sinclair said.
"Well, if you’ve been sending us all that money," Ani said sweetly, "thanks."
"Oh, come on. Sinclair the Puppet Master? Well, okay, that makes sense, but he wouldn’t kill vampires. Right? Right."
"Why not?" Marc asked. "No offense, Sinclair, but you’re not exactly the type to enjoy competition."
"You are a keen observer, Dr. Spangler."
Marc glowed under the sarcastic praise. I wanted to know how Sinclair knew Marc’s last name … I’d never told him.
"And now that Nostro’s dead," Marc continued, like a gay, male, younger version of that old lady from Murder, She Wrote, "you can thin the herd a little more. And you can sure afford to finance the Blade Warriors."
"That’s ridiculous!" I said hotly. "He’s a loathsome crumb and an overbearing control freak, but he wouldn’t start slaughtering his own people."
"Thank you, Elizabeth," he said politely.
"Well, he might," Tina said with her trademark ruthless honesty, "but he’d do it himself. He wouldn’t farm the work out to a bunch of pimply … um, to other people."
"Also," Sinclair added quietly, "I would never harm the queen."
I grinned in spite of myself. He likes me, he really really likes me!
"Then there’s you, Bets," Jessica said, and my grin fell off my face. "It’s pretty well known you hate being the queen, and that you can’t stand most vampires. Plus, you’re not exactly the type to get your hands dirty. It’d be just like you to hire a group to do the work for you."
I wanted to say something like, "Knock it off!" or "Drop dead!" But nothing she had said was untrue. So I just drank tea and glared.
"Except she has no interest—or participation—in vampire politics. And she wouldn’t know who was a vampire and who wasn’t. Not to mention, she doesn’t have the money to fund this operation. Which brings us," Sinclair added lazily, "to you, Jessica."
"Oh, come on!" I yelled.
But Jess was unfazed. "True, I’m a pretty good suspect." She started ticking the reasons off on her long fingers. "I’ve got the money. I’m sympathetic to my friend’s plight—namely, that she doesn’t want to be queen of the vamps. I don’t much give a crap if vampires get killed or not—sorry, guys. I’m rich enough to be able to hide my tracks. Except there’s one problem."
"She isn’t the one," Father Markus said.
"No?" Jessica smiled.
"No," he said firmly. "I’ve known your family since you were small, Miss Watkins. It’s not in you."
"You knew my father, right?" she said, hanging onto her smile.
"I did. It’s not in you," he repeated stubbornly.
"Hello?" a voice said, and then Monique stuck her head through the doorway. Tina and Sinclair didn’t move, but the rest of us jumped a foot. "Did I miss anything?"
"Who is that?" Jon slobbered.
"Never you mind. What are you doing here, Monique?"
"Nobody was at the hotel, so I made an educated guess. What’s going on? My, what a beautiful room." She settled herself between Tina and me, looking adorable in beige capris and a red sleeveless sweater.
"We’re trying to figure out who the Puppet Master is," I explained. "Um, Monique, you’re not rich, are you?"
She was pouring herself a cup of tea, and didn’t spill a drop. "Oh, good gosh no," she said mildly. "Not compared to some." She raised her eyebrows and nodded at Sinclair and Jessica.
"And what of the good Detective Berry?" Sinclair asked.
"What, Nick?" I was totally surprised. He wouldn’t have occurred to me in a million years.
"Isn’t it true that he’s reappeared in your life after a three month absence? And as a member of the police force, he has access to information the rest of us can only dream of."
"Yeah, but … he’s so nice."
"He didn’t look terribly nice when he was drooling and cringing and crawling around your carpet last spring," Tina said frankly.
"But he doesn’t remember any of that!"
"Doesn’t he?"
I fell silent; I had no idea what Nick remembered.
"After his experience with us, he has good reason to hate vampires," Sinclair added.
"The trouble is," Tina said, "we have too many suspects. It could be any one of Nostro’s followers. Betsy isn’t exactly … ah … acknowledged by all of us as the rightful queen."
"Mongrels," Monique said under her breath.
"Some vampires might perceive that as a chance to seize power," Tina continued.
"Which eliminates the number of suspects to about three hundred," I said glumly.
"More like two hundred thousand," Sinclair corrected.
"That’s how many vampires are running around on the planet?" Ani asked, looking appalled.
"Give or take a few hundred."
We batted the subject around a while longer, but soon enough it was close to four in the morning and we decided to call it quits. Also, we were out of tea and the rest of the cookies were squashed.
Tina and Sinclair left first, giving the Blade Warriors their backs, which was a major diss, but I kind of liked them for it. I wanted to know how they’d known to come back earlier tonight. I started to follow them out when Ani grabbed my arm.
"Uh … Betsy … Betsy’s okay, right?"
"It’s my name," I said, puzzled, as Marc and Jessica filed past us, arguing, as usual.
"I was … uh … I was wondering about Tina."
"Tina?"
"Short, good legs, blond hair, big pretty eyes—Tina."
"Oh," I said, catching on, "that Tina. What about her?"
"What’s her, you know, her situation?" Ani was practically jumping from one foot to the other—I wondered if she’d had too much tea. "Is she with that Sinclair guy?"
"Uh, no." I am. Sort of.
"So what’s her story?"
"She’s a hundred-year-old vampire who could eat you for breakfast before snapping your spine like a drumstick," I said, deciding to nip this in the bud right
now. "She’s loyal to Sinclair, fierce as shit, stubborn as hell, and a killer on a liquid diet. That’s her story."
"Right, but is she seeing anyone?"
"Ani, you’re a vampire killer!"
"Well, you guys have spent the whole night explaining that some of you are good," she snapped back. "You’re the furthest thing from a vampire I’ve ever seen. You’re like those cheerleaders I went to high school with. I think in the interest of live-to-undead personal relations—"
"Oh, ick. Go away. No, she’s not seeing anyone. But being that the last time you two met, you tried to cut her head off, I foresee problems in this burgeoning relationship—aagghh!"
Tina had stuck her head through the door. Dammit! I was tying bells to her and Sinclair. "Ani, dear, you left your headlights on," she said. "I thought you might like to know."
"Thanks!" she said, leaping past me and practically knocking me into the table. "I’ll take care of that right now. And I … I’ve been meaning to talk to you. To … um … apologize for trying to kill you and everything."
"That’s all right, dear. You didn’t know any better."
"Right! That’s exactly right! I thought all blood suckers were heartless killers, but I see now that maybe I was wrong." The door slammed behind them, but I could still hear Ani. "Maybe we could talk it over a cup of coffee or something … sometime …"
"Ick," I said again, but who was paying attention? Nobody.
Chapter 16
I opened my eyes to see Marie hovering over me.
"You’ve got to stop doing that," I said, throwing back my comforter with a groan.
"I’m bored."
"Well, sugar, what the hell am I supposed to do about it? Go find your dad."
"And you never wake up when I talk to you."
"Never mind about that." I yawned. Another night in the salt mines. "Scoot, I’ve got to get dressed for work."
I jumped in the shower, got cleaned up, and dressed for work. Marie had indeed scooted, and for a change I had my bedroom to myself.
Jessica tapped on the door while I was putting on my mascara, and I yelled for her to come in.
"Evening, dead girl. Um. Why are your books all facing the wrong way?"
I shrugged.
"Fine, be mysterious. Sinclair called. He’s bringing some people over tonight."
"That’s nice. I’m not going to be here, though."
"Ooooh, the diss du jour."
"It’s not a diss; I’ve got to work. Besides, it serves him right for not even asking if he can come over."
"Yeah, that’ll learn him. Listen, are you going to keep an eye on the Blade Warriors, or what?"
"Me?" I said, appalled. And what was I thinking when I bought navy blue mascara? The new black, my foot. My eyelashes looked cyanotic. "Why the hell would I do that?"
"Well, you want to make sure they’re not going to run around axing any more vamps, right?"
"Why would they? We explained all that last night. About how they’re toys in the hands of a fiendish master, blah-blah, time to stop killing dead people and figure out what’s going on."
"I still think someone should keep an eye on them."
"You watch the zit brigade."
"Oh, that’s nice," she said, but she laughed.
"Not a single one of them can walk into a bar and legally order a drink. I didn’t like hanging around with teenagers when I was one."
"Says the former Miss Burnsville."
"I can’t help it," I said with great dignity, "if my fellow inmates liked me more than I liked them."
"Maybe you can channel the Warriors’ energy in a new direction," she suggested.
I nearly put my eye out with the mascara wand. "Maybe you can, you’re so worried about it. I’m in charge of the dead people, not the live ones."
"Well, I think they’re looking for direction." She added slyly, "Jon’s already called for you five times."
"What, during the day? Idiot."
"I think he’s got a crush."
"So that’s where you’re going with this. Great. Just what I need."
"Hey, there’s worse problems to have."
"Name one."
"I can’t right now. But I’m sure something will come to me," she added cheerfully.
I was in a fairly foul temper when I stomped out of the house. Unfortunately, I wasn’t quite quick enough. I ran into Sinclair, Tina, Monique, and a vampire I didn’t know on my way to the car.
"How nice of you to come out to meet us," Sinclair said. "Are you feeling all right?"
"I’m on my way to work." I glanced at my watch. "In fact, I’ve got about twenty minutes to get there. Bye."
"This is Sarah," he continued as if I hadn’t spoken. "Sarah, this is Elizabeth the First, our sovereign."
The First? I was a First?
Sarah nodded coolly. She was short, about Tina’s height, with close-cropped brown hair and brown eyes with green flecks. She was wearing black slacks, a sleeveless black turtleneck, and crocodile flats. Her slacks were belted, also via crocodile. Sharp!
"Sarah’s in town to pay her respects," Tina said, breaching the silence.
"Hardly," Sarah sniffed. Tina jabbed her in the side with her elbow, but Sarah’s expression didn’t change.
"Nice to meet you," I said, trying to lighten the tension. One thing about dead people, once they’d been vampires for a few decades, they really figured out the style thing. "Great shoes."
"You killed Nostro." It wasn’t a question.
"Well, yes."
"You did."
"Sarah …" Sinclair warned.
"Hey, it was self-defense! Sort of. Okay, not really. I mean, it was self-defense in the sense that he eventually would have tried to kill me again, and he’d already tried to kill me twice—or was it three times?—and I sort of caught him between attempts, but it’s not like I started anything. He started it! And I didn’t exactly do the deed myself, you know. I mean, I was responsible and all, because I set the Fiends on him, but I didn’t actually bite his head off."
Sarah was staring at me. Tina was staring at the ground and nibbling on her lower lip, and Sinclair had his eyes closed.
"What?" I griped. "I’m just telling her what happened. And now I really, really have to go. Go in if you want, Jessica’s home, but next time call first so I can be home when you come over." Ha! Not likely. But it was the polite thing to say.
"I’m not going in that house," Sarah said.
"What have you got against my house? Are you the one Tina and Monique tried to bring over the other night, but you got pissy and walked away?"
"I did not get pissy."
"Okay, whatever." God, what a weirdo! "Never mind, I don’t want to know. Listen, I’m going to be late."
"So you keep saying," Tina teased, "but I notice you’re not going anywhere."
"We have pressing business," Sinclair-the-killjoy reminded me.
"Give me a break. You guys don’t need me to figure out who the Puppet Master is. Go talk to the Warriors some more."
"Actually, they’re meeting us here." He whipped out a card. From where, I had no idea—he wasn’t wearing a suit jacket and his shirt didn’t have any pockets. "We made the arrangements last night, and Jon gave me this."
"They’ve got business cards?" I rolled my eyes. "Jesus, why am I not surprised?" They all flinched. "And will you guys stop jumping like you’ve been goosed every time I take the Lord’s name in vain?"
"Some things you cannot order," Sarah said, still ice-cool.
"Yeah, well, okay. Bye."
I walked past them and felt their eyeballs on me all the way to my car. Which was just as unpleasant as it sounds.
"YOU don’t want that one," I whispered. "They say it’s hand-stitched, but they lie."
"Oh-ho," my would-be shoe buyer said. "Tricky tricky."
"You might try one of the Pradas," I suggested. "I know she’s really ubiquitous, but she deserves it. Look at the design! It’s like a kimono for
your foot."
"It’s nice, but—"
"Holy God, it’s true. You really do work at Macy’s!"
I turned. Jon, weirdo leader of the Blind Warriors and surfing beach escapee, was standing by the cash register, staring at me with his mouth open so wide, I could see his fillings.
"What?" I snapped. Then, mindful of my customer, I forced a smile. "I’ll be with you in a minute."
"No rush. I’ve got plenty of shoes," he retorted, grinning.
I turned back to my customer, who was determinedly jamming a size seven Escada onto her size nine foot. "Stop that," I said. "You’ll ruin the lacing. Let me get you one in your size."
"This-is-my-size," she puffed.
Fine, enjoy blisters the size of plums. "I’ll be over here if you need me," I said sweetly, then seized Jon by the elbow and hustled him over by the boots. He yelped as his feet left the floor. I put him down and hissed in his ear, "What are you doing here?"
"Wanted to see if it was true," he whispered back, his breath tickling my ear. "Are you sure you’re a vampire?"
"You would not believe how many people ask me that."
"I’ll bet," he said, staring at my name tag.
"What do you want?"
"Are you going to eat your customer?"
"No!"
"Don’t yell, I was just asking. Can’t we all just get along?"
"Says the vampire killer."
"I’ve reformed," he said, sounding hurt.
"Hmmm."
"Why are you wearing sunglasses inside at night?"
"Because I’m a big Corey Hart fan?" I guessed.
His blank stare reminded me that I was dating myself. Obviously the boy wasn’t up on his ’80s pop. "Never mind. Did Sinclair put you up to this? Oh, God—he’s not here, is he?" I looked around wildly, but only saw retail customers.
"Is he your boyfriend?"
"Are you in law school? What’s with the twenty questions? And no, he is not."
"Because he sort of acts like he is."
"One of the many, many reasons why I despise him. Now will you take a hike? You should be meeting with Sinclair and Tina and figuring out who sent you out to kill us, not bugging me."
He shifted from one foot to another. "Well … Ani’s there, she’s the brains, not me."
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