by Mara
"The moment you barf, I am so out of here." I plopped down in the chair beside her bed and got comfy, Babyjon snuggled against my shoulder.
"I haven't barfed since suppertime, and that's because it was Salisbury Steak night."
"Who could blame you?"
"How go the wedding plans?"
"They sort of screeched to a halt," I admitted. When you all abandoned me.
"What? Bets, you've got to pick a dress! You've got to settle on the flowers—the florist is going out of her mind! You've got to meet with the caterer for the final tasting! You've—"
"I will, I will. There's lots of time."
"There's two weeks. Isn't Eric helping you at all?"
"He's gone. Still sulking."
"Oh, Betsy!" she practically yelled, then coughed again. "Will you just call him and apologize?"
"Me?" I yelped, loud enough to stir Babyjon, who immediately settled back to sleep. "I didn't do a damned thing. He's the one who left in a huff. Stupid runaway groom."
"He'll be back," she predicted. "He can't stay away. He can't leave you, there's no such thing for him. You're in his system like a virus."
"Thanks. That's so romantic, I may cry."
"Well, don't cry. Nick was in here a while ago all teary and junk."
"Big bad Detective Nick Berry, catcher of serial killers?"
"To be fair, you and Laura and Cathie caught the killer."
"Right, but he helped. I mean, he came to the house and warned us."
"He made me promise not to die," she said, folding her arms behind her head and looking supremely satisfied. "And I made him promise. So that's all settled."
"Can I borrow that emesis basin?" I asked politely.
"Cram it, O vampire queen. Nobody barfs but me, it's the new rule."
I grinned, but couldn't help feeling the smallest twinge of jealousy. Which was completely stupid. But . . . Nick had originally been interested in yours truly. And I'd thought he'd asked Jessica out as a way to get closer to me. In fact, that had been utter wishful thinking on my part.
I was wildly happy for Jessica, but couldn't help feel a little miffed that Nick had recovered from his unholy lust for me so quickly. Which was also stupid: the whole reason Sinclair had made him forget our blood sharing was to make him forget. Not to mention, I had the sexiest, smartest vampire in the world on my hook.
When he was talking to me, that is.
"What's with the kid?"
"You won't even believe it."
Jessica covered her eyes. "Don't even tell me. You're his legal guardian."
"Got it in one."
She looked up. "Why so glum? You've wanted a baby since you came back from the dead."
"But not like this! I mean, gross. Garbage trucks uh incinerated birth parents? Yech."
"Well, there's plenty of room in the mansion for a baby. And you're crazy about him. And he pretty much only tolerates you. So it all worked out." She paused. "I'm sorry. That came out wrong."
"S'okay. It's always nice when someone else puts their foot in their mouth. I get tired of it sometimes."
"Really?" she asked sweetly. "It's hard to tell."
"Shut up and die."
"See? You just did it!"
I didn't answer. Instead, I jiggled BabyJon to wake him up. Since I was conked out during the day, and alone, if he cried during the day he was shit out of luck. This was going to be a nocturnal baby, by God.
"Better start interviewing day nannies," Jessica observed.
"There's usually a hundred people hanging around the house," I complained. "We need one more? And how can we hide all our weird goings on from her? Or him?"
"How about a vampire nanny?"
I was silent. The thought hadn't occurred to me.
Then: "No good. Any vampire would need to sleep during the day."
"But Marc, me, Cathie, and Antonia are usually around during the day."
I was silent. She had enough problems without knowing that everyone had disappeared on me.
"Maybe a really old vampire? You know Sinclair can stay awake most of the day. Find some seventy-year-old bloodsucker for the job."
"Oh, sure, what a great honor. 'Hey, ancient vampire, mind changing the shitty diapers of my half brother? And don't forget to burp him before his nappy-nap. Also, don't suck his sweet, new, baby blood.'"
"Blabbb," Babyjon agreed. He turned his head and smiled sweetly at Jessica. He really was getting cute. When he was born, he looked like a pissed-off plucked chicken. Now he'd filled out with sweetly plump arms and legs, a rounded belly, and a sunny grin. His hair was a dark thatch that stood up in all directions. Jessica grinned back; she couldn't help it.
"He's definitely growing on me," she said.
"Like a foot fungus."
Jessica's door whooshed open, and the night nurse stood there. Luckily for me, it was a man. "I'm sorry, miss, but visiting hours were over an hour ago."
1 slid my sunglasses down my nose and said, "Get lost. I can stay as long as I like."
"These aren't the droids you're looking for," Jessica Added, giggling.
Like a badly maintained robot, the nurse swung around and walked stiffly away.
I propped my feet up on Jessica's bed and got comfy. Babyjon squirmed and, to divert him, I plopped him on her bed. He wriggled for a moment, then flopped over .md popped his thumb in his mouth, his deep blue eyes never leaving my face.
"So, dish. How was the funeral?"
"Gruesome. And filled with lies."
"So, like the Ant was in life?"
I laughed for the first time in two days. God, I loved her. That chemo was going to work. Or I would not be responsible for my actions.
Chapter 9
The phone rang (at 1 a.m.!), and I lunged for it. "Sinclair? Hello? You rat bastard, where the hell have you—?
"Is this the head of Antonia's den?" a deep male voice asked.
I was flummoxed. It was a week for weird phone calls, barfing best friends, and fucked up funerals.
"Which Antonia?"
"The only Antonia. Tall, slender, dark hair, dark eyes, werewolf who can't Change?"
"Oh, the live one! Yeah, this is her, um, den."
"Explain yourself."
I was having major trouble following the conversation. "Explain what?"
"She has not checked in this month. As her pro tem Pack leader, you are responsible."
"Responsible for what?"
"Her safety."
"What's a pro tem what's-it?"
"Do not play the fool, vampire."
"Who's playing? And how'd you know I was a—I mean, who are you calling a vampire?"
"I gave Antonia leave to den with you under strict conditions. You are breaking those conditions."
'What conditions are you—?"
"Produce her at once, or suffer the consequences."
"Produce her? She's not a manufactured good! Who is this?"
"You know who this is."
"Dude: I totally completely do not."
"Your attempts to act an idiot will not sway me from my course."
"Who's acting?" I cried. "Who are you, and what the hell are you talking about?"
There was a long pause, punctuated by heavy breathing. Great. A prank call from a pervert. "Very well," the deep voice growled. Really growled; I could feel the hairs on the back of my neck trying to stand up. "Be it on your head and suffer the consequences."
Click.
Story of my life, this week.
I stared at the now-dead phone, then threw it at the wall hard enough for it to shatter into a dozen pieces.
Chapter 10
The next evening, after feeding Babyjon his 10 p.m. bottle, burping him, and plopping him into the playpen in the kitchen, I took the new phone out of the box (thank goodness for twenty-four-hour Walgreens).
I had literally just hooked up, and hung up, the phone when it rang, making me jump right out of my skin. I snatched up the new receiver.
"What freak is calling me now?"
"Only I, Your Majesty."
"Tina! You sound tinny. Still in France?" "Still. And worse: I have been unable to raise the king."
Raise him at poker? was my wild thought. "What?" I asked, my word of the week.
"He has never, in seventy-some years, not returned a call, or a letter, or a telegram, or a fax."
"Well. He was pretty grumpy when he left." "Grumpy." Tina let out a most unladylike snort, almost as startling as when she was swearing like—well, me. "I dislike this. I dislike this extremely. I will be returning on the next flight."
"But what about the European vamp—"
"Hang them. Hang them all. This is much more distressing. Besides, there's not much to do here. After the show you put on a few months ago, they're quite terrified of you."
I smirked and buffed my nails on my purple tank top. It was all the sweeter because it was true: they'd seen me pray, and that had been enough for them.
"On the next flight? How are you gonna pull that off? Isn't it, like, a twenty-hour flight? Some of it during daylight hours?"
"I'll travel the traditional way, of course. In a coffin in the cargo hold. Our people here will forge a death certificate and other appropriate paperwork."
I shuddered and gave thanks, once again, that I was <¦ queen, and not a run-of-the-mill vampire. Don't get me wrong; I'd prefer to be alive. But if I had to be dead . . . "Tina, that sucks."
"Recent circumstances are highly suspect. The king would not leave you for so
long—"
"It's only been a few days—"
"—nor would he ignore my messages. Something is wrong."
"He doesn't want to wear the navy blue tux I picked out?" I guessed.
"Majesty. This is serious."
I shrugged, forgetting she couldn't see me. "If you say so."
"Until I return, do not answer the door. You will not try to contact anyone who has gone missing. You will not answer the phone unless the caller ID tells you it is me." Her subservient tone was long gone; this was a general thinking fast and issuing orders. "Your Majesty, do you understand me?"
"Uh, sure. Simmer."
"I will simmer," she hissed, "when I get a few heads on sticks. And the devil pity the rat fuck who gets i my way."
"Yeesh."
"Heads. On. Sticks."
"I got it the first time."
On that happy note, she hung up.
Chapter 11
I broke one of the rules less than twenty-four hours liter. I blamed sleep deprivation. Despite my efforts over the last three days, Babyjon still had the whole "stay awake at nighttime" thing a little mixed up. (But then, so did I.)
Small wonder. The Ant, Satan rest her soul, had stuck him with night nannies all the time, and they had encouraged him to sleep so they could goof off.
I groped for the bedside phone, forgetting to check the caller ID. "Mmph . . . lo?"
"—can—hear—"
For a change, I actually identified the crack In voice. "Marc! Where the hell are you?"
"—can't—make—drop—"
"Are you hurt? Are you in trouble?"
"—trouble—fucked—death"
"Oh my God!" I screamed, instantly snapping all the way awake. I glanced at the bedside clock; four-thirty in the afternoon. In his port-a-crib, Babyjon snored away. "You are in trouble! Can you get to a computer? Can you send me an e-mail? Why aren't you answering my e-mails? Tell me where you are, and I'll come get you!" With a baby in tow, I neglected to add.
"—can't—worry—trouble—"
"Where are you?" I hollered.
"—dusk—dark—come—"
"I'll come, I'll come! Where are you?"
''—see—stars—''
"Marc?"
"—worried—"
"Marc?!" I was yelling into a dead line.
That was it. That was it. I threw back the covers of my lonely bed, trying not to realize that things were getting mighty fucking weird (and failing), and got dressed with amazing speed.
I plucked a sleepy, wet, yawning Babyjon from his lib, changed him with vampiric speed (he seemed surprised, yet amused), grabbed the diaper bag and some formula, and headed for the bedroom door to beat feet for Minneapolis General, Oncology Ward. I was breaking rule number two, and I didn't give a tin luck. Not for the rules of ordinary man was I, the dreaded vampire queen. No indeed! I was—
My computer beeped. Rather, Sinclair's computer beeped (what did I need a computer in the bedroom for? We only had, like, nine offices). The thing hadn't made a peep in days, so for a long moment, all I did was stare. It beeped again, and I lunged for it, ignoring Babyjon's squawk, and saw the you've got mail icon pop up.
I clicked on it (Sinclair had set the thing up so I could use it whenever I wanted), hoping. He knew it was in our bedroom, he knew I'd hear the chime wherever I was in the house, ergo it had to be from—
My sister, Laura.
Grumbling under my breath, I read the e-mail.
Betsy,
I'm dreadfully sorry I was unable to attend the funeral of your father and my mother. I was, as you know, occupied with the arrangements for the wake and the burial, as well as helping your mother with the baby, but deeply regret my unavoidable absence. I do hope we can get together soon. Please call me if you need anything, or if you run into trouble. God bless, Your loving sister, Laura
"And they that know thy name will put their trust in thee: for thou, Lord, hast not forsaken them that seek thee." (Psalms 9:10)
"Yeah, yeah, yeah," I said aloud. "Verrrry helpful." But I was all talk. At least someone hadn't forgotten me, left the country, or disappeared. Or gotten cancer.
Or if you run into trouble? What did that mean? It was almost like she knew things were getting weirder by the second. Which of course she couldn't. We hadn't even spoken until the day before the funeral, and that was all Ant stuff, not Jessica and Marc and Sinclair and Antonia and Garrett stuff.
I shoved the thought out of my head. Of all the people I had to worry about, Laura was so not one of them. Even if she was, according to the Book of the Dead, fated to take over the world. She was a good kid (when she wasn't killing vampires pretty much effortlessly) with a steady head and a kind heart (when she wasn't killing serial killers), and she was the definitive good girl (even if she was the devil's own). So there. Dammit.
I said it out loud, just to cement the idea into my lead. "So there. Dammit!"
"Blurrgghh," Babyjon agreed, kicking his footie pajama feet into my hip bones. "Ready for a trip, baby brother?" "Yurrgghh!" "Right. Onward, and all of that."
Chapter 12
I was so used to pouring out my troubles to Jessica—I'd been doing it since seventh grade—that I was actually shocked to find a bunch of doctors and nurses clustered around her bed. I couldn't even see her, much less talk to her. Not to mention, usually there was just one nurse, and that was only if it was time for a new bag of death.
Nick was standing off to one side, watching with his jaw clenched so tight I could see the muscles in his cheek jumping.
He saw me and said dully, "They're doing another round of chemo. She's something of a nine-day wonder. Everyone's been invited."
"But—" Shocked, I shifted Babyjon to my other ¦ boulder, for once praying he wouldn't wake up. "But she just had a round of it!"
"It's a hard cancer to kill."
"But—but—I have to tell her . . . um, stuff." Careful, I said to myself. Nick's poor scrambled brains didn't need any more clues that things weren't normal at the House O' Vampires. "I mean, I came to talk to her."