Blue Twilight. Maggie Shayne
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“D-Delia. Delia Beck. She’s Janie.” Her lip trembled. “Is she going to be all right?”
“Yes, I promise you she’s fine. Don’t be afraid, Delia Beck. You have nothing to fear from me.” He took a moment to ease her mind, reaching out to it with his own until she relaxed visibly. “Sit there with your friend,” he told her. “While I deal with this.”
She went to the chaise and sat upon it, taking her friend’s hand in her own, speaking softly to her.
He walked across the room to Fieldner, who started babbling at his approach. “I—I had to drug them. I did! There are two of them, and they would have fought me. I didn’t want to have to hurt one of them. You got angry the last time I hurt one of them.”
“And what good did you think it would do to bring me tainted blood, you idiot?” He looked back at the girls.
The one called Delia was staring at him as if she couldn’t look away, her heart still racing, though she wasn’t as afraid as she had been. She was mesmerized and terrified all at once. The other one, Janie, moaned, shifting restlessly on the chaise.
“I cannot feed on tainted blood,” he said to Fieldner. “And I will not feed on children.”
“I’m sorry, master.”
“The damage is done. There’s nothing for it but to keep it from getting worse. They will be missed, surely.”
“No! They were traveling alone.”
That, at least, was a point in his favor. “Good. I’ll command them to forget and send them on their way. But I need sustenance, Fieldner. And I won’t take it from them.”
“The emergency stores, sir?”
“I don’t think so.”
Bowing his head, the drone—who was also the police chief of Endover—moved across the room to the hardwood bar, a modern contrivance but one he liked. Fieldner removed a velvet case and set it on top. Opening the lid, he extracted a beautiful cut-crystal wineglass and then a jeweled, razor-sharp dagger.
“I apologize for the girls, sir. But there is something else. Something you should know before I proceed.”
“You wouldn’t be trying to stall, would you, Fieldner?”
“No, master.” He held his wrist over the wineglass and, clasping the dagger in his other hand, laid the blade against his own skin. He would do as commanded. But his blood would be gamey. Male blood always was. And the blood of a man as weak-minded as Fieldner would lack spark and power.
The vampire sighed. “Go on, then. Tell me what it is I should know.”
“That one. The dark one,” the chief said with a nod of his head toward Delia. “She managed to make a call on her cell phone.”
He lifted his brows. “And how did she manage that?” he asked.
“Cowering in the back of my car. I didn’t realize what she was doing.” He swallowed, his Adam’s apple swelling and receding like a wave. “Her brother is in town.”
The girl gasped. “Jason?”
Fieldner sent her a quelling look. “You shouldn’t ought to have made that phone call, girl. What happens to him now will be on your shoulders.”
The vampire felt her panic returning, and glanced again at the child. “No harm will befall your brother, Delia. Trust me.”
“But what about him?” she cried. She pointed a finger at Fieldner. “He kept us locked up in the bottom of some lighthouse for hours! It was dark and we—”
“Calm,” the vampire said. He drew the word out, aiming more power at the girl. Teenagers—God, but their minds were so much more difficult to control than those of adults. “Relax, child. Everything is fine.”
She gulped back a sob and sat on the chaise once more.
Turning to Fieldner again, he said, “Perhaps you’d better begin at the beginning.”
The other man nodded. “The two girls were passing through town. Stopped at the old visitor center. While they were looking for rest rooms, I pulled a couple of the plug wires, so their car wouldn’t start. Then I offered them a ride to the nearest diner, where they could wait for a tow truck to arrive. They trusted me.”
Of course they had, he thought. Fieldner was a policeman. He wore a uniform and drove a marked cruiser. Any woman would trust him.
“That was this morning. I couldn’t very well bring them out here then, so I locked them up in the lighthouse. But on the way there, that one caught on that something wasn’t right and called her brother. I don’t know how she even got through, with the reception being as bad as it is. There must be a hot spot on the highway somewhere.”
“And why didn’t you hear the phone call?”
“By then they were making a fuss, demanding I stop the car, let them out. I.I put on the radio to drown out the noise.”
Disgusted, the vampire rolled his eyes.
“So she told her brother where she was.”
Fieldner nodded. “He was in my office not an hour ago, asking if I had seen her.”
“Her car?”
“I’d already hidden it.”
The vampire nodded slowly. “That makes one smart move you’ve made this week,” he told Fieldner. “Where is he now?”
“He’s staying at the North Star. I think he suspects something.”
“Of course he suspects something, if he’s less than a complete moron.” The vampire heaved a deep sigh. Complications. God, how he hated them. He’d created an idyllic life for himself here, one where he was in complete control. Anytime unexpected complications crept in, they put his entire lifestyle at risk.
He would have to deal with this as quickly and cleanly as possible. “I’ll speak with these children, and then you may return them and their car. Leave them far from the shores of Endover. They will remember nothing, of course. This brother of hers will not find them here, and he’ll go on his way to discover them safe and sound.” He nodded at the man’s wrist. “Proceed.”
“There’s more.”
Closing his eyes slowly, the vampire sighed. “What more?”
“This,” Fieldner said. He took a paper from his pocket, unfolded it and handed it over.
He took it, skimming the glossy flyer, which advertised some sort of detective agency. But then he went as still as if he’d suddenly turned to stone. His eyes were riveted to the photographs of the women on the front. One of the women, to be more precise. It was impossible. Impossible.
“What is the meaning of this?” he asked, and his voice was no more than