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“Short version: everything.”

“And the long version?”

“I’m too hungover for the long version.”

“Gimme the CliffsNotes, then.”

I pried myself off the dresser and started sorting through a drawer. “Let’s just say, it looks like my luck runs in the family.”

“Ouch.”

I went back into the bathroom to change, and this time, Billy left me alone. I pulled on an old pair of khaki shorts and tried a couple of different shirts, finally settling on one with orange and white stripes. It was soft, thin cotton with a mock turtleneck and no sleeves. It had been part of my work wardrobe, worn under a jacket to keep me from dying of heatstroke in the Atlanta summers, and it looked a little dressy for the shorts. But it was better than announcing my evening’s activities to everybody I met.

Only now that I was dressed, I found that I didn’t really feel like meeting anybody. I kind of felt like going back to bed. I walked into the bedroom, yawning. “What time is it?”

Billy looked up from his card game. “Four a.m.”

I sighed in relief and fell face-first onto the bed. Jonas was coming at one for our lesson, and I had nothing to do until then. And nothing sounded pretty damn good right now.

“Move over,” I told Billy, because he was hogging the bed as usual. He gave me maybe another two inches of space, also as usual. I turned onto my side, since it was easier than arguing.

The room was dark but the bed was spotted by watery blue-white rectangles, the light shadows from Billy’s cards. They moved across the duvet as he played, silent, intent. For about half a minute.

“You can call him what you want, but he’s still a monster,” Billy said, because of course this wasn’t over. “They all are.”

“I don’t know why you hate vamps so much,” I said sleepily. “What’d they ever do to you?”

“They’re creepy.”

“They are not.”

“Like hell.”

I didn’t point out the irony of this coming from a guy who would send most people screaming in terror if they could see him, because the door cracked open. A thin sliver of slightly less dark leaked in from the hallway and fell over the bed. It highlighted dust particles dancing in the air and a massive head poking around the doorjamb.

“Hey,” Marco said softly, like he thought I might already be asleep.

“Hey, yourself.”

“You okay?”

“Yeah.”

“You have fun?”

“Yeah.”

“Thought so.” I couldn’t see his expression, but his voice was smug.

It would have been weird coming from a human, but vamps got a lot of their self-worth from their masters. Anytime Mircea did something well—negotiated a treaty, got recognition from the Senate, banged the Pythia—their egos all got a boost. In a real sense, when you dated a master vamp, you dated his entire family. All of whom thereafter took a proprietary interest in your business.

It was something I tried hard not to think about.

“You hungry?” Marco asked. “We got pizza.”

Actually, I thought one more bite of anything, and I might just pop. “I’m good.”

“Beer?”


Tags: Karen Chance Cassandra Palmer Fantasy