At least as a passenger I could look for recognizable landmarks a little more safely. After making sure Tom was following us with my car, I leaned over the dashboard and peered out the windshield, searching.
“The other guy’s Tom. What’s your name?” I asked.
After a pause he said, “Bradley.”
Tom and Bradley. Didn’t sound very sinister and Men In Black-ish.
“So, Bradley, where’s the Washington Monument?”
“We’re going the wrong way to see it.”
I sat back and sighed, not bothering to contain my disappointment. How frustrating, to be so close to a major national landmark and not see anything.
Bradley glanced at me. Sounding amused, he said, “Give me a couple minutes and I’ll swing back that way.” He flicked on the blinker and made a sharp right turn.
Wait, was he being nice to me?
Back in Colorado, I could see. The sky was big, and I could look west and always see the mountains. I always knew where they were, where I was. I needed landmarks. Here, and pretty much everywhere
I’d been back East, I felt vaguely claustrophobic. Thick trees grew everywhere and blocked the horizon. Even in autumn, with their leaves dried and falling, they formed walls and I could only see the sky by looking up, not out.
We turned a corner, and Bradley said amiably, in tour-guide fashion, “We now approach the famous Washington Mall. And on your right, the Washington Monument.”
I pressed my face to the window. My gut gave a little jump, like it did when I saw someone famous. It was just like the pictures, but bigger. The towering obelisk was all lit up, and the lights gave it an orange cast. In the center of the vast swath of lawn that was the Mall, it stood alone in the dark.
“Wow.” I watched it until we turned another corner and left it behind.
I kept track of our route. We ended up driving the opposite direction, back toward the freeway, but we veered off and continued farther west until we came to a quiet row of townhomes in the area Bradley said was Georgetown. Even in the dark I could tell it was nice, and old. Tree-lined streets held rows of brick houses, with slatted shutters and window planters, painted doors, and fancy wrought-iron fences out front. Georgetown University was nearby. Bradley turned into an alley, then into a cobbled driveway wide enough to hold several cars. My car was already there.
I didn’t get much of a sense of what I’d gotten myself into until we entered the town house, up a set of steps and through a back door.
That surprised me. Most vampires, even the heads of Families and cities, made their homes underground. It reduced the chance of them or any of their retainers suffering sunshine-related accidents. But Bradley and Tom led me into the house, through a hall, and to a parlor. This vampire held court in a room with windows—covered with heavy brocade drapes, but windows nonetheless.
The place managed to look cluttered and opulent at the same time: crammed with furniture, chaise lounges and wingback chairs, mahogany sideboard tables, end tables, and coffee tables, some with lace runners, others with lamps, both electric and oil. Curio cabinets held china collections, and a silver tea service was on display on the mantel above the fireplace. Persian rugs softened the hardwood floor. All the lamps were lit, but softly, so the room had a warm, honey-like glow. Scattered among the other decorations were pictures, small portraits, a few black and white photographs. Faces stared out of them all. I wondered who they were.
The decor didn’t surprise me. Vampires lived for hundreds of years; they tended to carry their valuable collections with them. If the room reminded me of a Victorian parlor, it was probably because it was the real deal. As was its occupant.
A woman set a book down on a table and stood from an armchair that sat nearly hidden toward the back of the parlor, near a set of bookshelves. She was pale, cold, dead. No heartbeat. I couldn’t guess her actual age, of course. She looked about thirty, in her prime and haughty. Her brunette hair was drawn back into a knot at the nape of her neck; her face was round, the lines of her lips hard, her gaze dark and steady. She wore a wine-colored dress suit with a short, tailored jacket and a calf-length, flowing skirt—a feminine-looking outfit that brought to mind Ingrid Bergman or Grace Kelly.
I decided she wasn’t Victorian. She was older, much older. She had a gaze that looked across centuries with disdain. The present was only ever a stepping-off point for the really old ones. The oldest vampire I’d ever met was probably around three hundred years old. I couldn’t be sure—it was rude to ask—but I bet this woman was older.
I had planned on being brazen. If she could disrupt my life, I could be snotty about it. But for once, I kept my mouth shut.
“Katherine Norville?” she said, an inquiring tilt to her head. She had a wonderfully melodic British accent.
“Um, Kitty. Yeah.”
“I am Alette. Welcome to my city.”
I still wanted to argue the my thing, but this woman had me cowed into silence. I didn’t like the feeling.
“Bradley, Tom, any problems?”
“None, ma’am,” Bradley said.
“Thank you, that will be all.”
The two men actually bowed—smartly, from the waist, like trained butlers or footmen in a fairy tale. I stared after them as they left through the doorway to another part of the house.