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Claimed by the Immortal (The Claiming) Page 9


  The idea of him wanting her to show a little pity amused her and kept her secretly grinning while she bundled up for the cold winter night. While the daytime heat from the sun, buildings and cars had melted away almost all the snow, at night chilly winds blew in the canyons between buildings, icy enough to be threatening.

  But Damien donned no extra clothing. He hadn’t taken off his black leather jacket when they’d come inside, and he added nothing to it as they departed.

  “You really don’t get cold?” she asked as she jammed her gloved hands into her pockets and bent into the wind.

  “No. I don’t get hot either. At least in the traditional sense.”

  That brought another secret grin to her lips. “Why not?”

  “How should I know? I don’t even know how I exist. Of course, you really don’t either, if you want to get down to the nitty-gritty details. But to answer your question, I don’t feel temperature at all unless it comes from human contact. Hot or cold makes no difference to me. I could walk naked in Antarctica for a week and return to tell you how lovely it was.”

  The idea both amazed and saddened her. “Don’t you miss it? I can’t imagine not feeling warmth, especially on a night like this.”

  “You could give me warmth. As for missing it...” He shrugged a shoulder. “We’re adaptable, just as you are. We get used to it. The only time I think about it is when I’m touching a human and feel it again. Then it becomes so pleasurable, I ache for it.”

  She fell silent, scanning the streets out of long habit, hunched within her jacket, the hood drawn tight. “I guess,” she said finally, “I don’t think about it much. The weather is the weather. When it’s cold, I turn on the heat. When it gets too hot, air-conditioning. But I can’t imagine not feeling it at all. Especially a good hot shower.”

  A half laugh escaped him. “You humans spend a lot of money and effort to make sure you live in an unchanging temperature environment. You prefer not to notice the cold or heat. I simply can’t.”

  That was an interesting way to think of it. But there were good things, too, like coming in from an icy day and warming up with a mug of coffee or hot chocolate. Feeling your cheeks and toes burn a bit as they revived. Minor things perhaps, but she doubted she would want to give them up—even though she sometimes came home from a shift feeling like a miserable icicle, or like something that had been steamed for too long.

  “How far is this place we’re going to?”

  “It’s over on West Bolger.”

  She pulled up her mental map of the city. “If we walk we’re not going to have a whole lot of time to get you back before dawn, especially if we stay too long at this place.”

  “Well, I could make it all happen faster, if you’d allow me.”

  “How so?”

  “I could carry you. You’ll get colder, but we’ll move faster than the wind.”

  She had no doubt of that, having seen him appear to disappear and rematerialize out of thin air. But to have him carry her? Being that close to him was dangerous to her peace of mind. Worse, letting him carry her would leave her with absolutely no control of anything.

  On the other hand, the streets were getting colder, the walk would be long and time consuming, and it seemed really pointless to waste all this time if they didn’t have to.

  “So you don’t have a car?” she asked.

  “No, I’m on a visit. I came because Jude needed help.”

  “Help for what?” She was stalling and knew it, but she was curious, too.

  “You may remember a few months ago there was a rash of what were called animal maulings?”

  Her heart quickened. “We never got an answer to that. It just stopped. What was it?”

  “A bunch of vampires. They want to rule the world, keeping humans as chattel. They were particularly angry at Jude because he drove them from this city and has driven them from others. He even formed a coalition of us who feel we can live in harmony with humans.”

  “Wow,” she said, trying to absorb all this.

  “It’s a long story, but Jude and others had to fight them off. To protect you and your kind. I came to help but arrived just as the battle was wrapping up. I should have gone home but was enjoying the company of Jude and his friends, so I lingered. Thus I am still here.”

  Talk about tipping over reality’s edge. “A battle between vampires?” Unreal. Yet she remembered the terror that had gripped the city before the killings suddenly stopped. “I never imagined.”

  “We never wanted you to.”

  She had a lot to mull over and would have liked to do so, but then she spied something that awoke the policewoman in her, distracting her.

  They had reached a corner, and a car sped by, too fast. Farther down the street she saw a group of boys or young men, out too late to be up to any good. How much did she want to deal with right now? They were most likely gang members and things could get real ugly, real fast if she tried to intervene solo or get past them.

  “I’ll opt for vampire transit,” she said, making the decision abruptly.

  “Wise decision. I smell trouble wafting this way. Drug-energized trouble.”

  “You can smell when people are on drugs?”

  He didn’t answer her, instead drawing her quickly around the corner out of sight. “Hang on” was the only warning she got.

  The next instant she had been tossed onto his back and was clinging for dear life to his shoulders and hips as the world spun dizzily by, leaving her with no impressions but flashes of light and shadow. After only a few moments, she closed her eyes to keep from getting sick and pressed her face against his back to keep it warm as the wind chill seemed to drop close to absolute zero.

  She guessed that must be why vampires couldn’t feel temperature. None of them would be able to move fast for very far if they were susceptible to heat and cold.

  Her mind rebelled at how fast they reached West Bolger. When next she could see something, Damien lowered her to her feet and she looked around, recognizing the neighborhood. This area was at the outer reaches of her precinct and the kind of place cops expected to have trouble.

  Damien’s hands lingered as he lowered her, but she didn’t brush the importunate touches away. Feeling a little dizzied, she focused on getting her bearings.

  Trouble, she had learned, accompanied poverty like fleas on a dog. It wasn’t that most of the people here were bad people. But it was a neighborhood full of despair, and despair created plenty of desperation and resentment. Fertile ground for gangs who could see no way out by remaining law-abiding. The Police Athletic League was strengthening its involvement here, trying mostly to attract youngsters to safer outlets for their time. Another organization had recently joined in to provide tutoring and other aftercare in the same building. Still, it would take years to fully win young minds and start the “upward and outward” movement that was the ultimate goal. Caro donated a lot of her free time to the effort.

  But, she had to admit, this neighborhood seemed a lot safer by daylight than it did right now. Instinctively, she felt for her holster, then dropped her hand.

  All of a sudden, she realized Damien was staring at her. “What?”

  At least half the streetlights were broken, and the remaining few offered little light, but even so she could see the intensity of his look. A shiver, whether of apprehension or anticipation she could not tell, ran through her.

  “Nothing,” he said abruptly. Turning on his heel, he headed across the street to a shop.

  “It’s late,” she remarked. “We probably wasted this trip.”

  “Some shops do most of their business during the midnight hours. Others never really close. Given the type of business this shop does, I suspect they answer their bell at any hour.”

  She couldn’t ask why he suspected that as she was too busy racing across the street after him. Boy, could that vampire move. But she supposed she’d get her answer if the door opened.

  He had to press the button twice, but fi
nally there was some noise from within the tiny shop. Then a curtain twitched aside, behind a barred window, and an eye peeked out. For long moments it seemed they would be ignored, so Caro lifted her jacket, showing her badge. Fortunately, most people would open their doors to a cop rather than risk having it busted down.

  The eye disappeared, and then she could hear dead bolts turning. Finally the door opened a crack, although it was still guarded by three chain locks.

  “What do you want?” a wizened man demanded.

  “Help,” said Damien.

  “I don’t squeal.” The door started to close.

  Damien’s voice changed, assuming that timbre that made Caro shiver. “Open the door. We mean you no harm. The information we want is in your books.”

  The air seemed to change. Without further protest, the old man opened his door and let them in. As he made way for them and locked up behind them, he looked mildly confused.

  But whatever control Damien’s voice had had over the man wore off quickly. “Better spend some money,” he grumped. “This place isn’t a library.”

  The owner was not only wizened but thin and stooped, as well. He looked as old as Methuselah and hobbled his way behind a tiny counter that held an ancient cash register. There he perched on a stool Caro could barely see.

  Dusty, dingy and right now the place was poorly lit, as well. At the moment it would be impossible for her to find a book or anything else by sight.

  But Damien seemed to have no such problems. He wandered along a shelf of old books, running a finger along them as he surveyed titles. “Do you know anything about elementals?”

  To Caro it seemed the man behind the counter stiffened. “I don’t dabble in what I sell,” he said irritably. “Fools mess with what they don’t understand.”

  “I agree with you,” Damien said pleasantly. “But I need to learn about elementals, and you must know if you have any books or monographs dealing with them.” He turned from the shelf and faced the man. “Even if you don’t dabble, you surely must hear a great deal from those who do.”

  For some reason, Caro felt compelled to take a step backward. It was as if some invisible force tugged at her, but it was not the power that had been following her. After that one step back, however, she forced herself to stand still. What was going on here?

  “I hear all kinds of things from idiots,” the shopkeeper said. “Look around you. I don’t even go for the incense and crystals some hang everywhere. I sell the books. That’s it.”

  Damien nodded. “So you’ve heard nothing about a bokor?”

  At that the man stiffened. “No. Have you?”

  “It’s been mentioned. And since a bokor may be troubling a friend of mine, I’m naturally looking for information.”

  “Of course,” the man said. “Look, I’ll be honest with you. I don’t hold truck with most of this stuff, but it makes a living. Everyone wants some crazy knowledge these days, as if getting a little religion wouldn’t be enough.”

  “It’s alternative religion,” Damien remarked.

  “Apparently. But if you believe this crap, why would you want to get involved?” He shook his head. “I get lots of people, but most of them probably couldn’t manage to perform a ritual well enough to raise any kind of Cain.”

  “Most likely not. But what if someone could?”

  The shopkeeper leaned forward and arched his back as if stretching a painful muscle. “If someone could,” he said, “then I guess we’re in deep shit.”

  “Any idea who it might be?”

  A shake of the head. “I keep as far away from people who claim to be adept as I can. There are other stores like this, and some of them are run by people who buy their own sales pitch.”

  “Meaning?”

  “They believe, or say they believe in this New Agey stuff. Maybe some of them actually practice Santeria or hoodoo. I keep clear, and I don’t want to know.”

  Caro spoke. “I’ve answered complaints about Santeria in this neighborhood.”

  “I don’t doubt it. But what can you do about it? It’s not illegal to sacrifice a chicken anymore, although you’d think folks around here couldn’t afford the chickens.”

  “They eat them afterward as part of the ritual.”

  “So I hear. Which makes it no different than a creepy kind of slaughterhouse. I can live with it. I’m no vegetarian.”

  “So you have practitioners in the neighborhood.”

  The shopkeeper sighed. “Yeah. From what I’ve heard, nothing bad comes out of it. It’s a religion, and everybody says it’s about doing good. God knows, folks around here need something to keep their spirits up.”

  Caro couldn’t argue with that. She also couldn’t escape the feeling that this man wasn’t going to tell them a thing. She could understand that. Living in this neighborhood was difficult enough without being under suspicion.

  Then Damien spoke. “Do you ever get bored enough to read your own books?”

  The man cocked an eye at him. “I don’t believe this shit, but I’m also not stupid enough to read about it. On the off chance there’s something to it, why do I want it in my head? What if just reading those things could make something happen?”

  Superstitious, Caro thought. Another thing she could well understand, although even a few days ago, she would have denied it.

  “Then we come back to my original question,” Damien said. “Do you have any good references on elementals?”

  Grunting, the man slid off his stool and came around to the tumbled and dusty stacks. “Like I said, this isn’t a library.”

  “I’ll pay. Just get me your best ones.”

  “You’re looking in the wrong place,” the guy muttered. “I do have some organization.” He disappeared around the corner of the floor-to-ceiling shelf and came back a few minutes later with two thin, tattered volumes. “Not a popular subject,” he remarked. “Twenty dollars each.”

  Neither book looked worth that much to Caro, but Damien paid without complaint. “Are there any more of them?” he asked as he slipped his wallet back into his hip pocket.

  “Not much call for elementals these days. People want bigger deals. Nasty deals. Not enough to call up a wood sprite anymore.”

  Damien’s tone changed subtly, seeming to charge the air a little. “Then people don’t know what real power is.”

  The man froze again, then closed his cash register. “Maybe so. The less I know, the better.”

  The man wrapped the books in brown paper and tied the parcel with a string. Caro was charmed for a moment because it seemed so old-fashioned.

  Then she and Damien were on the icy street again, listening to the door lock behind them.

  “What do you think?” Caro asked him.

  “Later. Let’s get away from here as soon as we can.”

  They walked down a dark alley, then he put her on his back again and the night sped by too fast to see.

  Chapter 6

  Garner was at the office when they returned, and he made no secret of his impatience to talk with Jude.

  “Where is he? He sends me out to do things, and now he’s not even answering his phone? What’s the point of always being in touch, like he demands?” Garner waved a phone. “Radio phones in case someone gets in trouble. His idea. And then he doesn’t answer?”

  Damien stilled. “He didn’t say where he was going. Did he tell you?”

  “Of course not! He never lets me know anything. I feel like a dog. Go here, Garner, go there, Garner. Cripes.”

  Damien ignored the complaints. “What has you so worked up?”

  “There’s been another murder!”

  Now it was Caro who froze. “Who? How?”

  Garner, clearly glad to at last have someone to listen, leaned forward. “That guy whose entire family was killed last week? The one you came here about? His brother-in-law bit the dust. But that’s not what’s so interesting. What’s interesting is that he lived alone, that he was inside a locked condo and that there�
�s a lot of street talk about how it could have happened. Where the hell is Jude?”

  “Wait,” Caro said. “Did he have any relationship with the Pritchetts other than the marriage?”

  “I don’t know. All I know is that the only reason they found him was because some friends started to get worried when he disappeared for three days and didn’t return calls. That’s why I need Jude!”

  “Relax,” Damien said quietly. “Jude can’t answer his phone if he’s traveling fast.”

  “It’s been a half hour. He can cross this entire city faster than that. It’s irrelevant anyway. I don’t see his car out there.”

  Damien exchanged looks with Caro. “He did drive.”

  “Yes.” Tension was winding her tighter than a spring, the kind of tension she felt when walking into a potentially deadly situation.

  “Can you find out anything on the computer?” Damien asked her.

  “I’d need a case number.”

  “No way to get it?”

  She jammed her hand into her jeans and pulled out her cell. She dialed a familiar number and heard a familiar voice. “Pat? I need some help. I hear Andrew Pritchett’s brother-in-law was found dead.”

  Pat asked her to hold a minute, and shortly thereafter Caro could tell from the change in sounds that Pat had moved to a bathroom. When she hung up, she was able to answer Damien’s question.

  “They don’t know if the death is associated. No information on how it occurred but Pat said the guy looked as if he’d been scared to death. That might indicate a weak heart. Regardless, she’s going to text me the case number.”

  “Then you can get the reports?”

  Caro hesitated. “It won’t exactly be legal, but yes.”

  “In the meantime,” Damien said, turning back to Garner, “see what you can find on that machine about associations between Pritchett and his brother-in-law. Maybe they were in business together.”

  “Why me?” Garner asked, regarding the computer as if it might explode. “Jude will have a fit if I mess something up. Why can’t you do it?”

  “Because I’ve never bothered to master a computer. What would I need it for?”

  “Plenty, apparently,” Garner muttered. “Imagine that. Thousands of years old and no computer experience.”