never found…undoubtedly because they didn’t relish the idea of being stalked by you. So
we’ve been willing to turn a blind eye to your refusal to follow the rules. But when it comes to
the prince of darkness, you’re going to have to stand back and let us—Alaric! I say, Alaric!”
But Alaric had already heard more than he could stand and had sprinted off after the
couple who had just disappeared around the corner.
Except of course by that time he’d lost them.
Which shouldn’t even have been possible. The man was over six feet tall and the woman
a diminutive five-four in heels, at the most . They made a striking couple and certainly stood
out in a crowd. She’d been toting along a golden-brown walking fuzzball of a dog.
How could they just have vanished? “They’re gone,” Alaric cried when Holtzman came
rushing up beside him. “They’re gone. And it’s your fault, you bureaucratic buffoon. If you
hadn’t stood there quoting the HR handbook at me—”
“They aren’t gone.” Holtzman scanned the street. “He’s playing with us.”
“What?” Alaric shook his head. He’d always have some respect for the training his boss
had given him during his early days as a vampire hunter. But the man’s refusal to do things
any way but by the book had always made Alaric’s blood boil.
“He saw us,” Holtzman said. “And he’s thrown up a glamour to protect himself.”
Alaric was taken aback. “Of course. Why didn’t I think of that?”
Holtzman shook his head sadly. “Because you’re too personally involved in this, Alaric.
Why do you think I asked you to concentrate on the case to which you’ve been assigned—
finding the killer of the dead girls—and not the prince? Your desire to wipe out the entire
vampire race for what they did to your partner…it’s made you ineffective at your work. Now
go back to your hotel. Which, I’ve heard, is the most expensive one in the city…as usual. I
hope you don’t think Accounts Payable will accept receipts from a place like that. There’s no
earthly reason why you couldn’t have stayed downtown at the rectory at St. Clare’s, like me.”
Alaric set his jaw. He didn’t like being told what to do, not even by his oldest mentor.
Or that he ought to stay in a barren church rectory on his employer’s dime instead of the
luxurious hotel he was paying for himself.
Nor did he like being told that his personal feelings were making him ineffective at his
job…even if there was a slight possibility that it was true.
But most especially, he didn’t like the fact that he’d encountered a vamp with the kind of
casual power Lucien Antonescu seemed to possess. The ability simply to turn invisible on a
less-than-crowded sidewalk? And to make the woman he was with—and her dog —invisible
too?
Alaric had battled some pretty powerful vampires in the past—the South American ones,
he remembered, had always been particularly awe-inspiring—but none with those kinds of
abilities.
“We don’t even know if he’ll come back,” Holtzman complained irritably, staring off
toward Fifth Avenue. “He’s seen us now. He’ll know we know about the Antonescus. We’ve
lost him.”
Holtzman didn’t come out and add, And it’s your fault, Wulf . But Alaric could tell he
was thinking it.
“We’ve still got them,” Alaric said. “Mary Lou and Emil Antonescu. We can use them to
find him.”
“They’ll never talk.” Holtzman sounded sorrowful. “Especially not if I leave you in
charge. You’ll whack off their heads before I even get a chance to ask them anything. I know
you.”
Alaric shook his head. He squared his shoulders and turned around to head back to 910
Park Avenue.
“Wulf?” Holtzman seemed startled by his protégé’s sudden activity. He hurried after
him. “Wulf. I was kidding about whacking off the Antonescus’ heads. They could still prove to
be vital sources of information to us. Let’s not do anything to tip our hand. They don’t know
yet that we’ve discovered them. Lucien might not really have seen us or figured out who we
are. Don’t do anything rash—”
Alaric strode up to the red carpet in front of 910 Park. As soon as he stood in front of the
double brass-framed doors, they opened with a whoosh, and the doorman in the dark green
livery, reading a textbook entitled The Art of Sensuous Massage, looked up from it and smiled.
“How can I help you, sir?”
“Yes,” Alaric said, grinning broadly. “I could have sworn I just saw my best friend from
college come out of this building—the tall, dark-haired guy—but he jumped into a cab before I
could get his attention. Was that him, Lucien Antonescu, or am I crazy?”
“Lucien Antonescu?” The doorman kept right on smiling. “Lucien Antonescu? I’m
afraid we don’t…Oh, you must mean the tall gentleman who was visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Antonescu tonight! Yes, yes. There was a Mr. Antonescu on the list.”
“I knew it,” Alaric said, just as Holtzman came hurrying in behind him. “I knew that was
Lucien!”
The doorman, whose nameplate said Pradip, looked down at a list on his desk. “That’s
right,” he said. “There was a Lucien Antonescu at Mr. and Mrs. Antonescu’s party tonight.”
“See, Dad,” Alaric said, turning to Holtzman. “I told you it was him.”
“Dad?” Holtzman said. Now it was his turn to be taken aback.
“And that beautiful young lady, the one with the dog, who was with him,” Alaric said,
turning back to the doorman, “must have been his wife. I can’t believe it. He never told me he
got married!”
“Oh,” Pradip said, laughing. “No, that was Miss Harper. She lives here in the building.
Oh, no. No, Miss Harper’s not married.”
Alaric let his face fall. “Are you serious?” he asked. “That wasn’t Lucien’s wife?”
“No, no,” Pradip said. He was having a grand old laugh now, as if the thought of Miss
Harper marrying Mr. Antonescu was the funniest thing he’d ever heard in the world. “No, Miss
Meena Harper lives here with her brother, Mr. Harper. She and your friend just met tonight, at
the Antonescus’ party, I think.”
Alaric’s estimation of 910 Park Avenue went up another notch. Pradip the doorman was
observant, indeed, but a little too forthcoming with total strangers about the personal lives of
his tenants…. Alaric now knew that the woman accompanying Lucien Antonescu tonight was
named Meena Harper, that she lived in the building, and that she lived with her brother. No
small amount of information considering that all he’d volunteered about himself was the lie
that he’d been Lucien Antonescu’s college roommate.
“Well, I’m sorry I missed him,” Alaric said. “You know what? I’m going to see if I can
look him up on Facebook.”
“Oh, that’s a great idea,” Pradip said. “You know, you can get in touch with practically
anyone on Facebook these days. I was on there the other day, and I managed to get in touch
with an old friend of mine I hadn’t seen since kindergarten. Can you believe that?”
“You see, Dad?” Alaric grinned at Holtzman. “Facebook. That’s how it’s done.”
Holtzman looked dazed. “Facebook?” he echoed.
Alaric winked at the doorman. “Thanks, Pradip,” he said. “You wouldn’t have any idea
where Lucien is staying while he’s here in the city, would you?”
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