Reginald, who caught them expertly.
“Are you kidding me?” Reginald looked down at the keys in his hands. “But what’s Mr.
Dimitri going to say?”
“Not much,” Lucien said, “when I get through with him. Ladies, come here, please.”
When the girls had gathered around the desk, Lucien gave them each several stacks of
the neat piles of hundred-dollar bills.
“Take this money,” he instructed them, “and your passports, and start a new life,
somewhere far away from here. Or go back to your old lives, if that’s what you think will
make you happy. Just forget all about what happened here. I’ll take care of the people who hurt
you. They won’t harm anyone else again. I promise. You have nothing more to fear. Go, and
be healthy and happy.”
The girls, whose grasp of English was shaky, smiled—first down at the money in their
hands, then at each other, and then at him.
They didn’t need to know English to understand what he’d said to them.
Because he hadn’t even spoken out loud. He’d said all he had to say in their minds,
giving them each a gentle memory wipe.
It would be a long time before they were completely healed. Even he couldn’t do that for
them.
But this, he knew, was a beginning.
The money would do nothing to bring back the lives that had been lost due to his failure
to control his brother’s barbarism.
But for now, this was the only penance he could make.
“Reginald,” he said aloud. “Take the women outside, and make sure they get safely into
cabs. Have the drivers take them to JFK. They can decide from there where they want to head
next.”
“You got it,” Reginald said.
“Then,” Lucien said, “you’re going to take the car and drive it to Georgia to live with
your brother.”
“My brother,” Reginald said, looking pleased. “That’s a good idea!”
“I thought so. Don’t forget anything here at the club. If you do, you won’t be able to
come back for it. It’s just going to burn.”
“Burn, sir?” Reginald looked confused. “How?”
“In the fire,” Lucien explained patiently. “Go now. And don’t worry. No one will be left
to point a finger at you, I assure you.”
Reginald turned, his arms open wide, and shepherded the girls away. They all left,
smiling back at Lucien gratefully…and a little bit worshipfully.
He looked away. Gratitude was the last thing he deserved, much less worship.
He was dousing the bodies in the basement with rum from the bar—he’d always found
that 151 burned quickest and most efficiently, leaving very little tissue residue—when his cell
phone buzzed.
He pulled it out and saw the name on the screen he’d been longing to see all day.
Meena Harper .
Chapter Fifty-one
9:15 P.M . EST, Saturday, April 17
Shrine of St. Clare
154 Sullivan Street
New York, New York
L ucien?” Meena cried when someone finally picked up at the other end. “Is that you?”
She had to stick a finger in her other ear in order to hear him.
That was because of all the screaming coming from the ground below her.
She supposed it was her own fault, though: she’d just lobbed a water balloon filled with
holy water at a pack of vampires who’d been trying to climb the churchyard fence in order to
get into the rectory.
“Meena,” he said. “Are you all right?”
“Oh,” she said. “I’m fine. But I’m sorry. I can barely hear you. Where are you? This is a
horrible connection.”
“No, I’m sorry,” Lucien said. He sounded impossibly far away. “I’m not in a very good
location for cell phone reception right now. Let me just…there. Can you hear me now?”
“Oh,” Meena said. A wave of warmth washed over her at the sound of his voice.
Suddenly, she felt as if everything was going to be okay.
Which was ridiculous, because one man couldn’t possibly fix all the things that had gone
wrong in the past few hours.
Even Lucien, who was no ordinary man.
“That’s much better,” she said. “You sounded like you were in some kind of tunnel
before. So you’re not at the apartment?”
“No,” Lucien said. “Meena, where are you ? Is that…screaming?”
“Oh,” Meena said. She glanced down at the vampires beyond the churchyard fence,
feeling a twinge of fear…and loathing.
Then she instantly felt guilty about the loathing. She couldn’t quite believe how quickly
she’d gone from feeling pity for these creatures who couldn’t help what they were, and
insisting there were surely some redeeming qualities in them, just as there were in Lucien, to
callously hurling water balloons filled with a liquid that was as corrosive to them as battery
acid from the rectory rooftop.
What was happening to her? What was she turning into?
She was just as much a monster as they were.
Then again, she supposed being nearly murdered tended to bring out the monster in
everyone.
“Never mind about that,” she said to Lucien. “They’ll be all right again in a few
minutes.” Her brother had been right about vampiric healing powers. They were amazing.
Nothing killed these things. Well, except a stake to the heart, apparently, but Meena, up on the
rectory roof, hadn’t been close enough to one to test this theory. Yet.
“Meena.” Lucien’s deep voice sounded like heaven to her ears. Especially when he said
her name like that, so filled with pure, masculine love …and longing. “What are you talking
about? Who’ll be all right?”
“No one,” she said. She didn’t want to spoil things by having to admit that she’d just
spent the past quarter of an hour dousing his kind with holy water so she could get a few
minutes alone to call him. “It’s good to hear your voice.”
“It’s good to hear you, too,” he said. “You can’t know what I’ve been going through, not
knowing where you’ve been all this time. I’ve been torturing myself, thinking of all the things
that might have happened to you and how I haven’t been there to protect you.”
“Oh,” Meena said, flattening a hand to her chest. Tears filled her eyes. “Lucien, you have
to stop saying that kind of stuff. You know we can’t be together. It’s impossible.”
“You keep saying it’s impossible,” Lucien said. “But if there’s anything I’ve learned in
my five centuries on earth, Meena, it’s that nothing is impossible. Especially to a man as much
in love as I am with you.”
A hand appeared over the edge of the rooftop beside Meena’s foot—a vampire, trying to
claw his way up the building toward her. Stifling a startled gasp, Meena pulled a squirt gun
from the back pocket of her jeans, aimed, and launched a steady stream of holy water at him.
He shrieked as his fingers caught fire, lost his footing, and fell fifty feet to the pavement
below. Horrified, Meena turned away.
“Meena,” Lucien said. “What was that?”
“That? Oh, nothing. Look, I want you to know I did get your messages. I would have
called sooner, but I had to steal my phone back from my brother. He doesn’t know I have it—”
As if right on cue, she heard her brother shouting from a second-story window below,
“You want a piece of this? You want a piece of this? Well, then come and get it, you sick
vampire pusswad!” This was followed by a small explosion.
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