“Vampires are monster misogynists,” Leisha said. “And you have a hero complex. You
always have. Of course you think you’re going to save the show. And probably the world,
while you’re at it.”
Meena snorted. “Right. Enough about me. How’s Adam?”
“Hasn’t gotten off the couch in three days,” Leisha replied.
Meena nodded, forgetting that Leisha couldn’t see her. “That’s normal for the first
month after a layoff.”
“He just lies there in front of CNN, like a zombie. He’s starting to freak out about this
serial killer thing.”
“What serial killer thing?” Then Meena remembered what Shoshona had been talking
about in her meeting with Sy. “Oh, that thing with the dead girls, in the parks?”
“Exactly. You know, he actually grunted at me the other day when I asked him if he’d
picked up the mail from the box downstairs.”
Meena sighed. “Jon was the same way after he lost his job and had to move in with me.
At least he does laundry now. Only because I have a washer-dryer unit in the apartment and
you can’t help tripping over the piles on the way to it.”
“I asked Adam when he was going to get started with the baby’s room,” Leisha said. “Or
the baby’s alcove, I guess I should call it, since that room is so small, it’s practically a closet.
Still, he has to put a door on it, and the drywall, and paint it and everything. You know what he
said? It’s still too early and that there’s plenty of time. Thomas is coming in two months!
Sometimes I don’t know if we’re going to make it. I really don’t.”
“Yes, you will,” Meena said soothingly. “We’ll get through all of this. Really, we will.”
Meena didn’t believe this, of course. It had been months since her brother, Jon, had been
laid off from the investment company where he’d worked as a systems analyst, and he was no
closer to finding a job than he’d been the day of his firing…same as Leisha’s husband, Adam,
who’d been Jon’s college roommate before Jon had introduced him to Leisha. The few jobs
that were out there in their fields had hundreds, maybe thousands, of equally qualified
applicants vying for them.
“Is that a prediction?” Leisha asked.
“It is,” Meena said firmly.
“I’m holding you to that,” Leisha said. “Well, good luck with the prince. I’d wear black.
Black is always appropriate. Even for meeting royalty.” She hung up.
Meena set the receiver down, chewing her lower lip. She hated lying to Leisha.
Because things weren’t going to be fine.
Something was wrong. Leisha kept telling Meena that her due date was two months
away.
And maybe that’s what her doctor had said.
But the doctor was wrong. Every time Leisha said it—“Thomas is coming in two
months”—Meena felt an uncomfortable twinge.
The baby—Meena was positive—was coming next month. Possibly even sooner than
that.
And Thomas! Leisha and Adam wanted to name their baby Thomas Weinberg !
That kid was going to be a pretty funny-looking Thomas, considering that it was a girl
and not a boy.
But how did you tell an expectant mother that everything her doctor was saying was
wrong…when it was all just based on a feeling ? Especially when all of your previous
predictions had been about death, not a new life?
Easy. You didn’t tell her at all. You kept your mouth zipped up tight.
Turning back to her computer monitor, Meena was confronted again with Mary Lou’s email. Sometimes she found it hard to believe there were still people who didn’t have to work
for a living…ladies with princes for relatives who did nothing but plan elaborate parties and
use their husband’s credit card to go shopping all day.
And then meanwhile there were girls like Yalena, being preyed upon by scumbags like
her boyfriend, Gerald, about whom the cops could do exactly nothing….
But these people existed.
And they lived right in her building. Right next door to her, in fact.
Meena resolutely hit Delete, then opened a new document and began to write.
Chapter Nine
11:00 P.M . GMT, Tuesday, April 13
Somewhere above the Atlantic
L ucien Antonescu did not like to fly commercially, but not, perhaps, for the same
reasons other people might dislike it. He had no control issues—other than his concerns about
controlling his own rage—and of course no fear of death. The idea of a fiery or otherwise
painful end did not trouble him in any way.
He was, however, disturbed by the way the airlines packed their customers into the metal
tubes they were currently calling “planes,” then expected them to sit in those impossibly small,
cramped excuses for “seats” for so many hours on end, with no exercise or fresh air.
So it had been some time since Lucien Antonescu had been on an airplane he himself did
not own (his personal Learjet was ideal for most trips but not powerful enough for nonstop
transatlantic flight). When asked to speak at an overseas conference or tour for one of his
books, Lucien tended simply to decline. He wasn’t fond of publicity in any case…
But today Lucien was flying first class. The seats there were designed as individual
compartments, so that other passengers seated in front of, behind, or beside him were not
visible.
At a certain point during the flight, the attractive and very pleasant stewardess—they
were called flight attendants now, he reminded himself—presented him with a menu from
which he was asked to choose from a dizzying selection of food choices and wines, including
some quite decent Italian Barolos….
Later, after the pilot turned out the lights, the flight attendant asked him if he’d like her
to make his bed for him. He accepted, purely out of curiosity. What bed? His wide and
spacious seat, it transpired, automatically folded out into a reasonably sized (though not for
him, being several inches over six feet tall) bed, all at the touch of a button.
The lovely flight attendant then produced a padded mattress from yet another hidden
recess, real sheets that she “tucked in,” a duvet, and a pillow, which she fluffed.
She then handed him a cloth bag containing a large pair of designer pajamas, a
toothbrush and paste, and an eye mask.
Finally, she wished him good night with a smile. He smiled back, not because he had any
intention of changing into the pajamas or of going to sleep, but because he found the entire
procedure—and her—so utterly charming.
His smile made her blush. She was divorced from an unscrupulous man who had been
cheating on her throughout their eight-year marriage and was supporting their toddler on her
own. She wished only that her ex-husband would pay his child support on time and visit their
daughter once in a while. She did not tell Lucien these things…but then, she did not have to.
He knew them because he could not be around people without their secret thoughts intruding
upon his own. It was something to which he’d grown accustomed over the years, something
that he occasionally enjoyed. It made him feel human again.
Almost.
She excused herself to see to another passenger, a corpulent businessman seated across
the spacious aisle, in 6J. The passenger in seat 6J could not seem to stop complaining: His
pillow was not soft enough, his pajamas were not large enough, his toothbrush bristles were
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