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Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter Colletion_ Books 6-10 - Laurell K. Hamilton [97]

By Root 4168 0
He was just as dangerous as the assassin, maybe more. Dangerous in ways I had no words for.

He glided towards me in his black boots. I watched him walk closer like a deer caught in headlights. I expected him to flirt or ask how I liked the painting. Instead, he said, “Tell me of Robert. The police said he was dead, but they know nothing. You have seen the body. Is he truly dead?”

His voice was thick with concern, worry. It caught me completely off guard. “They took his heart.”

“If it is only a stake through the heart, he might survive if it was removed.”

I shook my head. “The heart was taken out completely. We couldn’t find it in the house or the yard.”

Jean-Claude stopped. He slumped suddenly into one of the chairs, staring at nothing, or nothing I could see. “Then he is truly gone.” His voice held sorrow the way it sometimes held laughter, so that I felt his words like a cold, grey rain.

“You treated Robert like dirt. Why all this weeping and wailing?”

He looked at me. “I am not weeping.”

“But you treated him badly.”

“I was his master. If I had treated him kindly, he would have seen it as a sign of weakness. He would have challenged me and I would have killed him. Do not criticize things that you do not understand.” There was anger in that last sentence, enough to brush heat along my skin.

Normally, it would have pissed me off, but tonight . . . “I apologize. You’re right. I don’t understand. I didn’t think you gave a damn about Robert unless he could further your power.”

“Then you do not understand me at all, ma petite. He was my companion for over a century. After a century, I would mourn even an enemy’s passing. Robert was not my friend, but he was mine. Mine to punish, mine to reward, mine to protect. I have failed him.”

He stared up at me, eyes gone blue and alien. “I am grateful to you for seeing to Monica. The last thing I can do for Robert is to tend his wife and child. They will want for nothing.”

He stood suddenly in one smooth motion. “Come, ma petite. I will show you to our room.” I didn’t like the our, but I didn’t argue. This new, improved, emotional Jean-Claude had me confused.

“Who are the other two in the painting?”

He glanced at it. “Julianna and Asher. She was his human servant. The three of us traveled together for nearly twenty years.”

Good. He couldn’t give me some bullshit about the clothing being costumes now. “You’re too young to have been a Musketeer.”

He stared at me, face carefully blank, giving nothing away. “Whatever do you mean, ma petite?”

“Don’t even try. The clothing is from the 1600s, around the time of Dumas’s The Three Musketeers. When we first met, you told me you were two hundred and ten. Eventually, I figured out you were lying, that you were closer to three hundred.”

“If Nikolaos had known my true age, she might have killed me, ma petite.”

“Yeah, the old Master of the City was a real bitch. But she’s dead. Why still lie?”

“You mean why am I lying to you?” he said.

I nodded. “Yeah, that’s what I mean.”

He smiled. “You are a necromancer, ma petite. I would have thought you could judge my age without my help.”

I tried to read his face and couldn’t. “You’ve always been hard to read; you know that.”

“So glad I can be a challenge in some area.”

I let that go. He knew exactly how much of a challenge he was, but for the first time in a long time, I was bothered. Telling a vamp’s age was one of my talents, not an exact science to be sure, but one I was good at. I’d never been off by this much. “A century older, my, my.”

“Are you so sure that it is only a century?”

I stared at him. I let his power beat across my skin, rolled the feel of it around in my head. “Pretty sure.”

He smiled. “Do not frown so, ma petite. Being able to hide my age is one of my talents. I pretended to be a hundred years older when Asher was my companion. It allowed us freedom to wander through the lands of other masters.”

“What made you stop trying to pass for older?”

“Asher needed help, and I was not master enough to help him.” He looked up at the portrait. “I . . . humbled myself to

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