Burnt Offerings - Laurell K. Hamilton [158]
Balthasar was actually shorter than the new body by an inch or two. He stood close enough for the Traveler to take him under his arm, like a tall man will walk with a woman, cradled against his body, protected.
“I saved your humans today, Anita. I saved many vampires. Is that not enough for you?”
“Jean-Claude?” I made his name a question.
He let his breath out in a long sigh. “It was pointless to make you promise. Be yourself, ma petite, but try not to be too insulting.” He stepped back so that we were all even with each other. Maybe he hadn’t liked the symbolism either.
“I’m thrilled that you saved my friends today,” I said. “I’m ecstatic that you saved all the trapped vampires. But you got a lot of good press out of it without any risk to yourself. I thought you agreed that you guys needed to modernize a little, come into the twentieth century.”
“But I do agree, Anita, I do agree.” The Traveler rubbed his cheek against Balthasar’s face, staring at me hard enough that I was glad he wasn’t heterosexual.
“Then what is this medieval shit?” I jabbed a thumb backwards at Ernie.
His eyes flicked to the man, then back to me. “I would have let it go, but the others voted and it is true that Jean-Claude has been a lax host.”
Jean-Claude touched my arm. “If you had come at my invitation or even requested permission to enter my territory, I would have been more than happy to grant you hunting rights. Though you will find one of the other benefits to legality is an amazing number of willing victims. People will even pay you to quench your thirst on their bodies.”
“It is an old law among us,” the Traveler said, “not to feed in another’s lands without their permission. I sustained the others, but then your human servant showed me that my powers were having serious side effects on your local population.” He stepped away from Balthasar, coming within touching distance of Jean-Claude.
“But none of your vampires were affected. I could not steal their energy, or give them extra energy. You prevented that. That has surprised me more than anything else you have done, Jean-Claude. It smacks of a power that I would never have credited you with, not now, not a thousand years from now.” He paced to stand in front of Richard. And the new body was still taller, six foot four at least.
He stood so close that the purple cloth brushed the length of Richard’s body. He moved around him so closely that the cloth never stopped touching, sliding over the tailored tux like a cloth hand. “Padma has not gained such power from his joining.” He ended standing between Jean-Claude and Richard. He raised a hand to stroke Richard’s face, and Richard caught his wrist.
“That’s enough,” Richard said.
The Traveler drew his wrist slowly downward so that his hand brushed Richard’s. He turned to Balthasar with a smile. “What do you think?”
“I think Jean-Claude is a lucky man,” Balthsar said.
A red flush crept up Richard’s face, his hands curled into fists. He was placed in the position usually reserved for women. If you deny that you’re sleeping with someone, they won’t believe you. The harder you deny it, the surer everyone is that you’re guilty.
Richard was smarter than I was. He didn’t try to deny it. He just turned and looked at the Traveler. He stared at him nearly eye to eye and said, “Get away from me.”
All the bad guys laughed. None of us did. Us included Gideon and Thomas, strangely enough. What were they doing with Padma? What series of events had trapped them with him? If we all survived, maybe I’d get a chance to ask them, but it was doubtful. If we killed Padma, they would probably die, too. If Padma killed us, well, there you go.
The Traveler walked over to me in a cloud of purple cloth. “Which brings us to you, Anita.” His new body towered over me, over a foot taller, but hey, you get used to it.
“What?” I said, staring up at him.
He laughed again. He was so damn happy. I realized what it was—afterglow. He and Balthasar had been polishing