Guilty Pleasures - Laurell K. Hamilton [16]
“She would die,” Jean-Claude said.
“Wait just a minute,” Catherine said. “Are you threatening me?”
Catherine’s face was gaining a lot of color. Anger did that to her. “She’ll go to the police,” I said.
“It is your choice.”
“I’m sorry, Catherine, but it would be better for us all if you didn’t remember any of this.”
“That’s it! We are leaving, now.” She grabbed my hand, and I didn’t stop her.
Aubrey moved up behind her. “Look at me, Catherine.”
She stiffened. Her fingers dug into my hand; incredible tension vibrated down her muscles. She was fighting it. God, help her. But she didn’t have any magic, or crucifixes. Strength of will was not enough, not against something like Aubrey.
Her hand fell away from my arm, fingers going limp all at once. Breath went out of her in a long, shuddering sigh. She stared at something just a little over my head, something I couldn’t see.
I whispered, “Catherine, I’m sorry.”
“Aubrey can wipe her memory of this night. She will think she drank too much, but that will not undo the damage.”
“I know. The only thing that can break Aubrey’s hold on her is his death.”
“She will be dust in her grave before that happens.”
I stared at him, at the blood stain on his shirt. I smiled a very careful smile.
“This little wound was luck and nothing more. Do not let it make you overconfident,” Aubrey said.
Overconfident; now that was funny. I barely managed not to laugh. “I understand the threat, Jean-Claude. Either I do what you want or Aubrey finishes what he started with Catherine.”
“You have grasped the situation, ma petite.”
“Stop calling me that. What is it exactly that you want from me?”
“I believe Willie McCoy told you what we wanted.”
“You want to hire me to check into the vampire murders?”
“Exactly.”
“This,” I motioned to Catherine’s blank face, “was hardly necessary. You could have beaten me up, threatened my life, offered me more money. You could have done a lot of things before you did this.”
He smiled, lips tight. “All that would have taken time. And let us be truthful. In the end you would still have refused us.”
“Maybe.”
“This way, you have no choice.”
He had a point. “Okay, I’m on the case. Satisfied?”
“Very,” Jean-Claude said, his voice very soft. “What of your friend?”
“I want her to go home in a cab. And I want some guarantees that old long-fang isn’t going to kill her anyway.”
Aubrey laughed, a rich sound that ended in a hysterical hissing. He was bent over, shaking with laughter. “Long-fang, I like that.”
Jean-Claude glanced at the laughing vampire and said, “I will give you my word that she will not be harmed if you help us.”
“No offense, but that’s not enough.”
“You doubt my word.” His voice growled low and warm, angry.
“No, but you don’t hold Aubrey’s leash. Unless he answers to you, you can’t guarantee his behavior.”
Aubrey’s laughter had softened to a few faint giggles. I had never heard a vampire giggle before. It wasn’t a pleasant sound. The laughter died completely, and he straightened. “No one holds my leash, girl. I am my own master.”
“Oh, get real. If you were over five hundred years old, and a master vampire, you’d have cleaned up the stage with me. As it was”—I flattened my hands palms up—“you didn’t, which means you’re very old but not your own master.”
He growled low in his throat, face darkening with anger. “How dare you?”
“Think, Aubrey, she judged your age within fifty years. You are not a master vampire, and she knew that. We need her.”
“She needs to learn some humility.” He stalked towards me, body rigid with anger, hands clenching and unclenching in the air.
Jean-Claude stepped between us. “Nikolaos is expecting us to bring her, unharmed.”
Aubrey hesitated. He snarled; his jaws snapped on empty air. The smack of his teeth biting together was a dull, angry sound.
They stared at each other. I could feel their wills straining through the air, like a distant wind. It made the skin at the back of my neck crawl. It was Aubrey who looked away, with an angry graceful blink. “I will not anger, my master.” He emphasized “my,” making