Esmé came downstairs wearing a short sundress. Even disaster didn’t deter her where Gabriel was concerned.
Weren’t you turning him over to me, Mom?
Vivian thought.
They settled in the living room, where Esmé described in detail the condition of the corpse. Vivian didn’t want to hear, but she couldn’t do anything to shut the words out.
I wouldn’t do that, she thought.
I couldn’t.
But again she remembered the blood on her sheets.
“The people at the bar think the killer was a rabid dog or a big cat someone was keeping as a pet that got loose,” Esmé said.
Vivian spoke up although she’d not meant to. “Maybe that’s what the cops think.” She remembered that Gregory had mentioned a policeman mumbling about wild animals.
“Their forensic specialists are going to be pretty confused when they try to identify any hair, saliva, or blood they might find,” said Rudy. “And the size of any bite wound won’t make sense.”
“Is that good or bad?” Vivian wondered out loud.
“That might depend on whether it’s an isolated incident,” Gabriel answered. “The night Astrid led a run by the river,” he said, pinning Vivian with his piercing, icy eyes. “Did they bring someone down?”
“No.” The intensity of his gaze frightened her, and the word came out quick and defensive.
“No one I’ve talked to so far has heard of any other mysterious bodies appearing, either,” Gabriel said. “So if it doesn’t happen again, maybe we’ll be all right. Maybe after a while, when they can’t identify the killer, the police will write the incident off as a weird one-timer they can spook the rookies on night shift with. Meanwhile, I’m going to order that no one go out in their fur if possible. The police are going to be searching for a large animal.”
Esmé looked as if she wanted to protest but didn’t dare.
“What if it does happen again?” Rudy asked.
Gabriel scowled. “Our job is to not let it.”
“We need to know who to stop, first,” Rudy said. “Got any ideas?”
“A few,” Gabriel answered.
“Astrid?” Esmé suggested.
Gabriel shrugged. “Right now she’s got an all-night alibi, not that I place much faith in Rafe’s word.”
Esmé rolled her eyes. “Still cradle robbing, huh?”
“What about Rafe’s father?” Rudy asked. “Lucien hangs out at Tooley’s drinking his meals. He’s always getting into fights with that biker Skull and his buddies.”
Vivian remembered Lucien watching the police, grinning.
“No,” Gabriel said. “A fight would be loud. Someone would have heard it. This had to be quick. He wasn’t expecting death and never got the chance to scream.”
Vivian tried to picture the kill, afraid that she would suddenly see herself there, but desperate for the truth. Could she bring down a total stranger in that way, without anger, without cause?
“I could understand if this were some harsh winter hundreds of years ago, and we were starving,” Gabriel said, his eyes glittering with anger. “But this wasn’t a kill for food, it was for pleasure-a pleasure that could condemn us all. I’ll be watching; others will watch for me; and when I’m sure who’s done this I’ll make him pay.”
His words struck Vivian with the strength of a blow, and for a moment she couldn’t catch her breath.
Gabriel rose to his feet and paced the room. Vivian watched him with cold dread. His arms were powerful; they could snap a neck with one smack. His legs were long, and even through his jeans she could sense the muscle and sinew that would allow him to run down the swiftest prey. When he put on his pelt he was a massive, dark, merciless animal.
“I understand the urge to kill as much as any of us,” he said fiercely, and Vivian believed him. “But it must be controlled. There’s no wilderness to hide in anymore. We can’t run in packs in the mountains where travelers go unmissed for months, there are no black forests that stretch on for days, and it’s been many centuries since we ruled small kingdoms in the dark center of Europe as if we were gods.
Homo sapiens is everywhere, they outnumber us, and
Homo lupus must live beside them. As much as we might crave to, we cannot kill them. To do so endangers us.” He paused. “Sometimes I think we have outlived our time.”
He yearns for the old days, Vivian realized with chill fascination. She wondered if part of his anger at the killer was because he could not allow himself the same luxury. She recognized deep within herself the same red spark of desire for a time when instinct wasn’t bound and the young Moon found it easy to forgive. She shuddered and looked away.
“I’m sorry this has frightened you,” Gabriel said, and she realized he was standing at her chair, studying her. His eyes were gentler than they had been moments ago.
“What makes you think I’m frightened?” she said.
“Vivian, I can smell it on you.” He reached down and lightly stroked her cheek with fingers that could easily crush her throat. She didn’t dare pull back. “I’m sorry you lost your home in West Virginia. I’ll find you another, and soon, I promise. I’ll make you safe.”
She almost laughed.
Vivian sprawled on the couch and allowed the tears to dry on her face. All she’d done for the last three days was haunt the living room, listening to the most miserable music she could find and tying herself up in knots. At night she locked herself in her room and comforted herself with chocolate. Her dreams were of the dark and of blood.
The CD ended, leaving her in harsh silence, allowing the same old thought to ring in her head.
How can he not love me?
She clutched the pentagram she still wore around her neck. No one had ever turned her away. Even Gabriel wanted her. And all she wanted was some pale, floppy-haired human with huge dark eyes who didn’t want her.
She knew now that what she’d done was all a big mistake-a stupid, stupid mistake. She should have enjoyed him while she could and never let him know she was different. What if he did something foolish? What if something terrible happened because of her?
And worse, what had she done when she left his house?
“What’s wrong?” Esmé said, coming home to find Vivian in exactly the same place she had been when Esmé had left. “That boy dump you?”
Vivian turned away. She couldn’t deny it, but she didn’t want to talk about it, either, because then she’d have to go through the effort of inventing a reason why. The truth, of course, was unrepeatable.
“The nerve of him,” Esmé proclaimed, but she sounded relieved. “What an idiot! Couldn’t he see how lucky he was? Men! They’re jerks. No matter what the species. There weren’t any phone calls for me?” she added anxiously.
Vivian shook her head.
“Oh, baby, I know you feel rotten,” Esmé said. “But he’s not worth the pain. It couldn’t have lasted, you know that. You can do better. Much better. You could have Gabriel-someone you can be yourself with. You’ve had your taste of rebellion, now it’s time to get real.”
Vivian didn’t have the energy to argue. She’d thought she could be herself with Aiden, and now he was afraid of her.
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