Claire bent over to retrieve Stinky. “Get well soon,” she told me. “I want to go see some movies, eat some greasy human food, go shopping. . . .”
“So you’re not headed right back?”
She shook her head. “I know it doesn’t sound like it from the way I’ve been talking, but there are things I love about Faerie. But I’m half human, too. And I think I’ve been away too long.”
“Maybe you need to visit more often, then.”
She grinned. “Maybe I do.”
Radu was the last one remaining. He settled beside me on the bed, looking sober. “LouisCesare is downstairs. He’s been here since he brought you back.”
“Why didn’t he come up?”
“He doesn’t think you want to see him. I told him he was being ridiculous, but you know how he is.”
“I’m learning.”
“Should I tell him to come up?”
“Yeah.” I had a few questions for him.
Radu nodded, but he didn’t leave. “You know, even if she hadn’t been an evil mutant, she was always quite bad for him. Not that I meddle.”
“Of course not.”
“But she was. He needs a nice, levelheaded girl. You’re levelheaded, Dory.”
“I’m insane, ’Du.”
“Well, not all the time. And when you’re not, you’re quite lovely . . . in your own odd little way.”
“Uh, thank you?”
Radu patted my arm. “You’re welcome.”
I closed my eyes for what felt like a brief moment after he left, and when I opened them again it was dark. Moonlight poured through the window onto the bed, tracing LouisCesare’s face with a slender outline of silver. “I guess Claire was right,” I murmured. “I must have been tired.”
“With cause,” he said softly.
“You didn’t have to stay.”
He brushed sweaty hair out of my eyes. “I have left you twice, and each time, you were almost killed.”
“Perhaps you shouldn’t leave, then.”
He let his fingers, soft and featherlight, trail over the skin of my face. “I’m not going anywhere. But you need to sleep.”
“Un-uh. You don’t get off that easy.” I didn’t feel like getting up, so I bunched a fist in his pretty blue shirt and pulled him down beside me. His chest made a good pillow, I decided; my eyes were already trying to slip closed.
I forced them back open, because there were a couple of things I wanted to know. I decided to get the big one out of the way first. “Was Christine really your mistress?”
“For a brief time, before the Change. But afterwards . . . even had I been inclined to continue our affair, she hated vampires. She would never have been involved with one of us.”
“Then why tell people that?”
“She required constant supervision and it was not a task I could trust to another. Had she managed to get away, any deaths she caused would have been my fault. I had to keep her constantly with me, and I had to have a believable reason for doing so.”
“So you let everyone think you were just too smitten to let her out of your sight?”
“Essentially. But it backfired when Alejandro decided that kidnapping my beloved mistress would be a perfect way to force me to deal with Tomas.”
“That’s why you were so crazy to get her back. You knew how dangerous she could be.”
“I had no idea how dangerous she could be,” he said drily. “She kept her abilities very well hidden. I was more concerned with the possibility that she would give herself away. Christine was quite lucid much of the time, but at others . . .”
“I saw.” That image of her playing in Anthony’s mutilated chest would stay with me a while. She’d seemed so . . . happy.
“But at Alejandro’s court, eccentricity is the order of the day. Apparently no one noticed. And Alejandro kept her closely confined; he knew that I would be looking for any way to steal her back.”
“But Elyas wasn’t so careful.”
“No. Alejandro transferred Christine to him once he discovered that Tomas was missing, fearing that his threat to kill her might lead me to desperate measures. Elyas agreed to take her, but it seems that his only concession to security was to tell the doorman not to allow her egress! She appeared timid and powerless to him—not someone to worry about. Not someone to fear.”
“Which is one reason she was able to kill so easily. Everyone else thought the same.”
“Fortunately she appears to have concluded that killing single vampires would do little good in her quest to eradicate the breed. And it might lead to her discovery and execution before she could put a larger plan in place. At least, Marlowe can find no reports of mysterious deaths, either here or near Elyas’s estate. We do not know what occurred at Alejandro’s, but I assume it was the same.”
“She was saving it up for one big blowout.”
“It would seem so.”
I rolled over so I could see his face. “Okay, end of the easy questions. What were you doing in my head?”
“Mind speak is part of your legacy, from your vampire half. I assume the wine you have been drinking allowed it to manifest.”