Halfway to the Grave

“Kiss me and find out.”

 

 

He moved in that lightning-fast way of his, the one I’d seen hundreds of times before but that still managed to surprise me with its suddenness. Bones pulled me to him, tilting my head back and covering my mouth before I blinked.

 

“Not much room in here,” he whispered after a long minute. “Want to go outside so you can stretch out?”

 

“Oh no. Right here. Love to do it in a truck.”

 

His former words rolled off my tongue and he laughed. His eyes glowed pure emerald and when he smiled, fangs protruded from his lips.

 

“Let’s find out.”

 

 

 

After another two weeks of fruitless trolling, we still hadn’t found any trace of Hennessey or Switch. I’d been to every sordid club within a fifty-mile range of Columbus, but with no luck. Bones reminded me that he’d been after Hennessey for the better part of eleven years. Age had taught him patience. Youth had taught me to get frustrated at the lack of progress.

 

We were at my apartment, waiting for the pizza I’d ordered. It was a Sunday evening, so we weren’t going out tonight. I had every intention of doing nothing but kicking back now and studying later. Even going to the grocery store had been too much for me, hence the delivery. Whatever I’d inherited from my mother, it hadn’t been her inclination to cook.

 

A knock at the door had me glancing in bemusement at the clock. Only fifteen minutes since I’d ordered. My, that was fast.

 

Courteously Bones started to get up, but I grabbed my robe and stopped him.

 

“Stay there. You’re not eating it anyway.”

 

A grin touched his mouth. He could eat solid food, I’d seen him do it, but he didn’t take much enjoyment out of it. He’d once remarked that he did it more to blend in.

 

I opened my front door—and then slammed it shut with a cry. “Sweet Jesus!”

 

Bones was up in a flash, still naked but now with a knife in his hand. The sight of that made another scream escape me even as there was an annoyed banging on the door.

 

“Catherine, what is the matter with you? Open this door!”

 

I was thrown into a state of sheer, mindless panic. “It’s my mother!” I whispered fiercely, as if Bones hadn’t figured that out. “Holy shit, you have to hide!”

 

I literally shoved him toward the bedroom, yelling, “I—I’ll be right there, I’m not dressed!”

 

He went, but with none of my hysteria. “Kitten, you still haven’t told her? Blimey, what are you waiting for?”

 

“The Second Coming of Christ!” I snapped. “And not a moment sooner! Here, in the closet!”

 

Her knocks were getting louder. “What is taking you so long?”

 

“I’ll be right there!” I hollered. Then to Bones, who was giving me a very aggravated look, “We’ll talk about this later. Just stay here and don’t make a sound, I’ll get rid of her as fast as I can.”

 

Without waiting for his reply, I shut the closet door with a bang and whirled back around, kicking his clothes and shoes under the bed. God, had he left his keys on the counter? What else could be around for her to find?

 

“Catherine!” It sounded like a kick punctuated my name this time.

 

“Coming!”

 

I flew over to the door and opened it with a broad, false smile. “Mom, what a surprise!”

 

She swept past me, more than a little upset. “I drop by to say hello, and you slam the door in my face? What is wrong with you?”

 

I wracked my brain to think up an excuse. “Migraine!” I said triumphantly before lowering my voice and affecting a pained expression. “Oh, Mom, I’m glad to see you, but it’s a bad time.”

 

She was staring at my apartment with a look of amazement. Uh-oh. How to explain?

 

“Look at this place.” Her arms encompassed the small, drastically altered space. “Catherine, where did you get the money to pay for all of this?”

 

Upon first seeing my apartment, Bones had derisively said he was going to slaughter my landlord for daring to charge me money for it. He hadn’t, though from his tone I didn’t think he’d been entirely kidding, but what he had done was furnish it from top to bottom. “All of this” meant the couch he’d bought with a comment that he wanted something to sit on besides the floor, the TV so supposedly I could watch the news to look out for any telltale headlines, the computer for similar purposes, and the coffee table, end tables, and appliances—well. I’d given up by then.

 

“Credit cards,” I said instantly. “They’ll give ’em to anybody.”

 

She gave me a disapproving frown. “Those things will get you in trouble.”

 

I almost laughed out of dementia. If she only knew how I’d really gotten this stuff, she’d forget all about the dangers of high interest rates!

 

“Mom, it’s great to see you, really, but…”

 

The way she was staring in shock at the bedroom made a chill creep up my spine. I was afraid to turn around. Had Bones ignored my directive and come out?

 

“Catherine…is that a new bed as well?”

 

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