Appetite for Art
AS I STEPPED ONTO THE LADDER, MY VISION CLOUDED FOR a second, like a mental stutter.
“Someone’s coming,” I whispered into the hole. “My perimeter spell just went off. I cast one across the front of the property.”
Cassandra blinked, as if shocked by this show of foresight. She motioned for me to come down and hide there, but I shook my head, hurried to the door, cracked it open and peeked out. A young man headed toward the cabin. He struggled to carry an armload of supplies, and could barely see where he was going, let alone see me. When Cassandra peered over my shoulder, I pointed out a path along the left side of the cabin, behind the overgrown bushes.
Cassandra took the lead, as usual. This time, though, it made sense. A vampire’s stealth is partly preternatural and partly hunting experience. By following in her footsteps I could move almost as quietly as she could.
Behind the cabin, the land was a patchwork of forest and meadow. The forest alternated between stands of evergreens and deciduous trees. Even the meadow itself seemed uncertain what form it should take, with patches of long grass interspersed with brush and brambles.
“Should we wait it out or come back later?” I whispered when we’d walked far enough.
“Wait it out.”
“I’ll phone Lucas, then. He’s probably wondering where we are.”
It turned out that Lucas and Aaron didn’t need our help. The house had required little more than a quick sweep, and revealed nothing. With the news of our find, Lucas promised to hurry over and help us.
As I hung up, Cassandra glided out from a stand of trees. I hadn’t noticed she’d left.
“This isn’t going to work,” she said. “He’ll be there for a while. He’s an artist.”
“Artist?”
“He’s set up in front of the cabin with a half-finished painting of it, although why on earth anyone would want a picture of that in their living room is quite beyond me.”
“Wonderful. Well, since it doesn’t look as if he’ll leave on his own, we’ll have to give him a supernatural push. Think a hailstorm would persuade him to call it a day?”
“I’ll handle this. Wait here.”
Cassandra slipped away without waiting for an answer, which was a good thing because I had no intention of staying behind. As good as Cassandra was, everyone can use backup. So I waited until she was out of sight, then looped around the cabin the other way.
The obvious plan of action was to charm him. Like most vampire powers, charming is a functional skill, another adaptation that makes them expert hunters. At its most basic, charming is extreme charisma. It allows a vamp to walk up to the most street-savvy girl in a bar and, within minutes, have her saying, “Hmm, yes, I think I would like to follow you into that dark alley.”
By the time I got close enough to see around the cabin, Cassandra would probably be nearly done “persuading” the artist to leave. If anything went wrong, though, I’d be close enough to help out. When I reached the front corner of the cabin, I readied a cover spell, which would keep me hidden so long as I stayed motionless. When the spell was half cast, I leaned out and finished the incantation at the same time, so I could watch without being seen.
Cassandra wasn’t there. I could see the artist, a balding man in his late twenties, sitting on a folding camp stool, his attention riveted to the canvas on his portable easel. A bush a few yards behind the man shimmered, as if ruffled by a sudden breeze. Cassandra? Why was she over there? Oh, probably approaching from the road so he wouldn’t wonder where she’d come from.
Cassandra’s green shirt flashed between two bushes, now less than a yard behind the artist. Okay, stop playing and come out before you give the poor guy a heart attack.
As if hearing me, Cassandra eased into the open. She stood between the bush and the artist, her narrowed eyes gleaming. She tilted her head, gaze fixed on the back of his head. Then she smiled. Her lips parted, and the tip of her tongue slid over her teeth.
Oh, shit.
I jerked back behind the cabin just as she pounced. There was an intake of breath, half sigh, half gasp. Then silence. I wrapped my arms around my chest and tried very hard not to think about what was happening just a scant ten feet away, which, of course, made me think about it all the more. She wouldn’t kill him. I knew that. She was just…feeding.
I shivered and hugged myself tighter. It wasn’t such a bad idea, I told myself. Beyond the obvious debilitating effect of blood-draining, a vampire’s initial bite, if done properly, knocked its victim unconscious, so the blood would flow freely. Cassandra’s bite would guarantee the artist would be out cold for a few hours. And she did need to eat. But still…
“I told you to stay where you were, Paige.”
I turned to see Cassandra at the corner of the cabin. There wasn’t so much as a blood smear on her lips, but her color was high and her eyes had lost their usual glitter, lids half closed with the lazy, sated look of someone who’s just had a very good meal…or very good sex.
“I—backup—wanted—” I managed.
“Well, I appreciate the sentiment, but you should have listened to me. Now come on. We need to check out that basement.”
Instead of marching off in the lead, she prodded me forward. When I turned the corner, I saw the artist slumped on the ground. I couldn’t suppress a shiver.
“He’ll be fine, Paige,” Cassandra said, her tone gentler than usual.
“I know.”
“You may not like it, but I could argue that some people would feel the same about the chicken you ate for dinner last night.”
“I know.”
A soft chuckle. “You aren’t going to argue the point? Quelle surprise.” She patted my back. “Let’s get to that secret room. I can’t wait to see what they’ve stashed down there.”
Before we went back into the cabin, I cast another perimeter spell. If anyone arrived before Lucas and Aaron, we needed enough advance warning to move the unconscious artist. It may have seemed wiser to move him immediately, but with a vampire bite, the safest way to hide what happened is not to hide it at all. Better for the artist to wake up on the ground by his chair, thinking he’d suffered a blackout.
With Cassandra following, I climbed down the ladder. Then I stood at the bottom and cast my light-ball around four walls, each with a floor-to-ceiling canning shelf. Every shelf was empty.
I slumped against the ladder. “It really is a cold cellar.”
“Don’t be so hasty,” Cassandra said, moving her hands along the far shelving unit. “Here, this one seems looser than the others. Grab the other end.”
I took hold of the shelf and, on the count of three, pulled. The shelf didn’t move. I walked to the nearest shelf and began examining it, the first wave of disappointment having given way to resolution. Maybe I had been mistaken about this room, but I wasn’t leaving until I was certain of that.
I poked and pried at the shelf but it didn’t budge. On to the next one.
“That one’s firmly fastened,” Cassandra said as she inspected the remaining shelf. “It doesn’t so much as quiver.”
I stopped yanking on the shelf and instead ran my fingers along both sides, where the unit fastened to the wall. It was rammed so tight against the wall that I couldn’t even squeeze a fingernail into the gap. I crouched to examine the underside of the lower shelves.
On the second-to-bottom shelf, I found a nail sticking out near the corner. I prodded it. The nail slid into the wood and the shelf snapped hard against my hands.
“A catch,” Cassandra said. “Well done again.”
Before I could pull it open, my vision clouded.
“Not again,” I muttered. “My perimeter spell, with flawless timing.”
Cassandra checked her watch. “Aaron and Lucas.”
“Or so I hope. I’ll check. You go on in.”
I scooted up the ladder and out the cabin door. Lucas and Aaron were picking their way through the brambles. I hailed them with a shout.
“Hear you found Edward’s hidey-hole,” Aaron called as they drew closer. “Way to go.”
“We haven’t had a chance to look inside yet,” I said. “We ran into a few complications.”
When they caught up, Lucas’s hand brushed mine, then gave it a squeeze.
“Oooh, would that be one of those complications?” Aaron said, jerking his chin toward the fallen artist. “Or just a late-afternoon snack?”
“Both, I think,” I said.
“Is she in a better mood now?”
“Actually, now that I think about it, a much better mood.”
Aaron’s laugh rang out through the quiet meadow. “Oh, yeah, same old Cassandra. I thought that might be the problem. She gets pretty damned testy when she hasn’t eaten. That’s one big drawback to socializing with nonvamps. Nobody wants to hear you say, ‘I’m just popping out for a bite.’ If she ever gets bitchier than usual, that’s a good time to send her out on a late-night coffee run. Best way to cheer her up.” He grinned. “Well, there are other ways, but you don’t want to hear about those.”
We circled past the artist and headed into the cabin.
Industrial Magic
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