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Rhoan gave him a hug, then looked at me. “So how did you fill in the evening while we were out partying?”

Of the two of them, he looked slightly less pickled. Though at least both of them could talk without slurring their sentences. I leaned a shoulder against the doorframe and smiled. “I went out and kissed a girl.”

They both blinked owlishly at me for a moment, then Rhoan said, “What?”

I didn’t answer straightaway, making them coffee first, then sitting back down and reclaiming my breakfast. “The girl was a vamp who wasn’t a bloodsucker, and I kissed her to get the name of a rogue who was beating up an accountant.”

“So what was it like?” Liander asked. “Kissing a girl, I mean?”

“Not in the least bit arousing.” Which was the truth, and yet not the whole truth. I picked up my coffee and took a sip. The fact was, the caress of her lips had haunted a good part of my dreams, but the cause was trepidation rather than desire. Even my dreams had been filled with the certainty that something more than lip-locking had happened.

Rhoan untangled himself from Liander and leaned forward. “Why would you kiss a vamp to get information? Why didn’t you just read her mind or beat it out of her?”

I waved my spoon at him. “It’s not polite to run around beating up women.”

“It is when they’re vamps who could beat the shit out of most normal people.”

“We’re not normal people.” We weren’t even normal in the nonhuman sense of the word. According to Jack—who apparently kept an eye on such things—we were the rarest of the rare. Who’d have thought, after all those years of getting beaten up because we were half-breeds?

He waved the comment away. “They don’t know that. So why kiss her when you didn’t want to?” He hesitated a moment, then added with a cheeky grin, “Or did you?”

“I’m still hetero all the way, bro. Trust me on that.” I took a sip of coffee, then added, “I tried reading her mind, but it felt like falling into a black hole.”

“So why not use threats or force? If she’s withholding evidence, you’re entitled to.”

I shrugged. “Beating her up would have been an exercise in stupidity. She had forty of her get living with her and those sort of odds are a little overwhelming.”

“Forty?” He frowned. “How does any one vampire control that many fledglings? And how would they even manage to all live together?”

I finished off my cereal, then dumped the bowl back on the table and said, “She wasn’t a blood vamp, but rather some sort of emotional vampire. Apparently living together is a requirement for suckers who feed off emotion.”

“There’re vamps who feed off emotion?” Liander said. “That’s a somewhat horrific thought.”

I raised an eyebrow. “No worse than blood vamps, really.”

He snorted. “It’s hard to miss a blood vamp feeding off you. Bet the same couldn’t be said of an emotional vampire.”

He had a point. Especially if all emotional vamps had an aura as strong as Vi

“You reported their presence to Jack?” Rhoan asked.

“Yep.”

“Good.” He paused to sip his coffee. “So why were you even there rescuing this accountant? Did it have something to do with that phone call you got last night?”

I nodded and explained why Ben had rung, then added, “Which is why I kissed the vamp. To get the name before he attacks someone else.”

“So it’s not someone co

“Ben doesn’t seem to think he’s the co

Which wouldn’t be a good thing, because Young’s actions had earned him an execution order. Vamps involved in the torture of others didn’t live all that much longer than those actually killing—simply because one crime usually developed into the other anyway. And if Ben was a good friend, he’d come under Directorate scrutiny as well.

Liander frowned. “That name rings a bell.”

I raised an eyebrow. “You know someone called Aron Young?”

“I didn’t say that. I just said it rings a bell.”

“I’m sure there’s more than one Aron Young out there,” Rhoan said dryly.

Liander sniffed. “Well, of course there is. I’m just saying the name seems familiar.”

“Well,” I said, grabbing my cup and bowl as I rose. “Let me know if you remember. Meanwhile, I’m heading into the Directorate. You want me to let Jack know you’re going to be late?”



“No need.” Rhoan’s voice was decidedly smug. “I’ve got the day off. Some of us do occasionally think ahead and prepare.”

“And this would have to be a first for you.”

He threw a cushion after me. It thudded into a wall, missing by miles. For some reason, it sent the two of them off into fits of laughter. I shook my head and left them to it.

Thankfully, the car had survived the night without additional decoration from the local goons. I threw my gear in, clipped my cell phone onto its hands-free holder, then pulled into the traffic and headed to work.

The phone rang well before I got there and my heart sunk. The number said it was either Jack or Sal, and a call at this hour from either one could never be a good thing.

I pressed the receive button and said, “You know I can’t stomach bad news before I’ve had my second cup of coffee.”

“Well, ain’t that just too bad,” Jack said, sounding tired and just a little frustrated, “because I’ve got another one for you.”

I slowed the car as the lights ahead turned to red. “I take it you mean another dead naked politician flashing his butt to the world?”

“Not quite. This one is a naked shoe-store owner flashing his butt to all and sundry.”

That raised my eyebrows. “Human or nonhuman?”

“Non. Werefox, to be exact.”

The killer wasn’t restricting himself to any one race, then. “Where was he found?”

“In his store, by his employee. Apparently the dead man and a friend were getting hot and happy in the store window, and that’s where he died.”

So we had a killer who liked to do the deed in exposed spots, and who obviously had no qualms about being seen. Either that, or it added to the thrill. “Let me guess—his friend is nowhere to be found again?”

“Spot on.”

“So why are you so sure it’s co

“A feeling, nothing more.”

And I’d put money on Jack’s feelings over most people’s certainties any day.

“Kade’s heading there now,” he continued. “I want you there ASAP to see if you can sense anything.”

“I didn’t sense anything useful at James’s office.” And if my job at the Directorate started to be nothing more than visiting murder scenes to try and sense departing souls, then I’d rather quit.

Which was quite a statement, considering I never actually wanted to be a guardian in the first place.

“Still worth trying. I’ll send you the address.” He paused, and in the background I heard paper rustling. “We checked out that nest you found last night, too.”

I raised my eyebrows. “That was fast.”

“Emo vamps can be quite dangerous. We had to assess the situation.”

“So they really do feed on emotions rather than blood?”

“Yes. And they have the ability—and the tendency—to amp up emotions. In certain situations, that can get extremely dangerous.”

“This one seems to feed off sexual energy.”

“Sexual emotions tend to be the rawest, and therefore more satisfying to emo vamps, but they’ll make do with lesser emotions like fear, anger, and pain when they have to.”

Which is why there’d been such a strong sense of hunger in the building when I’d walked in—they’d been feeding off what was happening in Ivan’s apartment.

And I wouldn’t have been surprised if that had been part of the reasoning behind Vi

“What’s your impression of Vincenta Castillo?” Jack asked.