“What’s that?”
“I know you saw me and the girl in the parking garage. So why didn’t you rat us out? Why leave that pill on Troy’s body and walk away like you hadn’t seen anything at all? Did you think you could blackmail me? Get me to pay you to keep quiet?”
“I have my reasons.”
I dug my blade into his neck, breaking the skin and drawing blood, to encourage him to start talking. Silvio stiffened even more, feeling more like a board pressed against my side than flesh and bone, but he remained silent. Whatever he was holding back, it would take more than a few scratches from my knife to get him to spill his guts. I admired him for that—but only a little.
“Well, then, on to other matters. You and I are going to go out and do the whole meet-and-greet that your boss so desperately wants. Don’t make any problems for me, and you might live through this.”
“And if I do make problems?” he asked in a wry tone, even though he already knew the answer.
“Make so much as a whimper, and I will slit your throat,” I hissed again.
Silvio nodded once. Smart man.
“Move,” I ordered.
Silvio walked toward the door at the end of the hallway. I gripped his left shoulder with one hand and used the other to keep my knife at his throat, so our progress was slow but steady. We reached the door.
“Open it—slowly.”
Silvio started to nod again but thought better of it, given the blade against his neck. He leaned forward enough to turn the knob and crack the door. The murmur of conversation drifted over to me.
“. . . good to see that you’ve done so well for yourself, Roslyn,” a familiar nasal voice said.
Silence.
“Thank you,” Roslyn answered, her normally light voice tight with tension. “But I don’t see the need for this.”
A low laugh sounded. “Oh, I think we both know that I couldn’t meet with your friend under any other circumstances. Not without killing her. And you wouldn’t want that, now, would you?”
This time, Roslyn laughed. “You always were confident. In this case, too confident.”
“We’ll see.”
Silvio slowly opened the door the rest of the way. I leaned to one side so that I could see over his right shoulder.
“Walk,” I ordered him.
Silvio moved forward, his steps slow, careful, and steady. He didn’t want to get sliced open. We would see if the same could be said for his boss.
We stepped through the door and into the main part of the club. The inside of Northern Aggression was all opulent glamour, from the springy bamboo floor to the red crushed-velvet drapes cloaking the walls to the glittering elemental Ice bar off to my left. The air was cool, bordering on frosty, to keep the bar intact until the elemental who maintained it with his magic came in for his shift, but the chill swirling through the room was nothing compared with the cold fury running through my veins.
Roslyn was sitting at a small round table that had been moved to the middle of the dance floor. In her teal-blue suit, Roslyn looked every inch the successful club owner she was. The bright color set off the dark luster of her black hair and the rich toffee color of her skin, while her understated makeup highlighted her toffee eyes and perfect features.
And she wasn’t alone.
Beauregard Benson sat opposite her at the table. Long, gangly arms and legs, rumpled black hair, blue eyes behind silver glasses. He looked much the same as he had in the garage last night, wearing white pants and sneakers, with a pale pink button-up shirt and matching bow tie. I didn’t see his white lab coat anywhere, but adding to the geeky-scientist illusion were the plastic protector and the notepad and pens once again lined up inside it in a neat row in his shirt pocket. He had one ankle crossed on top of the opposite knee, his pant leg pulled up enough to expose his sock, white with a pink argyle pattern in the center.
Benson’s posture was easy and relaxed, but another guard stood a few feet behind the vamp, his arms crossed over his chest and his hard stare fixed on Roslyn, as he if expected her to cause trouble at any second.
That was my job.
At the sound of Silvio’s footsteps, Benson looked in our direction. “Ah, Silvio. There you are. I was wondering what was taking you so long—”
Benson’s mouth puckered at the sight of me and the knife I had at his minion’s throat, but the expression quickly melted into a smile as he got to his feet. His figure was lean again, instead of having the bulked-up look it had last night after he’d drained Troy of his emotions. I wondered what he’d done to expend all that stolen life and energy so quickly. Probably best not to know.
“Ah, Ms. Blanco,” he said. “So glad you could join us. And ahead of schedule too.”
“Well, I got your invitation and hurried over here as fast as I could,” I drawled, my voice as calm and even as his was.
His smile widened. “I don’t think that we’ve been properly introduced. My name is Benson. Beauregard Benson.”
12
Beauregard Benson bowed to me, as low, gallant, and charming as any old-fashioned Southern gentleman. But his blue eyes were as empty as mirrors, despite his veneer of manners and civility.
The third man cursed and started to reach under his jacket for his gun, but Benson snapped his fingers, as though he were calling off a junkyard dog. The other man froze at the sharp sound.
“There’s no need for that,” Benson purred again, although his high, nasal voice ruined his smooth words. “Is there, Ms. Blanco?”
Instead of answering him, my gaze went to my friend. “Roslyn?”
She slowly got up from the table and stepped back, removing herself from the line of fire, should it come to that. “I’m okay, Gin.”
Benson gestured at the table. “Please, Ms. Blanco. Let’s sit and talk.”
“If you wanted to talk, you could have just called,” I said in a sweet tone.
“Call me old-fashioned, but I prefer face-to-face conversations.” His voice was as fake and syrupy as mine was.
He might as well have substituted confrontations for conversations, but I decided to play along—for now. Roslyn was unharmed, and I wanted to keep her that way. Going along with Benson was the easiest way to ensure her safety. Besides, part of me was curious about what the vampire possibly thought he had to say to me. Ah, that damned old curiosity. Going to get me stabbed in the back one day.
Maybe even right now.
“All right, then,” I said. “Let’s chat.”