Kylie shot Della an apologetic look. “Yeah, he kind of is. But he could still be a panty pervert.”
“Aren’t all guys panty perverts?” Miranda asked.
“No, this guy’s creepy,” Della snapped. “And egotistical. And his scent … It’s familiar, and not in good way.”
“Maybe he just smells like someone else?” Kylie said.
Della shook her head. “Obviously you haven’t developed your vampire nose yet. We don’t forget scents. And if something intense was happening when you smelled that scent, then there’s an emotional trace.”
“Wow. Lucas told me that werewolves do that, too,” Kylie said.
“Not nearly as good as vampires,” Della huffed. “I mean, I know they’re wolves, but for a vampire, who doesn’t go around putting their nose everywhere, an emotional trace is stronger.”
“Wouldn’t you know,” Miranda said sarcastically. “Nothing is as good as vampires.”
Della shot the witch a go-to-hell look that implied she should not just go to Hades, but go in a hurry.
Miranda snickered.
Obviously, Della’s go-to-hell look wasn’t in working order.
“So what emotion does he remind you of?” Kylie asked, and both she and Miranda eased up to the table and sat down.
“Danger,” Della said, and pulled the photo closer to stare at the image. Her uncle really looked just like her father.
“Maybe it’s the good kind of danger,” Miranda offered. “You know, you’re hot for him and worried about what you are feeling for Steve.”
“I don’t feel anything for Steve,” Della snapped, and frowned when she heard her own heart pick up its pace. So what if she felt something, she wasn’t going to let it lead anywhere. Swallowing, she focused on the photo again.
“We pretty much figured that out,” Miranda said. “Or you’d be hooking up with him.”
“That sounds so stupid. What does hooking up really mean? We’re not dogs, you know!”
Kylie held up both hands as if requesting peace. “What’s going on, Della?”
“Nothing’s going on,” Della insisted.
“Yes, it is,” Kylie said. “You’re grumpy.”
“I’m always grumpy!” Della insisted.
“Then you’re extra arrogant,” Miranda snapped.
“There’s a difference between arrogance and confidence,” Della insisted.
Her friends weren’t buying it. “What happened this weekend?” Kylie asked.
Della felt a wave of emotion swell inside her, but she pushed it back and locked it away so she wouldn’t start blubbering like a little girl. Then, in a monotone voice, she told them about the weekend, about her nightmare, the hole in the wall, and her sister, Marla, saying her dad never talked about her. She told them what she learned about possibly having a vampire uncle. Oh, and she saved the best for last, getting caught in her father’s study and practically being accused of being a thieving alcoholic.
Kylie sat there, her light blue eyes looking consumed with worry. Miranda sat there, expression tight, her fingers laced together, except for her pinkies, which she twirled in tight circles.
“I’m so sorry,” Kylie said.
“Why? It’s not as if you did anything,” Della said, trying to make light of the whole thing.
“But I could do something,” Miranda said. “I could put a curse on your dad. A bad case of athlete’s foot. Or jock itch. I’m good at that curse. There was this football player at school that—”
“Leave my dad’s feet and junk alone!”
“I just want to help,” Miranda said.
“It wouldn’t help,” Della said in a calmer voice. “You can’t even blame him. It looked like I was into his brandy.”
“Why didn’t you just tell him the truth?” The somberness of Kylie’s words expressed empathy.
Della’s chest tightened. Kylie’s concern, and even Miranda’s desire to zap her father with a foot or private-part fungus, was why Della loved her two best friends. They cared. Everyone needed someone to care. Thank God she’d found them. Her sinuses stung, but she swallowed hard to keep her eyes from watering. She reached for the envelope, remembering the possibility that she might have an actual family member who would understand her. Maybe even care.
“You could have told him Marla mentioned he had a brother and you were curious,” Kylie continued. “Maybe he would have told you more about him.”
“You don’t know my dad. Anyway, Marla said she overheard him telling this to my mom, and while she asked my mom, my dad probably didn’t know she heard it. The last thing I want to do is get him mad at Marla. He’s already lost one daughter.”
“I guess so,” Kylie said.
“I still think he was an ass**le,” Miranda concluded.
“He was,” Della said, “but if I’d done what he suspected me of doing, then he had a right to be an ass**le.”
“But you didn’t do it,” Miranda snapped.
“No, but I looked guilty, and I couldn’t defend myself. So my only option is to just accept it.”
“That sucks,” Miranda said. “I’m so glad I don’t have to deal with being a supernatural and having to keep it from my parents.”
But that doesn’t make Miranda’s mom any less of an asswipe. Just before Della vocalized the thought, she decided it might be best to leave it unsaid.
How was it Holiday had put it? Just because crap pops in here—Holiday had tapped her temple—doesn’t mean crap has to pop out here. She had touched her lips. The camp leader had also said that supernatural scientists were considering doing medical research to prove vampires were missing the thingamajig that filtered out inappropriate dialogue. Della wasn’t sure if Holiday was joking or not.
But considering Holiday was married to Burnett, who was famous for speaking his mind, Della figured Holiday might be telling the truth.
Then again, Della had kind of spoken her mind even before she’d been turned.
She’d been suspended from kindergarten for telling the teacher she looked like Yoda in Star Wars—if Yoda was older, fatter, and smelled funny. That, of course, came after the teacher had asked Della why she had an Asian name, but didn’t look more Asian. At the time, Della had a supercomplex about being of mixed race and not looking more like all her Asian cousins. Especially when she didn’t even look like her mom, who was an all-American blonde.