Frost Moon (9 page)

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Authors: Anthony Francis

Tags: #Fantasy, #Fiction, #General, #Fiction - Fantasy, #Fantasy - General, #Fantasy - Urban Life, #Fiction : Fantasy - Urban Life

BOOK: Frost Moon
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Damnit, I could figure this out. I stretched the collar open, pulled it around my neck, and closed it. I felt Doug’s fingers reach up, slipping my hair from beneath it, and then pulling the edges together until the post slipped through the hole with a clack; then he pushed something heavy onto the back of the collar… and locked it with a sharp CLICK.

Doug returned to kneel at her side, and I turned to face her, adjusting the collar. It felt oddly… right about my neck, neither too tight nor too loose. I started to wonder if she’d had the collar made for me, and had kept it, waiting, all this time since we split. I caught her wicked grin, and became convinced that she had.

“This collar is the sign of my house,” she said, reaching down to tug at Doug’s collar, which I now noticed was identical to my own. “A sign to any vampire that sees you that you are mine, that you are not to be touched—”

“Wonderful,” I said. “Is there anything else, or can I go now?”

“Oh, there’s just one more thing,” Savannah said. She leaned forward in her chair, looking at me with hungry, hungry eyes, and I swallowed. Surely… surely she didn’t think…I was going to actually give her blood?

“Now, Dakota,” Savannah said, licking her lips. “Strip.”

12. PROTECTING DAKOTA

“Excuzme,
what
did you say?” I said, tugging at the steel collar.

“I said,
strip
,” Savannah said. “What are you worried about? It’s not like you’re in any
danger,
;” she said, lifting her skirt to reveal a set of metal ‘panties’—a chastity belt, connected by glittering chains to her thigh bands. “You’ve already seen Doug’s safe, so relax. So, Dakota, strip—” and for the
briefest
moment I actually considered doing it “—and pleasure yourself.”

“What?”
I said. Had she actually said that
with company?
“No way! I mean, good grief, what is
wrong
with you, Savannah? You two are horny, strapped in and can’t play with each other, so you decide to play with me, is that it?” I adjusted the collar. Again. “Look, I don’t care what you and Doug do when Darkrose leaves the two of you alone. Just don’t involve me.”

Savannah and Doug looked at each other in shock, then started laughing. “You think I—I mean, with him—” Savannah laughed. “Dakota,
you’re
the one who likes boys.”

“And I’m
not
about to come between two lovers, much less two
vampires”
Doug said. “I’m just here for the training, at the request of Sir Charles—”

“Sir Charles?” A whole forgotten world re-opened in my mind— a road not taken, or at least not traveled in a long while. Sir Charles had been a kindly old Santa Claus looking fellow who was just as comfortable chatting your ear off for hours on end as he was with whipping you until you cried and felt warm and goosy inside. It had been Sir Charles who had introduced Savannah to bondage and puppy play. The last I’d seen him, at least a couple of years ago, he was looking about a hundred and quite unwell. “How is he? Did he ever…”

Savannah lowered her head. “Well… no. He’s still on the heart transplant list. He’s not doing so bad beyond that, better than before, but he’s definitely still on the list.”

“I’m sorry to hear that but… look, I’m on a mission, Savannah,” I said, tugging at the ring on the collar. “I don’t have time for games. Let’s just stipulate that you’ve made me remember that you’re hot, that you’ve put me in my place, and move the fuck on—”

“But,” Doug said, confused, “if she won’t give blood… and she won’t, um, you know, how are we going to get a sample?”

My jaw dropped. “How are you going to get a
what,
Pup?”

“A
bodily fluid
sample,” Savannah said, and all I could do was stare at her while she tripped over her words in the rush to explain. “It’s not just part of the ritual. We need them to tell if any vampire has drained you—”

“Can I spit on you? Will that do?” I said. “Hold out your hand—”

“No,” she said, in all seriousness. “We need a sample more… charged with your aura. And since I know you’d rather die than give me blood—”

“Savannah!
This is the
twenty-first fucking century!”
I said. “If you
really
need samples you can get a finger stick or some swabs from any medical supply house. Between all your bondage games and this ‘Vampire Consulate’ crap you’ve probably got one on speed dial!”

“Yeah” she said. “Actually… yeah. It’s not the usual form of the ritual but… Doug, you think he would go for that?”

“I think he almost certainly would,” Doug said. “After all, it is your court.”

“Who would go for what?” I asked, suspicious. “Anyway, you’ve had your little fun. Now take this thing off and—”

“We can’t,” Savannah said. “Darkrose has the keys.”

My eyes bugged. My fingers reached up and felt the lock: it was solidly closed.

“You have got to be shitting me,” I said. “Take this fucking thing off!”

“We… we can’t,” she said, suddenly apologetic. “We used the same lock that she puts on Doug and me, and only she has the key—”

“You idiots,” I snarled. “What if there was a fire?”

“She never chains us
to
anything with those,” Doug said. “The leash is just a snap—”

“Get this fucking thing off me or I swear I will go down to Home Depot and buy a pair of metal clippers and snip the fucking thing off—”

“A little late for that,” Doug said. “You know, the twenty-four hour Home Depot dialed their hours back, so—”

“I know lots of
welders,
not to mention professionals specializing in body modification,” I said. “Somebody’s got
something
that will get this off—”

“Dakota! Dakota!” Savannah said, holding up her hands. “I’m so sorry. All right? Given our history, I didn’t think it would bother you so much.”

“We split because you started drinking blood which you did because—wait for it—
-you never think!”
I shouted. “If I didn’t know better, I’d swear you were a guy always thinking with his
dick—

“Hey,” Doug said.

“Shut up, Pup,” Savannah and I said in unison.

Savannah studied me in the silence that fell. “Darkrose will be back in a couple of hours. We’ll take that lock off and give you a new one with the key, but… you need the collar. I wasn’t joking when I said it was the symbol of my house—if you don’t have it I can’t guarantee that other vampires won’t bite first—”

“You have to be kidding. You
have
to be
kidding!”

Doug shook his head. “She’s not. Even I’ve been harassed by vampires, and they only quit after I showed them the collar—”

“Did you have to give a ‘sample’?” I asked.

Doug looked away, embarrassed. “Yes. I don’t give blood either.”

The intercom buzzed, and I jumped.

“Yes, what is it?” Savannah said.

“Lord Delancaster is here,” a man said, and I drew a breath. Delancaster was the vampire who made Savannah into Saffron. “He says you called upon him, Lady Saffron.”

“Tell him our crosses are uncovered, so we shall join him in the vestibule.”

“As you wish, Lady Saffron.” The intercom went dead.

Wonderful. The vampire who made Saffron. I’d never met him. Sight unseen, I despised him. And didn’t intend to hang around and do a polite little meet and greet now. “Alright,” I said. “Thank you, ‘Lady Saffron,’ for this damn visa, and for the lovely little show that left it locked around my neck.
You
go meet with your master,
I’ll
go meet with the werewolves, and we can talk about getting this off me when I get back—”

I turned to go, but Savannah raised her hand. “Wait, you can’t leave. We’re not done. Don’t you want my protection?”

I let out my breath. “At this point, no, not really. It’s not like every vampire you meet is a serial killer… but… damnit, I do still worry about the pesky few.
You
know this gang, you tell me—do I
need
your protection?”

Savannah sagged in her chair. “It’s on the west side,” she said, scanning the floor as she considered. “Yes, you do need it. I’m sorry. I’m sad to say, if you really want to be safe, you even need it in the vampire district, if people knew you were my ex—”

“Damn blood junkies,” I said.

“We’re trying to do better,” she said, leaning forward, almost pleading. “We really are. Lord Delancaster approves of our efforts. You’ll like him—”

“Not
likely,” I said, “and in any case I’m not planning to stay and get chummy—”

“But you
have
to,” she said. “He’s the Lord of Georgia. He has to confirm my protection. You need his ‘ban’. The sample is for him—that’s why I summoned him.”

My jaw tightened. I counted to ten and reminded myself that if a vampire worried about where I was going, I needed protection. And this was from Savannah, who probably really did have my best interests at heart. Son of a bitch. “Of
course
I have to meet him. How stupid of me not to have realized. The hits just keep on coming,” I said. “Let’s get this over with.”

“Please don’t make a scene,” Savannah said. She got up and snapped for Doug to follow her. He started to crawl, and she muttered something, so he got onto his feet, which had the side effect of exposing his little cage again. Oy. The hits really
did
keep on coming.

Lord Reynold James Delancaster waited in the vestibule, the perfect parody of a modern vampire. His long silvery hair poured back over the soft brown cape and coat he had apparently stolen from Sherlock Holmes; one hand checked a pocketwatch, which he deposited back into the pocket of a brocaded vest; the other hand rested on the top of a jewel-headed cane.

Before she’d turned, Savannah had told me breathlessly that he’d been the model for Louis in
Interview with the Vampire.
Personally,
I
think he was just hamming it up, and it made him look like a bad copy of Lucius Malfoy.

“You called,” he said, his deep voice sounding more like Lurch from the Addams Family than the whine of everyone’s favorite angst-ridden gothy vampire. “I trust it was urgent.”

Delancaster lived in the Little Five Points District—not far from me in Candler Park, actually—but not as Savannah’s subject; as her ruler. Officially his full title was Lord of the Vampires for Georgia, making Savannah kind of like a mayor in the world of vampire politics.

“Lord Delancaster,” Savannah said, smiling, bowing deferentially to the vampire. I wondered how smart giving her a court was: ‘Saffron’ was
extremely
powerful for a such young vampire, and history was filled with empires toppled because the heirs were eager to inherit. Vampire nepotism might make it just as hard to hold onto power.

But, watching her bowing… I remembered this was Savannah. For all of her supposed power, she was still a wet-behind-the-ears twenty-seven-year-old with a submissive streak. She was obviously treating this like some kind of grand game where she was the star player, and by letting her ham it up Delancaster had no doubt wrapped her round his finger.

Savannah was up and talking again. “Thank you for coming on such short notice.”

“That is… quite the outfit. Going out for Halloween?” Lord Delancaster asked, kissing her hand. As he did so, he caught sight of Doug’s cage and flinched. “Oh my. Hello, Douglas. I take it you are
not
going out tonight.”

“Hello, RJ,” Doug responded, nodding briefly. “Not like this, no.”

“Well, my Lady Saffron,” the Lord Delancaster said, with a forced smile. “Your court is always a show.”

“Tell me about it,” I muttered. “The sight of a three hundred year old vampire flinching
alone
was worth the price of admission.”

“Be nice,” Savannah said icily. “I’m sorry, my Lord Delancaster. My
supplicant
here interrupted the Lady Darkrose and me during our play.”

Lord Delancaster looked at me.

I’ve heard you’re not supposed to look vampires in the eyes, but I’ve never had any patience for that, so I just stared straight back at him. His eyes were fine amber; they would probably glow gold if he exerted his power, giving me a chance to flinch if I needed to; but apparently he had far too much control for that. “You must be Miss Frost,” he said. “The young lady who almost kept my Lady Saffron from me.”

“The one and only,” I said, tilting my head. I had a whole
list
of other things I had always wanted to say to the bloodsucker who stole Savannah from me, but I gritted my teeth and kept it to, “Best magical tattooist in the Southeast.”

But Delancaster caught some of what I had
not
said from the look in my eyes. “You have a fire in you,” he said. “I can see why she nearly turned down my offer of eternal life—”

“You don’t have that to offer,” Savannah said coldly.

“Bodily immortality, if you prefer,” the Lord Delancaster said, bowing. “Or agelessness. I meant no offense to your religious beliefs—”

“Fine, fine, fine,” I said, before he could get Savannah started on that again. “We’re all one big happy vampire family, respecting each other’s beliefs, and even managing to pretend Doug’s whing-whang isn’t hanging out. All that still leaves me wearing this stupid collar
just
so I don’t have to worry about
other
vampires gnawing on me while I go consult with a graphomancer they’re guarding. So whatever you’re here to do, let’s do it, so I can get on with it. I am on the clock.”

Lord Delancaster looked at me, face oddly blank. “Very well,” he said, his mask of humanity seeming to filter away, leaving something cold, ancient and impersonal. “Please tell me this one is willing to give blood—”

“No, and no on other bodily fluids,” I snapped.

He looked at Savannah, humanity flooding back into his features. “Then how is this going to work—”

“We’re going to use a finger stick,” she said, stepping behind the wet bar.

“Of course,” Lord Delancaster said, tapping his fingers to his forehead. “This
is
the twenty-first century. But that will only grant a partial protection. I will still need to taste—”

“No,” I repeated.

“Your
aura,”
he said pointedly. “Your aura will do—”

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