Next morning, as soon as I arrived at work, I was greeted with, âWell, if it's not the hero of the hour!'
âDon't. Just don't. It was horrible, Liam. Really. Never let me get volunteered for anything like that again.'
Liam shoved the daily paper under my nose. There, spread across the front page, was a truly dreadful picture of me leaving the Museum Gardens, ice-cream stains across the front of my shirt and an inexplicable, but heroic, smear of blood across my cheek, which I suspected someone had
Photoshopped
in. âYou “helped save lives”, apparently. You should be proud of yourself, Jessie.' His voice was gentle. âAnd, for the record, I wouldn't have let you go if I'd known how bad it was.'
I stared at my picture. âDoes my nose
really
look like that?'
âOnly sometimes.'
âGreat! Well, they can keep it. I couldn't be a Hunter, going through that all the time. There's plenty of people like me out there, let them recruit from that five per cent and leave me alone.'
âNo, Jessie,' Liam laid the paper down, folded so that the ânose shot' was less visible, which unfortunately meant that my chest was on the crease-line, âfive per cent of the population is like
me
. I don't think there's
anyone
out there who works like you do. By the way,' he swivelled his chair so that he faced his computer and couldn't see my expression, âtalking of that, Sil came by earlier.'
All the reactions that I
should
have felt facing down the hell-hound â the nausea, increased heart rate â hit me like delayed shock. âWhat?' I asked faintly. âWhen?'
â'bout ten minutes ago. Came to find out how you were.'
âYeah, right.'
âHonestly. He looked shitty, if that makes you feel better.'
âWhat, not brushed his hair?' I pretended to be immersed in sorting through some of the papers on my desk, not even seeing them, just keeping my hands busy.
âCome on, Jessie, we both miss him. I'm sure he'd come back if you asked him. With Zan doing the admin I bet running the city doesn't take up
all
his time.'
It was far, far too late to tell Liam the truth now, so I muttered, âBudget cuts. It's him or you,' which shut him up, and an unusually sullen silence descended on the office.
I stared at my e-mails, all documents, giving various Otherworlders permission to enter the city on a temporary basis, until the print ran into a formless blur. Remembering, whilst trying not to, that evening when the place had been full of swirling paper, falling like moths around us as Sil and I had screamed at each other with a passion which could only ever find its outlet in fighting and vehemence.
And then I'd thrown him out. The best associate I'd ever had, Liam's friend, my nemesis, my downfall. Sil. Because he was getting too close,
because I was afraid
.
âPenny for them?'
I jumped, and dropped the sheaf of papers. âBloody
hell
! Where did you come from?' Malfaire, cross-legged and elegant on Liam's desk, raised an eyebrow. âI didn't hear you come in!'
âNo. You didn't.' He stood up and stretched, gracefully and oddly familiarly. âToo busy navel-gazing?' He was wearing a navy-blue suit with a collarless shirt which laced up down the front, dark glasses hid his eyes. He couldn't have looked any cooler if he'd slithered in coated in ice.
âI was thinking. Where's Liam?'
A flash of eyebrows: was that meant to be suggestive? âMaking coffee. I think he might be leaving us alone together.'
âI'll kill him, I'll bloody
kill
him,' I muttered, still trying to switch my head from thinking about Sil to talking intelligent English. âSo, what can we do for you today?'
âApart from make me coffee and give me the opportunity to chat with a, quite frankly, delightful young woman?'
âI'm not
that
young!'
âShe's not that delightful, either.' Liam came in, carefully balancing three mugs and a plate of our best shortbread. Weird though our visitor may be, he clearly merited top-class treatment â Liam usually just brushed off the custard creams when someone new came in. âTrust me.'
âI came to get your RSVP for the Run tomorrow night. The organisers need exact numbers, you see, and they were slightly concerned that after all your excitement yesterday, you might not want to attend.' Malfaire removed his glasses, and marmalade-coloured eyes met mine. âAre you still planning to attend, Jessica?' Although his words were business-like, he was scanning me up and down in a way that made me feel slightly uncomfortable; a tinge of magic ran along with his gaze and tickled my skin like a snake's tongue.
âI'm not sure.' I took my mug from Liam and tried to conceal the âa woman needs a man like a fish needs a bicycle' logo by cupping it in my hands. âLast night I â¦'
âI read the papers. Quite a triumph, by all accounts.' There was a note of amusement in his voice again.
âYeah. But Jessie is still a bit shaken.' Liam wasn't looking at Malfaire, he was watching me with concerned eyes. âThere was a bit of a misunderstanding with a couple of Enforcement officers too, and we still haven't got to the bottom of that. So maybe mixing with Otherworlders isn't such a great idea right now.'
He was completely ignored. âIt is something of a triumph to be invited. Certainly for a human. In fact, I cannot recall
any
human being requested to attend the Dead Run. A great coup for your department, in fact.' Hot damn. He certainly knew the buttons to press. York Council would be absolutely wetting its collective padded underwear at the prospect of scoring one over all the other districts that had hosted the Run to date. There would be so much triumphant crowing that the Town Hall would sound like a free-range chicken farm at dawn. âAnd I can promise there won't be a single hell-hound.'
I pretended to think, propping my chin in my hands and wrinkling my nose, whilst in reality giving our guest a once-over. He should have been good looking. Heart-shaped face, small mouth, just enough stubble and dark-blond floppy hair randomly scattered with lighter streaks, like he'd been on a surfing holiday. There was just this ⦠oddness that stopped me from puddling at his feet, this slight sense of wrongness â¦
What the hell was he? Vampire, demon, or a lucky human?
His eyes gave nothing away, neither human nor Other, and trying to scan him was like running my mind over sheets of glass.
If I went to the Dead Run, at least I'd have a chance to find out. âI suppose, if it's safe â¦' Plus, think of the kudos. We might even get a rise ⦠hell, we might even start getting paid at post-decimal rates.
Liam groaned. âJessie, are you sure?'
But Malfaire cut his words off again. âYou will enjoy it. A spectacle, I think they say, something worth seeing. And the Run is being done a little differently this year, had you heard?' Malfaire carried on conversationally, ignoring Liam's narked expression. âIn a simulcrum of the City of York. I think they felt it might add a little more drama to the proceedings.' He sighed. âIt's all about “visual experience” these days, not a pure exhibition any more.'
I almost asked if there would be an attendance fee; after all, I still needed to replace those sandals, and I was already on first-name terms with the girls in the shop where I bought my tights, but when he cocked his head inquisitively towards me, I realised I was supposed to come up with something slightly more intelligent.
âI ⦠err ⦠I don't really know very much about it.'
âNo? And yet you knew how to bind a hell-hound?' His lips twitched when I shrugged. âBut I suppose you would.'
âThis is the first time the Run's been held on our patch,' Liam chipped in. âAnd, from what I gather, no-one else gets told much. The organisers are very “need to know”.'
Malfaire looked at Liam with his head slightly tilted. âYou are very protective of Jessica, aren't you? You care a great deal.'
Liam flared red. He opened and closed his mouth a couple of times, making a spluttering noise, and finally managed to breathe. âShe's my
boss
. I just want to make sure I get paid!'
âOf course.' Giving off stylish yeah, pull-the-other-one vibes, Malfaire set to flicking imaginary fluff from an immaculate trouser leg. This drew my attention to the slender length of his thighs and his perfect, form-fitting, tailoring. My mouth should be watering, but wasn't. Dear God, don't tell me Sil had ruined me for other men; I'd be doomed to a life filled with cats.
I'd turn into Rachel â¦
The telephone rang and my brain pinged back to reality with an out-of-proportion gratitude. While Liam dealt with the call, my visitor smiled his honeyed smile. âSo. Can I tell them that your answer is yes?'
âI â¦'
âIs something worrying you? You seem very hesitant, Jessica. Surely you wouldn't want the vampires to think you are afraid of them and their kin?'
This made me bridle. How dare he imply that I'd ever be
scared
of a bunch of overly image-conscious, dentally challenged creeps? But he was right. If the word got out that I'd turned down an invite, then someone somewhere would draw that conclusion, and the next step might be an
en masse
attempt to give me something to be scared of. âMalfaire â I â look, it's just that ⦠I had a warning. About some kind of danger? At the time I thought it was stupid, but with what happened with Enforcement, this invitation, and the Run and everything ⦠are you
sure
it's safe?'
The lazy smile died from his face, his eyes hardened. âDanger? To you? Where did you hear this?'
âVamp called Daim Willis. His demon is Tezrael of the Asgarths. I once did Tezrael a favour and the other day he returned it.'
Malfaire put his coffee mug down very carefully and leaned towards me. I noticed that he smelled of lemon-water and something smoky, and that his skin was very cold when he touched me, cupping my chin in his hand and brushing his eyes over my face to take in all my features. âIf anyone wished you danger, Jessica, then they would have to go through me first.'
âThat's,' I had to stop and clear my throat, âvery kind of you.'
He released my chin, but his fingers trailed over my skin slowly before he pulled back. âI must leave now, so much to do. Take care, and I hope we shall see each other tomorrow.'
And he was gone. Disappeared out of the office as though he'd never been; apart from the half-drunk coffee and the biscuit crumbs, he could have been an illusion.
Liam hung up the phone. âEnforcement. No-one there has a clue what happened or how anything got past the shielding. They're “investigating”, for which read “ignoring the whole thing”'. He stared at me. âGod, Jessie. You look like you're going to pass out.'
I touched my face, feeling the cold ridges Malfaire's fingers had left. âIs he, or is he not, totally freaky?'
âDunno about freaky, but he's a bit too smooth for my liking. No-one can be
that
smooth without having a whole load of weirdo under the surface. He looks like one of those guys you start talking to at a party only to find that they're a secret train spotter and you have to listen to the lists of “engines that got away”.' He sighed. âShame they won't let us shoot train spotters on sight; the Treaty wasn't all good news.'
âAnd still nothing?'
He shook his head. âNope. I was trying like crazy, but, it's like he's metal or something. Impervious.'
âDid you Google him?'
Liam tapped a finger on his keyboard. âCouldn't get anything. Maybe using a false name?'
I chewed my lip. âCould be, I suppose. Not like an Otherworlder not to want us to know
exactly
who they are, though. Do you reckon Zan would have anything on him?'
âHard to tell, if he's using a false name. We could try getting a furtive picture of him, but that's your job not mine. Last time I did the “concealed camera” thing all we got was four shots of the inside of my pocket and an inexplicable photograph of a pigeon.'
âOh no, I am
not
creeping around taking secret photographs. Can't you just describe him to Zan?'
âI'm not sure Mr Social Phobia has a baseline to go from, we'd have to start with defining “walks upright” and I haven't got that many years left to me. Picture would be better. You could pretend it's for your “album”. The special, secret one you keep under your bed â¦'
I threw my phone at him. This was getting to be a pattern; if I wasn't careful I'd need a new one.
The Hagg Baba restaurant was located in one of York's better streets, one where the cobbles still stood proud. Its simple, understated exterior bore only the carefully symbolic sign, and mirror-effect windows of any other York eaterie, only the folded-back shutters and faint slaughterhouse-whiff of the fresh blood cocktails gave it away as an Otherworld favourite.
âWhat're these for?' Rach fingered the black shutters as we went past.
âBlocking out the light. It's as good as midnight inside for the creatures that can't take daylight. Ghouls, that kind of thing.'
âOh.' She glanced around to see if anyone was looking, and then adjusted her underwear with a swiftly subtle hoik. âThese tights are murder.'
âIt's worth it, you look very nice.' Rach was clad from head to foot in borrowed dark-blue satin, while I wore a more serviceable knee-length dress in a kind of black-and-red embossed velvet material which looked as though it had been copied from the walls of a Chinese takeaway. My dark hair was piled up on top of my head and pinned loosely in place, a style that was meant to look carefree and relaxed but actually made me look more as though I'd been in the vicinity of a small detonation. I caught my reflection in a window and cursed under my breath. I'd made a real effort tonight, but I was still one windy day and a mixed-wash accident away from presentable.
A uniformed man took our coats, and Rach hissed at me, wide-eyed, âIs
he
a vampire?'
âNo. Human.'
âOh.' Disappointed, she stared out of the windows into the street outside. âHow about him? Over there? The foxy looking guy with his arm around the blonde?'
âHuman.'
âOh,
blast
.'
âCan you really not tell? Doesn't looking at a vampire make you feel all â¦' I waved an arm in lieu of words, â
odd
?'
Rach gave me a look. âYou mean horny? I've heard about what they do, how they mess with your head to get you to â do whatever they want.' She gave a half-scared, half-hopeful shiver.
âThey can. But for some reason it doesn't work on me.' I shrugged. âDon't know why.'
She turned away to stare around the restaurant foyer. âBut then you've always been a bit strange yourself, Jessie, haven't you? Maybe that's why.'
Gosh, thanks Rachel.
We were shown to our table (not a good one, right at the back, but at least handy for the toilets) and sat down. I adjusted my dress carefully, so as not to let the three tranq syringes I had in my pocket show, which would be the equivalent of pumping a shotgun in a crowded bar.
âWhat's that lump in your skirt?'
âSsssh, Rach! Just a precaution.' I pushed the narrow tubes with their sleeved, wide-aperture needles further down so that they lay flat along the pocket seam. I'd decided that the gun would be overkill and I could work the little hypodermics by hand if it was essential.
âWhy? Do you think it might be dangerous?' She shifted in pleasurable fear. Like most of the generation too young to remember the Troubles, vampire attack for Rach was a sexy, moodily lit scene from a late-night film, rather than the subtle back-alley assault that it tended to be in real life.
âNo, but it is my job to be prepared. I'd hate to see the headlines if I let something kick off that I could have prevented.' Yeah, I needed another sarcastic caption like I needed two holes in my throat.
âOh.' Rachel lost interest in my sartorial peculiarities, and stared at the waiters coming in with laden trays. âWe don't have to eat anything
funny
, do we?'
âNo, it's all right, there's a human option for us.' I turned my attention away from her again, scoping the room but coming up with nothing more menacing than the blackness caused by a Shadow squatting near the bar, invisible in this non-light, drinking gin. The place was crowded out because the Hagg Baba was one of the few places in the city where real blood, brought in from the States where they paid a premium to donors, was served. Apparently, human blood is as different from synthetic as low-alcohol lager is from Stella. I'd investigated the Hagg Baba a couple of times during boring moments, but the paperwork all checked out, so I had to assume it was legit.
The human menu turned out to be more than adequate, with roasted quail served alongside exquisite terrines of vegetables, and lovingly embellished Beef Wellington sitting amid a vat of onion gravy. âSo, now what happens?' Rach asked, refilling her glass with the, seemingly, limitless free wine.
âDunno. From what I'm told, they read out a list of the runners and then everyone ⦠well, it's a bit hard to explain but ⦠the race doesn't actually happen
here
.'
âSo there's, what, like a bus or something?'
âNo, it's here, but it's not
here
, if you see what I mean. The actual race takes place in another dimension. Y'see, what it is, this world is where a lot of dimensions touch,' I used the cruet to build a demonstration model, âand some clever dick has found out how to open the door to certain places. A hundred years ago, no-one knows why, it opened by accident to the demon dimension, hence the vampires and the werewolves and everything, but today it might be â¦' Earth was destroyed as the pepper pot fell over. âAre you listening?'
âYeah. Weird.' She was busy adjusting her tights again. I took advantage to look around once more, fingering the tranqs. âDon't look now,' Rachel whispered at me from a semi upside-down position behind the table, âbut there is a
very
gorgeous man over there, and he's looking right at you!'
Gosh. Now
that
was something else that didn't happen every day. âWhere?' I whispered back, hunching forward across the table to try to see behind me.
âOver near the stage area. Oh, God, Jessie, he is really, absolutely, pant-wettingly, amazingly
stunning
; quick, look, I can't bear it!'
I glanced across the heads of the crowd between us and the area set up with microphone and notepad for the announcement of the race.
â
Shit!
What's he doing here?' I flicked back around and fixed my eyes firmly on the cutlery.
âJessie? You've gone all pale. What's up? Do you know him?'
Standing in a clear space, with his gunmetal-grey eyes turned our way, was Sil. Tall, with the effortless elegance inherent in the vampire added to by his own titanium-sharp cheekbones, a surprisingly gentle mouth and dedicated stubble in the planes and angles of his face that drew attention to their sharp definition. Totally gorgeous. Totally devoid of human emotion. A total heartbreaker.
With obvious interest Rach stared across the restaurant. âHe's very pretty, isn't he?' she carried on. âWho â oh, I see, he's with that dark girl.'
âWhat? Which one?' My neck cracked as I swivelled, in time to see Sil sliding his dinner-jacketed arm around a coffee-skinned young beauty, her long hair tied in a high ponytail, but still long enough to cascade down her bare back to where her dress, and bottom, started. He was no longer looking our way, but speaking animatedly to his companion, so I covertly studied him. He was thinner but as casually glamorous as ever with his night-dark hair messy over the collar of the dress shirt and his bow tie askew. So attractive that he didn't need to try, and he knew it. Unfortunately, so did I.
âJessie? What's the matter?'
âNothing!'
âWell, stop banging that wine bottle with the spoon, it's really irritating.' Rach stared around her again. âYou never see vampires going round with their teeth out, do you? I mean, out fangy out, not, like, gummy. I suppose they get fed up with biting their own tongues. They sort of slide them back in when they don't need them, don't they?'
I laid down the spoon very carefully and set my jaw. After all, Sil was nothing to me, had
never been
anything to me, apart from my assistant. Okay, so he was good looking and all that jazz, and we'd had a great time working together but, well, really, that temper. âYes. Like cats' claws.'
A whine of feedback indicated the opening of proceedings and Rach and I pulled our chairs to the same side of the table to watch. To my astonishment, Sil left the girlfriend at a table and came up to the microphone.
âNow, we all know why we're here,' he began â there were a couple of catcalls but he ignored them â âso I'll cut the crap and get down to it. Tonight's race will be â' a dramatic pause gave me long enough to wonder why Sil was acting as MC; it was hardly the sort of thing I'd expect to find him doing â âthrough the carefully hand-crafted vision of York. And the runners, chosen by random draw from those who have applied, are,' Sil opened the envelope handed to him by one of the uniformed human flunkies, âfor the vampires, Caro.' A very pretty female vamp stood up and acknowledged the cheers, looking stunned. âTangent D, running for the Zombie nation.' There was a small, muted cheer from a party seated so far over to the left that we couldn't see them. âThe Hog, running for the Wild Folk,' a more raucous cheer. The whole audience looked over. The Hog turned out to be something I had taken to be someone's guide dog. âTasster, for the Night,' a ghoul, I presumed, but couldn't see, âand, running for the Humans,' Sil's eyes were fixed on the piece of paper he held. Watching his face I saw his mouth move and his eyes darken. âJessica Grant.'
I imagined it. I must have done. â
What!
'
âJessie?' Rachel was on her feet, knees banging against the table, forks jostling out of the way. âYou didn't tell me you'd entered anything!'
âThat's because I
didn't
!' I stormed out of my seat and began to zigzag between the crowded tables towards the Master of Ceremonies with sheer indignation overriding my desire to never speak to him again. âLook. You know as well as I do that humans don't do the Dead Run.'
Sil seemed to be struggling with himself for control, a muscle twitched in his nicely stubbled cheek. âJessie.' Eyes narrowed in an artificial smile. âIt's been an age.'
âJust drop it, Sil, I'm not impressed,' I snapped.
âDon't tell me, you can't keep away.' Sil's grimace-grin became more real. âI ought to have known that even
you
couldn't keep up the defiance forever.'
âDon't start changing the subject, you bastard!' I hissed. I must have looked serious, because Sil started back, hands held defensively in front of him.
âHey, hey, calm yourself! I'm only saying.' He lowered his arms and bent down to look into my face and the sudden familiarity of the smell of him took me back so fast that the breath puffed out of my lungs. He always smelled good, Sil, a mixture of dark chocolate and earthy scents, like a wooden box of cocoa overlaid with the subtle alluring vampire fragrance. The bastard. âJessie, there is danger brewing, a whisper that something big is going on. I came here to try to find out what it is and now I am beginning to think someone has fixed this draw.' He was almost whispering now. His dark hair had fallen across his face and was curtaining us from the room. âSomeone wants you in the Run for some reason.'
I lowered my voice to match his. âBut the Run ⦠well, it's just a race, isn't it? And I'd stand no chance against a vampire or a zombie ⦠I know how fast you lot can move. Or shuffle, in their case. Does someone want me there just to prove how useless humans are?'
âPerhaps.' Sil's mouth was so close to my ear that I could feel his lips moving against my skin. I toyed with the idea of shoving him in the chest to force him to back up a little, but stopped myself. Physical contact with Sil â not a good idea. âBut, as you said, humans don't participate. There must be a way to get you out of it.'
I stepped away and his head came up. His eyes followed my movements, as vampires tended to do, like cats watching very clever mice of whom they are slightly suspicious. âWhat, you think it's beyond me? You think I can't even stagger a couple of miles to prove a point?' All my earlier indignation had gone, subsumed under the desire to demonstrate that I was just as good as a vampire. Well, maybe not
as
good, but certainly partially adequate. âDon't you dare dismiss me like that, Sil!' Being angry with him was the only thing that kept the feelings at bay. It's hard to want someone when you want them to shut up and leave you alone.
He raised a hand and long, pale fingers flickered as though he was about to touch me. âJessâ¦'
âBack off, Sil.' I turned so that my whole body indicated the end of the conversation. âMy name got chosen. I'll run.'
âIn that dress?' There was a momentary heat in his words, whether desire, anger or sartorial comment I couldn't tell. âI thought you always said you needed considerable undergarments simply to walk briskly?'
âExcuse me.' An intentional elbow caught me in the ribs, as purposeful as a pickaxe in a pavement. âDo you know this person?' It was the long-haired girl, returning from the bar with jealousy raging in what passed for her heart. Thin as a knitting needle, she looked like someone who wore three wisps of lace under her frock, and had never needed the full-on support of a cantilevered bra in her life.
âThis is Jessica. I used to work with her.' His eyes were calm now, misleadingly gentle.
âReally? You never said. Was that how you learned so much about the human way of doing things?'
Sil's eyes met mine as we both remembered that night, the spectacular fight that had led up to him storming out. âYes,' he said smoothly, but there was a flicker of yellow across the grey, âthat was how I learned.'
âHow lovely. Well, if you'll excuse us,' and she grabbed his elbow and steered him away, deep into the crowd, not wanting a proper introduction, not wanting history. If only it was that easy.