I hesitated a beat. It wasn’t that she was going to be angry that I was on television. No, she was going to be angry that I didn’t tell her I was going to be on television so she could call all the relatives and set the timer on the VCR to record it.

  “Dad watches C-SPAN?” I said.

  “He was flipping channels,” she said defensively.

  I sighed. “Yes, he probably saw me on C-SPAN. I was in the audience.”

  “Well, isn’t that exciting?”

  “Not really. It’s kind of nerve wracking. I’m supposed to testify at some point.”

  “You’ll have to let us know when, so we can tape it.”

  This wasn’t the school play. But I wasn’t going to convince her of that. “That’s cool, Mom. Look, I have someplace I need to be. I’ll talk to you later, okay?”

  “Okay—I’ll have to call your father and tell him about this.”

  “Okay, Mom. Bye—”

  “I love you, Kitty.”

  “You, too, Mom.” I hung up. Why did I always feel guilty hanging up on her?

  I didn’t have time to track Flemming down that afternoon. I had an appointment.

  At 3:55, I was at the Crescent, sitting at the table by the bar, with a soda in front of me and a glass of schnapps in front of an empty chair. Right on schedule, the old man entered the club. He’d walked another three steps before he stopped, frozen in place, and stared at me.

  I hadn’t asked how long he’d been coming here. Probably since long before Jack started working here. When was the last time someone had interrupted his routine? I could almost see his thoughts working themselves out on his furrowed, anxious face as he processed this new event, this wrinkle in his life.

  I nodded at the empty chair in invitation, but I didn’t smile, and I didn’t look directly at him. Staring might have been a challenge; smiling might have showed teeth, also a challenge. I worked on being quiet and submissive, like a good younger wolf in the pack. If his body was sliding more to the wolf half, I had to assume his mind was as well, and that those were the cues he would read.

  Slowly, watching me carefully the whole time, he came to the table and took the empty seat.

  “What do you want?” he said in a pronounced German accent. His voice was gravelly.

  “To talk. I collect stories, sort of. I’m guessing you have some pretty good ones.”

  “Bah.” He took a swallow from the glass. “There is nothing to talk about.”

  “Nothing at all?”

  “You think that a pretty young thing like you will soften an old man’s heart, with drink and blushing? No.”

  “I’m new in town,” I said, soldiering on. “I came here for the first time two nights ago, and I’m just trying to learn as much as I can before I have to leave. I’ve been pretty sheltered until now. I was in a pack for a while. It wasn’t anything like this.”

  “You came from a pack?” His eyebrows bunched together in curiosity.

  I knew if I kept rambling long enough he’d interrupt. I nodded earnestly.

  He scowled and shook his head. “The pack. Is archaic. In the old days, we needed it for protection. To defend against hunters, against rivals, against the vampires. Now? Easier to buy each other off. All the packs will go away soon, trust me.”

  I thought about Carl, my former alpha, running his pack into the ground to maintain his own sense of importance, and hoped he was right.

  “My name’s Kitty,” I said.

  He arched that peculiar brow at me. “A joke?”

  “’Fraid not.” I’d never seen much reason to change my name just because it had become a hideous irony.

  He stared at me long and hard, like he was deciding whether or not to give something valuable away. Finally, he said, “Fritz.”

  “Nice to meet you, Fritz.”

  “Bah. You’ll go away and in a week I won’t remember you.” He regarded his glass thoughtfully for a moment, then shook his head. “On second thought, you I will remember. Kitty.” He snorted a brief laugh.

  I had to smile. It heartened me that he could be amused by something, anything, and the icy wall around him seemed to chip a little.

  He drained his glass, as he’d done the day before.

  “Can I get you another one?”

  He shook his head as he pushed back his chair. “Only one. Then I go. Goodbye.”

  “Where?” I blurted. “I mean, you obviously live in D.C. But what do you do? Where do you go?”

  I’d said too much, crossed a line before earning his trust. He’d never talk to me again. He threw a glare over his shoulder and strode out the door, shrugging deeper into his coat.

  Jack came over to pick up the empty glass and wipe down the table. “Good work,” he said. “I’ve been here for a year and never heard him say more than one word.”

  I needed more than one word if I was going to get him to tell me his story. If I was going to convince him to tell his story on my show . . . But I was getting ahead of myself.

  Then Luis walked through the door, and all such thoughts left my brain entirely. My giddy smile grew even giddier when I saw the same smile on him. He took me out for seafood, then back to his place, and Leo didn’t break down the door on us this time.

  The next morning, I drove to Bethesda and looked for Dr. Flemming.

  The letterhead located him at the Magnuson Clinical Center, a research hospital that dated back to the fifties. I had to check in at the front gate of the campus, show ID and everything. I told them up front that I was visiting Flemming. Since the campus included several working hospitals, security was used to visitors. They gave me a pass and let me in.

  Flemming’s office was in the basement. I made my way from elevator to corridor, unsure of what I’d find. Fluorescent lighting glared off scuffed tile floors and off-white walls. I passed one plain beige door after another, marked with plastic nameplates, white letters indented into black backgrounds. At the ends of corridors, safety notices advised passersby about what they should do in case of emergency, red lines moving through floor plans helpfully directing them to the nearest exit. Wherever our taxpayer dollars were going, it wasn’t for interior decorating.

  The place smelled like a hospital, antiseptic and sickly. The vigilant attempts at cleanliness were never able to completely hide the illness, the decay, the fact that people here were hurting and unhappy. I didn’t want to breathe too deeply.

  I found Flemming’s nameplate at the end of a little-used hallway, after passing several unmarked doors. I hadn’t seen another person in the last five minutes. It seemed like he’d been relegated to the place where he’d be most out of the way.

  I knocked on the door and listened. Somebody was inside. Leaning close to the door, I tried to make out the noises. A mechanical whirring sound, almost constant. Crunching paper. A paper shredder, working overtime.

  And if that wasn’t enough to make me suspicious . . .

  I knocked louder and tried the doorknob. It was locked, requiring a magnetic key card to open. No sneaking in and catching the good doctor unawares, alas. I rattled the knob insistently. The paper shredder whined down and stopped. I waited to hear footsteps, heavy breathing, the sound of a gun being cocked, anything. Had Flemming—or whoever was in there—snuck out the back? I wondered if Bradley had a lock pick that worked on card readers.

  I considered: was I ready to stoop to going through Flemming’s waste bin, piecing together strips of shredded documents, to find out what his research really involved and what he was hiding?

  I wasn’t any good at puzzles.

  Then, the footsteps I’d been waiting to hear sounded, the slap of loafers on linoleum.

  “Yes?” a voice said. It was Flemming.

  I put on my happiest radio voice. “Hi! Is this where we sign up for tours of the lab?”

  The lock clicked and the door opened a crack. Flemming stared back at me with a startled, wide-eyed expression. “You shouldn’t be here.”

  He turned away,
leaving the door open. I considered it an invitation and stepped inside.

  The place was a mess. I wanted to say like a tornado had struck, but that wasn’t right. The chaos had a settled look to it, as if it had accumulated over time, like sediment through the eons. Flemming must have been the kind of person who organized by piling. Papers, file folders, books, trade journals, clipboards—that was just what I saw on a cursory glance. The stacks crowded the floor around the pair of desks, lurked in corners, and blocked the bookshelves that lined the walls. Three computers, older models, hunched on the desks. If I had expected the gleaming inhumanity of a high-tech, secret government laboratory, I was disappointed. This was more like a faculty office at a poorly funded university department. A second door in the back led to who-knew-where. Probably a collection of coats and umbrellas. It had a frosted window inset into it, but the other side was dark.

  The waist-high, high-volume paper shredder lurked against the back wall. Flemming returned to it, and the stack of paper on the table next to it.

  “Is everything okay, Doctor?”

  “I’m just cleaning up.”

  “In case you have to move out, is that what you’re thinking?”

  “Maybe.”

  “So, no tours of the lab today?” He’d started shredding again, and I had to speak louder to be heard over the noise.

  “Ms. Norville, this isn’t a good time.”

  “Can I come back tomorrow?”

  “No.”

  “You don’t have any hapless interns who could show me around?”

  “No. There’s only me.”

  The scene made me think Flemming wasn’t just afraid of losing his funding; he was already at the end of it.

  The computers were on, but the screen savers were running. I wondered if I could casually bump the desk, and get an image to flash on-screen, maybe a word-processing file with a title across the top saying, “Here’s What’s Really Going on in Flemming’s Lab.”

  I took slow steps, craning my neck to read the papers on the tops of various stacks. There were graphs, charts, statistics, and articles with titles containing long, Latinate words. Without sitting down and plowing through the documents, I wasn’t going to get anything out of the mess.

  I really wanted to take a look at what he was shredding.

  He was keeping an eye on me, watching me over his shoulder while continuing to feed pages into the shredder.

  “So, um, do you think the committee would want to take a look at what you’re destroying there?”

  “I don’t think that’s any of your concern.”

  “Then I guess if I asked you straight up what the real purpose of your research is, you wouldn’t be inclined to tell me?”

  “Do you treat everyone like they’re on your show?”

  I hadn’t really thought of it like that, but he had a point. I shrugged noncommittally.

  “I’ve told you a dozen times, and I’ve told the committee: I’m doing pure science here, information-gathering research, nothing more.”

  “Then what was all that you told the committee about finding the secret of vampire immortality?”

  He’d run out of pages to feed into the machine. The room became still, a contrast to the grinding noise of the shredder. After a pause he said, “Potential medical application. That’s all. Government-funded programs like research that leads to practical applications. That’s what the committee wants to hear. I had to tell them something.”

  “Have you done it? Found the secret of vampire immortality?”

  He shook his head, and for a moment the constantly watchful tension in his face slipped. The scientist, inquisitive and talkative, overcame the paranoid government researcher. “It doesn’t seem to be physiological. It’s almost as if their bodies are held in stasis at a cellular level. Cellular decay simply stops. Like it’s an atomic, a quantum effect, not a biological one. It seems to be outside my immediate expertise.” He gave a wry smile.

  “Like magic,” I said.

  “What?”

  “Quantum physics has always seemed like magic to me. That’s all.”

  “Ms. Norville, I’m really quite busy, and as pleasant as your company is, I don’t have time to talk with you right now.”

  “Then when?”

  He stared. “I don’t know.”

  “Which means never.”

  He nodded slightly.

  I stalked out of there. The door closed behind me, and I heard the sliding of a lock.

  Chapter 6

  The committee staffers finally put me on the docket for that afternoon. I was beginning to suffer anticipation-induced, nail-biting anxiety. I just wanted to get it over with.

  Ben and I walked down the hallway to the hearing room. Fifty feet or so away, I put my hand on his arm and stopped him.

  I recognized the silhouette of the man leaning against the wall outside the door. I would have noticed him in any case. He was out of place here, wearing laid-back, Midwest casual—a black T-shirt, faded jeans, biker boots—at odds with the East Coast business fashions that predominated the capital. His leather jacket hung from one hand. The building security guards let him keep his belt holster—still holding his revolver.

  I knew exactly what I’d see when the man turned to face us. He was in his early thirties, with brown hair, a trimmed mustache, and a lazy frown. When he was amused, the frown turned into a smirk, which it did now. Cormac.

  Somebody let Cormac in here with a gun. What happened to security? How had he snuck by them? A moment of blind panic struck. I glanced around for the nearest exit, which was behind me—I could run there in no time.

  A split second of reflection reminded me that the last time I saw Cormac, I’d almost invited him into my apartment for the night. Maybe the panic wasn’t entirely fear-driven. I didn’t want the confusion of having Cormac around.

  “What the hell?” Ben murmured, catching sight of who I stared at.

  Cormac shrugged himself away from the wall, crossed his arms, and blocked the hallway in front of us. Ben matched his pose, arms crossed and face a wry mask. Ben was a couple inches shorter and a bit slimmer than the hit man, but he matched him attitude for attitude, smirk for smirk.

  “What the hell are you doing here?” Cormac said to him.

  With a nonchalant shrug, Ben said, “Representing my client.”

  The weird part of it was, Cormac was the one who referred Ben to me. By all accounts, Ben was the reason Cormac wasn’t in jail. Neither of them would tell me if Cormac ought to be in jail.

  I butted in. “What are you doing here?”

  His eyes lit up, like this genuinely amused him. “The committee wanted someone with experience to be on hand in case things get out of control. Duke called me, hired me on as extra security. Great, isn’t it?”

  Security had been around the entire week. Knowing Duke and his paranoia, I had assumed they were all armed with silver bullets. That was the thing about all the “special” methods used to kill supernatural beings: a stake through the heart or a silver bullet will kill anyone.

  I might have been mistaken. Normal security might not have changed their routine at all. Rather than arming the regular guards with silver bullets, in case the werewolf called to testify went berserk, why not call in the expert? Cormac was a professional, as he was pleased to call himself. He was a bounty hunter/hit man who specialized in lycanthropes, and brought in a few vampires on the side for fun. We’d had some run-ins. We’d even helped each other out a couple of times, once I talked him out of trying to kill me. The man scared the daylights out of me. And now he was standing here with a gun, looking at me like hunting season had just been declared open.

  It seemed that Duke’s paranoia knew no bounds.

  “You wouldn’t really shoot me, would you?” I felt my eyes go large and liquid, puppy-dog eyes. After all we’d been through, I’d like to think he wouldn’t be so happy about traveling across the country for a chance to kill me.

  He rolled his e
yes. “Norville, if I really thought you were going to get out of control, I wouldn’t have taken the job. I’ve seen you in action, you’re okay.”

  I looked at Ben for a cue. His wry expression hadn’t changed.

  “No, I’m not going to shoot you,” Cormac said with a huff. “Unless you get out of control.”

  “If you shoot my client, I’ll sue you,” Ben said, but he was smiling, like it was a joke.

  “Yeah? Really?” Cormac sounded only mildly offended.

  Could Ben simultaneously sue Cormac for killing me while defending Cormac against criminal charges for killing me?

  I was so screwed.

  Also on the docket for the day were some folklorists from Princeton who gave prepared statements about how phenomena attributed to the supernatural by primitive societies had their roots in easily explained natural occurrences. When the floor opened to questions, I was almost relieved that Duke harried them as hard as he’d harried Flemming. The senator was after everyone, it seemed. He’d cornered Flemming on vampires. He cornered the folklorists on the Bible.

  “Professor, are you telling me that the Holy Scripture that tens of millions of good people in this country swear by is nothing more than a collection of folklore and old wives’ tales? Is that what you’re telling me? Because my constituency would respectfully disagree with you on that score.”

  The academics just couldn’t counter that kind of argument.

  Duke called one of the committee staffers over and spoke for a few moments. Then he left. The remaining senators conferred, while the audience started grumbling.

  Then Senator Henderson recessed the hearing for the day. I didn’t testify after all.

  Anticipation produced the worst kind of anxiety. It didn’t matter how nervous about a show I was beforehand, how worried I was that a guest wouldn’t show, or that I’d get a call I couldn’t handle, or that I was presenting a topic that would get out of control, once the show started that all went away. I was only nervous when I sat there, doing nothing, inventing terrible stories of everything that could go wrong.