this alone, when he wasn't there to pull her out, was more than just a little dangerous. But she wasn't about to tell Jake that.

He still looked doubtful, but guided her toward the elevator. 'If the Feds are still with Mark, it might be wise to try to find Dale in your room.'

'It might be better to do that anyway,' she commented as the doors closed. 'The Feds certainly won't want us involved in the case.' And she certainly didn't want them walking into the middle of everything—especially if things went wrong.

Jake nodded. 'In that case, I'll escort you to your suite, then go and collect the items you'll need from Mark.'

'Good,' she said, despite the sliver of unease that curled through her stomach.

They stopped on the top floor and got out. The golden theme from the lobby was extended here, lending the long corridor warmth. Flowers cascaded over tables in corner nooks, and palms sat either side of the elevator doors, their fronds waving gently in the breeze of air conditioning.

'There are only two suites on this floor,' Jake said, as he swiped the key card through the lock. 'And the other one's not occupied. You and Michael can come and go as you please without disturbing anyone.'

He thrust open the door and waved her through. Nikki stopped in the middle of the living room and shook her head in amazement. Talk about opulent! The walls were again pale gold, offset by burnt umber chairs and curtains of rich red and gold. The windows looked out over a leafy park, though the trees were little more than shadows in the fog.

'You have a look around,' Jake said, dumping her bag on the ornate mahogany coffee table, 'and I'll go see Mark.'

She nodded and headed into the bedroom. The bed was big enough to hold a party in and was framed by a canopy of red and gold curtains. She touched the comforter, her fingers sinking into its rich redness.

The mattress underneath was firm, but not overly so. Just the way she liked it. Directly opposite the bed was a fireplace. She smiled and flopped back onto the bed, closing her eyes as she imagined lying here in Michael's arms, the warmth of the fire caressing their bodies….

Heat stirred through her, and she sighed. Three weeks without his touch was way too long.

She lay there for a while, listening to the growing hum of traffic and the musical peal of a bell as a cable car rolled past the hotel.

Then she heard the ding of the elevator returning and soft footsteps. She sighed again and pushed up from the bed. Time to get to work.

'We'd better shift some of the furniture,' she said, walking back into the living room. 'The last time I tried this I ended up—' She stopped abruptly, a cold feeling of dread enveloping her. It wasn't Jake who'd entered her room.

It was a vampire.

Chapter Three

He was young and scruffy-looking, dressed in jeans and a black leather jacket decorated in biker's colors. His face was pale, gaunt, and his brown eyes haunted.

Hasn't been turned all that long, Nikki thought. Which only made him all the more dangerous.

She clenched her fist against the energy burning across her fingers and shifted her stance slightly, ready to dive out of the way should he attack.

'What do you want?' She kept her voice flat and low, not wanting to provoke him in any way.

'Are you Nikki James?' His voice was guttural, thick.

A sliver of fear ran through her. How did he know her name? She'd just arrived in San Francisco, and no one but Jake and Mark really knew she was here. 'And what do you want with her?'

He smiled, revealing long, sharp canines. It was rather obvious what he intended to do—suck her dry.

'You're her, ain't you?' His gaze travelled the length of her body and back again, and an excited light crept past the haunted look in his brown eyes. 'Gonna enjoy tasting you, I am.'

His gaze seemed to intensify, and power slivered through the air between them. She frowned. He was obviously trying to get a mind-lock on her, but thanks to what she'd become, she was basically immune to the mind-control attempts of most vampires. Despite her earlier fears, she suspected even Michael couldn't really force her to act against her wishes—not that he'd ever tried.

Evidently, this vampire had no idea his mind assault wouldn't work, which was odd. Elizabeth, the now-dead vampire who'd turned Michael so long ago, had taken one look and known she was a thrall.

Had known mind control wouldn't work simply because Michael had, in a sense, created her. So why couldn't this one tell?

She shifted her weight from one foot to the other and continued to watch him, her hands still clenched against the energy burning across her fingertips. Sweat tickled down his hollowed cheeks, and after a few seconds, he frowned.

'Well, hell,' he muttered. 'That ain't working, is it?'

'No, it's not,' she replied. 'Who sent you here to kill me?'

'Yeah, like I'm going to tell you that.' He snorted and produced a knife from the side pocket of his dirty jeans. 'Ready to die?'

Fear slid through her. The knife was long and sharp and gleamed silver in the room's warm light—and it was not the sort of weapon you could easily conceal. He should never have been able to get past hotel security with a weapon like that stuck down his pants. There had been at least two discreetly positioned guards near the hotel's main entrance, and it would have taken a lot of psychic strength to control their minds enough to slip past unnoticed. More strength than what this vampire had, anyway. And she had no doubt that after the recent kidnapping, security would have been doubled on every exit.

So, if he hadn't come through any secured entrance, where in hell had he come from?

And why was he using a knife when he was a damn vampire?

He snarled silently and sprang, slashing wildly with the knife. She dove out of the way, but he was faster than she'd expected. The blade nicked the sleeve of her jacket and sliced into her arm as easily as butter.

Biting back her yelp, she hit the carpet and rolled back to her feet. The vampire was little more than a blur, the knife a streak of silver as it arced toward her. She thrust out her hand, hitting him with the pent-up energy.

He flew across the room and smashed into an expensive looking painting. The frame and glass shattered, showering the vampire with shards as he hit the floor then scrambled back to his feet.

She thrust out kinetically again, this time retrieving rather than pushing away. The vampire's eyes went wide as two jagged pieces of frame flew across the room.

She caught them deftly and forced a grin, feigning a confidence she certainly didn't feel. Warmth flowed down her arm, and the cuff of her sweater was growing damp. She had to end this quickly before she started bleeding all over the carpet.

A wild light entered the young vampire's eyes. He could obviously smell the blood, even if he couldn't yet see it. 'How'd you do that?'

'Magic,' she said and waved the stake in her right hand, catching his gaze. 'Want to see more?'

He sneered again. 'I'm going to kill you, you know. You can't beat me. I'm a vampire. I'm invincible.'

She snorted softly. 'You've been listening to a few too many fairy tales, kid. No vampire is invincible.

Not even the old ones.'

He launched across the room, his body blurring. She twisted out of the way and slashed through the shadows, stabbing one of the stakes deep into his leg.

He hissed, a sound full of anger and pain, then twisted and threw the knife. She ducked and heard the blade thud into something solid. Heard the whistle of air and twisted desperately away—but not fast enough. His fist smashed into her chin and lifted her off the ground. She flew across the room and crashed into the wall. Air

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