bend and I could break a man’s neck with my kick.
This dress camouflaged the muscle, tricking the eye into seeing soft flesh where there was none. The trouble was, I wasn’t sure I wanted to wear it today for Crest.
I touched the soft fabric and wished Anna would call.
The phone rang.
I picked it up and heard Anna’s voice say, “Hello.”
“How do you do that?”
“What? Calling when you want to talk to me?” She sounded amused.
“Yes.”
“Most clairvoyants are slightly emphatic, Kate. The empathy with the person serves as a bridge for the things we do. I’ve known you for a very long time—I remember when you were learning to walk—and I’ve formed a permanent bond. Think of it as being tuned to a certain radio station that’s off-line most of the time.”
I sipped my water. I knew she wouldn’t mention the vision, unless I asked her about it and I didn’t feel like asking.
“How’s the investigation?”
“I’ve found Greg’s killer.”
“Aha. What did you do to him?”
“Her. I disemboweled her and then crushed her heart.”
“Lovely. What did she do to you?”
“I’ll have a scar on my upper thigh and my stomach is still healing. But at least I had a professional medic this time.”
Anna sighed. “I suppose it’s not too bad for one of your outings. Are you satisfied?”
I opened my mouth to tell her yes and stopped. The cause for my unease became clear.
“Kate?”
“No, I’m not satisfied.” I told her about Olathe and her pre-Shift vampires. “Too many loose ends,” I said. “One, I’m still not sure who killed Greg. I’d thought it could be one of her vamps, but that doesn’t explain the animal power prints on the m-scanner and I saw no animals during the fight.”
“There is no way to check now?”
“No. The building is kaput. Two, where are the missing women and why were they kidnapped?”
“As food for the vampires?” Anna ventured.
“Four women wouldn’t have sustained her stable for more than a day. Why didn’t she grab more?”
“I don’t know.”
I sipped my water. “Neither do I. And the enemy in your vision was male. There is more, but I can’t remember right now. I have this awful feeling that I’ve overlooked something. Something ridiculously obvious.”
I fell silent. Anna waited on the line.
“Anyhow,” I said finally. “I’ll have to wait until my brain sorts this out.”
“Ah,” Anna said. “Is there something more pressing?”
“A handsome plastic surgeon expects me at Fernando’s at six.”
“Aha. Did you happen to mention that you abhor Fernando’s?”
“No,” I said. “But I expected him to figure it out. Formal dining isn’t me, Anna.”
“Understatement of the year,” Anna murmured. “Is he fun?”
“Who?”
“The plastic surgeon. Is he fun? Does he make you laugh?”
“He tries,” I said.
“Doesn’t sound like he’s successful.”
“I think I may have tried to force this thing too hard,” I said.
“Which part? Intimacy or sex?”
“I suppose both.” For me casual sex was an oxymoron. Sex placed me in a position of vulnerability and there was nothing casual about that. I never slept with a man I didn’t trust and admire. I didn’t know enough about Crest to either admire or trust him, yet I had wanted to get him into the sack. I had paraded naked in front of him, for God’s sake. “It bothers me. I think it has something to do with Greg’s death.”
There was silence on the line. Finally Anna’s voice murmured, “Lo and behold, a chip in your armor.”
“I intend to repair it tonight.”
“You’re a maximalist, Kate. All or nothing. Perhaps he deserves a chance.”
“I didn’t mean that I would break it off. I’ll just reassess the situation. I’ll try to see if he is fun.”
Anna sighed. “Will you wear the dress we bought that time?”
“Yes.”
“A word of advice,” she said. “Let your hair down.”
I WALKED INTO FERNANDO’S WITH MY HAIR DOWN. It fell to below my waist, framing my face and softening the edges. With makeup on my face, a dress and matching heels, at least I looked like the kind of woman that would be eating at Fernando’s. The heels made my hip hurt.
I gave my name to an impeccably dressed host and he led me deeper into the restaurant. My shoes made faint clicking noises on the marble floor as we walked past the round tables draped with crisp white tablecloths. Men in expensive suits and well-groomed women wearing gowns worth more than I made in a month conversed at the tables, eating at their leisure. Several vines heavy with pungent white flowers grew from ceramic urns. Someone had taken a lot of care in arranging their stems on the walls with artful precision.
I hated this place.
Crest sat at a corner table, studying the menu. He looked glum. He glanced up, saw me, and froze. It was shallow but the dumb look on his face made me feel better. Beautiful I would never be. Striking, that I could manage.
Moving with the grace of a dancer, the host held the chair for me. I thanked him—which was probably against the rules—and sat. Crest stared at me.
“Have we met?” I asked.
“I think so,” he said. “You look different.”
It was time to break the illusion. “Different? Amazing, radiant, gorgeous, any of those might get you laid, but I don’t know about different.”
It worked. He stopped staring. “I didn’t think you were coming.”
“Work,” I said. “Besides, since I’ve tortured you with Las Colimas, the least I could do is let you return the favor.”
“You don’t like it here?”
“Every three weeks or so.”
The waiter showed up and engaged Crest in conversation that I didn’t understand and didn’t listen to. I watched the patrons until the waiter murmured the code words, “And the lady?”
“What salads do you serve?”
I ordered a twenty-two-dollar salad and the waiter departed.
“No main course?” Crest asked.
“Not today.”
A silence reined. Crest seemed content to gaze at me while I had no idea what to do with myself.
“You look stunning,” he said finally. “So different.”
“It’s an illusion,” I told him. “I’m still me.”
“I know.”
He smiled. By the way he looked at me, I knew he was wondering what I would be like in bed. Why wasn’t I wondering the same thing about him? He did cut a nice figure in the dark suit. A few women overtly glanced at him.
I caught a man looking at me from a table nearby. I suppose I should’ve been flattered.