was.'
'No, it's not.'
'Sure it is! Trust me, it counts as the fourth step.'
'Regardless, the point is moot. Raphael is not a Dark One.'
'My point exactly! You should be thinking through this relationship a bit more before you throw away your whole life for him.'
And on it went. Unfortunately, Roxy didn't keep her word, taking periodic opportunities to point out the idiocy of falling in love with a man I knew nothing about. When I reminded her that she'd been perfectly happy for me to bind myself to him when she thought he was a bloodsucking soulless wonder, she waved that point away with the statement that Dark Ones never ran off with another woman while their Beloved was left pregnant and penniless adrift in a strange land.
I had to admit that she had a point, but it didn't dim the strength of my blossoming emotions one bit. They might not be rock solid yet, but I felt strongly that Raphael and I had taken steps down the path to something a bit more serious than a holiday fling. As for the wisdom of falling in love with a man I knew little about… well, I squelched that niggling worry with the reminder that everything important, everything that truly mattered about Raphael—his character, his morals, the fact that he wasn't the undead—was already clear to me.
Roxy and I visited the museum, poked around two nearby towns, and returned to the hotel for an afternoon nap.
'The fair's late hours and your insistence on being a tourist are playing merry hell with my beauty sleep,' Roxy grumbled an hour and a half later when I woke her.
'You don't have to stay out until two A.M. every night, you know. What did you and Christian do all that time?'
She groaned and rubbed the sleep from her eyes. 'He left at about one. I hung out with a group of people from Portugal. Did you know there were Portuguese Goths? There are. They're kind of cute, too. None of them speak English, but we had a good time dancing. I think maybe we should go to Portugal before we go home.'
I didn't say anything, just looked out the tiny window to the rooftops of nearby buildings.
'Joyful? I know you'll start 'la la la-ing' again if I bring it up, but have you asked Raphael what his plans are after this weekend?'
I sighed and turned around to face her. 'No. It's too soon. We've only just gotten together. I can't be asking him yet if he thinks we should make the effort to stay together or if he doesn't have any room for me in his life.'
'Pooh on him—how about you?' Roxy asked, smoothing out the down comforter. 'Do you have room in your life for him? Would you leave everything at home for him? Would you travel around with the fair just to be with him?'
I started for the door. 'Why do you always ask hard questions?'
'Someone has to. Joy, the fair is due to leave in four days. If this is as serious as you think it is, shouldn't you two be talking about the future beyond a few days of jumping each other's bones?'
I paused at the door for a minute, my hand smoothing over the cool planes of wood. 'If you're asking if I've thought of what it would mean to leave everything behind, the answer is, yes, I have. If you're asking will I go through with it—well, that answer depends on Raphael. If you're done grilling me now, I'll see you down in the bar. The gentleman in question said he'd try to drop by for a few minutes before he has to get the security teams in place.'
'You're not stupid, Joy,' she called out as I closed the door. 'If you think he's really different, if he's the one you've been looking for, make him prove it.'
Our neighbor across the hall emerged from the shared bathroom, keeping me from bellowing my reply to Roxy. I smiled, murmured politely in my best German, and skipped down the stairs to the bar where I hoped Raphael would be waiting.
He was, but he sat against a wall with three tables pushed together, surrounded by seven fair employees, mostly guys who did all the grunt work around the fair. A large sheet of paper was in the center of the table, and Raphael was marking off areas that I assumed he felt were hot spots. He had told me earlier that the shape of the grounds had altered how they set up the fair, so I gathered he had called a strategy meeting to alert everyone as to how best to handle the swarm of people expected for the next few days.
Arielle sat across from the guys, a glass of untouched beer in front of her. I blew Raphael a kiss when he looked up and smiled at me, then went to sit down with Arielle.
'Good afternoon, Joy,' she said in her careful English.
I scooted in the opposite side of the booth and reached across the table to pat her hand. 'Hi, Arielle. What's wrong? You look like you've been crying. Are you upset about something? Is something the matter?'
She gave me a pathetic smile. 'I look like I have been crying because I
I lifted both eyebrows. 'No?'
Her gaze dropped to her hands. 'Perhaps just a little.'
My heart went out to her. I was sure her sister had ragged on her over her decision to stick with her boyfriend. I looked around the bar to see if Tanya was lurking in a corner. It was dusk, night just beginning to take over the sky, and there was a steady stream of people coming into the bar, but thankfully no Tanya. I assumed that with the huge hordes in the tent city, all of the bars in town would be running at full capacity. A busy bar was no place for Arielle to be doing the unloading she clearly wanted to do. 'Listen, if you'd like to have a good cry, you're welcome to use my room. It's not great, but it will give you a little privacy.'
'No, I am not going to cry anymore,' she said adamantly, giving a defiant little dab to her nose. 'Paal said it is not necessary to cry since all will resolve well.' She gave a big sniff and sent an adoring glance over to a prematurely balding Viking sitting at the end of Raphael's table. Paal gave her a little nod and turned his attention back to the orders Raphael was snapping out. 'It is Tanya, you know? Dominic had an argue with her last night, a big argue. Much of it was about you, but once they were finished, Dominic said it was that Tanya was no longer compatible with him, and she must leave since she caused very much trouble last night.'
'Trouble? You mean trouble other than the scene when I read the runes?'
Arielle nodded. 'Yes. Dominic was very angry with her, and Milos said she was a
'
'No, it is not because of their affair which has ended so sadly, but of the other that Milos is so angry about.'
I sat back against the high settle. 'Wait a minute, you've lost me. What does Milos have to do with the history between Dominic and Tanya?'
'Milos owns the fair with Dominic, yes?'
I nodded.
'Dominic is for the customers, the… mmm… ringleader?'
'Ringmaster? That's a circus term, but I think I know what you mean. He's the flashy bit of show for all the people attending the fair, while Milos is the silent partner?'
'No, he is not silent, he speaks many languages quite well, better than me. But he is the businessman. He finds the bands and makes the arrangements for where we will stop. He is the one who pays us.'
'Ah, he's the moneybags. Gotcha. So what did Tanya do that miffed Milos enough to make him angry at her?'
'She threatened to go to the local police with information about violations of the permit granted to the fair,' Raphael said as he slid in next to me.
I was distracted for a moment by the warm press of his leg against mine. Raphael was a big man, but even allowing for that fact, he didn't just sit, he dominated whatever environment he was in, making spaces that previously appeared adequate suddenly seem intimate. Was I going to complain about the fact that he took over our side of the booth, squishing me up against him? I was not. I just breathed in that wonderful clean smell that always