Darkwing Chronicles 4 - In the Blood

Darkwing Chronicles 4 - In the Blood, Savannah Russe
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In the Blood
By
Savannah Russe
To my agent and friend
John Talbot.
You led the way.
Introduction
Should a vampire such as myself wear white to walk down the aisle? White is
traditional, but seems inappropriate. My soul is anything but pure as driven snow.
In point of fact, a rich, dark vermilion is my favorite color, and coal black would
suit me quite well, being both symbolic of my sins and eminently more practical.
Practical? Oh, yes. You see, my clothes often become stained by my victims'
blood—a blot difficult to launder out. Personally, I don't dare send garments with
that kind of soiling to the dry cleaner's. It raises too many questions.
I don't want attention, of course. I prefer to stay under the radar, to remain an
anonymous creature who roams Manhattan's streets at night. Secrecy is my
forte. Deception is my game. Both skills have kept me alive for over four hundred
years. Coincidentally, they now make me very good at my job.
Let me introduce myself. My name is Daphne Urban. I work for the United States
government. In these times of turmoil and terror, I protect and serve… in my own
way.
I am a member of Team Darkwing. I am a vampire. And I am a spy.
Chapter 1
Coitus Interraptus
I wanted to sink my teeth into the young man lying next to me. To bite or not to
bite, that was the question. Biting was, after all, what vampires did. But I aspired
to something different: I was struggling to become a moral, principled vampire, of
a better class than the run-of-the-mill bloodsuckers out there in the world. Well,
chalk up another victory for vain self-delusion. I was making a balls-up mess of it.
The white sheet slipped down to my waist as I sat up in the bed, twisting away
from the muscular hand that had been caressing my right breast. Through the
plate-glass windows of the modern apartment building, the weak light of the
illuminated city revealed my body. It was as ghostly pale as the sheet. I was
hungry for blood, and anemic from lacking it.
"Something wrong?" The voice of St. Julien Fitzmaurice, my lover, was husky
with desire.
I turned my head to look at him. Lying prone, Fitz had propped himself up on one
arm. His long, lithe body was naked except for the bandage still covering the
nearly healed stomach wound where he had been shot not long ago. His eyes
were heavy-lidded, his hands were now stroking my back, and it was obvious
how much he wanted to make love to me—while I, on the other hand, wanted to
dine on him.
"I'm not in the mood," I answered, lying artlessly. I learned to lie centuries ago in
order to save my life. Since then, I've done it often, and I do it well. If I told the
truth, I'd have to say I was very much in the mood, but any further arousal would
make it impossible for me to resist what all my instincts were pushing me to do.
Quickly I slid my eyes away from Fitz. I realized I had been staring—not at his
sensual lips, not at his lean body, not even at his stiff member, so clearly ready
for love. I had been staring at the carotid artery steadily beating in his neck. I
imagined I could hear the blood rushing through it. And with my animal senses,
perhaps I could.
Not good. Oh, not good at all. Annoyed with myself, I threw the sheet aside and
stood up. Cool air embraced my body. I shivered. This wasn't my apartment. I
kept the thermostat at my place cranked up to eighty.
Tonight, however, I was at Fitz's new apartment, three rooms with a terrace over
on the East Side of Manhattan. He had money, old money from his family's
bootlegging business back in the 1920s, so he could afford the astonishing rent
for rooms not much bigger than closets.
My money was far older than his. I could afford a much larger place even in this
neighborhood. However, I found the Upper East Side too conspicuously affluent
and conventional. Rich I was, but hardly conventional, so I lived in the area
bordered by the Columbia students who rented sublets near the university, the
psychiatrists who clustered their practices along West End Avenue, and the
working mommies-with-nannies who pushed strollers along Central Park West
near the Museum of Natural History. The West Side of Manhattan had more funk
and more secrets. It did, after all, have me.
"I don't understand you," Fitz said.
"I never expected you to. Let's not go there. We'll only end up fighting again." I
gazed through the window at the murky sky above the East River. I once
overheard Samuel Johnson call second marriages "the triumph of hope over
experience." The same thing went for rebound romances. That was what Fitz and
I had. We had both been left betrayed and embittered. I didn't think our
relationship had a snowball's chance in hell of surviving, even without the
complication that Fitz was human and I… I was not.
I picked up Fitz's sports coat off a chair and slipped it on in lieu of a bathrobe.
The silk lining was icy and smooth against my skin. Something hard in the inside
pocket knocked against my ribs. It was Fitz's gun. He was in the Secret Service.
A very secret part of the Secret Service. I worked for… oh, who the hell did I
work for? Some other intelligence agency. The CIA? NSA? USAMI? I can only
fathom a guess.
My all-vampire spy group, the Darkwings, operated in deep black. In other words,
we were a covert operation that didn't exist on paper, wasn't overseen by
Congress, and probably wasn't even known to the president himself. He wasn't
part of the permanent government—the people in Washington who really ran
things, like J. Edgar Hoover back in his day. And if the president were told about
us, he'd never believe it. He'd have to accept that vampires really do exist, and I
have a feeling that wouldn't be politically correct.
But Fitz, whom I now heard stirring on the other side of the room, was a frank
and honest man. I mistrust those qualities in anyone, but everything he had ever
told me turned out to be the truth. That made him far too good for me. I suppose
we ended up together because we were both lost, each in our own way.
A lamp with a low wattage lightbulb came on next to Fitz's side of the bed. I
heard a cap being unscrewed and liquid being poured into a glass. I knew
without glancing over that Fitz was pouring himself a Jameson, straight up, no
ice. I wasn't as much surprised as disappointed. He had promised to stop
drinking. It was a promise he couldn't seem to keep for long. Fitz wasn't a drunk
by any means. He held his liquor well, but he sometimes drank until his demons
disappeared.
I was in no position to criticize. There were worse vices.
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