“This time we know the vampires are here and real. Damian can come in with the full protection of the police.”
“You don’t know what you’re asking, Edward.”
“I know people are dying, Anita. I know more are going to die if we don’t figure out how to stop this.”
“It’s just a bunch of vampires, Edward. You know how to kill vampires. Kill them and get out of there.”
“The local police aren’t letting me off leash much.”
“What’s that mean?”
“It means that the Irish are having trouble deciding how to deal with the vampires.”
“Have you found the vampires that are doing this?”
“Not yet, but when we do the Irish still don’t have a death penalty.”
“Wait. Are you seriously telling me that when you finally trace these bastards down, the locals aren’t going to kill them?”
“You know better than I do that vampires can become good little citizens, Anita.”
“Not if they’re doing this kind of shit, Edward.”
“I’ll bet if you ask your fiancé what he did when he first rose from the grave it won’t be any worse than this.”
Jean-Claude had heard both ends of the conversation, of course. He said, “When the bloodlust first rises we all do horrible things, unless our masters lock us away for those first nights.”
I looked at him while I said to Edward, “No one’s innocent, I guess, but whoever is doing this in Ireland is killing people now, not hundreds of years ago.”
“I guess that does make it worse,” he said, his voice very dry.
“I can’t ask Damian to go back to Ireland.”
“Anita, his old master was so scary that she spooked you, but just a few years later she’s lost enough power that she can’t control a bunch of new vampires. What changed?”
“Damian won’t know the answer to that.”
“No, but he will know more about the local vampires than anyone else here, because he was one of them.”
“I can’t promise that he’ll agree to come, Edward.”
“Aren’t you his master?”
“I won’t force him, Edward.”
“I don’t ask for help often, Anita, but I’m asking now.”
“Has something else happened, Edward?”
“Two more bodies.”
“You’ve seen dead bodies before, Edward.”
“I’d rather stop seeing them here, Anita.”
“What aren’t you telling me, Edward?”
“Are kid vampires more likely to attack other children?”
“Sometimes. It’s easier for them to subdue them physically. Even modern kids who are warned against pedophiles trust other kids. Crap, the last two victims were kids.”
“Yes.”
“Kids are always hard.”
“You don’t have kids of your own yet, Anita; once you do you’ll understand.”
“I’m not planning to ever have kids, Edward.”
“Neither was I.”
“I think I can avoid dating people who already have a family,” I said.
“That’s what I thought, too.”
“I’ll talk to Damian when he wakes up for the night, but don’t hold your breath.”
“I can send you the latest pictures, Anita. It might change his mind.”
“I doubt it.”
“It might change yours.”
“Me coming was always on the table.”
“I’ve been trying to find the older vamps, Anita. It’s like they aren’t here.”
“They’re there, Edward. I promise you that.”
“Then help me find them.”
“Damian won’t be awake for hours yet.”
“Let me know when he wakes up. Maybe I can help persuade him.”
“Have you and Damian ever had a conversation?”
“No.”
“Then what makes you think you can be more persuasive than I can?”
“Desperation.”
“You don’t get desperate easily, Edward; what aren’t you telling me?”
“I have that feeling, Anita. That feeling that says things are going to get worse.”
It wasn’t like him to be this spooked. “Guard your ass.”
“Don’t I always?”
“Yeah, you do, but I feel like you’re leaving stuff out.”
“Don’t I always?” he said.
“Yeah, you do.” I sighed.
“Call me with Damian’s answer,” he said. He hung up.
“Fuck,” I said to the phone.
“What’s wrong?” Nathaniel asked.
“More dead in Ireland. Apparently one of the vampires has a taste for kids.”
“I didn’t think vampires attacked children that often,” Nathaniel said.
“We do not,” Jean-Claude said.
“Their throats are so tiny that a good bite can close down the blood supply, so why attack them?” I asked.
“Ask Edward to send you photos of the new victims. If their throats are intact and the bites dainty enough, then the new Irish vampires may be breaking one of our few strict taboos.”
“You mean they’re making new child vampires,” I said.
Jean-Claude gave a small nod. He didn’t try to hide the anger on his face. “I am only king of America, but if they are doing this, then they must be stopped. It is forbidden to bring children over for a reason.”