Desire After Dark (Page 33)

Duncan nodded.

"And Sharlene and those other women, they’ve all been killed by a vampire?"

"Yeah."

"It’s just one vampire doing the killing, right? I mean, Antonio isn’t… "

"Well, I can’t be sure of that," Duncan admitted. And at the same time, he admitted something he had known but refused to acknowledge for years. Between the two of them, Ramsey had been the true hunter. Duncan had been the slayer. Not for the first time, he wondered if it was time to hang up his vampire kit and find another line of work.

Maybe something here, in Pear Blossom Creek. Maybe it was time to settle down and get married, maybe to a pretty girl like Bobbie Sue, and raise a couple of kids.

"Are you going to… you know?"

"I’m sure as hell gonna try."

"Both of them?"

"That’s the only way to be sure I’ve got the killer," Duncan said, and then he laughed softly. All vampires were killers. No matter how civilized and friendly they might seem, killing was in their nature. It was a fact he would be wise to remember. Now, in addition to looking for Falco’s resting place, he would have to search for Battista’s as well.

Dammit, he wished Ramsey were siding him on this one.

"But what about Vicki? I think she really likes Antonio."

He grunted softly. "Believe me, the world will be better off without him, and so will she."

Bobbie Sue didn’t argue, but she looked unconvinced.

Duncan sat down on the sofa and put his arm around her. "You’ll just have to trust me on this."

Chapter 19

Vicki didn’t get any sleep that night. She sat on the sofa in front of the fireplace thinking about Antonio, reliving every moment she had spent with him as she tried to decide what her answer would be when she saw him again. Had he been an ordinary man, the decision would have been easy, she thought, or would it? Maybe, subconsciously, part of his attraction was the fact that he wasn’t an ordinary man.

One thing was certain, if he weren’t a vampire, she would most likely be dead by now, and so would he. Only the fact that he was a vampire had enabled him to fight off Falco’s attack. It was a sobering, disturbing thought.

So, what was she going to do? She thought of all the men she had known and dated.

They had all been nice guys, but none of them had held her interest for long. There had been no excitement, no sparks, nothing beyond friendship. Their caresses hadn’t excited her or made her long for more than kisses. She had never been tempted to surrender her virtue for a night of wild passion, at least not until Antonio entered her life.

Since the night she had first seen him, she had thought of little else.

It wasn’t fair. She had finally found a man who fascinated her, and he wasn’t a man at all. As attracted to him as she was, there seemed little point in pursuing their relationship. He had made it quite clear that there couldn’t be anything serious between them, and he was right. No matter how she felt about him, they were as different as day and night. She laughed bitterly. Day and night, indeed.

He had said he loved her.

And she was horribly afraid that she was dangerously close to falling in love with him.

With a sigh, she hugged one of the sofa pillows to her chest. It was obvious that no matter what decision she made, sooner or later she was going to end up with a broken heart.

She fell asleep on the sofa, her dreams disjointed and confusing. Sometimes Antonio was chasing her and sometimes she was chasing him and then, without warning, it would be Falco chasing her, his breath hot on the back of her neck. She woke feeling hungry and out of sorts with barely enough time to shower and dress and make it to work on time.

"Hey, Red, how are you feelin’?" Gus asked.

"Fine, thanks."

"I guess it was just a twenty-four-hour thing," Gus remarked.

She frowned and then remembered that she had called in sick the night before. "I guess so. How’s the crowd tonight?"

"Same as always."

With a smile, she went out into the diner, wondering if Antonio would come in.

The first hour passed quickly, with the dinner crowd keeping her and Bobbie Sue busy.

Vicki had the feeling Bobbie Sue wanted to talk to her, but there was no time until the dinner crowd dispersed.

As soon as the diner cleared, Bobbie Sue took her aside. "You don’t mind my dating Tom, do you?"

"Mind? Of course not. Why should I mind?"

"Well, you went out with him first and I… Well, I just wanted to make sure I wasn’t stepping on your toes."

"Don’t worry about it. So tell me, are you going out with him again?"

"I want to, but I don’t know. I mean, what he does for a living kind of creeps me out."

Bobbie Sue lowered her voice. "Can you believe all this? Vampires in the twenty-first century? I still can’t believe it."

"I know what you mean. Can you imagine what would happen if the word got out?

People would either lock us up in the loony bin, or they’d panic and run amok."

Vicki glanced up, her pulse quickening in anticipation as the bell over the door rang, but it was just Rhonda McGee. She looked around and took a seat at one of Vicki’s tables.

"So, what do you think I should do?" Bobbie Sue asked. "About Tom?"

"What does your heart tell you?"

"To see him again," Bobbie Sue said, smiling. "Thanks."

With a nod, Vicki went to take Rhonda’s order. Not surprisingly, Rhonda brought up the recent murders and the fact that she and Vicki were both redheads.

"It’s unsettling," Rhonda said. "I never used to be afraid to go out at night, you know?

But now… " She shrugged. "I’m thinking of asking if I can work the day shift for a while."

"I don’t blame you," Vicki said. "I’ve been thinking about that, too. You haven’t seen a man with yellow eyes, have you?"

"Yellow eyes? No, I’m sure I’d remember that."

"Well, if you see him, run like the devil himself was after you."

"Vicki, you’re scaring me."

"Good, because he’s the killer."

Rhonda’s eyes widened. "How do you know? Have you seen him? Oh my gosh, you have! When? Where?"

"At the Blue Horse the other night."

"Thanks for the warning. I was going over there later."

"Well, don’t. And don’t invite any strange men into your house."

"You’re the second one to tell me that."

"Oh?"

Rhonda leaned forward, her voice low and intimate. "A really good-looking guy walked me home from the hospital one night and warned me about that. I don’t know who he was, but I was really tempted to ask him in, stranger or not… Oh, there he is now."