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As I followed, Gettyson called after me. “Frost, I-go on, get it done, cub,” he said, idly cuffing Tully behind the ear as the boy walked past with a can of house paint. “I wants the whole thing wiped. Anyways, Frost, you did good bringing her here. We’ll take good care of her.”

“I’m sure you will,” I said, exchanging a sympathetic glance with Tully before following Calaphase out. Like the other werekin, his eyes were still hungry, but when not shrouded by fear and darkness, that glance looked less like hunger for flesh and more like longing for a normal life. I’d seen that look before. “But I’ll be back to be certain.”

The door screamed shut in a sudden gust of wind, and I was alone with a vampire underneath the darkening sky. Calaphase didn’t seem to notice the sudden cold; he just kept walking, heels cracking against the pavement as he led us away from the werehouse, out onto a tongue of concrete that jutted out over the lower level of the parking lot like a pier. I followed the vampire uncomfortably, not sure whether I was really scared of being alone with him at night, or just filled with willies over having once again to be bearer of the bad news.

“Tell me,” Calaphase said, staring into the distance, silhouetted against orange twilight.

I told him about Revy’s death-as many details as I thought he could bear.

“That’s… horrible,” Calaphase said at last, still staring into the distance.

“Yes, it was,” I said.

“Revy was my first, you know,” Calaphase said. “The first vampire I ever made. This is like… like losing a child. No, this is worse; a child can’t do for you what Revy did for me.”

“I’m sorry,” I said flatly. I sympathized, though I didn’t approve “I’ve never killed anyone, you know that?” Calaphase said, turning back to me, grim. “Never. Not even my master. Revy did that. He freed me. He made it possible for me, for the whole Oakdale Clan, to be something different. Even this shit job, guarding this dump… Revenance made it possible. Werekin normally hate vamps, but at least here, Revenance changed that. He really cared about them, especially the cubs. I owed him everything. ”

He snarled and kicked a tire brake lying on the end of the dock; the rotted rubber triangle flew out over the parking lot and disappeared into the darkness.

I stared at him in shock. I never expected to scratch a vampire lord and find so many layers underneath. I’d never asked about the relationship Revenance had with Calaphase, and now I found it was most important relationship in his life.

And Revenance himself? I’d thought of him as just a second banana in a vampire gang-but to hear Calaphase tell it, Revenance had been a man of insight, protector of the werehouse’s feral children, perhaps even a protector of Cinnamon.

I was taking people for granted a lot lately. When did I become such an insensitive bitch?

I stepped up beside him, cautiously, deliberately grinding my boots against the pavement so my touch would not be a surprise. “Hey,” I said, rubbing the arm of his jacket. Unlike Saffron, his flesh was cold. “That’s OK. There’s nothing you could have done-”

And then an awful scream rent the air.

“Oh hell,” Calaphase said, whirling. “Not again.”

We leapt down from the concrete pier, my knee immediately throbbing with pain. Calaphase ran like the wind, me, somewhat less so; but I managed to keep him in sight as he curled round the lower side of the werehouse’s main building and then stopped.

“Help, help, it gots me,” someone screamed-familiar-the boy Tully ?

I wheezed and skidded round the corner and stopped next to Calaphase in shock.

Paint cans-whitewash-were spilled about; half of it had already gone to cover a huge graffiti tag on the wall. But beneath the white paint something thick squirmed and bubbled-and where the paint ended, coiling tentacles twisted into the air, pulling hard at Tully, who was pinned on the wall by a massive band of graffiti about his chest.

“Don’t worry, we’ll get you out,” Calaphase was saying, picking up a long handled paint roller and holding it out to Tully like a lifeline. The boy grabbed for it, but a coiling tentacle reached out and snapped the handle in two- and then reached for Calaphase.

I jerked him back just as a dozen tentacles whipped out and snatched through the space where he’d been standing. Unbalanced, Calaphase tumbled backward into the mud with a curse, eyes glowing. “Fuck!” he said. “What the fuck is wrong with you, Dakota-”

But I’d already turned my back on him. “You know what’s wrong,” I said, eyes running over the curving lines, the tombstones, the grassy hillside, the familiar wildstyle letters. They ‘pieced’ us -a ‘piece’-oh, I am such an idiot. “You know exactly what is wrong.”

Behind me, Calaphase scrambled to his feet, but I held out my hand sharply to bar his path. He cursed, but didn’t try to pass me. “We’ve got to get him out of there.”

“If we can,” I said. “That tag is just like the one that killed Revenance.”

A Thankless Job

“No vampires,” I said, shoving yet another of Calaphase’s guards back behind the line I’d drawn in the pavement. “It seems to like you guys. Talk to me, Calaphase. You said again.”

“We heard a scream last night,” Calaphase said, staring at Tully, pinned within the tag. “Sounded like Josephine, a panther who ran with one of our transients. I sent Revy into the Underground to check on her-”

“The Underground?” I asked. It was a series of ancient tunnels honeycombing the central part of Atlanta, but I had no idea it stretched almost all the way out here, nearly to the Perimeter. “There are entrances to the Underground in Oakdale?”

“Oh, yes,” Calaphase said. “Don’t try to find the ones out here, the werekin use them as escape routes and they’re… protective of that territory. Revy went into the Underground, but never came back. I thought he was waiting for dark, until you showed up with the news.”

I tried to remember whether there was an entrance to the Underground near Oakland Cemetery. Then I noticed the sharp, questioning glance of a vampire guard, a striking man with a thundercloud of dark curly hair rising over his bushy eyebrows, and I explained, “Revenance died in a tag just like this one on the other side of town.”

“Something like that killed Revenance?” the guard said, in a reedy, deliberate European accent which was hard to place. He returned his piercing gaze to the squealing tag and the crowd of werekin who were splashing paint on it-no longer just whitewashing it, but covering it with as many colors as they could find. “Really, killed by that scrawl -”

“Yes, really,” I snapped, “and I won’t have any more of you dead on my watch!”

Calaphase stood, scowling behind the line, as more of his crew firmed up around him. “Some guardians we are,” he said bitterly, hands jammed in his pockets. “Can’t even protect our clients from a can of paint. Think we could get a pole, lever him out of there?”

I glared at the serrated band of graffiti on Tully’s chest. “It might cut him in two.”

“ Jesus! ” Fischer shouted, leaping back as part of the tag ripped out from beneath the paint and snatched at him. His hat came off as he danced back out of reach, and the barbed tentacle sliced it in half. Fischer kept going, stumbling back over the line without ever fully losing his balance. An ugly scar was torn in his woodsman’s jacket, top to bottom, and he stared at it, then me, his wide eyes even more shocking against his worn, seasoned face.