"Afraid," Olaf said.
I met his angry eyes. "I need some sleep if I'm to function well while I'm here. If I see the pictures right before bedtime, I can't guarantee sleep."
He turned back to Edward. "Your soul mate is a coward."
"No, she's just honest."
"Thank you, Edward." I went to stand closer to Olaf, so that I had to crane my neck back to see his face, and he loomed over me. There was really no way to get decent eye contact, so I stepped back to a more comfortable angle for my neck, and settled for meeting his deep-set eyes. "If I'd been a man I'd have probably felt compelled to look at the pictures, to prove myself worthy of all Edward's praise. But one of the good things about being a woman is that my level of testosterone poisoning is lower than most men's."
"Testosterone poisoning?" Olaf looked confused. Probably not a new sensation for him.
"Show me to my room, then explain it to him, Edward. I want to get some extras if I'm going to be interviewing vamps tonight."
Edward led me past the brooding Olaf and out the door that everyone seemed to disappear through. The hallway was white and so unadorned it looked unfinished. He pointed out Bernardo's room as the first door and Olaf's was right beside mine.
"Do you really think Olaf and I bunking next door to each other is a good Idea?"
"By putting you right beside him, it shows him I'm not afraid for you."
"But I am," I said.
He smiled. "Just take some basic precautions. You'll be fine."
"Nice to know one of us confident. If you hadn't noticed, he outweighs me by like a ton."
"You're talking like it would be a standup fight. I know you, Anita. If Olaf comes through your door tonight, you'll just shoot him."
I studied his face. "Are you setting him up so I will kill him?"
He blinked, and I saw for a moment that I'd surprised him. "No, no. I meant what I said to Olaf. If I wanted him dead, I'd just kill him. I put you next door to him because I know how he thinks. He'll think it's a trap, too easy, and he'll behave himself tonight."
"What about tomorrow night?"
Edward shrugged. "One night at a time."
I shook my head and opened the door. Edward called to me before I could go inside or even turn on the light. I turned back to face him.
"You know most women get all mushy when a man tells them they're his soul mate."
"I'm not most women."
His smile widened. "Amen to that."
I looked at him. "You know what you said in there scares me. The thought that you fantasize about hunting me and killing me. That's creepy, Edward."
"Sorry," he said, but he was still smiling, still amused.
"But honestly if you'd said the soul mate stuff and meant it like lovey-dovey, that could have scared me more. I've known since we met that you might kill me some day, but fall in love with me … that would be just too weird."
The smile faded a notch or two. "You know if we could love each other, our lives would be less complicated."
"Truth, Edward. Have you ever had a romantic thought about me?"
He didn't even have to think about it. He just shook his head.
"Me, either. I'll meet you out front by the car."
"I'll wait for you here," he said.
I looked at him. "Why?"
"I don't want you smarting off to Olaf on your way out if I'm not there to stop the fight."
"Would I do that?"
He shook his head. "Get the extra firepower and let's start the drive. I'd like to get to bed before dawn."
"Good point." I went into the room, closing the door behind me. There was a knock on the door almost immediately. I opened it back up, slowly, but was pretty sure it was Edward. It was.
"We'll take you into the club as my guest, just a friend. If the vamps don't know who you are, they might be more careless around you, let something slip that would make sense to you, that wouldn't make sense to me."
"What happens if I get outted during the evening? Think Her Worship will resent you sneaking the Executioner into her club?"
"I'll tell her that you wanted to see the best show in town and thought that they might not want the Executioner around, but that you're strictly there in an unexecution work mode."
"Will you say it just like that, unexecution work mode?"
He smiled. "Probably. She likes her men to be either very serious or very cute."
"She. You talk like you know her."
"Ted only kills rogues. He is very welcome in a lot of the local monster hangouts."
"Edward the actor," I said.
"I do good undercover work."
"I know you do, Edward."
"But it always makes you uncomfortable to see me do it."
I shrugged. "You're such a good actor, Edward, sometimes it makes me wonder which act is real."
The smile faded, leaving his face blank, and empty like some of him had slithered away with his smile. "Go get your gear, Anita."
I closed the door with him still standing there. In some ways I understood Edward better than either of the men I had been dating. In other ways he was the biggest mystery of all. I shook my head, literally shaking it off, and looked around the small bedroom. If we came back here at dawn, I'd be tired, and tired could mean careless. I decided to make some changes now while I was fresh.
The room's only chair would go under the doorknob, but not until I was in for the night. I moved a line of miniature Kachina dolls from the dresser to the windowsill. If anyone opened the window, one or more of the dolls would fall. There was a small mirror on the wall that was framed by deer antlers. I placed it under the window, just in case the dolls didn't fall. I'd leave my suitcase to one side of the door entrance so if the door did somehow manage to open without knocking the chair over, Olaf might trip over the suitcase. Of course, I was almost as likely to trip over it trying to get to the bathroom on the way out. The moment I thought of it, I had to go. I'd hit the bathroom on the way out. Edward could stand outside and make sure Olaf didn't interrupt.
I searched through my suitcase. It was illegal for me to carry my vampire gear without a court order of execution. Carrying it without one was like premeditated murder. But no law against carrying a few extras. I had two thin vials of holy water with little rubber caps. You hit the cap with your thumb and it popped open, sort of like a grenade, but only dangerous to the vamp. Which made it a lot more user friendly than a grenade.
I slipped the holy water into each of my back pockets. They barely showed through the dark cloth. I already had my cross, but I'd had crosses ripped off of my throat before, so I had backups. I put a plain silver cross with chain in one front pocket of my jeans, and another one in the pocket of the black dress jacket. I opened the box of new ammunition that I'd packed.
I'd had to leave my apartment almost two years ago now. When I'd lived in my apartment, I'd put Glazer Safety Rounds in my guns because I didn't want my neighbors to take a stray bullet. Glazers will not go through walls, but as Edward and some of my police friends had pointed out, I'd been lucky. Glazers will shatter bone, but don't really go through bone, the difference between a shotgun and a rifle round, sort of. Edward had actually come into town just to take me out to the shooting range and test fire stuff. He'd asked me questions about specific gun fights, and what I'd learned was that the reason the Glazers had done what I wanted them to do was mostly being almost point blank every time I used them for a kill. What I needed was something that was a reliable kill from a safer distance than arm's length. It also might explain why I'd hit some older vamps from a distance, but they hadn't stopped. Maybe not. Maybe they were just that old, but … Edward had been very convincing. Something with more penetrating power, more stopping power, ammo meant not to wound but to kill. Because let's face it: when was the last time I'd wounded anyone that I hadn't meant to kill? Wounding was an accident for me. Killing was the goal.