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My pistol was in the next room. But it wasn’t loaded with silver bullets.

What happened to the hawthorn stake? Was it still on the table? Or had it fallen? I moved my arm and felt the stake slide across the T-shirt under my right shoulder. Now to wait for the chance to strike.

“I brought you a present.” Phaedra undid the knot cinching the leather bag in her hand. She upended the bag.

A head with spiky black hair thumped against the floor. Phaedra toed the head until it faced me.

Nguyen’s vacant eyes gazed from the puckered recesses of the sockets.

The dread, the horror, made my neck and shoulders lock up.

Nguyen’s lips were black as ink against his purple skin. He’d probably been dead for days, though with some vampires it’s difficult to tell.

“He never liked me,” Phaedra said, “so I killed him.”

I stared at the head. “Why?”

“Because he said no. I offered him the chance to join me.”

“In what?”

I moved and rolled the stake close to my right hip.

“My destiny. I’ve known it since the time I first became aware of myself. The world pitied me. ‘Poor Phaedra, what a raw deal from life.’ But I knew if I could escape that sentence, if I could cheat God out of what he’d given me, then the world would be mine.”

“How?”

“Because vampires, humans, everyone would belong to me.”

My expression must have said, you’re insane.

Phaedra responded, “Why? Because I’m young? Alexander the Great was only sixteen when he set out to conquer the world.”

“The Araneum will stop you.”

Phaedra clasped the necklace of crow heads. “This is what I think of the Araneum. I will destroy the Araneum.” She kicked Nguyen’s head. “Just like I did him.”

I saw my chance. When she went out through the door, I could leap after her and tackle her. If I hit her hard enough, the advantage would be mine. I’d run her through with the stake.

She narrowed her eyes. A smile wormed across on her lips and her eyes opened wide in theatrical sarcasm. “Oh no, the stake.” She jammed a foot under my ribs. She jerked her foot and the stake clattered across the floor.

“You shouldn’t worry about the stake when I have this.” Phaedra pulled the skinning knife from her waist sash. “It cuts well. Ask Nguyen.”

She sheathed the knife and tossed the leather bag onto my chest. “Go show the Araneum what I’ve done.” She slipped on her flip-flops and stepped back to the door.

“Where are you going?”

“To learn. There’s so much I don’t know and yet look at what I’ve done to you.”

Phaedra stopped at the threshold. “When you report to the Araneum, tell them I will have more of this.”

Her aura flashed like the blast from a cannon. Her eyes burned with megawatt intensity.

The noise started in my head, rising to a pounding like I was at the bottom of a waterfall. My psychic column shook like it wanted to tear free of my body. Spots erupted before my eyes, jittering as the walls and floor pitched.

The nausea overwhelmed me. My vision narrowed to a tiny point. My knees buckled and I crumbled to the floor.

The shrieking stopped. The nausea vanished. I became aware of gravity and felt the refreshing coolness of the wooden floor against my cheek.

The echo shrank to nothing. The silence left a void in my head and my thoughts trickled in like sand.

I sat up and stared about the room. Things seemed so normal I could imagine that I had hallucinated everything. But Nguyen’s severed head and the splintered wood from my broken door put me front and center before reality.

I balled the leather bag in my hand and got to my feet. I wiped a trace of sour spit from my lips.

I knelt and scooped Nguyen’s head with the bag. I juggled the bag until his head rested on the bottom.

I found the hawthorn plunged upright through the lining in my coffin.

I felt nothing. No anger. No shame.

I made myself another manhattan and let the ice melt to mellow the bourbon.

The emotion that first came back was the desire to see things as they were.

Phaedra was gone.

I was still here.

I sipped the manhattan. It tasted good.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Much thanks to HarperCollins, specifically my publisher at Eos, Lisa Gallagher; my editor, Diana Gill; her assistant, Emily Krump; online marketing manager Michael Barrs; marketing manager Christine Casaccio; and publicist Jack Womack. Also great thanks to my agent, Scott Hoffman, and the staff at Folio Literary Management, LLC. I have to mention my critique group: Jeanne Stein, Sandy Maren, Jeff Shelby, Tamra Monahan, Warren Hammond, and Margie and Tom Lawson. Several other groups have kept me going: Lighthouse Writers Workshop, Mystery Writers of America, El Centro Su Teatro, and the Chicano Humanities and Arts Council. To Stevon Lucero for his wonderful discussion on metaphysics. To Dr. Ricardo Cantú, of California State University-Los Angeles, for his enthusiastic support. Erika Paterson, Manuel Ramos, Jennifer Mosquera, and Eric Matelski: thanks for the props. Big hugs to my sons, Alex and Emil, and family, especially my sister, Sylvia.

About the Author

MARIO ACEVEDO is the bestselling author of The Nymphos of Rocky Flats, X-Rated Bloodsuckers, and The Undead Kama Sutra. A former infantry and aviation officer, engineer, and art teacher to incarcerated felons, he lives and writes in denver, Colorado.

www.marioacevedo.com

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