Industrial Magic Page 87
“I—I think you’ll like what we’ve done here, Cassandra,” Ronald said. “It’s a new age for us, and we’re taking advantage of it. Adapting to the times. Refusal to change is the death knell of any civilization—that’s what Hans says.”
“Step on my heels again and you’ll hear a death knell.”
She stopped before another door, waved me forward. I slipped past Ronald.
“I want you to wait out here,” Cassandra said.
I shook my head. “You go, I go.”
“I won’t be responsible for you, Paige.”
“You aren’t,” I said, and pushed open the door.
Beyond the door was a cavernous room, just barely illuminated by a dull red glow. At first, I couldn’t make out the source of the lighting, but then I noticed that the faux Grecian pillars were pieced with tiny holes, each letting out a thin ray of red light, like an infrared pointer.
One glance around and I knew the designation “bar” no longer applied to the Rampart. It was a club, probably a private one. The only furnishings were a half-dozen couches and divans, most of them occupied. Areas on either side of the room had been cordoned off with beaded curtains. Only the occasional murmur or muffled laugh broke the silence.
On the nearest sofa, two women were curled up together, one semireclined, holding her hand out, the other bending over whatever her companion held. Cocaine, maybe methamphetamine. If Hans and his bunch had opened an exclusive drug club, they were treading dangerous ground for people who had to stay below the radar. I wasn’t sure whether this violated the council’s statutes, but we’d need to look into it after this investigation was over.
One of the women on the divan leaned over her partner’s arm. I tried to glance over discreetly, to see what kind of drugs they were using, but the woman wasn’t holding anything. Instead, she stretched out her arm, empty palm up, forearm braced with her other hand. A dark line bisected the inside of her forearm. She clenched her fist and a rivulet of blood trickled down. Her companion lowered her mouth to the cut.
I stumbled back, hitting Cassandra. She turned sharply, mouth opening to snap at me, then followed my gaze. She wheeled on Ronald.
“Who is that woman? I don’t know her.”
“She’s not—” Ronald lowered his voice. “—not a vampire.”
“Not a—?” I said. “Then why is she…?”
“Because she wants to,” Ronald said. “Some like to give, some to receive. Hardly a new fetish, but they’ve become more open about it. We’re simply taking advantage—”
Cassandra stomped off before he could finish. She strode to the nearest curtain and shoved it back, to the yelps of the surprised guests within. She swungaround, letting the curtain fall, and headed for the next cubicle. Ronald scrambled after her. I stayed where I was. I’d seen enough.
“You’re not seeing the beauty of it, Cassandra,” Ronald whispered. “The opportunities. Hiding in plain sight, that’s the ultimate goal, isn’t it? Other races can do it. Why shouldn’t we?”
Cassandra shoved back another beaded curtain. I looked away, but not fast enough. Inside was the singer, in her mock bridal ensemble, splayed across the center of the couch, arms outstretched, her two female companions each attached leechlike to an arm, her dress shoved up around her hips while her male bodyguard crouched before her, pants down…and I don’t need to describe anymore. Suffice to say, I hoped to wipe the scene from my memory before it reappeared at an inopportune moment, and ruined a perfectly good round of bed games.
Cassandra whirled on Ronald. “Get these people out of here now.”
“But—but—they’re members. They’ve paid—”
“Get them out and consider yourself lucky if money is all you lose.”
“M—maybe this wasn’t such a good idea, maybe we made an error in judgment, but—”
Cassandra brought her face down to his. “Do you remember the Athenian problem? Do you remember the penalty for their ‘error in judgment’?”
Ronald swallowed. “Give me a minute.”
He hurried to the singer’s cubicle and pushed his head through the beaded curtain. I caught the words “police,” “raid,” and “five minutes.” The quartet came barreling out so fast, they were still pulling on their clothes as they raced past me.
A minute later, as the last stragglers stumbled for the exit, a door opened at the far end of the room. In strode a tall woman in her late twenties. Her face was too angular to be pretty, with features better suited to a man. She wore her blond hair long and straight, an uncomplimentary style that left one with the fleeting impression that she might be a guy in drag, yet her black silk baby-doll revealed enough to reassure any confused onlooker that she was indeed gender female. Even her feet were bare, toes painted bright red, as were her fingernails and her lips. It looked as if she’d put on her lipstick in the dark, and smeared it. As she moved into the semilit room, I saw that it wasn’t lipstick at all, but blood.
“Wipe your mouth, Brigid,” Cassandra snapped. “No one here is impressed.”
“I thought I heard harping,” Brigid said, gliding into the center of the room. “I should have known it was the queen bitch—” A tiny smile. “Whoops, I meant queen bee.”
“We know what you meant, Brigid. Have the guts to admit it.”