Cold sweat trickled under Griffin’s collar. “I’m perfectly well.”
“Could have fooled me. Still, it doesn’t seem—”
The sound of an engine drowned out her words. Griffin glanced up to see a battered delivery truck backing into the alley. Instinctively he placed himself between the ladies and the vehicle.
“What is it?” Miss Moreau asked.
“Bootleggers,” he said. “No doubt here to make a delivery.”
Allegra Chase moved up to stand beside him, her body tense and alert. “What perfect timing,” she murmured.
No sooner had she finished speaking than a pair of hatchet men jumped from the back of the truck, took up positions facing the street and stoodwatch while several other men began to unload crates into the alley. A door near the mouth of the alley opened to receive the shipment.
The last of the crates had just been passed into the building when another man, dressed from head to toe in black wool and leather, emerged from the truck and spoke to someone inside the door. After a moment the door shut, and the man turned to look at Griffin. His upper face was completely covered by his black fedora and sunglasses.
Griffin advanced a dozen paces, his hands loose at his sides, and stopped a few yards from the man in black. He felt the leech’s eyes on him, eyes as keen in the dark as his own.
The leech’s lips curled. He signaled to a pair of henchmen armed with tommy guns.
“You shouldn’t be here, dog,” he said.
“It wasn’t intentional, I assure you.” Griffin spread his hands. “We have no interest in your business.”
“You are pack—”
“My name is Griffin Durant. I don’t belong to the pack.”
The leech made a sound of disbelief and glanced toward Miss Chase. He hissed through his teeth.
“Allegra.”
The lady in question strolled past Griffin and assumed an insolent pose, pushing her coat away from her dress to expose her shapely legs, one hip thrust out, her hand perched at the curve of her waist.
“Bendik. How nice to see you.”
Griffin stepped in front of her again. “A friend of yours, Miss Chase?”
“A friend? That’s a laugh.” She returned her attention to her fellow vampire. “Quit your glaring, Bendik. No one here’s going to cause any trouble, so why don’t you just wander on home?”
The leech looked Miss Chase up and down with scarcely less hostility than he’d shown Griffin. “What are you doing with a dog?”
“He’s woman’s best friend. Or hadn’t you heard?”
“Raoul…”
“Worried he might not approve? Too bad he can’t decide who I spend my time with.”
“You’ll go too far, Allegra. I look forward to the day Raoul puts you in your place.”
She yawned, stretching her body sensuously. “I’ll see you at the funeral, Bendik. Send him my best wishes.”
Bendik lingered a moment longer, looking as if he would have dearly loved to spray the alley with bullets, then retreated with an audible snarl. His henchmen jumped back into the truck, and the vehicle pulled out of the alley.
Griffin faced Allegra, his palms slick with perspiration. “That was very foolish, Miss Chase,” he said.
“Why? Did you think I was in danger?”
Anger choked him. “That…man was clearly not well disposed toward you.”
“He’s one of Raoul’s lieutenants, and Raoul isn’t happy with me these days.”
Griffin had heard the name Raoul more than once. The leech ruled the city’s vampire clan, but the authorities naturally assumed him to be human.
“Raoul is your patron,” he said.
“No!” Allie’s vehemence made it evident that she was telling the truth. “My patron…he’s nothing like Raoul.”
Griffin almost asked her to explain but stopped himself. He had no desire to become involved in vampire politics.
“A pity your patron isn’t here to caution you against your habit of imprudence,” he said.
“Ha. You don’t know anything about my habits. I—” She paused, regarding him through narrowed eyes. “Hey.You’re as white as a sheet.” She lay a hand against Griffin’s cheek. “Your heart’s beating like a jackhammer.”
Her touch wasn’t cold, as he’d expected a vampire’s would be. He moved away. “I didn’t savor the prospect of further violence, Miss Chase.”
“Don’t tell me you were scared. Bendik and his men would as soon have shot you as looked at you, but you were ready to take them on single-handedly.”
He stepped away. “Only if every other method failed.”
She shook her hair beneath the veil. Silky skeins settled about her face like black feathers. “So modest, isn’t he?” she said to Miss Moreau. “A paragon of virtue.”
Refusing to dignify Allegra’s provocation with a reply, Griffin gathered up his and Miss Moreau’s packages and asked the ladies to wait while he hunted down a policeman. Much to his surprise, Allegra and Miss Moreau were still in the alley when he returned with an officer of the law.
After the patrolman had briefly questioned Miss Moreau and taken the hoodlums into custody, Griffin flagged down a taxi and handed the ladies into the backseat. Allegra gave the cabbie an address that made Griffin raise his brows. It was one of the finest apartment buildings on Fifth Avenue, directly across from Central Park.
Miss Chase leaned out of the cab, her eyes unreadable behind the veil. “Thank you, Mr. Durant,” she said coolly, “for Lou’s sake.”
“You’re welcome, Miss Chase.” She began to close the door, but he locked his fingers around the handle, holding it open.
She lifted the veil and gazed up at him, dark brows high. “Well?”
“May I telephone you? At your convenience, of course.”
She grasped the card he offered between two slender, red-nailed fingers. “Why?”
“To inquire after Miss Moreau’s recovery.”
“Ah. Of course.” She smiled slyly. “Do you like me, Mr. Durant?”