comment, nor did he look anywhere except straight in front of him. I wondered if he would have lost status points if heâd turned. Werewolves play power games, too, but I know the rules for them. A werewolf would never have allowed a strange wolf to walk behind him.
He left off petting me, stood up, and walked around until he faced Stefan again. âSo you are Stefan, Marsiliaâs little soldier boy. I have heard of youâthough your reputation is not what it once was, is it? Running away from Italy like that would soil any manâs honor. Somehow, still, I expected more. All those storiesâ¦I expected to find a monster among monsters, a creature of nightmares who frightens even other vampiresâand all I see is a dried-up has-been. I suppose thatâs what happens when you hide yourself in a little backwater town for a few centuries.â
There was a slight pause after the other vampireâs last words.
Then Stefan laughed, and said, âWhereas you have no reputation at all.â His voice was lighter than usual, sounding almost rushed, as if what he was saying was of no moment. I took a step away from him without meaning to, somehow frightened by that light, amused voice. He smiled gently at the other vampire and his tone softened further as he said, âThatâs what happens when you are newly made and abandoned.â
It must have been some sort of vampire super-insult because the second vampire erupted, reacting as if Stefanâs words had been an electric goad. He didnât go after Stefan, though.
Instead, he bent down and grabbed the bottom of the king-sized box spring and jerk-lifted it and everything above it over his head. He swung it toward the hall door and then around so that the ends of the box spring, mattress, and bedding were balanced for an instant.
He shifted his grip and threw them all the way through the wall and into the empty hotel room next door, landing on the floor in a cloud of Sheetrock dust. Two of the wall studs hung splintered, suspended from somewhere inside the wall, giving the hole in the wall the appearance of a jack-o-lanternâs smile. The false headboard, permanently mounted into the wall where the bed had been, looked forlorn and stupid hanging a foot or more above the pedestal of the bed.
The vampireâs speed and strength didnât surprise me. Iâd seen a few werewolves throw temper tantrums, enough to know that if the vampire had been truly angry, he wouldnât have had the control it took to manage the physics of swinging the two unattached mattresses together through the wall. Apparently, as in werewolf fights, battles between vampires have a lot of impressive fireworks before the main show.
In the silence that followed, I heard something, a hoarse mewling noise coming from behind the closed bathroom doorâas if whatever made it had already cried out so much it could only make a small noise, but one that held much more terror than a full-throated scream.
I wondered if Stefan knew what was in the bathroom and that was why heâd been afraid when we were in the parking lotâthere were things that even a vampire ought to be afraid of. I took a deep breath, but all I could smell was the bitter darknessâand that was getting stronger. I sneezed, trying to clear my nose, but it didnât work. Both vampires stood still until the noise stopped. Then the stranger dusted his hands lightly, a small smile on his face as if there had not been rage just an instant before.
âI am remiss,â he said, but the old fashioned words sounded false coming from him, as if he were pretending to be a vampire the way the old vampires tried to be human. âYou obviously do not know who I am.â
He gave Stefan a shallow bow. It was obvious, even to me, that this vampire had grown up in a time and place where bowing was something done in Kung Fu Theater movies rather than in everyday life. âI am Asmodeus,â