Part 9 (1/2)

”We don't know that,” Evra said. ”Maybe he's waiting for it to close before going in.”

”He'd have a long wait,” I laughed. ”It stays open all night.”

”I'm coming up,” Evra said. ”Don't move until I get there.”

”I'll move when Mr. Crepsley moves, whether you're here or not,” I said, but Evra had hung up and didn't hear me.

He arrived a few minutes later, his breath stinking of mustard and onions. ”Dry bread for you from now on,” I muttered.

”Do you think Mr. Crepsley will smell me?” Evra asked. ”Maybe I should go back down and -”

I shook my head. ”He's too close to the slaughterhouse,” I said. ”The smell of blood will block everything else out.”

”Where is he?” Evra asked. I pointed the vampire out. Evra had to squint but eventually spotted him.

”We have to be extra quiet,” I said. ”Even a small noise could have him swooping down on us.”

Evra s.h.i.+vered - whether because of the cold or the thought of being attacked, I don't know - and settled down. We said hardly anything to each other after that.

We had to breathe into our cupped fists to stop our breath from showing. We would have been all right if it had been snowing - the snow would have hidden the smokelike tendrils - but it was a clear and frosty night. We sat there until three in the morning. Evra's teeth were chattering, and I was at the point of sending him home before he froze to death, when the fat man emerged. Mr. Crepsley started after him immediately.

Too late, I realized the vampire was going to pa.s.s by us on his way back.

There was no time to hide. He'd see us!

”Keep perfectly still,” I whispered to Evra. ”Don't even breathe.”

The vampire came toward us, walking steadily across the icy roofs in his bare feet. I was certain he'd spot us, but his eyes were trained on the human. He pa.s.sed within ten feet of us - his shadow crept over me like some awful ghost - and then he was gone.

”I think my heart stopped,” Evra said shakily.

I heard the familiar thump-thump sounds of the snake-boy's heart (it beat slightly slower than a normal human's) and smiled. ”You're okay,” I told him.

”I thought we were done for,” Evra hissed.

”Me, too.” I stood and checked which way the vampire was going. ”You'd better slip back down to the street,” I told Evra.

”He's not going fast,” Evra said. ”I can keep up.”

I shook my head. ”There's no telling when he'll speed up: the man might get in a cab or have a car waiting for him. Besides, after our narrow escape, it's better we split: that way, if one of us gets caught, the other can sneak back to the hotel and pretend he wasn't involved.”

Evra saw the sense in that and went down the nearest fire escape. I began following the tracks of the vampire and the fat man.

He walked back the way he'd come, past the deserted street where we first picked him up, on to a block of apartments.

He lived in one of the central apartments on the sixth floor. Mr. Crepsley waited for the lights to go off inside, then went up in the elevator. I ran up the stairs and watched from the far end of the landing.

I expected him to open the door and enter - locks were no problem for the vampire - but all he did was check the door and windows. Then he turned around and went back to the elevator.

I hurried down the stairs and got the vampire back in view as he walked away from the apartments. I told Evra what had happened and where the vampire was heading. A few minutes later he caught up with me and we followed Mr. Crepsley as he jogged through the streets.

”Why didn't he go in?” Evra asked.

”I don't know,” I said. ”Maybe there was somebody else there. Or maybe he plans to come back later.

One thing's for sure: he didn't go up there to send a letter!”

After a while, we turned a corner into an alley and spotted Mr. Crepsley bent over a motionless woman. Evra gasped and started forward. I caught his arm and yanked him back.

”What are you doing?” he hissed. ”Didn't you see? He's attacking! We have to stop him before -”

”It's okay,” I said. ”He isn't attacking. He's feeding.” Evra's struggles stopped. ”You're sure?” he asked suspiciously.

I nodded. ”He's drinking from the woman's arm. The corpses in the building had their throats cut, remember?”

Evra nodded uncertainly. ”If you're wrong...”

”I'm not,” I a.s.sured him.

Minutes later, the vampire moved on, leaving the woman behind. We hurried down the alley to check. As I'd guessed, she was unconscious but alive, a small, fresh scar on her left arm the only sign that she had been feasted upon.

”Let's go,” I said, standing. ”She'll wake up in a few minutes. We'd better not be here when she does.”

”What about Mr. Crepsley?” Evra asked.

I looked up at the sky, estimating how long was left until dawn. ”He won't kill anyone tonight,” I said. ”It's too late. He's probably heading back for the hotel.

Come on - if we don't get back before him, we'll have a h.e.l.l of a time trying to explain where we were.”

CHAPTER THIRTEEN.

Before dusk descended the next night, Evra went around to the block of apartments to keep watch on the fat man. I stayed home, in order to follow Mr.

Crepsley. If the vampire headed for the apartments, I'd join Evra. If he went anywhere else, we'd discuss the situation and decide whether Evra should desert his post or stay.

The vampire rose promptly as the sun went down. He was looking more cheerful tonight, though he still wouldn't have appeared out of place in a funeral parlor.

”Where is Evra?” he asked, diving into the meal I had prepared.

”Shopping,” I said.

”By himself?” Mr. Crepsley paused. For a moment I thought he was suspicious, but he was just looking for the salt.

”I think he's buying Christmas presents,” I said.