Anna-Violetta Books ~ December 13th

We have big news! We’ve combined all three parts of our series back into one ebook…and it’s FREE today!

We also put our other series back into single books, so no more reading the first part for free, but we will be serializing a few chapters in the future.

And now, back to Moonlight, Roses & Murder. (Notice the new cover.)

Chapter 7

“My father took me to Florence when I was seventeen years old,” Selina said, smiling at the memory.  “I was so excited since I’d never been to Italy before.  He was going on business, and I begged him to take me with him.” 

“We lived in Paris and my mother did not want to go.  He needed someone to accompany him, and I finally convinced him it should be me.”  She looked down at the floor.  “That was the biggest mistake of my life.” 

“We arrived and stayed at a business partner’s home.  It was beautiful, so large and impressive, right in the middle of Florence.”  She started to pace as she continued.  “Angelo De Lamorte,” she said bitterly.  “The name should have told me something, but I was so naïve.”  She looked at Damian, then went back to pacing.

“He was older, but so handsome and charming.  He seemed to find me quite captivating, and I was enamored with him.  My father didn’t mind as a marriage between us would solidify his business interests in Italy.”  She stopped and sat back down in the chair.  “It was on the last night of our visit that I found out who Angelo really was.  Or what he was.”

She clenched her hands into fists, then relaxed them, holding them together in her lap.  “We had just finished dinner, and I was sad that we were leaving.  When Angelo said that he had something to show me, I looked at my father wondering if Angelo was going to propose.  My father nodded and said he’d go into the library and have a cigar while Angelo walked with me out in the garden.  He had such a lovely garden behind his home.  He showed me the cake and coffee service, which had been laid out on the table under a huge pergola.  He said it was for our celebration.”

Selina stood up and started pacing again.  “I don’t talk about this, although I still dream about it sometimes.”  She took a deep breath and continued.  “Angelo said I was lovely, so young and so pure.  That being pure was the most important thing.  Then, he looked at the cake and said he wasn’t sure he could wait that long.”

“As he came over and took my hand, I really thought he was going to propose.  I didn’t love him, but he fascinated me, and I knew my father would approve.  As I smiled, he lifted my hand and kissed my wrist.  Then, he got this strange look.  I’ll never forget it.  He….”  Selina stopped and walked out of the room.  “I’ll be right back,” she said over her shoulder. 

Walking down to the kitchen, she poured herself a large glass of wine, then decided to get one for Damian.  She walked back upstairs and into the guest room, offering him one.  As he hesitated, she said, “Relax, I only drug people once in a weekend.”  She took a small sip from each glass then held them both out.

“All right,” he said, seeing how upset she was, “I’ll take one.”  She handed him the glass, then downed the wine in her own. 

“As I was saying,” she continued, starting to pace once more, “Angelo kissed my wrist, then got this strange look.  It was as if his eyes almost glowed.  Suddenly, he shoved me against the table, hard.  I think I screamed as he ripped the front of my dress and grabbed my shoulders.  I thought he was going to force himself on me, but instead he kissed my neck.  He kissed it and murmured something about purity…and then he bit me.  I was in shock.  I remember pushing him, trying to get away, and begging him to stop.” 

“As he held me tight, I felt myself growing weaker and looked up at the pergola, which seemed to be spinning.  I dimly heard my father shouting, then Angelo let go of me and turned around.  I almost fainted but managed to grab hold of the table.  Angelo yelled at my father to leave while he could.  My father grabbed him and tried to pull him away from me.  Then, Angelo picked my father up and threw him across the garden.  His strength was unbelievable.”

“I heard my father yell my name and tell me to run.  Angelo walked over and kicked him, then leaned down and stabbed him with a dagger that he’d pulled out of his coat.  He stabbed him over and over again, then took the dagger and licked it off, smiling at me.  He slipped it back into his coat and walked over to me, saying he wouldn’t need to use it on me.  My blood was too sweet to waste in such a way.”

Selina sat down.  “I reached behind me on the table and felt something sharp. It was the knife we were supposed to have used to cut the cake.  As Angelo grabbed me by the shoulders, I stabbed him as hard as I could.  I tried to run, but I barely stumbled my way out of the garden and into the street.  As I felt myself starting to faint, a woman ran up and caught me.  I thought she must have been an angel and that I was dying.”

Damian said nothing, waiting for Selina to continue.  “When I woke up, I was in a dark room lying on a cot.  It was not very comfortable, and I was in a lot of pain.  The angel, although now I wondered about that since I hurt all over…she helped me sit up and gave me something to drink.  She told me it would help and to go back to sleep.”

Selina got up and walked back and forth again.  “Damian, she saved me.  Her name was Apollonia and she saved my life.  What was left of it.  She told me that she watched Angelo’s house as often as possible, trying to find a way to stop him.  That he’d turned her years earlier, but she had fought the urge to feed on others and would teach me to do the same.”

She stopped and looked at him.  “Being a vampire is a terrible curse and one that should never be done to someone against their will.  He wasn’t planning to turn me; he was going to kill me.  By getting away, I was now infected with the same disease that had made him what he was.  Apollonia told me some people made the choice to become vampires, but for those of us who did not it was a terrible burden.”

“So, you’ve never fed on a human?” Damian asked surprised. 

“No, never,” Selina replied, “but the desire was there.  It’s more of a coldness, which you feel all through your body and you crave the warmth that you know their blood will give you.  Apollonia helped me through the worst of it.  She told me that she believed God would forgive us since we had not chosen this path.  As long as we resisted the urge, it would eventually pass, and we would be able to rejoin the living.  She was so sure…but that’s not quite how it worked out.”

Selina stopped talking and looked at Damian.  “I really need another glass of wine,” she said, “and if you’re up for it maybe you’d like to come downstairs and have some lunch.”

Damian watched her walk out of the room and let out a low whistle.  What a story, he thought as he carefully got out of bed.  He was pretty sure she was no longer a threat, but where did Diana fit in and what did she have to do with these murders?  Or was there a connection?  Damian put on his shirt very slowly and got up to follow her.

“Your turn,” Selina said as Damian walked into the kitchen. 

“Fair enough, Damian replied, “but first, what year did you go to Italy?”

Selina looked down for a moment, then back up, holding his gaze.  “I traveled with my father to Florence in the spring of 1787.  I know that sounds incredible, but…”

Damian held up his hand.  “No, actually it does not.  I think it will make it easier for you to believe what I’m going to tell you.”

Selina nodded and sat down at the kitchen table, forgetting all about lunch for the moment.  When Damian hesitated, she smiled and said, “Go ahead.  I want to know.”

Damian sat down across from her.  “I’ve been a vampire hunter for a long time.  I apprenticed in Milan, Italy in the year 1839.  I was sixteen and chosen for my lineage and my size.”  He paused and smiled.  “I was very tall for that era.”

“We considered our work a holy calling from God,” he continued, “to rid the world of demons that stole the lives and possibly the souls of others.  I did this for nine years until the Italian revolutions of 1848.  My teacher and mentor, Alessandro Cabrini, did not believe our work was finished, but I did.  I was ready for a change, and I’d seen enough death even if it was for the good of humanity.  And that was the year I met Beatrice de Campo.  She was beautiful, kind, intelligent and had a wonderful sense of humor.  I fell for her completely, and all I wanted was to get married and have a family.”

Damian stopped and looked around the room.  “You mentioned some more wine?”

Selina got up and poured them each a new glass, which she brought over and set on the table.  “Do you wish to choose first?” she asked seriously. 

Damian shook his head and took the one on the right.  “As you said, one drugging a weekend is more than enough.”  He drank some wine as Selina sat back down at the table.  “Where was I?”

“You wanted to get married and have a family,” Selina said with such sadness, Damian almost reached over and touched her cheek. 

“Right,” he said, taking a breath.  “Beatrice was more than happy to get married in Milan, but I knew her family was in Clusone.  I convinced her we should go there to get married.  We decided to travel by coach with some friends.  She had written to her parents, who would put us up at their home and then the wedding would be the following week.”

Damian stopped and took another sip of wine.  “We got a late start because Alessandro wanted to give me a gift.  He said he could not attend the wedding, but he wanted me to have something very special to remember all of our work together.  It was a silver cross with a lion’s head on top, hanging from a silver chain.  It was the symbol of our order and I told him I would never forget all that we’d accomplished.  I thanked him and hurried back to Beatrice and our friends.”

He paused and looked down for a moment.  “It happened when we were about two kilometers from Clusone.  A tree had fallen across the road and it was too heavy to move.  We sent the driver back to the last turnoff, telling him to take the detour and meet us at the house.  It would take at least an hour to make the trip by road since it wound around the other side of the foothills.  Beatrice was so excited to see her family that we decided to walk the short distance instead.” 

“It was late afternoon and the weather was beautiful.  We were enjoying ourselves, talking about the wedding and the feast we’d have afterwards when we heard the growling.  I looked over and saw a pack of what I thought were wolves coming out of the foothills.  Wolves were not uncommon, but with a large party like ours they never should have approached us.”

He rubbed his hand over his face.  “They walked toward us, growling with their ears flattened back.  I told Beatrice and her friend Nora to get behind us while my two friends, Alberto and Lorenzo, stood on either side of me.  We did our best to protect the women, but the wolves attacked with such precision I couldn’t believe it.  We pulled out our weapons, but all we had were knives.  No crossbows or guns.” 

“As the wolves ran towards us, I swung at the first one drawing blood while Lorenzo managed to deflect the second.  Alberto ran at the third, but a fourth one knocked him down and landed on him, grabbing him by the neck.  The wolf shook him and threw him aside.  Lorenzo and I did our best to stay between the wolves and the women, but they charged again knocking us down while one grabbed Beatrice and a second one joined it.  I ran at it, throwing my knife.  It hit the animal, but another took its place.  Beatrice tried to fight them off, but it was over in seconds.  My lovely Beatrice was dead on the ground.” 

“I turned to see the wolves moving in on Nora, who picked up a large stick and threw it at the wolf closest to her.  It jumped up and knocked Nora to the ground, biting her on the arm.  I turned and made a grab for Alberto’s knife, which was lying nearby.  One of the wolves lunged at me and I felt its teeth tear into my shoulder.  I thought we were all dead until it saw the silver cross around my neck.  Suddenly, the wolf released me and took off for the mountains with the others following behind.  I thought the reflection might have scared it since the sun was starting to set.”

He drank some more wine.  “Alberto was killed during the attack, but Lorenzo was only injured with a bite to the leg.  He crawled over to Nora, saying she was alive but unconscious.  I had already reached Beatrice and was holding her, crying like a baby.  She was my whole life and she was gone. Then, I looked over at Nora and Lorenzo, realizing we had to get help, or we’d all be dead.”

“I got to my feet and walked up the trail.  Lorenzo stayed with Nora, holding his shirt on her arm, so she wouldn’t bleed to death.  It must have been fifteen minutes, but it felt like hours.  I finally saw a farmhouse and made it to the door.  The farmer helped me and quickly rounded up his neighbors to go back and get Nora and Lorenzo.  We survived the attack, but we were never the same.  The three of us healed very quickly, but when the next full moon arrived, we changed into wolves.”

Damian stopped and slowly got up.  He walked over to the sink and splashed some water on his face.  “It took a lot of time and effort to learn to control what we had become.  I thank God that we didn’t kill anyone in the process.  Eventually, I returned to Milan and told Alessandro what had happened.  He said he’d heard about the attack and was sorry for my loss.  It was only later when I finally hunted down the werewolves responsible for our attack that I learned he was the one, who had hired them.”

Selina put her hand over her mouth.  “How horrible!” she said as she stood up and walked over to him.  “Here, let me help you back to the table.  You should rest.”

“I still heal very quickly,” Damian said.  “A benefit of the curse I’ve lived with for over a century.  It’s also slowed my aging, but I do look about ten years older.”

Selina nodded.  “I look older, too.  I was seventeen when I was attacked, but vampires age about five years for every century.  Whether we drink human blood or not.”

Damian looked out the window.  “I’ve got to get out of here for a while.   Can you go outside without any ill effects?”

Selina nodded.  “Yes.  Bright sunlight gives me a headache, but with the clouds today…I would enjoy a walk in the garden.”

Damian took her arm.  He was actually going to escort a vampire through a garden on a Sunday afternoon.  As they walked outside, he decided to wait to ask her about her girls until after dinner.

Anna-Violetta Books ~ November 25th

Enjoy these two short stories now in one ebook.

And now, here’s the fifth chapter of Moonlight, Roses & Murder.

Chapter 5

When Damian opened his eyes, he saw Selina Bellerose looking down at him.  “It’s about time,” she said.  “You had me worried.”

He smiled in spite of the pain he was in.  “Sorry to drop in on you like this.”  He noticed he was missing his shirt and could feel the sting of antiseptic on his face.

“You seem to have gotten yourself on the wrong side of someone’s fists,” Selina said with some concern.  Then looking down at his ribs, she added, “Or maybe their boot.”

“All part of the job,” Damian said nonchalantly, waving a hand and wincing.

Selina tried to hide a smile, then grew more serious.  “I was surprised to see you choose my club rather than a hospital,” she replied, “until I saw this.”  She pointed to his shoulder, where there was a tattoo of a woman shooting an arrow.  “This looks like Diana, goddess of the hunt.”

Damian nodded.  “I like to hunt…”

Selina shook her head.  “And this symbol above and to the right.  It looks like a crescent moon.”

“So, I like to hunt at night,” Damian replied.

Selina smiled and shook her head again.  “No, this is the mark of the vampire hunter.  I did not know they still existed.”

Damian looked at her and said very quietly, “How do you know what this represents?”

“I like to read,” she replied.  “I have a library at home, and I collect old books.  Some have a little paranormal mixed in with the history and I remember seeing this symbol.”  She smiled.  “My name gave me an early interest in mythology, and this is Diana’s bow and arrow under the crescent moon.”

Damian relaxed and smiled.  “Selina, as in Selene.  That makes sense.  And you’re right…my older brother taught history and mythology in Florence many years ago.  He’s the one who told me about the meaning, and I thought it would make an interesting tattoo.”

“While I would enjoy discussing this further, Mr. Salvadori,” Selina paused, glancing down at his bruises, “tonight, you should be in the hospital.  I’m no expert, but it would seem you have two possibly three cracked ribs.”

“No hospital,” Damian replied too quickly. 

Selina’s eyebrow went up and she tipped her head.  “Surely, a valued member of Interpol should be in a hospital,” she said.  “You are a valued member of Interpol, are you not?”

“Yes and no,” Damian admitted.  “I have a complicated relationship with them and having the hospital ask a lot of questions would not help.”

“Well, you can’t stay here,” she replied.  “The girls and I are going home in a few hours when the club closes.  We’ll be gone until Tuesday afternoon, so you’ll have to find somewhere else to recuperate.”

Damian realized he was lying on a sofa in an expensive looking townhouse.  One with a fireplace, but no windows.  “Is there any way I can get someone to take me to my hotel?” he asked, hoping he could make it to his room. 

“Excuse me, Selina,” Marcus said as he walked into the living area.  “There’s a woman in the club, who’s asking to see you.”

“Is she blonde and gorgeous?” Selina asked, wishing Diana would leave them alone.

“No, she’s Hispanic and looks like she means business,” he replied.

“I’ll be right out,” she said.  Looking back at Damian, she added, “Don’t move from this sofa.”

She walked out the door as Damian closed his eyes and wished the room would stop spinning.

“Detective Fuentes,” Selina said, looking around for Nate.  “Where is Detective Wright?”

Maria smiled.  “We have been known to work separately, but he’s questioning some of your employees regarding Damian Salvadori.”

“The man from Interpol,” Selina said.  “I saw him yesterday, but he didn’t seem very interested in anything we had to say.”

“Someone reported seeing a Maserati parked in your alley this afternoon, and we haven’t seen Mr. Salvadori since last night.”

“I see,” said Selina.  “I could check the cameras we have installed in the back.  Why don’t we go into my office?”

“Fine,” Maria agreed.  “Sorry to bother you while you’re working, but it’s important.”

“Of course,” Selina said, leading the way into her office.  “Do you suspect something has happened to Mr. Salvadori?”

“We don’t know, but we have a few questions we’d like to ask him,” Maria replied.

Selina motioned for her to sit in one of the chairs.  “Let me get this copied for you,” she said.  A moment later, she handed Maria the thumb drive and smiled.  “Do you miss your Goth days?” Selina asked as Maria glanced around the room.

“Actually, yes,” Maria replied, laughing.  “It was a lot of fun and drove my mother crazy.  Now, my two boys are doing the same to me.”

Selina nodded.  “They certainly know how to do that.  When the girls….”  She stopped.  “I should let you get back to work.”

Careful again, Maria noted.  She wasn’t sure if Selina was a private person or if she had something to hide.  She liked her, but Maria sensed there was something troubling her.  “You know if there’s anything you want to tell me, we are here to help.”

Selina decided it was time to make a change.  “I just wondered, would the police mind if the girls left for a few days?  We’d been planning this trip to Portland,” she stopped and smiled.  “I won’t be going, but I’d like them to enjoy it.”

“You’d like to get them out of town?” Maria asked, nodding.  “I can understand that.”  She paused for a moment.  “Go ahead.  I’ll contact you if we need to reach them for any reason.”

“Thank you,” Selina said.  “I’ll be in Port Townsend for the next two days, then back here on Tuesday afternoon.”

Maria got up.  “Thank you for this, Miss Bellerose,” she said, holding up the thumb drive.  “And if Mr. Salvadori does contact you, please tell him to call me.”

“Of course,” Selina replied.  

As soon as the detectives left, Selina went back through her office and into the living area to see Damian. “You need to call Detective Fuentes.  The police have some questions for you.”

“What did you do with my car?” Damian asked.  “If it was still in the alley, they would have known I was here.”

“We moved the Maserati this afternoon after we brought in your clothes,” Selina said, looking over at the suitcase.  “We thought you might need another shirt since we had to practically cut off the one you were wearing.” 

“I appreciate you cleaning me up,” Damian replied.  “And my car?”

“The girls wanted to drive it,” Selina explained, smiling, “but David was the closest to your size, so he put on your coat and moved it to the parking garage a few blocks away.”

“I see,” Damian said.  “So, what do you plan to do with me?”

“I told you,” Selina replied, “you should be in a hospital.”

“Yes, well that’s not such a good idea.”  Damian looked around.  “I could stay here.”

“Also, not a good idea,” Selina said, opening the suitcase and handing him a shirt.  “I need you to call Detective Fuentes, so she stops looking for you.  I’ll be back in a few minutes.”

Damian winced as he carefully put on his shirt.  “I’ll tell her that I’m out of town following up on a lead.  And my phone connection is breaking up.”

“Not a bad idea,” Selina replied as she walked out of the room.  “Do it now,” she said as she closed the door.

Selina walked into the club and motioned for Isabella to come over.  “Tell the girls I need to speak to all of you as soon as we close.  The guys, too.”

Isabella nodded, then Selina walked over to the bar and poured two glasses of whiskey.  She carried them back into her office, set them down on her desk, then opened the safe.  She took out a vial and very carefully added three drops of liquid to one of the glasses.  Then, considered for a moment and added two more.

As she walked back into the living area, she handed one of the glasses of whiskey to Damian.  “I thought you might like a drink.”

He looked at her and smiled.  “Nice of you.  I don’t suppose you’d mind switching glasses?”

Selina hesitated, then smiled.  “You don’t trust me?”

“I do if you’ll swap glasses with me.”  Damian raised an eyebrow and Selina handed him her glass.  He gave her the other one and they toasted, then he watched her take the first sip and drank his whiskey. 

“That should help you rest,” she said as she took the glass out of his hand. 

He felt himself getting foggy.  “What did you put in the whiskey?” he asked.

“It won’t hurt you,” she replied, “but I’m not taking a vampire hunter home with me unless he’s in no condition to be a threat to anyone.”

Damian shook his head and tried to get up.  “You don’t understand, you shouldn’t have done that…”  He fell back and closed his eyes. 

Selina smiled and finished her whiskey, then walked back into the office.  

An hour later, she was talking to her entire staff as they sat around a table at the back of the club.  The customers had gone, and they’d just finished cleaning up for the night.

“I want you all to stay in Portland for the next few days,” Selina said, “my treat.  And don’t worry about going home to pack since the hotel is close to several department stores.  You can get whatever you need there.  Again, my treat.”

“What’s really going on?” Michela demanded.

“And why do you think that we’d leave you in the middle of all this…” Isabella hesitated, then added, “this situation.”

“It’s only two days and you’ll all be back Tuesday afternoon.”  Selina looked at Michela.  “I need a little time to deal with the fallout from all this.” 

Michela knew that she meant Diana.  “What about the Interpol cop?” she asked.

“He’s going to need a few days to recover,” she said.  “Another reason for you to go have fun and give him a chance to rest.  A houseful of young women is hardly what he needs right now.”

Annalise smiled.  “We can be kind of loud,” she admitted.

Genevieve nodded and looked over at Marcus.  “So, do you guys want to go to Portland?”

Marcus smiled and nodded, looking around at the others. 

“I don’t feel right about you paying for everything,” David said seriously. 

“Think of it as a well-deserved bonus,” Selina replied.  “You have all worked very hard these past few months, and I believe you’ve earned it.”

David smiled.  “All right, I’m in.”

“Me too,” said Jeremy, who looked over at Brandon.

“Are you kidding?”  Brandon laughed.  “Free hotel…I’m in.”

Isabella turned to Selina.  “It’s a good idea, but I need to go over some things in the office with you before we leave.”

“All right,” Selina replied.  “Michela, why don’t you call for a limo, and I’ll give you the paperwork for the hotel reservations when I come back out.”

Michela watched them go into the office, then turned to Genevieve and whispered, “I don’t like it, but arguing with her is pretty pointless.”

Genevieve nodded.  “I know.”  Then, she looked over at Marcus and smiled.  “Have you ever been to Portland?” she asked.

As they closed the office door, Isabella turned to Selina and said, “I don’t think it’s a good idea, you’re staying here with that Interpol cop while we’re all out of the house.”

“Are you worried about my reputation?” Selina asked. 

“Very funny,” Isabella replied.  “You know what I mean.  Who is this guy?  And why are you taking him to the house?”

“He needs to recover, and he can’t go to a hospital.”  At Isabella’s look, Selina added, “It’s complicated.”

“Uh huh,” Isabella said, smiling.  “You like him.”

“I don’t even know him.”  Selina grew serious.  “Don’t worry the others, but I think Diana may have had something to do with him showing up in that condition.”

“I wondered about that,” Isabella said.  “Michela did, too, but the others didn’t seem to notice anything.”

“Then, I need you two to get everyone settled in Portland, and I’ll call you Monday night to let you know if it’s safe to come home.  If not, we’ll extend your stay.”  Selina walked over and handed her the paperwork for the hotel, then hugged her. “Take care of yourself and the others.  And know that I love you all very much.”

“We love you, too,” Isabella said, giving her a quick kiss on the cheek.  “Be careful.”

Isabella walked out and got the rest of the staff upstairs and into the limo while Selina checked on Damian.  He was still sleeping, so she went into the office and called for her town car.  When the driver arrived, he helped her get Damian out to the car and settled in the backseat. 

“Is everything all right, Miss?” the chauffeur asked.

“Yes, thank you, Daniel,” Selina said.  “I appreciate your discretion as always.”

“My pleasure, Miss Bellerose,” Daniel replied.  He drove her to her house and back at least twice a week, and she was a very good tipper.

“Why don’t you put up the divider and we’ll let him sleep,” she said. 

Selina looked over, wondering just how much she should tell Damian.  She realized that taking him to the house alone was probably not one of her better ideas.  But with Diana in town maybe a vampire hunter was exactly what she needed.  She leaned back and closed her eyes as they drove onto the ferry.

Read Chapter 6 in our next post!

Anna-Violetta Books ~ November 11th

Today is Veteran’s Day, so a big THANK YOU to all Veterans! My dad was in the Air Force for 20 years. He’s no longer with us, and I miss him every day. Growing up in the military was a challenge and also an honor. Moving to new schools was the challenge, but we also believed he was making a difference and that was an honor.

I think that’s one reason I got interested in history, especially diplomacy and military history. At our Lavender Cottage Books website, we have WW2 Short stories and historical nonfiction. One book is even FREE!

Last week, we took down our post and need to put Chapter 3 back up…so this week is a little bit of a repeat. However, we appreciate you reading along, and we’ll post Chapter 4 next week!

And now, here’s the third chapter of Moonlight, Roses & Murder.

Chapter 3

Damian walked down the stairs into the club.  He’d discovered the back door was unlocked after looking around the crime scene.  Not much to see in his opinion.  Hopefully, talking to the people who had found the body would clear up some of the details.

“You can’t come in this way,” said a young man, walking over to him.  He was tall, had blond hair, and walked with a casual stride.  His brown slacks, white shirt, and brown vest with antique brass buttons made it obvious he was an employee.

“Relax,” Damian said, pulling out his identification.  “I’m with Interpol, and I have some questions about the murder last night.”

“You’ll need to talk to Selina,” the young man said.  “I’ll see if she’s available.”

Damian walked over to the bar and sat down.  He looked around at the fireplace and cozy seating, nodding approvingly.  Turning back to the bar, a short, very cute girl was pouring drinks.  She had red hair, a great smile, and wore the same kind of outfit as the other employee.  “What can I get you?” she asked.

“I’ll take a whiskey, neat,” he said.  “Irish if you have it.”

Genevieve nodded.  “Brandon will be right back,” she said as she slid the drink over to him.  The girl didn’t miss much, Damian thought to himself.

He looked around the bar while he waited to see this Selina.  He assumed she was the owner, although the club was named Luna’s.  Damian glanced at his watch, wondering what was taking so long when he heard someone say, “May I help you?”

He turned to see a beautiful woman in a dark blue dress.  She had long brown hair with bits of fire shimmering through it.  Her eyes were golden brown and seemed to sparkle in the vintage lighting of the bar. 

“Damian Salvadori, Interpol,” Damian said.  “You must be the owner?”

She smiled but her eyes stayed serious.  “Selina Bellerose,” she replied, “and yes, I am the owner.  We’re about to open, so if you have any questions, perhaps we should speak in my office.”  He looked over and saw some customers walking down the front stairs.

“That would be fine,” Damian said.  “Nice place,” he added as they walked through the door into her office.

“Thank you,” she replied, indicating the sofa, but he sat in one of the chairs.  Selina decided to take the sofa and looked over at him.  He was very handsome, but there was something about him that put her on edge.  “Would you like any coffee…or just the whiskey?” she asked with a touch of sarcasm.

“Whiskey is fine,” Damian said.  “You really are a beautiful woman, but you know that don’t you?”  He paused.  “I don’t trust beautiful women.”

“That’s all right, because I don’t trust men who tell me I’m beautiful,” Selina replied.  “Did you have any other questions for me?  It’s going to be a very busy night.”

“Murder is good for business, is it?” Damian asked, not sure why he was being so confrontational.  She had him feeling slightly off center, and he didn’t like it.

“All publicity, good or bad, seems to bring in more business,” Selina replied, “at first.  That doesn’t mean I enjoy the type of media circus that is going on outside my club.”  She looked at him more closely.  “Why are you here, Mr. Salvadori?  Surely, one murder in Seattle is hardly enough to interest Interpol?”

He noticed she had a very slight, French accent.  “You’ve lived in Seattle for a long time?” he asked.

“Three years,” she replied.  “And again, why does this case interest Interpol if I may ask?”

Damian stared into her eyes for a moment, then looked down at the table.  “We’ve had three other cases in the past six months, which were similar to this one.  Someone murdered those young women, then tried to make it look as though a vampire had done it.”

Selina shook her head.  “There is no such thing as a vampire, so why would someone do that?”

“There are many things that exist all around us, whether we realize it or not,” Damian replied. 

Selina wasn’t sure how to respond to that, so she looked at her watch.  “If there’s nothing else, I really do need to get back to work.”

Damian looked around her office.  “Your entire club has no windows.  At least, none that I’ve seen, which seems rather odd.”

“We are in a basement,” Selina said, looking at him as if he were a bit dense.  “We don’t have windows, but we do have emergency access areas and two sets of stairs into the main club.” 

“And where are the emergency access areas?” Damian asked innocently.

Selina had finally run out of patience.  “Get a warrant, and I’ll show you.  Otherwise, I need to get to work.  Good night, Mr. Salvadori.”

Damian smiled and walked out of the office.  She followed him to the front stairs and watched him walk up, then went back to the bar.  It was going to be a long night. 

As Damian walked out of the club, he stopped and looked back at the bouncer.  A woman in her twenties, with shoulder-length black hair, was telling three men they could not go in without paying the cover charge.  She was maybe 5’5” and as things began to get heated, Damian walked back to help her.  He smiled as she grabbed one of the men and pushed his head down onto the desk, twisting his arm behind his back. 

A young African American man, another bouncer by the look of it, walked up laughing and shaking his head at the other two.  “I wouldn’t if I were you,” Marcus said.  “Mike is not in a good mood tonight.  You got this, Michela?” 

She nodded.  “These gentlemen were just leaving,” she said, releasing the man’s arm.  “Right, boys?”

The man rubbed his arm and followed his friends down the block towards one of the other clubs.  Damian smiled.  “Pretty strong,” he said, walking up.

“You mean for a girl?” Michela asked, smirking.  “You want to give it a try?”

Damian held up his hands in surrender.  “No, I’ve got a full evening planned.  You do martial arts or something?”

Michela started to reply when a young woman walked up and smiled at him.  She had dark blonde hair, tied up with a green ribbon that matched her dress.  “Michela, this is Mr. Salvadori from Interpol,” Isabella said.  “Selina told me to let all the staff know that he might be asking questions.”

“Interpol,” Michela repeated, sizing Damian up.  “Interesting,” she added as he shrugged and smiled, turning back towards the alley and his car. 

Smart, Damian had to admit, sending the girl around to notify the staff.  It made Selina Bellerose look clever, guilty, or maybe both.  He didn’t know what exactly bothered him.  She didn’t have any of the telltale signs of a vampire, but there was something about her….as well as the other people working at the club that made the hairs on the back of his neck stand up.   There’s something odd going on here, he thought to himself.  Whether it was tied to the murder, the supernatural, or something else entirely he didn’t know, but he planned to find out.

As he drove down the street to his hotel, Damian thought about Selina.  He’d been a vampire hunter for a lot of years, and he’d developed a sixth sense about these things.  She basically had a business in a dungeon even if it was a nightclub.  She was beautiful, but so were a lot of women in Seattle.  And except for the murder scene, he had detected no trace of blood anywhere in the club.  Still, he knew this would bother him until he figured it out.  He changed his mind and headed for the Seattle police station, deciding he needed to see those reports.  The hotel would have to wait.

Selina walked over to the bar and sat down on one of the stools.  It was almost one thirty and the place was finally starting to slow down.  “We’ll need to get some more supplies if this keeps up,” she said, looking over at Genevieve. 

The bartender nodded.  “David said he’s low on fruit juices, especially tomato, as well as vodka and whiskey.” 

Selina shook her head.  “I don’t know if we should offer Bloody Mary on the menu tomorrow night.  It seems to be in such poor taste.”

“Yes, but it was almost ten percent of our sales tonight,” Isabella stated, walking up to the other two women. 

“Fine, we’ll leave it on the menu,” Selina said, “but let’s offer a discount on the rum drinks.  We’ve got plenty of that and it doesn’t mix well with tomato juice.”

Genevieve smiled at Isabella.  “Another half hour and then we close up.  Are you staying here tonight?”

Isabella nodded.  “I think Annalise and Michela plan to stay, too.”  She looked over at Selina.  “What about you?”

“With all the work to do tomorrow, it doesn’t make sense to take the ferry and drive all the way up to Port Townsend,” Selina replied.  “Let’s stay and have a big brunch tomorrow.”

“Sounds good!”  Isabella smiled and winked at Genevieve.  “Should we invite the guys?”

Genevieve rolled her eyes.  She knew Isabella was referring to Marcus, who Genevieve thought was pretty wonderful. 

“How about just the girls tomorrow,” Selina said, growing more serious.  “We have some issues to discuss that we won’t want the others to hear.”

Isabella nodded.  “I’ll let Annalise and Michela know.”

Damian rubbed his hand over his face.  His eyes felt like they were seeing double, but he’d been looking through these reports for hours.  Not that there was much in them as far as helpful information.  The girl had been killed between 10 pm and midnight and the body had been moved to the alley.  Why?  That was the question that bothered him the most.  Okay, second most since the punctures were the biggest problem.

Damian had seen this type of thing before, but these punctures were different.  They could have been made by a vampire or carefully staged to look like one.  He’d been hunting vampires and other supernatural threats for a long time and at least half turned out to be amateurs staging deaths to blame the supernatural. 

What surprised him about all this was Selina.  What was her story?  And why place the body behind her club?  He looked through the report again.  A few other clubs that might or might not benefit from her closing.  These types of clubs brought in a lot of college kids and tourists, who traveled from one to another.  Sometimes, three or four clubs in one area did a better business than one or two on their own. 

He looked at the blues club owner’s background but didn’t see any red flags.  Same with the neighbors, who had complained about the noise and weirdos in the funny costumes.  He smiled. Steampunk costumes were not that weird and some of those short skirts weren’t half bad.  He stopped smiling.  The murder victim had been wearing a somewhat short skirt, but no sexual assault.  Something to be thankful for. 

As he flipped through the paperwork, he came across the victim’s friends again.  The young woman, Sonya, had said their friend Andy had been with her all night.  But the bartenders the police interviewed said she’d been dancing, and the young man had wandered out towards the back.  After that, they got too busy to notice much else.

Damian wrote down all the names and decided to check them out the next day.  If he didn’t get a sense of anything out of the ordinary, he’d let the police tie up the case and head back to Italy.  As he pushed up from the chair, he decided to add Selina to his list of visits the following day.  Looking at his watch, he realized it was almost 2 am.  Good thing he’d slept on the plane.

Nicole was laughing and flirting with Rob, who had bought her three margaritas and been trying to reel her in all night.  Okay, not a good term for a woman he actually found very interesting.  She was wearing this sexy brown and black Steampunk outfit, which made her legs looks amazing, and the corset was doing wonderful things for the rest of her.  He smiled as she teased him about his terrible costume.  He’d decided at the last minute to go to the club with friends and looked more like a chimney sweep than a Victorian gentleman. 

As they crossed Pioneer Square, he thought this was the place to make his move.  It was kind of romantic and fit the mood of the evening.  Victorian London with a bit of mist from the water giving the illusion of fog.  He took her arm and leaned over to kiss her. 

Suddenly, all he saw were stars as someone hit him from behind.  The last thing he heard was Nicole saying his name and then a cut off scream. 

Nate looked at Maria and shook his head.  All deaths were bad, but with these young women it was such a waste. 

Maria glanced over at the young man in his early twenties, who was with the paramedics.  “He’ll be okay,” one of them said.  “Looks like he’s starting to come around.”

She focused on the girl, who was carefully laid out on the stones with a red rose by her body.  She had those same puncture marks on her neck in almost the same place.  This one had lost less blood, but she’d also been killed on the spot. 

“This is going to be hell on tourism,” Maria said, trying to cover up the fact that the deaths of these young women bothered her more than she cared to admit.  She focused on the crime and not the thought of having to notify the parents in the next few hours.

“You think it’s a copycat or the same guy?” Nate asked.

“What makes you so sure that it’s a man?” Maria replied.  “There’s been no assault.  At least, there doesn’t seem to be.  And anyone can murder young women and get off on puncture marks and vampire stories.”

Nate nodded.  “Good point.  Never assume, right?”  It was one of Maria’s favorite sayings.

Maria looked over her shoulder at the sound of someone trying to push his way through a police line.  “Here comes Mr. Interpol,” she said under her breath.

Nate turned around and stood up.  “Damian,” he said, walking over.  “You got here quickly.”  Nate was starting to wonder about the coincidence of these murders and some guy showing up from Interpol.  He decided to run a check on him if Maria hadn’t already.

“I was looking through the police report when the call came in,” Damian replied.  “Thought I’d see if it matches our first victim.”

“Yes and no,” Maria said, looking over at Damian.  “We have a red rose with this one, but someone could have taken the last one…or the killer is getting more dramatic.”

“Or it’s a copycat, who thinks he can improve on the original,” Damian said, looking around.  “Anyone in the crowd look familiar?”

“We have officers getting everyone’s name and information,” Nate said, looking over his shoulder, then adding, “The blues club owner is back there.”

Maria nodded as Damian glanced over then focused on the victim.  “Forensics been here yet?” he asked.

“They made good time tonight,” Maria said, looking at Nate.  “Go ahead and show him.”

Nate turned the body over, and Damian saw the two puncture marks.  There was no doubt this was the work of a vampire.  The first had been more tentative but this was definitely a puncture. 

“Seems similar to the first case but not exact.  So, do we have two murderers or one?” Damian asked, getting up and heading towards the young man, who was now sitting up.

“I told her I’d walk her back to her apartment.  Even made a joke about the vampire and how I would protect her,” said Rob.  “Not much protection, was I?” he added, shaking his head.

Damian walked up to Rob.  “The killer came up to you from behind by the look of it.  Did you see or hear anything before you were hit?”

“Just Nicole saying my name and then she started to scream…”  Rob looked at the ground.  “I just met her tonight, but she was really cool.  She didn’t deserve this.”

Damian nodded and put his hand on the young man’s shoulder.  “You’re lucky to be alive.  If you’d seen him coming, you might both be dead.”

“Or she might be alive,” Rob replied.  He turned back to the paramedics, who were still trying to determine if he had a concussion. 

Damian wandered over to the old storefronts and started looking around, trying to get a sense of the murderer.  Where had he or she hidden?  Why attack in such a public place?  And did this mean Selina was not involved, or had someone done this to draw suspicion away from her?  No, that didn’t fit, but he needed to consider all the possibilities.

Finally, Damian got into his car and drove to the hotel.  Maybe some sleep would help.  He had too many questions and very few answers.  One thing he did know was that more women were going to die if he couldn’t find the murderer.  This latest victim had definitely been killed by a vampire.

Read Chapter 4 in our next post!