'No,' Claire said. 'I told Liz we need to get one, but she doesn't think we can afford it.'
'Better broke than dead,' Jesse said. 'I can smell the crazy on that man from here. I have a nose for it.' In the dim light, a passing car's lights hit Jesse full in the face, and lit her up like a billboard. Her blue eyes were very, very bright, and for a second Claire had a Morganville deja vu ... but this was the real world, and Jesse was just a badass. Like Pete.
Maybe that was enough.
CHAPTER FIVE
SHANE
I was up to my elbows in hot water.
I don't mean that figuratively. It was actual hot water, with suds, and I was washing bar glasses. My second full day in Cambridge, and I had a job - crappy as it was - at a place called Florey's Bar & Grill, although the only thing I'd seen them grill so far had been some burgers and hot wings. It was the kind of place that offered up a food menu small enough to fit on a business card, and a nine-page drinks list.
So even though my official title was dishwasher, I was washing glasses. Every once in a while, there was a plate for variety. Maybe a fork. Not much else.
Like all industrial kitchens everywhere, it was humid, hot and a little nasty; the building was old and had probably seen various owners shilling drinks for at least a hundred years. The plumbing probably hadn't been significantly upgraded in all that time. Hell, it probably had rats older than me, and maybe bigger, too. When I was done with the glasses - if that ever happened - I'd be expected to mop and scrub the place out.
A kitchen is run like an army; in fact, they call it a brigade system. The chef de cuisine ('Yes, chef!') is the general; his second-in-command is the sous chef; and then there are chefs des parties, who are responsible for individual workstations. Somewhere way down at the bottom of that organisational chart is something called a plongeur - as in, dishwasher. That's what I was doing. In a major restaurant there would be a bunch more positions, but all we had in this mini-brigade was the chef ('Yes, chef!') Roger, who had been in the navy and swore like a sailor, too, and then Bridget, who was his second and did everything else other than swear.
Yes, I knew the system. This was, obviously, not my first dishwashing gig.
Amazing thing was, what little they cooked was pretty great. I'd gotten hired to fetch, carry and clean, and since I had a valid state-issued ID, they were overjoyed (and surprised). Technically I couldn't drink in a place like this, but I got free meals to make up for it. And Bridget was a cute, motherly type. I'd already made friends with the bouncer, Pete, a short, muscular type who casually mentioned that he powerlifted with an eye to making the Olympic team someday. Damn.
What worried me, though, was the bartender. Her name was Jesse, and she was a stunning knockout redhead in tight leather. I'm usually all in favour of that, from a purely scenic standpoint, but there was something about her that set off alarms - Morganville-type alarms. I'd convinced myself that I was being paranoid, but I found myself still wondering about her over the course of the two days I'd been working at Florey's. Pete was one of those laconic types who didn't say much about other people, but he'd finally given up that Jesse had drifted into town a few years back and was one hell of a good bartender; she knew how to cut people off when they had too much, and get them out the door without trouble, which in his opinion was ninety per cent of a good bartender's job.
In other words, he didn't much like to exert himself. I approved of this. A bouncer's worth isn't how much he flexes his muscles, but how rarely he has to. It's the security guys who are always looking for a fight that cause trouble.
This is why I did not get hired to be a bouncer. I knew better than to apply.
I filled up the dishwasher - a big, industrial thing - again, and started it, and took care of the overflow, then did some clean-up and trash-taking-out before it was time for my dinner break. The sky outside was sliding toward twilight, and I stood out in the alley for a little while enjoying the cool air, so unlike Morganville's dry desert wind, before the smell of garbage drove me back inside. Roger was swearing about something I didn't bother to register, since it wasn't glasses, plates, utensils, pots, pans or cleaning; Bridget was chopping celery, knife flying in a blur, but she spared me a wink and a grin as I signed out for dinner, took off my kitchen apron, and hung it up.
I went looking for Pete.
The bar was already starting to fill, even this early, with after-work happy hour people; the day bartender was still on duty. Jesse didn't come on until seven, and it was still a quarter to six. Pete usually started his day early, with dinner, so I figured I'd sit down with him ... but I spotted him on the other side of the doorway, heading into the street. I followed, intending to tap him on the shoulder and ask if he was free, but then I saw he was heading for a car that pulled smoothly in at the kerb. The passenger door opened, and I saw Jesse leaning over, all stark contrasts of black and white except for the fiery red sheen of her hair ...
... And her eyes.
I stopped dead in the doorway, staring, as Pete slid into the front seat, slammed the door, and they drove off.
Had I really seen that flash of red in her eyes? Or had I just seen a reflection from the dashboard, maybe? Was I hallucinating Morganville all over the place? Maybe. Yeah, probably. Not every hot girl in pale trendy make-up could be a genuine vampire.
But maybe, just maybe, one could hide in plain sight.
Fun facts: she worked nights, never showing up until after the sun went down. She drove a car with windows tinted as dark as non-Morganville laws would allow. She went for the powder-faced Goth look, always.
She never had a problem handling drunks.
Add all that together, and you came up with ...
C'mon, I told myself. Really? You move out of the one town that has a heavy population of vampires, and you think you're going to run into one halfway across the country?
Some people are just lucky like that. Also, I hadn't just gotten this job for no good reason ... I'd followed Claire's new professor lady here, where she ate lunch and had pleasant chats with Jesse and Pete. I'd done it purely to find out what Dr Anderson was like; anybody who had the Amelie Seal of Approval was automatically someone I felt I should check out carefully, and by extension, I'd been checking out Jesse and Pete, then. Hence, the dishwashing gig.
And now, Jesse, with the flashing red in her eyes. So it wasn't so much coincidence as deliberate investigation on my part. I wanted Claire to be safe, and I wanted to be absolutely certain she wasn't walking unsuspecting into a lion's den.
Now, I wasn't so sure.
I'd used the savings I had left after securing my very grungy little room above the bar to buy a beat-up motorcycle, and I wasted no time getting on it and following Jesse's modified vampmobile. Claire would hate that I was doing this; she'd think I was interfering. Which I was. But only behind the scenes. I didn't intend for her to even know I was in town; it was enough to be close, if she needed me. Or if she said she wanted to see me. I wasn't going to pull some romantic movie stunt and show up uninvited on her doorstep. She needed space; I was giving it.
But Jesse was making me very, very nervous.
I got even more jumpy when Jesse's car pulled up at the kerb of a row house that I'd driven past once before, and memorised everything about. I'd resisted driving past again, mainly because I knew that it would drive me crazy to be that close and not stop. Now, I kept moving, past Jesse and around the block, where I stopped and dismounted. I took up a vantage point at the corner, where I could see what was going on.
Jesse and Pete went up the steps to Claire's row house, knocked, and after a while and some discussion at the door, Pete went inside. I didn't know if it was Liz, Claire's housemate, letting them in, or whether Claire was doing it. Jesse stayed outside, which was a relief.
In the idle time before the next thing happened, I saw Jesse fix on someone standing across the street from her - much closer than I was. Couldn't tell a lot about him except that he was big, and didn't seem bothered by Jesse's stare. I knew from experience how off-putting a vampire's attention could be, and it was a little surprising he didn't take the hint.
Then, the door opened again, and Claire and Pete stepped out. As Claire locked up, I drank in the sight of her like water in the desert ... damn, she looked good. Still the same girl who'd kissed me a few days ago. She hadn't changed at all - but then, had I really expected her to, in such a short time?
Pete had a bulky-looking box in his thick arms, and he carried it down to Jesse's car. Don't get in, I thought, watching Claire. Danger. C'mon. I know you have better instincts than that.