"Don't you and your boyfriends take care of each other?"
I thought about that. "I guess so. I mean, I hadn't thought about it."
"Why are you so busy trying to find reasons to talk yourself out of Nathaniel?"
I frowned at her. "Jason told me that it's because Nathaniel won't be aggressive enough. That if a man's just a little commanding, I feel like the choice isn't all mine, and the guilt isn't all mine either. Nathaniel's sort of forcing me to make the move, to be in charge, to be..."
"The one to blame," she offered.
"Maybe."
"Anita, I am terrified of spending the rest of my life with one man. I mean, what if a body like Nathaniel's comes walking up to me the day after I say yes to Louie? I'm going to turn it down?"
"Yeah," I said, "that's what being in love means, doesn't it?"
"Spoken by the girl who's sleeping with more men than I've dated in the last three years."
"I was raised that marriage would make everything that was dirty okay. Suddenly, all those feelings were legal, holy. Part of me has trouble letting that go."
"Letting what go?" she asked.
"That I'm never going to get married. That I'm never going to do anything to make how I feel about Jean-Claude, or Micah, or Nathaniel, or Asher, or, hell, Damian, okay. That no matter what happens, I am going to be living in sin."
"You mean that you'd like to be in love with just one man and do the marriage thing?"
"I used to think so. Now..." I sat down at the table. "Oh, Ronnie, I don't know. I can't see being with just one person anymore. My life wouldn't work with just one of them in it."
"And that bothers you," she said.
"Yes, it does."
"Why?"
"Because this isn't the way it's supposed to be."
"Anita, 'supposed to be' is for children. Grown-ups know that it's what you make of it."
"My life is working, Ronnie. Nathaniel is like my wife, and Micah is the other husband. He works for the coalition and helps me take care of the leopards and all the other shapeshifters. It's partnership the way I always thought marriage could be, but never seems to be."
"And where does Jean-Claude fit into this little domestic scene?"
"Wherever he wants, I guess. He runs his business and polices his territory, and we date."
"You, him, and Asher date?"
"Sometimes."
She shook her head. "And Damian?"
"I don't know yet."
She looked down at her hands on the tabletop. "I guess we've both been having some interesting personal choices to make." She looked at me and frowned--a little frown. "Why is it that your choices seem so much more fun than mine?"
I smiled. "You have issues with commitment, marriage, and being tied to just one man. I have issues that anything short of that monogamous setup means you're a slut. We're both being set up to deal with our issues."
"You do sound like you've been to therapy."
"Glad to hear it shows," I said.
"So you're saying that we've fallen into the love lives we have so that we can face our demons and slay them?"
"Or realize that what we thought were monsters aren't that much different from us."
"You really did think that vampires were walking corpses once, didn't you?"
"Down to my toes."
"That must make it really hard to be in love with one of them."
I nodded. "Yes."
She took my hands in hers. "I'm sorry I've been pissy about Jean-Claude. I'll try to do better."
I smiled and squeezed her hands. "Apology accepted."
"I'm thirty, and I've never been this happy with anyone. I'll talk to Louie about giving me a little space and maybe finding a premarriage counselor."
"Can I say I'm happy to hear that, without you accusing me of wanting you to marry him?"
She smiled and had the grace to look embarrassed. "Yeah, and sorry about that, too."
"It's alright, Ronnie, we all have our hangups."
"Trust you to find a witch for a counselor, but if you can do therapy, I guess it's not too late for the rest of us."
"I was talking to Marianne for months before I realized what it was."
"You're saying that you went to therapy by accident."
I shrugged, squeezed her hands, and got up. Please, God, let some of the coffee still be warm.
"So you went to therapy by accident. You became the lover of the Master of the City, kicking and screaming that you wouldn't do it. Now you've fallen into one, or is it two ménage à trois, when your goal in life was monogamous marriage."
The French press was cold, but the coffeemaker was not. Yeah. "That about sums it up," I said.
"And my goal was to never tie myself down to any one person and never to marry. Now here we are, each getting what the other one thought she wanted."
I couldn't have said it better myself, so I didn't try. I'd never gotten the impression that God had a sadistic sense of irony, but someone sure did. Was there an angel in charge of relationships? If so, that particular winged messenger of deity had a lot to answer for. I got that tiny pulse in my head that I sometimes got when I prayed. It was more feeling than words. Be happy, just be happy. Easy to say, so very hard to do.
28
At 3:00 that afternoon, I was at work, right on time. Neither sex, vampires, shapeshifters, nor metaphysical meltdowns will deter this animator from her appointed rounds. At least not today.
I was sitting in Bert Vaughn's office. He'd been the boss at Animator's Inc. once, but recently we'd had a sort of palace coup. He was still office and business manager, but he was more like our agent than our boss. It hadn't lost him any money, so he was happy, but it had meant that most of the animators here were like partners in a law firm. Once you made partner, you almost had to kill someone to lose your job, well, kill someone and get caught. So Bert wasn't the boss anymore. Which meant he didn't get to treat us like the hired help. He hadn't liked that part, but it was either agree to our terms, or we all walked, and since he can't raise the dead, that would pretty much put him out of business. Especially if we opened another firm in direct competition with him. So we had a new power structure, and we hadn't worked all the kinks out of it yet.
Bert's office was now a warm yellow with orange undertones. It was cozier than the pale blue cubicle it had once been, but not by much. The entire office had gotten a face-lift, along with buying out the offices next door, so that most of the animators at Animator's Inc. no longer had to share their office space. Since most of our time was spent out in the field, or cemetery as it were, I thought the new offices were a waste of money, but I'd been outvoted. Charles, Jamison, and Manny had wanted bigger offices, Larry and I had been fine sharing, but Bert voted with the other three, so they'd taken out a wall and voilà, we were suddenly twice as big. The reason that most of the offices had gone to warmer tones, earth tones, comforting tones of yellows, browns, tans, ecru, was that Bert was dating an interior designer. Her name was Lana, and, though I thought she was far too good for him, she irritated me. She constantly went around talking about the science of color and how with a business like ours we needed to make people feel loved and cared for.
I'd told her that it wasn't my job to love my clients. That I wasn't in that business. She'd taken it wrong and hadn't really liked me since. That was fine, as long as she stayed the hell away from my office.
Mary, our daytime secretary, had asked me to wait in Mr. Vaughn's office as soon as I hit the door. Not a good sign. To my knowledge I hadn't done anything wrong at work, so I had no clue what the meeting was about. Once it would have bugged me, but not now; I was used to not knowing things.
Bert came in, and shut the door behind him. Shutting the door was not a good sign either. Bert is 6'4", and played football in college. He'd started to gain that past-forty, nearing-fifty extra around the middle, but Lana had put him on a diet and an exercise program. He looked better than he had for most of the time I'd known him. She'd even persuaded him that tanning cocoa brown every summer was not healthy for anyone. So he looked pale, but healthy. It also meant that his hair hadn't gone that white-blond that it used to in the summer. His hair was actually a pale yellow, with a little white creeping in, but the white was so close to the way his hair used to look with his tan, that it had taken me days to figure out it was his way of going gray.