you would prefer I take."
He turned and stared at the rest of the group. His gaze came to rest at last on Damian. "I could take this one. Balthasar would enjoy that, I think."
I shook my head. "No."
"Is this one also your friend?"
I glanced at Damian. "Not my friend, no, but he's still mine."
The Traveler turned his head to one side, staring at me. "He belongs to you, how? Is he your lover?"
I shook my head. "No."
"Brother? Cousin? Ancestor?"
"No," I said.
"Then how is he . . . yours?"
I didn't know how to explain it. "I won't give Damian to you to save Willie. You said it yourself. You're not hurting him."
"And if I was? Would you trade Damian's safety for your friend?"
I shook my head. "I'm not going to debate this with you."
"I am merely trying to discern how important your friends are to you, Anita."
I shook my head again. I didn't like where this conversation was going. If I said the wrong thing, the Traveler was going to start cutting Willie up. I could see it coming. It was a trap, and everything I thought to say led right into it.
Jean-Claude interrupted, "Ma petitevalues her friends."
The Traveler held up a hand. "No, she must answer this one herself. It is her loyalty that I wish to understand, not yours." He stared at me from less than a foot away, uncomfortably close. "How important are your friends to you, Anita? Answer the question."
I thought of one answer that might not lead where the Traveler wanted to go. "Important enough to kill for," I said.
His eyes flew wide. His mouth opened in amazement. "Are you threatening me?"
I shrugged. "You asked a question. I answered it."
He threw his head back and laughed. "Oh, what a man you would have made."
I'd spent enough time around macho guys to know it was a compliment, a sincerely meant one. They never understood the implied insult. And as long as we weren't cutting up people I cared for, I wasn't going to point it out. "Thanks," I said.
His face blanked instantly, the humor gone like a bad memory. Only his eyes, Willie's eyes, were still alive, glittering with a force that crept along my skin like a chill wind. He offered me his arm like Jean-Claude had done earlier.
I glanced at Jean-Claude. He gave the barest of nods. I placed my still bleeding hand on the Traveler's wrist. His pulse beat hard and fast against my hand. It felt like the small wound had a second heartbeat, pounding in rhythm to his pulse. The blood flowed faster out of the cut, called by his power. It dripped in a tickling line down my arm to the elbow to fall inside the arm of the coat, soaking into the dark cloth. Blood spread over his wrist in crimson rivulets. My blood.
My own heart sped up, feeding the fear, driving the blood faster. I knew in that moment that he could stand there and bleed me to death out of that small wound. That he could waste all the blood in me, all the power in me, to make a point.
My heart was thudding in my ears. I knew I should move my hand, but I just never seemed to get around to moving it, as if something was interfering with the screaming in my head, before it could reach my hand.
Jean-Claude reached out to me, but the Traveler spoke before he could touch us. "No, Jean-Claude. I acknowledge her as a power to be reckoned with if she can break this hold on her own."
My voice was breathy, rushed, as if I'd been running, but I could talk, think, I just couldn't move my hand. "What do I get out it?"
He laughed, pleased with himself. I think I'd finally asked a question he was comfortable with. "What do you want?"
I thought about that as the pulse in my hand beat fast and faster. Blood was beginning to soak the Traveler's sleeve, Willie's sleeve. I wanted Willie back. "Safe passage for me and all my people and friends."
He threw his head back and roared with laughter. The laughter stopped in mid-motion like a badly made film. He turned glittering eyes to me. "Break this hold, Anita, and I will grant you what you ask, but if you fail to break it, what do I gain?"
It was a trap, and I knew it, but I didn't know how to get out of it. If he kept bleeding me I'd