Virtual Virgin Page 0,64

barrel. As soon as the swinging-on-a-skull effect slowed, Sansouci used the remote control on the table to shut off the piped-in racket.

He leaned back on the tufting to inspect me from head to boot. So I surveyed him with Vida’s eyes. He was still a handsome green-eyed guy with a slash of silver in his brunet forelock. His black turtleneck shirtsleeves were pushed up to the elbows to reveal a landscape new to me, forearms with matching iridescent green tattoos of snaky Celtic design.

He’d recently made no secret of being attracted to me, so I’d resolved not to fidget under his own assessment, half impersonal surveillance and half lust. Wondering if he could be a remote candidate for Daddy dearest really upped the ante on my nerves.

What I wanted—needed—to know from him was extremely personal and even more confidential. Girlish hesitation wouldn’t get me anything from a man or supernatural like him. I had to extract my information in a way that seemed to feed his desires, but also addressed my increasing fears.

Lucky for me his was a new breed of vampire—developed to go public these post–Millennium Revelation days. A gigolo vamp who liked and lived off women, a few drops at a time, was easier to relate to than the usual desperate lunger.

A screen inset on one of the skull’s eye sockets burned into being, showing the impassively perfect face of the joint’s virtual cocktail waitress. “Your order, please?”

Sansouci cocked a dark eyebrow my way. “You’re the star Inferno Bar mixologist.”

My answer lofted that eyebrow to new heights. “I’ll have a Virtual Virgin.” I ticked off the ingredients. “Six ounces of no cal, no sodium, no caffeine cherry cola, an ounce of lime juice, and a slice of lime.”

“Is there any octane at all in that drink?” Sansouci asked.

“Add two ounces of UV cherry vodka,” I suggested.

“That’ll do for mine,” he said, nodding at the screen. “Skip the lime garnish.”

Our virtual waitress vanished.

“Virtual Virgin.” He savored the name. “You sending a message?”

“I wanted to invent a drink for the sober that could go country or pop.”

The eye socket blinked open with a red flash. Two cocktails in tall, footed glasses sat on a black glass tray. Only one had a skewered lime slice on a swizzle stick.

Sansouci handed me that glass and took his own as the skull’s socket went opaque black again, tray gone. He clicked off the skull’s other . . . porthole, as I’d prefer to think of it.

We were swaying in a sensory deprived environment again except for a black-light blue glow that amped up my white blouse and skin and our teeth, of course. We each sipped our light, and loaded, versions of the Virtual Virgin. I was beginning to regret my nervy attempt to sucker the werewolf mob house vampire into any kind of confession for anything.

“A toast,” he said, “to whatever you think you want from me this time.”

I clicked glass rims and talked fast.

“Why did you c-come . . . show up . . . if you weren’t willing to give me information? You know that’s my job.”

I wished Irma were there to sing, Wrong start.

He smiled at my clumsy attempt to dodge any inciting double entendres. Sexy guys made me nervous. Blame it on my convent school education.

“Fair enough,” he said. “I patronize this private club. These suspended skulls are as secure as the grave used to be. I was curious to see what you’d wear to semi-seduce me, but not really mean it. You never disappoint me there, Delilah. No skin but a whole lot of attitude. I can’t resist a virtual virgin.” He shrugged and lifted his glass as an example. “And I’m bored. Should I say, bored out of my skull?”

I quirked a pale smile at his jest. To get info you’ve got to give info. I ignored the inciting things he’d said—everything but the last phrase. I leaned my elbows on the table and bent in confidentially even though he claimed the skull booth was eavesdrop proof.

“You and your skull are not going to be bored in Vegas very long. Christophe’s come back from Wichita with something that will blow the local supernatural mobs off the map.”

“What, some new venue or power? Out of Podunk Wichita?”

“Wichita is my home town.” I was surprised to hear myself defending a place I once couldn’t wait to leave. “We were just there, Ric and I. And Quicksilver. And . . . as it turned out, Snow.”

“Hmm.” Sansouci gazed down

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