“Mm—hmm.”
“You and everybody else.”
He looked over at her, surprised. “Well, I can’t vouch for what everybody knows and doesn’t know. I remember my daddy telling me you were good with animals and we should be nice to you so you didn’t leave. That was when I was just a kid m’self.” He chuckled. “Boy, you were the prettiest thing I ever saw.”
She blushed. Tried to, anyway. Blood didn’t rush anywhere in her body anymore. “That’s very sweet.”
“My point is, nobody ever out and out said, ‘Dr. Sophie’s a vampire.’ But nobody ever got out the cross and pitchforks, either.”
“Thank goodness! She turned, putting her arm across the back of the seat, the better to face his profile. “Weren’t you afraid?”
“Heck, no!” He looked surprised. “Just afraid you’d leave. We all knew you didn’t…I mean, that you hadn’t come from Embarrass. Or even Minnesota. Or even America. We were afraid you’d go back. To where you came from, you know? In…how many years? In all that time, you never once griped about late nights or house calls. Didn’t mind working holidays. Truth was, we were scared to let you go.”
“That’s so…sweet.” So they liked her for her work ethic, eh? Well, what did she expect?
“Bunch of outsiders came to build a Catholic church up here,” he mused. “Course, Reverend Reed put a stop to that right quick. We didn’t know if you could stay, if—”
“So you are telling me, in this entire town, no one, no one at all, had a problem with the resident veterinarian being a vampire?” Too good to be true! There had to be a…what was the colloquialism? A trap? No. A catch.
“Well, sure.” He glanced at her, then back at the road. “The ones who had a problem moved away.”
“Oh.” She sat back, feeling foolish. Of course, several families had moved away in the last forty years. But when no one came down to her houseboat with a teapot full of holy water, she had put it out of her mind. And her dear friend Ed had always kept his ear to the ground. He would have warned her if the town’s mood had turned ugly. “Yes, I can see that.”
“So, there you go,” he said comfortably.
“There I go,” she parroted. “Do you know where we’re going?”
“I expect we’re heading down to Tyler Falls.”
She blinked. “Yes. That’s right. I must know. How did—”
“That news story, the one that got your panties in a bunch. Gal who killed herself was from Tyler Falls.”
“They aren’t killing themselves,” she snapped.
“All right, keep your shirt on. What, you guess another vampire is doing it?”
“Liam, has anyone ever told you, you’re extremely astute?”
He shrugged.
“Well, you’re right. It’s not the girls. What I think is, a vampire is making them fall in love, then he no doubt breaks up with them in some brutal fashion, then enjoys their torment and their eventual deaths. Remember, how the girl’s father told the news she had a new boyfriend? I’m willing to bet they all had new boyfriends. Bastard,” she added in a mutter.
“So, they are killing themselves.”
“But they wouldn’t have, if not for him. Bastard,” she said again.
“So, we find him. And stop his clock.”
“One thing at a time. First we talk to the girls’ fathers. I’m suspicious, but I would like to talk to at least one of the family members. Then we tell the queen what we know.”
“Okay.” Pause. “The queen?”
“Oh, you won’t be there,” she assured him. “You can just drop me off when we get to Minneapolis.”
“Hell with that,” he said.
“Liam…”