She could tell he was searching his mind and her face to see what, if anything, he should say.
"Yeah, my friend Nick runs the site," he said after a long pause. "We have a lot of interesting people who play there."
"I saw that. Do you have one of those names like Hellion or Rogue that you play under?"
He came forward and took the day planner from her. "No, I just use 'Chris.' "
"Ah. So what goes on in the private areas?"
"Nothing," he said a little too fast. "Just a bunch of us BSing each other."
"Then why is it private?"
"It just is." He grabbed the book from her hand and shoved it back into his backpack. "Look, I have to go now. Good luck on the test."
Cassandra wanted to stop him and ask more questions, but it was painfully obvious he had no intention of letting her know anything else about them or him.
"Thanks, Chris. I appreciate the help."
He nodded and made a hasty exit.
Alone in her kitchen, Cassandra sat in the chair, chewing her thumbnail as she debated how to proceed. She thought about tailing Chris to his house, but that wouldn't do much good. No doubt his bodyguards would catch her, even with Kat's cockamamie driving.
Getting up, she went to the laptop in her room and booted it up.
Okay, the Dark-Hunter site was designed as if the Dark-Hunters were characters in a book. Most people would accept that, but what if she reviewed it again from the angle that nothing on the site was false?
She'd spent her life in hiding and one thing she had learned... the best place to hide was out in the open. People had a tendency to not see what was right before them.
And even if they saw it, they came up with ways to explain it away. They would say it was a figment of then-imagination or youthful pranks.
No doubt the Dark-Hunters thought the same thing. After all, in this modern world where everyone knew about vampires and demons and thought them a Hollywood myth, they wouldn't even necessarily have to hide. Most people would write them off as eccentrics.
She watched the intro to the site, then switched to the profile pages of the individual Hunters who were listed.
There was one there for a character named Wulf Tryggvason whose Squire was named Chris Eriksson. Supposedly, Wulf was a Viking warrior who had been cursed...
Cassandra copied Wulf's name and then searched the Nillstrom-an Old Norse legend-and-history search engine.
"Bingo," she whispered as several entries popped up.
Born of a Christian mother from Gaul and a Norse father, Wulf Tryggvason had been a renowned adventurer and raider of the mid-eighth century whose death was unrecorded. In fact, it only said that he had vanished one day after he had won a battle against a Mercian warlord who had been trying to kill him. Popular belief had it that one of the warlord's sons had vengefully slain him that night.
Cassandra heard her bedroom door open. Looking up, she saw Kat standing in the doorway.
"You busy?" Kat asked.
"I was just doing some more research."
"Ah." Kat moved forward to read over her shoulder. " 'Wulf Tryggvason. Pirate, risk-taker, and warrior, he fought his way across Europe, hiring himself out to both Christian and pagan alike. It was once written that his only loyalty was to his sword and to his brother Erik who traveled with him...' Interesting. You think this might be the guy you saw at the Inferno?"
"Maybe. You ever heard of him?"
"Not at all. You want me to ask Jimmy? He's all into Viking history."
Cassandra considered it for a second. Kat's friend was in the Society of Creative Anachronism and lived to study Viking culture.
But it wasn't Wulf's past that interested her at the moment. It was his present, and what she wanted most was a modern-day address for him.