Vamparazzi (7 page)

Read Vamparazzi Online

Authors: Laura Resnick

BOOK: Vamparazzi
9.41Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
He was also never very clear about how he had supposedly become a vampire. There were occasional allusions to being debauched by a seductive older woman when he was a lad, but “being turned” was an “intensely private experience” that Daemon preferred not to talk about. I wondered if the tabloid reporter to whom Daemon had lately agreed to grant an exclusive and very expensive in-depth interview would get a more detailed version of the tale out of him.
As if my thoughts had summoned him, Al Tarr, the writer who was Daemon's constant shadow these days, appeared in the doorway. His cynical blue gaze swept the room, taking in everything, and then he nodded in the general direction of the stage door as he said to us, “Did you hear that the cops have arrested a real vampire out there tonight?”
4
I
frowned. “What?”
Leischneudel, who was still jumpy from the full court press we'd gotten outside the theater, gaped at Tarr. “They've arrested a real vampire?”
“Actually, about a dozen of 'em.” Tarr chuckled and gave Leischneudel a friendly little punch in the stomach.
I repressed an irritated sigh. Of course the cops were arresting unruly vamparazzi. They'd been doing it for the past two nights.
Annoyed that I'd fallen for another of Tarr's juvenile gags, I said, “What a droll wit you have.”
“Hee hee!”
When he tried to pat my cheek, I tried to bite him.
“Whoa, I think we've got a vampire right
here,
” Tarr said cheerfully.
“Now, now, children,” Daemon admonished.
“I like a woman with spunk,” said Tarr.
“I only appear spunky,” I said. “Really I'm timid and vaporous.”
He shrugged. “We could still go out.”
“No, we couldn't.”
A staff writer for
The Exposé
, Tarr had been tagging after Daemon this past week, following him everywhere but the bathroom; and I gathered this would probably go on for a few more days. He was, he said, determined to get the real truth about the man behind the mask, the victim behind the vampire, the cuddly creature of the night behind the celebrity facade.
Tarr was in his early forties, stocky, and short. He had a receding hairline, a ruddy complexion, and big teeth. I found his perpetual grin annoying and somehow sleazy. His unabashed nosiness, combined with his terrier-like persistence, made it clear how he'd become a top tabloid reporter. As he told anyone who failed to flee his presence quickly enough, he had a long résumé of in-depth feature stories about major Hollywood stars and was on a first-name basis with half the celebrity parolees in Tinseltown. I gathered this was his way of saying that Daemon should be flattered Tarr was covering him.
“To return to the subject . . .” Leischneudel said to Daemon. “It might be a good idea for you to issue a statement condemning violence against your fellow actors—and, in particular, against the ladies in the cast.”
Tarr said, “This is about last night, right?”
“Once again, those razor-sharp journalistic instincts zero in on the obvious,” Daemon said, starting to apply base to his face, as he continued creating the dissipatedyet-sexy appearance of Lord Ruthven.
“Were you hurt?” Tarr said to me.
“It's nice of you to ask, Al,” I said. “Some sixteen hours
after
you got into the limo with my attacker and Daemon without asking me that.”
Tarr held up his hands as if to proclaim his innocence. “Hey, they were leaving, and I gotta stick with my boy. You know that.”

Must
you call me your ‘boy'?” Daemon said.
I shrewdly sensed that Tarr's 24/7 companionship was wearing on the vampire's nerves. Good. Daemon should have to work hard for his money, like everyone else.
The Exposé
was reputedly paying him thousands for this exhaustive profile. And in addition to the money, he'd get what he valued most—even more attention.
“Jeez, everyone's so touchy tonight.” Tarr shook his head as he ambled all the way into the room, heading toward a chair. He paused at the spilled blood. “Hey, what's this? Did I miss a little bloodletting?”
I realized in that instant why the little bottles in the refrigerator contained blood.
The Exposé
's crafty reporter was sticking his nose into every aspect of Daemon's existence. The actor had undoubtedly supposed that Tarr would investigate those bottles. I recalled Daemon saying something, when he caught me with a bottle a few minutes ago, about his supply being pilfered. Tarr must have stolen one of the bottles so he could get its contents analyzed.
I gagged again when I realized that if Daemon had been thorough enough to anticipate that possibility, then the blood in the bottles might well be human.
“You're
sure
that blood was safe?” I asked faintly.
Daemon glanced at me in the mirror. “You'll be fine. Stop worrying.”
“You had some of that stuff?” Tarr asked in surprise.
“Quite by accident,” I said. “That'll teach me to poke around in a vampire's fridge.”
Daemon's gaze returned to his own reflection as he purred, “But if you'd like to poke around in something else of mine, I have a few suggestions . . .”
“Oh, give it a rest, would you?” I was tired of him already tonight—and he hadn't even fondled me yet.
I turned to leave the room and walked straight into Daemon's assistant, Victor, who was rushing through the doorway. Victor rushed everywhere and seemed to exist in a perpetual state of semipanic. I found him courteous but fatiguing. An effeminate, plump, completely bald man in his late thirties, Victor had a tendency to overreact to everything—which always made me wonder how he'd wound up working for Daemon, of all people.
When I explained about the bloody carpet and apologized, Victor had a moment of near hysterics over the stain. Then he manfully pulled himself together, patted my shoulder, and told me not to worry about it.
“We can probably save the carpet. And even if we can't, I don't want you to feel bad about it,” Victor said warmly to me. “It's only a
thing
. And people matter more than things, don't they? So I just thank God you weren't hurt when this happened, Esther.”
“Thanks.”
“How would she have been hurt?” Tarr asked in puzzlement.
“I don't want you to beat yourself up over this,” Victor continued. “I want you to try to put it out of your mind. You've got two performances to do tonight, and the show must go on.”
I hadn't actually planned to think about the carpet ever again, so I was able to assure Victor with all sincerity that I would refrain from engaging in distracting self-condemnation over this incident.
“Good for you!” He patted me again, then pulled out his cell phone. “Now I'm just going to call the dry cleaner and see if he can deal with this tonight.”
“You know a dry cleaner who works on Saturday nights?” I asked.
The assistant stage manager knocked on Daemon's door. “Forty-five minutes to curtain, people.” When he saw me, he paused. “How's the eye, Esther?”
“I'm fine,” I said.
“See? She's fine,” Tarr said to Leischneudel.
“That's not the point,” the actor replied.
Daemon ignored us all.
“Come on,” I said to Leischneudel. “Let's go get ready for the first show.”
We left the dressing room and walked down the hall. Victor's voice, talking urgently on his cell with the dry cleaner, echoed behind us.
Then I heard Tarr call out, “Hey, Esther!”
I looked over my shoulder and saw him exit Daemon's dressing room and come after us. “You and me, we have to talk!”
“No, we don't,” I said firmly.
“You're the only cast member I haven't interviewed yet.”
I was aware of that. And given my druthers, I'd like to keep it that way. “I don't have anything to say.”
“Oh, come on, I gotta have
you
in the article! You're
Jane,
the girl Ruthven really loves.”
I blinked and looked at Leischneudel.
“I told you,” the actor said. “It's what everyone's talking about.”
“And those scenes between the two of you are hot, hot,
hot!
” Tarr let out a low whistle and waved his hand as if he'd just burned it. “Everyone wants to know what it's like to get initiated by Daemon Ravel.”
“Initiated?”
“Into vampire sex.”

What?
” I blurted. “Are you kidding? I've
never
—”
“I'm talking about the wedding night, sweetie.” Tarr added, “You know—in the
play?

“Don't call me ‘sweetie,'” I snapped. “And
here's
what I can tell you about being ‘initiated.' I have absolutely no idea what it's like to be touched, embraced, or bitten by Daemon Ravel. I
only
know how Lord Ruthven does those things.” I grabbed Tarr's polyester-blend collar and said between gritted teeth, “Are we clear now?”
“That's a cute take, toots,” Tarr said. “But my readers are going to want a lot more than that.”
“Then they will have to live with the dull ache of disappointment.” I turned away and headed toward my dressing room.
“So we'll talk later, right?” Tarr called after me. “Maybe over a drink somewhere?”
“You have to admire his persistence,” Leischneudel said to me.
“No, I don't.”
He halted outside his dressing room and opened the door. “If you need help with your dress, you know where I'll be.”
I nodded and kept walking. The wardrobe mistress, who didn't like anyone but Daemon, rarely helped me. And Mad Rachel, the actress who shared my dressing room, couldn't always be counted on.
As I approached our dressing room, I heard Mad Rachel's voice booming forth from the other side of the closed door, and I realized that this was probably one of those nights when I would need Leischneudel to lace up my gown.
“Fuck you, you fucking cocksucker!”
I opened the door and entered the room. As expected, Rachel was on her cell phone.
“No, fuck
you,
you cocksucking fucker!” she shrieked.
She was already in costume, having evidently gotten Fiona, the cranky wardrobe mistress, to help her. Rachel Manning was about twenty-five, petite, and extremely pretty. She looked like someone who should be on TV, though the tremendous carrying power of her voice made her a natural for the stage.
“Go fuck yourself, Eric!” she hurled into her cell phone.
I was used to this sort of thing after so many weeks of it; but I had found it disorienting at first to see this fineboned woman in her demure Regency gown screeching vicious obscenities into a cell phone.
Rachel lived with her phone glued to her ear. Her boyfriend, Eric, was usually the person at the other end of the call, though sometimes she gave him a break and talked to her agent or her mother. And she seemed physically incapable of lowering her voice. Whether obscenely angry, as she was now, or just conversing, Rachel always yammered into the phone with the same wellsupported volume that she used onstage; she did this no matter how many times the stage manager or Daemon read her the riot act about it—which they did often, since her backstage bellowing had disrupted the performance a few times.
When she saw me enter the room, she turned away without acknowledging me and shouted into her phone, “I
hate
you, Eric, you fucking cocksucker!”
Half the time, she chatted to Eric about minutiae; the rest of the time, the two of them fought hysterically while Rachel cursed, at top volume, like a drunken stevedore handicapped by a sadly limited supply of obscenities.
“Go to hell, you fucker!”
It was already clear what kind of night tonight would be. Suppressing a sigh, I walked over to the makeup counter and set down my tote bag.
Rachel looked startled by this. She held the phone away from her ear for a moment and bellowed at me, “Do you
mind?

“Huh?”
“This is a private conversation.” Her tone and facial expression suggested that I had the IQ of chewing gum.
“Private.”
I felt an overwhelming urge to throttle her. But if I did that, we'd have to cancel the show. And then the vamparazzi would riot.
So, in the interests of public safety, I mastered my perfectly understandable impulse to kill Mad Rachel, and said, “Then you should take it somewhere else. I have to get ready for the show, and this is my dressing room, too.”
Looking outraged, she complained to Eric, “This place sucks so bad. I can't believe what I have to put up with!”
“Ditto,” I said sourly.
Since the men had private dressing rooms, Rachel and I, who had disliked each other from the start, had requested the same consideration. Bill, the bipolar stage manager, had refused our request. Multiple times. The reasons he gave us varied, depending on whether he was in a manic or a depressive phase of his cycle; but the bottom line was that Daemon was a star, and neither of us was. I had never had a dressing room to myself and wouldn't normally have made such a request; but Mad Rachel pushed the limits of what I could put up with night after night.
“This fucking place!” she bellowed as she stormed out of our dressing room. “The
theater,
Eric.
That's
what place!”
Rachel slammed the door so hard the room shook. I could hear her yakking into her phone for another fifteen seconds, until she was finally far enough away that the sound of her voice no longer penetrated the thick walls and closed door of this dressing room. When merciful silence at last descended, I took a few deep, steadying breaths, trying to calm myself and start focusing.

Other books

The Rowing Lesson by Anne Landsman
Bad Medicine by Eileen Dreyer
The Elite by Jennifer Banash
Nerds Are From Mars by Vicki Lewis Thompson
Familiar Spirits by Leonard Tourney
Boss by Ashley John
Flirting with Destiny by Corona, Eva