the circumstances, it was more an inconvenience than anything else.
Iâd been too young when I met him to realize that the handsome young man who told me Romanian folk tales was actually older than Tony by about a century. He sent me an encouraging smile now out of a face that had looked thirty for five hundred years. I smiled back in spite of myself; Iâd had my first crush on those brown velvet eyes, and Iâd forgotten how attractive he was. Those same features had won his longer-lived brother Radu the title of âthe Handsomeâ back in the sixteenth century. Mircea paused to brush a speck of lint off his snazzy black suit. Other than Rafe, who preferred more casual chic, Mircea was the only vamp I knew who cared much about modern fashion. Maybe that was why Iâd never seen him wearing the court regalia of old Wallachia, or possibly the clothes then had just sucked. In any case, he looked completely up-to-date now, except for the long, black ponytail. I was glad to see him, but even assuming he remembered me fondly, I doubted one vote would do me much good.
Speaking of a need to update a wardrobe, the vamp next to Mircea â the same one who had been loitering around the waiting room â looked like a GQ ad, if the magazine had been printed in the seventeenth century. Considering that Iâd spent a lot of time in a Goth club, I didnât object to the embroidered frock coat, frothy shirt and knee britches he was wearing. Iâd seen weirder getups, and at least this one was flattering â silk hose shows off legs better than most modern styles, and his were worth playing up. The sticking point was that the whole deal was in buttercup yellow satin. Iâm sorry, but a vamp in yellow is just wrong, especially when you throw in bright blue eyes and glossy auburn curls cascading halfway down his back. He was very handsome, with one of those open, honest faces you automatically trust. It really irritated me that it belonged to a vamp. I gave him a tentative smile anyway on the theory that it couldnât hurt, and thought maybe Iâd get a brownie point for being the only other one in yellow in the room. Of course, my happy-face T wasnât looking its best at the moment, which maybe explains why he didnât smile back. He was watching me almost hungrily, the weight of his gaze so intense that I spared a thought to hope heâd already eaten. I needed to get this blood off me before I started looking to someone like a walking hors dâoeuvre.
The remaining vamps, two on the far side of the Consul, were so alike that I assumed they had to be related. I found out later that it was a coincidence. The man was almost as old as the Consul, having started life as one of Neroâs bodyguards even though his mother had been a slave captured somewhere much farther north than Italy. Heâd been one of the emperorâs favorites for having even more sadistic tastes than his master: want to guess who really burned Rome? The woman, who looked so much like Portia that I did a double take, had been born in the antebellum South. She was said to have killed more Union soldiers in the twenty miles or so around her family home than the Confederate military did, and to have mourned the end of the war and the easy hunting that had gone with it. So, different eras, countries and backgrounds, but they looked like twins with their milky complexions and wavy dark hair. They even had similar eye color, a light brownish gold, like the light through autumn leaves, and were dressed in complementary outfits of white and silver. Admittedly, his was a toga while she looked like she was on her way to a Savannah ball, but they looked good together.
The Consul gave me time to size everyone up before she spoke, but when she did, I had no desire to look anywhere else. Wherever her kohl-rimmed gaze landed, it felt like tiny pinpricks along my skin. The sensation was not quite painful, but I had the