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That singsong voice was really starting to get on my nerves. “This isn’t a game, Myra.”

“No,” she agreed. “It’s a contest, for very high stakes. The highest, you might say.”

“Meaning what?”

Mircea followed the line of my gaze but of course saw nothing. “To whom are you speaking?”

“Meaning you aren’t fit to be Pythia.” She regarded me out of eyes that were such a pale blue, they were almost white. I assumed they weren’t that light when she was in her body, but at the moment it was creepy. “Agnes was old and dangerously unstable when she appointed you. If her decision had gone through the usual review process, she’d have been laughed out of the hall. But she skipped all that, didn’t she? She went behind everyone’s backs and fucked up a system that’s been in place for thousands of years. I’m here to fix that.”

“By killing me?”

“Nothing so crude. Let me give you a little lesson, your first and last, all in one,” she said pleasantly. “Any being that travels in linear time is defined by its past. Take that past away, or change it, and you redefine that being.” She smiled, but there was acid in it. “Or do away with it completely.”

“I know that.” What I didn’t understand was why she was here, in this time. If Augusta had just turned Jack, then it looked like I was back in the 1880s. If Myra wanted to change my past, she was a little early. “Do you have a point?”

“What is happening?” Mircea demanded, looking back and forth between the vampires and me as if he realized he was missing something.

“Do I have a point?” Myra mimicked. “God, you’re thick. I know first-year initiates who catch on faster!”

She glanced at Mircea, and I tensed. I really didn’t like her expression. “If you want to kill me, why attack him?”

“You still don’t get cause and effect, do you?” Her voice held genuine astonishment. “Let me spell it out for you. Mircea protected you most of your life. Why do you think Antonio never lost his temper and killed you? Why did he open his arms and welcome you back after you ran away? If Mircea is removed, his protection is removed. And that means you die, long before you become a problem for me.”

The ghostly creature behind Myra jerked slightly, as if it didn’t like this information any better than I did. It moved those huge eyes back and forth between the two of us, its color shading from a silvery hue to dark purple. Odd flutterings starting around the edge of its diaphanous shape and, with no further warning, it changed. The pale, almost featureless face grew a mouthful of deadly-looking fangs, and the eyes flooded with dark red, like old blood. I stared at it in shock, but Myra didn’t seem to notice. Or maybe she thought I was grimacing at her.

“And did Agnes become a problem for you?” I demanded. I was assuming that Myra had been the woman at the theatre who had poisoned Mircea’s wine. How she’d recovered so fast I didn’t know, but if she was here, then she could have been there. And it wasn’t as if there were a lot of other contenders. I couldn’t know whether the poison she’d used was the same kind that had killed Agnes, but the similarity in method was interesting. “Is that why you killed her?”

Myra laughed as if I’d said something genuinely funny. “That’s against the rules, or didn’t you know?” she asked. Then she stepped into the brunette’s body and disappeared.

Mircea gripped my upper arms. “Are you mad?”

“The brunette,” I gasped. I didn’t say any more, because the vamp Myra had possessed suddenly hurtled herself at Mircea. He grabbed her around the throat before I had a chance to blink, holding her away from him. She twisted and fought, but her reach wasn’t quite long enough. Not that it would have made any difference if it had been. Apparently, to Myra a vamp was a vamp. She didn’t understand that the brunette was a child compared to Mircea, and that he could break her as easily. But she was a fast learner. In less than a minute, Myra flew out of the woman, disappearing into the crowd.

The brunette collapsed, sobbing, clutching Mircea’s feet and begging for forgiveness almost incoherently. “She was possessed—she didn’t know what she was doing,” I told him.

He lifted the hysterical vamp to her feet and looked at me over her head, his face darkening with anger. “Vampires cannot be possessed!”

I thought of Casanova but decided not to debate the point. “Not by most things,” I agreed, my eyes on the crowd, which had grown with the advent of violence.

I’d invaded a vamp before, a first-level master. The difference was that I’d done it by accident, not knowing about that facet of my power, and almost scared myself to death. It hadn’t done him much good either. But Myra could obviously manage it at will, and there was a whole roomful of vampires for her to choose from.

“What is out there?” Mircea pushed the sobbing vamp towards Augusta—her master, I assumed—and started to examine the crowd himself, those quick dark eyes taking it in, no doubt memorizing the faces. Too bad that sort of thing wouldn’t help.

I didn’t have to answer, because a woman who might have walked straight out of Versailles, in cream-colored panniers and a two-foot-tall headdress, lurched out of the crowd. She didn’t make a beeline for Mircea as I’d expected, but staggered drunkenly about the circle, careening into Jack, who was huddled off to the side, trying to disappear into the shadows. They went down in a tumbled mass, naked, dirty legs entwined with embroidered satin, until Augusta snatched up his leash and yanked him away.

The vamp didn’t get up, but stayed in the middle of the floor, limbs thrashing, head rolling, eyes showing white. It looked like she was fighting the possession, trying to throw Myra out. If she succeeded, it would really help. My knives could rip through flesh as easily as spirit, but I couldn’t risk attacking when Myra was clothed in someone else’s body. Her puppets might not deserve an untimely death, not to mention what it would do to the timeline.

Several vamps started toward the woman, looking concerned, and I grabbed Mircea’s arm. “Get them back! I can stop this if I get a clear shot.”

“No! You are not killing the host merely—”

“I?

?m not going to touch the host,” I said as the woman screamed and clawed the air. “Once the spirit realizes it can’t control her, it will come out. As soon as it does—”

I stopped, but too late. Normally, Myra wouldn’t have been able to hear a whispered comment from yards away, but in a vamp’s body, she also had a vamp’s hearing. The woman’s head raised and she gave me a smile that was halfway between a grin and a grimace; then she collapsed. One of the women who had been trying to help her suddenly darted back into the crowd, no doubt with a passenger on board. Damn it!

I searched the crowd for the new host, but when I finally spied her, she’d fainted into the arms of a young vamp. Myra was playing hide-and-seek. “Watch the women,” I told Mircea, hoping Myra would overhear. She’d been in only women so far, possibly because she didn’t like invading a male’s body any more than I did. And those closest to Mircea were all women. If Myra overheard me and switched to men, he’d at least get a split-second warning before he was attacked again.

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