
lane, I cut a sharp turn at the next corner and put my foot down. The Buick had enough in it to accelerate
away at a good clip, and I left them behind for a few hopeful seconds.
Traffic was light in the area, which was just as well since I didn't want any bystanders or cops getting in
the way. I hadn't seen a patrol car yet, not that I was remotely interested in involving the law over this. If
the men in the Caddy ran to type they'd have no qualms about bumping off a cop to get to me. I was
content to leave Chicago's finest out of the immediate line of fire and take care of these clowns myself.
I continued the illusion of a chase for several long blocks. At one point I thought I'd genuinely lost them,
but the familiar pattern of their headlights swung into view again and caught up. Losing them without
having to try anything fancy would have been just fine, but that kind of luck wasn't working for me
tonight. I took the next corner fast and tight, the wheels squawking until they bit the pavement with a
quick lurch. The Cadillac easily kept pace.
The corner coming up was to be my last one. Sooner or later I'd have to run into a traffic stop that I
couldn't beat through, and this was it. The driving lane ahead was blocked with cars waiting for the next
signal change. The curb was lined with parked vehicles. Oncoming traffic prevented me from making a
U-turn, so I stood on the brake and stopped just short of the guy in front of me. For effect, I tapped the
horn, but no one bothered to move out of the way.
Since I was giving the impression of a nerved-up and frantic man, it was time to do something desperate.
I cut the motor and launched out of the car on the right-hand side, sparing only one glance back at the
Caddy. They'd been ready for that move; the front and rear passenger doors opened and two guys in
dark coats bowled out after me.
I slipped between the parked cars and darted a dozen yards along the sidewalk. The street was well
lighted, but that didn't matter as long as I managed to get out of their sight for a few seconds. I ducked
around the corner of a building and vanished. Period.
My forward movement slowed, stopped, and reversed, but by then they'd pounded past and were just
starting to wonder what had happened to me. Their puzzlement wouldn't last all that long, so I whipped
back the way I'd come like an invisible cloud, hugging the side of the building for guidance. I couldn't see
at all, which made it hard to gauge distance, but tried my best guess. It worked out. When I re-formed
into a solid man again I was twenty feet behind their car and in a position to do myself some good.
Vanishing was one of my more convenient talents—acquired, not inherent—though at first it had taken
some practice to get it right. I'm one of the Un-Dead—anosferatu —a vampire—pick your own name.
Any one of them is close enough to the truth, but I tend to ignore them all because of the dramatically bad
press associated with such words. In my own mind, I have a condition; terrible in some ways, great in
others, but not something to be lightly overlooked.
I wouldn't show in their rearview mirror, but crouched anyway as I ran up to their right rear tire. The
cold wind blew the exhaust right in my face, but I don't breathe much except to talk; it was annoying
mostly because it made my eyes water.
Fumbling out my pocketknife, I buried the sharp point into the side of the tire with one strong jab. It
deflated in a most satisfactory way, getting the immediate attention of the people inside. The guy in the
backseat rolled down his window to see what had happened.
He wasn't Kyler, though it would have been nice. I popped his unfamiliar face once on the chin and he
dropped out of sight without a sound. The driver said something, but I missed it when I vanished again