
slipped from my view, but I follow his movements with my ears. I am on the lower level, in the shadows
beneath the stands. He is inside the Coliseum proper, running up the bleachers. My hearing stretches out,
an expanding wave of invisible radar, as I stand rock still. There are three other souls in the Coliseum,
and none of them is human. I track the steps. They meet together at the north end of the building, speak
softly, then fan out to the far comers. I doubt that they know my exact whereabouts, but their plan is
clear. They wish to surround me, come at me from every direction. I don't wish to disappoint them.
Leaving my shelter, I stride openly down a concrete tunnel and out onto the field, where the moon
shim-mers on the grass like radioactivity on an atomic blast sight. I see the four vampires at the same time
they see me. They pause as I hurry to the fifty-yard line. Let them come to me, I think. I want time to
observe them, see if they have weapons. A bullet in the brain, a knife in the heart, might kill me, although
the wooden stake through my chest did not, six weeks ago. The pain awakens with the memory, but I
will it away. These four are my problem now.
The moon is almost straight overhead. Three vam-pires continue to move to their corners; the one at the
north end is in place and stands motionless, watching me. He is the only Caucasian, tall, thin, his bony
hands like a fossilized skeleton. Even in the silver light, in the distance, I note the startling green of his
eyes, the bloodshot veins that surround his glowing pupils like the strings of a red-stained spiderweb. He
is the leader, and the cocky smile on his acne-scarred face reveals his confidence. He is thirty, maybe,
but he will get no older, because I believe he is about to die. He is the one I wish to question, to drink
from. I think of the security guard, the girl in the morning's paper. I will kill him slowly and enjoy it.
None of them appears to carry any weapons, but I look around for one for myself, regretting the loss of
my knife, which I can fling over a quarter of a mile with deadly accuracy. It is mid-December, as I have
said, but I see a collection of track and field equipment at the side of the field. The person in charge of
equipment must have forgotten to put it away. I note the presence of a javelin. As the leader studies me, I
move casually in the direction of the equipment. But he is sharp, this cold, ugly man, and he knows what I
am going for. With a hand movement he signals to his partners to start toward me.
The three dark figures move quickly down the steps. In seconds they have cleared the bleachers and
leaped onto the track that surrounds the field. But in those seconds I have reached the equipment and
lifted the javelin in my right hand. It is a pity there is only one spear. I raise my empty left hand in the
direction of the leader, still far away at the top of the bleachers.
"I would like to talk," I call. "But I am fully capable of defending myself."
The smile on the leader's face, over two hundred yards away, broadens. His goons also grin, although
not with the same confidence. They know I am a vampire. They eye the javelin and wonder what I will
do with it, such silly young immortals. I keep an eye on all three of them, although I continue to face in the
direction of the leader.
"It is always a mistake to decide to die hastily," I call.
The leader reaches behind and removes a knife from his back pocket. There is fresh blood on the tip, I
see. I am not worried that he can hit me from such a distance since my ability with my knife has only
come after centuries of practice. Yet he handles the weapon skillfully, balancing it in his open palm. The
young man whom I chased into the Coliseum is in front of me, between me and the leader. Four against
one, I think. I will improve the odds. In a move too swift for mortal eyes to follow, I launch my javelin
toward the young man. Too late he realizes my strength and agility. He tries to jump aside but the tip
catches him square in the chest, going through his rib cage and spine. I hear the blood explode in his
ruptured heart. A death grunt escapes his lip as he topples, the long sharp object sticking through his