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3
   I huddled against the side of the helicopter, one hand in a death grip on the strap that was bolted to the wall. I wanted to use both hands to hold on, as if by holding very tightly to the stupid strap it would save me when the helicopter plummeted to earth. I used one hand because two hands looked cowardly. I was wearing a headset, sort of like ear protection for the shooting range, but with a microphone so you could talk above the teeth-rattling noise. I hadn't realized that most of a helicopter was clear, like being suspended in a great buzzing, vibrating bubble. I kept my eyes closed as much as possible.
   "Are you all right, Ms. Blake?" Lionel Bayard asked.
   The voice startled me. "Yeah, I'm fine."
   "You don't look well."
   "I don't like to fly," I said.
   He gave a weak smile. I don't think I was inspiring confidence in Lionel Bayard, lawyer and flunkie of Beadle, Beadle, Stirling, and Lowenstein. Lionel Bayard was a small, neat man with a tiny blond mustache that looked like it was as much facial hair as he would ever get. His triangular jaw was as smooth as my own. Maybe the mustache was glued on. His brown suit with a thin yellow tweed fit his body like a well-tailored glove. His thin tie was brown-and-yellow striped with a gold tie tack. The tie tack was monogrammed. His slender leather briefcase was monogrammed as well. Everything matched, down to his gold-tasseled loafers.
   Larry twisted in his seat. He was sitting beside the pilot. "You're really afraid of flying?" I could see his lips move, but all the sound came out of my headset; without them we'd never have been able to talk over the noise. He sounded amused.
   "Yes, Larry, I'm really afraid of flying." I hoped sarcasm traveled the headsets as clearly as amusement did.
   Larry laughed. Evidently, sarcasm traveled. Larry looked freshly scrubbed. He was dressed in his other blue suit, his white shirt—which was one of three he owned—and his second-best tie. His best tie had blood all over it. He was still in college, working weekends for us until he graduated. His short hair was the color of a surprised carrot. He was freckled and about my height, short, with pale blue eyes. He looked like a grown-up Opie.
   Bayard was working hard at not frowning at me. The effort showed enough that he shouldn't have bothered. "Are you sure you're up to this assignment?"
   I met his brown eyes. "You better hope I am, Mr. Bayard, because I'm all you got."
   "I am aware of your specialized skills, Ms. Blake. I spent the last twelve hours contacting every animating firm in the United States. Phillipa Freestone of the Resurrection Company told me she couldn't do what we wanted, that the only person in the country who might be able to do it was Anita Blake. Elan Vital in New Orleans told us the same thing. They mentioned John Burke but weren't confident that he could do all we wanted. We must have all the dead raised or it's useless to us."
   "Did my boss explain to you that I am not a hundred percent sure that I can do it?"
   Bayard blinked at me. "Mr. Vaughn seemed very confident that you could do what we asked."
   "Bert can be as confident as he wants. He doesn't have to raise this mess."
   "I realize the earthmoving equipment has complicated your task, Ms. Blake, but we did not do it deliberately."
   I let that go. I'd seen the pictures. They'd tried to cover it up. If the construction crew hadn't been local with some Bouvier sympathizers, they'd have plowed up the boneyard, poured some concrete, and voila, no evidence.
   "Whatever. I'll do what I can with what you've left me."
   "Would it have been that much easier if you had been brought in before the graves were disturbed?"
   "Yeah."
   He sighed. It vibrated through the headphones. "Then my apologies."
   I shrugged. "Unless you did it personally, you're not the one who owes me an apology."
   He shifted a little in his seat. "I did not order the digging. Mr. Stirling is on site."
   "TheMr. Stirling?" I asked.
   Bayard didn't seem to get the humor. "Yes, that Mr. Stirling." Or maybe he really expected me to know the name.
   "You always have a senior partner looking over your shoulder?"
   He used one finger to adjust his gold-framed glasses. It looked like an old gesture from a time before new glasses and designer suits. "With this much money at stake, Mr. Stirling thought he should be in the area in case there were more problems."
   "More problems?" I asked.
   He blinked at me rapidly, like a well-groomed rabbit. "The Bouvier matter."
   He was lying. "What else is going wrong with your little project?"
   "Whatever do you mean, Ms. Blake?" His manicured fingers smoothed down his tie.
   "You've had more problems than just the Bouviers." I made it a statement.
   "Any problems we may or may not be having, Ms. Blake, are not your concern. We hired you to raise the dead and establish the identity of said deceased persons. Beyond that, you have no duties here."
   "Have you ever raised a zombie, Mr. Bayard?"
   He blinked again. "Of course not." He sounded offended.
   "Then how do you know the other problems won't affect my job?"
   Small frown lines formed between his eyebrows. He was a lawyer and was earning a good living, but thinking seemed to be hard for him. Made you wonder where he'd graduated from.
   "I don't see how our little difficulties could affect your job."
   "You've just admitted you don't know anything about my job," I said. "How do you know what will affect it and what won't?" Alright, I was fishing. Bayard was probably right. The other problems probably wouldn't affect me, but you never know. I don't like being kept in the dark. And I don't like being lied to, not even by omission.
   "I think Mr. Stirling would have to make the call about whether you are enlightened or not."
   "Not senior enough to make the decision," I said.
   "No," Bayard said, "I am not."
   Geez, some people you can't even needle. I glanced at Larry. He shrugged. "Looks like we're going to land."
   I glanced out at the rapidly growing land. We were in the middle of the Ozark Mountains, hovering over a blasted scar of reddish naked earth. The construction site, I presume.
   The ground swelled up to meet us. I closed my eyes and swallowed hard. The ride was almost over. I would not throw up this close to the ground. The ride was almost over. Almost over. Almost over. There was a bump that made me gasp.
   "We've landed," Larry said. "You can open your eyes now."
   I did. "You are enjoying the hell out of this, aren't you?"
   He grinned. "I don't get to see you out of your element often."
   The helicopter was surrounded by a fog of reddish dirt. The blades began to slow with a thick whump, whumpsound. As the blades stopped, the dirt settled down and we could see where we were.
   We were in a small, flat area between a cluster of mountains. It looked like it had once been a narrow valley, but bulldozers had widened it, flattened it, made it a landing pad. The earth was so red it looked like a river of rust. The mountain in front of the helicopter was one red mound. Heavy equipment and cars were clustered to the far side of the valley. Men were clustered around the equipment, shielding their eyes from the dust.
   When the blades came to a sliding stop, Bayard unbuckled his seat belt. I did, too. We lifted off the headsets and Bayard opened his door. I opened mine and found that the ground was farther away than you'd think. I had to expose a long line of thigh to touch the ground.
   The construction workers were appreciative. Whistles, catcalls, and one offer to check under my skirt. No, those weren't the exact words used.
   A tall man in a white hard hat strode towards us. He was wearing a pair of tan coveralls, but his dirt-covered shoes were Gucci and his tan was health-club perfect. A man and a woman followed at his back.
   The man looked like the real foreman. He was dressed in jeans and a work shirt with the sleeves rolled over muscular forearms. Not from racquetball or a little tennis, but from plain hard work.
   The woman wore the traditional skirt suit complete with little blousy tie at her throat. The suit was expensive, but was an unfortunate shade of puce that did nothing for the woman's auburn hair but did match the blush that she'd smeared on her cheeks. I checked her neckline, and yes, she did have a pale line just above her collar where the base had not been blended in. She looked like she'd been made up at clown school.
   She didn't look that young. You'd think someone somewhere would have clued her in to how bad she looked. Of course, I wasn't going to tell her either. Who was I to criticize?
   Stirling had the palest grey eyes I'd ever seen. The irises were only a few shades darker than the whites of his eyes. He stood there with his entourage behind him. He looked me up and down. He didn't seem to like what he saw. His strange eyes flicked to Larry in his cheap, wrinkled suit. Mr. Stirling frowned.
   Bayard came around, smoothing his jacket into place. "Mr. Stirling, this is Anita Blake. Ms. Blake, this is Raymond Stirling."
   He just stood there, looking at me like he was disappointed. The woman had a clipboard notebook, pen poised. Had to be his secretary. She looked worried, as if it was very important that Mr. Raymond Stirling like us.
   I was beginning not to care if he liked us or not. What I wanted to say was, "You got a problem?" What I said was, "Is there a problem, Mr. Stirling?" Bert would have been pleased.
   "You're not what I expected, Ms. Blake."
   "How so?"
   "Pretty, for one thing." It wasn't a compliment.
   "And?"
   He motioned at my outfit. "You're not dressed appropriately for the job."
   "Your secretary's wearing heels."
   "Ms. Harrison's attire is not your concern."
   "And my attire is none of yours."
   "Fair enough, but you're going to have a hell of time getting up that mountain in those shoes."
   "I've got a coverall and Nikes in my suitcase."
   "I don't think I like your attitude, Ms. Blake."
   "I know I don't like yours," I said.
   The foreman behind him was having trouble not smiling. His eyes were getting shiny with the effort. Ms. Harrison looked a little scared. Bayard had moved to one side, closer to Stirling. Making clear whose side he was on. Coward.
   Larry moved closer to me.
   "Do you want this job, Ms. Blake?"
   "Not enough to take grief about it, no."
   Ms. Harrison looked like she'd swallowed a bug. A big, nasty, squirming bug. I think I'd missed my cue to fall down and worship at her boss's feet.
   The foreman coughed behind his hand. Stirling glanced at him, then back to me. "Are you always this arrogant?" he asked.
   I sighed. "I prefer the word 'confident' to 'arrogant,' but I'll tell you what. I'll tone it down if you will."
   "I am so sorry, Mr. Stirling," Bayard said. "I apologize. I had no idea . . ."
   "Shut up, Lionel," Stirling said.
   Lionel shut up.
   Stirling was looking at me with his strange pale eyes. He nodded. "Agreed, Ms. Blake." He smiled. "I'll tone it down."
   "Great," I said.
   "All right, Ms. Blake, let's go up to the top and see if you're really as good as you think you are."
   "I can look at the graveyard, but until full dark I can't do anything else."
   He frowned and glanced at Bayard. "Lionel." That one word had a lot of heat in it. Anger looking for a target. He'd stop picking on me, but Lionel was fair game.
   "I did fax you a memo, sir, as soon as I realized that Ms. Blake would be unable to help us until after dark."
   Good man. When in doubt, cover your ass with paper.
   Stirling glared at him. Bayard looked apologetic but he stood his ground, safe behind his memo.
   "I called Beau and had him bring everybody down here on the understanding we could get some work done today." His gaze was very steady on Bayard. Lionel wilted just a little; evidently one memo was not protection enough.
   "Mr. Stirling, even if I can raise the graveyard in one night, and that's a big if, what if the dead are all Bouviers? What if it is their family plot? My understanding is that construction will stop until you rebuy the land."
   "They don't want to sell," Beau said.
   Stirling glared at him. The foreman just smiled softly.
   "Are you saying that the entire project is off if this is the Bouvier family plot?" I asked Bayard. "Why, Lionel, you didn't tell me that."
   "There was no need for you to know," Bayard said.
   "Why wouldn't they want to sell the land for a million dollars?" Larry asked. It was a good question.
   Stirling looked at him like he'd just appeared out of thin air. Evidently, the flunkies weren't supposed to talk. "Magnus and Dorcas Bouvier have only a restaurant, called Bloody Bones. It is nothing. I have no idea why they wouldn't want to be millionaires."
   "Bloody Bones? What kind of name is that for a restaurant?" Larry asked.
   I shrugged. "It doesn't exactly say bon appetit." I looked at Stirling. He looked angry but that was all. I would have bet a million dollars that he knew exactly why the Bouviers didn't want to sell. But it didn't show on his face. His cards were close to his chest and unreadable.
   I turned to Bayard. There was an unhealthy flush to his cheeks, and he avoided my gaze. I'd play poker with Bayard any day. But not in front of his boss.
   "Fine. I'll change into something more bulky and we'll go take a look." The pilot handed out my suitcase. The coverall and shoes were on top.
   Larry came up to me. "Gee, I wished I'd thought of the coverall. This suit's not going to survive the trip."
   I pulled out two pairs of coveralls. "Be prepared," I said.
   He grinned. "Thanks."
   I shrugged. "One good thing about being nearly the same size." I slipped off the black jacket, which left the gun in plain sight.
   "Ms. Blake," Stirling said. "Why are you armed?"
   I sighed. I was tired of Raymond. I hadn't even gone up the hill and I didn't want to go. The last thing I wanted to do was stand here and debate whether I needed a gun. The red blouse was short-sleeved. Visual aids are always better than lectures.
   I walked over to him with my arms bent outward, exposing the inside of both forearms. There's a rather neat knife scar on my right arm, nothing too dramatic. My left arm is a mess. It had only been a little over a month since a shapeshifting leopard had opened my arm. A nice doctor had stitched it back together, but there is only so much you can do with claw marks. The cross-shaped burn scar that some inventive vampire servants had put on me was now a little crooked because of the claws. The mound of scar tissue at the bend of my arm where a vampire had bitten through the flesh and gnawed the bone dribbled white scars like water.
   "Jesus," Beau said.
   Stirling looked a touch pale but he held up well, like he'd seen worse. Bayard looked green. Ms. Harrison paled so that the makeup floated on her suddenly pale skin like impressionist water lilies.
   "I don't go anywhere unarmed, Mr. Stirling. Live with it, because I have to."
   He nodded, eyes very serious. "Fine, Ms. Blake. Is your assistant armed as well?"
   "No," I said.
   He nodded again. "Fine. Change, and when you're ready we'll go up."
   Larry was zipping up his coverall when I walked back. "I could have been armed, you know," he said.
   "You brought your gun?" I asked.
   He nodded.
   "Unloaded in your suitcase?"
   "Just like you told me."
   "Good." I let it go. Larry wanted to be a vampire executioner as well as an animator, which meant he needed to know how to use a gun. A gun with silver-plated bullets that could slow a vampire down. We'd work up to shotguns, which could take out a head and heart from a relatively safe distance. Beat the hell out of staking.
   I'd gotten him a carry permit on the condition he didn't carry it concealed until I thought he was a good enough shot not to blow a hole in himself or me. I'd gotten him the permit mainly so we could carry it around in the car and go to the range in any spare moments.
   The coverall went over the skirt like magic. I took off the heels and put the Nikes on. I left the coverall unzipped enough that I could go for the gun if needed, and I was set to go.
   "Are you going up with us, Mr. Stirling?"
   "Yes," he said.
   "Then lead the way," I said.
   He walked past me, glancing at the coveralls. Or maybe visualizing the gun under it. Beau started to follow but Stirling said, "No, I'll take her up alone."
   Silence among the three flunkies. I'd expected Ms. Harrison to stay behind in her high-heeled pumps, but I'd been sure the two men would come along. So, from the looks on their faces, had they.
   "Wait a minute. You said 'her.' You want Larry to wait down here, too?"
   "Yes."
   I shook my head. "He's in training. You can't learn if you don't see it done."
   "Will you be doing anything that he needs to see today?"
   I thought about that for a minute. "I guess not."
   "I do get to come up after dark?" Larry asked.
   "You'll get to see the down and dirty, Larry. Don't worry."
   "Of course," Stirling said. "I have no problem with your associate doing his job."
   "Why can't he come along now?" I asked.
   "At the price we're paying, humor me, Ms. Blake."
   He was being strangely polite, so I nodded. "Okay."
   "Mr. Stirling," Bayard said, "are you sure you should go up alone?"
   "Why ever not, Lionel?"
   Bayard opened his mouth, closed it, then said, "No reason, Mr. Stirling."
   Beau shrugged. "I'll tell the men to go home for the day." He started to turn away, then stopped. "Do you want the crew back tomorrow?"
   Stirling looked at me. "Ms. Blake?"
   I shook my head. "I don't know yet."
   "What's your best guess?" he asked.
   I looked over at the waiting men. "Do they get paid whether they show up or not?"
   "Only if they show up," Stirling said.
   "Then no work tomorrow. I can't guarantee they'll have anything to do."
   Stirling nodded. "You heard her, Beau."
   Beau looked at me, then back to Stirling. He had a strange took on his face, half amused, half something I couldn't read. "Anything you say, Mr. Stirling, Ms. Blake." He turned and strode off over the raw ground, waving at the men as he moved. The men began to leave long before he got to them.
   "What do you want us to do, Mr. Stirling?" Bayard asked.
   "Wait for us."
   "The helicopter, too? It has to leave before dark."
   "Will we be down before dark, Ms. Blake?"
   "Sure. I'm just going to take a quick look around. I'll need to get back in here after dark, though."
   "I'll give you a car and driver for your stay."
   "Thanks."
   "Shall we, Ms. Blake?" He motioned me forward. Something had changed in the way he was treating me. I couldn't put my finger on it, but I didn't like it.
   "After you, Mr. Stirling."
   He nodded and took the lead, striding over the red earth in his thousand-dollar shoes.
   Larry and I exchanged glances. "I won't be long, Larry."
   "Us flunkies aren't going anywhere," he said.
   I smiled. He smiled. I shrugged. Why did Stirling want it to be just the two of us? I watched the senior partner's broad back as he marched across the torn earth. I followed him. I'd find out what the secrecy was all about when we got to the top. I was betting I wouldn't like what I'd hear. Just me and the big cheese on top of the mountain with the dead. What could be better?
   
   
4
   The view from the top of the mountain was worth the hike. Trees stretched out and out to the horizon. We stood in a circle of forest that showed no hand of man as far as the eye could see. That first blush of green was more pronounced here. But the thing you noticed most was the lavender color of redbuds through the dark trees. Redbuds are such delicate things that if they came out in the height of summer they'd get lost in all the leaves and flowers, but here with nothing but naked trees the redbuds were eye-catching. A few dogwoods had started to bloom, adding their white to the lavender. Spring in the Ozarks, ah.
   "The view is magnificent," I said.
   "Yes," Stirling said, "it is, isn't it?"
   My black Nikes were covered in rust-colored dirt. The raw, wounded earth filled the mountaintop. This hilltop had probably been just as pretty as the rest once. There was an arm bone sticking out of the dirt next to my feet. The lower arm, judging from the length. The bones were slender and still connected by a dry remnant of tissue.
   Once I'd seen one bone, my eyes found more to look at. It was like one of those magic-eye pictures where you stare and stare and suddenly see what's there. I saw them all, studding the ground like hands reaching up through a river of rust.
   There were a few splintered coffins, their broken halves spilling out into the air, but mostly it was just bones. I knelt and put my hands palm down on the ruined earth. I tried to get some sense of the dead. There was something faint and far-off like a whiff of perfume, but it was no good. In the bright spring sunlight I couldn't work my . . . magic. Raising the dead isn't evil, but it does require darkness. I don't know why.
   I stood up, brushing my hands against the coverall, trying to clean the red dust away. Stirling was standing at the edge of the naked dirt staring off into space. There was a distance to his gaze that said he wasn't admiring the trees.
   He spoke without looking at me, "I can't bully you, can I, Ms. Blake?"
   "Nope," I said.
   He turned to me with a smile, but it left his eyes empty, haunted. "I invested everything I had into this project. Not just my money, but clients' money. Do you understand what I am saying, Ms. Blake?"
   "If the bodies up here are Bouviers, you're screwed."
   "How eloquently you put it."
   "Why are we up here alone, Mr. Stirling? Why all the skullduggery?"
   He took a deep breath of the gentle air and said, "I want you to say they aren't Bouvier ancestors even if they are." He looked at me when he said it. Watched my face.
   I smiled and shook my head. "I won't lie for you."
   "Can't you make the zombies lie?"
   "The dead are very honest, Mr. Stirling. They don't lie."
   He took a step towards me, face very sincere. "My entire future is riding on you, Ms. Blake."
   "No, Mr. Stirling, your future rides on the dead at your feet. Whatever comes out of their mouths will decide it."
   He nodded. "I suppose that is fair."
   "Fair or not, it's the truth."
   He nodded again. Some light had gone out of his face, like someone had turned down the power. The lines in his face were suddenly clearer. He aged ten years in a few seconds. When he met my gaze, his dramatic eyes were woeful.
   "I'll give you a piece of the profits, Ms. Blake. You could be a billionaire in a few years."
   "You know bribing won't work."
   "I knew it wouldn't work just a few minutes after we met, but I had to try."
   "You really do believe this is the Bouvier family plot, don't you?" I asked.
   He took a deep breath and walked away from me to gaze off at the trees. He wasn't going to answer my question, but he didn't have to. He wouldn't be so desperate if he didn't believe he was screwed.
   "Why won't the Bouviers sell?"
   He glanced back at me. "I don't know."
   "Look, Stirling, there are just the two of us up here, nobody to impress, no witnesses. You know why they won't sell. Just tell me."
   "I don't know, Ms. Blake," he said.
   "You're a control freak, Mr. Stirling. You've overseen every detail of this deal. You have personally seen that every 'i' was dotted, every 't' crossed. This is your baby. You know everything about the Bouviers and their problem. Just tell me."
   He just looked at me. His pale eyes were opaque, empty as a window with no one home. He knew, but he wasn't going to tell me. Why?
   "What doyou know about the Bouviers?"
   "The locals think they're witches. They do a little fortune-telling, a few harmless spells." There was something about the way he said it, too casual, too offhand. Made me want to meet the Bouviers in person.
   "They any good at magic?" I asked.
   "How am I supposed to know?"
   I shrugged. "Just curious. Is there a reason why it had to be this mountain?"
   "Look at it." He spread his arms wide. "It's perfect. It is perfect."
   "It is a great view," I said. "But wouldn't the view be equally good over on that mountaintop? Why did you have to have this one? Why did you have to have the Bouviers' mountain?"
   His shoulders slumped; then he straightened and glared at me. "I wanted this land, and I got it."
   "You got it. Trick is, Raymond, can you keep it?"
   "If you are not going to help me, then don't taunt me. And don't call me Raymond."
   I opened my mouth to say something else and my beeper went off. I fished under the coverall for it, and checked the number. "Shit," I said.
   "What's wrong?"
   "I'm being paged by the police. I've got to get to a phone."
   He frowned at me. "Why would the police be calling you?"
   So much for being a household name. "I'm the legal vampire executioner for a three-state area. I'm attached to the Regional Preternatural Investigation Team."
   He was looking very steadily at me. "You surprise me, Ms. Blake. Not many people do that."
   "I need to find a phone."
   "I have a portable with a battery pack at the bottom of this damned hill."
   "Great. I'm ready to head down if you are."
   He did one last turn, taking in that breath-stealing billion-dollar view. "Yes, I'm ready to go down."
   It was an interesting choice of words, a Freudian slip you might say. Stirling had wanted this land for some perverse reason. Maybe because he was told he couldn't have it. Some people are like that. The more you say no, the more they want you. It reminded me of a certain master vampire I knew.
   Tonight I'd walk the land, visit with the dead. It would probably be tomorrow night before I actually tried to raise them. If the police matter was pressing enough, it might be longer. I hoped it wasn't pressing. Pressing usually meant dead bodies. When the monsters are involved, it's never just one dead body. One way or another, the dead multiply.
   
   
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Zodijak Taurus
Pol Žena
Poruke 18761
Zastava Srbija
5
   We got back to the valley. The construction crew was gone except for Beau the foreman. Ms. Harrison and Bayard stood next to the helicopter, as if huddling against the wilderness. Larry and the pilot stood to one side, smoking, sharing that comradery of all people who are determined to blacken their lungs.
   Stirling walked towards them all, his stride firm and confident once more. He'd left his doubts on top of the mountain. or so it seemed. He was the impervious senior partner once more. Illusion is all.
   "Bayard, get the phone. Ms. Blake needs to use it."
   Bayard gave a startled little jump, like he'd been caught doing something he shouldn't have. Ms. Harrison looked a little flushed. Was there romance in the air? And was that not allowed? No fraternizing among the flunkies.
   Bayard ran off across the dirt towards the last car. He fetched what looked like a small, black leather backpack with a handle. He pulled a phone out and handed it to me. It looked like an antennaed walkie-talkie.
   Larry walked over smelling of smoke. "What's up?"
   "I got beeped."
   "Bert?"
   I shook my head. "Police." I walked a little ways from our group. Larry was polite enough to stay with them, though he didn't have to. I dialed Dolph's number. Detective Sergeant Rudolf Storr was head of the Regional Preternatural Investigation Team.
   He answered on the second ring. "Anita?"
   "Yeah, Dolph, it's me. What's up?"
   "Three dead bodies."
   "Three? Shit," I said.
   "Yeah," he said.
   "I can't be there soon, Dolph."
   "Yes, you can," he said.
   There was something in his voice. "What's that supposed to mean?"
   "The victims are right near you."
   "Near Branson?"
   "Twenty-five minutes east of Branson," he said.
   "I'm already forty miles from Branson in the middle of freaking nowhere."
   "The middle of nowhere is where this one is," Dolph said.
   "Are you guys flying up?" I asked.
   "No, we got a vampire victim in town."
   "Jesus, are the other three vamp victims?"
   "I don't think so," he said.
   "What do you mean, you don't think so?" I asked.
   "Missouri State Highway Patrol has this one. Sergeant Freemont is the investigator in charge. She doesn't think it was a vampire because the bodies are cut up. Pieces of the bodies are missing. I had to do a lot of tap dancing to get that much information out of her. Sergeant Freemont seems convinced that RPIT is going to come in and steal all the glory. She was particularly worried about our headline-stealing pet zombie queen."
   "It's the pet part that I mind the most," I said. "But she sounds charming."
   "I'll bet she's even more charming in person," Dolph said.
   "And I get to meet her?"
   "Given the choice between a large chunk of the squad coming down later and just you right now, she chose you. I think she sees you alone, without us to back you up, as the lesser evil."
   "Nice to be the lesser evil for a change," I said.
   "You might get upgraded," Dolph said. "She doesn't know you too well yet."
   "Thanks for the vote of confidence. Let me test my understanding here. None of you are coming up to the scene?"
   "Not right away. You know we're shorthanded until Zerbrowski gets back on duty."
   "What does the Missouri State Highway Patrol think about a civilian helping them in a murder investigation?"
   "I made it clear that you are a valuable member of my squad."
   "Thanks for the compliment, but I still don't have a badge to flash."
   "You may if that new federal law goes into effect," Dolph said.
   "Don't remind me."
   "Don't you want to be a federal marshal?" His voice was very mild. Nah, amused.
   "I agreed they should license us, but giving us what amounts to federal marshal status is ridiculous."
   "You could handle it."
   "But who else? John Burke with the power of the law behind him? Give me a break."
   "It won't get passed, Anita. The pro-vampire lobby is too strong."
   "From your lips to God's ear. Unless they revoke the need for court orders of execution, it won't make killing them any easier, and they won't do that. I've already gone out of state to execute vamps. I don't need no stinking badge."
   Dolph laughed. "If you run into trouble, give a yell."
   "I really don't like this, Dolph. I'm out here investigating a murder without any official status."
   "See, you do need a badge." I heard him sigh over the phone. "Look, Anita, I wouldn't leave you solo if we didn't have problems of our own. I've got a body on the ground here. When I can, I'll send somebody. Hell, I'd like you to come take a look at our corpse. You're our resident monster expert."
   "Give me some details and I'll try to play Kreskin."
   "Male, early twenties, rigor hasn't set in."
   "Where's the body?"
   "His apartment."
   "How'd you get there so soon?"
   "Neighbor heard a fight, called 911. They called us."
   "Give me his name."
   "Fredrick Michael Summers, Freddy Summers."
   "He got any old vampire bites on his body? Healed bites?"
   "Yeah, quite a few. Looks like a damn pincushion. How'd you know?"
   "What's the first rule of a homicide?" I said. "You check the nearest and dearest. If he had a vamp lover, there'd be healed bite marks. The more of them, the longer the relationship has gone on. No vamp can bite a victim three times within a month without running the risk of killing them and raising them as a vamp. You can have different vamps bite somebody, but that would make Freddy a vampire junkie. Ask the neighbors if there were a lot of different guys or girls going in and out at night."
   "It never occurred to me that a vampire could be someone's nearest and dearest," Dolph said.
   "Legally, they're people. Means they get to have sweethearts, too."
   "I'll check the bite radiuses," Dolph said, "If they match one vamp, a lover; different ones, and our boy was doing groups."
   "Hope for a lover," I said. "If it's all one vamp, he might even rise from the dead."
   "Most vamps know enough to slit the throat or take the head," he said.
   "Doesn't sound well planned. Crime of passion, maybe."
   "Maybe. Freemont is holding the bodies for you. Eagerly awaiting your expertise."
   "I bet."
   "Don't bust Freemont's balls on this, Anita."
   "I won't start anything, Dolph."
   "Be polite," he said.
   "Always," I said in my mildest voice.
   He sighed. "Try to remember that the staties may never have seen bodies with pieces missing."
   It was my turn to sigh. "I'll be good, scout's honor. Do you have directions?" I got a small notebook with a pen stuck in its spiral top out of a pocket of the coverall. I'd started carrying notebooks just for such occasions.
   He gave me what Freemont had given him. "If you see anything fishy at the crime scene, keep the scene intact and I'll try to send some people down. Otherwise, look over the victim, give the staties your opinion, and let them do their job."
   "You really think Freemont would let me close up her shop and force her to wait for RPIT?"
   Silence for a second; then, "Do the best you can, Anita. Call if we can do anything from this end."
   "Yeah, sure."
   "I'd rather have you on a murder than a lot of the cops I know," Dolph said.
   That was a very big compliment coming from Dolph. He is the world's ultimate policeman. "Thanks, Dolph."
   I was talking to empty air. Dolph had hung up. He was always doing that. I hit the button, turning the phone off, and just stood there for a minute.
   I didn't like being out here in unfamiliar territory with unfamiliar police, and partially eaten victims. Hanging around with the Spook Squad legitimized me. I'd even pulled that "I'm with the squad" at crime scenes. I had a little ID badge that clipped to my clothes. It wasn't a police badge, but it did look official. But pretending on home turf, where I knew I could run to Dolph if I got in trouble for it, was one thing; out here with no backup was another story.
   The police have absolutely no sense of humor about civilians meddling in their homicide cases. Can't really blame them. I wasn't really a civilian, but I had no official status. No clout. Maybe the new law would be a good thing.
   I shook my head. Theoretically, I'd be able to go into any police station in the country and demand help, or involve myself uninvited in any case. Theoretically. In the real world, the cops would hate it. I'd be as welcome as a wet dog on a cold night. Not federal, not local, and there weren't enough licensed vamp executioners in the country to fill a dozen slots. I could only name eight of us; two of those were retired.
   Most of them specialized in vampires. I was one of the few who would look at other types of kills. There was talk of the new law being expanded to include all preternatural kills. Most of the vampire executioners would be out of their depth. It was an informal apprenticeship. I had a college degree in preternatural biology, but that wasn't common. Most of the rogue lycanthropes, occasional trolls run amok, and other more solid beasties were taken out by bounty hunters. But the new law wouldn't give special powers to bounty hunters. Vampire executioners, most of them, worked very strictly within the confines of the law. Or maybe we just had better press.
   I'd been screaming about vamps being monsters for years. But until a senator's daughter got herself attacked just a few weeks ago, nobody did shit. Now suddenly it's a cause celebre. The legitimate vampire community delivered the supposed attacker in a sack to the senator's home. They left his head and torso intact, which meant even without arms and legs he wouldn't die. He confessed to the attack. He'd been the new dead and just got carried away on a date, like any other twenty-one-year-old red-blooded male. Yeah, right.
   The local hitter, Gerald Mallory, had done the execution. He's based out of Washington, D.C. He has to be in his sixties now. He still uses a stake and hammer. Can you believe it?
   There had been some talk that cutting off their arms and legs would allow us to keep vamps in jail. This was vetoed mainly on the grounds of cruel and unusual punishment. It also wouldn't have worked, not for the really old vampires. It isn't just their bodies that are dangerous.
   Besides, I didn't believe in torture. If cutting someone's arms and legs off and putting them in a little box for all eternity isn't torture, I don't know what is.
   I walked back to the group. I handed the phone to Bayard. "I hope it isn't bad news," he said.
   "Not personally," I said.
   He looked puzzled. Not an uncommon occurrence for Lionel.
   I talked directly to Stirling. "I've got to go to a crime scene near here. Is there someplace to rent a car?"
   He shook his head. "I said you'd have a car and driver while you were here. I meant it."
   "Thanks. I'm not so sure about the driver, though. This is a crime scene they won't want civilians hanging around."
   "A car, then; no driver. Lionel, see that Ms. Blake gets anything she wants."
   "Yes, sir."
   "I'll meet you back here at full dark, Ms. Blake."
   "I'll be here at dusk if I can, Mr. Stirling, but the police matter takes precedence."
   He frowned at me. "You are working for me, Ms. Blake."
   "Yes, but I'm also a licensed vampire executioner. Cooperation with the local police takes precedence."
   "So it's a vampire kill?"
   "I am not free to share police information with anyone," I said. But I cursed myself. By bringing up the word "vampire," I'd started a rumor that would grow with the telling. Damn.
   "I can't leave the investigation early just to come look at your mountain. I'll be here when I can. I'll definitely look the dead over before daylight, so you won't really lose any time."
   He didn't like it, but he let it go. "Fine, Ms. Blake. I will wait here for you even if it takes all night. I'm curious about what you do. I've never seen a zombie raised before."
   "I won't raise the dead tonight, Mr. Stirling. We've been over that."
   "Of course." He just looked at me. For some reason it was hard to meet his pale eyes. I made myself meet his gaze and didn't look away, but it was an effort. It was like he was willing me to do something, trying to compel me with his eyes like a vampire. But a vampire, even a little one, he was not.
   He blinked and walked away without saying another word. Ms. Harrison toddled after him in her high heels on the uneven ground. Beau nodded at me and followed. I guess they'd all come in the same car. Or maybe Beau was Stirling's driver. What a joyous job that must be.
   "We'll fly you to the hotel where we booked your rooms. You can unpack, and I'll have a car brought around for you," Bayard said.
   "No unpacking, just a car. Murder scenes age fast," I said.
   He nodded. "As you like. If you'll get back into the helicopter, we'll be off."
   It wasn't until I was taking off the coveralls and repacking both of them that I realized I could have gone with Mr. Stirling. I could have driven out of here, instead of flying. Shit.
   
   
6
   Bayard had gotten us a black Jeep with black-tinted windows and more bells and whistles than I could even guess at. I'd been worried they'd saddle me with a Cadillac or something equally ridiculous. Bayard had given me the keys with the comment, "Some of these roads are not even paved. I thought you might need something more substantial than just a car."
   I resisted the urge to pat him on the head and say "Good flunkie." Hell, he'd made a great choice. Maybe he'd make full partner someday after all.
   The trees made long, thin shadows across the road. In the valleys between mountains, the sunlight had softened to a late-afternoon haze. We might make it back to the graveyard by full dark.
   Yes, we. Larry sat beside me in his wrinkled blue suit. The cops wouldn't mind his cheap suit. My outfit, on the other hand, might raise a few eyebrows. There aren't many female cops out in the boonies. And fewer who wear short red skirts. I was beginning to really regret my choice of clothes. Insecure: who, me?
   Larry's face was shiny with excitement. His eyes sparkled like a kid's on Christmas Day. He was drumming his fingers on the armrest. Nervous tension.
   "How you doing?"
   "I've never been to a murder scene before," he said.
   "There's always a first time."
   "Thanks for letting me come along."
   "Just remember the rules."
   He laughed. "Don't touch anything. Don't walk through the blood. Don't speak unless spoken to." He frowned. "Why the last? I understand all the others, but why can't I talk?"
   "I'm a member of the Regional Preternatural Investigation Team. You're not. If you go around saying golly gee whiz a dead body, they may catch on."
   "I won't embarrass you." He sounded insulted; then a thought occurred to him. "Are we impersonating police officers?"
   "No. Keep repeating I'm a member of the Spook Squad, I'm a member of the Spook Squad, I'm a member of the Spook Squad."
   "But I'm not," he said.
   "That's why I don't want you talking."
   "Oh," he said. He settled back into his seat, a little of the shine dimming around the edges. "I've never actually seen a freshly dead body before."
   "You raise the dead for a living, Larry. You see corpses all the time."
   "It's not the same thing, Anita." He sounded grumpy.
   I glanced at him. He had slumped down as far into the seat as the seat belt would allow, arms crossed over his chest. We were at the crest of a hill. A band of sunlight fell like an explosion over his orange hair. His blue eyes looked translucent for a moment as we passed from light into shadow. He looked all scrunched and sulky.
   "Have you ever seen a dead person outside of a funeral or a freshly raised zombie?"
   He was quiet for a minute. I concentrated on driving, letting the silence fill the Jeep. It was a comfortable silence, at least for me.
   "No," he said at last. He sounded like a little boy who had been told he couldn't go outside and play.
   "I'm not always good around fresh bodies either," I said.
   He looked at me sort of sideways. "What do you mean?"
   It was my turn to scrunch into the seat. I fought the urge and sat up straighter. "I threw up on a murder victim once." Even saying it very fast, it was still embarrassing.
   Larry scooted up in his seat, grinning. "You're just telling me that to make me feel better."
   "Would I tell a story like that about myself if it wasn't true?" I asked.
   "You really threw up on a body at a crime scene?"
   "You don't have to sound so happy about it," I said.
   He giggled. I swear he giggled. "I don't think I'll throw up on the body."
   I shrugged. "Three bodies, with parts missing. Don't make promises you can't keep."
   He swallowed loud enough for me to hear it. "What do they mean, parts missing."
   "We'll find out," I said. "This isn't part of your job description, Larry. I get paid for helping the cops; you don't."
   "Will it be awful?" His voice was low, uncertain.
   Chopped-up bodies. Was he kidding? "I don't know until we get there."
   "But what do you think?" He was staring at me very earnestly.
   I glanced back at the road, then at Larry. He looked very solemn, like a relative who'd asked the doctor for the truth. If he would be brave, I could be truthful. "Yeah, it'll be awful."
   
   
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7
   It was awful. Larry had managed to stagger from the crime scene before he threw up. The only comfort I could offer him was that he wasn't the only one. Some of the cops were looking a little green around the edges, too. I hadn't thrown up yet, but I was keeping it as an option for later.
   The bodies lay in a small hollow near the base of a hill. The ground was nearly knee-deep with leaves. Nobody rakes in the woods. The drought had dried the leaves to a fine, biting crunch underfoot. The hollow was ringed by naked trees and bushes with branches like thin brown whips. When the leaves came out, the hollow would be hidden on all sides.
   The body nearest to me was a blond man with hair cut so short it looked like an old-fashioned butch. Blood pooled around the eyeballs, flowing from them down the face. There was something wrong with the face, besides the eyes, but I couldn't quite figure out what. I knelt in the dry leaves, glad that the leg of the coverall was protecting my hose from the leaves and the blood. Blood had pooled to either side of the boy's face, soaking into the leaves. The blood had dried to a tacky maroon substance. It looked like the teenager's eyes had been crying dark tears.
   I touched the tip of my gloved fingers to the blond's chin. It moved in a boneless, wiggling movement that chins were not meant to do.
   I swallowed hard and tried to take shallow breaths. I was glad it was still spring. If the bodies had been sitting this long in full summer heat, they'd have been ripe in more ways than one. Cool weather was a blessing.
   I put my hands in the leaves and bent from the waist in an awkward sort of push-up motion. I was trying to see under his chin without moving the body again. There, nearly lost in the blood on the neck, was a puncture mark. A puncture mark wider than my outspread hand. I'd seen knife wounds and claw marks that could make a similar wound, but it was too big for a knife and too clean for a claw. Besides, what the hell had a claw that big? It looked like a massive blade had been shoved under the blond's chin, close enough to the front of his face to slice the eyes up from inside the head. That's why the eyes were bleeding, but still looked intact. The sword had nearly pulled the blond's face off his skull.
   I ran my gloved fingers over the blond's short hair and found what I was looking for. The tip of the sword, if that's what it was, had come out the top of his head. Then the blade had been withdrawn and the blond had dropped to the leaves. Dead, I hoped, but dying I was sure of.
   His legs were missing just below the hip joint. There was almost no blood where the legs had been bisected. They'd been cut off after he'd died. Small blessing, that. He'd died relatively quickly, and had not been tortured. There were worse ways to die.
   I knelt by the stubs of his legs. The left bone had been cut clean with one blow. The right bone had splintered, as if the sword struck from the left side, cut the left cleanly, but only got a piece of the right leg. A second blow had been needed to sever the right leg.
   Why take the legs? A trophy? Maybe. Serial killers took trophies, clothing, personal items, a body part. Maybe a trophy?
   The other two boys were shorter, neither of them over five feet. Younger maybe, maybe not. They were both small and dark-haired, slender. Probably the kind of boys who looked pretty rather than handsome but, frankly, it was hard to tell.
   One lay on his back almost opposite from the blond. One brown eye stared up at the sky, glassy and immobile, somehow unreal like the eyes of a taxidermy animal. The rest of his face was sliced in two huge gaping furrows, as if the tip of the sword had been used coming and going like a backhand slap. The third slice had taken out his neck. It was a very clean wound; they all were. The damn sword, or whatever it was, was incredibly sharp. But it was more than a good blade. No human could have been fast enough to take them all without a struggle. But most beasties that will kill a human being won't pick up a weapon to do it.
   A lot of things will claw us apart, or eat us alive, but the list of preternatural beings that will cut us up with weapons is pretty small. A troll may tear up a tree and whap you to death, but it won't use a blade. Not only had this thing used a sword, not a common weapon, but it had some skill.
   The blows to the face hadn't killed the boy. Why didn't the other two run? If the blond was killed first, why didn't this one run? Nothing was fast enough that it could take out three teenage boys with a sword before any of them could run. These were not quick blows. Whoever, or whatever, had done this had taken some time with each kill. But they all acted as if they'd been hit by surprise.
   The boy had fallen onto his back in the leaves, hands clutching at his throat. The leaves had been scuffed away where his feet had kicked them. I took a shallow breath. I didn't want to probe the wounds, but I was beginning to have a nasty idea.
   I knelt and traced the neck wound with my fingertips. The edges of the skin were so smooth. But it was still human flesh, human skin, blood dried to a thick stickiness. I swallowed hard and closed my eyes and let my fingers search for what I thought I'd find. The edge of the wound had two lips, starting about midway. I opened my eyes and traced the double wound with my fingers. My eyes still couldn't see it. There was too much blood. Once the wound was clean, you'd see it, but not here, not like this. The neck had been sliced twice, deeply. One cut was enough to kill. Why twice? Because they were hiding something on the neck.
   Fang marks, maybe? Being killed by a vampire would explain why he hadn't tried to crawl away. He'd just lain in the leaves and kicked until he died.
   I stared at the last teenager. He was crumpled on his right side. Blood had pooled under him. He was so cut up that at first my eyes didn't want to make sense of what I was seeing. I wanted to look away before my brain caught up to my eyes, but I didn't.
   Where the face should have been was just a ripped, gapping hole. The creature had done the same thing to this one as to the blond, but it had been more thorough. The front of the skull had been ripped away. I glanced around, searching the leaves for the piece of bone and flesh, but didn't see it. I had to look back then, at the body. I knew what I was looking at now. I liked it better when I didn't.
   The back of the skull was full of blood and gore, like a gruesome cup, but the brain was gone. The blade had sliced him open across the chest and stomach. His intestines spilled out in a thick, rubbery mass. What I thought was his stomach had spilled out from the wound like a balloon half-inflated. The left leg had been chopped off at the hip joint. The ragged cloth of his jeans clung to the hole like the petals of an unopened flower. The left arm had been ripped out just below the elbow. The bone of the humerus was dark with dried blood, sticking up at an odd angle as if the entire arm had been broken at the shoulder and no longer moved. More violent. Had this one struggled a little?
   My eyes flicked back to his face. I didn't want to look again, but I hadn't really examined it. There was something horribly personal about disfiguring a person's face. If it had been humanly possible to do all this, I'd have said check their nearest and dearest. As a general rule, only people who love you will cut up your face. It implies passion that you can't get from strangers. One exception is serial killers. They're working through a pathology in which the victims can represent someone else. Someone that the killer has a personal passion for. When cutting up the faces of strangers they'd be symbolically cutting up, say, a hated father figure.
   The fine bones of the boy's sinus cavities had been cracked open. The maxillary was gone, making the face look incomplete. Part of the mandible was still there, but it had been cracked apart back to the rear molars. Some trick of blood flow had left two teeth white and clean. One of the teeth had a filling in it. I stared at that ruined face. I'd been doing pretty good at thinking of it as so much meat, just dead meat. But dead meat didn't get cavities, didn't go to dentists. It was suddenly a teenager, or maybe even younger. I was only judging on height and the apparent age of the other two. Maybe this one with no face was a child, a tall child. A little boy.
   The spring afternoon wavered around me. I took a deep breath to steady myself, and it was a mistake. I got a big whiff of bowels and stale death. I scrambled for the side of the hollow. Never throw up on the murder victims. Pisses off the cops.
   I fell to my knees at the top of the small rise where all the cops were gathered. I hadn't exactly fallen so much as thrown myself down. I took deep, cleansing breaths of the cool air. It helped. A small breeze was blowing up here, thinning out the smell of death. It helped more.
   Cops of all shapes and sizes were huddled at the top of the rise. Nobody was spending more time than they had to down among the dead. There were ambulances waiting on the distant road, but everybody else had had their piece of the bodies. They had been videotaped and trooped through with the crime scene technicians. Everybody had done their job, except me.
   "Are you going to be sick, Ms. Blake?" The voice was that of Sergeant Freemont, Division of Drug and Crime Control, DD/CC—affectionately known as D2C2. Her tone was gentle but disapproving. I understood the tone. We were the only two women at the crime scene, which meant we were playing with the big boys. You had to be tougher than the men, stronger, better, or they held it against you. Or they treated you like a girl. I was betting Sergeant Freemont hadn't gotten sick. She wouldn't have allowed it.
   I took another cleansing breath and let it out. I looked up at her. From my knees she looked every inch of her five-foot-eight. Her hair was straight, dark, cut just below her chin. The ends were curled under to frame her face. Her pants were a bright sunny yellow, jacket black, blouse a softer yellow. I had a good view of her polished black loafers. There was a gold wedding band on her left hand, but no engagement ring. Deep smile lines put her on the far side of forty, but she wasn't smiling now.
   I swallowed once more, trying not to taste that smell on the back of my tongue. I got to my feet. "No, Sergeant Freemont, I'm not going to be sick." I was glad that it was true. I just hoped she didn't make me go back down into the hollow. I'd toss my cookies if I had to look at the bodies again.
   "What did that?" she asked. I didn't turn and look where she pointed. I knew what was down there.
   I shrugged. "I don't know."
   Her brown eyes were neutral and unreadable, good cop eyes. She frowned. "What do you mean, you don't know? You're supposed to be the monster expert."
   I let the "supposed to be" go. She hadn't called me a zombie queen to my face; in fact she'd been very polite, correct, but there was no warmth to it. She wasn't impressed, and in her quiet way, with a look or the slightest inflection, she let me know. I was going to have to pull a very big corpse out of my hat to impress Sergeant Freemont, DD/CC. So far I wasn't even close.
   Larry walked up to us. His face was the color of yellow-green tissue paper. It clashed with his red hair. His eyes were red-rimmed where his eyes had teared while he threw up. If it's violent enough, sometimes you cry while you vomit.
   I didn't ask Larry if he was okay; the answer was too obvious. But he was on his feet, ambulatory. If he didn't faint, he'd be fine.
   "What do you want from me, Sergeant?" I asked. I'd been more than patient. For me, I'd been downright conciliatory. Dolph would be proud. Bert would have been amazed.
   She crossed her arms over her stomach. "I let Sergeant Storr talk me into letting you see the crime scene. He said you were the best. According to the newspapers, you just do a little magic and figure it all out. Or maybe you can just raise the dead and ask them who killed them."
   I took a deep breath and let it out. I didn't use magic to solve crimes, as a general rule; I used knowledge, but saying so would be defending myself. I didn't need to prove anything to Freemont. "Don't believe everything you read in the papers, Sergeant Freemont. As for raising the dead, it won't work with these three."
   "Are you telling me you can't raise zombies, either?" She shook her head. "If you can't help us then go home, Ms. Blake."
   I glanced at Larry. He gave a small shrug. He still looked shaky. I don't think he had the energy yet to tell me to behave myself. Or maybe he was as tired of Freemont as I was.
   "I could raise them as zombies, Sergeant, but you have to have a mouth and a working throat to talk with."
   "They could write it down," Freemont said.
   It was a good suggestion. It made me think better of her. If she was a good cop, I could put up with a little hostility. As long as I never had to see another set of bodies like the ones below, I could put up with a lot of hostility.
   "Maybe, but the dead often lose higher brain function faster after a traumatic death. They might not be able to write, but even if they could, they might not know what killed them."
   "But they saw it," Larry said. His voice sounded hoarse, and he coughed gently behind his hand to clear it.
   "None of them tried to run away, Larry. Why?"
   "Why are you asking him?" Freemont said.
   "He's in training," I said.
   "Training? You brought a trainee in on my murder case?"
   I stared up at her. "I don't tell you how to do your job. Don't tell me how to do mine."
   "You haven't done a damn thing yet. Except for your assistant throwing up in the bushes."
   An unhealthy flush crept up Larry's neck. Embarrassed when he was almost too nauseated to stand.
   "Larry wasn't the only one upchucking in the weeds, just the only one without a badge." I shook my head. "We don't need this shit." I brushed past Freemont. "Come on, Larry."
   Larry followed, obedient to the last.
   "I don't want any of this leaked to the press, Ms. Blake. If the media gets hold of it, I'll know where it came from." She wasn't yelling, but her voice carried.
   I turned. I wasn't yelling either, but everyone could hear me. "You have an unknown preternatural creature that uses a sword, and is faster than a vampire."
   Something flickered across her face, like maybe I'd finally done something interesting. "How do you know it's faster than a vampire?"
   "None of the boys tried to get away. All of them died where they stood. Either it's faster, or it has some amazing mind control."
   "It's not a lycanthrope, then?"
   "Even a lycanthrope isn't that fast, and they don't have the ability to cloud men's minds. If a lycanthrope came in there with a sword, the boys would have screamed and run. There would have at least been signs of a struggle."
   Freemont just stood there looking. It was a very serious look, like she was weighing and measuring me. She still wasn't happy with me, but she was listening.
   "I can help you, Sergeant Freemont. I can help you figure out what did this, maybe, before it does it again."
   Her quiet, confident mask crumbled around the edge for a second. If I hadn't been staring at her neutral brown eyes, I'd have missed it.
   "Shit," I said, loud. I walked back over to her and lowered my voice. "That's it, isn't it? These aren't the first killings."
   She glanced down at the ground, then met my eyes, jaw sort of thrust forward. Her eyes weren't neutral now; they were just a little bit scared. Not for herself, but for what she'd done, or not done.
   "The State Highway Patrol can handle a homicide." Her voice was the gentlest I'd heard it.
   "How many?" I asked.
   "Two before. A couple of teenagers, boy and a girl. Probably necking in the woods." Her voice was soft, almost tired.
   "What's the M.E. say?"
   "You're right," she said. "It was a blade, probably a sword. The monsters don't use weapons, Ms. Blake. I thought it was the girl's ex-boyfriend. He's got a collection of Civil War memorabilia, including swords. It seemed pretty cut-and-dried."
   I nodded. "Sounds logical."
   "None of his swords matched the blows, but I thought he'd ditched the murder weapon. I didn't think . . ." She looked away from me, hands shoved so hard into her pants pockets I thought they'd split the cloth. "The first scene wasn't like this. They were killed with the first blow; it pinned them through the chest into the ground. A human being could have done that." She looked back at me as if wanting me to agree with her. I did.
   "Were their bodies cut up beyond the death wound?"
   She nodded. "Disfigured faces, her left hand missing. The one that had worn the ex-boyfriend's ring."
   "Were their throats cut?"
   She frowned, thinking, then nodded. "Hers was. Not much blood either, like it'd been done after she died."
   My turn to nod. "Great."
   "Great?" Larry asked.
   "I think you've got a vampire on your hands, Sergeant Freemont."
   They both frowned at me. "Look at the body parts that are missing. The legs of the one boy were cut off after he died. The femoral artery is in the thigh near the groin. I've seen vamps take blood from that in preference to the neck. Cut off the legs, and no fang marks."
   "What about the other two?" Freemont asked.
   "Maybe the smallest boy was bitten. His neck was sliced twice for no reason. Maybe it was just a little extra violence like the disfigurement of the face. I don't know. But a vamp can take blood from the wrist, the bend of the arm. All parts that are missing."
   "One of their brains is missing," Freemont said.
   Larry swayed gently beside me. He wiped a hand over his suddenly sweating face.
   "You going to be alright?" I asked.
   He nodded, not trusting his voice. Brave Larry.
   "What better way to throw us off the track than to take something a vamp wouldn't be interested in?" I said.
   "Okay, say it makes some sense. Why this way? This is . . ." She spread her hands wide, staring down at the carnage. She was the only one of the three of us still looking at it. "This is nuts. If it was human, I'd say we had a serial killer on our hands."
   "We may have," I said softly.
   Freemont stared at me. "What the hell do you mean?"
   "A vampire was a person once. Just being dead doesn't cure you of any problems you had as a live human being. If you have a violent pathology before death, that won't change just because you're dead."
   Freemont looked at me like I was the one who was crazy. I think it was the word "dead" that was bothering her. Once her suspects were dead, they weren't suspects anymore. I tried again. "Say Johnny is a serial killer. He becomes a vampire. Why should being a vampire make him suddenly less violent? Why not more violent?"
   "Oh, my God," Larry said.
   Freemont took a deep breath in through her nose and let it out slow. "Okay, maybe you're right. I'm not saying you are. I've seen pictures of vampire victims and they don't look like this, but if you are, what do you need from me?"
   "The pictures from the first crime scene. And a look at where it happened."
   "I'll send the file to your hotel," she said.
   "Where was the couple killed?"
   "Just a few hundred yards from here."
   "Let's go take a look."
   "I'll have one of the troopers take you over," she said.
   "This is a damn small geographic area. I assume you searched it."
   "With a fine-tooth comb. But frankly, Ms. Blake, I wasn't sure what we were looking for. The leaves and the dry weather make it almost impossible to find tracks."
   "Yeah," I said. "Tracks would help." I glanced back the way I'd come. The leaves were disturbed coming up the hill. "If it is a vampire . . ."
   Freemont cut me off. "What do you mean, if?"
   I met her suddenly accusing eyes. "Look, Sergeant, if it is a vampire it has more mind control than I've ever seen. I've never met a vampire, even a master vampire, that could hold three humans in thrall while he killed them. Until I saw this, I'd have said it couldn't be done."
   "What else could it be?" Larry asked.
   I shrugged. "I think it's a vamp, but if I said I was a hundred percent sure, I'd be lying. I try not to lie to the police. There may be no tracks up the hill even if the ground was soft, because the vampire could have flown in."
   "Like a bat?" Freemont asked.
   "No, they don't change shape into a bat, but they can . . ." I searched for a word and there wasn't one. "They can levitate, sort of fly. I've seen it. I can't explain it, but I've seen it."
   "A serial killer vampire." She shook her head, the lines near her mouth deepening. "The Feds are going to be all over this."
   "No joke," I said. "Did you find the missing body parts?"
   "No, I thought maybe it had eaten them."
   "If it ate that much, why not more? If it ate, why no teeth marks? If it ate, why not some scattered body parts, like crumbs?"
   She clenched her hands into fists. "You've made your point. It was a vampire. Even a dumb cop knows they don't eat flesh." She turned her brown eyes to me, and there was a lot of anger in them. Not at me, exactly, but I might make a good target. I stared back at her, not flinching. She looked away first. Maybe I wouldn't make a good target.
   "I don't like having a civilian contractor in on a homicide investigation, but you spotted things down there that I missed. You're either very good, or you know something that you aren't telling me."
   I could have just said I'm good at my job, but I didn't. Didn't want the police thinking I was holding out information when I wasn't. "I've got one advantage over a normal homicide detective, I expect it to be a monster. No one ever calls me in if it's just a stabbing, or a hit-and-run. I don't spend a lot of time trying to come up with nice, normal explanations. It means I get to ignore a lot of theories."
   She nodded. "Alright, if you help me catch this thing, I don't care what you do for a living."
   "Glad to hear it," I said.
   "But no reporters, no media. I am in charge here. This is my investigation. I decide when we go public. Is that clear?"
   "Sure."
   She stared at me like she didn't believe me. "I mean it about the media, Ms. Blake."
   "I don't have a problem with no media, Sergeant Freemont. I prefer it that way."
   "For a person who doesn't want the media around, you get a lot of attention."
   I shrugged. "I'm involved in only sensational cases, detective. Cases that make good press, good sound bites. I slay vampires, for God's sake; it makes great headlines."
   "As long as we understand each other, Ms. Blake."
   "No media; it's not a hard concept," I said.
   She nodded. "I'll have someone walk you over to the first crime scene. I'll see you get the file at your hotel." She started to turn away.
   "Sergeant Freemont?"
   She turned back, but it was not a friendly look. "What is it now, Ms. Blake? You've done your job."
   "You can't treat this like a human serial killer."
   "I'm in charge of this investigation, Ms. Blake. I can do what I damn well please."
   I stared up at her, met her hostile eyes. I wasn't feeling too friendly myself. "I am not trying to steal your thunder here. But vampires aren't just people with fangs. If the vamp could catch their minds and hold them while he slaughtered each of them in turn, he could capture your mind, anyone's mind. A vampire that talented could make you think black was white. Do you understand me?"
   "It's daylight, Ms. Blake; if it's a vampire then we find it and stake it."
   "You'll need a court order of execution."
   "We'll get one."
   "When you get it, I'll come back and finish the job."
   "I think we can handle it."
   "You ever stake a vampire?" I asked.
   She just looked at me. "No, but I've shot a man. It can't be that much harder."
   "It's not harder in the way you mean," I said. "But it's a hell of a lot more dangerous."
   She shook her head. "Until the Feds get here, I'm in charge, and not you or anyone else is taking over. Is that clear, Ms. Blake?"
   I nodded. "Crystal, Sergeant Freemont." I stared at the cross-shaped pin in the lapel of her suit jacket. Most plainclothesmen had a cross-shaped tie tack. Standard police issue across the country. "You do have silver ammo, right?"
   "I'll take care of my men, Ms. Blake."
   I raised my hands slightly. So much for girl talk. "Fine, we're leaving. You've got my beeper number. Use it if you need it, Detective Freemont."
   "I won't need it."
   I took a deep breath and swallowed a lot of words. Picking a fight with the cop in charge of a murder investigation was not the way to get invited back to play. I walked past her without saying good-bye. If I opened my mouth, I wasn't sure what would come out. Nothing pleasant, and nothing useful.
   
   
8
   People who don't camp much think darkness falls from the sky. It doesn't. Darkness slides from the trees and fills them first, then spreads outward to the open places. It was so dark under the trees that I wished for a flashlight. When we stumbled to the road, and our waiting Jeep, it was only dusk.
   Larry looked up at the coming night, and said, "We can get back and walk the graveyard for Stirling."
   "First let's eat," I said.
   He looked at me. "You wanting to stop for food, that's a first. I usually have to beg for drive-up."
   "I forgot to eat lunch," I said.
   He grinned. "That I believe." The smile faded slowly from his face. "The first time you offer me food voluntarily, and I don't think I can eat." He stared at me. There was enough light left for me to see him search my face. "Could you really eat after what we just saw?"
   I looked at him. I didn't know what to say. Not so long ago, the answer would have been no. "Well, I wouldn't want to face a plate of spaghetti, or steak tartare, but yeah, I could eat."
   He shook his head. "What the heck is steak tartare?"
   "Raw beef, pretty much," I said.
   He swallowed hard, looking just a little paler than he had a second ago. "How can you even think of stuff like that so soon after . . ." He let the words trail off. We'd both seen it; no words were needed.
   I shrugged. "I've been going to murder scenes for nearly three years, Larry. You learn to survive. Which means you learn to eat after seeing cut-up bodies." I didn't add that I'd seen worse. I'd seen human bodies reduced to a roomful of blood and gobbets of unrecognizable flesh. Not enough left to fill a gallon-size baggie. I hadn't gone out for Big Macs after that one.
   "Are you up to at least trying to eat?"
   He was looking at me sort of suspiciously. "Where did you have in mind?"
   I untied the Nikes and stepped carefully on the gravel road. Didn't want to snag the hose. I unzipped the coverall and stepped out of it. Larry did the same, but he tried to keep his shoes on. He managed to work his feet through, but it required some hopping on one leg.
   I folded my coverall carefully so the blood wouldn't touch the Jeep's immaculate interior. I tossed the Nikes into the back floorboard and got the high heels out.
   Larry was trying to brush wrinkles from his suit pants, but some things only a dry cleaner could fix.
   "How would you like to go to Bloody Bones?" I asked.
   He looked up at me, hands still patting at the wrinkles. He frowned. "Where?"
   "It's the restaurant that Magnus Bouvier owns. Stirling mentioned it."
   "Did he tell us where it was?" Larry said.
   "No, but I asked one of the local cops for restaurants, and Bloody Bones isn't that far from here."
   Larry squinted suspiciously at me. "Why do you want to go there?"
   "I want to talk to Magnus Bouvier."
   "Why?" he asked.
   It was a good question. I wasn't sure I had a good answer. I shrugged and climbed into the Jeep. Larry had no choice but to join me, unless he didn't want to continue the conversation. When we were all settled in the Jeep, I still didn't have a really good answer.
   "I don't like Stirling. I don't trust him."
   "I got the impression you didn't like him," Larry said, his voice very dry. "But why not trust him?"
   "Do you trust him?" I asked.
   Larry frowned and thought about it. He shook his head. "Not as far as I could throw him."
   "See?" I said.
   "I guess so, but you think talking to Bouvier will help?"
   "I hope so. I don't like raising the dead for people I don't trust. Especially something this big."
   "Okay, so we go eat dinner at Bouvier's restaurant and talk to him; then what?"
   "If we don't learn anything new, we go see Stirling and walk the graveyard for him."
   Larry was looking at me like he wasn't sure he trusted me. "What are you up to?"
   "Don't you want to know why Stirling had to have that mountain? Why the Bouviers' mountain and not someone else's?"
   Larry looked at me. "You've been hanging around the police too long. You don't trust anybody."
   "The cops didn't teach me that, Larry; it's natural talent." I put the Jeep in gear and off we went.
   The trees made long, thin shadows. In the valleys between mountains, the shadows formed pools of coming night. We should have driven straight to the graveyard. Just walking the cemetery wouldn't hurt anything. But if I couldn't go vampire hunting, I could question Magnus Bouvier. That part of my job nobody could chase me out of.
   I didn't really want to go vampire hunting. It was almost dark. Hunting vamps after dark was a good way to get killed. Especially one that could control minds like this one could. A vampire can cloud your mind and even hurt you, if its control is good enough, and you won't mind. But once its concentration is off you, onto someone else, and that person starts screaming, you'll wake up. You'll run. But the boys hadn't run. They hadn't woken up. They'd just died.
   If this thing wasn't stopped, other people would die. I could almost guarantee it. Freemont should have let me stay. They needed a vampire expert with them on this one. They needed me. Okay, they really needed police with expertise in monsters, but they didn't have that. It had only been three years since Addison v. Clark made vampires legally alive. Three years ago Washington had made the bloodsuckers living citizens with rights. Nobody had thought what that meant for the police. Before the law changed, preternatural crime was handled by bounty hunters, vampire hunters. Those private citizens with enough experience to keep them alive. Most of us had some sort of preternatural power that helped give us an edge against the monsters. Most cops didn't.
   Ordinarily human beings didn't fare well against the monsters. There have always been a few of us who had a talent for taking out the beasties. We've done a good job, but suddenly the cops are expected to take over. No extra training, no extra manpower, nothing. Hell, most police departments wouldn't even spring for the silver ammunition.
   It had taken this long for Washington, D.C., to realize they might have been hasty. That maybe, just maybe, the monsters were really monsters and the police needed some extra training. It would take years to train the cops, so they were going to short-circuit the process, just make cops out of all the vampire hunters and monster slayers. For myself, personally, it might work. I would've loved to have a badge to shove in Freemont's face. She couldn't have chased me off then, not if it was federal. But for most vampire hunters, it was going to be a mess. You needed more than preternatural expertise to work a homicide case. You sure as hell needed more than vampire expertise to carry a badge.
   There were no easy answers. But out there in the coming darkness were a bunch of police hunting a vampire that could do things I never thought they could do. If I had a badge, I could be with them. I wasn't an automatic safety zone, but I knew a damn sight more than a state cop who had "seen" pictures of vampire victims. Freemont had never seen the real thing. Here was hoping she survived her first encounter.
   
   
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9
   Bloody Bones bar and grill lay up a red gravel road. Someone had butchered the trees back to either side, so the Jeep climbed upward towards a black blanket of sky, sprinkled with a million stars. The shine of stars was the only light in sight.
   "It is really dark out here," Larry said.
   "No streetlights," I said.
   "Shouldn't we see the lights from the restaurant by now?"
   "I don't know." I was staring at the broken trees. The trunks gleamed white and ragged. It had been done recently, as if someone had gone mad with an axe, or maybe a sword, or something big had ripped off the trunks.
   I slowed down, scanning the darkness. Was I wrong? Was it trolls? Was there a Greater Ozark Mountain Troll left in these mountains? One that would use a sword? I was a big believer in a first time for everything.
   I brought the Jeep almost to a stop.
   "What's wrong?" Larry asked.
   I hit the emergency flashers. The road was narrow, barely two cars wide, but it was going uphill. Anybody coming down wouldn't see the Jeep right away. The lights helped, but if someone was speeding . . . Hell, I was going to do it; why quibble? I put the Jeep in park and got out.
   "Where are you going?"
   "I'm wondering if a troll ripped the trees apart."
   Larry started to get out on his side. I stopped him. "Slide over on my side if you want to get out."
   "Why?"
   "You're not armed." I got the Browning out. It was a solid, comforting weight, but truthfully, against something the size of one of the great mountain trolls, it wasn't too useful. Maybe with exploding bullets, but short of that a 9mm wasn't the gun for hunting something the size of a small elephant.
   Larry closed his door and slid across. "You really think there's a troll out here?"
   I stared off into the darkness. Nothing moved. "I don't know." I moved to a dry gully that cut the edge of the road. I stepped very carefully into it. The heels sank in the dry, sandy soil. I grabbed a handful of weeds with my left hand and levered myself up the slope. I had to grab one of the butchered trunks to keep from sliding backwards in the loose leaves and pine needles.
   My hand came up against thick sap. I fought the urge to jerk away, forcing myself to keep hold of the sticky bark.
   Larry scrambled up the bank, slick-soled dress shoes sliding in the dry leaves. I didn't have a free hand to offer him. He caught himself in a sort of half pushup, and used the weeds to move up beside me. "Damn dress shoes."
   "At least you're not in heels," I said.
   "And don't think I'm not grateful," he said. "I'd break my neck."
   Nothing moved in the dark, dark night except us. There was the sound of spring peepers close by, musical, but nothing bigger. I let out a breath I hadn't realized I was holding. I pulled myself up to more solid footing and looked at the trees.
   "What are we looking for?" Larry asked.
   "An axe makes a wide, smooth stroke. If a troll snapped the trunks, they'll be ragged and full of jagged points of wood."
   "Looks smooth to me," he said. He ran his fingertips over the naked wood. "But it doesn't look like an axe."
   The wood was too smooth. An axe will come in at an angle. This was almost flat, like each tree had been felled with a single stroke, two at most. Some of the trees had been nearly a foot in diameter. No human could do that, even with an axe.
   "Who could have done this?"
   I searched the darkness, fighting an urge to aim the gun into the dark, but I kept it skyward. Safety first. "A vampire with a sword, maybe."
   He stared off into the darkness. "You mean the one that killed the guys? Why would the vampire chop down a bunch of trees after he killed them?"
   It was a good question. A great question. But like with so many questions today, I didn't have a good answer. "I don't know. Let's get back to the car."
   We scrambled back the way we'd come. Neither of us fell down this time. A record.
   When we were at the car I put the gun away. I probably hadn't needed it at all, but then again . . . something cut down those trees.
   I used the aloe and lanolin baby wipes that I kept in the car to wipe off blood, to wipe the sap from my hand. The wipes worked nearly as well on tree blood as it did on human.
   We drove on, searching for lights. We had to be close to Bloody Bones, unless the directions were way off. Here's hoping they weren't.
   "Is that a torch?" Larry asked.
   I stared into the darkness. There was a flicker of fire, too high off the ground to be a campfire. Two torches on long poles illuminated a wide gravel turnaround to the left of the road. The trees had been pushed back here, too, but years ago. It was an old, established clearing. The trees formed a backdrop for a one-story building. A wooden sign hung from the eaves. It was hard to read by torchlight, but it might have read "Bloody Bones."
   Dark wooden shingles covered the roof and climbed down the walls, so that the entire building looked like a natural growth that had sprung from the red clay soil. About twenty cars and trucks were parked haphazardly on the dark gravel.
   The sign swung in the wind, the torchlight reflecting off the deeply carved words. "Bloody Bones" was carved in smooth, curving letters.
   I walked carefully over the gravel in my high heels. Larry's dress shoes worked better on gravel than mine did. "Bloody Bones is a strange name for a bar and grill."
   "Maybe they serve ribs," I said.
   He made a face at me. "I could not face barbecue anything right now."
   "It wouldn't be my first choice either."
   The door swung inward directly into the bar. The door swung shut and we were plunged into a fire-shot twilight. Most bars are gloomy places to drink and hide. A place of refuge from the noisy shiny world outside. But as refuges went, this was a good one. There was a bar along one side of the room, and a dozen small tables scattered on the dark polished wood floor. There was a small stage to the left and a jukebox near the back wall where a small hallway probably led to bathrooms and the kitchen beyond.
   Every surface was dark wood and polished 'til it shone. Candles with chimney glass over them shone from the walls. A chandelier with more chimney glass and candles hung from the low, dark wood ceiling. The wood was the darkest of mirrors, glowing in the light rather than reflecting it.
   The beams that supported the ceiling were carved with fruiting vines and stray leaves that looked like oaks. Every face was turned towards us like a bad western. A lot of the faces were male; the eyes slid over me, saw Larry, and most went back to their drinks. A few stayed hopeful, but I ignored them. It was too early in the night for anybody to be drunk enough to give me grief. Besides, we were armed.
   The women were grouped three deep at the bar. They were dressed for a Friday night, if you planned to spend Friday night on a street corner propositioning strangers. They stared at Larry like they wondered if he'd be good to eat. Me, they seemed to hate on sight. If I knew any of them, I'd have said they were jealous, but I'm not the kind of woman to elicit jealousy on sight. Not tall enough, not blonde enough, not Nordic enough, not exotic enough. I'm pretty, but I'm not beautiful. The women looked at me like they saw something I didn't. It made me glance behind me to see if someone had come in behind us, even though I knew no one had.
   "What's going on?" Larry whispered.
   That was another thing. It was quiet. I'd never been in a bar on a Friday night that you could whisper in and be heard.
   "I don't know," I said softly.
   The women at the bar parted like someone had asked, giving us a clear view of the bar. There was a man behind the bar. I thought what beautiful hair shehad when I first saw him. The hair fell to his waist like thick, chestnut-colored water. The candle flames gleamed in his hair the same way they shone in the polished wood of the bar.
   He raised startling blue-green eyes, like deep sea water, to us. He was dark and lovely rather than handsome, androgynous as a cat. He was exotic as hell and I suddenly understood why the bar was three deep in women.
   He sat an amber-filled glass down on a tiny napkin and said, "You're up, Earl." His voice was surprisingly low, like he'd sing deep bass.
   A man got up from the tables, Earl probably. He was a large, lumbering man, formed of soft squares like a gentler version of Boris Karloff's monster. Not a cover boy. He reached for his drink, and his arm brushed the back of one of the women. The woman turned, angry. I expected her to tell him to go to hell, but the bartender touched her arm. She was suddenly very still, as if listening to voices I couldn't hear.
   The air wavered. I was suddenly very aware that Earl smelled of soap and water. His hair was still damp from the shower. I could lick the water from his skin, feel those big hands on my body.
   I shook my head and stepped back into Larry. He caught my arm. "What's wrong?"
   I stared at him, clutching his arm, my fingers digging through the cloth of his suit, until I could feel his arm solid under my hand. I turned back to the bar.
   Earl and the woman had gone to sit at a table. She was kissing the palm of his calloused hand.
   "Jesus," I said.
   "What's wrong, Anita?" Larry asked.
   I took a deep breath and stood away from him. "I'm okay; it was just unexpected."
   "What was?"
   "Magic." I stepped up to the bar.
   Those amazing eyes stared back at me, but there was no power to them. It wasn't like dealing with a vampire. I could gaze into those beautiful eyes forever, and they would still just be eyes. Sort of.
   I placed my hands on the gleaming wood of the bar. More vines and leaves curved around the edge of the heavy wood. I ran my fingers over the deep set carvings. Hand-carved, all of it.
   His fingertips caressed the wood like it was skin. It was a proprietal touch, the way some men touch their girlfriends when they're into ownership. I was betting that he'd carved every inch of it.
   A brunette in a dress two sizes smaller than it should have been touched his arm. "Magnus, you don't need a stranger."
   Magnus Bouvier turned to the brunette. He trailed those caressing fingertips down her arm. She shivered. He raised her hand gently from his arm, pressing his lips to the back of her hand. "Pick anyone you want, darlin'. You are too beautiful to be denied tonight."
   She wasn't beautiful. Her eyes were small and muddy brown, her chin too sharp, nose too large for a thin face. I was staring right at her from not a foot away, and her face smoothed. Her eyes were suddenly large and sparkling, her thin lips full and moist. It was like seeing her through one of those soft filters they used during the sixties, except more.
   I glanced at Larry. He looked like he'd been hit by a truck. A slim, lovely truck. I stared out over the bar, and every other male in the place except Earl was staring at the woman in exactly the same way, as if she'd just appeared before them like Cinderella transformed by her fairy godmother. Not a bad analogy.
   I turned back to Magnus Bouvier. He was not staring at the woman. He was staring at me.
   I leaned into the bar, meeting his gaze. He smiled slightly. I said, "Love charms are illegal."
   The smile widened. "You're much too pretty to be the police." He reached out to touch my arm.
   "Touch me and I'll have you arrested for using undue preternatural influence."
   "It's a misdemeanor," he said.
   "Not if you're not human, it isn't," I said.
   He blinked at me. I didn't know him well enough to be sure, but I think I surprised him, like I should have believed he was human. Yeah, right.
   "Let's talk at a table," he said.
   "Fine with me."
   "Dorrie, can you take over for a few minutes?"
   A woman came behind the bar. She had the same thick chestnut hair, but it was tied back from her face in a severe ponytail, high and tight on her head. The long, shining tail of hair swung as she moved, like it was alive. Her face, free of hair and makeup, was triangular, exotic, catlike. Her eyes were the same startling seawater green as Magnus's.
   The men nearest the bar watched her out of the corners of their eyes, as if afraid to look directly at her. Larry stared at her open-mouthed.
   "I'll watch the bar, but that's all," she said. She turned those eyes to Larry and said, "What are you staring at?" Her voice was harsh, thick with scorn.
   Larry blinked, closed his mouth, and stuttered. "N-nothing."
   She glared at him like she knew he was lying. I got an inkling why the men weren't staring at her.
   "Dorcas, be nice to the customers."
   She glared at Magnus; he smiled, but he backed down. Magnus stepped out from behind the bar. He was wearing a soft blue dress shirt untucked over jeans so faded they were almost white. The shirt hit him at nearly mid-thigh; he'd had to roll the sleeves over his forearms. Black and silver cowboy boots completed the outfit. Everything but the boots looked borrowed. He should have looked sloppy, too casual among everyone else duded up for a Friday night, but he didn't. His utter confidence made the outfit seem perfect. A woman at one of the tables grabbed the hem of his shirt as he moved past. He pulled it out of her hands with a playful smile.
   Magnus led us to a table near the empty stage. He stood, letting me choose my seat; very gentlemanly of him. I sat with my back to the wall so I could see both doors and the room. It was sort of cowboyish, but magic rode the air. Illegal magic.
   Larry sat to my right. He'd watched me and scooted his chair a little back from the table so he could see the room too. It was almost frightening how seriously Larry watched what I did. It would keep him alive, but it was like being followed around by a three-year-old with a carry permit. Kind of intimidating.
   Magnus smiled at us both, indulgently, like we were doing something cute or amusing. I wasn't in the mood to be amusing.
   "Love charms are illegal," I said.
   "You said that already," Magnus said. He flashed me a smile that I think was meant to be charming and harmless. It wasn't. There wasn't anything he could do to make himself less than exotic. He sure as hell wasn't harmless.
   I stared at him until the smile wilted around the edges, and he swallowed. He spread his long-fingered hands on the tabletop, staring at them. When he looked up, the smile was gone. He looked solemn, a little nervous even. Good.
   "It's not a charm," he said.
   "The hell it isn't," I said.
   "It isn't. A spell, but nothing as mundane as a charm."
   "You're splitting hairs," I said.
   Larry was staring at us intently. "Was that stuff at the bar a love charm?"
   "What stuff at the bar?" Magnus's face was incredibly mild, as if he thought Larry would believe him.
   Larry looked at me. "Is he kidding? The woman went from a three to a twenty-three. It had to be magic."
   Magnus turned his attention to Larry for the first time, excluding me—and I felt excluded. It was like a ray of sunshine had moved away from me, and I was just a little colder, a little more in the dark.
   I shook my head. "Cut the glamor crap."
   Magnus turned back to me, and for a minute I felt that warmth. "Stop it."
   "What?"
   I stood up. "Fine; let's see how funny you think you are in jail."
   Magnus encircled my wrist with his hand. His skin should have been work-roughened, but it wasn't. His skin was unnaturally soft, like living velvet. Of course, that could have been illusionary, too.
   I tried to pull my hand away, but his grip tightened. I kept pulling, and he kept tightening with that certainty of someone who knew that I couldn't get away. He was wrong. It wasn't just a matter of strength, it was a matter of leverage.
   I turned my wrist towards his fingers in a quick turning motion, jerking at the same time. His fingers slid over my skin trying to dig in, but it was over. My wrist felt rubbed raw where his finger had scraped along the skin. It wasn't bleeding, but it hurt anyway. It would have felt better if I rubbed it, but I wouldn't give him the satisfaction. I was, after all, a tough-as-nails vampire slayer. Besides, it would have ruined some of the effect, and I liked the surprise on Magnus's face.
   "Most women don't pull away once I've touched them."
   "You use magic on me one more time, and I'll feed you to the cops."
   He stared up at me, a thoughtful look on his face. He nodded. "You win. No more magic on you or your friend."
   "Or anyone else," I said. I sat back down carefully, putting a little more distance between me and him. I angled the chair just a little to one side so the grab for my gun would be smoother. I didn't think I'd have to shoot him, but my wrist was aching where he'd squeezed. I had arm wrestled with vampires and shapeshifters. I knew preternatural strength when I felt it. He had it. He could have squeezed until my bones popped out of my skin, but he hadn't squeezed fast enough. He hadn't really wanted to hurt me. His mistake.
   "Oh, my customers wouldn't like the magic going away," he said.
   "You can't manipulate them like this. It is illegal, and I will turn you in for it."
   "But everyone knows that Friday night is lovers' night at Bloody Bones," Magnus said.
   "What's lovers' night?" Larry asked.
   Magnus smiled, already regaining some of his easy charm, but that flicker of warmth was gone. He was being true to his word, as far as I could tell. Even vampires couldn't work mind control on me without my knowing it. That Magnus could made me nervous.
   "I make everyone beautiful or handsome, or sexy, tonight. For a few hours you can be the lover of your own dreams, and someone else's. Though I wouldn't spend the night. The glamor doesn't last that long."
   "What are you?" Larry asked.
   "What looks like Homo sapiens,can breed with Homo sapiens,but isn't Homo sapiens?" I asked.
   Larry's eyes widened. "Homo arcanus. He's a fairie?"
   "Please keep your voice down," Magnus said. He glanced around at the near tables. No one was playing much attention to us. They were too busy gazing into each other's magically enhanced eyes.
   "You can't be passing for human," I said.
   "The Bouviers have told the future and made love charms for centuries around here."
   "You said it wasn't a love charm," I said.
   "They think it is, but you know what it is."
   "Glamor," I said.
   "What's glamor?" Larry asked.
   "It's fairie magic. It's what allows them to cloud our minds, make things seem better or worse than they are."
   Magnus nodded, smiling, as if pleased that I knew so much. "Exactly; it's really a minor magic compared to some."
   I shook my head. "I've read about glamor, and it doesn't work this well unless you're high court, Daoine Sidhe. The seelie court of fairyland doesn't interbreed with mortals often. At least not commoners. The unseelie court, on the other hand, does."
   He stared at me with his beautiful eyes, looking, even without glamor, so gorgeous you wanted to touch him. Wanted to see if his hair was as luxuriant as it looked. He was like a really fine sculpture; you wanted to run your hands over it and feel the lines.
   Magnus smiled gently. "The unseelie court is evil, cruel. What I do here is not evil. For one night these people can come here and be their own fantasies. They think it's love charms, and I let them. We all keep the secret of this small illegal act. The local police know. They even come down once in a while and join in."
   "But it's not love charms."
   "No, it's natural talent on my part. Using my own homegrown magic isn't illegal if everyone knows I'm doing it."
   "So you pretend it's love charms, and everyone looks the other way because they're having a good time, but it's really fairie glamor, which isn't illegal with permission of the participants."
   "Exactly," he said.
   "Which makes it all legal."
   He nodded. "Now if I was descended from the dark side of fairie, would I do anything to bring pleasure to so many?"
   "If it suited your needs, yeah."
   "Isn't there a ban on unseelie court moving to this country?" Larry asked.
   "Yeah," I said.
   "Not if my family moved here before the ban went into effect. The Bouviers have been here for nearly three hundred years."
   "Not possible," I said. "Nobody but the Indians have been here that long."
   "Llyn Bouvier was a French fur trapper. He was the first European to set foot on this land. He married into the local tribe, Christianized them."
   "Bully for him. So how come you didn't want to sell to Raymond Stirling?"
   He blinked at me. "It would disappoint me greatly to find out you are working for him."
   "Sorry to disappoint you," I said.
   "What are you?"
   He hadn't asked who, he'd asked what. It was a very different question. It sort of stopped me for a second.
   "I'm Anita Blake; this is Larry Kirkland. We're animators."
   "I take it you don't draw cartoons," he said.
   It made me smile. "No. We raise the dead; 'animate' from the Latin, to give life."
   "Is that all you do?" He was staring at me very intently, like there was something written on the inside of my skull and he was trying to read it.
   It was an uncomfortable level of scrutiny, but I've been stared at by the best. I met his eyes and answered. "I'm a licensed vampire executioner."
   He shook his head gently. "I didn't ask what you did for a living. I asked what you were."
   I frowned. "Maybe I don't understand the question."
   "Perhaps you don't, but your friend asked what I was. You said I was a fairie. I ask you what you are, and you describe your job. It would be like me saying I'm a bartender."
   "I don't know how to answer you, then," I said.
   He was still staring at me. "Yes, you do. I can see a word in your eyes. One word."
   When he said it, a word did come to mind. "Necromancer. I'm a necromancer."
   Magnus nodded. "Does Mr. Stirling know what you are?"
   "I doubt he'd understand even if I told him."
   "Do you really have the ability to control all types of undead?" Magnus asked.
   "Can you really make a hundred shoes in a single night?" I asked.
   Magnus smiled. "Wrong kind of fairie."
   "Yeah," I said.
   "If you're working for Stirling, why are you here? I hope you didn't come here to try to persuade me to sell. I'd hate to have to say no to such a lovely woman."
   "Can the compliments, Magnus. It won't get you anywhere."
   "What would get me somewhere?"
   I sighed. "I've got too many men on my plate now."
   "That's the God's honest truth," Larry muttered.
   I frowned at him.
   "I'm not asking you out on a date. I'm asking you into my bed."
   I frowned at Magnus. No, glared was a better word. "Not in this lifetime."
   "Sex between supernatural beings is always amazing, Anita."
   "I'm not a supernatural being."
   "Now who's splitting hairs?"
   I didn't know what to say to that, so I said nothing. I rarely get in trouble with silence.
   Magnus smiled. "I've made you uncomfortable. I am sorry, but I'd never have forgiven myself if I hadn't asked. It's been a long time since I was with anyone who wasn't straight human. Let me buy you both drinks, to make up for my rudeness."
   I shook my head. "Menus would be fine. We haven't eaten yet."
   "The meals will be on the house."
   "No," I said.
   "Why not?"
   "Because I don't particularly like you, and I don't take favors from people I don't like."
   He sat back in his chair, a strange, almost startled expression on his face. "You are direct."
   "You have no idea," Larry said.
   I resisted the urge to kick Larry under the table and said, "Can we have some menus?"
   He raised a hand and called, "Two menus, Dorrie."
   Dorrie brought them over. "I'm part owner of this place, not your waitress, Magnus. Hurry it up."
   "Don't forget that appointment I've got tonight, Dorrie." His voice was mild. She wasn't fooled.
   "You aren't leaving me alone with these people. I will not . . ." She glanced at us. "I don't approve of lovers' night. You know that."
   "I'll take care of everybody before I leave. You won't have to sully your morals."
   She glared at all of us in turn. "You're leaving with them?"
   "No," he said.
   She turned on her heel and stalked back to the bar. The men who weren't paired off watched her swaying back, carefully, not staring until she couldn't see them.
   "Your sister doesn't approve of abusing glamor?" I asked.
   "Dorrie doesn't approve of a lot of things."
   "She has morals."
   "Implying I don't," he said.
   I shrugged. "You said it, not me."
   "She always this judgmental?" he asked Larry.
   Larry nodded. "Usually."
   "Let's just order our food," I said.
   Larry smiled, but he looked down at the menu.
   It was a laminated piece of paper printed on both sides. I ordered a cheeseburger, well done, house fries, and a large Coke. I hadn't had caffeine in several hours; I was running low.
   Larry was frowning at the menu. "I don't think I could eat a hamburger right now."
   "They've got salads," I said.
   Magnus laid his fingertips against the back of Larry's hand. "Something swims up behind your eyes. Something . . . awful just behind your eyes."
   Larry stared at him. "I don't know what you mean."
   I grabbed Magnus's wrist and pulled him away from Larry. He turned his eyes to me, but there was more than just their color to make them hard to stare at. The pupil of his eyes had spiraled down like the eye of a bird. Human eyes just didn't do that.
   I was suddenly very aware that I was still holding his wrist. I drew my hand away. "Stop reading us, Magnus."
   "You wore gloves, or I'd be able to tell what you'd touched," he said.
   "It's an ongoing police investigation. Anything you discern by psychic means must be held confidential, or you're liable just as if you stole information out of our files."
   "Do you always do that?" he asked.
   "What?"
   "Quote the law when you're nervous."
   "Sometimes," I said.
   "I saw blood, that's all. My gifts are rather limited in the area of far-seeing. You should shake Dorrie's hand. Far-seeing is her strong suit."
   "Thanks, but no thanks," Larry said.
   He smiled. "You are not police, or you wouldn't have threatened me with the police, but you were with them earlier. Why?"
   "I thought all you saw was blood," I said.
   He had the grace to look embarrassed; nice to know he could be embarrassed. "A little bit more, perhaps."
   "Touch clairvoyance isn't a traditional fey power."
   "Our many-times-great-grandmother was the daughter of a shaman, so the story goes."
   "Getting magic from both sides of the family tree," I said. "Dirty pool."
   "Clairvoyance isn't magic," Larry said.
   "A really good clairvoyant will make you think it is," I said. I stared at Magnus. The last clairvoyant who had touched me and seen blood had been horrified. He hadn't wanted to touch me again. He hadn't wanted me anywhere near him. Magnus didn't look horrified, and he'd offered to have sex with me. Different strokes for different folks.
   "I'll take your order through to the kitchen myself, if you'll just decide what you want," he said.
   Larry stared at the menu. "A salad, I guess. No dressing." He thought about it some more. "No tomatoes."
   Magnus started to stand.
   "Why won't you sell to Stirling?" I asked.
   Magnus cocked his head to one side, smiling. "The land has been in our family for centuries. It's our land."
   I looked at him and couldn't read his face. It could have been the absolute truth, or a boldfaced lie.
   "So the only reason you don't want to be a millionaire is because of what . . . family tradition?"
   The smile deepened. He leaned closer, long hair spilling forward. He whispered, and it was quiet enough that he needed to whisper. "Money is not everything, Anita. Though Stirling seems to think it is."
   His face was very close, just barely far enough away for me not to complain. I could smell his aftershave, faint as if you'd have to get very near his skin to smell it, but it would be worth the effort.
   "What do you want, Magnus, if it's not money?" I stared at him from too close. His long hair trailed over my hand.
   "I told you what I wanted."
   Even without the glamor be was trying to sweet-talk me, distract me. "What happened to the trees out by your road?" I didn't distract that easily.
   He blinked long lashes. Something slid behind his eyes. "I happened."
   "You cut down those trees?" Larry asked.
   Magnus turned to him, and I was glad not to be staring at him from inches away. "Sadly, yes."
   "Why?" I asked.
   He straightened up, suddenly businesslike. "I got drunk and went on a little rampage." He shrugged. "Embarrassing, isn't it?"
   "That's one word for it," I said.
   "I'll go get your food. One naked salad coming up."
   "You remember what I'm getting?" I asked.
   "Meat burned to death; I remember."
   "You sound like a vegetarian."
   "Oh, no," he said. "I eat all sorts of things."
   He walked away through the crowd before I could decide if I'd been insulted or not. Just as well. For the life of me, I couldn't think of a good comeback line.
   
   
10
   Dorcas brought our food without a word. She seemed angry—maybe not at us, but with us. Or with everything. I sympathized. Magnus went behind the bar, spreading his own special brand of magic to his customers once more. He glanced our way and smiled but didn't come back to finish our talk. Of course; we'd been finished. I was all out of questions.
   I took a bite of my cheeseburger. It was almost crispy around the edges, not a smidgen of pink in the center. Perfect.
   "What's wrong?" Larry asked. He was nibbling at a lettuce leaf.
   I swallowed. "Why should something be wrong?"
   "You're frowning," he said.
   "Magnus didn't come back to the table."
   "So? He answered all our questions."
   "Maybe we just don't know the right questions to ask."
   "You suspect him of something now?" Larry shook his head. "You have been hanging around with cops too long, Anita. You think everyone's up to something."
   "They usually are." I took another bite of burger.
   Larry squinched his eyes tight.
   "What's wrong with you?" I asked.
   "There's juice coming out of your burger. How can you eat that after what we just saw?"
   "I guess this means you don't want me to put ketchup on my fries."
   He looked at me with something near physical pain on his face. "How can you make jokes?"
   My beeper went off. Had they found the vampire? I hit the button, and Dolph's number flashed at me. Now what?
   "It's Dolph. Eat hearty. I'll phone from the Jeep and be back."
   Larry stood up with me. He put a tip on the table and left his salad nearly untouched. "I'm done."
   "Well, I'm not. Have Magnus pack my meal to go." I left him staring forlornly down at my half-eaten burger.
   "You're not going to eat it in the car, are you?"
   "Just have it packed up." I went for the Jeep and its fancy phone. Dolph answered on the third ring. "Anita?"
   "Yeah, Dolph, it's me. What's up?"
   "Vampire victim out near you."
   "Shit, another one."
   "What do you mean another one?"
   That stopped me. "Freemont didn't call you after I talked to her?"
   "Yeah, she said good things about you."
   "That surprises me; she wasn't too friendly."
   "How not friendly?"
   "She wouldn't let me hunt vampires with her."
   "Tell me," Dolph said.
   I told him.
   Dolph was quiet for a very long time after I finished. "You still there, Dolph?"
   "I'm here. I wish I wasn't."
   "What's going on, Dolph? Why would Freemont call and tell you what a good job I'm doing, but not ask for the squad's help on something this big?"
   "I bet she hasn't called the Feds either," Dolph said.
   "What's going on, Dolph?"
   "I think Detective Freemont is pulling a Lone Ranger on us."
   "The federal boys are going to want a piece of this. The first vampire serial killer in recorded history. Freemont can't keep it to herself."
   "I know," Dolph said.
   "What are we going to do?"
   "The body on the ground this time sounds like a straightforward vampire kill. It's classic, bite marks, no other damage to the body. Could it be a different vamp?"
   "Could be," I said.
   "You sound doubtful."
   "Two rogue vamps in this small a geographical area, this far from a city, doesn't seem likely."
   "The body wasn't cut up."
   "There is that," I said.
   "How sure are you that the first killer is a vamp? Is there anything else it could be?"
   I opened my mouth to say no, and closed it. Anybody who could cut down all those trees in one drunken brawl could certainly cut up people. Magnus had his glamor. I wasn't sure it was capable of doing what I'd seen in the clearing, but . . .
   "Anita?"
   "I might have an alternative."
   "What?"
   "Who," I said. I hated giving Magnus up to the cops. He'd kept his secret so long, but . . . what if the question I should ask was, had he killed five people? I'd felt the strength in his hands. I remembered the clean trunks of the trees, cut by just one blow, two at most. I flashed on the murder scene. The blood, the naked bone. I couldn't rule Magnus out, and I couldn't afford to be wrong.
   I gave him up to Dolph. "Can you keep the part about him being fairie out of it for a while?"
   "Why?"
   "Because if he didn't do it, then his life is ruined."
   "A lot of people have fey blood in them, Anita."
   "Tell that to the college student last year whose fiance beat her to death when he found out he was about to marry a fairie. He protested in court that he hadn't meant to kill her. The fey were supposed to be hard to kill, weren't they?"
   "Not everyone is like that, Anita."
   "Not everyone, but enough."
   "I'll try, Anita, but I can't promise."
   "Fair enough," I said. "Where's the new victim?"
   "Monkey's Eyebrow," he said.
   "What?"
   "That's the name of the town."
   "Jesus. Monkey's Eyebrow, Missouri. Let me guess. It's a small town."
   "Big enough to have a sheriff and a murder."
   "Sorry. Do you have directions?" I fished my small, spiral-bound notebook out of the pocket of the black jacket.
   He gave me directions. "Sheriff St. John is holding the body for you. He called us first. Since Freemont wants to go it alone, we'll let her."
   "You're not going to tell her?"
   "No."
   "I don't suppose Monkey's Eyebrow has a crime scene unit, Dolph. If we don't have Freemont come in with her people, we're going to need somebody. Can you guys come down yet?"
   "We're still working our own murder. But since Sheriff St. John called us in for his murder, we'll be in the area as soon as we can get there. Not tonight, but tomorrow."
   "Freemont's supposed to send over crime-scene photos from the first couple that was killed. I bet if I asked she might send over photos from the second scene, too. Show-and-tell tomorrow when you get here."
   "Freemont may be suspicious about you asking for more pictures," Dolph said.
   "I'll tell her I want them for comparison. She may be trying to hog the case for herself, but she wants it solved. She just wants to solve it herself."
   "She's a glory hound," Dolph said.
   "Looks that way."
   "I don't know if I'll be able to keep Freemont out of the second case or not, but I'll try to give you some lead time, so you can look around without her breathing down your neck."
   "Much appreciated."
   "She said you had your assistant with you at the crime scene. Had to be Larry Kirkland, right?"
   "Right."
   "What are you doing bringing him to crime scenes?"
   "He'll have a degree in preternatural biology this spring. He's an animator and a vampire slayer. I can't be everywhere, Dolph. If I think he can handle it, I thought it might be nice to have two monster experts."
   "It might. Freemont said Larry lost his lunch all over the crime scene."
   "He didn't throw up on the crime scene, just near it."
   There was a moment of silence. "Better than throwing up on the body."
   "I'm never going to live that down, am I?"
   "No," Dolph said, "you aren't."
   "Great. Larry and I will get out there as soon as we can. It's about a thirty-minute drive, maybe more."
   "I'll tell Sheriff St. John you're on your way." He hung up.
   I hung up. Dolph was training me never to say good-bye over the phone.
   
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11
   Larry slumped in the seat as far as the seat belt would let him. His hands were clenched tight in his lap. He stared out into the dark like he was seeing something besides the passing scenery. Images of butchered teenagers dancing in his head, I bet. They weren't dancing in mine. Not yet. I might see them in my dreams, but not awake, not yet.
   "How bad will this one be?" he asked. His voice sounded quiet, strained.
   "I don't know. It's a vampire victim. Could be neat, just a couple of puncture wounds; could be carnage."
   "Carnage like the three boys?"
   "Dolph said no, said it's classic, just bite marks."
   "So it won't be messy?" His voice was squeezed down to a near whisper.
   "Won't know until we get there," I said.
   "You couldn't just comfort me?" His voice sounded so small, so uncertain that I almost offered to turn the Jeep around. He didn't have to see another murder scene. It was my job, but it wasn't his job, not yet.
   "You don't ever have to see another murder scene, Larry."
   He turned his head and looked at me. "What do you mean?"
   "You've had your quota of blood and guts for one day. I can turn around and drop you back at the hotel."
   "If I don't come tonight, what happens next time?"
   "If you aren't cut out for this kind of work, you aren't cut out for it. No shame in that."
   "What about next time?" he asked.
   "There won't be a next time."
   "You aren't getting rid of me that easy," he said.
   I hoped the darkness hid the smile on my face. I kept it small.
   "Tell me about vampires, Anita. I thought a vampire couldn't drink enough blood in one night to kill somebody."
   "Pretty to think so," I said.
   "They told us in college that a vampire couldn't drain a human being with one bite. Are you saying that's not true?"
   "They can't drink a human dry with one bite, in one night, but they can drain one with one bite."
   He frowned at me. "What's that supposed to mean?"
   "They can pierce the flesh and drain the blood without drinking it."
   "How?" he asked.
   "Just put the fangs in, start the blood flow, and let the blood fall down your body onto the ground."
   "But that's not taking blood for food, that's just murder," Larry said.
   "And your point is?" I said.
   "Hey, isn't that our turnoff?"
   I caught a glimpse of the road sign. "Damn." I slowed down, but couldn't see over the crest of the hill. I didn't dare U-turn until I was sure there were no cars coming the other way. It was another half mile before we came to a gravel road. There was a row of mailboxes beside the road.
   Trees grew so close to the road that even winter-bare they covered the one-lane road in shadows. There was no place to turn around. Hell, if a second car had come, one of us would have had to back up.
   The road rose up and up, as if it were going to go straight into the sky. At the crest of the hill I could see nothing in front of the car. I had to simply trust that there was more road in front of us, rather than some endless precipice.
   "Jesus, this is steep," Larry said.
   I eased the Jeep forward and the tires touched road. My shoulders loosened just a little. There was a house just up ahead. The porch light was on, like they were expecting company. The bare light bulb was not kind. The house was unpainted wood with a rusting tin roof. Its raised porch sagged under the weight of the front seat of a car that was sitting by the screen door. I turned around in the dirt in front of the house that passed for a front yard. It looked like we weren't the first car to do it. There were deep wheel ruts in the powder-dry dirt from years of cars turning in and out.
   By the time we got down to the end of the road, the darkness was pure as velvet. I hit the Jeep's high beams, but it was like driving in a tunnel. The world existed only in the light; everything else was blackness.
   "I'd give a lot for a few streetlights right now," Larry said.
   "Me, too. Help me spot our road. I don't want to drive past it twice."
   He leaned forward in his seat, straining against the shoulder belt. "There." He pointed as he spoke. I slowed and turned carefully onto the road. The headlights filled the tunnel of trees. This road was just bare red earth. The dirt rose in a mist around the Jeep. For once I was glad of the drought. Mud would have been a real bitch on a dirt road.
   The road was wide enough that if you had nerves of steel, or were driving someone else's car, you could drive two cars abreast. A stream cut across the road, with a ditch at least fifteen feet deep. The bridge was nothing but planks laid across some beams. No rails, no nothing. As the Jeep crept over the bridge, the planks rattled and moved. They weren't nailed in. God.
   Larry was staring at the drop, his face pressed against the tinted glass. "This bridge isn't much wider than the car."
   "Thank's for telling me, Larry. I'd have never noticed on my own."
   "Sorry."
   Past the bridge, the road was still wide enough for two cars. I guess if two cars met at the bridge they took turns. There was probably some traffic law to cover it. First car on the left gets to go first, maybe.
   At the crest of the hill, lights showed in the distance. Police lights strobed the darkness like muticolored lightning. They were farther away than they looked. We had two more hills to go up and down before the lights reflected off the bare trees, making them look black and unreal. The road spilled into a wide clearing. A lawn spread up from the road, surrounding a large white house. It was a real house with siding and shutters and a wraparound porch. It was two-storied and edged with neatly trimmed shrubs. The driveway was white gravel, which meant someone had shipped it in. Narcissus edged the driveway in two thick stripes.
   A uniformed policeman stopped us in the foot of the sloping drive. He was tall, big through the shoulders, and had dark hair. He shined a flashlight into the car. "I'm sorry, miss, but you can't go up there right now."
   I flashed my ID at him and said, "I'm Anita Blake. I'm with the Regional Preternatural Investigation Team. I was told Sheriff St. John is expecting me."
   He leaned into the open window and flashed his light at Larry. "Who's this?"
   "Larry Kirkland. He's with me."
   He stared at Larry for a few seconds. Larry smiled, doing his best to look harmless. He's almost as good at it as I am.
   I had a good view of the cop's gun as he leaned into the window. It was a Colt .45. Big gun, but he had the hands for it. I caught a whiff of his aftershave; Brut. He'd leaned too far into the window to look at Larry. If I'd had a gun hidden in my lap, I could have fed it to him. He was big, and I bet sheer size saw him through a lot, but it was careless. Guns don't care how big you are.
   He nodded and pulled out of the car. "Go on up to the house. Sheriff's expecting you." He didn't sound particularly happy about that.
   "You got a problem?" I asked.
   He gave a smile, but it was sour. He shook his head. "It's our case. I don't think we need any help; that includes you."
   "You got a name?" I asked.
   "Coltrain. Deputy Zack Coltrain."
   "Well, Deputy Coltrain, we'll see you up at the house."
   "I guess you will, Miss Blake."
   He thought I was a cop and deliberately didn't call me "officer" or "detective." I let it go. If I really had a professional title I'd have demanded it, but getting into an argument because he wouldn't call me "detective" when I wasn't one seemed counterproductive.
   I drove up and parked between the police cars. I clipped my ID to my lapel. We walked up the pale curve of sidewalk, and no one stopped us. We stood outside the door in a silence that was almost eerie. I'd been to a lot of murder scenes. One thing they weren't was silent. There was no static crackle of police radios, no men milling around. Murder scenes were always thick with people: plainclothes detectives, uniforms, crime scene techs, people taking photographs, video, the ambulance waiting to take the body away. We stood on the freshly swept porch in the cool spring night with the only sounds the calls of frogs. The high-pitched, peeping sound played oddly with the swirling police lights.
   "Are we waiting for something?" Larry asked.
   "No," I said. I rang the glowing doorbell. The sound gave a rich bongdeep within the house. A small dog barked furiously, somewhere deep in the house. The door opened. A woman stood framed in the light from the hall, placing most of her in shadow. The police lights strobed across her face, painting in neon Crayola flashes. She was about my height with dark hair that was either naturally curly or had a really good perm. But she'd done more with it than I did, and it framed her face neatly. Mine always looked sort of unruly. She was wearing a button-down shirt with long sleeves untucked over jeans. She looked about seventeen, but I wasn't fooled. I looked young for my age, too. Heck, so did Larry. It can't just be being short, can it?
   "You aren't the state police," she said. She seemed very sure of that.
   "I'm with the Regional Preternatural Investigation Team," I said. "Anita Blake. This is my colleague Larry Kirkland."
   Larry smiled and nodded.
   The woman moved back out of the door, and the light from the hallway fell full on her face. It added five years to her age, but they were a good five years. It took me a minute to realize she was wearing very understated makeup. "Please come in, Miss Blake. My husband, David is waiting with the body." She shook her head. "It's awful."
   She peered out into the colored darkness before she closed the door. "David told him to turn off those lights. We don't want everyone for miles to know what's happened."
   "What's your name?" I asked.
   She blushed slightly. "I'm sorry; I'm not usually this scattered. I'm Beth St. John. My husband is the sheriff. I've been sitting with the parents." She made a small motion towards a set of double doors to the left of the main entrance.
   The dog was still barking behind those doors like a small furry machine gun. A man's voice said, "Quiet Raven." The barking stopped.
   We were standing in an entryway that had a ceiling that soared up to the roof, as if the architect had cut a piece out of the room above us to create the sweeping space. A crystal chandelier sparkled light down on us. The light cut a rectangle out of the darkened room to our right. There was a glimpse of a cherrywood dining room set so polished it gleamed.
   The hallway cut straight back to a distant door that probably led to the kitchen. Stairs ran along the wall with the double doors. The bannister and door edges were white, the carpet was pale blue, the wallpaper white with tiny blue flowers and tinier leaves. It was open and airy, bright and welcoming, and utterly quiet. If we could have found a piece of uncarpeted floor, we would have dropped a pin and listened to it bounce.
   Beth St. John led us up the blue-and-white stairway. In the center of the hallway on the right-hand side was a series of family portraits. They began with a smiling couple; smiling couple and smiling baby; smiling couple and one smiling baby, one crying baby. I walked down the hallway, watching the years pass by. The babies became children, a girl and a boy. A miniature black poodle appeared in the pictures. The girl was the oldest, but only by about a year. The parents grew older, but didn't seem to mind. The parents and the girl smiled; sometimes the boy did, sometimes he didn't. The boy smiled more on the other wall, where the camera had caught him tanned with a fish, or with hair slicked back from just coming out of the pool. The girl smiled everywhere you looked. I wondered which of them was dead.
   There was a window at the end of the hallway. The white drapes framed it; no one had bothered to draw them. The window looked like a black mirror. The darkness pressed against the glass like it had weight.
   Beth St. John knocked on the last door to the right, next to that pressing darkness. "David, the detectives are here." I let that slide. The sin of omission is a many-splendored thing.
   I heard movement in the room, but she stepped back before the door could open. Beth St. John backed up into the middle of the hallway so there would be no chance of her seeing inside the room. Her eyes flicked from one picture to another, catching glimpses of smiling faces. She put a slender hand to her chest, as if she was having trouble breathing.
   "I'm going to go make coffee. Do you want some?" Her voice was strained around the edges.
   "Sure," I said.
   "Sounds good," Larry said.
   She gave a weak smile and marched down the hallway. She did not run, which got her a lot of brownie points in my book. I was betting it was Beth St. John's first murder scene.
   The door opened. David St. John was wearing a pale blue uniform that matched the one his deputy wore, but there the resemblance ended. He was about five-foot-ten, thin without being skinny, like a marathon runner. His hair was a paler, browner version of Larry's red. You noticed his glasses before you noticed his eyes, but the eyes were worth noticing. A perfect pale green like a cat's. Except for the eyes it was a very ordinary face, but it was one of those faces you wouldn't grow tired of. He offered me his hand. I took it. He barely touched my hand, as if afraid to squeeze. A lot of men did that, but at least he offered to shake hands; most don't bother.
   "I'm Sheriff St. John. You must be Anita Blake. Sergeant Storr told me you'd be coming." He glanced at Larry. "Who's this?"
   "Larry Kirkland."
   St. John's eyes narrowed. He stepped fully into the hallway, closing the door behind him. "Sergeant Storr didn't mention anyone else. Can I see some ID?"
   I unclipped my badge ID. He looked at it and shook his head. "You're not a detective."
   "No, I'm not." I was mentally cursing Dolph. I'd known it wouldn't work.
   "How about him?" He jerked his chin at Larry.
   "All I have on me is a driver's license," Larry said.
   "Who are you?" the sheriff asked.
   "I am Anita Blake. I am part of the Spook Squad. I just don't happen to have a badge. Larry is a trainee." I fished my new vampire executioner's license out of my jacket pocket. It looked like a glorified driver's license, but it was the best I had.
   He peered at the license. "You're a vampire hunter? It's a little early for you to be called in. I don't know who did it yet."
   "I'm attached to Sergeant Storr's squad. I come in at the start of a case instead of the end. It tends to keep the body count down that way."
   He handed back the license. "I didn't think Brewster's law had gone into effect."
   Brewster was the senator whose daughter got eaten. "It hasn't. I've been working with the police for a long time."
   "How long?"
   "Nearly three years."
   He smiled. "Longer than I've been sheriff." He nodded, almost as if he'd answered a question for himself. "Sergeant Storr said if anybody could help me solve this, it was you. If the head of RPIT has that much confidence in you, I'm not going to refuse the help. We've never had a vampire kill out here, ever."
   "Vampires tend to stay near cities," I said. "They can hide their victims better that way."
   "Well, no one tried to hide this one." He pushed the door open and made a little arm gesture, ushering us in.
   The wallpaper was all pink roses, big old-fashioned cabbage roses. There was an honest-to-God vanity, with a raised mirror and everything, that looked like it might be an antique, but everything else was white wicker and pink lace. It looked like the room for a much younger girl.
   The girl lay on the narrow bed. The bedspread matched the wallpaper. The sheets twisted up underneath her body were jellybean pink. Her head lay on the edge of the pillows, as if it had slipped to one side after she was laid on them.
   The pink curtains fanned against the open window. A cool breeze crawled through the room, ruffling her thick black hair. It had been curled and styled with hair gel. There was a small red stain under her face and neck where the sheets had soaked up some blood. I was betting there was a bite mark on that side of the neck. She wore makeup not nearly as well applied as Beth St. John's, but the attempt had been made. The lipstick was badly smeared. One arm hung off into space, the hand half-cupped as if reaching for something. The nails were shiny with fresh red nail polish. Her long legs were spread-eagled on the bed. There were two fang marks high on her inner thigh—not fresh, though. Her toenails were painted to match her fingers.
   She was still almost wearing the black teddy she'd started the night in. The straps had been pushed down her shoulders, exposing small, well-formed breasts. The crotch had been ripped out, or was one of the ones that snapped open, because the bottom was pushed up nearly to her waist until the teddy was little more than a belt. With her legs spread wide, she was completely exposed.
   That, more than anything, pissed me off. He could have at least covered her up, not left her like some whore. It was arrogant and cruel.
   Larry was standing across the room at the other window. It was open too, spilling cool air into the room.
   "Have you touched anything?"
   St. John shook his head.
   "Have you taken any photos?"
   "No."
   I took a deep breath, reminding myself that I was a guest here and had no official status. I could not afford to piss him off. "What have you done?"
   "Called you, and the state cops."
   I nodded. "How long ago did you find the body?"
   He checked his watch. "An hour ago. How did you get here so fast?"
   "I wasn't ten miles away," I said.
   "Lucky for me," he said.
   I looked at the girl's body. "Yeah."
   Larry was hugging the windowsill, gripping it with his hands. "Larry, why don't you run down to the Jeep and get some gloves out of my bag?"
   "Gloves?"
   "I've got a box of surgical gloves in with my animating stuff. Bring the box."
   He swallowed hard and nodded. Every freckle stood out on his face like ink spots. He moved very quickly to the door and shut it behind him. I had two sets of gloves in my jacket pocket, but Larry needed air.
   "This his first murder?"
   "Second," I said. "How old is the girl?"
   "Seventeen," he said.
   "Then it's murder even if she consented."
   "Consented? What are you talking about?" There was the very first hint of anger in his voice.
   "What do you think happened here, Sheriff?"
   "A vampire climbed in her window while she was getting ready for bed and killed her."
   "Where's all the blood?"
   "There's more blood under her neck. You can't see the mark, but that's where he drained her."
   "That's not enough blood to kill her."
   "He drank the rest." He sounded a little outraged.
   I shook my head. "No single vampire can consume the entire blood supply of an adult human in one sitting."
   "Then there was more than one," he said.
   "You mean the bites on her thighs?"
   "Yeah, yeah." He paced the pink shag carpet in quick, nervous strides.
   "Those marks are at least a couple of days old," I said.
   "So he hypnotized her twice before, but this time he killed her."
   "It's awfully early for a teenager to be going to bed."
   "Her mother said she wasn't feeling well."
   That I believed. Even if you want it to happen, that much blood loss can take the sparkle out of your step.
   "She fixed her hair and makeup before she went to bed," I said.
   "So?"
   "Did you know this girl?"
   "Yes, hell yes. This is a small town, Miss Blake. We all know each other. She was a good kid, never in any trouble. You never found her parked with a boy, or out drinking. She was a good girl."
   "I believe she was a good girl, Sheriff St. John. Being murdered doesn't make you a bad person."
   He nodded, but his eyes were sort of wild, too much white showing. I wanted to ask how many murders he'd seen, but didn't. Whether this was his first or his twenty-first, he was sheriff.
   "What do you think happened here, Sheriff?" I'd asked the question once, but I was willing to try it again.
   "A vampire raped and killed Ellie Quinlan, that's what happened here." He said it almost defiantly, like he didn't believe it either.
   "This wasn't rape, Sheriff. Ellie Quinlan invited her killer into this room."
   He paced to the far window and stood like Larry had, staring out into the darkness. He wrapped his arms around himself like he was hugging himself. "How am I going to tell her parents, her kid brother, that she let some . . . thing make love to her? That she'd been letting it feed off her? How can I tell them that?"
   "Well, in three nights, two counting tonight, Ellie can rise from the dead and tell them herself."
   He turned back to me, his face pale with shock. He shook his head slowly.
   "They want her staked."
   "What?"
   "They want her staked. They don't want her to rise as a vampire."
   I stared down at the still-warm body. I shook my head. "She'll rise in two more nights."
   "The family doesn't want it."
   "If she was a vampire, it would be murder to stake her just because her family doesn't want her to be one."
   "But she's not a vampire yet," St. John said. "She's a corpse."
   "The coroner will have to certify death before she can be staked. That can take a little time."
   He shook his head. "I know Doc Campbell; he'll speed it along for us."
   I stood there, staring down at the girl. "She didn't plan to die, Sheriff. This isn't a suicide. She's planning on coming back."
   "You can't know that."
   I stared at him. "I do know that, and so do you. If we stake her before she can rise from the dead, it's murder."
   "Not according to the law."
   "I am not going to take out the head and heart of a seventeen-year-old girl just because her parents don't like the lifestyle she's chosen."
   "She's dead, Miss Blake."
   "It's Ms. Blake, and I know she's dead. I know what she'll become. Probably better than you do."
   "Then you understand why they want it done."
   I looked at him. I did understand. There was a time when I could have done it and felt good about it. Felt like I was helping the family, freeing her soul. Now, I just wasn't sure anymore.
   "Let her parents think about it for twenty-four hours. Trust me on this. They're horrified right now, and grief-stricken; are they really in a position to decide what happens to her?"
   "They're her parents."
   "Yeah, and two days from now would they rather have her on her feet, talking to them, or dead in a box?"
   "She'll be a monster," he said.
   "Maybe, probably, but I think we should hold off for just a little while until they've had some time. I think the immediate problem is the blood-sucker that did this."
   "I agree, we find him and kill him."
   "We can't kill him without a court order of execution," I said.
   "I know the local judge. I can get you a court order."
   "I bet you can."
   "What's the matter with you? Don't you want to kill him?"
   I looked at the girl. If he'd really wanted her to rise as a vampire, he'd have taken the body with him. He'd have hidden her until she rose to keep her safe from people like me. If he cared for her. "Yeah, I'll kill him for you."
   "Alright, what can we do?"
   "Well, first, the killing took place just after dark, so his daytime resting place had to be very near here. Are there any old houses, caves, some place where you could hide a coffin?"
   "There's an old homestead about a mile from here, and I know there's a cave down along the stream. I used to go there when I was little. We all did."
   "Here's the deal, Sheriff. If we go out into the dark after him now, he'll probably kill some of us. But if we don't try it tonight, he'll move his coffin. We might not find him again."
   "We'll look for him tonight. Now."
   "How long have you and your wife been married?" I asked.
   "Five years; why?"
   "You love her?"
   "Yes, we were high school sweethearts. What kind of question is that?"
   "If you go out after the vampire, you may never see her again. If you've never hunted one out there at night in its own territory, you don't know what we're up against, and nothing I can tell you will prepare you for it. But think about never seeing Beth again. Never holding her hand. Never hearing her voice. We can go out in the morning. The vampire may not move its coffin tonight, or it might move from the cave to the homestead, or vice versa. We might catch it tomorrow without risking anybody's life."
   "Do you think it won't move tonight?"
   I took a deep breath and wanted to lie. God knows I wanted to lie. "No, I think it'll leave the immediate area tonight. That's probably why he came just after full dark. It gives him all night to run."
   "Then we go after him."
   I nodded. "Okay, but we have to have some ground rules here. I'm in charge. I've done this before and I'm still alive; that makes me an expert. If you do everything I say, maybe, just maybe, we can all live until morning."
   "Except for the vampire," St. John said.
   "Yeah, sure." It had been a long time since I had gone up against a vampire at night in the open. My vampire kit was at home in my closet. It was illegal to carry it with me without a specific court order of execution. I had the cross I was wearing, the two handguns, the two knives, and that was it. No holy water, no extra crosses, no shotgun. Hell, no stake and mallet.
   "Do you have silver bullets?"
   "I can get some."
   "Do it, and find me a shotgun and silver ammo for that too. Is there a Catholic or Episcopalian church around here?"
   "Of course," he said.
   "We need some holy water and holy wafer, the host."
   "I know you can throw the holy water on the vampire, but I didn't know you could throw the host."
   I had to smile. "They aren't like little holy grenades. I want the host to give to the Quinlans so they can put one at every windowsill, every doorsill."
   "You think it'll come for them?"
   "No, but the girl invited it in, only she can revoke the invitation, and she's dead. Until we get the bastard, better safe than sorry."
   He hesitated, then nodded. "I'll go to the church. I'll see what I can do." He went for the door.
   "And, Sheriff?"
   He stopped and turned to me.
   "I want that court order in my hands before we leave. I'm not going to be up on murder charges."
   He nodded, sort of nervously, head bobbing like one of those dogs you see in the backs of cars. "You'll have it, Ms. Blake." He left, closing the door behind him.
   I was left alone with the dead girl. She lay there pale and unmoving, growing colder, deader. If her parents had their way, it would be permanent. And it would be my job to make it happen. There were schoolbooks scattered beside the bed, as if she had been studying in bed before he came. I pushed one of the book covers closed with my toe, careful not to rearrange it. Calculus. She'd been studying calculus before she put on her makeup and black teddy. Shit.
   
   
12
   While we waited for the court order, I talked to the family. Not my favorite thing to do, but necessary. This hadn't been a random attack, which meant they probably knew the vampire, or had known him before he died.
   The living room continued the pastel theme, blue predominating. Beth St. John had made coffee. She'd shanghaied Larry into carrying up a tray. I guess she didn't want to see the body again. Couldn't say I blamed her. I'd seen bloodier murder scenes, a lot bloodier, but each death has its own peculiar poignancy. There was something very piteous about Ellie Quinlan stretched across her pink candy sheets, and I hadn't known her. Beth St. John had. Made it hard.
   The family sat huddled on the white sofa. The man was broad, not fat, but square like a linebacker. He had short black hair that was going nicely grey at the sideburns. Very distinguished. His complexion was ruddy, not tanned, but colorful just the same. He was dressed in a white dress shirt unbuttoned at the neck, but sleeves still sporting their cufflinks. His face was very tight, immobile like a mask, as if underneath something entirely different was going on. He looked calm, composed, but the effort thrummed along his skin. Anger glittered in his dark eyes.
   His arm was around his wife's shoulders. She leaned into him crying softly, eyes closed as if that would make it better. Her eye makeup had smeared in long, multicolored streaks like an oil slick down her cheeks. She had thick black hair done in some short, complicated style that looked too stiff to touch. She wore a long-sleeved, button-down blouse with a delicate flower pattern on it, pink predominating. Her slacks were a matching pink. Her feet were bare except for dark hose. A delicate gold cross and wedding rings were her only jewelry.
   The boy was only about my height and slender as a willow. He hadn't hit his growth spurt yet, and it made him look younger than he was. His face had that soft, perfect skin that said he'd never had a pimple and shaving was a distant dream. If the girl was seventeen, he had to be at least fifteen, maybe sixteen. He could have passed for twelve. A perfect victim, except for his eyes and the way he held himself. Even in the midst of grief with the lines of tears drying on his face, he looked sure of himself, self-possessed. His eyes held a quick intelligence and a rage that would hold the bullies at bay.
   His hair was the perfect black of his father's, but it was baby fine, probably the natural texture of Mrs. Quinlan's before she styled it to death.
   A little black poodle was in his lap. It had barked like a machine gun, rat-a-tat-tat, yip-yip-yip until he'd picked it up and held it. A soft growl tickled out of its curly jaws.
   "Hush, Raven," the boy said. He petted the dog as he said it, thus rewarding the growling. The dog growled again; he petted it again. I decided to ignore it. If the poodle got loose, I figured I could take it. I was armed.
   "Mr. and Mrs. Quinlan, my name's Anita Blake. I need to ask you a few questions."
   "Have you staked the body yet?" the man asked.
   "No, Mr. Quinlan, the sheriff and I agreed to wait twenty-four hours."
   "Her immortal soul is in jeopardy. We want it done now."
   "If you still want it done tomorrow night, I'll do it."
   "We want it done now." He was holding his wife very tight, fingers digging into her shoulder.
   She opened her eyes and blinked at him. "Jeffrey, please, you're hurting me."
   He swallowed hard and loosened his grip. "I'm sorry, Sally. I'm sorry." The apology seemed to take some of the anger out of him. The lines in his face softened. He shook his head. "We must save her soul. Her life is gone, but her soul remains. We must save that at least."
   There had been a time when I believed that, too. Down to my toes I thought all vampires were evil. Now, I wasn't so sure. I knew too many of them who didn't seem that bad. I knew evil when I felt it, and that wasn't what they were. I didn't know what they were, but were they damned? According to the Catholic Church, yes, they were, and so was the girl upstairs. But then, according to the Church, so was I. I'd become Episcopalian when the church declared all animators excommunicates.
   "Are you Catholic, Mr. Quinlan?"
   "Yes; what difference does that make?"
   "I was raised Catholic. So I understand your beliefs."
   "They are not beliefs, Miss . . . What is your name?"
   "Blake, Anita Blake."
   "They are not beliefs, Miss Blake. They are facts. Ellie's immortal soul is in danger of eternal damnation. We must help her."
   "Do you understand what you're asking me to do?" I asked.
   "To save her."
   I shook my head. Mrs. Quinlan was looking at me. Her eyes were very intent. I was betting I could cause a little family disagreement.
   "I will put a stake through her heart and chop off her head." I left the fact out that most of my executions were done with a shotgun now, at close range. It was messy and you needed a closed coffin, but it was a lot easier on me and a quicker death for the vampire.
   Mrs. Quinlan started to cry again, huddling against her husband. She buried her face against him, smearing makeup on his clean white shirt.
   "Are you trying to upset my wife?"
   "No, sir, but I want you all to realize that two nights from now Ellie will rise as a vampire. She'll walk and talk. Eventually, she'll be able to be around you. If I stake her, all she'll be is dead."
   "She is already dead. We want you to do your job," he said.
   Mrs. Quinlan wouldn't look at me. Either she believed as strongly as her hubby, or she wouldn't fight him. Not even for her daughter's continued existence.
   I let it go. I could stall for twenty-four hours. I doubted that Mr. Quinlan was going to change his mind. I had hopes for Mrs. Quinlan.
   "Does the poodle always bark at strangers?"
   They all three blinked at me like rabbits caught in headlights. The change of subject was too abrupt for their grief.
   "What has that got to do with anything?" he asked.
   "There is a murderous vampire out there somewhere. I'm going to catch him, but I need your help. So please just answer my questions as best you can."
   "What does the dog have to do with it?"
   I sighed and sipped my coffee. He had just found his daughter dead, murdered, raped, I'm sure he'd told himself. The horror of it cut him some slack, but he was beginning to use it up.
   "The poodle barked its head off when I came to the door. Does it bark every time a stranger comes to the house?"
   The boy saw what I was getting at. "Yeah, Raven always barks at strangers."
   I ignored his parents and talked to the most reasonable person in the room. "What's your name?"
   "Jeff," he said. God, Jeffrey Junior, of course.
   "How many times would I have to come to the house before Raven stopped barking at me?"
   He thought about that, rolling his lower lip under, really thinking about it.
   Mrs. Quinlan sat up, a little apart from her husband. "Raven always barks when someone comes to the door. Even if she knows you."
   "Did she bark tonight?"
   The parents frowned at me. Jeff said, "Yeah. She barked like crazy until Ellie let her in her room just after dark. Ellie let her in, then a few minutes later Raven came back downstairs."
   "How'd you find the body?"
   "Raven started barking again and wouldn't stop. Ellie didn't let her in. Ellie always lets her in. I mean, I'm not allowed in her room, but Raven gets to go in even when Ellie wants her privacy." He made that last word sound like he usually said it with a lot of eye-rolling.
   "I knocked at the door and she didn't answer. Raven was scratching at the door. It was locked. She locked her door a lot, but she wouldn't answer." A tear escaped from his wide eyes. "I went and got Dad."
   "You unlocked the door, Mr. Quinlan?"
   He nodded. "Yes, and she was just lying there. I couldn't bear to touch her. She's unclean now. I . . ." He was choking on tears, trying so hard not to cry that his face was turning purple.
   Jeff came and put his arm around his dad, leaning against his mother, the poodle still gripped in his other arm. The dog whined softly, licked the makeup from Mrs. Quinlan's face. The woman looked up and gave a choked laugh, petting the curly fur.
   I wanted to leave. I wanted to let them huddle together and grieve. Hell, the death was so fresh, they hadn't gotten to grieving yet. They were still in shock. But I couldn't leave. Sheriff St. John would be back with the warrant, and I needed as much information as I could get before we braved the darkness.
   Larry was sitting in the corner in a pale blue chair. He was being so quiet you'd almost forget he was there. But his eyes were eager, noticing everything, filing it all away. When I first realized he damn near memorized everything I said and did, it was intimidating. Now I counted on it.
   Beth St. John came into the room with a tray of sandwiches, coffee, and soft drinks. I didn't remember anybody asking for them, but I think Beth was needing something to do besides sit here and watch the Quinlans cry. Me, too.
   She set the tray on the coffee table between the couch and the love seat. The Quinlans ignored it. I took a fresh mug of coffee. Grilling grieving families always goes down better with caffeine.
   The group huddle broke up. The poodle was transferred to the wife's arms, and the two men sat on either side of her. Jeffrey and Jeff looked at me with identical eyes. It was almost eerie. Genetics at work.
   "The vampire had to be in the room with Ellie when she let the dog in at full dark," I said.
   "My daughter would not have let in her murderer."
   "If she was eighteen, Mr. Quinlan, it wouldn't be murder."
   "Being made a vampire against your will is still murder, Miss Blake."
   I was getting tired of everyone calling me "Miss," but the grieving father could do it a few more times. "I believe your daughter knew the vampire. I believe she let him in willingly."
   "You are crazy. Beth, go get the sheriff. I want this woman out of my house."
   Beth stood up uncertainly. "David's gone to get some things, Jeffrey. I . . . Deputy Coltrain's upstairs with the body, but . . ."
   "Then get him down here."
   Beth looked at me, then back to him. She gripped her small hands together, almost wringing them. "Jeffrey, she's a licensed vampire hunter. She's done this a lot. Listen to her."
   He stood up. "My daughter was raped and murdered by some soulless, bloodsucking animal, and I want this woman out of my house, now." If he hadn't been crying at the same time, I'd have been pissed.
   Beth looked at me. She was willing to stand up to him if I needed her to. Mucho points for her. "Has anyone you know vanished or died recently?" I asked.
   Quinlan squinted at me. He looked confused. The change of subject again was just too abrupt. I was hoping I could distract him from throwing me out long enough to learn something.
   "What?"
   "Has anyone you know gone missing or died recently?"
   He shook his head. "No."
   "Andy's missing," Jeff said.
   Quinlan shook his head again. "That boy is no concern of ours."
   "Who's Andy?" I asked.
   "Ellie's boyfriend."
   "He is not her boyfriend," Quinlan said.
   I caught Jeff's gaze. The look said it all. Andy had been a boyfriend, and dear old dad hadn't liked him one little bit.
   "Why didn't you like Andy, Mr. Quinlan?"
   "He was a criminal."
   I raised my eyebrows. "In what way?"
   "He was arrested for drug abuse."
   "He smoked some pot," Jeff said.
   I was beginning to wish I could just go off and talk with Jeff. He seemed to know what was going on and wasn't trying to hide it. Trick was how to manage it.
   "He was a corrupting influence on my daughter, and I put a stop to it."
   "And he's missing?" I asked.
   "Yes," Jeff said.
   "I will answer Miss Blake's questions, Jeff. I am the man of the house."
   Jesus, man of the house. Hadn't heard that in a while. "I'd like to see the rest of the house in case the vampire entered somewhere other than her room. If Jeff could show me the doors, I'd appreciate it."
   "I can show you around, Miss Blake," Quinlan said.
   "I'm sure your wife needs you right now, Mr. Quinlan. Jeff can show me around, but only you can comfort your wife."
   Mrs. Quinlan looked up at him, then at me, as if she wasn't sure she wanted to be comforted, but I knew the image would appeal to him.
   He nodded. "Perhaps you're right." He touched his wife's shoulder. "Sally needs me right now."
   Sally cooperated with fresh crying, using the poodle as a sort of impromptu handkerchief. The poodle squirmed and whined. Quinlan sat down and took his wife in his arms. The dog squirmed free and trotted over to Jeff.
   I stood. Larry stood. I moved toward the door and looked back at the boy. Jeff stood and the poodle trotted at his side. I opened the doors and ushered us all outside. Raven the poodle eyed me suspiciously, but she came along.
   I caught a last glimpse of Beth St. John gazing at the door as if she wanted to go with us, but she sat down beside the unwanted sandwiches and the cooling coffee. She sat like a good soldier. She would not abandon her post.
   I closed the door, feeling cowardly. I was glad it wasn't my job to hold the Quinlans' hands. Facing the vampire even in the dark didn't seem so bad by comparison. Of course, I was still safe inside the house. Out there in the dark with the vampire, I might feel different.
   
   
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13
   We stood out in the entryway. The air felt cooler out here, easier to breathe. Had to be my imagination. The poodle was sniffing at my foot. She gave a low growl and Jeff picked her up, tucking her under one arm, in a familiar gesture like he'd done it a hundred times before.
   "You don't really want to see the doors, do you?" he asked.
   "No," I said.
   "Dad's all right. He's just . . ." He shrugged. "He's just right, and everyone else is wrong. He doesn't mean anything by it."
   "I know. He's scared right now, too. That makes everyone bitchy."
   Jeff grinned. I wasn't sure if it was the "scared" comment or the word "bitchy." Probably didn't hear many people saying either about his dad.
   "How serious were Andy and your sister?"
   He glanced at the closed doors and lowered his voice just a little. "Dad'll say not very, but they were serious. Real serious." He glanced at the door again.
   "We can go somewhere else to talk," I said. "Your choice of rooms."
   He looked at me. "You're really a vampire hunter?" If the circumstances had been different, he would have been enjoying himself. It's hard not to think it's cool to put stakes through people's chests.
   "Yeah, and we raise zombies, too."
   "Both of you?" He sounded surprised.
   "I'm a full-fledged animator," Larry said.
   Jeff shook his head. "We can talk in my room." He led the way up the stairs. We followed.
   If I'd been a cop, questioning a juvenile without a guardian or lawyer present would have been illegal, but I wasn't a cop. And he wasn't a suspect. Just gathering information, folks. Just grilling a sixteen-year-old boy about his sister's sex life. Murder investigations are never pleasant, and some of that unpleasantness has nothing to do with the corpse.
   Jeff hesitated at the head of the stairs, peering down the hallway. Deputy Coltrain was standing outside Ellie's room, back stiff, hands behind his back, alert for intruders. The door was open. Too hard to stand in the room with the body, I guess. He saw Jeff and closed the door, still standing in front of it. Nice of Coltrain to make sure Jeff didn't see the body. But standing outside the closed door was not the best idea. A vampire, if it was old enough, could have come in the room behind him and opened the door before he could have drawn his gun. The undead make no noise.
   I debated on whether to tell him that. I let it go. If the vamp had meant to take out more people, it could have. He could have taken out the entire family. Instead, when the dog barked he panicked and ran. This was not an ancient bloodsucker. This was someone who was new at the job. I was betting on the boyfriend, Andy, but I'd keep an open mind. Andy might have just driven to California to find fame and fortune, but I doubted it.
   Jeff opened the door near the head of the stairs and went in. His room was smaller than his sister's. Being firstborn does have its advantages. The wallpaper was tan with cowboys and Indians on it. The bed had a matching spread. It was the room of a much younger person, just like his sister's. The walls were bare, no pinups, no sports figures. There was a desk stacked high with books. A small pile of clothes lay near the closet door. Raven the poodle sniffed the clothes. Jeff shooed her away and kicked the clothes into the closet and closed the door.
   "Sit down anywhere you can." He pulled the desk chair out a little, then stood near the window, not sure what to do. I doubted he had many adults up to his room for a talk. Parents didn't count. Though frankly I couldn't imagine either of the Quinlans coming in for a quiet chat.
   I took the chair. I figured Jeff would feel more comfortable lounging on his bed with Larry than with me. Besides, I wasn't used to wearing skirts this short yet, and every once in a while I forgot. The chair seemed safer.
   Larry sat down on the bed with his back pressed against the wall. Jeff sat down next to him, propping some of the pillows into the corner for a back rest. Raven jumped up on the bed, circled his lap twice, and lay down. Cozy.
   "How hot an item were Andy and your sister?" No prelims; off with the clothes.
   He glanced at both of us. Larry gave him an encouraging smile. He shifted more securely against his mound of pillows and said, "Pretty hot. I mean, they hung all over each other at school."
   "Embarrassing," I said.
   "Yeah. I mean, she was my sister. She's only a year older than me, and there's this guy pawing her." He shook his head. He rubbed the poodle's ears, hands moving down her small curly body. He petted her like it was habit, a comfort measure.
   "Did you like Andy?"
   He shrugged. "He was older and sort of cool, but no, I thought Ellie could have done better."
   "How so?"
   "He did smoke pot and didn't have any plans for college. Andy wasn't going anywhere. It was like the fact that he loved my sister was everything. Like they'd live on love or something stupid like that."
   I agreed that that was stupid. "When your dad put a stop to it, did it stop?"
   He grinned at me. "No. They just started sneaking around. I think if anything, telling Ellie she couldn't see him made it worse."
   "It usually does," I said. "When did Andy disappear?"
   "About two weeks ago. His car went missing, too, so everybody thought he'd run off, but he wouldn't have left Ellie behind. He was sort of creepy, but he wouldn't have left her."
   "Was Ellie upset at being left behind?"
   He frowned, hugging the dog against his chest. Raven licked his chin with her small pink tongue. "That was the weird part. I mean, I know she had to pretend not to care in front of Mom and Dad, but even at school or out with our friends she didn't seem to care. I was kinda glad. I mean, Andy was a loser, but it was like she didn't believe he was gone or knew something the rest of us didn't. I thought he'd just gone off to find like an out-of-town job and was going to send for her."
   "Maybe he did," I said.
   The frown deepened between his smooth, unblemished brows. "What do you mean?"
   "I think Andy may be the vampire that did your sister."
   A look of disgust crumbled his face even further. "I don't believe that. Andy loved Ellie; he wouldn't kill her."
   "If he's a vampire, Jeff, he wouldn't think turning her into the undead is killing her. He'd probably think of it as bringing her over."
   Jeff shook his head. Raven wiggled out of his grasp as if he was squeezing too hard. She hopped off his lap and lay down on the covers. "Andy wouldn't hurt Ellie. Doesn't it hurt to die?"
   "Probably," I said.
   "The bushes underneath her end window are all crushed," Larry said.
   I looked at him. "Say again."
   He smiled, pleased with himself. "I took a look around outside. That's what took me so long when you sent me out for gloves that you didn't need. The bushes under the end window to the girl's room are all smashed like something heavy fell on them."
   I had a moment to visualize Larry out in the dark all alone, unarmed except for his cross. The thought made my skin cold. I opened my mouth to yell at him and closed it. Never dress anyone down in public unless it's an object lesson. I said, "Any tracks?" I gave myself a dozen brownie points for not yelling.
   "Do I look like Tonto? Besides, the ground is just grass and it's been so dry lately. I don't think there'd be any tracks." He frowned at me. "Can you track vampires?"
   "Not normally, but if this one is as new as I think he is, then maybe." I nodded. "Yeah." I stood up. "I've got to go ask the deputy something. Thank you for your help, Jeff." I offered him my hand to shake. He took it. His handshake was a little uncertain, as if he wasn't used to it.
   I went for the door and Larry followed.
   "You will find him and kill him, even if it's Andy?" Jeff asked.
   I turned back and looked at him. His dark eyes were still intelligent, still full of purpose, but there was also a little boy needing reassurance.
   "Yeah, we'll find him."
   "And kill him?"
   "And kill him," I said.
   "Good," he said. "Good."
   I wasn't sure if "good" was the word I would have chosen, but it wasn't my sister lying dead in the other room.
   "You got a cross?" I asked.
   He frowned, but said, "Yeah."
   "You wearing it?"
   He shook his head.
   "Get it and wear it until we catch him. Okay?"
   "You think he'll come back?" Fear glittered at the edge of his eyes.
   "No, but you never know, Jeff. Just humor me."
   He got up and went to his bureau. There was a line of glittering chain on one corner of the mirror. When he picked it up, a tiny gold cross dangled from it. I watched him put it on. The dog watched it all with anxious eyes.
   I smiled. "We'll see you later."
   He nodded, fingering the cross, scared now underneath the shock. We left him in the tender care of Raven.
   "You really think the vamp will come back to the house?" Larry asked.
   "No," I said, "but just in case your little visit out into the dark gives him ideas, I want Jeff to at least have a cross on."
   "Heh," he said. "I found a clue."
   Deputy Coltrain was watching us, but we were running out of privacy. I kept my voice down and hoped that was enough. "Yeah, and you went out, alone, unarmed, in the dark with a vampire that had already killed once on the loose."
   "You said it was a really new vampire."
   "Not before you went out after the gloves."
   "Maybe I figured out that it was a new one all on my own," he said. He was looking stubborn, like far from taking my warning to heart, he just might do it again.
   "New vampires can still kill you, Larry."
   "With a cross on?"
   He had a point. Very few of the new dead could get past the pain of a cross, or play enough head games to get you to take it off voluntarily.
   "Fine, Larry, but where's the vampire that made him? That one may be a couple of centuries old, and it's out in the dark, too."
   He went a little pale around the edges. "I never thought of that."
   "I did."
   He gave a shrug and had the grace to look embarrassed. "That's why you're the boss."
   "That's right," I said.
   "All right, all right. I promise to be good."
   "Great; now let's go ask Deputy Coltrain if he knows anyone who could track our vampire."
   "Can you really track a vampire like that?"
   "I don't know, but with one less than two weeks old, one that falls out a window and into some shrubs, you might be able to. They at least might be able to narrow down where we should look first."
   He was grinning very broadly at me.
   "Yeah, knowing it fell out the window is useful information. It might not have occurred to me to check for tracks outside the window."
   If he grinned any wider, he was going to pull something.
   "And if a vampire old enough to get past your cross had eaten your face, I'd have never known about the shrubs."
   "Ah, Anita. I done good."
   I shook my head. For all that Larry had seen of vampires, it wasn't enough. He still didn't fully appreciate what they were. He didn't have any scars yet. If he stayed in the business long enough to get his license, that would change.
   God help him.
   
   
14
   The wind was cool and smelled of rain. I turned my face to the soft touch of it. The air smelled of green growing things. It smelled clean and new. I stood on the grass looking upward. Ellie Quinlan's window shone like a soft yellow beacon. Ellie had opened the windows, but her father had turned on the lights. She had met her vampire lover in darkness. The better not to see him for the walking corpse he was.
   I had the coverall back on, unzipped halfway so I could get to the Browning. I'd only brought an inner pants holster for the Firestar, so I shoved it into a pocket of the coveralls. Not handy for a quick draw, but better than not having it. An inner pants holster just doesn't work well with a skirt on.
   Larry had his very own gun in a shoulder rig. He stood beside me shrugging his shoulders, trying to get the straps more comfortable. It isn't really uncomfortable if it's a good fit, but it isn't really comfortable either. It's sort of like a bra. They fit and they are necessary, but they are never completely comfortable.
   He was wearing the extra coverall unzipped and flapping nearly to his hips. A flashlight flicked over us, glinting on Larry's cross. The light swept over me, glaring in my eyes. "Now that you've ruined my night vision, get that damn thing out of my eyes."
   Deep masculine laughter came from behind the brilliant beam of light. Two state cops had arrived just in time to join us on the hunt. Oh, joy.
   "Wallace," a man's voice said, "do what the lady says." The voice was deep and vaguely threatening. A voice to say, "lean on the hood of the car and spread 'em." And you'd do it or else.
   Officer Granger walked up to us, his flashlight pointed at the ground. He wasn't as tall as Wallace, and a gut was beginning to creep over his belt, but he moved through the dark like he knew what he was doing. Like maybe he'd hunted in the dark before. Maybe not vampires but something. Maybe men.
   Wallace walked over to us, flashlight swimming around us like an oversized firefly. It wasn't in my eyes, but it was still not helping my night vision.
   "Turn off the flashlight . . . please," I said.
   Wallace took a step closer, looming over me. He was tall, built like a football player, With long legs. A running back, maybe. He and Deputy Coltrain could arm wrestle later. Right now I just wanted him to back the fuck off me.
   "Turn it off, Wallace," Granger said. He'd already clicked off his own.
   "I won't be able to see a damn thing," he protested.
   "Afraid of the dark?" I asked, smiling up at him.
   Larry laughed. It was the wrong thing to do.
   Wallace turned on him. "You think that's funny?" He stepped up to Larry until they were almost touching, using his size to intimidate. But Larry's like me; he's been small all his life. He'd been bullied by the best. He stood his ground.
   "Are you?" Larry asked.
   "Am I what?" Wallace asked.
   "Afraid of the dark?"
   Animating wasn't the only thing Larry was learning from me. Unfortunately for Larry, he was a boy. I could get away with being a pain in the ass and most people wouldn't take a swing at me. Larry wasn't so lucky.
   Wallace balled his hands into Larry's coverall and lifted him to tiptoes. His flashlight fell to the grass, rolling around spotlighting our ankles.
   Officer Granger stepped up close to them but didn't touch Wallace. Even in the dark you could see the tension in his shoulders and arms. Not from lifting Larry, but from wanting to hit him and resisting the urge.
   "Ease down, Wallace. He didn't mean anything."
   Wallace didn't say anything, he just pulled Larry closer to him, leaning over to put his face next to Larry's. A square of yellow light fell across his face. The muscle along the edge of his jaw was jutting out, throbbing like it would pop out of his face. There was a scar under the bone of his jawline. A scar that disappeared into the collar of his jacket.
   Wallace nearly put his face nose to nose with Larry. "I-am-not-afraid-of-anything." Each word was squeezed out.
   I stepped up close to him. He was bent down to intimidate Larry, so I could whisper in his ear. "Nice scar, Wallace."
   He jumped like I'd bit him. He released Larry so suddenly that Larry stumbled. He whirled, one big hand raised to smash my face. At least he'd let go of Larry.
   He swung at me. I swept his arm to one side and past me. He stumbled. I brought my knee up into his stomach hard. It took a lot not to follow through and really hurt him. He was a cop. One of the good guys. You don't beat up on them. I stepped back, out of reach, and hoped that one near miss had cooled him down. I could have hurt him badly in the initial rush, but now he'd be ready. Harder to hurt.
   He was nearly a foot taller than me and outweighed me by more than a hundred pounds. If the fight turned serious, I was in trouble. I hoped I wouldn't regret my gallant gesture.
   Wallace ended on all fours near the shrubs by the house. He got to his feet quicker than I wanted him to, but he stayed half bent over, hands on his knees. He looked up at me. I wasn't sure what his expression meant, but it wasn't completely hostile. It was more a considering sort of look, as if I'd surprised him. I get that look a lot.
   "You all right now, Wallace?" Granger asked.
   Wallace nodded. Hard to talk after a good gut shot.
   Granger glanced at me. "You all right, Ms. Blake?"
   "I'm fine."
   He nodded. "Yes, you are."
   Larry moved up beside me. He was standing too close. If Wallace came back at me, I would need more room to maneuver. I knew that Larry meant it as a show of support. After we got Larry's shooting up to speed, we'd have to work on some basic hand-to-hand techniques.
   Why was I training him to shoot before I taught him to fight? Because you don't arm wrestle vampires. You shoot them. He would live through a beating from Officer Wallace. He wouldn't live through a vampire attack. Not if he couldn't shoot.
   "Were you with him when he got that scar?" I asked.
   Granger shook his head. "His first partner didn't make it."
   "Vampire got him?"
   He nodded.
   Wallace stood up sort of slow. He arched his back just a bit, as if working the kinks out. "Nice shot," he said.
   I shrugged. "It was my knee, not my fist."
   "Still a good shot. I don't have any excuses good enough for what I just did."
   "No," I said, "you don't."
   He just looked down at the ground, then up. "I don't know what made me do it."
   "Let's take a little walk." I started off into the dark without looking back, as if I had no doubt he'd follow me. This technique works more often than you think it would.
   He followed me. He had stopped to pick up his flashlight, but bravely turned it off.
   I stopped just short of the woods and stared off into the trees, letting my eyes adjust to the dark. I didn't look at anything in particular. I let my eyes just sort of see everything. I was looking for movement. Any movement. The tree limbs moved fitfully in the spring wind, but it was a general movement like ocean waves. The trees weren't what worried me.
   Wallace tapped the darkened flashlight against his thigh. A soft whap, whap. I wanted to tell him to stop but didn't. If it comforted him, I could live with it.
   I let the silence stretch between us. The wind picked up, filling the night with a rushing, hurrying sound. You could smell the rain on the wind.
   He gripped the flashlight in both hands. I could hear his intake of breath above the wind. "What was that?"
   "The wind," I said.
   "Are you sure?"
   "Pretty much."
   "What do you want?" he asked.
   "Is this the first vamp you've gone after since your partner's death?"
   He looked at me. "Granger told you?"
   "Yeah, but I saw your neck. I was pretty sure what had done it."
   I wanted to tell him it was okay to be scared. Hell, I was scared, but he was a cop and a man, and I didn't know him well enough to know how he'd take a pep talk from me. But I had to know if he'd follow me into those woods. I had to know if I could depend on him. If he stayed this scared, I couldn't.
   "What happened?" I asked. Maybe talking about it right now was the wrong thing to do, but ignoring it wasn't working very well.
   He shook his head. "Headquarters says you're in charge, Ms. Blake. Fine, I'll do what I'm told. But I don't have to answer personal questions."
   It was too much trouble to shrug out of the overall, and I really didn't want my arms trapped. I undid one button on my blouse and spread the cloth.
   "What are you doing?"
   "How good's your night vision?"
   "Why?"
   "Can you see the scar?"
   "What are you talking about?" He sounded suspicious. Suspicious that I was crazy, maybe.
   My night vision would have picked it up, but most people don't have my eyes. "Give me your hand."
   "Why?"
   "I am about to give you a once-in-a-lifetime offer. Just give me your damn hand."
   He did, sort of hesitatingly, glancing back at the waiting men.
   His hand was cold to the touch. He was one scared puppy. I traced his large, blunt fingers along my collarbone. The moment he touched the scar tissue, his hand jerked like he'd had an electric shock. I pulled my hand away, and he traced the scar again on his own.
   He took his hand back, slowly, rubbing his fingers together like he was remembering the feel of my skin. "What did that?"
   "Same thing that did your neck. A vampire that wasn't neat with its food."
   "Jesus," he said.
   "Yeah," I said. I rebuttoned my blouse. "Tell me what happened, Wallace. Please."
   He looked at me for a moment longer, then nodded. "Harry, my partner, and me, we got a call that someone had found a body with its throat torn out." He made the words very bland, ordinary, but I knew he was seeing it in his head. Watching it all happen again behind his eyeballs.
   "It was a construction site. Just us in the middle of the place with our flashlights. There was a sound like wind whistling, and something hit Harry. He went down with a man on top of him. He screamed, and I had my gun out. I fired into the man's back. I hit him solid three, four times. He turned on me and his face was bloody. I didn't have time to wonder why, 'cause he jumped me. I emptied my gun into him before I hit the ground."
   He took a deep breath, big hands twisting back and forth on the flashlight. He was looking off into the trees, too, but not for vampires, or at least not for this one.
   "He ripped my jacket and shirt like they were paper. I tried to fight him, but . . ." He shook his head. "He caught me with his eyes. He caught me with his eyes, and when he tore into my neck, I wanted him to do it, wanted it worse than I've ever wanted anything in my life."
   He turned a little away from me, as if not meeting my eyes wasn't enough. "When I woke up, he was just gone. Harry was dead. The girl was dead. I was alive."
   He turned to me finally, looked me straight in the eyes and said, "Why didn't he kill me, Ms. Blake?"
   I looked into his earnest eyes and didn't have a good answer. "I don't know, Wallace. He wanted to make you one of them, maybe. I don't know why you and not Harry. You ever catch him?"
   "The local master sent his head in a box to the station. The note apologized for his uncivilized behavior. That's what the note said, 'uncivilized behavior.' "
   "It's hard to look at it as murder when you feed off humans yourself."
   "Do they all do that? Feed off people?"
   "I've never met one that didn't."
   "Can't they eat animals?"
   "Theoretically, yes. In practice it seems to lack certain nutrients." Truth was, feeding was too close to sex for most vamps. They weren't into bestiality, so they didn't feed off animals. I didn't think the sex analogy would go over well with Officer Wallace.
   "Can you do this, Wallace?"
   "What do you mean?"
   "Can you go out into the dark and hunt vampires?"
   "It's my job."
   "I didn't ask if it was your job. I asked if you can go out into that darkness and hunt vampires."
   "You think there's more than one?"
   "Always best to assume so," I said.
   He nodded. "Yeah, I guess so."
   "Scared?" I asked.
   "Are you?"
   I looked off into the windswept night. The trees tossed and moaned in the wind. There was movement everywhere. Soon there would be rain, and what light the stars gave would be gone.
   "Yeah, I'm scared."
   "But you're a vampire hunter," he said. "How can you do this night after night if it scares you?"
   "Doesn't it scare you to know that every time you pull over some yahoo for a traffic violation that he could be armed? You walk up on that car and never know."
   "It's my job."
   "And this is my job."
   "But you're scared?"
   "Down to my toes."
   Larry called, "The sheriff's back. He's got the warrant."
   Wallace and I looked at each other. "You got silver bullets?" I asked.
   "Yes."
   I smiled. "Then let's go. You'll be fine," I said. I believed it. Wallace would do his job. I would do my job. We would all do our jobs. And come morning, some of us would be alive and some of us wouldn't. Of course, maybe there was just the one newly dead vampire to deal with. If so, we might all see the sunrise.
   But I hadn't lived this long assuming the best. Assuming the worst was always safer. And usually truer.
   
   
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15
   I'd gotten used to the sawed-off shotgun that I had at home. Yeah, it is illegal, but it's easy to carry and makes mincemeat out of vampires. What more could a modern vampire hunter want? The Ithaca pump action 12 gauge was close.
   "Why don't I get a shotgun?" Larry asked.
   I just looked at him. He looked serious. I shook my head. "When you can handle the nine, we'll talk about shotguns."
   "Great."
   Oh, for the enthusiasm of youth. Larry was only four years younger than I was. Sometimes it seemed like a million.
   "He's not going to shoot us in the back by accident, is he?" Deputy Coltrain asked.
   I smiled, not sweetly. "He promised not to."
   Coltrain looked at me like he wasn't sure I was kidding.
   Sheriff St. John joined us at the edge of the woods. He had a shotgun, too. I had to trust that he knew how to use it. Wallace had the shotgun from their unit. His partner Granger had a wicked-looking rifle like something a sniper would carry. It looked like the wrong tool for tonight's job, and I had said so. Granger had just looked at me. I'd shrugged and let it go. It was his neck and his gun.
   I looked around at them. They looked at me. Waiting for me to give the word.
   "Everybody got their holy water?" I asked.
   Larry patted his coverall pocket. Everyone else nodded, or mumbled yes.
   "Remember the three rules of vampire hunting. One: Never, ever look them in the eyes. Two: Never, ever give up your cross. Three: Aim for the head and heart. Even with silver ammo, it won't be a killing blow anywhere else." I felt like a kindergarten teacher sending her kiddies off to a hostile playground. "Don't panic if you get bitten. The bite can be cleansed. As long as they don't mesmerize you with their eyes, you can still fight."
   I looked at them, all silent, all taller than me, even Larry by an inch or two. They could all arm wrestle me and win. So why did I want to order them all into the house where'd they'd be safe? Heck, we could all go inside. Have a nice cup of hot cocoa. Tell the Quinlans their little girl would be fine. I mean, liquid diets are in with teens. Right?
   I took a deep breath and let it out slow. "Let's do it, boys. We're wasting starlight." Either nobody got my John Wayne reference, or nobody thought it was funny. Hard to tell which.
   I had to let St. John lead the way into the black trees. I didn't know the area. He did. But I didn't like him taking point. I didn't like it at all. I wanted to bring him back to his wife. His high school sweetheart. Five years married and still in love. Jesus, I didn't want to get him killed.
   
   The trees closed around us. St. John threaded his way through them like he knew what he was doing. There was very little undergrowth this time of year. It made it easier, but there is still an art to going through thick woods, especially in the dark. You can't really see even with a flashlight. You have to sort of give yourself over to the trees the way you give yourself to water when you swim. You don't really concentrate on the water, or even on your own body. You concentrate on the rhythm of your body cutting, sliding through the cool liquid. For the forest you find a rhythm, too. You concentrate on sliding your body through the natural openings. Finding the place where the forest itself will let you through. If you fight it, it will fight you back. And, just like water, it can kill you. Anyone who doesn't believe that the forest is a deadly place has never been lost in one.
   St. John knew how to move, and so did I. I was pretty pleased at that, actually. I'd been a city girl for a long time. Larry stumbled into me. I had to brace, or we'd have both gone down.
   "Sorry," he said, pushing himself away from me.
   "How ya doing up there, vampire hunter?" Coltrain called. He was bringing up the rear. I had to go second to back up St. John, and I wouldn't let Larry take rear. Coltrain had wanted it. Said he and the sheriff would guard our ass. Fine with me.
   "Yell a little louder," Wallace said. "I don't think the vampire heard you."
   "I don't need no statie telling me how to do my job."
   "It knows we're here," I said.
   That stopped them. They both looked at me. Granger, who was just ahead of Wallace, looked at me, too. I had everyone's attention.
   "Even if the vampire is only a few weeks old, its hearing is incredibly acute. It knows we're here. It knows we're coming. It doesn't matter if we're quiet or have a brass band. It's all the same. We won't surprise it in the dark." It would probably surprise us, but I didn't add that part aloud. We were all thinking it anyway.
   "We are wasting time here, Deputy," St. John said.
   Coltrain didn't apologize or even look sorry. Wallace did. "I'm sorry, Sheriff. It won't happen again."
   St. John nodded and turned without another word and led us farther into the woods.
   Coltrain made a small humphing sound but let it go. Whatever he said, I didn't think Wallace would rise to bait again. At least I hoped not. I didn't care if he was scared; we had enough problems without fighting among ourselves.
   The trees rustled and swayed around us. Last year's dead leaves crunched underfoot. Someone cursed softly behind me. The wind blew in a wild gust, streaming my hair back from my face. Up ahead the quality of darkness was different. We were approaching the clearing.
   St. John stopped just short of the tree line. He glanced back at me. "How do you want to do this?"
   I could taste the rain on the wind coming closer. If possible, I wanted us out of here before it came. Visibility sucked as it was.
   "We kill it, and we get the hell back to the house. It's not a hard plan."
   He nodded, as if I'd said something profound.
   Wish I had.
   A figure stepped in front of us. One minute nothing, the next there he was. Darkness and shadows, magic. He grabbed St. John as he went for his gun and threw him out into the clearing in a high looping arch.
   I shot the vampire in the chest at almost point-blank range. He collapsed to his knees. I caught a glimpse of the whites of his eyes, like he couldn't believe it. I had to pump the shotgun to jack another shell in place.
   Granger's rifle exploded behind me like a cannon. Someone screamed. I shot the vampire between the eyes. His head splattered into the leaves. I turned with the shotgun to my shoulder before the body hit the ground.
   Larry was on the ground with a vamp on top of him. I had a glimpse of long brown hair before his cross flared to life in a brilliant flash of blue-white fire. She flung herself backwards with a scream, scrambling into the dark. Gone.
   A vamp with long blonde hair held Granger in her slender arms, head pressed to his neck. I couldn't use the shotgun. They were pressed too close together. At this range I'd kill them both.
   I dropped the shotgun into Larry's surprised lap. He was still lying on the ground, blinking. I drew the Browning and fired into the vampire's broad chest. She jerked but didn't let go of Granger. The vampire looked at me, the man still clasped to her chest. She hissed at me. I fired a round into her gaping mouth. It blew the back of her head out.
   The vamp shuddered. I fired a second round into her head. She let go of Granger and fell to the leaves in convulsions. Granger just lay there. In the dark I couldn't see his face or neck. Dead or alive, I'd done all I could.
   Larry was on his feet, shotgun awkward in his hands.
   There was a scream, low and pain-filled. Wallace was on the ground with a slender-bodied vamp on top of him. Fangs sunk in his arm. The bone broke with a loud, brittle snap. He screamed again.
   I had a glimpse of Coltrain standing, frozen, just beyond. There was movement behind him. I stared straight at it, waiting for the vampire to take shape from the shadows, but something gleamed. A dull silver blade flashed into sight. I stared straight at it, but I lost a second somehow. The next thing I knew the blade tip exploded from Coltrain's throat. I lost another second, blinking at shadows, and the vampire tore the blade from his throat and was gone. It scuttled through the trees like nothing human, unbelievably fast, like a nightmare seen from the corner of your eye.
   Larry raised the shotgun to his shoulder, aimed in Wallace's direction. I grabbed it from him, and something smashed into my back and rode me into the leaves. A hand pressed my face into the dry, crackling leaves. A second hand ripped the back of my coverall so violently it wrenched one shoulder. There was an explosion just behind my head, and the vampire was gone. I rolled over, ears ringing.
   Larry was standing over me with his arm extended, gun out. Whatever he'd shot was gone out in the dark.
   My left shoulder was hurt, but not as badly as it might be if I didn't get up. I struggled to my feet. The vampires were gone.
   Wallace was sitting up, cradling his arm. Coltrain lay on the ground without moving. A sound behind us. I turned, Browning pointed. Larry was turning too, but too slow. I sighted down the barrel, and it was St. John.
   "Don't shoot. It's me."
   Larry held his gun two-handed pointed at the ground. "Sweet Jesus," he said.
   Amen. "What happened to you?"
   "The fall knocked me out. I followed the sound of shots," St. John said.
   A gust of wind slapped against us. It smelled so strongly of rain I almost felt it on my skin.
   "Check Granger's pulse, Larry," I said.
   "What?" Larry looked shell-shocked.
   "See if he's alive." It was a messy job, and I'd have done it myself, but I trusted me more than Larry to keep the vampires away. He'd saved me once tonight, but I still trusted me more.
   St. John walked past us. He touched Wallace, who nodded. "My arm's broke, but I'll live." St. John went to Coltrain's still form.
   Larry knelt by Granger. He switched his gun to his left hand, not the best thing to do, but I understood. Hard to check for a pulse in the dark on a throat warm with blood; better to use your dominant hand.
   "I've got a pulse." He looked up, his broad smile a dim whiteness in the dark.
   "Coltrain's dead," St. John said. "God help me, he's dead." He raised a hand and the skin glistened with blood, black in the dim light. "He's nearly decapitated. What did this?"
   "Sword," I said. I'd seen it. Watched it happen. But all I could remember was a black shape larger than a human being. Or larger than most. A shadow with a sword was all I'd seen, and I'd been looking right at it.
   Something flowed across my skin, and it wasn't the wind. Power filled the spring night like water. "There's something old out here," I said.
   "What are you talking about?" St. John said.
   "An ancient vampire. It's here. I can feel it." I searched the darkness, but nothing moved but the trees, the wind. There was nothing to see. Nothing to fight. But it was here and it was close. Sword in hand, maybe.
   Granger sat up so suddenly that Larry fell back into the leaves with a squeak. The big man's eyes turned to me. I saw his hand go for his gun, and I knew what the vampire was doing.
   I pointed the Browning at his head and waited. I had to be sure.
   Granger didn't hunt for his dropped rifle. He drew his sidearm and pointed it very slowly, as if he didn't want to do it. He pointed it at Larry from less than a foot away.
   Wallace yelled, "Granger, what the fuck are you doing?"
   I fired.
   Granger jerked; the gun wavered, then his hand came back up. I fired again, and again. His hand fell slowly to the ground, gun still in it. He fell straight back into the leaves.
   "Granger!" Wallace was screaming, crawling toward his partner. Shit.
   I got there first and kicked the gun out of his hand. If he'd twitched, I'd have shot him again. He didn't twitch. He just lay there, dead.
   Wallace tried to cradle him one-handed. "Why'd you shoot him? Why?"
   "He was going to kill Larry. You saw it."
   "Why?"
   "The vamp that bit him. His master is out here. And he's a powerful son of a bitch. He used him."
   Wallace had Granger's bloody head in his lap, his own ravaged arm pressed to Granger's chest. He was crying.
   Shit.
   A sound rode the rising wind. A sharp, furious barking. A woman's scream, high and clear, cut across the sound.
   "Oh, God," I whispered.
   "Beth." St. John was on his feet running before I could say anything.
   I grabbed Wallace's shoulder, pulling on his jacket. He looked up.
   "What's happening?"
   "They're in the house," I said. "Can you walk?"
   He nodded. I helped him to his feet.
   Another scream came. It wasn't the same scream. A man this time, or a boy.
   "Stay with him, Larry. Get to the house as soon as you can."
   "What if they're trying to split us up?" Larry asked.
   "Then it's going to work," I said. "Shoot anything that moves." I touched his arm, as if that would make him more real, keep him safe. It wouldn't, but it was all I had. I had to go for the house. Larry had signed up to be a monster slayer. The Quinlans and Beth St. John hadn't.
   I holstered the Browning, kept a two-handed grip on the shotgun, and threw myself into the trees. I ran, not trying to see where I was going. Rushing through openings in the trees that I wasn't sure were there, but they were. I jumped over a log and nearly fell but caught myself and kept running. A branch slashed my face, bringing tears to my eye. The forest that had seemed passable before was now a maze of roots and branches that grabbed and tripped. I was running blind. It was not a good way to stay alive with vampires in the dark. I spilled out onto the Quinlans' lawn on my knees, shotgun tightly gripped.
   The front door was open. Light spilled in a warm rectangle. Shots sounded from inside the house. I got to my feet and ran for the light.
   The poodle lay broken by the door, crumpled like someone had tried to force it into a ball.
   The doors to the living room were open. A second shot sounded. I went in to the left of the door, wall at my back, shotgun ready.
   Mr. and Mrs. Quinlan were huddled in the far corner with their crosses held out before them. The metal glowed with a white-hot light like burning magnesium.
   The thing in front of them didn't look much like a vampire. It looked like a skeleton with muscle and flesh stretched over a bone frame. It was stretched impossibly thin and tall. A sword rode its back, gleaming and wide as a scimitar. Coltrain's killer?
   St. John was firing into the brown-haired vamp from the woods. She had long brown hair parted in the middle, straight and lovely, framing a face that was blood-smeared and stretched wide over fangs.
   I had a glimpse of Beth St. John on the floor behind her. She wasn't moving.
   St. John kept firing into the vampire's body. She just kept coming. Blood blossomed on the front of her jean jacket. His gun clicked, empty. The vampire staggered, then fell to her knees. She fell forward on all fours, and you could see that her back was so much raw meat. She lay gasping on the floor while St. John reloaded.
   I got to my feet, trying to keep an eye on the door just in case this wasn't all. I walked towards the Quinlans and the thing that stood in front of them. I needed a better angle before I used the shotgun. Didn't want to catch them in the shot pattern.
   The thing turned on me. I had a glimpse of a face that was neither human nor animal, but stretched thin and alien with fangs and blind, glowing eyes. It shrank, and skin flowed over the bare flesh, covered the nearly naked bone. I'd never seen anything like it. When I aimed the shotgun, I was looking into what could have passed for a human face. Long white hair framed a fine-boned face, and it ran—if running was the word for that blur of motion. It ran like some of them flew, almost like it was doing something else altogether, but I had no better word for it. Some of them flew; this one ran. It was gone before I could pull the trigger.
   I was left staring at the open door where the barrel had followed its movement. Could I have fired? Had I hesitated? I didn't think so, but I wasn't sure. It was like in the woods when Coltrain died, like I'd missed a few seconds. The vampire had to be our killer, but the only thing I'd seen clearly in the woods had been the sword.
   St. John shot into the fallen vampire. He fired until his gun clicked empty again. The gun went click, click, click.
   I walked over to him. The vampire's head was bloody meat and heavier, wetter things. There was no face left. "It's dead, St. John. You killed it."
   He just stared at it, down the barrel of his empty gun. He was shaking. He collapsed to his knees suddenly, as if he just couldn't stand any longer. He crawled over to his wife, gun left behind him on the carpet. He cradled her in his arms, half-lifting, rocking her. She was soaked with blood. Her throat was so much raw meat on one side.
   St. John was making a high, keening sound deep in his throat.
   The Quinlans's crosses had stopped glowing. They stood still clinging to each other, blinking as if blinded by the light.
   "Jeff—he took Jeff," Mrs. Quinlan said.
   I looked at her. Her eyes were too wide. "He took Jeff."
   "Who took Jeff?" I asked.
   "The big one," Mr. Quinlan said. "That thing, that thing told Jeff to take his cross off, and Jeff did it." He looked at me with startled eyes. "Why did he do that? Why did he take it off?"
   "The vampire caught him with his eyes," I said. "He couldn't help himself."
   "If his faith had been stronger, he wouldn't have given in," Quinlan said.
   "It wasn't your son's fault."
   Quinlan shook his head. "He wasn't strong enough."
   I turned away from him. Which put me staring at St. John. He had folded as much of his wife's body into his lap and arms as he could. He rocked her, eyes distant. He wasn't seeing this room. He'd gone somewhere deep inside. Someplace better. I hoped.
   I went for the door. I didn't have to see this. Watching St. John rock his wife's body was not part of my job description. Honest.
   I sat down on the stairs where I could see the door, the hallway, and the stairs as far as the landing. St. John started singing in a strange, broken voice. It took me a few minutes to figure out what he was singing. It was "You Are So Beautiful." I got up and went for the outer door. Larry and Wallace were just limping up onto the porch.
   I just shook my head and kept walking. I was almost to the driveway before I couldn't hear the singing. I stood there taking deep breaths, letting them out slowly. I concentrated on my breathing, concentrated on the sound of frogs and wind. I concentrated on anything but the sound that was building in my throat. I stood there in the dark, in the open, knowing it was dangerous, and not sure I cared. I stood there until I was sure I wasn't going to start screaming. Then I turned and went back to the house.
   It was the bravest thing I'd done all night.
   
   
16
   Detective Freemont sat on one end of the Quinlans' couch and I perched on the other. We were as far away from each other as we could get and share it. Only pride kept me from taking a chair. I wouldn't flinch under her cool cop eyes. So I stayed nailed to my end of the couch, but it was an effort.
   Her voice was low and careful, every word enunciated, as if she thought she might yell if she rushed the words. "Why didn't you call and tell me you had a second vampire kill?"
   "Sheriff St. John called the state cops. I assumed you'd be told."
   "Well, I wasn't."
   I stared up into her cool eyes. "You're twenty minutes away with a crime scene unit looking into a possible vampire kill. Why wouldn't they send you over to a second vampire scene?"
   Freemont's eyes shifted to one side, then back to me. Her cool cop eyes had melted just a little. It was hard to read for sure, but she looked uneasy. Maybe even scared.
   "You haven't told them it was a vampire kill, have you?"
   Her eyes flinched.
   "Shit, Freemont. I know you don't want the Feds to steal your case, but withholding information from your own people . . . Bet your superiors aren't happy with you."
   "That's my business."
   "Fine. Whatever plan you've got, more power to you, but why are you pissed at me?"
   She took a deep, shaking breath and blew it out like a runner trying to get that extra kick. "How sure are you the vampire used a sword?"
   "You saw the body," I said.
   She nodded. "A vampire could have ripped the neck apart."
   "I saw a blade, Freemont."
   "The ME will either back you up, or not."
   "Why don't you want this to be vampires?"
   She smiled. "I thought I had this case all solved. Thought I'd make an arrest this morning. I didn't think it was vampires."
   I stared at her. I wasn't smiling. "If it wasn't vamps, then what was it?"
   "Fairies."
   I stared at her for a heartbeat. "What do you mean?"
   "Your boss, Sergeant Storr, called me. Told me what you'd found out about Magnus Bouvier. He's got no alibi for the time of the killings, and even you think he could have done it."
   "Because he could have done it, doesn't mean he did," I said.
   Freemont shrugged. "He ran when we tried to question him. Innocent people don't run."
   "What do you mean, he ran? If you were there questioning him, how could he run?"
   Freemont settled back into the couch, hands clasped together so tightly her fingers were mottled. "He used magic to cloud our minds, and made his escape."
   "What sort of magic?"
   Freemont shook her head. "What do you want me to say, Ms. Preternatural Expert? Four of us sat there in his restaurant like idiots while he just walked out. We didn't even see him get up from the table."
   She looked at me, no smiles. Her eyes were back to that neutral coolness. You could stare all day at someone with eyes like that and keep all your secrets safe.
   "He looked human to me, Blake. He looked like a nice, normal guy. I wouldn't have picked him out of a crowd. How did you know what he was?"
   I opened my mouth, and closed it. I wasn't exactly sure how to answer the question. "He tried to use glamor on me, but I knew what was happening."
   "What's glamor, and how did you know he was using a spell on you?"
   "Glamor isn't exactly a spell," I said. I always hated explaining preternatural things to people who had no skill in the area. It was like having quantum physics explained to me. I could follow the concepts, but I had to take their word for it on the math. The math was beyond me, hated to admit it, but it was. But not understanding quantum physics wouldn't get me killed. Not understanding preternatural creatures might get Freemont killed.
   "I'm not stupid, Blake. Explain it to me."
   "I don't think you're stupid, Detective Freemont. It's just hard to explain. I was riding with two uniforms in St. Louis. They were transporting me from a crime scene, playing taxi. The driver spotted this guy just walking along. He pulled over, put him up against a car. The guy was carrying a weapon, and was wanted in another state for armed robbery. If I'd been in a room with him, I'd have noticed the gun, but just passing by in a car, no way. I wouldn't have seen it. Even his partner asked him how he spotted him. He couldn't explain so that we could do it, but he knew how to do it."
   "So it's practice?" Freemont said.
   I sighed. "In part, but hell, Detective, I raise the dead for a living. I have some preternatural abilities. It gives me a leg up."
   "How the hell are we supposed to police creatures, Ms. Blake? If Bouvier had pulled a gun, we'd have sat there and let him shoot us. We just sort of woke up and he wasn't there anymore. I've never seen anything like it."
   "There are things you can do to protect yourself from fairie glamor," I said.
   "What?"
   "A four-leaf clover will break glamor, but it won't keep the fey from killing you by hand. There are other plants you can wear, or carry that break glamor: Saint-John's-wort, red verbena, daisies, rowan, and ash. My choice would be an ointment made of either four-leaf clovers or Saint-John's-wort. Spread it on your eyelids, mouth, ears, and hands. It'll make you proof against glamor."
   "Where do I get this stuff?"
   I thought about that for a second. "Well, in St. Louis I'd know where to go. Here, try health-food stores and occult shops. Any fairie ointment will be hard to find because we don't have any fairies native to this country. Ointment from four-leaf clovers is very expensive, and rare. Try for the Saint-John's-wort."
   She sighed. "Will this ointment work on any mind control, like for vamps?"
   "Nope," I said. "You could drop a vamp in a whole tub of Saint-John's-wort and it wouldn't give a damn."
   "What do you do against vampires, then?"
   "Keep your cross, avoid eye contact, pray. They can do things that'll make Magnus look like an amateur."
   She rubbed her eyes, smearing eye shadow on the ball of her thumb. She suddenly looked tired. "How do we protect the public against something like that?"
   "You don't," I said.
   "Yes, we do," she said. "We have to; it's our job."
   I didn't know what to say to that, so I didn't try. "So you thought it was Magnus because he ran, and he doesn't have an alibi?"
   "Why else would he run?"
   "I don't know," I said. "But he didn't do it. I saw the thing in the woods. It wasn't Magnus. Hell, I've only heard about vampires forming from shadows. I'd never seen it before."
   She looked at me. "You've never seen it before. That's not comforting."
   "It wasn't meant to be. But since it wasn't Magnus, you can call off the warrant."
   She shook her head. "He used magic on police officers while committing a crime. That's a class C felony."
   "What was his crime?"
   "Escaping."
   "But he wasn't under arrest."
   "I had a warrant for his arrest," she said.
   "You didn't have enough for a warrant," I said.
   "Helps to know the right judge."
   "He didn't kill those kids, or Coltrain."
   "You pointed the finger at him," she said.
   "Just an alternate possibility. With five people dead, I couldn't afford to be wrong."
   She stood. "Well, you got your wish. It was vampires, and I don't know why the hell Magnus Bouvier ran from us. But just using magic on a police officer is a felony."
   "Even if he was innocent of the original crime you were trying to bring him in on?" I asked.
   "Felonious use of magic is a serious crime, Ms. Blake. There's a warrant for his arrest. You see him, you remember that."
   "I know Magnus isn't nice people, Detective Freemont. I don't know why he ran, but if you put out the word that he used magic on cops, someone'll shoot him."
   "He's dangerous, Ms. Blake."
   "Yeah, but so are a lot of people, Detective. You don't hunt them down and arrest them for it."
   She nodded. "We've all got prejudices, Ms. Blake; makes us all wrong once in a while. At least here we know what did it."
   "Yeah," I said. "We know what did it."
   "Do you know when the girl's body was taken?" she asked. She got a notebook out of her coat pocket. Down to business.
   I shook my head. "No. It was just gone when I went up."
   "What made you think to check on the body?"
   I looked at her. Her eyes were pleasant and unreadable. "They'd gone to a lot of trouble to make her one of them. I thought they might try to get her. They did."
   "The father's making noises that he asked you to stake her body before you went out after the vampires. Is that true?" Her voice was soft, matter-of-fact. But she was paying attention to the answers. She didn't take as many notes as Dolph did. The notebook seemed to be more something to do with her hands than anything else. I was finally seeing Freemont doing her job. She seemed good at it. That was reassuring.
   "Yeah, that's true."
   "Why didn't you stake the girl when the parents requested it?"
   "I had a father. A widower. His daughter and only child got bit. He wanted her staked. I did it that night, right away. Next morning he's in my office crying, wanting me to undo it. Wanting me to bring her back as a vampire." I leaned back into the couch, hugging myself. "You put a stake through a new vamp's heart, and it's dead for good."
   "I thought you had to take a vampire's head to be sure."
   "You do," I said. "If I had staked the Quinlan girl, I would have taken out her heart, cut off her head." I shook my head. "There isn't much left."
   She drew something on her note pad. I couldn't see what. I was betting it was a doodle and not a word. "I see why you wanted to wait, but Mr. Quinlan is talking about suing you."
   "Yeah, I know."
   Freemont raised her eyebrows. "Just thought you'd want to know."
   "Thanks."
   "We haven't found the boy's body yet."
   "I don't think you will," I said.
   Her eyes didn't look pleasant anymore. They looked narrow and suspicious. "Why?"
   "If they wanted to kill him, they could have done it here, tonight. I think they want to make him one of them."
   "Why?"
   I shrugged. "I don't know. But usually when a vampire takes this personal an interest in a family, there's a reason for it."
   "You mean a motive?"
   I nodded. "You've seen the Quinlans. They're devout Catholics. The church sees vampirism as suicide. Their children will be damned for all eternity if they become vampires."
   "Worse than just killing them," she said.
   "To the Quinlans, I think so."
   "You think the vampires will be back to get the parents?"
   I thought about that for a minute. "Hell, I don't know. I mean, before vampires were legal you had some cases where a master vamp would take out entire families. Sometimes befriend them first. Sometimes just for revenge for some slight. But since they've been legal, I don't know why the vamp would do it. I mean, the vampire can take them to court. What could the Quinlans have done that was bad enough for this?"
   The doors opened. Freemont turned, a frown already in place. Two men appeared in the doorway. They were both dressed in dark suits, dark ties, white shirts. Standard federal issue. One was short and white, the other tall and black. That alone should have made them look different, but there was a sameness to them, like the same cookie cutter had been used no matter how well cooked the outside was.
   The shorter of the two flipped his badge at us. "I'm Special Agent Bradford, this is Agent Elwood. Which one of you is Detective Freemont?"
   Freemont walked towards them with her hand out. Showing she was unarmed and friendly. Yeah, right. "I'm Detective Freemont. This is Anita Blake."
   I appreciated being included in the introductions. I stood up and joined the foursome.
   Agent Bradford looked at me for a long time. Long enough that it got on my nerves. "Is there something wrong, Agent Bradford?"
   He shook his head. "I attended Sergeant Storr's lectures at Quantico. The way he talked about you, I thought you'd be bigger." He smiled when he said it, halfway between friendly and condescending.
   A lot of scathing comebacks came to mind, but never get in a pissing contest with the Feds. You'll lose. "Sorry to disappoint you."
   "We've already talked with Officer Wallace. He makes you sound taller, too."
   I shrugged. "Hard to make me sound shorter."
   He smiled. "We'd like to speak with Detective Freemont in private, Ms. Blake. But don't go far; we'll want a statement from you and your associate, Mr. Kirkland."
   "Sure."
   "I took Ms. Blake's statement personally," Freemont said. "I don't think we need her any more tonight."
   Bradford looked at her. "I think we'll be the judge of that."
   "If Ms. Blake had called me in when there was only one body on the ground, there wouldn't be two dead policemen, and a dead civilian," Freemont said.
   I just looked at her. Somebody's ass was going to be in a sling, and Freemont didn't want it to be hers. Fine.
   "Don't forget the missing boy," I said. Everyone looked at me. "You want to start pointing fingers, fine; there's enough blame to go around. If you hadn't chased me off earlier, I might have called you in, but I did call the state police. If you'd told your superiors everything I told you, they'd have connected the two cases, and you'd have been here anyway."
   "I had enough men with me to cover the house and the civilians," Freemont said. "Not including me cost lives."
   I nodded. "Probably. But you'd have come down here and kicked me out again. You'd have taken St. John and his people out in the dark with five vampires, one of them ancient, when all you've seen is pictures of vampire kills. They'd have slaughtered you, but maybe, just maybe, Beth St. John would be alive. Maybe Jeff Quinlan would still be here."
   I stared up at her, and watched the anger drain from her eyes. We looked at each other. "It took both of us to fuck this one up, Sergeant." I turned back to the two agents. "I'll wait outside."
   "Wait," Bradford said. "Storr said that sometimes the legal vampire community will help on a case like this. Who do I talk to down here?"
   "Why would they hunt down one of their own?" Agent Elwood asked.
   "This kind of shit is bad for business. Especially right now with Senator Brewster's daughter getting killed. Vampires don't need any more bad publicity. Most of them like being legal. They like the fact that killing them is murder."
   "So who do I talk to?" Bradford asked.
   I sighed. "In this area, I don't know. I'm not a hometown girl."
   "How do I go about finding out who to talk to?"
   "I might be able to help you there."
   "How?"
   I shook my head. "I know someone who might know a name. I'm not trying to give you a hard time here, but a lot of the monsters don't like dealing with cops. It just hasn't been that long ago that the police shot them on sight."
   "So you're saying the vampires will talk to you and not to us?" Elwood said.
   "Something like that."
   "That makes no sense. You're a vampire executioner. Your job is to kill them. Why would they believe you and not us?" he asked.
   I didn't know how to explain it, and wasn't sure I wanted to. "I also raise zombies, Agent Elwood. I think they sort of consider me one of the monsters."
   "Even though you're their version of an electric chair."
   "Even though."
   "That's not logical."
   I laughed then; I couldn't help it. "God, has anything that happened here tonight been logical?"
   Elwood gave a very small smile. I pegged him as the newer of the two. I don't think he'd gotten over the thought that FBI agents don't smile.
   "You wouldn't be withholding information from the FBI, would you, Ms. Blake?" Bradford asked.
   "If I come up with a vampire in this area that will talk to you, I'll give you the name."
   Bradford stared at me. "How about if you come up with any vampires in this area, you give us the names. Let us worry about whether they'll talk to us or not."
   I looked at him for a heartbeat and lied. "Sure." If I expected the monsters to help me, I couldn't give them all over to the cops. Only a select few.
   He looked like he didn't believe me, but couldn't quite call me a liar to my face. "When we find the vampires responsible, we'll be sure to call you in for the kill."
   That was more than Freemont had been willing to do. The night was looking up. "Beep me any time."
   "We'll talk to Sergeant Freemont now, Ms. Blake." I was dismissed. Fine with me. He offered his hand. I took it. We shook. Agent Elwood and I shook. Everyone smiled. I left.
   Larry was waiting out in the entryway. He got up off the stairs where he'd been sitting. "What now?"
   "I need to make a phone call."
   "Who to?"
   Two more men with "Federal Agent" tattooed on their foreheads walked up the hallway from the direction of the kitchen. I shook my head and went out the door into the cool windy night. The place was swarming with cops. I'd never seen so many federal agents in my life. But hey, the very first vampire serial killer was news. Everyone would want a piece. Watching everyone mill around on the carefully tended lawn, I suddenly wanted to go home. To just pack up and go home. It was still early. Hours and hours left of darkness. It only seemed like it had been an eternity since we left the graveyard. Hell, there'd be time to go back and look at Stirling's boneyard before dawn.
   I got in the jeep that Bayard had loaned us. I'd use the nifty portable phone it came with.
   Larry got in the passenger side.
   "Private call."
   "Come on, Anita."
   "Out, Larry."
   "Out in the dark with the vampires." He blinked his big blue eyes at me.
   "The place is lousy with cops. I think you'll be safe. Out."
   He got out, grumbling under his breath. He could grumble all he wanted to. Larry wanted to be a vampire hunter, fine; but he didn't have to be as intimately involved with the monsters as I was. I was trying to keep him as out of it as I could. Not easy, but worth the effort.
   I'd lied to the nice agents. It wasn't the fact that I raised zombies that got me in good with the vampires. It was the fact that the Master of the City, of St. Louis, had the hots for me. Was maybe in love with me, or at least thought he was.
   I knew the number by heart, which was a bad sign all on its own. "Guilty Pleasures, where your darkest fantasies come true. This is Robert. How may I help you?"
   Great; Robert, one of my least favorite vampires. "Hi, Robert, this is Anita. I need to speak to Jean-Claude."
   He hesitated, then said, "I'll transfer you to his office phone. It's a new system, so if I disconnect you, call back."
   The phone clicked before I could answer. A moment of silence, and the voice came on the line. You can criticize a lot about Jean-Claude, but he gives good phone.
   "Good evening, ma petite." That was it, all he said, but even over the buzzing phone his voice was like fur inside my skull.
   "I'm near Branson. I need to contact the Master of the City down here."
   "No 'Good evening, Jean-Claude, how are you doing?'? Just down to business. How terribly rude, ma petite."
   "Look, I don't have time for games right now. Some vampires down here are on the rampage. They've kidnapped a young boy. I want to find him before they can make him one of them."
   "How young is the boy?"
   "Sixteen."
   In centuries past, ma petite, that was not considered a child."
   "It isn't legal age right this minute."
   "Did he go willingly?"
   "No."
   "You know that for a fact, or were you merely told he was kidnapped?"
   "I talked to him before. He didn't go willingly."
   Jean-Claude sighed. The sound slithered down my skin like cool fingers. "What do you want of me, ma petite?"
   "I want to talk to the Master of the City down here. I need the name. I'm assuming you do know who the Master is down here?"
   "Of course, but it is not that simple."
   "We only have three nights to save him, and a hell of a lot less if they just want a snack."
   "The Master will not talk to you without a guide to take you in."
   "Send someone, then."
   "Who? Robert? Willie? Neither of them is powerful enough to be your escort."
   "If you mean they can't protect me, I can protect myself."
   "I know you can take care of yourself, ma petite. You have made that abundantly clear. But you do not look as dangerous as you are. You might have to shoot one or two to teach them their place. If you got out alive, they would not help you."
   "I want to get this boy back intact, Jean-Claude. Work with me here."
   "Ma petite. . ."
   I had an image of Jeff Quinlan's brown eyes. His room with its cowboy wallpaper. "Help me, Jean-Claude."
   He was silent for a moment. "I am the only one powerful enough to be your escort. Do you wish me to drop everything and rush down to you?"
   It was my turn to be quiet. Put like that, it didn't sound right. It sounded like a big favor. I didn't want to be indebted to him. But I'd probably live through owing him a favor. Jeff Quinlan might not.
   "Fine," I said.
   "You want me to come help you?"
   I gritted my teeth and said, "Yes."
   "I will fly down tomorrow night."
   "Tonight."
   "Ma petite, ma petite, what am I to do with you?"
   "You said you'd help me."
   "And I will, but these things take time."
   "What things?"
   "It might be helpful if you thought of Branson as a foreign country. A potentially hostile foreign country where I am working to get us safe passage. There are customs to be observed. If I barge in, it will be seen as a declaration of war."
   "Isn't there any way to start tonight?" I asked. "Short of starting a war?"
   "Perhaps, but if you wait one more night, ma petite, we can enter much more safely. "
   "We can take care of ourselves. Jeff Quinlan can't."
   "That is his name?"
   "Yeah."
   He took a deep breath and let it out in a sigh that made me shiver. I would have told him to stop that, but it would have amused him, so I didn't.
   "I will fly down tonight. How do I contact you?"
   I gave him the name of my hotel and then, with a sigh, my beeper number.
   "I will call you when I arrive."
   "How long will it take you to fly this far?"
   "Anita, do you think I am going to fly myself down, as a bird would?"
   I didn't like the faint amusement in his voice, but I answered truthfully. "It was a thought."
   He laughed, and it raised goose-bumps on my arms. "Oh, ma petite, ma petite, you are precious."
   Just what I wanted to hear. "So how are you getting here?"
   "My private jet."
   Of course, he had a private jet. "When can you be here?"
   "I will be there as soon as I can, my impatient flower."
   "I prefer ma petiteto flower."
   "As you like, ma petite."
   "I want to see the Master of Branson tonight before dawn."
   "You have made that abundantly clear, and I will try."
   "Do more than try."
   "You are feeling guilty about this boy; why?"
   "I'm not feeling guilty."
   "Responsible, then," he said.
   I sat there, not sure what to say. He was right. "I don't suppose you read my mind just then?"
   "No, ma petite, just your voice and your impatience."
   I hated that he knew me that well. Hated it. "Yeah, I feel responsible."
   "Why?"
   "I was in charge."
   "Did you do all you could to keep him safe?"
   "I had hosts put at every entrance."
   "Someone let them in, then?"
   "They had a doggie door that exited through the garage, into the house wall. They didn't want to cut a hole through any of the outer doors."
   "Was there a child vampire among them?"
   "No."
   "Then how?"
   I described the thin, skeletal vampire. "It was almost a form change. He changed back in seconds. Once he changed back, he could have passed for human in dim light. I've never seen anything like it."
   "I've only seen the ability once," he said.
   "You know who it is, don't you?"
   "I will be with you as soon as I am able, ma petite."
   "You sound serious all of a sudden; why?"
   He gave a small laugh, but this one was bitter, like swallowing broken glass. It hurt just to hear it. "You know me too well, ma petite."
   "Just answer the question."
   "Did the boy who was taken look younger than his years?"
   "Yeah; why?"
   Silence thick enough to slice was the only answer.
   "Talk to me, Jean-Claude."
   "Have there been any other young boys gone missing?"
   "Not to my knowledge, but I haven't asked."
   "Ask," he said.
   "How young?"
   "Twelve, fourteen, older if they look young enough."
   "Like Jeff Quinlan," I said.
   "I fear so."
   "Is this vampire into more than just kidnapping?"
   "What do you mean, ma petite?"
   "Murder, not just biting them, but murder."
   "What sort of murder?"
   I hesitated. I didn't discuss ongoing police investigations with the monsters.
   "I know you do not trust me, ma petite, but it is important. Tell me of these deaths, please."
   He didn't say please very often. I told him. Not in great detail, but enough.
   "Were they violated?"
   "What do you mean, violated?" I asked.
   "Violated, ma petite, violated. There are other words for it, but none better for children."
   "Oh," I said. "I don't know if they were sexually assaulted. They were still clothed."
   "There are things that can be done without removing clothing, ma petite. But the abuse would have happened before the killings. Systematic abuse over a period of weeks or months."
   "I'll find out if they were assaulted." An idea occurred to me. "Would this vamp ever do a girl?"
   "By 'do,' you mean sex?"
   "Yeah."
   "If pressed for company, he would take a young girl, prepubescent, but only if he could find nothing else."
   I swallowed hard. We were talking about children like they were things, objects. "No, this girl looked like a woman. She didn't look young."
   "Then, no, he would not willingly touch her."
   "What do you mean, willingly? What other choice would there be?"
   "His master could order him to do it, and he might, if he feared the master enough. Though I cannot think of many people that he would fear enough to do something he found repugnant."
   "You know this vampire. Who is he? Give me a name."
   "When I arrive, ma petite."
   "Just give me the name."
   "So you can give it to the police?"
   "That is their job."
   "No, ma petite. If it is who I think it is, it will not be a matter for the police."
   "Why not?"
   "Put simply, he is too dangerous and too exotic to be revealed to the general public. If mortals found out we could have among us such things, they might turn on us all together. You must be aware of that nasty law floating around the Senate."
   "I'm aware."
   "Then you must understand my caution."
   "Maybe, but if more people die because of your caution, it's going to help Brewster's law get passed. You think about that."
   "Oh, I am, ma petite. Trust that I am. Now farewell. I have much to do." He hung up.
   I sat there staring at the phone. Damn him. What did he mean by exotic? What could this new vampire do that others couldn't? He could slim himself down enough to fit through a doggie door. Maybe it made Houdini jealous, but it was hardly a crime. But I remembered its face. Not human. Not even just a corpse's face. It had been something else altogether. Something different. And I remembered those few seconds I lost, twice. Me, the great vampire hunter, helpless as any civilian for just a heartbeat. With vampires, a heartbeat was enough.
   Visions of such things would get you talking of demons, which Quinlan had done briefly. The police ignored him, and I didn't back up his story. Quinlan had never met a real demon, or he wouldn't have made the mistake. Once you've been in the presence of demons, you never forget it. I'd rather fight a dozen vampires than one demonic presence. They don't give a shit about silver bullets.
   
   
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Zodijak Taurus
Pol Žena
Poruke 18761
Zastava Srbija
17
   It was after 2:00 a.m. before we got back to the graveyard. The Feds had kept us forever, like they didn't believe we were telling them the whole truth. Fancy that. I hated being accused of concealing evidence when I wasn't. Made me want to lie to them just so they wouldn't be disappointed. I think Freemont had painted a less than charitable picture of me. That'll teach me to be generous. But it seemed petty to point fingers at each other, and say she did it, when Beth St. John's blood was still wet on the carpet.
   The wind that had all but promised rain had drifted away. The thick clouds that had obscured the woods while we were playing tag with vampires were suddenly gone. The moon rode high and two days past full. Since dating Richard, I'd paid more attention to the lunar cycles. Fancy that.
   The moon sailed the shining night sky, gleaming like it had been polished. The moonlight was so strong it cast faint shadows. You didn't need a flashlight, but Raymond Stirling had one. A big freaking halogen torch that filled his hand like a captive sun.
   I watched him start to point it at Larry and me. I raised an arm and said, "Don't point it at us. You'll ruin our night vision." It wasn't very diplomatic, but I was tired, and it had been a long night.
   He hesitated in mid-motion. I didn't have to see his face to know he didn't like it. Men like Raymond give orders better than they take them.
   He clicked off the light. Good for him. He waited with Ms. Harrison, Bayard, and Beau gathered around him. He was the only one with a flashlight. I bet that his entourage wasn't worried about night vision, and would have liked to have had a light.
   Larry and I were still wearing the coveralls. I was getting tired of mine. What I really wanted to do was go back to the hotel and sleep. But once Jean-Claude arrived I wouldn't be sleeping anyway; might as well work. Besides, Stirling was my only paying client. Well, yeah I do get money for killing vampires if it's a legal kill, but it's not a lot of money. Stirling was financing this trip. He deserved his money's worth, I guess.
   "We've been waiting for a very long time, Ms. Blake."
   "I'm sorry that the death of a young girl inconvenienced you, Mr. Stirling. Shall we go up?"
   "I am not unsympathetic to another's loss, Ms. Blake, and I resent the implication that I am." He stood there in the moonlit dark, very straight, very commanding. Ms. Harrison and Bayard moved a little closer, showing support. Beau just stood there, looking sort of amused behind Stirling's back. He was wearing a black slicker with a hood. He looked like a phantom.
   I looked up at the clear, sparkling sky. Looked at Beau. He grinned broadly enough for his teeth to flash in the moonlight. I just shook my head and let it go. Maybe he'd been a Boy Scout, always prepared and all that.
   "Fine, whatever you say. Let's get this over with." I didn't wait for them. I just walked past them and started up.
   Larry, at my side, said, "You're being rude."
   I glanced at him.
   "Yeah, I am."
   "He is a paying client, Anita."
   "Look, I don't need you to chastise me, okay?"
   "What's wrong with you?"
   I stopped. "What we just left is what's wrong with me. I'd think it'd bother you a little more, too."
   "It bothers me, but I don't have to take it out on everyone else."
   I took a deep breath and let it out slow. He was right. Damn. "Alright, you've made your point. I'll try to be nicer."
   Stirling marched up to us, entourage in tow. "Are you coming, Ms. Blake?" He walked past us, his back ramrod-straight.
   Ms. Harrison stumbled, and only Bayard's grab on her elbow kept her from falling flat on her butt. She was still wearing her high heels. Maybe it was against the executive secretary code to wear tennis shoes.
   Beau followed with his black slicker flapping around his long legs. It made a distinctive slap-slapsound that was most irritating.
   Okay, maybe everything was irritating right now. I was feeling decidedly grumpy. Jeff Quinlan was out there somewhere. He was either already dead or had one bite by now. It wasn't my fault. I'd told his father to put a piece of the host in front of every entrance. I would have thought of the doggie door if I'd seen it, but I'd never gone that far into the house. Even I would have thought it was paranoid to guard the doggie entrance. But I would have done it, and Beth St. John would be alive.
   I'd dropped the ball. I couldn't bring Beth St. John back, but I could save Jeff. And I would. I would. I didn't want to avenge him by killing the vampire that killed him. For once I wanted to be in time. For once I wanted to save someone and leave revenge for someone else.
   Was Jeff being violated, right this minute? Was that thing I'd seen in the Quinlans' living room doing more than just biting his neck? God, I hoped not. I was pretty sure I could bring Jeff back from a vampire bite, but combine that with rape by a monster, and I wasn't so sure. What if I found him and there wasn't much left to save? The mind is a surprisingly fragile thing sometimes.
   I prayed as we walked up the hill. I prayed and felt a measure of calm return. No visions. No angels singing. But a feeling of peace flowed over me. I took a deep breath, and something hard and tight and ugly in my heart let go. I took it as a good sign that I'd get to Jeff in time. But part of me was skeptical. God doesn't always save someone. Often He just helps you live through the loss. I guess I don't entirely trust God. I never doubt Him, but His motives are too beyond me. Through a glass darkly and all that. Just once I'd like to see through the damn glass clearly.
   The moon shone down on the top of the hill like silver fire. The air was almost luminescent. The rain was gone, giving its blessing somewhere else. Heaven knows we could have used the rain, but personally I was just as glad I didn't have to walk the raw dirt in a downpour. Mud would have been just too perfect.
   "Well, Ms. Blake, shall we begin?" Stirling asked.
   I glanced at him. "Yeah." I took a breath and swallowed the blunt things I wanted to say. Larry was right. Stirling was a pain in the ass, but he wasn't who I was mad at. He was just a convenient target.
   "Mr. Kirkland and I will walk the graveyard. But you need to stay here. Other people moving around are very distracting." There; that was diplomatic.
   "If you were going to make us stand here like an audience, you could have said so at the bottom of this mountain. And saved us the walk."
   So much for diplomacy. "Would you have liked me telling you to stay at the bottom of the hill where you couldn't see what we were doing?"
   He thought about that for a minute. "No, I suppose I wouldn't have liked it."
   "Then what are you complaining about?"
   "Anita," Larry said very softly under his breath.
   I ignored him. "Look, Mr. Stirling, it has been a really rough night. I am just out of niceness right now. Please, just let me do my job. The faster I get this done, the sooner we go home. Okay?"
   Honesty. I was hoping profound honesty would work. It was about all I had left.
   He hesitated a minute, then nodded. "All right, Ms. Blake. Do your job, but know this. You have been decidedly unpleasant. It better be pretty spectacular."
   I opened my mouth, and Larry touched my arm. He gripped my arm not too hard, but hard enough. I swallowed what I was going to say and walked away from all of them. Larry trailed after me. Brave Larry.
   "What's the matter with you tonight?" he asked when we were out of earshot of Stirling and Co.
   "I told you."
   "No," he said, "it isn't just the murder tonight. Hell, I've seen you kill people and be less upset afterwards. What's wrong?"
   I stopped walking and just stood there for a minute. He'd seen me kill people and be less upset. Was that true? I thought about it for a heartbeat. It was true. That was pretty damn sad.
   I knew what was wrong. I'd seen too many slaughtered people in the last few months. Too much blood. Too much killing. I'd done some of the killing. Not all of it had been sanctioned by the state. I also wanted to be looking for Jeff Quinlan. I couldn't do anything until Jean-Claude arrived. I really couldn't. But I felt like my job was interfering with my police work. Was that a bad sign? Or a good one?
   I took a deep breath of the cool mountain air. I let it out very slowly, concentrating on just breathing, in and out, in and out. When I felt calm again, I looked at Larry.
   "I'm just a little on edge tonight, Larry. I'll be alright."
   "If I said a little on edge with a surprised lilt in my voice, would you get mad?"
   I smiled. "Yeah, I would."
   "You've been in a blacker mood than usual since you talked to Jean-Claude. What's up?"
   I stared into his smiling face and didn't want to tell him. He wasn't that much older than Jeff Quinlan, four years. He could still have passed for a high-schooler. "Fine," I said, and told him.
   "A vampire pedophile; isn't that against the rules?"
   "What rules?"
   "That you can only be one kind of monster at a time."
   "It kind of caught me off guard, too."
   A strange look flashed across his face. "Sweet Jesus, Jeff Quinlan is with that thing." He looked at me, all the horror, all the pain, or as much as he could imagine, flowing across his face. "We have to do something, Anita. We have to save him." He turned as if to go back down the mountain.
   I grabbed his arm. "We can't do anything until Jean-Claude arrives."
   "But we can't just do nothing."
   "We aren't doing nothing. We're doing our job."
   "But how can we . . ."
   "Because we can't do anything else right now."
   Larry looked at me for a second, then nodded. "Okay; if you can be calm, so can I."
   "Good man."
   "Thanks. Now show me this nifty trick you've been talking about. I've never heard of anyone who could read the dead without raising them first."
   Truthfully, I didn't know if Larry could do it. But telling him he might not be able to was not going to help his confidence. Magic, if that was the right word, often rises and falls on your own belief in your abilities. I've seen very powerful people completely crippled by self-doubt.
   "I'm going to walk the cemetery." I tried to think of how to put it into words. How do you explain something that you don't fully understand yourself?
   I have always had an affinity with the dead. Even as a small child, I always knew if the soul had fled the body. I remember my great-aunt Katerine's funeral. I'm named after her, my middle name. She was my father's favorite aunt. We went early to view the body and make sure everything was ready. I felt her soul hovering above the coffin. I looked up expecting to see it, but there was nothing for my eyes to hold onto. I've never seen a soul. I've felt them, but I've never seen one.
   I know now that Aunt Katerine's soul hung around a long time. Most souls leave within three days, some leave instantly, some don't. My mother's soul was gone by the time the funeral arrived. I didn't feel her there. There was nothing but a closed coffin and a blanket of pink roses over the coffin, as if the coffin would get cold.
   It was at home where I felt my mother hovering close. Not her soul, not really, but some piece of her that couldn't let go immediately. I would hear her footsteps in the hall outside my bedroom as if she was coming to kiss me good night. She moved through the house for months, and I found it comforting. When she finally left, I was ready to let her go. I never told my father. I was only eight, but even then I knew that he couldn't hear her. Maybe he heard other things. I don't know. My father and I never talked much about my mother's death. It made him cry.
   I'd been able to sense ghosts long before I could raise the dead. What I was about to do was just an extension of that, or maybe a combination of both skills. I don't know. But it was like trying to explain that there was a soul hovering over Aunt Katerine's coffin. Either you knew the soul was there or you didn't. Words didn't quite cover it.
   "Can you see ghosts?"
   "You mean right now?"
   I smiled and shook my head. "No, just in general."
   "Well, I knew the Calvin house wasn't haunted, no matter how many stories people made up. But there was a little cave near town that had something in it. Something not nice."
   "Was it a ghost?"
   He shrugged. "I never tried to find out, but nobody else seemed able to feel it."
   "Do you know when the soul leaves the body? I mean, can you tell it?"
   "Sure." He said it like, Couldn't everybody do that?
   I had to smile. "Good enough. I'm just going to do it. I don't know what you'll see, if anything. I know that Raymond is going to be disappointed because he won't see anything, unless he's a lot more talented than he looks."
   "What are you going to do, Anita? They never talked about 'walking a cemetery' in college."
   "It's not like a magic spell, a few words or gestures and it works. It isn't anything like that." I struggled to put into words something that we had no vocabulary for. "It's closer to psychic ability than magic. It's not physical. It's not a muscle to move, or even a thought. It's . . . I just do it. Let me get started; then if I can, I'll bring you in or try and talk to you while I do it. Okay?"
   He shrugged. "I guess so. I still don't understand what the heck you're doing, but that's okay. I usually don't know what's going on."
   "But you always figure it out," I said.
   He grinned. "I do, don't I?"
   "You bet."
   I stood in nearly the dead center of the raw earth. Not so long ago I was afraid of what I was about to do. It wasn't really frightening in and of itself. I was scared of the fact that I could do it at all. It wasn't a very human thing to be able to do.
   But then, lately I'd been rethinking exactly what made you human, and what made you one of the monsters. Once I'd been very sure of myself, and everyone else. I wasn't so sure anymore. Besides, I'd been practicing.
   Of course, I'd been practicing in empty graveyards where there was nothing but me and the dead. Okay, night insects, but arthropods never bothered my concentration. People did.
   Even with my back turned, I could feel Larry like a warm presence behind me. It bugged me. "Can you move back farther?"
   "Sure; how far?"
   I shook my head. "As far as you can get and still be in sight."
   He raised his eyebrows. "Do you want me to go over and wait with Mr. Stirling?"
   "If you can stand it."
   "I can stand it. I schmooze clients better than you do."
   That was the God's honest truth. "Great. When I call you over, come slowly. I've never tried to talk to someone while I do this."
   "Whatever you say." He gave a laugh that was almost nervous. "I can't wait to see this."
   I let that go, and turned away. I walked away from him. When I glanced back, he was walking to the others. I hoped Larry wouldn't be disappointed. I still wasn't sure if he'd be able to even sense anything. I turned my back on all of them. Seeing them huddled there would distract me, that much I was sure of.
   The top of the mountain had been stripped. It was like standing on the edge of the world looking down. The moonlight bathed everything in a soft glow. It was so bright up here near the sky without any trees to hide it that the air itself glowed with diffused light. A gentle wind traced just about head-high. It smelled green and fresh, almost as if the rain had actually fallen. I closed my eyes and let the wind touch my skin, ruffle my hair. There was almost no sound but the singing of insects from below. Nothing but the wind, me, and the dead.
   I couldn't tell Larry exactly how to do it, because I wasn't completely sure myself. If it was a muscle, I would move it. If it was a thought, I would think it. If it was a magic word, I would say it. It is none of those things. It is like my skin opens up. All my nerve endings naked to the wind. My skin grew cool. It's like a cool wind emanates from my body. It isn't really wind. You can't see it. You can't feel it, or no one else can. But it's there. It's real.
   The cool fingers of "wind" stretched outward from me. Within a ten– to fifteen-foot radius I would be able to search the graves. As I moved, the circle would move with me, searching.
   I raised my arm and waved. I didn't turn around to see if Larry saw me. I stayed tight inside my private circle. I was holding it in, trying not to start searching the dead until Larry got over here. I was hoping he'd be able to sense what was going on. Seemed logical that it would be easier to figure out if he saw it from the beginning.
   I heard his footsteps on the dry earth. They seemed thunderously loud, as if I could hear every grain of dirt under his shoes.
   He stopped behind me. "Jesus, what is that?"
   "What?" My voice sounded distant and loud at the same time.
   "Wind, a cold wind." He sounded a little scared. Good. You should always be a little afraid when you do magic. It's when you start taking it for granted that you get in trouble.
   "Come closer, but don't touch me." I wasn't sure on that last, but it sounded like a good idea. Better cautious than not.
   He came slowly, one hand held out like he was feeling the wind against his skin. "Jesus, Mary, and Joseph. Anita, it's coming from you. The wind is coming from you."
   "Yes," I said.
   His eyes were wide. He looked like his voice sounded, a little scared.
   "If I stood right next to Stirling, he wouldn't feel a thing. None of them would."
   Larry shook his head. "How could they miss it?" His hand hovered just off my body, almost touching but not quite. "It's colder, or stronger, or something the closer I get to your body."
   "Interesting," I said.
   "What now?" he asked.
   "Now, I touch the dead." I let go of it, like unclenching a hand. The fingers of "wind" stretched downward. How does it feel to go through solid earth and touch the dead beneath? Like nothing human. It was as if the invisible fingers could melt through the dirt searching for the dead. This time we didn't have to search far. The earth was disturbed, and the dead lay on top of the raw land.
   I'd never tried this in anything but a well-organized cemetery. Where each grave, each body, was distinct. The wind touched Larry like a stone in a stream. The power rippled around him. He was alive, and it disturbed us. But we'd been practicing, and we could work around him.
   I was standing on top of bones. Under the earth where eyes could not see. I tried to step off them, and only stepped on more. The earth was thick with bodies, like raisins in a pudding. No eating around them.
   I stood on top on a raft of bones in a sea of dry, red earth. Everywhere I touched was a body—a piece of bone. There was no clear space. No breathing space. I stood there, huddled in on myself, trying to sort through what I was sensing.
   The rib cage just to the left belonged with the thighbone yards away. The wind leaked out and touched piece after piece. I could have put the skeleton back together like a giant jigsaw puzzle. That was what my power would do if I tried to raise it.
   I moved, stepping on the dead, and everywhere I walked I put bodies together. The pieces stayed separate, but I remembered.
   Larry moved with me. He moved surprisingly smoothly through the power, like a swimmer leaving the smallest possible ripples behind.
   A ghost flared to life like a pale, dancing flame. I walked towards it. It rose like a swaying snake, watching me without eyes. There was that thread of hostility that some ghosts seem to feel towards the living. A jealousy. But if I'd been tied to some forsaken piece of earth for a hundred years or more, I might be hostile, too.
   "What is that?" Larry whispered.
   "What do you see?" I asked.
   "I think it's a ghost. I've just never seen one materialize before." He reached out as if to touch it.
   I grabbed his wrist before he could ever have reached. I felt his power flare to life in a rush of wind that should have poured my hair back from my face.
   The circle suddenly widened, like a camera lens spreading wide. The dead awoke under our combined power like twigs touched by fire. Our power spread over them, and they gave up their secrets. Bits of muscle withered to bone, gaping skulls, all the pieces were there. All we had to do was call them forth. Two more ghosts rose from the ground like smoke. It was a lot of active ghosts for this small and this old a cemetery. And they were all angry at being disturbed. The level of hostility was unusual.
   Combining our powers hadn't doubled the circle—it had quadrupled it.
   The nearest ghost stood like a white pillar of flame. It was strong, powerful. A full-blown ghost in a graveyard that hadn't seen a burial in over two hundred years.
   I stared at it. Larry stared at it. As long as we didn't touch it, we were safe. Heck, we were safe even if we did touch it. Ghosts can't cause physical harm, not really. They can grab you, but if you ignore them they fall away. If you pay attention, they can be bothersome. Frightening, but if a spirit causes real harm it isn't just a ghost. Demon, evil sorcerous dead, but not a normal ghost.
   Staring at the wavering shape, I wasn't at all sure this was a normal ghost. Ghosts wear out. They fade to haunts, which don't usually materialize, hot spots that can give you a jolt, then just shivery places. Ghosts do not last forever. These looked pretty damn solid. For ghosts.
   "Stop!" a man's voice yelled.
   Larry and I turned towards the voice. Magnus Bouvier scrambled up the side of the mountain opposite from where we had walked up. His hair fell across his face, hiding everything but his eyes from the moonlight. His eyes glowed in the dark, reflecting lights I could not see.
   "Stop!" He was waving his hands. His long-sleeved shirt was untucked over jeans. He hit the circle of wind and froze. He put his hands up as if he was trying to touch it.
   Two people in one night who could sense the power. Unusual, but sort of cool. If Magnus hadn't been on the run from the police, we could have sat down and had a nice talk about it.
   "We told you to stay off this land, Mr. Bouvier," Stirling said.
   Bouvier looked at him, turning his head slowly as if concentrating on anything besides the feel of power was hard.
   "We've tried being nice about this," Stirling said. "We are not going to be nice any longer. Beau."
   The pump action on a shotgun is a very distinctive sound. I turned towards the sound, gun in hand. I don't remember thinking about it. I was just looking down the barrel of a gun at Beau. He was cradling a shotgun in his arms, not aimed at anything. That saved him. I know if it had been pointed near us, I'd have shot him.
   I was still seeing double. I could see the graveyard behind my eyes where there is no optic nerve. The cemetery was mine. I knew the bodies. I knew the ghosts. I knew where all the pieces lay. I stared down the gun, seeing Beau and the shotgun, but inside my head the dead still reached out for their scattered parts.
   The ghosts were still real. The power had agitated them. They'd dance and sway on their own for a while. But they'd fade back into the ground. There was more than one way to raise the dead, but not permanently.
   I couldn't look away from the shotgun to see what Bouvier was doing. "Anita, please don't raise the dead." His surprisingly deep voice held a note of pleading.
   I fought an urge to glance at him. "Why not, Magnus?"
   "Get off my land," Stirling said.
   "This is not your land."
   "Get off my land or you will be shot for trespassing."
   Beau glanced my way. "Mr. Stirling?" He was being very careful that the shotgun stayed loose, and harmless, in his hands.
   "Beau, show him we mean business."
   "Mr. Stirling," he said again, with a little more urgency in his voice.
   "Do what I pay you for," Stirling said.
   He started to raise the shotgun to his shoulder, but slowly, watching me.
   "Don't do it," I said. I let my breath out all the way until my body was still and quiet. There was nothing but the gun and what I was aiming at.
   Beau lowered the shotgun.
   I took a breath and said, "Put it on the ground, now."
   "Ms. Blake, this is none of your business," Stirling said.
   "You are not going to shoot someone for trespassing on a piece of land while I watch."
   Larry had his gun out too, now. It wasn't pointed at anybody in particular, which I was grateful for. Pointed guns have a tendency to go off if you don't know what you're doing.
   "On the ground, Beau, now. I won't ask a third time."
   He laid the shotgun on the ground.
   "I pay your salary."
   "You don't pay me enough to get killed."
   Stirling made an exasperated sound and moved forward as if he would pick up the gun himself.
   "Don't touch it, Raymond. You'll bleed just as easy as anybody else."
   He turned to me. "I cannot believe that you would hold me at gunpoint on my own property."
   I lowered my gun arm just a touch; it gets shaky if you hold a shooting pose too long. "I cannot believe that you had Beau come up here armed. You knew my little show would attract Bouvier. You knew it and planned for it. You cold-blooded son of a bitch."
   "Mr. Kirkland, are you going to let her talk to me like that? I am a client."
   Larry shook his head. "I'm with her on this one, Mr. Stirling. You were going to ambush that man. Murder him. Why?"
   "Good question," I said. "Why are you so afraid of the Bouvier family? Or is it just him that you're afraid of?"
   "I am afraid of no one. Come along; we will leave you to your new friend." He marched away, and the others followed. Beau sort of hesitated.
   "I'll bring the shotgun down for you," I said.
   He nodded. "Figured that."
   "And you better not be waiting down there with another gun."
   He looked at me for a long minute. At both of us. He shook his head. "I'm going home to my wife."
   "You do that, Beau," I said.
   He walked away, black slicker flapping against his legs. He hesitated, then said, "I'm out of it from now on. Money doesn't spend if you're dead."
   I knew a few vampires that would argue with him, but I said, "Glad to hear it."
   "I just don't want to get shot," he said. He walked away down the slope, out of sight.
   I stood there with the Browning pointed skyward. I turned in a slow circle, surveying the mountaintop. We were alone, the three of us. So why didn't I want to put my gun up?
   Magnus took a step up the slope and stopped. He raised slender hands towards the power-charged air. He trailed fingertips down it, like it was water. I felt the ripples of his touch shiver down my skin, tremble through my magic.
   No, I wasn't putting my gun up yet.
   "What was that?" Larry asked. His gun was still out, pointed at the ground.
   Bouvier moved his gleaming eyes to Larry. "He is not a necromancer, Anita, but he is more than he seems."
   "Aren't we all," I said. "Why didn't you want me to raise the dead, Magnus?"
   He stared up at me. His eyes were full of glinting lights like reflections in a pool, but the reflections were of things that were not there.
   "Answer me, Magnus."
   "Or what?" he asked. "You'll shoot me?"
   "Maybe," I said.
   The slope made him shorter than I was, so I was looking down on him. "I didn't believe anyone could raise dead this old without a human sacrifice. I thought you'd take Stirling's money, try, fail, and go home." He took a step forward, trailing his hands through the power again, as if he were testing it. As if he weren't sure he could cross into it. The touch made Larry gasp.
   "With this power you can raise some of them, maybe enough of them," Magnus said.
   "Enough for what?" I asked.
   He stared up at me, as if he hadn't meant to speak aloud. "You mustn't raise the dead on this mountain, Anita, Larry. You must not."
   "Give us a reason not to," I said.
   He smiled up at me. "I don't suppose just because I asked."
   I shook my head. "Not hardly."
   "This would be so much easier if glamor worked on you." He took another step up the slope. "Of course, if glamor worked on you, we wouldn't be here, would we?"
   If he wouldn't answer one question, I'd try another one. "Why'd you run from the police?"
   He took another step closer, and I backed up. He'd done nothing overtly threatening, but there was something about him as he stood there, something alien.
   There were images in his eyes that made me want to glance behind to see what was reflecting in his eyes. I could almost see trees, water . . . It was like the things you see out of the corner of your eye, except in color.
   "You told the police my secret; why?"
   "I had to."
   "You really think I did those awful things to those boys?" He took another step, moving into the flow of power, but he didn't slip easily as Larry had. Magnus was like a mountain, huge, forcing the power to go wide around him, as if he filled more space magically than could be seen with the naked eye.
   I pointed the Browning two-handed at his chest. "No, I don't."
   "Then why point a gun at me?"
   "Why all this fey magic shit?"
   He smiled. "I performed a lot of glamor tonight. It's like a high."
   "You feed off your customers," I said. "You don't just do it for business. You siphon them; that's fucking unseelie court."
   He gave a graceful shrug. "I am what I am."
   "How'd you know the victims were boys?" I asked.
   Larry moved to my left, gun pointed carefully at the ground. I'd yelled at him for pointing guns at people too soon.
   "The police said so."
   "Liar."
   He smiled gently. "One of them touched me. I saw it all."
   "Convenient," I said.
   He reached out towards me. "Don't even think it."
   Larry pointed his gun at Magnus. "What's going on, Anita?"
   "I'm not sure."
   "I can't allow you to raise the dead here. I am sorry."
   "How are you going to stop us?" I asked.
   He stared at me, and I felt something push against my magic, like something large swimming just out of sight in the dark. It made me gasp.
   "Freeze, right there, or I will pull this trigger."
   "I haven't moved a muscle," he said softly.
   "No games, Magnus; you're too damn close to being dead."
   "What did he just do?" Larry asked. There was a fine tremor in his two-handed grip.
   "Later," I said. "Clasp your hands on top of your head, Magnus, slowly, very slowly."
   "Are you going to take me in, as they say on television?"
   "Yeah," I said. "You've got a better chance of getting to the jail alive with me than with most of the cops."
   "I don't think I'll go with you." Staring down two guns, and he still sounded sure of himself. He was either stupid or knew something I didn't. I didn't think he was stupid.
   "Tell me when to shoot him," Larry said.
   "When I shoot him, you can shoot him, too."
   "Okay," Larry said.
   Magnus looked from one to the other of us. "You would take my life for such a small thing?"
   "In a heartbeat," I said, "Now clasp your hands slowly on top of your head."
   "If I don't?"
   "I don't bluff, Magnus."
   "Do you have silver bullets in those guns?"
   I just stared at him. I could feel Larry shift slightly beside me. You can only point a gun so long without getting tired, or antsy.
   "I'll bet they're silver. Silver isn't very effective against fairies."
   "Cold iron works best," I said. "I remember."
   "Even normal lead bullets would be better than silver. The metal of the moon is a friend to the fey."
   "Hands, now, or we find out how fairie flesh holds up to silver bullets."
   He raised his hands slowly, gracefully upward. His hands were above shoulder level when he threw himself backwards, falling down the slope. I fired, but he kept on rolling down the earth, and somehow I couldn't quite see him. It was like the air blurred around him.
   Larry and I stood at the top of the slope and fired down on him, and I don't think either of us hit him.
   He scrambled down the raw earth faster than he looked because he got harder to see even in the moonlight until he vanished into the underbrush left near the midpoint on that side.
   "Please tell me he didn't just go poof," Larry said.
   "He didn't just go poof," I said.
   "What did he do, then?"
   "How the hell do I know. This wasn't covered in Fairies 301." I shook my head. "Let's get out of here. I don't know what's going on, but whatever it is, I think we lost our client."
   "You think we lost our hotel rooms?"
   "I don't know, Larry. Let's go find out." I clicked the safety on the Browning but left it out in my hand. I'd have left the safety off, but that didn't seem wise while stumbling down a rocky mountainside even in the moonlight.
   "I think you can put the gun up now, Larry." He hadn't put his safety on.
   "You aren't."
   "But I've got the safety on."
   "Oh." He looked a little sheepish, but he clicked the safety on and holstered it. "You think they would have really killed him?"
   "I don't know. Maybe. Beau would have shot at him, but see how much good it did us."
   "Why does Stirling want Magnus dead?"
   "I don't know."
   "Why did Magnus run from the police?"
   "I don't know."
   "It makes me nervous when you keep answering all my questions with 'I don't know.' "
   "Me, too," I said.
   I glanced back once just before we lost sight of the mountaintop. The ghosts twisted and flared like candle flames, cool white flames. I knew something else I hadn't known before tonight. Some of the bodies were nearly three hundred years old. A hundred years older than Stirling had told us they were. A hundred years makes a lot of difference in a zombie raising. Why had he lied? Afraid I'd refuse, maybe. Maybe. Some of the bodies were Indian remains. Bits and pieces of jewelry, animal bone, stuff that wasn't European. The Indians in this area didn't bury their dead, at least not in simple graves. And this wasn't a mound.
   Something was going on, and I didn't have the faintest idea what it was. But I'd find out. Maybe tomorrow after we got new hotel rooms, gave back the nifty jeep, rented a new car, and told Bert we no longer had a client. Maybe I'd let Larry break the news to him. What are apprentices for if they can't do some of the grunt work?
   Okay, okay, I'd tell Bert myself, but I wasn't looking forward to it.
   
   
   
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18
   Stirling and Co. were gone when we trudged down off the mountain. We drove the Jeep back to the hotel. I was frankly surprised they hadn't taken the Jeep with them and left us to walk. Stirling didn't strike me as a man who liked having guns pointed at him. But then, who does?
   Larry's room was first down the hall. He hesitated with his room card in the lock. "You think the rooms are paid for tonight, or do we pack?"
   "We pack," I said.
   He nodded, and shoved the card in its little slot. The door handle turned, and in he went. I went to the next door and put in my own card. There was a connecting door between the rooms. We hadn't unlocked it, but it was there. Personally I liked my privacy, even from my friends. And especially from my coworkers.
   The room's silence flowed around me. It was wonderful. A few minutes of quiet before I faced Bert and told him all that money had just flown the coop.
   The room was a suite with an outer room and a separate bedroom. My apartment wasn't much bigger. There was a bar set into the left-hand wall. Being a teetotaler, that was a real plus for me. The walls were a soft pink with a delicate pattern of gilt-edged leaves, the carpet a deep burgundy. The full-sized couch was a purple so dark it looked nearly black. A love seat matched it. Two armchairs were done in a purple, burgundy, and white floral pattern. All exposed wood was very dark and highly polished. I had suspected I had some kind of honeymoon suite until I saw Larry's room. It was nearly a mirror of mine, but done in shades of green.
   A cherrywood desk that looked like a genuine antique sat against the far wall. The connecting door was beside it but opened opposite so you wouldn't accidentally bump the desk. Monogrammed stationery graced the desk, along with a second telephone line for your modem I guess.
   I don't know if I'd ever stayed in a room this expensive. I doubted seriously if Beadle, Beadle, Stirling, and Lowenstein would want to pick up the tab now.
   A sound jerked me around. The Browning sort of materialized in my hand. I was staring down the barrel at Jean-Claude. He stood in the doorway leading to the bedroom. The shirt had long, full sleeves that had been gathered in three puffs down the length of the arm to end in a spill of cloth that framed his long, pale fingers. The collar was high and tied with a white cravat that spilled lace down the front of him tucked into a vest. It was black and velvety with pinpricks of silver on it. Thigh-high black boots fit his legs like a second skin.
   His hair was nearly as black as the vest, making it hard to tell where the curls ended and the velvety cloth began. A silver and onyx stickpin that I'd seen before pierced the white lace at his chest.
   "Well, ma petite, are you going to shoot me?"
   I was still standing there with the gun pointed at him. He had not moved. He had been very careful to do nothing that could be taken as threatening. His blue, blue eyes stared at me. Serious, waiting.
   I pointed the gun at the ceiling and let out a breath I hadn't realized I was holding. "How the hell did you get in here?"
   He smiled then, and pushed away from the doorjamb. He walked into the room with that wonderful gliding motion of his. Part cat, part dancer, part something else. Whatever the "else" was, it wasn't human.
   I put the gun away, though I wasn't sure I wanted to. It made me feel better having it in my hand. Trouble was, a gun wouldn't help me against Jean-Claude. Oh, if I was going to kill him it would, but that's not what we were doing lately. Lately we were—dating. Can you stand it? I wasn't sure I could.
   "The desk clerk let me in." His voice was very mild, amused, whether with himself or with me it was hard to tell.
   "Why would he do that?"
   "Because I asked him to." He walked around me like a shark circling its prey.
   I didn't turn with him. I stared straight ahead and let him circle me. It would only amuse him if I kept him in sight. The hairs at the back of my neck stood up. I took a step forward and felt his hand fall back. He'd been about to touch my shoulder. I didn't want him to touch me.
   "You used mind tricks on the desk clerk?"
   "Yes," he said. That one word was full of so much more. I turned towards him so I could see his face.
   He was staring at my legs. He raised his face to mine, and somehow that one quick gaze took in my entire body. His midnight blue eyes looked even darker than usual. We weren't sure how I was able to meet his gaze. I was beginning to suspect that being a necromancer had more fringe benefits than just being good with zombies.
   "Red becomes you, ma petite." His voice had grown softer, deeper. He moved closer to me, not touching. He knew better than that, but somehow his eyes showed where his hands wanted to be. "I like this very much."
   His voice was soft and warm, and far more intimate than his words. "Your legs are wonderful." His words were growing softer. A whisper in the dark that hovered around my body like a line of warmth. His voice was always like that, touchable. He still had the best voice I'd ever heard.
   "Stop it, Jean-Claude. I'm too short to have wonderful legs."
   "I do not understand this modern obsession with height." He ran his hands just above my hose, so close I could almost feel it like a breath of warmth against my skin.
   "Stop it," I said.
   "Stop what?" His voice was utterly mild, harmless. Ri-ight.
   I shook my head. Asking Jean-Claude not to be a pain in the ass was like asking rain not to be wet. Why try?
   "Fine, flirt all you want, but keep in mind that you're here to save the life of a young boy. A young boy who may be being raped while we sit here and waste time."
   He sighed deeply and walked towards me. Something must have shown on my face because he sat down in the other chair, not trying to come closer. "You have a habit, ma petite, of taking all the fun out of seducing you."
   "Yippee," I said. "Now, can we get down to business?"
   He smiled his lovely, perfect smile. "I had arranged to meet with the Master of Branson tonight."
   "Just like that," I said.
   "Isn't that what you wanted me to do?" he asked. His voice held that amused edge again.
   "Yeah. I'm just not used to you giving me exactly what I ask for."
   "I would give you anything you wanted, ma petite, if you would only let me."
   "I wanted you out of my life. You don't seem to want to do that."
   He sighed. "No, ma petite, I do not want to do that." He let it go at that. No accusations about me wanting to be with Richard instead of him. No vague threats on Richard's life. It was sort of odd.
   "You're up to something," I said.
   He turned, eyes wide, long fingers pressed to his heart. "Moi?"
   "Yeah, you," I said. I shook my head and let it go. He was up to something. I knew him well enough to know the signs, but I also knew him well enough to know that he wouldn't tell me until he was good and ready. Nobody kept a secret like Jean-Claude, and nobody else had as many of them. There was no deceit in Richard. Jean-Claude lived and breathed it.
   "I've got to change and pack before we can leave."
   "Change your lovely red skirt, why? Because I like it?"
   "Not just that," I said, "though admittedly it's a plus. I can't wear my inner pants holster with the skirt."
   "I will not argue that having a second gun will help our show of force tomorrow night."
   I stopped and turned. "What do you mean, tomorrow night?"
   He spread his hands wide. "It is too close to dawn, ma petite. We cannot even drive to the master's lair before the sun rises."
   "Dammit," I said softly and with feeling.
   "I did my part, ma petite. But even I cannot stop the sun from rising."
   I leaned against the back of the love seat, hands gripping the edge hard enough to hurt. I shook my head. "We're going to be too late to save him."
   "Ma petite, ma petite." He knelt in front of me, staring up at me. "Why does this boy bother you so very much? Why is his life so precious to you?"
   I stared down into Jean-Claude's perfect face, and had no answer. "I don't know."
   He laid his hands on top of my hands. "You're hurting yourself, ma petite."
   I moved my hands out from under his, crossing my arms over my stomach. Jean-Claude remained kneeling, a hand on either side of me. He was entirely too close to me, and I was suddenly very aware of how short the skirt was.
   "I have to go pack," I said.
   "Why? Don't you like your room?" Without moving, he seemed closer somehow. I could feel the line of his body against my legs like heat.
   "Move," I said.
   He leaned backwards, sitting on his heels, forcing me to move past him. The hem of my skirt brushed his cheek as I walked past. "You are such a pain in the ass."
   "So nice of you to notice, ma petite. Now, why are you leaving this lovely room?"
   "A client's paying for the room, and he's not a client anymore."
   "Why ever not, ma petite?"
   "I pulled a gun on him."
   His eyes widened, his face a perfect mask of surprise. The mask slipped and he stared at me with ancient eyes. Eyes that had seen much but still didn't know what to make of me. "Why would you do that?"
   "They were going to shoot a man for trespassing."
   "Was he trespassing?"
   "Technically, yeah."
   Jean-Claude just looked at me. "Does he not have the right to protect his own land?"
   "No, not if it means killing people. A piece of land isn't worth killing over."
   "Protecting our lands has been a valid excuse for slaughter since the beginning of time, ma petite. Did you suddenly change the rules?"
   "I wasn't going to stand there and watch them kill a man for walking on a piece of ground. Besides, I think it was a setup."
   "A setup? You mean a plot to kill the man."
   "Yeah."
   "Were you part of this plot?"
   "I may have been bait. He could feel my power over the dead. It called to him."
   "Now that is interesting. What is this man's name?"
   "You give me the name of the mystery vampire first."
   "Xavier," he said.
   "Just like that. Why wouldn't you give me the name earlier?"
   "I do not want the police to have it."
   "Why not?"
   "I explained all that. Now, the name of the man you saved tonight."
   I stared at him, and didn't want to give it to him. I didn't like how interested he was in the name. But a deal was a deal. "Bouvier, Magnus Bouvier."
   "I do not know the name."
   "Should you?"
   He just smiled at me. It meant nothing and everything.
   "You are an irritating son of a bitch."
   "Ah, ma petite, how can I resist you when you whisper such sweet endearments to me?"
   I glared at him, which made him smile wider. There was just the faintest hint of fang peeking into view.
   Someone knocked on the door. Probably the manager telling me to get out. I walked to the door. I didn't bother looking through the peephole, so I was caught off guard by who was outside. It was Lionel Bayard.
   Had he come to throw us out in person?
   I stood there for a second, looking at him. He spoke first, clearing his throat nervously. "Ms. Blake, may I speak with you for a moment?"
   He was being awfully polite for someone who had come to kick us out. "I'm listening, Mr. Bayard."
   "I really don't think the hallway is the place to discuss this."
   I stepped to one side, ushering him into the room. He stepped past me, hands smoothing his tie. His gaze flicked to Jean-Claude, who was standing now. Jean-Claude smiled at Bayard. Pleasant, charming.
   "I didn't realize you had company, Ms. Blake. I can come back."
   I closed the door. "No, Mr. Bayard, it's all right. I told Jean-Claude about our misunderstanding this evening."
   "Ah, yes, uh . . ." Bayard looked from one to the other of us, as if not sure what to say.
   Jean-Claude didn't so much sit in the chair as fold his body around it. The movement was almost catlike. "Anita and I have no secrets from one another, Mr . . ."
   "Bayard, Lionel Bayard." He walked over and offered his hand to Jean-Claude. Jean-Claude raised an eyebrow but took the offered hand.
   The handshake seemed to make Bayard feel better. A normal gesture. He didn't know what Jean-Claude was. How he could look at him and think him human was beyond me. I'd only seen one vampire that could have passed for human, and he hadn't been human at all. Bayard turned back to me, adjusting his glasses, which didn't need adjusting. That nervous little gesture again. Something was up.
   "What's up, Bayard?" I asked. I'd closed the door and was leaning to one side of it, arms crossed over my stomach.
   "I'm here to offer our most sincere apologies for earlier tonight."
   I just stared at him. "You're apologizing to me?"
   "Yes. Mr. Stirling was overzealous. Why, if you had not been there to bring us all to our senses, a great tragedy might have occurred."
   I tried to keep my face blank. I wanted to frown at him, or look confused. "Stirling's not mad at me?"
   "On the contrary, Ms. Blake. He's grateful to you."
   I didn't believe that. "Really," I said.
   "Oh, yes. In fact, I've been authorized to offer you a bonus."
   "Why?"
   "To make up for our behavior tonight."
   "Your behavior was fine," I said.
   He smiled modestly. His act was about as sincere as faux pearls, but not half so realistic.
   "How much is the bonus?"
   "Twenty thousand," he said.
   I stayed leaning against the wall, staring at him. "No."
   He blinked at me. "Excuse me?"
   "I don't want the bonus."
   "I'm not authorized to go higher than twenty thousand, but I could speak with Mr. Stirling. Perhaps he would go higher."
   I shook my head and pushed away from the wall. "I don't want more money. I don't want the bonus at all."
   "You aren't quitting on us, are you, Ms. Blake?" He was blinking so fast I thought he'd pass out. Me quitting bothered him. A lot.
   "No, I'm not quitting. But you're already paying an enormous fee. You don't need to pay more."
   "Mr. Stirling is just very anxious that he has not offended you."
   I let that one go. Too easy. "Tell Mr. Stirling I'd have thought better of his apology if it had been delivered in person."
   "Mr. Stirling is a very busy man. He would have come himself, but he had pressing business."
   I wondered how often Bayard had to apologize for the big man. I wondered how often the apology was for telling a fellow flunkie to shoot someone. "Fine, you've delivered the message. Tell Mr. Stirling that it isn't the gunfight that's going to make me bail. I read the cemetery tonight. Some of the corpses are closer to three hundred than two hundred. Three hundred years, Lionel; that's an old zombie."
   "Can you raise them?" He had stepped closer, hands fidgeting with his lapels. He was close to invading my space. I'd have rather had Jean-Claude next to me.
   "Maybe. The question isn't can I, but will I, Lionel."
   "What do you mean?"
   "You lied to me, Lionel. You underestimated the age of the dead by nearly a century."
   "Not deliberately, Ms. Blake, I assure you. I merely repeated what our research department told me. I did not deliberately mislead you."
   "Sure."
   He reached out almost like he wanted to touch me. I moved back, just enough. He seemed terribly intense. He let his hand drop. "Please, Ms. Blake, I did not lie on purpose."
   "The problem, Lionel, is that I'm not sure I can raise zombies this old without a human sacrifice. Even I have my limits."
   "So nice to know," Jean-Claude said softly.
   I frowned at him. He smiled.
   "You will try, won't you, Ms. Blake?"
   "Maybe. I haven't decided yet."
   He shook his head. "We will do anything to make this oversight up to you, Ms. Blake. It is entirely my fault that I did not double-check the research department's findings. Is there anything that I can do personally to make it up to you?"
   "Just leave. I'll call your office tomorrow to discuss details. I may need some extra . . . paraphernalia to attempt the raising."
   "Anything, anything at all, Ms. Blake."
   "Fine; I'll call." I opened the door and stood by it. I thought it was enough of a hint. It was. Bayard went to the door and almost backed out, apologizing as he went.
   I closed the door and stood there for a minute.
   "That little man is up to something," Jean-Claude said.
   I turned and looked at him. He was still curled in the chair, looking scrumptious.
   "I didn't need vampiric powers to tell me that."
   "Neither," he said, "did I." He rose from the chair easily. If I'd curled up in a chair like that, I'd have been stiff.
   "I've got to tell Larry that he can stop packing. I don't understand why we're still hired, but we are."
   "Can anyone else raise the graveyard?"
   "Not without a human sacrifice, maybe not even then," I said.
   "They need you, ma petite. From the little man's anxiety, they must need the dead raised very badly."
   "Millions of dollars are at stake."
   "I do not think money is all that is at stake," he said.
   I shook my head. "Me either."
   He came to join me by the door. "What extra paraphernalia will you need to raise a three-hundred-year-old corpse, ma petite?"
   I shrugged. "A bigger death. I'd originally thought to use a couple of goats." I opened the door.
   "What are you thinking about using now?"
   "An elephant, maybe," I said.
   We were out in the hall and he was staring at me.
   "I'm kidding. Honest. Besides, elephants are an endangered species. I was thinking maybe a cow."
   Jean-Claude stared down at me for a long space of moments, his face very serious. "Remember, ma petite, I can tell if you are lying."
   "What's that supposed to mean?"
   "You meant the elephant comment."
   I frowned up at him. What could I say? "Okay, but just for a minute. I wouldn't really do in an elephant. I'm telling the truth."
   "Yes, ma petite, I know."
   I hadn't really meant the crack about the elephant. Not really. It was just the biggest animal I could think of on short notice. And if I was going to attempt to raise several three-hundred-year-old corpses, I was going to need something big. I didn't think a cow would do. Hell, I didn't think a herd of cows would do it. I just hadn't thought of a good alternative yet.
   But no elephants, I promise. Besides, can you imagine trying to slit the throat of an elephant? The logistics of just getting one to hold still while you killed it were mind boggling. There's a reason why most sacrifices are our size or smaller. Makes it easier to hold them down.
   
   "We can't just leave Jeff with that monster," Larry said. He was standing in the middle of his forest green carpet. Jean-Claude was sitting in the corner of the green patterned couch. He was looking amused, like a cat that had found a very interesting mouse.
   "We aren't leaving him," I said. "We just can't go looking for him tonight."
   He whirled and pointed a finger at Jean-Claude. "Why, because he says so?"
   Jean-Claude's smile widened. Definitely amused.
   "Check the time, Larry. It'll be dawn soon. All the vampires will be asnooze in their coffins."
   Larry shook his head. The look on his face reminded me of me. Stubborn, not wanting to accept it. "We have to do something, Anita."
   "We can't talk to vampires during daylight hours, Larry. That's just the way it is."
   "And what happens to Jeff today, while we wait for the sun to go down?" His pale skin had gone almost white. His freckles looked like brown ink spots. His pale blue eyes glittered like angry glass. I'd never seen Larry so mad. Hell, I'd never seen him angry.
   I glanced at Jean-Claude; he just looked at me. I was on my own. Wasn't I always. "Xavier will have to sleep. He won't be able to harm Jeff once the sun rises."
   Larry shook his head. "Will we get him back in time?"
   I wanted to say "Sure," but I wouldn't lie. "I don't know. I hope so."
   His soft, Howdy-Doody face was set in very stubborn lines. I looked at him and understood why so many people underestimate me. He looked so harmless. Hell, he was sort of harmless, but he was armed now, and learning how to be dangerous. And in his face for the first time I saw a grim purpose building. I'd planned on leaving him behind when I went to talk to the Master of Branson. Looking at him now, I wasn't sure he was going to let me do that. He'd had his first vampire hunt tonight. I'd managed to keep him out of the rough stuff until now. But it wasn't going to last. I'd been hoping he'd give up the idea of hunting vampires. Staring into his glittering eyes, I realized I was the one who was fooling myself. In his own way Larry was as stubborn as I was. Frightening thought, that. But for tonight he was safe.
   "You couldn't just comfort me? Tell me we'll find him?" Larry asked.
   I smiled. "I try not to lie to you, if I can avoid it."
   "For once," Larry said, "I'd have liked to have heard the lie."
   "Sorry," I said.
   He took in a deep breath and let it out slow. His anger was gone just like that. Larry didn't know what it was to hold onto his rage. He didn't brood over things. One of the main differences between us. I never forgave anyone for anything. A character flaw to be sure, but hell, everyone's got to have at least one.
   There was a knock on the door. Larry went for the door.
   Jean-Claude was suddenly standing by me. I hadn't seen him move. Hadn't heard his leather boots slither over the carpet. Nothing. Magic. My heart was suddenly thudding in my throat.
   "Stomp your feet or something when you do that."
   "Do what, ma petite?"
   I glared up at him. "That wasn't a mind trick, was it?"
   "No," he said. That one word slithered across my skin like a low creeping breeze.
   "Damn you," I said softly and with feeling.
   He smiled. "We've been over that, ma petite; you are too late."
   Larry had closed the door. "There's a guy out in the hall says he's with Jean-Claude."
   "A guy or a vampire?" I asked.
   Larry frowned. "Not a vampire, but if you mean human I wouldn't go that far."
   "You expecting company?" I asked.
   "Yes, I am."
   "Who?"
   He stalked to the door and put a hand on the doorknob. "Someone I believe you've already met." He opened the door with a flourish, stepping to one side to let me have a clear view.
   Jason stood in the open door, smiling, relaxed. He was my height exactly, not something you find in a man often. Straight blond hair barely touched the top of his collar; his eyes were the innocent blue of spring skies. The last time I'd seen him he'd been trying to eat me. Werewolves will do that sometimes.
   He was dressed in an oversized black sweater that hit him almost at mid-thigh. He'd had to roll the sleeves over his wrists. His pants were leather, laced up the side from waist to mid-calf, where the laces vanished into boots. The lacings were loose enough that there was a pale line of flesh all the way down.
   "Hello, Anita."
   "Hi, Jason. What are you doing here?"
   He had the grace to look embarrassed. "I'm Jean-Claude's new pet."
   He said the last word like it was alright. Richard wouldn't have said it that way.
   "You didn't tell me you brought company," I said.
   "We are going to be calling on the Master of the City. We must make a good show of it."
   "So a werewolf, and what . . . me?"
   He sighed. "Yes, ma petite, whether you bear my marks or not, most consider you my human servant." He raised a hand. "Please, Anita, I know you are not my human servant in the technical sense. But you have helped me defend my territory. You have killed to protect me. That is the best definition of what a human servant does."
   "So, what? I have to pretend to be your human servant on this visit?"
   "Something like that," he said.
   "Forget it."
   "Anita, I need a show of strength here. Branson was part of Nikolaos's territory. I gave it up because the population density could support another group. But it was still my land, and now it's not. Some view that as weakness rather than practicality."
   "So without any marks at all you've finally got me to play servant for you. You manipulative son of a bitch."
   "You asked me down here, ma petite." A thread of warmth cut through his words. He stalked towards me. "I am doing you a favor, do not forget that."
   "I don't think you'll let me forget," I said.
   He made a harsh sound, as if he had no words for his anger. "Why do I put up with you? You insult me at every turn. There are many who would give their souls for what I offer you."
   He stood in front of me, eyes like dark sapphires, skin white as marble. His skin glowed like there was a light inside him. He looked like some kind of live sculpture made of light, jewels, and stone.
   He was impressive and scary, but I'd seen it before. "Cut the vampire powers shit, Jean-Claude. It's almost dawn; don't you have a coffin to crawl into somewhere?"
   He laughed, but it wasn't pleasant, it was bitter like the touch of steel wool. Something to irritate rather than entice. "Our luggage has not arrived, has it, my wolf?"
   "No, master," Jason said.
   "Your coffin hasn't arrived?" I asked.
   "Either I have chosen a very lax skycab, or . . ." He let the words trail off, face bland and pleasant.
   "Or what?" Larry asked.
   "Ma petite."
   "You think the local master took your coffin," I said.
   "A punishment for entering her territory without observing all the social niceties." He looked at me when he said it.
   "I suppose that's my fault," I said.
   He gave that infuriating shrug. "I could have said no, ma petite."
   "Stop being so civilized about it."
   "Would you be happier if I was angry?" His voice was very mild when he said it.
   "Maybe," I said. It would have made me feel less guilty, but I didn't say that out loud.
   "Go to the airport and find our luggage if you can, Jason. Bring it back to Anita's room."
   "Wait a minute. You are not moving into my room."
   "It is nearly dawn, ma petite. I have no choice. Tomorrow we will find other accommodations."
   "You planned this."
   He gave a short, bitter laugh. "Even my deviousness knows some bounds, ma petite. I would not willingly be without my coffin this close to dawn."
   "What are you going to do without your coffin?" Larry asked. He looked anxious.
   Jean-Claude smiled. "Do not fear, Lawrence, all I need is darkness, or rather lack of sunlight. The coffin itself is not absolutely necessary, simply more secure."
   "I've never known a vampire that didn't sleep in a coffin," I said.
   "If I am underground in a secure place, I forego my coffin. Though truthfully, once daylight finds me I am insensible and could sleep on a bed of nails and not know it."
   I wasn't sure I believed him. He worked harder than most at passing for human. "You will see the truth of my words soon enough, ma petite."
   "That's what I'm afraid of," I said.
   "You can sleep on the couch if you prefer, but I am telling you truly that once full daylight arrives I will be harmless, helpless if you like. I would be unable to molest you even if I wanted to."
   "And what other fairy tales am I supposed to believe? I've seen you move around after dawn, hidden from light, but you worked just fine."
   "After eight hours or so of sleep, if it is still daylight I can move around, true, but I doubt you will stay abed for eight hours. You have clients or something, a murder investigation, some business that will take you out and about."
   "If I leave you alone, who'll see that some maid doesn't come in, pull the curtains back and French fry you?"
   The smile widened. "Concern over my well-being. I am touched."
   I looked at him. He looked pleasant, amused, but it was a mask. His expression when he didn't want you to know what he was thinking, but didn't want you to know that he didn't want you to know. "What are you up to?"
   "For once, ma petite, nothing."
   "Yeah, right."
   "If I find the coffin, I'll need to rent a truck," Jason said.
   "You can use our Jeep," Larry said.
   I glared at him. "No, he can't."
   "Think of it as expediency, ma petite. If Jason must rent a truck, then I may have to spend another day in your bed. I know you do not want that." There was amusement in his voice, and an undercurrent of something else. It might have been bitterness.
   "I'll drive," Larry said.
   "No, you won't," I said.
   "It's almost dawn, Anita. I'll be alright."
   I shook my head. "No."
   "You can't treat me like a kid brother forever. I can drive the Jeep."
   "I promise not to eat him," Jason said.
   Larry held out his hand for the keys. "You have to trust me sometime."
   I just looked at him.
   "I promise to shoot anything, human or monster, that threatens me while I'm gone." He made the Boy Scout sign, three fingers to heaven. "You can bail me out of jail and explain that I was just following orders."
   I sighed. "Alright, dammit." I gave him the keys.
   He grinned at me. "Thanks."
   I shook my head. "Just hurry back, okay?"
   "Anything you say."
   "Just get out of here, and be careful."
   Larry left with Jason trailing behind. I stared at the door after it closed, wondering if I should have gone with them. Knowing that Larry would have gotten mad, but mad was better than dead. Hell, it was a simple errand; go to the airport and pick up a coffin. What could go wrong with less than an hour of darkness left? Shit.
   "You cannot protect him, Anita."
   "I can try."
   Jean-Claude gave that infuriating shrug that meant anything you wanted it to mean, and nothing at all. "Shall we retire to your room, ma petite?"
   I opened my mouth to tell him he could bunk with Larry, but didn't say it. I didn't really believe he'd munch on Larry, but I was sure he wouldn't munch on me. "Sure," I said.
   He looked a little surprised, as if he'd expected an argument. But I was all out of argument tonight. He could have the bed. I'd take the couch. What could be more innocent? Biker Nuns from Hell, but besides that.
   
   
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19
   I could feel dawn pressing against the windows like a cool hand when we got back to my room. It was very near. Jean-Claude smiled at me. "The first time I manage to share a hotel room with you, and there is no time." He gave an elaborate sigh. "Things never work as I plan with you, ma petite."
   "Maybe that's a hint," I said.
   "Perhaps." He glanced at the closed drapes. "I must go, ma petite. Until darkness." He shut the bedroom door a little hurriedly. I could feel the coming light pressing around the building. I'd noticed over the years of hunting vamps that I'd become aware of dawn, and sunset. There had been times when I'd struggled from disaster to disaster just to stay alive until that soft growing pressure of light could sweep the sky and save my cookies. For the first time I wondered what it would be like to see it as a danger instead of a blessing.
   After he'd closed the door I realized my suitcase was in the bedroom. Damn. I hesitated, and finally knocked. No answer. I opened the door just a crack, then farther. He wasn't in there. Water ran in the bathroom. A line of light showed under the door. What did vampires do in bathrooms? Better not to know.
   I grabbed my suitcase from the floor and carried it out before the bathroom door could open. I did not want to see him again. I did not want to see what happened to him when the sun rose.
   When the sun had risen enough to pulse against the closed drapes like pale lemon liquid, I changed into a t-shirt and jeans. I had a robe with me, but if I was going to greet both Larry and Jason I wanted to be wearing some pants.
   I called down for extra blankets and a pillow. No one bitched that it was a quarter past dawn, and a strange time to need bedclothes. They just brought the stuff. True class. The maid didn't even glance at the closed bedroom door.
   I spread the blanket on the couch and stared at it. It was a pretty couch but didn't look terribly comfortable. Oh, well, virtue had its punishments. Of course, maybe it wasn't virtue that kept me out of the bedroom. If it had been Richard curled up in the next room, then only moral fortitude would have kept me out. With Jean-Claude . . . I had never seen him after dawn when he was dead to the world. I wasn't sure I wanted to see. I knew I didn't want to cuddle up next to him while the warmth left his body.
   There was a knock on the door. I hesitated. It was probably Larry, but then again . . . I went to the door with the Browning naked in my hand. Beau had had a shotgun last night. Paranoia, or caution; hard to tell the difference sometimes.
   I stood to one side of the door and said, "Yes."
   "Anita, it's us."
   I hit the safety and put the barrel of the Browning down the front of my jeans. It was too big a gun to wear in an inner pants holster, but for temporary holding, that worked.
   I opened the door.
   Larry leaned against the doorjamb, looking rumpled and tired. He had a McDonald's sack in one hand, and four cups shoved into one of those Styrofoam holders. Two of the cups held coffee, the other two sodas.
   Jason had a large leather suitcase under each arm, a battered, much smaller suitcase in his right hand, and a second McDonald's bag in his left. He didn't look the least bit tired. A morning person, even after no sleep at all. It was disgusting. His eyes flicked to the gun shoved in my waistband. He noticed, but he didn't comment. Point for him.
   Larry never even blinked at the gun.
   "Food?" I asked.
   "I didn't eat much last night. Besides, Jason was hungry, too," Larry said. He came inside, putting the drinks and food on the wet bar. None of us drank; good to use the bar for something.
   Jason walked through the door sideways with the suitcases and food, but there was no effort to it. He wasn't straining one little bit to carry it all.
   "Showoff," I said.
   He sat the luggage on the floor. "This isn't even close to showing off," he said.
   I locked the door behind them. "I suppose you can bring the coffin up single-handedly."
   "No, but not because it's heavy. It's just too long. The balance isn't right."
   Great. Super werewolf. Though for all I knew, all lycanthropes could lift that much weight. Maybe Richard could lift coffins with one arm. It was not a comforting thought.
   Jason started laying food out on the bar. Larry had already climbed onto one of the bar stools. He was pouring sugar into one of the coffees.
   "Did you just leave the coffin in the lobby?" I asked. I had to lay the Browning on the bar to sit down. I was just too short-waisted to have it down my pants.
   Larry sat the unopened coffee in front of me. "It's missing."
   I stared at him. "You found the suitcases but not the coffin?"
   "Yep," Jason said, as he finished dividing the food into three piles. He'd pushed some of it in front of both of us, but the lion's share was in front of him.
   "How can you eat this early in the morning?"
   "I'm always hungry," he said. He looked at me sort of expectantly.
   I let it slide. It was too easy.
   "Come on, I fed you that one," he said.
   "You don't seem particularly worried," I said.
   He shrugged, and slid onto a bar stool. "What do you want me to say? I've seen some weird shit since I became a werewolf. If I got hysterical every time something went wrong, every time someone I knew died, I'd be in the loony bin by now."
   "I thought fights for dominance in the pack, except for pack leader, weren't to the death," I said.
   "People forget," he said.
   "I'll have to talk to Richard when I get back in town. He hasn't been mentioning any of this."
   "Nothing to mention," Jason said. "Just business as usual."
   Great. "Did anybody see who took the coffin?"
   Larry answered, his voice sluggish even with the caffeine and sugar. There's only so much you can do on no sleep at all. "No one saw anybody take it. In fact, the only guy left from the night shift said, 'I just turned away for a second, and it wasn't there. Just the luggage standing there by itself.' "
   "Shit," I said.
   "Why take the coffin?" he asked. He drank most of his coffee. His Egg McMuffin sat untouched in front of him. They'd put hotcakes in front of me with a little tub of syrup beside it.
   "Your breakfast is getting cold," Jason said.
   He was enjoying himself too much. I frowned at him, but I opened my coffee. I didn't want the food. "I think the master is flexing a little muscle. What do you think, Jason?" I kept my voice casual.
   He smiled at me around a mouthful of food, swallowed, and said, "I think whatever Jean-Claude wants me to think."
   Maybe my voice had been too casual. I should really give up on subtlety; I just wasn't good enough at it. "Did he tell you not to talk to me?"
   "No, just to be careful what I said."
   "He says jump, and you say how high; is that it?"
   "That's it." He ate a bite of scrambled egg, his face peaceful.
   "Doesn't that bother you?"
   "I don't make the rules, Anita. I'm not an alpha anything."
   "And it doesn't bother you?" I asked.
   He shrugged. "Sometimes, but there's nothing I can do about it. Why fight it?"
   "I don't understand that at all," Larry said.
   "Me either."
   "You don't have to understand it," he said. He couldn't have been more than twenty, but the look in his eyes wasn't young. It was the look of someone who'd seen a lot, done a lot, and not all of it nice. It was the look I was dreading to see on Larry's face someday. They were nearly the same age; what had people been doing to Jason to give him such jaded eyes?
   "What do we do now?" Larry asked.
   "You're the vampire experts. I'm just Jean-Claude's pet."
   He said it like it didn't bother him. It would have bothered me. I shook my head. "I'm going to call the cops, then get some sleep."
   "What are you going to tell them?" Jason asked.
   "I'm going to tell them about Xavier."
   "Did Jean-Claude say you could tell the cops?"
   I looked at him. "I didn't ask for permission."
   "Jean-Claude wouldn't like you bringing in the police."
   I just stared at him.
   He blinked at me. "Don't do it just because I said that, please."
   "He knows you pretty well for someone who's only met you twice," Larry said.
   "Three times," I said. "Two out of three times, he's tried to eat me."
   Larry's eyes widened a little. "You're kidding."
   "She just looks so tasty," Jason said.
   "I've had about enough of you," I said.
   "What's wrong? Jean-Claude and Richard both tease you."
   "I'm dating both of them," I said. "I'm not dating you."
   "Maybe you've got a thing for monsters. I can be just as scary as the next guy."
   I stared at him. "No," I said, "you can't. That's why you're not alpha. That's why you're Jean-Claude's pet, because you aren't scary enough."
   Something flowed through his pale blue eyes. Something angry and dangerous. Sitting there with his forkful of scrambled eggs, and a Coke in one hand, he was suddenly different. It was hard to put into words, but it raised the hair on the back of my neck.
   "Ease down, wolf-boy," I said. My voice was soft, careful. I was sitting less than a foot away from him. At this distance he could jump me easy. The Browning was an inch away from my right hand, but I knew better. I might grab the gun, but I'd never get it pointed in time. I'd seen him move before, and I wasn't quick enough. Lack of sleep was making me trusting, or stupid. Same thing.
   A low, trickling growl rumbled out of him. My pulse beat a little faster.
   Larry's gun was suddenly pointing past my nose at the werewolf's face. "Don't," Larry said. His voice was low and even, and very damn serious.
   I eased back off the bar stool, bringing the Browning with me. Didn't really want Larry's gun to go off right next to my face.
   I pointed my gun at Jason's chest, one-handed, almost casual. "Don't ever threaten me again."
   Jason stared at me. His beast lurked just behind his eyes like a wave rushing towards the shore.
   "You start going furry, and I won't wait to find out if you're bluffing," I said.
   Larry had one knee on the bar stool, gun still pointed nice and steady. I hoped he didn't fall off the bar stool and accidentally shoot Jason. If he shot him, I wanted it to be on purpose.
   Jason's shoulders relaxed. His hands unclenched, leaving the fork and the drink on the bar. He closed his eyes and sat very still for nearly a full minute. Larry and I waited, guns still pointed. Larry's eyes flicked to me. I shook my head.
   Jason opened his eyes and let out a deep, sighing breath. He looked normal again, that tension drained away. He grinned. "I had to try."
   I took another step back, putting my back to the wall. Out of reach, I lowered the gun. Larry hesitated, but followed my lead.
   "So you tried; now what?"
   He shrugged. "You're dominant to me."
   "Just like that," I said.
   "Would you be happier if I made you fight me?"
   I shook my head.
   "But I backed her up," Larry said. "She didn't do it alone."
   "Doesn't matter. You're loyal to her, would risk your life for her. There's more to being dominant than just muscle, or guns."
   Larry looked puzzled. "What do you mean, dominant? I feel like I'm missing part of the conversation."
   "Why are you working so damn hard at not being human, Jason?" I asked.
   He smiled and went back to his breakfast.
   "Answer me, Jason."
   He finished off his eggs and said, "No."
   "What's going on?" Larry said.
   "Mind games," I said.
   Larry made an exasperated noise. "Someone explain to me why we had to pull a gun on someone who's supposed to be on our side."
   "Jean-Claude keeps telling me Richard isn't any more human than he is. Jason's little display helps emphasize that. Doesn't it, wolf-boy?"
   Jason ate the rest of his food like we weren't there.
   "Answer me," I said.
   He turned on the bar stool, putting his elbows behind him. "I have too many masters now, Anita. I don't need another one."
   "And I've got too many monsters messing with me right now. Don't add yourself to the list, Jason."
   "Is it a short list?" he asked.
   "Gets shorter all the time," I said.
   He smiled and slid off the bar stool. "Is anybody tired but me?"
   Larry and I stared at him. The werewolf didn't look tired—more than I could say for us mere humans.
   Jason wasn't going to answer my questions, and they weren't important enough to shoot him over. Stalemate.
   "Fine; where are you sleeping?" I asked.
   "If you trust me not to eat him, in Larry's room."
   "No way," I said.
   "You want me here, with you?"
   "I told him he could stay in my room on the ride over," Larry said.
   "That was before he pulled the werewolf crap," I said.
   Larry shrugged. "You've got the Master of the City tucked into your bed. I think I can handle one werewolf."
   I didn't think so. But I didn't want to discuss it in front of the werewolf. "No, Larry."
   He was instantly angry. "What do I have to do to prove myself to you?"
   "Stay alive," I said.
   "What's that supposed to mean?"
   "You're not a shooter, Larry."
   "I was willing to shoot him." Larry pointed to the smiling werewolf.
   "I know."
   "Because I'm not trigger-happy, you don't trust me to handle myself?"
   I sighed. "Larry, please. If Jason turned furry in the middle of the day and killed you, I couldn't live with myself."
   "And if he kills you?" Larry said.
   "He won't."
   "Why not?" Larry asked.
   "Because Jean-Claude would kill him. If he hurt you, I'd kill him, but I don't know if Jean-Claude would avenge you. Jason's more frightened of Jean-Claude than he is of me. Aren't you, Jason?"
   Jason had sat down on the end of the couch on my blanket. "Oh, yes."
   "I don't know why," Larry said. "You're the one who kills for Jean-Claude. He never seems to kill anyone on his own."
   "Larry, who would you be more afraid of, Jean-Claude or me?"
   "You wouldn't hurt me," he said.
   "If you had to face one of us, which would you prefer?"
   Larry looked at me for a long time. The anger drained away, replaced by something tired and old in his eyes. "Him."
   "For God's sake, why?" I asked.
   "I've seen you kill a lot of people, Anita. A lot more than Jean-Claude. He might try to frighten me to death, but you'd just kill me."
   My mouth was open, just a little. "If you really believe that I'm more dangerous than Jean-Claude, then you haven't been paying attention."
   "I didn't say you were more dangerous. I said you'd kill me quicker."
   "That's why I'm not as afraid of Anita as I am of Jean-Claude," Jason said.
   Larry looked at him. "What do you mean?"
   "All she'll do is kill me, quick, neat. Jean-Claude wouldn't kill me quick, or easy. He'd make sure it hurt."
   The two men stared at each other. Each one's logic was sound as far as it went. I was with Jason. "If you really believe what you're saying, Larry, then you haven't seen enough vampires."
   "How am I ever going to see enough vampires if you keep me at arm's length, Anita?"
   Had I really kept him out of it that much? Had I overprotected him? Let him see my ruthlessness but not Jean-Claude's?
   "And I'm going to the master's tomorrow night. You are not leaving me behind anymore."
   "You're right," I said. The answer seemed to surprise both of them.
   "If you really believe that I'd kill someone quicker than Jean-Claude would, I have overprotected you. You have to understand how dangerous they are, Larry. How deadly, or someday I won't be around and you'll get killed."
   I took a deep breath and let it out slowly. My stomach was tight with fear. Fear that Larry would get killed because I'd kept him out of it. It was something I hadn't anticipated.
   "Come on, Jason," Larry said.
   Jason stood up.
   "No. Tomorrow you can be ass-deep in vampires with me watching. Until you understand how dangerous the monsters are, I don't want you alone with them."
   His eyes were angry and hurt. I'd undercut his confidence, his self-esteem. But . . . what else could I do?
   Larry turned abruptly on his heel and left. He didn't argue. He didn't say goodbye. He slammed the door behind him, and I fought an urge to follow him. What could I say? I leaned my forehead against the door, and whispered, "Damn."
   "Do I get the couch?" Jason asked.
   I turned and leaned against the door. I still had the Browning in my hand, though I wasn't sure why anymore. I was getting tired, sloppy. "No, I get the couch."
   "Where do you want me, then?"
   "I don't care; just not near me."
   He ran his hands down the edge of the blanket, running the cloth between his fingers. "If you're really sleeping out here, I'd just as soon have the bed."
   "It's taken," I said.
   "How big is the bed?"
   "King-size, but what difference does it make?"
   "Jean-Claude won't mind if I share with him. He'd prefer it was you, but . . ." He shrugged.
   I looked at him, at his tranquil, pleasant face. "Is this the first time you've shared a bed with Jean-Claude?"
   "No," he said.
   It must have shown on my face, because he lowered the high neck of the sweater enough for me to see two fang marks. I pushed away from the wall and walked closer. Close enough to see that the bite was almost healed.
   "Sometimes he likes a snack when he first wakes up," Jason said.
   "Jesus," I said.
   Jason let go of the collar, and it slid over the bite like it wasn't there. The same way you'd hide a hickey. Jason sat there looking harmless. He was exactly my height, and had the face of a knowledgeable angel.
   "Richard didn't let Jean-Claude snack on him," I said.
   "No," he said.
   "No. That's all you have to say."
   "What do you want me to say, Anita?"
   I thought about that for a second. "I want you to be outraged. Angry."
   "Why?"
   I shook my head. "Go to bed, Jason. You're making me tired."
   He went into the bedroom without another word. I didn't peek to see if he changed into a wolf and curled up on the carpet, or if he crawled into bed beside the corpse. None of my business, or at least nothing I wanted to see.
   
   
20
   I put the Browning under the pillow with the safety on. At home with the gun in the special holster I'd added to the headboard of the bed, the safety would have been off. But I'd look pretty silly if I accidentally shot myself during the night—day—trying to protect myself from werewolves.
   The Firestar I put under the couch cushion, safety on. Normally it would have been in my luggage, but I was feeling just a little insecure.
   The knives were in the luggage. Things weren't quite dangerous enough to wear the wrist sheaths to bed. Besides, they weren't very comfortable, not to sleep in, anyway.
   I had just settled down for a long day's sleep when I realized I hadn't called Special Agent Bradford. Damn. I threw the blanket back and padded to the telephone in nothing but a t-shirt and undies. Yes, the Browning came with me. Doesn't do you a damn bit of good to have a weapon if it isn't with you.
   I dialed the number and got no answer. Fancy that. Didn't everyone work twenty-four hours a day? I had his beeper number. Could the news about Xavier wait? Would even having the name help them? Agent Bradford had made it very clear that I was persona non grata. First, Freemont had blackballed me; second, the Quinlans were threatening to sue everybody unless I was kept away from the case. I'd done such a bang-up job protecting their family, they didn't want a repeat. They seemed to think I'd get their son killed. Fancy that.
   I had Bradford's beeper number. He'd given strict orders that if I found out anything I was to tell him, and only him. Made me not want to tell him a bloody thing. But who was I to say the FBI didn't have a vampire file somewhere? Maybe the name would mean something to them. Maybe it would help them find Jeff. Besides, Jean-Claude hadn't told me not to give Xavier's name to the cops. I used the beeper number. I left my phone number. Now I could either go back to bed, and let his return call wake me, or I could sit in the chair for a few minutes and wait. I waited.
   The phone rang in under five minutes. I like a man who returns his pages promptly. I said "Hello," in case it wasn't him. It was.
   "Special Agent Bradford. This number was on my beeper." His voice was rough with sleep.
   "This is Anita Blake."
   A moment of silence, then, "Do you know what time it is?"
   "I haven't been to bed yet, so yeah, I know what time it is."
   Another silence. "What do you want, Ms. Blake?"
   I took a deep breath and let it out slow. Getting mad would not be helpful. "I have a possible name for the vampire that's been slaughtering kids."
   "What's the name?"
   "Xavier."
   "Last name?"
   "Vampires don't have last names, as a general rule."
   "Thank you for the name, Ms. Blake. How did you get it?"
   I thought about that for a few seconds. I couldn't think of a really good answer. "It sort of fell into my lap."
   "Why don't I believe that, Ms. Blake? I thought I'd made myself clear this evening. You are not to involve yourself in this case, in any way."
   "Look, I didn't have to call, but I want Jeff Quinlan back alive. I thought the FBI might be able to use the name of the vampire who took him."
   "I want to know how you got the name," he said.
   "An informant."
   "I'd like to talk to this informant," he said.
   "No," I said.
   "Are you withholding information from a federal investigation, Ms. Blake?"
   "No, Agent Bradford, I am going out of my way to share information."
   He was quiet again. "Alright, Ms. Blake, you're right. Thank you for the name. We'll run it in the computers."
   "This vampire has a history of harming preadolescent boys. He's a pedophile."
   "Good lord, a vampire pedophile." He finally sounded genuinely interested in what I was saying. "And he has the Quinlan boy."
   "Yeah," I said.
   "I would really like to talk to this source of yours," he said.
   "He's a little shy around the police."
   "I could insist, Ms. Blake. We've got reports that a private jet flew in last night, and a coffin got unloaded. It's registered to a J. C. Corporation. They seem to own a lot of vampire-related, St. Louis-based businesses. Do you know anything about that, Ms. Blake?"
   Lying to the FBI seemed like a bad idea, but I wasn't sure what they'd do with the truth. The Feds were investigating vampire crime, and suddenly a new vamp shows up in town. The least they would do was question him. The worst . . . well, there was the vampire in Mississippi that had been accidentally transferred to a cell with a window. The sun rose, and . . . French fried vampire. An ACLU lawyer had sued the cops' asses, and won, but that didn't bring the vamp back. Admittedly the dead vamp was one of the newly dead. Jean-Claude would have escaped fairly easily, but just escaping from the law by using vampire powers would get a warrant for his arrest. Sort of like what was happening to Magnus.
   Besides, a vampire had killed a cop last night. The police might not be terribly careful with any vampire right now. The police are only human, after all.
   "You still there, Blake?"
   "I'm here."
   "You didn't answer my question."
   "Where was the coffin delivered?" I asked.
   "It wasn't. It just disappeared."
   "So what do you want from me?"
   "There was some luggage that went with it. The luggage was picked up a little while ago by two young men. The description of one of them sounds a lot like Larry Kirkland."
   "Is that so?"
   "That's so."
   We both sat on our ends of the phone waiting for someone to say something. "I could send some agents down to your hotel room."
   "There are no coffins in my hotel room, Agent Bradford."
   "You sure of that, Blake?"
   "My hand to God."
   "Do you know who runs this J. C. Corporation?"
   "No." It was the truth. Until Bradford told me about it, I'd never heard of the J. C. Corporation. It would only have been an educated guess if I'd said Jean-Claude owned it. Okay, I was fooling myself, but so what?
   "Do you know where the coffin was delivered?" he asked.
   "Nope."
   "Would you tell me if you knew?"
   "If it would help find Jeff Quinlan, you bet."
   "Alright, Blake, but no more helping. Stay the fuck out of this case. When we find the vampires we'll call you in, and you can do your job. You're a vampire hunter, not a cop. Try to remember that."
   "Fine," I said.
   "Good. Now I'm going back to sleep. I suggest you do the same. We'll find the vampires today, Blake. And let's just say I don't believe everything Freemont said. We'll call you in for the kill."
   "Thanks."
   "Good night, Blake."
   "Good night, Bradford."
   We hung up. I sat there for a minute, just letting it all sink in. If they found Jean-Claude in my room, what would they do? I'd seen the cops pop a comatose vampire in a body bag, transport it to the station house, and wait for nightfall to question it. I'd thought it was a bad idea because the vamp would wake up pissed. It did. I ended up killing it. I've always felt bad about that particular kill. It was an out-of-state job. The local cops invited me in to advise them. Once we found the vamp, they stopped listening to my advice. Reminded me of now. That vampire had also just been brought in for questioning.
   I was suddenly tired. It was like the entire night just hit me in one grinding wave. Sleep dragged at me. I had to go to sleep. I couldn't help Jeff Quinlan, or anybody else, until I'd had a few hours of sleep. Besides, maybe the Feds would find him. Stranger things had happened.
   I left a wake-up call with the desk for noon, and cuddled under the blanket. The Browning was lumpy under the pillow. At least I couldn't feel the Firestar under the couch cushion. I half wished I'd packed Sigmund, my stuffed toy penguin, but somehow having Jean-Claude or Jason find me sleeping with a stuffed toy bothered me almost as much as them trying to eat me. What price machismo?
   
   
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